S-2666-119
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
What it does
This bill would create an interagency task force to advise federal agencies and Congress on combating robocalls originating outside the United States. It would also extend the FCC's designation period for an industry-led consortium responsible for tracing the origin of suspected unlawful robocalls from one year to three years, reducing how often the FCC must solicit new applications for that role.
Who benefits
All Americans who receive phone calls, particularly the elderly who are disproportionately targeted by robocall scams. Consumers who lose money to phone fraud schemes. Legitimate businesses whose caller ID information is spoofed by bad actors. The currently designated robocall tracing consortium, which would gain greater operational continuity under the longer designation term. Law enforcement agencies that would gain a coordinated interagency resource for cross-border robocall investigations.
Who is hurt
Competing industry groups that currently have the opportunity to apply annually for the FCC consortium designation — they would lose two application cycles over a three-year period. Foreign-based robocall operations that could face increased enforcement pressure. Potentially, consumers and the public if the extended designation term reduces competitive accountability for the consortium's performance. Telecom carriers that may face increased compliance or reporting obligations under the new task force's future recommendations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that foreign robocall operations are a persistent and growing threat — the FTC received over 1.9 million robocall complaints in a recent year — and that the current patchwork of agency responses lacks the coordination needed to address calls originating abroad, where U.S. enforcement jurisdiction is limited. They contend that extending the consortium's designation to three years provides the operational stability needed for long-term tracing infrastructure investment, rather than forcing the industry to rebuild relationships and systems annually.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending the consortium's designation from one to three years reduces the FCC's ability to hold the industry group accountable if its tracing performance falls short, effectively locking in a single operator with less competitive pressure. They contend that an advisory task force, without direct enforcement authority, may produce recommendations that agencies are free to ignore, making the bill largely symbolic rather than a meaningful check on foreign robocall operations that have persisted despite years of prior legislative and regulatory action.