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SRES 788 119th Congress · Senate

Senate Resolution Marks 5 Years Since Surfside Collapse

Advocate

Official title: A resolution commemorating the passage of 5 years since the tragic building collapse in Surfside, Florida, on June 24, 2021.

This Senate resolution commemorates the fifth anniversary of the tragic Champlain Towers South collapse in Surfside, Florida, on June 24, 2021. It is a commemorative measure meant to honor the victims, survivors, families, first responders, and community members affected by the disaster. The resolution does not create a new federal program or spend money; its purpose is to express the Senate’s remembrance and support. Because it is a simple Senate resolution, its practical effect is symbolic rather than regulatory.

  • Commemorates the fifth anniversary of the Surfside, Florida building collapse on June 24, 2021.
  • Expresses the Senate’s remembrance for the victims, survivors, families, and first responders.
  • Does not establish a new federal program, benefit, or penalty.
  • Functions as a symbolic chamber resolution rather than a law.
Public Relevance 8 / 100
Niche Narrow / procedural Broad

For most Americans, this resolution has no direct financial or regulatory effect. For families affected by the Surfside collapse, it provides official Senate recognition of the anniversary and the ongoing human toll of the disaster, but it does not create compensation, benefits, or new safety requirements.

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FOR
  • Families of victims and survivors They are likely to support a formal Senate acknowledgment that honors those lost and recognizes the lasting trauma carried by survivors and loved ones. A public resolution can validate the community’s grief and preserve the memory of the disaster in the congressional record.
  • Florida residents and local community leaders They may see the resolution as an important act of solidarity with a community that endured a major tragedy. It can reinforce public attention to safety, recovery, and remembrance in South Florida and beyond.
  • Building safety and condominium policy advocates They may back the resolution because it keeps attention on the consequences of neglected maintenance and structural oversight. Even without regulatory changes, commemorative action can help sustain momentum for safer housing policies.
AGAINST
  • Taxpayer-focused fiscal conservatives They may question the value of congressional time spent on symbolic measures with no operational effect. Their concern is that Congress should focus on legislation with measurable public benefits instead of commemorations.
  • Some constituents seeking policy action They may argue that remembrance is important but insufficient without concrete measures to improve building safety, inspections, and accountability. From this perspective, a resolution can feel like a substitute for substantive reform.
  • Budget-minded government critics They may object to routine congressional resolutions that do not change law or spending but still use legislative resources. Even though the cost is minimal, they may prefer the Senate to limit symbolic action.
  • “commemorating the passage of 5 years since the tragic building collapse in Surfside, Florida”

    This establishes the resolution as a memorial measure tied to the anniversary of a specific disaster. In practical terms, it is meant to mark the date publicly and keep the event in congressional memory.

  • “Submitted in Senate”

    The measure has been formally introduced in the Senate and entered the legislative process. That is the first step before committee consideration or chamber action.

  • “Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary”

    The resolution was sent to committee for any review or further action. For commemorative resolutions, committee referral is often a routine procedural step before possible floor consideration.

As a Senate resolution, this measure is likely to be agreed to if it receives broad bipartisan support, which is common for memorial and commemorative resolutions. Its referral to committee and the presence of a cosponsor suggest routine consideration rather than controversy, and measures honoring a major tragedy are often adopted by unanimous consent or voice vote.

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

Bill
SRES 788
Congress
119th Congress
Official title
A resolution commemorating the passage of 5 years since the tragic building collapse in Surfside, Florida, on June 24, 2021.
Policy area
Housing & Infrastructure
Latest action
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (June 24, 2026)
Last updated
June 25, 2026

June 24, 2026

Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

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