SRES-854-117
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S6911; text: CR S6910-6911)
Sponsored by Steve Daines (R-MT)
What it does
This is a Senate resolution that formally recognizes the efforts and sacrifices of wildland firefighters who responded to wildfires during the 2022 fire season. It expresses congressional support for affected western communities as they recover and rebuild, and extends gratitude to the families of wildland firefighters for their support of the firefighting community. As a simple resolution, it carries no binding legal force and does not appropriate funds or change any law.
Who benefits
Wildland firefighters — both active and the families of those who died — receive formal congressional recognition of their service and sacrifice. Communities in western states affected by 2022 wildfires receive an expression of congressional support for their recovery. Families and loved ones of wildland firefighters are specifically acknowledged for their role supporting the firefighting community.
Who is hurt
No individuals or groups are directly or materially harmed by this resolution. It creates no legal obligations, imposes no costs, and changes no policy. There are no identifiable negative effects on any specific group.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Congress has a responsibility to formally acknowledge the extraordinary courage and sacrifice of wildland firefighters, who risk their lives under dangerous conditions to protect communities and natural resources. They contend that official recognition from the full Senate — passed by unanimous consent — sends a meaningful signal of national gratitude to firefighters, their families, and affected communities. Supporters also note that symbolic resolutions cost nothing, impose no burdens, and serve an important civic function by placing congressional appreciation for public servants on the permanent record.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that symbolic resolutions without accompanying funding or policy changes offer little tangible benefit to the wildland firefighters they purport to honor. They contend that Congress would better serve firefighters by passing substantive legislation — such as improved pay, benefits, mental health resources, or equipment funding — rather than spending floor time on non-binding statements. Critics may also argue that unanimous consent resolutions can create the appearance of action on an issue while allowing legislators to avoid the harder work of addressing the structural challenges facing the wildland firefighting workforce.