The bipartisan bill, aimed at bolstering safety in coastal waters off Martin, St. Lucie and Indian River counties, advances unanimously toward a full House vote.
A bill targeting the safety of Florida's coastal and offshore waters cleared a significant congressional threshold after a House committee ordered it reported by unanimous consent, moving the legislation one step closer to a full House vote.
Rep. Daniel Webster sponsored the Florida Safe Seas Act of 2025 (HR 3831), which advanced out of committee without a single dissenting vote — a procedural signal that typically reflects broad bipartisan support and improves a bill's prospects on the House floor. The exact committee and hearing date were not immediately available in public records.
For Treasure Coast residents in Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties, the bill's name and Florida-specific framing suggest direct relevance to the region's heavily used Atlantic coastline, Indian River Lagoon system, and commercial and recreational fishing industries. The precise provisions of HR 3831 — including any funding allocations or regulatory mandates — were not detailed in available public records.
A unanimous committee vote is notable in the current polarized Congress. Bills ordered reported by unanimous consent face a smoother path to the House floor but still require scheduling by House leadership, a full chamber vote, Senate passage, and presidential signature before becoming law.
Webster, a Republican who represents central Florida, did not release public statements on the milestone that were immediately available. No opposition statements were on record as of publication.
The bill's next step is placement on the House calendar for a floor vote, a timeline that depends on House leadership scheduling priorities.
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