HRES-289-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Bruce Westerman (R-AR)
What it does
This resolution would express the House of Representatives' support for designating April 2025 as "Second Chance Month." It would call on Americans to observe the month by raising awareness of the legal and societal barriers — called "collateral consequences" — that people with criminal records face after serving their sentences. The resolution does not create new law, change any existing statute, or appropriate any funds.
Who benefits
People with criminal records who may benefit from increased public awareness and reduced stigma. Reentry service organizations and nonprofits (such as Prison Fellowship) that may gain visibility. Employers who voluntarily adopt "fair chance" hiring practices. Families and children of formerly incarcerated individuals, who the resolution notes can face multigenerational economic hardship. Underserved communities of color, which the resolution identifies as disproportionately affected by collateral consequences.
Who is hurt
This resolution has no binding legal effect, so no group faces a direct material harm. Victims' advocacy organizations may object to framing that emphasizes the debt being "paid" without reference to victims' ongoing experiences. Businesses or landlords that use criminal background screening as a risk-management tool may view increased public pressure as a precursor to future restrictive legislation.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that hundreds of thousands of people return from prison each year and face automatic, often permanent barriers to employment, housing, and education that are unrelated to public safety — making successful reintegration extremely difficult and contributing to recidivism. They contend that the bipartisan First Step Act of 2018 and the Second Chance Act of 2007 have already demonstrated broad congressional consensus that reducing collateral consequences benefits public safety, and that a symbolic designation costs nothing while building the public awareness needed to sustain that policy direction.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a congressional resolution endorsing "second chances" without addressing victims' perspectives presents an incomplete picture of the criminal justice system, and that framing incarceration as a fully "paid debt" may minimize ongoing harms to crime victims. They contend that collateral consequences — such as restrictions on firearms, professional licenses, or public housing — often serve legitimate public safety purposes, and that a broadly worded resolution could be used to build political momentum for eliminating screening tools that communities and employers rely on.