H.R. 3134 – Defund Planned Parenthood Act of 2015
(Rep. Black, R-TN, and 176 cosponsors)
H.R. 3504 – Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act
(Rep. Franks, R-AZ, and 82 cosponsors)
The Administration
strongly opposes House passage of H.R. 3134 and H.R. 3504 because the
bills, while different, would have the same consequence of limiting
women’s health care choices.
H.R. 3134 would defund
Planned Parenthood based on its provision of abortion services. Planned
Parenthood uses both Federal and non-Federal funds to provide a range
of important preventive care and health services, including health
screenings, vaccinations, and check-ups to millions of men and women who
visit their health centers annually. Longstanding
Federal policy already prohibits the use of Federal funds for
abortions, except in cases of rape or incest or when the life of the
woman would be endangered. By eliminating Federal funding for a major
provider of health care, H.R. 3134 would limit access to health care for
men, women, and families across the Nation, and would
disproportionately impact low-income individuals.
H.R. 3504 would impose
new legal requirements related to the provision of abortion services in
certain circumstances, which would likely have a chilling effect,
reducing access to care.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3134 or H.R. 3504, he would veto them.
H.R. 348 – Responsibly and Professionally Invigorating Development Act of 2015
(Rep. Marino, R-PA, and 21 cosponsors)
The Administration
strongly opposes H.R. 348, which would undercut responsible
decision-making and public involvement in the Federal environmental
review and permitting processes. As the Administration said when
virtually identical legislation was considered previously, H.R. 348
would increase litigation, regulatory delays, and potentially force
agencies to approve a project if the review and analysis cannot be
completed before the proposed arbitrary deadlines. This legislation
would complicate the regulatory process and create two sets of standards
for Federal agencies to follow to review projects – one for
"construction projects" and one for all other Federal actions, such as
rulemakings or management plans.
This Administration is
committed to modernizing the Federal permitting and review process for
major infrastructure projects to provide certainty for project
applicants, reducing the aggregate time it takes to conduct reviews and
make permitting decisions, and producing measurably better environmental
and community outcomes. However, the Administration strongly rejects
the legislation's premise that public input and responsible agency
decision-making under current law hinders job creation. The
Administration believes that H.R. 348, if enacted, would lead to more
confusion and delay, limit public participation in the permitting
process, and ultimately hamper economic growth.
The Administration
supports efforts to improve the efficiency of the environmental review
processes without diminishing requirements for rigorous analyses, agency
consultation, and public participation. Since 2011, the Administration
has prioritized improving the environmental review process and
continues to make advancements in this space that will improve
interagency coordination and synchronization of reviews to increase
decision-making speed; improve project siting and application quality;
expand innovative mitigation approaches; and drive accountability and
transparency through the expanded use of an online permitting
dashboard. For example, under Executive Order 13604, the interagency
infrastructure permitting steering committee established the permitting
dashboard, which makes project schedules transparent to the public and
is designed to improve the timeliness and environmental outcomes of the
permitting process. In the coming months, additional projects requiring
complex permitting actions will be posted to the dashboard in an effort
to improve project delivery.
If the President were presented with H.R. 348, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
H.R. 758 – Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act of 2015
(Rep. Smith, R-TX, and 6 cosponsors)
The Administration
strongly opposes H.R. 758 because it is both unnecessary and
counterproductive. H.R. 758 would limit the discretion of courts for
violations of Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Rule 11
requires attorneys to certify pre-filing that pleadings are not
presented for any improper purpose, such as to harass, cause unnecessary
delay, or needlessly increase the cost of litigation. H.R. 758 would
require courts to impose monetary sanctions, including court costs and
attorney fees, for any Rule 11 violation. The bill would eliminate the
safe harbor provision that currently allows attorneys to correct or
withdraw a filing before Rule 11 proceedings commence. H.R. 758 would
also circumvent the usual procedure for amending the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure.
H.R. 758 was introduced
to curb a perceived increase in frivolous litigation; however, the
proposed changes to Rule 11 will actually increase litigation. By
creating an automatic financial incentive, and by removing the safe
harbor provision, the proposed changes to Rule 11 could dramatically
increase the number of sanctions motions, including those filed against
Federal government attorneys, and correspondingly increase the risk of
financial exposure for any conduct that might be considered a Rule 11
violation. In short, H.R. 758 would raise the amount and cost of civil
litigation and provide more opportunity for unnecessary delay and
harassment.
The
Administration is particularly concerned that the new requirements
could be used to target consumer and civil rights plaintiffs. Consumer
abuse and civil rights cases can rely heavily on the discovery process
to prove the merits of their claims. In addition, civil rights cases
often seek to challenge the law or to extend existing precedents. The
threat of mandatory sanctions for failure to withstand a Rule 11
challenge could chill meritorious claims by deterring worthy plaintiffs,
who often lack the financial resources to pay costs and fees, from challenging existing laws or seeking novel interpretations of them.
The bill is also opposed
by the Judicial Conference of the United States, the principal
policymaking body for the Judicial Branch charged with proposing
amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure under the careful,
deliberate process outlined in the Rules Enabling Act. The Congress has
tasked the Judicial Conference to serve as the principal policymaking
body for the Judicial Branch. The Congress has thus empowered the
Federal judiciary to make its own procedural rules, retaining the right
to review those rules and to accept, modify, or reject them. H.R. 758
is an attempt to amend the rules directly, over the objections of the
Judicial Conference.
Source: Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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