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Farm Programs: USDA Has Improved Its Completion of Eligibility Compliance Reviews, but Additional Oversight is Needed, Report to the Honorable Charles E. Grassley, President Pro Tempore, U.S. Senate
From the Highlights: "Each crop year, USDA distributes billions of dollars in payments to farmers through programs that, by law, require payment recipients to be actively engaged in farming. These programs provide income support to producers of key crops such as corn, cotton, and soybeans. In September 2013, GAO [Government Accountability Office] found weaknesses in how FSA [Farm Service Agency] implemented regulations to ensure that farmers meet the criteria for being actively engaged and do not receive payments above program limits. GAO recommended that FSA set a plan and time frame for using its tracking system to monitor compliance reviews, which FSA did."
United States. Government Accountability Office
2020-10
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Biomedical Research: NIH Should Publicly Report More Information About the Licensing of Its Intellectual Property, Report to Congressional Requesters
From the Highlights: "HHS [Department of Health and Human Services] labs conduct research that can contribute to the development of new life-saving drugs. HHS may grant rights to its inventions by licensing the patents to pharmaceutical companies that conduct the additional development activities and testing necessary to bring drugs to market. Public health experts and patients' rights advocates have raised concerns about the prices of drugs developed with federal support. GAO [Government Accountability Office] was asked to review HHS's management of its intellectual property. This report examines (1) the extent to which HHS-owned intellectual property has contributed to the development of FDA-approved drugs, (2) what is known about the licenses associated with FDA-approved drugs, (3) factors NIH prioritizes when licensing its inventions and information about licensing it makes public, and (4) steps HHS has taken to protect its rights."
United States. Government Accountability Office
2020-10
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Crude Oil Markets: Effects of the Repeal of the Crude Oil Export Ban, Report to Congressional Requesters
From the Highlights: "Between 1975 and the end of 2015, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act directed a ban on nearly all exports of U.S. crude oil. This ban was not considered a significant policy issue when U.S. oil production was declining and import volumes were increasing. However, U.S. crude oil production roughly doubled from 2009 to 2015, due in part to a boom in shale oil production made possible by advancements in drilling technologies. In December 2015, Congress effectively repealed the ban, allowing the free export of U.S. crude oil worldwide. GAO [Government Accountability Office] was asked to provide information on the effects of repealing the crude oil export ban. This report describes the effects of the repeal of the crude oil export ban on the domestic crude oil production, petroleum refining, and related sectors of the U.S. shipping industry."
United States. Government Accountability Office
2020-10
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New Jersey Interim COVID-19 Vaccination Plan
From the Executive Summary: "'COVID-19's [coronavirus disease 2019] devastating impacts motivate New Jersey to build a robust COVID-19 vaccination program.' In January 2020, the State of New Jersey started actively tracking the outbreak of a novel coronavirus. Since the COVID-19 public health emergency was declared through Executive Order No. 103 on March 9, 2020, New Jersey has mobilized a statewide, data-driven COVID-19 response that includes healthcare capacity expansion, focus on vulnerable populations, scaling of testing, contact tracing and exposure notification mobilization, resource provision, and resiliency planning. The State informs COVID-19 efforts through transparent information to the public and through funding and technical guidance to local partners. New Jersey began COVID-19 vaccination planning in the context of considerable unknowns regarding vaccine safety, efficacy, availability and timelines, federal distribution logistics, supplies and funding resources, public demand, likelihood of community protection through vaccination, and other factors. New Jersey submitted a Draft Interim COVID-19 Vaccination Plan to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for feedback on October 16, 2020, but New Jersey will adapt its phased approach as unknowns are resolved."
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
2020-10
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What Explains Temporal and Geographic Variation in the Early US Coronavirus Pandemic?
From the Abstract: "We provide new evidence on the drivers of the early US coronavirus pandemic. We combine an epidemiological model of disease transmission with quasi-random variation arising from the timing of stay-at-home orders to estimate the causal roles of policy interventions and voluntary social distancing. We then relate the residual variation in disease transmission rates to observable features of cities. We estimate significant impacts of policy and social distancing responses, but we show that the magnitude of policy effects is modest, and most social distancing is driven by voluntary responses. Moreover, we show that neither policy nor rates of voluntary social distancing explain a meaningful share of geographic variation. The most important predictors of which cities were hardest hit by the pandemic are exogenous characteristics such as population and density."
Stanford University. Institute for Economic Policy Research
Allcott, Hunt; Boxell, Levi; Conway, Jacob C. . . .
2020-10
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Affective Polarization Did Not Increase During the Coronavirus Pandemic
From the Abstract: "We document trends in affective polarization during the coronavirus pandemic. In our main measure, affective polarization is relatively flat between July 2019 and February 2020, then falls significantly around the onset of the pandemic. Two other data sources show no evidence of an increase in polarization around the onset of the pandemic. Finally, we show in an experiment that priming respondents to think about the coronavirus pandemic significantly reduces affective polarization."
Stanford University. Institute for Economic Policy Research
Boxell, Levi; Conway, Jacob C.; Gentzkow, Matthew . . .
2020-10
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Food Safety: CDC Could Further Strengthen Its Efforts to Identify and Respond to Foodborne Illnesses, Report to the Chairwoman, Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies, Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives
From the Highlights: "CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] has estimated that each year, one in six people in the United States gets a foodborne illness, 128,000 are hospitalized, and 3,000 die. CDC data show increases in the number of reported multistate foodborne illness outbreaks--groups of two or more linked cases in multiple states--in recent years. Such outbreaks are responsible for a disproportionate number of hospitalizations and deaths, compared with single-state outbreaks. GAO [Government Accountability Office] was asked to review CDC's response to multistate foodborne illness outbreaks. This report examines (1) CDC's roles and responsibilities, (2) challenges that CDC faces and the extent to which it has addressed these challenges, and (3) the extent to which CDC evaluates its performance."
United States. Government Accountability Office
2020-10
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Consumer Privacy: Better Disclosures Needed on Information Sharing by Banks and Credit Unions, Report to the Chairman, Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate
From the Highlights: "Banks and credit unions maintain a large amount of personal information about consumers. Federal law requires that they have processes to protect this information, including data shared with certain third parties. GAO [Government Accountability Office] was asked to review how banks and credit unions collect, use, and share such information and federal oversight of these activities. This report examines, among other things, (1) what personal information banks and credit unions collect, and how they use and share the information; (2) the extent to which they make consumers aware of the personal information they collect and share; and (3) how regulatory agencies oversee such collection, use, and sharing."
United States. Government Accountability Office
2020-10
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Food Insecurity Edged Back Up After COVID-19 Relief Expired: Findings from the September 11-28 Coronavirus Tracking Survey
From the Document: "Food insecurity decreased early in the pandemic between late March/early April and mid-to-late May, after stimulus checks were released to many Americans and a $600 weekly supplement to unemployment benefits was implemented. However, food insecurity edged back up the month after the unemployment benefit boost expired. In September 2020, one in five adults reported their households had experienced food insecurity in the prior 30 days, an increase of 1.7 percentage points since May 2020, according to new data from the Urban Institute's Coronavirus Tracking Survey. Nearly four in ten adults who reported they or a spouse or partner lost a job at some point during the pandemic reported being food insecure in the September survey, which was fielded just over one month after the weekly supplement to unemployment benefits expired at the end of July. Black and Hispanic/Latinx adults, two groups who have experienced significant negative economic and health impacts from COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019], continued to experience food insecurity at rates approximately twice that of white adults. Parents with children under age 19 had similar rates of food insecurity in May and September, while adults not living with children experienced a statistically significant increase over the same period."
Urban Institute
Waxman, Elaine; Gupta, Poonam; Gonzalez, Dulce
2020-10
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Impact of the Coronavirus on Food Insecurity in 2020
From the Introduction: "In this brief, we provide updated analysis of the potential impact of COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] on food insecurity in 2020. Households that experience food insecurity lack access to enough food for an active, healthy life for all household members. Before the COVID-19 crisis began, more than 35 million people, including nearly 11 million children, lived in a food-insecure household. Pre-pandemic data reflect the lowest food insecurity rates had been in more than 20 years, but the current crisis has reversed improvements made over the past decade since the Great Recession."
Feeding America
2020-10
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Federal Contracting: Actions Needed to Improve Department of Labor's Enforcement of Service Worker Wage Protections, Report to Congressional Requesters
From the Highlights: "The SCA [Service Contract Act] ensures that service workers on certain federal contracts receive pay and benefits that reflect current employment conditions in their locality. From fiscal years 2014 through 2019, the U.S. government obligated over $720 billion on service contracts covered under the SCA. GAO [Government Accountability Office] was asked to review SCA implementation and enforcement. This report examines (1) what available data reveal about past SCA cases, (2) what challenges DOL [Department of Labor] reports facing in enforcing the SCA, and (3) how contracting agencies implement the SCA."
United States. Government Accountability Office
2020-10
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Violent Victimization by Race or Ethnicity, 2005-2019
This document provides statistics related to violent victimization by race or ethnicity from 2005 to 2019.
United States. Bureau of Justice Statistics
Oudekerk, Barbara A.
2020-10
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Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers: Cepheid, Xpert Xpress SARS-CoV-2/Flu/RSV
From the Document: "This Fact Sheet informs you of the significant known and potential risks and benefits of the emergency use of the Xpert Xpress SARS-CoV-2 [severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2]/Flu/RSV [respiratory syncytial virus] test. The Xpert Xpress SARS-CoV-2/Flu/RSV test is authorized for use with certain respiratory specimens collected from individuals suspected of respiratory viral infection consistent with COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] by their healthcare provider."
United States. Food and Drug Administration
2020-10-01
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Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers: Tempus Labs, Inc., iC SARS-CoV2 Test
From the Document: "This Fact Sheet informs you of the significant known and potential risks and benefits of the emergency use of the iC SARS-CoV2 [severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2] Test. The iC SARS-CoV2 Test is authorized for use with upper respiratory tract specimens collected from individuals suspected of COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] by their healthcare provider."
United States. Food and Drug Administration
2020-10-01
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Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers: Access IL-6 - Beckman Coulter, Inc.
From the Document: "This Fact Sheet informs you of the significant known and potential risks and benefits of the emergency use of the Access IL-6. The Access IL-6 is authorized for use in human serum and plasma specimens collected from patients with confirmed Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) to assist in identifying severe inflammatory response to aid in determining the risk of intubation with mechanical ventilation, in conjunction with clinical findings and the results of other laboratory testing."
United States. Food and Drug Administration
2020-10-01
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SBA EIDL and Emergency EIDL Grants: Data by State [Updated October 1, 2020]
From the Document: "Congress made COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019]-related economy injury an eligible expense for the Small Business Administration's (SBA) Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL) in the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2020 (P.L. 116-123). It also expanded EIDL eligibility for certain businesses and organizations, and it established an Emergency EIDL Grant program as part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act; P.L. 116-136). COVID-19-related EIDL and Emergency EIDL grants are available to all 50 states, U.S. territories, and Washington, DC. This Insight provides: [1] a general overview of SBA EIDL (including eligibility) and the Emergency EIDL Grant program; [2] SBA EIDL data by the number and amount of loans approved by state; and [3] Emergency EIDL Grant program (also referred to as EIDL advance) data by the number and amount of grants approved by state."
Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service
Lindsay, Bruce R.; Mullins, Maura
2020-10-01
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Expanding the Toolbox: The Whole-of-Government Response to Homelessness
From the Executive Summary: "In the Council of Economic Advisors (CEA) 'The State of Homelessness in America' report, CEA pointed out that overall homelessness has increased in America; and in many communities, homelessness has reached a crisis level. In just five years, unsheltered homelessness increased 20.5 percent from 175,399 in 2014 to 211,293 in 2019. Simultaneously, the number of year-round beds available to serve persons experiencing homelessness through subsidized Rapid Rehousing and Permanent Supportive Housing rose from 338,065 to 482,254, a 42.7 percent increase in five years. Despite significant increases in funding and beds, overall homelessness has been increasing in the United States. The federal government's policy shift in 2013 to prioritizing housing first as a one-size-fits-all approach has not worked to reduce homelessness for all populations and communities. Policies that do not address the real root causes of homelessness combined with high housing costs in overregulated markets have exacerbated the homelessness condition in America. As many community leaders are coming to realize, the status quo is simply not working. Reforms and changes are needed to reverse the growing homelessness crisis in America. Artificial changes in definitions and reclassifications that purport temporal improvements only give false hope. The time has come for real change, for real reforms. Our aspirational goals should move beyond primarily providing subsidized housing assistance. As Congress has suggested, we must optimize self-sufficiency in federal homeless assistance programs and reduce reliance on public assistance. This strategic plan, Expanding the Toolbox: The Whole-of-Government Response to Homelessness, envisions an approach that dramatically reduces homelessness by engaging and assessing families and individuals with a trauma-informed approach to care that addresses the real root causes of homelessness."
United States Interagency Council on Homelessness
2020-10
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Digital Cash Transfers for Stranded Migrants: Lessons from Bihar's COVID-19 Assistance Program
From the Document: "On March 24, with little advance notice, India's federal government announced a strict countrywide lockdown to contain the spread of COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019]. Within two days, it also announced a relief package providing cash transfers to women, elderly and farmers, as well as food grains through the Public Distribution System (PDS). In spite of these measures, millions of migrants - mostly urban informal sector workers - made a desperate attempt to return to their villages, often walking several hundred kilometers over many days to get there. The chaotic scenes witnessed during the first week of India's lockdown underscored the precariousness of their livelihoods and highlighted the shortcomings in India's extensive social safety net that caters to nearly 80 percent of its 1.3 billion people. For nearly a decade, India has invested in building a digital infrastructure to transfer social benefits to its citizens directly to their bank accounts. Known as the Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) platform, it currently includes 380 schemes run by 52 ministries of the federal government. State governments can use the DBT platform for their own cash transfer schemes as well. India also has a clear strategy in place to enable digital delivery of public services, subsidies and transfers. [...] The COVID-19 lockdown provided a test of whether these investments in digital infrastructure would pay off and help the government deliver relief quickly and efficiently."
Center for Global Development
Mukherjee, Anit, 1972-
2020-10
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S. Rept. 116-274: Advancing Critical Connectivity Expands Service, Small Business Resources, Opportunities, Access, and Data Based on Assessed Need and Demand Act, Report to Accompany S. 1046, October 1, 2020
From the Document: "The United States faces a persistent digital divide. Although more than 98 percent of Americans have access to high-speed broadband, over 20 million Americans are still without such service. The Federal Government has established a number of programs designed to increase access to broadband [...]. In addition to the Universal Service Fund programs managed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), several other Federal agencies run programs that provide funding to support broadband access or adoption. Navigating the myriad Federal broadband support programs can be challenging for entities seeking assistance. Not only are Federal broadband support programs spread across multiple Executive Branch agencies, but the programs often have different qualifications and applications; address different needs; and may not be well-promoted. Streamlining and standardizing applications for broadband support across these programs (to the extent such standardization is possible) and better promoting these programs to the public can help those seeking Federal broadband support to access those programs more efficiently. NTIA [National Telecommunications and Information Administration] has attempted to accomplish some of this simplification through its BroadbandUSA program. BroadbandUSA currently serves local and State governments, industry, and nonprofits that seek to enhance broadband connectivity. [...] S. 1046 seeks to address some of the shortcomings stakeholders have pointed out with respect to BroadbandUSA and Federal broadband support programs at large. It would create a new office within NTIA and confer upon that office certain specific responsibilities, including attempting to streamline application processes for those programs."
United States. Government Publishing Office
2020-10-01
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Under the Radar: Private Sector Debt and Coronavirus in Developing Countries
From the Document: "In the global south, coronavirus is leaving a trail of devastation - from widespread loss of life from the virus itself, to huge economic disruption that has left hundreds of millions of people, who were already struggling to make ends meet, without jobs or sufficient food. Despite this huge economic shock, many developing countries are continuing to pay off debts to rich countries, public institutions like the World Bank and IMF [International Monetary Fund] , and some of the richest banks and hedge funds in the world. This means they have less money to meet the immediate needs of the population. This briefing aims to shine a light on the debt owed to private creditors by five African countries - Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal and Zambia - and it outlines the steps which the G20 [Group of Twenty] needs to take immediately to avert further economic chaos."
Oxfam International; Christian Aid; Catholic Agency for Overseas Development . . .
Chetcuti, Pauline; Cohen, Marc J.; Farr, Emily . . .
2020-10
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Later Will Be Too Late: How Extreme Levels of Hunger Have Not Been Averted Despite Alarms
From the Document: "In 2017, extreme hunger was the defining humanitarian crisis, with four countries on the brink of famine and 30 million people in dire need of food assistance for survival. An international outcry led to a late but robust reaction which prevented the descent into full famine in all four countries. In 2020, the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic is the defining global crisis, but the virus brings even greater hunger in its wake. State economies are collapsing, and millions of people can no longer afford to buy food. More people globally are experiencing extreme hunger today than in 2017, but no equivalent international reaction is on the horizon."
Oxfam International
Chetcuti, Pauline; Cohen, Marc J.; Farr, Emily . . .
2020-10
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CARES Act Coronavirus Relief Fund: The Prime Recipient Perspective
From the Introduction: "The impact of the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] public health emergency has stretched beyond any global catastrophe experienced in the past century. With cases of the virus increasing at an astounding rate in the month of March, President Trump declared a national emergency. This set off a chain of events culminating in an extraordinary spike in unemployment rates amid a crashing economy which put immense pressure on State and local governments to continue providing public services through the turbulence of rapidly decreasing revenues. Congress was pushed to take urgent action to address the landslide of challenges that erupted as the country fell into a deadlock, and on March 27th, the $2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act was signed into law."
Government Finance Officers Association
Haroon, Mehreen
2020-10
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COVID-19's Impact on Sub-National Governments
From the Document: "In emerging markets, urban centers feel the brunt of both the health and economic crises, putting subnational governments, or SNGs, front and center in the efforts to contain COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019]. SNGs in emerging markets face significant challenges brought on by the pandemic, for example, significantly less use of public transit, dramatically lower sales tax revenue due to retail and tourism closures, and limited capacity to mount an effective health response. Low levels of preparedness compound these vulnerabilities."
International Finance Corporation
Kochanov, Pavel; Hong, Youngki; Mutambatsere, Emelly
2020-10
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Enforcement Policy for Modifications to FDA-Cleared Molecular Influenza and RSV Tests During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Public Health Emergency: Guidance for Industry and Food and Drug Administration Staff
From the Introduction: "FDA plays a critical role in protecting the United States from threats such as emerging infectious diseases, including the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. FDA is committed to providing timely guidance to support response efforts to this pandemic. FDA is issuing this guidance to provide a policy to help expand access to certain FDA-cleared molecular assays intended for detection and identification of influenza (flu) viruses, including those molecular influenza assays that also detect and identify respiratory syncytial viruses (RSV), during the influenza season and for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency."
United States. Food and Drug Administration
2020-10
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COVID-19 and Healthcare Professional Stress and Resilience- Speaker Series [presentation]
This PowerPoint presentation outlines the October 2020 webinar, "COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] and Healthcare Professional Stress and Resilience- Speaker Series." Included in the presentation is a link to the webinar video (access requirements include name and email address) as well as a transcript of the presentation. From the ASPR TRACIE [Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Technical Resources, Assistance Center, and Information Exchange] Webinar Transcript: "This collection of brief presentations highlights emerging behavioral health and resilience practices among healthcare facilities across the country during COVID-19. [...] In this video, Dr. Eileen Barrett, Director of Continuous Medical Education and Graduate Medical Education Wellness Initiatives from the University of New Mexico, will discuss proactive programs available to support staff during stressful times."
United States. Technical Resources, Assistance Center and Information Exchange
2020-10
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From Overall Fiscal Space to Budgetary Space for Health: Connecting Public Financial Management to Resource Mobilization in the Era of COVID-19
From the Abstract: "This paper advances the concept of budgetary space for health, which explores resources available for health that are generated through higher public expenditure, better budget allocations, and through improved public financial management (PFM). The budget decomposition approach presented in the paper provides insight into the extent to which each factor drives expansion in budgetary space for health. The approach is applied to 133 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) between 2000-2017 and finds that around 70% of budgetary space for health is driven by changes in overall public expenditure, while about 30% is directly attributable to the share of the budget allocated to health."
Center for Global Development; World Health Organization
Barroy, Helene; Gupta, Sanjeev
2020-10
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Is the World Bank's COVID Crisis Lending Big Enough, Fast Enough? New Evidence on Loan Disbursements
From the Abstract: "The World Bank has forecast an unprecedented global recession in 2020-21, and the reversal of a decades-long fall in global poverty, provoking an acute need for short-term financing in low- and lower-middle income countries. Critics contend that the Bank has failed to rise to this challenge, acting slowly to increase lending volumes and resisting calls for a multilateral debt standstill. We compile a new data set, combining official sources with transaction-level records scraped from the World Bank website, spanning all commitments, disbursements, and payments on all World Bank loans from before the 2008-09 Global Financial Crisis (GFC) through August 2020, allowing us to compare the Bank's COVID [coronavirus disease] response to the last comparable global crisis. We find that lending has indeed accelerated in 2020, with new loan commitments up 118 percent year on year in the first seven months of 2020, but actual disbursements up only 31 percent."
Center for Global Development
Morris, Scott; Duggan, Julian; Sandefur, Justin . . .
2020-10
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S. Rept. 116-276: Telework for U.S. Innovation Act, Report of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs United States Senate to Accompany S. 4138, Including Cost Estimate of the Congressional Budget Office, October 1, 2020
From the Summary and Background: "S. 4138, the Telework for U.S. Innovation Act, removes the statutory expiration date for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's (PTO) telework travel expenses program and requires a permanent annual report to Congress. [...] In the Telework Enhancement Act of 2010, Congress established a test program under which the PTO 'may pay any travel expenses of an employee for travel to and from a [PTO] worksite or provide an employee with the option to waive any payment authorized' under the program under certain conditions. Pursuant to this authority, the PTO launched the Telework Enhancement Act Pilot Program (TEAPP) in February 2012."
United States. Government Publishing Office
2020-10-01
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S. Rept. 116-277: Information Technology Modernization Centers of Excellence Program Act, Report to Accompany S. 4200, Including Cost Estimate of the Congressional Budget Office, October 1, 2020
From the Purpose and Summary: "The purpose of S. 4200, the Information Technology Modernization Centers of Excellence Program Act, is to codify the General Services Administration's (GSA) Centers of Excellence (COE) program, which facilitates the adoption of modern information technology (IT) acquisition and utilization of best practices at Federal agencies."
United States. Government Publishing Office
2020-10-01
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COVID-19 Intensifies Nursing Home Workforce Challenges
From the Document: "The Office of Behavioral Health, Disability, and Aging Policy within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) contracted with Mathematica to research the impact of the COVID-19 [coronavirus disease 2019] pandemic on the nursing home workforce to better understand the challenges faced by nursing homes during the outbreak. This project therefore has two objectives: (1) to gather information about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the nursing home workforce to better understand the challenges faced by nursing homes during the outbreak; and (2) to identify new federal and state policies and practices that have been implemented to address these challenges in nursing homes."
United States. Department of Health and Human Services. Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
Denny-Brown, Noelle; Stone, Denise; Hays, Burke . . .
2020-10