Support for FY2024 & FY2025 funding of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (OEM) residency training programs at HRSA. Support for FY2024 & FY2025 funding for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), including for Education and Research Centers, the Total Worker Health Program, and the Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing Program.
- H.R.5894 & S.2624 - Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2024 - Provisions related to funding for programs to provide funding to occupational and environmental residency training programs.
- H.R.2882 - Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024, provisions related to funding for programs to provide funding to occupational and environmental residency training programs.
- Forthcoming Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2025 - Provisions related to funding for programs to provide funding to occupational and environmental residency training programs.
- S.2333 - Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness and Response Act, provisions related to health care provider workforce
- S.1176 & H.R.2663 - Workplace Violence Prevention for Health Care and Social Service Workers Act
- S.4928 - Beryllium Testing Fairness Act
- H.R.4897 & S.2501 - Asuncion Valdivia Heat Illness and Fatality Prevention Act
- H.R.5420 & S.2948 - WORK (Workplace Overdose Reversal Kits) to Save Lives Act
- H.R. 766 & S.114 - The Preventive Health Savings Act
- Authorization legislation to establish a program to provide federal support to graduate medical education programs in occupational and environmental medicine.
- Support of Congressional oversight on issues related to occupational respirable crystalline silica exposures.
- Support of Congressional oversight on issues related to occupational lead exposures.
- Support of Congressional oversight on issues related to on-site workplace clinic illness and injury management.
- Advocated for the issuance of an interim OSHA standard for occupational heat stress
It can be tricky to figure out how much an organization spent on a particular lobbying engagement. The law only requires lobbyists to report the amount they were paid for federal lobbying each quarter rounded to the nearest $10,000—and if it's less than $3,000 in a given quarter (or less than $13,000 for organizations with in-house lobbyists), they don't have to disclose it at all. Plus, some organizations include spending that doesn’t belong in the report—for instance, money spent lobbying state governments or other legal work.
Agencies lobbied since 2023: U.S. Senate, House of Representatives, Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA)
Bills mentioned
S.1176: Workplace Violence Prevention for Health Care and Social Service Workers...
Lobbyists named here were listed on a filing related to this lobbying engagement. They may not be working on it now. Occasionally, a single lobbyist whose name is spelled two different ways on filings may be represented twice here.
Once a lobbying engagement begins, the lobbyist or firm is required to file updates four times a year. Those updates sometimes change which lobbyists are involved or add new issues being discussed. When lobbyists stop working for a client, the firm is also supposed to file a report disclosing the end of the relationship.
Q1 Report
Q4 Report
Q3 Report
Q2 Report
Q1 Report
Registration
Source: Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives and Secretary of the Senate