Top Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Budgets, Business, Career education, Commercialization, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Curricula, Data banks, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Engineering, Engineers, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Environmental technology, Ethics, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to research, Federal officials, Government employees, Government information, Government publicity, Government travel, Governmental investigations, Green products, Health policy, Higher education, Laboratories, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Nanotechnology, Office of Science and Technology Policy, Public-private partnerships, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Science policy, Scientific education, Scientific instruments and apparatus, Scientists, Secondary education, Small business, Standards, Strategic planning, Teacher education, Technology, Technology transfer, Travel costs
Latest Action: 06/06/2008 - Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Bill TextTo authorize activities for support of nanotechnology research and development, and for other purposes. 5/1/2008--Introduced. National Nanotechnology Intiative Amendments Act of 2008 - Revises the 21st Century Nanotechology Research and Development Act with regard to strategic plans developed pursuant to the National Nanotechnology Program. Requires agencies participating in the Program to support the setting of standards for nanotechnology. Sets forth a new funding requirement with respect to the National Nanotechnology Coordination Office. Requires the Office to be supported by funds from each agency participating in the Program. Sets forth annual reporting requirements regarding the Office. Makes the National Nanotechnology Advisory Panel a distinct entity. Instructs the Panel to form a subpanel to enable it in assessing whether societal, ethical, legal, environmental, and workforce concerns are adequately addressed by the Program. Rewrites [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Air pollution, Air pollution control, Antarctic regions, Department of Homeland Security, Diesel motor, Environmental health, Environmental law enforcement, Environmental protection, Environmental Protection Agency, Executive departments, Fines (Penalties), Foreign policy, Government information, Government paperwork, Hazardous substances, Health policy, International affairs, International agencies, International environmental cooperation, Law, Licenses, Marine engines, Marine pollution, Marine resources, Marine terminals, Medical care, Medicine, Merchant ships, Nitrogen oxides, Ozone layer depletion, Ships, Shipyards, Solid wastes, Standards, Tankers, Territorial waters, Transboundary pollution, Transportation, Treaties, Waste disposal in rivers, lakes, etc., Waste disposal in the ocean, Water pollution, Water pollution control
Latest Action: 07/08/2008 - Mr. Oberstar moved that the House suspend the rules and agree to the Senate amendment. Bill TextTo amend the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships to implement MARPOL Annex VI. 6/26/2008--Passed Senate amended. (There are 3 other summaries) Maritime Pollution Prevention Act of 2008 - (Sec. 3) Amends the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships (Act) to provide for the adoption of Annex VI (Prevention of Air Pollution From Ships Enforcement) of the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, 1973 (MARPOL Convention, which includes any Protocols or Annexes entered into force for the United States). Makes the Act, with respect to Annex VI, applicable to: (1) ships in a port, shipyard, offshore terminal, or U.S. internal waters; (2) a ship that is bound for, or departing from, a port, shipyard, offshore terminal, or the internal waters of the United States and is in navigable U.S. waters or the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), an emission control, or other specified area; (3) a ship that is entitled to fly the flag of, or operating [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Air pollution, Alternative energy sources, Armed forces, Aviation fuels, Budgets, Building construction, Business, Carbon cycle, Carbon dioxide, Coal, Coal liquefaction, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction costs, Cooperative societies, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense policy, Department of Energy, Depreciation and amortization, Diesel motor, Energy, Energy facilities, Energy research, Energy storage, Environmental health, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Executive departments, Federally-guaranteed loans, Finance, Gas industry, Government lending, Governmental investigations, Health policy, Income tax, Investment tax credit, Laboratories, Law, Licenses, Medical care, Methane, Military bases, Minimum tax, Motor vehicle pollution control, Natural resources, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Petroleum reserves, Public contracts, Public lands, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Science policy, Secondary recovery of gas, Secondary recovery of oil, Strategic materials, Synthetic fuel, Tax credits, Tax deductions, Tax returns, Taxation, Transportation
Latest Action: 01/04/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (text of measure as introduced: CR S144-148) Bill TextA bill to promote coal-to-liquid fuel activities. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Coal-to-Liquid Fuel Promotion Act of 2007 - Amends the Energy Policy Act of 2005 to instruct the Secretary of Energy to: (1) make loan guarantees to certain large-scale coal-to-liquid facilities to produce liquid transportation fuel; (2) establish a loan program to pay the federal share of the cost of obtaining services necessary for the planning, permitting, and construction of a coal-to-liquid facility; and (3) promulgate regulations for development of coal-to-liquid manufacturing facilities on federal land. Amends the Energy Policy and Conservation Act to instruct the Secretaries of Energy and of Defense to study and report to Congress on the feasibility and suitability of maintaining coal-to-liquid products in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (Reserve). Authorizes the Secretary to: (1) construct storage facilities in the vicinity of pipeline infrastructure and at least one military base;[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Air pollution, Alternative energy sources, Armed forces, Aviation fuels, Budgets, Building construction, Business, Carbon cycle, Carbon dioxide, Coal, Coal liquefaction, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction costs, Cooperative societies, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense policy, Department of Energy, Depreciation and amortization, Diesel motor, Energy, Energy facilities, Energy research, Energy storage, Environmental health, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Executive departments, Federally-guaranteed loans, Finance, Gas industry, Government lending, Governmental investigations, Health policy, Income tax, Investment tax credit, Laboratories, Law, Licenses, Medical care, Methane, Military bases, Minimum tax, Motor vehicle pollution control, Natural resources, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Petroleum reserves, Public contracts, Public lands, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Science policy, Secondary recovery of gas, Secondary recovery of oil, Strategic materials, Synthetic fuel, Tax credits, Tax deductions, Tax returns, Taxation, Transportation
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality. Bill TextTo promote coal-to-liquid fuel activities. 1/10/2007--Introduced. Coal-to-Liquid Fuel Promotion Act of 2007 - Amends the Energy Policy Act of 2005 to instruct the Secretary of Energy to: (1) make loan guarantees to certain large-scale coal-to-liquid facilities to produce liquid transportation fuel; (2) establish a loan program to pay the federal share of the cost of obtaining services necessary for the planning, permitting, and construction of a coal-to-liquid facility; and (3) promulgate regulations for development of coal-to-liquid manufacturing facilities on federal land. Amends the Energy Policy and Conservation Act to instruct the Secretaries of Energy and of Defense to study and report to Congress on the feasibility and suitability of maintaining coal-to-liquid products in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (Reserve). Authorizes the Secretary to: (1) construct storage facilities in the vicinity of pipeline infrastructure and at least one military base; and [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Anniversaries, Catholic Church, Church and social problems, Civil liberties, Commemorations, Congress, Congressional tributes, Criminal justice, Economic assistance, Education, El Salvador, Elementary and secondary education, Food, Food relief, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Health policy, Human rights, Hunger, International affairs, Latin America, Medical care, Missionaries, Murder, Poverty, Religion, Welfare
Latest Action: 11/14/2007 - Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S14419-14420; text as passed Senate: CR S14419-14420; text of measure as introduced: CR S14404-14405) Bill TextA resolution remembering and commemorating the lives and work of Maryknoll Sisters Maura Clarke and Ita Ford, Ursuline Sister Dorothy Kazel, and Cleveland Lay Mission Team Member Jean Donovan, who were executed by members of the Armed Forces of El Salvador on December 2, 1980. 11/14/2007--Passed Senate without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary has been expanded because action occurred on the measure.) Remembers and commemorates the lives and work of Sisters Maura Clarke, Ita Ford, and Dorothy Kazel and lay missionary Jean Donovan, and extends sympathy and support for the families, friends, and religious communities of the four U.S. churchwomen. Continues to find inspiration in their lives and work. Calls upon the people of the United States and religious congregations to participate in local, national, and international events commemorating the 25th [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Americans in foreign countries, Archaeology, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Authors and authorship, Budgets, Business, Civil-military relations, Clinics, Communications, Compensation (Law), Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congress and military policy, Congressional investigations, Congressional joint committees, Congressional oversight, Congressional reorganization, Congressional reporting requirements, Contracts, Cost of living adjustments, Counterterrorism, Cultural property, Defense budgets, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense policy, Democracy, Diplomacy, Economic assistance, Economic policy, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Embassies, Energy, Engineers, Environmental protection, Federal employees, Federal officials, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Foreign service, Government contractors, Government employees, Government information, Government liability (International law), Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Hazardous substances, Hazardous wastes, Health policy, Higher education, Historic sites, History, Hospitals, Humanities, Immigration, Indexing (Economic policy), Infrastructure, Infrastructure (Economics), Inspectors general, International affairs, International agencies, International claims, International military forces, International relief, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Job training, Judges, Law, Lawyers, Limitation of actions, Medical care, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical supplies, Medicine, Middle East and North Africa, Military assistance, Military bases, Military occupation, Military operations, Military training, Military withdrawal, Minesweeping, Missing in action, National security, Nonprofit organizations, Nurses, Peace, Peacekeeping forces, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Physicians, Police training, Politics and government, President and foreign policy, Presidents, Public contracts, Refuse and refuse disposal, Repatriation, Reporters and reporting, September 11, 2001, Social services, Solid wastes, Teachers, Terrorism, Trade, United Nations, Uranium, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, War and emergency powers, War casualties, War relief
Latest Action: 10/29/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H12136-12137) Bill TextTo require United States military disengagement from Iraq, to provide United States assistance for reconstruction and reconciliation in Iraq, and for other purposes. 1/17/2007--Introduced. Bring the Troops Home and Iraq Sovereignty Restoration Act of 2007 - Declares that it is U.S. policy to: (1) end the occupation of Iraq; (2) accelerate the training and equipping of Iraq's military and security forces; (3) pursue security and stability in Iraq through diplomacy; (4) help preserve the territorial integrity of Iraq as a nation state; (5) account for any missing U.S. Armed Forces personnel or U.S. citizens in Iraq; and (6) turn over internal security activities and military operations in Iraq to the elected government of Iraq within six months. Repeals the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002. Requires the withdrawal from Iraq of all U.S. Armed Forces and contractor security forces within six months. Prohibits, with exceptions,[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative fees, Administrative procedure, Agriculture, Air pollution, Air pollution control, Alternative energy sources, Animals, Biomass energy, Budgets, Business, Carbon cycle, Carbon dioxide, Cellulose, Climate change, Coal, Coal gasification, Coastal zone, Community development, Congressional reporting requirements, Cost accounting, Data banks, Developing countries, Dislocated workers, Droughts, Economic impact statements, Economic policy, Ecosystem management, Electric power plants, Electric utilities, Emergency management, Emissions trading, Energy, Energy crops, Environmental assessment, Environmental health, Environmental protection, Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental technology, Executive departments, Farm lands, Federal aid to air pollution control, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Fines (Penalties), Fisheries, Floods, Fluorocarbons, Foreign policy, Forest conservation, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Grants-in-aid, Greenhouse gases, Habitat conservation, Health policy, Housing, Identification devices, Industrial pollution, Infrastructure, International affairs, International environmental cooperation, Job hunting, Job training, Labor, Law, Marine resources, Medical care, Meteorology, Methane, Motor vehicle pollution control, Natural resources, Nitrogen oxides, Nonprofit organizations, Oceanography, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Pollution measurement, Poverty, Real estate development, Reforestation, Revolving funds, Sea level, Social services, Solid wastes, State and local government, Storage, Storms, Technology, Tourism, Transportation, Treaties, United Nations, Waste reduction, Weather, Welfare, Wildlife conservation, Wind power
Latest Action: 02/07/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife, and Oceans. Bill TextTo accelerate the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States by establishing a market-driven system of greenhouse gas tradeable allowances that will limit greenhouse gas emissions in the United States, reduce dependence upon foreign oil, and ensure benefits to consumers from the trading in such allowances, and for other purposes. 1/22/2007--Introduced. Climate Stewardship Act of 2007 - Requires the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to establish a National Greenhouse Gas Database consisting of: (1) an inventory of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by covered entities (specified entities that own or control a source of GHG emissions in the electric power, industrial, and commercial sectors of the U.S. economy that emit more than 10,000 metric tons of GHGs per year); and (2) a registry of GHG emission reductions and increased sequestration, applicable to both covered and noncovered entities.Establishes a program for the market-driven [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Advice and consent of the Senate, Aged, Ambulatory care, Appropriations, Bonds, Budgets, Building construction, Capital budgets, Capital investments, Capitation (Medical care), Children, Chiropractic and chiropractors, Civil liberties, Clinics, Coinsurance, Community health services, Compensation (Law), Comprehensive health care, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumers, Dental care, Dentists, Department of Health and Human Services, Dislocated workers, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Excise tax, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Eye care, Federal aid to child health services, Federal aid to education, Federal-state relations, Finance, Generic drugs, Government information, Government paperwork, Government trust funds, Group medical practice, Health counseling, Health education, Health facilities, Health insurance, Health insurance portability, Health maintenance organizations, Health planning, Health policy, Hearing, Hearing aids, Higher education, Home care services, Hospital care, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Identification devices, Income tax, Indian medical care, Indians, Insurance premiums, Investments, Investors, Job hunting, Job training, Labor, Law, Licenses, Long-term care, Long-term care insurance, Managed care, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical fees, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical personnel, Medical records, Medical residents, Medical supplies, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Mental health services, Mental illness, Midwives, Minorities, Minority health, National health insurance, Nonprofit organizations, Nurse practitioners, Nursing homes, Occupational retraining, Occupational therapy, Optometry, Osteopathy and osteopaths, Patients' rights, Payroll deductions, Physicians, Physicians' assistants, Poor children, Prescription pricing, Presidential appointments, Presidents, Preventive medicine, Prosthesis, Psychologists, Quality of care, Right of privacy, Salaries, Social services, State and local government, State laws, Tax rates, Taxation, Technology, Telecommunication, Unemployment insurance, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Welfare, Withholding tax
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo provide for comprehensive health insurance coverage for all United States residents, and for other purposes. 1/24/2007--Introduced. United States National Health Insurance Act (or the Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act) - Establishes the United States National Health Insurance (USNHI) Program (the Program) to provide all individuals residing in the United States and in U.S. territories with free health care that includes all medically necessary care, such as primary care and prevention, prescription drugs, emergency care, and mental health services. Prohibits an institution from participating in the Program unless it is a public or nonprofit institution. Allows nonprofit health maintenance organizations (HMOs) that actually deliver care in their own facilities to participate in the Program. Gives patients the freedom to choose from participating physicians and institutions. Prohibits a private health insurer from selling health insurance coverage that [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Administrative remedies, Advertising, Agriculture, Budgets, Business, Business records, Cancer, Carcinogens, Cardiovascular diseases, Chemicals, Child health, Children, Cigarettes, Civil liberties, Communications, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional oversight, Congressional powers, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumer education, Consumers, Criminal justice, Damages, Deceptive advertising, Defective products, Dental care, Department of Health and Human Services, Disciplining of employees, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Drug adulteration, Drug approvals, Executive departments, Exports, Federal advisory bodies, Federal preemption, Federal Trade Commission, Fines (Penalties), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Freedom of information, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Hazardous substances, Health policy, Health warnings, Herbs, Identification devices, Imports, Independent regulatory commissions, Intellectual property, Judicial review, Labeling, Labor, Law, Liability (Law), Licenses, Local laws, Lung cancer, Lung diseases, Marketing, Medical care, Medical ethics, Medical records, Medical research, Medicine, Mortality, New products, Nicotine, Packaging, Patients' rights, Pesticides, Pregnant women, Product counterfeiting, Product safety, Public service advertising, Quality control, Research and development, Restrictive trade practices, Retail trade, Right of privacy, Risk, Sales promotion, Science policy, Smokeless tobacco, Smoking, Smoking and youth, Smuggling, Spices, Standards, State and local government, State laws, Storage, Stroke, Surveys, Tax returns, Taxation, Technological innovations, Technology, Tobacco, Tobacco exports, Tobacco industry, Tobacco research, Trade, Trade regulation, Trade secrets, Trademarks, User charges, Warning labels, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 08/01/2007 - Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably. Bill TextA bill to protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products. 2/15/2007--Introduced. Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act - Amends the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to provide for the regulation of tobacco products by the Secretary of Health and Human Services through the Food and Drug Administration, including through disclosure, annual registration, inspection, recordkeeping, and user fee requirements. Sets forth criteria by which tobacco products are deemed adulterated or misbranded. Allows the Secretary to require prior approval of all label statements. Allows the Secretary to restrict the sale or distribution of tobacco products, including advertising and promotion, if the Secretary determines that such regulation would be appropriate for the protection of the public health. Prohibits such regulations from: (1) limiting product sales or distribution to authorization [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administration of justice, Advice and consent of the Senate, Aged, Alcoholism, Alternative dispute resolution, Animals, Armed forces, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Arms control verification, Arms sales, Block grants, Budgets, Cabinet officers, Child abuse, Child health, Child welfare, Children, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Civil rights movements, Commemorations, Communications, Community organization, Community policing, Conferences, Congressional reporting requirements, Conservation of natural resources, Crime prevention, Crimes against women, Criminal justice, Cultural relations, Curricula, Defense policy, Democracy, Department of Justice, Department of State, Department of the Treasury, Dispute settlement, Drug abuse, Drug abuse prevention, Drug abuse treatment, Economic policy, Economic research, Education, Elder abuse, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Embargo, Employee rights, Employee training, Energy, Energy research, Environmental protection, Ethics, Ethnic relations, Exchange of persons programs, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Families, Family violence, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to research, Federal employees, Federal officials, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Firearms control, Foreign aid, Foreign loans, Foreign policy, Freedom of the press, Gangs, Government employees, Government information, Government publications, Government publicity, Hate crimes, Health policy, Higher education, Homosexuality, Human rights, Humanities, Inspectors general, Intergovernmental relations, International affairs, International finance, Internet, Job training, Labor, Law, Mediation, Medical care, Medicine, Minorities, National security, Natural resources, Nature conservation, Nonviolence, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons tests, Peace, Peace Corps, Peace negotiations, Peace treaties, Peacekeeping forces, Police-community relations, Politics and government, Presidential appointments, Protection of animals, Punishment, Rehabilitation of criminals, Religion, Religious liberty, Research and development, School security, Science policy, Secondary education, Service academies, Service learning, Space activities, Space warfare, Special days, State and local government, Storage, Summit diplomacy, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Trade, Transportation, Transportation research, United Nations, Victims of crimes, Violence, Violence in mass media, War relief, Weapons of mass destruction, Weapons systems, Women
Latest Action: 05/18/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Bill TextTo establish a Department of Peace and Nonviolence. 2/5/2007--Introduced. Department of Peace and Nonviolence Act - Establishes a Department of Peace and Nonviolence, which shall be headed by a Secretary of Peace and Nonviolence appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. Sets forth the mission of the Department, including to: (1) hold peace as an organizing principle; (2) endeavor to promote justice and democratic principles to expand human rights; and (3) develop policies that promote national and international conflict prevention, nonviolent intervention, mediation, peaceful resolution of conflict, and structured mediation of conflict. Establishes in the Department the Intergovernmental Advisory Council on Peace and Nonviolence, which shall provide assistance and make recommendations to the Secretary and the President concerning intergovernmental policies relating to peace and nonviolent conflict resolution. Transfers to the Department [...] show full description
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Budgets, Business, Career education, Commercialization, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Curricula, Data banks, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Engineering, Engineers, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Environmental technology, Ethics, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to research, Federal officials, Government employees, Government information, Government publicity, Government travel, Governmental investigations, Green products, Health policy, Higher education, Laboratories, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Nanotechnology, Office of Science and Technology Policy, Public-private partnerships, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Science policy, Scientific education, Scientific instruments and apparatus, Scientists, Secondary education, Small business, Standards, Strategic planning, Teacher education, Technology, Technology transfer, Travel costs
Latest Action: 06/06/2008 - Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Bill TextTo authorize activities for support of nanotechnology research and development, and for other purposes. 5/1/2008--Introduced. National Nanotechnology Intiative Amendments Act of 2008 - Revises the 21st Century Nanotechology Research and Development Act with regard to strategic plans developed pursuant to the National Nanotechnology Program. Requires agencies participating in the Program to support the setting of standards for nanotechnology. Sets forth a new funding requirement with respect to the National Nanotechnology Coordination Office. Requires the Office to be supported by funds from each agency participating in the Program. Sets forth annual reporting requirements regarding the Office. Makes the National Nanotechnology Advisory Panel a distinct entity. Instructs the Panel to form a subpanel to enable it in assessing whether societal, ethical, legal, environmental, and workforce concerns are adequately addressed by the Program. Rewrites [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Air pollution, Climate change, Commemorations, Environmental health, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Health policy, Health services administration, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Science policy, Special weeks
Latest Action: 04/09/2008 - Referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (text of measure as introduced: CR S2821) Bill TextA resolution recognizing the week of April 7, 2008 to April 13, 2008, as "National Public Health Week". 4/9/2008--Introduced. Recognizes: (1) National Public Health Week; (2) the efforts of public health professionals, first responders, states, municipalities, and local communities to incorporate measures to adapt health care systems to address impacts of climate change; and (3) the role of adaptation in preventing impacts of climate change on vulnerable communities, the potential for improvement of health status and equity through efforts to address climate change, and the need to include health policy in the development of climate responses. Encourages: (1) further research, interdisciplinary partnership, and collaboration to understand and monitor the health impacts of climate change, for preparedness activities, and for improvement of health care infrastructure; and (2) every American to learn about the impacts of climate change on health.
Also tagged in: Air pollution, Climate change, Commemorations, Environmental health, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Health policy, Health services administration, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Science policy, Special weeks
Latest Action: 04/08/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextRecognizing of the week of April 7, 2008, to April 13, 2008, as "National Public Health Week". 4/4/2008--Introduced. Recognizes: (1) National Public Health Week; (2) the efforts of public health professionals, first responders, states, municipalities, and local communities to incorporate measures to adapt health care systems to address impacts of climate change; and (3) the role of adaptation in preventing impacts of climate change on vulnerable communities, the improvement of health status and equity through efforts to address climate change, and the need to include health policy in the development of climate responses. Encourages: (1) further research, interdisciplinary partnership, and collaboration to understand and monitor the health impacts of climate change, for preparedness activities, and for improvement of health care infrastructure; and (2) every American to learn about the impact of climate change on health.
Latest Action: 03/12/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextSupporting the We Don't Serve Teens campaign. 3/12/2008--Introduced. Supports the goals and ideals of campaigns working to improve long-term public health and well being, including campaigns that work to prevent underage drinking of alcoholic beverages, such as the We Don't Serve Teens Campaign. Encourages Americans to utilize resources that provide a wealth of information beneficial to combating and reducing such underage drinking. Commends the leadership and continuing efforts of all groups working to reduce underage drinking.
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Aged, Alaska, Armed forces, Authorization, Black colleges, Budgets, Business, Child health, Children, Citizenship education, Colleges, Communications, Community and school, Community development, Compensatory education, Computer literacy, Conferences, Congressional reporting requirements, Corporation directors, Corporation for National and Community Service, Cost effectiveness, Crime prevention, Criminal justice, Curricula, Defense economics, Depressed areas, Disaster relief, Dropouts, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Economic policy, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational innovations, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Energy, Energy conservation, Energy efficiency, Engineering, Environmental protection, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Ex-offenders, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Families, Family services, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to education, Federal-territorial relations, Finance, Financial planning, Financial services, Foster home care, Foundations, Gifts, Government corporations, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Government service contracts, Graduate education, Grandparents, Grievance procedures, Health policy, Higher education, Hispanic Americans, History, Housing, Indian education, Indians, Infrastructure, Infrastructure (Economics), Inspectors general, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Labor, Law, Leadership, Learning, Literacy programs, Mathematics, Medical care, Medicine, Mental illness, Mentoring, Military base closures, Minorities, Minority education, National service, Nonprofit organizations, Northern Mariana Islands, Older workers, Parent and child, Parental consent, Parents, Performance measurement, Personal budgets, Policy sciences, Politics and government, Public contracts, Recidivists, Rehabilitation of criminals, Rural affairs, Rural economic development, Rural health, Salaries, Scholarships, School-age child care, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Service learning, Social services, State and local government, Student employment, Student loan funds, Summer employment, Technical education, Technology, Transportation, Transportation engineering, Travel costs, Urban affairs, Urban economic development, Veterans, Veterans' benefits, Volunteer workers, Wages, Welfare, Youth services
Latest Action: 03/12/2008 - Considered as unfinished business. (consideration: CR H1560-1561) Bill TextTo reauthorize and reform the national service laws. 3/10/2008--Introduced. Generations Invigorating Volunteerism and Education Act, or the GIVE Act - Amends the National and Community Service Act of 1990 (NSCA) and the Domestic Volunteer Service Act of 1973 (DVSA) to revise the programs under such Acts and reauthorize appropriations for such programs through FY2012. Revises under NSCA: (1) the School-Based and Community-Based Service-Learning programs and Higher Education Innovative Programs for Community Service (Learn and Serve programs); (2) National Service Trust programs (AmeriCorps); (3) the National Civilian Community Corps (NCCC); and (4) the Investment for Quality and Innovation program. Eliminates the current Community-Based Learn and Serve programs. Establishes a new Learn and Serve program, Innovative Service-Learning Programs and Research, providing matching grants to: (1) provide community service-learning opportunities to elementary and [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, American investments, Americans in foreign countries, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Business, Civil liberties, Clinics, Collection of accounts, Conferences, Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congress and military policy, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Corporation taxes, Counterterrorism, Criminal justice, Damages, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense policy, Democracy, Diplomacy, Dispute settlement, Economic development, Economic policy, Embassies, Energy, Energy development, Ethnic relations, Excess profits tax, Executive departments, Extradition, Federal advisory bodies, Federal employees, Federal officials, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Government contractors, Government employees, Government liability (International law), Hazardous substances, Hazardous wastes, Health policy, Hospitals, Human rights, Income tax, Insurgency, International affairs, International agencies, International finance, International military forces, International relief, Iran, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Land mines, Legislative resolutions, Limitation of actions, Medical care, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical supplies, Medicine, Middle East and North Africa, Military bases, Military occupation, Military operations, Military posture, Military withdrawal, Minorities, Missing in action, Missing persons, Negotiations, Ordnance, Peace, Peacekeeping forces, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Policy sciences, Politics and government, President and foreign policy, Prisoners, Prisons, Private police, Profit, Protection of officials, Public contracts, Religion, Religious liberty, Syria, Taxation, Terrorism, Terrorists, Torture, Trade, United Nations, Uranium, War relief, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 02/27/2008 - Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the Committee on Armed Services, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee Bill TextTo require the safe, complete, and fully-funded redeployment of United States Armed Forces and contractor security forces from Iraq and to prohibit the establishment of any enduring or permanent United States military bases in Iraq, and for other purposes. 2/27/2008--Introduced. Fully-Funded United States Military Redeployment and Sovereignty of Iraq Restoration Act of 2008 - States that it is the policy of the United States to: (1) commence the safe and orderly redeployment of U.S. troops and military contractors from Iraq; (2) pursue security and stability in Iraq through diplomacy; (3) help preserve the territorial integrity of Iraq and establish a democratic central government there; (4) account for missing U.S. personnel and citizens in Iraq; and (5) turn over all internal security activities and military operations in Iraq to its elected government within one year after the enactment of this Act. Repeals the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq [...] show full description
Latest Action: 03/06/2008 - Committee on the Judiciary. Ordered to be reported with an amendment favorably. Bill TextA bill to amend chapter 111 of title 28, United States Code, relating to protective orders, sealing of cases, disclosures of discovery information in civil actions, and for other purposes. 12/11/2007--Introduced. Sunshine in Litigation Act of 2007 - Amends the federal judicial code to prohibit a court from entering an order restricting the disclosure of information obtained through discovery, approving a settlement disagreement that would restrict such disclosure, or restricting access to court records in a civil case, unless the court has found that: (1) such order would not restrict the disclosure of information which is relevant to the protection of public health or safety; or (2) the public interest in the disclosure of potential health or safety hazards is outweighed by a specific and substantial interest in maintaining the confidentiality of the information, and the requested protective order is no broader than necessary to protect the privacy interest. Prohibits any [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative fees, Administrative procedure, Advice and consent of the Senate, Agriculture, Air pollution, Air pollution control, Alternative energy sources, Animals, Aquatic ecology, Biomass energy, Budgets, Business, Carbon cycle, Carbon dioxide, Cellulose, Chesapeake Bay, Climate change, Coal, Coastal zone, Community development, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumer discounts, Cost accounting, Data banks, Developing countries, Dislocated workers, Droughts, Economic impact statements, Economic policy, Ecosystem management, Electric power plants, Electric utilities, Emergency management, Emissions trading, Energy, Energy crops, Environmental assessment, Environmental health, Environmental protection, Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental technology, Estuaries, Everglades, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Farm lands, Federal aid to air pollution control, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Fines (Penalties), Fisheries, Floods, Fluorocarbons, Foreign policy, Forest conservation, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publications, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Grants-in-aid, Great Lakes, Greenhouse gases, Habitat conservation, Health policy, Housing, Identification devices, Imports, Industrial pollution, Infrastructure, International affairs, International environmental cooperation, Job hunting, Job training, Labor, Law, Long Island Sound, Marine resources, Medical care, Meteorology, Methane, Motor vehicle pollution control, Natural resources, Negotiations, Nitrogen oxides, Nonprofit organizations, Oceanography, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Pollution measurement, Poverty, Presidential appointments, Presidents, Real estate development, Rebates, Reforestation, Restoration ecology, Revolving funds, Sea level, Social services, Solid wastes, State and local government, Storage, Storms, Subsidies, Technology, Tourism, Trade, Transportation, Treaties, United Nations, Waste reduction, Water resources, Weather, Welfare, Wildlife conservation, Wind power
Latest Action: 04/25/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Conservation, Credit, Energy, and Research. Bill TextTo accelerate the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States by establishing a market-driven system of greenhouse gas tradeable allowances that will limit greenhouse gas emissions in the United States, reduce dependence upon foreign oil, and ensure benefits to consumers from the trading in such allowances, and for other purposes. 11/15/2007--Introduced. Climate Stewardship and Economic Security Act of 2007 - Requires the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to establish a National Greenhouse Gas Database consisting of: (1) an inventory of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by covered entities (specified entities that own or control a source of GHG emissions in the electric power, industrial, and commercial sectors of the U.S. economy that emit more than 10,000 metric tons of GHGs per year); and (2) a registry of GHG emission reductions and increased sequestration, applicable to all entities.Establishes a program for the market-driven [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Anniversaries, Catholic Church, Church and social problems, Civil liberties, Commemorations, Congress, Congressional tributes, Criminal justice, Economic assistance, Education, El Salvador, Elementary and secondary education, Food, Food relief, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Health policy, Human rights, Hunger, International affairs, Latin America, Medical care, Missionaries, Murder, Poverty, Religion, Welfare
Latest Action: 11/14/2007 - Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S14419-14420; text as passed Senate: CR S14419-14420; text of measure as introduced: CR S14404-14405) Bill TextA resolution remembering and commemorating the lives and work of Maryknoll Sisters Maura Clarke and Ita Ford, Ursuline Sister Dorothy Kazel, and Cleveland Lay Mission Team Member Jean Donovan, who were executed by members of the Armed Forces of El Salvador on December 2, 1980. 11/14/2007--Passed Senate without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary has been expanded because action occurred on the measure.) Remembers and commemorates the lives and work of Sisters Maura Clarke, Ita Ford, and Dorothy Kazel and lay missionary Jean Donovan, and extends sympathy and support for the families, friends, and religious communities of the four U.S. churchwomen. Continues to find inspiration in their lives and work. Calls upon the people of the United States and religious congregations to participate in local, national, and international events commemorating the 25th [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Communicable diseases, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Correctional institutions, Correctional personnel, Criminal justice, Department of Health and Human Services, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Grants-in-aid, Health policy, Hepatitis, Medical care, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Prisoners, Vaccination
Latest Action: 11/08/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend the Public Health Service Act to establish an Office of Correctional Public Health. 10/1/2007--Introduced. Office of Correctional Public Health Act of 2007 - Amends the Public Health Service Act to establish the Office of Correctional Public Health (OCPH) within the Office of Public Health and Science. Requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services, acting through the Director of OCPH, to carry out public health activities for individuals who are: (1) employed in the field of corrections as employees in federal, state, or local penal or correctional institutions; (2) incarcerated in such institutions; (3) employed as parole or probation officers; or (4) under parole or probation supervision. Includes among such activities disease prevention, health promotion, service delivery, research, and health professions education activities. Authorizes the Secretary to make matching grants to states to provide for correctional populations screenings, immunizations,[...] show full description
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