Sunday, June 2, 2013

Pass the Pipe

Over the Canadian border, please.

Congress.org (congress.org) presents: M E G A V O T E  May 28, 2013
In this MegaVote for Georgia's 13th Congressional District:

Recent Congressional Votes
  • Senate: Farm Bill  Amendment Vote
  • House: Keystone Pipeline Approval  Final Passage
  • House: Student Loan Interest Rate Reform  Final Passage

The House and Senate are in recess until Monday, June 3.

Recent Senate Votes:

Farm Bill  Amendment Vote
Vote Agreed to (59-33, 8 Not Voting)
The Senate began working its way through amendments last week to a five-year reauthorization of food and nutrition programs, with a view toward passing the bill after the Memorial Day recess. This year’s farm bill is very similar to last year’s version, with some exceptions including greater support for Southern crops such as rice, cotton and peanuts. The bill would reduce spending on food stamps by about $4 billion and would reduce the deficit by $17.9 billion over ten years. The last amendment vote of the week changed the bill to reduce by 15 percent the amount of crop insurance subsidies for farmers with adjusted gross incomes above $750,000 a year. The amendment includes a clause stating that the new limitation would not take effect if the Agriculture secretary determines that it would result in a decline in overall crop insurance coverage or increase the total cost of the program.  Other amendment votes last week included: a Gillibrand, D-N.Y.  amendment to block the food stamp cuts (defeated, RC 131); an Inhofe, R-Okla. amendment to turn the food stamp program into a block grant to the states (defeated, RC 132); and a Sanders, I-Vt. amendment to permit states to require labeling of genetically-modified foods (defeated, RC 135). President Obama supports the Senate bill. The House is working on its own farm bill (H.R. 1947), which passed out of committee on May 15. The House measure would reduce the deficit by almost twice as much as the Senate bill, including more than $20 billion in cuts to nutrition programs.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted NO
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted NO
Georgia Senators voting no to protect subsidies for farmers. Lot of good it did.  Congress is in a phase right now that resembles historical peace time activity  whack defense beyond the point of safety and take from the producers to feed the useless. I say, don't subsidize any of them, let all things stand or fail on their own merit.

Recent House Votes:

Keystone Pipeline Approval  Final Passage
Vote Passed (241-175, 1 Present, 16 Not Voting)
Returning to an issue from last Congress, the House passed a bill last week to force approval of the Keystone XL pipeline, which would transport diluted bitumen (or tar sands) from Canada through the American heartland to refining facilities on the Gulf Coast. Approval of pipelines do not normally spark so much controversy, but Keystone requires presidential approval because it crossed an international boundary, thus placing President Obama in the middle of a fight that places labor unions and environmentalists, two of his key constituencies, on opposing sides. H.R. 3 would seek to remove Obama from the approval process by declaring a presidential permit was not a necessity. It would deem various documents and reports that have been issued by federal and state entities over the last two years as satisfying the various regulatory thresholds to begin construction of the pipeline. It would essentially cut the Environmental Protection Agency out of the oversight process, and would force the Army Corps of Engineers to issue construction permits within 90 days of an application being filed. The president has threatened to veto the bill, though the Senate is unlikely to take it up in any case.
Rep. David Scott voted NO
On this issue the President is wrong head-headed as can be and the little shit David Scott is being the best sycophant he can. And sir production in the US is not up because of your actions, it is up because  the prices are high an there is profit to be made. You Mr. President are obstructing future growth.  Everybody knows it.

Student Loan Interest Rate Reform Final Passage
Vote Passed (221-198, 15 Not Voting)
In its last action before the recess, the House passed a bill to overhaul student loan interest rates. Interest rates are currently set to rise from 3.4 to 6.8 percent this summer. H.R. 1911 would set rates for Stafford loans at the level of the 10-year Treasury Note plus 2.5 percent (capped at 8.5 percent), while PLUS loans would be set at 10-year Treasuries plus 4.5 percent (capped at 10.5 percent). Though Republicans stated that the bill was modeled on reforms from President Obamas FY 2014 budget, the president has threatened to veto the bill. It is not clear what the Senate intends to do about interest rates at this time.
Rep. David Scott voted NO
Since the federal government got involved with student loans, the cost of education has skyrocketed. The problems are, one, too much cheap money in the system props-up financially inefficient schools, and two, the same institutions have in many cases lowered standards in the chase for loose money available through weakened candidate pools. In the end it is the federal government buying control of higher education. 

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