On November 4, after a four-month delay, the Senate resumed consideration of the FY2006 defense authorization bill (S. 1042). Debate on the measure began in July but stalled when the bill was pulled from the floor due to disagreements on amendments (see The Source, 7/22/05). In late October, a compromise enabled debate to resume. The House approved its version of the bill (H.R. 1815) on May 25 (see The Source, 5/27/05).
S. 1042 would authorize $491.6 billion in defense spending, establish stalking as an offense, and authorize $440 million for child care services.
During consideration of the bill, an amendment by Sen. Bill Nelson (R-FL) was approved, 93-5. The amendment would eliminate a dollar-for-dollar reduction of survivor benefits. Current payments received under the Defense Department’s Survivor Benefits Program are reduced by the amount dependents receive from a similar Department of Veterans Affairs program.
The Senate also approved, by unanimous consent, additional amendments, including:
Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) offered and withdrew an amendment designed to improve the availability of child care services for active duty members of the Armed Forces deployed in Operation Enduring Freedom or Operation Iraqi Freedom, and to support school districts that serve “large numbers or percentages of military dependent children affected by the war in Iraq or Afghanistan, or by other Department of Defense personnel decisions.”