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The Total Economic Costs of the War Beyond the Federal Budget
S. HRG. 110–703 WAR AT ANY COST? THE TOTAL ECONOMIC COSTS OF THE WAR BEYOND THE FEDERAL BUDGET HEARING BEFORE THE JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES ONE HUNDRED TENTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION FEBRUARY 28, 2008 Printed for the use of the Joint Economic Committee ( U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 42–773 PDF WASHINGTON : 2009 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512–1800; DC area (202) 512–1800 Fax: (202) 512–2250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402–0001 VerDate 11-MAY-2000 11:44 Jan 30, 2009 Jkt 042773 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 5011 Sfmt 5011 C:\DOCS\42773.TXT DianeA PsN: DianeA JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE [Created pursuant to Sec. 5(a) of Public Law 304, 79th Congress] SENATE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CHARLES E. SCHUMER, New York, Chairman CAROLYN B. MALONEY, New York, Vice Chair EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts MAURICE D. HINCHEY, New York JEFF BINGAMAN, New Mexico BARON P. HILL, Indiana AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota LORETTA SANCHEZ, California ROBERT P. CASEY, JR., Pennsylvania ELIJAH CUMMINGS, Maryland JIM WEBB, Virginia LLOYD DOGGETT, Texas SAM BROWNBACK, Kansas JIM SAXTON, New Jersey, Ranking Minority JOHN SUNUNU, New Hampshire KEVIN BRADY, Texas JIM DEMINT, South Carolina PHIL ENGLISH, Pennsylvania ROBERT F. BENNETT, Utah RON PAUL, Texas MICHAEL LASKAWY, Executive Director CHRISTOPHER J. FRENZE, Minority Staff Director (II) VerDate 11-MAY-2000 11:44 Jan 30, 2009 Jkt 042773 PO 00000 Frm 00002 Fmt 5904 Sfmt 5904 C:\DOCS\42773.TXT DianeA PsN: DianeA C O N T E N T S MEMBERS Hon. -
Presidential Documents
Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Monday, October 30, 2000 Volume 36ÐNumber 43 Pages 2529±2650 Contents Addresses and Remarks Addresses and RemarksÐContinued BudgetÐ2616, 2638 New YorkÐContinued Congressional candidate Donald Dunn, Representative Maurice Hinchey, reception receptionÐ2613 in KingstonÐ2582 Drunk driving standard, establishment of Westchester County Democratic Party nationalÐ2578 dinner in New RochelleÐ2595 Indiana North Carolina Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr., Hillary Clinton, reception in IndianapolisÐ tributeÐ2599 2545 People for the American Way receptionÐ Representative Julia Carson, rally in 2610 IndianapolisÐ2550 Radio addressÐ2549 Jordan-U.S. trade agreement, signingÐ2608 School construction and education, legislative Legislative agendaÐ2616, 2638 agendaÐ2603 Massachusetts, Democratic Senate Campaign Committee Bill Signings dinner in BostonÐ2541 Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Representative Martin Meehan, reception Treatment Act of 2000, statementÐ2607 in LowellÐ2534 New York Department of Transportation and Related Democratic Assembly Campaign Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001, Committee reception in New York CityÐ statementÐ2580 2623 Ryan White CARE Act Amendments of 2000, Departure for New York CityÐ2616 statementsÐ2531, 2532 Hillary Clinton Communications to Congress Birthday tribute in New York CityÐ2632 Brunch in Johnson CityÐ2555 Bipartisan tax cut legislation, lettersÐ2631, Dinner in HempsteadÐ2564 2636 Reception in Alexandria BayÐ2559 Colombia and neighboring countries, letter Reception in -
Indian Point Draft Letter
April 26, 2007 The Honorable Dale Klein Chairman U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission 11555 Rockville Pike Rockville, MD 20852 Dear Chairman Klein: I write to express my strong support for H.R. 994 and S. 649, and to call on you to direct the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to conduct an Independent Safety Assessment of the Indian Point nuclear power plant in Westchester County, New York. I commend Congressman John Hall for his leadership in sponsoring H.R. 994, and the dedication of the bill’s co-sponsors from the New York Hudson Valley—Congressman Eliot Engel, Congressman Maurice Hinchey, and Congresswoman Nita Lowey. I also applaud Senators Clinton and Schumer for leading the charge in the Senate by co-sponsoring S. 649. These bills direct the NRC to conduct an ISA of Indian Point before the plant can be relicensed. Never has the need for this type of evaluation been greater. Indian Point’s two commercial nuclear reactors are located in a densely populated area of New York, on the east bank of the Hudson River 24 miles north of New York City. According to a 2003 study by James Lee Witt Associates, 298,000 people live within the ten-mile circular area surrounding the plant. Bear Mountain State Park, Harriman State Park and the U.S. Military Academy at West Point are also located within the emergency planning zone. Given Indian Point’s close proximity to New York City, a serious accident could threaten millions of people in the greater metropolitan area. Indian Point has been plagued with significant operational difficulties. -
Xcuse the Duplication
WashingtonReport March 2001 American Public Works Association Washington Office Robert E. Clegg, P.E., Government Affairs Committee Chair • Peter B. King, Executive Director • 1401 K Street, NW, 11th floor, Washington, DC 20005 • 202-408-9541 • Fax 202-408-9542 • email [email protected] • www.apwa.net INTERGOVERNMENTAL 2002 Budget Resolution HOUSE DEBATES SPENDING BLUEPRINT MIRRORING BUSH BUDGET PROPOSAL The House of Representatives began debate March 27, 2001, on an FY2002 budget resolution that reflects the Bush administration’s budget plan, including a $1.62 trillion tax cut over 10 years. Approved in Committee along party lines March 21, 2001, the budget resolution caps discretionary budget authority at $661 billion, a four percent increase over FY2001. The measure would pay $2.3 trillion over 10 years for debt reduction and would reserve $517 billion as a contingency fund for spending or additional debt reduction. In addition, the resolution contains instructions for four tax reconciliation bills and sets aside $153 billion from the Medicare surplus for prescription drug benefits. The budget resolution does not have the force of law but is a spending blueprint adopted by Congress and used to allocate funding authority to the 13 appropriations committees. The Senate is expected to begin deliberations on its budget resolution in April. Appropriations Committee CURRENT MEMBERSHIP LISTING House Appropriations Committee C.W. Young (R-FL) (Chair), David R. Obey (D-WI) (Ranking Member) Republicans: Ralph Regula (OH), Jerry Lewis (CA), Harold Rogers (KY), Joe Skeen (NM), Frank R. Wolf (VA), Tom DeLay (TX), Jim Kolbe (AZ), Sonny Callahan (AL), James T. Walsh (NY), Charles H. -
Action Alert: Contact Your Congressman
Action Alert: Contact your Congressman From: Kathleen Roe Sent: June 02, 2008 Subject: PAHR Update and plea for more help We’ve reached an important milestone with the Preserving the American Historical Record effort by getting a bill number, HR 6056. We’ve asked you before to work with your administration, your State Historical Records Advisory Board and your constituents to contact your members of the House of Representatives urging them to sign on as co-sponsors for the bill. Many thanks for all you’ve done on this so far! But we indeed have “miles to go” before we are done, so we are asking you to reach out again to your members of the House of Representatives. In order for the bill to be taken seriously and brought forward for mark-up in the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, we need to have at least 50 co-sponsors. At this time, we have 14 members who have signed on to sponsor the bill. They are: Prime sponsors: Maurice Hinchey, D-NY and Chris Cannon, R- UT,Co- sponsors: Tammy Baldwin, D-WI; Sanford Bishop, R-GA; Joseph Crowley, D- NY; Eliot Engel, D- NY; Steve Israel, D- NY; Sheila Jackson Lee, D-TX; Carolyn Maloney, D- NY; Jim McDermott, D-WA; James McGovern, D- MA; John McHugh, R,-NY; Jerrold Nadler, D- NY; Edolphus Towns, D-NY. If your representative’s name is not among that list, please contact them again and ask your constituents to do so as well. They should tell their member the bill number (some members have indicated they were waiting for that), and urge them to sign on as a co-sponsor by calling either (if they are a Democrat) Anne Georges in Rep. -
Looking Back, Forgingahead Riverkeeper Celebrates 40 Years
SPRING 2006 Looking Back, Forging Ahead Riverkeeper Celebrates 40 Years Board of Directors DEAR FRIENDS OF RIVERKEEPER, George Hornig, Chair 2006 marks 40 years since a group of blue-collar men and women Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Vice Chair Dr. Howard A. Rubin, Treasurer gathered in Crotonville and launched what was to become one of the Peggy Cullen, Secretary Richard R. Knabel, Executive Committee most effective models of environmental advocacy in the history of the John McEnroe, Executive Committee John Abplanalp movement. In leading the fight to reclaim the storied Hudson, Riverkeeper Doni Belau Lorraine Bracco has inspired the addition of 154 other “waterkeepers” patrolling their Ann Colley Hamilton Fish local rivers, lakes and coasts across the globe. Robert Gabrielson Anne Hearst Here at home, Riverkeeper is going strong, waging epic battles against Karen Kelly Klopp Alex Matthiessen giants like Entergy, GE and ExxonMobil who share a common strategy Dennis Rivera of spending more money trying to deceive the public than on redressing Seymour Schwartz Ronald A. DeSilva, Emeritus their assaults on the environment. We’re tackling dozens of other cases where more modest polluters Arthur Glowka, Emeritus Henry Lewis Kingsley, Emeritus are taking a serious collective toll on our environment and health. Recently, we learned that as much Staff as 36% of private drinking water wells in Putnam, Dutchess, and Columbia counties are contaminated ALEX MATTHIESSEN Hudson Riverkeeper with pollutants that exceed EPA federal standards! & President In this issue, we highlight some of the work we’re doing to protect our drinking water supply – ROBERT F. KENNEDY, JR. Chief Prosecuting Attorney in this case not by confronting polluters, but by working with legislators, municipalities, community DARCY CASTELEIRO Indian Point Associate groups, and even developers to try to promote positive approaches to protecting water quality. -
Washington Update
WASHINGTON UPDATE A MONTHLY NEWSLETTER Vol. 11 No. 5 Published by the AUSA Institute of Land Warfare Mav 1999 Shinseki nominated as chief of staff. Secretary Promoted to general in August 1997, he became the com of Defense William S. Cohen announced April 21 that manderin chief, United States Army, Europe, and 7th Army, President Clinton has nominated Gen. EricK Shinseki to and commander of the Stabilization Force in Bosnia become the Army's chief of staff. Shinseki will succeed Herzegovena. While in Europe, he also commanded soldiers Gen. Dennis J. Reimer who will retire June 21. Reimer from several NATO countries as the commander, Allied served in this position for four years. Land Forces Central Europe. Commenting on the nomination, AUSA President Gen. In 1998, Shinseki was called back to the Pentagon to Gordon R. Sullivan, USA, Ret., said, "Ric Shinseki is an become the Army's28th vice chief of staff. In this position, dynamic, inspirational, compassionate and effective leader he chaired several councils and committees that have an who has proven in combat and in troop and staffpositions impact on the day-to-day operations and futureplans of the that he is the right soldier at the right time to lead America's total Army- active, Army National Guard and United Army into the next millenium. States Army Reserve- as it prepares to enter the 21st century. "AUSA, with its I 00,000 members, urges the Senate to confirm Gen. Shinseki as soon as possible. He's a great They include: the Army Space Council, the Reserve Com American; he's a soldier's soldier." ponent Coordination Council, the Army Reserve Action Plan General OfficerSteering Committee and the Special Born in Lihue on the island of Kauai, Hawaii, in 1942, Access Program Oversight Committee. -
Union Calendar No. 478 105Th Congress, 2D Session – – – – – – – – – – – – House Report 105–837
1 Union Calendar No. 478 105th Congress, 2d Session ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± House Report 105±837 SUMMARY OF ACTIVITIES A REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED FIFTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION DECEMBER 31, 1998.ÐCommitted to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 69±006 WASHINGTON : 1999 COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES One Hundred Fifth Congress JAMES A. LEACH, Iowa, Chairman BILL MCCOLLUM, Florida HENRY B. GONZALEZ, Texas MARGE ROUKEMA, New Jersey JOHN J. LAFALCE, New York DOUG BEREUTER, Nebraska BRUCE F. VENTO, Minnesota RICHARD H. BAKER, Louisiana CHARLES E. SCHUMER, New York RICK LAZIO, New York BARNEY FRANK, Massachusetts SPENCER BACHUS, Alabama PAUL E. KANJORSKI, Pennsylvania MICHAEL CASTLE, Delaware JOSEPH P. KENNEDY II, Massachusetts PETER T. KING, New York FLOYD H. FLAKE, New York 10 TOM CAMPBELL, California MAXINE WATERS, California EDWARD R. ROYCE, California CAROLYN B. MALONEY, New York FRANK D. LUCAS, Oklahoma LUIS V. GUTIERREZ, Illinois JACK METCALF, Washington LUCILLE ROYBAL-ALLARD, California ROBERT W. NEY, Ohio THOMAS M. BARRETT, Wisconsin ROBERT L. EHRLICH, Maryland NYDIA M. VELAÂ ZQUEZ, New York BOB BARR, Georgia MELVIN WATT, North Carolina JON D. FOX, Pennsylvania MAURICE HINCHEY, New York FRANK LOBIONDO, New Jersey 1 GARY ACKERMAN, New York J.C. WATTS, JR., Oklahoma 2 KEN BENTSEN, Texas SUE KELLY, New York JESSE JACKSON, JR., Illinois RON PAUL, Texas CYNTHIA MCKINNEY, Georgia 6 DAVE WELDON, Florida CAROLYN CHEEKS KILPATRICK, Michigan JIM RYUN, Kansas JAMES H. MALONEY, Connecticut MERRILL COOK, Utah DARLENE HOOLEY, Oregon VINCE SNOWBARGER, Kansas JULIA M. -
Washington Update
------ ·-- -- -----, WASHINGTON UPDATE A MONTHLY NEWSLETTER Vol. 10 No. 3 Published by the AUSA Institute of Land Warfare March 1998 Congress looks at "emergency allowance" for Army vulnerable if Congress does not act Bosnia. While the chairman of a key Senate committee swiftly on two emergency requests. The Army, pledges "Bosnia must come from sources other than the which provides the bulk of the U.S. forces in Bosnia, is defense budget," the administration's proposal to pay for particularly vulnerable if Congress does not act swiftlyon continuing operations in the Balkans by a special "emer the two requests for Bosnia operationsand keeps them gency allowance" is being greeted warily on Capitol Hill. out of the defense budget. If that does not happen, theArmy would have to shiftmoney from its operations and mainte Those were the words ofSen. StromThurmond, chairman nance accounts to pay for past and current operations in the of the SenateArmed Services Committee, as the panel took Balkans.Those accounts pay for training. When training has up the Defense Department's $251 billion budget request been curtailed, unit readiness has been affected. recently. Defense officialssaid readiness problems could begin show The price tag for Bosnia in Fiscal Year 1999 is estimated to ingupasearlyasMayand definitelyinJuly. They already be$2 billion. Exact figures will be determined by the size and concede "anecdotal evidence" of parts shortages, cannibal nature of the U.S. commitment. The United States now izing equipment and combat trainingshortfalls . provides 7, 000 soldiers to the Stabilization Force. Defense Secretary William Cohen said, "If we don't getthe At the same time as the "emergency allowance" goes to supplemental for '98 and '99, we would be in trouble-.. -
Congressional Record—House H9561
November 30, 2017 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — HOUSE H9561 Law enforcement officers have stress- My resolution, H.R. 625, I believe, body loved him. We all did, we all do, ful jobs. They are exposed to higher would do just that. we regret his passing, and may he rest levels of violence and death than the f in peace. average American. f One in five officers has PTSD. One in b 1715 NATIONAL ADOPTION MONTH four officers have thought about sui- REMEMBERING GARY LEWIS cide at one point during their career, (Mr. PAULSEN asked and was given (Mr. CARTER of Georgia asked and and the suicide rate for police officers permission to address the House for 1 was given permission to address the is four times higher than the rate for minute and to revise and extend his re- House for 1 minute and to revise and firefighters. marks.) We can do more, Mr. Speaker. That is extend his remarks.) Mr. PAULSEN. Mr. Speaker, Novem- why I am glad the House passed the Mr. CARTER of Georgia. Mr. Speak- ber is National Adoption Month, which Law Enforcement Mental Health and er, I rise today to remember the life of is an opportunity to remember the Wellness Act earlier this week. Mr. Gary Lewis who passed away on more than 400,000 children across the This legislation will provide law en- November 20 at 65 years of age. country who are waiting for a family forcement’s agencies with the re- Mr. Lewis was well known in Jesup, to provide them with a loving home, sources they need to address mental Georgia, for serving his community one they can call their own. -
H. Res. 12 in the House of Representatives, U
H. Res. 12 In the House of Representatives, U. S., January 5 (legislative day, January 4), 1995. Resolved, That the following named Members be, and they are hereby, elected to the following standing committees of the House of Representatives: COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE: E (Kika) de la Garza, Texas; George E. Brown, Jr., California; Charlie Rose, North Carolina; Charles W. Stenholm, Texas; Harold L. Volkmer, Missouri; Tim Johnson, South Dakota; Gary A. Condit, Cali- fornia; Collin C. Peterson, Minnesota; Calvin M. Dooley, Cali- fornia; Eva M. Clayton, North Carolina; David Minge, Min- nesota; Earl F. Hilliard, Alabama; Earl Pomeroy, North Da- kota; Tim Holden, Pennsylvania; Cynthia McKinney, Georgia; Scotty Baesler, Kentucky; Karen L. Thurman, Florida; San- ford Bishop, Georgia; Bennie G. Thompson, Mississippi; Sam Farr, California; Ed Pastor, Arizona; and John Baldacci, Maine. COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS: David R. Obey, Wis- consin; Sidney R. Yates, Illinois; Louis Stokes, Ohio; Tom Bevill, Alabama; John P. Murtha, Pennsylvania; Charles Wil- ★ 1 2 son, Texas; Norman D. Dicks, Washington; Martin Olav Sabo, Minnesota; Julian C. Dixon, California; Vic Fazio, California; W.G. (Bill) Hefner, North Carolina; Steny H. Hoyer, Maryland; Richard J. Durbin, Illinois; Ronald D. Coleman, Texas; Alan B. Mollohan, West Virginia; Jim Chap- man, Texas; Marcy Kaptur, Ohio; David E. Skaggs, Colo- rado; Nancy Pelosi, California; Peter J. Visclosky, Indiana; Thomas M. Foglietta, Pennsylvania; Esteban Edward Torres, California; Nita M. Lowey, New York; and Ray Thornton, Arkansas. COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES: Henry B. Gonzalez, Texas; John J. LaFalce, New York; Bruce F. Vento, Minnesota; Charles E. Schumer, New York; Barney Frank, Massachusetts; Paul E. -
Poem for Maurice Hinchey
Poem for Maurice Hinchey What a marvel was Maurice Hinchey!! Born in NY City on October 27, 1938 from a “working class family” in the Lower West Side He spent most of his life in Saugerties He served in the Navy on a destroyer in the Pacific He married Brooklyn-born Erica Laumer and they had two children, Maurice, Jr. and Josef (named after Erica’s father) Erica encouraged Maurice to attend college and to become active in politics. While Maurice attended New Paltz College where he picked up a B.A. in 1968 and an M.A. in ’70 he worked as a toll collector for the NY Thruway Maurice was the chair of the Saugerties Democratic Committee and in 1972 challenged Woodstock’s Clark Bell who was serving in the State Legislature. Maurice lost, but ran again for the Legislature during the Miracle Year of 1974 after Nixon resigned as president under the threat of impeachment. Maurice was swept into office in the Democratic surge that fall He quickly involved himself in helping the local economy, and in environmental protection. He was legendary for getting gov’t help to assist local economic development, and equally legendary for his historic work protecting and cleaning up the environment. One of his early triumphs in the Legislature was his help in passing the Freshwater Wetlands Law of 1975, with amendments in subsequent years. Hinchey became chair of the Assembly’s Environmental Conservation Committee in ’79, and served as chair for the next 14 years. Although very patriotic, Maurice nevertheless took on the military in 1980 with a report that detailed military dumping at Love Canal, the nation's first major toxic dump site.