Home

Blog

Recently Visited

  • Getting bills...

You are viewing all content tagged with "Financial Services Approps"

The Latest on Annual Spending

Congress didn’t finish the annual spending process by the beginning of the new fiscal year October 1st. It has passed some of the bills that run the government, but most of the government has been running on temporary spending measures, called “continuing resolutions.”
Here’s a run-down of the action so far:
On October 1st, the Legislative Branch [...]

FY 2010 Spending Tracker Updated

The FY 2010 Spending Tracker has been updated with votes in the House last week on energy and water development spending, financial services and general government spending, and military/veterans spending.
The two biggest bills of the season have yet to make an appearance. The Labor/HHS and Defense spending bills often cost about $5,000 per U.S. [...]

FY 2010 Spending Tracker

Congress is well into the process of passing the twelve spending bills that dictate federal government spending for the 2010 fiscal year, which begins October 1, 2009. We’ve produced a table to track the House and Senate bills, their costs, and votes on them, as well as votes on final passage of the compromise [...]

Annual Spending Process: Nothing to Report

When is nothing happening newsworthy? How about when Congress spends thousands of dollars per U.S. family without oversight.
With just over two weeks to go before the beginning of the new fiscal year October 1st, neither the House or the Senate have introduced all the annual spending bills, and none have passed into law.
These are [...]

Fiscal Year 2009 Congressional Budget and Spending Page Updated

We’ve updated the FY 2009 Budget and Spending Process page once again, with information on a few more of the annual spending bills that are now making their way through Congress.
The new additions, and their cost per family (at current interest rates and population figures), are:

Energy and Water Development – $315.09
Financial Services and General Government [...]