S-1070-119
Held at the desk.
Sponsored by Joni Ernst (R-IA)
What it does
This bill would amend the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010 to designate one week per calendar year as "National STEM Week." It would direct a federal interagency committee to encourage schools, families, and private industry to participate in STEM-related activities such as mentorship programs, site visits, and guest lectures. The authority to designate and carry out National STEM Week would expire five years after enactment.
Who benefits
K-12 students and college students — particularly those in rural, urban, and underserved communities — who gain exposure to STEM career pathways. STEM-focused companies and nonprofits that gain a structured platform to recruit and engage with students. Schools and educators who receive encouragement and a national framework for STEM programming. Families who are invited to participate in at-home STEM activities. States and local communities that receive federal support for tailoring their own STEM events.
Who is hurt
No group faces direct regulatory burden or financial cost from this bill. Federal agencies tasked with coordinating and reporting on National STEM Week activities would bear modest administrative costs. Non-STEM educational programs (arts, humanities, vocational training) could face indirect competition for school time and attention during the designated week, though the bill imposes no mandates on schools.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States faces a documented shortage of STEM workers — the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects STEM occupations will grow roughly twice as fast as non-STEM occupations through 2031 — and that awareness campaigns help close participation gaps for underrepresented groups. They contend that a nationally coordinated week creates a low-cost, voluntary framework that leverages existing school and industry resources without imposing federal mandates or spending.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a symbolic designation without dedicated funding or enforceable standards is unlikely to produce measurable improvements in STEM outcomes, particularly for the underserved communities the bill highlights. They contend that existing federal STEM initiatives — including programs under the America COMPETES Act itself — already provide this function, making National STEM Week a duplicative gesture that consumes congressional and agency time without addressing root causes such as teacher shortages or inadequate school infrastructure.