SRES-737-119
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S2313; text: CR S2312-2313)
Sponsored by Chuck Grassley (R-IA)
What it does
This resolution designates May 2026 as "National Foster Care Month" and May 31, 2026, as "National Foster Parent Appreciation Day." It expresses the Senate's support for raising awareness about challenges faced by children in the foster care system and encourages Congress to implement policies to improve outcomes for foster youth. The resolution does not create new law, appropriate funds, or mandate any specific policy action.
Who benefits
Approximately 331,747 children currently in foster care may benefit from increased public awareness and any downstream policy attention the resolution generates. Foster parents, social workers, and child welfare advocates receive formal recognition. Foster care alumni and advocacy organizations gain a platform. Relative (kinship) caregivers are specifically acknowledged. Youth who age out of foster care without permanent family connections are highlighted as a priority group.
Who is hurt
No group is directly harmed by this resolution. Because it is purely symbolic and non-binding, it does not impose costs, restrictions, or obligations on any party. Critics of symbolic legislation more broadly may argue that commemorative resolutions consume legislative time without producing concrete policy change for the children described.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that formal congressional recognition focuses national attention on a vulnerable population — roughly 331,747 children in care, 15,030 of whom aged out in 2025 without a permanent family connection — and that awareness is a necessary precursor to legislative action. They contend the resolution builds on a 40-year bipartisan legislative record, including the Family First Prevention Services Act of 2018, and that publicly honoring foster parents and child welfare workers helps address the 23–60% annual turnover rate among caseworkers by boosting recognition of their essential role.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that symbolic resolutions do not translate into material improvements for the children they describe, and that the Senate's limited floor time is better spent advancing substantive legislation addressing the documented problems cited in the resolution itself — such as medication monitoring gaps affecting 30% of foster children on antipsychotics, or the financial disparities between kinship and non-relative foster caregivers. They contend that passing commemorative measures can create the appearance of action while deferring the harder policy work indefinitely.