SRES-449-119
Resolution agreed to in Senate without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S7141)
Sponsored by Christopher Coons (D-DE)
What it does
This Senate resolution designates the week of October 12, 2025, as "National Wildlife Refuge Week." It acknowledges the role of national wildlife refuges in providing recreational opportunities and contributing to local economies. It also reaffirms the Senate's support for wildlife conservation and the National Wildlife Refuge System. As a simple resolution, it carries no binding legal force and does not change any law, appropriate any funds, or impose any requirements.
Who benefits
Supporters of the National Wildlife Refuge System — including hunters, anglers, birdwatchers, hikers, and other outdoor recreationists — would receive symbolic recognition of the refuges they use. Conservation organizations and wildlife advocacy groups gain a public platform. Local businesses near refuges (outfitters, hotels, restaurants) that depend on refuge-related tourism receive indirect acknowledgment of their economic role. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, which administers the refuge system, receives a public expression of Senate support.
Who is hurt
No group is directly or materially harmed by this resolution. Because it is purely symbolic and creates no legal obligations, imposes no costs, and changes no policy, there are no identifiable groups who are negatively affected in a concrete way.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that designating a national awareness week is a low-cost, broadly unifying way for the Senate to publicly recognize the value of the National Wildlife Refuge System — the world's largest network of lands and waters set aside specifically for wildlife. They contend that the refuges generate significant economic activity in rural communities through hunting, fishing, and wildlife tourism, and that periodic reaffirmation of congressional support helps sustain public and political attention to conservation funding and stewardship. Supporters also note the resolution passed by unanimous consent, reflecting broad, bipartisan agreement on the symbolic importance of the gesture.
Opponents argue
Opponents might argue that symbolic resolutions of this kind consume limited Senate floor time and legislative resources without producing any tangible policy outcome, funding, or enforceable protection for wildlife refuges. They could contend that if the Senate genuinely supports the refuge system, it should demonstrate that support through concrete action — such as appropriating adequate management funding or passing legislation to address habitat threats — rather than through non-binding proclamations. Critics might also note that such resolutions can create a false impression of legislative action while underlying policy challenges facing the refuge system go unaddressed.