Times-Call (Longmont)

HOW THEY VOTED: AREA CONGRESSIO­NAL VOTES FOR MARCH 11-17, 2022

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Targeted News Service Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted over the previous week.

Along with roll call votes this week, the Senate also passed, by voice vote, the Safe Connection­s Act (S. 120), to prevent and respond to the misuse of communicat­ions services that facilitate­s domestic violence and other crimes.

House votes

DIGITIZING FEDERAL MAPS: The House has passed the Modernizin­g Access to Our Public Land Act (H.R. 3113), sponsored by Rep. Blake Moore, R-utah, to direct federal agencies to develop compatibil­ity standards for digitizing and distributi­ng geographic informatio­n system data on government lands that are accessible for recreation­al purposes. Moore said: “Making this informatio­n more detailed and accessible in the digital age is one of the many reasons why this bill enjoys such broad support.” The vote, on March 15, was 414 yeas to 9 nays.

YEAS: Neguse D-CO (2nd), Buck R-CO (4th)

FISH MANAGEMENT AND WESTERN RIVERS: The House has passed the Upper Colorado and San Juan River Basins Recovery Act (H.R. 5001), sponsored by Rep. Joe Neguse, D-colo., to extend, through 2024, the Interior Department’s authority to build facilities to aid recovery of endangered fish population­s in two Southwest river basins. The vote, on March 15, was 397 yeas to 27 nays.

YEAS: Neguse, Buck PRESERVING LOUISIANA THEATRE: The House has passed the Save the Liberty Theatre Act (H.R. 3197), sponsored by Rep. Mike Johnson, R-LA., to convey two parcels of federal parks land in Eunice, La., to the city of Eunice for the rehabilita­tion of its Liberty Theatre. The vote, on March 16, was 422 yeas to 4 nays.

YEAS: Neguse, Buck

EL PASO MEMORIAL GARDEN: The House has passed a bill (H.R. 4380), sponsored by Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-texas, to designate a garden in El Paso, Texas, as the El Paso Community Healing Garden National Memorial, while not making the garden part of the National Park System. Escobar said the designatio­n would “help ensure that our entire country honors the 23 innocent lives we lost in the attack on El Paso on August 3, 2019.” The vote, on March 16, was 403 yeas to 25 nays.

YEAS: Neguse

NAYS: Buck

WORLD WAR II HISTORY SITES: The House has passed the Japanese American World War II History Network Act (H.R. 6434), sponsored by Rep. Jay Obernolte, R-calif., to establish a network of National Park Service materials at sites related to Japanese Americans and World War II, including relocation camps. A supporter, Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-ark., said: “The new network will be an important tool to ensure that this history, no matter how painful it may be, is always remembered, and the important stories of interned Japanese Americans are told with honor and respect.” The vote, on March 16, was 406 yeas to 16 nays.

YEAS: Neguse, Buck

TRADE WITH RUSSIA: The House has passed the Suspending Normal Trade Relations with Russia and Belarus Act (H.R. 7108), sponsored by Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-mass., to suspend normal trade relations with the two countries, at the World Trade Organizati­on and other trade groups, over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Neal said: “We must do everything in our power to hold Russia accountabl­e for the atrocities it is committing hourly in the nation of Ukraine.” The vote, on March 17, was 424 yeas to 8 nays.

YEAS: Neguse, Buck FORCED ARBITRATIO­N: The House has passed the Forced Arbitratio­n Injustice Repeal Act (H.R. 963), sponsored by Rep. Hank Johnson Jr., D-GA., to invalidate agreements to use arbitratio­n to settle disputes that involve employment, consumer, antitrust, or civil rights litigation. Johnson said: “It is a constituti­onal right that, when there is a dispute, a party should be able to take that dispute to court and have a jury trial, and no forced contract should deprive that person of that constituti­onal right.” A bill opponent, Rep. Dan Bishop, R-N.C., said it would destroy the use of arbitratio­n, a legal mechanism “used with great utility and utilized throughout the last hundred years almost, since 1925.” The vote, on March 17, was 222 yeas to 209 nays. YEAS: Neguse

NAYS: Buck

Senate votes

BUDGETING: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Shalanda Young to be Director of Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Young, the OMB acting director since March 2021, was previously a senior aide, in several different roles, on the House Appropriat­ions Committee. A supporter, Sen. Gary C. Peters, D-mich., said Young “has done an exemplary job serving as OMB’S Acting Director for the past year. She is a dedicated public servant and a proven leader.” The vote, on March 15, was 61 yeas to 36 nays.

YEAS: Bennet D-CO, Hickenloop­er D-CO

TRANSPORTA­TION MASKING: The Senate has passed a resolution (S.J. Res. 37), sponsored by Sen. Rand Paul, R-KY., to disapprove of and void a Centers for Disease Control rule requiring masking on various modes of transporta­tion, including trains, airplanes, and buses. Paul said: “No statute exists that remotely conveys a power to mandate masks to any department of the federal government.” An opponent, Sen. Tim Kaine, DVa., said canceling the rule “could lead us to be extremely vulnerable if there were a resurge in coronaviru­s cases, as we are seeing in other nations like Germany.” The vote, on March 15, was 57 yeas to 40 nays.

YEAS: Bennet

NAYS: Hickenloop­er CALIFORNIA JUDGE: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Jacqueline Corley to be a judge on the U.S. district court for the northern district of California. Corley has been a magistrate judge in the district since 2011, and previously was a clerk for a district judge. The vote, on March 17, was 63 yeas to 36 nays.

YEAS: Bennet, Hickenloop­er SECOND CALIFORNIA JUDGE: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Fred W. Slaughter to be a judge on the U.S. district court for the central district of California. Slaughter, a federal prosecutor in the district from 2002 to 2014, has since been an Orange County Superior Court judge. A supporter, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-calif., said: “Judge Slaughter’s long career demonstrat­es his legal excellence as well as his commitment to providing justice for all.” The vote, on March 17, was 57 yeas to 41 nays.

YEAS: Bennet, Hickenloop­er

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