Sludge -- Good for Fish?

Last Wednesday, June 19, the House Resources Committee held a hearing on the dumping of 200,000 tons of toxic sludge into the Potomac River by the Army Corps of Engineers. "And, despite the fact that this practice is in blatant, indisputable violation of both the Clean Water Act and the Endangered Species Act, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is in the process of re-issuing the Corps' permit to dump," according to Rep. George Radanovich (R-CA), chairman of the Parks Subcommittee. A recent story in the

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A Resounding "No" to Estate Tax Repeal

On June 12, the Senate rejected a proposal by Sen. Phil Gramm (R-TX) to make repeal of the estate tax, which under current law only expires for only one year, in 2010, permanent. Repeal advocates needed 60 votes to send the House-passed estate tax repeal bill on to the President for his signature, but only received 54 votes -- 44 Senators, including 2 Republicans, voted against repeal. This is even fewer votes than repeal proponents received in February on a non-binding .

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Battle of the Bills

The Senate is currently considering two chemical security bills that seem just about as diametrically opposed to each other as two bills could be. Sen. Jon Corzine’s (D-NJ) Chemical Security Act (S. 1602) is scheduled for mark-up this week. Corzine’s bill would require that facilities that pose hazards to their neighbors look for safer processes and adopt them where feasible. Under the act:
  • The EPA and the Department of Justice would identify the highest-priority facilities;

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Administration to Relax Clean Air Protections for Aging Power Plants

The Bush administration recently announced its decision to roll back clean air protections for older, coal-fired power plants, allowing them to modernize without installing the latest technology to cut down on emissions, as reported in the Washington Post.

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Budget Process, October 1, And Tax Cuts

With the expiration of key Senate budget rules on October 1, tax cuts will get easier to pass.

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2001 Giving USA Study Released

Some $212 billion in charitable giving was generated in 2001, a 0.5% rate of growth significantly lower than the 6% rate of growth in 2000, according to the 2002 edition of Giving USA, a publication of the AAFRC Trust for Philanthropy, researched and written by the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University, released June 20. Arguably the most surprising news is that charitable giving centered around September 11th activities constituted less than 1% of all giving for the year.

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Senate Finance Committee Passes Amended CARE Act

The Senate Finance Committee passed the Chair's amended version of the CARE Act (S. 1924, the Lieberman-Santorum compromise on the President's faith-based initiative) on June 18 by a voice vote.

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No ICANN Fix It

The nonprofit organization responsible for the management of the Internet's domain name space has recently drawn renewed criticism from Congress, international governments, nonprofits, and the broader online public, most recently for a series of reorganization proposals developed to address earlier concerns about transparency, accountability, and fairness around its deliberations and overall operations.

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Race to Transfer .org Intensifies

On June 18, 2002, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) closed the bidding to both nonprofit and collaborative applicants that represent the future management of the .org Internet namespace.

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Is the FBI Watching You?

The Department of Justice announced new guidelines for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) that dramatically expand their authority to conduct investigations that are not related to criminal activity and engage in surveillance of religious, political and advocacy organizations.

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