Skip to content

Search Roll Call

Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.

15 results for "schedule"

Filters: insurance Policy Clear all

Congress · 119th Congress

Top-down approach has Congress AWOL on FDA, experts say

last year stopped approving routine COVID-19 vaccines for the healthy, non-elderly population and consulted in the decision to revamp the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's childhood vaccine schedule

Policy · 118th Congress

Biden mixes doable, aspirational health messages in speech

But he stopped short of a key ask of Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and other Republicans to permanently schedule fentanyl-related substances, referring to chemically

Congress · 117th Congress

Budget bill clears as Democrats seek to head off midterm losses

House moderates balked, temporarily withholding their support for the budget resolution needed to set up the reconciliation vehicle until Pelosi agreed to schedule the infrastructure vote for September

Congress · 117th Congress

Democrats race to prep sweeping budget bill for weekend votes

He said ahead of Schumer’s timing announcement that senators were trying to work out a schedule with some predictability and get an agreement to shorten the 20 hours of debate to move more quickly to the

Congress · 117th Congress

Senators seek to clear procedural hurdles on unfinished business

that date back as needed, but there will be little appetite to stay later from the rank and file who have planned vacations, overseas work trips, and district and campaign events around the existing schedule

Congress · 117th Congress

House passes stopgap funding, debt ceiling suspension bill

The bill would extend fentanyl’s status as a so-called “Schedule 1” drug until Jan. 28, 2022. Under current law, the drug would lose its status as a drug with a high risk for abuse on Oct. 22.

Policy · 117th Congress

Biden bid for federal workers to get COVID-19 shots prompts debate

California also said it would be the first state to require state workers and workers in health care and other high-risk settings to either show proof they have been vaccinated or adhere to a weekly testing schedule