the Senate ~~ CONGRESS 3/5 ~~ the House


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A map of those living in slavery 21st Century

The Senate stands adjourned until 10:00am on Wednesday, March 5, 2014.

Will common sense ever prevail in Congress … #Midterms2014Matter

Following any Leader remarks, the Senate will proceed to Executive Session to consider Executive Calendar #659, the nomination of Debo P. Adegbile, of New York, to be an Assistant Attorney General with the time until 11:45am will be equally divided and controlled between Senators Leahy and Grassley or their designees.

 At 11:45am, there will be up to 3 roll call votes:

–        Motion to invoke cloture on the Adegbile nomination

–        If cloture is invoked, all but 4 minutes of post-cloture time will be yielded back and the Senate will vote on confirmation of the Adegbile nomination

–        Following disposition of the Adegbile nomination or if cloture is not invoked on the Adegbile nomination, the Senate will vote on the motion to invoke cloture on Executive Calendar #568, Pedro A. Delgado Hernandez to be U.S. District Judge for the District of Puerto Rico.

 We expect to recess following the cloture vote on the Hernandez nomination for the weekly caucus meetings. Upon disposition of the Hernandez nomination, the Senate will process the following cloture motions.  We hope to reach an agreement to process the remaining nominations throughout the afternoon.

 –        Executive Calendar #569, Pamela Reeves to be U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Tennessee (2 equally-divided hours);

–        Executive Calendar #565, Timothy Brooks to be U.S. District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas (2 equally-divided hours);

–        Executive Calendar #571, Vince Chhabria to be U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of California (2 equally-divided hours);

–        Executive Calendar #636, Rose Gottemoeller to be Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security (8 equally-divided hours); and

–        Motion to proceed to Legislative Calendar #309, S.1086, the Child Care and Development Block Grant.

 As a reminder, when cloture is filed sequentially on several items, the Senate will consider one motion at a time. If cloture is not invoked or upon disposition of the nomination, the Senate would immediately proceed to the cloture vote on the next nomination listed. If cloture is invoked on a nomination, the corresponding amount of debate time will occur prior to a vote on confirmation of the nomination.

 Upon disposition of the Gottemoeller nomination, the next vote will be on cloture on the motion to proceed to S.1086, the Child Care and Development Block Grant Act. We hope to vitiate the cloture motion and adopt the motion to proceed by consent and begin legislating on the bill.

11:57am, there will be up to 3 roll call votes related to the following nominations:

  1. Motion to invoke cloture on Executive Calendar #659, Debo Adegbile, of New York, to be an Assistant Attorney General;
  2. If cloture is invoked on Adegbile, immediately proceed to vote on confirmation of the Adegbile nomination;
  3. If cloture is not invoked on Adegbile, proceed immediately to cloture on Executive Calendar #568, Pedro A. Delgado Hernandez to be U.S. District Judge for the District of Puerto Rico.

 Following the votes, the Senate will recess until 2:15pm to allow for the weekly caucus meetings.

 At 2:15pm, there will be a period of Morning Business with senator permitted to speak therein for up to 10 minutes each.

 At 3:30pm, the Senate will resume Executive Session with the time equally divided until 4:00pm. If cloture is invoked on any of the following nominations, except for Gottemoeller, all post-cloture debate time will be yielded back and the Senate will proceed to vote on confirmation of the nomination. All votes after the first vote will be 10 minutes in duration. There will be 2 minutes for debate equally divided between the votes.

 At 4:00pm, there will be up to 8 roll call votes:

  1. Confirmation of Hernandez nomination;
  2. Cloture on Executive Calendar #569, Pamela Reeves to be U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Tennessee;
  3. Confirmation of Reeves nomination;
  4. Cloture on  Executive Calendar #565, Timothy Brooks to be U.S. District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas;
  5. Confirmation of Brooks nomination;
  6. Cloture on  Executive Calendar #571, Vince Chhabria to be U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of California;
  7. Confirmation of Chhabria nomination; and
  8. Cloture on Executive Calendar #636, Rose Gottemoeller to be Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security (Up to 8 equally-divided hours)

11:58am The Senate began a 15 minute roll call vote on the motion to invoke cloture on Executive Calendar #659, Debo Adegbile, of New York, to be an Assistant Attorney General

Cloture Not Invoked: 47-52.

Senator Reid changed his vote to no (for procedural reasons) and entered a motion to reconsider the failed cloture vote at a later time

12:28pm The Senate began a 15 minute roll call vote on cloture on Executive Calendar #568, Pedro A. Delgado Hernandez to be U.S. District Judge for the District of Puerto Rico;

Invoked: 57-41 (1 senator voted present)

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Last Floor Action:3/4
7:41:52 P.M. – The House adjourned.

The next meeting is scheduled for 10:00 a.m. on March 5, 2015.

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the Senate ~~ CONGRESS 3/4 ~~ the House


matthew 25

The Senate stands adjourned until 2:00pm on Tuesday, March 4, 2014.

Following any Leader remarks, the Senate will be in a period of morning business for debate only with Senators permitted to speak therein for up to 10 minutes each. There will be no roll call votes on Tuesday.

 The next roll call votes will be at approximately 11:45am on Wednesday, March 5th.

WRAP UP

No Roll Call Votes

Legislative Items

Began the Rule 14 process of S.2077, the Emergency Unemployment Compensation Extension Act of 2014 (Reed) in order to place the bill on the Legislative Calendar.

No Executive Items

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Last Floor Action: 3/2
4:13:47 P.M. – The Speaker announced that the

 

House do now recess.

The next meeting is subject to the call of the Chair.

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EPA plans to put National Limits on Carbon Pollution …Tell Congress to Support the EPA


Don’t let them take away our shot at climate action.

When the EPA announced their plans to finally put national limits on carbon pollution from America’s power plants, we knew the opposition would soon be out in full force. And they did not disappoint.

Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-KY) introduced the Electricity Security and Affordability Act (H.R. 3826), that would essentially handcuff the EPA and allow unlimited carbon pollution to continue. The House of Representatives will vote on this destructive legislation as early as Wednesday.

Tell your elected officials this is unacceptable! Ask them to stand strong in support of the EPA.

H.R. 3826 would block the EPA on multiple fronts. First, it would halt their efforts to make sure that all new power plants are built with technologies that meet common sense standards to reduce carbon pollution—but it won’t stop there.

The EPA is also working to propose carbon pollution standards to begin cleaning up OLDER, DIRTY power plants. But this bill would stop that in its tracks by changing the rules at the end of the game, requiring Congress to get its act together and pass additional legislation before power plants have to start cleaning up smokestack pollution.

The fact is, Congress already passed bipartisan legislation authorizing these rules—it’s called THE CLEAN AIR ACT. And with climate deniers and dirty energy allies standing ready to derail these clean air standards in Congress, it’s unlikely these groundbreaking rules would ever get put into practice.

Don’t stand by and let this happen.

Take Action: Tell your members of Congress to let the EPA do its job.

Heather ShelbyThank you for your activism and support, HeatherShelbySignature
Heather Shelby
Action Network Coordinator

Minimum wage facts …


  Minimum wage is an employer’s way of saying “if I was allowed to pay you less, I would.”           

Minimum wage workers are not all teenagers bagging groceries at the corner store.  They’re not just on the first rung of the ladder to the American dream.  They are mostly women, disproportionately of color and in service industries where there’s no way up or out.

They’re the men and women who hand you your change, clear off your tray and say “have a nice day” on your way out the door.

And they haven’t had a raise in years. In fact, their pay has gone down because it’s not indexed to inflation.

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Take Action

4.4 million Americans currently earn the federal minimum wage of $7.25, or less. 284,000 of them are college graduates. Worse, the minimum wage has not kept up with the cost of living. After adjusting for inflation, the minimum wage is lower than it was in 1956.

Click here to tell the House and Senate to raise the minimum wage.

Sincerely,

~~~ 6 tips for putting your words to music ~~~


I am not a songwriter, but I love to read and definitely hear the spoken word.

My interest is in movement, specifically dance, but great words put to music with innovative patterns can invigorate, irritate, and make you feel good. So good that you want to move.

They also say that music is said to soothe the savage beast, or at the very least, we love to talk about how music impacts us physically and what’s inside our souls

…  And

We all love to love …

1) Make it personal because reading someone’s experience with love at first sight, first love, lust, long-term love, or a one-night stand brings a sense of connection that folks sometimes look for. Setting it to music can only make a good lyric better, right?

2) Be authentic because, as a music lover and voracious reader, I make an effort to learn the lyrics to songs I enjoy and occasionally end up loving them. Most can sense that the performer’s passion is real, not an attempt to be someone else. Sincere lyrics can actually be heard and felt through the spoken word.

3) The music that makes an impression on me also provides imagery, a vision of something of what the song is about; even if it is abstract, the image is sort of like a coffee table object. The meaning of the images can change and are sometimes left up for interpretation, depending on who is listening to, reading, or learning the lyrics. Of course, when it comes to love, when someone is singing to you, take the time to listen.

We often hear the music and skim the lyrics, but we weren’t feeling it

 What gets folks onto the dance floor …

4) Rhymes, Reason, and Rhythm, because who doesn’t like movement?  Usually, rhymes, reason, and rhythm are what make tracks work.  That is what kind of music makes great artists move up into the stratosphere.  I dance because I have to, even as a kid, and if you have a great hook, added to a great bass, or syncopation, it definitely will get played more than once in my house.

The rhythm of life

5) Always assume a video of your creation is a possibility, so … be that visionary

 

6)     🙂  Always believe you were born to make music  (:
 

Source: Nativegrl77