[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 119 (Monday, July 28, 2014)]
[Daily Digest]
[Pages D863-D867]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]





                      CONGRESSIONAL PROGRAM AHEAD

                 Week of July 29 through August 1, 2014

                             Senate Chamber

  On Tuesday, at 12 noon, Senate will begin consideration of the 
nomination of Robert Alan McDonald, of Ohio, to be Secretary of 
Veterans Affairs.
  At 2:45 p.m., Senate will vote on confirmation of the nominations of 
Robert Alan McDonald, of Ohio, to be Secretary of Veterans Affairs, 
Larry Edward Andre, Jr., of Virginia, to be Ambassador to the Islamic 
Republic of Mauritania, Michael Stephen Hoza, of Washington, to be 
Ambassador to the Republic of Cameroon, and Joan A. Polaschik, of 
Virginia, to be Ambassador to the People's Democratic Republic of 
Algeria.
  Upon disposition of the nomination of Joan A. Polaschik, Senate will 
begin consideration of H.R. 5021, Highway and Transportation Funding 
Act, with votes on or in relation to the bill.
  During the balance of the week, Senate may consider any cleared 
legislative and executive business.


                           Senate Committees

        (Committee meetings are open unless otherwise indicated)
  Committee on Armed Services: July 30, to receive a closed briefing 
on the situation in Ukraine, 2:30 p.m., SVC-217.
  Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: July 30, 
Subcommittee on Housing, Transportation, and Community Development, 
to hold hearings to examine flood insurance claims process in 
communities after Sandy, focusing on lessons learned and potential 
improvements, 10 a.m., SD-538.
  July 31, Full Committee, to hold hearings to examine financial 
products for students, focusing on issues and challenges, 10 a.m., 
SD-538.
  July 31, Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer 
Protection, to hold hearings to examine the Government 
Accountability Office report on expectations of government support 
for bank holding companies, 2 p.m., SD-538.
  Committee on the Budget: July 29, to hold hearings to examine the 
economic and budgetary consequences of climate change, focusing on 
the cost of inaction, 10 a.m., SD-608.
  Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation: July 29, 
Subcommittee on Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries, and Coast Guard, to 
hold hearings to examine revisiting the Resources and Ecosystems 
Sustainability, Tourist Opportunities and Revived Economies 
(RESTORE) Act, focusing on progress and challenges in Gulf 
restoration post-Deepwater Horizon, 10:30 a.m., SR-253.
  July 29, Subcommittee on Surface Transportation and Merchant 
Marine Infrastructure, Safety, and Security, to hold hearings to 
examine opportunities and challenges for improving truck safety on 
our highways, 3 p.m., SR-253.
  July 30, Subcommittee on Aviation Operations, Safety, and 
Security, to hold hearings to examine domestic challenges and global 
competition in aviation manufacturing, 10:30 a.m., SR-253.
  July 30, Full Committee, to hold hearings to examine wireless 
phone bills, focusing on a review of consumer protection practices 
and gaps, 2:30 p.m., SR-253.
  Committee on Energy and Natural Resources: July 29, to hold 
hearings to examine breaking the logjam at the Bureau of Land 
Management (BLM), focusing on ways to more efficiently process 
permits for energy production on Federal lands, and understanding 
the obstacles in permitting more energy projects on Federal lands, 
including S. 279, to promote the development of renewable energy on 
public land, and S. 2440, to expand and extend the program to 
improve permit coordination by the Bureau of Land Management, 2:30 
p.m., SD-366.
  July 30, Subcommittee on Public Lands, Forests, and Mining, to 
hold hearings to examine S. 1049 and H.R. 2166, bills to direct the 
Secretary of the Interior and Secretary of Agriculture to expedite 
access to certain Federal lands under the administrative 
jurisdiction of each Secretary for good Samaritan search-and-
recovery missions, S. 1437, to provide for the release of the 
reversionary interest held by the United States in certain land 
conveyed in 1954 by the United States, acting through the Director 
of the Bureau of Land Management, to the State of Oregon for the 
establishment of the Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension 
Center of Oregon State University in Hermiston, Oregon, S. 1554, to 
direct the heads of Federal public land management agencies to 
prepare reports on the availability of public access and egress to 
Federal public land for hunting, fishing, and other recreational 
purposes, to amend the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 
to provide funding for recreational public access to Federal land, 
S. 1605, for the relief of Michael G. Faber, S. 1640, to facilitate 
planning,

[[Page D864]]

permitting, administration, implementation, and monitoring of 
pinyon-juniper dominated landscape restoration projects within 
Lincoln County, Nevada, S. 1888 and H.R. 1241, bills to facilitate a 
land exchange involving certain National Forest System lands in the 
Inyo National Forest, S. 2123, to authorize the exchange of certain 
Federal land and non-Federal land in the State of Minnesota, S. 
2616, to require the Secretary of the Interior to convey certain 
Federal land to Idaho County in the State of Idaho, H.R. 1684, to 
convey certain property to the State of Wyoming to consolidate the 
historic Ranch A, and H.R. 3008, to provide for the conveyance of a 
small parcel of National Forest System land in Los Padres National 
Forest in California, 9:30 a.m., SD-366.
  Committee on Environment and Public Works: July 29, Subcommittee 
on Clean Air and Nuclear Safety, to hold hearings to examine the 
threats posed by climate change, 2:30 p.m., SD-406.
  July 30, Full Committee, business meeting to consider S. 1463, to 
amend the Lacey Act Amendments of 1981 to prohibit importation, 
exportation, transportation, sale, receipt, acquisition, and 
purchase in interstate or foreign commerce, or in a manner 
substantially affecting interstate or foreign commerce, of any live 
animal of any prohibited wildlife species, the nominations of Jane 
Toshiko Nishida, of Maryland, and Ann Elizabeth Dunkin, of 
California, both to be an Assistant Administrator, and Manuel H. 
Ehrlich, Jr., of New Jersey, to be a Member of the Chemical Safety 
and Hazard Investigation, all of the Environmental Protection 
Agency, Corps of Engineers Study Resolution relating to San 
Francisco Bay to Stockton Navigation Channels, California, and 
General Services Administration resolutions, Time to be announced, 
Room to be announced.
  Committee on Finance: July 29, to hold hearings to examine 
tobacco, focusing on taxes owed, avoided, and evaded, 10 a.m., SD-
215.
  July 29, Subcommittee on International Trade, Customs, and Global 
Competitiveness, to hold hearings to examine the United States-Korea 
free trade agreement, focusing on lessons learned two years later, 
2:30 p.m., SD-215.
  July 30, Full Committee, to hold hearings to examine ``The African 
Growth and Opportunity Act'' at 14, focusing on the road ahead; to 
be immediately followed by a business meeting to consider the 
nominations of Robert W. Holleyman II, of Louisiana, to be a Deputy 
United States Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador, D. 
Nathan Sheets, of Maryland, to be Under Secretary, and Ramin Toloui, 
of Iowa, to be Deputy Under Secretary, both of the Department of the 
Treasury, Maria Cancian, of Wisconsin, to be Assistant Secretary of 
Health and Human Sevices for Family Support, and Cary Douglas Pugh, 
of Virginia, to be a Judge of the United States Tax Court, 2 p.m., 
SD-215.
  July 31, Full Committee, to hold hearings to examine the 
nomination of Carolyn Watts Colvin, of Maryland, to be Commissioner 
of Social Security, 10 a.m., SD-215.
  Committee on Foreign Relations: July 29, to hold hearings to 
examine Iran, focusing on the status of the P-5+1 negotiations with 
Iran, 10 a.m., SD-419.
  July 29, Full Committee, business meeting to consider S. Res. 502, 
concerning the suspension of exit permit issuance by the Government 
of the Democratic Republic of Congo for adopted Congolese children 
seeking to depart the country with their adoptive parents, S. Res. 
522, expressing the sense of the Senate supporting the U.S.-Africa 
Leaders Summit to be held in Washington, D.C. from August 4 through 
6, 2014, S. Res. 513, honoring the 70th anniversary of the Warsaw 
Uprising, S. Res. 520, condemning the downing of Malaysia Airlines 
Flight 17 and expressing condolences to the families of the victims, 
and the nominations of Todd D. Robinson, of New Jersey, to be 
Ambassador to the Republic of Guatemala, Jane D. Hartley, of New 
York, to be Ambassador to the French Republic, and to serve 
concurrently and without additional compensation as Ambassador to 
the Principality of Monaco, Kevin F. O'Malley, of Missouri, to be 
Ambassador to Ireland, James D. Pettit, of Virginia, to be 
Ambassador to the Republic of Moldova, Brent Robert Hartley, of 
Oregon, a to be Ambassador to the Republic of Slovenia, Marcia 
Stephens Bloom Bernicat, of New Jersey, to be Ambassador to the 
People's Republic of Bangladesh, David Pressman, of New York, to be 
Alternate Representative of the United States of America for Special 
Political Affairs in the United Nations, with the rank of 
Ambassador, and to be an Alternate Representative of the United 
States of America to the Sessions of the General Assembly of the 
United Nations, during his tenure of service as Alternate 
Representative of the United States of America for Special Political 
Affairs in the United Nations, George Albert Krol, of New Jersey, to 
be Ambassador to the Republic of Kazakhstan, Allan P. Mustard, of 
Washington, to be Ambassador to Turkmenistan, Erica J. Barks 
Ruggles, of Minnesota, to be Ambassador to the Republic of Rwanda, 
and John R. Bass, of New York, to be Ambassador to the Republic of 
Turkey, all of the Department of State; to be immediately followed 
by a hearing to examine the nominations of John Francis Tefft, of 
Virginia, to be Ambassador to the Russian Federation, Donald L. 
Heflin, of Virginia, to be Ambassador to the Republic of Cabo Verde, 
Craig B. Allen, of Virginia, to be Ambassador to Brunei Darussalam, 
Earl Robert Miller, of Michigan, to be Ambassador to the Republic of 
Botswana, Michele Jeanne Sison, of Maryland, to be Representative of 
the United States of America to the Sessions of the General Assembly 
of the United Nations, during her tenure of service as Deputy 
Representative of the United States of America to the United 
Nations, and to be the Deputy Representative of the United States of 
America to the United Nations, with the rank and status of 
Ambassador and the Deputy Representative of the United States of 
America in the Security Council of the United Nations, Stafford 
Fitzgerald Haney, of New Jersey, to be Ambassador to the Republic of 
Costa Rica, and Charles C. Adams, Jr., of Maryland, to be Ambassador 
to the Republic of Finland, all of the Department of State, 2:15 
p.m., SD-419.
  July 31, Full Committee, business meeting to consider pending 
calendar business, 2 p.m., S-116, Capitol.

[[Page D865]]


  Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: July 30, 
Subcommittee on Children and Families, to hold hearings to examine 
paid family leave, focusing on the benefits for businesses and 
working families, 10:15 a.m., SD-430.
  Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: July 30, 
business meeting to consider H.R. 4007, to recodify and reauthorize 
the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Standards Program, S. 1618, to 
enhance the Office of Personnel Management background check system 
for the granting, denial, or revocation of security clearances or 
access to classified information of employees and contractors of the 
Federal Government, S. 1347, to provide transparency, 
accountability, and limitations of Government sponsored conferences, 
S. 1396, to authorize the Federal Emergency Management Agency to 
award mitigation financial assistance in certain areas affected by 
wildfire, S. 2640, to amend title 44, United States Code, to require 
information on contributors to Presidential library fundraising 
organizations, S. 2547, to establish the Railroad Emergency Services 
Preparedness, Operational Needs, and Safety Evaluation (RESPONSE) 
Subcommittee under the Federal Emergency Management Agency's 
National Advisory Council to provide recommendations on emergency 
responder training and resources relating to hazardous materials 
incidents involving railroads, S. 2323, to amend chapter 21 of title 
5, United States Code, to provide that fathers of certain 
permanently disabled or deceased veterans shall be included with 
mothers of such veterans as preference eligibles for treatment in 
the civil service, S. 2664, Integrated Public Alert and Warning 
System Authorization Act of 2014, S. 2651, DHS OIG Mandates Revision 
Act of 2014, H.R. 4197, to amend title 5, United States Code, to 
extend the period of certain authority with respect to judicial 
review of Merit Systems Protection Board decisions relating to 
whistleblowers, S. 2665, Emergency Information Improvement Act of 
2014, S. 1898, to require adequate information regarding the tax 
treatment of payments under settlement agreements entered into by 
Federal agencies, S. 2247, to prohibit the awarding of a contract or 
grant in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold unless the 
prospective contractor or grantee certifies in writing to the agency 
awarding the contract or grant that the contractor or grantee has no 
seriously delinquent tax debts, H.R. 606, to designate the facility 
of the United States Postal Service located at 815 County Road 23 in 
Tyrone, New York, as the ``Specialist Christopher Scott Post Office 
Building'', H.R. 1671, to designate the facility of the United 
States Postal Service located at 6937 Village Parkway in Dublin, 
California, as the ``James `Jim' Kohnen Post Office'', H.R. 2291, to 
designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located 
at 450 Lexington Avenue in New York, New York, as the ``Vincent R. 
Sombrotto Post Office'', H.R. 3472, to designate the facility of the 
United States Postal Service located at 13127 Broadway Street in 
Alden, New York, as the ``Sergeant Brett E. Gornewicz Memorial Post 
Office'', H.R. 3765, to designate the facility of the United States 
Postal Service located at 198 Baker Street in Corning, New York, as 
the ``Specialist Ryan P. Jayne Post Office Building'', and the 
nominations of Joseph L. Nimmich, of Maryland, to be Deputy 
Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of 
Homeland Security, Anne E. Rung, of Pennsylvania, to be 
Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy, and James C. Miller, 
III, of Virginia, Stephen Crawford, of Maryland, David Michael 
Bennett, of North Carolina, and Victoria Reggie Kennedy, of 
Massachusetts, all to be a Governor of the United States Postal 
Service, 10 a.m., SD-342.
  Committee on Indian Affairs: July 30, business meeting to consider 
S. 1948, to promote the academic achievement of American Indian, 
Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian children with the establishment 
of a Native American language grant program, S. 2299, to amend the 
Native American Programs Act of 1974 to reauthorize a provision to 
ensure the survival and continuing vitality of Native American 
languages, S. 2442, to direct the Secretary of the Interior to take 
certain land and mineral rights on the reservation of the Northern 
Cheyenne Tribe of Montana and other culturally important land into 
trust for the benefit of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe, S. 2465, to 
require the Secretary of the Interior to take into trust 4 parcels 
of Federal land for the benefit of certain Indian Pueblos in the 
State of New Mexico, S. 2479, to provide for a land conveyance in 
the State of Nevada, S. 2480, to require the Secretary of the 
Interior to convey certain Federal land to Elko County, Nevada, and 
to take land into trust for certain Indian tribes, and H.R. 4002, to 
revoke the charter of incorporation of the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma 
at the request of that tribe; to be immediately followed by an 
oversight hearing to examine responses to natural disasters in 
Indian country, 2:30 p.m., SD-628.
  Committee on the Judiciary: July 29, to hold hearings to examine 
the nominations of Madeline Cox Arleo, to be United States District 
Judge for the District of New Jersey, Victor Allen Bolden, to be 
United States District Judge for the District of Connecticut, and 
David J. Hale, and Gregory N. Stivers, both to be a United States 
District Judge for the Western District of Kentucky, 9:30 a.m., SD-
226.
  July 30, Full Committee, to hold hearings to examine the next 
steps for the ``Violence Against Women Act'' (VAWA), focusing on 
protecting women from gun violence, 10 a.m., SD-106.
  July 30, Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and 
Consumer Rights, to hold hearings to examine pricing policies and 
competition in the contact lens industry, 2:15 p.m., SD-226.
  Select Committee on Intelligence: July 29, closed business meeting 
to consider pending calendar business, 2:30 p.m., SH-219.
  Special Committee on Aging: July 30, to hold hearings to examine 
the impact of Medicare observation status on seniors, 2:15 p.m., SR-
418.


                            House Committees

  Committee on Agriculture, July 30, Subcommittee on Horticulture, 
Research, Biotechnology, and Foreign Agriculture, hearing to review 
the impact of enforcement activities by the Department of Labor on 
specialty crop growers, 10 a.m., 1300 Longworth.

[[Page D866]]


  Committee on Armed Services, July 30, Full Committee, hearing 
entitled ``Risks to Stability in Afghanistan: Politics, Security, 
and International Commitment'', 10 a.m., 2118 Rayburn.
  July 30, Subcommittee on Seapower and Projection Forces, hearing 
entitled ``Logistics and Sealift Force Requirements and Force 
Structure Assessment'', 2 p.m., 2212 Rayburn.
  Committee on Energy and Commerce, July 30, Full Committee, markup 
on the following legislation: H.R. 3522, the ``Employee Health Care 
Protection Act''; H.R. 4701, the ``Lyme and Tick-borne Diseases Act 
of 2014''; H.R. 4067, to provide for the extension of the 
enforcement instruction on supervision requirements for outpatient 
therapeutic services in critical access and small rural hospitals 
through 2014; a bill to require the Secretary of Health and Human 
Services to provide for recommendations for the development and use 
of clinical data registries for the improvement of patient care; 
H.R. 3670, the ``Anti-Spoofing Act of 2013''; H.R. 5161, the ``E-
LABEL Act''; and H.R. 1575, the ``Kelsey Smith Act'', 10 a.m., 2123 
Rayburn.
  July 31, Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, hearing 
entitled ``PPACA Implementation: Updates from CMS and GAO'', 9 a.m., 
2123 Rayburn.
  Committee on Financial Services, July 30, Subcommittee on 
Oversight and Investigations, hearing entitled ``Allegations of 
Discrimination and Retaliation and the CFPB Management Culture'', 
3:30 p.m., 2128 Rayburn.
  Committee on Foreign Affairs, July 30, Full Committee, markup on 
H.R. 3398, to authorize the Secretary of State and the Administrator 
of the United States Agency for International Development to provide 
assistance to support the rights of women and girls in developing 
countries, and for other purposes; H.R. 5041, the ``Naftali Fraenkel 
Rewards for Justice Act of 2014''; H.R. 5206, to allow Foreign 
Service and other executive agency employees to designate 
beneficiaries of their death benefits; a bill to authorize further 
assistance to Israel for the Iron Dome anti-missile defense system; 
H. Res. 281, expressing concern over persistent and credible reports 
of systematic, state-sanctioned organ harvesting from non-consenting 
prisoners of conscience, in the People's Republic of China, 
including from large numbers of Falun Gong practitioners imprisoned 
for their religious beliefs, and members of other religious and 
ethnic minority groups; and H. Res. 683, expressing the sense of the 
House of Representatives on the current situation in Iraq and the 
urgent need to protect religious minorities from persecution from 
the Sunni Islamist insurgent and terrorist group the Islamic State 
in Iraq and Levant (ISIL) as it expands its control over areas in 
northwestern Iraq, 10 a.m., 2172 Rayburn.
  July 30, Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, hearing entitled 
``Building Prosperity in Latin America: Investor Confidence in the 
Rule of Law'', 2 p.m., 2200 Rayburn.
  July 30, Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific, hearing entitled 
``Twenty-Years of U.S. Policy on North Korea: From Agreed Framework 
to Strategic Patience'', 2 p.m., 2172 Rayburn.
  Committee on the Judiciary, July 30, Full Committee, hearing 
entitled ``The IRS Targeting Scandal: The Need for a Special 
Counsel'', 10 a.m., 2141 Rayburn.
  July 30, Subcommittee on The Constitution and Civil Justice, 
hearing on oversight of the False Claims Act, 1 p.m., 2237 Rayburn.
  July 30, Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property and the 
Internet, hearing entitled ``The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office: 
The America Invents Act and Beyond, Domestic and International 
Policy Goals'', 3 p.m., 2141 Rayburn.
  Committee on Natural Resources, July 30, Full Committee, markup on 
the following legislation: H.J. Res. 120, approving the location of 
a memorial to commemorate the more than 5,000 slaves and free Black 
persons who fought for independence in the American Revolution; H.R. 
361, the ``Alpine Lakes Wilderness Additions and Pratt and Middle 
Fork Snoqualmie Rivers Protection Act''; H.R. 3006, to authorize a 
land exchange involving the acquisition of private land adjacent to 
the Cibola National Wildlife Refuge in Arizona for inclusion in the 
refuge in exchange for certain Bureau of Land Management lands in 
Riverside County, California, and for other purposes; H.R. 3109, to 
amend the Migratory Bird Treaty Act to exempt certain Alaskan Native 
articles from prohibitions against sale of items containing 
nonedible migratory bird parts, and for other purposes; H.R. 4119, 
the ``West Hunter Street Baptist Church Study Act''; H.R. 4182, to 
provide that the Ozark National Scenic Riverways shall be 
administered in accordance with the general management plan for that 
unit of the National Park System, and for other purposes; H.R. 4867, 
the ``Economic Development Through Tribal Land Exchange Act''; H.R. 
5026, the ``Fish Hatchery Protection Act''; H.R. 5069, the ``Federal 
Duck Stamp Act of 2014''; H.R. 5203, the ``Dwight D. Eisenhower 
Memorial Commission Reform Act''; H.R. 5204, the ``Federal Lands 
Recreation Enhancement Modernization Act of 2014''; H.R. 5205, the 
``Northern Nevada Land Conservation and Economic Development Act''; 
S. 311, the ``Lower Mississippi River Area Study Act''; S. 354, the 
``Oregon Caves Revitalization Act of 2013''; S. 476, to amend the 
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Development Act to extend to the 
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park Commission; and 
S. 1603, the ``Gun Lake Trust Land Reaffirmation Act'', 10 a.m., 
1324 Longworth.
  Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, July 30, Full 
Committee, hearing entitled ``IRS Abuses: Ensuring that Targeting 
Never Happens Again'', 9:30 a.m., 2154 Rayburn.
  July 31, Subcommittee on Government Operations, hearing entitled 
``Planes, Trains and Automobiles: Operating While Stoned'', 9 a.m., 
2154 Rayburn.
  July 31, Full Committee, markup on pending legislation, 10:30 
a.m., 2154 Rayburn.
  Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, July 30, Full 
Committee, hearing entitled ``EPA's Carbon Plan: Failure by 
Design'', 10 a.m., 2318 Rayburn.
  July 31, Subcommittee on Research and Technology; and Subcommittee 
on Oversight, joint subcommittee

[[Page D867]]

hearing entitled ``Technology Needed to Secure America's Border'', 
10 a.m., 2318 Rayburn.
  Committee on Small Business, July 30, Full Committee, hearing 
entitled ``Regulatory Overreach: Is EPA Meeting Its Small Business 
Obligations?'', 1 p.m., 2360 Rayburn.
  July 31, Subcommittee on Health and Technology, hearing entitled 
``Telemedicine: A Prescription for Small Medical Practices?'', 10 
a.m., 2360 Rayburn.
  Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, July 30, 
Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and 
Emergency Management, hearing entitled ``GSA Tenant Agencies: 
Challenges and Opportunities in Reducing Costs of Leased Space'', 10 
a.m., 2167 Rayburn.
  Committee on Ways and Means, July 30, Subcommittee on Select 
Revenue Measures, hearing on dynamic analysis of the Tax Reform Act 
of 2014, 10 a.m., 1100 Longworth.
  July 30, Subcommittee on Human Resources, hearing on subsidized 
jobs programs and their effectiveness in helping families escape 
poverty, 2 p.m., 1100 Longworth.
  House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, July 31, Full 
Committee, hearing entitled ``Ongoing Intelligence Activities'', 9 
a.m., HVC-304. This is a closed hearing.


                             Joint Meetings

  Joint Economic Committee: July 29, to hold hearings to examine 
increasing economic opportunity for African Americans, focusing on 
local initiatives that are making a difference, 2:30 p.m., SD-G50.