Analyses / Public Summary / 119 · HR 3393 Public Summary

119-HR-3393 Journalist Public Summary

119 · HR 3393 To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 12208 North 19th Avenue in Phoenix, Arizona, as the "Officer Zane T. Coolidge Post Office".

settings Government Operations and Politics
This bill designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 12208 North 19th Avenue in Phoenix, Arizona, as the "Officer Zane T. Coolidge Post Office".

A short, bipartisan bill to rename a Phoenix, Arizona post office after Officer Zane T. Coolidge; it’s through committee consideration in the House (as of December 2, 2025) and could next move to a House floor vote, then the Senate, and on to the President if passed.

Published
03 Dec 2025
Updated
03 Dec 2025
Tags
public-summary · US Congress · postal-naming
Unvetted
01 · Section

Headline Summary

Rename a Phoenix post office in honor of Officer Zane T. Coolidge; the measure has bipartisan Arizona backing and is advancing through the House.

02 · Section

What It Does

The bill would officially name the U.S. Post Office at 12208 North 19th Avenue in Phoenix, Arizona the “Officer Zane T. Coolidge Post Office.” It also makes clear that any federal references to that facility would use the new name.

03 · Section

Who’s For It

  • Primary sponsor: Rep. Abraham Hamadeh (R–AZ).
  • Arizona co-sponsors from both parties: Reps. Juan Ciscomani, Greg Stanton, Andy Biggs, Yassamin Ansari, Paul Gosar, Eli Crane, and David Schweikert.
  • In general, hometown commemorative post-office namings tend to attract broad, bipartisan support from the local delegation.
04 · Section

Who’s Against It

  • No specific opposition noted in the provided record.
  • These ceremonial naming bills rarely face organized resistance unless there’s controversy around the honoree or the location—none is indicated here in the materials provided.
05 · Section

What’s Next

  • Status as of December 3, 2025: A committee consideration and mark-up session was held on December 2, 2025.
  • If approved by the committee, the bill would move to a House floor vote; if it passes, it goes to the Senate. If both chambers pass it, it heads to the President for signature into law.
06 · Section

Tone

Neutral, plain-English overview aimed at a general audience.

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