Weblog: As Senate Considers Faith-Based Initiative, Bush Pushes D.C. Vouchers Scrutinizing religious speech after the Columbia disaster, and other stories from online sources around the world Ted Olsen
February 1, 2003
CARE Act back in the Senate
A new version of the Charity Aid, Recovery, and Empowerment (CARE) Act, part of President Bush's faith-based initiative, will make it to the U.S. Senate floor for a vote as early as next week, Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Penn.) tells The Washington Times.
Last year, the Democrat-controlled Senate did not vote on the bill as some members demanded that it also force faith-based groups receiving government funds to hire workers without considering their religion.
This year's bill isn't much different from the one Santorum and Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-Conn.) introduced last year. It doesn't expand charitable choice (that is, it doesn't allow more faith-based social service organizations to receive government funds). But it does offer several tax code changes that both Republicans and Democrats support. Among them, it proposes:
- Letting taxpayers who do not itemize their deductions to deduct a portion of their charitable giving
- Tax incentives for farmers and restaurants to donate extra food to the hungry, and similar incentives for donors of books and technology;
- Government-matched savings accounts for low-income Americans who want to purchase a home, further their education, or start a small business; and
- Deducting volunteers' mileage from their gross income.
The bill also offers $150 million each year for technical assistance to small community and faith-based charities, and allows a faith-based organization to receive funds even if it displays religious icons, has a religious name, uses religious language in its charter documents, or has religious qualifications for its governing board.
Even so, a congressional aide says the bill may not be strong enough for House Republicans, who passed a much broader faith-based ...
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