This bill officially designates the United States Postal Service facility at 1157 West Mission Avenue in Escondido, California, as the "Captain E. Royce Williams Post Office Building."
Darrell Issa
Representative
CA-48
This bill officially designates the United States Postal Service facility located at 1157 West Mission Avenue in Escondido, California, as the "Captain E. Royce Williams Post Office Building." The legislation ensures that all federal records and documents will henceforth use this new official name for the location.
If you live in Escondido, California, and frequently use the post office on West Mission Avenue, this bill is a heads-up that your federal building is getting a new official name. The legislation states clearly that the United States Postal Service facility located at 1157 West Mission Avenue will henceforth be known as the “Captain E. Royce Williams Post Office Building.” This is a purely administrative move to honor an individual, and it kicks off immediately upon enactment.
This is the definition of a straightforward, ceremonial bill. The main purpose is to attach a new name to a specific federal property. For the average person mailing a package or picking up a passport form, nothing about the services, hours, or staff changes. The bill doesn't touch postage rates, delivery schedules, or postal worker benefits; it's strictly about the sign on the building and the name on the paperwork.
While the public impact is minimal, the bill does require some immediate housekeeping in Washington. Section 1 mandates that every federal law, map, regulation, and document that mentions this specific post office location must be updated to reflect the new name, "Captain E. Royce Williams Post Office Building." Think of it as a mandatory find-and-replace operation across the entire federal government's digital and physical archives concerning this address. This ensures that when the USPS, the General Services Administration, or any other agency references the facility, they use the correct, officially designated name.
For the busy person, this means if you ever have to reference this specific post office on a formal federal document—say, if you’re a small business owner using it as a mailing address or a lawyer citing its location—the official name is now fixed. This is a symbolic gesture to recognize Captain E. Royce Williams, embedding his name into the local infrastructure. It’s a low-vagueness, low-concern piece of legislation that changes the building's label without changing its function, proving that sometimes, policy is just about making sure the records match the sign on the wall.