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H. Con. Res. 85, Setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2010 and including the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2009 and 2011 through 2014
- This bill has been mooted by the passage of another bill on the same subject or by other events. Check 'Related Bills' below to see if other bills on this subject have been passed into law. Mooted: 4/29/2009.
- This item is from the 111th Congress (2009-2010) and is no longer current. Comments, voting, and wiki editing have been disabled, and the cost/savings estimate has been frozen.
Version saved on April 3, 2009, 20:01:29, by webmaster:
Setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2010 and including the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2009 and 2011 through 2014.
Detailed Summary
<b>(This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The expanded summary of the House reported version is repeated here.)</b>
Sets forth the congressional budget for the federal government for FY2010, including the appropriate budgetary levels for FY2009, and FY2011-FY2014.
<b>Title I: Recommended Levels and Amounts</b> - (Sec. 101) Recommends budgetary levels and amounts for FY2009-FY2014 with respect to: (1) federal revenues; (2) new budget authority; (3) budget outlays; (4) deficits (on-budget); (5) debt subject to limit; and (6) debt held by the public.
(Sec. 102) Lists the appropriate levels of new budget authority and outlays for specified major functional categories for FY2009-FY2014.
<b>Title II: Reconciliation</b> - (Sec. 201) Sets forth reconciliation instructions for the Committees on: (1) Energy and Commerce; (2) Ways and Means; and (3) Education and Labor.
Authorizes the House to direct the House Clerk to add at the end of a health care reform bill or an education investment bill, subject to these reconciliation instructions, the text of another such measure as passed by the House to form a single engrossed reconciliation bill.<br>
<b>Title III: Reserve Funds</b> - (Sec. 301) Creates certain deficit-neutral reserve funds, subject to specified conditions, for legislation concerning: (1) health care reform; (2) college access, affordability, and completion; (3) an increase in energy independence; (4) America's veterans and servicemembers; (5) certain tax relief; (6) a 9/11 health program; (7) child nutrition; (8) structural unemployment insurance reforms; (9) child support; (10) the Affordable Housing Trust Fund; (11) home visiting for certain individuals and families; and (12) a low-income home energy assistance program (LIHEAP) trigger.
(Sec. 313) Creates a reserve fund, subject to specified conditions, for legislation concerning reauthorization of surface transportation programs.
(Sec. 314) Creates a current policy reserve fund, subject to specified conditions, for legislation concerning: (1) Medicare improvements; (2) middle-class tax relief; (3) Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) reform; and (4) the Estate and Gift Tax.
<b>Title IV: Budget Enforcement</b> - (Sec. 401) Prescribes adjustments for direct spending and revenues to maintain such current policy reserves, only if certain conditions and pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) requirements are met.
Authorizes adjustments for the LIHEAP program, and prescribes other adjustments for the deposit insurance guarantee commitment (in effect as of the enactment of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 [EESA]).
(Sec. 402) Authorizes or prescribes adjustments to discretionary spending limits, budgetary aggregates, and allocations for: (1) continuing disability reviews, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) redeterminations, and SSI asset verification by the Social Security Administration (SSA); (2) Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax compliance; (3) the health care fraud and abuse control program; (4) unemployment insurance improper payments reviews; and (5) a Partnership Fund for Program Integrity Innovation in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
States that new budget authority, outlays, and receipts resulting from adoption of legislation making appropriations for FY2009-FY2010 for overseas deployments and related activities, or appropriations for discretionary spending to meet emergency needs, shall not count for certain purposes of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (CBA).
(Sec. 403) Prohibits House legislation that would require advance appropriations, except certain FY2011 or FY2012 programs, projects, activities, or accounts.
(Sec. 404) Encourages all House committees to: (1) conduct rigorous oversight hearings to root out waste, fraud, and abuse in all aspects of federal spending and operations, giving particular scrutiny to issues raised by the Office of Inspector General or Comptroller General; and (2) make recommendations, based on these oversight efforts, to reduce wasteful federal spending to promote deficit reduction and long-term fiscal responsibility.
(Sec. 405) Requires in the House the joint explanatory statement accompanying the conference report on any budget resolution to include in its allocation to the House Committee on Appropriations amounts for the discretionary administrative expenses of the SSA and of the Postal Service.<br>
<b>Title V: Policy</b> - (Sec. 501) Declares the policy of this resolution on: (1) middle-income tax relief and revenues; and (2) defense priorities.
<b>Title VI: Sense of the House</b> - (Sec. 601) Expresses the sense of the House of Representatives on: (1) veterans' and servicemembers' health care; (2) homeland security; (3) American innovation and economic competitiveness; (4) pay parity; (5) college affordability; (6) Great Lakes restoration; and (7) the importance of child support enforcement.
Status of the Legislation
Latest Major Action: 4/2/2009: House floor actions. Status: Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union rises leaving H. Con. Res. 85 as unfinished business.
Points in Favor
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Points Against
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Visitor Comments

Deb61
April 3, 2009, 2:01pm (report abuse)YEP, a marxist communist in the office and this will make the worse depression this world will ever see.
Leonard Henderson
April 6, 2009, 10:23am (report abuse)The only word that is appropriate to describe what is happening in the District of Corruption is--
SCHIZOPHRENIA
Iairo Lasaro
April 19, 2009, 10:28pm (report abuse)I would love to see this appropriation of,USD $55,658.43 materialised. Thanks to US government for recognising the hardshlips of the families who are voulnable to the world economic, meltdoun and the impact of the global climatic and changes of weather partarns and the woes of nature in this 20th centuary.
Jeannie Pemberton
April 23, 2009, 9:34am (report abuse)I think this excessive spending budget will be very detrimental to America. What happened to the promise then candidate Obama made when he said he would go line by line to eliminate waste - Ha! WHAT A JOKE`
CinDeeP
(logged-in user) April 23, 2009, 9:45am (report abuse)Dear Representatives: PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE pay more attention to this act as related to our children and grandchildren. As we are busy insuring their future, this Administration and Congress are busy destroying it. All we ask is a fair debate and it appears that this is not the case. As I watch CSPAN, etc., all I see is the consistency of the same old excuse...Obama inherited this mess and HAS to fix it in any way he sees fit. I want to know why, if he is/was so up to speed, did he not know what he was getting in to? This is a lemming approach and I would "Hope" that our representatives will pay more attention to content rather than accusations.
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