1. Clean Water/Stop Dumping Mountaintop Removal Waste: Mountaintop
removal coal mining literally blasts the tops off of mountains
in Appalachia in order to reach seams of coal within. The millions
of tons of waste that result are dumped into valleys, obliterating
streams and leveling landscapes. In October 1999, a West Virginia
federal district court found that this practice violates provisions
of the Clean Water Act and the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation
Act (SMCRA). In response, Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WV) attempted
to attach an eleventh-hour rider to the fiscal year 2000 Omnibus
Appropriations bill that would have exempted coal mining companies
around the country from these portions of the Clean Water Act
and SMCRA. This rider would have wreaked havoc on clean water
around the nation and set a terrible precedent for a polluting
industry to bypass environmental laws. Ultimately, Sen. Byrd
attached his rider to a continuing resolution (a measure that
extends funding for the federal government at last year's levels)
that was never signed into law. On November 18, 1999, the Senate
approved the Byrd rider, 56-33. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
2. Clean Water/Clean Up Mining Operations: The hardrock
mining industry is the nation's top toxic polluter and has polluted
more than 12,000 miles of rivers and 180,000 acres of lakes
nationwide. Dozens of mining waste sites are on the Superfund
list of the nation's most toxic sites, and cleanup costs can
run into the hundreds of millions of dollars per site. Regulations
drafted in 1980 to protect public lands from the damaging impacts
of hardrock mining were notoriously too weak and outdated, having
been written before the onset of modern, destructive mining
practices. Mining industry advocates succeeded for years in
blocking needed reforms to these rules, and even attached a
"rider" to the fiscal year 2001 Agriculture Appropriations bill
(H.R. 4461) to gut a revised rule. Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL)
offered an amendment to H.R. 4461 to reaffirm the authority
of the Interior Department to pass new, more protective rules.
Sen. Gramm (R-TX) called for a point of order against the Durbin
amendment, arguing that it was not "germane," or relevant to
the bill, even though the anti-environmental rider had been
found germane. On July 20, 2000, the Senate approved the point
of order finding the Durbin amendment not germane, thus blocking
a vote on the amendment itself by 36-56. (The Clinton Administration
ultimately negotiated language that allowed the mining rules
to be revised, but current Interior Secretary Norton has proposed
to suspend these more protective rules and reinstate the old,
inadequate regulations.) PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: YES
3. Endangered Species/Protect Endangered Species on the
Missouri River: The Army Corps has proposed revisions to
its master manual for water control that would prevent the extinction
of the piping plover, the pallid sturgeon, and the lease tern.
However, during consideration of H.R. 4733, the Fiscal Year
2001 Energy and Water Development appropriations bill, Sen.
Kit Bond (R-MO) inserted a rider to block revisions to the master
manual and other proposed conservation actions on the river.
Senators Thomas Daschle (D-SD) and Max Baucus (D-MT) offered
an amendment to strike the Bond rider from the Energy and Water
Appropriations bill. On September 7, 2000, the Senate rejected
the amendment, 45-52. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: YES
4. Toxic Waste/Oppose Weakening Toxic Waste Clean-Up Law:
There are hundreds of toxic waste sites across the nation,
including some of the largest Superfund sites, that have river
and lake sediments contaminated with dangerous chemicals. Polluters,
including General Electric, the nation's largest polluter of
Superfund sites, successfully lobbied the House of Representatives
to get an anti-environmental rider passed that would delay the
cleanup of such sites, including the nation's largest Superfund
site, the Hudson River. GE contaminated the Hudson River with
over 1.3 million pounds of polychlorinated biphynols (PCBs),
which are probable human carcinogens. Sen. Barbara Boxer (CA)
introduced an amendment to strike the anti-environmental rider
from the bill. The Senate voted 56-39 to table her motion, defeating
the effort to strip the rider. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
5. Environmental Preservation/Protect National Monuments:
In July 2000, Representative Don Nickles (R-OK) offered an amendment
to H.R. 4578, the Fiscal Year 2001 Interior Appropriations bill
that would have prohibited funds from being used to establish
or expand a national monument, unless approved by Congress.
This language would have undermined the president's authority
to proclaim national monuments under the Antiquities Act. On
July 18, 2000, the Senate rejected the Nickles amendment by
a 49-50 vote. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
6. Clean Air and Clean Water/Oppose Weakening Clean Air
and Clean Water Protections: Over 30 million people drink
water containing dangerous amounts of arsenic. Arsenic is known
to cause cancer of the bladder, lungs and skin, as well as a
host of other adverse health effects. Congress required EPA
to update the drinking water standard for arsenic by January
2001. The old drinking water standard of 50 parts per billion
was set in 1942. The National Academy of Sciences concluded
that the 50 parts per billion standard "could easily result
in a 1 in 100 fatal cancer risk. Polluters, including the mining
industry, lobbied for an anti-environmental rider to increase
the amount of time that EPA had to increase protections against
arsenic in tap water. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) submitted an
amendment to strike this anti-environmental rider from the bill.
On October 12, 2000, the Senate voted 63-32 to table the Boxer
amendment, defeating the attempt to strip the rider. PUBLIC
INTEREST VOTE: NO
7. Arctic Refuge/Protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
from Oil and Gas Drilling: The vote on the Arctic Refuge
was on the 2000 Senate Budget Resolution. Drilling supporters
Senators Frank Murkowski (R-AK) and Pete Domenici (R-AZ), chair
of the Senate Budget Committee, included language in the Budget
Resolution that assumed revenue from leasing and drilling in
the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Including
revenue language in the Budget Resolution has often been used
in the past as a first step towards passing legislation that
would actually authorize leasing and drilling in the Arctic
Refuge. Sen. William Roth (R-DE) introduced an amendment to
strike the assumption of revenue language from the Budget Resolution.
Sen. Murkowski countered with a motion to table Roth's amendment.
So supporters of protecting the Arctic Refuge from oil and gas
drilling voted no on Murkowski's motion to table Roth's amendment.
On April 6, 2000, the Senate voted 51-49 to table (not to allow)
a vote on the Roth amendment. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
8. National Forests/Cut Subsidy for Logging in National
Forests: The U.S. Forest Service subsidizes the destruction
of our National Forests by selling off our trees to the timber
industry at prices that do not even cover the agency's costs
to administer these sales. As a result, taxpayers have lost
$2 billion over the last six years. At the same time, logging
in the National Forests has destroyed wildlife habitat, polluted
rivers necessary for fish and for drinking water, and caused
expensive and deadly mudslides. Logging also removes mature
trees and leaves behind brush that increases the severity of
forest fires. Senators Richard Bryan (D-NV) and Peter Fitzgerald
(R-IL) offered an amendment to the fiscal year 2001 Interior
Appropriations bill (H.R. 4578) that would have cut $30 million
from the timber subsidy, and shifted $15 million to wildland
fire planning and preparedness. On July 18, 2001 the Senate
rejected the amendment 45-54. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: YES
9. Polluter Pork/Stop Wasteful Water Project: The Animas-La
Plata water project would siphon up to a quarter of the Animas
River to create a reservoir in southwestern Colorado, which
would not be used by anyone for years. The project would cost
$450 million, more than 80% of which would be paid for by federal
taxpayers. The project would also drain one of the nation's
most endangered rivers and one of the West's last free-flowing
rivers, threatening two endangered species, a trout fishery,
and flooding wildlife habitat and Native American burial sites
in the process. Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-CO) introduced
a bill (S. 2508) authorizing this destructive water project.
Sen. Russell Feingold (D-WI) offered an amendment to the bill
to address some of the more blatant fiscal and environmental
problems. On October 25, 2000, Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell
(R-CO) offered a motion to table the amendment which passed
56-34. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
10. Nuclear Waste/Stop Dangerous Transport of Nuclear Waste:
S. 1287, The Nuclear Waste Policy Act Amendments of 2000, would
needlessly mandate the transportation of highly radioactive
waste through 43 states. This bill would put millions of Americans
at risk, and undermine EPA radiation standards. On February
10, 2000, the Senate approved S. 1287 by a 64-34 vote. PUBLIC
INTEREST VOTE: NO
11. Global Warming/Energy Efficiency/Stop Freeze on Auto
Fuel Efficiency Standards: A legal loophole allowing lower
miles per gallon standards for sport utility vehicles, minivans
and light trucks causes an extra 187 million tons of global
warming pollution and costs consumers up to $27 billion extra
at the gas pump annually. This loophole also causes the U.S.
to consume almost a million extra barrels of oil per day. Since
1995, a rider placed on the Transportation Appropriations bill
by Rep. Tom Delay (R-TX) and Rep. Frank Wolf (R-VA) has prohibited
the Department of Transportation from even considering updated
standards for these vehicles. Senators Gorton (R-WA), Byran
(D-NV) and Feinstein (D-CA) offered an amendment to the Senate
Transportation Appropriations bill rejecting the Wolf rider.
On September 15, 1999, the Senate rejected the amendment 40-55.
Although 40 votes in favor of the amendment is sufficient to
sustain a veto of the bill, the president ultimately signed
the bill and the rider into law. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: YES
12. Polluter Pork/Protect Taxpayers and Stop Underpayment
of Oil Royalties: Companies that drill for oil on public
lands are required to pay royalties, which benefit taxpayers,
the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and state governments,
many of which use the royalties for public education. However,
according to the Minerals Management Service (MMS), the largest
oil companies have been underpaying these royalties by at least
$66 million a year. To address this underpayment, the MMS formulated
new rules to create fair, market-based oil payments, but three
"riders" on three different spending bills blocked the final
passage of these rules. During consideration of the fiscal year
2000 Interior Appropriations bill, Senators Kay Bailey Hutchison
(R-TX) and Pete Domenici (R-NM) offered yet another rider to
delay the MMS rules. (The MMS rules were finalized on March
15, 2000, but the oil industry is suing the MMS to prevent the
rules from being enforced.) On September 23, 1999, the Senate
adopted the Hutchison oil royalty rider, 51-47. PUBLIC INTEREST
VOTE: NO
13. Campaign Finance Reform/Ban Soft Money Contributions:
Sens. McCain (R-AZ) and Feingold (D-WI) brought S. 1593 to the
floor of the Senate to ban soft money contributions in federal
elections. Soft money is unlimited and unregulated funds from
corporations, labor unions, and wealthy individuals given to
political parties and other organizations as a way to get around
the legal limits on contributions to parties. While the bill
fell short of comprehensive reform, it would have been an important
first step. A motion to invoke cloture on the debate, which
would have allowed it to come to a final vote, failed on October
19, 1999 by 53-47. Despite the fact that a majority of Senators
supported the bill, Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-MS)
did not bring it to a final vote because 60 votes were needed
to break a filibuster led by Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY). PUBLIC
INTEREST VOTE: YES
14. Campaign Finance Reform/Amend Constitution to Limit
Contributions and Spending: Sens. Hollings (D-SC) and Specter
(R-PA) proposed a constitutional amendment that would grant
Congress and the states the authority to set mandatory limits
on campaign spending and contributions. Congress set spending
limits in 1974, but they were invalidated by the controversial
Supreme Court decision, Buckley vs. Valeo, which extended First
Amendment protection to unlimited spending in elections. On
March 28, 2000, the Senate tabled (killed) the amendment by
a vote of 67-33. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
15. Health Care/Pass Strong Patients' Bill of Rights:
This is the Managed Care Patient Protections amendment #3273
to the Fiscal 2001 Defense Authorization (S. 549). Sen. Tom
Daschle (D-SD) attempted to attach pro-consumer managed care
reform legislation to the Defense Department authorization bill.
Adopted in the House in 1999, the legislation was intended to
protect the doctor-patient relationship, both by ensuring that
physician decisions prevail over plan objections if upheld by
an external review and by eliminating improper physician incentive
plans. In addition, it would have: required a timely and independent
external grievance and appeals system; held managed care organizations
legally accountable for negligence; allowed health care providers
to prescribe the right drug for their patients, even if that
drug was not on the plan's formulary; and allowed patients direct
access to specialists in some cases. Furthermore, the bill's
protections would have applied to all 161 million Americans
enrolled in private insurance plans. On June 8, 2000, a motion
to table, and thus kill, Sen. Daschle's amendment was agreed
to 51-48. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
16. Consumer Protection/Oppose Weakening Consumer Bankruptcy
Protections: Congress passed one-sided legislation that
would have restricted the ability of financially strapped consumers
to make a fresh start in bankruptcy without reining in unfair
credit card company marketing practices. The bill would have
imposed a rigid new means test on debtors seeking to file for
Chapter 7 "fresh-start" bankruptcy, forcing many consumers into
unfair Chapter 13 "5-year repayment plans." The bill also would
have created onerous legal and paperwork burdens for debtors
of modest means while continuing to allow affluent debtors in
some states to file for bankruptcy protection and retain expensive
homes. Furthermore, it would have done virtually nothing to
rein in -- and would likely have encouraged -- abusive creditor
practices that help lead consumers into insupportable debt.
On December 7, 2001, the conference report was adopted 70-28,
but was vetoed by the President. PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
17. Consumer Protection/Protect Consumers From High-Cost
Lenders: During consideration of legislation supported by
the credit card industry to amend the bankruptcy laws, S. 625,
Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-MN) offered a balancing amendment to
curb certain abusive practices. The Wellstone amendment would
have prevented predatory lenders who make loans at interest
rates greater than 100% APR, such as payday and auto title pawn
loan companies, from making claims against consumers to recover
unpaid debts in bankruptcy. The amendment would have also curbed
certain unfair debt collection practices. On February 1, 2000,
the Senate voted to table (kill) the Wellstone amendment 53-44.
PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: NO
18. Higher Education/Increase Student Aid Funding From Pell
Grants: Sen. Kennedy (D-MA) introduced an amendment to the
Budget Resolution to increase Pell Grant Funding by $400 for
the maximum annual award. The Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA)
was passed to ensure that all Americans would have access to
higher education, regardless of their economic status. An integral
piece of the HEA is the Pell Grant Program, the primary source
of the federal need-based grant aid for students. Each year,
Pell Grants enable millions of students to afford a college
education. However, over the past two decades college costs
have soared while the spending value of the Pell Grant has been
cut in half. In the late 1970s the maximum Pell Grant paid for
three-quarters of the average cost of attendance at a public
four-year college. Today the Pell Grant covers only one-third
of the average of attending a public four-year college - increases
in the maximum Pell Grant have not kept pace with rising tuition
costs. On April 7, 2000 the Senate approved this amendment 51-49.
PUBLIC INTEREST VOTE: YES