Saturday, November 22, 2008

This Week in Congress 4.14.08 - 4.18.08

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Monday, April 14, 2008, 21:03
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GINA (Genetic Nondiscrimination Measure): This week the Senate may take up a Genetic Nondiscrimination Measure, H.R. 493, that would ban employers from using genetic information in decisions to hire and fire employees and prevent insurers from using the information in determining insurance premiums. Similar measures have passed the Senate and the House in the past but never in the same year. A cloture vote will be needed to pass the bill as Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) has placed a hold on the legislation.

For more information on CAP’s bioethics and science policies see Bioethics and Science homepage

Infrastructure: On Monday afternoon the Senate will hold a cloture vote on H.R. 1195, a bill to make technical corrections to the 2005 SAFETEA-LU transportation reauthorization. The corrections bill, normally a routine measure, does include some controversial provisions, including an increase in the minimum share of highway safety formula grants from 0.5 percent to 0.75 percent, and an increase in funding for an earmarked magnetic levitation transportation project in Las Vegas.

For more information on CAP’s policy solutions for infrastructure see Safe at Home: A National Security Strategy to Protect the American Homeland, the Real Central Front by P.J. Crowley

Education: This week, the House will consider H.R. 5715, the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act. The bill will raise student loan limits by $2,000 and make changes to the parent PLUS loans program by giving parent borrowers another six months after their child leaves school to begin making payments. It also relaxes some of the requirements on PLUS loans to allow some parents who have fallen behind on their mortgages to still be eligible for PLUS loans.

The Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee is holding a hearing on “The Credit Market’s Student Loans Impact” on Tuesday.

For more on CAP’s policy solutions for student loans see Dealing with Debt: New Legislation Could Help Millions of Students and College Students Need Help

Farm Bill: Senate conferees will continue formal conference committee negotiations to complete the Farm Bill by the April 18 expiration. A conference committee meeting is set for Monday. If negotiations are completed a conference report will be brought to the floor this week. If lawmakers are not able to finish negotiations it is possible they will pass a one-year extension to the current Farm Bill.

For more on CAP’s policy solutions for the Farm Bill see Hungry for Next Generation Biofuels: Sustainable Crop Diversity Combats Poverty by Jake Caldwell and Gayle Smith and Fueling a New Farm Economy: Creating Incentives for Biofuels in Agriculture and Trade Policy by Jake Caldwell

This material was published by the Center for American Progress






Tags:

Banking, Bioethics, Biofuels, Cloture Vote, Congress, Education, Farm Bill, Genetic Nondiscrimination Measure, Genetic Science, GINA, Government, Insurance Premiums, IRS, Magnetic Levitation Transportation, National Security, Nondiscrimination, Parent Plus Loans, SAFETEA-LU, Science policies, Strategy, Student loans, Tom Coburn, Trade, Urban Affairs Committee

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