[Pages S2272-S2278]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




          STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS

      By Mr. DURBIN (for himself, Mr. King, Ms. Smith, and Ms. Sinema):
  S. 1036. A bill to expand the use of open textbooks in order to 
achieve savings for students and improve textbook price information; to 
the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the text of 
the bill be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the text of the bill was ordered to be 
printed in the Record, as follows:

                                S. 1036

       Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of 
     the United States of America in Congress assembled,

     SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

       This Act may be cited as the ``Affordable College Textbook 
     Act''.

     SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

       Congress finds the following:
       (1) The high cost of college textbooks continues to be a 
     barrier for many students in achieving higher education.
       (2) According to the College Board, during the 2017-2018 
     academic year, the average student budget for college books 
     and supplies at 4-year public institutions of higher 
     education was $1,240.
       (3) The Government Accountability Office found that new 
     textbook prices increased 82 percent between 2002 and 2012 
     and that although Federal efforts to increase price 
     transparency have provided students and families with more 
     and better information, more must be done to address rising 
     costs.
       (4) The growth of the internet has enabled the creation and 
     sharing of digital content, including open educational 
     resources that can be freely used by students, teachers, and 
     members of the public.
       (5) According to the Student PIRGs, expanded use of open 
     educational resources has the potential to save students more 
     than a billion dollars annually.
       (6) Federal investment in expanding the use of open 
     educational resources could significantly lower college 
     textbook costs and reduce financial barriers to higher 
     education, while making efficient use of taxpayer funds.
       (7) Educational materials, including open educational 
     resources, must be accessible to the widest possible range of 
     individuals, including those with disabilities.

     SEC. 3. OPEN TEXTBOOK GRANT PROGRAM.

       (a) Definitions.--In this section:
       (1) Institution of higher education.--The term 
     ``institution of higher education'' has the meaning given the 
     term in section 101 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 
     U.S.C. 1001).
       (2) Open educational resource.--The term ``open educational 
     resource'' has the meaning given the term in section 133 of 
     the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1015b).
       (3) Open textbook.--The term ``open textbook'' means an 
     open educational resource or set of open educational 
     resources that either is a textbook or can be used in place 
     of a textbook for a postsecondary course at an institution of 
     higher education.
       (4) Relevant faculty.--The term ``relevant faculty'' means 
     both tenure track and contingent faculty members who may be 
     involved in the creation or use of open textbooks created as 
     part of an application under subsection (d).
       (5) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary 
     of Education.
       (6) Supplemental material.--The term ``supplemental 
     material'' has the meaning given the term in section 133 of 
     the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1015b).
       (b) Grants Authorized.--From the amounts appropriated under 
     subsection (k), the Secretary shall make grants, on a 
     competitive basis, to eligible entities to support projects 
     that expand the use of open textbooks in order to achieve 
     savings for students while maintaining or improving 
     instruction and student learning outcomes.
       (c) Eligible Entity.--In this section, the term ``eligible 
     entity'' means an institution of higher education, a group of 
     institutions of higher education, or States on behalf of 
     institutions of higher education.
       (d) Applications.--
       (1) In general.--Each eligible entity desiring a grant 
     under this section, after consultation with relevant faculty, 
     shall submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in 
     such manner, and accompanied by such information as the 
     Secretary may reasonably require.
       (2) Contents.--Each application submitted under paragraph 
     (1) shall include a description of the project to be 
     completed with grant funds and--
       (A) a plan for promoting and tracking the use of open 
     textbooks in postsecondary

[[Page S2273]]

     courses offered by the eligible entity, including an estimate 
     of the projected savings that will be achieved for students;
       (B) a plan for evaluating, before creating new open 
     textbooks, whether existing open textbooks could be used or 
     adapted for the same purpose;
       (C) a plan for quality review and review of accuracy of any 
     open textbooks to be created or adapted through the grant;
       (D) a plan for assessing the impact of open textbooks on 
     instruction and student learning outcomes at the eligible 
     entity;
       (E) a plan for disseminating information about the results 
     of the project to institutions of higher education outside of 
     the eligible entity, including promoting the adoption of any 
     open textbooks created or adapted through the grant; and
       (F) a statement on consultation with relevant faculty, 
     including those engaged in the creation of open textbooks, in 
     the development of the application.
       (e) Special Consideration.--In awarding grants under this 
     section, the Secretary shall give special consideration to 
     applications that demonstrate the greatest potential to--
       (1) achieve the highest level of savings for students 
     through sustainable expanded use of open textbooks in 
     postsecondary courses offered by the eligible entity;
       (2) expand the use of open textbooks at institutions of 
     higher education outside of the eligible entity; and
       (3) produce--
       (A) the highest quality open textbooks;
       (B) open textbooks that can be most easily utilized and 
     adapted by faculty members at institutions of higher 
     education;
       (C) open textbooks that correspond to the highest 
     enrollment courses at institutions of higher education;
       (D) open textbooks created or adapted in partnership with 
     entities within institutions of higher education, including 
     campus bookstores, that will assist in marketing and 
     distribution of the open textbook; and
       (E) open textbooks that are accessible to students with 
     disabilities.
       (f) Use of Funds.--An eligible entity that receives a grant 
     under this section shall use the grant funds to carry out any 
     of the following activities to expand the use of open 
     textbooks:
       (1) Professional development for any faculty and staff 
     members at institutions of higher education, including the 
     search for and review of open textbooks.
       (2) Creation or adaptation of open textbooks.
       (3) Development or improvement of supplemental materials 
     and informational resources that are necessary to support the 
     use of open textbooks, including accessible instructional 
     materials for students with disabilities.
       (4) Research evaluating the efficacy of the use of open 
     textbooks for achieving savings for students and the impact 
     on instruction and student learning outcomes.
       (g) License.--For each open textbook, supplemental 
     material, or informational resource created or adapted wholly 
     or in part under this section that constitutes a new 
     copyrightable work, the eligible entity receiving the grant 
     shall release such textbook, material, or resource to the 
     public under a non-exclusive, royalty-free, perpetual, and 
     irrevocable license to exercise any of the rights under 
     copyright conditioned only on the requirement that 
     attribution be given as directed by the copyright owner.
       (h) Access and Distribution.--The full and complete digital 
     content of each open textbook, supplemental material, or 
     informational resource created or adapted wholly or in part 
     under this section shall be made available free of charge to 
     the public--
       (1) on an easily accessible and interoperable website, 
     which shall be identified to the Secretary by the eligible 
     entity;
       (2) in a machine readable, digital format that anyone can 
     directly download, edit with attribution, and redistribute; 
     and
       (3) in a format that conforms to accessibility standards 
     under section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 
     U.S.C. 794d), where feasible.
       (i) Report.--Upon an eligible entity's completion of a 
     project supported under this section, the eligible entity 
     shall prepare and submit a report to the Secretary 
     regarding--
       (1) the effectiveness of the project in expanding the use 
     of open textbooks and in achieving savings for students;
       (2) the impact of the project on expanding the use of open 
     textbooks at institutions of higher education outside of the 
     eligible entity;
       (3) open textbooks, supplemental materials, and 
     informational resources created or adapted wholly or in part 
     under the grant, including instructions on where the public 
     can access each educational resource under the terms of 
     subsection (h);
       (4) the impact of the project on instruction and student 
     learning outcomes; and
       (5) all project costs, including the value of any volunteer 
     labor and institutional capital used for the project.
       (j) Report to Congress.--Not later than 2 years after the 
     date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall prepare 
     and submit a report to the Committee on Health, Education, 
     Labor, and Pensions of the Senate and the Committee on 
     Education and Labor of the House of Representatives 
     detailing--
       (1) the open textbooks, supplemental materials, and 
     informational resources created or adapted wholly or in part 
     under this section;
       (2) the adoption of such open textbooks, including outside 
     of the eligible entity;
       (3) the savings generated for students, States, and the 
     Federal Government through projects supported under this 
     section; and
       (4) the impact of projects supported under this section on 
     instruction and student learning outcomes.
       (k) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized 
     to be appropriated to carry out this section such sums as are 
     necessary.

     SEC. 4. TEXTBOOK PRICE INFORMATION.

       Section 133 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 
     1015b) is amended--
       (1) in subsection (b)--
       (A) by striking paragraph (6) and inserting the following:
       ``(6) Open educational resource.--The term `open 
     educational resource' means a teaching, learning, or research 
     resource that is offered freely to users in at least one form 
     and that resides in the public domain or has been released 
     under an open copyright license that allows for its free use, 
     reuse, modification, and sharing with attribution.''; and
       (B) in paragraph (9), by striking ``textbook that'' and all 
     that follows through the period at the end and inserting 
     ``textbook that may include printed materials, computer 
     disks, website access, and electronically distributed 
     materials.'';
       (2) in subsection (c)(1)--
       (A) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by striking 
     ``or other person or adopting entity in charge of selecting 
     course materials'' and inserting ``or other person or entity 
     in charge of selecting or aiding in the discovery and 
     procurement of course materials''; and
       (B) by adding at the end the following:
       ``(E) Whether the college textbook or supplemental material 
     is an open educational resource.'';
       (3) in subsection (d)--
       (A) in the subsection heading, by striking ``ISBN''; and
       (B) in paragraph (1)--
       (i) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A)--

       (I) by striking ``disclose, on the institution's Internet 
     course schedule and in a manner of the institution's 
     choosing, the International Standard Book Number and retail 
     price information'' and inserting ``verify and disclose (on, 
     or through a link from, the institution's Internet course 
     schedule and in a manner of the institution's choosing) the 
     International Standard Book Number and retail price 
     information'';
       (II) by striking ``and retail price'' and inserting ``, 
     retail price, and any applicable fee'';
       (III) by inserting ``, and whether each required and 
     recommended textbook and supplemental material is an open 
     educational resource,'' after ``supplemental materials''; and
       (IV) by striking ``used for preregistration and 
     registration purposes''; and

       (ii) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``for a college 
     textbook or supplemental material, then the institution shall 
     so indicate by placing the designation `To Be Determined' '' 
     and inserting ``or available for a college textbook or 
     supplemental material, then the institution shall indicate 
     the status of such information'';
       (4) by striking subsection (e) and inserting the following:
       ``(e) Availability of Information for College Bookstores.--
       ``(1) In general.--An institution of higher education 
     receiving Federal financial assistance shall assist a college 
     bookstore that is operated by, or in a contractual 
     relationship or otherwise affiliated with, the institution, 
     in obtaining required and recommended course materials 
     information and such course schedule and enrollment 
     information as is reasonably required to implement this 
     section so that such bookstore may--
       ``(A) verify availability of such materials;
       ``(B) source lower cost options, including presenting lower 
     cost alternatives to faculty for faculty to consider, when 
     practicable; and
       ``(C) maximize the availability of format options for 
     students.
       ``(2) Due dates.--In carrying out paragraph (1), an 
     institution of higher education may establish due dates for 
     faculty or departments to notify the campus bookstore of 
     required and recommended course materials.'';
       (5) in subsection (f)--
       (A) by redesignating paragraphs (3) and (4) as paragraphs 
     (4) and (5); and
       (B) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
       ``(3) available open educational resources;''; and
       (6) by striking subsection (g) and redesignating 
     subsections (h) and (i) as subsections (g) and (h), 
     respectively.

     SEC. 5. SENSE OF CONGRESS.

       It is the sense of Congress that institutions of higher 
     education should encourage the consideration of open 
     textbooks by faculty within the generally accepted principles 
     of academic freedom that establishes the right and 
     responsibility of faculty members, individually and 
     collectively, to select course materials that are 
     pedagogically most appropriate for their classes.

     SEC. 6. GAO REPORT.

       Not later than 3 years after the date of enactment of this 
     Act, the Comptroller General of the United States shall 
     prepare and submit a report to the Committee on Health,

[[Page S2274]]

     Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate and the 
     Committee on Education and Labor of the House of 
     Representatives on the cost of textbooks to students at 
     institutions of higher education. The report shall 
     particularly examine--
       (1) the implementation of section 133 of the Higher 
     Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1015b), as amended by 
     section 4, including--
       (A) the availability of college textbook and open 
     educational resource information on course schedules;
       (B) the compliance of publishers with applicable 
     requirements under such section; and
       (C) the costs and benefits to institutions of higher 
     education and to students;
       (2) the change in the cost of textbooks;
       (3) the factors, including open textbooks, that have 
     contributed to the change of the cost of textbooks;
       (4) the extent to which open textbooks are used at 
     institutions of higher education; and
       (5) how institutions are tracking the impact of open 
     textbooks on instruction and student learning outcomes.
                                 ______
                                 
      By Mr. SCHUMER (for himself, Mr. Cotton, Mr. Brown, Mr. Rubio, 
        Mr. Menendez, Mrs. Shaheen, and Mr. Toomey):
  S. 1044. A bill to impose sanctions with respect to foreign 
traffickers of illicit opioids, and for other purposes; to the 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the text of 
the bill be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the text of the bill was ordered to be 
printed in the Record, as follows:

                                S. 1044

       Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of 
     the United States of America in Congress assembled,

     SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE OF CONTENTS.

       (a) Short Title.--This Act may be cited as the ``Fentanyl 
     Sanctions Act''.
       (b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act 
     is as follows:
Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents.
Sec. 2. Findings.
Sec. 3. Sense of Congress.
Sec. 4. Definitions.

     TITLE I--SANCTIONS WITH RESPECT TO FOREIGN OPIOID TRAFFICKERS

Sec. 101. Identification of foreign opioid traffickers.
Sec. 102. Sense of Congress and reporting on international opioid 
              control regime.
Sec. 103. Imposition of sanctions.
Sec. 104. Description of sanctions.
Sec. 105. Waivers.
Sec. 106. Procedures for judicial review of classified information.
Sec. 107. Briefings on implementation.

     TITLE II--COMMISSION ON COMBATING SYNTHETIC OPIOID TRAFFICKING

Sec. 201. Commission on combating synthetic opioid trafficking.

                        TITLE III--OTHER MATTERS

Sec. 301. Director of National Intelligence program on use of 
              intelligence resources in efforts to sanction foreign 
              opioid traffickers.
Sec. 302. Department of Defense funding.
Sec. 303. Department of State funding.
Sec. 304. Department of the Treasury funding.
Sec. 305. Appropriate committees of Congress defined.

     SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

       Congress makes the following findings:
       (1) The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate 
     that from June 2017 through June 2018 more than 48,000 people 
     in the United States died from an opioid overdose, with 
     synthetic opioids (excluding methadone), contributing to a 
     record 31,500 overdose deaths. While drug overdose deaths 
     from methadone, semi-synthetic opioids, and heroin have 
     decreased in recent months, overdose deaths from synthetic 
     opioids have continued to increase.
       (2) The objective of preventing the proliferation of 
     synthetic opioids though existing multilateral and bilateral 
     initiatives requires additional efforts to deny illicit 
     actors the financial means to sustain their markets and 
     distribution networks.
       (3) The People's Republic of China is the world's largest 
     producer of illicit fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, and their 
     immediate precursors. From the People's Republic of China, 
     those substances are shipped primarily through express 
     consignment carriers or international mail directly to the 
     United States, or, alternatively, shipped directly to 
     transnational criminal organizations in Mexico, Canada, and 
     the Caribbean.
       (4) In 2015, Mexican heroin accounted for 93 percent of the 
     total weight of heroin seized in the United States, 
     transported to the United States by transnational criminal 
     organizations that maintain territorial influence over large 
     regions in Mexico and remain the greatest criminal drug 
     threat to the United States.
       (5) The United States and the People's Republic of China, 
     Mexico, and Canada have made important strides in combating 
     the illicit flow of opioids through bilateral efforts of 
     their respective law enforcement agencies.
       (6) Insufficient regulation of synthetic opioid production 
     and export and insufficient law enforcement efforts to combat 
     opioid trafficking in the People's Republic of China and 
     Mexico continue to contribute to a flood of opioids into the 
     United States.
       (7) While the Department of the Treasury used the Foreign 
     Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act (21 U.S.C. 1901 et seq.) to 
     sanction the first synthetic opioid trafficking entity in 
     April 2018, precision economic and financial sanctions policy 
     tools are needed to address the flow of synthetic opioids.

     SEC. 3. SENSE OF CONGRESS.

       It is the sense of Congress that--
       (1) the United States should apply economic and other 
     financial sanctions to foreign traffickers of illicit opioids 
     to protect the national security, foreign policy, and economy 
     of the United States; and
       (2) it is imperative that the People's Republic of China 
     follow through on the commitments it made to the United 
     States on December 6, 2018, through the Group of Twenty--
       (A) to schedule the entire category of fentanyl-type 
     substances as controlled substances; and
       (B) to change its national and provincial laws and increase 
     provincial law enforcement efforts to prosecute traffickers 
     of fentanyl substances.

     SEC. 4. DEFINITIONS.

       In this Act:
       (1) Alien; national; national of the united states.--The 
     terms ``alien'', ``national'', and ``national of the United 
     States'' have the meanings given those terms in section 101 
     of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1101).
       (2) Appropriate congressional committees and leadership.--
     The term ``appropriate congressional committees and 
     leadership'' means--
       (A) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
     Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, the Committee on Foreign 
     Relations, the Committee on Homeland Security and 
     Governmental Affairs, the Committee on the Judiciary, the 
     Select Committee on Intelligence, and the majority leader and 
     the minority leader of the Senate; and
       (B) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
     Financial Services, the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the 
     Committee on Homeland Security, the Committee on the 
     Judiciary, the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, 
     and the Speaker and the minority leader of the House of 
     Representatives.
       (3) Controlled substance; listed chemical.--The terms 
     ``controlled substance'', ``listed chemical'', ``narcotic 
     drug'', and ``opioid'' have the meanings given those terms in 
     section 102 of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 802).
       (4) Entity.--The term ``entity'' means a partnership, joint 
     venture, association, corporation, organization, network, 
     group, or subgroup, or any form of business collaboration.
       (5) Foreign opioid trafficker.--The term ``foreign opioid 
     trafficker'' means any foreign person that the President 
     determines plays a significant role in opioid trafficking.
       (6) Foreign person.--The term ``foreign person''--
       (A) means--
       (i) any citizen or national of a foreign country; or
       (ii) any entity not organized under the laws of the United 
     States or a jurisdiction within the United States; and
       (B) does not include the government of a foreign country.
       (7) Knowingly.--The term ``knowingly'', with respect to 
     conduct, a circumstance, or a result, means that a person has 
     actual knowledge, or should have known, of the conduct, the 
     circumstance, or the result.
       (8) Opioid trafficking.--The term ``opioid trafficking'' 
     means any illicit activity--
       (A) to cultivate, produce, manufacture, distribute, sell, 
     or knowingly finance or transport illicit opioids, controlled 
     substances that are opioids, listed chemicals that are 
     opioids, or active pharmaceutical ingredients or chemicals 
     that are used in the production of controlled substances that 
     are opioids;
       (B) to attempt to carry out an activity described in 
     subparagraph (A); or
       (C) to assist, abet, conspire, or collude with other 
     persons to carry out such an activity.
       (9) Person.--The term ``person'' means an individual or 
     entity.
       (10) United states person.--The term ``United States 
     person'' means--
       (A) any citizen or national of the United States;
       (B) any alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence in 
     the United States;
       (C) any entity organized under the laws of the United 
     States or any jurisdiction within the United States 
     (including a foreign branch of such an entity); or
       (D) any person located in the United States.

     TITLE I--SANCTIONS WITH RESPECT TO FOREIGN OPIOID TRAFFICKERS

     SEC. 101. IDENTIFICATION OF FOREIGN OPIOID TRAFFICKERS.

       (a) Public Report.--
       (1) In general.--The President shall submit to the 
     appropriate congressional committees and leadership, in 
     accordance with subsection (c), a report--
       (A) identifying the foreign persons that the President 
     determines are foreign opioid traffickers;
       (B) detailing progress the President has made in 
     implementing this title; and
       (C) providing an update on cooperative efforts with the 
     Governments of Mexico and

[[Page S2275]]

     the People's Republic of China with respect to combating 
     foreign opioid traffickers.
       (2) Identification of additional persons.--If, at any time 
     after submitting a report required by paragraph (1) and 
     before the submission of the next such report, the President 
     determines that a foreign person not identified in the report 
     is a foreign opioid trafficker, the President shall submit to 
     the appropriate congressional committees and leadership an 
     additional report containing the information required by 
     paragraph (1) with respect to the foreign person.
       (3) Exclusion.--The President shall not be required to 
     include in a report under paragraph (1) or (2) any persons 
     with respect to which the United States has imposed sanctions 
     before the date of the report under this title or any other 
     provision of law with respect to opioid trafficking.
       (4) Form of report.--
       (A) In general.--Each report required by paragraph (1) or 
     (2) shall be submitted in unclassified form but may include a 
     classified annex.
       (B) Availability to public.--The unclassified portion of a 
     report required by paragraph (1) or (2) shall be made 
     available to the public.
       (b) Classified Report.--
       (1) In general.--The President shall submit to the 
     appropriate congressional committees and leadership, in 
     accordance with subsection (c), a report, in classified 
     form--
       (A) describing in detail the status of sanctions imposed 
     under this title, including the personnel and resources 
     directed toward the imposition of such sanctions during the 
     preceding fiscal year;
       (B) providing background information with respect to 
     persons newly identified as foreign opioid traffickers and 
     their illicit activities;
       (C) describing actions the President intends to undertake 
     or has undertaken to implement this title; and
       (D) providing a strategy for identifying additional foreign 
     opioid traffickers.
       (2) Effect on other reporting requirements.--The report 
     required by paragraph (1) is in addition to the obligations 
     of the President to keep Congress fully and currently 
     informed pursuant to the provisions of the National Security 
     Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3001 et seq.).
       (c) Submission of Reports.--Not later than 180 days after 
     the date of the enactment of this Act, and annually 
     thereafter until the date that is 5 years after such date of 
     enactment, the President shall submit the reports required by 
     subsections (a) and (b) to the appropriate congressional 
     committees and leadership.
       (d) Exclusion of Certain Information.--
       (1) Intelligence.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
     this section, a report required by subsection (a) or (b) 
     shall not disclose the identity of any person if the Director 
     of National Intelligence determines that such disclosure 
     could compromise an intelligence operation, activity, source, 
     or method of the United States.
       (2) Law enforcement.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
     of this section, a report required by subsection (a) or (b) 
     shall not disclose the identity of any person if the Attorney 
     General, in coordination, as appropriate, with the Director 
     of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Administrator of 
     the Drug Enforcement Administration, the head of any other 
     appropriate Federal law enforcement agency, and the Secretary 
     of the Treasury, determines that such disclosure could 
     reasonably be expected--
       (A) to compromise the identity of a confidential source, 
     including a State, local, or foreign agency or authority or 
     any private institution that furnished information on a 
     confidential basis;
       (B) to jeopardize the integrity or success of an ongoing 
     criminal investigation or prosecution;
       (C) to endanger the life or physical safety of any person; 
     or
       (D) to cause substantial harm to physical property.
       (3) Notification required.--If the Director of National 
     Intelligence makes a determination under paragraph (1) or the 
     Attorney General makes a determination under paragraph (2), 
     the Director or the Attorney General, as the case may be, 
     shall notify the appropriate congressional committees and 
     leadership of the determination and the reasons for the 
     determination.
       (e) Provision of Information Required for Reports.--The 
     Secretary of the Treasury, the Attorney General, the 
     Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, the Secretary 
     of Homeland Security, and the Director of National 
     Intelligence shall consult among themselves and provide to 
     the President and the Director of the Office of National Drug 
     Control Policy the appropriate and necessary information to 
     enable the President to submit the reports required by 
     subsection (a).

     SEC. 102. SENSE OF CONGRESS AND REPORTING ON INTERNATIONAL 
                   OPIOID CONTROL REGIME.

       (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that, 
     in order to apply economic and other financial sanctions to 
     foreign traffickers of illicit opioids to protect the 
     national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United 
     States--
       (1) the President should instruct the Secretary of State to 
     commence immediately diplomatic efforts, both in appropriate 
     international fora such as the United Nations, the Group of 
     Seven, the Group of Twenty, trilaterally and bilaterally with 
     partners of the United States, to establish a multilateral 
     sanctions regime against foreign opioid traffickers; and
       (2) the Secretary of State, in consultation with the 
     Secretary of the Treasury, may consider forming a new 
     coalition of countries to establish a multilateral sanctions 
     regime against foreign opioid traffickers if certain 
     countries in existing multilateral fora fail to cooperate 
     with respect to establishing such a regime.
       (b) Reports to Congress.--
       (1) In general.--The President shall include, in each 
     report required by section 101(b), an assessment conducted by 
     the Secretary of State, in consultation with the Secretary of 
     the Treasury, of the extent to which any diplomatic efforts 
     described in subsection (a) have been successful.
       (2) Elements.--Each assessment required by paragraph (1) 
     shall include an identification of--
       (A) the countries the governments of which have agreed to 
     undertake measures to apply economic or other financial 
     sanctions to foreign traffickers of illicit opioids and a 
     description of those measures; and
       (B) the countries the governments of which have not agreed 
     to measures described in subparagraph (A), and, with respect 
     to those countries, other measures the Secretary of State 
     recommends that the United States take to apply economic and 
     other financial sanctions to foreign traffickers of illicit 
     opioids.

     SEC. 103. IMPOSITION OF SANCTIONS.

       The President shall impose 5 or more of the sanctions 
     described in section 104 with respect to each foreign person 
     that is an entity, and 4 or more of such sanctions with 
     respect to each foreign person that is an individual, that--
       (1) is identified as a foreign opioid trafficker in a 
     report submitted under section 101(a); or
       (2) the President determines is owned, controlled, directed 
     by, supplying or sourcing precursors for, or acting for or on 
     behalf of, such a foreign opioid trafficker.

     SEC. 104. DESCRIPTION OF SANCTIONS.

       (a) In General.--The sanctions that may be imposed with 
     respect to a foreign person under section 103 are the 
     following:
       (1) Loans from united states financial institutions.--The 
     United States Government may prohibit any United States 
     financial institution from making loans or providing credits 
     to the foreign person.
       (2) Prohibitions on financial institutions.--The following 
     prohibitions may be imposed with respect to a foreign person 
     that is a financial institution:
       (A) Prohibition on designation as primary dealer.--Neither 
     the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System nor the 
     Federal Reserve Bank of New York may designate, or permit the 
     continuation of any prior designation of, the financial 
     institution as a primary dealer in United States Government 
     debt instruments.
       (B) Prohibition on service as a repository of government 
     funds.--The financial institution may not serve as agent of 
     the United States Government or serve as repository for 
     United States Government funds.

     The imposition of either sanction under subparagraph (A) or 
     (B) shall be treated as one sanction for purposes of section 
     103, and the imposition of both such sanctions shall be 
     treated as 2 sanctions for purposes of that section.
       (3) Procurement ban.--The United States Government may not 
     procure, or enter into any contract for the procurement of, 
     any goods or services from the foreign person.
       (4) Foreign exchange.--The President may, pursuant to such 
     regulations as the President may prescribe, prohibit any 
     transactions in foreign exchange that are subject to the 
     jurisdiction of the United States and in which the foreign 
     person has any interest.
       (5) Banking transactions.--The President may, pursuant to 
     such regulations as the President may prescribe, prohibit any 
     transfers of credit or payments between financial 
     institutions or by, through, or to any financial institution, 
     to the extent that such transfers or payments are subject to 
     the jurisdiction of the United States and involve any 
     interest of the foreign person.
       (6) Property transactions.--The President may, pursuant to 
     such regulations as the President may prescribe, prohibit any 
     person from--
       (A) acquiring, holding, withholding, using, transferring, 
     withdrawing, transporting, importing, or exporting any 
     property that is subject to the jurisdiction of the United 
     States and with respect to which the foreign person has any 
     interest;
       (B) dealing in or exercising any right, power, or privilege 
     with respect to such property; or
       (C) conducting any transaction involving such property.
       (7) Ban on investment in equity or debt of sanctioned 
     person.--The President may, pursuant to such regulations or 
     guidelines as the President may prescribe, prohibit any 
     United States person from investing in or purchasing 
     significant amounts of equity or debt instruments of the 
     foreign person.
       (8) Exclusion of corporate officers.--The President may 
     direct the Secretary of State to deny a visa to, and the 
     Secretary of Homeland Security to exclude from the United 
     States, any alien that the President determines is a 
     corporate officer or principal of, or a shareholder with a 
     controlling interest in, the foreign person.
       (9) Sanctions on principal executive officers.--The 
     President may impose on the

[[Page S2276]]

     principal executive officer or officers of the foreign 
     person, or on individuals performing similar functions and 
     with similar authorities as such officer or officers, any of 
     the sanctions described in paragraphs (1) through (8) that 
     are applicable.
       (b) Penalties.--A person that violates, attempts to 
     violate, conspires to violate, or causes a violation of any 
     regulation, license, or order issued to carry out subsection 
     (a) shall be subject to the penalties set forth in 
     subsections (b) and (c) of section 206 of the International 
     Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1705) to the same 
     extent as a person that commits an unlawful act described in 
     subsection (a) of that section.
       (c) Exceptions.--
       (1) Intelligence activities.--Sanctions under this section 
     shall not apply with respect to any activity subject to the 
     reporting requirements under title V of the National Security 
     Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3091 et seq.) or to any authorized 
     intelligence activities of the United States.
       (2) Exception relating to importation of goods.--The 
     authority to impose sanctions under subsection (a)(6) shall 
     not include the authority to impose sanctions on the 
     importation of goods.
       (3) Exception to comply with united nations headquarters 
     agreement.--Sanctions under subsection (a)(8) shall not apply 
     to an alien if admitting the alien into the United States is 
     necessary to permit the United States to comply with the 
     Agreement regarding the Headquarters of the United Nations, 
     signed at Lake Success June 26, 1947, and entered into force 
     November 21, 1947, between the United Nations and the United 
     States, the Convention on Consular Relations, done at Vienna 
     April 24, 1963, and entered into force March 19, 1967, or 
     other applicable international obligations.
       (d) Implementation; Regulatory Authority.--
       (1) Implementation.--The President may exercise all 
     authorities provided under sections 203 and 205 of the 
     International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1702 
     and 1704) to carry out this section.
       (2) Regulatory authority.--The President shall issue such 
     regulations, licenses, and orders as are necessary to carry 
     out this section.

     SEC. 105. WAIVERS.

       (a) Waiver for State-owned Financial Institutions in 
     Countries That Cooperate in Multilateral Anti-trafficking 
     Efforts.--
       (1) In general.--The President may, on a case-by-case 
     basis, waive for a period of not more than 12 months the 
     application of sanctions under this title with respect to a 
     financial institution that is owned or controlled, directly 
     or indirectly, by a foreign government or any political 
     subdivision, agency, or instrumentality of a foreign 
     government, if the President, not less than 30 days before 
     the waiver is to take effect, certifies to the appropriate 
     congressional committees and leadership that the foreign 
     government is closely cooperating with the United States in 
     efforts to prevent opioid trafficking.
       (2) Certification.--The President may certify under 
     paragraph (1) that a foreign government is closely 
     cooperating with the United States in efforts to prevent 
     opioid trafficking if that government is--
       (A) implementing domestic laws to schedule all fentanyl 
     analogues as controlled substances; and
       (B) doing 2 or more of the following:
       (i) Implementing substantial improvements in regulations 
     involving the chemical and pharmaceutical production and 
     export of illicit opioids.
       (ii) Implementing substantial improvements in judicial 
     regulations to combat transnational criminal organizations 
     that traffic opioids.
       (iii) Increasing efforts to prosecute foreign opioid 
     traffickers.
       (iv) Increasing intelligence sharing and law enforcement 
     cooperation with the United States with respect to opioid 
     trafficking.
       (3) Subsequent renewal of waiver.--The President may renew 
     a waiver under paragraph (1) for subsequent periods of not 
     more than 6 months each if, not less than 30 days before the 
     renewal is to take effect, the Director of National 
     Intelligence certifies to the appropriate congressional 
     committees and leadership that the government of the country 
     to which the waiver applies has effectively implemented and 
     is effectively enforcing the measures that formed the basis 
     for the certification under paragraph (2).
       (b) Waivers for National Security and Access to 
     Prescription Medications.--
       (1) In general.--The President may waive the application of 
     sanctions under this title with respect to a person if the 
     President determines that the application of such sanctions 
     with respect to that person would significantly harm--
       (A) the national security of the United States; or
       (B) subject to paragraph (2), the access of United States 
     persons to prescription medications.
       (2) Monitoring.--The President shall establish a monitoring 
     program to verify that a person receiving a waiver under 
     paragraph (1)(B) is not trafficking illicit opioids.
       (3) Notification.--Not later than 21 days after making a 
     determination under paragraph (1) with respect to a person, 
     the President shall notify the appropriate congressional 
     committees and leadership of the determination and the 
     reasons for the determination.
       (c) Humanitarian Waiver.--The President may waive, for 
     renewable periods of 180 days, the application of the 
     sanctions under this title if the President certifies to the 
     appropriate congressional committees and leadership that the 
     waiver is necessary for the provision of humanitarian 
     assistance.

     SEC. 106. PROCEDURES FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW OF CLASSIFIED 
                   INFORMATION.

       (a) In General.--If a finding under this title, or a 
     prohibition, condition, or penalty imposed as a result of any 
     such finding, is based on classified information (as defined 
     in section 1(a) of the Classified Information Procedures Act 
     (18 U.S.C. App.)) and a court reviews the finding or the 
     imposition of the prohibition, condition, or penalty, the 
     President may submit such information to the court ex parte 
     and in camera.
       (b) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
     construed to confer or imply any right to judicial review of 
     any finding under this title, or any prohibition, condition, 
     or penalty imposed as a result of any such finding.

     SEC. 107. BRIEFINGS ON IMPLEMENTATION.

       Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of 
     the Fentanyl Sanctions Act, and every 180 days thereafter 
     until the date that is 5 years after such date of enactment, 
     the President, acting through the Secretary of State, in 
     coordination with the Secretary of the Treasury, shall 
     provide to the appropriate congressional committees and 
     leadership a comprehensive briefing on efforts to implement 
     this title.

     TITLE II--COMMISSION ON COMBATING SYNTHETIC OPIOID TRAFFICKING

     SEC. 201. COMMISSION ON COMBATING SYNTHETIC OPIOID 
                   TRAFFICKING.

       (a) Establishment.--
       (1) In general.--There is established a commission to 
     develop a consensus on a strategic approach to combating the 
     flow of synthetic opioids into the United States.
       (2) Designation.--The commission established under 
     paragraph (1) shall be known as the ``Commission on Synthetic 
     Opioid Trafficking'' (in this section referred to as the 
     ``Commission'').
       (b) Membership.--
       (1) Composition.--
       (A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), the 
     Commission shall be composed of the following members:
       (i) The Administrator of the Drug Enforcement 
     Administration.
       (ii) The Secretary of Homeland Security.
       (iii) The Secretary of Defense.
       (iv) The Secretary of the Treasury.
       (v) The Secretary of State.
       (vi) Two members appointed by the majority leader of the 
     Senate, one of whom shall be a Member of the Senate and one 
     of whom shall not be.
       (vii) Two members appointed by the minority leader of the 
     Senate, one of whom shall be a Member of the Senate and one 
     of whom shall not be.
       (viii) Two members appointed by the Speaker of the House of 
     Representatives, one of whom shall be a Member of the House 
     of Representatives and one of whom shall not be.
       (ix) Two members appointed by the minority leader of the 
     House of Representatives, one of whom shall be a Member of 
     the House of Representatives and one of whom shall not be.
       (B)(i) The members of the Commission who are not Members of 
     Congress and who are appointed under clauses (vi) through 
     (ix) of subparagraph (A) shall be individuals who are 
     nationally recognized for expertise, knowledge, or experience 
     in--
       (I) transnational criminal organizations conducting 
     synthetic opioid trafficking;
       (II) the production, manufacturing, distribution, sale, or 
     transportation of synthetic opioids; or
       (III) relations between--

       (aa) the United States; and
       (bb) the People's Republic of China, Mexico, or any other 
     country of concern with respect to trafficking in synthetic 
     opioids.

       (ii) An official who appoints members of the Commission may 
     not appoint an individual as a member of the Commission if 
     the individual possesses any personal or financial interest 
     in the discharge of any of the duties of the Commission.
       (iii)(I) All members of the Commission described in clause 
     (i) shall possess an appropriate security clearance in 
     accordance with applicable provisions of law concerning the 
     handling of classified information.
       (II) For the purpose of facilitating the activities of the 
     Commission, the Director of National Intelligence shall 
     expedite to the fullest degree possible the processing of 
     security clearances that are necessary for members of the 
     Commission.
       (2) Co-chairs.--
       (A) In general.--The Commission shall have 2 co-chairs, 
     selected from among the members of the Commission, one of 
     whom shall be a member of the majority party and one of whom 
     shall be a member of the minority party.
       (B) Selection.--The individuals who serve as the co-chairs 
     of the Commission shall be jointly agreed upon by the 
     President, the majority leader of the Senate, the minority 
     leader of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of 
     Representatives, and the minority leader of the House of 
     Representatives.
       (c) Duties.--The duties of the Commission are as follows:
       (1) To define the core objectives and priorities of the 
     strategic approach described in subsection (a)(1).
       (2) To weigh the costs and benefits of various strategic 
     options to combat the flow of

[[Page S2277]]

     synthetic opioids from the People's Republic of China, 
     Mexico, and other countries.
       (3) To evaluate whether the options described in paragraph 
     (2) are exclusive or complementary, the best means for 
     executing such options, and how the United States should 
     incorporate and implement such options within the strategic 
     approach described in subsection (a)(1).
       (4) To review and make determinations on the difficult 
     choices present within such options, among them what norms-
     based regimes the United States should seek to establish to 
     encourage the effective regulation of dangerous synthetic 
     opioids.
       (5) To report on efforts by actors in the People's Republic 
     of China to subvert United States laws and to supply illicit 
     synthetic opioids to persons in the United States, including 
     up-to-date estimates of the scale of illicit synthetic 
     opioids flows from the People's Republic of China.
       (6) To report on the deficiencies in the regulation of 
     pharmaceutical and chemical production of controlled 
     substances and export controls with respect to such 
     substances in the People's Republic of China and other 
     countries that allow opioid traffickers to subvert such 
     regulations and controls to traffic illicit opioids into the 
     United States.
       (7) To report on the scale of contaminated or counterfeit 
     drugs originating from the People's Republic of China and 
     India.
       (8) To report on how the United States could work more 
     effectively with provincial and local officials in the 
     People's Republic of China and other countries to combat the 
     illicit production of synthetic opioids.
       (9) In weighing the options for defending the United States 
     against the dangers of trafficking in synthetic opioids, to 
     consider possible structures and authorities that need to be 
     established, revised, or augmented within the Federal 
     Government.
       (d) Functioning of Commission.--The provisions of 
     subsections (c), (d), (e), (g), (h), (i), and (m) of section 
     1652 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act 
     for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) shall apply to the 
     Commission to the same extent and in the same manner as such 
     provisions apply to the commission established under that 
     section, except that--
       (1) subsection (c)(1) of that section shall be applied and 
     administered by substituting ``30 days'' for ``45 days'';
       (2) subsection (g)(4)(A) of that section shall be applied 
     and administered by inserting ``and the Attorney General'' 
     after ``Secretary of Defense''; and
       (3) subsections (h)(2)(A) and (i)(1)(A) of that section 
     shall be applied and administered by substituting ``level V 
     of the Executive Schedule under section 5316'' for ``level IV 
     of the Executive Schedule under section 5315''.
       (e) Treatment of Information Relating to National 
     Security.--
       (1) Responsibility of director of national intelligence.--
     The Director of National Intelligence shall assume 
     responsibility for the handling and disposition of any 
     information related to the national security of the United 
     States that is received, considered, or used by the 
     Commission under this section.
       (2) Information provided by congress.--Any information 
     related to the national security of the United States that is 
     provided to the Commission by the appropriate congressional 
     committees and leadership may not be further provided or 
     released without the approval of the chairperson of the 
     committee, or the Member of Congress, as the case may be, 
     that provided the information to the Commission.
       (3) Access after termination of commission.--
     Notwithstanding any other provision of law, after the 
     termination of the Commission under subsection (h), only the 
     members and designated staff of the appropriate congressional 
     committees and leadership, the Director of National 
     Intelligence (and the designees of the Director), and such 
     other officials of the executive branch as the President may 
     designate shall have access to information related to the 
     national security of the United States that is received, 
     considered, or used by the Commission.
       (f) Reports.--The Commission shall submit to the 
     appropriate congressional committees and leadership--
       (1) not later than 270 days after the date of the enactment 
     of this Act, an initial report on the activities and 
     recommendations of the Commission under this section; and
       (2) not later than 270 days after the submission of the 
     initial report under paragraph (1), a final report on the 
     activities and recommendations of the Commission under this 
     section.
       (g) Limitation on Funding.--Of amounts made available under 
     sections 302, 303, and 304 to carry out this Act, not more 
     than $5,000,000 shall be available to the Commission in any 
     of fiscal years 2020 through 2025.
       (h) Termination.--
       (1) In general.--The Commission, and all the authorities of 
     this section, shall terminate at the end of the 120-day 
     period beginning on the date on which the final report 
     required by subsection (f)(2) is submitted to the appropriate 
     congressional committees and leadership.
       (2) Winding up of affairs.--The Commission may use the 120-
     day period described in paragraph (1) for the purposes of 
     concluding its activities, including providing testimony to 
     Congress concerning the final report required by subsection 
     (f)(2) and disseminating the report.

                        TITLE III--OTHER MATTERS

     SEC. 301. DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE PROGRAM ON USE OF 
                   INTELLIGENCE RESOURCES IN EFFORTS TO SANCTION 
                   FOREIGN OPIOID TRAFFICKERS.

       (a) Program Required.--
       (1) In general.--The Director of National Intelligence 
     shall, with the concurrence of the Director of the Office of 
     National Drug Control Policy, carry out a program to allocate 
     and enhance use of resources of the intelligence community, 
     including intelligence collection and analysis, to assist the 
     Secretary of the Treasury and the Administrator of the Drug 
     Enforcement Administration in efforts to identify and impose 
     sanctions with respect to foreign opioid traffickers under 
     title I.
       (2) Focus on illicit finance.--To the extent practicable, 
     efforts described in paragraph (1) shall--
       (A) take into account specific illicit finance risks 
     related to narcotics trafficking; and
       (B) be developed in consultation with the Undersecretary of 
     the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Crimes, appropriate 
     officials of the Office of Intelligence and Analysis of the 
     Department of the Treasury, the Director of the Financial 
     Crimes Enforcement Network, and appropriate Federal law 
     enforcement agencies.
       (b) Review of Counternarcotics Efforts of the Intelligence 
     Community.--The Director of National Intelligence shall, in 
     coordination with the Director of the Office of National Drug 
     Control Policy, carry out a comprehensive review of the 
     current intelligence collection priorities of the 
     intelligence community for counternarcotics purposes in order 
     to identify whether such priorities are appropriate and 
     sufficient in light of the number of lives lost in the United 
     States each year due to use of illegal drugs.
       (c) Reports.--
       (1) Quarterly reports on program.--Not later than 90 days 
     after the date of the enactment of this Act, and every 90 
     days thereafter, the Director of National Intelligence and 
     the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy 
     shall jointly submit to the appropriate congressional 
     committees and leadership a report on the status and 
     accomplishments of the program required by subsection (a) 
     during the 90-day period ending on the date of the report. 
     The first report under this paragraph shall also include a 
     description of the amount of funds devoted by the 
     intelligence community to the efforts described in subsection 
     (a) during each of fiscal years 2017 and 2018.
       (2) Report on review.--Not later than 120 days after the 
     date of the enactment of this Act, the Director of National 
     Intelligence and the Director of the Office of National Drug 
     Control Policy shall jointly submit to the appropriate 
     congressional committees and leadership a comprehensive 
     description of the results of the review required by 
     subsection (b), including whether the priorities described in 
     that subsection are appropriate and sufficient in light of 
     the number of lives lost in the United States each year due 
     to use of illegal drugs. If the report concludes that such 
     priorities are not so appropriate and sufficient, the report 
     shall also include a description of the actions to be taken 
     to modify such priorities in order to assure than such 
     priorities are so appropriate and sufficient.
       (d) Intelligence Community Defined.--In this section, the 
     term ``intelligence community'' has the meaning given that 
     term in section 3(4) of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 
     U.S.C. 3003(4)).

     SEC. 302. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FUNDING.

       (a) Source of Funds.--Subject to subsection (b), amounts 
     authorized to be appropriated for each of fiscal years 2020 
     through 2025 for the Department of Defense for operation and 
     maintenance shall be available for operations and activities 
     described in subsection (c).
       (b) Limitation on Amount Available.--
       (1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the amount 
     available under subsection (a) in a fiscal year to carry out 
     operations and activities described in subsection (c) may not 
     exceed the following:
       (A) In fiscal year 2020, $25,000,000.
       (B) In each of fiscal years 2021 through 2025, $35,000,000.
       (2) Exclusion of funds for us southcom from limitation.--
     Amounts authorized to be appropriated for a fiscal year for 
     operation and maintenance and available for such fiscal year 
     for the United States Southern Command for operations and 
     activities described in subsection (c)(2) shall not count 
     toward the limitation applicable to such fiscal year under 
     paragraph (1).
       (c) Operations and Activities.--The operations and 
     activities described in this subsection are the following:
       (1) The operations and activities of any department or 
     agency of the United States Government (other than the 
     Department of Defense) in carrying out this Act.
       (2) The operations and activities of the Department of 
     Defense in support of any other department or agency of the 
     United States Government in carrying out this Act.
       (d) Transfer Authority.--
       (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may transfer 
     funds authorized to be appropriated for the Department of 
     Defense as described in subsection (a) to any other 
     department or agency of the United States Government to carry 
     out this Act.
       (2) Notice requirements.--Any transfer under this 
     subsection shall not be subject to

[[Page S2278]]

     any reprogramming requirements under law. However, a notice 
     on any such transfer shall be provided to the appropriate 
     committees of Congress.
       (3) Inapplicability of transfer limitations.--Any transfer 
     under this subsection in a fiscal year shall not count toward 
     or apply against any limitation on amounts transferrable by 
     the Department of Defense in such fiscal year, including any 
     limitation specified in an annual defense authorization Act 
     for such fiscal year.

     SEC. 303. DEPARTMENT OF STATE FUNDING.

       (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized 
     to be appropriated to the Secretary of State to carry out the 
     operations and activities described in subsection (b)--
       (1) $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2020; and
       (2) $35,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2021 through 2025.
       (b) Operations and Activities Described.--The operations 
     and activities described in this subsection are the 
     following:
       (1) The operations and activities of any department or 
     agency of the United States Government (other than the 
     Department of State) in carrying out this Act.
       (2) The operations and activities of the Department of 
     State in support of any other department or agency of the 
     United States Government in carrying out this Act.
       (c) Notification Requirement.--
       (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), 
     amounts authorized to be appropriated by subsection (a) may 
     not be obligated until 15 days after the date on which the 
     President notifies the appropriate committees of Congress of 
     the President's intention to obligate such funds.
       (2) Waiver.--
       (A) In general.--The Secretary of State may waive the 
     notification requirement under paragraph (1) if the Secretary 
     determines that such a waiver is in the national security 
     interests of the United States.
       (B) Notification requirement.--If the Secretary exercises 
     the authority provided under subparagraph (A) to waive the 
     notification requirement under paragraph (1), the Secretary 
     shall notify the appropriate committees of Congress of the 
     President's intention to obligate amounts authorized to be 
     appropriated by subsection (a) as soon as practicable, but 
     not later than 3 days after obligating such funds.
       (d) Transfer Authority.--
       (1) In general.--The Secretary of State may transfer funds 
     authorized to be appropriated by subsection (a) to any other 
     department or agency of the United States Government to carry 
     out this Act.
       (2) Notice requirements.--Any transfer under this 
     subsection shall not be subject to any reprogramming 
     requirements under law. However, a notice on any such 
     transfer shall be provided to the appropriate committees of 
     Congress.

     SEC. 304. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY FUNDING.

       (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized 
     to be appropriated to the Secretary of the Treasury to carry 
     out the operations and activities described in subsection 
     (b)--
       (1) $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2020; and
       (2) $35,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2021 through 2025.
       (b) Operations and Activities Described.--The operations 
     and activities described in this subsection are the 
     following:
       (1) The operations and activities of any department or 
     agency of the United States Government (other than the 
     Department of the Treasury) in carrying out this Act.
       (2) The operations and activities of the Department of the 
     Treasury in support of any other department or agency of the 
     United States Government in carrying out this Act.
       (c) Notification Requirement.--
       (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), 
     amounts authorized to be appropriated by subsection (a) may 
     not be obligated until 15 days after the date on which the 
     President notifies the appropriate committees of Congress of 
     the President's intention to obligate such funds.
       (2) Waiver.--
       (A) In general.--The Secretary of the Treasury may waive 
     the notification requirement under paragraph (1) if the 
     Secretary determines that such a waiver is in the national 
     security interests of the United States.
       (B) Notification requirement.--If the Secretary exercises 
     the authority provided under subparagraph (A) to waive the 
     notification requirement under paragraph (1), the Secretary 
     shall notify the appropriate committees of Congress of the 
     President's intention to obligate amounts authorized to be 
     appropriated by subsection (a) as soon as practicable, but 
     not later than 3 days after obligating such funds.
       (d) Transfer Authority.--
       (1) In general.--The Secretary of the Treasury may transfer 
     funds authorized to be appropriated by subsection (a) to any 
     other department or agency of the United States Government to 
     carry out this Act.
       (2) Notice requirements.--Any transfer under this 
     subsection shall not be subject to any reprogramming 
     requirements under law. However, a notice on any such 
     transfer shall be provided to the appropriate committees of 
     Congress.

     SEC. 305. APPROPRIATE COMMITTEES OF CONGRESS DEFINED.

       In this title, the term ``appropriate committees of 
     Congress'' means--
       (1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
     Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, the Committee on Foreign 
     Relations, the Select Committee on Intelligence, and the 
     Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; and
       (2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
     Financial Services, the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the 
     Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee 
     on Appropriations of the House of Representatives.

                          ____________________