[Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and the Rules of the House of Representatives, 118th Congress]
[118th Congress]
[House Document 117-161]
[Miscellaneous Provisions Of Congressional Budget Laws]
[Pages 1059-1148]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]


[[Page 1059]]
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                        CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET ACT

                         BUDGET ENFORCEMENT ACT


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                       STATUTORY PAY-AS-YOU-GO ACT

[[Page 1061]]
                                                               Sec. 1127


                        CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET ACT


excerpts relating to legislative procedure from the congressional budget 
                               __________


                   act of 1974 (2 u.s.c. 601 et seq.)


                         declaration of purposes

  Sec. 2. The Congress declares that it is essential--



Sec. 1127.

          (1) to  assure effective congressional 


        control over the budgetary process;

          (2) to provide for the congressional determination each year 

        of the appropriate level of Federal revenues and expenditures;

          (3) to provide a system of impoundment control;

          (4) to establish national budget priorities; and

          (5) to provide for the furnishing of information by the 

        executive branch in a manner that will assist the Congress in 


        discharging its duties.


                               definitions

  Sec. 3. In General.--For purposes of this Act--

  (1) The terms ``budget outlays'' and ``outlays'' mean, with respect to 
any fiscal year, expenditures and net lending of funds under budget 
authority during such year.

  (2) Budget authority and new budget authority.--

          (A) In general.--The term ``budget authority'' means the 

        authority provided by Federal law to incur financial 

        obligations, as follows:

                  (i) provisions of law that make funds available for 

                obligation and expenditure (other than borrowing 

                authority), including the authority to obligate and 

                expend the proceeds of offsetting receipts and 

                collections;

                  (ii) borrowing authority, which means authority 

                granted to a Federal entity to borrow and obligate and 

                expend the borrowed funds, including through the 

                issuance of promissory notes or other monetary credits;

                  (iii) contract authority, which means the making of 

                funds available for obligation but not for expenditure; 

                and

                  (iv) offsetting receipts and collections as negative 

                budget authority, and the reduction thereof as positive 

                budget authority.

          (B) Limitations on budget authority.--With respect to the 

        Federal Hospital Insurance Trust Fund, the Supplementary Medical 

        Insurance Trust Fund, the Unemployment Trust Fund, and the 

        railroad retirement account, any amount that is precluded from 

        obligation in a fiscal year by a provision of law (such as a 

        limitation or a benefit formula) shall not be budget authority 

        in that year.

          (C) New budget authority.--The term ``new budget authority'' 

        means, with respect to a fiscal year--

                  (i) budget authority that first becomes available for 

                obligation in that year, including budget authority that 

                becomes available in that year as a result of a 

                reappropriation; or

                  (ii) a change in any account in the availability of 

                unobligated balances of budget authority carried over 

                from a prior year, resulting from a provision of law 

                first effective in that year;

        and includes a change in the estimated level of new budget 

        authority provided in indefinite amounts by existing law.

  (3) The term ``tax expenditures'' means those revenue losses 
attributable to provisions of the Federal tax laws which allow a special 
exclusion, exemption, or deduction from gross income or which provide a 
special credit, a preferential rate of tax, or a deferral of tax 
liability, and the term ``tax expenditures budget'' means an enumeration 
of such tax expenditures.

  (4) The term ``concurrent resolution on the budget'' means--

          (A) a concurrent resolution setting forth the congressional 

        budget for the United States Government for a fiscal year as 

        provided in section 301; and

          (B) any other concurrent resolution revising the congressional 

        budget for the United States Government for a fiscal year as 

        described in section 304.

  (5) The term ``appropriation Act'' means an Act referred to in section 
105 of title 1, United States Code.

  (6) The term ``deficit'' means, with respect to a fiscal year, the 
amount by which outlays exceeds receipts during that year.

  (7) The term ``surplus'' means, with respect to a fiscal year, the 
amount by which receipts exceeds outlays during that year.

  (8) The term ``government-sponsored enterprise'' means a corporate 
entity created by a law of the United States that--

          (A)(i) has a Federal charter authorized by law;

          (ii) is privately owned, as evidenced by capital stock owned 

        by private entities or individuals;

          (iii) is under the direction of a board of directors, a 

        majority of which is elected by private owners;

          (iv) is a financial institution with power to--

                  (I) make loans or loan guarantees for limited purposes 

                such as to provide credit for specific borrowers or one 

                sector; and

                  (II) raise funds by borrowing (which does not carry 

                the full faith and credit of the Federal Government) or 

                to guarantee the debt of others in unlimited amounts; 

                and

          (B)(i) does not exercise powers that are reserved to the 

        Government as sovereign (such as the power to tax or to regulate 

        interstate commerce);

          (ii) does not have the power to commit the Government 

        financially (but it may be a recipient of a loan guarantee 

        commitment made by the Government); and

          (iii) has employees whose salaries and expenses are paid by 

        the enterprise and are not Federal employees subject to title 5 

        of the United States Code.

  (9) The term ``entitlement authority'' means--

          (A) the authority to make payments (including loans and 

        grants), the budget authority for which is not provided for in 

        advance by appropriation Acts, to any person or government if, 

        under the provisions of the law containing that authority, the 

        United States is obligated to make such payments to persons or 

        governments who meet the requirements established by that law; 

        and

          (B) the food stamp program.

  (10) The term ``credit authority'' means authority to incur direct 
loan obligations or to incur primary loan guarantee commitments.


  (11) The terms ``emergency'' and ``unanticipated'' have the meanings 
given to such terms in section 250(c) of the Balanced Budget and 
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.

  The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) modified 
paragraphs (2) and (6) of this section and added paragraphs (7) and (8). 
Two separate sections of the 1990 Act amended paragraph (2): section 
13201 added a new sentence at the end of the paragraph; section 13211 
rewrote the paragraph entirely, effective for fiscal years after 1991. 
The text depicted here attempts to harmonize the two; but see 2 U.S.C. 
622(2). The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 
(tit. II of P.L. 99-177) added paragraphs (9) and (10). The Budget 
Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10101 of P.L. 105-33) amended the 
definition of ``entitlement authority'' in paragraph (9) in conjunction 
with amendments to section 401. The Budget Control Act of 2011 (sec. 105 
of P.L. 112-25) added paragraph (11).


  Amounts of liquidating cash provided in the annual bill making 
appropriations for the Department of Transportation are not new budget 
authority within the meaning of this section, but are merely funds to 
liquidate contractual obligations previously incurred pursuant to new 
discretionary contract authority previously reported from and scored 
against allocations to the Committee on Public Works and Transportation 
(now Transportation and Infrastructure) as the authority to enter into 
obligations that will result in immediate or future outlays (July 30, 
1986, p. 18154).
* * * * *


                 TITLE III--CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET PROCESS


                                timetable



 
 
  Sec. 300. The timetable with respect to the congressional budget 
process for any fiscal year is as follows:

 
First Monday in February......................  President submits his
                 On or before:                   Action to be completed:

                                                 budget.
February 15...................................  Congressional Budget

                                                 Office submits report

                                                 to Budget Committees.
Not later than 6 weeks after President submits  Committees submit views
 budget.                                         and estimates to Budget

                                                 Committees.
April 1.......................................  Senate Budget Committee

                                                 reports concurrent

                                                 resolution on the

                                                 budget.
April 15......................................  Congress completes

                                                 action on concurrent

                                                 resolution on the

                                                 budget.
May 15........................................  Annual appropriation

                                                 bills may be considered

                                                 in the House.
June 10.......................................  House Appropriations

                                                 Committee reports last

                                                 annual appropriation

                                                 bill.
June 15.......................................  Congress completes

                                                 action on

                                                 reconciliation

                                                 legislation.
June 30.......................................  House completes action

                                                 on annual appropriation

 


                                                 bills.
October 1.....................................  Fiscal year begins.


  The date for committees' submissions of views and estimates was 
amended by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10104, P.L. 105-33).


         annual adoption of concurrent resolution on the budget

  Sec. 301. (a) Content of Concurrent Resolution on the Budget.--On or 
before April 15 of each year, the Congress shall complete action on a 
concurrent resolution on the budget for the fiscal year beginning on 
October 1 of such year. The concurrent resolution shall set forth 
appropriate levels for the fiscal year beginning on October 1 of such 
year and for at least each of the 4 ensuing fiscal years for the 
following--

          (1) totals of new budget authority and outlays;

          (2) total Federal revenues and the amount, if any, by which 

        the aggregate level of Federal revenues should be increased or 

        decreased by bills and resolutions to be reported by the 

        appropriate committees;

          (3) the surplus or deficit in the budget;

          (4) new budget authority and outlays for each major functional 

        category, based on allocations of the total levels set forth 

        pursuant to paragraph (1);

          (5) the public debt;

          (6) for purposes of Senate enforcement under this title, 

        outlays of the old-age, survivors, and disability insurance 

        program established under title II of the Social Security Act 

        for the fiscal year of the resolution and for each of the 4 

        succeeding fiscal years; and

          (7) for purposes of Senate enforcement under this title, 

        revenues of the old-age, survivors, and disability insurance 

        program established under title II of the Social Security Act 

        (and the related provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 

        1986) for the fiscal year of the resolution and for each of the 


        4 succeeding fiscal years.
The concurrent resolution shall not include the outlays and revenue 
totals of the old-age, survivors, and disability insurance program 
established under title II of the Social Security Act or the related 
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 in the surplus or 
deficit totals required by this subsection or in any other surplus or 
deficit totals required by this title.

  (b) Additional Matters in Concurrent Resolution.--The concurrent 
resolution on the budget may--

          (1) set forth, if required by subsection (f), the calendar 

        year in which, in the opinion of the Congress, the goals for 

        reducing unemployment set forth in section 4(b) of the 

        Employment Act of 1946 should be achieved;

          (2) include reconciliation directives described in section 

        310;

          (3) require a procedure under which all or certain bills or 

        resolutions providing new budget authority or new entitlement 

        authority for such fiscal year shall not be enrolled until the 

        Congress has completed action on any reconciliation bill or 

        reconciliation resolution or both required by such concurrent 

        resolution to be reported in accordance with section 310(b);

          (4) set forth such other matters, and require such other 

        procedures, relating to the budget, as may be appropriate to 

        carry out the purposes of this Act;

          (5) include a heading entitled ``Debt Increase as Measure of 

        Deficit'' in which the concurrent resolution shall set forth the 

        amounts by which the debt subject to limit (in section 3101 of 

        title 31 of the United States Code) has increased or would 

        increase in each of the relevant fiscal years;

          (6) include a heading entitled ``Display of Federal Retirement 

        Trust Fund Balances'' in which the concurrent resolution shall 

        set forth the balances of the Federal retirement trust funds;

          (7) set forth procedures in the Senate whereby committee 

        allocations, aggregates, and other levels can be revised for 

        legislation if that legislation would not increase the deficit, 

        or would not increase the deficit when taken with other 

        legislation enacted after the adoption of the resolution, for 

        the first fiscal year or the total period of fiscal years 

        covered by the resolution;

          (8) set forth procedures to effectuate pay-as-you-go in the 

        House of Representatives; and

          (9) set forth direct loan obligation and primary loan 


        guarantee commitment levels.

  The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) added 
paragraphs (6) and (7) and a new last sentence to subsection (a), added 
paragraphs (5)-(8) to subsection (b), and added former section 606 
(repealed by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10118, P.L. 105-
33)), requiring that a concurrent resolution on the budget set forth 
appropriate levels for five fiscal years for the matters described in 
subsection (a). Title III had previously been comprehensively amended by 
the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. II, 
P.L. 99-177). Sections 301(a) and 301(b) were amended by the Budget 
Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10105, P.L. 105-33) to extend the 
requirement that the term of budget resolutions be at least five years 
and to eliminate the requirement that budget resolutions contain direct 
loan and loan guarantee levels. In the 113th and 114th Congresses, the 
House prohibited consideration of a budget resolution not containing 
specified information on certain direct spending programs (sec. 3(e), H. 
Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2013, p. 27; sec. 3(h), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 2015, p. 22).

  The prescribed content of a concurrent resolution on the budget under 
the prior version of section 301 evolved over time. Pursuant to the 
authority to include other ``appropriate procedures'' under then section 
301(b)(2) of the Budget Act, the first concurrent resolution on the 
budget for fiscal year 1981 (which also contained the third concurrent 
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 1980, budget targets for fiscal 
years 1981 and 1983, and other related matters) contained new provisions 
directing House and Senate committees to report to their respective 
Committees on the Budget reconciliation legislation reducing spending 
for fiscal year 1981 (H. Con. Res. 307, 96th Cong.). The first 
concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 1982, in addition to 
other new ``appropriate procedures,'' included in its reconciliation 
instructions directions to several House and Senate committees to report 
reductions in both entitlement spending authority and discretionary 
authorization programs sufficient to reduce budget authority and outlays 
separately for each of three fiscal years, and included a ``deferred 
enrollment'' procedure relating to bills containing new budget authority 
and entitlement spending authority in excess of allocations to 
committees (H. Con. Res. 115, 97th Cong.). The first concurrent 
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 1983, in addition to other new 
``appropriate procedures,'' included a binding Federal credit budget for 
two fiscal years, containing not only aggregate and functional category 
targets for new direct loan obligations and new primary and secondary 
loan guarantee commitments, but also (1) prohibiting consideration of 
bills authorizing new loan obligations or new loan guarantee commitments 
not subject to the appropriations process with certain exceptions (now 
section 402(a)), and (2) establishing a ceiling on total new direct loan 
obligations and new primary or secondary loan guarantee commitments for 
the ensuing fiscal year upon adoption of the second concurrent 
resolution on the budget for that year (similar to the section 311 
ceiling for direct budget authority). Also included was a prohibition 
against consideration in either House of measures providing new budget 
or entitlement authority until the reporting committee filed a report in 
the House concerning its section 302(b) allocation (now section 302(c)) 
and a direction that if a second concurrent resolution on the budget for 
fiscal year 1983 was not finally adopted by October 1, then the 
aggregate amounts in that first concurrent resolution would become the 
spending ceilings and revenue floor for the purposes of section 311 (S. 
Con. Res. 92, 97th Cong.). The first concurrent resolution on the budget 
for fiscal year 1984 likewise contained the latter provision, but also 
provided that a point of order under section 311 of the Budget Act would 
not apply if spending contained in a bill remained within the reporting 
committee's discretionary allocation under section 302 (section 311(b) 
contains a similar exception). The 1984 resolution also contained a new 
provision reserving specific amounts of budget authority and outlays for 
subsequent allocation to committees by the Committee on the Budget (H. 
Con. Res. 91, 98th Cong.; see also Mar. 6, 1984, p. 4621, for a 
statement by Speaker O'Neill describing the operation and effect of the 
latter provision). The first concurrent resolution on the budget for 
fiscal year 1985 included a similar provision that it be treated as the 
second budget resolution for that year on October 1, 1984, for the 
purposes of the section 311 spending ceilings and revenue levels, but 
that a point of order not apply where the committee in question had not 
exceeded its section 302(a) allocations. The resolution also provided 
that legislation providing budget authority, entitlement authority, or 
credit authority not be considered until the reporting committee filed 
the requisite report concerning its section 302(b) allocations (H. Con. 
Res. 280, 98th Cong.).

  In 1986, the first concurrent resolution on the budget since the 
enactment of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 
1985 (P.L. 99-177), the recommended deficit level for fiscal year 1987 
was below the maximum deficit amount as then specified, thus permitting 
consideration of the conference reported amendment in disagreement 
pursuant to then section 301(i) without a waiver by three-fifths vote in 
either House (June 26, 1986, p. 15740). That concurrent resolution also 
contained a ``contingency fund'' for deficit reduction and unmet 
critical needs, additional general revenue-sharing funding beyond levels 
contained therein if deficits were not increased and authorization 
enacted, and a provision authorizing a report to be filed by the chair 
of the House Committee on the Budget by a date certain to be printed and 
to constitute allocations of new budget authority and outlays required 
by section 302(a) (where the conferees did not have time to prepare 
allocations prior to filing of the conference report).

  The concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal years 1988-1990 
contained a provision permitting the first concurrent resolution to 
``become'' a second binding concurrent resolution only at the beginning 
of the fiscal year. It also contained a provision encouraging sales of 
Government assets to non-Government buyers but providing that amounts 
realized not be treated as revenues, receipts, or negative outlays for 
purposes of specified budget enforcement and scorekeeping procedures (H. 
Con. Res. 93, 100th Cong.). The concurrent resolutions on the budget for 
fiscal years 1989-1991 and for fiscal years 1990-1992, respectively, 
each contained a section stating that, for purposes of allocations and 
points of order under section 302, amounts realized from asset sales and 
prepayments of loans would not be allocated or scored as affecting 
budget authority or outlays (H. Con. Res. 268, 100th Cong.; H. Con. Res. 
106, 101st Cong.). The concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
years 1989-1991 also contained a section providing for a subsequent 
allocation of budget authority and outlays for fiscal year 1989 upon the 
reporting by appropriate committees of an anti-drug initiative (H. Con. 
Res. 268, 101st Cong.). The concurrent resolution on the budget for 
fiscal years 1995-1999 included provisions (1) adjusting allocations of 
budget authority, new entitlement authority, and outlays and adjusting 
total levels of budget authority, outlays, and revenues for health care 
reform in the House (within a maximum aggregate deficit for fiscal years 
1995-1999), and (2) adjusting committee allocations, budget aggregates, 
and the maximum deficit amount contingent on certain IRS compliance 
initiatives (H. Con. Res. 218, 103d Cong.). The concurrent resolution on 
the budget for fiscal years 1996-2002 established a budget surplus 
allowance contemplating tax reductions only as part of a legislative 
package producing a balanced budget by fiscal year 2002; corrected a 
disparity that had arisen under the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 
for the scoring of student loans; and established a process for 
certifying a balanced budget before the House could consider a 
reconciliation bill reducing taxes (H. Con. Res. 67, 104th Cong.).

  Concurrent resolutions on the budget have included reconciliation 
instructions that contemplated reductions in revenues (e.g., H. Con. 
Res. 95, 109th Cong.), including one that contemplated two bills 
reducing revenues (H. Con. Res. 178, 104th Cong.).

  The concurrent resolutions on the budget for fiscal years 2000 and 
2001 included a point of order against consideration in the House or 
Senate of a concurrent resolution on the budget for the next fiscal 
year, or any amendment thereto or conference report thereon, that sets 
forth a deficit for any fiscal year (as determined by the Committee on 
the Budget) (sec. 201, H. Con. Res. 68, 106th Cong.; sec. 201, H. Con. 
Res. 290, 106th Cong.).

  The concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2001 also 
included points of order against consideration in the House of a 
reported bill or joint resolution, or any amendment thereto or 
conference report thereon: (1) that would cause a surplus for fiscal 
year 2001 to be less than the level established in the resolution; and 
(2) that, until January 1, 2001, contained a directed scorekeeping 
provision (secs. 202, 203, H. Con. Res. 290, 106th Cong.).

  Budget resolutions have established a point of order against a measure 
that would cause the total level of discretionary advance appropriations 
to exceed a set amount (secs. 202, 203, H. Con. Res. 290, 106th Cong.; 
sec. 201, H. Con. Res. 83, 107th Cong.; sec. 301, H. Con. Res. 353, 
107th Cong., deemed in place by H. Res. 428, 107th Cong., May 22, 2002, 
pp. 8675, 8676, and by sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 108th Cong., Jan. 7, 
2003, p. 10; sec. 501, H. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong.; sec. 401, S. Con. 
Res. 95, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, deemed in place by H. Res. 649, 
108th Cong., May 19, 2004, p. 10105, and by sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 
109th Cong., Jan. 4, 2005, p. 44; sec. 401, H. Con. Res. 95, 109th 
Cong.; sec. 206, S. Con. Res. 21, 110th Cong.; sec. 302, S. Con. Res. 
70, 110th Cong.; sec. 424, S. Con. Res. 13, 111th Cong. (carried forward 
by H. Res. 1493, 111th Cong.); sec. 402, H. Con. Res. 34, 112th Cong., 
deemed in place by H. Res. 287, 112th Cong., June 1, 2011; sec. 501, H. 
Con. Res. 112, 112th Cong., deemed in place by H. Res. 614, 112th Cong., 
Apr. 17, 2012; sec. 601, H. Con. Res. 25, 113th Cong., deemed in place 
by H. Res. 243, 113th Cong., June 4, 2013; sec. 3304, S. Con. Res. 11, 
114th Cong.; sec. 5104, H. Con. Res. 71, 115th Cong.; sec. 4006, S. Con. 
Res. 5, 117th Cong.; sec. 4003, S. Con. Res. 14, 117th Cong.). Such 
point of order has also been established for a Congress in the absence 
of a budget resolution (sec. 3(e), H. Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 809; sec. 
3(g), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2017, p. 38; sec. 103(c), H. Res. 6, Jan. 3, 
2019, p. _; sec. 2, H. Res. 293, Apr. 9, 2019, p. _; sec. 3, H. Res. 
467, June 14, 2021, p. _; sec. 3, H. Res. 1151, June 8, 2022, p. _) and 
by law (sec. 203, P.L. 116-37).

  Budget resolutions have provided that new budget authority, new 
entitlement authority, outlays, and receipts designated as an emergency 
in bills, joint resolutions, amendments, or conference reports are not 
cognizable under specified sections of titles III and IV of the Budget 
Act. The budget resolutions also have required to be included in a 
committee report, joint statement of managers, or the Congressional 
Record an explanation of how an emergency item meets certain criteria 
(sec. 502, H. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong.; sec. 402, S. Con. Res. 95, 
108th Cong., May 19, 2004, deemed in place by H. Res. 649, 108th Cong., 
May 19, 2004, p. 10105, and by sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 109th Cong., 
Jan. 4, 2005, p. 44; sec. 402, H. Con. Res. 95, 109th Cong.; sec. 204, 
S. Con. Res. 21, 110th Cong.; sec. 301, S. Con. Res. 70, 110th Cong.). 
The concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2005 also 
provided that new budget authority, new entitlement authority, and 
outlays contained in a supplemental appropriation bill for fiscal year 
2005 for overseas contingency operations related to the war on terrorism 
were not cognizable under sections 302, 303 and 401 of the Budget Act 
(sec. 403, S. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, deemed in place 
by H. Res. 649, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, p. 10105, and by sec. 
3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 109th Cong., Jan. 4, 2005, p. 44). Budget 
resolutions have also provided that new budget authority, outlays, or 
receipts resulting from appropriations for overseas deployments and 
related activities are not cognizable under titles III and IV of the 
Budget Act (sec. 207, S. Con. Res. 21, 110th Cong.; sec. 301, S. Con. 
Res. 70, 110th Cong.).

  The concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006 included 
a provision permitting the chair of the Committee on the Budget to make 
adjustments to levels and allocations to conform to changes in concepts 
or definitions and a provision providing for a section 302(b) 
suballocation to the full Appropriations Committee for appropriations 
for the Legislative Branch (secs. 406, 410, H. Con. Res. 95, 109th 
Cong.).


  The House has adopted resolutions to deem budget resolutions, portions 
thereof, or other budgetary parameters to be in place for temporary 
enforcement (H. Res. 231, July 24, 1985, p. 20181; H. Res. 413, June 19, 
1990, p. 14612; H. Res. 477, June 19, 1998, p. 12991; H. Res. 428, May 
22, 2002, pp. 8675, 8676; sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, Jan. 7, 2003, p. 10; 
H. Res. 649, May 19, 2004, p. 10105; sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, Jan. 4, 
2005, p. 44; sec. 2(a), H. Res. 818, May 18, 2006, p. 8651; sec. 
511(a)(4), H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 2007, p. 19 (adopted Jan. 5, 2007); H. 
Res. 1493, July 1, 2010, p. 12572; H. Res. 287, June 1, 2011, pp. 8438, 
8439; H. Res. 614, Apr. 17, 2012, p. 4937 (amended by H. Res. 643, May 
8, 2012, p. 6152); sec. 3(c), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2013, p. 27; H. Res. 
243, June 4, 2013, p. 7917; H. Res. 557, Apr. 30, 2014, p. 6551; sec. 
3(e)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 2015, p. 35; H. Res. 223, Apr. 29, 2015, pp. 
5762, 5763; sec. 103(m), H. Res. 6, Jan. 3, 2019, p. _; H. Res. 293, 
Apr. 9, 2019, p. _; sec. 3(p), H. Res. 8, Jan. 4, 2021, p. _; H. Res. 
467, June 14, 2021, p. _; H. Res. 1151, June 8, 2022, p. _); sec. 3(e), 
H. Res. 5, Jan. 9, 2023, p. _). The House has also directed the chair of 
the Committee on the Budget to publish in the Congressional Record 
budget aggregates and allocations and provided that such figures be 
treated as completion of a budget resolution (sec. 2(a), H. Res. 5, Jan. 
6, 1999, p. 47; sec. 3(b), H. Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 80; H. Res. 293, 
Apr. 9, 2019, p. _; H. Res. 1151, June 8, 2022, p. _) and in one case 
further specified the level of an allocation to be so published by 
reference to a given fiscal year (H. Res. 38, Jan. 25, 2011, p. 627). 
For fiscal year 2014, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (div. A, P.L. 
113-67) provided by statute for such a publication and required that 
certain levels be set by reference to statutory discretionary spending 
caps or to a published baseline (sec. 111), and in the next Congress the 
levels in that publication (as subsequently adjusted) were deemed to be 
in force for the first session (sec. 3(e)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 2015, 
p. 35). That act had a similar provision for fiscal year 2015 (sec. 
115), but contingent on Congress not adopting a budget resolution for 
that fiscal year. For fiscal year 2019, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 
2018 (P.L. 115-123) similarly provided by statute for such a publication 
with the same requirements by reference to discretionary spending caps, 
and in the 116th Congress, the levels in that publication (and 
subsequently adjusted) were deemed to be in force for the first session 
(sec. 103(m), H. Res. 6, Jan. 3, 2019, p. _). For fiscal years 2020 and 
2021, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 (P.L. 116-37) provided by 
statute for such a publication with the same requirements by reference 
to discretionary spending caps for two consecutive fiscal years, and in 
the 117th Congress, the levels in that publication (and subsequently 
adjusted) were deemed to be in force for the first session (pending the 
adoption of a concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2021) 
(sec. 3(p), H. Res. 8, Jan. 4, 2021, p. _).


  (c) Consideration of Procedures or Matters Which Have the Effect of 
Changing any Rule of the House of Representatives.--If the Committee on 
the Budget of the House of Representatives reports any concurrent 
resolution on the budget which includes any procedure or matter which 
has the effect of changing any rule of the House of Representatives, 
such concurrent resolution shall then be referred to the Committee on 
Rules with instructions to report it within five calendar days (not 
counting any day on which the House is not in session). The Committee on 
Rules shall have jurisdiction to report any concurrent resolution 
referred to it under this paragraph with an amendment or amendments 
changing or striking out any such procedure or matter.


  (d) Views and Estimates of Other Committees.--Within 6 weeks after the 
President submits a budget under section 1105(a) of title 31, United 
States Code, or at such time as may be requested by the Committee on the 
Budget, each committee of the House of Representatives having 
legislative jurisdiction shall submit to the Committee on the Budget of 
the House and each committee of the Senate having legislative 
jurisdiction shall submit to the Committee on the Budget of the Senate 
its views and estimates (as determined by the committee making such 
submission) with respect to all matters set forth in subsections (a) and 
(b) which relate to matters within the jurisdiction or functions of such 
committee. The Joint Economic Committee shall submit to the Committees 
on the Budget of both Houses its recommendations as to the fiscal policy 
appropriate to the goals of the Employment Act of 1946. Any other 
committee of the House of Representatives or the Senate may submit to 
the Committee on the Budget of its House, and any joint committee of the 
Congress may submit to the Committees on the Budget of both Houses, its 
views and estimates with respect to all matters set forth in subsections 
(a) and (b) which relate to matters within its jurisdiction or 
functions. Any Committee of the House of Representatives or the Senate 
that anticipates that the committee will consider any proposed 
legislation establishing, amending, or reauthorizing any Federal program 
likely to have a significant budgetary impact on any State, local, or 
tribal government, or likely to have a significant financial impact on 
the private sector, including any legislative proposal submitted by the 
executive branch likely to have such a budgetary or financial impact, 
shall include its views and estimates on that proposal to the Committee 
on the Budget of the applicable House.


  Section 301(d) was amended by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10105, P.L. 105-33) to permit the Committees on the Budget to set an 
alternate deadline for submission of committee views and estimates.

  (e) Hearings and Report.--

          (1) In general.--In developing the concurrent resolution on 

        the budget referred to in subsection (a) for each fiscal year, 

        the Committee on the Budget of each House shall hold hearings 

        and shall receive testimony from Members of Congress and such 

        appropriate representatives of Federal departments and agencies, 

        the general public, and national organizations as the committee 

        deems desirable. Each of the recommendations as to short-term 

        and medium-term goals set forth in the report submitted by the 

        members of the Joint Economic Committee under subsection (d) may 

        be considered by the Committee on the Budget of each House as 

        part of its consideration of such concurrent resolution, and its 

        report may reflect its views thereon, including its views on how 

        the estimates of revenues and levels of budget authority and 

        outlays set forth in such concurrent resolution are designed to 

        achieve any goals it is recommending.

          (2) Required contents of report.--The report accompanying the 

        resolution shall include--

                  (A) a comparison of the levels of total new budget 

                authority, total outlays, total revenues, and the 

                surplus or deficit for each fiscal year set forth in the 

                resolution with those requested in the budget submitted 

                by the President;

                  (B) with respect to each major functional category, an 

                estimate of total new budget authority and total 

                outlays, with the estimates divided between 

                discretionary and mandatory amounts;

                  (C) the economic assumptions that underlie each of the 

                matters set forth in the resolution and any alternative 

                economic assumptions and objectives the committee 

                considered;

                  (D) information, data, and comparisons indicating the 

                manner in which, and the basis on which, the committee 

                determined each of the matters set forth in the 

                resolution;

                  (E) the estimated levels of tax expenditures (the tax 

                expenditures budget) by major items and functional 

                categories for the President's budget and in the 

                resolution; and

                  (F) allocations described in section 302(a).

          (3) Additional contents of report.--The report accompanying 

        the resolution may include--

                  (A) a statement of any significant changes in the 

                proposed levels of Federal assistance to State and local 

                governments;

                  (B) an allocation of the level of Federal revenues 

                recommended in the resolution among the major sources of 

                such revenues;

                  (C) information, data, and comparisons on the share of 

                total Federal budget outlays and of gross domestic 

                product devoted to investment in the budget submitted by 

                the President and in the resolution;

                  (D) the assumed levels of budget authority and outlays 

                for public buildings, with a division between amounts 

                for construction and repair and for rental payments; and

                  (E) other matters, relating to the budget and to 


                fiscal policy, that the committee deems appropriate.


  The contents required of a report accompanying a budget resolution 
were modified by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10105, P.L. 
105-33).

  (f) Achievement of Goals for Reducing Unemployment.--

          (1) If, pursuant to section 4(c) of the Employment Act of 

        1946, the President recommends in the Economic Report that the 

        goals for reducing unemployment set forth in section 4(b) of 

        such Act be achieved in a year after the close of the five-year 

        period prescribed by such subsection, the concurrent resolution 

        on the budget for the fiscal year beginning after the date on 

        which such Economic Report is received by the Congress may set 

        forth the year in which, in the opinion of the Congress, such 

        goals can be achieved.

          (2) After the Congress has expressed its opinion pursuant to 

        paragraph (1) as to the year in which the goals for reducing 

        unemployment set forth in section 4(b) of the Employment Act of 

        1946 can be achieved, if, pursuant to section 4(e) of such Act, 

        the President recommends in the Economic Report that such goals 

        be achieved in a year which is different from the year in which 

        the Congress has expressed its opinion that such goals should be 

        achieved, either in its action pursuant to paragraph (1) or in 

        its most recent action pursuant to this paragraph, the 

        concurrent resolution on the budget for the fiscal year 

        beginning after the date on which such Economic Report is 

        received by the Congress may set forth the year in which, in the 

        opinion of the Congress, such goals can be achieved.

          (3) It shall be in order to amend the provision of such 

        resolution setting forth such year only if the amendment thereto 

        also proposes to alter the estimates, amounts, and levels (as 

        described in subsection (a)) set forth in such resolution in 

        germane fashion in order to be consistent with the economic 

        goals (as described in sections 3(a)(2) and (4)(b) of the 

        Employment Act of 1946) which such amendment proposes can be 


        achieved by the year specified in such amendment.

  (g) Economic Assumptions.--

          (1) It shall not be in order in the Senate to consider any 

        concurrent resolution on the budget for a fiscal year, or any 

        amendment thereto, or any conference report thereon, that sets 

        forth amounts and levels that are determined on the basis of 

        more than one set of economic and technical assumptions.

          (2) The joint explanatory statement accompanying a conference 

        report on a concurrent resolution on the budget shall set forth 

        the common economic assumptions upon which such joint statement 

        and conference report are based, or upon which any amendment 

        contained in the joint explanatory statement to be proposed by 

        the conferees in the case of technical disagreement, is based.

          (3) Subject to periodic reestimation based on changed economic 

        conditions or technical estimates, determinations under titles 

        III and IV of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 shall be 

        based upon such common economic and technical assumptions.

  (h) Budget Committee's Consultation With Committees.--The Committee on 
the Budget of the House of Representatives shall consult with the 
committees of its House having legislative jurisdiction during the 
preparation, consideration, and enforcement of the concurrent resolution 
on the budget with respect to all matters which relate to the 
jurisdiction or functions of such committees.


  (i) Social Security Point of Order.--It shall not be in order in the 
Senate to consider any concurrent resolution on the budget (or 
amendment, motion, or conference report on the resolution) that would 
decrease the excess of social security revenues over social security 
outlays in any of the fiscal years covered by the concurrent resolution. 
No change in chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 shall be 
treated as affecting the amount of social security revenues unless such 
provision changes the income tax treatment of social security benefits.

  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) modified this portion of section 301 by: (1) inserting 
a new subsection on referral of budget resolutions to the Committee on 
Rules; (2) amending and redesignating existing subsections (c), (d), and 
(e) as (d), (e), and (f), respectively; and (3) adding new subsections 
(g) (which was amended by Public Law 100-119) and (h). It also added a 
former subsection (i), which precluded consideration of a concurrent 
resolution on the budget exceeding the pertinent maximum deficit amount 
absent a three-fifths vote. That point of order was amended by Public 
Law 100-119 and was eliminated by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 
(tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508). The Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 
1988 (P.L. 100-418) added paragraph (10) to subsection (e), effective 
only for fiscal years 1989 through 1992. Previously, the Full Employment 
and Balanced Growth Act of 1978 (P.L. 95-523) amended this section by: 
(1) adding a new paragraph (6) to subsection (a) and redesignating the 
succeeding paragraph (both of which were later repealed by P.L. 99-177); 
(2) adding a new second sentence to subsection (c) (now contained in 
subsection (d)); and (3) adding a new subsection (e) (now designated as 
(f)), relating to the review of the Economic Report as part of the 
congressional budget process, and allowing the inclusion in the budget 
resolution of a timetable for achieving unemployment goals under the 
Employment Act of 1946. The last sentence of subsection (d) was added by 
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (sec. 102(2), P.L. 104-4; 109 
Stat. 62). The Social Security point of order contained in paragraph (i) 
was added by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-
508) and later expanded by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10105, P.L. 105-33).

  The House and Senate completed final action on the first concurrent 
resolution on the budget considered under the Congressional Budget Act 
by adopting a conference report thereon on May 14, 1975 (p. 14329). That 
concurrent resolution contained aggregate figures only for revenues, 
budget authority, budget outlays, deficit and public debt, because the 
Committee on the Budget had not implemented the functional categories 
provisions of the Act for fiscal year 1976.


  On May 13, 1976, the House and Senate completed final action on the 
first concurrent resolution for fiscal year 1977, the first year of full 
implementation of title III of the Congressional Budget Act (p. 13776).


                          committee allocations

  Sec. 302. (a) Committee Spending Allocations.--

          (1) Allocation among committees.--The joint explanatory 

        statement accompanying a conference report on a concurrent 

        resolution on the budget shall include an allocation, consistent 

        with the resolution recommended in the conference report, of the 

        levels for the first fiscal year of the resolution, for at least 

        each of the ensuing 4 fiscal years, and a total for that period 

        of fiscal years (except in the case of the Committee on 

        Appropriations only for the fiscal year of that resolution) of--

                  (A) total new budget authority; and

                  (B) total outlays;

        among each committee of the House of Representatives or the 

        Senate that has jurisdiction over legislation providing or 

        creating such amounts.

          (2) No double counting.--In the House of Representatives, any 

        item allocated to one committee may not be allocated to another 

        committee.

          (3) Further division of amounts.--

                  (A) In the senate.--In the Senate, the amount 

                allocated to the Committee on Appropriations shall be 

                further divided among the categories specified in 

                section 250(c)(4) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency 

                Deficit Control Act of 1985 and shall not exceed the 

                limits for each category set forth in section 251(c) of 

                that Act.

                  (B) In the house.--In the House of Representatives, 

                the amounts allocated to each committee for each fiscal 

                year, other than the Committee on Appropriations, shall 

                be further divided between amounts provided or required 

                by law on the date of filing of that conference report 

                and amounts not so provided or required. The amounts 

                allocated to the Committee on Appropriations shall be 

                further divided--

                        (i) between discretionary and mandatory amounts 

                    or programs, as appropriate; and

                        (ii) consistent with the categories specified in 

                    section 250(c)(4) of the Balanced Budget and 

                    Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.

          (4) Amounts not allocated.--In the House of Representatives or 

        the Senate, if a committee receives no allocation of new budget 

        authority or outlays, that committee shall be deemed to have 

        received an allocation equal to zero for new budget authority or 

        outlays.

          (5) Adjusting allocation of discretionary spending in the 

        house of representatives.--(A) If a concurrent resolution on the 

        budget is not adopted by April 15, the chairman of the Committee 

        on the Budget of the House of Representatives shall submit to 

        the House, as soon as practicable, an allocation under paragraph 

        (1) to the Committee on Appropriations consistent with the 

        discretionary spending levels in the most recently agreed to 

        concurrent resolution on the budget for the appropriate fiscal 

        year covered by that resolution.

          (B) As soon as practicable after an allocation under paragraph 

        (1) is submitted under this section, the Committee on 

        Appropriations shall make suballocations and report those 


        suballocations to the House of Representatives.


  (b) Suballocations by Appropriations Committees.--As soon as 
practicable after a concurrent resolution on the budget is agreed to, 
the Committee on Appropriations of each House (after consulting with the 
Committee on Appropriations of the other House) shall suballocate each 
amount allocated to it for the budget year under subsection (a) among 
its subcommittees. Each Committee on Appropriations shall promptly 
report to its House suballocations made or revised under this 
subsection. The Committee on Appropriations of the House of 
Representatives shall further divide among its subcommittees the 
divisions made under subsection (a)(3)(B) and promptly report those 
divisions to the House.


  (c) Point of Order.--After the Committee on Appropriations has 
received an allocation pursuant to subsection (a) for a fiscal year, it 
shall not be in order in the House of Representatives or the Senate to 
consider any bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or conference 
report within the jurisdiction of that committee providing new budget 
authority for that fiscal year, until that committee makes the 
suballocations required by subsection (b).


  (d) Subsequent Concurrent Resolutions.--In the case of a concurrent 
resolution on the budget referred to in section 304, the allocations 
under subsection (a) and the subdivisions under subsection (b) shall be 
required only to the extent necessary to take into account revisions 
made in the most recently agreed to concurrent resolution on the budget.


  (e) Alteration of Allocations.--At any time after a committee reports 
the allocations required to be made under subsection (b), such committee 
may report to its House an alteration of such allocations. Any 
alteration of such allocations must be consistent with any actions 
already taken by its House on legislation within the committee's 
jurisdiction.

  (f) Legislation Subject to Point of Order.--

          (1) In the house of representatives.--After the Congress has 

        completed action on a concurrent resolution on the budget for a 

        fiscal year, it shall not be in order in the House of 

        Representatives to consider any bill, joint resolution, or 

        amendment providing new budget authority for any fiscal year, or 

        any conference report on any such bill or joint resolution, if--

                  (A) the enactment of such bill or resolution as 

                reported;

                  (B) the adoption and enactment of such amendment; or

                  (C) the enactment of such bill or resolution in the 

                form recommended in such conference report,

        would cause the applicable allocation of new budget authority 

        made under subsection (a) or (b) for the first fiscal year or 

        the total of fiscal years to be exceeded.

          (2) In the senate.--After a concurrent resolution on the 

        budget is agreed to, it shall not be in order in the Senate to 

        consider any bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or 

        conference report that would cause--

                  (A) in the case of any committee except the Committee 

                on Appropriations, the applicable allocation of new 

                budget authority or outlays under subsection (a) for the 

                first fiscal year or the total of fiscal years to be 

                exceeded; or

                  (B) in the case of the Committee on Appropriations, 

                the applicable suballocation of new budget authority or 


                outlays under subsection (b) to be exceeded.

  (g) Pay-as-You-Go Exception in the House.--

          (1) In general.--(A) Subsection (f)(1) and, after April 15, 

        section 303(a) shall not apply to any bill or joint resolution, 

        as reported, amendment thereto, or conference report thereon if, 

        for each fiscal year covered by the most recently agreed to 

        concurrent resolution on the budget--

                  (i) the enactment of that bill or resolution as 

                reported;

                  (ii) the adoption and enactment of that amendment; or

                  (iii) the enactment of that bill or resolution in the 

                form recommended in that conference report,

        would not increase the deficit, and, if the sum of any revenue 

        increases provided in legislation already enacted during the 

        current session (when added to revenue increases, if any, in 

        excess of any outlay increase provided by the legislation 

        proposed for consideration) is at least as great as the sum of 

        the amount, if any, by which the aggregate level of Federal 

        revenues should be increased as set forth in that concurrent 

        resolution and the amount, if any, by which revenues are to be 

        increased pursuant to pay-as-you-go procedures under section 

        301(b)(8), if included in that concurrent resolution.

          (B) Section 311(a), as that section applies to revenues, shall 

        not apply to any bill, joint resolution, amendment thereto, or 

        conference report thereon if, for each fiscal year covered by 

        the most recently agreed to concurrent resolution on the 

        budget--

                  (i) the enactment of that bill or resolution as 

                reported;

                  (ii) the adoption and enactment of that amendment; or

                  (iii) the enactment of that bill or resolution in the 

                form recommended in that conference report,

        would not increase the deficit, and, if the sum of any outlay 

        reductions provided in legislation already enacted during the 

        current session (when added to outlay reductions, if any, in 

        excess of any revenue reduction provided by the legislation 

        proposed for consideration) is at least as great as the sum of 

        the amount, if any, by which the aggregate level of Federal 

        outlays should be reduced as required by that concurrent 

        resolution and the amount, if any, by which outlays are to be 

        reduced pursuant to pay-as-you-go procedures under section 

        301(b)(8), if included in that concurrent resolution.

          (2) Revised allocations.--(A) As soon as practicable after 

        Congress agrees to a bill or joint resolution that would have 

        been subject to a point of order under subsection (f)(1) but for 

        the exception provided in paragraph (1)(A) or would have been 

        subject to a point of order under section 311(a) but for the 

        exception provided in paragraph (1)(B), the chairman of the 

        Committee on the Budget of the House of Representatives shall 

        file with the House appropriately revised allocations under 

        section 302(a) and revised functional levels and budget 

        aggregates to reflect that bill.

          (B) Such revised allocations, functional levels, and budget 

        aggregates shall be considered for the purposes of this Act as 

        allocations, functional levels, and budget aggregates contained 

        in the most recently agreed to concurrent resolution on the 


        budget.

  Section 302 was amended by the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 
Control Act of 1985 (tit. II, P.L. 99-177) to: (1) add appropriate 
levels of total entitlement authority and total credit authority to the 
allocations required by subsection (a), with all levels further divided 
into mandatory and discretionary amounts; (2) add new credit authority 
to the subdivisions required of the Committees on Appropriations by 
subsection (b)(1); (3) redesignate subsection (c) as (d); and (4) add 
new subsections (c), (e), (f), and (g). The Budget Enforcement Act of 
1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) removed credit authority from the purview 
of points of order under this section by deleting all references to 
credit authority in subsections (a), (b), (c), and (f), effective for 
fiscal years beginning after September 30, 1991. That law also amended 
subsections (c) and (f) to standardize their application to bills, joint 
resolutions, amendments, motions, or conference reports. Section 302 was 
further amended by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10106, P.L. 
105-33) to: (1) permanently extend the requirement that allocations to 
the authorizing committees cover at least a five-year period and to 
revert the temporary allocations under former section 602 into section 
302; (2) permit a further allocation among defense, nondefense, and 
violent crime reduction funding; (3) modify the Committee on 
Appropriations' default allocation; and (4) clarify that committee's 
suballocations to its subcommittees.

  Clause 8 of rule XXI, adopted in the 110th Congress, provides that 
points of order under title III of the Budget Act apply to unreported 
measures (sec. 403, H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 2007, p. 19 (adopted Jan. 5, 
2007)). Previously, a point of order under section 302(f) operated with 
respect to a bill or joint resolution in its reported state and thus did 
not lie against consideration of an unreported measure (Mar. 21, 1995, 
p. 8491). The budget resolution deemed in place for fiscal year 2005 
provided that, for purposes of titles II and III of the Budget Act, the 
term ``amendment'' or ``amendment thereto'' means an amendment offered 
or an amendment made in order as original text or considered as adopted 
by special order of the House (sec. 406, S. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong., 
May 19, 2004, deemed in place by H. Res. 649, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, 
p. 10105, and by sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 109th Cong., Jan. 4, 2005, p. 
44).

  Points of order under section 302(c) apply separately to the 
consideration of bills and amendments, and thus a waiver of points of 
order against consideration of an appropriation bill before the filing 
of a report from the Appropriations Committee allocating new budget 
authority among its subcommittees does not extend to an amendment 
providing new budget authority in addition to the amounts contained in 
the bill (July 13, 1987, p. 19514). Where the House deemed the adoption 
of new section 302(a) allocations for the 108th Congress (sec. 3, H. 
Res. 5, Jan. 7, 2003, p. 10), the Chair sustained a point of order under 
section 302(c) against an amendment providing new budget authority where 
the Appropriations Committee had not reported section 302(b) 
suballocations (Jan. 8, 2003, p. 225; Jan. 28, 2003, p. 2009 (both 
sustained by tabling of appeal)).

  By way of example, the Chair has held the following as providing new 
budget authority in excess of the relevant allocations under section 
302(a), as authoritatively estimated by the Committee on the Budget 
pursuant to section 312(a), in violation of section 302(f): (1) a motion 
to recommit a bill establishing a Medicare prescription drug benefit 
program with instructions to report forthwith an amendment in the nature 
of substitute containing a different program (sustained by tabling of 
appeal) (June 28, 2000, pp. 12736, 12751); (2) an amendment extending 
eligibility for Foster Care Maintenance Payments to a new class (Sept. 
14, 2005, pp. 20218-20); (3) an amendment delaying the imposition of a 
monetary penalty resulting in a loss of offsetting receipts (July 18, 
1991, p. 18860); (4) where a subcommittee of the Committee on 
Appropriations had received two separate allocations of budget 
authority, an amendment transferring funds from accounts under one 
allocation to accounts under the other, thereby exceeding the level of 
the latter allocation (July 18, 2012, pp. 11599, 11600).

  An amendment that proposes offsetting increases and decreases in new 
budget authority is not subject to a point of order under section 302(f) 
(May 9, 1995, p. 12175). Amendments to an appropriation bill making a 
series of figure changes intended to offset one another and considered 
en bloc are subject to points of order under section 302(f) where the 
intended reductions in new discretionary budget authority fail to offset 
increases in such authority, so that the net effect of the amendments is 
to cause the bill to exceed the appropriate allocation of new 
discretionary budget authority made pursuant to section 302(b) for the 
fiscal year (July 30, 1986, p. 18154).

  Where a Senate amendment proposed to increase certain loan guarantees 
that were estimated by the Committee on the Budget to breach the 
subcommittee subdivision of new credit authority (as then required by 
this section), the Chair sustained a point of order under section 302(f) 
against a motion to concur therein (Oct. 20, 1990, p. 31517).

  Where a limitation on funds in a general appropriation bill was 
estimated under former section 302(g) (current section 312(a)) to 
provide negative new budget authority in an amount sufficient to avoid a 
breach of the pertinent allocation of such authority, an amendment 
striking the limitation from the bill was held to provide new budget 
authority causing such a breach, in violation of section 302(f) (June 
26, 1991, p. 16474; June 13, 2000, p. 10501). An amendment proposing to 
strike from a general appropriation bill a proviso stating that a 
specified increment of new discretionary budget authority ostensibly 
provided by the bill would ``become available for obligation only upon 
the enactment of future appropriations legislation'' was held to cause 
the bill to provide additional new discretionary budget authority in 
that incremental amount, in breach of the pertinent allocation under 
sections 302 and 602, and therefore in violation of section 302(f) (June 
26, 1996, p. 15563). An amendment proposing to strike from a general 
appropriation bill a rescission scored as negative budget authority was 
held to provide new budget authority in excess of the relevant 
allocation under section 302(b) (June 20, 2001, pp. 11248, 11249). The 
Chair relies on authoritative estimates from the Committee on the Budget 
pursuant to section 312(a) to determine whether an amendment to a 
general appropriation bill provides new budget authority in excess of 
the relevant allocation under section 302(b) in violation of section 
302(f) (e.g., June 8, 2000, pp. 9942, 9943; June 12, 2000, pp. 10377, 
10378; Apr. 2, 2004, pp. 6355, 6374). Such estimates may be provided by 
the chair of the Committee on the Budget pursuant to clause 4 of rule 
XXIX.


  The 104th Congress authorized the chair of the Committee on the Budget 
to revise existing allocations under this section among committees of 
the House to reflect changes in jurisdiction under clause 1 of rule X 
and to publish the revised allocations in the Congressional Record, to 
the end that the revised allocations be effective in the House as though 
made pursuant to sections 302(a) and 602(a) of the Congressional Budget 
Act of 1974 (sec. 202(c), H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 1995, p. 467). The House 
has adopted resolutions to deem budget resolutions, or portions thereof, 
to be in place for temporary enforcement (see annotations under section 
301(b) of this Act). The budget resolution deemed adopted for fiscal 
year 2003 established a reserve fund in the House to support an extra 
allocation for propositions providing for specified increases in 
obligation levels for highway spending, with a special application of 
section 302(f) to enforce levels of outlays (as well as budget 
authority) in that area, and provided for a separate, exclusive section 
302(a) allocation for medicare spending (on one-year and 10-year bases) 
(sec. 204, H. Con. Res. 353, 107th Cong., deemed in place by H. Res. 
428, 107th Cong., May 22, 2002, pp. 8675, 8676, and by sec. 3, H. Res. 
5, 108th Cong., Jan. 7, 2003, p. 10). The special allocation for surface 
transportation was carried in the budget resolution for fiscal year 2004 
(sec. 501, H. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong.) and in the budget resolution 
deemed in place for fiscal year 2005 (sec. 401, S. Con. Res. 95, 108th 
Cong., May 19, 2004, deemed in place by H. Res. 649, 108th Cong., May 
19, 2004, p. 10105, and by sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 109th Cong., Jan. 4, 
2005, p. 44). Budget resolutions have established reserve funds in the 
House to support extra allocations for various propositions covering a 
broad range of subjects (e.g., secs. 201-220, S. Con. Res. 70, 110th 
Cong.). The House has provided that, for purposes of subsection (f), 
certain off-budget discretionary amounts be included in estimates of 
budget authority and outlays (sec. 3(f)(2), H. Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 
80).

   concurrent resolution on the budget must be adopted before budget-


                    related legislation is considered

  Sec. 303. (a) In General.--Until the concurrent resolution on the 
budget for a fiscal year has been agreed to, it shall not be in order in 
the House of Representatives, with respect to the first fiscal year 
covered by that resolution, or the Senate, with respect to any fiscal 
year covered by that resolution, to consider any bill or joint 
resolution, amendment or motion thereto, or conference report thereon 
that--

          (1) first provides new budget authority for that fiscal year;

          (2) first provides an increase or decrease in revenues during 

        that fiscal year;

          (3) provides an increase or decrease in the public debt limit 

        to become effective during that fiscal year;

          (4) in the Senate only, first provides new entitlement 

        authority for that fiscal year; or

          (5) in the Senate only, first provides for an increase or 

        decrease in outlays for that fiscal year.

  (b) Exceptions in the House.--In the House of Representatives, 
subsection (a) does not apply--

          (1)(A) to any bill or joint resolution, as reported, providing 

        advance discretionary new budget authority that first becomes 

        available for the first or second fiscal year after the budget 

        year; or

          (B) to any bill or joint resolution, as reported, first 

        increasing or decreasing revenues in a fiscal year following the 

        fiscal year to which the concurrent resolution applies;

          (2) after May 15, to any general appropriation bill or 

        amendment thereto; or

          (3) to any bill or joint resolution unless it is reported by a 

        committee.

  (c) Application to Appropriation Measures in the Senate.--

          (1) In general.--Until the concurrent resolution on the budget 

        for a fiscal year has been agreed to and an allocation has been 

        made to the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate under 

        section 302(a) for that year, it shall not be in order in the 

        Senate to consider any appropriation bill or joint resolution, 

        amendment or motion thereto, or conference report thereon for 

        that year or any subsequent year.

          (2) Exception.--Paragraph (1) does not apply to appropriations 

        legislation making advance appropriations for the first or 

        second fiscal year after the year the allocation referred to in 


        that paragraph is made.

  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) amended subsection 303(a) by: (1) adding the phrase 
``as reported to the House or Senate''; (2) modifying paragraph (4) to 
apply to new entitlement authority; and (3) adding a paragraph (5) 
relating to new credit authority. The same law amended subsection (b) by 
adding the May 15th exception for general appropriation bills. The 
Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) amended 
subsection (a) to standardize its application to bills, joint 
resolutions, amendments, motions, and conference reports, and by 
deleting the reference in paragraph (5) to new credit authority. That 
law also subdivided subsection (b) into paragraphs relating to 
exceptions in the House and Senate. Section 303 was rewritten by the 
Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10107, P.L. 105-33) to simplify the 
section, drop obsolete provisions, make certain conforming changes, and 
eliminate references to ``new entitlement authority'' in the House and 
``new credit authority.''

  Clause 8 of rule XXI, adopted in the 110th Congress, provides that 
points of order under title III of the Budget Act apply to unreported 
measures (sec. 403, H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 2007, p. 19 (adopted Jan. 5, 
2007)). Previously, a point of order under section 303(a) operated with 
respect to a bill or joint resolution in its reported state and thus did 
not lie against consideration of an unreported measure (Mar. 21, 1995, 
p. 8491), although it did lie against consideration of an amendment to 
an unreported measure (July 24, 1998, p. 17278). The budget resolution 
deemed in place for fiscal year 2005 provided that, for purposes of 
titles II and III of the Budget Act, the term ``amendment'' or 
``amendment thereto'' means an amendment offered or an amendment made in 
order as original text or considered as adopted by special order of the 
House (sec. 406, S. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, deemed in 
place by H. Res. 649, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, p. 10105, and by sec. 
3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 109th Cong., Jan. 4, 2005, p. 44).

  A conference report containing revenue-sharing provisions in the form 
of new entitlement authority as described in section 401(c)(2)(C) of the 
Budget Act to become effective in fiscal years 1978 through 1980 in 
amounts greater than the amount in fiscal year 1977 was ruled out on a 
point of order under section 303(a), because the first concurrent 
resolution on the budget for those future fiscal years had not yet been 
adopted and the increased entitlements could not be considered mere 
continuations of entitlement authority that became effective in fiscal 
year 1977 (for which a concurrent resolution had been adopted), and 
because the section 303(b) exception permitting certain advance budget 
authority does not apply in the case of new entitlement authority 
(Speaker Albert, Sept. 30, 1976, p. 34074). An amendment providing new 
budget authority for a fiscal year before adoption of a budget 
resolution for that year was held to violate section 303, where points 
of order under that section had been waived against the pending bill but 
not against amendments (Aug. 1, 1984, p. 21871; July 17, 1985, pp. 
19435, 19463 (amendment contained in motion to recommit with 
instructions)).

  To a bill providing eligibility for certain entitlement benefits to 
become effective in the fiscal year for which a budget resolution had 
been adopted, an amendment allowing a deduction in computing household 
income to determine eligibility effective in the next following fiscal 
year, to reflect changes in shelter and utility costs, was ruled out as 
providing new entitlement authority to become effective in a fiscal year 
for which a concurrent resolution on the budget had not been adopted, in 
violation of section 303(a)(4) (July 27, 1977, p. 25222).

  To a bill partially replacing an existing mandatory student loan 
(entitlement) program with a new discretionary program, an amendment 
reducing the discretionary program and commensurately restoring the 
mandatory program was held to violate section 303(a) by providing new 
entitlement authority for the ensuing fiscal year before the adoption of 
a concurrent resolution on the budget for that fiscal year (Mar. 26, 
1992, p. 7173). Amendments enlarging the class of persons eligible for, 
or increasing the amount of, a Government subsidy (lower interest 
payments on student loans) have been held to violate section 303(a) by 
providing new entitlement authority for the ensuing fiscal year before 
the adoption of a concurrent resolution on the budget for that fiscal 
year (Mar. 26, 1992, pp. 7184, 7186, 7227, 7231, 7236).

  An amendment repealing an agricultural marketing (entitlement) program 
for peanuts over a five-year period was nevertheless held to provide new 
budget authority for the ensuing fiscal year before the adoption of the 
budget resolution for that year, in violation of section 303(a), where 
the Chair was persuaded by estimates from the Congressional Budget 
Office that economic conditions under that repeal would result in 
decreased receipts and increased Federal outlays during that first 
fiscal year (July 25, 1990, p. 19155).

  An amendment imposing fees on generated electric energy, to be 
deposited in a trust fund, and effective in the ensuing fiscal year, was 
held to violate section 303(a) by increasing revenues effective in the 
ensuing fiscal year, for which a budget resolution had yet to be adopted 
(July 23, 1985, p. 20041). An amendment striking a revenue provision in 
a pending unreported bill and proposing to insert an alternative revenue 
provision was held to violate section 303(a) (July 24, 1998, p. 17278).

  The Committee on the Budget of the House determined, as stated in its 
second report on the implementation of congressional budget procedures 
for fiscal year 1976 (H. Rept. No. 94-457, Oct. 8, 1975), that the 
section 303(b) exemption for certain advance budget or revenue authority 
ceases to apply with the beginning of the fiscal year in question. 
Therefore, on or after October 1, 1975, the beginning of fiscal year 
1976, budget authority or revenue measures to become effective in fiscal 
year 1977, could no longer be considered under the 303(b) exception but 
would have to await the final adoption in May of the first concurrent 
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 1977. But the Senate in the 
95th Congress overruled a decision of its presiding officer holding that 
the section 303(b) exemption ceased to apply after the beginning of the 
fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which revenue changes were 
proposed (Oct. 5, 1978, pp. 33945-50).

  In the 106th through 113th Congresses, the House adopted an order to 
enforce a 303(a) point of order against a reported bill or joint 
resolution considered under a special order of business on the basis of 
text made in order as original text (sec. 2(a)(3), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 
1999, p. 47; sec. 3(b)(2), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2001, p. 24; sec. 3(a)(2), 
H. Res. 5, Jan. 7, 2003, p. 10; sec. 3(a)(2), H. Res. 5, Jan. 4, 2005, 
p. 44; sec. 511(a)(2), H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 2007, p. 19 (adopted Jan. 5, 
2007); sec. 3(a)(2), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 2009, p. 9; sec. 3(a)(2), H. 
Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 80; sec. 3(b)(2), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2013, p. 
26). These orders were no longer necessary after the enactment of an 
amendment to section 315 by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (div. A, 
P.L. 113-67).


  The House has adopted resolutions to deem budget resolutions, or 
portions thereof, to be in place for temporary enforcement (see 
annotations under section 301(b) of this Act).


      permissible revisions of concurrent resolutions on the budget


  Sec. 304. At any time after the concurrent resolution on the budget 
for a fiscal year has been agreed to pursuant to section 301, and before 
the end of such fiscal year, the two Houses may adopt a concurrent 
resolution on the budget which revises or reaffirms the concurrent 
resolution on the budget for such fiscal year most recently agreed to.


 provisions relating to the consideration of concurrent resolutions on 
  The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) deleted a 
subsection (b), relating to maximum deficit amount requirements for 
revised budget resolutions, that had been added by the Balanced Budget 
and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. II, P.L. 99-177), and 
redesignated the subsection on economic assumptions, originally added by 
Public Law 100-119, as (b). The latter subsection (b) was deleted by the 
Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10108, P.L. 105-33). Although not a 
section 304 revision, the House has by simple resolution modified 
amounts in House enforcement provisions of a concurrent resolution on 
the budget (sec. 2, H. Res. 665, July 22, 2009, p. 18581).


                               the budget

  Sec. 305. (a) Procedure in House of Representatives After Report of 
Committee; Debate.--

          (1) When a concurrent resolution on the budget has been 

        reported by the Committee on the Budget of the House of 

        Representatives and has been referred to the appropriate 

        calendar of the House, it shall be in order on any day 

        thereafter, subject to clause 4 of rule XIII of the Rules of the 

        House of Representatives, to move to proceed to the 

        consideration of the concurrent resolution. The motion is highly 

        privileged and is not debatable. An amendment to the motion is 

        not in order and it is not in order to move to reconsider the 

        vote by which the motion is agreed to or disagreed to.

          (2) General debate on any concurrent resolution on the budget 

        in the House of Representatives shall be limited to not more 

        than 10 hours, which shall be divided equally between the 

        majority and minority parties, plus such additional hours of 

        debate as are consumed pursuant to paragraph (3). A motion 

        further to limit debate is not debatable. A motion to recommit 

        the concurrent resolution is not in order, and it is not in 

        order to move to reconsider the vote by which the concurrent 

        resolution is agreed to or disagreed to.

          (3) Following the presentation of opening statements on the 

        concurrent resolution on the budget for a fiscal year by the 

        chairman and ranking minority member of the Committee on the 

        Budget of the House, there shall be a period of up to four hours 

        for debate on economic goals and policies.

          (4) Only if a concurrent resolution on the budget reported by 

        the Committee on the Budget of the House sets forth the economic 

        goals (as described in sections 3(a)(2) and (4)(b) of the Full 

        Employment Act of 1946) which the estimates, amounts, and levels 

        (as described in section 301(a)) set forth in such resolution 

        are designed to achieve, shall it be in order to offer to such 

        resolution an amendment relating to such goals, and such 

        amendment shall be in order only if it also proposes to alter 

        such estimates, amounts, and levels in germane fashion in order 

        to be consistent with the goals proposed in such amendment.

          (5) Consideration of any concurrent resolution on the budget 

        by the House of Representatives shall be in the Committee of the 

        Whole, and the resolution shall be considered for amendment 

        under the five-minute rule in accordance with the applicable 

        provisions of rule XVIII of the Rules of the House of 

        Representatives. After the Committee rises and reports the 

        resolution back to the House, the previous question shall be 

        considered as ordered on the resolution and any amendments 

        thereto to final passage without intervening motion; except that 

        it shall be in order at any time prior to final passage 

        (notwithstanding any other rule or provision of law) to adopt an 

        amendment (or a series of amendments) changing any figure or 

        figures in the resolution as so reported to the extent necessary 

        to achieve mathematical consistency.

          (6) Debate in the House of Representatives on the conference 

        report on any concurrent resolution on the budget shall be 

        limited to not more than 5 hours, which shall be divided equally 

        between the majority and minority parties. A motion further to 

        limit debate is not debatable. A motion to recommit the 

        conference report is not in order, and it is not in order to 

        move to reconsider the vote by which the conference report is 

        agreed to or disagreed to.

          (7) Appeals from decisions of the Chair relating to the 

        application of the Rules of the House of Representatives to the 

        procedure relating to any concurrent resolution on the budget 


        shall be decided without debate.

  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) amended section 305 in several places, with the most 
important changes being the reduction in the availability requirement 
for the committee report on a budget resolution to five days (from 10) 
and the addition of a one-day availability requirement for any report 
thereon from the Committee on Rules. The Full Employment and Balanced 
Growth Act of 1978 (P.L. 95-523) amended this subsection by adding 
subparagraphs (3) and (4) and making conforming changes relating to 
debate and amendments on economic goals and policies during 
consideration of the first concurrent resolution on the budget in the 
House. A similar addition relating to Senate procedure was made in 
subparagraphs (3) and (4). The Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10109, P.L. 105-33) amended section 305(a)(1) to provide a three-day 
layover requirement for the concurrent resolution on the budget.

  General debate on economic goals and policies under subsection (a)(3) 
must be confined to that subject (Apr. 23, 1980, p. 8815). Clause 10 of 
rule XVIII (former clause 8 of rule XXVIII), as added in the 95th 
Congress (H. Res. 5, Jan. 4, 1977, pp. 53-70) requires that any 
concurrent resolution on the budget (consisting of both aggregate totals 
and functional categories) be considered as read and open to amendment 
at any point, and unanimous consent is required to read such a 
concurrent resolution by section in order to allow amendments to 
aggregates to be considered before amendments to functional categories 
(May 2, 1978, pp. 12074, 12075). Clause 10 of rule XVIII (former clause 
8 of rule XXIII) was further amended in the 96th Congress (H. Res. 5, 
Jan. 15, 1979, pp. 7-16) to require that amendments to budget 
resolutions achieve mathematical consistency and contain all the matter 
set forth in subsections 301(a)(1) through (5). On one occasion, the 
chair of the Committee on the Budget offered a ``mathematical 
consistency'' amendment in the Committee of the Whole, rather than in 
the House (Apr. 29, 1976, p. 11916).

  A concurrent resolution on the budget is subject to a demand for a 
division of the question if, for example, the resolution grammatically 
and substantively relates to different fiscal years (May 7, 1980, pp. 
10185-87) or includes a separate, hortatory section having its own 
grammatical and substantive meaning (Mar. 5, 1992, p. 4675).

  Where a perfecting amendment changing several figures in a concurrent 
resolution on the budget was pending in the Committee of the Whole, the 
Chair indicated that adoption of that amendment would preclude a further 
amendment merely changing those figures but would not preclude a more 
comprehensive amendment changing other (unamended) portions of the 
resolution (Apr. 28, 1976, p. 11599).

  Although under this paragraph there can be up to five hours of debate 
on a conference report on a concurrent resolution on the budget, where 
the conferees report in total disagreement, debate on the motion to 
dispose of the amendment in disagreement is under the ``hour rule'' and 
is equally divided and controlled between the majority and minority 
parties under clause 8(d) of rule XXII (former clause 2 of rule XXVIII) 
(May 13, 1976, p. 13756; Sept. 16, 1976, p. 30182).

  A concurrent resolution on the budget providing for the production of 
three separate reconciliation bills, including a reconciliation bill 
that lowers revenues, is privileged in the Senate under section 305(b) 
(May 21, 1996, pp. 11937-41).


  In the 96th Congress, for the first time, the Committee on Rules 
reported and the House adopted a special order permitting only certain 
designated amendments to be offered to a concurrent resolution on the 
budget (H. Res. 642, Apr. 23, 1980, p. 8789). The House has adopted 
similar ``modified-closed rules'' for the consideration of concurrent 
resolutions on the budget in each subsequent Congress. In the 98th 
Congress, a special order (H. Res. 144, Mar. 22, 1983, p. 6503) waiving 
the existing 10-day layover requirement of section 305(a)(1) was 
construed not to have waived the separate layover requirement of clause 
4 of rule XIII (former clause 2(l)(6) of rule XI, amended in the 102d 
Congress (H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 1991, p. 39) to conform to the five-day 
layover requirement of this section). In the 117th Congress, the House 
adopted a special order foreclosing any amendment from being offered to 
a concurrent resolution on the budget and providing for consideration of 
such concurrent resolution in the House instead of in the Committee of 
the Whole as provided by this section of law (H. Res. 85, Feb. 2, 2021, 
p. _). The House has adopted a special order of business providing 
directly for the hereby adoption of a Senate concurrent resolution on 
the budget (H. Res. 101, Feb. 5, 2021, p. _; sec. 4, H. Res. 601, Aug. 
24, 2021, p. _). The House has adopted resolutions to deem budget 
resolutions, or portions thereof, to be in place for temporary 
enforcement (see annotations under section 301(b) of this Act).

  (b) Procedure in Senate After Report of Committee; Debate; 
Amendments.--

          (1) Debate in the Senate on any concurrent resolution on the 

        budget, and all amendments thereto and debatable motions and 

        appeals in connection therewith, shall be limited to not more 

        than 50 hours, except that with respect to any concurrent 

        resolution referred to in section 304 all such debate shall be 

        limited to not more than 15 hours. The time shall be equally 

        divided between, and controlled by, the majority leader and the 

        minority leader or their designees.

          (2) Debate in the Senate on any amendment to a concurrent 

        resolution on the budget shall be limited to 2 hours, to be 

        equally divided between, and controlled by, the mover and the 

        manager of the concurrent resolution, and debate on any 

        amendment to an amendment, debatable motion, or appeal shall be 

        limited to 1 hour, to be equally divided between, and controlled 

        by, the mover and the manager of the concurrent resolution, 

        except that in the event the manager of the concurrent 

        resolution is in favor of any such amendment, motion, or appeal, 

        the time in opposition thereto shall be controlled by the 

        minority leader or his designee. No amendment that is not 

        germane to the provisions of such concurrent resolution shall be 

        received. Such leaders, or either of them, may, from the time 

        under their control on the passage of the concurrent resolution, 

        allot additional time to any Senator during the consideration of 

        any amendment, debatable motion, or appeal.

          (3) Following the presentation of opening statements on the 

        concurrent resolution on the budget for a fiscal year by the 

        chairman and ranking minority member of the Committee on the 

        Budget of the Senate, there shall be a period of up to four 

        hours for debate on economic goals and policies.

          (4) Subject to the other limitations of this Act, only if a 

        concurrent resolution on the budget reported by the Committee on 

        the Budget of the Senate sets forth the economic goals (as 

        described in sections 3(a)(2) and 4(b) of the Employment Act of 

        1946) which the estimates, amounts, and levels (as described in 

        section 301(a)) set forth in such resolution are designed to 

        achieve, shall it be in order to offer to such resolution an 

        amendment relating to such goals, and such amendment shall be in 

        order only if it also proposes to alter such estimates, amounts, 

        and levels in germane fashion in order to be consistent with the 

        goals proposed in such amendment.

          (5) A motion to further limit debate is not debatable. A 

        motion to recommit (except a motion to recommit with 

        instructions to report back within a specified number of days, 

        not to exceed 3, not counting any day on which the Senate is not 

        in session) is not in order. Debate on any such motion to 

        recommit shall be limited to 1 hour, to be equally divided 

        between, and controlled by, the mover and the manager of the 

        concurrent resolution.

          (6) Notwithstanding any other rule, an amendment or series of 

        amendments to a concurrent resolution on the budget proposed in 

        the Senate shall always be in order if such amendment or series 

        of amendments proposes to change any figure or figures then 

        contained in such concurrent resolution so as to make such 

        concurrent resolution mathematically consistent or so as to 


        maintain such consistency.

  (c) Action on Conference Reports in the Senate.--

          (1) A motion to proceed to the consideration of the conference 

        report on any concurrent resolution on the budget (or a 

        reconciliation bill or resolution) may be made even though a 

        previous motion to the same effect has been disagreed to.

          (2) During the consideration in the Senate of the conference 

        report (or a message between Houses) on any concurrent 

        resolution on the budget, and all amendments in disagreement, 

        and all amendments thereto, and debatable motions and appeals in 

        connection therewith, debate shall be limited to 10 hours, to be 

        equally divided between, and controlled by, the majority leader 

        and minority leader or their designees. Debate on any debatable 

        motion or appeal related to the conference report (or a message 

        between Houses) shall be limited to 1 hour, to be equally 

        divided between, and controlled by, the mover and the manager of 

        the conference report (or a message between Houses).

          (3) Should the conference report be defeated, debate on any 

        request for a new conference and the appointment of conferees 

        shall be limited to 1 hour, to be equally divided between, and 

        controlled by, the manager of the conference report and the 

        minority leader or his designee, and should any motion be made 

        to instruct the conferees before the conferees are named, debate 

        on such motion shall be limited to one-half hour, to be equally 

        divided between, and controlled by, the mover and the manager of 

        the conference report. Debate on any amendment to any such 

        instructions shall be limited to 20 minutes, to be equally 

        divided between and controlled by the mover and the manager of 

        the conference report. In all cases when the manager of the 

        conference report is in favor of any motion, appeal, or 

        amendment, the time in opposition shall be under the control of 

        the minority leader or his designee.

          (4) In any case in which there are amendments in disagreement, 

        time on each amendment shall be limited to 30 minutes, to be 

        equally divided between, and controlled by, the manager of the 

        conference report and the minority leader or his designee. No 

        amendment that is not germane to the provisions of such 


        amendments shall be received.

  (d) Concurrent Resolution Must Be Consistent in the Senate.--It shall 
not be in order in the Senate to vote on the question of agreeing to--

          (1) a concurrent resolution on the budget unless the figures 

        then contained in such resolution are mathematically consistent; 

        or

          (2) a conference report on a concurrent resolution on the 

        budget unless the figures contained in such resolution, as 

        recommended in such conference report, are mathematically 


        consistent.


legislation dealing with congressional budget must be handled by budget 
  The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) deleted a 
subsection (d), which required action by budget conferees within seven 
days, and redesignated the succeeding subsection.


                               committees

  Sec. 306. (a) In the Senate.--In the Senate, no bill, resolution, 
amendment, motion, or conference report, dealing with any matter which 
is within the jurisdiction of the Committee on the Budget shall be 
considered unless it is a bill or resolution which has been reported by 
the Committee on the Budget (or from the consideration of which such 
committee has been discharged) or unless it is an amendment to such a 
bill or resolution.


  (b) In the House of Representatives.--In the House of Representatives, 
no bill or joint resolution, or amendment thereto, or conference report 
thereon, dealing with any matter which is within the jurisdiction of the 
Committee on the Budget shall be considered unless it is a bill or joint 
resolution which has been reported by the Committee on the Budget (or 
from the consideration of which such committee has been discharged) or 
unless it is an amendment to such a bill or joint resolution.

  The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) amended 
this section to standardize its application to any bill, resolution, 
amendment, motion, or conference report. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 
2013 (div. A, P.L. 113-67) separated the section into two subsections to 
provide that the point of order applies in the House to a joint 
resolution but not any other resolution. This change codified separate 
orders adopted by the House from the 107th through 113th Congresses that 
construed the term ``resolution'' in the former unified section as 
``joint resolution'' (sec. 3(b), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2001, p. 24; sec. 
3(a)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 7, 2003, p. 10; sec. 3(a)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 
4, 2005, p. 44; sec. 511(a)(1), H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 2007, p. 19 (adopted 
Jan. 5, 2007); sec. 3(a)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 2009, p. 9; sec. 
3(a)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 80; sec. 3(b)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 
3, 2013, p. 26). The 104th and 105th Congresses expanded the legislative 
jurisdiction of the Committee on the Budget (sec. 202(a), H. Res. 6, 
Jan. 4, 1995, p. 463; sec. 5, H. Res. 5, Jan. 7, 1997, p. 121). Pursuant 
to section 4(a)(4) of the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010 (tit. I, 
P.L. 111-139), a designation regarding budgetary effects under that Act 
is not considered a matter within the jurisdiction of the Committee on 
the Budget for purposes of section 306 enforcement.

  A special order of business adopted by the House providing for 
consideration of an unreported concurrent resolution on the budget upon 
the Speaker's declaration that the House be resolved into the Committee 
of the Whole has the effect of discharging the Committee on the Budget 
when so announced by the Speaker, and need not contain the term 
``discharge'' or waive points of order under this section, because the 
concurrent resolution is effectively discharged consistent with, and not 
in violation of, this section (Mar. 13, 1986, p. 4638).


  The following were held to violate this section: (1) an amendment 
directing that certain lease-purchase agreements be scored on an annual 
basis for budget purposes (July 19, 1999, p. 16615); and (2) an 
amendment designating an appropriation as ``emergency spending'' within 
the meaning of the budget-enforcement laws (Sept. 8, 1999, p. 20930).

  house committee action on all appropriation bills to be completed by 


                                 june 10


  Sec. 307. On or before June 10 of each year, the Committee on 
Appropriations of the House of Representatives shall report annual 
appropriation bills providing new budget authority under the 
jurisdiction of all of its subcommittees for the fiscal year which 
begins on October 1 of that year.


  This section was rewritten by the Balanced Budget and Emergency 
Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. II, P.L. 99-177) to establish June 
10th as the annual target date for completion of House committee action 
on all regular appropriation bills.


   reports, summaries, and projections of congressional budget actions

  Sec. 308. (a) Legislation Providing New Budget Authority or Providing 
an Increase or Decrease in Revenues or Tax Expenditures.--

          (1) Whenever a committee of either House reports to its House 

        a bill or joint resolution, or committee amendment thereto, 

        providing new budget authority (other than continuing 

        appropriations) or providing an increase or decrease in revenues 

        or tax expenditures for a fiscal year (or fiscal years), the 

        report accompanying that bill or joint resolution shall contain 

        a statement, or the committee shall make available such a 

        statement in the case of an approved committee amendment which 

        is not reported to its House, prepared after consultation with 

        the Director of the Congressional Budget Office--

                  (A) comparing the levels in such measure to the 

                appropriate allocations in the reports submitted under 

                section 302(b) for the most recently agreed to 

                concurrent resolution on the budget for such fiscal year 

                (or fiscal years);

                  (B) containing a projection by the Congressional 

                Budget Office of how such measure will affect the levels 

                of such budget authority, budget outlays, revenues, or 

                tax expenditures under existing law for such fiscal year 

                (or fiscal years) and each of the four ensuing fiscal 

                years, if timely submitted before such report is filed; 

                and

                  (C) containing an estimate by the Congressional Budget 

                Office of the level of new budget authority for 

                assistance to State and local governments provided by 

                such measure, if timely submitted before such report is 

                filed.

          (2) Whenever a conference report is filed in either House and 

        such conference report or any amendment reported in disagreement 

        or any amendment contained in the joint statement of managers to 

        be proposed by the conferees in the case of technical 

        disagreement on such bill or joint resolution provides new 

        budget authority (other than continuing appropriations) or 

        provides an increase or decrease in revenues for a fiscal year 

        (or fiscal years), the statement of managers accompanying such 

        conference report shall contain the information described in 

        paragraph (1), if available on a timely basis. If such 

        information is not available when the conference report is 

        filed, the committee shall make such information available to 

        Members as soon as practicable prior to the consideration of 

        such conference report.

          (3) CBO paygo estimates.--

                  (A) The Chairs of the Committees on the Budget of the 

                House and Senate, as applicable, shall request from the 

                Director of the Congressional Budget Office an estimate 

                of the budgetary effects of PAYGO legislation.

                  (B) Estimates shall be prepared using baseline 

                estimates supplied by the Congressional Budget Office, 

                consistent with section 257 of the Balanced Budget and 

                Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.

                  (C) The Director shall not count timing shifts, as 

                that term is defined at section 3(8) of the Statutory 

                Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010, in estimates of the budgetary 


                effects of PAYGO Legislation.

  (b) Up-To-Date Tabulations of Congressional Budget Action.--

          (1) The Director of the Congressional Budget Office shall 

        issue to the committees of the House of Representatives and the 

        Senate reports on at least a monthly basis detailing and 

        tabulating the progress of congressional action on bills and 

        joint resolutions providing new budget authority or providing an 

        increase or decrease in revenues or tax expenditures for each 

        fiscal year covered by a concurrent resolution on the budget. 

        Such reports shall include but are not limited to an up-to-date 

        tabulation comparing the appropriate aggregate and functional 

        levels (including outlays) included in the most recently adopted 

        concurrent resolution on the budget with the levels provided in 

        bills and joint resolutions reported by committees or adopted by 

        either House or by the Congress, and with the levels provided by 

        law for the fiscal year preceding the first fiscal year covered 

        by the appropriate concurrent resolution.

          (2) The Committee on the Budget of each House shall make 

        available to Members of its House summary budget scorekeeping 

        reports. Such reports--

                  (A) shall be made available on at least a monthly 

                basis, but in any case frequently enough to provide 

                Members of each House an accurate representation of the 

                current status of congressional consideration of the 

                budget;

                  (B) shall include, but are not limited to summaries of 

                tabulations provided under subsection (b)(1); and

                  (C) shall be based on information provided under 


                subsection (b)(1) without substantive revision.
The chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the House of 
Representatives shall submit such reports to the Speaker.

  (c) Five-Year Projection of Congressional Budget Act.--As soon as 
practicable after the beginning of each fiscal year, the Director of the 
Congressional Budget Office shall issue a report projecting for the 
period of 5 fiscal years beginning with such fiscal year--

          (1) total new budget authority and total budget outlays for 

        each fiscal year in such period;

          (2) revenues to be received and the major sources thereof, and 

        the surplus or deficit, if any, for each fiscal year in such 

        period;

          (3) tax expenditures for each fiscal year in such period; and

          (4) entitlement authority for each fiscal year in such period.


  (d) Scorekeeping Guidelines.--Estimates under this section shall be 
provided in accordance with the scorekeeping guidelines determined under 
section 252(d)(5) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control 
Act of 1985.

  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) expanded the scope of subsection (a) to apply not only 
to reports on legislation providing budget authority and tax 
expenditures but also to reports on legislation providing new spending 
authority, new credit authority, and changes in revenues. That law also 
added the requirement that the same information be available to Members 
before consideration of conference reports or amendments in disagreement 
on such legislation, as well as subsections (b) and (c). The Budget 
Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) made conforming 
changes to subsections (a) and (b) to reflect the advent of five-year 
budget resolutions. Certain technical and conforming changes were made 
to this section by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10110, P.L. 
105-33). The Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010 (tit. I, P.L. 111-139) 
added subsections (a)(3) and (d).


  Section 308(a)(1) does not apply either to the consideration or to the 
adoption of a special order reported from the Committee on Rules ``self-
executing'' the adoption in the House of an amendment providing new 
budget authority, because the amendment is not separately before the 
House during consideration of the special order (but only when the bill 
of which it becomes a part is before the House), and because it is the 
amendment itself, and not the special order resolution, that provides 
the new budget authority (Feb. 24, 1993, p. 3543). A committee cost 
estimate identifying certain spending authority as recurring annually 
and indefinitely was held necessarily to address the five-year period 
required by this section (Nov. 20, 1993, p. 31354).


              house approval of regular appropriation bills


  Sec. 309. It shall not be in order in the House of Representatives to 
consider any resolution providing for an adjournment period of more than 
three calendar days during the month of July until the House of 
Representatives has approved annual appropriation bills providing new 
budget authority under the jurisdiction of all the subcommittees of the 
Committee on Appropriations for the fiscal year beginning on October 1 
of such year. For purposes of this section, the chairman of the 
Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives shall 
periodically advise the Speaker as to changes in jurisdiction among its 
various subcommittees.


  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) added this section. See also section 310(f), infra.


                             reconciliation

  Sec. 310. (a) Inclusion of Reconciliation Directives in Concurrent 
Resolutions on the Budget.--A concurrent resolution on the budget for 
any fiscal year, to the extent necessary to effectuate the provisions 
and requirements of such resolution, shall--

          (1) specify the total amount by which--

                  (A) new budget authority for such fiscal year;

                  (B) budget authority initially provided for prior 

                fiscal years;

                  (C) new entitlement authority which is to become 

                effective during such fiscal year; and

                  (D) credit authority for such fiscal year,

        contained in laws, bills, and resolutions within the 

        jurisdiction of a committee is to be changed and direct that 

        committee to determine and recommend changes to accomplish a 

        change of such total amount;

          (2) specify the total amount by which revenues are to be 

        changed and direct that the committees having jurisdiction to 

        determine and recommend changes in the revenue laws, bills, and 

        resolutions to accomplish a change of such total amount;

          (3) specify the amounts by which the statutory limit on the 

        public debt is to be changed and direct the committee having 

        jurisdiction to recommend such change; or

          (4) specify and direct any combination of the matters 

        described in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) (including a direction 


        to achieve deficit reduction).

  (b) Legislative Procedure.--If a concurrent resolution containing 
directives to one or more committees to determine and recommend changes 
in laws, bills, or resolutions is agreed to in accordance with 
subsection (a), and--

          (1) only one committee of the House or the Senate is directed 

        to determine and recommend changes, that committee shall 

        promptly make such determination and recommendations and report 

        to its House reconciliation legislation containing such 

        recommendations; or

          (2) more than one committee of the House or the Senate is 

        directed to determine and recommend changes, each such committee 

        so directed shall promptly make such determination and 

        recommendations and submit such recommendations to the Committee 

        on the Budget of its House, which upon receiving all such 

        recommendations, shall report to its House reconciliation 

        legislation carrying out all such recommendations without any 


        substantive revision.
For purposes of this subsection, a reconciliation resolution is a 
concurrent resolution directing the Clerk of the House of 
Representatives or the Secretary of the Senate, as the case may be, to 
make specified changes in bills and resolutions which have not been 
enrolled.

  (c) Compliance With Reconciliation Directions.--(1) Any committee of 
the House of Representatives or the Senate that is directed, pursuant to 
a concurrent resolution on the budget, to determine and recommend 
changes of the type described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection 
(a) with respect to laws within its jurisdiction, shall be deemed to 
have complied with such directions--

          (A) if--

                  (i) the amount of the changes of the type described in 

                paragraph (1) of such subsection recommended by such 

                committee do not exceed or fall below the amount of the 

                changes such committee was directed by such concurrent 

                resolution to recommend under that paragraph by more 

                than--

                        (I) in the Senate, 20 percent of the total of 

                    the amounts of the changes such committee was 

                    directed to make under paragraphs (1) and (2) of 

                    such subsection; or

                        (II) in the House of Representatives, 20 percent 

                    of the sum of the absolute value of the changes the 

                    committee was directed to make under paragraph (1) 

                    and the absolute value of the changes the committee 

                    was directed to make under paragraph (2); and

                  (ii) the amount of the changes of the type described 

                in paragraph (2) of such subsection recommended by such 

                committee do not exceed or fall below the amount of the 

                changes such committee was directed by such concurrent 

                resolution to recommend under that paragraph by more 

                than--

                        (I) in the Senate, 20 percent of the total of 

                    the amounts of the changes such committee was 

                    directed to make under paragraphs (1) and (2) of 

                    such subsection; or

                        (II) in the House of Representatives, 20 percent 

                    of the sum of the absolute value of the changes the 

                    committee was directed to make under paragraph (1) 

                    and the absolute value of the changes the committee 

                    was directed to make under paragraph (2); and

          (B) if the total amount of the changes recommended by such 

        committee is not less than the total of the amounts of the 

        changes such committee was directed to make under paragraphs (1) 

        and (2) of such subsection.

          (2)(A) Upon the reporting to the Committee on the Budget of 

        the Senate of a recommendation that shall be deemed to have 

        complied with such directions solely by virtue of this 

        subsection, the chairman of that committee may file with the 

        Senate appropriately revised allocations under section 302(a) 

        and revised functional levels and aggregates to carry out this 

        subsection.

              (B) Upon the submission to the Senate of a conference 

            report recommending a reconciliation bill or resolution in 

            which a committee shall be deemed to have complied with such 

            directions solely by virtue of this subsection, the chairman 

            of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate may file with 

            the Senate appropriately revised allocations under section 

            302(a) and revised functional levels and aggregates to carry 

            out this subsection.

              (C) Allocations, functional levels, and aggregates revised 

            pursuant to this paragraph shall be considered to be 

            allocations, functional levels, and aggregates contained in 

            the concurrent resolution on the budget pursuant to section 

            301.

              (D) Upon the filing of revised allocations pursuant to 

            this paragraph, the reporting committee shall report revised 

            allocations pursuant to section 302(b) to carry out this 


            subsection.

  (d) Limitation on Amendments to Reconciliation Bills and 
Resolutions.--

          (1) It shall not be in order in the House of Representatives 

        to consider any amendment to a reconciliation bill or 

        reconciliation resolution if such amendment would have the 

        effect of increasing any specific budget outlays above the level 

        of such outlays provided in the bill or resolution (for the 

        fiscal years covered by the reconciliation instructions set 

        forth in the most recently agreed to concurrent resolution on 

        the budget), or would have the effect of reducing any specific 

        Federal revenues below the level of such revenues provided in 

        the bill or resolution (for such fiscal years), unless such 

        amendment makes at least an equivalent reduction in other 

        specific budget outlays, an equivalent increase in other 

        specific Federal revenues, or an equivalent combination thereof 

        (for such fiscal years), except that a motion to strike a 

        provision providing new budget authority or new entitlement 

        authority may be in order.

          (2) It shall not be in order in the Senate to consider any 

        amendment to a reconciliation bill or reconciliation resolution 

        if such amendment would have the effect of decreasing any 

        specific budget outlay reductions below the level of such outlay 

        reductions provided (for the fiscal years covered) in the 

        reconciliation instructions which relate to such bill or 

        resolution set forth in a resolution providing for 

        reconciliation, or would have the effect of reducing Federal 

        revenue increases below the level of such revenue increases 

        provided (for such fiscal years) in such instructions relating 

        to such bill or resolution, unless such amendment makes a 

        reduction in other specific budget outlays, an increase in other 

        specific Federal revenues, or a combination thereof (for such 

        fiscal years) at least equivalent to any increase in outlays or 

        decrease in revenues provided by such amendment, except that a 

        motion to strike a provision shall always be in order.

          (3) Paragraphs (1) and (2) shall not apply if a declaration of 

        war by the Congress is in effect.

          (4) For purposes of this section, the levels of budget outlays 

        and Federal revenues for a fiscal year shall be determined on 

        the basis of estimates made by the Committee on the Budget of 

        the House of Representatives or of the Senate, as the case may 

        be.

          (5) The Committee on Rules of the House of Representatives may 

        make in order amendments to achieve changes specified by 

        reconciliation directives contained in a concurrent resolution 

        on the budget if a committee or committees of the House fail to 

        submit recommended changes to its Committee on the Budget 

        pursuant to its instruction.

  (e) Procedure in the Senate.--

          (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the provisions of 

        section 305 for the consideration in the Senate of concurrent 

        resolutions on the budget and conference reports thereon shall 

        also apply to the consideration in the Senate of reconciliation 

        bills reported under subsection (b) and conference reports 

        thereon.

          (2) Debate in the Senate on any reconciliation bill reported 

        under subsection (b), and all amendments thereto and debatable 

        motions and appeals in connection therewith, shall be limited to 


        not more than 20 hours.

  (f) Completion of Reconciliation Process.--It shall not be in order in 
the House of Representatives to consider any resolution providing for an 
adjournment period of more than three calendar days during the month of 
July until the House of Representatives has completed action on the 
reconciliation legislation for the fiscal year beginning on October 1 of 
the calendar year to which the adjournment resolution pertains, if 
reconciliation legislation is required to be reported by the concurrent 
resolution on the budget for such fiscal year.


  (g) Limitation on Changes to the Social Security Act.--Notwithstanding 
any other provision of law, it shall not be in order in the Senate or 
the House of Representatives to consider any reconciliation bill or 
reconciliation resolution reported pursuant to a concurrent resolution 
on the budget agreed to under section 301 or 304, or a joint resolution 
pursuant to section 258C of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 
Control Act of 1985, or any amendment thereto or conference report 
thereon, that contains recommendations with respect to the old-age, 
survivors, and disability insurance program established under title II 
of the Social Security Act.


  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) amended subsection (a) to eliminate a requirement that 
Congress complete action on a subsequent concurrent resolution on the 
budget, normally the second for that fiscal year, reaffirming or 
revising the most recently agreed to concurrent resolution on the 
budget. It also added paragraph (1)(D) to subsection (a) along with new 
subsections (b) through (g) to specify the reconciliation process in 
greater detail (which previously was permitted in the subsequent budget 
resolution of a fiscal year). The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. 
XIII, P.L. 101-508) amended subsection (c), relating to adjustments to 
allocations in the Senate, and deleted from subsection (f) a June 15 
deadline for congressional action on reconciliation. The Budget 
Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10111, P.L. 105-33) amended section 
310(c)(1)(A) to clarify that committees, in meeting their reconciliation 
targets, may alternatively substitute revenue and spending changes by up 
to 20 percent of the sum of the absolute value of reconciled changes as 
long as the result does not increase the deficit relative to the 
reconciliation instructions. Clause 7 of rule XXI places restrictions on 
reconciliation directives relative to direct spending.


      budget-related legislation must be within appropriate levels

  Sec. 311. (a) Enforcement of Budget Aggregates.--

          (1) In the house of representatives.--Except as provided by 

        subsection (c), after the Congress has completed action on a 

        concurrent resolution on the budget for a fiscal year, it shall 

        not be in order in the House of Representatives to consider any 

        bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report 

        providing new budget authority or reducing revenues, if--

                  (A) the enactment of that bill or resolution as 

                reported;

                  (B) the adoption and enactment of that amendment; or

                  (C) the enactment of that bill or resolution in the 

                form recommended in that conference report;

        would cause the level of total new budget authority or total 

        outlays set forth in the applicable concurrent resolution on the 

        budget for the first fiscal year to be exceeded, or would cause 

        revenues to be less than the level of total revenues set forth 

        in that concurrent resolution for the first fiscal year or for 

        the total of that first fiscal year and the ensuing fiscal years 

        for which allocations are provided under section 302(a), except 

        when a declaration of war by the Congress is in effect.

          (2) In the senate.--After a concurrent resolution on the 

        budget is agreed to, it shall not be in order in the Senate to 

        consider any bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or 

        conference report that--

                  (A) would cause the level of total new budget 

                authority or total outlays set forth for the first 

                fiscal year in the applicable resolution to be exceeded; 

                or

                  (B) would cause revenues to be less than the level of 

                total revenues set forth for that first fiscal year or 

                for the total of that first fiscal year and the ensuing 

                fiscal years in the applicable resolution for which 

                allocations are provided under section 302(a).

          (3) Enforcement of social security levels in the senate.--

        After a concurrent resolution on the budget is agreed to, it 

        shall not be in order in the Senate to consider any bill, joint 

        resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report that would 

        cause a decrease in social security surpluses or an increase in 

        social security deficits relative to the levels set forth in the 

        applicable resolution for the first fiscal year or for the total 

        of that fiscal year and the ensuing fiscal years for which 

        allocations are provided under section 302(a).

  (b) Social Security Levels.--

          (1) In General.--For purposes of subsection (a)(3), social 

        security surpluses equal the excess of social security revenues 

        over social security outlays in a fiscal year or years with such 

        an excess and social security deficits equal the excess of 

        social security outlays over social security revenues in a 

        fiscal year or years with such an excess.

          (2) Tax Treatment.--For purposes of subsection (a)(3), no 

        provision of any legislation involving a change in chapter 1 of 

        the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 shall be treated as affecting 

        the amount of social security revenues or outlays unless that 

        provision changes the income tax treatment of social security 

        benefits.

  (c) Exception in the House of Representatives.--Subsection (a)(1) 
shall not apply in the House of Representatives to any bill, joint 
resolution, or amendment that provides new budget authority for a fiscal 
year or to any conference report on any such bill or resolution, if--

          (1) the enactment of that bill or resolution as reported;

          (2) the adoption and enactment of that amendment; or

          (3) the enactment of that bill or resolution in the form 


        recommended in that conference report;
would not cause the appropriate allocation of new budget authority made 
pursuant to section 302(a) for that fiscal year to be exceeded.

  The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) amended 
subsection (a) by: (1) standardizing its application to any bill, joint 
resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report; (2) adding the 
exception for the case of a declaration of war; and (3) adding a new 
paragraph (2) relating to Senate procedure. The Balanced Budget and 
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. II, P.L. 99-177) made 
important changes in this section by codifying in subsection (b) the 
exception for the House that previously had appeared in the budget 
resolution, and by adding subsection (c). The Budget Enforcement Act of 
1997 (sec. 10112, P.L. 105-33) further amended this section by: (1) 
eliminating references to ``new entitlement authority''; (2) modifying 
Senate procedure; and (3) enforcing the revenue level for the same 
multiyear period covered by the allocations under section 302(a).

  Clause 8 of rule XXI, adopted in the 110th Congress, provides that 
points of order under title III of the Budget Act apply to unreported 
measures (sec. 403, H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 2007, p. 19 (adopted Jan. 5, 
2007)). Previously, a point of order under section 311(a) operated with 
respect to a bill or joint resolution in its reported state and thus did 
not lie against consideration of an unreported measure (Mar. 21, 1995, 
p. 8491). The budget resolution deemed in place for fiscal year 2005 
provided that, for purposes of titles II and III of the Budget Act, the 
term ``amendment'' or ``amendment thereto'' means an amendment offered 
or an amendment made in order as original text or considered as adopted 
by special order of the House (sec. 406, S. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong., 
May 19, 2004, deemed in place by H. Res. 649, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, 
p. 10105, and by sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 109th Cong., Jan. 4, 2005, p. 
44). The House has adopted resolutions to deem budget resolutions, or 
portions thereof, to be in place for temporary enforcement (see 
annotations under section 301(b) of this Act). A point of order under 
this section is untimely after consideration of the measure has begun 
(July 11, 2014, p. 11815).

  To an appropriation bill already containing new budget outlays in 
excess of the total level permitted by the second concurrent resolution 
on the budget for that fiscal year, where the bill was considered under 
a waiver of section 311(a) of the Budget Act, an amendment striking a 
proposed rescission of existing budget authority that had the effect of 
causing the net total of new budget authority in the bill to be 
increased was ruled out in the House as in violation of section 311(a), 
as further exceeding the total budget outlay ceiling in the second 
concurrent resolution on the budget (May 12, 1981, pp. 9314, 15). An 
amendment that provides no new budget authority or outlays but instead 
results in outlay savings is not subject to a point of order under 
section 311(a) (June 30, 1987, p. 18308).


  The Chair relied on estimates furnished by the Committee on the Budget 
to hold that a motion to amend a Senate amendment providing new budget 
authority for official mail costs to be available immediately violated 
section 311(a) because the appropriate level of new budget authority 
contained in the budget resolution had already been exceeded and because 
the Appropriations Committee had exceeded its section 302(a) allocation 
(thereby rendering the section 311(b) exception inapplicable) (Sept. 28, 
1989, p. 22267).


                   determinations and points of order

  Sec. 312. (a) Budget Committee Determinations.--For purposes of this 
title and title IV, the levels of new budget authority, outlays, direct 
spending, new entitlement authority, and revenues for a fiscal year 
shall be determined on the basis of estimates made by the Committee on 
the Budget of the House of Representatives or the Senate, as applicable.

  (b) Discretionary Spending Point of Order in the Senate.--

          (1) In General.--Except as otherwise provided in this 

        subsection, it shall not be in order in the Senate to consider 

        any bill or resolution (or amendment, motion, or conference 

        report on that bill or resolution) that would exceed any of the 

        discretionary spending limits in section 251(c) of the Balanced 

        Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.

          (2) Exceptions.--This subsection shall not apply if a 

        declaration of war by the Congress is in effect or if a joint 

        resolution pursuant to section 258 of the Balanced Budget and 

        Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 has been enacted.

  (c) Maximum Deficit Amount Point of Order in the Senate.--It shall not 
be in order in the Senate to consider any concurrent resolution on the 
budget for a fiscal year, or to consider any amendment to that 
concurrent resolution, or to consider a conference report on that 
concurrent resolution, if--

          (1) the level of total outlays for the first fiscal year set 

        forth in that concurrent resolution or conference report 

        exceeds; or

          (2) the adoption of that amendment would result in a level of 

        total outlays for that fiscal year that exceeds;
the recommended level of Federal revenues for that fiscal year, by an 
amount that is greater than the maximum deficit amount, if any, 
specified in the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 
1985 for that fiscal year.

  (d) Timing of Points of Order in the Senate.--A point of order under 
this Act may not be raised against a bill, resolution, amendment, 
motion, or conference report while an amendment or motion, the adoption 
of which would remedy the violation of this Act, is pending before the 
Senate.

  (e) Points of Order in the Senate Against Amendments Between the 
Houses.--Each provision of this Act that establishes a point of order 
against an amendment also establishes a point of order in the Senate 
against an amendment between the Houses. If a point of order under this 
Act is raised in the Senate against an amendment between the Houses and 
the point of order is sustained, the effect shall be the same as if the 
Senate had disagreed to the amendment.


  (f) Effect of a Point of Order in the Senate.--In the Senate, if a 
point of order under this Act against a bill or resolution is sustained, 
the Presiding Officer shall then recommit the bill or resolution to the 
committee of appropriate jurisdiction for further consideration.

  Section 312 was added by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. 
XIII, P.L. 101-508). The section was amended by the Budget Enforcement 
Act of 1997 (sec. 10113, P.L. 105-33) to: (1) clarify the responsibility 
of the Committee on the Budget to provide estimates to the Chair upon 
which points of order under the Congressional Budget Act are evaluated; 
and (2) modify Senate procedure. Pursuant to clause 4 of rule XXIX, 
estimates may be provided by the chair of the Committee on the Budget.


  The concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2000 included 
a point of order against consideration in the House or Senate of a 
concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2001, or any 
amendment thereto or conference report thereon, that sets forth a 
deficit for any fiscal year (as determined by the Committee on the 
Budget) (sec. 201, H. Con. Res. 68, 106th Cong., Apr. 13, 1999, p. 
6337). The House in the 115th and 118th Congresses provided that certain 
conveyances of Federal land not be considered as providing new budget 
authority, decreasing revenues, increasing mandatory spending, or 
increasing outlays (sec. 3(q), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2017, p. 39; sec. 
3(g), H. Res. 5, Jan. 9, 2023, p. _).


             extraneous matter in reconciliation legislation


  Sec. 313. (a) In General.--When the Senate is considering a 
reconciliation bill or a reconciliation resolution pursuant to section 
310 (whether that bill or resolution originated in the Senate or the 
House) or section 258C of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 
Control Act of 1985, upon a point of order being made by any Senator 
against material extraneous to the instructions to a committee which is 
contained in any title or provision of the bill or resolution or offered 
as an amendment to the bill or resolution, and the point of order is 
sustained by the Chair, any part of said title or provision that 
contains material extraneous to the instructions to said Committee as 
defined in subsection (b) shall be deemed stricken from the bill and may 
not be offered as an amendment from the floor.

  (b) Extraneous Provisions.--(1)(A) Except as provided in paragraph 
(2), a provision of a reconciliation bill or reconciliation resolution 
considered pursuant to section 310 shall be considered extraneous if 
such provision does not produce a change in outlays or revenue, 
including changes in outlays and revenues brought about by changes in 
the terms and conditions under which outlays are made or revenues are 
required to be collected (but a provision in which outlay decreases or 
revenue increases exactly offset outlay increases or revenue decreases 
shall not be considered extraneous by virtue of this subparagraph); (B) 
any provision producing an increase in outlays or decrease in revenues 
shall be considered extraneous if the net effect of provisions reported 
by the Committee reporting the title containing the provision is that 
the Committee fails to achieve its reconciliation instructions; (C) a 
provision that is not in the jurisdiction of the Committee with 
jurisdiction over said title or provision shall be considered 
extraneous; (D) a provision shall be considered extraneous if it 
produces changes in outlays or revenues which are merely incidental to 
the non-budgetary components of the provision; (E) a provision shall be 
considered to be extraneous if it increases, or would increase, net 
outlays, or if it decreases, or would decrease, revenues during a fiscal 
year after the fiscal years covered by such reconciliation bill or 
reconciliation resolution, and such increases or decreases are greater 
than outlay reductions or revenue increases resulting from other 
provisions in such title in such year; and (F) a provision shall be 
considered extraneous if it violates section 310(g).

  (2) A Senate-originated provision shall not be considered extraneous 
under paragraph (1)(A) if the Chairman and Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee on the Budget and the Chairman and Ranking Minority Member 
of the Committee which reported the provision certify that: (A) the 
provision mitigates direct effects clearly attributable to a provision 
changing outlays or revenue and both provisions together produce a net 
reduction in the deficit; (B) the provision will result in a substantial 
reduction in outlays or a substantial increase in revenues during fiscal 
years after the fiscal years covered by the reconciliation bill or 
reconciliation resolution; (C) a reduction of outlays or an increase in 
revenues is likely to occur as a result of the provision, in the event 
of new regulations authorized by the provision or likely to be proposed, 
court rulings on pending litigation, or relationships between economic 
indices and stipulated statutory triggers pertaining to the provision, 
other than the regulations, court rulings or relationships currently 
projected by the Congressional Budget Office for scorekeeping purposes; 
or (D) such provision will be likely to produce a significant reduction 
in outlays or increase in revenues but, due to insufficient data, such 
reduction or increase cannot be reliably estimated.


  (3) A provision reported by a committee shall not be considered 
extraneous under paragraph (1)(C) if (A) the provision is an integral 
part of a provision or title, which if introduced as a bill or 
resolution would be referred to such committee, and the provision sets 
forth the procedure to carry out or implement the substantive provisions 
that were reported and which fall within the jurisdiction of such 
committee; or (B) the provision states an exception to, or a special 
application of, the general provision or title of which it is a part and 
such general provision or title if introduced as a bill or resolution 
would be referred to such committee.


  (c) Extraneous Materials.--Upon the reporting or discharge of a 
reconciliation bill or resolution pursuant to section 310 in the Senate, 
and again upon the submission of a conference report on such a 
reconciliation bill or resolution, the Committee on the Budget of the 
Senate shall submit for the record a list of material considered to be 
extraneous under subsections (b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B), and (b)(1)(E) of this 
section to the instructions of a committee as provided in this section. 
The inclusion or exclusion of a provision shall not constitute a 
determination of extraneousness by the Presiding Officer of the Senate.

  (d) Conference Reports.--When the Senate is considering a conference 
report on, or an amendment between the Houses in relation to, a 
reconciliation bill or reconciliation resolution pursuant to section 
310, upon--

          (1) a point of order being made by any Senator against 

        extraneous material meeting the definition of subsections 

        (b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(D), (b)(1)(E), or (b)(1)(F), and


          (2) such point of order being sustained,
such material contained in such conference report or amendment shall be 
deemed stricken, and the Senate shall proceed, without intervening 
action or motion, to consider the question of whether the Senate shall 
recede from its amendment and concur with a further amendment, or concur 
in the House amendment with a further amendment, as the case may be, 
which further amendment shall consist of only that portion of the 
conference report or House amendment, as the case may be, not so 
stricken. Any such motion in the Senate shall be debatable for two 
hours. In any case in which such point of order is sustained against a 
conference report (or Senate amendment derived from such conference 
report by operation of this subsection), no further amendment shall be 
in order.


  (e) General Point of Order.--Notwithstanding any other law or rule of 
the Senate, it shall be in order for a Senator to raise a single point 
of order that several provisions of a bill, resolution, amendment, 
motion, or conference report violate this section. The Presiding Officer 
may sustain the point of order as to some or all of the provisions 
against which the Senator raised the point of order. If the Presiding 
Officer so sustains the point of order as to some of the provisions 
(including provisions of an amendment, motion, or conference report) 
against which the Senator raised the point of order, then only those 
provisions (including provisions of an amendment, motion, or conference 
report) against which the Presiding Officer sustains the point of order 
shall be deemed stricken pursuant to this section. Before the Presiding 
Officer rules on such a point of order, any Senator may move to waive 
such a point of order as it applies to some or all of the provisions 
against which the point of order was raised. Such a motion to waive is 
amendable in accordance with the rules and precedents of the Senate. 
After the Presiding Officer rules on such a point of order, any Senator 
may appeal the ruling of the Presiding Officer on such a point of order 
as it applies to some or all of the provisions on which the Presiding 
Officer ruled.


  Section 313, popularly known as the ``Byrd Rule,'' was added by the 
Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508). The Budget 
Enforcement Act of 1997 effected a technical correction to this section 
(sec. 10113, P.L. 105-33).


                               adjustments

  Sec. 314. (a) Adjustments.--After the reporting of a bill or joint 
resolution or the offering of an amendment thereto or the submission of 
a conference report thereon, the chairman of the Committee on the Budget 
of the House of Representatives or the Senate may make appropriate 
budgetary adjustments of new budget authority and the outlays flowing 
therefrom in the same amount as required by section 251(b) of the 
Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.

  (b) Application of Adjustments.--The adjustments made pursuant to 
subsection (a) for legislation shall--

          (1) apply while that legislation is under consideration;

          (2) take effect upon the enactment of that legislation; and

          (3) be published in the Congressional Record as soon as 

        practicable.

  (c) Reporting Revised Suballocations.--Following any adjustment made 
under subsection (a), the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and 
the House of Representatives may report appropriately revised 
suballocations under section 302(b) to carry out this section.

  (d) Emergencies in the House of Representatives.--(1) In the House of 
Representatives, if a reported bill or joint resolution, or amendment 
thereto or conference report thereon, contains a provision providing new 
budget authority and outlays or reducing revenue, and a designation of 
such provision as an emergency requirement pursuant to 251(b)(2)(A) of 
the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, the chair 
of the Committee on the Budget of the House of Representatives shall not 
count the budgetary effects of such provision for purposes of title III 
and title IV of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and the Rules of 
the House of Representatives.

  (2)(A) In the House of Representatives, a proposal to strike a 
designation under paragraph (1) shall be excluded from an evaluation of 
budgetary effects for purposes of this title and title IV and the Rules 
of the House of Representatives.

  (B) An amendment offered under subparagraph (A) that also proposes to 
reduce each amount appropriated or otherwise made available by the 
pending measure that is not required to be appropriated or otherwise 
made available shall be in order at any point in the reading of the 
pending measure.

  (e) Senate Point of Order Against an Emergency Designation.--

          (1) In General.--When the Senate is considering a bill, 

        resolution, amendment, motion, amendment between the Houses, or 

        conference report, if a point of order is made by a Senator 

        against an emergency designation in that measure, that provision 

        making such a designation shall be stricken from the measure and 

        may not be offered as an amendment from the floor.

          (2) Supermajority Waiver and Appeals.--

                  (A) Waiver.--Paragraph (1) may be waived or suspended 

                in the Senate only by an affirmative vote of three-

                fifths of the Members, duly chosen and sworn.

                  (B) Appeals.--Appeals in the Senate from the decisions 

                of the Chair relating to any provision of this 

                subsection shall be limited to 1 hour, to be equally 

                divided between, and controlled by, the appellant and 

                the manager of the bill or joint resolution, as the case 

                may be. An affirmative vote of three-fifths of the 

                Members of the Senate, duly chosen and sworn, shall be 

                required to sustain an appeal of the ruling of the Chair 

                on a point of order raised under this subsection.

          (3) Definition of an Emergency Designation.--For purposes of 

        paragraph (1), a provision shall be considered an emergency 

        designation if it designates any item pursuant to section 

        251(b)(2)(A)(i) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 

        Control Act of 1985.

          (4) Form of the point of order.--A point of order under 

        paragraph (1) may be raised by a Senator as provided in section 

        313(e) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974.

          (5) Conference Reports.--When the Senate is considering a 

        conference report on, or an amendment between the Houses in 

        relation to, a bill, upon a point of order being made by any 

        Senator pursuant to this section, and such point of order being 

        sustained, such material contained in such conference report 

        shall be deemed stricken, and the Senate shall proceed to 

        consider the question of whether the Senate shall recede from 

        its amendment and concur with a further amendment, or concur in 

        the House amendment with a further amendment, as the case may 

        be, which further amendment shall consist of only that portion 

        of the conference report or House amendment, as the case may be, 

        not so stricken. Any such motion in the Senate shall be 

        debatable. In any case in which such point of order is sustained 

        against a conference report (or Senate amendment derived from 

        such conference report by operation of this subsection), no 

        further amendment shall be in order.

  (f) Enforcement of Discretionary Spending Caps.--It shall not be in 
order in the House of Representatives or the Senate to consider any 
bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report that 
would cause the discretionary spending limits as set forth in section 
251 of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act to be 
exceeded.

  (g) Adjustment for Reemployment Services and Eligibilty Assessments.--

          (1) In General.--

                  (A) Adjustments.--If the Committee on Appropriations 

                of either House reports an appropriation measure for any 

                of fiscal years 2022 through 2027 that provides budget 

                authority for grants under section 306 of the Social 

                Security Act, or if a conference committee submits a 

                conference report thereon, the chairman of the Committee 

                on the Budget of the House of Representatives or the 

                Senate shall make the adjustments referred to in 

                subparagraph (B) to reflect the additional new budget 

                authority provided for such grants in that measure or 

                conference report and the outlays resulting therefrom, 

                consistent with subparagraph (D).

                  (B) Types of Adjustments.--The adjustments referred to 

                in this subparagraph consist of adjustments to--

                      (i) the discretionary spending limits for that 

                    fiscal year as set forth in the most recently 

                    adopted concurrent resolution on the budget;

                      (ii) the allocations to the Committee on 

                    Appropriations of the Senate and the House of 

                    Representatives for that fiscal year under section 

                    302(a); and

                      (iii) the appropriate budget aggregates for that 

                    fiscal year in the most recently adopted concurrent 

                    resolution on the budget.

                  (C) Enforcement.--The adjusted discretionary spending 

                limits, allocations, and aggregates under this paragraph 

                shall be considered the appropriate limits, allocations, 

                and aggregates for purposes of congressional enforcement 

                of this Act and concurrent budget resolutions under this 

                Act.

                  (D) Limitation.--No adjustment may be made under this 

                subsection in excess of--

                      (i) for fiscal year 2022, $133,000,000;

                      (ii) for fiscal year 2023, $258,000,000;

                      (iii) for fiscal year 2024, $433,000,000;

                      (iv) for fiscal year 2025, $533,000,000;

                      (v) for fiscal year 2026, $608,000,000; and

                      (vi) for fiscal year 2027, $633,000,000.

                  (E) Definition.--As used in this subsection, the term 

                ``additional new budget authority'' means the amount 

                provided for a fiscal year, in excess of $117,000,000, 

                in an appropriation measure or conference report (as the 

                case may be) and specified to pay for grants to States 

                under section 306 of the Social Security Act.

          (2) Report on 302(b) Level.-- Following any adjustment made 

        under paragraph (1), the Committees on Appropriations of the 

        Senate and the House of Representatives may report appropriately 

        revised suballocations pursuant to section 302(b) to carry out 


        this subsection.


  This section was added by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10114, P.L. 105-33). Subsection (b)(6) was added by the Adoption and 
Safe Families Act of 1997 (sec. 201(b), P.L. 105-89). Subsection (a) was 
amended and subsections (d) and (e) (later redesignated as (f)) were 
added by the Budget Control Act of 2011 (sec. 105, P.L. 112-25). 
Subsection (d)(2) was amended by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (div. 
A, P.L. 113-67) to strike a subparagraph (A) that was erroneously 
duplicative of subsection (d)(1). Subsection (e) was added by the 
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 (sec. 511, P.L. 112-
78). Subsection (g) was added by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (sec. 
30206(d), P.L. 115-123). Budget resolutions have provided that new 
budget authority, new entitlement authority, outlays, and receipts 
designated as an emergency in bills, joint resolutions, amendments, or 
conference reports are not cognizable under specified sections of title 
III and IV of the Budget Act. The budget resolutions also have required 
to be included in a committee report, joint statement of managers, or 
the Congressional Record an explanation of how an emergency item meets 
certain criteria (sec. 502, H. Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong.; sec. 402, S. 
Con. Res. 95, 108th Cong., May 19, 2004, deemed in place by H. Res. 649, 
108th Cong., May 19, 2004, p. 10105, and by sec. 3(a)(4), H. Res. 5, 
109th Cong., Jan. 4, 2005, p. 44; sec. 402, H. Con. Res. 95, 109th 
Cong.; sec. 204, S. Con. Res. 21, 110th Cong.; sec. 301, S. Con. Res. 
70, 110th Cong.). The budget resolution adopted by the House in 2006 
provided a specific amount of emergency spending that, to be exceeded, 
would require a vote of the Committee on the Budget to raise the 
relevant 302 allocation (sec. 501, H. Con. Res. 376, 109th Cong., May 
18, 2006). In the absence of a budget resolution, the House has enabled 
the designation of budget authority or revenue as an emergency (sec. 
3(c), H. Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 80).

   effect of adoption of a special order of business in the house of 


                             representatives


  Sec. 315. For purposes of a reported bill or joint resolution 
considered in the House of Representatives pursuant to a special order 
of business, the term ``as reported'' in this title or title IV shall be 
considered to refer to the text made in order as an original bill or 
joint resolution for the purpose of amendment or to the text on which 
the previous question is ordered directly to passage, as the case may 
be. In the case of a reported bill or joint resolution considered 
pursuant to a special order of business, a point of order under section 
303 shall be determined on the basis of the text made in order as an 
original bill or joint resolution for the purpose of amendment or to the 
text on which the previous question is ordered directly to passage, as 
the case may be.

  This section was added by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10115, P.L. 105-33). The second sentence was added by the Bipartisan 
Budget Act of 2013 (div. A, P.L. 113-67), codifying separate orders 
adopted by the House from the 106th through 113th Congresses (see 
annotations under section 303 of this Act). See clause 8 of rule XXI for 
similar treatment of unreported bills under title III of the 
Congressional Budget Act.


  The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) 
established a new title VI that placed temporary limits on discretionary 
spending and provided mechanisms for enforcement that included those 
found in title III of the Congressional Budget Act, which was extended 
by the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 (tit. XIV, P.L. 103-
66). Title VI was repealed by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10118, P.L. 105-33). For the text of title VI, see the House Rules and 
Manual for the 104th Congress (H. Doc. 103-342).


      TITLE IV--ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS TO IMPROVE FISCAL PROCEDURES


                       Part A--General Provisions


        budget-related legislation not subject to appropriations

  Sec. 401. (a) Controls on Certain Budget-related Legislation Not 
Subject to Appropriations.--It shall not be in order in either the House 
of Representatives or the Senate to consider any bill or joint 
resolution (in the House of Representatives only, as reported), 
amendment, motion, or conference report that provides--

          (1) new authority to enter into contracts under which the 

        United States is obligated to make outlays;

          (2) new authority to incur indebtedness (other than 

        indebtedness incurred under chapter 31 of title 31 of the United 

        States Code) for the repayment of which the United States is 

        liable; or

          (3) new credit authority;
unless that bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or conference 
report also provides that the new authority is to be effective for any 
fiscal year only to the extent or in the amounts provided in advance in 
appropriation Acts.

  (b) Legislation Providing New Entitlement Authority.--

          (1) Point of order.--It shall not be in order in either the 

        House of Representatives or the Senate to consider any bill or 

        joint resolution (in the House of Representatives only, as 

        reported), amendment, motion, or conference report that provides 

        new entitlement authority that is to become effective during the 

        current fiscal year.

          (2) If any committee of the House of Representatives or the 

        Senate reports any bill or resolution which provides new 

        entitlement authority which is to become effective during a 

        fiscal year and the amount of new budget authority which will be 

        required for such fiscal year if such bill or resolution is 

        enacted as so reported exceeds the appropriate allocation of new 

        budget authority reported under section 302(a) in connection 

        with the most recently agreed to concurrent resolution on the 

        budget for such fiscal year, such bill or resolution shall then 

        be referred to the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate or 

        may then be referred to the Committee on Appropriations of the 

        House, as the case may be, with instructions to report it, with 

        the committee's recommendations, within 15 calendar days (not 

        counting any day on which that House is not in session) 

        beginning with the day following the day on which it is so 

        referred. If the Committee on Appropriations of either House 

        fails to report a bill or resolution referred to it under this 

        paragraph within such 15-day period, the committee shall 

        automatically be discharged from further consideration of such 

        bill or resolution and such bill or resolution shall be placed 

        on the appropriate calendar.

          (3) The Committee on Appropriations of each House shall have 

        jurisdiction to report any bill or resolution referred to it 

        under paragraph (2) with an amendment which limits the total 

        amount of new spending authority provided in such bill or 

        resolution.

  (c) Exceptions.--

          (1) Subsections (a) and (b) shall not apply to new authority 

        described in those subsections if outlays from that new 

        authority [will]\1\ flow--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

  \1\Paragraph (4)(A) of section 10116(a) of Public Law 105-
33 amended this provision as shown above. However, the word ``will'' 
probably should have appeared in the matter proposed to be stricken by 
that public law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

                  (A) from a trust fund established by the Social 

                Security Act (as in effect on the date of the enactment 

                of this Act); or

                  (B) from any other trust fund, 90 percent or more of 

                the receipts of which consist or will consist of amounts 

                (transferred from the general fund of the Treasury) 

                equivalent to amounts of taxes (related to the purposes 

                for which such outlays are or will be made) received in 

                the Treasury under specified provisions of the Internal 

                Revenue Code of 1954.

          (2) Subsections (a) and (b) shall not apply to new authority 

        described in those subsections to the extent that--

                  (A) the outlays resulting therefrom are made by an 

                organization which is (i) a mixed-ownership Government 

                corporation (as defined in section 201 of the Government 

                Corporation Control Act), or (ii) a wholly owned 

                Government corporation (as defined in section 101 of 

                such Act) which is specifically exempted by law from 

                compliance with any or all of the provisions of that 

                Act, as of the date of enactment of the Balanced Budget 

                and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985; or

                  (B) the outlays resulting therefrom consist 

                exclusively of the proceeds of gifts or bequests made to 

                the United States for a specific purpose.

          (3) In the House of Representatives, subsections (a) and (b) 

        shall not apply to new authority described in those subsections 

        to the extent that a provision in a bill or joint resolution, or 

        an amendment thereto or a conference report thereon, establishes 

        prospectively for a Federal office or position a specified or 

        minimum level of compensation to be funded by annual 


        discretionary appropriations.

  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) amended subsection (a) by substituting the phrase 
``spending authority'' for ``contract or borrowing authority'' and 
extended the point of order to conference reports, consistent with House 
precedent. The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 
(tit. II, P.L. 99-177) left the subsection entitled ``exceptions'' 
intact except to clarify the application of section 401 to Government 
corporations created after December 12, 1985. The Budget Enforcement Act 
of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) amended subsections (a) and (b)(1) to 
standardize their application to any bill, joint resolution, amendment, 
motion, or conference report. The Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10116, P.L. 105-33): (1) repealed section 402, collapsing the point of 
order under that section into section 401; (2) repealed the definition 
of ``new spending authority,'' while shifting the definition of new 
entitlement authority to section 3; and (3) converted the mandatory 
referral of measures providing new entitlement authority to the 
Appropriations Committee to discretionary referral of such measures. The 
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (div. A, P.L. 113-67) added subsection 
(c)(3), codifying separate orders adopted by the House in the 109th and 
110th Congresses (sec. 3(a)(3), H. Res. 5, Jan. 4, 2005, p. 44; sec. 
511(a)(3), H. Res. 6, Jan. 4, 2007, p. 19 (adopted Jan. 5, 2007)). The 
107th, 108th, 111th, 112th, and 113th Congresses had adopted similar 
orders regarding entitlement authority, but they were not limited to 
section 401 (sec. 3(b)(3), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2001, p. 24; sec. 3(a)(3), 
H. Res. 5, Jan. 7, 2003, p. 10; sec. 3(a)(3), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 2009, 
p. 9; sec. 3(a)(3), H. Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 80; sec. 3(b)(3), H. 
Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2013, p. 26). The 106th Congress adopted a temporary 
version of that order (sec. 2(a)(2), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 1999, p. 47), 
which expired upon the adoption of the budget resolution for fiscal year 
2000. Before these orders, an amendment establishing a new executive 
position at compensation level II but subjecting its salary to the 
appropriation process was held not to provide new entitlement authority 
(Mar. 26, 1992, p. 7203).

  Language in a bill authorizing receipts from loans under certain 
legislation to be made available for designated purposes was held not to 
be ``new spending authority'' that would prohibit the consideration of 
the bill under section 401(a) of the Congressional Budget Act, where it 
was shown from the term ``authorized'' and from the committee report on 
the bill that the amounts of repaid loans must again be appropriated in 
appropriation Acts before the funds could be expended (Speaker Albert, 
Sept. 10, 1975, p. 28270). A point of order under section 401(a) 
operates with respect to a bill or joint resolution in reported state 
and thus does not lie against consideration of an unreported measure 
(Mar. 21, 1995, p. 8491). Section 401(a) prohibits the consideration of 
a bill or amendment, including a conference report, containing new 
spending authority to incur indebtedness for the repayment of which the 
United States is primarily liable, the budget authority for which is not 
provided in advance by appropriation Acts. Thus a conference report 
authorizing a Secretary to borrow funds by issuing Government notes as a 
public debt transaction to make payments in connection with defaults on 
loans by medical students, not subject to amounts specified in advance 
by appropriation Acts, was ruled out of order as violating section 
401(a) (Sept. 27, 1976, pp. 32655-704).

  A point of order under section 401(b) operates with respect to a bill 
or joint resolution in reported state and thus does not lie against 
consideration of an unreported measure (Mar. 21, 1995, p. 8491).

  A conference report (filed in 1976 to accompany a bill originally 
reported in the House in calendar year 1975) requiring the Secretary of 
Agriculture to pay a cost of transporting agricultural commodities to 
major disaster areas upon the date of enactment was held to constitute 
new spending ``entitlement'' authority that could become effective 
before the fiscal year beginning during the calendar year in which the 
bill had been reported from conference, in violation of section 
401(b)(1), and the conference report was ruled out of order (Speaker 
Albert, Sept. 23, 1976, pp. 32099, 32100). A Senate amendment providing 
new spending ``entitlement'' authority for adjustment assistance under 
the Trade Act of 1974, by requiring the Secretary of Labor to certify a 
new group of workers as eligible beginning on the day before to the 
start of the ensuing fiscal year, was conceded to violate section 
401(b)(1), and a motion to concur was ruled out on that point of order 
(June 26, 1986, p. 15729). Where an amendment contained new entitlement 
authority in the form of retirement benefits to certain Federal 
employees, the Chair contemplated immediate enactment in his 
determination that the new entitlement authority became effective before 
the fiscal year beginning during the calendar year in which the pending 
bill was reported (May 9, 1995, p. 12178).

  Where a committee had not yet filed with the House a report 
subdividing among its subcommittees or by programs new entitlement 
authority allocated to that committee in the joint statement 
accompanying a conference report on a concurrent resolution on the 
budget, formerly required under section 302(a), the Speaker under 
section 401(b) referred to the Appropriations Committee for the 15-day 
period a bill reported by that committee that exceeded the total 
entitlement authority allocated to that committee in the joint 
statement, and also referred a subsequent bill reported by that 
committee that contained new entitlement authority (Speaker Albert, May 
17, 1976, p. 14093; Aug. 25, 1976, p. 27775). During the efficacy of 
title VI, section 401(b)(2) had no practical effect because that section 
remained linked to section 302 rather than the overriding section 602. 
Before consideration of a bill in the Committee of the Whole, the 
Speaker may discharge from the Union Calendar and refer to the 
Appropriations Committee for 15 days, pursuant to section 401(b), a bill 
that has been reported providing new entitlement authority in excess of 
the total amount allocated to the reporting committee (Speaker O'Neill, 
Sept. 8, 1977, p. 28153; Sept. 8, 1978, p. 28543) even if the bill was 
reported before final adoption of the first budget resolution (Speaker 
O'Neill, July 19, 1978, pp. 21786, 21787; May 21, 1981, p. 10622). A 
bill reported from the Committee on Agriculture amending the Food and 
Agriculture Act to increase certain commodity target prices of 1979 
crops, thereby providing new entitlement authority for fiscal year 1980 
in excess of the amount allocated to that committee under the first 
budget resolution, and a bill reported from the Committee on Ways and 
Means increasing eligibility and payments for child welfare and social 
services under the Social Security Act, providing new entitlement 
authority in excess of the net amount of such authority allocated to 
that committee under the first budget resolution, were discharged from 
the Union Calendar by the Speaker and referred to the Appropriations 
Committee pursuant to section 401(b) (Speaker O'Neill, June 5, 1979, p. 
13385; June 6, 1979, p. 13665). The Speaker may exercise the referral 
authority under section 401(b), whether or not the committee has filed 
its report under section 302(b) of the Budget Act, where the budget 
authority for the entitlement bill has been assumed in the budget 
resolution and would be included in the committee's 302(b) report, but 
where the budget authority for such bill exceeds the net amount of such 
authority allocated to the reporting committee, because the budget 
resolution assumes the reporting of other legislation, decreasing other 
programs for the year in question, that has yet to be reported (Speaker 
O'Neill, June 6, 1979, p. 13665).

  Although the former definition of new spending authority in section 
401(c)(2) did not include the authority to insure or guarantee the 
repayment of indebtedness incurred by another person or government (as 
where the authority to incur contractual obligations to insure or 
guarantee another person's debt is a contingent liability of the United 
States), the authority to make payments in connection with defaults that 
have already occurred was conceded to constitute a primary liability of 
the United States to incur indebtedness and to require budget authority 
in advance in appropriation Acts (Sept. 27, 1976, pp. 32655-704). A 
provision that requires payments to individuals meeting certain 
qualifications, but that also contains an authorization for 
appropriations to make such payments and a provision that if sums 
appropriated pursuant thereto are insufficient to make payments, then 
payments be ratably reduced to the amounts of appropriations actually 
made, does not constitute new entitlement authority (Sept. 13, 1983, p. 
23884).


  The former definition of new entitlement authority did not include 
revenue-sharing spending authority in the form of entitlements, because 
the exception from the definition of new spending authority for revenue-
sharing programs did not apply to new entitlement authority for future 
fiscal years (Speaker Albert, Sept. 30, 1976, pp. 34074-100).


                 analysis by congressional budget office

  Sec. 402. The Director of the Congressional Budget Office shall, to 
the extent practicable, prepare for each bill or resolution of a public 
character reported by any committee of the House of Representatives or 
the Senate (except the Committee on Appropriations of each House), and 
submit to such committee--

          (1) an estimate of the costs which would be incurred in 

        carrying out such bill or resolution in the fiscal year in which 

        it is to become effective and in each of the 4 fiscal years 

        following such fiscal year, together with the basis for each 

        such estimate;

          (2) a comparison of the estimates of costs described in 

        paragraph (1), with any available estimates of costs made by 

        such committee or by any Federal agency; and

          (3) a description of each method for establishing a Federal 

        financial commitment contained in such bill or resolution.
The estimates, comparison, and description so submitted shall be 
included in the report accompanying such bill or resolution if timely 
submitted to such committee before such report is filed.
* * * * *


  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) amended this section by adding paragraph (4) to 
subsection (a), along with a conforming change to the second sentence of 
that subsection. Public Law 97-108 previously amended section 403 by 
adding subsections (a)(2), (b), and (c). The Unfunded Mandates Reform 
Act of 1995 deleted from this section a requirement that the Director 
estimate costs incurred by State and local governments, in favor of a 
more particularized requirement in section 424, infra (sec. 104, P.L. 
104-4; 109 Stat. 62). The Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10116, 
P.L. 105-33) redesignated this section, formerly section 403, as section 
402. A committee cost estimate identifying certain spending authority as 
recurring annually and indefinitely was held necessarily to address the 
five-year period required by section 308 (Nov. 20, 1993, p. 31354). 
During the 102d Congress, former clause 8 of rule XXI required that 
certain measures contain a statement of cost by the Congressional Budget 
Office (H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 1991, p. 39). In the 118th Congress, the 
House directed the Congressional Budget Office to include an estimate of 
the effects of certain measures on inflation and specified trust funds 
within the estimate provided under this section (sec. 3(e), H. Res. 5, 
Jan. 9, 2023, p. _).

   study by the government accountability office of forms of federal 


     financial commitment that are not reviewed annually by congress


  Sec. 404. The Government Accountability Office shall study those 
provisions of law which provide mandatory spending and report to the 
Congress its recommendations for the appropriate form of financing for 
activities or programs financed by such provisions not later than 
eighteen months after the effective date of this section. Such report 
shall be revised from time to time.


  This section, formerly section 405, was redesignated by the Budget 
Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10116, P.L. 105-33).


              off-budget agencies, programs, and activities

  Sec. 405. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, budget 
authority, credit authority, and estimates of outlays and receipts for 
activities of the Federal budget which are off-budget immediately prior 
to the date of enactment of this section, not including activities of 
the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Federal Disability 
Insurance Trust Funds, shall be included in a budget submitted pursuant 
to section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, and in a concurrent 
resolution on the budget reported pursuant to section 301 or section 304 
of this Act and shall be considered, for purposes of this Act, budget 
authority, outlays, and spending authority in accordance with 
definitions set forth in this Act.


  (b) All receipts and disbursements of the Federal Financing Bank with 
respect to any obligations which are issued, sold, or guaranteed by a 
Federal agency shall be treated as a means of financing such agency for 
purposes of section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, and for 
purposes of this Act.


  This section, formerly section 406, was redesignated by the Budget 
Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10116, P.L. 105-33).


                            member user group


  Sec. 406. The Speaker of the House of Representatives, after 
consulting with the Minority Leader of the House, may appoint a Member 
User Group for the purpose of reviewing budgetary scorekeeping rules and 
practices of the House and advising the Speaker from time to time on the 
effect and impact of such rules and practices.


  The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (tit. 
II, P.L. 99-177) added sections 405, 406, and 407 as new sections at the 
end of title IV. This section, formerly section 407, was redesignated by 
the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 10116, P.L. 105-33).
* * * * *


SEC. 421. DEFINITIONS.
                        Part B--Federal Mandates

  For purposes of this part:

          (1) Agency.--The term ``agency'' has the same meaning as 

        defined in section 551(1) of title 5, United States Code, but 

        does not include independent regulatory agencies.

          (2) Amount.--The term ``amount'', with respect to an 

        authorization of appropriations for Federal financial 

        assistance, means the amount of budget authority for any Federal 

        grant assistance program or any Federal program providing loan 

        guarantees or direct loans.

          (3) Direct costs.--The term ``direct costs''--

                  (A)(i) in the case of a Federal intergovernmental 

                mandate, means the aggregate estimated amounts that all 

                State, local, and tribal governments would be required 

                to spend or would be prohibited from raising in revenues 

                in order to comply with the Federal intergovernmental 

                mandate; or

                  (ii) in the case of a provision referred to in 

                paragraph (5)(A)(ii), means the amount of Federal 

                financial assistance eliminated or reduced;

                  (B) in the case of a Federal private sector mandate, 

                means the aggregate estimated amounts that the private 

                sector will be required to spend in order to comply with 

                the Federal private sector mandate;

                  (C) shall be determined on the assumption that--

                        (i) State, local, and tribal governments, and 

                    the private sector will take all reasonable steps 

                    necessary to mitigate the costs resulting from the 

                    Federal mandate, and will comply with applicable 

                    standards of practice and conduct established by 

                    recognized professional or trade associations; and

                        (ii) reasonable steps to mitigate the costs 

                    shall not include increases in State, local, or 

                    tribal taxes or fees; and

                  (D) shall not include--

                        (i) estimated amounts that the State, local, and 

                    tribal governments (in the case of a Federal 

                    intergovernmental mandate) or the private sector (in 

                    the case of a Federal private sector mandate) would 


                    spend--


    (I) to comply with or carry out all applicable Federal, State, local, 
and tribal laws and regulations in effect at the time of the adoption of 
the Federal mandate for the same activity as is affected by that Federal 
mandate; or


    (II) to comply with or carry out State, local, and tribal governmental 
programs, or private-sector business or other activities in effect at the 
time of the adoption of the Federal mandate for the same activity as is 
affected by that mandate; or

                        (ii) expenditures to the extent that such 

                    expenditures will be offset by any direct savings to 

                    the State, local, and tribal governments, or by the 


                    private sector, as a result of--


    (I) compliance with the Federal mandate; or


    (II) other changes in Federal law or regulation that are enacted or 
adopted in the same bill or joint resolution or proposed or final Federal 
regulation and that govern the same activity as is affected by the Federal 
mandate.

          (4) Direct savings.--The term ``direct savings'', when used 

        with respect to the result of compliance with the Federal 

        mandate--

                  (A) in the case of a Federal intergovernmental 

                mandate, means the aggregate estimated reduction in 

                costs to any State, local, or tribal government as a 

                result of compliance with the Federal intergovernmental 

                mandate; and

                  (B) in the case of a Federal private sector mandate, 

                means the aggregate estimated reduction in costs to the 

                private sector as a result of compliance with the 

                Federal private sector mandate.

          (5) Federal intergovernmental mandate.--The term ``Federal 

        intergovernmental mandate'' means--

                  (A) any provision in legislation, statute, or 

                regulation that--

                        (i) would impose an enforceable duty upon State, 


                    local, or tribal governments, except--


    (I) a condition of Federal assistance; or


    (II) a duty arising from participation in a voluntary Federal program, 
except as provided in subparagraph (B); or

                        (ii) would reduce or eliminate the amount of 


                    authorization of appropriations for--


    (I) Federal financial assistance that would be provided to State, 
local, or tribal governments for the purpose of complying with any such 
previously imposed duty unless such duty is reduced or eliminated by a 
corresponding amount; or


    (II) the control of borders by the Federal Government; or reimbursement 
to State, local, or tribal governments for the net cost associated with 
illegal, deportable, and excludable aliens, including court-mandated 
expenses related to emergency health care, education or criminal justice; 
when such a reduction or elimination would result in increased net costs to 
State, local, or tribal governments in providing education or emergency 
health care to, or incarceration of, illegal aliens; except that this 
subclause shall not be in effect with respect to a State, local, or tribal 
government, to the extent that such government has not fully cooperated in 
the efforts of the Federal Government to locate, apprehend, and deport 
illegal aliens; [or]

                  (B) any provision in legislation, statute, or 

                regulation that relates to a then-existing Federal 

                program under which $500,000,000 or more is provided 

                annually to State, local, and tribal governments under 

                entitlement authority, if the provision--

                        (i)(I) would increase the stringency of 

                    conditions of assistance to State, local, or tribal 

                    governments under the program; or

                        (II) would place caps upon, or otherwise 

                    decrease, the Federal Government's responsibility to 

                    provide funding to State, local, or tribal 

                    governments under the program; and

                        (ii) the State, local, or tribal governments 

                    that participate in the Federal program lack 

                    authority under that program to amend their 

                    financial or programmatic responsibilities to 

                    continue providing required services that are 

                    affected by the legislation, statute, or regulation.

          (6) Federal mandate.--The term ``Federal mandate'' means a 

        Federal intergovernmental mandate or a Federal private sector 

        mandate, as defined in paragraphs (5) and (7).

          (7) Federal private sector mandate.--The term ``Federal 

        private sector mandate'' means any provision in legislation, 

        statute, or regulation that--

                  (A) would impose an enforceable duty upon the private 

                sector except--

                        (i) a condition of Federal assistance; or

                        (ii) a duty arising from participation in a 

                    voluntary Federal program; or

                  (B) would reduce or eliminate the amount of 

                authorization of appropriations for Federal financial 

                assistance that will be provided to the private sector 

                for the purposes of ensuring compliance with such duty.

          (8) Local government.--The term ``local government'' has the 

        same meaning as defined in section 6501(6) of title 31, United 

        States Code.

          (9) Private sector.--The term ``private sector'' means all 

        persons or entities in the United States, including individuals, 

        partnerships, associations, corporations, and educational and 

        nonprofit institutions, but shall not include State, local, or 

        tribal governments.

          (10) Regulation; rule.--The term ``regulation'' or ``rule'' 

        (except with respect to a rule of either House of the Congress) 

        has the meaning of ``rule'' as defined in section 601(2) of 

        title 5, United States Code.

          (11) Small government.--The term ``small government'' means 

        any small governmental jurisdictions defined in section 601(5) 

        of title 5, United States Code, and any tribal government.

          (12) State.--The term ``State'' has the same meaning as 

        defined in section 6501(9) of title 31, United States Code.

          (13) Tribal government.--The term ``tribal government'' means 

        any Indian tribe, band, nation, or other organized group or 

        community, including any Alaska Native village or regional or 

        village corporation as defined in or established pursuant to the 

        Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (85 Stat. 688; 43 U.S.C. 

        1601 et seq.) which is recognized as eligible for the special 

        programs and services provided by the United States to Indians 

        because of their special status as Indians.
SEC. 422. EXCLUSIONS.

  This part shall not apply to any provision in a bill, joint 
resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report before Congress 
that--

          (1) enforces constitutional rights of individuals;

          (2) establishes or enforces any statutory rights that prohibit 

        discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, 

        national origin, age, handicap, or disability;

          (3) requires compliance with accounting and auditing 

        procedures with respect to grants or other money or property 

        provided by the Federal Government;

          (4) provides for emergency assistance or relief at the request 

        of any State, local, or tribal government or any official of a 

        State, local, or tribal government;

          (5) is necessary for the national security or the ratification 

        or implementation of international treaty obligations;

          (6) the President designates as emergency legislation and that 

        the Congress so designates in statute; or

          (7) relates to the old-age, survivors, and disability 

        insurance program under title II of the Social Security Act 

        (including taxes imposed by sections 3101(a) and 3111(a) of the 

        Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (relating to old-age, survivors, 

        and disability insurance)).
SEC. 423. DUTIES OF CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES.

  (a) In General.--When a committee of authorization of the Senate or 
the House of Representatives reports a bill or joint resolution of 
public character that includes any Federal mandate, the report of the 
committee accompanying the bill or joint resolution shall contain the 
information required by subsections (c) and (d).

  (b) Submission of Bills to the Director.--When a committee of 
authorization of the Senate or the House of Representatives orders 
reported a bill or joint resolution of a public character, the committee 
shall promptly provide the bill or joint resolution to the Director of 
the Congressional Budget Office and shall identify to the Director any 
Federal mandates contained in the bill or resolution.

  (c) Reports on Federal Mandates.--Each report described under 
subsection (a) shall contain--

          (1) an identification and description of any Federal mandates 

        in the bill or joint resolution, including the direct costs to 

        State, local, and tribal governments, and to the private sector, 

        required to comply with the Federal mandates;

          (2) a qualitative, and if practicable, a quantitative 

        assessment of costs and benefits anticipated from the Federal 

        mandates (including the effects on health and safety and the 

        protection of the natural environment); and

          (3) a statement of the degree to which a Federal mandate 

        affects both the public and private sectors and the extent to 

        which Federal payment of public sector costs or the modification 

        or termination of the Federal mandate as provided under section 

        425(a)(2) would affect the competitive balance between State, 

        local, or tribal governments and the private sector including a 

        description of the actions, if any, taken by the committee to 

        avoid any adverse impact on the private sector or the 

        competitive balance between the public sector and the private 

        sector.

  (d) Intergovernmental Mandates.--If any of the Federal mandates in the 
bill or joint resolution are Federal intergovernmental mandates, the 
report required under subsection (a) shall also contain--

          (1)(A) a statement of the amount, if any, of increase or 

        decrease in authorization of appropriations under existing 

        Federal financial assistance programs, or of authorization of 

        appropriations for new Federal financial assistance, provided by 

        the bill or joint resolution and usable for activities of State, 

        local, or tribal governments subject to the Federal 

        intergovernmental mandates;

          (B) a statement of whether the committee intends that the 

        Federal intergovernmental mandates be partly or entirely 

        unfunded, and if so, the reasons for that intention; and

          (C) if funded in whole or in part, a statement of whether and 

        how the committee has created a mechanism to allocate the 

        funding in a manner that is reasonably consistent with the 

        expected direct costs among and between the respective levels of 

        State, local, and tribal government;

          (2) any existing sources of Federal assistance in addition to 

        those identified in paragraph (1) that may assist State, local, 

        and tribal governments in meeting the direct costs of the 

        Federal intergovernmental mandates; and

          (3) if the bill or joint resolution would make the reduction 

        specified in section 421(5)(B)(i)(II), a statement of how the 

        committee specifically intends the States to implement the 

        reduction and to what extent the legislation provides additional 

        flexibility, if any, to offset the reduction.

  (e) Preemption Clarification and Information.--When a committee of 
authorization of the Senate or the House of Representatives reports a 
bill or joint resolution of public character, the committee report 
accompanying the bill or joint resolution shall contain, if relevant to 
the bill or joint resolution, an explicit statement on the extent to 
which the bill or joint resolution is intended to preempt any State, 
local, or tribal law, and, if so, an explanation of the effect of such 
preemption.

  (f) Publication of Statement From the Director.--

          (1) In general.--Upon receiving a statement from the Director 

        under section 424, a committee of the Senate or the House of 

        Representatives shall publish the statement in the committee 

        report accompanying the bill or joint resolution to which the 

        statement relates if the statement is available at the time the 

        report is printed.

          (2) Other publication of statement of director.--If the 

        statement is not published in the report, or if the bill or 

        joint resolution to which the statement relates is expected to 

        be considered by the Senate or the House of Representatives 

        before the report is published, the committee shall cause the 

        statement, or a summary thereof, to be published in the 

        Congressional Record in advance of floor consideration of the 

        bill or joint resolution.
SEC. 424. DUTIES OF THE DIRECTOR; STATEMENTS ON BILLS AND JOINT 

        RESOLUTIONS OTHER THAN APPROPRIATIONS BILLS AND JOINT 

        RESOLUTIONS.

  (a) Federal Intergovernmental Mandates in Reported Bills and 
Resolutions.--For each bill or joint resolution of a public character 
reported by any committee of authorization of the Senate or the House of 
Representatives, the Director of the Congressional Budget Office shall 
prepare and submit to the committee a statement as follows:

          (1) Contents.--If the Director estimates that the direct cost 

        of all Federal intergovernmental mandates in the bill or joint 

        resolution will equal or exceed $50,000,000 (adjusted annually 

        for inflation) in the fiscal year in which any Federal 

        intergovernmental mandate in the bill or joint resolution (or in 

        any necessary implementing regulation) would first be effective 

        or in any of the 4 fiscal years following such fiscal year, the 

        Director shall so state, specify the estimate, and briefly 

        explain the basis of the estimate.

          (2) Estimates.--Estimates required under paragraph (1) shall 

        include estimates (and brief explanations of the basis of the 

        estimates) of--

                  (A) the total amount of direct cost of complying with 

                the Federal intergovernmental mandates in the bill or 

                joint resolution;

                  (B) if the bill or resolution contains an 

                authorization of appropriations under section 

                425(a)(2)(B), the amount of new budget authority for 

                each fiscal year for a period not to exceed 10 years 

                beyond the effective date necessary for the direct cost 

                of the intergovernmental mandate; and

                  (C) the amount, if any, of increase in authorization 

                of appropriations under existing Federal financial 

                assistance programs, or of authorization of 

                appropriations for new Federal financial assistance, 

                provided by the bill or joint resolution and usable by 

                State, local, or tribal governments for activities 

                subject to the Federal intergovernmental mandates.

          (3) Additional flexibility information.--The Director shall 

        include in the statement submitted under this subsection, in the 

        case of legislation that makes changes as described in section 

        421(5)(B)(i)(II)--

                  (A) if no additional flexibility is provided in the 

                legislation, a description of whether and how the States 

                can offset the reduction under existing law; or

                  (B) if additional flexibility is provided in the 

                legislation, whether the resulting savings would offset 

                the reductions in that program assuming the States fully 

                implement that additional flexibility.

          (4) Estimate not feasible.--If the Director determines that it 

        is not feasible to make a reasonable estimate that would be 

        required under paragraphs (1) and (2), the Director shall not 

        make the estimate, but shall report in the statement that the 

        reasonable estimate cannot be made and shall include the reasons 

        for that determination in the statement. If such determination 

        is made by the Director, a point of order under this part shall 

        lie only under section 425(a)(1) and as if the requirement of 

        section 425(a)(1) had not been met.

  (b) Federal Private Sector Mandates in Reported Bills and Joint 
Resolutions.--For each bill or joint resolution of a public character 
reported by any committee of authorization of the Senate or the House of 
Representatives, the Director of the Congressional Budget Office shall 
prepare and submit to the committee a statement as follows:

          (1) Contents.--If the Director estimates that the direct cost 

        of all Federal private sector mandates in the bill or joint 

        resolution will equal or exceed $100,000,000 (adjusted annually 

        for inflation) in the fiscal year in which any Federal private 

        sector mandate in the bill or joint resolution (or in any 

        necessary implementing regulation) would first be effective or 

        in any of the 4 fiscal years following such fiscal year, the 

        Director shall so state, specify the estimate, and briefly 

        explain the basis of the estimate.

          (2) Estimates.--Estimates required under paragraph (1) shall 

        include estimates (and a brief explanation of the basis of the 

        estimates) of--

                  (A) the total amount of direct costs of complying with 

                the Federal private sector mandates in the bill or joint 

                resolution; and

                  (B) the amount, if any, of increase in authorization 

                of appropriations under existing Federal financial 

                assistance programs, or of authorization of 

                appropriations for new Federal financial assistance, 

                provided by the bill or joint resolution usable by the 

                private sector for the activities subject to the Federal 

                private sector mandates.

          (3) Estimate not feasible.--If the Director determines that it 

        is not feasible to make a reasonable estimate that would be 

        required under paragraphs (1) and (2), the Director shall not 

        make the estimate, but shall report in the statement that the 

        reasonable estimate cannot be made and shall include the reasons 

        for that determination in the statement.

  (c) Legislation Falling Below the Direct Costs Thresholds.--If the 
Director estimates that the direct costs of a Federal mandate will not 
equal or exceed the thresholds specified in subsections (a) and (b), the 
Director shall so state and shall briefly explain the basis of the 
estimate.

  (d) Amended Bills and Joint Resolutions; Conference Reports.--If a 
bill or joint resolution is passed in an amended form (including if 
passed by one House as an amendment in the nature of a substitute for 
the text of a bill or joint resolution from the other House) or is 
reported by a committee of conference in amended form, and the amended 
form contains a Federal mandate not previously considered by either 
House or which contains an increase in the direct cost of a previously 
considered Federal mandate, then the committee of conference shall 
ensure, to the greatest extent practicable, that the Director shall 
prepare a statement as provided in this subsection or a supplemental 
statement for the bill or joint resolution in that amended form.
SEC. 425. LEGISLATION SUBJECT TO POINT OF ORDER.

  (a) In General.--It shall not be in order in the Senate or the House 
of Representatives to consider--

          (1) any bill or joint resolution that is reported by a 

        committee unless the committee has published a statement of the 

        Director on the direct costs of Federal mandates in accordance 

        with section 423(f) before such consideration, except this 

        paragraph shall not apply to any supplemental statement prepared 

        by the Director under section 424(d); and

          (2) any bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or 

        conference report that would increase the direct costs of 

        Federal intergovernmental mandates by an amount that causes the 

        thresholds specified in section 424(a)(1) to be exceeded, 

        unless--

                  (A) the bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or 

                conference report provides new budget authority or new 

                entitlement authority in the House of Representatives or 

                direct spending authority in the Senate for each fiscal 

                year for such mandates included in the bill, joint 

                resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report in 

                an amount equal to or exceeding the direct costs of such 

                mandate; or

                  (B) the bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or 

                conference report includes an authorization for 

                appropriations in an amount equal to or exceeding the 

                direct costs of such mandate, and--

                        (i) identifies a specific dollar amount of the 

                    direct costs of such mandate for each year up to 10 

                    years during which such mandate shall be in effect 

                    under the bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion 

                    or conference report, and such estimate is 

                    consistent with the estimate determined under 

                    subsection (e) for each fiscal year;

                        (ii) identifies any appropriation bill that is 

                    expected to provide for Federal funding of the 

                    direct cost referred to under clause (i); and

                        (iii)(I) provides that for any fiscal year the 

                    responsible Federal agency shall determine whether 

                    there are insufficient appropriations for that 

                    fiscal year to provide for the direct costs under 

                    clause (i) of such mandate, and shall (no later than 

                    30 days after the beginning of the fiscal year) 

                    notify the appropriate authorizing committees of 


                    Congress of the determination and submit either--


    (aa) a statement that the agency has determined, based on a re-estimate 
of the direct costs of such mandate, after consultation with State, local, 
and tribal governments, that the amount appropriated is sufficient to pay 
for the direct costs of such mandate; or


    (bb) legislative recommendations for either implementing a less costly 
mandate or making such mandate ineffective for the fiscal year;

                        (II) provides for expedited procedures for the 

                    consideration of the statement or legislative 

                    recommendations referred to in subclause (I) by 

                    Congress no later than 30 days after the statement 

                    or recommendations are submitted to Congress; and


                        (III) provides that such mandate shall--


    (aa) in the case of a statement referred to in subclause (I)(aa), cease 
to be effective 60 days after the statement is submitted unless Congress 
has approved the agency's determination by joint resolution during the 60-
day period;


    (bb) cease to be effective 60 days after the date the legislative 
recommendations of the responsible Federal agency are submitted to Congress 
under subclause (I)(bb) unless Congress provides otherwise by law; or


    (cc) in the case that such mandate that has not yet taken effect, 
continue not to be effective unless Congress provides otherwise by law.

  (b) Rule of Construction.--The provisions of subsection (a)(2)(B)(iii) 
shall not be construed to prohibit or otherwise restrict a State, local, 
or tribal government from voluntarily electing to remain subject to the 
original Federal intergovernmental mandate, complying with the 
programmatic or financial responsibilities of the original Federal 
intergovernmental mandate and providing the funding necessary consistent 
with the costs of Federal agency assistance, monitoring, and 
enforcement.

  (c) Committee on Appropriations.--

          (1) Application.--The provisions of subsection (a)--

                  (A) shall not apply to any bill or resolution reported 

                by the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate or the 

                House of Representatives; except

                  (B) shall apply to--

                        (i) any legislative provision increasing direct 

                    costs of a Federal intergovernmental mandate 

                    contained in any bill or resolution reported by the 

                    Committee on Appropriations of the Senate or House 

                    of Representatives;

                        (ii) any legislative provision increasing direct 

                    costs of a Federal intergovernmental mandate 

                    contained in any amendment offered to a bill or 

                    resolution reported by the Committee on 

                    Appropriations of the Senate or House of 

                    Representatives;

                        (iii) any legislative provision increasing 

                    direct costs of a Federal intergovernmental mandate 

                    in a conference report accompanying a bill or 

                    resolution reported by the Committee on 

                    Appropriations of the Senate or House of 

                    Representatives; and

                        (iv) any legislative provision increasing direct 

                    costs of a Federal intergovernmental mandate 

                    contained in any amendments in disagreement between 

                    the two Houses to any bill or resolution reported by 

                    the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate or 

                    House of Representatives.

          (2) Certain provisions stricken in senate.--Upon a point of 

        order being made by any Senator against any provision listed in 

        paragraph (1)(B), and the point of order being sustained by the 

        Chair, such specific provision shall be deemed stricken from the 

        bill, resolution, amendment, amendment in disagreement, or 

        conference report and may not be offered as an amendment from 

        the floor.

  (d) Determinations of Applicability to Pending Legislation.--For 
purposes of this section, in the Senate, the presiding officer of the 
Senate shall consult with the Committee on Governmental Affairs, to the 
extent practicable, on questions concerning the applicability of this 
part to a pending bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or 
conference report.

  (e) Determinations of Federal Mandate Levels.--For purposes of this 
section, in the Senate, the levels of Federal mandates for a fiscal year 
shall be determined based on the estimates made by the Committee on the 
Budget.
SEC. 426. PROVISIONS RELATING TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.

  (a) Enforcement in the House of Representatives.--It shall not be in 
order in the House of Representatives to consider a rule or order that 
waives the application of section 425.

  (b) Disposition of Points of Order.--

          (1) Application to the house of representatives.--This 

        subsection shall apply only to the House of Representatives.

          (2) Threshold burden.--In order to be cognizable by the Chair, 

        a point of order under section 425 or subsection (a) of this 

        section must specify the precise language on which it is 

        premised.

          (3) Question of consideration.--As disposition of points of 

        order under section 425 or subsection (a) of this section, the 

        Chair shall put the question of consideration with respect to 

        the proposition that is the subject of the points of order.

          (4) Debate and intervening motions.--A question of 

        consideration under this section shall be debatable for 10 

        minutes by each Member initiating a point of order and for 10 

        minutes by an opponent on each point of order, but shall 

        otherwise be decided without intervening motion except one that 

        the House adjourn or that the Committee of the Whole rise, as 

        the case may be.

          (5) Effect on amendment in order as original text.--The 

        disposition of the question of consideration under this 

        subsection with respect to a bill or joint resolution shall be 

        considered also to determine the question of consideration under 

        this subsection with respect to an amendment made in order as 

        original text.
SEC. 427. REQUESTS TO THE CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE FROM SENATORS.

  At the written request of a Senator, the Director shall, to the extent 
practicable, prepare an estimate of the direct costs of a Federal 
intergovernmental mandate contained in an amendment of such Senator.
SEC. 428. CLARIFICATION OF APPLICATION.

  (a) In General.--This part applies to any bill, joint resolution, 
amendment, motion, or conference report that reauthorizes 
appropriations, or that amends existing authorizations of 
appropriations, to carry out any statute, or that otherwise amends any 
statute, only if enactment of the bill, joint resolution, amendment, 
motion, or conference report--

          (1) would result in a net reduction in or elimination of 

        authorization of appropriations for Federal financial assistance 

        that would be provided to State, local, or tribal governments 

        for use for the purpose of complying with any Federal 

        intergovernmental mandate, or to the private sector for use to 

        comply with any Federal private sector mandate, and would not 

        eliminate or reduce duties established by the Federal mandate by 

        a corresponding amount; or

          (2) would result in a net increase in the aggregate amount of 

        direct costs of Federal intergovernmental mandates or Federal 

        private sector mandates other than as described in paragraph 

        (1).

  (b) Direct Costs.--

          (1) In general.--For purposes of this part, the direct cost of 

        the Federal mandates in a bill, joint resolution, amendment, 

        motion, or conference report that reauthorizes appropriations, 

        or that amends existing authorizations of appropriations, to 

        carry out a statute, or that otherwise amends any statute, means 

        the net increase, resulting from enactment of the bill, joint 

        resolution, amendment, motion, or conference report, in the 

        amount described under paragraph (2)(A) over the amount 

        described under paragraph (2)(B).

          (2) Amounts.--The amounts referred to under paragraph (1) 

        are--

                  (A) the aggregate amount of direct costs of Federal 

                mandates that would result under the statute if the 

                bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or conference 

                report is enacted; and

                  (B) the aggregate amount of direct costs of Federal 

                mandates that would result under the statute if the 

                bill, joint resolution, amendment, motion, or conference 

                report were not enacted.

          (3) Extension of authorization of appropriations.--For 

        purposes of this section, in the case of legislation to extend 

        authorization of appropriations, the authorization level that 

        would be provided by the extension shall be compared to the 

        authorization level for the last year in which authorization of 


        appropriations is already provided.

  Part B of title IV was added by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 
1995 (sec. 101(a), P.L. 104-4; 109 Stat. 50-60). That Act explicitly 
declared that the new part was enacted as an exercise of congressional 
rulemaking powers (sec. 108; 109 Stat. 63-64).


  Pursuant to section 426, a Member raising a point of order under 
section 425 or 426 must specify the precise language upon which the 
point of order is based (see e.g., May 23, 1996, p. 12283; May 14, 2008, 
p. 9050), and the content of estimates prepared under section 424 is a 
matter for debate (June 8, 2006, p. 10457). A point of order under 
section 426 raised against consideration of a resolution providing a 
special order of business must specify the precise language upon which 
the point of order is based (see e.g., June 10, 1998 p. 11853; June 26, 
2001, p. 11906), which may include a waiver of points of order against 
amendments (Jan. 28, 2009, p. 1796; May 21, 2014, p. 8827), must be made 
when the special order is called up and comes too late after the 
resolution has been adopted (July 18, 1996, p. 17668), and may be raised 
against a resolution that, by hereby adopting legislative text, 
effectively waives the application of section 425 (Feb. 1, 2006, pp. 
549, 550). A point of order under section 425 against consideration of a 
bill is properly raised pending the Speaker's declaration that the House 
resolve into the Committee of the Whole for such consideration (Oct. 29, 
1997, p. 23712). A statutorily privileged joint resolution of approval 
may be subject to a point of order under section 425 (May 8, 2002, p. 
7145). Debate on the point of order is on the question of considering 
the underlying text that is the subject of the point of order (May 14, 
2008, p. 9051). The Members controlling debate on the point of order may 
reserve their time (Mar. 28, 1996, p. 6932), and a manager of a measure 
who controls time for debate against the point of order that is to be 
resolved by a question of consideration has the right to close debate 
(May 1, 1997, p. 7011; June 10, 1998, p. 11854).


* * * * *

                TITLE VII--PROGRAM REVIEW AND EVALUATION


         continuing study of additional budget reform proposals

  Sec. 703. (a) The Committees on the Budget of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate shall study on a continuing basis 
proposals designed to improve and facilitate methods of congressional 
budgetmaking. The proposals to be studied shall include, but are not 
limited to, proposals for--

          (1) improving the information base required for determining 

        the effectiveness of new programs by such means as pilot 

        testing, survey research, and other experimental and analytical 

        techniques;

          (2) improving analytical and systematic evaluation of the 

        effectiveness of existing programs;

          (3) establishing maximum and minimum time limitations for 

        program authorization; and

          (4) developing techniques of human resource accounting and 

        other means of providing noneconomic as well as economic 

        evaluation measures.

  (b) The Committee on the Budget of each House shall, from time to 
time, report to its House the results of the study carried on by it 
under subsection (a), together with its recommendations.


  (c) Nothing in this section shall preclude studies to improve the 
budgetary process by any other committee of the House of Representatives 
or the Senate or any joint committee of the Congress.
* * * * *


* * * * *

           TITLE IX--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS; EFFECTIVE DATES


                      exercise of rulemaking powers

  Sec. 904. (a) The provisions of this title and of titles I, III, IV, 
and V and the provisions of sections 701, 703, and 1017 are enacted by 
the Congress--

          (1) as an exercise of the rulemaking power of the House of 

        Representatives and the Senate, respectively, and as such they 

        shall be considered as part of the rules of each House, 

        respectively, or of that House to which they specifically apply, 

        and such rules shall supersede other rules only to the extent 

        that they are inconsistent therewith; and

          (2) with full recognition of the constitutional right of 

        either House to change such rules (so far as relating to such 

        House) at any time, in the same manner, and to the same extent 


        as in the case of any other rule of such House.


  (b) Any provision of title III or IV may be waived or suspended in the 
Senate by a majority vote of the Members voting, a quorum being present, 
or by the unanimous consent of the Senate.

  (c) Waivers.--

          (1) Permanent.--Sections 305(b)(2), 305(c)(4), 306, 310(d)(2), 

        313, 904(c), and 904(d) of this Act may be waived or suspended 

        in the Senate only by the affirmative vote of three-fifths of 

        the Members, duly chosen and sworn.

          (2) Temporary.--Sections 301(i), 302(c), 302(f), 310(g), 

        311(a), 312(b), 312(c), 314(e), and 314(f) of this Act and 

        sections 258(a)(4)(C), 258A(b)(3)(C)(i), 258B(f)(1), 258B(h)(1), 

        258B(h)(3), 258C(a)(5), and 258C(b)(1) of the Balanced Budget 

        and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 may be waived or 

        suspended in the Senate only by the affirmative vote of three-


        fifths of the Members, duly chosen and sworn.

  (d) Appeals.--

          (1) Procedure.--Appeals in the Senate from the decisions of 

        the Chair relating to any provision of title III or IV or 

        section 1017 shall, except as otherwise provided therein, be 

        limited to 1 hour, to be equally divided between, and controlled 

        by, the mover and the 

[[Page 1141]]
        

        

        manager of the resolution, concurrent 

        resolution, reconciliation bill, or rescission bill, as the case 

        may be.

          (2) Permanent.--An affirmative vote of three-fifths of the 

        Members, duly chosen and sworn, shall be required in the Senate 

        to sustain an appeal of the ruling of the Chair on a point of 

        order raised under sections 305(b)(2), 305(c)(4), 306, 

        310(d)(2), 313, 904(c), and 904(d) of this Act.

          (3) Temporary.--An affirmative vote of three-fifths of the 

        Members, duly chosen and sworn, shall be required in the Senate 

        to sustain an appeal of the ruling of the Chair on a point of 

        order raised under sections 301(i), 302(c), 302(f), 310(g), 

        311(a), 312(b), 312(c), 314(e), and 314(f) of this Act and 

        sections 258(a)(4)(C), 258A(b)(3)(C)(i), 258B(f)(1), 258B(h)(1), 

        258B(h)(3), 258C(a)(5), and 258C(b)(1) of the Balanced Budget 

        and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.


  (e) Expiration of Certain Supermajority Voting Requirements.--
Subsections (c)(2) and (d)(3) shall expire on September 30, 2002.

  Section 904 was amended by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (sec. 
10119, P.L. 105-33) to clarify points of order in the Senate that may be 
waived by a supermajority vote. The expiration in subsection (e) was 
extended to 2017 in the budget resolution for fiscal year 2008 (sec. 
205, S. Con. Res. 21, 110th Cong.) and was further extended to 2025 in 
the budget resolution for fiscal year 2016 (sec. 3201, S. Con. Res. 11, 
114th Cong.).


  Pursuant to this section, and under its authority contained in clause 
5 of rule XIII (former clause 4(b) of rule XI) to report on rules and 
the order of business, the Committee on Rules may report as privileged a 
resolution recommending the temporary waiver of the provisions of 
section 401 of the Congressional Budget Act during the consideration of 
designated legislation in the House (Speaker Albert, Mar. 20, 1975, p. 
7676). A point of order against consideration of a resolution reported 
from the Committee on Rules providing for consideration of a concurrent 
resolution on the budget does not lie based upon alleged violation of a 
statute that merely reaffirms the congressional commitment towards 
achieving balanced Federal budgets (P.L. 96-389), because the statute 
does not constitute a rule of the House and because section 904 of the 
Budget Act acknowledges the constitutional authority of either House to 
change its rules at any time (June 10, 1982, pp. 13352, 13353). A 
unanimous-consent agreement that only permits a (nonprivileged) bill to 
be considered in the House before availability requirements of the 
report thereon have been met, but that does not specifically waive 
points of order against consideration, does not preclude a point of 
order against consideration of the bill when called up based upon an 
alleged violation of the Budget Act (Feb. 4, 1982, p. 845).



[[Page 1143]]
                                                               Sec. 1129


                     BUDGET ENFORCEMENT ACT OF 1990


                               __________


In addition <> to adding titles V and VI to the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (relating to credit reform and to 
budget agreement enforcement, respectively), the Budget Enforcement Act 
of 1990 (tit. XIII, P.L. 101-508) also included these free-standing 
provisions addressing the budgetary treatment of social security.

                excerpts from title xiii of p.l. 101-508


SEC. 13301. OFF-BUDGET STATUS OF OASDI TRUST FUNDS.
                       Subtitle C--Social Security

  (a) Exclusion of Social Security From All Budgets.--Notwithstanding 
any other provision of law, the receipts and disbursements of the 
Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund and the Federal 
Disability Insurance Trust Fund shall not be counted as new budget 
authority, outlays, receipts, or deficit or surplus for purposes of--

          (1) the budget of the United States Government as submitted by 

        the President,

          (2) the congressional budget, or

          (3) the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 


        1985.


* * * * *
SEC. 13302. PROTECTION OF OASDI TRUST FUNDS IN THE HOUSE OF 
  The House has waived this section in requiring that discretionary 
administrative expenses of the Social Security Administration be 
included in an allocation under section 302 of the Congressional Budget 
Act of 1974 (sec. 3(f)(1), H. Res. 5, Jan. 5, 2011, p. 80).

        REPRESENTATIVES.

  (a) In General.--It shall not be in order in the House of 
Representatives to consider any bill or joint resolution, as reported, 
or any amendment thereto or conference report thereon, if, upon 
enactment--

          (1)(A) such legislation under consideration would provide for 

        a net increase in OASDI benefits of at least 0.02 percent of the 

        present value of future taxable payroll for the 75-year period 

        utilized in the most recent annual report of the Board of 

        Trustees provided pursuant to section 201(c)(2) of the Social 

        Security Act, and (B) such legislation under consideration does 

        not provide at least a net increase, for such 75-year period, in 

        OASDI taxes of the amount by which the net increase in such 

        benefits exceeds 0.02 percent of the present value of future 

        taxable payroll for such 75-year period,

          (2)(A) such legislation under consideration would provide for 

        a net increase in OASDI benefits (for the 5-year estimating 

        period for such legislation under consideration), (B) such net 

        increase, together with the net increases in OASDI benefits 

        resulting from previous legislation enacted during that fiscal 

        year or any of the previous 4 fiscal years (as estimated at the 

        time of enactment) which are attributable to those portions of 

        the 5-year estimating periods for such previous legislation that 

        fall within the 5-year estimating period for such legislation 

        under consideration, exceeds $250,000,000, and (C) such 

        legislation under consideration does not provide at least a net 

        increase, for the 5-year estimating period for such legislation 

        under consideration, in OASDI taxes which, together with net 

        increases in OASDI taxes resulting from such previous 

        legislation which are attributable to those portions of the 5-

        year estimating periods for such previous legislation that fall 

        within the 5-year estimating period for such legislation under 

        consideration, equals the amount by which the net increase 

        derived under subparagraph (B) exceeds $250,000,000;

          (3)(A) such legislation under consideration would provide for 

        a net decrease in OASDI taxes of at least 0.02 percent of the 

        present value of future taxable payroll for the 75-year period 

        utilized in the most recent annual report of the Board of 

        Trustees provided pursuant to section 201(c)(2) of the Social 

        Security Act, and (B) such legislation under consideration does 

        not provide at least a net decrease, for such 75-year period, in 

        OASDI benefits of the amount by which the net decrease in such 

        taxes exceeds 0.02 percent of the present value of future 

        taxable payroll for such 75-year period, or

          (4)(A) such legislation under consideration would provide for 

        a net decrease in OASDI taxes (for the 5-year estimating period 

        for such legislation under consideration), (B) such net 

        decrease, together with the net decreases in OASDI taxes 

        resulting from previous legislation enacted during that fiscal 

        year or any of the previous 4 fiscal years (as estimated at the 

        time of enactment) which are attributable to those portions of 

        the 5-year estimating periods for such previous legislation that 

        fall within the 5-year estimating period for such legislation 

        under consideration, exceeds $250,000,000, and (C) such 

        legislation under consideration does not provide at least a net 

        decrease, for the 5-year estimating period for such legislation 

        under consideration, in OASDI benefits which, together with net 

        decreases in OASDI benefits resulting from such previous 

        legislation which are attributable to those portions of the 5-

        year estimating periods for such previous legislation that fall 

        within the 5-year estimating period for such legislation under 

        consideration, equals the amount by which the net decrease 


        derived under subparagraph (B) exceeds $250,000,000.


  (b) Application.--In applying paragraph (3) or (4) of subsection (a), 
any provision of any bill or joint resolution, as reported, or any 
amendment thereto, or conference report thereon, the effect of which is 
to provide for a net decrease for any period in taxes described in 
subsection (c)(2)(A) shall be disregarded if such bill, joint 
resolution, amendment, or conference report also includes a provision 
the effect of which is to provide for a net increase of at least an 
equivalent amount for such period in medicare taxes.

  (c) Definitions.--For purposes of this subsection:

          (1) The term ``OASDI benefits'' means the benefits under the 

        old-age, survivors, and disability insurance programs under 

        title II of the Social Security Act.

          (2) The term ``OASDI taxes'' means--

                  (A) the taxes imposed under sections 1401(a), 3101(a), 

                and 3111(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and

                  (B) the taxes imposed under chapter 1 of such Code (to 

                the extent attributable to section 86 of such Code).

          (3) The term ``medicare taxes'' means the taxes imposed under 

        sections 1401(b), 3101(b), and 3111(b) of the Internal Revenue 

        Code of 1986.

          (4) The term ``previous legislation'' shall not include 

        legislation enacted before fiscal year 1991.

          (5) The term ``5-year estimating period'' means, with respect 

        to any legislation, the fiscal year in which such legislation 

        becomes or would become effective and the next 4 fiscal years.

          (6) No provision of any bill or resolution, or any amendment 

        thereto or conference report thereon, involving a change in 

        chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 shall be treated 

        as affecting the amount of OASDI taxes referred to in paragraph 

        (2)(B) unless such provision changes the income tax treatment of 


        OASDI benefits.


* * * * *

  The House in the 114th and 115th Congresses established a point of 
order against consideration of measures that would reduce the actuarial 
balance of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund by a 
specified percentage (sec. 3(q), H. Res. 5, Jan. 6, 2015, p. 37; sec. 
3(o), H. Res. 5, Jan. 3, 2017, p. 39).


  For a discussion of the Federal budget process, including the Balanced 
Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (Gramm-Rudman), which 
sets forth executive budget enforcement mechanisms, see House Practice, 
ch. 7 and Deschler-Brown-Johnson-Sullivan, ch. 41.


[[Page 1147]]

                                                              Sec. 1129a


                   STATUTORY PAY-AS-YOU-GO ACT OF 2010


                               __________


The Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010 (tit. I, P.L. 111-139) included 
this provision addressing the budgetary treatment of social security.

SEC. 13. LIMITATION ON CHANGES TO THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT.
          excerpts from title i of p.l. 111-139 (2 u.s.c. 939)


[[Page 1148]]


  (a) Limitation on Changes to the Social Security Act.--Notwithstanding 
any other provision of law, it shall not be in order in the Senate or 
the House of Representatives to consider any bill or resolution pursuant 
to any expedited procedure to consider the recommendations of a Task 
Force for Responsible Fiscal Action or other commission that contains 
recommendations with respect to the old-age, survivors, and disability 
insurance program established under title II of the Social Security Act, 
or the taxes received under subchapter A of chapter 9; the taxes imposed 
by subchapter E of chapter 1; and the taxes collected under section 86 
of part II of subchapter B of chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code.