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Davis, and Betsy Palmer CRS Report R元1572, Appropriations Subcommittee Structure: History of Changes from 1920-2007, by James V. Koempel CRS Report RS21901, 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 R元1835, Reorganization of the House of Representatives: Modern Reform Efforts, by Judy Schneider, Christopher M. Related CRS reports: CRS Report R元2661, House Committees: A Framework for Considering Jurisdictional Realignment, by Michael L. This report contains a brief history of House committees. The House has tended not to change its committee structure after executive branch reorganizations. Even if a new committee is created, other committees will still have jurisdiction over components of homeland security. A third consideration in creating a homeland security committee is whether such a committee is sufficient for policymaking. Others point to the record of Congress as a strong indication that existing committees are capable of action. Proponents of a new committee point to the fragmentation of jurisdiction over homeland security. A second consideration in creating a homeland security committee relates to implications of jurisdictional changes. The House at different times has made different decisions about concentrating or dispersing jurisdiction. One consideration in creating a homeland security committee relates to the concentration or dispersal of homeland security jurisdiction. To analyze the content of these hearings, this report organizes the testimony into 10 categories. Before the select committee made its recommendations, one of its subcommittees held four hearings on Perspectives on House Reform. This report digests the select committee’s recommendations. The select committee recommended a standing Committee on Homeland Security.
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In the 108th Congress, the House created a Select Committee on Homeland Security, and charged it with studying the rules of the House with respect to the issue of homeland security. This report analyzes selected recommendations relevant to House committee reorganization.
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The 9/11 Commission and other commissions and think tanks studying homeland security recommended congressional committee reorganization to increase Congress’s policy and oversight coordination. The original report was not changed its summary follows: This report has been updated with an epilogue on the creation of a standing House Committee on Homeland Security in the 109th Congress, the election of a new chair September 15, 2005, and the committee’s organization in the 110th Congress.