Medicare: Changes to Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA 97, P.L. 105-33) Provisions (open access)

Medicare: Changes to Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA 97, P.L. 105-33) Provisions

This report summarizes the major provisions of the agreement between the by House and Senate negotiators on the Medicare provisions.
Date: November 19, 1999
Creator: O'Sullivan, Jennifer; Merck, Carolyn L.; Smith, Madeleine T. & Tilson, Sibyl L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conservation Reserve Program: Policy Issues for the 1995 Farm Bill (open access)

Conservation Reserve Program: Policy Issues for the 1995 Farm Bill

The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), enacted in 1985, enables producers to bid to retire highly erodible or environmentally sensitive crop land for 10 years (or longer under certain circumstances). Successful bidders receive annual rental payments, and cost-sharing and technical assistance to install approved plantings. The program was to enroll between 40 and 45 million acres before 1996. Program goals are to reduce erosion and excess production, and more recently, to provide other environmental benefits. To date, about 36.5 million acres have been enrolled.
Date: December 19, 1994
Creator: Zinn, Jeffrey A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tobacco Legislation in the 105th Congress: Side-by-Side Comparison of S. 1415, S. 1530, S. 1638, S. 1889, H.R. 3474, and H.R. 3868 (open access)

Tobacco Legislation in the 105th Congress: Side-by-Side Comparison of S. 1415, S. 1530, S. 1638, S. 1889, H.R. 3474, and H.R. 3868

None
Date: August 19, 1998
Creator: Redhead, C. Stephen & Austin-Lane, Joy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tobacco Control: Enforcement and Effectiveness of Federal and State Youth Access Laws (open access)

Tobacco Control: Enforcement and Effectiveness of Federal and State Youth Access Laws

This report reviews recent efforts to limit youth access to cigarettes through enforcement of federal and state laws prohibiting tobacco sales to minors. Under the federal Synar Amendment, states must conduct compliance checks and enforce their minimum age-of-sale laws or risk losing block grant funds
Date: August 19, 1998
Creator: Redhead, C. Stephen & Austin-Lane, Joy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Emergency Funding for Agriculture: A Brief History of Congressional Action, 1988-June 1999 (open access)

Emergency Funding for Agriculture: A Brief History of Congressional Action, 1988-June 1999

Between 1988 and June 1999, thirteen emergency supplemental or farm disaster acts provided a total of $17 billion in emergency funding for U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) programs. The vast majority of this amount has gone directly to farmers, primarily in the form of disaster payments ($12.2 billion) to any farmer suffering a significant crop loss caused by a natural disaster, and "market loss" payments ($3.1 billion) to help grain, cotton, and dairy farmers recover from low farm commodity prices. The remaining $1.7 billion has gone to a wide array of other USDA programs, including those for other forms of farm disaster assistance, farm loans, and overseas food aid. Congress is expected to consider a multi-billion financial assistance package for farmers sometime this year.
Date: July 19, 1999
Creator: Chite, Ralph M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Courts Rulings During 1994 on Constitutional Taking Claims Against the United States (open access)

Courts Rulings During 1994 on Constitutional Taking Claims Against the United States

In 1994, the second session of the 103rd Congress saw the political pressure exerted by property rights bills ascend new heights. Members supporting property rights legislation sought to add such provisions to nearly every major environmental bill. Opponents, including several committee chairmen, therefore declined to move the bills, and gridlock resulted.
Date: July 19, 1995
Creator: Meltz, Robert
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Casework in a Congressional Office (open access)

Casework in a Congressional Office

This report and its appendices present a general overview of congressional office procedures associated with handling casework and the assistance provided by a Member of Congress to help constituents in their dealings with federal agencies. It discusses options for assisting Members’ constituents and the role of Members and staff in providing casework services.
Date: November 19, 1996
Creator: Pontius, John S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Congressional Campaign Spending: 1976-1996 (open access)

Congressional Campaign Spending: 1976-1996

The data in this report reflect spending by congressional candidates from funds donated by individuals, political action committees (PACs), parties, and candidates. Thus, it includes expenditures under candidate control and does not reflect spending on their behalf, with or without their cooperation, by parties, PACs, and other groups.
Date: August 19, 1997
Creator: Cantor, Joseph E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Procedural Distinctions Between the House and the Committee of the Whole (open access)

Procedural Distinctions Between the House and the Committee of the Whole

None
Date: February 19, 1998
Creator: Saturno, James V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Floor Consideration of Conference Reports in the House (open access)

Floor Consideration of Conference Reports in the House

This report explains the steps in the legislative process of the conference reports.
Date: February 19, 1999
Creator: Saturno, James V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Amendments Between the Houses (open access)

Amendments Between the Houses

This report briefly summarizes the process of amendments between the House of Representatives and the Senate, which occurs if the House and Senate approve differing versions of a measure. An exchange of amendments between the houses resolves these differences.
Date: February 19, 1999
Creator: Saturno, James V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kosovo: Lessons Learned from Operation (open access)

Kosovo: Lessons Learned from Operation

None
Date: November 19, 1999
Creator: Gallis, Paul E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Missile Defense and the ABM Treaty: Overview of Recent Events (open access)

National Missile Defense and the ABM Treaty: Overview of Recent Events

None
Date: March 19, 1999
Creator: Woolf, Amy F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Japan's Looming Bank Crisis: A Half Trillion Dollars in Non-Performing Loans? (open access)

Japan's Looming Bank Crisis: A Half Trillion Dollars in Non-Performing Loans?

Japan's top 21 banks have reported Y13.6 trillion (US$136 billion) in non-performing loans, but experts consider the true figure to be in the range of Y40 to Y60 trillion (US$400 to US$600 billion). If 90, Japan's banks may take five to seven more years to write off their bad loans and restore health to their balance sheets. Current write-offs are being financed primarily by sales of stocks held by banks whose values have appreciated. This problem of bad loans is depressing Japan's economic growth rate and making resolution of trade disputes and further opening of Japan's financial markets more difficult.
Date: August 19, 1994
Creator: Nanto, Dick K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Tax Treatment of Alternative Transportation Fuels (open access)

The Tax Treatment of Alternative Transportation Fuels

Historically, federal energy policy, including energy tax policy, promoted the development of oil and gas at the expense of alternative fuels and nonconventional forms of energy. Beginning in the 1970s, there was a shift in the focus of energy tax policy away from oil and gas toward energy conservation and toward the development of alternative fuels and nonconventional forms of energy.
Date: March 19, 1997
Creator: Lazzari, Salvatore
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Reauthorizations and Regulatory Reform: Recent Developments (open access)

Environmental Reauthorizations and Regulatory Reform: Recent Developments

If general regulatory reform bills were enacted, debates on statute-specific reauthorizations could shift from regulatory reforms to the substantive regulatory requirements of each Act. In this case, regulatory reform could consist of proposals to modify statutory requirements to reduce costs to the private sector and State and local governments, to increase flexibility, and to reduce or compensate regulatory impacts on the value of private property. At issue would be a series of potential tradeoffs, for example among efficiency of environmental regulations, national consistency versus local flexibility, protection of private property rights, and degrees of health and environmental protection.
Date: December 19, 1994
Creator: Blodgett, John E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Appropriations for FY1999: Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education (open access)

Appropriations for FY1999: Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education

Appropriations are one part of a complex federal budget process that includes budget resolutions, appropriations (regular, supplemental, and continuing) bills, rescissions, and budget reconciliation bills. This report is a guide to one of the 13 regular appropriations bills that Congress passes each year. It is designed to supplement the information provided by the House and Senate Appropriations Subcommittees on Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education.
Date: November 19, 1998
Creator: Irwin, Paul M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Banking Acquisition and Merger Procedures (open access)

Banking Acquisition and Merger Procedures

This report discusses in general terms the basic process and time line for banking industry acquisitions and mergers and briefly discusses the May 4, 1998 application by Travelers Group to merge with Citicorp. Among the issues discussed are: potential impact on consumers; whether the new entities would be too big to fail; and, whether competitive equity calls for financial modernization legislation with functional regulation of the securities, banking, and insurance sectors of companies offering customers a full range of financial products and services. Legislative developments on financial modernization issues in the 105th Congress are reported in CRS Issue Brief 97034, which is available on the Legislative Information System.
Date: May 19, 1998
Creator: Murphy, M. Maureen
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Delaney Dilemma: Regulating Pesticide Residues in Foods -- Seminar Proceedings, March 16, 1993 (open access)

The Delaney Dilemma: Regulating Pesticide Residues in Foods -- Seminar Proceedings, March 16, 1993

A provision in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, the Delaney Clause, appears to lower risks in the setting of tolerances for pesticide residues. It prohibits any substance from being added to processed foods if it induces cancer in man or animals. In reality, the provision created a dilemma because the zero-risk statute makes it difficult to regulate pesticides. Because of the prescription of Delaney, tolerances (legal limits) are established differently for carcinogens and non-carcinogens and in raw and processed foods.
Date: May 19, 1993
Creator: Vogt, Donna U.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Japanese Lobbying and U.S. Automobile Policy (open access)

Japanese Lobbying and U.S. Automobile Policy

This report surveys U.S. automobile policy in the 1980s in order to clarify the effects of foreign lobbying. The conclusion is that the success of Japanese and other foreign lobbying on automobile policy has been mixed. Some decisions have gone their way; others have not. Their success is partly because they have aligned their efforts with those of powerful domestic interests.
Date: February 19, 1993
Creator: Nanto, Dick K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Japan-U.S. Relations: U.S. Officials' Attitudes on the Eve of the Clinton Administration (open access)

Japan-U.S. Relations: U.S. Officials' Attitudes on the Eve of the Clinton Administration

The U.S. officials interviewed for this study see little chance of an immediate improvement in U.S. relations with Japan over the next year. Trends in the United States and Japan in recent years have led to deepening U.S. frustrations, especially over economic issues. These developments have combined with fundamental changes (notably the collapse of the USSR) affecting U.S.-Japanese political-military ties to lead many U.S. officials to question the allocation of costs and benefits in the U.S.-Japan relationship and to press for arrangements that will alter the allocation in the interests of the United States. U.S. officials assume that their Japanese counterparts are undertaking similar reassessments.
Date: January 19, 1993
Creator: Sutter, Robert G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
China Policy: Managing U.S.-PRC-Taiwan Relations After President Lee's Visit to the U.S. (open access)

China Policy: Managing U.S.-PRC-Taiwan Relations After President Lee's Visit to the U.S.

fallout of Taiwan President Lee Teng-hui's June 1995 visit to the United States has included a carefully calibrated PRC effort to cut off or suspend contacts and communications with the United States and Taiwan over a range of important policy questions. Prospects for a resumption of these contacts are unclear, especially since domestic politics in Beijing,
Date: June 19, 1995
Creator: Sutter, Robert G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Iraq: International Support for U.S. Policy (open access)

Iraq: International Support for U.S. Policy

Although there is a worldwide consensus that Iraq must comply with all applicable U.N. resolutions, international attitudes differ sharply on how to compel Iraq to comply with the U.N. program of eliminating Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs. Some countries support U.S. threats to use force against Iraq as a necessary step to ensure that Iraq does not reconstitute banned weapons programs. Other countries believe that force would kill Iraqi civilians already chafing under seven years of international sanctions and could prompt Iraq to expel U.N. weapons inspectors. Meanwhile, during the week of February 23, the Senate is scheduled to consider S.Con.Res. 71, calling on the President to take all necessary and appropriate actions in response to the threat posed by Iraq's refusal to end its lethal weapons program.
Date: February 19, 1998
Creator: Katzman, Kenneth
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
U.S.-Japan Trade: Framework Talks and Other Issues (open access)

U.S.-Japan Trade: Framework Talks and Other Issues

None
Date: January 19, 1995
Creator: Cooper, William H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library