Ensuring Accountability and Dignity in Government Contracting Act of 2025
Ensuring Accountability and Dignity in Government Contracting Act of 2025
Plain Language Summary
# Summary: Ensuring Accountability and Dignity in Government Contracting Act of 2025 **What the bill would do:** This bill strengthens existing anti-human trafficking requirements for companies and organizations that receive federal government contracts, grants, or cooperative agreements (worth over $500,000 for work done outside the U.S.). Currently, recipients must certify they have a plan to prevent human trafficking, but the bill would require them to actually submit a copy of that plan to the government office overseeing the contract or grant. It would also require recipients to report any trafficking activities by themselves, their subcontractors, or agents to the government. **Who it affects:** Companies, nonprofits, and other organizations that receive federal contracts or grants valued over $500,000 for work performed outside the United States would be most directly affected.
The bill ultimately aims to protect vulnerable workers and trafficking victims by increasing oversight of these federal partners. **Current status:** The bill is currently in committee and has not yet been voted on by the full House of Representatives. It was introduced by Rep. David Valadao (R-CA) in the 119th Congress.
CRS Official Summary
Ensuring Accountability and Dignity in Government Contracting Act of 2025This bill expands executive agency requirements to counter human trafficking connected to recipients of federal contracts, grants, or cooperative agreements.Federal law currently prohibits an executive agency from entering into a grant, contract, or cooperative agreement if the estimated value of the services to be performed outside the United States exceeds $500,000 unless a designated representative of the recipient certifies that the recipient has taken certain actions, including implementing a plan to prevent human trafficking.This bill requires that the recipient provide a copy of such plan to the contracting or grant office at the time of certification.The designated representative of the recipient must report to the contracting or grant office if the recipient or the recipient's subcontractor, subgrantee, or agent engages in trafficking activities. The report must include the circumstances surrounding such activities and any remedial actions taken. The agency's office of the inspector general must conduct an investigation of the reported activities and remedial actions and must also notify the agency head office and the agency suspension and debarment office if an investigation was not completed because the recipient acknowledged the activity and took appropriate remedial action.Additionally, the bill specifies that (1) the recipient's failure to take appropriate remedial action constitutes grounds for imposing certain penalties, and (2) the agency must suspend grant, contract, or cooperative agreement payments to the recipient until the recipient takes appropriate remedial action (under current law, suspending payments is optional).
Latest Action
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.