This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated.

WASHINGTON (NEXSTAR) — Lawmakers have found robocalls aren’t only a nuisance but also a threat to places like hospitals. After months of debate, they landed on a compromise to stop the calls.

“Today, the House is giving Americans back control of their phones,” said U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone/(D) of New Jersey.

More than 50 billion illegal robocalls rang customers’ phones last year. Pallone is working to block them. “These calls are not just annoying. In a lot of instances, they are scams targeted at consumers, and
unfortunately, these scams are becoming more sophisticated every
day.”

A bill the House passed Wednesday would require most phone companies to make sure calls are coming from real numbers. The legislation would also require carriers to block robocalls without charging customers- like Oregon Congressman Greg Walden- any extra money.

“I got one today already, and I imagine speaking here, I’ll get five more,” said U.S. Rep. Greg Walden/(R) of Oregon.

The bill would also make it easier for the Federal Communications Commission and Department of Justice to catch and convict the scammers on the other end of the calls.

Only three House members voted against this compromise version of the TRACED Act, concerned it could give the FCC too much authority. But Tennessee Republican, David Kustoff, disagrees, “The robocall issue is one issue, maybe the one issue, that’s united everybody, Republicans and
Democrats.”

New York Democrat Anthony Brindisi also voted for the bill, “This is a big concern that we hear from constituents. (white flash) Something has to
be done.”

The legislation now heads back to the Senate where lawmakers are expected to send the bill onto President Trump who plans to hang up on these illegal robocallers before Christmas.

A group of attorneys general from all 50 states and Washington, D.C., recently joined a dozen phone companies to announce their plan to combat illegal robocalls.

Many of the companies have already agreed to implement
call-blocking technology at no extra cost to customers.