Top Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: California, Civil liberties, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Landowners, Marine resources, Maryland, Missouri, National seashores, Natural resources, Nebraska, Nevada, Nonprofit organizations, Ohio, Public lands, Right of property, Social services, Sports, State and local government, State parks, Surveying, Trails, Urban affairs, Utah, Volunteer workers, Walking, West Virginia
Latest Action: 02/07/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands. Bill TextTo amend the National Trails System Act to authorize an additional category of national trail known as a national discovery trail, to provide special requirements for the establishment and administration of national discovery trails, and to designate the cross-country American Discovery Trail as the first national discovery trail. 1/4/2007--Introduced. National Discovery Trails Act - Amends the National Trails System Act to establish national discovery trails, which shall be extended, continuous interstate trails located so as to provide for outdoor recreation and travel and to connect representative examples of America's trails and communities. Authorizes the designation of such trails on Federal lands and, with the consent of the owner, on non-federal lands. Requires the appropriate Secretary for each national discovery trail to administer the trail in cooperation with a competent trailwide volunteer-based organization. Sets forth requirements for designation [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Aged, Budgets, Business, Coinsurance, Competitive bidding, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Cost control, Drug abuse, Drug industry, Drugs, Expedited congressional procedure, Finance, Government trust funds, Health insurance, Health maintenance organizations, Health policy, House rules and procedure, Insurance premiums, Legislation, Managed care, Medical care, Medical economics, Medical fees, Medicare, Medication abuse, Medicine, Pharmacies, Prescription pricing, Public contracts, Rebates, Retiree health benefits, Sedatives, Senate rules and procedure, Subsidies, Urban affairs
Latest Action: 01/04/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (text of measure as introduced: CR S134-135) Bill TextA bill to amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to provide additional beneficiary protections. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Preserving Medicare for All Act of 2007 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA) to repeal the prohibition against interference by the Secretary of Health and Human Services with the negotiations between drug manufacturers and pharmacies and prescription drug plan sponsors. Grants the Secretary authority to negotiate contracts with manufacturers of covered part D drugs in order to ensure that beneficiaries enrolled under prescription drug plans and Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug Plans (MA-PD plans) pay the lowest possible price. Allows the Medicare part D eligible individual an alternative to the current choice of coverage in at least two qualifying plans in the area in which the individual resides. Allows such an individual to choose enrollment in a nationwide prescription drug plan offered by the Secretary [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Congressional reporting requirements, Counterterrorism, Criminal justice, District of Columbia, Executive departments, Federal advisory bodies, Interstate highway system, Maryland, Terrorism, Transportation, Urban affairs, Virginia
Latest Action: 01/29/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Emerging Threats, Cybersecurity, and Science and Technology. Bill TextTo direct the Secretary of Homeland Security to establish an independent panel to assess the homeland security needs of the National Capital Region. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to establish an independent panel to assess the homeland security needs of the National Capital Region. Requires the panel to: (1) determine whether the definition of National Capital Region used by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) should be modified to include additional areas, including jurisdictions in Maryland and Virginia along Interstate Routes 270, 95, and 66; and (2) determine whether those jurisdictions should be taking actions to prepare for a terrorist attack in the Region, including the construction of necessary facilities, and if so, to make recommendations for appropriate funding.
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Airline passenger traffic, Airports, Alaska, Aliens, American Samoa, Appropriations, Armed forces, Auditing, Aviation safety, Biological warfare, Border patrols, Budgets, Business, Canada, Charities, Chemical warfare, Civil liberties, Communications, Confidential funding (Federal budgets), Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction costs, Cost effectiveness, Counterterrorism, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Curricula, Customs administration, Data banks, Defense policy, Democracy, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice, Disaster relief, Dismissal of employees, District of Columbia, Driver licenses, Drug abuse, Drug addiction, Drug law enforcement, Education, Electronic data interchange, Elementary and secondary education, Emergency communication systems, Emergency management, Employee training, English language, Executive departments, Extremist movements in politics, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to Indians, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Federal employees, Federal officials, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Finance, Foreign policy, Foreign service, Government employees, Government information, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Grants-in-aid, Guam, Hazardous substances, Higher education, Hours of labor, Human rights, Identification devices, Identification of criminals, Immigration, Indian law enforcement, Infrastructure, Infrastructure (Economics), Intelligence activities, Intelligence officers, Intermodal transportation, International affairs, International broadcasting, International cooperation, Internet, Islamic fundamentalism, Job training, Larceny, Law, Legislation, Local officials, Maryland, Mass rapid transit, Methamphetamine, Minorities, Muslims, National Guard, New Jersey, New York City, Northern Mariana Islands, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear terrorism, Nuclear weapons, Passports, Performance measurement, Pipelines, Pluralism (Social sciences), Police training, Politics and government, Prisoners, Public-private partnerships, Railroad commuting traffic, Railroad freight operations, Railroad passenger traffic, Railroad safety, Religion, Right of privacy, Risk, Rural affairs, Rural crime, Scholarships, School security, Science policy, Security classification (Government documents), Smuggling, Social services, Standards, State and local government, State officials, Strategic planning, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Terrorists, Tourism, Trade, Traffic accidents and safety, Transfer of employees, Transportation, Transportation of hazardous substances, Transportation planning, Transportation safety, Travel, Tunnels, United Nations, Urban affairs, Urban areas, Virgin Islands, Visas, Weapons of mass destruction, Weapons systems, Web sites, Western Hemisphere
Latest Action: 07/09/2007 - Senate incorporated this measure in H.R.1 as an amendment. Bill TextA bill to make the United States more secure by implementing unfinished recommendations of the 9/11 Commission to fight the war on terror more effectively, to improve homeland security, and for other purposes. 3/13/2007--Passed Senate amended. (There is 1 other summary) Improving America's Security Act of 2007 - Provides for implementation of recommendations of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (9/11 Commission). Title I: Improving Intelligence and Information Sharing within the Federal Government and with State, Local, and Tribal Governments - Subtitle A: Homeland Security Information Sharing Enhancement - (Sec. 111) Amends the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (HSA) to require the Secretary of Homeland Security (the Secretary) to administer the Homeland Security Advisory System to provide warnings regarding the risk of terrorist attacks on the homeland to federal, state, local, and tribal government authorities [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Business, Depressed areas, Economic policy, Government contractors, Government procurement, Labor, Labor statistics, Population, Public contracts, Rural affairs, Rural economic development, Small business, Unemployment, Urban affairs
Latest Action: 01/10/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Small Business. Bill TextTo amend the Small Business Act to revise the definition of a HUBZone with respect to counties that are highly rural but adjacent to urban areas. 1/10/2007--Introduced. HUBZone Improvement Act of 2007 - Amends the Small Business Act redefine a Hubzone Qualified Area to count as a qualified nonmetropolitan county any county located within a metropolitan statistical area if: (1) its total population is 80,000 or less; (2) the population residing within the county's urbanized areas is 10% or less of the county's total population; and (3) the county meets either a specified median household income or a specified unemployment rate requirement.
Also tagged in: Auditing, Budgets, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, District of Columbia, Federal aid to transportation, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Infrastructure, Inspectors general, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Interstate compacts, Local finance, Local laws, Maintenance and repair, Maryland, Mass rapid transit, Motor buses, Politics and government, Railroad engineering, State and local government, State finance, State laws, Subways, Transportation, Urban affairs, Urban transportation, Virginia, Whistle blowing
Latest Action: 05/09/2007 - Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Oversight and Government. H. Rept. 110-141. Bill TextTo amend the National Capital Transportation Act of 1969 to authorize additional Federal contributions for maintaining and improving the transit system of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, and for other purposes. 5/9/2007--Reported to House amended. (There is 1 other summary) National Capital Transportation Amendments Act of 2007 - (Sec. 2) Amends the National Capital Transportation Act of 1969 to authorize the Secretary of Transportation to provide additional funding through grants to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) to finance in part the capital and preventive maintenance projects included in the Capital Improvement Program. Subjects such grants to specified limitations and conditions. Prohibits funding to WMATA until it notifies the Secretary that certain amendments to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Compact have taken effect, including: (1) requiring that all local payments for the [...] show full description
Latest Action: 02/07/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S1710-1711) Bill TextA bill to specify that the 100 most populous urban ares of the United States, as determined by the Secretary of Homeland Security, shall be eligible for grants under the Urban Area Security Initiative of the Department of Homeland Security, and for other purposes. 2/7/2007--Introduced. Urban Area Security Initiative Improvement Act of 2007 - Makes each of the 100 most populous U.S. urban areas eligible for a grant under the Urban Area Security Initiative. Directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to award such grants after conducting a study of how the variation in the output of models used for such awards can be apportioned to different sources of variation.
Also tagged in: Boundaries, Columbia River development, Easements, Ecosystem management, Energy, Environmental education, Environmental protection, Hazardous substances, Helicopters, Hydroelectric plants, Hydroelectric power, Land transfers, Land use, Law, National forests, Natural resources, Public lands, Public utilities, Real estate appraisal, Sports, Trails, Transportation, Urban affairs, Washington State, Water resources, Watersheds, Wilderness areas
Latest Action: 02/07/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S1715-1716) Bill TextA bill to enhance ecosystem protection and the range of outdoor opportunities protected by statute in the Skykomish River valley of the State of Washington by designating certain lower-elevation Federal lands as wilderness, and for other purposes. 2/7/2007--Introduced. Wild Sky Wilderness Act of 2007 - Designates certain lands in the Skykomish River valley, Washington, as the Wild Sky Wilderness, to be managed by the Secretary of Agriculture. Directs the Secretary to establish a trail plan. Authorizes the use of helicopter access to construct and maintain a joint Forest Service-Snohomish County telecommunications repeater site to provide improved communication for safety, health, and emergency purposes. Authorizes the Secretary to acquire lands in the Wild Sky Wilderness by purchase, donation, or exchange, with priority to be given to specified Priority Acquisition Lands. Requires the boundaries of the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest and the Wild Sky Wilderness [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative fees, Administrative procedure, Agricultural machinery, Agriculture, Air pollution, Airports, Alcohol as fuel, Alternative energy sources, Armed forces, Authorization, Automobile engines, Automobile industry, Automobile tires, Automobiles, Awards, medals, prizes, Biomass energy, Budgets, Business, Cellulose, Commemorations, Commercialization, Commuting, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction industries, Construction workers, Consumer education, Consumers, Corporation taxes, Cost effectiveness, Defense policy, Department of Agriculture, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, Department of Transportation, Depreciation and amortization, Diesel motor, Economic policy, Education, Electric batteries, Electric utilities, Electric vehicles, Elementary and secondary education, Employee benefit plans, Energy, Energy conservation, Energy consumption, Energy demand, Energy efficiency, Energy research, Energy supplies, Engineers, Environmental protection, Environmental Protection Agency, Executive departments, Federal aid to air pollution control, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to research, Federal aid to transportation, Federally-guaranteed loans, Fees, Fines (Penalties), Fuel cells, Fuel consumption, Government contractors, Government information, Government publicity, Government trust funds, Government vehicles, Greenhouse gases, Higher education, Highway use tax, Hydrogen, Imports, Income tax, Indexing (Economic policy), Infrastructure, Infrastructure (Economics), Investment tax credit, Job creation, Labeling, Labor, Law, Lease and rental services, Legislation, Magnetic levitation vehicles, Marine terminals, Mass rapid transit, Materials, Methane, Methanol, Military vehicles, Minimum wages, Motor vehicle pollution control, Motor vehicle registration, Municipal solid waste, Nanotechnology, Natural gas, Natural gas vehicles, Paper and paper products, Parking facilities, Petroleum, Planning, Propane, Public contracts, Public service advertising, Public-private partnerships, Quality of products, Railroad freight operations, Refuse as fuel, Research and development, Research grants, Revolving funds, Right-of-way, School buses, Science policy, Secondary education, Service stations, Small business, Solid wastes, Standards, Tariff, Tax credits, Tax deductions, Taxation, Teaching materials, Technological innovations, Technology, Technology assessment, Trade, Traffic congestion, Transportation, Transportation engineering, Transportation research, Trucks, Urban affairs, Wages, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality. Bill TextTo promote the national security and stability of the United States economy by reducing the dependence of the United States on foreign oil through the use of alternative fuels and new vehicle technologies, and for other purposes. 1/24/2007--Introduced. Dependence Reduction through Innovation in Vehicles and Energy Act or DRIVE Act - Directs the Director of the Office of Management and Budget to publish in the Federal Register an oil savings target and action plan for specified calendar years. Directs the Secretary of Energy to conduct a national media campaign to decrease oil consumption in the United States over the next decade. Directs the Secretary of Transportation to develop: (1) a fuel efficiency program for passenger car and light truck tires; (2) a program to designate Transit-Oriented Development Corridors; and (3) pilot projects to save oil by reducing vehicle miles traveled. Directs the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to: (1) [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Adoption, Aid to dependent children, AIDS (Disease), Budgets, Caregivers, Cash welfare block grants, Child health, Child support, Child welfare, Children, Church and social problems, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Custody of children, Day care, Department of Health and Human Services, Disabled, Drug abuse, Drug abuse prevention, Drug abuse treatment, Education, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Executive departments, Families, Family services, Family violence, Federal aid to child health services, Food, Food stamps, Foster home care, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Grandparents, Grants-in-aid, Guardian and ward, Health insurance, Health policy, Higher education, Housing, Housing subsidies, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Identification of criminals, Indian children, Indians, Information services, Interstate compacts, Job training, Legal aid, Legal fees, Legal services, Medicaid, Medical care, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Mental health services, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Old age, survivors and disability insurance, Ombudsman, Parent and child, Parents, Politics and government, Poor children, Prisoners, Public contracts, Public-private partnerships, Religion, Respite care, Secondary education, Siblings, Social security, Social services, Special education, Standards, State and local government, Students, Supplemental security income program, Technology, Telecommunication, Telephone, Urban affairs, Vocational education, Web sites, Welfare, Welfare eligibility
Latest Action: 02/16/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S2171-2172) Bill TextA bill to establish kinship navigator programs, to establish guardianship assistance payments for children, and for other purposes. 2/16/2007--Introduced. Kinship Caregiver Support Act - Authorizes the Assistant Secretary for Children and Families of the Department of Health and Human Services to make grants for kinship navigator programs to state agencies, metropolitan agencies, or tribal organizations with experience in addressing needs of kinship caregivers or children and connecting them with services and assistance.Amends part E (Federal Payments for Foster Care and Adoption Assistance) of title IV of the Social Security Act to authorize all states to opt to enter agreements to provide kinship guardianship assistance payments on behalf of children to grandparents and other relatives who have assumed legal guardianship of children for whom they have cared as foster parents and have committed to care for on a permanent basis. Allows states to use part E funds to [...] show full description
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Admission of nonimmigrants, Agricultural labor, Agriculture, Air pollution, Alaska, Alien labor, Aluminum, American Revolution, Animals, Anniversaries, Archaeology, Arizona, Arkansas, Armed forces, Art, Astronautical accidents, Astronautics, Authorization, Authors and authorship, Boundaries, Budgets, Business, California, Canals, Civil rights, Civil rights workers, Civil war, Climate change, Coal, Coal mines and mining, Colorado, Columbia River development, Commemorations, Congress, Congressional elections, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Congressional tributes, Connecticut, Construction costs, Copyright, Dams, Defense policy, Disabled, District of Columbia, Easements, East Asia, Ecosystem management, Eisenhower Administration, Elections, Energy, Energy conservation, Environmental education, Environmental protection, Environmental technology, Europe, Ex-Members of Congress, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to transportation, Federal aid to water resources development, Fishery management, Foreign policy, Geology, Government liability, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Greenhouse gases, Groundwater, Guam, Habitat conservation, Hazardous substances, Helicopters, Highway maintenance, Hispanic Americans, Historic sites, History, House of Representatives, Humanities, Hydroelectric plants, Hydroelectric power, Hydrology, Illinois, Immigration, Indiana, Infrastructure, Intellectual property, International affairs, Iron and steel industry, Irrigation, Irrigation districts, Kansas, Kentucky, Labor, Lakes, Land transfers, Land use, Law, Libraries, Lighthouses and lightships, Lincoln Administration, Lithuania, Maryland, Massachusetts, Military bases, Military history, Military parks, Minesweeping, Minorities, Missouri, Missouri River development, Monuments and memorials, Museums, Music, Names, National forests, National Guard, National monuments, National parks, Natural areas, Natural resources, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York City, New York State, Non-native species, North Carolina, Northern Mariana Islands, Ohio, Oregon, Palau Islands, Pipelines, Presidents, Public contracts, Public lands, Public utilities, Railroads, Real estate appraisal, Restoration ecology, Rivers, Saline waters, Security measures, Slavery, South Carolina, Space activities, Space shuttles, Sports, State and local government, State laws, Steel, Subcontractors, Taiwan, Tax exemption, Taxation, Technological innovations, Technology, Technology transfer, Tennessee, Texas, Trails, Transportation, Treaties, Turkey, Urban affairs, Utah, Vermont, Veterans, Virginia, Visas, Warships, Washington State, Water conservation, Water resources, Water resources development, Water reuse, Water rights, Water supply, Water treatment plants, Watersheds, Weapons systems, West (U.S.), West Virginia, Wetlands, Wild rivers, Wilderness areas, Wildlife, Wildlife conservation, Wyoming
Latest Action: 05/08/2008 - Signed by President. Bill TextA bill to authorize certain programs and activities in the Department of the Interior, the Forest Service, and the Department of Energy, to implement further the Act approving the Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Political Union with the United States of America, to amend the Compact of Free Association Amendments Act of 2003, and for other purposes. 5/8/2008--Public Law. (There are 2 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The expanded summary of the Senate passed version is repeated here.)Consolidated Natural Resources Act of 2008 - Title I: Forest Service Authorizations - (Sec. 101) Designates certain lands in the Skykomish River Valley, Washington, as the Wild Sky Wilderness, to be managed by the Secretary of Agriculture. Directs the Secretary to establish a trail plan. Authorizes the use of helicopter access to construct and maintain a joint [...] show full description
Latest Action: 02/12/2008 - Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. Bill TextRecognizing and honoring the 400th anniversary of Quebec City in Quebec, Canada, since its founding in 1608 by French explorer Samuel de Champlain. 2/12/2008--Introduced. Recognizes Quebec City's 400th anniversary. Honors the contributions to friendship made by the people of Quebec City to North America.
Also tagged in: Air conditioning, Air pollution, Alternative energy sources, Biomass energy, Budgets, Building construction, Business, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction costs, Construction industries, Construction workers, Cost effectiveness, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Energy, Energy conservation, Energy efficiency, Environmental protection, Federal aid to education, Geothermal resources, Government contractors, Government information, Government paperwork, Heating, Hydroelectric power, Hydrogen, Indoor air pollution, Labor, Lighting, Minimum wages, Nonprofit organizations, Public contracts, School buildings, Secondary education, Social services, Solar energy, Standards, State and local government, State laws, Subcontractors, Technology, Urban affairs, Wages, Wind power
Latest Action: 02/12/2008 - Referred to the House Committee on Education and Labor. Bill TextTo authorize the Secretary of Education to make grants for energy efficiency improvements and renewable energy improvements at public school facilities, and for other purposes. 2/12/2008--Introduced. Grants for Renewable and Energy Efficiency Needs School Improvement Act or the GREEN School Improvement Act - Requires the Secretary of Education to allocate funds to states to provide competitive grants to local educational agencies and eligible entities to make energy improvements to schools that result in a direct reduction in school energy costs, an improvement in teacher and student health, or the installation of renewable energy technologies. Requires a priority to be given to high-need local agencies and local agencies designated with a specified metrocentric locale codes.Sets forth grant application requirements, including a needs assessment for the schools involved and a description of the benefits and costs of the energy improvements to be made. Authorizes [...] show full description
Latest Action: 01/16/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Federal Workforce, Post Office, and the District of Columbia. Bill TextTo amend the Federal Law Enforcement Pay Reform Act of 1990 to adjust the percentage differentials payable to Federal law enforcement officers in certain high-cost areas, and for other purposes. 12/19/2007--Introduced. Amends the Federal Law Enforcement Pay Reform Act of 1990 to revise the special pay adjustments for (percentage differentials payable to) federal law enforcement officers in specified consolidated metropolitan statistical areas. Includes Capitol Police as law enforcement officers under such Act. Eliminates the limitation on the aggregate of basic pay and premium pay with respect to availability pay for federal criminal investigators.
Latest Action: 12/19/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Bill TextTo amend title 38, United States Code, to expand access to hospital care for veterans in urban areas, and for other purposes. 12/19/2007--Introduced. Veterans' Access to Local Options for Recovery Act of 2007 (VALOR Act) - Authorizes the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to seek to enter into a contract with a non-Department of Veterans Affairs facility located in an eligible metropolitan statistical area to provide hospital care and medical services to veterans.
Also tagged in: Agriculture, Animals, Business, Colleges, Commemorations, Drug industry, Education, Food, Higher education, Kansas, Laboratories, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medicine, Missouri, Nutrition, Research centers, Science policy, Urban affairs, Veterinary medicine
Latest Action: 04/25/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry. Bill TextRecognizing the region from Manhattan, Kansas, to Columbia, Missouri, as the Kansas City Animal Health Corridor, and for other purposes. 11/15/2007--Introduced. Recognizes: (1) the region from Manhattan, Kansas, to Columbia, Missouri, including the metropolitan Kansas City area and St. Joseph, Missouri, as the Kansas City Animal Health Corridor; and (2) the Kansas City Animal Health Corridor as the national center of the animal health industry.
Also tagged in: Anniversaries, Commemorations, Congressional tributes, District of Columbia, Local government, Maryland, Nonprofit organizations, Regional planning, Social services, State and local government, Urban affairs, Virginia
Latest Action: 11/13/2007 - DEBATE - The House proceeded with forty minutes of debate on H. Res. 808. Bill TextCommemorating the 50th Anniversary of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. 11/13/2007--Passed House without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Offers the sincerest congratulations of the U.S. House of Representatives to the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments in recognition of its 50th Anniversary and its legacy of outstanding service to the governments and citizens of greater Washington, D.C., metropolitan region, and expresses its appreciation for a job well done.
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Damages, Emergency management, Employee rights, Employers' liability, Floods, Hours of labor, Hurricanes, Labor, Law, Louisiana, Minimum wages, Urban affairs, Wage restitution
Latest Action: 10/17/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Education and Labor. Bill TextTo permit the Secretary of Labor to make an administrative determination of the amount of unpaid wages owed for certain violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act in the New Orleans region after Hurricane Katrina. 10/17/2007--Introduced. Authorizes the Secretary of Labor to make an administrative determination of the amount of unpaid minimum wages or unpaid overtime compensation and an additional equal amount as liquidated damages owed to employees by an employer for certain violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act committed in the New Orleans region after Hurricane Katrina. Authorizes the Secretary to bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of such wages and liquidated damages.
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Department of Energy, Energy, Energy facilities, Executive departments, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Government information, Independent regulatory commissions, Land use, Law, Licenses, Public meetings, Urban affairs
Latest Action: 07/31/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. Bill TextTo amend the Federal Power Act and the Natural Gas Act to require that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission conduct local hearings before issuing a permit or other authorization for any action that may affect land use in any locality, and for other purposes. 7/31/2007--Introduced. Amends the Federal Power Act and the Natural Gas Act to direct the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), before issuing a permit or other authorization for any action that may affect land use in any locality, to hold a public hearing in that locality, if requested by five or more individuals or an organization representing 30 or more individuals. Requires the hearing to be held in a statistical metropolitan area at a location reasonably central to the affected areas, if a facility affects multiple areas. Instructs FERC to hold such a hearing whenever a request for reconsideration is granted, if FERC did not hold a hearing before issuing the permit or authorization.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Adult day care, Aged, AIDS (Disease), Alabama, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, American Samoa, Armed forces, Birth control, Budgets, Business, Cancer, Cardiovascular diseases, Child health, Children, Chronically ill, Clinics, Coinsurance, Collection of accounts, Colon cancer, Communication in medicine, Communications, Congressional reporting requirements, Connecticut, Consumer discounts, Consumers, Defense policy, Dental care, Diabetes, Drug therapy, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Employee health benefits, Energy, Estates (Law), Excise tax, Executive departments, Eye diseases, Families, Family services, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to child health services, Finance, Food, Foreign corporations, Gasoline, Government contractors, Government information, Government paperwork, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Guam, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health maintenance organizations, Health policy, Hepatitis, Higher education, Home care services, Hospital care, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Illinois, Imaging systems in medicine, Immigrant health, Immigration, Indian medical care, Indians, Influenza, Information technology, Inspectors general, Insurance companies, Insurance premiums, Kidney diseases, Labor, Language and languages, Law, Long-term care, Lung diseases, Mammography, Managed care, Marriage counseling, Massachusetts, Maternal health services, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical centers, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical fees, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical laboratories, Medical records, Medical research, Medical residents, Medical screening, Medical statistics, Medical supplies, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, Medicine, Medigap, Mental depression, Mental health services, Michigan, Midwives, Military personnel, Minnesota, Minorities, New Jersey, New York State, Northern Mariana Islands, Nursing homes, Nutrition, Osteoporosis, Oxygen, Pensions, Physical therapy, Physicians, Pneumonia, Politics and government, Poor children, Pregnant women, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Psychotherapy, Public contracts, Puerto Rico, Quality of care, Rebates, Reinsurance, Rural affairs, Rural health, Science policy, Sexual abstinence, Social services, Social work, Speech disorders, Tax exemption, Taxation, Technology, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Tennessee, Tobacco tax, Trade, Urban affairs, Vaccines, Virgin Islands, Welfare, Wisconsin, Women
Latest Action: 09/04/2007 - Received in the Senate. Read twice. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 338. Bill TextTo amend titles XVIII, XIX, and XXI of the Social Security Act to extend and improve the children's health insurance program, to improve beneficiary protections under the Medicare, Medicaid, and the CHIP program, and for other purposes. 8/1/2007--Reported to House amended, Part I. (There are 2 other summaries) Children's Health and Medicare Protection (CHAMP) Act of 2007 - Title I: Children's Health Insurance Program - (Sec. 100) States that it is the purpose of this title to provide dependable and stable funding for children's health insurance under titles XXI (Children's Health Insurance Program) (CHIP) (also known as SCHIP) and XIX (Medicaid) of the Social Security Act (SSA) in order to enroll all six million uninsured children who are eligible, but not enrolled, for coverage today. Subtitle A: Funding - (Sec. 101) Prescribes formulae for new base CHIP allotments for states and territories beginning with FY2008. (Sec. [...] show full description
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