Congressional Quarterly will sponsor a second CQ Forum on energy titled
“Toward a Comprehensive Energy Policy,” featuring leading policy makers
and stakeholders who will discuss how to reduce U.S. dependence on
foreign energy sources, protect the environment and continue to provide
energy for the economic growth of the nation as well as for our
transportation needs.
Contact: Marie Kilroy at 202-419-8484 or [email protected]
RSVP required
Hyatt Regency Hotel, Thornton Room, 400 New Jersey Ave., N.W.
Congressional Quarterly
07/19/2007 at 07:45AM
Senate Judiciary Committee
216 Hart
07/18/2007 at 10:00AM
From CQ.com, summaries of the amendment votes at
the markup session:
On the conservation front:
Farmers who earn too much to qualify for payments under the bil would
be barred from receiving payments under farmland conservation
programs, which worries environmentalists.
“Prohibiting and limiting large commercial farmers, in particular,
from participating in conservation programs makes no sense,” said
Scott Faber, who directs Environmental Defense’s farm policy campaign.
“Large commercial farmers are more likely to participate in
conservation programs and manage a disproportionately large share of
the landscape.”
Amendments passed:
- The “language barring farmers who make more than $1 million in annual
adjusted gross income from collecting government subsidies, and also
eliminating payments to those who earn $500,000 to $1 million a year
if less than 67 percent of that income comes from farming” was amended
by voice vote to “lift limits on marketing loans, which provide
short-term loans so farmers can pay their bills until they sell their
harvested crops. Aides said this concession by Peterson won support
from Southern lawmakers, who worried that the bill would otherwise
hurt cotton and rice growers.”
- An amendment by Bob Etheridge, D-N.C., that would make federal dollars
available to expand foreign markets for tobacco. The panel adopted the
amendment 14-10, with Peterson’s support. North Carolina Republican
Robin Hayes warned that without the support for U.S. growers, Chinese
growers would dominate the tobacco industry. North Dakota Democrat
Earl Pomeroy predicted the amendment would fail on the House floor. He
said it “would endure withering criticism for using U.S. dollars to
encourage other areas of the world to smoke.”
Passed by voice vote:
- An amendment by Tim Walz, D-Minn., that would make it easier for
farmers growing organic crops to enroll in the Conservation Security
Program.
- An amendment by Nick Lampson, D-Texas, that would create a one-time
incentive program to encourage the market growth of oilseeds, which
are lower in trans-fats.
- An amendment by Sam Graves, R-Mo., that would bar farmers or companies
defrauding the Agriculture Department from participating in the
agency’s programs.
- An amendment by K. Michael Conaway, R-Texas, that would prevent the
Agriculture Department from writing subsidy checks smaller than $25.
It costs the department too much to write checks for smaller amounts,
Conaway said.
- An amendment by Jim Costa, D-Calif., that would require 50 percent of
funding in the Regional Water Enhancement Program to be spent on new
water preservation projects. Waterways in California and elsewhere
could benefit from those federal dollars, Costa said.
House Agriculture Committee
1300 Longworth
07/18/2007 at 10:00AM
Eager to be part of the solution to global warming, many consumers,
businesses and government agencies have turned to carbon pollution
offsets to help reduce or eliminate their “carbon footprint.” While
these offsets represent a promising way to engage consumers in global
warming solutions, there are many unanswered questions as to the
efficacy and accounting of these unregulated commodities.
Witnesses
- Derik Broekhoff, Senior Associate, World Resources Institute
- Joseph Romm, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress
- Thomas Boucher, President and Chief Executive Officer, NativeEnergy
LLC
- Russ George, President and Chief Executive Officer, Planktos, Inc.
- Erik Blachford, CEO, TerraPass Inc.
Contact: Moulton, David – Democratic Staff Director at 202-225-4012
From the Washington
Post:
At the hearing, Planktos CEO Russ George,
whose company plans to engage in oceanic iron-seeding in the east
Pacific, said the EPA was working with
“radical environmental groups” who are criticizing his company. In
written submissions, he said his firm’s work had been “falsely
portrayed” to “generate public alarm.” George said “it’s the clearest
ocean on Earth because it’s lifeless, and it’s not supposed to be that
way.” He asserts that the potential is enormous. He said that the annual
drop in ocean plant life was like losing all the rain forests every
year. “If we succeed, we’ll have created an industry. If we don’t
succeed, we’ll have created a lot of great science.”
More from the article at this
post.
House Energy Independence and Global Warming Committee
07/18/2007 at 09:30AM
House Appropriations Committee
2359 Rayburn
07/18/2007 at 09:00AM
From Pacific
Views live
coverage:
The first House Agriculture Committee markup session on the 2007 Farm
Bill began with Rep. Collin Peterson’s opening statement, followed by
everyone else’s. Peterson said that Americans were fortunate to enjoy
low, stable food prices, and food that meets the highest standards of
quality and safety.
No markup, or voting on specific amendments, actually took place
during today’s session. The last changes to the legislation weren’t
made until late last night, and today was the first chance most
members got to see the final versions, though Rep. Peterson said that
the changes were minor in comparison to the version released a little
over a week ago.
Peterson said that listening sessions all over the country indicated
that the 2002 Farm Bill was popular and regarded as successful.
Building from that as a platform, changes Peterson described as
departing from 2002 policies included increased spending on research,
investment in nutrition, and help for new farmers. He said it was also
the first time there was dedicated baseline funding support for fruits
and vegetables, as well as a hard cap on payments under the commodity
and conservation programs, such that no one with an adjusted gross
income of a million dollars or more is eligible.
Peterson further said that there would be a main version of the bill
that strictly adhered to paygo, pay-as-you-go, budget guidelines.
Other items not covered by this baseline funding would be included in
a separate bill that would need to have budget offsets found for it.
Go to Pacific
Views for full
coverage.
House Agriculture Committee
1300 Longworth
07/17/2007 at 01:00PM
The nominations of Robert Boldrey, of Michigan, to be a Member of the
Board of Trustees of the Morris K. Udall Scholarship and Excellence in
National Environmental Policy Foundation, Kristine L. Svinicki, of
Virginia, to be a Member of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and R.
Lyle Laverty, of Colorado, to be Assistant Secretary of the Interior for
Fish and Wildlife
Senate Environment and Public Works Committee
406 Dirksen
07/17/2007 at 10:00AM
Business meeting to markup proposed legislation making appropriations
for the Department of Agriculture for the fiscal year ending September
30, 2008
Senate Appropriations Committee
192 Dirksen
07/17/2007 at 10:00AM
The House will have the floor debate on the $1.1 billion in member
earmarks to the FY 2008 Energy and Water
Appropriations Bill (HR 2641) approved last week by the House
Appropriations Committee in a voice vote.
The measure, House Report 110-185 Part
2
(full
pdf),
amounts to about 3 percent of the $31.6 billion the bill would provide
to the Energy Department, the Army Corps of Engineers, the Interior
Department’s Bureau of Reclamation and several independent agencies.
The committee estimates that $3.4 billion of the bill goes to elements
dealing with climate change, $1 billion more than in the President’s
budget request. More on the original bill below the fold.
U.S. House of Representatives
07/17/2007 at 09:00AM
S.488 and H.R.1100, bills to revise the boundary of the Carl Sandburg
Home National Historic Site in the State of North Carolina, S.617, to
make the National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Pass available at
a discount to certain veterans, S.824 and H.R.995, bills to amend Public
Law 106-348 to extend the authorization for establishing a memorial in
the District of Columbia or its environs to honor veterans who became
disabled while serving in the Armed Forces of the United States, S.955,
to establish the Abraham Lincoln National Heritage Area, S.1148, to
establish the Champlain Quadricentennial Commemoration Commission and
the Hudson-Fulton 400th Commemoration Commission, S.1380, to designate
as wilderness certain land within the Rocky Mountain National Park and
to adjust the boundaries of the Indian Peaks Wilderness and the Arapaho
National Recreation Area of the Arapaho National Forest in the State of
Colorado, and S.1182, to amend the Quinebaug and Shetucket Rivers Valley
National Heritage Corridor Act of 1994 to increase the authorization of
appropriations and modify the date on which the authority of the
Secretary of the Interior terminates under the Act, S. 1728, to amend
the National Parks and Recreation Act of 1978 to reauthorize the Na Hoa
Pili O Kaloko-Honokohau Advisory Commission
Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee
366 Dirksen
07/12/2007 at 02:30PM