Updated 6 hours ago
Last progress July 17, 2025 (7 months ago)
Designates the official name of a specified Federal building as the Raúl M. Grijalva Federal Building and requires that any reference in U.S. law, maps, regulations, documents, or other official records to that Federal building be treated as a reference to this name. It simply sets the official nomenclature to be used in federal records. This change affects how the building is cited in official materials and may require minor administrative updates (signage, forms, databases), but it does not create new programs, change authorities, or authorize new spending beyond routine implementation costs.
Any reference in a law, map, regulation, document, paper, or other record of the United States to the Federal building referred to in section 1 shall be deemed to be a reference to the "Raúl M. Grijalva Federal Building."
Primary effects are administrative and symbolic. The direct, immediate impacts fall on the building's occupants and the federal agencies that reference or manage the building: they must update records, signage, websites, maps, and databases to reflect the official name. These updates are routine and typically impose only minor costs borne from existing budgets. The general public and local community may notice the new name on signage and official communications, but the legislation does not change services, legal authorities, funding streams, or operational arrangements. There are no new regulatory obligations imposed on states or local governments, nor are there changes to federal programs or national policy.
Last progress June 2, 2025 (9 months ago)
Introduced on June 2, 2025 by Greg Stanton
Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.