HRES-1148-119
Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.
Sponsored by Judy Chu (D-CA)
What it does
This resolution would express the House of Representatives' support for recognizing April as "National Language Access Month." It would affirm the importance of language access in federal programs, and encourage federal agencies, state and local governments, and community organizations to promote awareness of language access rights. The resolution does not create new law, mandate any action, or appropriate any funds.
Who benefits
The approximately 25.7 million individuals in the United States with limited English proficiency (LEP) who may gain increased public awareness of existing language access rights and services. Immigrant communities — particularly Hispanic adults (32% LEP rate) and Asian-American adults (30% LEP rate) — stand to benefit most from heightened awareness. Advocacy organizations focused on language access and civil rights may gain visibility. Interpreters, translators, and bilingual service providers could see increased demand if awareness efforts expand service use.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct legal or financial burden from this resolution, as it is purely symbolic and creates no mandates. State and local governments that already observe their own language access months may see minimal practical effect. Federal agencies could face soft political pressure to expand language services, though no obligation is created. English-only advocacy groups may object to the symbolic endorsement of multilingual service provision.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that over 25.7 million U.S. residents with LEP face documented barriers — 31% report difficulty accessing health care, 29% report difficulty finding employment, and 22% report difficulty reporting crimes — and that a national recognition month would raise awareness of existing legal protections under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act and Executive Order 13166. They contend that symbolic congressional affirmation reinforces the legitimacy of language access rights and encourages consistent implementation across the patchwork of federal, state, and local programs where coverage remains uneven.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a symbolic resolution does nothing to address the underlying resource and implementation gaps that cause language access disparities, and that congressional time and attention would be better directed toward enforceable legislation or funding. They contend that encouraging federal agencies and states to "promote awareness" without any accountability mechanism or appropriation is unlikely to produce measurable improvement for the LEP individuals the resolution identifies, and that existing law — Title VI, the Voting Rights Act, and Executive Order 13166 — already establishes the framework this resolution merely celebrates.