Senate Votes to Stop Medicaid Changes

Yesterday, the Senate passed an amendment to the war supplemental bill that will put the brakes on several controversial Medicaid regulations. The Bush administration has finalized, or is preparing to finalize, the regulations in an effort to cut federal funding for a variety of Medicaid programs administered by the states.

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Polar Bear Called "Threatened," Federal Protection to Follow

Yesterday, after a period of long delay, the Department of the Interior announced it would list the polar bear as a "threatened" species under the Endangered Species Act. Designating a species as threatened is not as serious as calling it endangered, but it still affords the species federal protections and special considerations. The debate over whether to list the polar bear has been a hot button issue, because the main threat to the species is global climate change which is affecting the ice cover and sea conditions the bear needs to subsist.

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CPSC Chief Balks at Would-Be Lead Standard

Speaking yesterday to the National Retail Federation, Nancy Nord, head of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, said a new federal standard limiting lead in children's products "might prove to be overly broad," according to BNA news service (subscription). The limit on lead is contained in a product safety bill currently being considered by Congress. The bill would require CPSC to set a standard limiting lead in children's products to trace amounts (100 parts per million for the content and 90 parts per million for paint or coatings).

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Bush Sets Policy on Midnight Regulations

Friday, White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten sent a memo to the heads of federal agencies outlining the administration's policy on rules those agencies want to finalize by the end of the Bush administration. The memo states, "Except in extraordinary circumstances, regulations to be finalized in this Administration should be proposed no later than June 1, 2008, and final regulations should be issued no later than November 1, 2008." So, agencies will have just three weeks to announce proposed rules they want to finalize by year's end.

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Gade Ouster Will Have Chilling Effect on Environmental Regulators

The head administrator for EPA's Midwest Region, Mary Gade, resigned last week amid a political firestorm. Aides to EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson "told her to quit or be fired by June 1," according to the Chicago Tribune.

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Bush Administration to Lift Ban on Loaded Weapons in Parks

Yesterday, the Department of the Interior proposed rolling back regulations that prohibit people from carrying loaded guns in national parks, according to the Associated Press. The decision comes in response to pressure from the National Rifle Association and conservative Senators from both parties who believe the current ban on loaded guns in parks is "confusing." (The fact that a ban on guns in parks is "confusing" for members of the nation's highest legislative body is another disturbing issue that will not be discussed here.)

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Cheney and Dudley Interfering in Right Whale Rule

New evidence shows that the White House is meddling with a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) rule to protect the North Atlantic right whale — one of the most critically endangered whale species in the world. The rule has been awaiting clearance — or, more accurately, gathering dust — at the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) since February 2007.

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Polar Bear Decision Deadline Set by Court

Last night, a federal court ruled the Bush administration must make a decision by May 15 on whether to list the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act. Three advocacy groups — the Center for Biological Diversity, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and Greenpeace — sued the Department of the Interior in order to force a decision after months of delay.

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Congress Begins Prodding OMB to Release Whale Protection Rule

Today, the Senate Commerce Committee approved a bill that would force the White House Office of Management and Budget to stop sitting on a regulation to protect the North Atlantic right whale. The rule has been held up at OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) since Feb. 2007. The North Atlantic right whale is one of the most critically endangered marine species in the world. Although the species has benefited from federal protections for years, it is still having difficulty recovering. Collisions between whales and shipping vessels are a particularly serious problem.

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House Moves Bill to Stop Medicaid Changes

Yesterday the House passed a bill that would stop the Bush administration from going forward with several regulations intended to cut Medicaid services. The administration developed the regulations under the guise of "fiscal integrity," arguing state Medicaid programs are using loopholes to inappropriately claim federal funds. Bush has threatened to veto the bill. Fortunately, the bill passed the House in a 349-62 vote which, if the margin holds, would be enough to override a veto. State governments also support the bill. According to the Associated Press, "The governors of all 50 states…oppose the rules." If all this bipartisanship and widespread agreement make you uncomfortable, fear not — the U.S. Senate is on the case.

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