HR-836-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by David Valadao (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Agriculture (through the Forest Service) and the Secretary of the Interior to jointly conduct an evaluation of the Container Aerial Firefighting System (CAFFS) — a technology that uses shipping containers adapted for aerial delivery of fire retardant or water — within 90 days of enactment. Within 120 days of enactment, the two agencies would be required to submit a joint report on the evaluation's findings to four congressional committees: the House Committees on Agriculture and Natural Resources, and the Senate Committees on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry and Energy and Natural Resources.
Who benefits
Communities in wildfire-prone regions (particularly in the western United States) that could benefit from improved firefighting capabilities. Firefighters and first responders who may gain access to more effective aerial suppression tools. The CAFFS technology developer(s) and aviation contractors who could gain federal validation and potential future procurement contracts. Federal land managers responsible for wildfire suppression on national forests and public lands. State and local governments that rely on federal aerial firefighting resources.
Who is hurt
Existing aerial firefighting contractors (e.g., operators of traditional air tankers and helicopters) who could face increased competition if CAFFS receives a favorable evaluation and leads to future procurement. Taxpayers who would bear the administrative cost of conducting the evaluation and producing the report, though this cost would likely be modest. No groups face direct, immediate harm from this bill, as it is limited to a study and report.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the 2025 wildfire season — including the devastating Los Angeles-area fires — demonstrated urgent gaps in the nation's aerial firefighting capacity, and that evaluating emerging technologies like CAFFS is a necessary first step toward modernizing the federal response. They contend that a time-bound, interagency evaluation is a low-cost, evidence-based approach to determining whether CAFFS could supplement or improve upon existing airtanker fleets, potentially saving lives, property, and federal suppression dollars.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill may represent a narrow, technology-specific mandate that could divert agency attention and resources from broader, more proven wildfire management priorities such as forest thinning, prescribed burns, and expanding the existing airtanker fleet. They contend that directing agencies to evaluate a specific proprietary system — rather than conducting an open, technology-neutral review of all emerging aerial firefighting options — could give one vendor an unfair advantage in future federal procurement processes.