Sentences with phrase «house fy»

The House FY 2017 State and Foreign Operations bill, expected to be voted on in Committee next week, also includes severe cuts to international family planning programs and bans a U.S. contribution to UNFPA, the leading agency working to address the reproductive health needs of women in Zika - affected countries.
Magnet Schools of America, representing approximately 3,800 magnet schools and 2.6 million students nationwide, expresses its strong opposition to the House FY 2017 Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies bill that would entirely eliminate funding for the Magnet Schools Assistance Program (MSAP), despite being reauthorized in the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).

Not exact matches

As the House and Senate move forward in considering the Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 budget over the next few weeks, the Republican Study Committee (RSC)...
In the coming days and weeks, the Trump Administration is expected to release its full Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 budget proposal, and the House and...
While the House and Senate Budget Committees have yet to release a budget for FY 2019, the Republican Study Committee (RSC) has released its own...
The House Budget Committee recently passed a Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 budget resolution that proposes a path to a balanced budget after ten years...
As the House and Senate move forward in considering the Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 budget over the next few weeks, the Republican Study Committee (RSC) continues to tout its alternative, which aims to balance the budget in six years and reduce the ten - year deficit by $ 9.1 trillion.
As an alternative, House Republicans have floated the possibility of adopting a Fiscal Year (FY) 2017 budget resolution early next year (since Congress failed to adopt a FY 2017 budget resolution last year) to include reconciliation instructions for repealing (and possibly replacing) much of the ACA, while adopting a FY 2018 budget resolution later next year that includes reconciliation instructions for tax reform (and possibly some mandatory spending changes, perhaps from Medicare reform, other mandatory savings assumed in the budget resolution, and / or some ACA replacement).
On July 12, 2017, the House Appropriations Committee voted out its Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 Agriculture Appropriations Bill.
Webster Green Apartments is part of Governor Cuomo's unprecedented commitment to affordable housing and community renewal, which includes $ 20 billion in the FY 2017 Budget for comprehensive statewide housing and homelessness action plans.
New York State's FY 2018 Budget continues funding for the state's $ 20 billion comprehensive, five - year plan for affordable and supportive housing to ensure New Yorkers who are homeless or at risk of homelessness have safe and secure housing.
Additionally, the FY 2017 Budget invests nearly $ 20 billion for comprehensive statewide housing and homelessness action plans.
On the exploration front, both the Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion Crew Vehicle would be funded at FY 2017 enacted amounts, the same as the House bill, as opposed to the cuts requested by the Administration.
Yesterday, the House passed an FY 2018 omnibus spending package (H.R. 3354) by a partisan 211 - 198 vote.
According to AAAS estimates, the House omnibus would increase federal R&D by a total 4.9 percent or $ 7.7 billion above FY 2017 estimates, to $ 164.4 billion total.
The 2010 Republican takeover of the House was followed first by a round of cuts and then by the Budget Control Act, which locked in sequestration in FY 2013 and discretionary spending caps for a decade.
... Meanwhile, Biden plans to propose continuing the moonshot's financial momentum in the White House's FY 2017 budget request, due out 9 February.
Letter from AAAS CEO Rush Holt to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein Regarding Fingerprint Reporting Guidelines [March 28, 2018] AAAS Statement on FY 2018 Omnibus Bill Funds for Scientific Research [March 23, 2018] AAAS Statement on FY 2018 Omnibus Funding Bill [March 22, 2018] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement on Death of Rep. Louise Slaughter [March 16, 2018] AAAS CEO Urges U.S. President and Congress to Lift Funding Restrictions on Gun Violence Research [March 13, 2018] AAAS Statements on Elections and Paper Ballots [March 9, 2018] AAAS Statement on President's 2019 Budget Plan [February 12, 2018] AAAS Statement on FY 2018 Budget Deal and Continuing Resolution [February 9, 2018] AAAS Statement on President Trump's State of the Union Address [January 30, 2018] AAAS Statement on Continuing Resolution Urges FY 2018 Final Omnibus Bill [January 22, 2018] AAAS Statement on U.S. Government Shutdown [January 20, 2018] Community Statement to OMB on Science and Government [December 19, 2017] AAAS CEO Response to Media Report on Use of «Science - Based» at CDC [December 15, 2017] Letter from AAAS and the American Physical Society to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani Regarding Scientist Ahmadreza Djalali [December 15, 2017] Multisociety Letter Conference Graduate Student Tax Provisions [December 7, 2017] Multisociety Letter Presses Senate to Preserve Higher Education Tax Benefits [November 29, 2017] AAAS Multisociety Letter on Tax Reform [November 15, 2017] AAAS Letter to U.S. House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee on Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (H.R. 1)[November 7, 2017] AAAS Statement on Release of National Climate Assessment Report [November 3, 2017] AAAS Statement on EPA Science Adviser Boards [October 31, 2017] AAAS Statement on EPA Restricting Scientist Communication of Research Results [October 25, 2017] Statement of the Board of Directors of the American Association for the Advancement of Science on Scientific Freedom and Responsibility [October 18, 2017] Scientific Societies» Letter on President Trump's Visa and Immigration Proclamation [October 17, 2017] AAAS Statement on U.S. Withdrawal from UNESCO [October 12, 2017] AAAS Statement on White House Proclamation on Immigration and Visas [September 25, 2017] AAAS Statement from CEO Rush Holt on ARPA - E Reauthorization Act [September 8, 2017] AAAS Speaks Out Against Trump Administration Halt of Young Immigrant Program [September 6, 2017] AAAS Statement on Trump Administration Disbanding National Climate Assessment Advisory Committee [August 22, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Issues Statement On Death of Former Rep. Vern Ehlers [August 17, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt and 15 Other Science Society Leaders Request Climate Science Meeting with EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt [July 31, 2017] AAAS Encourages Congressional Appropriators to Invest in Research and Innovation [July 25, 2017] AAAS CEO Urges Secretary of State to Fill Post of Science and Technology Adviser [July 13, 2017] AAAS and ESA Urge Trump Administration to Protect Monuments [July 7, 2017] AAAS Statement on House Appropriations Bill for the Department of Energy [June 28, 2017] Scientific Organizations Statement on Science and Government [June 27, 2017] AAAS Statement on White House Executive Order on Cuba Relations [June 16, 2017] AAAS Statement on Paris Agreement on Climate Change [June 1, 2017] AAAS Statement from CEO Rush Holt on Fiscal Year 2018 Budget Proposal [May 23, 2017] AAAS thanks the Congress for prioritizing research and development funding in the FY 2017 omnibus appropriations [May 9, 2017] AAAS Statement on Dismissal of Scientists on EPA Scientific Advisory Board [May 8, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement on FY 2017 Appropriations [May 1, 2017] AAAS CEO Statement on Executive Order on Climate Change [March 28, 2017] AAAS leads an intersociety letter on the HONEST Act [March 28, 2017] President's Budget Plan Would Cripple Science and Technology, AAAS Says [March 16, 2017] AAAS Responds to New Immigration Executive Order [March 6, 2017] AAAS CEO Responds to Trump Immigration and Visa Order [January 28, 2017] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement on Federal Scientists and Public Communication [January 24, 2017] AAAS thanks leaders of the American Innovation and Competitiveness Act [December 21, 2016] AAAS CEO Rush Holt raises concern over President - Elect Donald Trump's EPA Director Selection [December 15, 2016] AAAS CEO Rush Holt Statement Following the House Passage of 21st Century Cures Act [December 2, 2016] Letter from U.S. scientific, engineering, and higher education community leaders to President - elect Trump's transition team [November 23, 2016] Letter from AAAS CEO Rush Holt to Senate Leaders and Letter to House Leaders to pass a FY 2017 Omnibus Spending Bill [November 15, 2016] AAAS reaffirms the reality of human - caused climate change [June 28, 2016]
House appropriators kicked off the Congressional appropriations cycle for FY 2018, advancing the first spending bill (out of twelve) for the year: Military Construction and Veterans Affairs.
The House floor amendment to the FY 2013 Commerce, Justice, and Science spending bill, offered by Rep. Daniel Webster (R - FL), was approved with 232 votes in favor, of which Mulvaney was one (note the provision did not survive the Senate).
Nearly a month after avoiding a shutdown, Congressional leaders and the White House have produced the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, a two - year deal to partially roll back the spending caps and increase discretionary spending in FY 2016 by 5.2 percent.
It drew the ire of the Trump administration, which proposed canceling it entirely in the White House's FY 2019 budget; Congress and the space science community have so far stood firm against that proposal.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced on 3 Feb. that the White House will request a doubling of funding for competitive grants under the department's Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI) in the president's FY 2017 budget, to be released next week.
According to the latest AAAS estimates, both the House and Senate would provide moderate increases to federal R&D overall in FY 2017: the House would provide a $ 3.1 billion or 2.1 percent increase for R&D above FY 2016 levels, while the Senate would provide a $ 4.7 billion or 3.2 percent increase (see table).
Last week, House Speaker John Boehner (R - OH) acknowledged a short - term continuing resolution may be necessary this fall to avoid a government shutdown, amid continuing disagreement between parties over the size of the discretionary budget for FY 2016.
He cited NIH, whose budget even under the sequestration regime is in line for a $ 1.1 billion increase above FY 2015 in the House and $ 2 billion in the Senate, the latter of which would be the largest single - year increase since the end of the agency's budget doubling over a decade ago.
«The suite of bills already passed would increase federal research & development (R&D) funding by an estimated 2.1 % above fiscal year 2016 levels in the House and 3.2 % above FY 2016 levels in the Senate, slightly above the rate of inflation,» AAAS wrote, citing objective analysis completed by the association's R&D Budget and Policy Program.
Although the President's budget requested a 5.5 % increase for EPA's discretionary budget, the House would instead significantly reduce it by 10 % below FY 2015 levels.
Despite a huge sense of relief, Jackson says there is still concern about next year's budget, although there are promising signs: The House Appropriations Committee approved a budget of $ 805 million for particle physics in FY 2009, nearly $ 117 million more than this year's allocation.
The bill also provides the House with mismatching authorizations and appropriations for the effected agencies in FY 2016, as shown in the chart below (see also this table).
The FY 2017 omnibus had provided a plus - up — against the recommendations of House appropriators — for NSF to begin construction of three research vessels as directed by their Senate counterparts.
While representing a 6.3 percent cut below FY 2016 levels, it's something of a departure in a year that sees climate programs at EPA, NOAA, and elsewhere slated for much larger cuts, especially given White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney's belief that dollars spent on climate change are a waste of money.
The House Appropriations Committee took advantage of a hoped - for increase in FY 2018 defense spending by bumping up DOD R&D above the Pentagon's request.
One of the big winners was Navy basic research; the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) was also granted a large increase of 6.3 percent in the House bill, not quite as much as requested but still $ 181 million above FY 2017 levels.
With the House of Representatives mulling a $ 5 billion reduction in nondefense spending in FY 2018, it puts the squeeze on many science and technology programs in House legislation.
House appropriators also added over $ 600 million more for medical research in cancer and other areas, a much smaller amount than that provided in the FY 2017 omnibus; total medical research funding would thus drop by 38.1 percent in FY 2018.
Many in the science community will breathe a sigh of relief as DOE's basic research arm, the Office of Science, escaped a White House - proposed 17.1 percent cut, as appropriators opted for flat funding from FY 2017 levels.
The NASA budget would total $ 19.9 billion, a full $ 780 million above the President's request and $ 219 million above FY 2017 levels, building on several years of strong funding growth due in no small part to House appropriators.
Under the House Defense bill adopted Thursday by the full committee, DOD research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E) funding would increase by over $ 10 billion or 14.3 percent above FY 2017 levels, and $ 1.2 billion above what was already a rather robust request.
While not specifying an amount for NOAA's Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) and the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) system, the House bill summary promises full funding for both JPSS and GOES in FY 2018.
Yesterday the House Appropriations Subcommittee approved its FY 2018 Commerce, Justice, Science (CJS) spending bill, which covers NASA, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Commerce, on a voice vote.
NASA Administrator Charles Bolden spoke with the media today regarding the White House's 2014 FY Budget Request, which was unveiled Wednesday, April 10, 2013, a few hours prior to -LSB-...]
The recent announcement that $ 100 million had been earmarked in the White House's FY 2014 Budget Proposal Request to send an unmanned probe to an asteroid and have it transported back to lunar orbit to be studied by astronauts has generated a lot of buzz.
FY 1992 Education Budget HR 2707 The House and Senate last week approved a fiscal 1992 spending bill for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education.
Bringing attention to the importance of magnet schools and ending school segregation on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives during the consideration of the FY 2018 Appropriations bill.
Today, the White House released the President's FY 2019 budget proposal that included further opportunities to give families more options with their child's K - 12 education.
Continue reading «National Alliance for Public Charter Schools Statement on White House's Proposed FY 18 Budget (May 23, 2017)»
In a letter from March 19, 2018, Members of the U.S. House of Representatives, led by Congresswoman Susan Davis (D - CA), asked Chairman Tom Cole (R - OK) and Ranking Member Rosa DeLauro (D - CT) of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies to fund SLRSP at $ 14.5 million in the FY 2019 appropriations bill.
He went on to slam both the president's budget proposal and the draft House Labor, Health and Human Services and Education FY 2018 Appropriations bill, both of which propose eliminating Title II funding for teacher and school leader professional development and undercut funding for Title I and Title IV Part B (21st CCLC) of ESSA.
«National Alliance for Public Charter Schools Statement on White House's Proposed FY 18 Budget (May 23, 2017)»
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