Back in June, Rep Strong (R,AL) introduced HR 8950, the National Training Center for Counter-Unmanned Aircraft Systems Act. The bill would amend the Homeland Security Act of 2002 by adding two new sections dealing with counter UAS training. No new funding is authorized by the bill.
Moving Forward
Strong is not a member of either the House Judiciary Committee (to which primary consideration was assigned) nor the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee (to which the secondary consideration was assigned). This means that the bill is not likely to have enough influence behind it to see it considered in either committee. I suspect that were the bill to be considered, it would receive some level of bipartisan support. I am not sure that it would be enough to see the bill move to the floor of the House under the suspension of the rules process. This bill I is not currently politically important enough to be considered under a rule.
Commentary
Section 124n provides limited authority for DOJ and DHS to
conduct some counter UAS activities. The authority to conduct such activities at
a ‘covered facility’ {see
§124n(k)(3)} will terminate
on October 1st, 2024. This date has been moved in relatively small
increments while Congress tries to work out a deal on rewriting §124n (or §210G
of the Homeland Security Act of 2002). If this does not get ‘fixed’ permanently,
the need for this legislation will pretty much disappear as the other cUAS uses
authorized in §124n are relatively limited.
For more details about the provisions of this bill, see my
article at CFSN Detailed Analysis - https://patrickcoyle.substack.com/p/hr-8590-introduced
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