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CRS85890Apage08
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on the following reasoning. ; ' '. . ,under generally-applicable discrimination statutes. . l»f CR3-2' As will be discussed in more detail later, H.R. l4l'and;H.R. 66l include " Congress within the scope of several employment discrimination statutes which are enforced by executive branch agencies and through the judicial system. H.R.,69l extends to both thellegislative
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CRS85890Apage15
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arrest while attending or traveling to and from Congress, I T which is also set forth at art{ L, sec. 6, cll l. I gg/ 421 U.s. 491 (1975). t q_g/.395 U.S. ass (1969). ' , ‘ , ‘ 4 q;§/ See Kaye, "Congressional Papers and judicial Subpoenas," 23 UCLA L. Rev. 57 (1975), and "Congressional Papers, Judicial Subpoenas, and the Constitution,7 24 UCLA L; Rev. 523 (1977). ‘ 1 23/ 421 u
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CRS85890Apage07
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, introduced by Rep. Jacobs on Jan. 3,'l985; H.R. 661, introduced by Rep. Don Edwards on Jan.,24, i985; and H.R. 691,; introduced by Rep. Lynn‘fiartin on Jan. 24, 1983. In addition, a. Res. 137, introduced by Rep. Schroeder .. June 5, L985, establishes an internal mechanism in the House of Representatives'to hear and adjudicate discrimination complaints. Finally,‘H. Con} Res. 139 establish- es
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CRS85890Apage22
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maximum hours for the workweek; I la ofi Labor; 1 2000e-2(a). L‘ C3 \-. 43.. K) C: _ (/3 - (3 U) {D 0 41/€42 U.S;C. sec, 2000e-S. / 29 3.3.0. sec; 153. / 29 U{S.C. sec. LS7. / 29 U.S.C. sec. 158. / U.-S-C.'S8C. ’ :3. 9.3. 515‘. .£§/ 29 U.S.G. sec. L59. ii ‘g1/ 29 U.S.C. sec. 206. 5*... ‘/ 29 U.S.C. sec. 207. I?‘
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CRS86547ENRpage18
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the final one? Other programs, like honey and soybeans, use only loans to support prices. How will USDA limit loans to curtail outlays for these programs-by reducing the loan rate, raising interest charged, or changing eligibility? The dairy program presents special questions. USDA might simply ,reduce the Federal rate of support for manufacturing milk, now at $11.60 per hundred pounds (cwt.). However
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CRS861020ENRSPRpage32
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the biotechnology research guidelines developed by the National Institutes of 28 See, Hart, I. C. and J. A. Bines. The Effect of Injecting or Infusing Low Doses of Bovine Growth Hormone or Milk Yield, Milk Composition and the Quantity of Hormone in the Milk Serum of Cows. Animal Production, v.40, 1985. p. 243-250. 29 Personal Communication. Aug. 18, 1986, Lehmann, Richard,lCenter for Veterinary Medicine, Food
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CRS861020ENRSPRpage24
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CRS~20 The use of bovine growth hormone to increase milk production is an example of biotechnological progress which does not contribute to increased profitability. A dairy farmer with 100 cows would spend $4,000 per year for the hormone drug and $9,000 for additional feed concentrate. At today's support prices, this $13,000 investment would return $17,000 in additional milk receipts
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CRS861020ENRSPRpage10
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CRS-6 - consumption, which includes the milk contained in all dairy products consumed, dropped from 706 pcunds in 1955 to 596 pounds in 1985.5 However, population growth more than offset this per capita decline, pushing total civilian consumption of milk from 114.6 billion pounds in 1955 to 141.2 billion pounds in 1985, an average increase of 0.7 percent per year. A U.S. milk herd totalling more
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CRS861020ENRSPRpage21
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), introduced on September 19, would require USDA to submit a report to Congress only on the impact of BST on milk production and price supports.18 PRACTICAL APPLICATION AND COST What will the availability of BST supplements mean to the individual dairy farmer? will he or she find BST easy to apply? How much will it cost? As of late 1986, researchers had not yet perfected practical application of thee hormone
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CRS861020ENRSPRpage37
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, and were to include in that analysis environmental, economic and social effects, the agency would not be 39 21 ova 2S.31a, format item 9. 40 FDA letter.
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CRS861020ENRSPRpage38
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cRs—34 bound to take a particular action under NEPA. While FDA must uphold both NEPA and the FDCA, NEPA requires only that environmental effects be explored before major Federal action (e.g., drug approval) is taken.41,42 However, NEPA does not prescribe the action to be taken after environmental effects are considered. On the other hand, the FDCA requires that drugs that meet the statutory requirements of safety and effectiveness be approved. FDA has stated that ultimately, drug approval decisions are necessarily based only on scientific considerations having to do with whether a drug is safe and effective.43« There may be a need to reconcile NEPA and FDCA if, for example, BST were found to be safe and effective but caused significant environmental effects. In balancing these two laws, such factors as the significance of the environmental impact, the degree to which the effect posed a risk to public health, and the amount by which environmental effects could be mitigated by requiring prescriptions or warning labels on the drug would influence the action FDA finally takes. Efficacy and Animal Health Issues It appears that among the more substantial issues to be resolved before BST can be approved are the long-term efficacy and safety to the cow. Currently available data were collected from cows treated with BST under optimum research conditions over a relatively short interval of time. Under 41 21 can 25.42. 42 42 use 4332. 43 FDA letter.
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CRS86547ENRpage24
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Block said producers entering 1986-crop programs will be notified at the time of sign-up how programs will be affected by the deficit reduction legislation. A In regard to dairy program provisions, Black said the price support level of $11.69 per hundredweight will remain unchanged for the current fiscal year, but CCC purchase prices for cheese, butter, and nonfat dry milk will be discounted by 4
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CRS861031EPWpage10
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CRS~4 B. Passage of the EITC Fol1owing the recession that occurred in 1974, Congress passed the Tax Reduction Act of 1975. The 1975 Act was an attempt to halt the sliding economy. The Congress refunded $8.1 billion in 1974 individual income taxes,and cut . 1975 Federal income taxes for individuals by another $10 billion. The House Ways and Means Committee report on the Tax Reduction Act of 1975
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CRS861031EPWpage12
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and thus ended when adjusted gross income reached $8,000. c. Extensions of EITC (1975-1977 Laws) % ‘The Revenue Adjustment Act of 1975, P.L. 94-164, extended the EITC from January 1, 1976 to January 1, 1977, and included a provision requiring that the EITC not be counted in calculating program benefits and determining eligibility of recipients of Federal or federally supported assistance programs
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CRS861031EPWpage14
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. Conference Committee. Revenue Act of 1978. Report to Accompany H.R. 13511. Oct. 15, 1978. House Report No. 95-1800, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1978. p. 200. Finance Committee. Revenue Act of 1978. Senate Report No. 95-1263, 95th Senate. Octo 1, 3;] U.S. Congress. Report to Accompany H.R. 13511. ~Cong., 2d Sess. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1978. p. 52.
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CRS86570Epage09
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CRS-6 TABLE 2. Share of Each Country in U.S.—Latin American Trade, 1985 (Percentage of Total) Country U.S. Exports U.S. Imports TOTAL 100.0 100.0 Brazil 0 A 11.5 17.5 Mexico 49.1 44.0 Venezuela 11.7‘ 15.0 Others 27.7 23.5 Source: .U.S. Department of Commerce. TradeNet Data Retrieval System. Brazil and Venezuela are among the leading U.S. trade partners in Latin America. But Mexico dominates
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CRS86570Epage08
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Debt Crisis, 1982-84. by Patricia Wertman, September 17, 1984. p.16. 5/ CR8 calculations based (H1 data contained :h1 International Monetary Fund. Direction of Trade Statistics. Yearbook. 1985. Washington. Q! Between the end of 1982 and the end of 1984, real GNP in the United States grew an annual average of 5.3 percent. During the same period, real GNP in the other OECD countries grew by EH1 annual
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