S-3530-115
Became Public Law No: 115-410.
Sponsored by Jack Reed (D-RI)
What it does
This bill reauthorizes the Museum and Library Services Act and its federal funding through fiscal year 2025. It expands the legal definitions of "library" and "museum" to include tribal institutions and broadens the range of services museums may offer. It also creates the 21st Century Museum Professional Program, which would fund partnerships between the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), universities, and museum organizations to recruit, train, and retain museum workers — with a focus on students and professionals from underrepresented backgrounds.
Who benefits
Public and tribal libraries and their patrons, who would continue receiving federally supported services. Tribal communities, whose libraries and museums would gain formal recognition and eligibility under the law. Students from underrepresented backgrounds pursuing museum-related degrees, who would have access to new recruitment and scholarship pipelines. Current museum professionals from underrepresented groups, who would benefit from new retention and development programs. Museums and museum consortia, which would gain access to federal partnership funding. Institutions of higher education offering museum studies programs.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who oppose federal spending on cultural institutions would see continued or increased federal expenditures through FY2025. Applicants from non-underrepresented backgrounds competing for slots in the new professional development programs may face reduced access relative to targeted peers. Organizations or institutions that do not meet the new expanded definitions of "library" or "museum" may remain ineligible for funding. States or localities that prefer to fund cultural institutions without federal involvement may face conditions attached to federal dollars.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that libraries and museums are essential public infrastructure, providing free educational resources, digital access, and cultural preservation to millions of Americans — particularly in rural and low-income communities that lack alternatives. They contend that reauthorizing stable federal funding prevents service gaps that would disproportionately harm the most vulnerable library users. Supporters also argue that formally including tribal libraries and museums corrects a long-standing gap in federal recognition, honoring tribal sovereignty and preserving Indigenous cultural heritage. On the workforce side, they maintain that the museum sector has historically lacked diversity, and that targeted recruitment and retention programs would strengthen the profession by drawing talent from a broader pool, ultimately improving the quality and relevance of museum programming for all Americans.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that funding for libraries and museums is primarily a state and local responsibility, and that continued federal involvement displaces community-driven decision-making about cultural priorities. They contend that reauthorizing spending through FY2025 adds to federal expenditures without sufficient evidence that IMLS programs produce measurable outcomes justifying their cost. Critics of the workforce diversity provisions argue that directing federal resources toward applicants based on background characteristics raises equal protection concerns and may disadvantage equally qualified candidates who do not fall within the targeted groups. Opponents may also argue that expanding the definitions of "library" and "museum" to include tribal institutions, while well-intentioned, creates administrative complexity and could dilute program quality by broadening eligibility without a corresponding increase in oversight or accountability standards.
Constitutional context
The bill's primary constitutional basis is the Spending Clause (Art. I, Sec. 8), which grants Congress broad authority to fund programs for the general welfare. The expansion of definitions to include tribal institutions implicates the Indian Commerce Clause (Art. I, Sec. 8, Cl. 3) and federal trust responsibilities to tribes. The 21st Century Museum Professional Program's focus on recruiting individuals from "diverse and underrepresented backgrounds" touches on equal protection principles under the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause (as applied to federal action). Post-SFFA v. Harvard (2023), race-conscious selection criteria in federally funded programs face heightened scrutiny, though the bill's language targets "diverse and underrepresented backgrounds" broadly rather than specifying race explicitly. No direct First Amendment or Fifteenth Amendment tension is present.
Checks and balances
The executive branch, through the Institute of Museum and Library Services (an independent federal agency), gains expanded authority to enter into funding arrangements with museums, universities, and other entities under the new professional program. Congress retains oversight through the reauthorization structure, which requires future congressional action to extend funding beyond FY2025. No significant shift in judicial or legislative power is created by this bill.
Historical precedent
The original Museum and Library Services Act (1996) consolidated earlier library legislation, including the Library Services and Construction Act (1956) and the Museum Services Act (1977). This 2018 bill follows a pattern of periodic reauthorizations (2003, 2010) that have incrementally expanded IMLS's mandate and funding scope.