Meet the DC power crowd
On Capitol Hill, the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee of the U.S. Senate is a hotbed of trucking legislation. Here's why this committee is so important
Known to some as the “legislative trenches,” congressional committees are where the road starts for bills on Capitol Hill. Committees are where lawmakers hold hearings, draft, debate and amend legislation before it gets sent on for consideration by the full House or the Senate.
Committees are also where the vast majority of the thousands of bills introduced every year die without having seen the light of day. To say the least, congressional committees are where the action is, and next to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, the Senate’s Commerce Committee is the most important group for truckers.
Its formal name is the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, and it is composed of 22 senators and led by Committee Chairman Daniel K. Inouye, D-HI, and Vice Chairman Ted Stevens, R-AK. They assumed their positions in January 2007.
Under their leadership, the committee is composed of seven subcommittees, which together oversee the vast range of issues under its jurisdiction. These issues range from communications, highways, aviation, rail, shipping, transportation security, merchant marine, the Coast Guard, oceans, fisheries, climate change, disasters, science, space, interstate commerce, tourism, consumer issues, economic development, technology, competitiveness, product safety and insurance.
Chairman: Daniel K. Inouye,
D-Hawaii
Vice Chairman: Ted Stevens,
R-Alaska
Democratic committee members
in order of seniority:
Republican committee members in order of seniority:
Subcommittees An important subcommittee of the Senate's Commerce Committee is the subcommittee on Surface Transportation and Merchant Marine Infrastructure, Safety and Security. This subcommittee is the one most watched by truckers and the trucking advocacy. Its chairman is Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg, D-New Jersey. Other subcommittees of the Commerce Committee are:
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