HR-9022-119
Rules Committee Resolution H. Res. 1377 Reported to House. Rule provides for consideration of H.R. 1181, H.R. 9022, H.R. 8595 and H.R. 9237. The resolution provides for consideration of H.R. 1181 and H.R. 9237 under a closed rule and H.R. 9022 and H.R. 8595 under a structured rule. The resolution provides for one hour of general debate and one motion to recommit on each bill.
Sponsored by Charles Fleischmann (R-TN)
What it does
This bill would set discretionary spending levels for the Department of Energy, the Army Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation, and several related federal agencies for fiscal year 2027. As an annual appropriations bill, it would allocate specific dollar amounts to programs covering nuclear weapons maintenance, energy research and development, water infrastructure projects, and power marketing administrations. The full text of specific funding levels was not provided, so precise allocations cannot be detailed here.
Who benefits
Federal agencies receiving funding, including the Department of Energy and Army Corps of Engineers. Communities that rely on Army Corps flood control, navigation, and water infrastructure projects. States and localities receiving water project funding from the Bureau of Reclamation, particularly in the western U.S. Defense contractors and national laboratories involved in nuclear weapons maintenance. Energy researchers at universities and national labs. Utilities and ratepayers served by federal power marketing administrations (e.g., Bonneville, Western Area Power Administration). Construction and engineering firms that contract on water and energy infrastructure projects.
Who is hurt
Programs or agencies funded at lower levels than the prior year would face operational reductions. Competing discretionary spending priorities not included in this bill may be crowded out in the overall budget. Taxpayers broadly bear the cost of appropriated spending. Private energy companies that compete with federally subsidized programs may face an uneven playing field. Communities whose water or energy projects are not funded or are de-prioritized in the bill's allocations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that annual energy and water appropriations are essential to maintaining national security infrastructure, including the nuclear stockpile, and to funding water projects that protect millions of Americans from flooding and drought. They contend that consistent federal investment in energy research and water infrastructure produces long-term economic returns and that the Army Corps and Bureau of Reclamation provide services no state or private entity could replicate at scale.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that annual energy and water appropriations bills frequently fund parochial water projects and legacy energy programs that lack rigorous cost-benefit justification, effectively directing federal dollars to politically connected districts rather than highest-need uses. They contend that without full bill text and line-item scrutiny, specific funding levels may reflect congressional earmarks or cuts to critical programs that undermine long-term energy security or water reliability.