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Table of Contents
TODAY'S HILL ACTION
BENJAMIN APPROVED FOR SURGEON GENERAL POST
SENATE MOVES TO AVOID SHUTDOWN
NFL COMMISH GRILLED BY HOUSE
Congressional
Climate Bill Tracking 
Keyhole Image H.R.3607 - FAA FY10 Extension Act
Keyhole Image S. 1451 - FAA Reauthorization Bill
Keyhole Image H.R. 2454 - American Clean Energy & Security Act
Keyhole Image S.1 - Stimulus Bill
Keyhole ImageH.R. 3200 - America's Affordable Health Choices Act
Keyhole Image S.560 - Employee Free Choice Act
Keyhole Image H.R.3288 - Department of Transportation Appropriations
Keyhole Image H.R.3126 - Consumer Financial Protection
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Greetings!
 
Please enjoy today's issue of the Congressional Climate newsletter, brought to you by Keys to the Capitol!
Today's Hill Action: 
 
THE SENATE:
 
 
The Senate is in session but has no committee hearings scheduled.

 
 
SENATE COMMITTEES:
 
 

 

THE HOUSE:
 
 
The House is in session
 

HOUSE COMMITTEES:
 
House Financial Services (9:30 a.m.): Full Committee. Overdraft Protection Act. Public witnesses.
 
House Energy and Commerce (9:30 a.m.): Energy and the Environment Subc. Markup of H.R. 515 - The Radioactive Import Deterrence Act.
Senate Approves Regina Benjamin for Surgeon General:
  
Regina Benjamin Surgeon General
 
Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) -- The Senate confirmed Regina Benjamin to be U.S. surgeon general, a vote that had been delayed because of a partisan dispute over President Barack Obama's push to overhaul the nation's health-care system.
 
Obama nominated Benjamin for the job in July. Her confirmation was blocked by Senate Republicans after the Obama administration barred insurance companies participating in the government's Medicare program from making their case to seniors that his proposed health-care overhaul could mean benefit cuts.
 
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, decried what he called the administration's "gag order," and said he'd block nominees for jobs that are part of the Department of Health and Human Services until it relented.
 
The White House gave in, which allowed Benjamin's nomination to win confirmation late yesterday on a voice vote.
 
Benjamin, 53, is a family physician who founded a clinic that serves the rural poor along Alabama's Gulf Coast. She was the first woman and first black to serve as president of Alabama's medical association.
 
She also was the first black woman elected to serve on the board of trustees of the American Medical Association. Last year, she received a so-called genius grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and was named by U.S. News and World Report magazine as among America's best leaders.
 
When Obama announced her nomination, Benjamin called the surgeon general job "a physician's dream." She said she was dedicated to preventative medicine, citing the deaths of family members from diabetes, lung cancer and HIV-related illnesses.
 
"My family's not here with me today because of preventable diseases," she said as she stood by Obama's side at the White House. While "I cannot change my family's past," she said, "I can be a voice in the movement to improve our nation's health care, and our nation's health, for the future."
 
The post was created in 1870 to provide a supervising surgeon for the U.S. hospital system. The job evolved, with the surgeon general now serving as a leading educator about public- health issues.


KTC
Senate Moves to Avoid Government Shutdown: 
Senate Logo
 
The Senate has cleared a stopgap spending measure to avoid shutting down most federal agencies at midnight Saturday.
 
 
The measure gives Congress until Dec. 18 to finish seven incomplete spending measures that were supposed to be wrapped up by Sept. 30.
 
The bill cleared for President Barack Obama's signature by a 72-28 vote. The House had passed it hours earlier. The legislation, among other things, extends highway programs and federal loan guarantees for larger mortgages.
 
The anti-shutdown measure was attached to a spending bill for the Interior Department and environmental programs. Lawmakers are pumping billion of dollars into clean and safe-drinking water projects.
 
The House Thursday approved a stopgap spending measure to avoid a shutdown for 11 Cabinet-level departments whose budgets won't be enacted by a midnight Saturday deadline.
 
The measure would give Congress until Dec. 18 to finish seven incomplete spending measures that were supposed to be wrapped up by Sept. 30. The bill passed by a 247-178 vote and now goes to the Senate, which must pass it this week to avoid a partial shutdown.
 
The legislation also extends highway programs and federal loan guarantees for larger mortgages. The Senate took up the bill immediately and a vote was expected by late afternoon.
 
The anti-shutdown measure was attached to a remarkably generous $32.2 billion spending bill for the Interior Department and environmental programs, one that pumps billion of dollars into clean and safe drinking water projects.
 
Several of the remaining bills, including a $626 billion measure funding the Pentagon, now appear likely to be bundled together into an omnibus measure that lawmakers had hoped to avoid.
 
The underlying bill rewards Interior and the EPA and some smaller agencies with increases of $4.7 billion over 2009 levels, an increase of 17 percent. The biggest increases go to EPA grants to state and local governments for sewage treatment projects, wastewater treatment and clean drinking water projects.
 
There's $5 billion in the measure for such clean water projects, including 333 so-called earmarked by lawmakers in both parties, such as $500,000 for Fremont, Ohio, to deal with sewer overflows during heavy rains and $400,000 for Washburn, N.D., for improvements to its drinking water treatment plant.
 
The generosity raised hackles with Republicans, who said the increases are simply unaffordable - and unsustainable - given the government's dismal deficit picture.
 
"The 17 percent increase in this agreement is irresponsible, especially in light of the fact that Congress must soon consider legislation to increase our national debt," said Rep. Jerry Lewis of California, top Republican on the House Appropriations Committee. "It is no wonder that Americans across the country are losing confidence in this Congress."
 
But Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., the chief author of the bill in the House, said that former President George W. Bush had squeezed interior and environmental accounts in his eight years in office. Bush routinely cut back grants to state and local governments that are extremely popular with lawmakers, forcing them to rummage through other accounts to restore the cuts.
 
"The programs funded through this bill have been chronically underfunded," Dicks said. "This bill invests taxpayers' dollars in our natural resources, and for this investment, all Americans will see great returns."
 
There's also $475 million to restore the Great Lakes, a sevenfold increase requested by President Barack Obama, as well as lesser amounts to improve water quality in the Chesapeake Bay, Puget Sound, San Francisco Bay, and the Long Island Sound.
 
But at the same time, Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., used his clout to muscle through a provisions to effectively exempt 13 ships that haul iron ore, coal and other freight on the Great Lakes from a proposed federal rule meant to reduce air pollution.
 
 
And Democrats yielded to large agriculture interests by exempting all farms from a proposed EPA greenhouse gas reporting requirement. All but a handful of farmers were ready to be exempted, but an effort to require the very largest livestock operations to report emissions such as methane and carbon dioxide fell apart after a large vote early this week to exempt all operations.
 
 
The bill also establishes a $474 million reserve fund for emergency wildfire suppression, gives the National Park Service a 9 percent increase and provides a 10 percent increase for the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
 
 
The measure is a favorite of lawmakers, in large measure because it contains a raft of so-called earmarks, those back-home goodies they treasure so much. Besides the clean water projects, there's money for land acquisition for parks and wildlife refuges, visitor centers at national parks, and repair of landmarks.
 
 
Overall, there are 526 earmarks totaling $341 million in the bill, according to a preliminary analysis by Taxpayers for Common Sense, a Washington-based watchdog group.
 
 
The small, but heavily earmarked Save America's Treasures program is designed to preserve "irreplaceable" U.S. cultural and heritage resources such as Thomas Edison's lab notes and the bus in which Rosa Parks launched the Birmingham bus boycott. Lawmakers, however, often direct the money to refurbish old small-town movie houses and county courthouses.
 
 
For instance, the measure contains $500,000 requested by Kansas GOP Sens. Sam Brownback and Pat Roberts to help restore the Colonial Fox Theatre in Pittsburg, Kan. A half-dozen other theaters would receive funds as well.
 
 
The measure also includes an unusual provision authored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., aimed at prodding the National Park Service to extend the permit for an oyster farm in the Point Reyes National Seashore. Feinstein was siding with oyster farmer Kevin Lunny in a battle with the agency and local environmentalists who claimed that Lunny's oyster farm was harming seals and doing other damage to the pristine Drakes Estero.

KTC
NFL Commissioner Goodell Grilled By House Judiciary Committee: 
NFL
 
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell would not acknowledge a connection between head injuries on the football field and later brain diseases while defending the league's policies on concussions before Congress.
 
Under sometimes-contentious questioning from lawmakers - and suggestions about reconsidering the league's lucrative antitrust exemption - Goodell sat at a witness table Wednesday alongside NFL Players Association head DeMaurice Smith.
 
Both men agreed to turn over players' medical records to the House Judiciary Committee.
Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., asked Goodell whether he thinks there's an injury-disease link. Goodell responded that the NFL isn't waiting for that debate to play out and is taking steps to make the game safer.
 
"I just asked you a simple question. What is the answer?" Conyers persisted.
 
Goodell replied by saying a medical expert could give a better answer than he could.
 
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Until tomorrow,
 

Keys To The Capitol