PolicyBrief
H.R. 6694
119th CongressDec 12th 2025
To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 130 North Winton Road in Rochester, New York, as the "Lieutenant James N. Lyons Post Office".
IN COMMITTEE

This bill officially renames the United States Postal Service facility at 130 North Winton Road in Rochester, New York, as the "Lieutenant James N. Lyons Post Office."

Joseph Morelle
D

Joseph Morelle

Representative

NY-25

LEGISLATION

Rochester Post Office Renamed to Honor Lieutenant James N. Lyons: Purely Administrative Change

This bill is simple, direct, and highly specific: it officially renames the United States Postal Service facility located at 130 North Winton Road in Rochester, New York, as the “Lieutenant James N. Lyons Post Office.” The legislation mandates that every official federal document—from maps to regulations—must use this new designation moving forward. Essentially, this is a legislative nod of respect, formalizing an honorific name change for a single building in upstate New York.

The Real-World Impact: What Changes?

If you live in Rochester and use this post office, the biggest change is the sign on the building. For the rest of us, the impact is minimal to non-existent. This bill is purely administrative and honorific, meaning it doesn't change postal rates, delivery schedules, or how the post office operates. It doesn't create new programs or impose new taxes. The only people who will notice the change are federal bureaucrats who now need to update their records and maps to reflect the new official name. This is a common practice in Congress used to commemorate local heroes or figures.

Who Benefits from a Name Change?

The primary beneficiaries are the family and associates of Lieutenant James N. Lyons, who receive formal recognition through this federal designation. For the average person, there are no direct benefits or drawbacks. Since the bill is so narrowly focused and clear—simply defining a new name for a specific address—it avoids the vagueness and complexity that often plague larger policy bills. It’s a clean, simple action that provides a specific honor without affecting the daily lives or wallets of the public.