@
jmark@stayintouch.us,
You've been asked multiple times WHY you want to do this. People are not being nosy. What you are trying to do is poor practice. They are trying to answer your question but in reality, there is almost certainly a flaw in your design logic as we would NEVER modify objects in a database created for other people to use.
For example, maybe you want users to pick which query THEY always want when the report runs. You can accomplish this by saving the name of the requested query in a table with a PK = the user's ID so each user would have a different row and therefore his own choice. Then when the form opens, you would use DLookup() to get the saved choice for the user or if none is found, use the default choice.
Modifying the design of objects precludes distributing the database as an .accde or .accdr or using the Access Runtime, all of which provide a certain amount of safety in protecting the db from accidental corruption by the user.