Gateway Partnership Act: What It Means and How to Take Action
Gateway Partnership Act This bill authorizes the National Park Service (NPS) to enter into a one-time agreement with the Gateway Arch Park Foundation to host private events at the Gateway Arch National Park and its buildings for a period of up to five years. The NPS manages the park, located in St. Louis, Missouri, and its buildings, such as the Arch Visitor Center and the Old Courthouse. The bill outlines the terms and conditions that must be included in the agreement. The bill also requires private events hosted at the park or its buildings to be consistent with the park's purposes and compatible with NPS programs. Such events may not (1) degrade the integrity, appearance, or purposes of the park; or (2) take place during times or in locations that prevent or disrupt public use or access to the park or its buildings. The NPS must charge a fee to cover the cost of wear and tear resulting from the private events. The NPS may recover all costs incurred as a result of the private events, including maintenance, utilities, administrative expenses, security, and personnel costs. The bill terminates the NPS's authority to enter and carry out an agreement with the foundation seven years after the enactment of this bill.
Why physical mail matters
- Congressional staffers track and log constituent mail by position (support/oppose)
- Physical postcards have a higher psychological impact than emails or form letters
- During committee markup and floor votes, constituent contact volume directly influences how members vote
- Your postcard is mailed USPS First Class โ it lands on a real desk in a real office
What you can do
- Sign up free at signalpostnow.com and get alerted when this bill moves
- Send a pre-written postcard to your rep in 2 minutes โ first one free
- Share this page with others who care about Climate & Environment
Follow this bill and get alerted when it moves Get email alerts when Gateway Partnership Act hits a key vote. Free to join.