Locally Led Development and Humanitarian Response Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
This bill pushes U.S. foreign assistance agencies toward locally led development and humanitarian response. It states that local leadership is linked to more efficient and sustainable outcomes and that agencies should increase direct funding to local entities. Agencies should support effective local projects, simplify access to U.S. resources, set realistic exit plans, use matching grants or in-kind contributions, explore government-to-government partnerships with guardrails, diversify award types, and address OMB threshold constraints that make local awards harder.
Within 180 days, the head of the relevant foreign assistance agency must initiate policy actions, including rulemaking if necessary, to institutionalize those practices in internal rules, the Foreign Affairs Manual, the Foreign Affairs Handbook, the State Department Acquisition Regulation, and other strategies or policies. Agencies may accept applications, proposals, and contracting agreements in local languages when doing so eases burdens and the agency can evaluate them. They may increase de minimis indirect cost rates by 5 percentage points, create a matching acquisition rate for local partners, delay unique entity identifier and SAM registration for up to 180 days, and limit competition to local entities for awards up to $25 million and no more than 10 percent of annual appropriations. The bill also requires annual progress reports, a review of public international organizations, a contracting-officer report, and definitions for local partner.
Who Benefits and How
Local nonprofit organizations benefit from direct and indirect funding opportunities and simplified access to U.S. assistance. Local governments benefit from potential government-to-government partnerships with guardrails and oversight. Local private sector entities benefit from local-competition authorities and local-language support. Community members affected by aid programs benefit because agencies must assess local leadership in project priorities, design, implementation, and evaluation. Local partners with high indirect costs benefit from higher de minimis rates and delayed SAM registration. Congressional foreign affairs committees benefit from annual reporting on funding, authorities, staffing, and public international organizations.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Foreign assistance agency administrators must update policies, internal rules, award systems, local-language support, indirect-cost practices, SAM-registration exceptions, and reporting. Contracting officers and grant officers must manage local-language materials, local competition, higher indirect-cost thresholds, and limited-competition awards. International implementing partners may lose some opportunities when agencies increase direct awards to local partners. OMB staff may need to address threshold constraints and future indirect-cost recommendations. Public international organizations face review of whether their financing structures support locally led development. Agency reporting staff must publish annual progress reports and contracting-officer recruitment reports.
Key Provisions
- States congressional support for locally led development and humanitarian response.
- Directs agencies to institutionalize local-partner practices within 180 days.
- Authorizes local-language applications, proposals, contracts, and support assessments.
- Allows higher de minimis indirect-cost rates and delayed SAM registration for local partners.
- Authorizes limited competition to local entities for qualifying awards up to $25 million and 10 percent of annual appropriations.
- Requires annual public reports on local funding, leadership, authorities, and provisional NICRAs.
- Requires review of public international organizations and a report on contracting-officer recruitment and retention.
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
Directs foreign-assistance agencies to institutionalize locally led development, expand direct funding and local-language support for local partners, use higher indirect-cost and limited-local-competition authorities, review public international organizations, and report annually on local funding, leadership, authorities, staffing, and contracting-officer capacity.
Key Policy Areas
Foreign Assistance, Humanitarian Aid, International Development
Primary Purpose
Directs foreign-assistance agencies to institutionalize locally led development, expand direct funding and local-language support for local partners, use higher indirect-cost and limited-local-competition authorities, review public international organizations, and report annually on local funding, leadership, authorities, staffing, and contracting-officer capacity.
Policy Domains
House resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- Local nonprofit organizations
- Local governments
- Local private sector entities
- Community members affected by aid programs
- Local partners with high indirect costs
- Congressional foreign affairs committees
Identified Costs
- Foreign assistance agency administrators
- Contracting officers
- Grant officers
- International implementing partners
- OMB staff
- Public international organizations
- Agency reporting staff
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
ReportedOrdered to be Reported by the Yeas and Nays: 36 …
Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held
Ms. Jacobs (for herself and Mrs. Kim) introduced the following …
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Relevant foreign assistance agency administrators
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "omb"
- → Office of Management and Budget
- "state"
- → Department of State
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