HR-7386-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by Neal Dunn (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would extend the First Responder Network (FirstNet) Authority through FY2037 and restructure its governance by removing its independent agency status and placing it under direct NTIA oversight. It would require the network's operator (currently AT&T) to notify the FirstNet Authority within 30 minutes of any outage, provide users a real-time network status tool, and submit a business continuity and disaster recovery plan every five years. The bill would also expand the FirstNet Board to include at least five public safety professionals (up from three), require annual cybersecurity and adoption-rate reports to Congress, and direct the GAO to study whether the FirstNet Authority should be terminated in 2037.
Who benefits
First responders — including police officers, firefighters, and emergency medical personnel — who rely on FirstNet for interoperable communications during emergencies. State and local emergency management agencies that would gain better visibility into network outages. The public broadly, who may benefit from more reliable emergency response communications. Public safety professionals who would gain greater representation on the FirstNet Board. Congress, which would receive more frequent and detailed oversight reports. Potentially smaller or rural communities whose emergency responders depend on FirstNet as a primary communications backbone.
Who is hurt
AT&T, as the contracted network operator, would face new compliance obligations including 30-minute outage notification requirements, mandatory status tools, and five-year disaster recovery plan submissions subject to NTIA approval. The FirstNet Authority's current leadership and staff may lose operational autonomy under the shift from independent agency to NTIA sub-unit. Taxpayers could bear costs if restructuring or new reporting requirements increase administrative overhead. Entities that preferred the independent governance model — including some public safety advocacy groups — may see reduced insulation from political influence over network operations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that placing FirstNet under direct NTIA oversight closes a governance gap that has allowed the network to operate with limited accountability since its 2012 authorization. They contend that the 30-minute outage notification requirement and mandatory disaster recovery plans directly address documented failures during major disasters — such as Hurricane Maria in 2017 — when first responder communications networks went dark for extended periods. Expanding the Board's public safety membership, they argue, ensures that the people who depend on the network have a stronger voice in how it is managed and evaluated.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that stripping FirstNet of its independent agency status and subjecting its decisions to NTIA approval introduces political interference into a network that must operate on technical and public safety grounds alone. They contend that the original independent structure was deliberately designed to insulate FirstNet from bureaucratic delays, and that adding approval layers could slow the network's ability to respond to rapidly evolving cybersecurity threats or technology upgrades. Critics may also argue that the 2037 sunset review, rather than providing certainty, creates a long-term cloud over the network's future that could deter the private investment needed to keep it technologically current.