HR-473-116
Became Public Law No: 116-217.
Sponsored by Joe Neguse (D-CO)
What it does
This bill authorizes the construction of a monument on federal land in Washington, D.C. to commemorate the women's suffrage movement and the 19th Amendment, which granted women the right to vote in 1920. No federal funds may be used to build the monument; all costs must be raised and paid by the Every Word We Utter Monument organization through private contributions.
Who benefits
The Every Word We Utter Monument organization, which gains legal authorization to establish a commemorative work on federal land. Visitors to Washington, D.C. who wish to view a physical commemoration of the women's suffrage movement. Historians, educators, and students who use the monument as a teaching resource. Donors who wish to contribute to the project now that it has federal authorization.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct financial or regulatory burden from this bill, as no federal funds are authorized for construction. Competing monument or commemorative work proposals may face reduced access to the same federal land. Taxpayers bear no direct cost, though federal agencies will expend some administrative resources overseeing the authorization and site approval process.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the 19th Amendment is one of the most significant expansions of democratic participation in American history, yet it lacks a dedicated national monument in the nation's capital. Authorizing this monument corrects a gap in how the country commemorates its own history. Because the bill explicitly prohibits the use of federal funds, it places no burden on taxpayers — all costs fall on private donors who choose to contribute. The bill simply grants legal permission for a privately funded effort to honor a constitutional milestone that affected half the American population.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that Congress authorizes commemorative works selectively, and the process of choosing which historical movements receive a monument on scarce federal land in Washington, D.C. involves inherent trade-offs. Critics may contend that other historical milestones or groups are equally deserving of recognition but have not received similar authorization. Some may also raise concerns about the long-term federal administrative and maintenance obligations that typically follow monument construction on federal land, even when initial construction is privately funded, creating future costs not addressed in the bill.