There is 1 version of this bill. View text

Click the check-box to add or remove the section, click the text link to scroll to that section.
Titles Actions Overview All Actions Cosponsors Committees Related Bills Subjects Latest Summary All Summaries

Titles (2)

Short Titles

Short Titles - House of Representatives

Short Titles as Introduced

Sober Home Fraud Detection Act

Official Titles

Official Titles - House of Representatives

Official Title as Introduced

To develop and identify indicators of potentially fraudulent and disreputable recovery housing operators, and for other purposes.


Actions Overview (1)

Date Actions Overview
06/13/2018Introduced in House

All Actions (2)

Date All Actions
06/13/2018Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Action By: House of Representatives
06/13/2018Introduced in House
Action By: House of Representatives

Cosponsors (4)

* = Original cosponsor
CosponsorDate Cosponsored
Rep. Walters, Mimi [R-CA-45]* 06/13/2018
Rep. Frankel, Lois [D-FL-21]* 06/13/2018
Rep. Ruiz, Raul [D-CA-36]* 06/13/2018
Rep. Deutch, Theodore E. [D-FL-22] 08/10/2018

Committees (1)

Committees, subcommittees and links to reports associated with this bill are listed here, as well as the nature and date of committee activity and Congressional report number.

Committee / Subcommittee Date Activity Reports
House Energy and Commerce06/13/2018 Referred to

A related bill may be a companion measure, an identical bill, a procedurally-related measure, or one with text similarities. Bill relationships are identified by the House, the Senate, or CRS, and refer only to same-congress measures.


Subjects (7)


Latest Summary (1)

There is one summary for H.R.6092. View summaries

Shown Here:
Introduced in House (06/13/2018)

Sober Home Fraud Detection Act

This bill requires the Department of Health and Human Services to publish common indicators of potentially fraudulent or disreputable recovery housing (alcohol- and drug-free shared living environments that promote recovery from substance use disorders), such as with respect to unusual billing practices, longer than average occupancies, and excessive levels of drug testing.