LegisTrack
Back to all bills
SRES 125119th CongressIn Committee

A resolution commemorating the centennial of Delta Air Lines.

Introduced: Mar 12, 2025
Standard Summary
Comprehensive overview in 1-2 paragraphs

This is a Senate resolution commemorating Delta Air Lines’ 100th anniversary in 2025. Introduced by Senator Ossoff (with co-sponsors) and referred to the Judiciary Committee, the resolution recognizes Delta’s origins as Huff Daland Dusters in 1925, its evolution into Delta Air Service, and its growth into a major global airline. It notes Delta’s current scale—about 100,000 employees, roughly 5,000 daily flights, and more than 200 million travelers served annually—along with its network of hubs across several states and its extensive international reach. The resolution also highlights Delta’s community involvement and recent recognitions for on-time performance and reputation. As a ceremonial measure, it expresses the Senate’s appreciation and does not authorize or fund any new government activities or programs.

Key Points

  • 1The resolution commemorates Delta Air Lines’ centennial on March 2, 2025, marking 100 years since its founding as Huff Daland Dusters in 1925.
  • 2It traces Delta’s evolution from a crop-dusting company to a major airline and notes its ongoing role in connecting people and economies both domestically and globally.
  • 3The resolution highlights Delta’s current scope: about 100,000 employees, around 5,000 daily flights, serving more than 200 million travelers per year, with hubs nationwide.
  • 4It emphasizes Delta’s broad network of peak-day departures to more than 290 destinations across six continents, underscoring its role in linking the United States with the world.
  • 5The document cites recent accolades for Delta, including recognition as North America’s most on-time airline by Cirium, top U.S. airline by the Wall Street Journal, the World’s Most Admired Airline by Fortune, and a place on Time’s inaugural World’s Best Companies List.

Impact Areas

Primary: Delta Air Lines and its employees; the traveling public who rely on Delta for passenger and cargo service; the U.S. economy that benefits from a large, connected airline carrier.Secondary: Communities hosting Delta hubs and operations (local economies, jobs, and regional commerce); the broader aviation industry in terms of corporate reputation and national connectivity.Additional impacts: The resolution is ceremonial and has no new regulatory authority or funding implications; it signals congressional recognition and may influence public perception and corporate goodwill, with potential indirect benefits for tourism and business travel.
Generated by gpt-5-nano on Nov 18, 2025