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House Committees: A Framework for Considering Jurisdictional Realignment (CRS Report for Congress)

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Release Date Revised Feb. 23, 2005
Report Number RL32661
Report Type Report
Authors Michael L. Koempel, Government and Finance Division
Source Agency Congressional Research Service
Older Revisions
  • Premium   Nov. 4, 2004 (14 pages, $24.95) add
Summary:

The House has chosen to handle committee jurisdiction in a number of ways. It has chosen to concentrate jurisdiction over an issue in new, existing, and temporary committees. It has chosen to keep jurisdiction over components of an issue distributed among several committees. And, it has chosen to vest in one committee jurisdiction over a narrow subject matter that could just as readily have been considered a component of subject matter within another committee's jurisdiction. Rules relating to referral and the Speaker's referral authority have also been changed to deal with jurisdictional issues. The House's most recent decision to create a standing Committee on Homeland Security reflected the several values that can bear on jurisdictional alignment ( H.Res. 5 , 109th Congress, and an accompanying legislative history of House Rule X changes contained in the resolution). While the House and Senate consolidated and reduced the number of committees in the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946, and for the first time vested each committee with specific jurisdiction, the House did not adopt wide-ranging committee reorganizations in 1974 or 1994. Rather, the House on a number of occasions since 1946 has chosen incremental change in committee jurisdictional realignment. The House is expected to study its committee organization during the 109th Congress. Related CRS reports are as follows: CRS Report RL32711(pdf) , Homeland Security: Compendium of Recommendations Relevant to House Committee Organization and Analysis of Considerations for the House, by Michael L. Koempel; CRS Report RS21901(pdf) , House Select Committee on Homeland Security: Possible Questions Raised If the Panel Were to Be Reconstituted as a Standing Committee, by Judy Schneider; CRS Report RL31835(pdf) , Reorganization of the House of Representatives: Modern Reform Efforts, by Judy Schneider, Christopher M. Davis, and Betsy Palmer; and CRS Report RL31572 , Appropriations Subcommittee Structure: History of Changes, 1920-2005 , by James V. Saturno. This report will not be updated.