H.R. 7764118th CongressHouse Bill

Establishes a commission to study the potential transfer of the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia to the…

Official title: Commission to Study the Potential Transfer of the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History to the Smithsonian Institution Act

Signed into law

This act establishes a commission to study the potential transfer of the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia to the Smithsonian Institution. The commission must report its plan and recommendations to Congress and the President no later than two years after the commission's first meeting. The commission shall be composed of eight voting members appointed from among individuals or representatives of institutions with relevant expertise or interests (as further specified in the act). The Senate majority leader, Senate minority leader, Speaker of the House of Representatives, and House minority leader shall each appoint two voting members, with the chair elected by the commission members. The commission's report must detail (1) the museum's collections and the extent to which such collections are already represented in the Smithsonian Institution; (2) the impact of the museum on educational and governmental efforts to study and counter antisemitism; (3) the museum's financial assets and liabilities; and (4) operating and maintenance costs for the museum. The report must also contain a fundraising plan and legislative recommendations. The commission terminates 30 days after the final versions of its report, plan, and recommendations are submitted to Congress.

Introduced Mar 20, 2024Last action Dec 11, 2024
Introduced in HouseMar 20, 2024
Reported by CommitteeSep 11, 2024
Show change summary

The main substantive change is that the commission was reduced from 9 members to 8 members by eliminating the nonvoting seat for the Weitzman Museum's board representative. All other provisions regarding the commission's composition, duties, timeline, and administrative operations remain identical. Additionally, there is a minor grammatical change replacing "date of enactment" with "date of the enactment" in one section.

Passed HouseSep 23, 2024
Show change summary

These two versions are identical. There are no substantive policy changes, removed sections, altered numbers, thresholds, or scope modifications between the version reported in the House and the engrossed version. The bill's provisions regarding the commission's membership, duties, reporting requirements, and administrative operations remain the same.

Passed SenateDec 3, 2024
Signed into LawDec 11, 2024
Show change summary

These two versions are identical. There are no substantive policy changes, structural modifications, or alterations to the bill's provisions between the referred Senate version and the enrolled bill version.

The President has signed this bill. It is now the law of the land.

What changed in the latest version · AI-generated

These two versions are identical. There are no substantive policy changes, structural modifications, or alterations to the bill's provisions between the referred Senate version and the enrolled bill version.

Summary compares to previous version · Enrolled Bill on Apr 17, 2026

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