HRES-443-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
What it does
This resolution would express the House of Representatives' support for designating May 2025 as "National Electrical Safety Month." It would encourage citizens to adopt electrical safety habits at home, school, and work, and would request that the President issue a proclamation calling on citizens to observe the month with appropriate programs and activities. The resolution does not create any new law, mandate, or spending.
Who benefits
The Electrical Safety Foundation, a nonprofit organization, would receive formal congressional recognition and a boost in public visibility. Homeowners, renters, parents of young children, teachers, and employers who use the awareness campaign as a prompt to inspect electrical systems or adopt safety devices could benefit indirectly. Manufacturers and retailers of electrical safety products — such as ground-fault circuit interrupters, arc-fault circuit interrupters, and tamper-resistant receptacles — may see increased consumer interest.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct negative effect from this resolution. Because it is purely symbolic and carries no mandates or spending, there are no identifiable cost-bearers or parties whose interests are materially harmed.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that electrical fires cause nearly 500 deaths, over 1,400 injuries, and approximately $1.3 billion in property damage annually, and that over 2,000 children are treated each year for electrical shock from wall outlets — harms that public awareness campaigns have a demonstrated record of reducing. They contend that a low-cost, nonbinding resolution that encourages voluntary safety practices and highlights proven technologies like arc-fault circuit interrupters is a straightforward way for Congress to promote public well-being without regulatory burden.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that symbolic resolutions consume limited congressional floor time and committee resources without producing enforceable outcomes, and that the same public awareness goals could be achieved through existing federal agencies like the Consumer Product Safety Commission or the U.S. Fire Administration without a House resolution. They contend that designating awareness months has become so routine that individual proclamations carry diminishing public attention and measurable impact, making this an inefficient use of the legislative process.