2006 Tax Reconciliation Bill Languishes

Despite claims by the two senior GOP tax writers of a breakthrough last week following daily meetings with Republican leaders, last year's $70 billion tax cut bill remains unfinished. The bill is expected to be finalized and brought to the floor of both the House and the Senate, as long as House Ways and Means Chairman Bill Thomas (R-CA) and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley (R-IA) reach a compromise over how to pay for a small part of the bill that exceeds budget targets.

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Harsh Budget Resolution On Its Last Leg?

There has been little movement on the FY 2007 budget resolution since it was pulled from the House floor before the April congressional recess. Despite a deal late last week between Majority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) and Appropriations Committee Chairman Jerry Lewis (R-CA) that removed one of three major obstacles to approval in the House, the outlook for the resolution remains bleak.

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National Archives Reclassification Revealed

An audit conducted by the National Archives estimates that more than 8,500 of the 25,000 (or nearly one-third of) records removed from the public shelves of the Archives should not have been removed.

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Path to Chemical Security Is Clear, But Overlooked

Approximately 284 facilities in 47 states have reduced risks to nearby communities from hazardous chemicals by switching to safer chemical processes or moving to safer locations, according to an Apr. 24 report by the Center for American Progress (CAP). Preventing Toxic Terrorism highlights the need for a national program to encourage thousands of other chemical facilities to become safer neighbors through the use of alternative, inherently safer chemicals and technologies.

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Experts to Senate: EPA's Pollution Plans Stink

An Apr. 20 Senate staff briefing brought to Congress's attention concerns over the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) proposals to reduce Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) chemical reporting. A diverse panel of experts discussed how the changes proposed by EPA would cripple this successful environmental program, undermine first responder readiness, impede financial investment decisions and interfere with state and local programs. Panelist were:

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    White House Misleads Public, Congress on PART Results

    In each of the past two years, President Bush has publicly cited a group of 100-plus federal programs in his State of the Union address that he wishes to eliminate or drastically reduce because they are "not getting results." Yet, over two-thirds of these programs have not even been reviewed by the administration's own tool for determining results: the Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART).

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    Gearing Up for a May Estate Tax Vote

    As the May vote in the Senate to repeal the estate tax approaches, nonprofit advocacy groups around the country are stepping up their campaign to save the nation's most progressive tax and a vital source of revenue. OMB Watch urges individuals to email Senators today and let lawmakers know America favors preserving the estate tax and opposes repeal or back-door "reform" that would amount to repeal.

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    House Fails to Agree on Budget; Boehner Retreats

    After proposing a sparse budget on March 29 and following a intense and divisive few weeks of behind-the-scenes negotiations, House GOP leaders ultimately pulled the plug on the $2.8 trillion FY 2007 budget resolution late on April 6. House Majority Leader John Boehner (R-OH), who admittedly spent the week "popping Advil" in preparation for difficult negotiations with his colleagues, failed time and again to emerge from these talks with enough votes to pass the resolution--a significant setback in what was his first real test as the new Majority Leader.

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    Grassroots Lobbying Issue Hits the FEC and the Courts

    OMB Watch was among a varied group of nonprofit organizations that filed comments at the Federal Election Commission (FEC) urging it to quickly begin the process of rulemaking that would exempt grassroots lobbying from federal election regulation. At issue is a ban under the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA) on "electioneering communications," broadcasts that refer to federal candidates within 60 days of a general election or 30 days of a primary.

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    EPA Forced to Turn Over Documents on Controversial Mercury Program

    A federal judge ordered the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on April 13 to release documents related to an analysis of alternatives to its controversial power plant mercury 'cap and trade' program. After the agency rejected a July 2004 request for the documents under a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Massachusetts Attorney General Thomas F. Reilly filed a lawsuit in March 2005 against EPA to obtain the information.

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