Showing posts with label Electricity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Electricity. Show all posts

Saturday, July 13, 2024

Electricity, Brain Injuries, Disaster Loans

Golden presses SBA over issues with disaster relief access
Source: U.S. Representative Jared Golden (D-MN, 2nd)
July 12, 2024
“It is the responsibility of the SBA to provide these loans in a timely, efficient, and predictable manner. Nearly six months after the disaster, these businesses are mired in an inefficient, broken system and may ultimately go out of business without the necessary resources to rebuild from the storms,” Golden wrote in a letter to Isabel Guzman, administrator of the SBA. “ … I ask you and your staff to investigate how the SBA operates these programs and ensure the issues are resolved.”
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Gillibrand Announces Legislation To Address Epidemic Of Traumatic Brain Injuries In Service Members And Veterans
Source: Senator Kirsten E. Gillibrand (D-NY)
July 12, 2024
Service members who regularly fire heavy weapons are at increased risk of brain injury as a result of repeated exposure to explosions or blasts from their own weapons and explosives – otherwise known as blast overpressure. These brain injuries can cause depression, anxiety, cognitive problems, hallucinations, panic attacks, violent outbursts, suicidal tendencies, psychiatric disorders, dementia, and a variety of other serious health problems. At least a dozen Navy SEALs who have died by suicide over the past decade were later found to have suffered blast injuries, and many more service members have complained of health issues after blast exposure. Despite this, the Pentagon has struggled to properly investigate the impact of blast overpressure, effectively track the prevalence of blast overpressure-related injuries, or offer appropriate care to service members and veterans. Gillibrand is calling for more research and better treatment for those affected.
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Congresswoman Sylvia Garcia Demands Accountability from CenterPoint Energy for Power Outages Endangering Community Safety
Source: U.S. Representative Sylvia Garcia (D-TX, 29th)
July 10, 2024
“With scorching temperatures in the area, CenterPoint’s inability to restore power more quickly is creating a public health crisis forcing people to recover from a Hurricane while they survive extreme heat,” said Congresswoman Sylvia Garcia. “As a resident of Houston and CenterPoint customer, I am tired of CenterPoint’s excuses. Houstonians demand answers and want accountability. Our constituents must be assured that this never happens again.”
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I'll tell you what, Sylvia, why don't you reach into your pocket and hire and train a bunch of electricians for the job, and while you are at it, get your chainsaw out and see if you can remove all those trees laying across the electrical lines that the hurricane blew down so we can get them back up. Let me know how fast you can make that happen. Seriously, you sound like a spoiled brat.

Friday, April 17, 2020

830 Groups Urge Congress to Halt Broadband, Electricity and Water Shutoffs in Next COVID-19 Relief Bill

Washington, D.C. - April 17, 2020 - (The Ponder News) -- On Monday, 830 utility-justice, environmental, faith, digital-rights and civil-rights groups sent a letter to Congress calling for the next congressional COVID-19 relief package to include a moratorium on broadband, electricity and water shutoffs.

The letter also calls for stimulus funds to address the systemic issues that lead to shutoffs. These issues include racial and economic inequities that can be addressed with improved affordable broadband programs including Lifeline; distributed solar energy; and percentage-of-income water-affordability initiatives.

The coronavirus crisis has triggered unemployment to levels that are unprecedented in U.S. history, and this has disproportionately harmed low-income households and communities of color. These households are facing disconnections and unaffordable rates for utility services that are first lines of defense during this national health emergency.

Congress failed to include any utility-service protections in earlier coronavirus-relief packages despite vast public support for such measures. Today’s letter calls for a nationwide moratorium on all utility disconnections. The letter also advocates for reconnections for lost services and forgiveness of late fees and bill payments for economically distressed people. The letter, led by the Center for Biological Diversity, Food & Water Action, Free Press Action and Partnerships for Southern Equity, calls on Congress to extend these protections for six months after the emergency ends, allowing people to recover economically without the burden of debt.

“Unfortunately, millions of families each year are cut off from their utility services, and the coronavirus emergency exacerbates and highlights the urgency of these chronic issues,” the letter reads. “These utility services must be retained to ensure basic family survival and to fight the health pandemic at ground zero.”

“Right now, an affordable broadband connection can mean the difference between being employed or unemployed, healthy or sick, connected with the outside world or trapped in isolation,” said Dana Floberg, policy manager at Free Press Action. “As the pandemic forces people out of work, millions more people, especially low-income families and communities of color, will find themselves unable to pay for broadband. No one should lose access to lifesaving and necessary communications tools during this crisis. Congress must act swiftly. We must end the shutoffs that leave vulnerable families digitally stranded and fund the emergency broadband-connectivity programs to get and keep impacted communities online.”

“It’s unconscionable that Senate Republicans chose to protect corporate America over families in the last rescue package,” said Jean Su, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s energy justice program. “Families are facing impossible choices between paying for food or electricity, water or health care. Congress should ensure that all utilities are kept on and should invest in long-term solutions like community solar that aren’t dependent on dirty corporate-utility power that can be cut off in a crisis.”

“Our nation is in crisis and we are once again woefully underprepared to address the systemic injustices exacerbated by this pandemic head on,” said Chandra Farley, just energy director at the Partnership for Southern Equity. “Low-income households, particularly Black and Latino households that already spend a larger portion of their income on home-energy costs, need a national moratorium on utility shutoffs now. As bills continue to rise due to utility-rate hikes and expensive, dirty-energy infrastructure, Congress should invest in the economic engine of energy efficiency and pollution-free, clean energy that we know can lower utility bills and improve the overall health of historically marginalized communities.”

“There is absolutely no excuse left for Congress to exclude basic human needs from the next coronavirus stimulus package, or in general,” said Rianna Eckel, senior national water organizer at Food & Water Action. “People are facing the reality of living through a summer without running water right now. We need national action to protect every single person in this country from inhumane utility shutoffs, nothing less.”

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

U.S. Called to Bring China to International Court over COVID-19 (AND MORE!)

Council of Medical Specialty Societies (CMSS) Statement on Personal Protective Equipment
Source: American Psychiatric Association
April 2, 2020
CMSS and its member societies urge federal, state and local authorities to ensure an adequate supply and distribution of PPE for every frontline healthcare professional in the United States. Physicians and other healthcare professionals can and should expect their institutions to provide appropriate means to limit occupational exposure. Physicians and other healthcare professionals should be allowed to bring their own PPE to protect themselves, colleagues, and patients when these items are in short supply at their institutions. CMSS supports the Joint Commission statement allowing the use of private PPE, but this option does not obviate an institution’s responsibility to provide adequate PPE to all healthcare personnel.
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Pelosi’s coronavirus response investigation is absurd
Source: Americans for Limited Government
April 2, 2020
Nancy Pelosi’s decision to investigate the coronavirus response in the midst of the battle to save American lives is absurd and blatantly un-American. It is okay to question actions, but to open an official investigation that will drain resources from those who are working 24/7 trying to save American lives, and re-open our country as soon as possible is perhaps the most blatantly dangerous action I have ever witnessed by any elected official.
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Access Now joins 100+ organisations in telling governments: don’t use the coronavirus pandemic as cover for expanding digital surveillance
Source: Access Now
April 2, 2020
“Governments risk compounding the harms of this outbreak by running roughshod over our privacy and dignity, and ignoring protections that arose in direct response to overreach during past global crises. By selling tools of surveillance as public health solutions, authorities and all-too-willing companies could rewrite the rules of the digital ecosystem in corona-colored ink – which we fear is permanent,” said Peter Micek, General Counsel at Access Now.
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Congressman Marc Veasey (TX-33) Joins Entire Texas Democratic Delegation in Urging Governor Abbott and Secretary of State Hughs to Implement Statewide No-Excuse Vote-by-Mail Program
Source: U.S. Representative Marc Veasey (D-TX, 33rd)
April 3, 2020
Congressman Marc Veasey (TX-33) joined the entire Texas Democratic delegation urging Governor Greg Abbott and Secretary of State Ruth Hughs to implement a no-excuse vote-by-mail program for all elections in the state of Texas until the end of this year. The letter also calls for preserving in-person voting opportunities for those who need them, as long as in-person voting sites are structured in a way that will allow them to respond to any public health concerns. In the middle of this public health crisis, it is more important than ever that important pillars of our democracy are strengthened and that everyone in the state of Texas is able to exercise their right to vote.
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VELA ISSUES STATEMENT ON FIRING OF USS THEODORE ROOSEVELT COMMANDING OFFICER IN THE MIDST OF GLOBAL CRISIS
Source: U.S. Representative Filemon Vela (D-TX, 34th)
April 3, 2020
The rash and emotional decision by the Acting Secretary of the Navy to fire the Commanding Officer of the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt is deeply troubling in this time of global crisis. The act is truly unprecedented. Normally commanding officers are relieved by their immediate superiors instead this one was fired by the Pentagon,” said Congressman Vela. The firing appears to be politically motivated as the result of a letter released to the media painting the picture of a dire situation that was dismissed by the chain of command. A situation that none of us can fully appreciate, because the situation on the ground is often far worse than what we hear in letters and phone calls.
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Statement from Women’s Refugee Commission Executive Director Sarah Costa on the COVID-19 Pandemic
Source: Women’s Refugee Commission
April 3, 2020
Sixty percent of the more 70 million people currently displaced by conflict or crisis are women and girls. Displaced women and girls face unique challenges and risks – including increased risks of gender-based violence (GBV), limited access to critical health care services, and significant barriers to economic stability. The COVID-19 pandemic is sure to exacerbate these risks in alarming ways. Women and girls also are often the primary caregivers, with 70 percent of the global health and social service workforce made up of women, further increasing their risk of exposure.
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VAN HOLLEN, BLUMENTHAL LEAD CALL FOR INVESTIGATION INTO NAVY’S COVID-19 OUTBREAK & DECISION TO RELIEVE CAPT. CROZIER OF COMMAND
Source: Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-MD)
April 3, 2020
We are particularly alarmed by the stark reversal from the Navy regarding CAPT Crozier’s leadership during this crisis. One day before CAPT Crozier was relieved of command, the Acting Secretary of the Navy stated in reference to the Captain’s 30 March request for assistance that “the fact that he wrote the letter to his chain of command to express his concerns would absolutely not result in any kind of retaliation.” It is also difficult to understand how CAPT Crozier’s decision to copy “20 or 30 people” on an email to his chain of command necessarily constitutes a breach warranting relief of command. This reversal sends a mixed message to sailors aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt and given the remarkable show of support for CAPT Crozier by members of his crew, we are additionally worried about the impact of this decision on morale and readiness.
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VAN HOLLEN, MARKEY CALL FOR PRESERVING FIRST RESPONDERS’ ACCESS TO EMERGENCY SPECTRUM IN NEXT CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC RELIEF PACKAGE
Source: Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-MD)
April 3, 2020
The Don’t Break Up the T-Band Act repeals a provision of the 2012 Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act, which directed the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to auction off this band of spectrum by 2021. Police and fire fighters in highly-populated metropolitan areas in Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere use critical T-Band spectrum for emergency public safety communication. Agencies across the country have invested millions of local, state, and federal dollars in the T-Band networks, which offer the reliable coverage and regional interoperability that first responders require for mission critical voice communications.
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ACLU DEMANDS THAT ICE SUSPEND CIVIL ENFORCEMENT, RELEASE DETAINEES DURING COVID-19 PANDEMIC
Source: American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
April 3, 2020
The American Civil Liberties Union sent a letter today to the Department of Homeland Security demanding that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) temporarily suspend civil immigration enforcement and release those in civil detention for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic. ACLU state affiliates — including in Southern and Northern California, Louisiana, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Washington state, and Texas — are urging ICE field offices, private prison operators, and local elected officials around the country to act to limit spread of the virus and save lives.
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Perspective: Getting Through This Together
Source: American Medical Association
April 3, 2020
Since this pandemic began, the AHA has been sounding the alarm for policymakers and government leaders to make sure our field gets the tools and resources we need to win this war. We’ve told them — with your help — that hospitals, health systems and providers need more personal protective equipment, more ventilators and more beds and backup personnel to handle the surge in patients. And, we’ve told them that you need to be at the front of the line when it comes to financial support to keep our doors open because you are on the front lines, providing essential public services when and where they’re needed most.
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CPS Energy officials detail utility’s response to COVID-19 in Facebook Live event
Source: American Public Power Association
April 3, 2020
During the event, Gold-Williams noted that in the wake of the pandemic, CPS Energy has suspended customer disconnects indefinitely. “That’s not unusual,” she noted. “We typically suspend disconnects over the hottest part of the summer and around the Christmas holidays,” so CPS Energy already had a process and protocol in place. (Several other public power utilities have also suspended disconnects with COVID-19).
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COVID-19 costs American workers at least 10 million jobs
Source: Americans for Limited Government
April 3, 2020
“Today’s Bureau of Labor Statistics unemployment rate dramatically understates the actual state of the workforce. These reports are based upon mid-month surveys conducted on behalf of BLS, which do not reflect the full results of the last two new unemployment claims filed with state governments. The 1.35 million person increase in the number of unemployed is at least 8.5 million short of the actual number of people thrown out of work by the government’s response to the COVID-19 as demonstrated by the weekly unemployment claims reports released yesterday. This means that the actual COVID caused unemployment rate is likely between 9 and 10 percent and rising every day.
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Head Start, Child Care, Domestic Violence Programs to Receive Stimulus Funds
Source: Administration for Children and Families
April 3, 2020
“President Trump has secured more than $6 billion in funding to help meet the needs of America’s most vulnerable during this time of crisis, from youth in foster care to families enrolled in Head Start,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar. “As part of the President’s all-of-America approach to combating the coronavirus, ACF is providing extra support for community services, such as child care, housing, and nutrition, that Americans may rely on even more in this time of crisis.”
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McConnell: “Outstanding Nominations That Will Strengthen Our Independent Judiciary for Decades”
Source: Senator Mitch McConnell (R- KY)
April 3, 2020
“President Trump has announced two more outstanding nominations that will strengthen our independent judiciary for decades to come.”
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Barragán Urges Federally-Owned Personal Protective Equipment Go To Doctors and Nurses Ahead of ICE Agents
Source: U.S. Representative Nanette Barragan (D-CA, 44th)
April 3, 2020
In The Variety of Cardiovascular Presentations of COVID-19, the team of 18 New York City physicians note COVID-19 can involve the cardiovascular system in a variety of ways, and there are evolving considerations for treatment across the spectrum of patients with preexisting cardiovascular diseases. The researchers also detail four case studies of patients to illustrate the multiple cardiovascular presentations of COVID-19 infection.
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New York City physicians note multiple cardiovascular presentations of COVID-19, impact of pre-existing CVD
Source: American Heart Association
April 4, 2020
In The Variety of Cardiovascular Presentations of COVID-19, the team of 18 New York City physicians note COVID-19 can involve the cardiovascular system in a variety of ways, and there are evolving considerations for treatment across the spectrum of patients with preexisting cardiovascular diseases. The researchers also detail four case studies of patients to illustrate the multiple cardiovascular presentations of COVID-19 infection.
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U.S. SENATOR TAMMY BALDWIN INTRODUCES LEGISLATION TO PROTECT FRONTLINE WORKERS AGAINST COVID-19
Source: Senator Tammy Baldwin (D - WI)
April 6, 2020
Senator Baldwin’s COVID–19 Workers First Protection Act (S.3584) directs the Department of Labor (DOL) to issue an emergency temporary standard (ETS) that requires certain employers to develop and implement a comprehensive infectious disease exposure control plan to protect health care workers and other employees at elevated risk from exposure to COVID-19, such as first responders, firefighters and emergency medical technicians.
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Statement from Rep. Andy Barr Calling for Expansion of Paycheck Protection Program
Source: U.S. Representative Andy Barr (R-KY, 6th)
April 7, 2020
“The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), enacted as part of the CARES Act, has generated more than $70 billion in forgivable loans to American small businesses in just a few days. Despite this massive and rapid investment in small businesses, and because of growing demand for the program, additional funding and enhancements are required to help small employers keep their workers on the payroll through the duration of the pandemic-related shutdown of the U.S. economy. That is why I am joining House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in supporting Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s impending request to Congress for increased funding to the PPP. No eligible small business or employee should be left behind simply due to an arbitrary shortage of appropriations.
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Murkowski, Barrasso: States Need Flexibility in Using Coronavirus Relief Fund
Source: Senator John Barrasso (R-WY)
April 8, 2020
In their letter, the senators urge Treasury Secretary Mnuchin to publish guidance that cuts red tape and gives states and local governments flexibility to use these funds to address the needs and challenges their communities are facing.
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Rep. Jim Banks Calls on United States to Bring Case Against China to International Court of Justice

Source: U.S. Representative Jim Banks (R-IN, 3rd)
April 8, 2020
Rep. Banks says, “If China’s leaders hadn’t become embarrassed by the outbreak and tried to cover up its spread, the world may have had a better chance to prepare for this or even contain it in Wuhan or China. Instead, we have a pandemic. China shoulders most of that blame. Rather than succumb to the propaganda and spin of Chinese officials, the world must hold them accountable for mishandling this outbreak. If the United Nations cannot even do that, it has completely lost its purpose.”
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Saturday, October 7, 2017

EEI CONTINUES TO COORDINATE WITH FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND INDUSTRY PARTNERS TO SUPPORT POWER RESTORATION EFFORTS IN PUERTO RICO, AS NEW STORM DEVELOPS IN GULF

Source: Edison Electric Institute

Washington, D.C. - October 7, 2017 (The Ponder News) -- Edison Electric Institute (EEI) Executive Director of Security and Preparedness Scott Aaronson released the following statement on EEI’s efforts to coordinate with the federal government and industry partners to support power restoration and recovery efforts in Puerto Rico.

“The primary focus in Puerto Rico has been on the distribution of commodities such as food, water, and fuel for temporary power at critical facilities, as well as improving security, removing debris, and clearing roads. As these operations bring stability to Puerto Rico, efforts are shifting to long-term recovery and restoration of critical infrastructure, including the energy grid.

“The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been tasked with leading power restoration efforts on the island and will be working directly with the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority on this mission.

“Along with our colleagues at the American Public Power Association and the Electricity Subsector Coordinating Council, EEI will continue to monitor the progress of this restoration mission and will work closely with all industry mutual assistance networks to ensure that any additional worker and resource needs are addressed quickly. EEI member companies and the entire electric power industry stand ready to support the long-term recovery efforts in Puerto Rico.

“EEI also is tracking a new storm in the southern Gulf of Mexico that could threaten the Gulf Coast this weekend. The electric power sector remains in close coordination during this already historic hurricane season, and CEOs from electric companies in the new storm’s path already have convened to prepare the industry and our customers for the possibility of another significant weather event.”

Monday, October 2, 2017

McKinley Praises Move to Protect Reliability, Resiliency of Electric Grid

Washington, D.C. - October 2, 2017 - (The Ponder News) -- Congressman David B. McKinley, P.E. (R-WV) issued the following statement on the Department of Energy’s proposal to protect the reliability and resilience of the electric grid:

“The proposal released today is a clear recognition that reliability, resiliency, and fuel diversity are vital to our economic and national security. Coal and other baseload energy sources have attributes that are essential to the reliable delivery of electricity, and we must ensure that they remain part of our energy mix.

“From the Polar Vortex to Hurricane Harvey we’ve seen how weather and other external factors can stress our energy supply and threaten the grid. The federal government must take steps to reward energy sources that can guarantee they will be there in times of need.

“Today Secretary Perry took a bold step to protect the reliability and resiliency of our electricity infrastructure. Regulatory overreach and market challenges have led to hundreds of coal plants shutting down in the past few years. This proposal is an important move to protect existing plants and acknowledge the valuable role they play for our economy and our national security.”

The Department of Energy (DOE) requested the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to develop a rule that will address threats to our nation’s electrical grid reliability.

Namely, the proposed rule allows for the recovery of costs of fuel-secure (such as coal, nuclear, and hydropower) generation units frequently relied upon to make our grid reliable and resilient. Such resources provide:

  • Reliable capacity;
  • Resilient generation;
  • Frequency and voltage support; and
  • On-site fuel inventory.

  • Lipinski Helps Introduce Bill to Protect Electric Grid from Cyberattacks

    Washington, D.C. - October 2, 2017 - (The Ponder News) -- Congressman Dan Lipinski (IL-3) has helped introduce the Securing the Electric Grid to Protect Military Readiness Act of 2017, which requires the Department of Defense to put together a comprehensive report on significant cybersecurity risks to the national electric grid and the potential consequences for military readiness if the grid is attacked.  This legislation will improve America’s defenses and make the power grid we all rely on more secure.

    “This bill will help protect our electric grid from attacks by America’s enemies who are trying to take down our defenses,” Rep. Lipinski said.  “It will also help us harden our entire electric grid against cyberattacks, protecting Americans and American businesses from attempts by online adversaries to disrupt our lives.”

    The Securing the Electric Grid to Protect Military Readiness Act of 2017, which has a companion bill that was recently introduced in the Senate, requires the Secretaries of Defense, Energy, and Homeland Security, as well as the Director of National Intelligence, to issue a report to Congress identifying significant cybersecurity risks to critical defense infrastructure, assessing the potential effects of such risks on the readiness of America's Armed Forces, evaluating the strategic benefits and challenges of isolating military infrastructure from the electric grid, and recommending a path forward to address these security risks.

    Wednesday, June 21, 2017

    Lawsuit, Heroin, Mines, Electricity, Broadband, ICE, Small Business, Drones, Afghanistan, DACA

    Congresswoman Barbara Lee, Members of Congress File Largest Congressional Lawsuit in History Against President Trump
    Barbara Lee (D-CA 13th)
    June 20, 2017

    In the week since the lawsuit was filed, public reporting has revealed that President Trump has received additional foreign benefits – including new trademarks in China – and is brokering business deals in Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf while regional tensions escalate.
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    Leaders of Bipartisan Heroin Task Force React to Study Showing Increase in Emergency Room Visits, Inpatient Stays for Opioid-Related Issues
    Ann Kuster (D-NH, 2nd)
    June 20, 2017

    “This study is alarming but not surprising,” said Congresswoman Kuster. “The opioid crisis is putting severe strain on our healthcare system and is impacting communities throughout New Hampshire and across the country. This study underscores the need to strengthen prevention, treatment, and recovery services and strategies for those who are struggling with substance misuse. This crisis requires a comprehensive approach and I’m committed to working across the aisle to improve access to treatment services.”
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    Congressman LaHood Introduces Legislation to Increase Opportunity to Restore Abandoned Mines
    Darin Lahood (R-IL, 18th)
    June 21, 2017

    “While mining is an important part of Illinois’ economy, abandoned mines continue to present safety dangers and missed opportunities for new development. That is why I have introduced this bill, which would protect third-party groups from frivolous lawsuits when they attempt to clean up or re-purpose these abandoned mines. No group should be punished for wanting to help out their local community in this way,” stated LaHood. “I look forward to seeing this bill move forward with bipartisan support.”
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    LaMalfa’s Electricity Reliability and Forest Protection Act Passes House
    Doug LaMalfa (R-CA, 1st)
    June 21, 2017

    The bipartisan legislation provides streamlined processes for the removal of hazardous trees or other vegetative overgrowth within or adjacent to electricity infrastructure – such as power lines – on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and U.S. Forest Service lands, reducing the risk of forest fires and electrical grid blackouts. The bill passed the House by a margin of 300-118.
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    At E&C Hearing, Latta Discusses Increasing Broadband Access In Rural America
    Robert E. Latta (R OH, 5th)
    June 21, 201
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    During his questioning, Latta said, “Broadband support programs aim to increase broadband coverage in rural America where agricultural production generate significant value to the national economy and are an essential source of revenue and jobs in rural communities. Today, modern high precision farming operations require access to high-speed broadband to support advanced operations and technologies that significantly increase crop yields, reduce costs, and improve the environment. A program that only seeks to measure broadband coverage based on population centers, households, or road miles will overlook coverage gaps in agricultural communities.
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    Congresswoman Lawrence Sends Letter to DHS on ICE Raids in Michigan
    Brenda Lawrence (D-MI, 14th)
    June 16, 2017

    I have sent this letter in order to receive clarity on the rationale and methods used for targeting individuals with final orders especially if some of these orders appear to be decades old and do not reflect the current conditions in the countries of origin.
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    HOUSE COMMITTEE PASSES LAWSON BILL TO HELP SPUR INNOVATION IN SMALL BUSINESS
    Al Lawson (D-FL, 5th)
    June 15, 2017

    His bill would create a pilot program under the Small Business Administration’s Small Business Innovation Research Program (SBIR). This pilot program will provide additional funding for Phase II of the SBIR program which helps small business startups bring their products and services from commercialization into the marketplace.
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    Lewis leads bipartisan Drone Innovation Act
    Jason Lewis (R-MN, 2nd)
    June 19, 2017

    “America continues to lead the world in technological advances. It’s clear to me that drones have a growing role to play in interstate commerce, and that’s vital to maintaining our economic strength at home and competitiveness on the world stage. The Drone Innovation Act will promote that spirit of invention by establishing a clear framework for the operation of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS). Importantly, my legislation also lays out clear protections for your right to privacy and gives local governments the primary responsibility in forming guidelines for how drones can be used in our communities. I look forward to working with the FAA to maintain an environment that works for all stakeholders, and thank my colleagues for their support.”
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    4 VETERANS IN CONGRESS WRITE TO SECRETARY MATTIS EXPRESSING "GRAVE CONCERNS ABOUT THE DIRECTION OF THE WAR IN AFGHANISTAN
    Ted Lieu (D-CA, 33rd)
    June 21, 2017

    “Secretary Mattis is right – we definitely aren’t winning in Afghanistan. And it’s completely unacceptable that 6 months into the new administration, President Trump and his advisors still can’t agree on a strategy,” said Rep. Ruben Gallego, a member of the House Armed Services Committee and a Marine Corps combat veteran. “Deploying a few thousand additional American troops might buy the struggling Afghan government more time, but it certainly won’t produce any lasting gains. I strongly object to sending more brave young Americans into harm’s way without a real plan, simply to kick the can down the road.”
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    Lipinski Joins Bill to Protect DACA Recipients from Deportation
    Daniel Lipinski (D-IL, 3rd)
    June 21, 2017

    Congressman Dan Lipinski (IL-3) has signed on as a co-sponsor of H.R. 496, the BRIDGE (Bar Removal of Individuals who Dream and Grow our Economy) Act, which would protect recipients of DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) from the threat of deportation. This past Friday, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) continued the uncertainty for DACA recipients when it stated, “The future of the DACA program continues to be under review with the administration.”
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