$RSG is a publicly traded company in the Utilities sector. This company operates across Utilities and is subject to various Congressional legislative and regulatory actions. HillSignal is tracking 9 active Congressional signals mentioning $RSG, including 7 bills and 2 federal contracts. The current legislative sentiment is predominantly bullish, suggesting potential tailwinds from government policy.
The Zero Food Waste Act (HR6684) is an early-stage authorization bill with zero appropriated funding, 4 cosponsors, and no committee action since December 2025. It creates no market impact. Waste Management ($WM), Republic Services ($RSG), and Darling Ingredients ($DAR) show no price movement attributable to this legislation.
→ no change to Republic Services' landfill operations, collection contracts, or recycling processing volumes
H.R. 6669, the No Taxation on PFAS Remediation Act, would make PFAS remediation reimbursements tax-free, modestly improving after-tax margins for waste service providers WM and RSG on remediation contracts. The bill is in early-stage committee referral with low near-term passage probability. Real market data shows WM at $233.01 with a 7-day gain of 1.52% and RSG at $208.37 with a 7-day decline of 0.68%, reflecting broader sector trends rather than specific bill momentum.
→ Reimbursements become tax-free, increasing after-tax cash flow for remediation service providers by the marginal tax rate on those receipts.
HR6432 authorizes $1.25B over five years for EPA brownfields grants but remains in early House committee stage with no Senate companion or appropriations backing. WM ($234.2) and RSG ($209.11) could see small incremental remediation revenue if the bill is enacted and funded, but near-term market impact is negligible.
→ up to $250M/year in new EPA grant outlays available for brownfields cleanup, subject to separate appropriations
HR7268 (CLEAN-UP Act) is an early-stage, zero-funding procedural bill that shields the Army from CERCLA liability for contaminated sediment remediation. It has no near-term market impact on any publicly traded company. $WM and $RSG show typical recent price action, with no catalyst from this legislation.
→ No change in demand for contaminated sediment disposal or remediation services by private companies; existing CERCLA liability for non-Federal entities unchanged
The COMPOST Act (HR3272) is a procedural early-stage bill that authorizes no funding and has no immediate market impact. It designates composting as a conservation practice under USDA programs and authorizes a loan guarantee program for composting facilities, but actual spending requires separate appropriations. No stock movement attributable to this bill.
→ Future grants could subsidize RSG's organic waste processing infrastructure in agricultural regions, reducing capital expenditure for new composting lines, but no funding is authorized or appropriated in this bill.
The ESTUARIES Act (HR3962) reauthorizes the National Estuary Program through FY2031, extending federal policy support for coastal water quality and waste management grants. The bill is in early legislative stages — referred to two committees and reported by the House Transportation Committee, but not yet passed by either chamber. With no specific funding amounts authorized and actual money dependent on separate appropriations, market impact on waste management stocks is minimal in the near term.
→ Authorization for federal grants continues through FY2031, providing a stable policy framework for multi-year contracts related to coastal water quality monitoring, waste management infrastructure, and pollution remediation services.
The CLEANER Act (HR6080) proposes reclassifying oil/gas drilling wastes as hazardous, directly increasing operating costs for US E&P companies like $XOM, $CVX, and $EOG while creating a new revenue stream for waste management firms $WM and $RSG. The bill is in early committee stage with 23 Democratic cosponsors — low probability of passage in the 119th Congress given Republican control, but the fundamental mechanism creates clear winners and losers. Recent market action shows energy stocks recovering from 30-day losses: $XOM at $154.67 (up 2.75% 7-day), $CVX at $192.22 (+2.46%), $EOG at $139.12 (+3.92%) — but the regulatory overhang, if this bill advances, would reverse that trend for producers.
→ E&P companies must shift from current non-hazardous disposal routes (e.g., underground injection under Safe Drinking Water Act, land application) to EPA-permitted hazardous waste TSDFs, increasing service costs per barrel and diverting volume to commercial hazardous waste operators.