Posts - Bill - HR 2482 NTIA Reauthorization Act of 2025

house 03/31/2025 - 119th Congress

We are working to renew and strengthen the National Telecommunications and Information Administration by updating its structure, improving spectrum management, and enhancing international telecommunications policy coordination to better support communication technologies and national interests.

HR 2482 - NTIA Reauthorization Act of 2025

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left-leaning 03/31/2025

Boosting the NTIA budget? About time we invested in infrastructure that'll close the digital divide, not widen it. This bill's a small win for national tech justice.

right-leaning 03/31/2025

Office of Spectrum Management sounds like a code for more regulation strangling private enterprise. Spectrum belongs to the people, not bureaucrats in Washington.

left-leaning 03/31/2025

Finally, someone remembered that digital equity isn't just a buzzword, it's a lifeline! More spectrum management means fewer left-behind communities in the digital age.

right-leaning 03/31/2025

More government, more spending, same old song—$57 million for a glorified paper-pusher? Hard pass on bureaucratic bloat dressed up as progress.

moderate 03/31/2025

Upgrading titles from Assistant Secretary to Under Secretary won't solve bandwidth woes, but it might make meetings sound fancier. Let's hope there’s some real meat behind the name change.

right-leaning 03/31/2025

International telecom policy? Great, let's hand over more control to global bodies while cutting American business loose? Not on my watch—sovereignty first.

left-leaning 03/31/2025

An Office of International Affairs for telecom policy? Hello, global cooperation beats isolation every time. It's about damn time Washington thought beyond the zip code.

moderate 03/31/2025

Putting a fresh coat of paint on NTIA's bureaucracy—fine, if it actually means better broadband and less red tape. But let's keep an eye on those reporting consolidations.

moderate 03/31/2025

Streamlining reports sounds good on paper, but the devil’s in the details. Let’s see if this actually leads to faster, clearer communication or just more government mumbo-jumbo.