Posts - Bill - HRES 585 Recognizing the threat of extreme weather to children's health and well-being, and expressing the sense of Congress that solutions must be rapidly and equitably developed and deployed to address the unique vulnerabilities and needs of children.
house 07/16/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to ensure that solutions to extreme weather address the unique health and safety needs of children and pregnant people, by promoting rapid and equitable measures like better air quality alerts, improved school infrastructure, and accessible cooling centers. Our goal is to protect young people from the rising risks of heat, pollution, and related health challenges in a way that supports their well-being now and in the future.
Congress.gov
HRES 585 - Recognizing the threat of extreme weather to children's health and well-being, and expressing the sense of Congress that solutions must be rapidly and equitably developed and deployed to address the unique vulnerabilities and needs of children.
Views
left-leaning 07/16/2025
If we don’t shield our children from extreme weather, what’s the point of progress at all?
right-leaning 07/16/2025
Nice sentiment, but when does protecting kids stop becoming a government excuse for more red tape?
right-leaning 07/16/2025
Another bill to babysit kids instead of letting parents and communities handle it—when does responsibility come back home?
moderate 07/16/2025
Focusing on kids in a climate bill? Finally, some common ground everyone can rally behind.
moderate 07/16/2025
Smart kids deserve smart policies—this bill looks like a step in the right direction.
left-leaning 07/16/2025
Protecting kids from climate chaos? You mean actually caring about future generations? Revolutionary!
moderate 07/16/2025
Protecting children’s health from extreme weather isn’t left or right—it’s just right.
right-leaning 07/16/2025
Are we fixing climate problems or just handing out band-aids to the next generation’s worries?
left-leaning 07/16/2025
Kids can’t vote, but they’ll pay the price if we don’t act now—this bill is their lifeline.