
The slow progress the DOE has shown to date with a relatively inexperienced contractor... indicates to me that the DOE is slowly building up an infrastructure and expertise that may already exist at the Department of Labor.
On the public record
Every politician on the site, every statement on file. Search, filter, and read the public record.
7,700+·quotes on file

The slow progress the DOE has shown to date with a relatively inexperienced contractor... indicates to me that the DOE is slowly building up an infrastructure and expertise that may already exist at the Department of Labor.

I have a few concerns on the overall program and its progress.

I am concerned about the issue of whether the Department of Labor is not the best place to carry out the compensation program.

The Health Promotion First (Funding Integrated Research Synthesis and Training) Act will shortly be introduced by Senators Richard Lugan and Jeff Bingaman.

Forty-nine Senators have signed on as co-sponsors for a 'Building Health Promotion into the National Agenda' Resolution.

Forty-nine Senators have signed on as co-sponsors for a 'Building Health Promotion into the National Agenda' resolution.

The energy bill that the 107th Congress almost produced... is a good bill.

We commend and thank the leadership last year of three Members of the Senate Finance Committee in particular, Senators Bingaman, Snowe and (Frank) Murkowski.

I hope very much we can enact those provisions that related to energy efficiency.

I think it is an important hearing, an important set of issues.

the Alliance to Save Energy is strongly supportive of the package of tax incentives for energy efficient products and practices put forward by the Senate Finance Committee last year.

There is a lot we can do to improve energy efficiency and particularly in the Federal sector.

That bill failed to deal with fuel economy, and that failure will haunt the Nation for years to come.

Senator Dorgan and President Bush and others have called for a major investment in hydrogen and fuel cells.

Business Week writes that this is completely doable.

a working ranch would permit both cattle and wildlife to thrive on the land and traditional New Mexican families should have the opportunity to join others who had previously been able to use the land.

In the mean time, I believe it is appropriate to consider a stop-gap measure aimed at stimulating near-term economic development on fractionated Navajo lands.