Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa today made the following comment on the National Treasury Employees Union's opposition to the use of private contractors to collect tax debt.  The provision is part of the proposed highway bill in the Senate.

"The IRS union is already opposing the use of private contractors to collect taxes that's part of the proposed highway bill.  Meanwhile, the IRS just had one of the worst filing seasons for customer service on record, according to the agency's own taxpayer advocate.  The number of 'courtesy disconnects skyrocketed' this last filing season.  That means the IRS hung up on callers because it couldn't handle the calls.  The private contractors would take on accounts involving taxes that are due and owed that are just sitting dormant right now.  The IRS isn't even pursuing them.  It seems unlikely to do so any time soon when it has trouble answering the phone from people who are trying to pay their taxes.  It's hard to see the logic for the resistance."

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Senator Chuck Grassley, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made the following statement after the White House nominated Judge Leonard Strand to serve on the United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa.

Grassley recommended Strand to the White House after an extensive effort by a Judicial Selection Commission that Grassley formed after two judges announced their intention to take senior status.  The Commission was comprised of highly qualified members of the Iowa legal community, and led by Cynthia Moser, a former Iowa State Bar Association president. The Commission also included Richard Sapp, Jeffrey Goodman, Harlan D. Hockenberg, and Adam Freed.

These lawyers spent hundreds of hours carefully reviewing applications and interviewing each of the 39 Iowans who submitted applications and sought consideration.  Eleven applicants were then selected to participate in a lengthy second interview.  The Commission's review included not only these interviews, but also a thorough study and examination of the applicants' professional history, credentials, and qualifications.  The Commission then made recommendations to Grassley, who reviewed the candidates and their qualifications before submitting his recommendations to the White House.

Here is Grassley's comment on today's announcement.

"Judge Strand has impeccable credentials and very much deserves this nomination.  I appreciate the White House working with me to move his nomination forward.  The five commissioners who made the recommendation to me, and spent hundreds of hours to vet dozens of very qualified candidates, deserve a lot of credit.  I'm confident, like the White House, that Judge Strand will serve with distinction."
WASHINGTON - Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley today is introducing legislation to hold accountable sanctuary jurisdictions that are harboring illegal immigrants who have criminal records.

 

Grassley's legislation would withhold federal funding from sanctuary jurisdictions that refuse to cooperate on criminal aliens and other high priority individuals.  The bill would also increase the amount of time, from up to 2 years to a mandatory 5 years, an illegal immigrant must spend in jail for re-entry after deportation.

 

"No more people should die at the hands of those who ignore our immigration laws and commit crimes. No more families should have to go through what our hearing witnesses have experienced," Grassley said. "Sanctuary jurisdictions are giving a free pass to illegal immigrants who have repeatedly violated this country's laws and are now going on to commit other serious, violent offenses."

 

Grassley's bill comes as he convened a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing focusing on how the Obama administration's immigration policies and practices are hurting American families.  The Committee heard powerful testimony from a number of relatives who have lost loved ones as a direct result of the administration's failure to deport criminals or its tolerance of sanctuary policies.

 

The Improving Cooperation with States and Local Governments and Preventing the Catch and Release of Criminal Aliens Act of 2015:


Limits Federal Funding for State and Local Jurisdictions

If any jurisdiction does not cooperate with federal officials with respect to criminal aliens or other aliens deemed to be a priority for removal by the Secretary, then jurisdictions will not be considered for certain federal dollars.

 

Ø  SCAAP:  The State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) is a reimbursement program designed to provide federal assistance to states and local jurisdictions that incur costs for incarcerating undocumented criminal aliens being held as a result of local convictions. This program is administered by the Department of Justice.

Ø  Second Chance Act:  This grant program is aimed at improving outcomes for people returning to communities after incarceration.  Funding supports strategies and services designed to reduce recidivism by improving outcomes for people returning from prisons, jails, and juvenile facilities. This program is administered by the Department of Justice.

Ø  Other Funds:  The Secretary of Homeland Security and the Attorney General are also authorized to withhold other law enforcement related funding.

The funds that are not allocated to sanctuary jurisdictions are reallocated equally among other jurisdictions that do cooperate and to existing federal grant programs that aid victims of violence.

 

Increases Transparency and Accountability

In order to ensure that the American people know which jurisdictions are providing safe harbor to criminal aliens and ignoring ICE detainers, the bill would require the executive branch to publish a list of sanctuary jurisdictions on their websites.  They would also be required to list how many detainers are issued and how many are not being honored by jurisdictions across the country.

 

Increases Penalty for Reentry by Removed Alien

Under current law, individuals who re-enter or attempt to re-enter the country after being denied, excluded, deported, or removed face up to 2 years in prison and/or a fine.  This section would increase the penalty and make it a mandatory minimum 5 year prison sentence in addition to a possible fine.  This section is aimed at individuals who ignore our laws time and again.

 

For the purposes of this legislation, criminal aliens are those who are arrested or convicted of an aggravated felony under the immigration laws, those who are inadmissible or removable for criminal activity, and those who have been arrested, charge or convicted of drunk driving.

 

 

 

Prepared Statement by Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa

Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee

Hearing on "Oversight of the Administration's Misdirected Enforcement Policies:

Examining the Impact and Honoring the Victims"

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

 

This committee continues to honor its pledge to conduct oversight over the implementation of the laws Congress has passed as well as the policies and practices of the Executive Branch.  Today, we will focus on how this administration's immigration policies and practices are hurting American families.  The Committee will hear powerful testimony from a number of relatives who have lost loved ones as a direct result of the administration's failure to deport criminals or its tolerance of sanctuary policies.

 

Let me begin by extending a special welcome to our witnesses, especially family members of victims. I hope you will accept our deepest sympathies for the losses you have each suffered. Thank you very much for your willingness to share your stories, and for paying tribute to those who, though no longer with us in body, are surely with us in spirit in this room.

 

Today, we will honor Josh, Kate, Dennis, Danny, Grant, and many others whose lives were tragically cut short because of this administration's lax immigration policies.  We had many families and relatives who wanted to testify today, but unfortunately, we had to turn them away because we were limited on time and space.  However, we welcome their testimony for the record and encourage them to commemorate their loved ones with stories and written letters to the committee.

 

We will examine the administration's policies from the top down.  We'll look at how federal benefits are being granted to deportable criminals by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, why criminals are being released by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and how enforcement of the laws can be better achieved.

 

We'll look at how we can improve cooperation between the government agencies here today.  And, we'll look into how we can improve cooperation between the federal government and states and local law enforcement agencies.

 

We'll look at sanctuary jurisdictions and try to understand why policies protecting criminal aliens are in place.

 

In the past few weeks, we have learned that there are thousands of detainers placed each year by federal agents on undocumented immigrants with criminal records that are ignored.

 

According to government data, between January and September of 2014, there were 8,811 declined detainers in 276 counties in 43 states, including the District of Columbia.

 

Of the 8,811 declined detainers, 62 percent were associated with over 5,000 individuals who were previously charged or convicted of a crime or presented some other public safety concern.

 

And nearly 1,900 of the released offenders were arrested for another crime after being released by a sanctuary jurisdiction.

 

This is disturbing - not only to me, but to most Americans. There is no good rationale for non-cooperation between the feds and state and local law enforcement.  Public safety is needlessly and recklessly put at risk when state and local officials provide sanctuary to lawbreaking immigrants just to make a political point.

 

The Obama administration, in too many cases, has turned a blind eye to enforcement, even releasing thousands of criminals at its own discretion, many of whom have gone on to commit serious crimes, including murder.

 

The administration has also granted deferred action to criminal aliens who have committed heinous crimes after receiving this relief from deportation.  I have written to Secretary Johnson about four specific cases in which such individuals have received President Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA.

 

 

One of those beneficiaries was a known gang member when he applied and received DACA, then went on to kill four people in North Carolina.  Another DACA recipient used his work authorization to gain employment at a popular youth camp in California, where he was recently arrested for child molestation, and distribution of child pornography.  I am still waiting for responses on some of these cases.

 

Further, the administration has completely failed to do anything about sanctuary cities, all while challenging states that took a more aggressive approach to enforcing the immigration laws.

 

I recently sent a letter to Attorney General Lynch and Homeland Security Secretary Johnson about sanctuary cities.  I urged them to take control of the situation to ensure detainers are not ignored and undocumented individuals are safely transferred to federal custody and put into deportation proceedings.  I implored them to take a more direct role in the matter.  I have not received a response.

 

But, this isn't a new issue for the Obama Administration.  I wrote to then-Secretary Napolitano and then Attorney General Holder in 2012, and asked them to intervene in Cook County, Illinois, another sanctuary jurisdiction.  Nothing happened.  In fact, since then, administration officials have publicly stated that they neither believe detainers have to be honored, nor that they even want them to be mandatory.

 

Enforcing the immigration laws of the United States is not a voluntary or trivial matter.  Real lives are at stake. Things cannot continue this way.

 

That is why I'm introducing legislation today that will hold sanctuary jurisdictions accountable.  It will require the Executive Branch to withhold certain federal funding if states or local law enforcement refuse to cooperate with the federal government in holding or transferring criminal aliens.

 

My bill will require that state and locals cooperate on criminal aliens or risk losing law enforcement related grants that are distributed by the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice.

 

My bill will also require a mandatory minimum 5-year prison sentence in addition to a possible fine for individuals who enter the United States after having been deported.  Current law does not require prison time and caps the possible prison sentence at 2 years.  This section of my bill is aimed at individuals who ignore our laws time and again.

 

No more people should die at the hands of those who break our laws just by being here. No more families should have to go through what our witnesses have experienced.

 

Again, I'd like to thank our witnesses for taking the time to be with us today.  Your strength and determination to change the unacceptable status quo won't go unnoticed.

 

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Nearly a year ago, in August 2014, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa asked the Drug Enforcement Administration why it paid an Amtrak secretary $854,460 over 19 years for train passenger information it could have received for free, according to an inspector general report.  Grassley was and is concerned that the DEA might have paid for the information instead of working cooperatively with a drug enforcement task force to get the material at no cost.  The same month, the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General confirmed it "has been conducting an investigation of alleged payments for information by Drug Enforcement Administration personnel to an Amtrak employee."  Today, the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General issued an audit report entitled "Audit of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Confidential Source Policies and Oversight of Higher-Risk Confidential Sources."  The report does not specifically address the Amtrak informant payments.   Instead, it raises serious issues about the DEA's failure to oversee its agents' use of confidential sources.  Grassley, Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary, made the following comment.

"The latest report confirms concerns raised by the Amtrak incident.  The DEA needs to do a better job of managing the handling of confidential informants.  When the agency overpays and fails to manage long-term informant relationships properly, that's both detrimental to taxpayers and can impede the agency's ability to use informants effectively to help enforce the law.   It's good news that the DEA agrees with the inspector general's recommendations.  The agency needs to implement the recommendations.  On the Amtrak incident, since it's been nearly a year since the inspector general confirmed an investigation, the results of the investigation seem overdue.  The inspector general should advise on where the investigation stands and release any results for the sake of accountability."

The report released today is available here.  More information on Grassley's work on this issue is available here.  

WASHINGTON - Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Patty Murray (D-Wash.), Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) and Heidi Heitkamp (D-N.D.) today led a bipartisan group of 36 senators in urging the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to increase the proposed volumes it set for biodiesel production under the federal Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).

"While the proposal is a positive step for biodiesel, we remain concerned that the proposed biodiesel volumes for 2016 and 2017 fail to adequately recognize the domestic biodiesel industry's production capacity and its ability to increase production," the senators wrote to EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy.   "Biodiesel is the first EPA-designated advanced biofuel under the RFS to reach commercial scale production nationwide. It is exceeding the goals that Congress envisioned when it created the RFS with bipartisan support in 2005, while creating jobs, generating tax revenues, reducing pollution, and improving energy security. We urge you to support continued growth in the domestic biodiesel industry by making reasonable and sustainable increases in the biodiesel volumes for 2016 and 2017 in the final rule."

The senators noted that the EPA's prior delays in setting biodiesel volumes led to tremendous uncertainty and hardship for U.S. biodiesel producers and thousands of their employees, causing reduced production and even shutdowns, leading to layoffs and lost economic productivity.

Also, the agency's decision earlier this year to allow imports from Argentinean renewable fuel producers to participate in the RFS must be considered, and biodiesel volumes must be set at high enough levels to prevent displacement of domestic production, the senators wrote.

The EPA's proposed volumes for 2014 through 2017 are expected to become final by November 30, giving the agency an opportunity to increase them before then.  The public comment period on the current proposal closes July 27.

The text of the senators' letter is available here.
WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa today asked the leaders of the Finance Committee to hold a hearing on the 340B prescription drug pricing program in light of a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) showing there is a financial incentive at participating hospitals to maximize revenue through the difference between the cost of the drug and Medicare's reimbursement by prescribing either more drugs or more expensive drugs to beneficiaries.

"The GAO recommends that Congress consider eliminating the 'incentive to prescribe more drugs or more expensive drugs than necessary to treat Medicare Part B beneficiaries at 340B hospitals,' " Grassley wrote to Sen. Orrin Hatch, chairman, and Sen. Ron Wyden, ranking member.   "This subject matter clearly falls within the Senate Committee on Finance's Medicare Parts A and B jurisdiction. Thus, I would like to respectfully request a committee hearing on the 340B program."

The GAO report said the unnecessary spending on either more drugs or more expensive drugs has negative implications for the Medicare program as well as leading to increased cost-sharing and higher part B premiums for beneficiaries.

Through his oversight work prior to the GAO report, Grassley documented that some well-funded hospitals use proceeds through the 340B program for their bottom line rather than services for low-income individuals, arguably contrary to the intention of program.

Grassley's letter is available here.  The GAO report is available here.

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By U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley

Iowans know there's no use messing with Mother Nature during a summer thunderstorm. The occasional power outage triggered by severe weather requires households to ride out the storm without electricity.  Some families may welcome a reprieve from so-called screen time.  For others, the novelty of living off the grid wears thin. Sooner rather than later, the outage may turn to outrage. Accustomed to a reliable energy infrastructure, American society arguably has grown dependent upon energy-on-demand 24/7, 365 days a year.

Most Americans live and work in climate-controlled homes and businesses. We use energy to run our transportation fleet, operate farm machinery and power our homes, factories, schools and offices. Turning on the television, surfing the Internet, doing laundry and cooking with energy-dependent household appliances has become as essential to daily life as indoor plumbing.

Considering the significant consequences to the U.S. economy, public health, public safety and national security, maintaining access to affordable, abundant sources of energy is more than a matter of convenience. That's why a comprehensive energy strategy - one that includes expanding renewables, promoting conservation and developing traditional domestic sources - is a big priority for policymakers.

As Iowa's senior U.S. senator, I have long-championed efforts to cultivate Iowa's pivotal potential to produce clean-burning, emissions-free, homegrown renewable energy.  As the father of the first-ever federal wind energy tax incentive and a fierce advocate for renewable fuels, I lead the way in Washington to help Iowa contribute to a clean energy renaissance for America.

Promoting the production and use of renewable energy factors into tax and spending decisions at the policymaking tables. Unleashing science and technology has helped to improve fuel efficiency, produce electricity from wind and create fuel from crops and biomass. Fostering sound stewardship of our natural resources protects the environment and adds value to American agriculture.

Despite centuries-long tax breaks embedded in the federal tax code for fossil fuels, the more recent tax and regulatory tools designed to promote emissions-free and clean-burning renewables must survive a periodic rinse-and-repeat cycle on Capitol Hill. Key policy prescriptions that give renewable energy a fighting chance to flourish are included in a legislative package commonly known as a "tax extenders" package.  Some 50-plus provisions must withstand regular scrutiny in Congress. If they aren't renewed, they expire. I'm all for giving the tax code a thorough scrubbing, but the limited shelf life of these tax extenders generates a great deal of uncertainty and unfairness to renewable energy producers, job creators, workers and farmers.

As a senior member of the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, I pressed for renewal of several tax provisions that are key to Iowa's economy and environment, including the Production Tax Credit (PTC) and the Investment Tax Credit (ITC). Both drive growth of renewable energy, including wind, solar, biomass, cellulosic ethanol and biodiesel. The 179 expensing and bonus depreciation provisions also generate significant economic growth and job creation.

I'm glad to report that Sen. Hatch, chairman of the Finance Committee, has included these key provisions in the legislative vehicle known as the chairman's mark, a key step in the legislative process.  This is a critical victory to extend these expiring tax incentives through December 31, 2016.

How do these tax incentives help foster America's ascent toward clean energy and economic growth?

They bring certainty to investment that helps boost development, sustainability and expansion of homegrown renewable energy.

Take wind energy. Generating wind power creates zero emissions. In Iowa, wind energy supplied more than 28 percent of all in-state electricity production in 2014. That puts us first in the nation. Even with 98 wind projects online, Iowa still boasts untapped wind power potential that is capable of exceeding 40 times the state's current electricity needs.

Wind energy drives economic growth and higher wages.  Iowa is home not only to an inexhaustible wind supply, but it also serves as a national leader of wind-related manufacturing facilities that produce good-paying jobs in construction, operations, maintenance and support services.

Wind energy is good for Iowa. It puts people to work in good-paying jobs, creates a new revenue stream in lease payments for farmers, fosters an economic ripple effect that revitalizes rural communities, lessens dependence on foreign energy, displaces pollution and expands the tax base to support local public services.

In 2014, wind energy supported up to 7,000 jobs in Iowa, generated $17.1 million in lease payments and accrued $10 billion in capital investments. That's good for economic growth.

The facts show that bringing stability and certainty to clean energy policy is good for the economy and the environment. Championing renewable energy that's engineered by human ingenuity and produced by human hands builds upon America's centuries-long promise of prosperity. Renewable energy can help raise standards of living and leave Mother Earth better than we found it for posterity.

My message for Washington: Let's not mess around with these expiring tax breaks that do so much good for America.

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Senate-passed Education Bill Includes Grassley Provisions on Gifted and Talented Children, Foster Youth, Civics Education

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa included provisions in the education bill passed by the Senate today on gifted and talented students, school stability for foster youth, and civics education involving the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

"The bill returns much control of how best to teach children to states and local school districts and parents," Grassley said.  "It also includes provisions I worked on to alter federal incentives that were allowing gifted and talent kids from disadvantaged backgrounds to fall by the wayside, and help foster kids with school stability so they achieve an education.  I'm also pleased that the civics education grant program now supports teaching about the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.  That's generally agreed on as the basis for any civics lesson about our government."

The legislation includes the bipartisan bill from Grassley and co-sponsors that makes certain the needs of high ability students are included in federal education policy.  The bipartisan proposal is the TALENT Act, or the To Aid Gifted and High-Ability Learners by Empowering the Nation's Teachers Act.

"Federal education policy tends to overlook high potential students, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds," Grassley said.  "Often these kids aren't challenged and they might even drop out of school, when they could excel with the right encouragement.  This provision  would give attention to the students who are bright and capable but are in danger of falling through the cracks."

On foster youth, the bill includes the bipartisan Educational Stability of Foster Youth Act, which Grassley co-authored, that supports students in the foster care system by strengthening connections between child welfare agencies and state and local education institutions.  Often, schools may be the only familiar place for a child in foster care, and the measure would help make sure that those kids can go to school in a safe, stable environment.

"It's important to remember that kids in foster care often don't have school stability. That can put them behind in their education, and getting behind can be hard to overcome," said Grassley, founder and co-chairman of the Senate Caucus on Foster Youth. "In the worst case, older kids drop out of school altogether. This bill will help make sure that school stability is at the forefront for foster kids."

The bill as reported out of the committee contained a grant program for developing innovative civics education programs.  The provision Grassley negotiated in the final Senate-approved bill makes sure that a focus of the grant program is to support proven civics education programs that teach the history and principles of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

"Our Founding Fathers believed that an educated citizenry is essential to the preservation of liberty," Grassley said.  "It's critical that each new generation of Americans develops a sound understanding of our nation's founding principles and its founding document, the U.S. Constitution."

The Senate passed, 81-17, its Every Child Achieves Act (S. 1177).  The next step is a conference committee with the House of Representatives to work out the differences between each chamber's bills.

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Fake healthcare.gov enrollees reveal systemic failures; GAO testimony, Grassley question at hearing

The Finance Committee today held a hearing on an undercover operation from Congress' auditing and investigative agency, the Government Accountability Office (GAO), that found that the government-run health care program enrolled 11 of 12 fake applicants in 2014, then automatically re-enrolled them for 2015.  In response to a question from Sen. Chuck Grassley, a witness from the GAO confirmed that the health care program prioritizes enrollment and access over program integrity.   Grassley made the following comment on this approach.

 

"The undercover operation shows that the President's health care plan isn't working in the taxpayers' best interest.  Fake individuals were allowed to enroll with either false documentation, partial documentation or no documentation.  Most of the fake individuals were allowed to continue receiving taxpayer subsidies.  The law requires verification, but that didn't happen in the undercover operation. Instead, the federal government allowed promises to take the place of verification. That has terrible implications for the taxpayers.  The GAO documented systemic failures and illustrated how the government's attitude is to enroll people first and worry about eligibility later, if at all. This approach leaves the taxpayers on the hook for an even bigger bill than expected for Obamacare.  That's unacceptable."

Information on the hearing, including GAO testimony and video with Grassley's question, is available here.

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Grassley Makes Inquiries to Attorney General, Planned Parenthood After Video Surfaces in Media Reports

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, is making inquiries to Planned Parenthood and the Justice Department following media reports of a video describing in detail Planned Parenthood's role in the harvesting of fetal tissue.

The video shows Planned Parenthood's Senior Director for Medical Services, Deborah Nucatola, describing the organization's role in the procurement of fetal tissue.

Federal funding accounts for more than 40 percent of Planned Parenthood's annual revenue.  In addition, federal law prohibits the buying or selling of human body parts, the use of fetal human tissue for research without the informed consent of the woman having the abortion, and the alteration of abortion methods and procedures solely in order to obtain fetal tissue.

In his initial inquiry to Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards, Grassley began asking questions about the organization's facilitation of the activities described in the video.

In a separate letter to Attorney General Loretta Lynch, Grassley noted that the video shows Nucatola discussing the statutory interpretation and intent of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban.  Grassley wrote that this discussion raises questions about whether abortion providers are acting in full compliance with federal law.  He asked Lynch to provide the Judiciary Committee with a description of the actions taken by the Department of Justice to ensure compliance with the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.

Copies of the text of Grassley's letters are below.  A copy of the letter to Planned Parenthood can be found here.  A copy of the letter to the Department of Justice can be found here.

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IRS lives up to "abysmal" customer service predictions, report shows

In June, Sen. Chuck Grassley introduced comprehensive legislation to build on his prior work to improve customer service and hold the IRS accountable to the public.  He made the following comment on the National Taxpayer Advocate report released today, documenting poor customer service by the IRS.

"The National Taxpayer Advocate has reported to Congress a tale of extraordinary disregard for the taxpaying public. Clearly, the IRS needs to dial up better service to taxpayers, rather than hanging up on those who have questions filing their returns. The IRS commissioner this spring predicted an 'abysmal' level of customer service during this tax filing season, and by that measure, it appears the agency beat those low expectations by a country mile. I'll continue working to advance much-needed reforms so that misplaced priorities at the IRS don't erode voluntary taxpayer compliance."

The report is available here.   More information on Grassley's bill, the Taxpayer Bill of Rights Enhancement Act, is available here.

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Floor Speech of Sen. Chuck Grassley - Every Child Achieves Act - Delivered Wednesday, July 15, 2015

In 1965, Congress passed the original Elementary and Secondary Education Act as part of President Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty.  The centerpiece of that law, then as now, is Title I funding provided as a block grant to local school districts to serve children in poverty.  The assumption in 1965 was that simply providing an infusion of federal cash to schools with more disadvantaged children would correct educational inequities compared to more affluent schools.  As it turned out, simply providing more money didn't result in improved educational outcomes for disadvantaged children.  So, every time this law came back up for reauthorization, Congress added more stipulations on the use of the funds and additional programs that well-meaning members of Congress hoped would help students.  Meanwhile, Congress kept raising the level of funding.  Over time, there began to be a bipartisan realization that all this funding and all these programs were not resulting in improved student achievement, so something needed to change.  In this context, President Bush proposed what became the No Child Left Behind Act.  His original proposal promised to fundamentally change the old Washington-knows-best approach to improving teaching and learning.  The theory was that we would cut the federal strings that tied the hands of local administrators and teachers, allowing them to focus on teaching kids. In return, the law would require greater accountability in terms of student achievement outcomes.

However, the final compromise that passed Congress included a very detailed one-size-fits-all assessment and accountability system, but not the degree of local freedom that many had hoped for.  In retrospect, I think most people believe the focus on achievement for all students was positive.  But like with many federal laws, how it worked in practice didn't live up to the good intentions.

The reality is that the new federally mandated accountability system included required interventions that were cooked up in Washington and designed for big city failing school districts.  These were not a good fit for communities in Iowa and many other states.  Moreover, they set a new precedent for federal intervention into how local schools are run.

Secretary Duncan took this a step further through the Race to the Top program and his abuse of the federal waiver authority by adding conditions found nowhere in law.  He used these tools to coerce states into adopting his preferred policies.  These included new, even more heavy-handed mandates regarding reorganizing local schools, specific methods for schools to evaluate their teachers, and most infamously, pushing states to adopt the Common Core standards.  I believe these actions go well beyond any authority Congress gave the Secretary of Education and I told him so in a letter when he denied Iowa's waiver.  This should be a warning to Congress that if you give an inch, federal officials might just take a mile.

The high-stakes system in No Child Left Behind also created negative incentives for schools to focus on getting passing test scores rather than meeting the individual learning needs of each student.  For instance, I have had a concern for a long time in how federal education policy affects gifted and talented students.  The exclusive focus on bringing struggling students up to some minimum level means that we are setting our sights on mediocrity.  Left out of this equation are gifted students, including those from disadvantaged backgrounds, who have enormous potential but need to be challenged to reach that potential.

At the end of the day, the goal of making sure all students are receiving a quality education is a good one, but the record of Washington's intervention in this issue has not been a success.  It's time for Congress to take a step back and have a little humility.  We don't know what's best for every child in every school.  We can't design a single national education system that can meet the individual needs of children we will never meet.  Our Founding Fathers designed a federal system of government for a reason.  The principle of federalism is that decisions should be made at the level of government as close as practicable to the people those decisions impact.  When it comes to education, no one has a greater stake in educational decisions, or knows better what is right for a specific child, than that child's parents.  As a result, parents should have maximum control over their child's education.  When governments make decisions that impact education, it should be at a level of government as close as possible to the parents and children who are affected.

The Every Child Achieves Act is a step in that direction.  It eliminates the very specific mandates on states requiring that they evaluate schools based on test scores and apply federally designed interventions.  States will be free to design their own assessment and accountability systems.  The bill retains the requirement that states test annually in grades 3-8, which I understand was necessary to get a bipartisan agreement.  However, states will have wide discretion in how they design their assessments.  And, the elimination of the federally mandated school interventions that raise the stakes on the test results will reduce teaching to the test.  This bill also consolidates federal funding in a way that provides more latitude to local school districts to better meet their individual needs, although less so than in the House-passed bill.

By contrast, the Obama administration's blueprint for reauthorizing the Elementary and Secondary Education Act called for replacing the current set of federal mandates with a new set of federal mandates.  This would include even more intrusive, mandatory federal interventions for certain schools.  The Obama blueprint also proposed a series of new federal competitive grants with broad purposes, which puts smaller rural schools at a disadvantage and gives the Secretary of Education an inappropriate degree of control over which schools get funding for which purposes.  Moreover, the President's blueprint proposes tying federal education funds to the adoption of state content standards that are "college and career ready," which is code for Common Core.  In short, the Obama blueprint would have essentially ratified this administration's heavy-handed intrusions into how and what students are taught and enabled further federal overreach.

The Every Child Achieves Act represents a rejection of that approach and an admission that the model of federal control of local schools has not worked.  As a result, President Obama has said he cannot support the bill as it stands unless it adds back more power for the Secretary.  That position flies in the face of what I hear from Iowa educators and parents.

In fact, this bill quite intentionally tightens up some of the language in current law to prevent future overreach by the Secretary of Education.  For instance, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act has always required states to develop a state plan to show how it will comply with the law in order to get federal funding.  Under current law, the Secretary of Education is charged with approving the plan unless it does not meet the requirements of the law.  That should be sufficient to tell the Secretary that he must approve a plan so long as it complies with the law.  However, given the current Secretary's track record, the language in this bill is more explicit.  It requires the Secretary to deem a state plan approved within 90 days of its submission unless he can provide a detailed description of the specific requirements in law that the state did not comply with.  It then lists three pages of explicit limitations on the Secretary's authority describing what he cannot consider in evaluating a state plan.  That is then followed by a rule reemphasizing that the Secretary cannot require anything at all from states beyond what is in the law.  This bill also voids any conditions attached to waivers already granted by the Secretary of Education and prohibits the attaching of any new ones in the future.  I am also glad that this bill includes very comprehensive language I worked on with Senator Roberts to explicitly shut off all the avenues this administration has used to coerce states to adopt the Common Core standards.  This will free states to adopt whatever content standards they choose based on the input from their citizens without federal coercion or fear of federal repercussions.  Too often, Congress passes vague laws that delegate excessive discretion to federal agencies to fill in the blanks.  This bill is an improvement over the standard practice.  It makes congressional intent more clear and fills in many gaps to ensure that the Department implements the law as intended rather than based on the whims of the Secretary.

Some bipartisan compromise is necessary for any bill to pass the Senate, and like any compromise, most people can find some things they don't like in this bill.  Some senators feel this bill goes too far in reducing the federal role in education and some senators feel it doesn't go far enough.  I am one of those senators who would prefer to see a maximum degree of state and local control and I voted for amendments to that effect.  However, the Every Child Achieves Act is a step in the direction of reducing federal control on local schools so teachers can teach and parents know who to hold accountable for decisions that affect their children.  Given the current mess with an unworkable law on the books, many states ceding control over major policies to Washington in return for a waiver, and an unprecedented degree of federal intervention into what happens in neighborhood schools, it's overdue for Congress to act.  Local schools can do more when Washington does less.  Let's give them that chance.

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July 15, 2015

NOTICE OF COMMITTEE HEARING

The Senate Committee on the Judiciary has scheduled a hearing entitled "Nominations" for Wednesday, July 22 at 10:00 a.m., in Room 226 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building.

By order of the Chairman.

Witness List

John Michael Vazquez, to be a United States District Judge for the District of New Jersey

Wilhelmina Marie Wright, to be a United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota

Paula Xinis, to be a United States District Judge for the District of Maryland

Cono R. Namorato, to be an Assistant Attorney General, Tax Division

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WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa said today that the deadline for fall internships for college-age Iowans has been extended.  Applications will now be accepted through August 1, 2015.

Internships are available in Grassley's Washington, D.C., office as well as his offices in Cedar Rapids, Council Bluffs, Davenport, Des Moines, Sioux City and Waterloo.  The semester-long internships will run from August 18 through December 18.

Interns assist staff members with administrative, legislative and communications work, including that of Grassley's staff on the Committee on the Judiciary, where he serves as Chairman.  An internship allows for a wide range of learning experience and exposure for students on Capitol Hill.  A firsthand account of a Grassley internship can be read here.

Grassley said he encourages young Iowans who are interested in learning more about the government to apply.  "Interning in a congressional office is a good way for college students and new graduates to learn more about the legislative branch of the federal government while gaining valuable experience.  Internships in my offices are available to students in all areas of study," Grassley said.

Application forms are available on Grassley's website and in Grassley's offices in Iowa.  Due to security-related delays in postal mail delivery to U.S. Senate office buildings, internship applications should be emailed to intern_applications@grassley.senate.gov or faxed to 202-224-5136.  For additional information, email molly_foley@grassley.senate.gov or call 202-224-3744.

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Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - Senator Chuck Grassley, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, today made the following statement after the President's speech at the NAACP Annual Convention.

"For several months a group of senators, including Republicans and Democrats, has been working in good faith on a possible criminal justice bill that encompasses a range of issues, including both front-end solutions such as safety valves and reductions in mandatory minimums in certain situations, and back-end solutions such as prison reform.  Legislating takes a lot of hard work.  We've had hours of meaningful discussions up to this point, and those of us in the room are committed to trying to reach an agreement that can gain wide bipartisan support."

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