I never heard of Alma Adams, so I checked Wikipedia. It made no mention of her bill. It did say that she did not go to President Trump's inauguration. Why isn't he called an election denier? Along with many other Democrats who agreed with Hillary that Trump did not win the election.
Wikipedia also said, A court-ordered redistricting in 2016 made the 12th somewhat more compact. It now comprised nearly all of Mecklenburg County, home to Charlotte. Adams's home in Greensboro was drawn into the 13th district. She had already filed for a second full term, but announced she would move to Charlotte.[37] She claims a home in Charlotte's Fourth Ward neighborhood owned by Mary Gaffney,[38] one of her prominent supporters,[39] as her official residence in the district. Both Gaffney and Adams maintain active voter registrations at that address.[40] On May 31, WBTV in Charlotte reported that Adams filed campaign finance documents listing her longtime home in Greensboro as her residence, and also spends most weekends in her Greensboro home. WBTV also reported that Adams had scrubbed all references to her service as a local official in Greensboro from her campaign website, though her biography on her campaign's Facebook page still contained references to that service.[41] She drove away when a WBTV reporter confronted her in Greensboro.[41] While members of Congress are only required to live in the state they represent, convention calls for them to live in or near the district they represent.
BTW, one must read Politico with critical reasoning. Why is there no money going to Cleveland, and for that matter, why Chicago? And wasn't there a big scandal about that large amount of money that went to Baltimore but was not seen? Gee whiz, Democrat run cities that keep voting for Democrats. And I love the picture Politico used to show how Trump's dollars show a run down city. Oh my, the picture was taken in 2016,
House Passes Rep. Adams’ FUTURE Act to Secure Funding for HBCUs
Washington, DC — The Fostering Undergraduate Talent by Unlocking Resources for Education (FUTURE) Act, introduced by Congresswoman Alma S. Adams, Ph.D. (NC-12), founder and co-chair of the Congressional Bipartisan Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Caucus and Congressman Mark...
adams.house.gov