Nonprofits and Katrina

The nonprofit sector has really stepped up to the plate in responding to the crises left in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Now the federal government is responding with laws and regulations that will assist nonprofits providing relief in the Gulf Coast.

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Gag Orders Lifted; Judge Tells FBI It Can No Longer Silence Discussion of PATRIOT Act

In a victory for First Amendment advocates, a federal judge lifted a gag order on a Connecticut library from whom the FBI demanded patrons' records, allowing them to discuss openly their experience and participate in the broader debate about the PATRIOT Act. The judge issued a preliminary injunction against the government, barring it from enforcing gag orders on recipients of certain orders called National Security Letters (NSL), created under the PATRIOT Act.

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OMB Watch Urges Charities to Comment on Proposed FEC Rule

The ability of nonprofits to use broadcast media for advocacy and to encourage citizen participation in public policy debates could be severely limited by proposed rules meant to regulate federal campaign finance. The Federal Election Commission (FEC) is reviewing rules that exempt unpaid broadcasts and 501(c)(3) organizations from a provision meant to limit campaign attack ads funded with soft money. The review is the result of a court case challenging a host of regulations implementing the Bipartisan Campaign Act of 2002 (BCRA).

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Katrina Could Cause a Needed Reevaluation of Priorities in Congress

Hurricane Katrina has shaken up Congress' fall schedule immensely, as its focus has shifted to respond to the immediate needs of the Gulf region utterly devastated by the storm. Congress has passed more than $62 billion in aid, as well as Of the reconciliation measures laid out by Congress in April's budget resolution, some could prove to be extremely harmful. Reconciliation was expected to result in lawmakers:
  • cutting $35 billion from expected mandatory spending over five years ($10 billion was expected to be taken from Medicaid);

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White House Finds in Katrina Recovery 'Opportunity' to Waive Needed Protections

Though most government agencies have worked diligently to alleviate the untold burdens on Hurricane Katrina's victims and to expedite recovery in a safe and effective manner, several agencies have taken the opportunity to waive needed protections, thus possibly putting recovery workers and others at greater risk.

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Analysts Split on Meaning of Mercury Vote

Commentators disagree whether a recent vote on a Senate measure to reject part of the Bush administration's mercury rule should be viewed as a sign of strength or weakness for progressives in environmental fights to come. The vote in question was on ">S. J. Res. 20, a joint resolution under the Congressional Review Act to reject part of the Environmental Protection Agency's mercury rule.

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Right-Wing Groups Challenge Link Between Carcinogens, Cancer

Two right-wing, industry-backed groups filed a data quality petition with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) challenging the agency's labeling of certain chemicals as "likely human carcinogens." Specifically, the Washington Legal Foundation (WLF) and the American Council on Health and Science (ACHS) want EPA to eliminate statements in its Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment that indicate that a substance may properly be labeled as "likely to be carcinogenic to humans" based solely or primarily on the results of animal studies. Background

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Letter from Gary Bass on Post-Katrina Progressive Initiative

September 19, 2005 RE: A Survey to Gather Your Thoughts on Launching a Domestic Security Initiative Dear Friend of OMB Watch: Like you, the board and staff of OMB Watch has been dismayed, even outraged, by what has transpired in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The limited and poorly coordinated government response is a direct consequence of the "starve the beast" mindset that has dominated our nation's capitol in recent years. The era of less government and unquestioned reliance on the private sector must end.

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House GOP Reps Urge Bush to Cut Budget Further

Last week, twenty-one Republican members of the House sent a letter to President Bush, in which they urged him to cut non-defense discretionary spending to offset additional spending dealing with the hurricane aftermath. The letter said, "Congress and the President have a historic opportunity to show the American people that we are not afraid to make hard choices on cutting current federal spending when a national disaster requires investment of tens, possibly hundreds, of billions of dollars." Cutting spending elsewhere in the budget, most likely for supports and programs benefiting low-income Americans is certainly not a hard choice for Congress as they continue to push the completion of reconciliation bills cutting entitlement spending simply to offset the cost of new tax cuts or the rich. Perhaps Congress and President Bush should be sincere in their claims to be able to make hard choices and call upon those Americans who can best afford to pay to shoulder just a tiny bit more of the burden through choosing not to pass new tax cuts for the wealthy this year. Cutting non-defense discretionary programs to pay for emergency hurricane relief funding is akin to robbing Peter to pay Paul and continues to concentrate the burden on low- and middle-income Americans. Also, Reps. Hensarling and Flake, members of the conservative Republican Study Committee, sent a letter to Speaker Dennis Hastert and Majority Leader Tom DeLay, in which they suggested that the 2006 implementation of the Medicare prescription drug benefit be delayed in order to contain costs, which are expected to sky-rocket with all of the post-Katrina spending. In reality, though, these costs should be dealt with by promoting an agenda based on shared sacrifice -- not on cutting money further from the budget so that people don't have access to the services they rely upon. It's time the President to call for a renewal of shared sacrifice in rebuilding the Gulf Coast through our tax code.

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Voinovich Calls for End to Tax-Cutting Fervor

Senator George Voinovich (R-OH) joined his voice with other Republicans who are seeking to re-evaluate plans to pass additional new tax cuts after Hurricane Katrina. Voinovich told reporters at a press conference this afternoon he believed the government needed more money to pay all of its priorities and obligations and because of that hoped "we won't hear any more about making tax cuts permanent." While Voinovich did not call for specific tax increases, his decision to speak out against the accepted and irrational GOP policy of "starving the beast" through tax cuts at any time shows great vision and leadership. Let's hope other in Congress, Democrats and Republicans, follow his lead.

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