Passed
S-1003-119
Became Public Law No: 119-100.
Sponsored by Katie Britt (R-AL)
What it does
This bill would direct the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to issue an order explicitly permitting authorized government authorities to send wireless emergency alerts (WEA) to mobile phones when a shark attack occurs. Under current regulations, WEA messages are already authorized for public safety emergencies such as severe weather, missing children, and other threats to life or property; this bill would clarify that shark attacks fall within that permitted category.
Who benefits
Beachgoers and coastal recreationists who would receive faster, direct notification of a nearby shark attack. Coastal residents and tourists in shark-prone areas (e.g., Florida, California, Hawaii, the Carolinas). Local emergency management agencies seeking clear legal authority to send such alerts without ambiguity. Lifeguards and beach safety personnel who may benefit from a coordinated public alert system. Hospitals and first responders who may receive more timely calls as a result of faster public awareness.
Who is hurt
Coastal tourism businesses (hotels, surf shops, charter operators) that could see reduced visitor traffic following shark attack alerts. Mobile phone users broadly, who may experience alert fatigue if WEA messages expand to cover a wider range of localized events. State and local emergency managers who may face public pressure to issue alerts in ambiguous or unconfirmed situations. The FCC, which would bear administrative costs of issuing the required order.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current WEA framework lacks explicit authorization for shark attack alerts, leaving local emergency managers uncertain about whether they can legally send them — a gap that could cost lives in the critical minutes after an attack. They contend that shark attacks, while statistically rare, are sudden, localized, and immediately life-threatening, making them precisely the kind of event the WEA system was designed to address. Providing clear statutory authority removes legal ambiguity and empowers local officials to act without delay.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that existing WEA regulations already broadly authorize alerts for "threats to life or property," making this bill redundant — local authorities may already have the power to send shark attack alerts without new legislation. They contend that codifying a single, highly specific animal threat into federal law sets an odd precedent and could prompt similar narrow carve-outs for other localized hazards, fragmenting what should be a flexible, principles-based emergency alert framework. Critics may also raise concerns about alert fatigue reducing public responsiveness to more widespread emergencies.
Passed