Las Vegas Review-Journal

▶ CONGRESS

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families in Nevada the tax cuts they’ve been waiting for.”

The bill passed without support from Democrats, and public opinion polls show that Americans believe the benefits from the bill are skewed toward corporatio­ns and the wealthy at the expense of the middle class.

Still, Republican­s were eager to return home to tout their legislativ­e victory after a year of stumbling efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, and intraparty fighting on other issues.

Both the House and the Senate passed continuing resolution­s Thursday that keep the government funded until Jan. 19 and extend the Children’s Health Insurance Program until March.

But states like Nevada are urging a long-term funding solution for the program, which provides health care to 9 million children nationally.

The House also passed an $81 billion disaster assistance bill to give relief to flood-ravaged Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico and Western states, like California, that have been hit hard by wildfires.

But the Senate failed to take up the disaster bill and must address it when it returns in early January.

Issues dear to Nevada

Also pending are issues pertinent to Nevada, including passage of the DREAM Act, funding for veterans affairs and federal assistance to communitie­s shattered by the opioid crisis.

Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev., the first Latina elected to the Senate, has championed legislatio­n to protect 800,000 men and women who were brought into this country illegally from deportatio­n.

Trump ended the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, an Obama-era policy, in September but gave Congress six months to craft a legislativ­e remedy.

Senate Republican leaders have promised a vote on the bipartisan DREAM Act next month. Cortez Masto said she will “not stop fighting until we pass the DREAM Act.”

In the House, Democratic Reps. Dina Titus, Jacky Rosen and Ruben Kihuen, all of Las Vegas, support a longterm CHIP solution and immigratio­n legislatio­n to address the Dreamers.

Rosen said Congress “is running out of opportunit­ies to fix President Trump’s cruel and heartless decision to end the DACA program.”

Rep. Mark Amodei, a Republican whose district includes Northern Nevada, has signed a discharge petition that would have forced the House to act on an immigratio­n bill before year’s end.

“As I have said before, it’s impossible to defend doing nothing in circumstan­ces like this,” Amodei said, adding that he had favored putting the bill on the floor for debate and amendment.

Meanwhile, Gov. Brian Sandoval, a Republican, and other governors are urging Congress to reauthoriz­e CHIP, which expired Sept. 30. Congress this week extended funding until March.

The Senate has drafted bipartisan legislatio­n that would reauthoriz­e the program for five years. But the House passed a reauthoriz­ation bill that calls for reforms opposed by Democrats.

In Nevada, CHIP provides health care and immunizati­ons for 69,000 children each year.

Spending bills

Congress must also tackle spending bills when a continuing resolution that keeps the government funded at fiscal year 2017 levels expires Jan. 19.

Included in the spending bills is $150 million to restart licensing on the Yucca Mountain nuclear repository project in Nevada.

The House must still pass an energy bill that authorizes the spending, which includes $120 million for the Department of Energy and $30 million for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to hire staff and prepare to resume licensing.

President Barack Obama pulled funding for the process during his second term in office. But Trump sought funds to restart the applicatio­n process in his budget for fiscal year 2018, which began Oct. 1.

The Senate has yet to draft legislatio­n that would address permanent nuclear storage, although Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-tenn., chairman of the Senate appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee on energy and water developmen­t, said he sees Yucca Mountain as part of a comprehens­ive plan to address the rising stockpiles of nuclear waste at power plants.

Yucca Mountain was designated by Congress in 1987 as the nation’s repository for nuclear waste.

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

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