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Connolly Post Office Building designated in Fairfax

A formal naming of a Fairfax USPS facility honors a long-serving Virginia congressman with minimal policy impact.

The Brief

SB3294 designates the United States Postal Service facility at 10660 Page Avenue in Fairfax, Virginia as the "Congressman Gerald E. Connolly Post Office Building." The designation is ceremonial and does not alter postal operations, funding, or services.

The bill also provides that references in law, maps, regulations, documents, papers, or other records to the facility shall be deemed to use the new name.

At a Glance

What It Does

The bill designates the Fairfax USPS facility at 10660 Page Avenue as the "Congressman Gerald E. Connolly Post Office Building" and requires that references in law and official records use the new name.

Who It Affects

USPS staff at the Fairfax facility, federal agencies referencing the building, and local users of postal services.

Why It Matters

It creates a formal, enduring naming with no operational changes, ensuring consistent branding and recognition in official material.

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What This Bill Actually Does

The bill designates the United States Postal Service facility located at 10660 Page Avenue in Fairfax, Virginia as the Congressman Gerald E. Connolly Post Office Building, establishing the new name as the facility’s official designation.

This is a naming action that affects how the building is identified in signage, maps, and legal references, but it does not modify postal operations, budgets, or service levels. Section 1 establishes the name, while Section 2 ensures that any reference to the facility in laws or records uses the new designation.

Implementation would primarily involve updating signage and official records to reflect the name change.

Practically, the designation is a formal acknowledgement of the post office’s identity within federal and local records. It does not create new authorities or alter authority over the building.

Agencies that reference the site in documentation will adopt the new name, and local stakeholders may encounter updates to maps or signage. The bill’s scope is strictly nominal, aimed at branding rather than governance or funding decisions.

The Five Things You Need to Know

1

The facility at 10660 Page Avenue, Fairfax, Virginia is designated as the 'Congressman Gerald E. Connolly Post Office Building'.

2

Section 2 directs that references in laws and official records use the new name.

3

No changes to postal operations, funding, or services are included.

4

Introduced on December 2, 2025 by Senator Kaine with Senator Warner as cosponsor.

5

The action is a naming designation only, requiring downstream signage and records updates.

Section-by-Section Breakdown

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Section 1

Designation of the post office building name

This section designates the United States Postal Service facility at 10660 Page Avenue in Fairfax, Virginia as the 'Congressman Gerald E. Connolly Post Office Building.' The designation applies to signage and to the building’s official designation in federal references, without altering operations or funding.

Section 2

References to the facility

This section provides that any reference in law, map, regulation, document, paper, or other record to the facility shall be deemed to be the 'Congressman Gerald E. Connolly Post Office Building.' This ensures consistency across official materials and records.

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 and businesses in Fairfax County who rely on the Page Avenue post office benefit from a clear, officially recognized name in signage and correspondence.
  • USPS field operations and local postal staff benefit from a stable, formal designation that appears in internal records and branding materials.
  • Congressman Gerald E. Connolly and his constituents gain symbolic recognition of the representative’s service through the naming.
  • Federal and state agencies referencing the post office in documents or maps benefit from a consistent naming convention.

Who Bears the Cost

  • USPS for updating facility signage, internal databases, and documented references.
  • Local and state agencies that maintain maps, directories, and official records may incur minor update costs.
  • Potential transitional costs associated with revising electronic records and signage to reflect the new designation.

Key Issues

The Core Tension

The central dilemma is whether a symbolic naming obligation justifies the administrative effort and potential minor costs to update signage and records, in exchange for uniform branding and formal recognition.

The bill’s action is largely ceremonial, designating a single USPS facility by name and aligning legal references with that name. The practical implications are minimal: branding and signage updates, plus the administrative task of ensuring all references use the new designation.

There is no appropriations authority, no changes to services, and no shifts in governance or oversight implied by the designation. A potential implementation challenge is the timely update of all references across federal databases and maps to reflect the new nomenclature, which could entail small administrative costs.

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