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Latest Action: 05/24/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. Bill TextA bill to amend part B of title XVIII of the Social Security Act to restore the Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment to that in effect before enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. 5/24/2007--Introduced. Home Oxygen Patient Protection Act of 2007 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to restore Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment that existed prior to the enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. Repeals: (1) the limitation of Medicare payment to the supplier for such equipment (including portable oxygen equipment) to 36 months of continuous use; and (2) the requirement that the equipment supplier transfer title to the individual at the end of such period, with payments continuing at specified monthly rates.
Also tagged in: Access to airports, Administrative fees, Administrative procedure, Afghanistan, Age and employment, Aged, Air pollution, Air traffic, Air traffic control, Aircraft engines, Aircraft noise, Aircraft pilots, Airline employees, Airline passenger traffic, Airlines, Airports, Alaska, Alternative energy sources, Armed forces, Authorization, Aviation fuels, Aviation insurance, Aviation safety, Bicycles, Block grants, Budgets, Business, California, Child safety, Children, Commercial aircraft, Commercial aviation, Competition, Computer software, Concessions, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Consultants, Consumer complaints, Consumer education, Consumers, Cost effectiveness, Counterfeiting, Counterterrorism, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Data banks, Defense policy, Department of Transportation, Depressed areas, Disabled, District of Columbia, Drone aircraft, Economic policy, Education, Electronic surveillance, Elementary and secondary education, Employee training, Energy, Energy conservation, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Environmental technology, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal aid to transportation, Federal employees, Fines (Penalties), Flight crews, Foreign aid, Fraud, Fuel consumption, Fuel storage, Government contractors, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Government travel, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Greenhouse gases, Hazardous substances, Hours of labor, Human engineering, Humanities, Identification of criminals, Infrastructure, Insect control, Inspectors general, Insurance premiums, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Intermodal transportation, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Job training, Judicial review, Kidnapping, Labor, Land transfers, Land use, Law, Liability (Law), Licenses, Louisiana, Marshall Islands, Maryland, Medical care, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical supplies, Medicine, Metropolitan areas, Micronesia, Middle East and North Africa, Military occupation, Military operations, Military transportation, Minorities, Minority business enterprises, Motor vehicle pollution control, Mountains, Museums, National parks, National security, Natural resources, Navigation (Aeronautics), Navigational aids (Aeronautics), Nitrogen oxides, Noise, Noise control, Occupational health and safety, Occupational retraining, Ohio, Palau Islands, Parking facilities, Physical examinations, Privatization, Public contracts, Public lands, Public-private partnerships, Reinsurance, Relocation, Research centers, Retirement age, Road construction, Rural affairs, Safety measures, School buildings, Security measures, Small business, Small towns, South Asia, Standards, State and local government, Sunset legislation, Surveys, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Texas, Tourism, Transportation, Transportation engineering, Transportation planning, Transportation rates, Transportation research, Transportation workers, Travel costs, Urban affairs, Veterans, Veterans' benefits, Veterans' employment, Virginia, Water pollution, Water pollution control, Water quality, Weather
Latest Action: 05/07/2008 - Returned to the Calendar. Calendar No. 383. Bill TextTo amend title 49, United States Code, to authorize appropriations for the Federal Aviation Administration for fiscal years 2008 through 2011, to improve aviation safety and capacity, to provide stable funding for the national aviation system, and for other purposes. 9/20/2007--Passed House amended. (There is 1 other summary) FAA Reauthorization Act of 2007 - Title I: Authorizations - Subtitle A: Funding of FAA Programs - (Sec. 101) Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2008-FY2011 for: (1) airport planning and development and noise compatibility planning programs; (2) air navigation facilities and equipment; (3) Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) operations; and (4) FAA research, engineering, and development. Authorizes additional authorizations of appropriations from the general fund of the Treasury for aviation programs through FY2011. Subtitle B: Passenger Facility Charges - (Sec. 111) Amends the airport improvement program (AIP) [...] show full description
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, Metropolitan areas, Michigan, Midwives, Military personnel, Minnesota, Minorities, New Jersey, New York State, Northern Mariana Islands, Nursing homes, Nutrition, Osteoporosis, 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
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend part B of title XVIII of the Social Security Act to restore the Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment to that in effect before enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. 1/22/2007--Introduced. Home Oxygen Patient Protection Act of 2007 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to restore Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment that existed prior to the enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. Repeals: (1) the limitation of Medicare payment to the supplier for such equipment (including portable oxygen equipment) to 36 months of continuous use; and (2) the requirement that the equipment supplier transfer title to the individual at the end of such period, with payments continuing at specified monthly rates.
Also tagged in: Carbon dioxide, Emergency communication systems, Emergency management, Employee training, Equipment and supplies, Geographic information systems, Hazardous substances, Identification devices, Income tax, Job training, Labor, Mine safety, Minimum tax, Rescue work, Safety appliances, Tax credits, Taxation, Telecommunication
Latest Action: 09/06/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means. Bill TextTo amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide incentives for improving mine safety. 9/6/2007--Introduced. Amends the Internal Revenue Code to allow a tax credit for 50% of the cost of qualified advanced mine safety equipment property (in lieu of the existing taxpayer election to expense 50% of such property in the current taxable year). Defines such property to include: (1) an emergency communication technology or device for constant communication with individuals outside the mine; (2) an electronic identification and location device; (3) an emergency oxygen-generating device; (4) pre-positioned oxygen supplies; and (5) a comprehensive atmospheric monitoring system to monitor levels of carbon monoxide and other gases present in a mine. Revises the tax credit for mine rescue team training expenses to: (1) increase the amount of such credit; (2) allow such credit as an offset against the alternative minimum tax; and (3) make such credit permanent.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Administrative remedies, Adoption, Afghanistan, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, Anesthetics, Annuities, Appropriations, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Barbiturates, Brain, Budgets, Business, California, Capitation (Medical care), Cardiovascular diseases, Case management, Case mix (Medical care), Cash welfare block grants, Children, Chronically ill, Civil rights, Clinical trials, Clinics, Coinsurance, Collection of accounts, Communication in medicine, Communications, Community health services, Competitive bidding, Conflict of interests, Congregate housing, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Diabetes, Discrimination in medical care, District of Columbia, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Electronic government information, Estates (Law), Executive departments, Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal-state relations, Finance, Foster home care, Genetics, Gifts, Government information, Government procurement, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Group medical practice, Head injuries, Health education, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health maintenance organizations, Health policy, Hearing, Higher education, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Housing, Imaging systems in medicine, Indian medical care, Inspectors general, Insurance premiums, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Judicial review, Kidney diseases, Language and languages, Law, Life insurance, Living wills, Long-term care, Lung diseases, Managed care, Marketing, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical ethics, Medical fees, Medical laboratories, Medical personnel, Medical records, Medical savings accounts, Medical statistics, Medical supplies, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Medigap, Mental depression, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military occupation, Military operations, Minorities, Minority health, Nuclear medicine, Nursing homes, Obesity, Pensions, Performance measurement, Pharmacies, Physical examinations, Physicians, Politics and government, Post-traumatic stress disorder, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, Psychotropic drugs, Public contracts, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Sexual abstinence, South Asia, Speech disorders, Standards, State and local government, Subsidies, Technology, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Terminal care, Terrorism, Translating and interpreting, Transportation, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 07/15/2008 - Vetoed by President. Bill TextTo amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to extend expiring provisions under the Medicare Program, to improve beneficiary access to preventive and mental health services, to enhance low-income benefit programs, and to maintain access to care in rural areas, including pharmacy access, and for other purposes. 7/15/2008--Public Law. (There are 3 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was passed by the House on June 24, 2008. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 - Title I: Medicare - Subtitle A: Beneficiary Improvements - Part 1: Prevention, Mental Health, and Marketing - (Sec. 101) Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA), as amended by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, to cover additional preventive services. Includes body mass index and end-of-life planning among initial [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Air pollution, Algal blooms, Authorization, Budgets, Climate change, Coastal zone, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Ecological research, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Executive departments, Federal aid to water pollution control, Federal-state relations, Great Lakes, Marine resources, Science policy, State and local government, Water pollution, Water pollution control, Water resources
Latest Action: 06/25/2008 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S6162-6163) Bill Text A bill to develop and promote a comprehensive plan for a national strategy to address harmful algal blooms and hypoxia through baseline research, forecasting and monitoring, and mitigation and control while helping communities detect, control, and mitigate coastal and Great Lakes harmful algal blooms and hypoxia events.
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Air pollution, Algal blooms, Authorization, Budgets, Climate change, Coastal zone, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Ecological research, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Executive departments, Federal aid to water pollution control, Federal-state relations, Great Lakes, Marine resources, Science policy, State and local government, Water pollution, Water pollution control, Water resources
Latest Action: 06/25/2008 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S6162-6163) Bill Text A bill to develop and promote a comprehensive plan for a national strategy to address harmful algal blooms and hypoxia through baseline research, forecasting and monitoring, and mitigation and control while helping communities detect, control, and mitigate coastal and Great Lakes harmful algal blooms and hypoxia events.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Administrative remedies, Adoption, Afghanistan, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, Anesthetics, Annuities, Appropriations, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Barbiturates, Brain, Budgets, Business, California, Capitation (Medical care), Cardiovascular diseases, Case management, Case mix (Medical care), Cash welfare block grants, Children, Chronically ill, Civil rights, Clinical trials, Clinics, Coinsurance, Collection of accounts, Communication in medicine, Communications, Community health services, Competitive bidding, Conflict of interests, Congregate housing, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Diabetes, Discrimination in medical care, District of Columbia, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Electronic government information, Estates (Law), Executive departments, Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal-state relations, Finance, Foster home care, Genetics, Gifts, Government information, Government procurement, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Group medical practice, Head injuries, Health education, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health maintenance organizations, Health policy, Hearing, Higher education, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Housing, Imaging systems in medicine, Indian medical care, Inspectors general, Insurance premiums, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Judicial review, Kidney diseases, Language and languages, Law, Life insurance, Living wills, Long-term care, Lung diseases, Managed care, Marketing, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical ethics, Medical fees, Medical laboratories, Medical personnel, Medical records, Medical savings accounts, Medical statistics, Medical supplies, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Medigap, Mental depression, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military occupation, Military operations, Minorities, Minority health, Nuclear medicine, Nursing homes, Obesity, Pensions, Performance measurement, Pharmacies, Physical examinations, Physicians, Politics and government, Post-traumatic stress disorder, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, Psychotropic drugs, Public contracts, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Sexual abstinence, South Asia, Speech disorders, Standards, State and local government, Subsidies, Technology, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Terminal care, Terrorism, Translating and interpreting, Transportation, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 07/15/2008 - Vetoed by President. Bill TextTo amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to extend expiring provisions under the Medicare Program, to improve beneficiary access to preventive and mental health services, to enhance low-income benefit programs, and to maintain access to care in rural areas, including pharmacy access, and for other purposes. 7/15/2008--Public Law. (There are 3 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was passed by the House on June 24, 2008. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 - Title I: Medicare - Subtitle A: Beneficiary Improvements - Part 1: Prevention, Mental Health, and Marketing - (Sec. 101) Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA), as amended by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, to cover additional preventive services. Includes body mass index and end-of-life planning among initial [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Carbon dioxide, Emergency communication systems, Emergency management, Employee training, Equipment and supplies, Geographic information systems, Hazardous substances, Identification devices, Income tax, Job training, Labor, Mine safety, Minimum tax, Rescue work, Safety appliances, Tax credits, Taxation, Telecommunication
Latest Action: 09/06/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means. Bill TextTo amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide incentives for improving mine safety. 9/6/2007--Introduced. Amends the Internal Revenue Code to allow a tax credit for 50% of the cost of qualified advanced mine safety equipment property (in lieu of the existing taxpayer election to expense 50% of such property in the current taxable year). Defines such property to include: (1) an emergency communication technology or device for constant communication with individuals outside the mine; (2) an electronic identification and location device; (3) an emergency oxygen-generating device; (4) pre-positioned oxygen supplies; and (5) a comprehensive atmospheric monitoring system to monitor levels of carbon monoxide and other gases present in a mine. Revises the tax credit for mine rescue team training expenses to: (1) increase the amount of such credit; (2) allow such credit as an offset against the alternative minimum tax; and (3) make such credit permanent.
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, Metropolitan areas, Michigan, Midwives, Military personnel, Minnesota, Minorities, New Jersey, New York State, Northern Mariana Islands, Nursing homes, Nutrition, Osteoporosis, 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
Also tagged in: Access to airports, Administrative fees, Administrative procedure, Afghanistan, Age and employment, Aged, Air pollution, Air traffic, Air traffic control, Aircraft engines, Aircraft noise, Aircraft pilots, Airline employees, Airline passenger traffic, Airlines, Airports, Alaska, Alternative energy sources, Armed forces, Authorization, Aviation fuels, Aviation insurance, Aviation safety, Bicycles, Block grants, Budgets, Business, California, Child safety, Children, Commercial aircraft, Commercial aviation, Competition, Computer software, Concessions, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Consultants, Consumer complaints, Consumer education, Consumers, Cost effectiveness, Counterfeiting, Counterterrorism, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Data banks, Defense policy, Department of Transportation, Depressed areas, Disabled, District of Columbia, Drone aircraft, Economic policy, Education, Electronic surveillance, Elementary and secondary education, Employee training, Energy, Energy conservation, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Environmental technology, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal aid to transportation, Federal employees, Fines (Penalties), Flight crews, Foreign aid, Fraud, Fuel consumption, Fuel storage, Government contractors, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Government travel, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Greenhouse gases, Hazardous substances, Hours of labor, Human engineering, Humanities, Identification of criminals, Infrastructure, Insect control, Inspectors general, Insurance premiums, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Intermodal transportation, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Job training, Judicial review, Kidnapping, Labor, Land transfers, Land use, Law, Liability (Law), Licenses, Louisiana, Marshall Islands, Maryland, Medical care, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical supplies, Medicine, Metropolitan areas, Micronesia, Middle East and North Africa, Military occupation, Military operations, Military transportation, Minorities, Minority business enterprises, Motor vehicle pollution control, Mountains, Museums, National parks, National security, Natural resources, Navigation (Aeronautics), Navigational aids (Aeronautics), Nitrogen oxides, Noise, Noise control, Occupational health and safety, Occupational retraining, Ohio, Palau Islands, Parking facilities, Physical examinations, Privatization, Public contracts, Public lands, Public-private partnerships, Reinsurance, Relocation, Research centers, Retirement age, Road construction, Rural affairs, Safety measures, School buildings, Security measures, Small business, Small towns, South Asia, Standards, State and local government, Sunset legislation, Surveys, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Texas, Tourism, Transportation, Transportation engineering, Transportation planning, Transportation rates, Transportation research, Transportation workers, Travel costs, Urban affairs, Veterans, Veterans' benefits, Veterans' employment, Virginia, Water pollution, Water pollution control, Water quality, Weather
Latest Action: 05/07/2008 - Returned to the Calendar. Calendar No. 383. Bill TextTo amend title 49, United States Code, to authorize appropriations for the Federal Aviation Administration for fiscal years 2008 through 2011, to improve aviation safety and capacity, to provide stable funding for the national aviation system, and for other purposes. 9/20/2007--Passed House amended. (There is 1 other summary) FAA Reauthorization Act of 2007 - Title I: Authorizations - Subtitle A: Funding of FAA Programs - (Sec. 101) Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2008-FY2011 for: (1) airport planning and development and noise compatibility planning programs; (2) air navigation facilities and equipment; (3) Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) operations; and (4) FAA research, engineering, and development. Authorizes additional authorizations of appropriations from the general fund of the Treasury for aviation programs through FY2011. Subtitle B: Passenger Facility Charges - (Sec. 111) Amends the airport improvement program (AIP) [...] show full description
Latest Action: 05/24/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. Bill TextA bill to amend part B of title XVIII of the Social Security Act to restore the Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment to that in effect before enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. 5/24/2007--Introduced. Home Oxygen Patient Protection Act of 2007 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to restore Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment that existed prior to the enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. Repeals: (1) the limitation of Medicare payment to the supplier for such equipment (including portable oxygen equipment) to 36 months of continuous use; and (2) the requirement that the equipment supplier transfer title to the individual at the end of such period, with payments continuing at specified monthly rates.
Latest Action: 02/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend part B of title XVIII of the Social Security Act to restore the Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment to that in effect before enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. 1/22/2007--Introduced. Home Oxygen Patient Protection Act of 2007 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act to restore Medicare treatment of ownership of oxygen equipment that existed prior to the enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. Repeals: (1) the limitation of Medicare payment to the supplier for such equipment (including portable oxygen equipment) to 36 months of continuous use; and (2) the requirement that the equipment supplier transfer title to the individual at the end of such period, with payments continuing at specified monthly rates.
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