HR5442-119

Introduced

To build on America’s spirit of service to nurture, promote, and expand a culture of service to secure the Nation’s future, address critical needs of the Nation, and strengthen the civic fabric of American society.

119th Congress Introduced Sep 17, 2025

Analysis under review: This bill has generated analysis that may be too generic or incomplete. Clause-level evidence remains available below.

Summary

What This Bill Does

This bill establishes a comprehensive national framework to promote and expand opportunities for military, national, and public service across America. It aims to cultivate a "culture of service" by investing in civic education for K-12 students, creating a White House coordinating council for service policy, streamlining federal hiring pathways for service participants, and modernizing the Selective Service System.

Who Benefits and How

Students and young people benefit from expanded civic education programs and service-learning opportunities in K-12 schools, funded by at least $450 million annually in new grants. National service program participants (including AmeriCorps, Peace Corps, and VISTA volunteers) gain enhanced pathways to federal employment through new hiring preferences and streamlined processes. Veterans and military members receive strengthened hiring preferences and pension credits for their service. Federal agencies benefit from improved access to qualified workers through new scholarship, internship, and fellowship programs targeting critical skill areas like cybersecurity. Educational institutions can apply for grants to establish "public service academies" and civic education programs.

Who Bears the Burden and How

Federal agencies must implement new hiring systems, reporting requirements, and coordination mechanisms across multiple departments. The Office of Personnel Management takes on significant new responsibilities for establishing scholarship programs, fellowship frameworks, and hiring pathways. The Selective Service System is required to modernize its operations, register women (in addition to men), and conduct mobilization exercises to test readiness. Taxpayers fund substantial new appropriations, including at least $450 million annually for education programs alone, plus additional costs for federal hiring programs and Selective Service modernization.

Key Provisions

  • Civic Education Grants: Authorizes $400 million annually for K-12 civic education grants and $50 million for service-learning teacher training
  • White House Council on Service: Creates a new presidential council to coordinate policy across military, national, and public service programs
  • Federal Hiring Pathways: Establishes new scholarship-for-service programs, paid internships, and fellowships with direct conversion to federal employment
  • National Service Enhancements: Expands AmeriCorps and creates new "Cyber Service" programs for cybersecurity training
  • Selective Service Modernization: Requires registration of all Americans (not just men), updates mobilization procedures, and mandates regular readiness exercises

Evidence Chain:

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

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

Expands and strengthens military, national, and public service opportunities for all Americans by creating new fellowship programs, reforming federal hiring, modernizing the Selective Service System, and establishing coordinating bodies to promote a culture of service.

Who Benefits

  • Young Americans (ages 18-25) seeking national service opportunities
  • Students in K-12 receiving civic education and service-learning
  • Nonprofit organizations serving as service sponsor organizations

Who Bears Costs

  • Federal taxpayers (significant new appropriations for service programs)
  • Selective Service System (modernization and exercise requirements)
  • Office of Personnel Management (new demonstration projects and hiring reforms)

Key Policy Areas

National Service, Civic Education, Federal Workforce, Military Mobilization, Higher Education, Public Administration

Primary Purpose

Expands and strengthens military, national, and public service opportunities for all Americans by creating new fellowship programs, reforming federal hiring, modernizing the Selective Service System, and establishing coordinating bodies to promote a culture of service.

Policy Domains

National Service Civic Education Federal Workforce Military Mobilization Higher Education Public Administration

Legislative Strategy

"Create a comprehensive framework for expanding all forms of service (military, national, and public) through new programs, financial incentives, hiring reforms, and coordinating bodies to promote a culture of service among Americans."

Identified Gains

  • Young Americans (ages 18-25) seeking national service opportunities
  • Students in K-12 receiving civic education and service-learning
  • Nonprofit organizations serving as service sponsor organizations
  • Federal agencies seeking hiring flexibility and talent acquisition tools
  • Federal employees receiving modernized benefits packages
  • Student loan borrowers in public service (enhanced PSLF programs)
  • AmeriCorps and Peace Corps participants (increased awards and positions)
  • Teachers receiving civic education training and resources
  • Veterans Health Administration employees (simplified personnel system)
  • Schools in low-income communities (50% funding reservation)

Identified Costs

  • Federal taxpayers (significant new appropriations for service programs)
  • Selective Service System (modernization and exercise requirements)
  • Office of Personnel Management (new demonstration projects and hiring reforms)
  • Federal agencies (new reporting requirements on blended workforce)
  • State Commissions (registration and oversight of service sponsor organizations)

Legislative Progress

Introduced
Introduced Committee Passed
Sep 17, 2025

Mr. Panetta (for himself and Mr. Bacon) introduced the following …

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

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

Government
61 mentions across 49 clauses
+25 positive -27 negative ?9 uncertain

Coast Guard, Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security

Department of Defense, Executive agencies, Office of Personnel Management face effects in multiple directions

Positive-direction: Coast Guard, Executive agencies and military departments, Executive agencies seeking cyber talent, Executive agencies with critical skills gaps, Executive agency heads, Federal agencies, Federal agencies facing hiring challenges, Federal agencies seeking entry-level talent, Federal agencies seeking experienced staff, Federal agencies seeking to hire, Federal agencies seeking trained employees, Federal employees in executive agencies, Federal employees seeking career changes, Federal health care institutions, Former national service participants who become federal employees, High-performing former federal employees, NASA, DOE, NSF, Commerce, Interior, EPA employees, New federal employees with less than 5 years service, Veterans Health Administration employees, Youth Conservation Corps

Negative-direction: Federal HR specialists, Federal government tax revenue, Federal retirement system, Government Accountability Office, Legislative branch offices, Military departments, Military service academies, National Guard, National Security Council, Office of Management and Budget, Selective Service System, Senate offices

General Public
35 mentions across 30 clauses
+33 positive -1 negative ?1 uncertain

Americans seeking service opportunities, At-risk youth, Disadvantaged youth in national service

Positive-direction: Americans seeking service opportunities, At-risk youth, Disadvantaged youth in national service, Ex-offenders seeking reintegration support, Family members of national service participants, Federal interns receiving academic credit, Federal scholarship and fellowship recipients, Fellowship applicants in areas of national need, Former national service participants, Interns in congressional offices, Job applicants for federal positions, Job seekers for critical federal positions, Job seekers for temporary federal positions, Legislative branch interns, Military applicants who are ineligible, National service participants, National service participants completing terms, National service participants in rural areas, National service participants receiving educational awards, National service participants with dependents, Non-veteran national service participants, Preference eligible applicants, Recent college graduates, Recently separated veterans and disabled veterans, Students and recent graduates with critical skills, Students committing to federal service, Students interested in military careers, Students interested in public service careers, Students pursuing technical degrees with military commitment, Students seeking civilian public service careers, Students seeking federal employment, Students seeking federal fellowships and scholarships, Veterans and service participants seeking federal jobs

Negative-direction: Veterans separated more than 10 years

Education
14 mentions across 12 clauses
+12 positive -1 negative ?1 uncertain

Community colleges and vocational schools, High schools hosting JROTC programs, Institutions hosting cyber institutes

Positive-direction: Community colleges and vocational schools, High schools hosting JROTC programs, Institutions hosting cyber institutes, Institutions of higher education, Institutions of higher education offering civic programs, Local and state educational agencies, Public institutions of higher education, Schools excelling in civic education, State educational agencies and local school districts, Teachers providing civic education, Universities with federal partnerships

Negative-direction: Public elementary and secondary schools

Advocacy Groups
11 mentions across 9 clauses
+9 positive -1 negative ?1 uncertain

Community-based organizations in target areas, Full-time national service participants, Incumbent Senior Corps grantees

Positive-direction: Community-based organizations in target areas, Full-time national service participants, National service participants, National service programs, New Senior Corps grant applicants, Nonprofit organizations in underserved areas, Nonprofit organizations providing civic education, Part-time national service participants, Third-party fellowship programs

Negative-direction: Incumbent Senior Corps grantees

Military
4 mentions across 4 clauses
+2 positive -1 negative ?1 uncertain

Armed Forces members seeking credentials, Reserve component members with critical skills, Retired military officers at major rank or above

Positive-direction: Armed Forces members seeking credentials, Transitioning military service members

Negative-direction: Retired military officers at major rank or above

Advertising Agencies
4 mentions across 4 clauses
+4 positive

Advertising agencies serving military departments, Advertising and marketing agencies, Advertising and media agencies

Technology
3 mentions across 3 clauses
+3 positive

Cybersecurity professionals, Former federal employees with cybersecurity expertise, STEM and cybersecurity professionals

Educational Support Services
3 mentions across 3 clauses
+3 positive

Cybersecurity training providers, Educational testing companies, HR training and certification providers

77/86
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Education Civic Education Service-Learning
Actor Mappings
"the_director"
→ Director of Institute of Museum and Library Services
"the_librarian"
→ Librarian of Congress
"the_secretary"
→ Secretary of Education
Domains
National Service AmeriCorps Peace Corps Volunteer Programs
Actor Mappings
"the_director"
→ Director of the Council on Military, National, and Public Service (Assistant to the President)
"the_corporation"
→ Corporation for National and Community Service (AmeriCorps)
"chief_executive_officer"
→ Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation
Domains
Federal Workforce Personnel Management Student Loans Hiring Reform
Actor Mappings
"the_director"
→ Director of the Office of Personnel Management
"the_secretary"
→ Varies by section (Education, Defense, VA, etc.)
Domains
Military Service Selective Service National Mobilization Defense
Actor Mappings
"the_director"
→ Director of the Selective Service System
"the_president"
→ President of the United States
"the_secretary"
→ Secretary of Defense

Note: 'The Secretary' refers to Secretary of Education in Title I but varies in Title III (Education, Defense, VA depending on section).

Key Definitions

Terms defined in this bill

9 terms
"civic education" §101

An educational program that provides participants with knowledge of law, government, and the rights and responsibilities of citizens and skills that enable participants to participate responsibly in democracy.

"fellow" §198B_fellow

An eligible fellowship applicant who is awarded a national service fellowship and is designated a fellow.

"applied civics" §101_applied_civics

An educational program applying service-learning methods to provide students with practical and experiential opportunities to apply their civic knowledge and skills.

"public service" §201_public_service

Civilian employment in the Federal Government or a State, Tribal, or local government.

"military service" §201_military_service

Active service or active status in one of the uniformed services as defined in title 10, United States Code.

"national service" §201_national_service

Participation, other than military service or public service, in a program designed to enhance the common good and meet the needs of communities, the States, or the United States, funded by nonprofits, higher education, or government.

"term appointment" §345_term_appointment

An appointment in the competitive service for a period of more than 1 year and not more than 5 years.

"disadvantaged youth" §198B_disadvantaged_youth

As defined in section 101(13) of the National and Community Service Act of 1990.

"temporary appointment" §345_temporary_appointment

An appointment in the competitive service for a period of not more than 1 year.

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