Tucson Federal Building Renaming
This bill is currently waiting for a vote by the full Senate after being approved by a committee. It is actively moving through the legislative process and is now listed on the Senate calendar. There is no companion bill mentioned for this proposal.
Naming bills for local buildings almost always pass because they are seen as a simple way to honor public servants and rarely face opposition.
Govbase has not yet run an impact analysis on this legislation.
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 227.
The bill is now on the schedule for the full chamber to consider. It's in line for debate and a vote.
Committee on Environment and Public Works. Reported by Senator Capito without amendment. Without written report.
The committee approved this bill and is sending it to the full chamber for a vote. This is a significant step — most bills never get this far.
Committee on Environment and Public Works. Ordered to be reported without amendment favorably.
The committee approved this bill and is sending it to the full chamber for a vote. This is a significant step — most bills never get this far.
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.
Sent to a congressional committee for expert review. The committee decides whether this bill moves forward.
Introduced in Senate
The bill was officially filed and given a number. It now enters the legislative queue.
No votes or news coverage recorded for this bill yet.
Document Type
Congressional Bill
Official Title
A bill to designate the Federal building located at 300 West Congress Street in Tucson, Arizona, as the "Raul M. Grijalva Federal Building".
Analysis generated by AI. Always verify with official sources.