H.R. 2447 (119th)Bill Overview

New Collar Jobs Act of 2025

Labor and Employment|Labor and Employment
Sponsor
Cosponsors
Support
Democratic
Introduced
Mar 27, 2025
Discussions
Bill Text
Current stageCommittee

Referred to the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means, Education and Workforce, and Oversight and Government Reform, for…

Introduced
Committee
Floor
President
Law
Congressional Activities
01 · The brief

The New Collar Jobs Act of 2025 encourages cybersecurity workforce development through several federal incentives.

It creates a new employer tax credit covering 50% of certain employee cybersecurity education expenses (capped at $5,000 per employee) tied to NICE/NCWF work roles.

It authorizes up to $25,000 in student loan cancellation for eligible cybersecurity workers in economically distressed areas after 36 qualifying payments, expands and modifies the CyberCorps scholarship program, urges modest increases for NSF Advanced Technology Education funding, and gives a 5% procurement evaluation score boost to offerors who have claimed the new tax credit.

Passage45/100

Moderate, non-controversial policy aims increase chances, but tax expenditures and loan cancellation raise fiscal and process hurdles.

CredibilityPartially aligned

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill creates a set of substantive legal changes (a new employer tax credit for cybersecurity education, a targeted student loan cancellation pathway, amendments to the CyberCorps scholarship authority, and a procurement scoring incentive) and integrates them into existing statutory frameworks. The bill clearly states the problem and includes several concrete mechanisms, but some statutory language is imprecise or garbled, reliance on external standards is heavy, and key implementation, fiscal, and oversight details are limited or absent.

Contention68/100

Employer tax credit: left sees training benefit, right sees corporate giveaway.

02 · What it does

Who stands to gain, and who may push back.

Who this appears to help vs burden50% / 50%
Employers · BorrowersFederal agencies
Likely helped
  • EmployersEmployers receive a tax credit covering 50% of employee cybersecurity training expenses, up to $5,000 per employee.
  • BorrowersBorrowers can receive up to $25,000 in loan cancellation after 36 months working in distressed-area cybersecurity jobs.
  • Targeted stakeholdersThe bill encourages doubling CyberCorps scholarships, potentially increasing the pipeline of cybersecurity graduates an…
Likely burdened
  • Federal agenciesThe employer tax credit could reduce federal tax revenues, increasing budgetary pressures.
  • Federal agenciesLoan cancellations up to $25,000 per borrower increase federal loan outlays and reduce receivables.
  • Targeted stakeholdersA procurement score boost for qualifying firms may disadvantage competitors and distort contract awards.
03 · Why people split

Why the argument around this bill splits.

Employer tax credit: left sees training benefit, right sees corporate giveaway.
Progressive85%

Generally supportive because it targets job training, loan relief, and scholarships for cybersecurity roles, especially in distressed areas.

Concerned about employer-focused tax credits possibly favoring corporations over direct public investment and the removal of federal employment placement preference for scholarships.

Leans supportive
Centrist65%

Cautiously favorable to targeted workforce development and scholarship expansion, with emphasis on measurable outcomes and fiscal accountability.

Wants clearer guardrails to prevent gaming of procurement incentives and to quantify budgetary impact.

Split reaction
Conservative20%

Skeptical of new tax credits, procurement favoritism, and additional federal interventions.

Opposes taxpayer-funded loan cancellation and prefers market-driven training and state or private solutions.

Likely resistant
04 · Can it pass?

The path through Congress.

Introduced

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Committee

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Floor

Still ahead

President

Still ahead

Law

Still ahead

Passage likelihood45/100

Moderate, non-controversial policy aims increase chances, but tax expenditures and loan cancellation raise fiscal and process hurdles.

Scope and complexity
52%
Scopemoderate
52%
Complexitymedium
Why this could stall
  • No official cost estimate or budgetary offsets included
  • Ambiguity in effective dates and some drafting seams
05 · Recent votes

Recent votes on the bill.

No vote history yet

The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.

06 · Go deeper

Go deeper than the headline read.

Included on this page

Employer tax credit: left sees training benefit, right sees corporate giveaway.

Moderate, non-controversial policy aims increase chances, but tax expenditures and loan cancellation raise fiscal and process hurdles.

Unlocked analysis

Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill creates a set of substantive legal changes (a new employer tax credit for cybersecurity education, a targeted student loan cancellation pathway, amendments to the Cyb…

Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.

Perspective breakdownsPassage barriersLegislative design reviewStakeholder impact map
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