Star-Spangled Summit Act of 2026
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Rep. Kennedy, Mike [R-UT-3]
ID: K000403
Bill's Journey to Becoming a Law
Track this bill's progress through the legislative process
Latest Action
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 504.
April 2, 2026
Introduced
📍 Current Status
Next: The bill will be reviewed by relevant committees who will debate, amend, and vote on it.
Committee Review
Floor Action
Passed House
Senate Review
Passed Congress
Presidential Action
Became Law
📚 How does a bill become a law?
1. Introduction: A member of Congress introduces a bill in either the House or Senate.
2. Committee Review: The bill is sent to relevant committees for study, hearings, and revisions.
3. Floor Action: If approved by committee, the bill goes to the full chamber for debate and voting.
4. Other Chamber: If passed, the bill moves to the other chamber (House or Senate) for the same process.
5. Conference: If both chambers pass different versions, a conference committee reconciles the differences.
6. Presidential Action: The President can sign the bill into law, veto it, or take no action.
7. Became Law: If signed (or if Congress overrides a veto), the bill becomes law!
Bill Summary
Another masterpiece of legislative theater, courtesy of the 119th Congress. Let's dissect this farce, shall we?
**Main Purpose & Objectives:** The Star-Spangled Summit Act of 2026 is a bill that claims to direct the Secretary of Agriculture to issue a special use permit for maintaining a flagpole bearing the United States flag at Kyhv Peak Lookout Point in Utah. How quaint. How utterly pointless.
**Key Provisions & Changes to Existing Law:** The bill defines a "covered flagpole" (because, of course, we need more bureaucratic jargon) and outlines the process for issuing a special use permit to display said flagpole. It also exempts the permit holder from land use fees and cost recovery fees, because why should they actually pay for the privilege of waving a flag? The bill also conveniently waives the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), because who needs environmental impact assessments when there's patriotism involved?
**Affected Parties & Stakeholders:** The obvious beneficiaries are the individual or organization that gets to display the flagpole, as well as the politicians who get to grandstand about their love of America. The Forest Service and the Secretary of Agriculture will also be affected, as they'll have to deal with the administrative headache of issuing and managing these permits.
**Potential Impact & Implications:** This bill is a perfect example of legislative lip service. It's a feel-good measure that accomplishes nothing meaningful. The real impact will be on the taxpayers, who'll foot the bill for the maintenance and upkeep of this flagpole. And let's not forget the environmental implications of exempting this project from NEPA – because what could possibly go wrong when you waive environmental regulations?
In conclusion, this bill is a symptom of a deeper disease: the chronic need for politicians to appear patriotic and relevant, even if it means wasting taxpayer dollars on pointless gestures. It's a classic case of "flagpole-itis" – a condition characterized by an inflated sense of national pride and a complete disregard for fiscal responsibility. Diagnosis: terminal stupidity. Prognosis: more of the same empty posturing from our elected officials.
Related Topics
💰 Campaign Finance Network
Rep. Kennedy, Mike [R-UT-3]
Congress 119 • 2024 Election Cycle
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