HR501-119

Reported

Promoting Resilient Buildings Act of 2025

119th Congress Introduced Jan 16, 2025

Summary

What This Bill Does

This bill updates FEMA predisaster hazard-mitigation and revolving-loan language so relevant codes, specifications, and standards refer to the two most recently published editions, including state, local, Tribal, or territorial amendments. It then creates a residential resilience pilot program under the Stafford Act predisaster mitigation program. FEMA may use up to 10 percent of annual section 203 assistance for the pilot, which provides assistance to states and local governments so they can make grants to individuals with demonstrated financial need for residential resilience retrofits.

Eligible retrofits include home elevations, utility elevations, floodproofing, tornado safe rooms, seismic retrofits, wildfire mitigation, wind retrofits, roof replacements, hurricane straps, tie-downs, and similar measures FEMA determines reduce likely natural-disaster hazards. FEMA must establish the pilot within one year, terminate it on September 30, 2028, and report to Congress within four years on awards, projects, homes retrofitted, retrofit types and average costs, participant demographics, and estimated avoided disaster impacts and federal costs.

Who Benefits and How

Homeowners with financial need benefit from grants for resilience retrofits that can reduce disaster damage. State hazard-mitigation agencies and local governments benefit because they can channel FEMA assistance to residential retrofit projects. FEMA mitigation program staff benefit from clearer code-edition rules and a defined pilot structure. Retrofit contractors, roofers, safe-room builders, floodproofing firms, seismic retrofit specialists, and wildfire mitigation contractors benefit from potential project demand. Communities in flood, wind, wildfire, earthquake, and tornado risk areas benefit if homes are hardened before disasters.

Who Bears the Burden and How

FEMA mitigation staff must design the pilot, allocate up to 10 percent of eligible assistance, define project criteria, review grants, and prepare the four-year report. State and local grant administrators must identify financially needy homeowners, manage awards, document retrofit costs, and report project outcomes. Homeowners receiving grants may face application, inspection, contractor, and matching-cost requirements. Building-code officials and mitigation reviewers must apply the two-most-recent-editions standard and any state, local, Tribal, or territorial amendments. Hazard mitigation revolving-loan administrators must update program references to the revised standards language.

Key Provisions

  • Defines latest published editions as the two most recently published editions of relevant consensus-based codes, specifications, and standards.
  • Amends hazard mitigation revolving-loan language to account for state, local, Tribal, and territorial amendments to those standards.
  • Establishes a FEMA residential resilience pilot program under Stafford Act section 203.
  • Authorizes up to 10 percent of annual section 203 assistance for grants to financially needy individuals through states and local governments.
  • Provides eligible retrofit examples including elevations, floodproofing, tornado safe rooms, seismic retrofits, wildfire mitigation, wind retrofits, roof replacements, hurricane straps, and tie-downs.
  • Requires FEMA to report on awards, homes retrofitted, costs, demographics, and avoided disaster impacts.

Evidence Chain:

This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

Updates Stafford Act hazard-mitigation standards to use the two most recently published consensus-based building-code editions and creates a FEMA residential resilience pilot that uses predisaster mitigation assistance for grants to financially needy homeowners for flood, wind, wildfire, seismic, tornado, and utility-elevation retrofits through September 30, 2028.

Key Policy Areas

Disaster Mitigation, Housing, FEMA, Building Codes, Resilience

Primary Purpose

Updates Stafford Act hazard-mitigation standards to use the two most recently published consensus-based building-code editions and creates a FEMA residential resilience pilot that uses predisaster mitigation assistance for grants to financially needy homeowners for flood, wind, wildfire, seismic, tornado, and utility-elevation retrofits through September 30, 2028.

Policy Domains

Disaster Mitigation Housing FEMA Building Codes Resilience

House resolution provisions

Identified Gains
  • Homeowners with financial need
  • State hazard-mitigation agencies
  • Local governments administering retrofit grants
  • FEMA mitigation program staff
  • Residential retrofit contractors
  • Roofing contractors
  • Safe-room builders
  • Floodproofing firms
  • Seismic retrofit specialists
  • Wildfire mitigation contractors
  • Disaster-prone communities
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: rh
Safe-room builders: , , , , , ,
Floodproofing firms: , , , , , ,
Roofing contractors: , , , , , ,
Disaster-prone communities: , , , , , ,
Seismic retrofit specialists: , , , , , ,
FEMA mitigation program staff: , , , , , ,
Homeowners with financial need: , , , , , ,
Wildfire mitigation contractors: , , , , , ,
Residential retrofit contractors: , , , , , ,
State hazard-mitigation agencies: , , , , , ,
Local governments administering retrofit grants: , , , , , ,
Identified Costs
  • FEMA mitigation staff
  • State grant administrators
  • Local grant administrators
  • Homeowners applying for retrofit grants
  • Building-code officials
  • Mitigation reviewers
  • Hazard mitigation revolving-loan administrators
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: rh
Mitigation reviewers: , , , , , ,
FEMA mitigation staff: , , , , , ,
Building-code officials: , , , , , ,
Local grant administrators: , , , , , ,
State grant administrators: , , , , , ,
Homeowners applying for retrofit grants: , , , , , ,
Hazard mitigation revolving-loan administrators: , , , , , ,

Legislative Progress

Reported
Introduced Committee Passed
Oct 3, 2025

Additional sponsor: Mr. Fitzpatrick

Oct 3, 2025

Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the …

Oct 3, 2025

Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 273.

Oct 3, 2025

Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 273.

Feb 26, 2025

Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management Discharged

Feb 26, 2025

Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by Voice Vote.

Feb 26, 2025

Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held

Jan 17, 2025

Referred to the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and …

Jan 16, 2025

Introduced in House

Jan 16, 2025

Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.

Government
32 mentions across 10 clauses
+14 positive -18 negative

Building-code officials, FEMA mitigation program staff, FEMA mitigation staff

State hazard-mitigation agencies faces effects in multiple directions

Positive-direction: FEMA program administrators, Hazard mitigation revolving-loan administrators, Local governments administering retrofit grants, Other disaster assistance program staff, State hazard-mitigation applicants

Negative-direction: Building-code officials, FEMA mitigation program staff, FEMA mitigation staff, Local building-code officials, State grant administrators

Real Estate
6 mentions across 6 clauses
+6 positive

Disaster-prone communities, Homeowners with financial need

Construction
3 mentions across 3 clauses
+3 positive

Residential retrofit contractors

5/5
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Disaster Mitigation Housing FEMA Building Codes Resilience
Actor Mappings
"fema"
→ Federal Emergency Management Agency
"stafford"
→ Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology