U.S. Rep. Claudia Tenney, District 24 | Official U.S. House headshot
U.S. Rep. Claudia Tenney, District 24 | Official U.S. House headshot
Congresswoman Claudia Tenney of New York's 24th district has released her 2024 Year-End Report, highlighting the achievements and activities of her office over the past year. The report emphasizes successes in constituent casework, a commitment to transparency, and legislative accomplishments.
"As we begin 2025, I want to take a moment to reflect on the incredible year our office had serving the people of NY-24," said Congresswoman Tenney. She noted that her office introduced 79 bills and cosponsored 577 bills during the last Congress. In 2024 alone, more than $5 million in benefits were delivered directly to constituents. Additionally, $19.7 million was secured for projects across NY-24 through the Community Project Funding Program. "Throughout this past year—and my entire tenure as your elected representative—I have been committed to serving our region with compassion, tenacity, transparency, and accountability," she added.
The report outlines various achievements under different categories:
In Constituent Services, Tenney's office returned over $5 million in benefits or back pay to residents and secured $19.7 million for local projects. They completed 2,586 constituent cases and hosted 26 mobile office hours. The office also provided 78 letters of support for federal funding opportunities and grants while presenting over 300 proclamations and certificates to veterans, Eagle Scouts, first responders, and community members.
For Accessibility and Transparency, the congresswoman explained 843 votes on her website and replied to more than 60,000 messages from approximately 33,000 constituents. She attended over 305 community events and released several detailed legislative plans.
Regarding Delivering Results for NY-24, Tenney introduced 79 bills and cosponsored another 577 on various issues. She supported 11 bills that were signed into law and backed an additional 105 bills that passed the House of Representatives.
Tenney encourages constituents to read the full report available online and invites them to contact her office with any questions or concerns.