HR-7007-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Health.
Sponsored by James McGovern (D-MA)
What it does
H.R. 7007 is a wide-ranging omnibus bill with 13 titles covering distinct policy areas. It would: (1) extend and expand a tax deduction for film and TV production costs through 2030; (2) create a new federal crime for defrauding veterans of their benefits; (3) waive cost-sharing requirements for states, tribes, and localities recovering from wildfires caused by U.S. Forest Service management activities; (4) authorize National Science Foundation grants for AI literacy programs and require federal agencies to report on AI education integration; (5) require the Director of National Intelligence to report on China-Iran oil and missile transactions; (6) mandate no-cost-sharing coverage of annual lung cancer screenings for at-risk adults aged 50–80 across all health insurers and federal health programs; (7) direct FEMA and HUD to implement GAO disaster recovery recommendations; (8) allow the House to update its payroll schedule; (9) direct FEMA to administer and disburse previously appropriated Next Generation Warning System grants; (10) require House committees to hold hearings on the bill's implementation; (11) update House ethics rules to prohibit sexual relationships between Members and their supervised staff; and (12–13) establish PAYGO compliance procedures and appropriate $6 million across six federal agencies and programs.
Who benefits
Film and television production companies, particularly those operating in economically distressed areas, would benefit from the expanded and extended Section 181 tax deduction. Veterans and their dependents would gain stronger federal protection against benefits fraud. States, tribal governments, localities, and individual landowners affected by Forest Service-caused wildfires would benefit from waived cost-share requirements. Marginalized communities — including low-income populations, rural residents, seniors, and people with disabilities — would be prioritized for AI literacy grants. Nonprofit organizations and educational institutions could receive NSF funding. Adults aged 50–80 at elevated lung cancer risk would gain no-cost annual screenings, with particular benefit to current and former smokers. Communities in disaster-prone areas would benefit from improved FEMA/HUD coordination. Workers and small businesses could benefit indirectly from agency AI literacy integration. House staff and interns would gain stronger ethics protections. Dental and craniofacial research, agricultural inspection, railroad safety, wetlands conservation, Space Force operations, and the U.S. Tax Court would each receive $1 million in additional appropriations.
Who is hurt
Health insurers, pharmacy benefit managers, and federal health programs (Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA, FEHB) would bear the cost of mandatory no-cost lung cancer screenings, which could be passed on to policyholders through higher premiums. Taxpayers broadly would bear the cost of the film production tax deduction extension and the $6 million in new appropriations. Competing entertainment industries or productions that do not qualify under Section 181 thresholds would be at a relative disadvantage. Entities that have previously defrauded veterans may face new criminal liability. Forest Service management decisions could face increased financial scrutiny and liability exposure. Programs not receiving the $1 million appropriations may face indirect competition for discretionary funding. House Members who previously had consensual relationships with supervised staff would face new conduct restrictions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the bill addresses a broad range of concrete, documented needs in a single legislative vehicle. They contend the lung cancer screening mandate is grounded in strong clinical evidence — the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends annual LDCT screening for high-risk adults, and studies show it reduces lung cancer mortality by up to 20%, yet cost barriers prevent many eligible patients from accessing it. They argue the veterans fraud provision fills a gap in federal criminal law, the wildfire cost-share waiver corrects an inequity where communities bear costs for federal land management failures, and the AI literacy grants address a documented digital divide that leaves vulnerable populations unprepared for an AI-driven economy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that bundling 13 unrelated policy areas into a single bill obscures accountability and prevents members from voting on each provision on its merits — a practice critics across the political spectrum have long challenged as undermining deliberative democracy. They contend the lung cancer screening mandate imposes an unfunded obligation on private insurers and federal programs without a clear cost estimate, potentially raising premiums for all policyholders to subsidize a benefit for a defined subgroup. They further argue the film production tax deduction disproportionately benefits a wealthy, geographically concentrated industry, and that the $6 million in scattered appropriations — spread across six unrelated agencies — reflects the kind of piecemeal spending that bypasses normal appropriations oversight.
Constitutional context
The lung cancer screening mandate in Title VI raises Commerce Clause questions about Congress's authority to dictate coverage terms to private insurers, an authority affirmed broadly in NFIB v. Sebelius (2012) for existing commercial activity. The agency reporting requirements in Titles IV and V, and the FEMA directives in Titles VII and IX, could face post-Loper Bright scrutiny if implementing agencies interpret their statutory mandates expansively, as courts now exercise independent judgment on agency statutory authority rather than deferring to agency interpretations.
Checks and balances
Congress gains authority across multiple domains — tax, criminal law, health insurance mandates, and agency directives — while the Executive Branch (HHS, FEMA, HUD, DNI, NSF, and others) is directed to implement; courts retain review authority over agency rules under the post-Loper Bright independent judgment standard, and the House retains internal rulemaking authority over its own ethics and payroll provisions.
Historical precedent
The ACA (2010) established the precedent for Congress mandating specific no-cost preventive coverage by private insurers, and the Inflation Reduction Act (2022) similarly expanded no-cost coverage requirements; Section 181 film production deductions were previously extended multiple times, most recently through 2025.