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HR 196A Resolution designating the month of April 2025 as "Distracted Driving Awareness Month" in Pennsylvania.

Congress · introduced 2025-04-17

Latest action: (Remarks see House Journal Page 442-446), April 24, 2025

Sponsors

Action timeline

  1. · house Referred to TRANSPORTATION, April 17, 2025
  2. · house Reported as committed, April 22, 2025
  3. · house Adopted, April 24, 2025 (199-4)
  4. · house (Remarks see House Journal Page 442-446), April 24, 2025

Text versions

No text versions on file yet — same ingest as the action timeline populates these. Each version has direct links to the XML / HTML / PDF at govinfo.gov.

Bill text

Printer's No. 1413 · 3,386 characters · source document

Read the full text
PRINTER'S NO.    1413

                     THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA



              HOUSE RESOLUTION
                 No. 196
                                                 Session of
                                                   2025

     INTRODUCED BY NEILSON, HILL-EVANS, HANBIDGE, WAXMAN, CONKLIN,
        GIRAL, McNEILL, SCHLOSSBERG, DONAHUE, GUZMAN, WARREN, PARKER,
        HADDOCK, K.HARRIS, KHAN, SANCHEZ, GILLEN, STAATS AND
        HOHENSTEIN, APRIL 17, 2025

     REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION, APRIL 17, 2025


                                  A RESOLUTION
 1   Designating the month of April 2025 as "Distracted Driving
 2      Awareness Month" in Pennsylvania.
 3         WHEREAS, Distracted driving is considered any activity that
 4   diverts attention away from the primary task of safe driving;
 5   and
 6         WHEREAS, Anything can be a potential distraction but common
 7   examples of distracted driving include talking or texting on the
 8   phone, eating and drinking, talking to passengers in the
 9   vehicle, grooming or applying makeup and using the vehicle's
10   entertainment or navigation system; and
11         WHEREAS, Texting is considered the greatest distraction as
12   sending or reading a text takes a driver's eyes off the road for
13   five seconds; and
14         WHEREAS, At an average speed of 55 miles per hour, a driver
15   can travel the length of an entire football field in five
16   seconds; and
17         WHEREAS, According to data compiled by the Department of
 1   Transportation, there were 11,262 crashes Statewide in 2023 that
 2   involved a distracted driver; and
 3      WHEREAS, These crashes resulted in 65 fatalities; and
 4      WHEREAS, National data compiled by the National Highway
 5   Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) found that 3,275 people
 6   lost their lives in 2023 as a result of distracted driving,
 7   making distracted driving one of the leading causes of
 8   preventable roadway deaths in America; and
 9      WHEREAS, According to the Department of Transportation, young
10   drivers are over-represented in typical distracted driving
11   associated type crashes such as rear-end crashes, head-on
12   collisions and hitting fixed objects; and
13      WHEREAS, In an effort to educate all current and future
14   drivers on the importance of safe driving habits and the dangers
15   of distracted driving, the month of April has been designated as
16   "Distracted Driving Awareness Month" by NHTSA; and
17      WHEREAS, "Distracted Driving Awareness Month" is recognized
18   in this Commonwealth by the Governor's Office, PennDOT, the
19   Pennsylvania State Police, the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission
20   and the Pennsylvania Insurance Department, all of which have
21   shared resources and have encouraged safe driving to save lives;
22   therefore be it
23      RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives designate the
24   month of April 2025 as "Distracted Driving Awareness Month" in
25   Pennsylvania; and be it further
26      RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives encourage
27   Pennsylvanians to drive responsibly by focusing on the road and
28   not on their phones or other distractions and to have
29   conversations with their friends and family about the dangers of
30   distracted driving.

20250HR0196PN1413                 - 2 -

Connected on the graph

Outbound (1)

datetypetoamountrolesource
referred_to_committeePennsylvania House Transportation Committeepa-leg

The full graph

Every typed relationship touching this entity — 1 edge across 1 category. Grouped by what the connection is; the heaviest few are shown, with a link to the full list.

Committees

Referred to committee 1 edge

Who matters

Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.

#MemberRoleSpeechesVotedScore
1Ed Neilson (D, state_lower PA-174)sponsor05
2Ben Waxman (D, state_lower PA-182)cosponsor01
3Benjamin V. Sanchez (D, state_lower PA-153)cosponsor01
4Carol Hill-Evans (D, state_lower PA-95)cosponsor01
5Craig T. Staats (R, state_lower PA-145)cosponsor01
6Dan K. Williams (D, state_lower PA-74)cosponsor01
7Darisha K. Parker (D, state_lower PA-198)cosponsor01
8Jeanne McNeill (D, state_lower PA-133)cosponsor01
9Jeremy Shaffer (R, state_lower PA-28)cosponsor01
10Jim Haddock (D, state_lower PA-118)cosponsor01
11Joe Ciresi (D, state_lower PA-146)cosponsor01
12Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz (D, state_lower PA-129)cosponsor01
13Jose Giral (D, state_lower PA-180)cosponsor01
14Joseph C. Hohenstein (D, state_lower PA-177)cosponsor01
15Keith S. Harris (D, state_lower PA-195)cosponsor01
16Kyle Donahue (D, state_lower PA-113)cosponsor01
17Liz Hanbidge (D, state_lower PA-61)cosponsor01
18Manuel Guzman (D, state_lower PA-127)cosponsor01
19Mark M. Gillen (R, state_lower PA-128)cosponsor01
20Michael H. Schlossberg (D, state_lower PA-132)cosponsor01
21Nikki Rivera (D, state_lower PA-96)cosponsor01
22Pat Gallagher (D, state_lower PA-173)cosponsor01
23Perry S. Warren (D, state_lower PA-31)cosponsor01
24Scott Conklin (D, state_lower PA-77)cosponsor01
25Tarik Khan (D, state_lower PA-194)cosponsor01

Predicted vote

Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.

0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)

By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no

Activity

Every typed-graph event involving this entity, newest first. Each row is one edge in the influence graph; click the date to jump to its provenance.

  1. 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Transportation Committee · pa-leg

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