S-4835-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Sponsored by Kevin Cramer (R-ND)
What it does
This bill would amend the Export Control Reform Act of 2018 to require that informal regulatory guidance letters (called "is-informed letters") go through the same formal interagency review process as standard export licenses, and would require those letters to be published in the Federal Register or Code of Federal Regulations within 60 days or expire. It would also require the Commerce Department to publish the standards used when denying export license applications, and to create a structured set of technical advisory committees — covering areas like semiconductors, AI, biotechnology, and aerospace — to advise the government on export control policy. Finally, it would require a review and congressional report on a 2025 rule governing exports of advanced computing chips.
Who benefits
U.S. companies that export controlled technologies (especially in semiconductors, AI, and advanced manufacturing) who would gain clearer, more predictable rules. Foreign companies receiving U.S. technology exports who would benefit from more transparent licensing standards. Academic researchers and industry experts appointed to advisory committees who would gain a formal role in shaping export policy. Congressional oversight committees that would receive advance notice of denial standards and periodic advisory reports. Smaller exporters who currently lack resources to navigate informal guidance letters.
Who is hurt
The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), which would face new administrative burdens and tight publication deadlines. Executive branch agencies that currently use informal guidance letters as a flexible, low-visibility tool — this bill would constrain that flexibility. Companies or individuals who benefit from the current opacity of informal guidance, such as those who receive favorable informal treatment that might not survive public scrutiny. Adversary nations (e.g., China, Russia) whose access to controlled technologies could be more systematically restricted as advisory committees improve the precision of controls.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that BIS has increasingly relied on informal "is-informed letters" to impose export restrictions outside the normal rulemaking process, creating legal uncertainty for U.S. companies and undermining due process. They contend that requiring publication and interagency review would bring these informal controls in line with the Administrative Procedure Act's transparency norms, reduce compliance costs for exporters, and strengthen the overall export control system by grounding it in publicly accountable standards. The advisory committee structure, they argue, would ensure that technical experts — not just government officials — help identify emerging technology threats, improving the quality and timeliness of controls.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that requiring publication of informal guidance letters within 60 days could compromise national security by forcing the government to publicly disclose sensitive enforcement strategies and technology-specific concerns before adversaries can be countered. They contend that the flexibility of informal guidance is a feature, not a flaw — allowing BIS to respond rapidly to fast-moving technology threats without the delays of formal rulemaking. Critics may also argue that mandatory advisory committees with non-disclosure agreements and fixed membership terms could slow decision-making and introduce industry capture risks, as private-sector members may have commercial interests in loosening controls on the very technologies they are advising on.