Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 113 Part 3.djvu/450

 113 STAT. 1968 CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS—APR. 15, 1999 Apr. 15.1999 FEDERAL BUDGET—FISCAL YEAR 2000 [H.Con. Res. 68] Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), SECTION 1. CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2000. (a) DECLARATION.— Congress determines and declares that this concurrent resolution is the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2000 including the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2001 through 2009 as authorized by section 301 of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974. (b) TABLE OF CONTENTS. —The table of contents for this concurrent resolution is as follows: Sec. 1. Concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2000. TITLE I—LEVELS AND AMOUNTS Sec. 101. Recommended levels and amounts. Sec. 102. Social Security. Sec. 103. Major functional categories. Sec. 104. Reconciliation of revenue reductions in the Senate. Sec. 105. ReconciHation of revenue reductions in the House of Representatives. TITLE II—BUDGETARY RESTRAINTS AND RULEMAKING Sec. 201. Safe deposit box for Social Security siu-pluses. Sec. 202. Reserve fund for retirement security. Sec. 203. Reserve fund for Medicare. Sec. 204. Reserve fund for agriculture. Sec. 205. Tax reduction reserve fund in the Senate. Sec. 206. Emergency designation point of order in the Senate. Sec. 207. Pay-as -you-go point of order in the Senate. Sec. 208. Application and effect of changes in allocations and aggregates. Sec. 209. Establishment of levels for fiscal year 1999. Sec. 210. Deficit-neutral reserve fund to foster the employment and independence of individuals with disabilities in the Senate. Sec. 211. Reserve fund for fiscal year 2000 surplus. Sec. 212. Reserve fund for education in the Senate. Sec. 213. Exercise of rulemaking powers. TITLE III—SENSE OF CONGRESS, HOUSE, AND SENATE PROVISIONS Subtitle A—Sense of Congress Provisions Sec. 301. Sense of Congress on the protection of the Social Security surpluses. Sec. 302. Sense of Congress on providing additional dollars to the classroom. Sec. 303. Sense of Congress on asset-buUding for the working poor. Sec. 304. Sense of Congress on child nutrition. Sec. 305. Sense of Congress concerning funding for special education. Subtitle B—Sense of the House Provisions Sec. 311. Sense of the House on the Commission on International Religious Freedom. Sec. 312. Sense of the House on assessment of welfare-to-work programs. Subtitle C—Sense of the Senate Provisions Sec. 321. Sense of the Senate that the Federal Government should not invest the Social Security trust funds in private financial markets. Sec. 322. Sense of the Senate regarding the modernization and improvement of the Medicare Program. Sec. 323. Sense of the Senate on education. Sec. 324. Sense of the Senate on providing tax rehef to Americans by returning the non-Social Security surplus to taxpayers. Sec. 325. Sense of the Senate on access to Medicare services. Sec. 326. Sense of the Senate on law enforcement. Sec. 327. Sense of the Senate on improving security for United States diplomatic missions. Sec. 328. Sense of the Senate on increased funding for the National Institutes of Health.

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