HRES-1349-119
Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
Sponsored by David Taylor (R-OH)
What it does
This resolution would express the House of Representatives' support for designating the week of May 31 through June 6, 2026, as "Our Roads, Our Safety Week." It would recognize the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's existing public awareness campaign about sharing roads with large trucks and buses, and encourage the Department of Transportation and FMCSA to continue outreach and education efforts. The resolution does not create law, appropriate funds, or impose any requirements on any person or entity.
Who benefits
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, whose existing "Our Roads, Our Safety" campaign receives formal congressional recognition. Commercial truck and bus drivers, who gain public acknowledgment of their role in the economy and the unique safety challenges they face. Road safety advocacy organizations that may benefit from increased public visibility. Broadly, all road users — drivers, cyclists, and pedestrians — who may benefit from increased public awareness of large-vehicle safety practices.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct material harm from this resolution. Because it is purely symbolic and advisory, it imposes no costs, restrictions, or obligations on any individual, business, or government entity.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that thousands of lives are lost annually in crashes involving large trucks and buses, many of which are preventable through better public awareness of commercial vehicle blind spots, stopping distances, and turning radii. They contend that formal congressional recognition amplifies the FMCSA's existing campaign at no cost, encouraging federal, state, and local partners to coordinate safety outreach during a designated week and potentially reducing preventable fatalities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding resolution designating an awareness week has no measurable effect on road safety outcomes and represents a use of congressional floor time that produces no enforceable policy change. They contend that if Congress is serious about reducing the thousands of annual large-truck fatalities, it should pursue substantive legislation — such as funding infrastructure improvements or strengthening FMCSA enforcement authority — rather than symbolic proclamations.