PolicyBrief
H.R. 7746
119th CongressMar 2nd 2026
To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 8390 North Broadway in St. Louis, Missouri, as the "Chuck Stone Post Office".
IN COMMITTEE

This bill designates the United States Postal Service facility located at 8390 North Broadway in St. Louis, Missouri, as the "Chuck Stone Post Office."

Wesley Bell
D

Wesley Bell

Representative

MO-1

LEGISLATION

St. Louis Postal Facility to Be Renamed Chuck Stone Post Office Under New Federal Proposal

This bill is a straightforward piece of administrative business focused on one specific location: the United States Postal Service facility at 8390 North Broadway in St. Louis, Missouri. The core of the legislation is to officially designate this building as the "Chuck Stone Post Office." While it sounds like a simple sign change, the bill ensures that this isn't just a nickname; it mandates that every official federal map, regulation, and legal document referring to this site must be updated to reflect the new name.

The Paperwork Behind the Tribute

For the average person dropping off a package or checking a P.O. box at the North Broadway location, the daily routine won't change, but the government's backend records will. Section 1 of the bill specifically requires that any "law, map, regulation, document, paper, or other record of the United States" that currently points to this address must now use the name "Chuck Stone Post Office." This is standard procedure for commemorative bills, ensuring that if a legal dispute or a logistics contract involves this specific property, the paperwork matches the plaque on the front door.

Local Identity and Federal Records

Because this is a low-vagueness, administrative bill, there aren't hidden fees or complex regulatory hurdles for small businesses or residents to worry about. The impact is primarily symbolic and local, honoring an individual by weaving their name into the permanent geography of the federal government. For the community in St. Louis, it transforms a generic street address into a landmark, while for the federal government, it’s a simple matter of updating databases to keep the records consistent with the new designation.