STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 4402 – National Strategic and Critical Minerals Production Act
(Rep. Amodei, R-NV, and 27 cosponsors)
The Administration strongly opposes H.R. 4402, which, though vaguely worded, would undermine and remove the environmental safeguards, for, at a minimum, almost all types of hardrock mines on Federal lands. Notwithstanding the title and the stated purpose of the legislation, H.R. 4402, as reported by the House Natural Resources Committee, is drafted in such a manner as to cover virtually all hardrock mining on Federal lands. Protection of the public through sound Federal decision-making would be circumvented by the bill's provisions, which include, among other things, the elimination of appropriate reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act and the circumvention of public involvement in and the formulation of alternatives to any mining proposal. The Administration strongly supports the development of rare earth elements and other critical minerals, but rejects the notion that their development is incongruent with environmental protection and public involvement in agency decision-making.
The legislation also undermines existing law calling for the multiple uses of public lands by placing mining interests above all other uses. This change has the potential to threaten hunting, fishing, recreation and other activities which create jobs and sustain local economies across the country. Furthermore, the Administration opposes the legislation's severe restrictions on judicial review. While the legislation purports to limit litigation, its extremely short statute of limitations and vague constraints on the scope of prospective relief that a court may issue are likely to have the opposite effect.
S. 2237 – Small Business Jobs and Tax Relief Act
STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
S. 2237 – Small Business Jobs and Tax Relief Act
(Sen. Reid, D-NV, and 6 cosponsors)
The Administration strongly supports Senate
passage of S. 2237 to give small businesses a tax break for increasing wages,
creating new jobs, and making new investments. By providing targeted tax relief to
the businesses that are expanding their workforce and making new investments in
capital, S. 2237 will help spur economic growth and job creation and strengthen
the recovery. Targeted tax
relief for small businesses is one of the five to-do items the President has
called on the Congress to pass as part of a concrete plan that creates jobs and
helps restore middle class security.
Under S. 2237, nearly two million companies that
make new hires or increase wages would receive a 10 percent income tax credit
on their new payroll, encouraging over $200 billion in new hiring and pay
raises. Because the credit is limited to $5 million in new wages (for a
credit of up to $500,000 per firm), S. 2237 is particularly beneficial to small
businesses. S. 2237 is also focused on middle class workers.
Because the credit is based on the Social Security wage base, companies would
receive no credit for increasing wages above $110,100. The Congressional
Budget Office recently found this type of targeted tax relief to be the single
most effective business tax option for boosting hiring and spurring economic
growth.
S. 2237 would also put an additional $50 billion
in the hands of businesses over this year and the next by extending the 100
percent expensing provision that the President signed into law in December
2010, which rewards firms for making new investments by allowing them to
immediately deduct the full value of those investments in calculating their
taxable earnings. S. 2237
provides a direct incentive for companies to hire workers and make the sorts of
investments that will boost economic growth. In addition, this
legislation ensures that companies that are actively cutting their workforce or
that offer raises only to already well-paid executives would be ineligible for
the tax relief.
The President believes that entrepreneurs and
small businesses are engines of innovation and economic growth and are
currently at the forefront of the Nation's economic recovery. The proposals in S. 2237 build on the
18 small business tax cuts that the President has already signed into law,
ranging from the small business health tax credit to the temporary tax
exclusion of capital gains from key small business investments. Congress
should act now to help American small businesses hire and grow with targeted
tax relief designed to boost jobs, rather than enacting additional costly tax
cuts for the most fortunate.
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