CD169: Fiscal Recklessness

Published: March 10, 2018, 5:36 p.m.

b'Another shutdown, another dingleberry-filled temporary funding law! In this episode, learn about the new law that reopened the government after the 6 hour shutdown by providing funding until March 23 and be one of the few people in the country who will know about the random goodies that hitchhiked their way into law. Miranda Hannah joins Jen for the thank yous. Please Support Congressional Dish to contribute using credit card, debit card, PayPal, or Bitcoin to support Congressional Dish for each episode via Patreon Mail Contributions to: 5753 Hwy 85 North #4576 Crestview, FL 32536 Thank you for supporting truly independent media! Recommended Congressional Dish Episodes Additional Reading Article: by Stan Collender, Forbes, March 4, 2018. Report: by Joe Goud, Defense News, February 22, 2018. Report: by Baker Donelson Bearman Caldwell & Berkowitz PC, Lexology, February 22, 2018. Article: by Emma Foehringer Merchant, Green Tech Media, February 22, 2018. Article: by Deirdre Shesgreen, USA Today, February 19, 2018. Report: by Lizzy Francis, Fatherly, February 13, 2018. Report: , World Nuclear News, February 12, 2018. Report: by Lindsey McPherson, Roll Call, February 9, 2018. Report: by Paige Winfield Cunningham, The Washington Post, February 9, 2018. Article: by Catherine Rampell, The Washington Post, December 20, 2017. Report: by Leslie Small, Fierce Healthcare, November 22, 2017. Report: by Nathaniel Weixel, The Hill, November 2, 2017. Article: by John Bulliner, Medicare.com, January 24, 2017. Article: by Ryan Grim, Huffpost, December 6, 2016. Article: by Ryan Grim, Jason Cherkis, and Laura Barron-Lopez, Huffington Post, December 2, 2016. Article: by Joaquin Sapien, ProPublica, May 20, 2015. Additional Viewing Hearing: , US Senate Committee on Finance, August 4, 2015. Hearing: , US Senate Committee on Finance, May 19, 2015. Bill Outline \\xa0 : Honoring Hometown Heroes Act : Allows the flag to be flown at half staff when a first responder dies at work. : Supplemental Appropriations, Tax Relief, and Medicaid Changes Relating to Certain Disasters and further extension of continuing appropriations : Gives $2.36 billion to the Department of Agriculture, available until the end of 2019, to pay for "expenses related to crops, trees, bushes, and vine losses" caused by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, Maria, and other hurricanes and wildfires that took place in 2017. Companies who have crop insurance can have 85% of their losses covered by our tax money Companies who didn\'t buy crop insurance can have up to 65% of their losses covered by our money : Gives $14 million to Puerto Rico\'s food program but says the money is for infrastructure grants for infrastructure damaged by Hurricanes Irma and Maria : Changes the law to allow livestock producers to collect payments for cows they sold at reduced prices, instead of just dead ones, and eliminates the $20 million cap on total payouts for livestock producers. : Orders the Secretary of Commerce to issue a waiver within 120 days of the which prohibit the capture of marine mammals for . It says the waiver for the projects "will remain in effect for the duration of the construction, operations and maintenance of the projects. No rule-making, permit, determination, or other condition or limitation shall be required when issuing a waiver pursuant to this section." : Gives $15 billion to the Army Corps of Engineers to repair damages caused by natural disasters $10 billion has to be spend in areas impacted by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria Repairs made in Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands "shall be conducted at full Federal expense" : Provides $1.652 billion for the "Disaster Loans Program Account" but $618 million of that can be spend on "administrative expenses to carry out the disaster loan program" : Adds $23.5 billion to FEMA\'s "Disaster Relief Fund" : Adds religious institutions to the definition of a "Private Nonprofit Facility", which makes them eligible to receive tax money for disaster aid services. : Says the Federal government will pay 90% of the costs for 2017 wildfire disasters. : Provides $1.374 billion for the Federal highway "Emergency Relief Program", with the Federal government paying 100% of the costs for Puerto Rico : Provides $28 billion in disaster relief for housing and infrastructure. $11 billion must be spent on areas hit by Hurricane Maria $2 billion of that will be spent on upgrades to electrical power systems : Allows victims of wildfires in CA to borrow up to $100,000 from their own retirement accounts and pay it back within 3 years. : Allows companies that had to close due to wildfires to get a credit for up to 40% of their employees\' wages, up to $6,000 each. : Suspends limitations on charitable contributions made before December 31, 2018 for relief efforts in the California wildfire disaster area : Provides an extra $3.6 billion for Puerto Rico and $106 million for the US Virgin Islands for Medicaid Puerto Rico can get $1.2 billion more if Puerto Rico implements a new process for transmitting data to the Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System (T-MSIS) and if it creates a Medicaid fraud control unit : Extends 2017 government funding levels until March 23, 2018. : Budgetary and other matters : Sets the budget limits for 2018 and 2019 2018 $629 billion for defense $579 billion for non-defense 2019 $647 billion for defense $597 billion for non-defense : Zeroes out the balances on the PAYGO budget scorecard. : Requires the Secretary of Energy to sell 30 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve every year from 2022-2025 and 35 million per year in 2026 and 2027. Lowers the amount of oil we must have in reserves from 450 million barrels to 350 million barrels : Suspends the debt ceiling entirely until March 1, 2019. : Revenue Measures , , and : Extend 31 tax credits : Extends until 2021 but then phases out tax credits for residential solar electricity, solar water heaters, small wind energy turbines, and geothermal heat pumps. : Extends until 2022 and then phases out a 30% credit for fiber-optic solar, fuel cell, and small wind energy property, eliminating the credits entirely by 2024. : Extends and expands tax credits for nuclear power facilities : Extends an existing tax credit for carbon sequestration technology for 6 years and changes it so that for each ton of carbon captured and eliminates a cap on how many tons were eligible for credits (it was 75 million tons). : Health and Human Services Extenders : Extends the authorization for the Children\'s Health Insurance Program through 2027 and adds $48 million per year for 2023-2027 for enrollment assistance. : Extends Medicare programs : Authorizes voluntary telehealth appointments for people receiving at-home dialysis treatments for end state renal disease, as long as they see a doctor in-person every 3 months. : Expands a test program, which began in 2015 with 7 States, to all States. The program allows privately administered Medicare Advantage plans flexibility to design custom insurance plans for people with certain chronic diseases. : Starting in 2020, privately administered Medicare Advantage plans will be able to offer extra benefits for people with chronic health conditions and uniformity requirements will be waived for those plans. : Starting in 2020, privately administered Medicare Advantage plans can include "telehealth benefits" : Starting sometime in 2019, some Medicare administrators will be allowed to offer incentives up to $20 to encourage seniors to encourage them to come to appointments with their primary care doctors. The money collected will not be considered taxable income. The Secretary of Health and Human Services can cancel this program at any time for any reason. : Increased criminal and civil fines for Federal health care program fraud : Updates the abstinence education program and increases funding from $50 million to $75 million in 2018 and 2019 : Creates a program funding State efforts to provide mental health care, substance abuse treatment, and parenting counseling to parents in order to prevent their children from being placed in foster care. : Allows foster care payments to be given to licensed residential treatment facilities if the facility welcomes the child to live with its parent as long as the facility provides parenting classes and family counseling. : Requires States to require every child-care institution to run fingerprint-based checks of national crime information databases on any adult working in their facility. : Funds Community Health Centers with $3.8 billion for 2018 and $4 billion for 2019 : Repeals the Independent Payment Advisory Board : Offsets : Requires Medicaid to count lottery winnings as income when determining Medicaid eligibility : Rescinds $985 million from the , which is meant to improve oversight of Medicaid contracts and contractors. : Reduces pay for outpatient physical and occupational therapists for care their assistant\'s provide to 85 percent of the rate that would have otherwise been paid. : Increases the percentage that people who make over $500,000 per year pay for Medicare premiums from 80% to 85%. : Empty\'s the Medicare Improvement Fund by eliminating all $220 million. : Accelerates the closing of the prescription drug "donut hole" for seniors by moving up a decrease in out of pocket prescription costs to 25% by one year - it\'s now 2019 - and by increasing the percentage that drug manufacturers must discount their drugs from 50% to 70%. : Cuts $1.35 billion from the Prevention and Public Health Fund over the next 10 years. : Budgetary Effects Exempts the entire law from the PAYGO scorecard and the Senate PAYGO scorecards. Resources Bill Overview: Bill Summary: Bill Scorecard: Budget Notice: Committee on Finance Report: Government Debt Info: Government Debt Info: Louisiana State Government: Visual Resources Sound Clip Sources Senate Remarks: S, C-SPAN, February 8, 2018. Senator Rand Paul: The bill is nearly 700 pages. It was given to us at midnight last night, and I would venture to say no one has read the bill. No one can thoroughly digest a 700-page bill overnight, and I do think that it does things that we really, really ought to talk about and how we should pay for them. Senator Rand Paul: So the reason I\\u2019m here tonight is to put people on the spot. I want people to feel uncomfortable. I want them to have to answer people at home who said, how come you were against President Obama\\u2019s deficits, and then how come you\\u2019re for Republican deficits? Isn\\u2019t that the very definition of intellectual dishonesty? If you were against President Obama\\u2019s deficits and now you\\u2019re for the Republican deficits, isn\\u2019t that the very definition of hypocrisy? People need to be made aware. Your senators need to answer people from home, and they need to answer this debate. We should have a full-throated debate. Senator Rand Paul: You realize that this is the secret of Washington. The dirty little secret is the Republicans are loudly clamoring for more military spending, but they can\\u2019t get it unless they give the Democrats welfare spending, so they raise all the spending. It\\u2019s a compromise in the wrong direction. We should be compromising in the direction of going toward spending only what comes in. And yet this goes on and on and on. Senator Rand Paul: For the umpteenth time, Congress is going to exceed their budget caps. We had something passed back in 2010. It was called PAYGO. It was supposed to say, if you\\u2019re going to pay new money, you had to go find an offset somewhere else. You could only pay as you go. It was sort of like a family would think about it. If you\\u2019re going to spend some more money, you either got to raise your income or you\\u2019ve got to save some money. You know how many times we\\u2019ve evaded it since 2010? Thirty-some-odd times. Senator Rand Paul: So the bill\\u2019s going to exceed the budget caps by $296 billion. And that\\u2019s not counting the money they don\\u2019t count, all right? So these people are really, really clever. Imagine them running their fingers together and saying, how can we hide stuff from the American people? How can we evade the spending caps so we can be even more irresponsible than we appear? So, 296 is the official number; about $300 billion over two years that will be in excess of the budget caps. But there\\u2019s another $160 billion that\\u2019s stuck into something called an overseas contingency fund. The budget caps don\\u2019t apply there. So we\\u2019re $300 billion for two years over the budget caps; then we\\u2019re another 160 billion over the caps\\u2014they just don\\u2019t count it. They act as if it doesn\\u2019t matter; we\\u2019re just not going to count it. Senator Rand Paul: The spending bill\\u2019s 700 pages, and there will be no amendments. The debate, although it\\u2019s somewhat inside baseball that we\\u2019re having here, is over me having a 15-minute debate, and they say, woe is me; if you get one, everybody\\u2019ll want an amendment. Well, guess what? That would be called debate. That would be called an open process. That would be called concern for your country\\u2014enough to take a few minutes. And they\\u2019re like, but it\\u2019s Thursday, and we like to be on vacation on Fridays. And so they clamor. But we\\u2019ve been sitting around all day. It\\u2019s not like we\\u2019ve had 100 amendments today, we\\u2019re all worn out, we can\\u2019t do one more. We\\u2019re going to have zero amendments\\u2014zero, goose egg, no amendments. Senator Rand Paul: So over the past 40 years, four times have we actually done the right thing\\u2014passed 12 individual appropriation bills, bundled them together, have a budget, and try to do the right thing. You know, there\\u2019s no guarantee that everybody\\u2019ll be wise in their spending, but it\\u2019s got to be better; it can\\u2019t be worse. What do we do instead? It\\u2019s called a continuing resolution. We glom all the bills together in one bill, like we\\u2019ve done tonight\\u2014Republicans and Democrats clasping hands\\u2014and nobody\\u2019s going to look at it. Nobody\\u2019s going to reform the spending. As a consequence, wasteful spending is riddled throughout your government. Only four times in 40 years have we done the appropriation process the way we\\u2019re supposed to. Senator Rand Paul: The last thing I\\u2019ll get to is something called the debt ceiling. The debt ceiling is something that has been a limitation on how much we spend, and we have to vote on it, and it\\u2019s an unpleasant vote. And so they try to either do it for a long period of time or try to stretch it beyond elections. So this bill, the 700-page bill that no one read, that will continue all the spending and will not reform your government and is irresponsible\\u2014the one we will pass later tonight\\u2014that 700-page bill also allows the debt ceiling to go up. Historically, we would let the debt ceiling\\u2014our borrowing limit\\u2014we would let it go up a dollar amount. We\\u2019d say, well, we\\u2019ve got to borrow money, and it looks like we\\u2019re going to need a trillion dollars. But you know the way they do it now? It\\u2019s like everything else around here: We bend, break the rules, and then somehow there\\u2019s a little bit of deviousness to it. The debt ceiling will go up in an unspecified amount. So as much as you can borrow between now and November, go for it. So there is no limitation. The debt ceiling becomes not a limitation at all. Senator Rand Paul: And the media doesn\\u2019t even get it. The media does you such a disservice. They can\\u2019t even understand what\\u2019s going on sometimes. They\\u2019re like, bipartisanship has broken out. Hallelujah! Republicans and Democrats are getting along. And in reality, they should be telling you, look for your wallet; check your pants to make sure they haven\\u2019t taken your wallet, because when both parties are happy and both parties are getting together and doing stuff, guess what? They were usually looting the Treasury. And that\\u2019s what this bill does. It\\u2019s going to loot the Treasury. It spends money we don\\u2019t have. We will have a trillion-dollar deficit this year. Press Briefing: , C-Span, June 9, 2009. \\xa0 Community Suggestions Video: \\xa0 Video: See more community suggestions . \\xa0 Cover Art Design by Only Child Imaginations Music Presented in This Episode Intro & Exit: by (found on by mevio)'