H.R. 6051 (119th)Bill Overview

To Inform Families First Act of 2025

Transportation and Public Works|Transportation and Public Works
Cosponsors
Support
Republican
Introduced
Nov 17, 2025
Discussions
Bill Text
Current stageCommittee

Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.

Introduced
Committee
Floor
President
Law
Congressional Activities
01 · The brief

The To Inform Families First Act of 2025 directs the Secretary of Transportation, through NHTSA, to create a grant and technical assistance program to help States develop systems that allow drivers and ID holders to voluntarily provide emergency contact information to be stored in state driver’s license and identification records.

States receiving assistance must ensure participation is voluntary, build robust data security protections, limit access to authorized emergency personnel for emergency use only, and not require display of the information on a physical card.

The Secretary must submit an annual report to Congress on implementation and technical assistance not later than one year after enactment.

Passage60/100

On content alone this is a low‑stakes, narrowly tailored bill with privacy safeguards that reduce ideological opposition and that could attract bipartisan support; absent explicit appropriation language it could be enacted either as a simple authorization adopted by voice or included in a larger package. However, many introduced bills never reach final passage, and practical barriers (funding, floor time, or requests for additional detail) create meaningful uncertainty.

CredibilityPartially aligned

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill clearly defines a limited administrative program administered by NHTSA to assist States in collecting voluntary emergency contact information and includes basic recipient conditions and reporting requirements. It provides a usable high-level framework but omits several operational and fiscal details normally expected for implementing a federal assistance program.

Contention46/100

Privacy and data‑security concerns: liberals want strong federal safeguards and anti‑misuse rules; conservatives fear any expansion of government-held personal data.

02 · What it does

Who stands to gain, and who may push back.

Who this appears to help vs burden50% / 50%
Federal agencies · StatesFederal agencies
Likely helped
  • Targeted stakeholdersCould speed notification of next-of-kin and provide emergency responders with readily available contact information, po…
  • Federal agenciesProvides federal grant and technical assistance that may reduce upfront costs and technical barriers for States to impl…
  • StatesEncourages standardized practices across participating States (security, access controls, voluntary participation), whi…
Likely burdened
  • Targeted stakeholdersCollecting and storing sensitive contact data increases the risk of data breaches or unauthorized access despite requir…
  • Federal agenciesStates may face additional administrative and ongoing costs (systems, personnel, compliance audits) beyond federal assi…
  • Targeted stakeholdersAmbiguities about who qualifies as 'authorized emergency personnel' and how access is audited could lead to mission cre…
03 · Why people split

Why the argument around this bill splits.

Privacy and data‑security concerns: liberals want strong federal safeguards and anti‑misuse rules; conservatives fear any expansion of government-held personal data.
Progressive80%

A mainstream progressive would likely view the bill as a beneficial, low-cost public-safety measure that can reduce trauma for families and improve emergency response, provided civil‑liberties safeguards are enforced.

They would welcome the voluntary nature, data-security requirement, and restriction of access to emergency personnel, but would be watchful for gaps that could enable surveillance or discriminatory uses.

They would likely press for strong privacy rules, anti-discrimination protections, outreach to marginalized communities, and funding for implementation and public education.

Leans supportive
Centrist75%

A pragmatic moderate would generally view the bill favorably as a modest, common-sense public-safety initiative that respects voluntariness and provides federal support rather than mandates.

They would appreciate built-in data-security and limited-access conditions but would seek clarity on costs, technical feasibility, and administrative burden for state DMVs.

They would look for measurable outcomes, clear grant criteria, and oversight to ensure funds are used efficiently.

Leans supportive
Conservative45%

A mainstream conservative would be cautiously skeptical: the voluntary nature and grant structure reduce concerns about a federal mandate, but any federal role in expanding personally identifiable databases raises privacy and federal-overreach alarms.

They would worry about mission creep, data security liabilities, and potential misuse by federal or state actors for law enforcement or immigration purposes.

Support would be low-to-moderate unless strict limits on federal authority, sharing, and ongoing costs are added.

Split reaction
04 · Can it pass?

The path through Congress.

Introduced

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Committee

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Floor

Still ahead

President

Still ahead

Law

Still ahead

Passage likelihood60/100

On content alone this is a low‑stakes, narrowly tailored bill with privacy safeguards that reduce ideological opposition and that could attract bipartisan support; absent explicit appropriation language it could be enacted either as a simple authorization adopted by voice or included in a larger package. However, many introduced bills never reach final passage, and practical barriers (funding, floor time, or requests for additional detail) create meaningful uncertainty.

Scope and complexity
24%
Scopenarrow
24%
Complexitylow
Why this could stall
  • The bill authorizes grants but does not specify funding levels or an explicit appropriation mechanism; whether appropriations will be provided is uncertain and affects implementation.
  • Operational details are limited (e.g., definitions and verification of “authorized emergency personnel,” standards for "robust data security protections," and interoperability expectations), which could prompt follow-up legislation, administrative rulemaking, or resistance from privacy advocates or State DMVs.
05 · Recent votes

Recent votes on the bill.

No vote history yet

The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.

06 · Go deeper

Go deeper than the headline read.

Included on this page

Privacy and data‑security concerns: liberals want strong federal safeguards and anti‑misuse rules; conservatives fear any expansion of gove…

On content alone this is a low‑stakes, narrowly tailored bill with privacy safeguards that reduce ideological opposition and that could att…

Unlocked analysis

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill clearly defines a limited administrative program administered by NHTSA to assist States in collecting voluntary emergency contact information and includes basic recip…

Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.

Perspective breakdownsPassage barriersLegislative design reviewStakeholder impact map
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