Combating Illicit Xylazine Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Combating Illicit Xylazine Act treats xylazine as a controlled-substance problem without cutting off lawful veterinary uses. It defines xylazine, adds any material or mixture containing xylazine to schedule III unless excepted or listed elsewhere, rewrites the ultimate-user definition so animal owners, veterinarians, pharmacies, government animal-control programs, and wildlife programs can possess properly dispensed xylazine, delays labeling, packaging, logistics, practitioner-registration, inventory, and recordkeeping requirements, exempts existing manufacturers from new schedule III capital security expenditures, adds xylazine to ARCOS reporting, directs the Sentencing Commission to review penalties, and requires DEA/FDA coordination and congressional reporting.
Who Benefits and How
Veterinarians benefit because the bill preserves lawful dispensing and animal-use possession rather than treating ordinary veterinary xylazine as illicit possession. Animal owners, animal-control programs, and wildlife programs benefit from explicit ultimate-user language for animals under their care. DEA diversion investigators benefit from schedule III status and ARCOS tracking for xylazine movement. Communities affected by fentanyl-xylazine mixtures benefit if scheduling and sentencing updates reduce illicit trafficking. Existing xylazine manufacturers benefit from delayed compliance and an exemption from capital expenditures for schedule III manufacturing security standards.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Illicit xylazine traffickers face schedule III enforcement exposure and possible sentencing guideline changes. Veterinary pharmacies and practitioners must adapt to registration, inventory, recordkeeping, labeling, and distribution requirements as phase-in periods expire. DEA and FDA must expedite manufacturer submissions and coordinate implementation of xylazine scheduling. The Sentencing Commission must review and potentially amend guidelines for xylazine offenses. Congress and federal agencies must review reports on xylazine diversion, enforcement, and lawful animal-use access.
Key Provisions
- Adds xylazine and its salts and isomers to schedule III unless specifically excepted or listed elsewhere.
- Provides an animal-use ultimate-user rule for veterinarians, veterinary pharmacies, animal owners, government animal-control programs, and wildlife programs.
- Provides delayed phase-in periods for schedule III labeling, packaging, logistics, practitioner-registration, inventory, and recordkeeping requirements.
- Limits new capital security obligations by exempting existing xylazine manufacturers from schedule III manufacturing-security expenditures.
- Expands ARCOS tracking to xylazine and directs Sentencing Commission review and federal reporting.
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
Places illicit xylazine into schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act while preserving veterinary and animal-use access, phasing in compliance duties, adding ARCOS tracking, directing sentencing-guideline review, and requiring federal reports on xylazine.
Key Policy Areas
Controlled Substances, Animal Health, Law Enforcement
Primary Purpose
Places illicit xylazine into schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act while preserving veterinary and animal-use access, phasing in compliance duties, adding ARCOS tracking, directing sentencing-guideline review, and requiring federal reports on xylazine.
Policy Domains
Bill provisions
Identified Gains
- Veterinarians
- Animal owners
- Government animal-control programs
- Drug Enforcement Administration diversion investigators
- Existing xylazine manufacturers
- Wildlife program managers
Identified Costs
- Illicit xylazine traffickers
- Veterinary pharmacies
- Veterinary practitioners
- Drug Enforcement Administration
- Food and Drug Administration
- United States Sentencing Commission
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
ReportedCommittee on the Judiciary. Reported by Senator Grassley with an …
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. …
Reported by Mr. Grassley, with an amendment
Committee on the Judiciary. Ordered to be reported with an …
Ms. Cortez Masto (for herself, Mr. Grassley, Ms. Hassan, Mrs. …
Ms. Cortez Masto (for herself, Mr. Grassley, Ms. Hassan, Mrs. …
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Introduced in Senate
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Veterinarians, Veterinary practitioners
Positive-direction: Veterinarians
Negative-direction: Veterinary practitioners
DEA diversion investigators, Illicit xylazine traffickers
Positive-direction: DEA diversion investigators
Negative-direction: Illicit xylazine traffickers
Government animal-control programs
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "dea"
- → Drug Enforcement Administration
- "fda"
- → Food and Drug Administration
- "attorney_general"
- → Attorney General
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