Empowering the U.S. Fire Administration Act This bill authorizes the U.S. Fire Administration (USFA) to conduct on-site investigations of major fires and other fires under other specified circumstances. In the case of a major fire, the USFA may send incident investigators (e.g., safety specialists, fire protection engineers, codes and standards experts, researchers, and fire training specialists) to the site. Any such investigation shall (1) be conducted in coordination with appropriate federal,…
VOTE BREAKDOWN
Final passage · 292 politicians tracked
257
YEA
27
NAY
0
PRESENT
8
NOT VOTING
BY PARTY
MONEY ON THIS BILL
Top donor industries among YEA voters vs NAY voters · lobbying activity in affected industries
⬆ YEA voters — top donor industries
⬇ NAY voters — top donor industries
◎ Lobbying activity by issue area
No bill-issue lobbying matches.
“Pts” = sum of per-member industry donation scores (% of total donations from that industry, summed across the group). Higher means that industry funds a larger share of contributions for that voting bloc.
INDIVIDUAL VOTES
Recorded positions for tracked politicians

































































































































































































































































SPONSORS

Ritchie Torres
D-NY · Primary
21 COSPONSORS
BIPARTISAN





+15 more (see dot grid above)
SPONSOR FUNDING
Top industries funding Torres
TRAIL AI
HR 7077, the Empowering the U.S. Fire Administration Act, addresses the authorities and capabilities of the U.S. Fire Administration within the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The bill passed the House with 257 votes in favor and 27 opposed, with all 141 voting Democrats supporting it while Republicans split 116 to 27 in favor. The legislation was signed into law during the 117th Congress.
Based on public voting records. Does not imply causation.
TIMELINE
DATA SOURCES
Bill data: Congress.gov · 117th–119th Congress (2021–present)
Vote records: House Clerk / Senate · 2021–present
Reflects public records. Does not imply causation.