This bill officially designates the United States Postal Service facility at 1444 Main Street in Ramona, California, as the "Archie Moore Post Office Building."
Darrell Issa
Representative
CA-48
This bill officially designates the United States Postal Service facility located at 1444 Main Street in Ramona, California, as the "Archie Moore Post Office Building." The legislation ensures that all official records and documents will use this new name for the post office.
If you’re the kind of person who skips the jargon and goes straight to the bottom line, here it is: a new piece of legislation is making a purely administrative change to a specific building in Southern California. The bill officially designates the United States Postal Service facility located at 1444 Main Street in Ramona, California, as the “Archie Moore Post Office Building.” This change is honorific, meaning it’s about recognizing and commemorating an individual, and it kicks off immediately upon the bill’s enactment.
While this might sound like just a new plaque on the wall, the bill requires more than that. According to the text, once the name is official, every single piece of documentation referencing that location—from maps and regulations to official USPS records—must be updated to reflect the new name, “Archie Moore Post Office Building.” This means that administratively, the old name is completely scrubbed from the books regarding this specific facility. For the average person mailing a package or picking up their mail in Ramona, the change is minimal, but for the USPS staff handling the paperwork, it’s a clear directive to update their systems.
Since this bill is purely about naming a building, it doesn’t change your postage rates, the hours of operation, or the services offered at the Ramona post office. It’s an administrative action that carries no new regulations, costs, or benefits for the general public beyond the commemorative honor. It’s a clean, simple change that serves to memorialize an individual by attaching their name to a specific piece of public infrastructure. In the grand scheme of legislation that affects your wallet and your schedule, this one is about as low-impact as it gets, focusing entirely on local recognition and the official record-keeping of the federal government.