SRES-739-116
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Voice Vote. (consideration: CR S5998; text: CR S5986)
Sponsored by John Cornyn (R-TX)
What it does
This resolution expresses the Senate's support for designating September 21–25, 2020, as "National Family Service Learning Week." It recognizes family service learning — a multigenerational, community-focused approach to civic participation — as valuable, and encourages the public to support related programs. The resolution does not create law, allocate funding, or establish any government program.
Who benefits
Organizations and nonprofits that run family service learning programs may gain public visibility and informal recognition from a Senate resolution. Families and children who participate in such programs could see increased community awareness of their activities. Community development advocates who promote civic engagement initiatives may benefit from the symbolic endorsement.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct, concrete negative effect from this resolution. Because it carries no legal force, imposes no mandates, and allocates no funds, there are no identifiable parties who are materially harmed.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that symbolic recognition from the Senate serves a meaningful civic purpose by drawing national attention to family service learning programs that strengthen communities at the local level. They contend that highlighting multigenerational civic engagement encourages more families to participate, potentially expanding the reach of programs that address real community needs. Proponents also note that the resolution costs nothing, imposes no obligations on anyone, and represents a straightforward, uncontroversial way for the Senate to affirm the value of volunteerism and community involvement.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that purely symbolic resolutions consume limited Senate floor time and legislative resources that could be directed toward binding legislation with measurable outcomes. They contend that designating awareness weeks without accompanying funding, program mandates, or accountability measures produces no tangible improvement in communities and amounts to performative action. Critics may also note that the Senate's role under the Constitution is to legislate, and that repeated use of the chamber's time for non-binding proclamations dilutes the significance of formal congressional recognition generally.