Posted on Jul 29, 2015
GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
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Congress is on track to shore up federal highway aid and veterans' health care before heading out of town this week for its August recess, leaving unresolved an array of sticky issues that are sure to complicate an autumn agenda already groaning under the weight of indecision.

In one of their last decisions before adjourning for a month, House members are expected to vote Wednesday on a bill that would extend spending authority for transportation programs through Oct. 29, and replenish the federal Highway Trust Fund with $8 billion. That's enough money to keep highway and transit aid flowing to states through mid-December.

The Senate plans to take up the House bill before a midnight Friday deadline, when authority for the Transportation Department to process aid payments to states will expire.

Lawmakers said they were loath to take up yet another short-term transportation funding extension — this will be the 34th extension since 2009. But Republicans and Democrats don't want to see transportation aid cut off, and they are eager to pass an amendment attached to the extension bill that fills a $3.4 billion hole in the Department of Veterans Affairs' budget. The money gap threatens to force the closure of hospitals and clinics nationwide.

The three-month patch puts off House action on a long-term transportation bill, adding one more messy fight to a fall agenda already crammed with difficult, must-pass legislation.

Twelve annual spending bills face a Sept. 30 deadline but are being held up by a clash over the Confederate flag. Congress must also decide whether to approve or disapprove President Barack Obama's Iran deal, and whether to pass a contentious defense policy bill that faces a veto threat from the White House. Another fight is certain over raising the nation's borrowing authority.

Spending authority for the Federal Aviation Administration expires Sept. 30. Since long-term bills to set aviation policy have yet to be introduced in either the House or the Senate, lawmakers acknowledge they will have to pass a short-term extension there as well.

"I think it will be an extremely active fall with the potential for either terrific accomplishment or a train wreck," said Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a member of House Republican leadership.

A $350 billion, long-term Senate transportation bill cleared a procedural hurdle Wednesday by a vote of 65 to 35. Senate passage is likely Thursday. The bill would make changes to highway, transit, railroad and auto safety programs, but only provides enough funds for the first three years of the six years covered by the bill. The bill also renews the Export-Import Bank, which makes low-interest loans to help U.S. companies sell their products overseas. The bank's charter expired June 30 in the face of opposition from conservatives, who call it corporate welfare.

Senate GOP leaders had hoped the House would pass the long-term bill and send it to the White House before the recess. But their Republican counterparts in the House have made it clear they won't be hurried into accepting the Senate measure.

It has been a decade since Congress last passed a long-term transportation bill, even though lawmakers in both parties generally support highway and transit aid. The difficulty has been finding the money to pay for programs in a way that doesn't increase the federal deficit.

Complicating passage of a long-term transportation bill is that President Barack Obama and House Republican leaders want to change corporate tax laws that encourage U.S. companies to park foreign profits overseas and use the resulting revenue to fully pay for highway and transit aid. But there is no consensus on the details of the corporate tax changes, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has repeatedly tried to dampen support for that approach.

House Republicans say they will use the next three months to develop a tax plan that generates enough money to pay for a long-term highway bill. Two key House members — Reps. Charles Boustany, R-La., and Richard Neal, D-Mass. — unveiled part of the plan Wednesday. It would create a special 10 percent tax bracket that would be applied to a portion of the income companies get from patents, formulas, inventions and other intellectual property. The current corporate income tax rate is 35 percent.

Technology firms and pharmaceutical companies would be among the beneficiaries. The goal is to slow the flow of U.S. companies that have been relocating their headquarters to foreign countries to reduce their tax bills.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/lawmakers-poised-to-leave-town-with-lots-of-work-left-undone/ar-AAdDXH8
Posted in these groups: US CongressImages %283%29 Government
Edited 9 y ago
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PO2 Peter Klein
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This is the "Do Nothing" Congress. Nobody seems to want to work with the "Other" side. Compromise is a thing of the past. As in this case unrelated issues get lumped together in bills, in a way that stifles debate and public critique, to get a few things passed. Disgusting!
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SPC George Rudenko
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What's worse?  That they are leaving having done next to nothing? Or that we the people have come to expectt this.  I may not agree with the president, but he at least tries to do things, often wrong (did I say that too many times) with executive action. Politicians rarely advance legisslation, and if they do it has more pork than Oscar Meyer. I did 14 years in customs and immigration....  since Regan there has been virtually no legislation passed. Good or bad.  It is a quagmire that we can't get out of.
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MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
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No but our congress gets away with it and we have no say to do anything about it.
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Lawmakers poised to leave town with lots of work left undone. Is this any way to run a country?
Cpl Software Engineer
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If they aren't in congress, compromising on every bill, they aren't taking more of our hard earned incomes, nor taking more of our freedoms with arbitrary laws that usually result in unintended consequences.
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LTC Stephen C.
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad, this is what I now expect of this Congress and any other session of Congress. Democrats and Republicans alike are all worthless, useless and self serving.
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Sgt Air Traffic Control Radar Technician
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No surprises there.
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Capt Retired
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I used to have my work in order before I could vacation. I guess I should have been a congressman.
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
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Capt Retired
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If I would have left with work hanging I could not have enjoyed my vacation.
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CW4 Guy Butler
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
9 y
Congress faces fall from hell ...

Speaker John Boehner, addressing a roomful of fellow House Republicans on Tuesday morning, described a major, six-year highway bill crafted by the Senate as a “piece of shit,” according to sources in the room. Senate Republicans have been only slightly more charitable about the House’s three-month measure, calling it another lame procrastination on an issue that needs to be dealt with now.

The GOP Congress is likely to dispense with the highway issue in the next few days and skip town for a long summer break. But it won’t be any easier when lawmakers return — far from it.

In fact, lawmakers have teed up a hellish final few months of 2015, as a series of high-stakes deadlines looms on everything from keeping the government open to doling out money for roads and then, for good measure, raising the federal government’s borrowing limit. It promises to be a major test of the Republican Party’s ability to govern as the GOP prepares to ask voters to continue one-party control of Congress.

The crush was largely brought on by lawmakers themselves — the breakdown of the appropriations process this spring and failure to deal with highway funding have only added to the backlog of thorny, must-solve issues on Congress’ plate when it returns from its summer in September.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2015/07/congress-faces-fall-from-hell-120753.html#ixzz3hKUSulE0
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
9 y
Thanks for passing this along CW4 Guy Butler.
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CW4 Guy Butler
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Add Tricare and the DoD medical system funding to the "must do before recess" list...

My wife's waiting for a Tricare referral approval for an orthopedist to see how screwed up her knee is.
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