Skip to content

This Week: Doc Fix, Unemployment Benefits, and Budget

The House is not in session today, but the Senate is and is expected to advance another short-term fix to Medicare’s payment system, or the “doc fix.” The yearlong patch (HR 4302) would extend Medicare payments to physicians and prevent cuts to Medicare payment rates that were expected to take place in April without congressional intervention. Members of both bodies had hoped to clear a long-term proposal (HR 4015), but lawmakers never agreed on a way to pay for it. The current short-term patch expires tonight, so the Senate is under pressure to get the next short-term patch in place.

Later today, the Senate will likely begin debating a five-month extension to unemployment insurance. Senate Democrats plan to use a House-passed bill (HR 3979) as a vehicle for the extension to the benefits, which kick in after a person exhausts standard unemployment assistance. Under the proposal, the five-month extension would be paid for by a combination of offsets including temporarily reducing companies’ pension payments and extending US Customs and Border Protection user fees through 2024. The bill would also provide retroactive payments to those whose benefits have already been cut off. Though the measure seems to have enough support to pass the Senate, House Republicans have been cool to the proposal, in part because they consider it too difficult to implement given the now three-month lapse in benefits.

House members will return to the Capitol Tuesday and spend most of the week focused on their Budget Resolution. The FY2015 spending plan House Budget Chairman Ryan (R-WI) plans to release this week will include $1.2 trillion in additional deficit reduction to balance in 10 years. As a result, lawmakers say the new budget blueprint will recommend deeper and more accelerated cuts in spending necessary to make up for slower projected revenue growth over the next decade. That could take the form of deeper cuts to Medicaid, which would be converted to a block grant program in the House budget, or from speeding up the conversion of food stamps into a block grant program. The plan will, however, abide by the $1.014 trillion discretionary spending limit, as well as $521 billion defense and $492 billion nondefense caps, in the two-year budget agreement Ryan negotiated with Senate Budget Chairwoman Patty Murray (D-WA) late last year.

Senate Confirms New Leadership at NSF

Last night the U.S. Senate confirmed a new director of the National Science Foundation, Dr. France Cordova. She succeeds Subra Suresh, who stepped down from NSF one year ago to become president of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

An astrophysicist, Dr. Cordova earned a Ph.D in physics from the California Institute of Technology. She went on to become the first female chief scientist at NASA before returning to the academic world. She was vice chancellor for research at UC Santa Barbara, chancellor of UC Riverside, and later president of Purdue University.  A more in-depth biography can be found on the NSF website here.

Also in NSF leadership news, NSF named Northwestern University Professor Fay Lomax Cook to lead the Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences Directorate on Thursday. Dr. Cook will begin her appointment as Assistant Director in September of this year. More information can be found here.

This Week in Congress

Congress returns today from a weeklong recess. Here are a few hearings that may be of interest later in the week.

THURSDAY, February 27th 

Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee
North Pacific Perspectives on Magnuson-Stevens Act Reauthorization
Subcommittee on Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries and Coast Guard
10:30 AM, 253 Russell Building

Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee
Promoting College Access and Success For Students With Disabilities
Full Committee Hearing
10:00 AM, 216 Hart Building

House Appropriations
Oversight Hearing on Federal Investments in Neuroscience Research
Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies
10:00 AM, H-309 Capitol Bldg.

House Education and the Workforce
Exploring Efforts to Strengthen the Teaching Profession
Joint Hearing of Subcommittees on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education; and on Higher Education and Workforce Training
10:00 AM, 2175 Rayburn Building

FRIDAY, February 28th

House Natural Resources Committee
Strengthening Fishing Communities and Increasing Flexibility in Fisheries Management Act
Full Committee Hearing
9:30 AM, 1324 Longworth Building

Preview of President’s Budget Request for FY2015

President Obama will release his FY2015 budget request next Tuesday. He is expected to seek a small increase in spending as called for by the December budget deal but he will avoid any “grand bargain” proposals for steep deficit cuts. Obama’s request will stick to the $1.014 billion discretionary spending caps for FY2015 set by the budget agreement (PL 113-67), which is about $2 billion more than FY2014 and would not require any across-the-board sequester cuts.

The good news for higher education and research is that the White House will also propose a $56 billion “Opportunity, Growth and Security Initiative” aimed at funding research, manufacturing, education, and other priorities. The plan, which the administration said would be paid for by closing tax loopholes and changing spending programs, aims to effectively replace the remaining FY2015 sequestration cuts for nondefense discretionary programs – the programs we care about the most. The initiative would split funding evenly between defense and domestic-focused efforts, and it would create 45 new manufacturing institutes, an efficiency program focused on modernizing the electric grid, and fresh ways to boost access to pre-kindergarten programs.

Obama will release his budget in two parts with the main budget volume, key proposals, summary tables, agency-level information due March 4th, and the historical tables and analytical perspectives volume will come the following week. Shortly after that, we will finalize the UW Federal Agenda for FY2015, which will likely focus on investing in research, access to federal student aid, reauthorization of science and higher education programs, and immigration and tax reforms.

Senate Passes House Bill to Raise Debt Ceiling

With an impending snow storm as a powerful motivator, the Senate passed the House’s bill to suspend the debt ceiling until March 15, 2015 by a vote of 55-42.

Earlier this week, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas vowed to filibuster the measure since the House Republicans “caved to President Obama” and were unable extract to any spending cuts or other concessions to pass the bill. Such a filibuster could have caused a repeat of last Fall’s government shutdown.

However, much of the Senate’s inclination to stand tough went by the wayside as 5 plus inches of snow have been forecasted for the DC region. Both chambers of Congress have been eager to get out of town this afternoon given the storm hitting the eastern seaboard and the amount of snow that’s expected to fall in the Washington area.

The Senate voted 67-31 to end a debate on the legislation or end any filibuster threatened by Senator Cruz. The vote took nearly an hour, but cleared the way to a vote on final passage with a simple majority threshold. A dozen Republicans voted with Democrats to end the filibuster after the Senate Republican Leadership McConnell and Cornyn led the way. Republicans joining Democrats included, John Barrasso of Wyoming, Susan Collins of Maine, Bob Corker of Tennessee, Jeff Flake of Arizona, Orrin Hatch of Utah, Mike Johanns of Nebraska, Mark Kirk of Illinois, John McCain of Arizona, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and John Thune of South Dakota.

Both Washington Senators Murray and Cantwell voted to end the debate and voted for the suspension of the debt ceiling.