

Upcoming Legislation
This update provides a summary of major legislation that may be considered
in the Second Session of the 105th Congress. Among the major bills expected
to be considered by the House in 1998 are he following:
- Higher Education Reauthorization ( H.R. 6) The House is expected to
consider H.R. 6, which reauthorizes Higher Education Act programs, including
federal student financial aid programs. The Education and the Workforce
Subcommittee on Post secondary Education, Training, and Life-long Learning
has completed hearings on the matter. LULAC is actively supporting recommendations
made by Rep. Ruben Hinojosa.
- "Fast-Track" Negotiating Authority. The House may consider
legislation to renew authority for the president to seek congressional
approval of trade agreements on an expedited basis. So-called "fast-track"
authority permits expedited congressional consideration of legislation
to implement trade accords, and bars amendments to any such implementing
legislation. Efforts to renew fast track failed at the end of last session
when a vote was never held on H.R. 2616, Reciprocal Trade Agreement Authorities
Act, which would have granted the President fast track authority for up
to eight years. It is expected that efforts to revive such authority will
be more narrowly tailored and will, once again, be slowed by a dispute
over whether to include labor and environmental standards in trade negotiations.
- Electricity Deregulation (H.R. 655). The House may consider legislation
to deregulate the electric power industry. The measure before the Commerce
Committee would require retail competition in the electricity market by
December 2000, and would permit consumers to by electricity from any provider
offering it for sale. The bill also would direct states to devise and implement
local standards for a competitive electric utility industry, with the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission doing so if the states failed to by the 2000
deadline. It also repeals the Public Utility Holding Company Act, which
requires federal oversight of utility holding companies that operate across
state lines, and institutes a national renewable energy -credit trading
system to encourage the use of renewable energy sources. The Commerce Subcommittee
on Energy and Power had held hearings on the issue. The Senate has reported
out of committee a related bill (S.621) which would only repeal the Public
Utility Holding Company Act.
- Tax Cuts. The House may consider legislation to further reduce taxes.
Speaker Gingrich and other GOP leaders have stated that any budget surplus
achieved should be used to lessen the tax burden. With continued economic
growth, the Congressional Budget Office has suggested that the budget may
be balanced several years ahead of 2002, as planned in the balanced budget
agreement reached between Congress and the White House last spring. It
is unclear, however, what legislation would make it to the Floor if the
robust economy brings a budget surplus because, while some favor tax cuts,
others want the money saved in a "rainy day fund", and still
others want the money to be used for infrastructure and transportation
projects.
- IRS/Tax Code Overhaul. The House may consider legislation to further
overhaul management at the Internal Revenue Service, or to scrap the current
tax code entirely. Bipartisan support is growing to simplify the tax code.
Ways and Means Committee Chairman Archer (R-Texas) has been quoted many
times on his desire "to tear the tax code out by its roots."
Minority Leader Gephardt has also spoken of the need to simplify tax returns
so that the document could fit on a post card. In October, Rep. (R-Okla.)
and Speaker Gingrich (R-Ga.) led a press conference declaring their intention
to replace the tax code entirely by 2001.
- Highway & Transit Programs / ISTEA (H.R. 2400). The House will
consider legislation to re authorize funding for federal highway, mass
transit, highway safety, and other surface transportation programs authorized
under the 1991 Inter modal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA).
The original authorization for those programs expired September 30, and
was temporarily extended through early 1998 just prior to Congress adjourning
for the year. In September, the Transportation Committee completed markup
of legislation (H.R. 2400) that would provide a total of $218 Billion over
six years for highway and transit programs. However, over the five-year
period through FY 2002, that bill would provide $27 Billion more than was
assumed for those programs under the budget agreement.
- Transportation Committee Chairman Bud Shuster hopes to increase the
amounts allocated for transportation in the next budget resolution, using
part of the recently projected budget surplus.
- Union Dues for Political Purposes (H.R. 1625). The House may consider
H.R. 1625, which requires unions to obtain the prior written permission
of union members before they spend any funds on matters not directly related
to collective bargaining (such as political campaigns), and requires unions
to file detailed reports on how union dues are used. The measure has been
reported by the Education and the Workforce Committee.
- Tobacco Settlement. The House may consider legislation to implement
the settlement between state attorneys general and the tobacco industry
announced last June. Under this settlement, the participating tobacco companies
would pay a total of $368.5 Billion to states, lawsuit plaintiffs, and
public health campaigns over a 25-year period. The settlement also includes
provisions that would affect the authority of the Food and Drug Administration,
as well as restrict the ability of litigants to seek punitive damages against
tobacco companies.
About LULAC | Members
| Programs | Issues
| Events | Publications
| Links | Site Map
| Home | Email