[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 601 Introduced in House (IH)]
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118th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 601
Recognizing the importance of engagement with the Latino community to
get into the outdoors and participate in activities to protect United
States natural resources, and expressing support for the designation of
the third week of July as ``Latino Conservation Week''.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
July 19, 2023
Ms. Barragan (for herself, Mr. Espaillat, Mr. Cardenas, Mr. Soto, Ms.
Salinas, Mr. Correa, Mr. Costa, Ms. Escobar, Mr. Frost, Mr. Gallego,
Mr. Gomez, Mr. Grijalva, Mr. Levin, Mrs. Napolitano, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez,
Mr. Vargas, Ms. Velazquez, and Mr. Garcia of Illinois) submitted the
following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Natural
Resources
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Recognizing the importance of engagement with the Latino community to
get into the outdoors and participate in activities to protect United
States natural resources, and expressing support for the designation of
the third week of July as ``Latino Conservation Week''.
Whereas ``Latino Conservation Week'' was created by the Hispanic Access
Foundation to support the Latino community getting into the outdoors and
participating in activities to protect United States natural resources;
Whereas, during this week, Latino community, nonprofit, faith-based, and
government organizations and agencies across the United States will go
on hiking or camping outings in National Conservation Lands, national
monuments, and parks and other public lands, learn about conservation
efforts in their community, and show their support for permanently
protecting United States land, water, and air;
Whereas local activities include community-wide public events, private events,
film screenings, discussion, ground hikes, birdwatching, picnics,
neighborhood cleanups, and more;
Whereas national monument designations celebrate the Latino community's
contribution to this country, contribute to local economies, and provide
beautiful spaces for outdoor recreation;
Whereas 78 percent of Latinos say they have directly experienced the effects of
climate change;
Whereas two-thirds of Latinos say air pollution and contaminants in drinking
water are serious threats to the health of their families;
Whereas Latino children in the United States are 40 percent more likely to die
from asthma than their White counterparts, in part due to the
disproportionate pollution burdens their communities are exposed to;
Whereas Latinos are more likely to lack access to health insurance and thus are
less able to treat health ailments caused by exposure to poor air
quality;
Whereas access to natural spaces--
(1) provide mental and physical health benefits;
(2) can save almost three dollars in health care on every dollar spent
on creating and maintaining park trails; and
(3) helps mitigate climate change and can aid economic recovery;
Whereas communities of color in the United States are 3 times as likely as White
communities to live in nature-deprived places, which means there are far
fewer parks, forests, streams, beaches, and other natural places near
Black, Latino, and Asian communities;
Whereas Latinos are 21 percent more likely than non-Hispanic Whites to live in
urban heat islands, or areas dominated by asphalt and concrete without
access to parks that provide shade for urban cooling;
Whereas public lands are a key component of the Latino identity, and they weave
a narrative of the diverse and complex history of the Nation;
Whereas Latinos are the largest minority group in America, with over 62.5
million people making up 19 percent of the Nation's population and are
projected to become nearly one-third of the population by 2050;
Whereas 4.4 million Latinos participate in fishing, averaging more outings per
year than the general fishing population;
Whereas all communities should have equitable access to nearby green space, the
ability to reach it, and features that honor and welcome diverse
languages, inclusive histories, and uses of parkland; and
Whereas the third week of July is an appropriate week to designate as Latino
Conservation Week: Now, therefore be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) recognizes the Latino community's commitment to
conservation and the importance of getting outdoors;
(2) recognizes the future of public lands depends on
engaging and welcoming our diverse youth and Latino communities
that already deeply care about our environment and feel a moral
obligation to take care of it; and
(3) supports the designation of ``Latino Conservation
Week''.
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