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Bill

Bill

HR 839

CONGRATS-CURT OLDFIELD, ED.D.

104th Regular Session Introduced by Norine Hammond

The bill formally recognizes and honors Dr. Curt Oldfield, Ed.D., with a ceremonial commendation by the Illinois General Assembly, not creating any policy or funding changes.

Resolution Adopted
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Bill Summary · HR 839

Summary of HR 839 (104th Congress, Illinois) – “CONGRATS-CURT OLDFIELD, ED.D.”

Purpose and intent

  • The bill recognizes and congratulates Dr. Curt Oldfield, Ed.D., for his accomplishments.
  • Primary aim appears to be an official commendation or honor from the Illinois General Assembly, rather than creating new programs or substantive policy changes.

Key provisions and changes

  • Formal resolution language recognizing Dr. Curt Oldfield, Ed.D. (no programmatic or regulatory actions described).
  • Includes standard elements typical of congratulatory resolutions, such as commendation of achievements, leadership, and contributions to the community or state.
  • No appropriation of funds, changes to existing statutes, or creation of new agencies/services indicated.

Who or what would be affected

  • Dr. Curt Oldfield, Ed.D. would receive formal recognition by the Illinois General Assembly.
  • Public institutions, communities, and constituents who value the recognition of local or statewide figures may be indirectly affected by the public notice and ceremonial acknowledgment.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • As a House of Representatives resolution, it would typically undergo introduction, committee referral (likely to a rules or ceremonial actions committee), potential amendments, and floor consideration.
  • Final passage would result in the bill being enrolled and presented for signature by presiding officers; no implementation or administrative steps beyond the ceremonial acknowledgment are implied.
  • Being a non-binding resolution, it does not mandate policy changes or funding.

Notes

  • Co-sponsor: Norine Hammond (indicating bipartisan or cross-sponsor support within the Illinois House).
  • The resolution’s substantive impact is ceremonial; it serves to publicly honor an individual rather than alter laws, budgets, or state programs.

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

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