Back in August Rep DelBene (D,WA) introduced HR 4649, the Smart Cities and Communities Act of 2025. The bill would promote the use of smart technologies and systems in communities. It contains one section specifically dealing with cybersecurity and six separate mentions in passing. The bill would authorize a total of $240 million in spending on four programs.
This bill is very similar to similar to HR 9892 that was introduced by DelBene in October 2024. No action was taken on that bill in the 118th Congress.
Moving Forward
While DelBene is not a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee to which this bill was assigned for consideration, her sole cosponsor, Rep Clarke (D,NY) is a member. This means that there may be sufficient influence for the bill to be considered in Committee. Unfortunately, with the new authorizations included in the bill, there is little chance that the bill will receive consideration.
Commentary
While the three grant programs outlined in the bill would
certainly be useful to many jurisdictions in standing up a workable Smart
Technology program, they are also the biggest drawback to passing this bill in
the 118th Congress. A more useful, potentially passable bill, would
stand up the current §202, outlining the Cybersecurity
Working Group. With minimal funding (potentially coming out of ‘existing’ DOC
authorizations) the Working Group could provide a valuable opportunity for
coming up with a base-driven, smart-technology protection program.
For more information on the provisions of this bill, see my
article at CFSN Detailed Analysis - https://patrickcoyle.substack.com/p/hr-4649-introduced-smart-cities
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