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CRS84827EPWpage19
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CRS-17 authorized funding would be sufficient (assuming future increases in teacher salaries) to fund only one fellowship per Congressional district over the life of the program. Selection Processes For scholarship recipients, selection is to be made by State boards named by the "chief State elected officiall" Each State is to establish criteria for selection; the only standard element
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CRS84827EPWpage20
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. _ __ ._ _ _.._?__# .:__l._.._.-,.___ , _ . __l,,,,., . , , , _ CRS-18 In response, proponents of title VII of P.L. 98-558 might argue that the proposal gives proper recognition to the weaknesses of standardized test scores A as a "universal" measure of academic achievement or ability, and further recog- nizes the decentralized educational governance system in the United States
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CRS861021GOVpage31
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, 1986, with the term of office to expire on March 1, 1987; --The President would make his own pay recomendations, based on Committee [sic] findings, in his FY 1988 Budget Message to Congress; and --The regular quadrennial process would resume in 1988, as set forth in the original statute. OUTLOOK FOR FEDERAL EXECUTIVE PAY IN 1987 On December 19, 1985, President Reagan signed into law legislation
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CRS861021GOVpage01
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,1 ii. _ <~ LL 1%. ix/as I \Q$V.f'0.‘t;f,t8é"‘"' /0(3) QOU 86-1021 oov I Congressional Research Service The Library of Congress T Washington, D.C. 20540 FEDERAL EXECUTIVE, LEGISLATIVE AND JUDICIAL COMPENSATION: THE SITUATION AND CHOICES AS THE IOOTH CONGRESS CONVENES James P. McGrath Analyst in American National Government Government Division December 30, 1986 Updated
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CRS861021GOVpage20
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_,_ ._ H ;..;.__.i.-4.. l;..iA.____...____t-4_A-.-,_A_,ii..,~i ,_,4_,4.. h inn CRS-12 that Federal pay levels in general are too high. géf Congress is reluctant to raise its own pay because of this feeling and because of a perceived conflict of interest in Members voting to raise their own pay. On the other hand, Federal compensation commissions, staffed by pay experts from outside the Government
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CRS861021GOVpage35
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, January 6, 1987. p. 505, 509; and Havemann, Judith. Reagan Widens Pay Proposal: Raises Sought for 7,000 Senior Executives. Washington Post, January 8, 1987. pp. Al, A8. 63/ Figures supplied by the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM). According to 0PM the SES increases would be as follows: SES-1 from $63,200 to $64,700; SES-2 from $65,700 to $67,600; SES-3 from $68,200 to $70,500; SES-4 from $70
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CRS861021GOVpage27
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CRS-19 In each of the first four Commissions (fiscal 1969, l973, 1977, l98l), the President reduced the size of the Commission pay increase recommendations for Government officials in sending his recommendations to Congress. In 1969 and 1977, Congress accepted the President's pay recommendations andg they went into effect; in 1973 and 1981, Congress disapproved the President
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CRS861021GOVpage23
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and bonuses rose by 171 percent between 1982 and 1983. Executive Pay: The Top Earners: Who Made the Most-And Are They Worth It? Business Week, May 7, 1984, p. 88. These figures can be even more dramatic when surveyed over a ten-year time span. They show, for instance, that from 1971 to 1981, compensation for the President of Boeing and the President of Swift, Inc., increased by more than 1,000 percent
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CRS861021GOVpage33
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); and the salary of the Vice President would be raised from $100,800 to $175,000 (73.6 percent). (The Appendix shows salary rates as of January 1, 1987, together with the salary increases recommended by the Commission.) When the Commission delivered its report to President Reagan, the President reportedly told the Commission that senior Government officials‘ pay is a problem that needs to be addressed. "
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CRS861021GOVpage05
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..........................................;............... 10 Political Considerations Affecting Federal Officials Pay-Setting..... 10 ‘Problems Inherent in Comparing Federal and Private Pay Standards.t... 12a COMMISSION ON EXECUTIVE, LEGISLATIVE, AND JUDICIAL SALARIES............... 16 WHAT CO ISSION‘FO .....’....00....’C-..C..C............... The APprOaCh and Findings Of the 1985 COmmiSSi0nooooooooooooooooooooo 19 Changes Proposed by the 1985 Commission
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CRS87307EPWpage22
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CRS87307EPWpage13
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§ " daily attendance (ADA) entitlement entitlements « average daily entitlement entitlements. 1 » (dollars in millions) attendance (ADA) p (dollars in ~ millions) 202 to 1002 1007. $386 a 352 to 10021 1002* - , ' $430 combined; 20 to 34.9- 95 15 to 19.9 75 12.7 15 to 19.9 75 14a ' 89 combined. less than 1SZ ' less than 102 "(E/) ‘ Section 3(b) of P.L. 81-874 FY 1987 (P.L. 99-S00
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CRS87307EPWpage10
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.CRS-4 TABLE 1. Administration's Proposed Distribution of Section 3(a) Funds in FY 1988 Percent of section 3(a) students in average daily attendance (ADA) in Percent of Entitlement Q] the school district 352 to 100% 100% 20 to 34.9 s p 95 15 co 19.9 75 10 to 14.9 500 less than l0Z l I (Q/)’ 3/ A school district's section 3 entitlement is derived from a series of calculations: the school
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CRS87307EPWpage19
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.:o.m.>.a mgmg_mz o._o:m can co.umu=uu .mo.>guw zugmmmmz _mco.mwmgm:ou >2 oogmomga mm»ms.umm umumnom M . g A A 17 , VI i fil .n.: V%g go ...gg V g fig M g H .gmm. .om gwasougmm cmzogza msmgmogn .om go .u.oma gog um»; gog m:o.uu.googoa« m:_::_u:oo mc.xms Awmn .wmm.a.:. :o.u:_omog a:.on one m. oomamm .4.a \m g g% go . . M g g .omgoummg on u_:oz :o_m.>oga u:os>mo s:e.:.e ooo.ma may
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CRS84769EPWpage19
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info:fedora/mu:80024
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CRS-13 l TITLE IV-WOMEN'S EDUCATIONAL EQUITY Title IV of the Education Amendments of 1984, the "Women's Educational Equity Amendments of 1984,5 amends and extends the authorizations of appro- priations for the Women's Educational Equity Act of 1978 (WEEA) through FY 1989. In general, the purpose of the WEEA program is to promote educational equity for women in the United
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CRS84521ENRpage46
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the baseload capacity of these companies is mostly fossil- fired, their plants emit S02 and Nox. In 1980, Florida Power reports emitting about 171,209 of sulfur dioxide, about 24 percent of Florida's total utility S02 emissions. Most of this came from three power stations: (l)Crystal River Units 1 and_2 (964.3 MW, 69,375 tons of S02), (2) Anclote Units 1 and 2 (1030 MW, 56,872 tons of S02) and (3
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CRS861012ENRpage30
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info:fedora/mu:76890
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Share of Share of Of Income Farm Tzpe Of Farms Acreage gSales From Farming Very Small (Sales of p less than $10,000) 48,72 l3Z 3.6% ‘ 00% Small (Sales from — $10,000-$39,999) ‘ 23.22 18% 9.62 s 9% Medium (Sales from , , $40,000-$199,999) 23.62 472 39.32 58% Large (Sales of at 0 least $200,000) 0 4.52 222 47.52 912 SOURCE: "Agriculture Overview: U.S° Food/Agriculture in a Volatile World Economy
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