Foundation of the Federal Bar Association Charter Amendments Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
This bill modernizes the federal charter of the Foundation of the Federal Bar Association (FBA), a congressionally chartered nonprofit corporation, by amending its governance, membership, restrictions, and operational provisions in Title 36 of the U.S. Code. The changes transfer detailed organizational requirements from statute to the FBA's own bylaws and board of directors, giving the organization greater self-governance flexibility.
Who Benefits and How
The Federal Bar Association benefits from substantially greater organizational flexibility: it can now set membership eligibility through bylaws rather than statute (Sec. 3), give its board full governing authority as specified in bylaws (Sec. 4), relocate its principal office to any U.S. location chosen by the board (Sec. 6), and determine asset distribution on dissolution through board decisions subject to charter and bylaws (Sec. 8). FBA officers and employees benefit from explicit authorization for reasonable compensation. FBA members benefit from modernized governance that can adapt without requiring congressional action.
Who Bears the Burden and How
No significant new burdens are imposed. The FBA must continue to comply with existing restrictions on political activity, dividend issuance, stock issuance, and insider loans (Sec. 5). It must comply with service-of-process laws in its state of incorporation (Sec. 7). The budgetary effects determination requirement under the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act applies (Sec. 9).
Key Provisions
- Removes the statutory requirement for incorporating under the laws of the District of Columbia (Sec. 2)
- Delegates membership eligibility rules entirely to the FBA's bylaws (Sec. 3)
- Establishes the board of directors as the full governing body with authority specified in bylaws (Sec. 4)
- Maintains prohibitions on political activity, stock issuance, dividends, and insider loans while adding explicit employee compensation authorization (Sec. 5)
- Allows the FBA to move its principal office to any U.S. location (Sec. 6)
- Simplifies service-of-process to compliance with state/district incorporation laws (Sec. 7)
- Allows board-directed asset distribution on dissolution, subject to charter and bylaws (Sec. 8)
- Modernizes the Foundation's membership, governance, office-location, and dissolution provisions.
- Restricts stock issuance, dividends, political activity, and use of foundation funds.
- Updates service-of-process and budgetary-effect provisions for the chartered nonprofit.
- Authorizes the Foundation board to govern membership, office location, and dissolution through bylaws.
- Prohibits stock issuance, dividend payments, political activity, and legislative-influence spending.
- Requires compliance with state or District service-of-process law.
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
Modernizes the federal charter of the Foundation of the Federal Bar Association by transferring detailed governance, membership, and operational requirements from statute to the corporation's bylaws and board of directors, granting the organization greater self-governance flexibility.
Key Policy Areas
Nonprofit Governance, Legal Profession
Primary Purpose
Modernizes the federal charter of the Foundation of the Federal Bar Association by transferring detailed governance, membership, and operational requirements from statute to the corporation's bylaws and board of directors, granting the organization greater self-governance flexibility.
Policy Domains
Federal Bar Association Charter Amendments
Identified Gains
- Foundation of the Federal Bar Association
- Foundation members
- Foundation directors
- Federal Bar Association members
- Professional association members
- Legal education program participants
- Foundation officers
Identified Costs
- Foundation officers
- Foundation board of directors
- Foundation service-of-process administrators
- Foundation political activity compliance staff
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
Signed into LawBecame Public Law No: 119-57.
Signed by President.
Presented to President.
Mr. McClintock moved to suspend the rules and pass the …
Passed/agreed to in House: On motion to suspend the rules …
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without …
DEBATE - The House proceeded with forty minutes of debate …
On motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill …
Considered under suspension of the rules. (consideration: CR H4928-4929)
Held at the desk.
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
FBA board of directors, FBA members (individual political rights), FBA members and directors
Foundation of the Federal Bar Association faces effects in multiple directions
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "the_corporation"
- → Foundation of the Federal Bar Association
- "board_of_directors"
- → Board of directors of the FBA
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