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Legislative Updates  Legislative Updates > News From Washington > Archive

News from Washington
September 2003

   

CONGRESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

Most of the legislation of concern to individuals with disabilities, there families and those who support them was not completed before Congress left for its August recess. The first session of this Congress is scheduled to end on October 4, but that time is sure to be extended. Even so, the timing of passage of these bills and their final provisions is uncertain. Here are the latest developments.

EDUCATION APPROPRIATIONS

The full House passed its Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations bill (HR 2660) on July 10. The House bill provides only a $2.3 billion, or 4.3% increase over FY '03, for a total of $55.4 billion for the Education Department. This is the smallest increase in eight years, and freezes 67 programs. It specifically falls $1.2 billion short of what was promised for IDEA and $334 million below what was promised for Title I of NCLB (No Child Left Behind) in the FY '04 Budget Resolution

The Senate Appropriations Committee passed its Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations for fiscal year 2004 (S 1356) on June 26. Because the spending ceiling for the Senate's Labor-Health and Human Services and Education Appropriations bill is $445 million below the House ceiling, the Senate totals for education are lower than the levels reported out of the House subcommittee. On September 5, S 1356 went to the floor for debate. A Democratic press conference was held on September 3 to generate support for several amendments, including one to "Honor the Federal Commitment to Special Education" by increasing IDEA funding by $2.2 billion over current year funding. This amendment made no mention of mandatory full funding. Senate rules require that most amendments to increase education funding must pass by at least 60 votes.

IDEA REAUTHORIZATION

The Senate HELP committee passed its version of IDEA (S 1248) in late July. Although HELP Committee Chairman Judd Gregg has expressed his desire to pass the bill by mid-September, there are rumors that the Administration would like to postpone action on the bill until the next year. Currently, negotiations are going on to reduce the number of amendments that can be offered on the Senate floor. The only Democratic amendment being discussed is the Harkin/Hagel full funding amendment. Republicans are expected to offer amendments on full funding, vouchers, and caps on attorney's fees. In addition, Lamar Alexander (R-TN) may offer an amendment which would repeal the No Child Left Behind requirement that the scores of students with disabilities be counted in the accountability for AYP (Adequate Yearly Progress) because of the scores of students with disabilities to substitute students’ progress on meeting IEP goals as a measure accountability instead.

THE CHILD MEDICATION SAFETY ACT (HR 1170) (S 1390)

On July 10, Senator John Ensign (R-NV) introduced S 1390 - a Senate version of the House bill, which would require every state to develop and implement policies and procedures to prohibit school personnel from requiring a student from taking medication as a condition of attending school.

THE PATHWAYS FOR STUDENTS TO SUCCEED ACT (PASS) (S 1554)

On August 1. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) introduced the PASS (Pathways for Students to Succeed Act).which would help secondary schools hire literacy coaches to strengthen essential reading and writing skills and would provide grants for high-quality academic counselors to ensure each student has an individualized plan and access to services to prepare for college and a good job. The bill creates a $1 billion ``Reading to succeed'' grant program to establish effective, research-based reading and writing programs for students in middle and high schools, including children with limited English proficiency and children with disabilities.

REAUTHORIZATION OF THE WORKFORCE INVESTMENT ACT (WIA) (HR 1261)

The Employment, Safety and Training Subcommittee of the Senate Help Committee is working on a bipartisan bill to reauthorize WIA and hopes to introduce it in early September. Hopefully this bill will be an improvement over the House bill, H.R. 1261, which was opposed by disability organizations because it would take money from One Stop partners, including vocational rehabilitation, to pay for the expenses of running the One Stop Centers.

REAUTHORIZATION OF THE TEMPORARY AID TO NEEDY FAMILIES ACT (TANF) (HR 4) (1523)

On July 31, 2001, Senator Gordon Smith (R OR) introduced S. 1523, the Pathways to Independence Act of 2003, Unlike the House Bill (HR 4), which places a cap of three months on the amount of time states could count rehabilitative services as meeting the full work requirement and counts the hours an individual participated in rehabilitative services as meeting the work requirements only if the individual also completed 24 hours of countable work activities. S 1523 would also: (1) allow states to count participation in rehabilitative services as meeting the work requirement for more than three months if the TANF recipient is progressively increasing participation in core work activities; and (2) allow states to count as a work activity the time spent by the adult in the TANF family caring for a child with a disability or an adult relative with a disability.

REAUTHORIZATION OF HEAD START (HR 2210) (S1483)

On July 25th, the U.S. House of Representatives narrowly passed H.R. 2210, the School Readiness Act by a vote of 217 to 216. Twelve Republicans, one independent and all the Democrats voted against the bill, which authorizes a controversial 8-state block grant demonstration program On July 29 Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) introduced S.1483, the Head Start Coordination and School Readiness Act, which makes no mention of block grants, but would require stronger education credentials for Head Start teachers and wages more comparable to public school pre-kindergarten and kindergarten teachers; improve Head Start's academic focus, particularly in pre-literacy instruction; promote better coordination across all state early care and education programs; and expand Head Start to more children, including more younger children through the expansion of Early Head Start.

THE READY TO TEACH ACT (HR 2211)

On July 9, the House passed the Ready to Teach Act (H.R. 2211) which aligns teacher training programs under the Higher Education Act with the definitions and provisions for highly qualified teachers in the No Child Left Behind Act, coordinating activities under the two Acts and bringing the accountability found in NCLB into teacher training programs. The bill was sent to the Senate HELP committee on July 10.

THE ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH ACT OF 2003 (HR 852) (S 1588)

On September 5, Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA) introduced the Environmental Health Research Act (S 1588), which, like HR 852,, would require the Director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to develop comprehensive multidisciplinary research centers on women’s health and disease prevention and conduct and coordinate a research program on possible human health effects of hormone-disrupting chemicals, with emphasis on exposures to low does of individual chemicals and chemical mixtures during critical life stages of development, particularly effects of prenatal exposures on children’s health.

Public Agencies

EPA EXEMPTS PLANTS FROM CLEAN-AIR RULE

On August 27, the Environmental Protection Agency revised its rules to allow older power plants, refineries, and factories up to 20% of the costs of replacing their production system to be considered "routine maintenance" which does not require expensive anti-pollution controls. They can do so even if the upgrades increase emissions, and with no apparent restrictions on time intervals between modernization. Mercury compounds, which are known to cause birth defects and disabilities are among the pollutants generated by these plants.

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION APPOINTMENTS

The Department of Education Institute of Education Sciences (IES) Director Grover (Russ) Whitehurst has announced that Phoebe Cottingham has been named commissioner of the National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, which is part of the Institute of Education Sciences established by the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002. The National Center for Evaluation and Regional Assistance oversees the Regional Labs, ERIC, What Works Clearinghouse, Math and Science Clearinghouse, and key Federal program evaluations like Title I.

Education Under Secretary Gene Hickok will be named acting deputy secretary of education, replacing Bill Hansen, who left the Department earlier this month for a position in the private sector

Ronald Tomalis, former executive deputy secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Education will be named Acting Assistant Secretary For Elementary And Secondary Education.

Susan Sclafani, former counsel to Education Secretary Paige, has been named Assistant Secretary for Adult and Vocational Education.

RESTRUCTURING ERIC

Despite more than 3000 comments opposing the Department of Education's proposal to consolidate the current clearing houses in the ERIC (Education Resource Information Center) to a single center run by one contractor, only minor changes were made in the final draft that went out for bid in June. As a result, the Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education will be merged with Centers focusing on 15 other areas of education, including Adult/Vocational Education, Technology, Assessment and Evaluation, Reading, Elementary/Early Education, Urban Education, Environmental Education and Higher Education.

WRITING 2002 AND STUDENTS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) and the National Assessment Governing Board (NAGB) released The Nation's Report Card: Writing 2002 on July 10, 2003. Disaggregated achievement data is provided for various subgroups (e.g., gender, race/ethnicity), but not for students with disabilities. However, data is provided on numbers of students with disabilities and/or limited English proficient students identified, excluded, and assessed at each grade level. Details on inclusion of students with special needs are available at http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/writing/results2002/natexclusion.asp
*The full report can be downloaded from http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/

NATIONAL COUNCIL ON DISABILITY REPORT ON EMPLOYMENT FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES

On August 1, the National Council on Disability (NCD) released an excerpt from its annual report, National Disability Policy: A Progress Report which highlights a number of issues related to the challenges for advancing employment opportunities across the nation for people with disabilities. Recommendations were made for the Reauthorization of Workforce Investment Act (WIA) and the Rehabilitation Act:, Tax Incentives, the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act: and the Office of Disability Employment Policy (ODEP), U.S. Department of Labor. The report can be downloaded from http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/publications/progressreport_final.html

NATIONAL DISABILITY MENTORING DAY OCTOBER 15, 2003

Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao has designated Oct. 15, 2003 as National Disability Mentoring Day. Begun in 1999, National Disability Mentoring Day promotes career development for students and job seekers with disabilities through one-on-one job shadowing, group visits to public and private employers, and hands-on career exploration. The American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) is coordinating this program for the Department of Labor. For further information visit http://www.aapd-dc.org

MENTAL HEALTH COMMISSION ISSUES REPORT

The President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health delivered its report to the President. Achieving the Promise: Transforming Mental Health Care in America, is a comprehensive year-long study representing expert health care testimony and consumer comments from over 2,300 people across the nation. The report may be downloaded from http://www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/reports.htm Printed copies of this publication online, may be found at http://store.mentalhealth.org/publications/ordering.aspx
(Order Item Number SMA 03-3832, Final Report for the President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health)

Private Agencies

REPORT ON KEY LEGISLATION AFFECTING YOUTH

The Center on Law and Social Policy issued a report which reviews several key programs up for reauthorization this year, i.e.,the Adult Education and Family Literacy Act, the Higher Education Act, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act, the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, and the Workforce Investment Act. The report can be downloaded from http://www.clasp.org/DMS/Documents/1057083505.88/Disconnected_Youth.pdf

REPORT ON IMPLEMENTATION OF IDEA

An Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development's (ASCD) has issued a report on the implementation IDEA by states. This report can be found at http://www.ascd.org/publications/infobrief/index.html.

REPORT ON USE OF PESTICIDES BY SCHOOLS

THE SCHOOL PESTICIDE REFORM COALITION AND BEYOND PESTICIDES issued a guide for Safer Schools: Achieving a Healthy Learning Environment Through Integrated Pest Management.. The guide lists strategies schools may use to decrease pesticide use while implementing more effective pest management strategies. It can be downloaded at http://www.beyondpesticides.org/schools

 
 
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