H. Res. 927 (119th)Bill Overview

Declaring support by the House of Representatives for Design for Recycling (DFR) initiatives that limit all types of waste by encouraging manufacturers to design their products to have the maximum number of recyclable components.

Environmental Protection|Environmental Protection
Cosponsors
Support
Lean Democratic
Introduced
Dec 4, 2025
Discussions
Current stageCommittee

Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.

Introduced
Committee
Floor
President
Law
Congressional Activities
01 · The brief

This House resolution expresses the House of Representatives’ support for Design for Recycling (DFR) initiatives that encourage manufacturers to design products with the maximum number of recyclable components.

It defines DFR as design choices that enable use of recycled materials, removal of hazardous substances that hinder recycling, and easier, cost-effective recycling at end-of-life.

The resolution cites industry and EPA statistics about recycling rates, economic contributions of the recycled materials industry, landfill and waste volumes, and examples of circular-economy practices, and it affirms the recycled materials industry's role in the economy and employment.

Passage5/100

On content alone, the resolution is highly likely to be adopted by the originating chamber because it is non-binding, narrow, and non-controversial. However, because it is a House simple resolution (expressing the House's sentiment) and does not create statutory law or require enactment by both chambers and signature, it does not become law in the statutory sense. This makes the chance of 'becoming law' essentially negligible even though passage/adoption in the House is likely.

CredibilityPartial

How solid the drafting looks.

Contention28/100

Scope and enforceability: liberals want binding standards/funding; conservatives want to ensure the measure remains voluntary and nonregulatory.

02 · What it does

Who stands to gain, and who may push back.

Who this appears to help vs burden50% / 50%
Federal agenciesManufacturers · Cities
Likely helped
  • Targeted stakeholdersSupporters can point to potential environmental benefits — reduced landfill volumes and lower greenhouse gas emissions…
  • Targeted stakeholdersThe resolution reinforces and publicizes the recycled materials sector and could encourage private investment and corpo…
  • Federal agenciesBy signaling House support, the resolution may facilitate development of voluntary standards, industry partnerships, an…
Likely burdened
  • Targeted stakeholdersCritics can note the resolution is non‑binding and creates no new funding, regulatory requirements, or enforcement mech…
  • ManufacturersIf DFR expectations evolve into mandatory product‑design requirements or disclosure obligations in the future, manufact…
  • CitiesExpanding recycling through DFR depends on existing recycling infrastructure and markets for recycled materials; critic…
03 · Why people split

Why the argument around this bill splits.

Scope and enforceability: liberals want binding standards/funding; conservatives want to ensure the measure remains voluntary and nonregulatory.
Progressive90%

A mainstream liberal is likely to view the resolution favorably as a positive statement supporting a circular economy, waste reduction, and climate benefits.

They will welcome the emphasis on designing products for recyclability, reducing landfill waste and greenhouse gases, and recovering materials from e-waste.

They will note the resolution’s citations of job creation, industry economic contributions, and examples of successful DFR innovations as reasons to support broader policy action.

Leans supportive
Centrist75%

A centrist/moderate will generally view this resolution as a sensible, low-risk endorsement of voluntary industry efforts to improve product recyclability.

They will appreciate the document’s reliance on EPA and industry data and its emphasis on economic benefits and job creation, but will look for realistic implementation paths and cost-benefit clarity.

Because the resolution is symbolic and nonbinding, a centrist will neither be alarmed by federal overreach nor excited by immediate regulatory change; they will see it as a possible foundation for pragmatic, measurable next steps.

Leans supportive
Conservative55%

A mainstream conservative is likely to view this resolution as broadly acceptable in principle—encouraging recycling and economic benefits—because it is nonbinding and calls for industry-led initiatives rather than new federal regulation.

They will appreciate the emphasis on private-sector action and the resolution’s recognition of the recycled materials industry’s economic contributions.

However, conservatives may be wary of potential mission creep toward mandates, subsidies, or regulatory burdens on manufacturers and will want assurance the resolution won’t be used to justify intrusive federal rules or costly compliance requirements.

Split reaction
04 · Can it pass?

The path through Congress.

Introduced

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Committee

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Floor

Still ahead

President

Still ahead

Law

Still ahead

Passage likelihood5/100

On content alone, the resolution is highly likely to be adopted by the originating chamber because it is non-binding, narrow, and non-controversial. However, because it is a House simple resolution (expressing the House's sentiment) and does not create statutory law or require enactment by both chambers and signature, it does not become law in the statutory sense. This makes the chance of 'becoming law' essentially negligible even though passage/adoption in the House is likely.

Scope and complexity
24%
Scopenarrow
24%
Complexitylow
Why this could stall
  • Whether House committee scheduling and floor time will be allocated to consider a symbolic resolution amid other legislative priorities; procedural delay is possible despite low controversy.
  • The resolution is non-binding and declaratory; it does not create programs or funding, so its real-world impact depends on voluntary private-sector and state actions not specified in the text.
05 · Recent votes

Recent votes on the bill.

No vote history yet

The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.

06 · Go deeper

Go deeper than the headline read.

Included on this page

Scope and enforceability: liberals want binding standards/funding; conservatives want to ensure the measure remains voluntary and nonregula…

On content alone, the resolution is highly likely to be adopted by the originating chamber because it is non-binding, narrow, and non-contr…

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