Also tagged in: Armed forces, Colorado, Employee health benefits, Energy, Finance, Government contractors, Government insurance, Hazardous substances, Hazardous wastes, Health insurance, Health policy, Labor, Medical care, Nuclear facilities, Nuclear facility decommissioning, Nuclear weapons, Ohio, Public contracts, Radiation victims, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Retiree health benefits, Subcontractors, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 05/22/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality. Bill TextTo provide for health care benefits for certain nuclear facility workers. 5/21/2008--Introduced. Requires the Secretary of Energy to establish a program to provide health care benefits for workers who: (1) have been employed by a Department of Energy (DOE) contractor to perform duties under a contract for environmental remediation, waste management, decontamination and decommissioning, maintenance, security, and administrative activities at the Fernald Closure Project (Harrison, Ohio), the Mound Closure Project (Miamisburg, Ohio), or the Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site (Golden, Colorado); and (2) would have qualified for health care benefits available for retirees had the individual's employment not been terminated as a result of the accelerated closure of the site.
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Advanced weapons, Afghanistan, Air force, Alternative energy sources, Ammunition, Animal pests, Animals, Anxiety, Arkansas, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Armed forces reserves, Arms control, Army, Athletes, Authorization, Autopsy, Ballistic missile defenses, Ballistic missiles, Bomber aircraft, Budgets, Business, Capital investments, Chemical warfare, Children, Classified defense information, College costs, Colorado, Communicable diseases, Communications, Compensation (Law), Competition, Computer security measures, Congress, Congress and military policy, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction costs, Conventional weapons, Cost effectiveness, Courts-martial and courts of inquiry, Criminal justice, Czech Republic, Defense budgets, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Defense policy, Defense procurement, Dental care, Dentists, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, Disabled, District of Columbia, Drug abuse, Drug therapy, Education, Educational exchanges, Electric batteries, Electric power transmission, Elementary and secondary education, Employee selection, Employee training, Endangered species, Energy, Energy conservation, Engineers, Environmental protection, Europe, Executive departments, Families, Family leave, Federal employees, Fighter aircraft, Finance, Fissionable materials, Florida, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Former Soviet states, Fringe benefits, Georgia, Germany, Government contractors, Government employees, Government information, Governmental investigations, Guam, Guided missiles, Habitat conservation, Hazardous substances, Hazardous waste sites, Hazardous wastes, Health policy, Higher education, Housing, Idaho, Illinois, Impact aid, Imprisonment, Infrared technology, Intelligence activities, International affairs, International cooperation, International relief, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Italy, Job training, Kentucky, Labor, Laboratories, Land banking, Land transfers, Language and languages, Lasers, Law, Leases, Logistics, Maintenance and repair, Managed care, Mandatory retirement, Marines, Maryland, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medicine, Mental depression, Mental health services, Mental illness, Middle East and North Africa, Military aircraft, Military airlift, Military and naval supplies, Military aviation, Military base closures, Military bases, Military chaplains, Military civic action, Military command and control, Military construction operations, Military dependents, Military discharges, Military education, Military electronics, Military housing, Military intelligence, Military law, Military leave, Military medicine, Military occupation, Military operations, Military pay, Military pensions, Military personnel, Military promotions, Military research, Military strategy, Military training, Military vehicles, National Guard, NATO military forces, Natural resources, Navy, New Mexico, New York State, Non-native species, Nuclear energy research, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear reactors, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons tests, Nurses, Nursing education, Officer personnel, Olympic games, Ordnance, Pensions, Personnel records, Pest control, Pests, Petroleum industry, Pharmacists, Physicians, Privatization, Psychologists, Public contracts, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Reconnaissance aircraft, Recruiting and enlistment, Religion, Reprogramming of appropriated funds, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Retiree health benefits, Russia, Scholarships, Science policy, Scientists in government, Searches and seizures, Security measures, Semiconductors, Service academies, Shipbuilding, Snakes, Solar energy, Solid wastes, South Asia, Space activities, Space warfare, Special education, Sports, Standards, Student employment, Submarines, Suicide, Surplus government property, Tanker aircraft, Tanks (Combat vehicles), Technological innovations, Technology, Technology assessment, Terrorism, Torpedoes, Transportation, Travel costs, Utah, Veterans, Virginia, Warships, Washington State, Weapons systems, Youth services
Latest Action: 10/14/2008 - Signed by President. Bill TextAn original bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2009 for military activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other purposes. 10/14/2008--Public Law. (There are 4 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was passed by the House on September 24, 2008. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 - Expresses the sense of Congress that the Honorable Duncan Hunter, Representative from California, has discharged his official duties with integrity and distinction, has served the House of Representatives and the American people selflessly, and deserves the sincere gratitude of Congress and the Nation. Division A: Department of Defense Authorizations - Title I: Procurement - Subtitle [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Armed forces, Authorization, Budgets, Classified defense information, Congress, Congress and military policy, Congressional reporting requirements, Defense budgets, Defense economics, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Defense policy, Department of Energy, Education, Energy, Environmental protection, Executive departments, Federal employees, Fissionable materials, Foreign policy, Former Soviet states, Government employees, Government information, Hazardous substances, Hazardous waste sites, Hazardous wastes, Higher education, Idaho, Intelligence activities, Laboratories, New Mexico, Nuclear energy research, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear reactors, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons tests, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Research and development facilities, Russia, Scholarships, Science policy, Solid wastes, Student employment, Warships, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 09/18/2008 - Received in the House. Bill TextAn original bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2009 for defense activities of the Department of Energy, and for other purposes. 9/17/2008--Passed Senate amended. (There are 2 other summaries) Department of Energy National Security Act for Fiscal Year 2009 - Division C: Department of Energy National Security Authorizations and Other Authorizations - Title XXXI [sic]: Department of Energy National Security Programs - Subtitle A: National Security Programs Authorizations - (Sec. 3101) Authorizes appropriations for the Department of Energy (DOE) for FY2008 for: (1) activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration in carrying out programs necessary for national security, with specified allocations for weapons activities, defense nuclear nonproliferation activities, naval reactors, and the Office of the Administrator for Nuclear Security; and (2) new plant projects and environmental restoration and waste management activities [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Armed forces, Colorado, Employee health benefits, Energy, Finance, Government contractors, Government insurance, Hazardous substances, Hazardous wastes, Health insurance, Health policy, Labor, Medical care, Nuclear facilities, Nuclear facility decommissioning, Nuclear weapons, Ohio, Public contracts, Radiation victims, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Retiree health benefits, Subcontractors, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 04/10/2008 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to provide for health care benefits for certain nuclear facility workers. 4/10/2008--Introduced. Requires the Secretary of Energy to establish a program to provide health care benefits for workers who: (1) have been employed by a Department of Energy (DOE) contractor to perform duties under a contract for environmental remediation, waste management, decontamination and decommissioning, maintenance, security, and administrative activities at the Fernald Closure Project (Harrison, Ohio), the Mound Closure Project (Miamisburg, Ohio), or the Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site (Golden, Colorado); and (2) would have qualified for health care benefits available for retirees had the individual's employment not been terminated as a result of the accelerated closure of the site.
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Administrative remedies, Armed forces, Business, Business records, Compensation (Law), Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Department of Energy, Department of Health and Human Services, Energy, Executive departments, Federal employees, Government contractors, Government employees, Government liability, Hazardous substances, Ionizing radiation, Iron and steel industry, Labor, Law, Medical care, Medical records, Medicine, New York State, Nuclear weapons, Occupational health and safety, Public contracts, Radiation, Radiation victims, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 02/04/2008 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to amend the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 to include certain former nuclear weapons program workers in the Special Exposure Cohort under the energy employees occupational illness compensation program. 2/4/2008--Introduced. Ed Walker Memorial Act for Improvements to the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program - Amends the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 to include certain former nuclear weapons program workers in the Special Exposure Cohort under the energy employees occupational illness compensation program. Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to: (1) modify regulations and procedures to conform to amendments under this Act; and (2) initiate a petition to include workers employed at the Bethlehem Steel site in Lackawanna, New York, as a class to be included in the Special Exposure Cohort.
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Armed forces, California, Claims, Compensation (Law), Department of Energy, Energy, Executive departments, Federal employees, Government contractors, Government employees, Hazardous substances, Labor, Laboratories, Law, Medical care, Medicine, Nuclear facilities, Nuclear weapons, Occupational health and safety, Public contracts, Radiation victims, Science policy, Weapons systems, Workers' compensation
Latest Action: 07/19/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S9615-9616) Bill TextA bill to better provide for compensation for certain persons injured in the course of employment at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory in California. 7/19/2007--Introduced. Amends the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 to include within the meaning of the term member of the Special Exposure Cohort a Department of Energy (DOE) employee, DOE contractor employee, or atomic weapons employee who was so employed for a number of work days aggregating at least 250 work days before January 1, 2006, at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory in California. Provides that a claim that an individual qualifies for compensation or benefits under such Act shall be considered notwithstanding any denial of any other claim for compensation with respect to such individual.
Also tagged in: Administration of justice, Administrative remedies, Afghanistan, Aged, Agriculture, Air force, Air pollution, Alaska, Alcohol tax, Alternative energy sources, American Battle Monuments Commission, Appalachian Regional Commission, Appellate courts, Appropriations, Arabs, Architect of the Capitol, Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, Arid regions, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Armed Forces Retirement Home, Army, Army Corps of Engineers, Biological warfare, Block grants, Bombs, Border patrols, Botanical gardens, Budgets, California, Capitol (Washington, D.C.), Caribbean area, Charter schools, Chemical warfare, Chief financial officers, Children, China, Civil liberties, Civil rights, Civil service retirement, Clean coal technology, Climate change, Coal, College costs, Colorado, Colorado River development, Commemorations, Commission on Civil Rights, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Community development banking, Community policing, Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congressional agencies, Congressional allowances, Congressional Budget Office, Congressional caucuses, Congressional chaplains, Congressional employees, Congressional joint committees, Congressional leadership, Congressional legal counsel, Congressional office buildings, Congressional oversight, Congressional publications, Congressional Research Service, Congressional tributes, Construction costs, Consumer Product Safety Commission, Cost of living adjustments, Courthouses, Courts of special jurisdiction, Crime prevention, Crimes against women, Criminal justice, Cuba, Cultural relations, Day care, Defense budgets, Defense economics, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Defense policy, Defense procurement, Department of Agriculture, Department of Commerce, Department of Defense, Department of Education, Department of Energy, Department of Health and Human Services, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Department of Justice, Department of Labor, Department of State, Department of the Interior, Department of the Treasury, Department of Veterans Affairs, Disability evaluation, Disabled, Disaster relief, District courts, District of Columbia, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Easements, East Asia, Economic development, Economic policy, Ecosystem management, Education, Educational exchanges, Eisenhower Administration, Election administration, Election Assistance Commission, Electric power transmission, Elementary and secondary education, Embassies, Emergency management, Energy, Energy efficiency, Energy research, Energy transportation, Environmental protection, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Exchange of persons programs, Executive departments, Executive Office of the President, Fair housing, Families, Farm Credit Administration, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to housing, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal aid to water resources development, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Federal Communications Commission, Federal employees, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Federal law enforcement officers, Federal libraries, Federal Maritime Commission, Federally-guaranteed loans, Finance, Fishery management, Flood control, Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Foreclosure, Foreign exchange, Foreign exchange rates, Foreign policy, Foreign service, Forfeiture, Fossil fuels, Government Accountability Office (GAO), Government employees, Government life insurance, Government Printing Office, Government trust funds, Harbors, Hawaii, Hazardous substances, Health insurance, Health policy, Heating, Higher education, Historic sites, History, Homeless, Housing, Housing for the aged, Housing for the disabled, Housing subsidies, Human rights, Humanities, Hydroelectric plants, Hydroelectric power, Immigration, Income tax, Independent regulatory commissions, Indian housing, Inspectors general, Interagency Council on Homelessness, Internal Revenue Service (IRS), International affairs, International agencies, International broadcasting, International finance, International military forces, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Israel, Japan, Jewish holocaust (1939-1945), Joint Economic, Joint Taxation, Judicial compensation, Judicial officers, Juries, Juvenile delinquency, Laboratories, Land transfers, Latin America, Law, Lead poisoning, Leadership, Legal fees, Legal Services Corporation, Libraries, Library of Congress, Low-income housing, Marine Mammal Commission, Marines, Medical care, Medical research, Mexico, Middle East and North Africa, Military base closures, Military cemeteries and funerals, Military construction operations, Military dependents, Military housing, Military medicine, Military occupation, Military operations, Military personnel, Military vehicles, Minorities, Mississippi, Mississippi River, Mobile homes, Money, Mortgages, Museums, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Guard, National Transportation Safety Board, NATO countries, NATO military forces, Natural gas, Natural resources, Navy, Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation, Nevada, New Jersey, Northeastern States, Nuclear facilities, Nuclear facility decommissioning, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear power, Nuclear reactors, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board, Nuclear weapons, Nursing homes, Office of Management and Budget, Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, Oil shales, Paints and varnishes, Parliamentary government, Peacekeeping forces, Pensions, Petroleum reserves, Pipelines, Police, Politics and government, Power marketing administrations, Prefabricated buildings, Presidential inaugurations, Presidential residences, Presidents, Prisons, Prosecution, Prosthesis, Protection of officials, Public contracts, Public defenders, Public lands, Public prosecutors, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Religion, Religious liberty, Rent, Repatriation, Reprogramming of appropriated funds, Rescission of appropriated funds, Research and development, Research centers, Restoration ecology, Revolving funds, Right-of-way, Salaries, Scholarships, Science policy, Secondary mortgage market, Security measures, Sewerage, Shore protection, Soldiers' homes, Solid wastes, South Asia, Space activities, Space exploration, State and local government, State courts, Strategic materials, Subpoena, Supplemental appropriations, Supreme Court, Taiwan, Tax administration, Tax credits, Taxation, Taxpayers, Technological innovations, Technology, Technology assessment, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Tobacco tax, Torture, Tourism, Trade, Transfer of employees, Transportation, U.S. Sentencing Commission, United Nations, Uranium enrichment, Utah, Veterans, Veterans' benefits, Veterans' disability compensation, Veterans' hospitals, Veterans' loans, Veterans' medical care, Veterans' rehabilitation, Vice Presidents, Vocational rehabilitation, Voting, Warships, Water conservation, Water resources, Water reuse, Weapons systems, Welfare, Wetlands, White House (Washington, D.C.), Women
Latest Action: 12/26/2007 - Signed by President. Bill TextMaking appropriations for the Department of State, foreign operations, and related programs for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, and for other purposes. 12/26/2007--Public Law. (There are 3 other summaries) Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 - Division A: Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2008 - Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2008 - Title I: Agricultural Programs - Appropriates FY2008 funds for the following Department of Agriculture (Department) programs and services: (1) Office of the Secretary of Agriculture (Secretary); (2) Office of the Chief Economist; (3) National Appeals Division; (4) Office of Budget and Program Analysis; (5) Homeland Security Staff; (6) Office of the Chief Information Officer; (7) Office of the Chief Financial Officer; (8) Office of the Assistant Secretary for [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accounting, Afghanistan, Air force, Alabama, Alaska, Alliances, Alternative energy sources, Animals, Antimissile missiles, Appellate courts, Appropriations, Arizona, Arkansas, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Armed forces reserves, Armed Forces Retirement Home, Arms control, Arms control agreements, Arms control negotiations, Army, Artillery, Auditing, Authorization, Aviation insurance, Ballistic missile defenses, Biennial budgets, Biological warfare, Bombings, Bombs, Budgets, Building construction, Business, Business ethics, California, Cancer, Chemical warfare, Chromium, Civil liberties, Civil service retirement, Civil-military relations, Clothing, Cold War, College costs, College teachers, Colleges, Colorado, Commemorations, Communicable diseases, Communications, Competition, Competitive bidding, Congress, Congress and military policy, Congressional hearings, Congressional investigations, Congressional oversight, Congressional reporting requirements, Congressional witnesses, Connecticut, Corrosion, Cost accounting, Cost effectiveness, Counterterrorism, Cultural property, Defense budgets, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense industries, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Defense policy, Defense procurement, Delaware, Democracy, Dentists, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, Detention of persons, Deterrence, Developing countries, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drugs, East Asia, Education, Electric power production, Elementary and secondary education, Emergency management, Energy, Energy conservation, Enlisted personnel, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Europe, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Explosives, Export controls, Extremist movements in politics, Families, Federal advisory bodies, Federal employees, Fighter aircraft, Finance, Firearms, Fissionable materials, Florida, Foreign aid, Foreign exchange, Foreign policy, Former Soviet states, Fringe benefits, Georgia, Germany, Gifts, Government contractors, Government employees, Government employees' life insurance, Government information, Government publicity, Government service contracts, Government travel, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Habitat conservation, Hawaii, Hazardous substances, Hazardous waste sites, Hazardous wastes, Health policy, Health surveys, High technology, Higher education, History, Household moving, Housing, Human rights, Humanities, Idaho, Illinois, Indian lands, Indiana, Indians, Informers, Inspectors general, Insurgency, International affairs, International military forces, Iran, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Italy, Japan, Judges, Kansas, Kentucky, Laboratories, Land transfers, Land use, Language and languages, Law, Leases, Legal services, Legislation, Liability for environmental damages, Licenses, Logistics, Louisiana, Maine, Maintenance and repair, Managed care, Manganese, Marines, Marketing, Maryland, Massachusetts, Materials, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medicine, Metals, Michigan, Middle East and North Africa, Military agreements, Military aircraft, Military airlift, Military and naval supplies, Military assistance, Military base closures, Military bases, Military civic action, Military command and control, Military construction operations, Military dependents, Military education, Military housing, Military law, Military leave, Military medals, decorations, etc., Military medicine, Military occupation, Military operations, Military pay, Military pensions, Military personnel, Military posture, Military promotions, Military readiness, Military research, Military sealift, Military strategy, Military training, Military vehicles, Military weapons, Minorities, Missile warheads, Missing in action, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Music, Nanotechnology, National Guard, National security, NATO countries, NATO military forces, Natural resources, Navy, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York State, Nongovernmental organizations, North Carolina, North Dakota, North Korea, Nuclear energy research, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear reactors, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear warfare, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons tests, Oaths, Officer personnel, Oklahoma, Ordnance, Pakistan, Palau Islands, Peace, Pennsylvania, Pension funds, Pensions, Performance measurement, Personnel management, Petroleum, Petroleum industry, Plutonium, Police, Politics and government, Potable water, Prescription pricing, Prison labor, Private police, Private schools, Public contracts, Radar, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Reconnaissance satellites, Rent, Reprogramming of appropriated funds, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Retired military personnel, Rhode Island, Russia, Scholarships, School buildings, Science policy, Secondary education, Security clearances, Service academies, Shipbuilding, Shipyards, Soldiers' homes, Solid wastes, South Asia, South Carolina, Space activities, Space warfare, Special forces (Military science), Strategic forces, Strategic materials, Strategic planning, Student loan funds, Submarines, Supplemental appropriations, Survivors' benefits, Tanker aircraft, Tanks (Combat vehicles), Tax-deferred compensation plans, Technical assistance, Technology, Tennessee, Terrorism, Terrorists, Texas, Thailand, Transportation, Travel costs, Treaty-making power, Utah, Veterans, Virginia, Wages, Warships, Washington State, Water resources, Weapons systems, Western Hemisphere, Whistle blowing
Latest Action: 06/29/2007 - Select Committee on Intelligence. Reported by Senator Rockefeller with amendments. With written report No. 110-125. Additional views filed. Bill TextAn original bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2008 for military activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other purposes. 6/5/2007--Reported to 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.) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 - Division A: Department of Defense Authorizations - Title I: Procurement - Subtitle A: Authorization of Appropriations - (Sec. 101) Authorizes appropriations for FY2008 for the Army, Navy and Marine Corps, and Air Force for aircraft, missiles, weapons and tracked combat vehicles, ammunition, shipbuilding and conversion, and other procurement. (Sec. 104) Authorizes appropriations [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Armed forces, Arms control agreements, Arms control negotiations, Auditing, Authorization, Budgets, Cold War, Congress, Congress and military policy, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Defense budgets, Defense contracts, Defense economics, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, Defense policy, Department of Energy, Energy, Environmental assessment, Environmental protection, Executive departments, Finance, Fissionable materials, Foreign policy, Government contractors, Government trust funds, Hazardous substances, Hazardous waste sites, Hazardous wastes, History, Idaho, International affairs, Laboratories, Missile warheads, Nevada, New Mexico, Nuclear energy research, Nuclear fuels, Nuclear nonproliferation, Nuclear reactors, Nuclear security measures, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons tests, Pennsylvania, Plutonium, Potable water, Public contracts, Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive wastes, Research and development facilities, Russia, Science policy, Solid wastes, Strategic forces, Tennessee, Texas, Treaty-making power, Warships, Water resources, Weapons systems
Latest Action: 06/05/2007 - Committee on Armed Services. Original measure reported to Senate by Senator Levin. Without written report. Bill TextAn original bill to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2008 for defense activities of the Department of Energy, and for other purposes. 6/5/2007--Reported to 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.) Department of Energy National Security Act for Fiscal Year 2008 - Title XXXI [sic]: Department of Energy National Security Programs - Subtitle A: National Security Programs Authorizations - (Sec. 3101) Authorizes appropriations for the Department of Energy (DOE) for FY2008 for: (1) activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration in carrying out programs necessary for national security, with specified allocations for weapons activities, defense nuclear nonproliferation activities, naval reactors, the Office of the Administrator for Nuclear Security, and the International [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Armed forces, California, Claims, Compensation (Law), Department of Energy, Energy, Executive departments, Federal employees, Government contractors, Government employees, Hazardous substances, Labor, Laboratories, Law, Medical care, Medicine, Nuclear facilities, Nuclear weapons, Occupational health and safety, Public contracts, Radiation victims, Science policy, Weapons systems, Workers' compensation
Latest Action: 07/17/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections. Bill TextTo better provide for compensation for certain persons injured in the course of employment at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory in California. 5/9/2007--Introduced. Amends the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 to include within the meaning of the term member of the Special Exposure Cohort a Department of Energy employee, Department of Energy contractor employee, or atomic weapons employee who was so employed for a number of work days aggregating at least 250 work days before January 1, 2006, at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory in California. Provides that a claim that an individual qualifies for compensation or benefits under such Act shall be considered notwithstanding any denial of any other claim for compensation with respect to such individual.
Also tagged in: Administrative remedies, Armed forces, Claims, Compensation (Law), Department of Energy, Department of Labor, Energy, Executive departments, Federal employees, Government contractors, Government employees, Hazardous substances, Labor, Law, Medical care, Medicine, Nuclear weapons, Occupational health and safety, Ombudsman, Politics and government, Public contracts, Radiation victims, Weapons systems, Workers' compensation
Latest Action: 07/17/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections. Bill TextTo amend the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 to extend and increase the authority for the ombudsman under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program. 5/9/2007--Introduced. EEOICPA Ombudsman Extension and Enhancement Act of 2007 - Amends the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 to: (1) make permanent the authority of the Office of the Ombudsman of the Department of Labor; and (2) increase the duties of the Ombudsman under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program, including to assist in making claims for benefits for Department of Energy (DOE) contractor employees who have contracted a covered illness through exposure at a DOE facility and to act as an advocate for such employees in appropriate cases.
Also tagged in: Agriculture, Alternative energy sources, Armed forces, Arms control, Congress, Congress and foreign policy, Congress and military policy, Congressional oversight, Conversion of industries, Defense economics, Defense policy, Diplomacy, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Energy, Environmental protection, Foreign policy, Health policy, Higher education, Housing, International affairs, International cooperation, Job training, Medical care, Medicine, Nuclear weapons, Occupational retraining, Peace, President and foreign policy, Presidents, Secondary education, Weapons of mass destruction, Weapons systems
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