SPACE Act of 2025
Download PDFSponsored by
Rep. Onder, Robert F. [R-MO-3]
ID: O000177
Bill's Journey to Becoming a Law
Track this bill's progress through the legislative process
Latest Action
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.
September 9, 2025
Introduced
Committee Review
Floor Action
Passed House
Senate Review
📍 Current Status
Next: Both chambers must agree on the same version of the bill.
Passed Congress
Presidential Action
Became Law
📚 How does a bill become a law?
1. Introduction: A member of Congress introduces a bill in either the House or Senate.
2. Committee Review: The bill is sent to relevant committees for study, hearings, and revisions.
3. Floor Action: If approved by committee, the bill goes to the full chamber for debate and voting.
4. Other Chamber: If passed, the bill moves to the other chamber (House or Senate) for the same process.
5. Conference: If both chambers pass different versions, a conference committee reconciles the differences.
6. Presidential Action: The President can sign the bill into law, veto it, or take no action.
7. Became Law: If signed (or if Congress overrides a veto), the bill becomes law!
Bill Summary
Another thrilling episode of "Congressional Theater" brought to you by the esteemed members of the 119th Congress. Today's feature presentation is the SPACE Act of 2025, a bill that promises to revolutionize the way federal agencies share office space. Or, as I like to call it, "The Desperate Attempt to Make Bureaucratic Inefficiency Sound Exciting."
**Main Purpose & Objectives:** The primary objective of this bill is to require the General Services Administration (GSA) to collaborate with federal tenants on shared-space arrangements. Because, apparently, the GSA was just winging it until now, and we needed a law to tell them to talk to their tenants. The bill's sponsors claim that this will lead to more efficient use of space, cost savings, and improved collaboration among agencies. Yeah, right. I'm sure the real goal is to create more opportunities for bureaucrats to attend meetings about meetings.
**Key Provisions & Changes to Existing Law:** The bill mandates that the GSA Administrator:
1. Collaborate with federal tenants on shared-space arrangements (because they weren't doing this already). 2. Develop criteria for expanded use of space-sharing or collocating (read: create more paperwork and bureaucratic hurdles). 3. Identify ways to improve special-use spaces (a.k.a. find new excuses to waste taxpayer money on fancy conference rooms). 4. Establish measurable objectives to quantify the success of shared-space arrangements (a.k.a. create more metrics for bureaucrats to manipulate).
**Affected Parties & Stakeholders:** The usual suspects are involved:
* Federal agencies, who will now have to pretend to care about sharing office space. * The GSA, which will get to add another layer of bureaucracy to its already impressive collection. * Taxpayers, who will foot the bill for this exercise in futility.
**Potential Impact & Implications:** The SPACE Act of 2025 is a classic case of " legislative placebo effect." It promises to cure the symptoms of bureaucratic inefficiency but actually does nothing to address the underlying disease. The real impact will be:
* More meetings, more paperwork, and more opportunities for bureaucrats to justify their existence. * A slight increase in the number of federal employees who can claim they're working on "shared-space initiatives." * A negligible reduction in costs, which will be offset by the increased spending on bureaucratic overhead.
In conclusion, the SPACE Act of 2025 is a masterclass in legislative obfuscation. It's a bill that promises to solve a problem that doesn't exist, while creating new opportunities for waste and inefficiency. Bravo, Congress! You've managed to make even the most mundane topic sound exciting – if by "exciting" you mean "mind-numbingly dull."
Related Topics
💰 Campaign Finance Network
Rep. Onder, Robert F. [R-MO-3]
Congress 119 • 2024 Election Cycle
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Cosponsors & Their Campaign Finance
This bill has 2 cosponsors. Below are their top campaign contributors.
Rep. Pappas, Chris [D-NH-1]
ID: P000614
Top Contributors
10
Rep. Lawler, Michael [R-NY-17]
ID: L000599
Top Contributors
10
Donor Network - Rep. Onder, Robert F. [R-MO-3]
Hub layout: Politicians in center, donors arranged by type in rings around them.
Showing 28 nodes and 36 connections
Total contributions: $301,826
Top Donors - Rep. Onder, Robert F. [R-MO-3]
Showing top 20 donors by contribution amount