WeVote

Bill

Bill

HR 377

A Resolution directing the Legislative Budget and Finance Committee to conduct an effectiveness and results audit and issue a report on all existing incentives for public school district consolidation and sharing of services, and to make recommendations related to incentivizing the reorganization, consolidation and shared services of school districts of a specific enrollment size.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz and 6 co-sponsors

H.R. 377 is a ceremonial resolution recognizing a specific achievement or public service, with no policy, budget, or regulatory effect.

Referred to Education
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 377

Summary — H.R. 377 (compiled materials)

Note upfront: the materials provided are internally inconsistent. The official “Bill Information” lists H.R. 377 as a commendation for the fourth annual Gospel Music Living Legends Awards (Shreveport). The body of the document, however, contains multiple distinct resolutions from different jurisdictions that are each labeled “HR 377” (or “H. R. 377”) and address unrelated subjects (high‑school soccer champions, letter carriers, and an emergency‑communications official). The legislative action history and sponsor list also appear to come from a different record. Below I summarize what is present and flag the inconsistencies you should resolve.

Purpose (per the header)

  • Stated title: “COMMENDATIONS: Commemorates the fourth annual Gospel Music Living Legends Awards in Shreveport.”
  • No supporting text for that commemoration appears in the provided document.

Document contents (distinct resolutions found in the file)

  1. Westminster Christian Academy — Girls Soccer (Alabama)

    • Purpose: A House resolution celebrating Westminster Christian Academy Wildcats for winning three consecutive Alabama High School Athletic Association (AHSAA) Class 4A state championships (culminating in a 2–1 victory over St. Michael’s in 2025).
    • Key details: Player Caleigh Lewis scored both goals in the final (including the game‑winner, assisted by tournament MVP Annie Collier); goalkeeper Piper Blazier made 11 saves in the final. The resolution “celebrates and applauds” the team’s accomplishment.
    • Affects: Westminster Christian Academy, its players/coaches/staff, students and local community.
  2. National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) Branch 11 (Illinois)

    • Purpose: A House resolution commending NALC Branch 11 (Chicago region) for public service, charity fundraising, participation in the Stamp Out Hunger campaign, and advocacy for members.
    • Key details: Recognizes letter carriers’ role delivering mail to communities, historical formation of NALC (1889), and Branch 11’s founding in 1891; directs a copy of the resolution be presented to Branch leadership.
    • Affects: NALC Branch 11 members and the Chicago communities they serve.
  3. William Wright — Barrow County Emergency Communications (Georgia)

    • Purpose: A Georgia House resolution recognizing and commending William Wright upon retirement for his long public service as emergency communications director for Barrow County.
    • Key details: Notes his leadership in managing the county’s Public Safety Answering Point, P25 radio system, and coordination during disasters (Flood of 1990, Blizzard of 1993, Ice Storm of 2000, and the September 2024 Apalachee High School shooting). Directs that an appropriate copy be made available to him.
    • Affects: William Wright, Barrow County public safety operations, and local citizens.

Legislative actions & procedural timeline (as provided)

  • Dates listed (some possibly from a different jurisdiction/record):
    • Introduced: 2025‑01‑14
    • Referred to committees (Oversight & Gov Reform; Judiciary)
    • Placed on Congratulatory & Memorial Resolutions Calendar; read/ adopted 2025‑03‑06
    • Enrolled and signed by the Speaker: 2025‑06‑12
    • Presented to Secretary of State (or equivalent): 2025‑06‑13
  • Note: These procedural steps appear to reflect adoption and finalization, but because the document aggregates multiple state resolutions, verify which actions correspond to which resolution and which legislative body (state House, Illinois General Assembly, Georgia House, or U.S. House).

Sponsors

  • A long list of names (including federal Representatives and several state primary sponsors listed) appears in the file; these names likely correspond to different resolutions. Example primary sponsors listed include Stephanie I. Bice, Chuck Efstration, Lauren McDonald III, Holt Persinger, Houston Gaines, Marcus Wiedower, and Joy Walters.
  • Recommendation: Confirm the sponsoring body and correct sponsor list for the specific resolution you want summarized.

Impact / Who is affected

  • Mostly ceremonial/commendatory: recognizes achievements or public service and directs copies of the resolution to honorees.
  • Direct impacts are symbolic—honors, public recognition, and historical record; no regulatory, budgetary, or policy changes are indicated.

Recommendation / Next steps

  • Determine which H.R. 377 you need (the Gospel Music Living Legends awards commemoration, the Alabama soccer resolution, the Illinois NALC commendation, the Georgia William Wright commendation, or a federal resolution that matches the sponsor list).
  • Obtain the authoritative text from the appropriate legislative body (state House journals or Congress.gov) so a single, precise summary can be prepared matching the correct jurisdiction, sponsors, and procedural history.

If you tell me which specific jurisdiction or which of the above subjects you want the final summary for, I will produce a focused, authoritative summary.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.