Introduced
by
To provide a “template” or “place holder” for the Fiscal Year 2022-2023 Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy budget. This bill contains no appropriations, but may be amended at a later date to include them.
Referred to the Committee on Appropriations
Reported without amendment
With the recommendation that the substitute (H-3) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
Amendment offered
by
To add funding for an "inland aquatic invasive plant species and eradication program".
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To require the department to notify the legislators who represent a district when an environmental cleanup has been completed.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To establish that "rules and regulations established by the department shall not be more stringent than comparable rules and regulations established at the federal level".
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To authorize spending $100 million to subsidize payments by households with delinquent water and sewer bills, and adding $5 million for certain environmental cleanups.
The amendment failed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To add $1 million for to increase the number of air quality regulatory monitoring stations and add a monitoring drone, and $5 million for more air quality monitoring.
The amendment failed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To add another $25 million for contaminated site cleanups.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To add $500,000 for disposal of firefighting foam containing PFAS.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Passed in the House 54 to 49 (details)
The House version of the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy budget for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, 2022. This would appropriate $964.22 million, of which $526.5 million is federal money.
Referred to the Committee of the Whole
Passed in the Senate 21 to 12 (details)
To send the bill back to the House stripped of all actual appropriations except for $100 “placeholders," as part of a process to work out the differences between the House and Senate budgets.
Failed in the House 0 to 106 (details)