home / openregs / legislation

legislation: 114-hr-5115

Congressional bills and resolutions from Congress.gov, filtered to policy areas relevant to environmental, health, agriculture, and wildlife regulation.

Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API

This data as json

bill_id congress bill_type bill_number title policy_area introduced_date latest_action_date latest_action_text origin_chamber sponsor_name sponsor_state sponsor_party sponsor_bioguide_id cosponsor_count summary_text update_date url
114-hr-5115 114 hr 5115 SURE Act Commerce 2016-04-28 2016-04-29 Referred to the Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade. House Rep. Mullin, Markwayne [R-OK-2] OK R M001190 3 Statement on Unfairness Reinforcement and Emphasis Act or the SURE Act This bill amends the Federal Trade Commission Act to provide additional factors for the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to consider before it may declare acts or practices to be unlawful on the ground that they are unfair and likely to cause substantial injury to consumers. Trivial or merely speculative injury or harm must be considered unlikely to cause substantial injury. But the FTC may consider substantial: (1) an injury that does small harm to a large number of people, or (2) a significant risk of concrete harm. In determining the likelihood of substantial injury to consumers, the FTC must consider whether the act or practice results in: (1) monetary harm, (2) unwarranted health or safety risks, or (3) only emotional or other more subjective harm. The FTC must also find an act or practice to be injurious in its net effects before it may be considered unfair. In determining the net effects, the FTC must consider: (1) remedy costs; and (2) burdens on society in general, such as increased paperwork or regulatory burdens or reduced incentives for innovation and capital formation. The FTC may not second-guess consumer decisions, but may consider whether an act or practice unreasonably creates or takes advantage of an obstacle to the free exercise of consumer decisionmaking. 2023-01-11T13:31:32Z  

Links from other tables

  • 4 rows from bill_id in legislation_actions
  • 6 rows from bill_id in legislation_subjects
  • 3 rows from bill_id in legislation_cosponsors
  • 0 rows from bill_id in cbo_cost_estimates
Powered by Datasette · Queries took 2.478ms · Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API