Get started free →
HRES 1413 119th Congress · House

House Resolution Honors Laredo’s 271st Anniversary

Advocate

Official title: Recognizing the 271st anniversary of Laredo, Texas.

This resolution recognizes the 271st anniversary of Laredo, Texas, and formally celebrates the city’s history and contributions. It is a commemorative House resolution, so it does not create a new program, spend federal money, or change any rules for residents. The main effect is symbolic: it gives congressional recognition to a major South Texas border city and its long civic heritage.

  • Recognizes the 271st anniversary of Laredo, Texas.
  • Makes no change to federal benefits, taxes, or regulations.
  • Serves as an official House statement honoring the city’s history and contributions.
  • Was referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
Public Relevance 8 / 100
Niche Narrow / procedural Broad

For most Americans, this resolution has no direct practical effect. If you live in Laredo or have ties to the city, it offers symbolic recognition from Congress that can support community pride and anniversary celebrations, but it does not change eligibility for any program or create any federal spending.

See how this bill affects you — sign in for a personalized analysis
FOR
  • Laredo residents and local civic leaders They are likely to support the resolution because it gives their community official congressional recognition and highlights the city’s historic identity. That can strengthen civic pride and provide a public backdrop for anniversary events.
  • Texas lawmakers and border-region advocates They may view the resolution as a low-cost way to honor one of Texas’s oldest cities and spotlight its role in border commerce and regional culture. Symbolic recognition can also help draw attention to local priorities without requiring new spending.
  • Historical and cultural organizations These groups often favor commemorative resolutions because they preserve public memory and formally acknowledge a community’s long history. The resolution can help promote education and awareness about the city’s place in American and Texas history.
AGAINST
  • Fiscal watchdogs and procedural critics They may argue that Congress should focus floor time on legislation with concrete policy effects rather than ceremonial resolutions. Even if harmless, they can see such measures as adding little substantive value.
  • Members concerned about congressional workload Some lawmakers may prefer to limit commemorative resolutions so the chamber spends more time on pressing national issues. Their concern is not with Laredo itself but with the cumulative use of House time on symbolic measures.
  • “Recognizing the 271st anniversary of Laredo, Texas.”

    This is the core purpose of the resolution: formal congressional acknowledgment of the city’s milestone anniversary. It does not create a new federal program or require action from residents.

  • “Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.”

    The resolution has been sent to committee for consideration, which is a standard step before any possible House action. Many ceremonial resolutions move quickly if leadership chooses to bring them forward.

  • “Submitted in House”

    This indicates the resolution was formally introduced in the chamber. Introduction is the first procedural step and usually means the measure is being placed on the legislative record for possible consideration.

As a simple House resolution, this measure is not a law and only needs House approval. A ceremonial resolution honoring a Texas city, introduced by a Texas member and already referred to committee, is the kind of measure that commonly advances with little controversy and may be agreed to by voice vote or unanimous consent. The single cosponsor suggests modest but straightforward support, and there is little reason to expect opposition unless the House calendar becomes crowded.

BillBoard checks this page against public Congress.gov metadata, then adds plain-English analysis where available.

Bill
HRES 1413
Congress
119th Congress
Official title
Recognizing the 271st anniversary of Laredo, Texas.
Policy area
Government & Elections
Latest action
Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. (July 2, 2026)
Last updated
July 3, 2026

July 2, 2026

Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

Take Action

Get more from BillBoard

Free tools to understand, respond to, and track this bill.

Ask AI about this bill

Data sourced from api.congress.gov.

Free to use · No credit card

Understand every bill.
Make your voice count.

BillBoard turns dense U.S. legislation into plain-English summaries, helps you take a stance, and connects you to your representatives — in seconds.