HR-7258-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Laurel Lee (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would designate a senior federal official — likely within the Department of Energy or a related agency — as the lead coordinator for responding to energy emergencies. It would establish a clear chain of command and leadership structure for managing disruptions to the nation's energy supply or infrastructure. The specific powers, budget, and interagency authorities of this position would be defined by the bill's provisions.
Who benefits
Federal agencies that currently lack a clear lead coordinator during energy crises. State and local emergency managers who would have a single federal point of contact. Energy infrastructure operators (utilities, pipeline companies, grid operators) who would benefit from faster federal coordination. Consumers and businesses that depend on reliable energy supply during emergencies. Communities historically vulnerable to prolonged outages, including rural areas and low-income households.
Who is hurt
Agencies that currently hold overlapping jurisdiction over energy emergencies (e.g., FERC, DHS, DOE) may lose authority or autonomy. Congressional oversight committees may see reduced direct influence if authority is consolidated in a single executive official. Competing contractors or consultants tied to existing multi-agency coordination structures could lose business. Taxpayers would bear any new administrative costs associated with the position.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that fragmented federal authority across DOE, FERC, DHS, and FEMA has historically slowed emergency response to energy disruptions — pointing to delayed coordination during events like the 2021 Texas winter storm and Hurricane Maria's impact on Puerto Rico's grid. They contend that designating a single accountable leader would reduce bureaucratic delays, clarify interagency roles, and improve outcomes for millions of Americans who lose power during major emergencies.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that consolidating energy emergency authority in a single official risks creating a bottleneck rather than solving one, and that existing interagency frameworks — including FEMA's National Response Framework — already provide coordination mechanisms. They contend that without adequate resources, statutory enforcement tools, and congressional oversight built into the role, the designation may be largely symbolic while adding a new layer of bureaucracy that could slow rather than accelerate response.