HR-8357-119
Referred to the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, and in addition to the Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure, Energy and Commerce, and Natural Resources, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Marilyn Strickland (D-WA)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Transportation, in consultation with the EPA Administrator, to establish a task force through the National Academy of Sciences within 60 days of enactment. The task force would coordinate research, identify federal funding opportunities, and share best practices related to 6PPD — a chemical used in virtually all vehicle tires — and its toxic byproduct 6PPD-Q, which washes into waterways via stormwater runoff and has been linked to coho salmon deaths. The task force would submit annual reports to Congress and maintain a publicly accessible online repository of findings, and would include representatives from federal agencies, Tribal governments, the tire industry, environmental groups, state governments, and universities.
Who benefits
Coho salmon populations and the ecosystems that depend on them. Pacific Northwest Tribal nations whose treaty rights, cultural practices, and food sources depend on salmon runs. Commercial and recreational salmon fishers. Researchers and universities studying aquatic toxicology who would gain coordinated funding guidance. State and local transportation agencies seeking best practices for stormwater management. Tire and chemical manufacturers who would gain a clearer regulatory roadmap and research partnerships. Communities that rely on clean waterways for drinking water or recreation.
Who is hurt
Tire manufacturers and chemical additive suppliers who may face eventual pressure to reformulate products, potentially at significant cost. Consumers who could see tire price increases if a more expensive 6PPD alternative is developed and adopted. Taxpayers who would fund the task force's operations through the National Academy of Sciences agreement. Competing research priorities within federal agencies may receive less attention or funding as resources are directed toward 6PPD alternatives.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that 6PPD-Q has been scientifically documented as acutely lethal to coho salmon — a species of significant ecological, economic, and cultural importance — and that no coordinated federal response currently exists. They contend that the bill takes a measured, research-first approach by convening experts across government, industry, and Tribal nations rather than imposing immediate mandates, and that addressing the issue proactively protects both the environment and the domestic tire supply chain before the problem worsens or triggers more disruptive regulatory action.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new federal body with no guaranteed funding mechanism, no regulatory authority, and no binding timeline for action — making it potentially ineffective at actually reducing 6PPD-Q contamination. They contend that the task force's exemption from the Federal Advisory Committee Act removes standard transparency and public participation safeguards, and that the bill's scope is too narrow, focusing on coho salmon while other aquatic species and human health impacts from 6PPD exposure may be inadequately addressed.