Pursuant to House Rule XI Clause 3(q)(1), today the Chairman of the Committee on Ethics, Representative Michael Guest, and the Ranking Member, Representative Susan Wild, submitted a report to the House of Representatives in the Matter of Allegations Relating to Representative George Santos. The full Committee report includes the report of the Investigative Subcommittee (ISC) in this matter.
download the jan 6 committee report
The Committee thanks the Committee staff and the Members of the Investigative Subcommittee for their hard work, dedication, and service to the Committee and to the House. Representative David P. Joyce served as Chair of the Investigative Subcommittee. Representative Susan Wild served as Ranking Democratic Member. Representative John H. Rutherford and Representative Glenn F. Ivey also served on the Subcommittee.
The first print of the Scientific Report of the 2020 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee is being provided to the public online. Use the links below to download the Scientific Report, in full or in part by section or chapter. The report will be formatted for publication and available in hard copy later this year. Online-only supplementary materials for data analysis, food pattern modeling, and NESR systematic reviews are also provided at the bottom of the page.
The following Committees from the 117th Congress are no longer standing. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) will provide a website archive for these Committee websites in the Spring of 2023. Until those official archives are public, the links below provide access to the official documents of the committees no longer standing and access to known archival copies of the sites maintained by other House offices. Visit GovInfo for published documents of Committees no longer standing prior to the 117th Congress.
The SPRIRC report focuses on four main areas, including restructuring suicide prevention training, providing additional resources to help Service Members access existing support services, promoting lethal means safety, and emphasizing leader stewardship in addressing Service Member needs.
Committee reports beginning with the 104th Congress (1995/96) can be found on Congress.gov's Committees page. Reports can be searched or browsed using the options on the right hand sidebar of this page.
Committee reports are printed as part of the United States Congressional Serial Set. The Serial Set is available at the Law Library of Congress, as well as some libraries in the Federal Depository Library Program.
Each subcommittee report addresses in detail how Digital Platforms impact these different facets of our society, and proposes a range of policy solutions for lawmakers and regulators to consider when addressing the power held by these companies. In addition, the report contains a policy brief that summarizes the main report findings and proposes cohesive policy solutions.
If your download does not begin soon, please click hereAbout the CommitteeNewsSubcommitteesHearingsLegislationPrivacy PolicyCommittee on Appropriations Room S-128, The Capitol, Washington, D.C. 20510
(202) 224-7363The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) today released the final report of the Division I Transformation Committee, containing a comprehensive series of recommendations to modernize Division I to more fully serve the needs of current and future student-athletes.
The recommendations represented in the report will now being considered by the NCAA Division I Board of Directors for implementation in 2023 and beyond. Led by co-chairs Greg Sankey, the Commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, and Julie Cromer, Director of Athletics at Ohio University, and consisting of 21 experts from across college sports, the report culminates the Transformation Committee's yearlong effort to enhance all facets of Division I.
"In recent years, the environment surrounding collegiate athletics has evolved far faster than the structures, processes, and rules we use to govern it," said Greg Sankey. "College sports' leaders know it's imperative that we transform the NCAA and modernize college sports not just to keep pace with a changing landscape, but to shape and mold it to better serve student-athletes' needs. While transformation is never complete and will shift to a new phase with the conclusion of this Committee's work, the recommendations we've put forward will immediately and meaningfully improve the mental and physical health of a Division I student-athletes. I'm grateful to the Division I Board of Directors for the opportunity to co-chair this important committee and appreciate the committee members' tireless work bringing this report to fruition."
Tasked with scrutinizing the Division I student-athlete experience and its surrounding oversight apparatus, the Transformation Committee's final report contains dozens of recommended policy changes that ultimately clustered into three distinct areas of focus:
The recommendations detailed in the report contain several notable policy proposals, as it relates to more complete support for student-athletes and overall Division I governance philosophy. In particular, the report contains elements of a "new holistic model" for the Division I student-athlete experience. As part of the new holistic model, Division I student-athletes across sports and conferences will be guaranteed access to medical coverage for athletically related injuries for a minimum of two years following graduation or completion of athletics experience, mental health support in line with Inter-association Mental Health Best Practices, expanded programming focused in areas such as mental health, diversity, equity, and inclusion, career preparation, and strength and conditioning (among others), and increased academic counseling and tutoring services.
The report of the Committee to Establish Principles on Renaming provides the kind of enduring and timeless guidance I had hoped for: thoughtful, clear, scholarly, and balanced. It represents the intensive efforts of an extraordinary group of committee members who dedicated four months to meeting with each other, soliciting the input of the Yale community, reviewing documents, speaking with experts from around the country, and engaging in thoughtful analysis and debate. On behalf of the trustees, I offer heartfelt appreciation for this remarkable service to the university.
The State All Payer Claims Databases Advisory Committee (SAPCDAC) was established in 2021. The SAPCDAC was established by Section 735 of ERISA (as added by section 115(b) of the No Surprises Act, enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021 (Dec. 27, 2020)). The SAPCDAC will advise the Secretary of Labor on the standardized reporting format for the voluntary reporting by group health plans to State All Payer Claims Databases, as well as guidance provided to States on the process by which States may collect such data. The SAPCDAC must submit a report that includes recommendations on the establishment of the format and guidance by June 25, 2021.
Members appointed to serve on the Committee will be those candidates determined to have the technical expertise required to meet specific statutory categories and Departmental needs and in a manner intended to ensure an appropriate balance of membership. Selection of committee membership will be consistent with achieving the greatest impact, scope, and credibility among diverse stakeholders.
Welcome to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Activities and Reports page where you can find official documents produced by the committee during each congressional session beginning with the 105th Congress (1997-1998).
These documents have been categorized by type and include: hearing transcripts, business meeting transcripts, committee reports, committee prints and conference reports. Visitors may search by keyword and/or congressional session. Committee publications not currently available online may be accessed in Federal depository libraries throughout the United States.
A printed hearing is an official transcript of a hearing. Supplemental materials may be included as part of the hearing record. For example, a committee might include exhibits, charts and research materials, written statements of witnesses, witness responses to follow-up questions, other materials submitted by witnesses, or letters and testimony from individuals who did not testify in person.
Transcripts of committee business meetings are typically made public 30 business days after the event. Each transcript includes vote results, amendments offered to the bill, and a general description of the bill under consideration. To find the legislative text of a bill, refer to the Legislation page or visit
congress.gov, the official legislative information website of the Library of Congress.
A conference report is an agreement on a bill negotiated by a conference committee, a temporary committee comprised of House and Senate members. Conference reports are printed and submitted to each chamber for consideration. A conference report includes changes to the bill made during the conference committee's consideration and may also include the views of conference committee members.
Accompany a bill that has been reported to the full Senate for its consideration. Reports may include the legislative text of the bill, changes made by the committee during open executive sessions, and the views of committee members.
Accompany treaties submitted to the Senate for its advice and consent to ratification. These reports include a description of the Purpose and Background of the treaty under consideration, a Summary of Key Provisions of the treaty, any necessary Implementing Legislation, any Committee Action taken relating to the treaty and Committee Comments (including any minority views), and the Text of Resolution of Advice and Consent to Ratification.
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