DAILY FLOOR WRAP UP
February 26, 2014
SUMMARY OF LEGISLATIVE BUSINESS
H.R. 3308
— "To require a Federal agency to include language in certain
educational and advertising materials indicating that such materials are
produced and disseminated at taxpayer expense." –
ON THE MOTION TO SUSPEND THE RULES AND PASS THE BILL – PASSED BY VOICE
Ordering the Previous Question on
H. Res. 487 — "Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3865)
to prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from modifying the standard
for determining whether an organization is operated exclusively for the
promotion of social welfare for purposes of section 501(c)(4) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986; providing for consideration
of the bill (H.R. 2804)
to amend title 5, United States Code, to require the Administrator of
the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs to publish information about rules on the Internet,
and for other purposes; and providing for consideration of motions to
suspend the rules." –
ADOPTED 224 – 192
H. Res. 487
— "Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3865)
to prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from modifying the standard
for determining whether an organization is operated exclusively for the
promotion of social welfare for purposes of section 501(c)(4) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986; providing for consideration of the bill (H.R.
2804) to amend title 5, United States Code, to require the
Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs to
publish information about rules on the Internet, and for other purposes;
and providing for consideration of motions to suspend
the rules." - ADOPTED 231 – 185
H.R. 1944
— "To protect private property rights." – ON THE MOTION TO SUSPEND THE RULES AND PASS THE BILL –
PASSED 353 – 65
Democrat Motion to Recommit –
FAILED 191 – 230
Final Passage of
H.R. 3865 —
"To prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from modifying the standard
for determining whether an organization is operated exclusively for the
promotion of social welfare for purposes
of section 501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986." – PASSED 243 – 176
Polis Motion to Amend the Title –
FAILED 177 – 241
Cartwright (D-PA) – Amendment No. 1
to H.R. 2804
(ALERT Act) – Strikes the requirement that information
on the timing and costs of expected new regulations be published online
for six months before a new regulation can become effective. –
FAILED BY VOICE
Murphy (D-FL) – Amendment No. 2 to
H.R. 2804 (ALERT Act) – Eliminates reforms to notice-and-comment rulemaking and regulatory consent decree and settlement practices
by striking titles II and IV from the bill. – FAILED BY VOICE
Rothfus (R-PA), Barr, (R-KY) – Amendment No.
3 to H.R. 2804
(ALERT Act) – Adds terms to define “negative-impact on jobs and wages”
rules, helps agencies better
identify such rules, and requires agency heads that approve such rules
to state formally that they knew of the rules’ negative impacts on jobs
and wages before approving them. –
VOTE REQUESTED
Brady (R-TX) – Amendment No 4 to
H.R. 2804
(ALERT Act) – Requires federal agencies to identify in notices of
proposed rulemaking an achievable objective for
the proposed rule and metrics by which the agencies will determine if
the final rule achieves that objective. Also requires agencies to
determine that final regulations meets those objectives and that they
applied their stated metrics to make that determination.
– ADOPTED BY VOICE
Rigell (R-VA) – Amendment No. 5 to
H.R. 2804 (ALERT Act) – Expands requirements for initial regulatory flexibility analyses to include analysis of whether new
regulations may impair small entities’ ability to gain access to credit. – ADOPTED BY VOICE
Tipton (R-CO) – Amendment No. 6 to
H.R. 2804 (ALERT Act) – Makes a technical correction to make clear the retention of the Regulatory Flexibility Act’s requirement
that each agency annually publish a list of regulations to be reviewed pursuant to its periodic review plan. –
ADOPTED BY VOICE
No comments:
Post a Comment