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Roscoe Bartlett on Budget & Economy

Republican Representative (MD-6)


Voted NO on revitalizing severely distressed public housing.

CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY: HOPE VI Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2008:
  • Makes promoting housing choice among low-income families one of the purposes of the HOPE VI grant program for revitalization of severely distressed public housing.
  • Prohibits the award of demolition-only grants
  • Specifies requirements for revitalization plans including:
    1. involvement of public housing residents;
    2. a program for relocation;
    3. one-for-one replacement of demolished dwelling units; and
    4. green developments.

    SUPPORTER'S ARGUMENT FOR VOTING YES:Rep. WATERS: This bill preserves public housing. The administration eliminated the one-for-one replacement requirement in 1996, effectively triggering a national sloughing off of our Nation's public housing inventory. Housing authorities have consistently built back fewer units than they have torn down and, as a result, over 30,000 units have been lost. I urge you to support our Nation's low-income families and to preserve our housing stock.

    OPPONENT'S ARGUMENT FOR VOTING NO:Rep. HENSARLING: President Reagan once said that the nearest thing to eternal life on Earth is a Federal program, and I don't think there is any better case study than perhaps the HOPE VI program. If there was ever a program that cried out for termination, it's this one.

    This program began in 1992 with a very noble purpose of taking 86,000 units of severely distressed public housing and replacing them, demolishing them. Well, it achieved its mission. But somewhere along the line we had this thing in Washington known as mission creep.

    We already have 80-plus Federal housing programs, and the budget for Federal housing programs has almost doubled in the last 10 years, from $15.4 billion to more than $30 billion now. So it's very hard to argue that somehow Federal housing programs have been shortchanged.

    LEGISLATIVE OUTCOME:Bill passed House, 271-130

    Reference: HOPE VI Improvement and Reauthorization Act; Bill H.R.3524 ; vote number 08-HR3524 on Jan 17, 2008

    Voted YES on regulating the subprime mortgage industry.

    H.R.3915: To reform consumer mortgage practices and provide accountability for such practices, to establish licensing and registration requirements for residential mortgage originators. Prohibits certain creditor practices with respect to high-cost mortgages, including:

    Proponents support voting YES because:

    Rep. FRANK: This legislation seeks to prevent a repetition of events that caused one of the most serious financial crises in recent times. We have a worldwide problem economically, with a terrible shortage of credit. Innovations in the mortgage industry, in themselves good and useful, but conducted in such a completely unregulated manner as to have led to this crisis. The fundamental principle of the bill is not to put remedies into place, but to stop future problems from occurring in the first place. We have had two groups of mortgage originators: banks subject to the regulation of the bank regulators; and then mortgage loans made by brokers who were subject to no regulation. The secondary market has been on the whole useful but, having been unregulated, has caused some problems.

    Opponents recommend voting NO because:

    Rep. HENSARLING: This is a bad bill for homeowners in America. There is no doubt that this Nation faces a great challenge in the subprime market, but this piece of legislation is going to make the situation worse. Clearly, there has to be enforcement against fraud in the subprime market. But what Congress should not do is essentially outlaw the American Dream for many struggling families who may be of low income, who may have checkered credit pasts, for whom a subprime mortgage is the only means to purchase a home.

    Reference: Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act; Bill HR3915 ; vote number 2007-1118 on Nov 15, 2007

    Voted YES on restricting bankruptcy rules.

    Vote to pass the bill that would require debtors who are able to pay back $10,000 or 25 percent of their debts over five years to file under Chapter 13, rather then seeking to discharge their debts under Chapter 7. Chapter 13, calls for a reorganization of debts under a repayment plan. A Debtor would be restricted, in this bill, to a total exemption of $125,000 in home equity for residences bought within 40 months of a bankruptcy filing. The bill also would establish permanent and retroactive Chapter 12 bankruptcy relief for farmers.
    Reference: Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act; Bill S 1920 ; vote number 2004-10 on Jan 28, 2004

    Allow $3 on 1040 form to pay off National Debt.

    Bartlett co-sponsored allowing $3 on 1040 form to pay off National Debt

    OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY: Amends the Internal Revenue Code to permit an individual to designate three dollars on his or her income tax return (six dollars on a joint return) to be used to reduce the public debt of the United States.

    SPONSOR'S INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT: Pres. Eisenhower apparently once said that he believed that there could be no surplus as long as our Nation was in debt. I come from that school of thought, and yet that is not exactly where we are right now in Washington.

    Where we are right now is debating whether or not 90 percent or 50 percent, or some number in between, of these projected future surpluses should be allocated to the debt. What struck me is the fact that really more than just the Congress should be involved in that debate. It is for that reason that I introduce today the Taxpayers' Choice Debt Reduction Act.

    What this bill would do would be to simply take the 1040, the tax return as we now know it. And right now, we can send $3 to the presidential campaign. This would create another box wherein we could send 3 bucks to debt reduction. That is not enough money to change our national debt, but it is enough money to make a small step in an important debate that we all ought to be a part of.

    LEGISLATIVE OUTCOME: Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means; never called for a House vote.

    Source: Taxpayers' Choice Debt Reduction Act (H.R.5349) 00-HR5349 on Sep 29, 2000

    Supports Balanced Budget Amendment & on-budget accounting.

    Bartlett adopted the Republican Liberty Caucus Position Statement:

      The Republican Liberty Caucus endorses the following [among its] principles:
    1. There should be an amendment to the US Constitution to require a balanced budget, provided it includes a supermajority requirement to raise taxes and provided it does not empower the judiciary to unilaterally raise taxes.
    2. Honest accounting dictates that all federal expenditures should be on budget.
    3. Each budget should be derived based upon the justification for and needs of each program, with no program being either budgeted for or increased automatically.
    Source: Republican Liberty Caucus Position Statement 00-RLC8 on Dec 8, 2000

    Supports balanced budget amendment & line item veto.

    Bartlett signed the Contract with America:

    [As part of the Contract with America, within 100 days we pledge to bring to the House Floor the following bill]:

    The Fiscal Responsibility Act:
    A balanced budget/tax limitation amendment and a legislative line-item veto to restore fiscal responsibility to an out-of-control Congress, requiring them to live under the same budget constraints as families and businesses.
    Source: Contract with America 93-CWA3 on Sep 27, 1994

    Other candidates on Budget & Economy: Roscoe Bartlett on other issues:
    MD Gubernatorial:
    Martin O`Malley
    MD Senatorial:
    Barbara Mikulski
    Benjamin Cardin
    Corrogan Vaughn

    Democratic retirements
    & special elections:

    D,AL-5:Cramer
    D,CA-12:Lantos
    D,CO-2:Udall
    D,IN-7:Carson
    D,NY-21:McNulty
    D,ME-1:Allen
    D,MD-4:Wynn
    D,NM-3:Udall
    D,OR-5:Hooley

    Republican special elections:
    R,IL-14:Hastert
    R,LA-1:Jindal
    R,LA-6:Baker
    R,MS-1:Wicker
    R,OH-5:Gillmor
    Republican retirements:
    R,AL-2:Everett
    R,AZ-1:Renzi
    R,CA-4:Doolittle
    R,CA-52:Hunter
    R,CO-6:Tancredo
    R,FL-15:Weldon
    R,IL-11:Weller
    R,IL-18:LaHood
    R,KY-2:Lewis
    R,LA-4:McCrery
    R,MD-1:Gilchrest
    R,MN-3:Ramstad
    R,MO-9:Hulshof
    R,MS-3:Pickering
    R,NJ-3:Saxton
    R,NJ-7:Ferguson
    R,NM-1:Wilson
    R,NM-2:Pearce
    R,NY-25:Walsh
    R,NY-26:Reynolds
    R,OH-7:Hobson
    R,OH-15:Pryce
    R,OH-16:Regula
    R,PA-5:Peterson
    R,VA-11:Davis
    R,WY-0:Cubin
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    Page last updated: 3/31/2008