HR-7595-119
Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.
Sponsored by Michael Lawler (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would direct the Government Accountability Office (GAO) — the nonpartisan research arm of Congress — to conduct a study counting how many residential housing units, including public housing units, are located within one mile of a site on the EPA's National Priorities List (commonly called "Superfund sites"). The GAO would be required to submit a report to Congress with site-by-site findings within six months of the bill's enactment. The bill does not require any regulatory action, remediation, or spending beyond the study itself.
Who benefits
Residents living near Superfund sites — particularly low-income residents in public housing — who may gain greater congressional and public awareness of their proximity to toxic contamination. Public housing tenants and advocates who have long argued that environmental hazards are disproportionately concentrated near subsidized housing. Policymakers and researchers who would gain a standardized, authoritative federal dataset on this proximity. Environmental health advocates and journalists who could use the data to support further action. Future litigants in Fair Housing Act or environmental justice cases who could cite the data as evidence.
Who is hurt
Property owners and developers near Superfund sites whose property values could face additional downward pressure if the study draws public attention to proximity data. Local governments near Superfund sites that may face increased political pressure for remediation funding or relocation assistance. Federal agencies such as HUD and EPA that may face follow-on legislative mandates based on the study's findings. Taxpayers would bear the modest cost of the GAO study, though that cost is expected to be minimal.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal government currently lacks a comprehensive, site-by-site accounting of how many Americans — especially public housing residents — live within one mile of a Superfund site, making it impossible to target remediation or relocation resources effectively. They contend that existing research, including EPA data and academic studies, consistently shows that Superfund sites are disproportionately located near low-income and minority communities, and that a GAO study would provide the authoritative baseline needed to address this disparity. They argue the bill is a low-cost, noncontroversial first step that simply gathers facts before any policy response is designed.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the EPA already maintains detailed geographic data on Superfund sites through its CERCLIS database and that HUD tracks public housing locations, meaning the study may duplicate information that federal agencies could compile internally at lower cost and faster than a six-month GAO study. They contend that without any mandate for follow-up action, the report risks becoming a shelf document that generates political attention without producing remediation, relocation, or other tangible relief for affected residents. They argue that Congress would better serve affected communities by directing existing agency resources toward cleanup or housing assistance rather than commissioning another study.