Top Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Aged, AIDS (Disease), Budgets, Communication in medicine, Communications, Compensatory education, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Cost effectiveness, Criminal justice, Day care, Demography, Distance education, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Education, Educational counseling, Educational statistics, Educational technology, Elementary and secondary education, English language, Families, Family violence, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to health facilities, Finance, Geriatrics, Government information, Government paperwork, Health policy, Higher education, Homeless, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Labor, Loan defaults, Managed care, Mathematics, Medical associations, Medical care, Medical education, Medical residents, Medical technology, Medicine, Mentoring, Minorities, Minorities in medicine, Paramedical personnel, Public service advertising, Quality of care, Recruiting of employees, Rural affairs, Rural health, Scholarships, Science policy, Scientific education, Student loan funds, Teacher education, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Transportation, Travel costs, Victims of crimes, Vocational guidance, Women
Latest Action: 02/26/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S2231) Bill TextA bill to amend the Public Health Service Act to promote and improve the allied health professions. 2/15/2007--Introduced. Allied Health Reinvestment Act - Amends the Public Health Service Act to require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to develop public service announcements to promote the allied health professions. Requires the Secretary to award grants to promote such professions by: (1) supporting relevant state and local campaigns; (2) increasing education opportunities; (3) carrying out programs to facilitate the entry of students into relevant careers; (4) expanding enrollment into such programs; (5) providing education through new technologies and methods; (6) enhancing the workforce through retention programs; (7) developing retention strategies; (8) expanding area health education centers to develop models of excellence for such professionals; and (9) developing clinical education, internship, and resident programs that encourage mentoring and the [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Aged, Budgets, Disabled, Dislocated workers, Employee training, Employment of the disabled, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Grants-in-aid, Health insurance continuation, Health policy, Job training, Labor, Medical care, Older workers, Performance measurement, Recruiting of employees
Latest Action: 02/28/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to promote labor force participation of older Americans, with the goals of increasing retirement security, reducing the projected shortage of experienced workers, maintaining future economic growth, and improving the Nation's fiscal outlook. 2/28/2007--Introduced. Health Care and Training for Older Workers Act - Amends the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) to extend COBRA continuation coverage for certain older workers. Amends the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 to revise: (1) statewide employment and training activities, adding developing strategies for serving hard-to-serve populations and coordinating programs among one-stop partners; (2) local employment and training activities, with respect to intensive services and training services, and adding customer support for members of hard-to-serve populations, including individuals with disabilities; and (3) performance measures, data, and reporting.
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Apprenticeship, Awards, medals, prizes, Budgets, Business, Business records, Civil rights, Civil rights enforcement, Class actions (Civil procedure), Commemorations, Communications, Conferences, Congressional reporting requirements, Damages, Department of Education, Department of Labor, Disciplining of employees, Discrimination in employment, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Employee rights, Employee training, Employers' liability, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Evidence (Law), Executive departments, Expert witnesses, Federal aid to education, Federal employees, Government and business, Government contractors, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Higher education, Job training, Labor, Labor unions, Law, Legal fees, Pay equity, Personnel records, Politics and government, Position classification, Public contracts, Punitive damages, Sex discrimination, Supervisors, Surveys, Vocational education, Wage surveys, Wages, Whistle blowing, Women, Women's education, Women's employment
Latest Action: 03/06/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S2699-2700) Bill TextA bill to amend the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 to provide more effective remedies of victims of discrimination in the payment of wages on the basis of sex, and for other purposes. 3/6/2007--Introduced. Paycheck Fairness Act - Amends the portion of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) known as the Equal Pay Act to revise remedies for and enforcement of prohibitions against sex discrimination in the payment of wages to: (1) add nonretaliation requirements; (2) increase penalties; and (3) authorize the Secretary of Labor (the Secretary) to seek additional compensatory or punitive damages. Requires the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs to train EEOC employees and affected individuals and entities on matters involving wage discrimination. Authorizes the Secretary to make grants to eligible entities for negotiation skills training programs for girls and women. Directs the Secretaries of Labor [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Administrative remedies, Aged, Business, Business records, Caregivers, Children, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Collective bargaining, Communications, Confidential communications, Congress, Congressional agencies, Congressional employees, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Damages, Department of Labor, Disciplining of employees, Discrimination in employment, Dismissal of employees, Employee rights, Employee vacations, Employers' liability, Executive departments, Families, Family leave, Family violence, Federal employees, Fines (Penalties), Government Accountability Office (GAO), Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Grievance procedures, Informers, Injunctions, Labor, Labor contracts, Labor productivity, Law, Legal fees, Library of Congress, Limitation of actions, Married people, Medical care, Medical records, Medical tests, Medicine, Parents, Part-time employment, Personnel records, Preventive medicine, Right of privacy, Sick leave, Signs and signboards, State and local government, State employees, Wage restitution, Whistle blowing
Latest Action: 03/15/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S3220) Bill TextA bill to provide for paid sick leave to ensure that Americans can address their own health needs and the health needs of their families. 3/15/2007--Introduced. Healthy Families Act - Requires certain employers, who employ 15 or more employees for each working day during 20 or more workweeks a year, to provide a minimum paid sick leave and employment benefits of: (1) seven days annually for those who work at least 30 hours per week; and (2) a prorated annual amount for those who work less than 30 but at least 20 hours a week, or less than 1,500 but at least 1,000 hours per year. Allows employees to use such leave to meet their own medical needs or to care for the medical needs of certain family members. Directs the Secretary of Labor to exercise certain investigative and enforcement authority with respect to this Act's provisions for employees covered by title I of the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 or the Government Employee Rights Act of 1991. Provides [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Business, Business records, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Civil rights enforcement, Class actions (Civil procedure), Confidential communications, Congress, Congressional employees, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Damages, Disciplining of employees, Discrimination in employment, Dismissal of employees, Employee rights, Employers' liability, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Executive departments, Expert witnesses, Federal employees, Fees, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publications, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Hours of labor, Labor, Labor unions, Law, Legal fees, Minimum wages, Pay equity, Position classification, Punitive damages, Racial discrimination, Right of privacy, Salaries, Sex discrimination, Small business, Wage restitution, Wage surveys, Wages, Whistle blowing, Women, Women's employment
Latest Action: 04/11/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to amend the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 to prohibit discrimination in the payment of wages on account of sex, race, or national origin, and for other purposes. 4/11/2007--Introduced. Fair Pay Act of 2007 - Amends the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 to prohibit discrimination in the payment of wages on account of sex, race, or national origin. (Allows payment of different wages under seniority systems, merit systems, systems that measure earnings by quantity or quality of production, or differentials based on bona fide factors that the employer demonstrates are job-related or further legitimate business interests.) Prohibits the discharge of or any other discrimination against an individual for opposing any act or practice made unlawful by this Act, or for assisting in an investigation or proceeding under it. Directs courts, in any action brought under this Act for violation of such prohibition, to allow expert fees as part of the costs awarded to prevailing [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Balance of payments, Balance of trade, Business, Capital movements, Congress, Congressional agencies, Congressional investigations, Congressional reorganization, Congressional reporting requirements, Debt, Economic policy, Economic statistics, Employment, Executive departments, Federal advisory bodies, Finance, Government information, Government paperwork, Government statistics, Gross national product, Income, Industrial production, Inflation, International finance, Labor, Saving and investment, Trade, Unemployment, Wages, Wealth
Latest Action: 03/27/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Government Management, Organization, and Procurement. Bill TextTo establish the Commission on Economic Indicators to conduct a study and submit a report containing recommendations concerning the appropriateness and accuracy of the methodology, calculations, and reporting used by the Government relating to certain economic indicators. 2/16/2007--Introduced. Commission on Economic Indicators Act of 2007 - Establishes the Commission on Economic Indicators to study and report to Congress on: (1) economic statistics collected and reported by U.S. government agencies, including national income, employment and unemployment, wages, personal income, wealth, savings, debt, productivity, inflation, and international trade and capital flows; and (2) ways to improve the related statistical measurements.
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Apprenticeship, Awards, medals, prizes, Budgets, Business, Business records, Civil rights, Civil rights enforcement, Class actions (Civil procedure), Commemorations, Communications, Conferences, Congressional reporting requirements, Damages, Department of Education, Department of Labor, Disciplining of employees, Discrimination in employment, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Employee rights, Employee training, Employers' liability, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Evidence (Law), Executive departments, Expert witnesses, Federal aid to education, Federal employees, Government and business, Government contractors, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Higher education, Job training, Labor, Labor unions, Law, Legal fees, Pay equity, Personnel records, Politics and government, Position classification, Public contracts, Punitive damages, Sex discrimination, Supervisors, Surveys, Vocational education, Wage surveys, Wages, Whistle blowing, Women, Women's education, Women's employment
Latest Action: 08/01/2008 - Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextTo amend the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 to provide more effective remedies to victims of discrimination in the payment of wages on the basis of sex, and for other purposes. 3/6/2007--Introduced. Paycheck Fairness Act - Amends the portion of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) known as the Equal Pay Act to revise remedies for and enforcement of prohibitions against sex discrimination in the payment of wages to: (1) add nonretaliation requirements; (2) increase penalties; and (3) authorize the Secretary of Labor (the Secretary) to seek additional compensatory or punitive damages. Requires the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs to train EEOC employees and affected individuals and entities on matters involving wage discrimination. Authorizes the Secretary to make grants to eligible entities for negotiation skills training programs for girls and women. Directs the Secretaries of Labor and [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Business, Congressional reporting requirements, Corporation taxes, Depreciation and amortization, Depressed areas, Economic growth, Economic policy, Enterprise zones, Government information, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Income tax, Labor, Minimum tax, Partnerships, Poverty, Self-employed, Tax deductions, Tax rates, Taxation, Unemployment, Welfare
Latest Action: 03/06/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means. Bill TextTo amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to promote freedom, fairness, and economic opportunity by establishing National Enterprise Zones to promote prosperity in economically depressed areas. 3/6/2007--Introduced. National Enterprise Zone Act of 2007 - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to direct the Secretary of the Treasury to designate areas in the United States and its possessions as National Enterprise Zones and to publish a list of such Zones. Requires a Zone to: (1) have more than 50,000 residents; (2) have a poverty rate of two times the national poverty rate; and (3) have an unemployment rate two times the national average. Allows corporate and noncorporate taxpayers with taxable income from an active trade or business within such a Zone to elect a reduced alternative income tax in lieu of existing income and alternative minimum tax rates. Requires the Secretary to study and report to Congress on the effectiveness of such program.
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Administrative remedies, Aged, Business, Business records, Caregivers, Children, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Collective bargaining, Communications, Confidential communications, Congress, Congressional agencies, Congressional employees, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Damages, Department of Labor, Disciplining of employees, Discrimination in employment, Dismissal of employees, Employee rights, Employee vacations, Employers' liability, Executive departments, Families, Family leave, Family violence, Federal employees, Fines (Penalties), Government Accountability Office (GAO), Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Grievance procedures, Informers, Injunctions, Labor, Labor contracts, Labor productivity, Law, Legal fees, Library of Congress, Limitation of actions, Married people, Medical care, Medical records, Medical tests, Medicine, Parents, Part-time employment, Personnel records, Preventive medicine, Right of privacy, Sick leave, Signs and signboards, State and local government, State employees, Wage restitution, Whistle blowing
Latest Action: 06/27/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections. Bill TextTo provide for paid sick leave to ensure that Americans can address their own health needs and the health needs of their families. 3/15/2007--Introduced. Healthy Families Act - Requires certain employers, who employ 15 or more employees for each working day during 20 or more workweeks a year, to provide a minimum paid sick leave and employment benefits of: (1) seven days annually for those who work at least 30 hours per week; and (2) a prorated annual amount for those who work less than 30 but at least 20 hours a week, or less than 1,500 but at least 1,000 hours per year. Allows employees to use such leave to meet their own medical needs or to care for the medical needs of certain family members. Directs the Secretary of Labor to exercise certain investigative and enforcement authority with respect to this Act's provisions for employees covered by title I of the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 or the Government Employee Rights Act of 1991. Provides that,[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic freedom, Academic performance, Accreditation (Education), Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Agricultural labor, Agriculture, Alaska, Alcohol and youth, Alcoholism, Americans in foreign countries, Animals, Apprenticeship, Archives, Area studies, Arizona, Armed forces, Attorneys general, Auctions, Authorization, Biology, Black colleges, Bonds, Budgets, Building construction, Business, Business education, Charities, Chemistry, Child abuse, Children, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Collection of accounts, College administration, College costs, College teachers, Colleges, Communications, Community and school, Community colleges, Compensatory education, Conflict of interests, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumer credit, Consumer education, Consumers, Continuing education, Copyright, Counseling, Credit bureaus, Criminal justice, Criminal statistics, Curricula, Data banks, Deaf, Debtor and creditor, Defense policy, Department of Education, Developing countries, Disabled, Discrimination in education, Distance education, District of Columbia, Dropouts, Drug abuse, Drugs and youth, Economic policy, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Education savings accounts, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational facilities, Educational innovations, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational technology, Educational tests, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Emergency communication systems, Emergency management, Employment, Engineering, English language, Ethics, Evacuation of civilians, Executive departments, Families, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to education, Federal employees, Federally-guaranteed loans, Fees, Finance, Financial services, Fire prevention, Foreign policy, Foreign service, Foreign students, Freedom of association, Freedom of speech, Gifts, Government employees, Government information, Government internships, Government lending, Government paperwork, Government procurement, Government publicity, Graduate education, Hawaii, Hawaiians, Health policy, Higher education, Hispanic Americans, History, Home schooling, Homeless, Housing, Humanities, Income tax, Indexing (Economic policy), Indian education, Indians, Indigenous peoples, Intellectual property, Interest, Interest rates, International affairs, International education, Internet, Job hunting, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Labor, Land transfers, Language and languages, Law, Legal aid, Legal education, Libraries, Limitation of actions, Literacy programs, Loan defaults, Lobbying, Mathematics, Medical care, Medical education, Medical residents, Medicine, Mental health services, Mentally disabled, Mentoring, Migrant education, Migrant labor, Military dependents, Military housing, Military personnel, Minorities, Minorities in government, Minority education, Murder, New York State, Nonprofit organizations, Nurses, Nursing education, Olympic games, Pacific Islanders, Parent-school relationships, Parents, Personal budgets, Physics, Poverty, Preschool education, Prisoners, Professional education, Public broadcasting, Public contracts, Public defenders, Public health, Public prosecutors, Recruiting of employees, Rehabilitation of criminals, Research centers, Right of privacy, Rural affairs, Rural education, Salaries, Scholarships, School buildings, School districts, School health programs, School libraries, School personnel, School security, Science policy, Scientific education, Seasonal labor, Secondary education, Service learning, Sex crimes, Sex offenders, Single-parent families, Social services, Special education, Speech disorders, Sports, Standards, State and local government, State courts, Student aid, Student employment, Student enrollment, Student loan funds, Student records, Students' rights, Surveys, Tax returns, Taxation, Teacher education, Teacher supply and demand, Teachers, Technical education, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Television, Textbooks, Trusts and trustees, Urban affairs, Urban education, Veterans, Veterans' education, Veterinary medicine, Vocational education, Volunteer workers, Web sites, Welfare, Wireless communication, Women, Women's education
Latest Action: 11/15/2007 - By Senator Kennedy from Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions filed written report. Report No. 110-231. Bill TextA bill to extend the authorization of programs under the Higher Education Act of 1965, and for other purposes. 7/24/2007--Passed Senate amended. (There are 2 other summaries) Higher Education Amendments of 2007 - Amends the Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA) to revise HEA programs and to extend the authorization of appropriations for them through FY2013. Title I: General Provisions - (Sec. 101) Adds definitions of a critical foreign language, distance education, and poverty line. Provides that critical foreign languages are those contained on the list designated by the Secretary of Education in the Federal Register on August 5, 1985, but allows the Secretary to set language priorities according to the purposes of a specific program and national security, economic competitiveness, and educational needs. States that poverty line refers to the poverty line applicable to a family of the size involved. (Sec. 102) Revises [...] show full description
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Agricultural pollution, Agricultural research, Agriculture, Air conditioning, Air pollution, Air pollution control, Airports, Alternative energy sources, Animals, Armed forces, Auctions, Automobile industry, Automobile repair, Biomass energy, Budgets, Building laws, Business, Carbon cycle, Carbon dioxide, Cellulose, Clean coal technology, Climate change, Coal, Coal mines and mining, Coastal zone, Colleges, Commercial aviation, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Cooperative societies, Coral reefs, Corporations, Defense policy, Diesel motor, Earned income tax credit, Economic impact statements, Economic policy, Ecosystem management, Electric appliances, Electric power distribution, Electric power plants, Electric utilities, Electric utility rates, Electric vehicles, Electronic benefits transfers, Emergency management, Emissions trading, Employee training, Endangered species, Energy, Energy conservation, Energy efficiency, Energy prices, Environmental law enforcement, Environmental protection, Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental research, Environmental technology, Estuaries, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to Indians, Finance, Fire fighters, Fire prevention, Fishery management, Flood control, Fluorocarbons, Foreign policy, Forest conservation, Forest fires, Forestry, Forestry research, Forests, Fossil fuels, Fuel cells, Fuel consumption, Gas companies, Gas industry, Geology, Geothermal resources, Government information, Government liability, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Government trust funds, Greenhouse gases, Habitat conservation, Hazardous substances, Heating, Higher education, Import restrictions, Income tax, Industrial buildings, Information disclosure (Securities law), Infrastructure, International affairs, International environmental cooperation, Investments, Job training, Labor, Landfills, Law, Manufacturing industries, Marine ecology, Marine mammals, Marine pollution, Marine resources, Mercury, Methane, Minorities, Montana, Motor vehicle pollution control, National security, Natural gas, Natural resources, Negotiations, Nitrogen oxides, Nonprofit organizations, Ocean energy resources, Petroleum industry, Petroleum refineries, Pipelines, Potable water, Presidential powers, Presidents, Public lands, Recycling of waste products, Research centers, Rural affairs, Science policy, Scientific education, Social security, Social security taxes, Social services, Solar energy, Solid wastes, Standards, State and local government, State laws, Sulphur dioxide, Taxation, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Tidal power, Trade, Transportation, Treaties, U.S. Agency for International Development, Water pollution, Water pollution control, Water quality, Water resources, Welfare, Wind power, Wyoming
Latest Action: 07/08/2008 - Returned to the Calendar. Calendar No. 742. Bill TextA bill to direct the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to establish a program to decrease emissions of greenhouse gases, and for other purposes. 5/20/2008--Introduced. Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act of 2008 - Requires the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to establish: (1) a federal greenhouse gas (GHG) registry, for which certain facilities must report information regarding fossil fuels and GHGs produced and consumed; and (2) specified quantities of GHG emission allowances, which decline for each of 2012 to 2050. Requires the Administrator to establish a GHG emission allowance transfer system for the following: (1) facilities that use more than 5,000 tons of coal in a year; (2) facilities in the natural gas sector; (3) facilities that produce or entities that import petroleum- or coal-based fuel the combustion of which will emit group I GHGs; (4) facilities that produce or entities that import, in any year, more than [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Appropriations, Budgets, Collection of accounts, Criminal justice, Federal employees, Federal-state relations, Fines (Penalties), Fraud, Government employees, Government trust funds, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Labor, Nonprofit organizations, Social services, State and local government, State laws, Unemployment, Unemployment insurance, Veterans, Veterans' benefits
Latest Action: 06/13/2008 - Read the second time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 780 under authority of the order of the Senate of 06/12/2008. Bill TextTo provide for a program of emergency unemployment compensation. 6/12/2008--Passed House amended. (There are 2 other summaries) Emergency Extended Unemployment Compensation Act of 2008 - (Sec. 2) Authorizes a state to enter into an agreement with the Secretary of Labor under which the state agency will make emergency unemployment compensation payments to individuals who: (1) have exhausted all rights to regular compensation under state or federal law with respect to a benefit year ending on or after May 1, 2007; (2) have no rights to regular compensation or extended compensation with respect to a week under such law or any other state or federal unemployment compensation law; and (3) are not receiving compensation for such week under the unemployment compensation law of Canada. Authorizes a state's governor in an extended benefit period, if state law permits, to provide for the payment of emergency unemployment compensation before extended compensation [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Collection of accounts, Criminal justice, Federal-state relations, Fines (Penalties), Fraud, Government trust funds, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Labor, State and local government, State laws, Unemployment, Unemployment insurance
Latest Action: 04/16/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Income Security and Family Support. Bill TextTo provide for a program of targeted extended unemployment compensation, and for other purposes. 4/3/2008--Introduced. Targeted Assistance to Restore Growth in Employment Throughout 2008 Act, or the TARGET Act - Provides for federal-state agreements under which a state will make targeted extended unemployment compensation payments, for any week of unemployment beginning in the individual's eligibility period, to individuals who: (1) have exhausted all rights to regular compensation under such state law; (2) have no rights to compensation (including both regular and extended compensation) with respect to a week under such law or any other state or federal unemployment compensation law (and are not paid or entitled to be paid such additional compensation); and (3) are not receiving compensation for such week under the unemployment compensation law of Canada. Declares that such period of eligibility shall consist of any week which begins between April 1, 2008, and March [...] show full description
Latest Action: 01/23/2008 - Referred to the Committee on Education and Labor, and in addition to the Committee on Ways and Means, 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 commi Bill TextTo grant to a State with an unemployment rate that is equal to or greater than 125 percent of the national unemployment rate authority to use Federal funds made available to such State for job training programs. 1/23/2008--Introduced. Maximizing the Use of Federal Funds for Job Training Act - Authorizes states with unemployment rates that equal or exceed 125% of the national unemployment rate to consolidate or transfer, without limitation, any funds made available to them under specified job training programs.
Also tagged in: Budgets, Collection of accounts, Criminal justice, Federal-state relations, Fines (Penalties), Fraud, Government trust funds, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Labor, State and local government, State laws, Unemployment, Unemployment insurance
Latest Action: 01/15/2008 - Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means. Bill TextTo provide for a program of emergency unemployment compensation, and for other purposes. 1/15/2008--Introduced. Emergency Unemployment Compensation Act of 2008 - Provides for federal-state agreements during a period of rising unemployment under which a state will pay emergency unemployment compensation to individuals who: (1) have exhausted all rights to regular compensation under state or federal law for a benefit year (excluding any benefit year that ended before March 1, 2007); (2) have no rights to regular compensation or extended compensation with respect to a week under such law or any other state unemployment compensation law or to compensation under any other federal law; and (3) are not receiving compensation for such week under the unemployment compensation law of Canada. Requires federal payments to states to cover 100% of such temporary extended unemployment compensation payments. Provides for federal-state agreements for increased regular unemployment [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Disabled, Employee rights, Employment of the disabled, Federal employees, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Labor, Law, State and local government, State employees, Veterans, Veterans' employment
Latest Action: 12/13/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S15463-15464) Bill TextA bill to amend title 38, United States Code, to improve the enforcement of the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994, and for other purposes. 12/13/2007--Introduced. USERRA Enforcement Improvement Act of 2007 - Amends provisions concerning uniformed services members' employment or reemployment rights or benefits to: (1) require complainants to be notified of their rights within five days after receipt of the complaint by the Secretary of Labor; (2) require investigation and resolution of complaints to be completed no later than 90 days after receipt of the complaint; and (3) impose a 15-day deadline on referral to the Attorney General or to the Office of Special Counsel of an unsuccessful effort to resolve a complaint against a state or private employer or a federal executive agency, respectively. Requires the Attorney General or the Special Counsel, as appropriate, to make a decision and provide notification concerning representation of a complainant [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Budgets, Child abuse, Children, Communications, Compensatory education, Criminal justice, Dropouts, Drug abuse, Drug abuse prevention, Drugs and youth, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational innovations, Educational technology, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, English language, Families, Federal aid to education, Federal-state relations, Higher education, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Job creation, Juvenile delinquency, Labor, Literacy programs, Mathematics, Migrant education, Parent-school relationships, Preschool education, Reading, Recruiting of employees, School administration, School security, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, State and local government, Teacher education, Teacher supply and demand, Technology, Unemployment, Welfare
Latest Action: 02/05/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Bill TextTo amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to authorize additional flexibility to a State with an unemployment rate that is equal to or greater than 125 percent of the national unemployment rate to transfer funds among programs made available to such State by various provisions of that Act, and for other purposes. 12/4/2007--Introduced. Maximizing the Use of Federal Education Funds for Job Creation Act of 2007 - Authorizes states with unemployment rates that equal or exceed 125% of the national unemployment rate to consolidate or transfer, without limitation, any funds made available to them from specified formula grant programs under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.
Also tagged in: Budgets, Federal aid to transportation, Federal-state relations, Government trust funds, Highway finance, Infrastructure, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Job creation, Labor, Road construction, State and local government, Transportation, Unemployment
Latest Action: 11/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Highways and Transit. Bill TextTo grant to a State with an unemployment rate that is equal to or greater than 125 percent of the national unemployment rate authority to transfer funds among programs made available to such State by title 23, United States Code, and for other purposes. 11/1/2007--Introduced. Maximizing the Use of Federal Funds for Job Creation Act of 2007 - Authorizes a state with an unemployment rate equal to or greater than 125% of the national unemployment rate to transfer, without limitation, any Highway Trust Fund (other than the Mass Transit Account) amounts apportioned to the state to any state apportionments for certain named federal-aid highway programs (except, amounts for highway safety improvement programs).
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