Monthly Budget Review Predicts Higher Deficits

The Congressional Budget Office released their Monthly Budget Review this week, in which they noted that for the first eleven months of this fiscal year (which ends Sept. 30), the government ran a deficit of $352 billion. For various reasons, including that fact that corporate receipts were up due to specifics in certain expiring tax laws, this deficit is $85 billion less than the deficit run at this time last year. These facts have allowed President Bush to claim that he is on track to cutting the deficit in half by 2009 (one of his many campaign promises). The reality is, the Hurricane Katrina disaster will affect deficit levels for 2006. The CBO report states that deficits will not be greatly affected for FY 2005 because we only have one month to go; however they do mention "substantially greater costs will be incurred in fiscal year 2006." It looks like we can expect deficits to be on the rise again in the year to come. The administration is not to blame for the fact that the disaster will have a negative effect on the FY 2006 deficit. However, the administration is to blame for our deficits being so high in the first place. In 2004 the budget deficit was $412 billion, and most of that was due to Bush's massive tax cuts. Now we are being forced to engage in deficit-financed spending because of the recent disaster, and the administration can claim that they had no control over what is sure to be a very high deficit figure next year. If not for their prior policies, however, our deficits would have never been so high in the first place.

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Cuts Delayed For Month; Might Be Gone For Good

House and Senate GOP leaders have decided to postpone budget deadlines for cutting entitlement programs and passing additional tax cuts for at least a month. Republicans also announced an intention to postpone another difficult issue of raising the statutory debt limit by $781 billion until after the Columbus Day recess in mid-October. But the bills may be more than simply delayed. In an unexpected twist, the reconciliation bills that will outline the budget and tax cuts may loose their fast-track protections. The Senate parliamentarian believes the delay in the deadline for the bills could allow Democrats to offer amendments, seek consessions from Republicans, or even filibuster the bills.

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Toxic Chemical Sites in New Orleans

This page contains major sites that store, use, or produce large quantities of toxic chemicals within Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard Parishes. OMB Watch created this page by merging four Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) databases, which OMB Watch makes publicly available through its project RTK NET (the Right-To-Know Network).

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Santorum to Hold Hearings

On Tuesday, September 13, 2005 at 10:00 am, the Senate Finance Committee’s Subcommittee on Social Security and Family Policy will hold a hearing titled, “Charities on the Frontline: How the Nonprofit Sector Meets the Needs of America’s Communities.” The hearing will take place in Room 106 Dirksen Senate Office Building The Subcommittee, which is chaired by Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA), is expected to focus on the importance of the U.S charitable sector, the sector’s response to Hurricane Katrina and the need for Congress to enact the charitable giving incentives

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Charitable Incentives Provisions

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley (R-IA) is now looking to attach charitable reform and incentive proposals to two major pieces of legislation that Congress will consider in the coming months. One expected legislative vehicle is a relief bill to aid victims of Hurricane Katrina that will move quickly starting next week.

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States, Consumer Groups Sue over Energy Savings Standards

The Department of Energy has failed to revise energy savings standards for home appliances, prompting 15 states and New York City to file suit. In the 1990s, Congress instructed DOE to develop performance criteria for household appliances and to periodically update those standards. However, deadlines for updating the energy savings standards of 22 different home appliances expired six to 13 years ago, costing consumers billions of dollars, according to Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, a plaintiff in the suit.

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Donate A Day!

Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service officials announced today special relief intended to support leave-based donation programs to aid victims who have suffered from the extraordinary destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina. Under these programs, employees donate their vacation, sick or personal leave in exchange for employer cash payments made to qualified tax-exempt organizations providing relief for the victims of Hurricane Katrina.

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FDA Puts Medical Workers at Risk

Public Citizen's Peter Lurie has this statement on FDA's decision to withdraw a rulemaking on worker protections from needle sticks: Today’s withdrawal of a rulemaking initiated to protect health care workers from accidental needle sticks shows a profound indifference to the safety of workers and is yet another example of the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) failure to do its job.

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Bush Suspends Minimum Pay for Contract Workers

The White House announced that it is suspending its obligations under the Davis-Bacon Act to require a fair minimum wage for contractors working on the reconstruction and recovery efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

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Americans Demand Focus on Domestic Policy

USA Today is reporting the results of the latest Pew poll, in which a majority expresses its desire for a renewed focus on domestic policy: More than half of Americans now say it is more important for the president to focus on domestic policy — the first time since Sept. 11, 2001 that domestic matters have been viewed as a higher priority than the war on terrorism in polling by the Pew Research Center. Two-thirds said the president could have done more to get relief efforts going quickly, according to the survey.

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