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HR 1163

Congratulating Joshua Rodriguez of Horizon High School on winning a silver medal at the 2025 UIL Wrestling State Tournament.

89th Legislature (2025) Introduced by Mary González

H.R. 1163 formally congratulates Joshua Rodriguez for a silver medal at the 2025 UIL Wrestling State Tournament; ceremonial, with no policy or budget effects.

Reported enrolled
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Bill Summary · HR 1163

Summary — H.R. 1163 (Congratulatory Resolution for Joshua Rodriguez)

Main purpose

H.R. 1163 is a House resolution congratulating Joshua Rodriguez of Horizon High School for winning a silver medal at the 2025 University Interscholastic League (UIL) Wrestling State Tournament. The resolution is ceremonial and honorary in nature; it recognizes achievement and offers commendation rather than creating or changing law.

Key provisions

  • Formally congratulates Joshua Rodriguez for earning a silver medal at the 2025 UIL Wrestling State Tournament.
  • Commends his athletic achievement and the support of Horizon High School, coaches, teammates, family, and the local community.
  • Contains no substantive policy directives, regulatory changes, funding authorizations, or legal obligations.

Who is affected

  • Directly honors: Joshua Rodriguez (student-athlete).
  • Indirectly recognizes: Horizon High School, its wrestling program, coaches, teammates, family, and the local community.
  • No federal agencies, programs, or budgets are impacted.

Procedural and timeline details

  • Introduced in the House: February 10, 2025.
  • Referred to: Committee on the Judiciary and the Committee on Small Business (per the record), with subsequent committee actions recorded.
  • Placed on Congratulatory & Memorial Resolutions Calendar: May 23, 2025.
  • Laid before the House and adopted (non-record vote): May 23, 2025.
  • Reported enrolled: May 25, 2025.
  • Sponsors and cosponsors: Multiple Members are listed as sponsors/cosponsors in the provided record (e.g., Brad Finstad listed as primary sponsor; others include Nathaniel Moran, Zachary Nunn, Harriet Hageman, Maria Elvira Salazar, and more).

Budgetary and legal impact

  • The resolution is purely honorary. It does not create any new legal requirements, appropriations, entitlements, or changes to the U.S. Code.
  • No federal budgetary effect or administrative action is required.

Note on source materials

The materials provided also include House Report 119-108, titled the “Prove It Act,” which appears to be a substantive legislative report amending title 5 (regulatory flexibility analyses). That substantive report does not match the ceremonial title of H.R. 1163 described here. If you would like, I can:
- Provide a summary of the Prove It Act (H.R. 1163 as reported in H. Rept. 119-108), which contains detailed regulatory-process changes, or
- Verify which document/version of H.R. 1163 you want summarized and produce a consolidated summary accordingly.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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