TSA to Expand "Sensitive Security Information"

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) plans to expand the amount of information it can withhold from the public disclosure, according to a May 18 Federal Register notice.

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Budget Resolution Update

As of June 1, there is still no budget resolution, even as the appropriations process is scheduled to begin.

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Bill to Extend Patriot Act Is Quietly Introduced

Secrecy News reported the next salvo in the debate about the Patriot Act: On May 21, Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) [and others] introduced a bill to make the Patriot Act permanent. S. 2476 would repeal sunset provisions of the most controversial sections of the Patriot Act, which are set to expire in 2005. Speaking of Secrecy News, its editor, Steve Aftergood, was recently awarded a prize from the Playboy Foundation and the Creative Coalition for defending the first amendment with his unrelenting and undernoticed efforts to combat government secrecy.

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Mistakes and Terrorism Fears Jail the Innocent, Miss Employee Misconduct

When authorities in Philadelphia found a motion sensor along some railroad tracks, they worried terrorists might be installing triggering devices to launch an attack against trains along the busy eastern rail corridor between Boston and Washington. But they soon found out terrorism concerns overshadowed the real problem of employee misconduct.

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Economy and Jobs Watch: Major Cuts to Domestic Services are on the Horizon

The White House's Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has instructed government agencies to plan for cuts to a wide range of domestic programs. In a memo dated May 19, 2004, (download pdf), the White House told agencies to prepare their budgets for fiscal year (FY) 2006 consistent with the FY 2005 budget proposal -- specifically, to "[a]ssume accounts are funded at the 2006 level specified in the 2005 Budget database." The database refers to the

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Anti-worker, Anti-regulatory Bills Pass House

The House of Representatives voted to pass five bills, four of which threaten workplace safety while the other threatens regulatory safeguards across the board. The anti-regulatory bill, H.R. 2432, authorizes a study of "regulatory budgeting," a project that could ration protections of the public health, safety, and environment by setting an artificial cap of regulatory "costs" that can be imposed. An amendment proposed by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) would have established a panel to study the politicization of science, but it was defeated just before the House voted to pass the bill.

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Side-Impact Air Bag Rule Issued, but Advocates Raise Questions

The federal highway safety agency has issued a new rule requiring side-impact air bags. Safety advocates argue that, while a significant step forward, the rule is neither innovative nor sufficient to address side-impact collisions. The new rule governs the amount of impact a test dummy registers during crash testing. The consequences of the new performance standard will most likely be that automakers will make air bags that protect the head during side-impact collisions a standard feature of new vehicles. For vehicles with sensors that detect a rollover, these

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OSHA Bills Protect Employers at Cost of Workers' Safety

The House may soon consider four bills amending the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, which would effectively consolidate White House control over the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC) and provide leniency to employers at the cost of the health and safety of workers.

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FDA Ignores Experts, Rejects Plan B for Over-the-Counter Use

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) rejected an application to the "morning after pill" Plan B available without a prescription, despite the nearly unanimous advice of its own panel of experts that the drug is safe for over-the-counter use.

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FEC Delays Political Committee Rulemaking for 90 Days

At its May 13 meeting the Federal Election Commission (FEC) approved a General Counsel recommendation to defer action on its political committee rulemaking for 90 days. The General Counsel said the FEC needed time to give the complex issues in the case more thorough consideration, saying "It is just as important not to drop the issue as to get it right." The move makes it unlikely any new rules will take effect this year. In response the House Administration Committee has scheduled a hearing for May 20.

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