Posts - Bill - HRES 535 Recognizing June 24th as Public Safety Awareness Day to promote citizen empowerment, effective law enforcement, community-based crime prevention, and prudent public policy in support of safer neighborhoods nationwide.

house 06/23/2025 - 119th Congress

We are working to establish June 24th as Public Safety Awareness Day to promote community empowerment, support effective law enforcement, and encourage policies aimed at creating safer neighborhoods across the country. Our goal is to foster collaboration between citizens and officers while advancing evidence-based solutions to reduce crime and improve quality of life.

HRES 535 - Recognizing June 24th as Public Safety Awareness Day to promote citizen empowerment, effective law enforcement, community-based crime prevention, and prudent public policy in support of safer neighborhoods nationwide.

Views

moderate 06/23/2025

A day for public safety is great, but where’s the balance between enforcement and community care in the plan?

left-leaning 06/23/2025

If we’re serious about safety, beefing up police isn’t the whole answer; tackling poverty and systemic injustice is the real fix.

right-leaning 06/23/2025

Community empowerment sounds nice, but without strong police presence, you’re just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

right-leaning 06/23/2025

Finally, some respect for the folks who put their lives on the line—law enforcement needs our full backing.

moderate 06/23/2025

Supporting law enforcement is key, but let’s also fund the programs that stop crime before it starts.

left-leaning 06/23/2025

Public Safety Awareness? Cool, but how about awareness of police accountability and ending racial profiling first?

left-leaning 06/23/2025

Sure, support cops—but let’s not forget that community programs and mental health funding keep neighborhoods safe long-term.

right-leaning 06/23/2025

This isn’t about politics; it’s about restoring law and order to save our neighborhoods from chaos.

moderate 06/23/2025

Empowering citizens sounds fine until you ask who’s really getting heard in these so-called community strategies.