S-398-113
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 630.
Sponsored by Susan Collins (R-ME)
What it does
This bill would create a temporary commission to study whether and how to build a National Women's History Museum in Washington, D.C. The commission would produce a recommended plan of action, a private fundraising strategy, and a legislative proposal for construction. No federal funds would be spent on the museum itself — the bill explicitly prohibits obligating federal money for that purpose.
Who benefits
Advocates for women's history preservation and education would gain an official federal study process. Regional women's history museums and organizations would receive formal consideration of how a national museum might affect them. Researchers, educators, and students focused on women's history would potentially benefit from a future national institution. The general public interested in women's contributions to American history would benefit from increased visibility of that history.
Who is hurt
Existing regional women's history museums could face reduced donations, visitor traffic, or relevance if a national museum draws attention and funding away from them — the bill acknowledges this risk by requiring the commission to study it. Taxpayers who oppose any federal role in facilitating a museum, even a study commission, would bear the administrative costs of the commission itself. Private donors would be the primary funding source for any eventual museum, which could divert philanthropic dollars from other causes.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that a National Women's History Museum would fill a significant gap in the nation's cultural institutions on the National Mall, where no museum is currently dedicated to women's history and contributions. They contend that a study commission is a fiscally responsible first step — it costs relatively little, requires no federal commitment to build or fund a museum, and ensures that any future proposal is grounded in independent financial analysis and a viable private fundraising plan. Supporters also argue that the commission's mandate to examine impacts on regional museums shows careful stewardship, and that formally recognizing women's history at the national level reflects the contributions of more than half the American population.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that even a study commission represents an unnecessary use of federal legislative resources and sets the country on a path toward eventual federal spending on a museum, despite the bill's current prohibition on obligating federal funds. They contend that private organizations and existing institutions — including the Smithsonian — are already capable of preserving and presenting women's history without a new federal commission or a new museum. Opponents may also argue that the commission's work could duplicate efforts already underway by private groups, and that the question of whether to build such a museum is better left entirely to private initiative rather than a congressionally chartered body that lends implicit federal endorsement to the project.