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Congressional Dish

CD038: Wasting July

Congressional Dish

Jennifer Briney

News, Congress, Government, Politics, Corporations

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 9 August 2013

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, we catch up on most of the bills that passed the House during the last two weeks of August. A lot of bills were passed; very few have a prayer of becoming law. Intro and Exit Music: by (found on ) Is now law Covered in detail in the second half of Continues a system designed to expedite the approval of anti-biotics for animals Caps revenues from application fees paid by pharmaceutical companies Music: by (found on ) Has been amended by the Senate, passed the House again on July 31, and is now on the President's desk Original version covered in Now ties student loan interest loan rates to the market and caps rates at 8.25% for undergraduates and 9.5% for graduate students Student loan rate will be fixed at the rate where it starts for the life of the loan CBO predicts the rates will be above the current 6.8% starting in 2017 [caption id="attachment_801" align="aligncenter" width="912"] Congressional Record for July 31, page H5219[/caption] Passed the House on July 30, 2013 Public schools will be allowed to stockpile epinephrine for students with food allergies and train staff to administer it Passed the House on July 25, 2013 States will be allowed the regulate coal waste instead of the Federal government Gives the coal industry 10 years to meet groundwater protection standards Prohibits the EPA from categorizing waste from burning coal, oil, natural gas, and tar sands as 'hazardous waste'. saying that fossil fuel waste should not be classified as hazardous: Today's action applies to all remaining fossil fuel combustion wastes other than high volume coal combustion wastes generated at electric utilities and independent power producing facilities and manage separately which were addressed by a 1993 regulatory determination. These include: Large-volume coal combustion wastes generate at electric utility and independent power producing facilities that are co-managed together with certain other coal combustion wastes; coal combustion wastes generated at facilities with fluidized bed combustion technology; petroleum coke combustion wastes, wastes from the combustion of mixtures of coal and other fuels (i.e, co-burning); wastes from the combustion of oil, and wastes from the combustion of natural gas. The Agency has concluded these wastes do not warrant regulation under subtitle C or RCRA and is retaining the President Obama and his EPA wanted to classify fossil fuel wastes a hazardous Petroleum Coke blowing over Detroit Passed the House on August 1, 2013 EPA is not allowed to issue a regulation costing over $1 billion The social cost of carbon - climate change, cancer rates, etc. - can't be used in a cost-benefit analysis Passed the House on July 31, 2013 Was called the Forces Federal agencies to get Congressional approval for all major rules that cost over $100 million, affect the finances of businesses, or create a carbon tax If Congress does nothing for 70 working days, the rule can't be enacted None of this is subject to judicial review Monetary policy by the is exempted Passed the House on July 31, 2013 Government can't spend more than $500,000 on any individual conference All materials presented at the conference must be posted online Private companies can spend money on government conferences Three bills were combined into one and passed the House on August 1, 2013 Allows businesses to record in-person and telephone conversations with Executive Branch agencies such as the EPA, OSHA, and the IRS. Makes it easier to fire high level federal employees Caps the bonuses of federal employees and prevents 2/3 of eligible federal employees from getting bonuses at all Government doesn't create jobs, the private sector does. — Eric Cantor (@GOPLeader) Passed the House on July 31, 2013 Each agency must establish customer service standards including targets for response times, processing of benefits & payments, etc. Create a pilot program for the IRS and two other agencies to collect taxpayer complaints Gives no money or extra personal to the agencies to implement these new policies The full story of the IRS scandal: IRS can't have any conferences until they implement a bunch of recommendations IRS agents must be reminded that taxpayers have rights But they can still give political groups tax exempt status (<- not in bill, but still true) Prohibits the IRS from enforcing the tax provisions of ObamaCare Thank you for having me on your show! Representatives Quoted in This Episode

Transcript

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0:00.0

And the I am so damn tired of being like to.

0:15.0

I am so damn tired of being like to.

0:20.0

I don't think I can't deny it anymore.

0:27.0

You can't stick to your story if you think it flies

0:40.0

But I'm not going to buy it anymore.

0:46.4

Hello and happy August, congressional dish listeners.

0:49.0

This is your host Jennifer Briny

0:50.4

and welcome to the 38th episode of Congressional Dish.

0:53.0

Thank you guys so much for letting me go on vacation for a week while Congress was still in session.

0:58.5

I went to Venice Beach with some of my family members and we had a really great time I feel

1:03.7

completely recharged and ready to go back to kicking some congressional ass and

1:07.6

it turns out that while I was gone while Congress was finishing up July

1:12.1

they were wasting even more of our time with

1:15.2

bills that will never be signed into law and of course we're going to talk about all of them.

1:19.4

But before we get into anything that happened over the last two weeks, I do want to follow up on some of the previous episodes because when I tell you about these bills, I always promise, well, if it moves any further, if it gets signed into law, I'll let you know.

1:32.0

And out of all of these episodes that we've been doing over the past couple of months,

1:35.8

there is one bill that I've talked about that's been signed into law.

1:39.4

And that's S-622.

1:41.1

This is from the 30th episode. Now this bill had to do with animal drugs like

1:45.6

antibiotics that they pump into chickens and cows to make them fatter so that they

1:49.3

could kill them sooner and bring them to market. And what this bill does is it continues a system

1:54.5

we already have, which expedites the approval

...

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