HR-7077-117
Became Public Law No: 117-246.
Sponsored by Ritchie Torres (D-NY)
What it does
This law authorizes the U.S. Fire Administration (USFA) to send trained investigators — including safety specialists, fire protection engineers, and researchers — to the sites of major fires or fires with unusual circumstances. Investigators must work alongside federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial authorities, and must examine both the cause of the fire and broader systemic issues. After each investigation, the USFA must publish a public report for relevant authorities, unless doing so would interfere with an active or potential criminal investigation.
Who benefits
Residents and property owners in communities affected by major fires, who would gain access to public investigative reports. State, local, tribal, and territorial fire agencies, which would receive federal expertise and resources. Fire safety researchers and standards bodies, which would gain data from systematic federal investigations. Future occupants of buildings, who may benefit if investigations lead to improved fire codes or safety practices.
Who is hurt
Property owners or businesses whose fire incidents become subject to federal investigation, potentially increasing scrutiny and legal exposure. State and local fire investigation agencies that may experience reduced autonomy or jurisdictional overlap with federal investigators. Taxpayers who fund the USFA's expanded investigative operations. Parties involved in fires where a public report could complicate civil litigation, even if a criminal investigation exception applies.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that major fires often reveal systemic failures — in building codes, fire suppression systems, or emergency response — that local investigators lack the specialized resources to fully examine. By deploying federal experts and requiring public reports, the law creates a consistent, nationwide body of fire safety knowledge that can drive improvements in codes and standards, potentially preventing future deaths and property losses. Coordination requirements ensure federal investigators do not displace local authorities but instead supplement them, and the criminal investigation exception protects the integrity of prosecutions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that fire investigation is traditionally a state and local function, and that adding a federal layer risks duplicating existing efforts, creating jurisdictional confusion, and consuming resources without clear evidence of improved outcomes. They contend that the USFA's mandate to examine "broader systematic matters" is vaguely defined, potentially expanding federal involvement well beyond what individual fire incidents warrant. Critics also note that public reporting requirements — even with a criminal investigation exception — could complicate civil litigation or compromise sensitive local investigations, and that the costs of staffing and deploying specialized federal teams may outweigh the practical benefits.