SRES-222-119
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S2901; text: CR S2900)
Sponsored by Joni Ernst (R-IA)
What it does
This resolution expresses the Senate's support for designating May 2025 as "Motorcycle Safety Awareness Month." It recognizes motorcycles as part of the U.S. transportation mix, encourages motorcycle awareness among all road users, and supports rider safety education, training, and proper protective gear. The resolution is purely symbolic and does not create law, appropriate funds, or impose any legal requirements.
Who benefits
The approximately 30 million Americans who ride motorcycles annually, according to the Motorcycle Industry Council, may benefit from increased public awareness of their presence on roads. Motorcycle safety training organizations and instructors may see increased interest in their programs. Motorcycle equipment and gear manufacturers may benefit from the resolution's encouragement of protective gear use. Road users broadly may benefit if the awareness campaign reduces crash rates.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct material harm from this resolution. There are no mandates, spending changes, or regulatory burdens created. Competing awareness campaigns or other May designations receive no Senate recognition this month, though this is a negligible effect.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that motorcyclists face disproportionately high fatality rates compared to passenger vehicle occupants, making public awareness campaigns a low-cost, high-visibility tool for improving road safety. They contend that Senate recognition amplifies the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's existing Motorcycle Safety Awareness Month efforts, encouraging proper licensing, training, and gear use among the estimated 30 million annual riders — a population that shares roads with hundreds of millions of other motorists.
Opponents argue
Opponents could argue that symbolic resolutions consume limited legislative floor time without producing measurable safety outcomes, and that meaningful reductions in motorcyclist fatalities would require substantive policy action — such as funding for training programs or infrastructure changes — rather than a non-binding designation. They might contend that the Senate's role is to legislate, and that commemorative resolutions displace attention from actionable safety measures with demonstrated effectiveness.