HR-8515-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Julia Letlow (R-LA)
What it does
This bill would require every federal agency to publish a Consumer Price Information Statement alongside any "major rule" it proposes. The statement would describe the rule's potential impact on consumer prices in five categories — energy, food and groceries, housing and utilities, transportation, and health care — and would identify effects on vulnerable populations (low-income households, seniors, and rural communities) and any regional variation. The statement would be published in the Federal Register and on the agency's website at the time the rule is proposed. No new funding is authorized; agencies would carry out the requirement using existing resources.
Who benefits
The general public, who would gain access to standardized price-impact information before major rules take effect. Low-income households, seniors, and rural communities, who are explicitly identified as populations of interest and whose concerns would be formally documented. Journalists, researchers, and advocacy groups who analyze regulatory impacts. Members of Congress and their staff who use regulatory records to conduct oversight. Small businesses and trade associations that participate in the public comment process and would have more structured data to reference. State and local governments that must plan around federal regulatory changes.
Who is hurt
Federal agencies, which would bear new analytical and documentation workloads with no additional appropriations, potentially straining existing staff and budgets. Agencies with limited economic analysis capacity may face disproportionate burdens. Regulated industries could face delays if agencies need more time to prepare compliant statements. Advocacy groups that prefer faster rulemaking timelines may find the added procedural step slows regulatory action. Consumers who would benefit from faster implementation of protective rules could experience delays if agencies struggle to meet the new requirement within existing resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that federal agencies already issue hundreds of major rules annually — rules that can meaningfully affect the prices Americans pay for energy, food, housing, and health care — yet no standardized, consumer-focused price disclosure is currently required. They contend that requiring agencies to explicitly analyze and publish these impacts before rules take effect gives the public, Congress, and policymakers the information needed to hold agencies accountable and make better-informed decisions. They further argue the bill imposes no new spending, simply directing agencies to make their existing economic analysis more transparent and accessible.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that federal agencies are already required under Executive Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act to conduct cost-benefit analyses and assess impacts on small entities, making this bill largely duplicative of existing requirements. They contend that mandating additional statements with no new funding could degrade the quality of both the new disclosures and existing regulatory analysis, as agencies are forced to stretch limited staff. Critics also argue the bill's focus on consumer price impacts — without a parallel requirement to document consumer benefits — could systematically bias the public record against protective regulations and skew the rulemaking process.