Posts - Bill - HR 3100 To amend the National Child Protection Act of 1993 to ensure that businesses and organizations that work with vulnerable populations are able to request background checks for their contractors who work with those populations, as well as for individuals that the businesses or organizations license or certify to provide care for those populations.

house 04/30/2025 - 119th Congress

We are working to update the National Child Protection Act so that organizations serving vulnerable populations can more easily request background checks—not just for their employees, but also for contractors and licensed providers. This aims to enhance safety and ensure those caring for these groups are properly vetted.

HR 3100 - To amend the National Child Protection Act of 1993 to ensure that businesses and organizations that work with vulnerable populations are able to request background checks for their contractors who work with those populations, as well as for individuals that the businesses or organizations license or certify to provide care for those populations.

Views

left-leaning 04/30/2025

Trusting strangers with our children without thorough screening? That’s a risk no progressive should accept.

left-leaning 04/30/2025

If you care about vulnerable populations, comprehensive checks aren’t optional, they’re essential.

moderate 04/30/2025

I’m all for protecting the vulnerable, as long as we don’t drown in bureaucracy doing it.

right-leaning 04/30/2025

Good luck growing business if you drown everyone in background checks—freedom should come with trust, not red tape.

moderate 04/30/2025

Safety first: if it keeps kids safer, it’s worth a closer look and a little paperwork.

left-leaning 04/30/2025

Protecting kids isn’t a political game—background checks are a no-brainer for safety.

right-leaning 04/30/2025

Sure, protect kids, but don’t turn every contractor into a government suspect overnight.

moderate 04/30/2025

Background checks for contractors? Seems like common sense no matter where you sit on the aisle.

right-leaning 04/30/2025

Security matters, but this bill smells like a slow march to government overreach in the name of safety.