Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 110 Part 6.djvu/613

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CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS-JUNE 13, 1996 110 STAT. 4435 and that the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 1998 through 2002 are hereby set forth. SEC. 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS. The table of contents for this concurrent resolution is as follows: Sec. 1. Concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 1997. Sec. 2. Table of contents. TITLE I—LEVELS AND AMOUNTS Sec. 101. Recommended levels and amounts. Sec. 102. Debt increase. Sec. 103. Social security. Sec. 104. Magor functional categories. TITLE II—RECONCILIATION DIRECTIONS Sec. 201. Reconciliation in the House of Representatives. Sec. 202. Reconciliation in the Senate. TITLE III—BUDGET ENFORCEMENT Sec. 301. Discretionary spending limits. Sec. 302. Budgetary treatment of the sale of Government assets. Sec. 303. Budgetary treatment of direct student loans. Sec. 304. Superfund reserve fund. Sec. 305. Tax reserve fund in the Senate. Sec. 306. Exercise of rulemaking powers. Sec. 307. Government shutdown prevention allowance. TITLE IV—SENSE OF CONGRESS, HOUSE, AND SENATE PROVISIONS Sec. 401. Sense of Congress on baselines. Sec. 402. Sense of Congress on loan sales. Sec. 403. Sense of Congress on changes in medicaid. Sec. 404. Sense of Congress on impact of legislation on children. Sec. 405. Sense of Congress on debt repayment. Sec. 406. Sense of Congress on commitment to a balanced budget by fiscal year 2002. Sec. 407. Sense of Congress that tax reductions should benefit working families. Sec. 408. Sense of Congress on a bipartisan commission on the solvency of medicare. Sec. 409. Sense of Congress on medicare transfers. Sec. 410. Sense of Congress regarding changes in the medicare program. Sec. 411. Sense of Congress regarding revenue assumptions. Sec. 412. Sense of Congress regarding domestic violence. Sec. 413. Sense of Congress regarding student loans. Sec. 414. Sense of Congress regarding additional charges under the medicare program. Sec. 415. Sense of Congress regarding requirements that welfare recipients be drug-free. Sec. 416. Sense of Congress on an accurate index for inflation. Sec. 417. Sense of Congress that the 1993 income tax increase on social security benefits should be repealed. Sec. 418. Sense of Congress regarding the Administration's practice regarding the prosecution of drug smugglers. Sec. 419. Sense of Congress on corporate subsidies. Sec. 420. Sense of Congress regarding welfare reform. Sec. 421. Sense of Congress on FCC spectrum auctions. Sec. 422. Sense of the House on emergencies. Sec. 423. Sense of the Senate on funding to assist youth at risk. Sec. 424. Sense of the Senate on long-term trends m budget estimates. Sec. 425. Sense of the Senate on repeal of the gas tax. Sec. 426. Sense of the Senate regarding the use of budgetary savings. Sec. 427. Sense of the Senate regarding the transfer of excess Government computers to public schools. Sec. 428. Sense oi the Senate on Federal retreats. Sec. 429. Sense of the Senate regarding the essential air service program of the Department of Transportation. Sec. 430. Sense of the Senate regarding equal retirement savings for homemakers. Sec. 431. Sense of the Senate on the National Institutes of Health funding for antiaddiction drugs. Sec. 432. Sense of the Senate regarding the extension of the employer education assistance exclusion under section 127 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.