(167,001 - 167,020 of 183,067)
Pages
-
-
Title
-
CRS876Spage18
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:45571
-
Text
-
CRS-16 poverty. And room must be made for new households, up to a million ano a half net formations a year over the next 5 years. There is still work to be done in housing and a challenge to devise sound national housing policies.
-
-
Title
-
CRS84508ENRpage19
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:84055
-
Text
-
of the steel. The Steel Tank Institute claims that, since 1969, over 16,000 of these tanks have been installed without a single reported case iof leakage. ll/ Some petroleum industry experts note, however, that such tanks are not protected from corrosion from within. £g/ Another corrosion protection system used in steel tanks involves im- pressed current techniques. Basically, the system uses
-
-
Title
-
CRS84508ENRpage31
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:84055
-
Text
-
protection of steel tanks. Fiberglass storage tanks are built to performance standards from Underwriters Laboratories ggy Personal communication with Frederick Killmar, Killmar Associates, Great Falls, Va., January 5, 1984. 21/ Michigan Department of Natural Resources, Study on the Underground Storage of Gasoline, p. 109-128. §§/ Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors. An Ordinance to Add Chapter IX
-
-
Title
-
CRS84508ENRpage29
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:84055
-
Text
-
Few State laws or regulations are directed toward prevention of leakage and groundwater contamination by underground storage tanks. In several cases, the laws or regulations refer mainly to the need for prevent- ing fire or explosion hazards by the contents within the tanks. At present, however, several States and local governments are moving to address the 3}] 40 C.F.R. 265.190. _2_§_/ 40 C
-
-
Title
-
CRS85571EPWpage09
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:54921
-
Text
-
CRS-4 The Administration is proposing to maintain the funding for Head Start for FY 1986 at the FY 1985 level of $1.1 billion (which was an increase of approxi- mately $80 million over the FY 1984 appropriations). The appropriations language proposed would also freeze funding for Indian and migrant Head Start programs at $76.3 million for FY 1986, at the same level as FY 1985. In order to do this
-
-
Title
-
CRS85571EPWpage11
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:54921
-
Text
-
to assist specific groups, such as abused children and youth in foster care. It is 100 percent federally funded. The FY 1985 appropriations for research and demonstration are $12.0 fmillion. The Administration is requesting $200 million for child welfare services and $3.8 million for child welfare training for FY 1986. The amount requested. for each of these programs is, thus, identical to the FY 1985
-
-
Title
-
CRS85755EPWpage07
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:71972
-
Text
-
O O O O O O O I O O O O O O O O O O -CS0 O 0 0'0 0‘! 0 F0 O O O Q 0 O O I O O O O 0 CR0 0 O O O O I O O O O O O O O O O I O O O O O O O O O O APPENOIx A: ESTIMATED REAL INTEREST RATES (1953-1984) ................. COOOOOOIOOOOOIOOOOOCOOOO;OOOOOOOO>O0.0000.0>OODQ000000OOOOOOOOOQO‘OOlO \J uuunn-b~ Iv+-—r- 18 19 19 19 V19 20 20 I 20 22 n
-
-
Title
-
CRS85755EPWpage43
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:71972
-
Text
-
costs that are about 15 percent lower for civil service retirementthan what would be obtained using the OPM assumptions. Over the 32éyear period19S3 through 1984, real interest rates for U.Si Treasury 10-year securities averaged a little over 2 percent (see Appendix A). 1 \ I -. ,-vwyudi
-
-
Title
-
CRS85755EPWpage25
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:71972
-
Text
-
are assumed to retire in 2014. Afteretax replacement ratios are not shown for specific plans, but rather for all plans using a percentile distribu+ tion. The following assumptions are used to compute net replacement rates: d —-Federal taxes: computed using the standard deduction --State and local taxes 17.2 percent of Federal taxes 6 percent of after-tax income, --work-related expenses 1* w1
-
-
Title
-
CRS86552EPWpage19
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56804
-
Text
-
, 1974. As a result, the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare added the .3§/ 88 Stat. 579. E . _g2/ Humphrey, Hubert. Education Amendments of 1974. Congressional Record, v. 120, May 20, 1974. p. 15273.
-
-
Title
-
CRS86552EPWpage58
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56804
-
Text
-
. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1974. p. 1153-1763. ----- Education for all handicapped children, 1973-74. Hearings, 93d Con- gress, 2d session, on S. 6. Part 4, June 17 and 24, 1974. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. off., 1974. p. 1765-2405. ----- Education for all handicapped children, A75. Hearings, 94th Congress, 1st session, on S. 6. April 8, 9, and 15, 1975. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1975
Pages