Virtue, Liberty and Independence
Rehabilitation of Historic Schools Act of 2026
The bill helps fund and incentivize school building rehabilitation—potentially improving student environments and giving policymakers better data—at the cost of reduced federal revenue, added administrative work, and a risk that benefits flow disproportionately to better-resourced districts.
To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 4431 Main Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as the "Dr. Constance 'Connie' E. Clayton Post Office".
The bill honors a notable local leader and standardizes federal references to a Philadelphia post office, trading only small administrative costs and some potential criticism that the change is symbolic rather than service-improving.
MORE Act
The bill encourages partnerships that strengthen workforce training and better coordinate with public benefits, but does so in ways that are likely to favor larger institutional partners and employer‑focused projects, potentially disadvantaging smaller community applicants and non‑workforce priorities.
Mentoring and Supporting Families Act
The bill increases support for low-income and unemployed individuals to access training and career services (through stipends, coaching, and soft-skills development) but raises program costs and imposes grant preferences that may exclude smaller local providers and limit grantee flexibility.
Leveraging Educational Opportunity Networks Act
The bill expands and funds sectoral cohort-based training, stipends, and supports to improve employment opportunities—especially for low-income, underserved, and non‑degree workers—but does so at measurable federal cost, with risks that funds may favor larger providers, impose administrative burdens, exclude very short programs, and not fully resolve deeper barriers to employment.
To amend title II of the Social Security Act to provide that not more than 10 percent of a monthly benefit may be withheld on account of overpayments.
The bill protects most of monthly Social Security benefits for Title II recipients and preserves individual repayment choice, but does so at the cost of slower recovery of overpayments and added administrative complexity for the SSA.
Resources for Victims of Gun Violence Act of 2025
The bill improves federal coordination, visibility, and access to resources for a broad set of gun‑violence victims but relies on existing agency and local resources (and a short sunset), so practical impact depends on agencies and governments absorbing costs and sustaining efforts without guaranteed funding or long‑term authorization.
Tax Cut for Workers Act of 2025
The bill expands and makes EITC benefits more accessible and predictable (and continues territory education reimbursements), providing stronger income support for low‑income, young, and territorial residents, but does so at the cost of higher federal spending, added tax‑code complexity, and some verification/privacy risks.
Recognizing November 2025 as "National Family Caregivers Month".
The bill raises awareness and political visibility for the nation’s large population of family caregivers—potentially catalyzing future support—but delivers no funding or legal changes, so benefits are symbolic unless followed by concrete policy actions.