[Congressional Record Volume 144, Number 23 (Monday, March 9, 1998)]
[Daily Digest]
[Pages D194-D195]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]

Committee Meetings
(Committees not listed did not meet)
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Committee on Governmental Affairs: Subcommittee on Oversight of 
Government Management, Restructuring, and the District of Columbia 
concluded hearings to examine the District of Columbia Public Schools' 
efforts to repair school roofs during the

[[Page D195]]

summer of 1997, focusing on the availability of funds and the cost of 
the fiscal year 1997 capital improvement program procurement process, 
after receiving testimony from Gloria L. Jarmon, Director, Health, 
Education, and Human Services Accounting and Financial Management 
Issues, Accounting and Information Management Division, General 
Accounting Office; David L. Cotton, Cotton & Company, Alexandria, 
Virginia; Joyce Ladner, Member, District of Columbia Financial 
Responsibility and Management Assistance Authority; Julius W. Becton, 
Jr., Chief Executive Officer, District of Columbia Public Schools; and 
Taalib-Din Uqdah, Washington, D.C.
JUVENILE RECORD KEEPING
Committee on the Judiciary: Subcommittee on Youth Violence concluded 
hearings to examine the effectiveness of the juvenile record keeping 
requirement provisions of S. 10, to reduce violent juvenile crime, 
promote accountability by juvenile criminals, and punish and deter 
violent gang crime (pending on Senate calendar), after receiving 
testimony from Charles W. Archer, Assistant Director, Criminal Justice 
Information Services Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation, 
Department of Justice; Lewis Vass, Virginia Department of State Police, 
Richmond; and Gary R. Cooper, Sacramento, California, and Robert R. 
Belair, Washington, D.C., both on behalf of SEARCH/National Consortium 
for Justice Information and Statistics.
BABY BOOMERS' LONG-TERM CARE
Special Committee on Aging: Committee concluded hearings to examine the 
financial challenge for individuals and policy makers of meeting the 
long-term care needs of the baby boom generation, focusing on how 
retirement of the baby boomers will impact the demand for long-term 
care, the ability of public budgets to provide those services, and the 
projected retirement income of baby boomers, after receiving testimony 
from William J. Scanlon, Director, Health Financing and Systems Issues, 
Health, Education, and Human Services Division, General Accounting 
Office; Mathew Greenwald, Mathew Greenwald & Associates, Inc., 
Janemarie Mulvey and Barbara Stucki, both of the American Council of 
Life Insurance, and Joshua M. Wiener, Urban Institute, all of 
Washington, D.C.; Samuel Morgante, GE Capital Assurance Company, San 
Rafael, California, on behalf of the Health Insurance Association of 
America; Roger Auerbach, Oregon Department of Human Resources, Salem; 
Alan Lazaroff, Centura Health, Denver, Colorado, on behalf of the 
National Chronic Care Consortium; Mark J. Schulte, Brookdale Living 
Communities, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, on behalf of the American Seniors 
Housing Association; and Lynda Gormus, Richmond, Virginia.