H.R. 3350 would rename the U.S. Postal Service facility at 340 East 1st Street in Tustin, California, as the "Ursula Ellen Kennedy Post Office Building." The bill does not change postal operations, staffing, or funding; it is a naming measure only. It would apply to federal references to that specific facility in laws, maps, regulations, documents, and other records. The practical effect is limited to signage and official identification of the building.
What This Bill Does
- Renames the USPS facility at 340 East 1st Street in Tustin, California.
- The new official name would be the "Ursula Ellen Kennedy Post Office Building."
- Federal references to that facility must be treated as references to the renamed building.
- The bill does not change postal service rates, staffing, or delivery rules.
Who This Bill Affects
If you use the Tustin post office at 340 East 1st Street, the bill would change the building’s official federal name to the Ursula Ellen Kennedy Post Office Building and likely update signage and references in federal records. It does not change mailing services, postage prices, eligibility, or access to postal benefits, so there is no broader cost or benefit to the general public beyond the local naming recognition.
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June 9, 2026As ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on May 20, 2026
Full CBO report →Who Supports & Opposes This
- Tustin residents and local community leaders They may see the renaming as a way to honor Ursula Ellen Kennedy and give public recognition to a person or family important to the community.
- Postal patrons and civic-minded voters Supporters of commemorative naming bills often argue that Congress should use its symbolic authority to recognize people who contributed to a town or region without changing federal services.
- Family members and friends of Ursula Ellen Kennedy They would likely view the designation as a permanent public tribute that places her name on a federal building used by the community.
- Fiscal conservatives They may object that Congress should spend floor time on symbolic naming bills instead of legislation with broader policy or budget effects, even if the fiscal cost is minimal.
- People concerned about proliferation of commemorative names Some may argue that too many renamed federal buildings can create administrative clutter in maps, records, and signage without providing a functional public benefit.
- Residents who prefer neutral facility names A few local users may dislike changing a familiar building name if they believe public facilities should remain descriptive rather than commemorative.
Key Implications
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“"shall be known and designated as the 'Ursula Ellen Kennedy Post Office Building'"”
This is the core legal change: the building’s official federal name would be updated, which mainly affects signage and how the facility is identified in government use.
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“"Any reference in a law, map, regulation, document, paper, or other record"”
Federal paperwork and official references would need to treat the renamed building as the same facility, preventing confusion in legal or administrative records.
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“"located at 340 East 1st Street in Tustin, California"”
The designation applies to one specific postal facility, so the impact is geographically narrow and does not extend to other post offices or USPS operations.
Official Source & Bill Facts
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- Bill
- HR 3350
- Congress
- 119th Congress
- Official title
- To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 340 East 1st Street in Tustin, California, as the "Ursula Ellen Kennedy Post Office Building".
- Policy area
- Government & Elections
- Latest action
- Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection. (June 29, 2026)
- Last updated
- June 30, 2026
Latest Status
June 29, 2026
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
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Ask AI about this billData sourced from api.congress.gov.