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“Months after tsunami waves battered the North Coast, many communities are still recovering from the aftermath,” said Rep. Thompson.
Congressman Mike Thompson (D-CA) today voted against legislation that would mandate the most sweeping expansion of offshore drilling in our nation's history. H.R. 1231, "Reversing President Obama's Offshore Moratorium Act," would automatically open the Southern California coast, the entire Atlantic coast, the Arctic Ocean, and Alaska's Bristol Bay for leasing. The bill could also potentially open up California's North Coast to drilling - even if our state objects to offshore drilling in the region.
Mercado's work, titled “Rebirth” is a combination ink, watercolor and oil pastel. She said she never planned to submit the work. That was the idea of her instructor, Steve Pult-Vega.
“It was originally a class project,” said Mercado.
The House voted overwhelmingly today for a bill that would renew offshore oil development in Southern California at a time of consumer frustration over $4-a-gallon gasoline.
The measure, titled "Reversing President Obama's Offshore Moratorium Act," passed on a 243-179 vote, largely along party lines. It would would triple the nation's offshore oil production to 4.5 million barrels a day by 2027.
H.R. 754 will support critical U.S. intelligence capabilities by increasing resources for our country's counterterrorism efforts while also providing needed flexibility to the Central Intelligence Agency to hire the analysts that it needs.
Some may know that on April 5, House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan released a budget plan for the fiscal year of 2012. Chairman Ryan's proposed budget cuts would privatize Medicare, forcing seniors into the private health insurance market to shop for coverage with a government voucher.
High gas prices have reignited a familiar debate about drilling off California's coast, with everyone playing their usual part and the outcome pretty much predictable.
Republicans urge energy independence. Democrats warn of coastal devastation. And while the House today will approve an offshore drilling bill that includes part of California, the effort almost certainly will sputter out on the Senate side of Capitol Hill.
Still, political purpose is being served.