HR-7257-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Robert Latta (R-OH)
What it does
The SECURE Grid Act (hr-7257-119) would establish or strengthen federal security requirements for the U.S. electrical grid. Based on the bill's title — Securing Energy and Critical Utilities for Resilient Energy — it would likely direct a federal agency (such as FERC or DOE) to set and enforce cybersecurity and/or physical security standards for electric utilities and grid infrastructure. The full operative text was not provided, so specific mechanisms, timelines, and enforcement provisions cannot be confirmed.
Who benefits
All U.S. residents and businesses who depend on reliable electricity. Critical infrastructure operators (hospitals, water systems, emergency services) that are especially vulnerable to grid disruptions. Cybersecurity firms and contractors who would likely receive contracts to implement new standards. Domestic manufacturers of grid-hardening equipment. National security and defense establishments that rely on a stable grid.
Who is hurt
Electric utilities — particularly smaller rural cooperatives and municipal utilities — that would bear compliance costs. Ratepayers who may see electricity price increases if utilities pass compliance costs through to customers. Foreign-owned or foreign-sourced equipment suppliers that may be restricted or excluded under security provisions. Utilities operating older infrastructure that would face higher upgrade costs relative to newer facilities.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. electrical grid faces documented and growing threats from state-sponsored cyberattacks and physical sabotage, citing incidents such as the 2022 Moore County, NC substation attacks and repeated federal warnings from CISA and DOE about grid vulnerabilities. They contend that uniform federal security standards are necessary because a patchwork of voluntary or state-level measures leaves critical gaps that adversaries can exploit, and that the cost of a major grid failure — estimated in the hundreds of billions of dollars — far exceeds the cost of preventive hardening.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that imposing new federal mandates on utilities — especially smaller cooperatives and municipal systems — creates significant compliance burdens that would raise electricity costs for consumers without a demonstrated improvement in security outcomes. They contend that existing frameworks under NERC Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) standards and FERC oversight already address grid security, and that adding another layer of federal requirements risks duplicating existing rules, creating regulatory confusion, and diverting utility resources from actual infrastructure upgrades to paperwork compliance.
Constitutional context
Federal regulation of the electrical grid rests on the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3), as electricity transmission is inherently interstate commerce. Following Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024), any significant new rulemaking authority delegated to FERC or DOE would face independent judicial scrutiny rather than automatic deference, and under West Virginia v. EPA (2022), rules of vast economic or political significance would require clear congressional authorization in the bill's text.
Checks and balances
Congress would set the security mandate; a federal agency (likely FERC or DOE) would gain rulemaking and enforcement authority; courts would independently review the scope of that delegation under the post-Loper Bright standard, and the Tenth Amendment limits how far federal mandates can reach into state-regulated utility operations.
Historical precedent
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 gave FERC authority to enforce mandatory electric reliability standards, leading to the NERC CIP framework — the most directly analogous prior federal action on grid security.