Unauthorized Spending Accountability Act
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Bill details
Summary
Introduced in House
Unauthorized Spending Accountability Act This bill reduces budgetary levels for certain federal programs that are funded through the annual appropriations process and do not have an authorization of appropriations. Under the bill, budgetary levels are spending allocations provided to the congressional appropriations committees by a congressional budget resolution or a deeming resolution. The allocations are provided under the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and are often referred to as 302(a) allocations. The bill applies to programs included in the Congressional Budget Office's (CBO's) annual report listing programs that are funded through the appropriations process and have an authorization of appropriations that has either expired or will expire during the year. If a program is listed in the CBO report, the bill requires specified reductions to be implemented over a three-year period and terminates the unauthorized programs at the end of the third unauthorized year.
District impact notes
The Unauthorized Spending Accountability Act aims to reduce federal program spending for programs that lack current authorizations. • This bill could impact local federal funding for programs that are identified as unauthorized in the Congressional Budget Office's report. • Local institutions and public services that rely on these federal programs may experience changes in funding levels, which could affect their operations. • There may be questions about how the reductions will be implemented and which specific programs will be affected, potentially leading to uncertainty for stakeholders. AI-generated from official bill summary and plain-English note; verify with official text.
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Primary sources
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