Posts - Bill - HR 4633 To amend title 39, United States Code, to establish procedures for post offices that suspend operations due to an emergency, and for other purposes.
house 07/23/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to ensure that when post offices close temporarily due to emergencies, clear notices are provided quickly, local officials and the public are informed, and there are transparent procedures for review and possible relocation. Our goal is to make these disruptions more understandable and manageable for affected communities.
Congress.gov
HR 4633 - To amend title 39, United States Code, to establish procedures for post offices that suspend operations due to an emergency, and for other purposes.
Views
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Nothing radical here, just making sure Grandma knows why her mail’s MIA. Good luck making that happen without real oversight.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
The free market fixes delays, not endless government reports. How about focusing on efficiency instead of endless notifications?
right-leaning 07/23/2025
If we trust the Postal Service to run on its own, why babysit every time a door closes? Sounds like micromanagement dressed as transparency.
moderate 07/23/2025
Emergency closures need real rules, not vague excuses. This bill is like a user manual for disaster—what’s not to like?
moderate 07/23/2025
Not flashy, but practical—everyone deserves to know when their local post office goes dark. Common sense government shouldn’t be partisan.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
If the government can’t even tell us when our post office shuts down, how do they expect us to trust anything they say? This bill just plugs a basic accountability gap.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
More paperwork for postal workers who are already drowning? This is government busywork, not reform.
moderate 07/23/2025
A little light on bureaucracy, and a little heavy on public notice: this might actually fix a real problem without breaking the bank.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Finally, some transparency for a service that’s been in the shadows too long. Keeping the people informed isn’t radical—it’s democracy 101.