skip to main content

H.Res. 1105 (115th): Designating Salt Lake City, Utah, as the western center of the centennial commemoration of the 19th amendment to the Constitution, in coordination with Better Days 2020, and designating Cheyenne, Wyoming, Denver, Colorado, Helena, Montana, and Seneca Falls, New York, as sister cities in those celebrations.


Sponsor and status

Mia Love

Sponsor. Representative for Utah's 4th congressional district. Republican.

Read Text »
Last Updated: Sep 28, 2018
Length: 3 pages
Introduced
Sep 28, 2018
115th Congress (2017–2019)
Status
Died in a previous Congress

This resolution was introduced on September 28, 2018, in a previous session of Congress, but it did not receive a vote.

Cosponsors

3 Cosponsors (3 Republicans)

Source

History

Sep 28, 2018
 
Introduced

Bills and resolutions are referred to committees which debate the bill before possibly sending it on to the whole chamber.

H.Res. 1105 (115th) was a simple resolution in the United States Congress.

A simple resolution is used for matters that affect just one chamber of Congress, often to change the rules of the chamber to set the manner of debate for a related bill. It must be agreed to in the chamber in which it was introduced. It is not voted on in the other chamber and does not have the force of law.

Resolutions numbers restart every two years. That means there are other resolutions with the number H.Res. 1105. This is the one from the 115th Congress.

This simple resolution was introduced in the 115th Congress, which met from Jan 3, 2017 to Jan 3, 2019. Legislation not passed by the end of a Congress is cleared from the books.

How to cite this information.

We recommend the following MLA-formatted citation when using the information you see here in academic work:

“H.Res. 1105 — 115th Congress: Designating Salt Lake City, Utah, as the western center of the centennial commemoration of the ….” www.GovTrack.us. 2018. June 7, 2023 <https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/115/hres1105>

Where is this information from?

GovTrack automatically collects legislative information from a variety of governmental and non-governmental sources. This page is sourced primarily from Congress.gov, the official portal of the United States Congress. Congress.gov is generally updated one day after events occur, and so legislative activity shown here may be one day behind. Data via the congress project.