With God, all things are possible
To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 890 East 152nd Street in Cleveland, Ohio, as the "Technical Sergeant Alma Gladys Minter Post Office Building".
The bill honors Technical Sergeant Alma Gladys Minter by renaming a federal post office and updating official references, providing symbolic recognition and legal consistency at the cost of modest, one‑time administrative and local update expenses.
Strengthening Agency Management and Oversight of Software Assets Act
The bill aims to save taxpayer money and improve government IT interoperability, security, and procurement transparency by standardizing software inventories and controls—but doing so requires near‑term agency costs, added administrative burdens, possible operational delays, and uncertain funding for implementation.
To codify Executive Order 11246 titled "Equal Employment Opportunity".
The bill would strengthen and make enforceable nondiscrimination protections for federal employees and government contractors—improving remedies and inclusion for marginalized workers—but would raise compliance costs and litigation risk for contractors and limit future executive flexibility.
To amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to authorize the Secretary of Education to award grants to State educational agencies to carry out wellness programs for school personnel, and for other purposes.
Neighborhood Tree Act of 2026
The bill directs multi-year federal funding to expand urban tree canopy and target environmental justice—bringing measurable health, economic, and community benefits—while imposing substantial federal and local costs, administrative requirements, and potential implementation or legal challenges.
Feeding Families Not Fear Act of 2026
The bill preserves existing SNAP rules and reduces certain federal ICE expenditures—avoiding implementation costs and protecting current beneficiaries—at the cost of undoing potential SNAP expansions, reducing ICE enforcement resources, and creating short-term funding disruptions for programs and contractors.
Healthy Hair Act
The bill reduces consumer and worker exposure to formaldehyde and produces evidence to guide policy, but it imposes compliance costs on manufacturers and salons, may raise prices or limit product access, and relies on studies that delay direct protections.
Expanding Cybersecurity Workforce Act of 2025
The bill provides modest, multi-year federal funding to expand targeted cybersecurity training and partnerships—benefiting underrepresented individuals and educators—while imposing a small recurring taxpayer cost and carrying risks from a rapid rollout timeline and narrow eligibility definitions.
Thriving Community Gardens Act
The bill promotes student health, nutrition education, and hands-on learning through expanded PE, chronic-disease instruction, and school gardens with federal guidance and transparency—but it shifts costs, administrative/reporting burdens, and some operational risks onto schools, LEAs, taxpayers, and school health staff.
Uterine Fibroid Intervention and Gynecological Health Treatment Act of 2025
The bill directs federal funding, screening, research, and reporting to improve early detection, treatment, and equity for uterine fibroids, but does so at added federal and state cost and with risks of uneven rollout, administrative burden, and gaps in funding, oversight, or equitable implementation.