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Senate declines to speed Keystone pipeline

WASHINGTON — The Senate last week defeated a bid to speed construction of the controversial Keystone oil pipeline.

Voting 56-42, senators killed an amendment that sought to greenlight the $7 billion TransCanada Corp. plan to connect tar sands fields in Alberta, Canada to refineries on the Gulf Coast.

The amendment needed 60 votes to advance. Eleven Democrats joined Republicans to approve the amendment, despite President Barack Obama making personal calls urging Democrats to oppose it.

Obama in January rejected a permit for the project, saying he was not necessarily opposed to it but that Congress had passed a law requiring him to make a decision before he said all studies had been completed.

TransCanada since has said it will proceed with a portion of the pipeline from Oklahoma to the Gulf of Mexico, and would submit a new application for the northern segment that requires presidential approval because it crosses into Canada. Republicans said the president was dragging his feet on a project that would create jobs and supply energy to the U.S.

Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., the amendment sponsor, said applicable environmental studies have been completed, and the amendment would allow for TransCanada to redirect the pipeline around the ecologically sensitive Sandhills region of Nebraska, one of the marks against it.

Critics also have challenged estimates of job creation and impact on gas prices. They add risk to the environment from pipeline leaks make it “a disaster waiting to happen.”

Sens. John Boozman, R-Ark., and Mark Pryor, D-Ark., voted to speed the Keystone pipeline.

The vote came as senators debated a two year, $109 billion bill to reauthorize a range of highway and mass transportation programs.

The highway bill had been held up for several weeks when leaders hit an impasse over potential amendments. A deal last week cleared the way for 30 amendments to be debated, including 10 on issues that were extraneous to transportation.

One was a bid to delay Environmental Protection Agency rules on emissions from industrial boilers and incinerators. The Senate voted 52-46 for the delay, but 60 votes were needed to advance.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said the amendment would ensure new regulations “will be achievable and affordable and that manufacturers will have adequate time to bring their facilities into compliance, thus preserving jobs.”

Speaking against the amendment, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said it would do more than delay pollution controls, it would “forever change the current standards allowed for mercury, arsenic, lead, chromium, benzene, toxic soot, and other dangerous pollutants.”

Boozman and Pryor voted to delay the EPA regulations.

House passes small business bill

The House voted 390-23 for a package of bills to help small business owners take their companies public and raise capital.

The broad support came as a result of rare bipartisan cooperation between House Republicans and President Obama who backed the bill.

It would relax federal regulations on businesses looking to raise capital, with sponsors saying it ultimately would lead to the creation of jobs.

Reps. Steve Womack, R-Rogers, Tim Griffin, R-Little Rock, Rick Crawford, R-Jonesboro and Mike Ross, D-Prescott, voted for the bill.

Before passage, lawmakers defeated an amendment by Rep. Gary Peters. D-Mich., that would require companies to report annually on their numbers of domestic and overseas employees. Peters said his idea would ensure new jobs “stay here in the United States and in our local communities.”

“Responsible investors have a right to know how publicly traded companies are spending their money and whether they are hiring and investing in the United States or are sending their resources overseas,” he said.

Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, said the requirement would only mean more paperwork for companies.

“How does this amendment help jump-start business start-ups?” he said. “It is one more cost imposed upon our job creators.”

The amendment was defeated, 175-239. Womack, Griffin, Crawford and Ross voted against it.