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SB24 designates Jerome post office as Representative Maxine Bell Post Office

A ceremonial naming that honors a local figure with no change to postal operations or funding.

The Brief

SB24 is a straightforward naming bill that designates the United States Postal Service facility at 154 First Avenue East in Jerome, Idaho, as the "Representative Maxine Bell Post Office." This is a ceremonial designation that creates a formal name for the facility in law and in official records. The bill specifies that any reference to the facility in a law, map, regulation, document, or other record should be treated as referencing the Representative Maxine Bell Post Office.

At a Glance

What It Does

Section 1(a) designates the Jerome USPS facility at 154 First Avenue East as the Representative Maxine Bell Post Office. Section 1(b) requires that references to the facility in laws and records use the new name. No other changes to operations or funding are authorized.

Who It Affects

The designation directly affects the USPS facility in Jerome and any federal references to that facility. Local residents and businesses may encounter the new name in maps and records, but postal services and operations remain unchanged.

Why It Matters

The act formalizes a local recognition in federal records. It is a symbolic name change with minimal, if any, budget impact and serves as a matter of local pride without altering postal policy or service levels.

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What This Bill Actually Does

The bill designates a specific United States Postal Service building in Jerome, Idaho, as the Representative Maxine Bell Post Office. This is a ceremonial naming, not a policy change or funding authorization.

The law requires that the new name appear in future references to the facility in official documents and records. There are no directives altering how the post office operates or how services are delivered, and no money is appropriated by this bill.

The result is a formal, symbolic honor that local communities and federal record-keepers will recognize going forward.

The Five Things You Need to Know

1

Section 1(a) designates the Jerome USPS facility as the Representative Maxine Bell Post Office.

2

Section 1(b) requires references to the facility in federal records to use the new name.

3

No new funding or operational changes are authorized by the bill.

4

The designation applies to the post office located at 154 First Avenue East, Jerome, Idaho.

5

The bill is a ceremonial naming act with no changes to postal services or governance.

Section-by-Section Breakdown

Every bill we cover gets an analysis of its key sections.

Section 1

Designation of Post Office as Representative Maxine Bell Post Office

Section 1(a) designates the USPS facility at 154 First Avenue East in Jerome, Idaho as the Representative Maxine Bell Post Office. Section 1(b) provides that references in law, maps, regulations, documents, and other records should reflect this designation. The provision is strictly naming and record-keeping in nature, with no directives about funding or service changes.

At scale

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Who Benefits and Who Bears the Cost

Every bill creates winners and losers. Here's who stands to gain and who bears the cost.

Who Benefits

  • Residents of Jerome, Idaho, who gain a formally named local federal facility and a sense of local recognition.
  • USPS Jerome facility employees, who operate at the named site and will reference the post office by its new designation in internal and external communications.
  • Local government and community organizations that reference the post office in planning, tourism, and civic materials.

Who Bears the Cost

  • USPS for routine signage updates and record changes to reflect the new name (typically funded within existing operating budgets).
  • No direct funding is allocated by the bill; there is no explicit additional cost to taxpayers or agencies beyond routine administrative updates.

Key Issues

The Core Tension

The central tension is between honoring a local figure through a federal facility name and avoiding substantive policy changes or fiscal implications. The design carries symbolic value but does not address funding, service delivery, or governance, leaving open how future naming requests will be evaluated and funded.

The bill creates a symbolic designation that has minimal policy impact. In practice, the primary effect is the formal naming of a single USPS facility and alignment of future references to that name in official documents.

A potential policy tension in naming federal facilities is avoided here by the bill’s narrow scope and lack of funding provisions, but in a broader sense, such designations can raise questions about the criteria used to select honorees and the prevalence of naming requests. Implementers should anticipate minor administrative tasks to update signage, maps, and records if required by USPS branding or record-keeping practices.

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