Government Info

http://sites.google.com/site/hdjlabotorys/

(Law and info)

This data is a compiled analysis of the history of abortion by numbers. Also, this is analytical info compiled from RIAA dialogues; also, child support manifests in a rudimentary stanza of child support dialogue and or theory and marijuana deficits - in dialogue and or theory. These excerpts and epistemology efficacy is designed to give people a better prevalent understanding too the rudimentary of regardless devon victory's dialogues and or theory of laws in the working of being passed.

THIS INFO WAS COMPILED BY: REGARDLESS DEVON VICTORY (GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVE, DELEGATE, AND LOBBYIST) ALSO VISIT WWW.HOUSE.GOV ALSO VISIT WWW.GOPTEAMLEADER.COM

These files also contain a list of about 1000 plus government agencies............

This data is a compiled analysis of the history of abortion by numbers. Also, this is analytical info compiled from RIAA dialogue. Also, child support manifests in a rudimentary stanza of child support theory and marijuana deficits. This info was compiled by: regardless devon victory (no caps TM) (government representative, delegate, and lobbyist)

These files also contain a list of about 300 plus: government agencies............

History:

1. Abortion law

2. Part of the abortion series

3. History & overview

4. Case law

5. History of abortion law

6. Laws by country

7. Types of regulation

8. Buffer zones

9. Conscience clauses

10. Fetal protection

11. Informed consent

12. Late-term restrictions

13. Parental involvement

14. Spousal consent

Laws in the working of being passed by regardless devon victory (IN 2007) (no caps tm.)

Law 1: Stopping Abortion Law

Stopping abortions for the whole entire U.S.A,these women and teens in the world, if decided too the belief, that they wanted an abortion, they would have the exception, of filing out a formal letter to their local government,explaing,theirfor clarification of the nature needed for the abortion.

Law 2: Explicit Nature Law

This is the edification of a better care free world. The stipulations in this bill are hypothetically making some citizen think about how much power the, government haves. This is forcing all stores, brick and mortar, and physical stores, also radio stations online and offline. Will no longer be able to play insolent language. All television networks haves too stop cussing in their programming-any movie and or television show that was allowing insolents will now have too edit regardless.

Rappers music and other entertainers, if selling music will only be allowed too sell edited clean copy’s. This bill also comprises the taking away of pornographic material…

Online and from Public Satellite Channels

Law 3: Child Support Act Law

This IS to the insidious proclamation of the misplaced heriditys that are left without biological others. This is the enforcing of no more male citizens going to jail for not paying child support, and or female citizens going to jail. This is the enforcing of the government paying, for every separated family in the world. If the woman feel’s the man needs to handle his business, this operation works the same way as, the citizens in the world already enforce child support payments. This works the same way food stamps work, social security checks work. My people should get what they need in life, after ALL MONEY

Is just a piece of paper, and rich people shouldn’t be the only ones living well. MORE ON THIS LATER...

Law 4: Selling marijuana act

The government haves two choices to think about and one of these options there for have to be commenced. They have too stop selling marijuana products on line, or they need too think about the people who keep taking downfalls for this crime. When the government is sitten, back allowing it…

Therefore, they have to stop selling the illegal drug online, or make it legal but with certain laws.

It would be legal to sell in businesses but not at house addresses, more on this act later.

This is the exact analytical numeration start; from the top of the page, that coherst

The number's toward the history of abortions. This is where the numbers start...

The numbers consignments were 1-14...

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1. Abortion law:

Is legislation, which pertains to the provision of abortion? Abortion has at times emerged as a controversial subject in various societies because of the moral and ethical issues that surround it, though other considerations, such as a state’s pro- or antinatalist policies or questions of inheritance and patriarchy, also dictate abortion law and regulation. It has been regularly banned and otherwise limited, though abortions have continued to be commonplace in many areas where it is illegal. Almost 2/3 of the world’s women currently reside in countries where abortion may be obtained on request for a broad range of social, economic or personal reasons. Abortion laws vary widely by country, ranging from Chile, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Malta, and Vatican City, which ban the procedure entirely, to Canada, which places no restrictions on the provision of abortion whatsoever. Both supporters and opponents of legal abortion believe their position addresses a fundamental human right.

History:

Abortion law

Part of the abortion series

History & overview

Case law

History of abortion law

Laws by country

Types of regulation

Buffer zones

Conscience clauses

Fetal protection

Informed consent

Late-term restrictions

Parental involvement

Spousal consent

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Abortion and contraception have been widely available throughout the history of Western Civilization, despite ethical concerns on the part of some. Plato and Aristotle both argued in favor of compulsory abortion under certain circumstances, though Hippocrates expressly disapproved of the practice. Under Roman law, abortion sometimes occurred but family planning was conducted mainly through the exposure of healthy newborns–usually to protect the rights and interests of the biological father. References to abortion were included in the writings of Ovid, Seneca, Juvenal and Pliny, who included a list of abortifacients (drugs that induce an abortion) in one text. Early Christian philosophers, including Ivo of Chartres and Gratian, disapproved of abortion when it broke the link between the sexual act and procreation but argued that abortion of what Ivo termed an "unformed embryo" did not constitute homicide.

Religious authorities have taken various positions on abortion throughout history (see Religion and abortion). In 1588, Pope Sixtus V adopted a papal bull adopting the position of St. Thomas Aquinas that contraception and abortion were crimes against nature and sins against marriage. This verdict was relaxed three years later by Pope Gregory XIV, who pronounced that abortion before "hominization" should not be subject to church penalties that were any stricter than civil penalties. Common law positions on abortion in individual countries varied significantly from country to country.

As a matter of common law in England and the United States, abortion was illegal anytime after quickening — when the movements of the fetus could first be felt by the woman. In the 19th Century, many Western countries began to use statutes to codify or further restrictions on abortion. Anti-abortion forces were led by a combination of conservative groups opposed to abortion on moral grounds and medical professionals who were concerned about the danger presented by the procedure and the regular involvement of non-medical personnel in performing abortions.

It became clear in the following years, however, that illegal abortions continued to take place in large numbers even where abortions were expressly illegal. It was difficult to obtain sufficient evidence to prosecute the women and abortion doctors, and judges and juries were often reluctant to convict. Henry Morgentaler, for instance, was never convicted by a jury. Many were also outraged at the invasion of privacy and the medical problems resulting from abortions taking place illegally in medically dangerous circumstances. Political movements soon coalesced around the legalization of abortion and liberalization of existing laws.

By the early 20th century, many countries had begun to legalize abortions when performed to protect the life of the woman, and in some cases to protect the health of the woman. Under Vladimir Lenin, the Soviet Union legalized all abortions in 1920, but this was fully reversed in 1936 by Joseph Stalin in order to increase population growth. Iceland was the first Western country to legalize therapeutic abortion under limited circumstances, doing so in 1935, and the earliest country to do so without recriminalizing it later. Only a handful of countries – mostly in Scandinavia —decriminalized abortion before Britain did so in 1967. Other countries soon followed, including Canada (1969), the United States (1973 in most states, pursuant to the federal Supreme Court decision, which legalized abortion nationwide), France (1975), Austria (1975), New Zealand (1977), Italy (1978), the Netherlands (1980) and Belgium (1990). However, these countries vary greatly in the circumstances under which abortion is permitted. In 1975, the West German Supreme Court struck down a law legalizing abortion, holding that they contradict the constitution’s human rights guarantees. After Germany’s reunification, despite the legal status of abortion in the former East Germany, a compromise was reached which deemed most abortions illegal but does not penalize it under certain circumstances.

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Parental advisory info

The Parental Advisory sticker is found on many records.

The Parental Advisory sticker is found on many records.

Parental Advisory is a message affixed by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) to audio and video recordings in the United States containing offensive language and/or content. Albums began to be labeled for "explicit lyrics" in 1985, after pressure from the Parents Music Resource Center. In 1990, the PMRC worked with the RIAA to standardize the label, creating the now-familiar black and white design. To some, it has become known as the "Tipper sticker" because of Tipper Gore’s visible role in the PMRC.

Some politicians have tried to criminalize the sale of explicit records to minors, and others have gone so far as to try to ban such records. Certain retailers refuse to sell albums containing the label, and many others limit the sale of such albums to adults only, although, most stores have settled on an age limit of 17 in order to buy an album containing the label. While the label is most prevalent on heavy metal, dance pop, alternative rock, punk and, especially, hip-hop/rap albums, it can appear on any genre of CD which the RIAA believes warrants the need for one.

Although many retailers use the sticker as a criterion for censorship, whether or not to use the sticker is determined by the record company that publishes the album.[1] Many albums with a few instances of strong profanity, instances of violence, and/or sexual situations in lyrics have a "parental advisory" sticker, (Examples include Janet Jackson’s All for You and Damita Jo, Nirvana’s Incesticide and In Utero, Gorillaz’ self-titled album, Godsmack’s Awake, Kate Nash’s Made of Bricks, Lily Allen’s Alright, Still, Liz Phair’s self-titled album, Justin Timberlake’s FutureSex/LoveSounds, and Garbage’s Absolute Garbage, among others.), although albums with multiple uses of explicit language may not. It is not a rating; there are no true standards for a parental advisory label. It is totally up to the record company whether an album needs one or not. Just because an album has a parental advisory label, doesn’t mean that it is any more explicit than an album that does not have that label. For instance, the punk rock group NOFX has largely avoided the Parental Advisory sticker (though their albums contain many profanities) because they are published on the independent label, Fat Wreck Chords. Other independent artists avoid the label such as Modest Mouse (though on iTunes some of their albums have Parental Advisory) as well as Negativland, and their album Escape from Noise was released on SST Records and Seeland Records, both of them independent labels; also Jumpsteady, another independent label artist, uses many profanities but their CD’s are also PA-free. But some major label artists’ CDs evade Parental Advisory, such as albums from Atreyu, Deftones, Green Day, Incubus, and Senses Fail, Maroon 5’s Songs About Jane and It Won’t Be Soon Before Long, Mýa’s Moodring, Pussycat Dolls’ PCD, Tori Amos’ Boys for Pele, Jodeci’s Diary of a Mad Band, Arctic Monkeys’ Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not and Favourite Worst Nightmare, Breaking Benjamin’s Saturate (which included sexual references and over a dozen "fuck"’s) and some movie soundtracks such as Godzilla: The Album.

Some albums may receive Parental Advisory labels even though these albums contain no profane, sexual, or violent lyrics at all. Examples include Danzig’s self-titled album, Gorillaz’ G-Sides, Sum 41’s Does This Look Infected? (which only has mild and infrequent profanity), Savatage’s Fight for the Rock, Story of the Year’s Page Avenue, Slayer’s Seasons in the Abyss, and Britney Spears’ Blackout (which has two censored songs, "Hot as Ice" and "Get Naked (I Got a Plan)" both using the word "fuck"; the album is also sexually suggestive.)

Albums released on Sony BMG’s record labels (Arista Records, Columbia Records, Jive Records, J Records, among others) that contain the PA sticker provide additional explanations of why the disc warrants the sticker. On System of a Down’s Hypnotize, for instance, under the label it reads "STRONG LANGUAGE, SEXUAL + VIOLENT CONTENT". Radiohead’s Hail to the Thief has a warning of the strong offensive language on inside the CD booklet, next to the listed lyrics.

Many albums with the label have clean versions available, especially on online music stores such as iTunes or Napster. However, some of the "clean" stickers may be given to albums with no profanity, such as the case with Blur’s self-titled album, which was given a clean sticker because it had three tracks within "Essex Dogs": "Dancehall", the former song, and "Intermission". Relient K had a similar case on iTunes, where they released a "clean" version of "Must Have Done Something Right", even though the band is known for not using any profanities. In 2007, rock group Garbage’s "best of" collection was released worldwide through Warner Music Group, with all editions carrying a parental advisory label. A "clean" version of the album was, however, released through iTunes, yet the single instance of profanity found throughout the album (on the track "Why Do You Love Me") remained uncensored.

A few albums have a note saying that the lyrics are of an adult nature, but without the sticker: Back to Bedlam by James Blunt, Jimmy Buffett’s Live in Hawaii, Guns N’ Roses’s "The Spaghetti Incident?", Savatage’s Gutter Ballet and Overseer’s Wreckage. However, Back To Bedlam only contains one use of explicit language (fuck).

There have been some cases of unusual use of the label. After Frank Zappa campaigned against music censorship in 1985, the sticker was attached to his next album, Jazz from Hell, because of the title of one track, "G-Spot Tornado", although the album is entirely instrumental and contains no lyrics that could be "explicit lyrics". The designation of instrumentals as taboo, however, is nothing new; in the 1960s, the "Rumble" instrumental by Link Wray was banned from some radio stations because it could supposedly incite "juvenile violence."

There has been the observation that the stickers appear to have had the reverse effect to what was intended - the sticker can make an album more desirable (to teenagers, for example), and the sticker has been called the musical equivalent of an "alcohol content" label. The RIAA, however, officially states that "it’s not a PAL Notice that kids look for, it’s the music. Independent research shows kids put limited weight on lyrics in deciding which music they like, caring more about rhythm and melody. The PAL Notice alone isn’t enough incentive."[1]

The label is also seen in the United Kingdom, Portugal, Greece, Finland, the Netherlands, Brazil, Denmark, South Africa, Japan , Australia and, Canada on albums of American origin. An album with the label is automatically banned in some conservative countries. At Wal-Mart stores, only a "clean" version of an album is allowed, and if no "clean" version of the album is available, the album will not be available for purchase. However, Wal-Mart’s policy on carrying "explicit" versions of music albums in their stores seems to vary by country, as albums with the parental advisory label are found in Canadian Wal-Mart stores, for example.

Child support:

Legal theory

Child support is based on the policy that both parents are obligated to support their children, even when the children are not living with both biological parents. Though courts typically permit visitation rights to non-custodial parents, in such separations one parent is often awarded custody and the role of primary caregiver. In such cases, the other parent still remains obligated to pay a proportion of the costs involved in raising the child. Child support may also be ordered to be paid by one parent to another when both parents are custodial parents and they share the child raising responsibilities. In rare cases, a parent with sole custody of his or her children may be ordered to pay child support to the noncustodial parent to support the children while they are in the care of that parent.

In most jurisdictions there is no need for the parents to be married, and only paternity and/or maternity (filiation) need to be demonstrated for a child support obligation to be found by a competent court. Child support may also operate through the principle of estoppel where a de facto parent that is in loco parentis for a sufficient time to establish a permanent parental relationship with the child or children.[19]

Child support vs. contact:

While the issues of child support and visitation or contact may be decided in the same divorce or paternity settlement, in most jurisdictions the two rights and obligations are completely separate and individually enforceable. Custodial parents may not withhold contact to "punish" a noncustodial parent for failing to pay some or all child support required. Conversely, a noncustodial parent is required to pay child support even if he or she is partially or fully denied contact with the child.[20][21]

Additionally, a non-custodial parent is responsible for child support payments even if he or she does not wish to have a relationship with his or her child. Courts have maintained that a child’s right to financial support from parents supersedes an adult’s wish not to assume a parenting role.[22]

While child support and contact are separate issues, in some jurisdictions, the latter may influence the former. In the United Kingdom, for example, the amount of support ordered may be reduced based on the number of nights per week the child regularly spends at the non-custodial parent’s home. [23]

Use of child support payments:

All international and national child support regulations recognize that every parent has an obligation to support his or her child. Ergo, the custodial and non-custodial parents are required to share the responsibility for their child (ren)’s expenses.

Support monies collected are expected to be used for the child’s expenses, including food, shelter, clothing and educational needs. They are not meant to function as "spending money" for the child. [31] Courts have held that it is acceptable for child support payments to be used to indirectly benefit the custodial parent. For example, child support monies may be used to heat the child’s residence, even if this means that other people also benefit from living in a heated home.

Child support orders may earmark funds for specific items for the child, such as school fees, day care or medical expenses. In some cases, non-custodial parents may pay for these items directly. For example, they may pay tuition fees directly to their child’s school, rather than remitting money for the tuition to the custodial parent.[33] Orders may also require each parent to assume a percentage of expenses for various needs. For instance, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts, custodial parents are required to pay for the first $100 of annual uninsured medical costs incurred by each child. Only then will the courts consider authorizing child-support money from a non-custodial parent to be used for said costs.

Many American universities also consider non-custodial parents to be partially responsible for paying college costs, and will consider their income in their financial aid determinations. In certain states, non-custodial parents may be ordered by the court to assist with these expenses.[35]

In the United States, non-custodial parents may receive a medical order that requires them to add their children to their health insurance plans. In some states both parents are responsible for providing medical insurance for the child/children.[36][37] If both parents possess health coverage, the child may be added to the more beneficial plan, or use one to supplement the other.[38] Children of active or retired members of the U.S. armed forces are also eligible for health coverage as military dependents, and may be enrolled in the DEERS program at no cost to the non-custodial parent.[39]

Accountability regulations for child support money vary by country and state. In some jurisdictions, such as Australia and custodial parents are trusted to use support payments in the best interest of the child, and thus are not required to provide details on specific purchases.[40] In other jurisdictions, a custodial parent might legally be required to give specific details on how child support money is spent at the request of the court or the non-custodial parent. In the United States, 10 states (Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon, and Washington) allow courts to demand an accounting on expenses and spending from custodial parents. Additionally, Alabama courts have authorized such accounting under certain specific circumstances.

Obtaining child support:

Child support laws and regulations vary around the world. Legal intervention is not mandatory: some parents have informal or voluntary agreements or arrangements that do not involve the courts, where financial child support and/or other expenses are provided by non-custodial parents to assist in supporting their child(ren).[41][42][43]

A major impetus to collection of child support in many places is recovery of welfare expenditure. A resident or custodial parent receiving public assistance, as in the United States,[44] is required to assign his or her right to child support to the Department of Welfare before cash assistance is received. Another common requirement of welfare benefits in some jurisdictions is that the custodial parent must pursue child support from the non-custodial parent.

[edit] Court procedures for obtaining Child Support

In divorce cases, child support payments may be determined as part of the divorce settlement, along with other issues, such as alimony, custody and visitation. In other cases, there are several steps that must be undertaken to receive court-ordered child support. Some custodial parents may hire lawyers to oversee their child support cases for them; others may file their own applications in their local courthouses.

While procedures vary by jurisdiction, the process of filing a motion for court ordered child support typically has several basic steps.

1. The custodial parent, or his or her attorney, must appear at the local magistrate or courthouse to file an application or complaint for the establishment of child support. The information required varies by jurisdiction, but generally collects identifying data about both parents and the child(ren) involved in the case, including their names, social security or tax identification numbers and dates of birth. Parents may also be required to furnish details relating to their marriage and divorce, if applicable, as well as documents certifying the identity and parentage of the child(ren). Local jurisdictions may charge fees for filing such applications, however, if the custodial parent is receiving any sort of public assistance, these fees may be waived.[45][46][47][48]

2. Once the non-custodial parent is located, he or she will be visited by a local sheriff, police officer or process server and served with a court summons. The summons informs the non-custodial parent that she or he is being sued for child support. Once served, the non-custodial parent must attend a mandatory court hearing to determine if he or she is responsible for child support payments.[49][50]

3. In cases where parentage of a child is denied, has not been established by marriage or is not listed on the birth certificate, or where paternity fraud is suspected, courts may order or require establishment of paternity. Paternity may be established voluntarily if the father signs an affadavit or may be proven through DNA testing in contested cases. Once the identity of the father is confirmed through DNA testing, the child’s birth certificate may be amended to include the father’s name.[51][52][53][54][55]

4. After the responsibility for child support is established and questions of paternity have been answered to the court’s satisfaction, the court will order the non-custodial parent to make timely child support payments and any other provisions, such as medical orders, will be established.

Calculating Child Support:

Various approaches to calculating the amount of child support award payments exist. Many jurisdictions consider multiple sources of information when determining support, taking into account the income of the parents, the number and ages of children living in the home, basic living expenses and school fees. If the child has special needs, such as treatment for a serious illness or disability, these costs may also be taken into consideration.[56][57][58][59]

Guidelines for support orders may be based on laws which require non-custodial parents to pay a flat percentage of their annual income toward their children’s expenses. Often two approaches are combined. In the United Kingdom, for instance, there are four basic rates of child support based on the non-custodial parents’ income, which are then modified and adjusted based on several factors.[60] [61][62] In the United States, the federal government requires all states to have guideline calculations that can be verified and certified. These are usually computer programs based upon certain financial information including, earnings, visitation, taxes, insurance costs, and several other factors.

Once established, child support orders remain static unless otherwise reviewed. Custodial and non-custodial parents reserve the right to request a court review for modification (typically one year or more after the issuance of the order). For instance, if the non-custodial parent becomes unemployed or faces financial hardship, he or she may petition the court for a reduction in support payments. Conversely, if the child’s expenses increase, the custodial parent may ask the court to increase payments to cover the new costs. Although both parents have the right to petition the court for a support order adjustment, modifications are not automatic, and a judge may decide not to alter the amount of support after hearing the facts of the case. That is to say, simply because a non-custodial parent’s income has decreased, a court may find that the decrease in income is of no fault of the child, and will not decrease the child’s expenses, and therefore should not have an impact on him or her financially. Likewise, a court may find that an increase in the child’s expenses may have been calculated by the custodial parent and is not necessary, and therefore the support obligation of the non-custodial parent should not increase. [63][64][65][66]

Child support payments:

Child support payments are distributed in a variety of ways. In cases where a non-custodial parent is liable for specific expenses such as school tuition, he or she may pay them directly instead of through the custodial parent.[67]

In some jurisdictions, non-custodial parents are require to remit their payments to the governing federal or state child support enforcement agency. The payments are recorded, any portion required to reimburse the government is subtracted, and then the remainder is passed on to the custodial parent, either through direct deposit or checks.[68][69][70][71]

The first payee for child support depends on the current welfare status of the payee. For example, if the custodial parent is currently receiving a monthly check from the government, all current support collected during said month is paid to the government to reimburse the monies paid to the custodial parent. Regarding families formerly on assistance, current support is paid to the family first, and only after said support is received, the government may then collect additional payments to reimburse itself for previously paid assistance to the custodial parent. See 42 USC 657: "(A) Current Support Payments: To the extent that the amount so collected does not exceed the amount required to be paid to the family for the month in which collected, the State shall distribute the amount so collected to the family.".[72]

Within the United States, a 2007 study conducted through the University of Baltimore estimates that 50% of all child support arrears are owed to the government to reimburse welfare expenses. Half of U.S. states pass along none of the child support they collect to low-income families receiving welfare and other assistance, instead reimbursing themselves and the federal government. Most of the rest only pass along $50.00 per month. The bipartisan 2006 Deficit Reduction Act and other measures have sought to reduce the amount of money claimed by the government and to ensure that more funds are accessible by children and families, noting that more non-custodial parents are willing to pay child support when their children directly benefit from payments. [73]

The duration of support orders varies both by jurisdiction and by case. Requirements for support typically end when the child reaches the age of majority, which may range in age from 16 [74] to 19 [75][76][77] or graduates from high school, whichever happens later. Some countries and states have provisions which allow support to continue past the age of majority if the child is enrolled as a full-time, degree-seeking post-secondary student.[78][79][80]If the non-custodial parent owes back child support, he or she must continue to make payments until the debt is satisfied, regardless of the age of the child.

Several circumstances exist which allow for the termination of a support order for a child under the age of majority. These include the child’s marriage, legal emancipation or death.[81][82]

My goal is too make the world a better place. I’m not in this for myself I’m in this for the world. I work prostitute to what some people might be able to have thoght, I could not have done, when I was growing up. The house of representatatives took the vote to allow me to be a member within the, U.S.A House of reps along time ago and I plan on making major changes, that some people thought could never happened. You have to decide if you can trust regardless devon victory( no caps on name tm.) your opinions count: but we can handel the deficites of the world with out opinions , so feal privliged..More info on takeing the option of chosing RDV or the option of not chosing RDV.

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Bureau of Transportation Statistics

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Bureau of the Census

Bureau of the Public Debt

Business Reference Services

Carlsbad Area Office

Cataloging Directorate

Cataloging Distribution Service

Cataloging Policy and Support Office (CPSO)

Cataloging in Publication Division

Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER)

Center for Delivery, Organization, and Markets

Center for Devices and Radiological Health

Center for Drug Evaluation and Research

Center for Earth and Planetary Studies (CEPS)

Center for Faith-Based Initiatives

Center for Financing, Access, and Cost Trends

Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

Center for Information Technology

Center for Outcomes and Evidence

Center for Practice and Technology Assessment

Center for Primary Care, Prevention, and Clinical Partnerships

Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety

Center for Scientific Review

Center for Veterinary Medicine

Center for the Book

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board

Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory

Chicago Region

Chief Financial Officers Council

Chief Information Officer

Chief Information Officer

Chief Information Officers Council

Chief Information Officers Council

Chief Procurement Officer

Chief of Naval Operations

Children’s Literature Center

Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation

Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee

Civil Air Patrol

Civil Division

Civil Rights Division

Civil Rights

Climate Diagnostics Center

Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory

Clinical Center

Coast Guard

Cognitive, Neural and Biomolecular Science and Technology Division

Command, Control, Communications, Computers

Commandant of the Marine Corps

Commission of Fine Arts

Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (Helsinki Commission)

Committee for Purchase from People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled

Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements

Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States

Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)

Community Development Financial Institutions Fund

Community Relations Service

Community Relations Service

Compliance Review Staff

Congressional Budget Office (CBO)

Congressional Research Service

Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)

Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum

Coordinating Council on Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention

Corporate Programs Division

Corporation for National and Community Service

Cotton, Oilseeds, Tobacco and Seeds Division

Council of Economic Advisers

Council on Environmental Quality

Courts of Appeal/Federal Court Finder

Criminal Division

Critical Infrastructure

Customer Service: Departmental Account Representative Division

D.C. Circuit via FindLaw

D.C. Circuit via Georgetown University Law Center

DLA Office of Operations Research and Resource Analysis (DORRA)

DOT Library

Dairy, Livestock and Poultry Division

Dallas Region

Defense Acquisition University

Defense Administrative Support Center

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)

Defense Commissary Agency (DeCA)

Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA)

Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA)

Defense Contract Management District International (DCMDI)

Defense Contract Management District West (DCMDW)

Defense Courier Service

Defense Distribution Center (DDC)

Defense Energy Support Center (DESC)

Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS)

Defense Human Resources Activity

Defense Industrial Supply Center (DISC)

Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA)

Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)

Defense Legal Services Agency

Defense Logistics Agency (DLA)

Defense Logistics Information Service (DLIS)

Defense Logistics Support Command (DLSC)

Defense National Stockpile Center (DNSC)

Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB)

Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office

Defense Reutilization and Marketing Service (DRMS)

Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA)

Defense Security Service (DSS)

Defense Supply Center Columbus (DSCC)

Defense Supply Center Philadelphia (DSCP)

Defense Supply Center Richmond (DSCR)

Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC)

Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA)

Delaware River Basin Commission

Democratic Caucus

Democratic Leadership

Democratic Whip

Denver Region

Department of Agriculture

Department of Commerce

Department of Defense (DefenseLINK)

Department of Defense Education Activity

Department of Education

Department of Energy

Department of Health and Human Services

Department of Homeland Security

Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)

Department of Justice

Department of Labor (DOL)

Department of State

Department of Transportation

Department of Veterans Affairs

Department of the Air Force

Department of the Army

Department of the Interior

Department of the Navy Environmental Program

Department of the Navy

Department of the Treasury

Departmental Account Representative Division

Departmental Appeals Board

Departmental Representative to the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board

Deputy Chief Financial Officer

Director, Marine Corps Staff

Directorate for Command, Control, Communications, and Computer System (J-6)

Directorate for Intelligence (J-2)

Directorate for Manpower and Personnel (J-1)

Directorate for Operations

Directorate of Educational Policy and Development

Directorate of Integration

Directorate of Management

District Courts

District Offices

Division of Bird Habitat Conservation

Division of Energy and Mineral Resources

Division of Federal Employees’ Compensation

Division of Forestry

Division of Health Assessment and Consultation

Division of Health Education and Promotion

Division of Health Studies

Division of Information Technology Management

Division of Law Enforcement

Division of Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation

Division of Public Affairs

Division of Toxicology

Document Automation and Production Service

Domestic Policy Council

Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)

Dryden Flight Research Center

Dwight D. Eisenhower Library and Museum

Economic Development Administration

Economic Research Service

Economics and Statistics Administration

Educational Partnerships Program

Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC)

Eighth Circuit via FindLaw

Eighth Circuit

Eighth U.S. Army

Electronics Division

Electronics and Electrical Engineering Laboratory

Eleventh Circuit Published Opinions

Eleventh Circuit via Emory University School of Law

Eleventh Circuit via FindLaw

Eleventh Wing

Employee Benefits Security Administration

Employees’ Compensation Appeals Board (ECAB)

Employment Standards Administration

Employment and Training Administration

Endangered Species Committee

Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy

Energy Information Administration (EIA)

Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)

Enforcement Center

Engineering Materials and Physical Science

Environmental Measurement Laboratory (EML)

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

Environmental Research Laboratories

Environmental Studies Program Information System

Environmental Technology Laboratory

Epidemiology Program Office

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)

Equal Employment Opportunity Office

Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL)

Ethics Office

European Command

European Reading Room

Evidence-based Practice Centers

Executive Office for Asset Forfeiture

Executive Office for Immigration Review

Executive Office for United States Attorneys

Executive Office for Weed and Seed

Executive Office of the President

Export Administration Review Board

Export-Import Bank of the United States

FBI Laboratory

Facilities and Leadership

Family Policy Compliance Office

Farm Credit Administration

Farm Service Agency

Farm and Foreign Agriculture Services

FedWorld Information Network

Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board (FASAB)

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)

Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

Federal Circuit via Emory University School of Law

Federal Circuit via FindLaw

Federal Circuit via Georgetown University Law Center

Federal Communications Commission (FCC)

Federal Computer Incident Response Center

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)

Federal Depository Library Program Administration (FDLP)

Federal Duck Stamp Office

Federal Election Commission (FEC)

Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA

Federal Energy Management Program

Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)

Federal Executive Board

Federal Executive Institute and Management Development Centers

Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council

Federal Financing Bank

Federal Highway Administration

Federal Housing Finance Board

Federal Interagency Committee for the Management of Noxious and Exotic Weed

Federal Interagency Committee on Education

Federal Job Announcement Search

Federal Judicial Center

Federal Labor Relations Authority

Federal Laboratory Consortium for Technology Transfer

Federal Lands Highway Office

Federal Law Enforcement Training Center

Federal Library and Information Center Committee

Federal Library and Information Center Committee

Federal Maritime Commission

Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service

Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission

Federal Railroad Administration

Federal Relay Service

Federal Research Division

Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Federal Reserve Bank of Boston

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Federal Retirement Programs

Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board

Federal Supply Service

Federal Technology Service (formerly Federal Telecommunications Service)

Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

Federal Transit Administration

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab)

Fernald Environmental Management Project

Field Offices

Fifth Circuit via FindLaw

Financial Crimes Enforcement Network

Financial Management Service

Fire and Aviation Management

First Circuit via Emory University School of Law

First Circuit via FindLaw

Flight Standards Service

Fogarty International Center

Food Safety Information Center

Food Safety and Inspection Service

Food and Drug Administration

Food and Nutrition Information Center

Food and Nutrition Service

Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services

Force Structure Resources and Assessment Directorate (J-8)

Forecast Systems Laboratory

Foreign Claims Settlement Commission

Foreign Investment Survey

Foreign Service Institute

Forest & Fishery Products Division

Forest Service

Fourth Circuit via Emory University School of Law

Fourth Circuit via FindLaw

Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum

Freer Gallery of Art

GITS Security

GPO Online Bookstore

Gateway to Government Food Safety Information

General Services Administration (GSA)

Geographic Data Service Center

Geography and Map Division (G&M)

Geological Resources Division

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

George Bush Presidential Library and Museum

Gerald R. Ford Library and Museum

Glenn Research Center

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

Goddard Space Flight Center

Golden Field Office

Government Accountability Office

Government Domain Registration and Services

Government Information Xchange (GIX)

Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae)

Government Printing Office (GPO)

Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration

Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory

Great Plains Region

Hanford Site

Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation

Headquarters United States Air Force

Headquarters, United States Marine Corps

Health Resources and Services Administration

Health Services

Herbert C. Hoover Building Library

Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum

High Performance Computing and Communications (HPCC)

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden

Hispanic Reading Room

History and Museums Division

Horticultural and Tropical Products Division (H&TP)

House Leadership Offices

House Majority Whip

House Republican Conference

House Republican Policy Committee

Human Resources Center

Human Resources Management

Human Resources Management

Human Systems Department

Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL)

Idaho Operations Office

Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor Commission

Import Administration (IA)

Independent Validation and Verification Facility

Indian Arts and Crafts Board

Indian Health Service (IHS)

Industrial College of the Armed Forces

Industrial and Corporate Programs

Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection

Information Electronics and Surveillance Department

Information Management and Information Technology

Information Operations

Information Resource Center

Information Resources Management College

Information Security Oversight Office

Information Security Oversight Office

Information Technology Laboratory

Information Technology Solutions

Information/Publications

Infrastructure Protection and Computer Intrusion Squad (WFO IPCIS)

Infrastructure

Inspector General

Installations and Logistics Department

Institute for Federal Printing and Electronic Publishing

Institute for Telecommunications Sciences

Institute of Education Services

Institute of Museum and Library Services

Insurance Service

Inter-American Foundation

Internal Revenue Service (IRS)

International Cultural Property Protection

International Field Office

International Trade Administration

J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board

James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation

Japan Documentation Center

Japan-United States Friendship Commission

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Jimmy Carter Library and Museum

John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library and Museum

Johnson Space Center

Joint Board for the Enrollment of Actuaries

Joint Chiefs of Staff

Joint Forces Command

Joint Forces Staff College

Joint Military Intelligence College

Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation

Justice Information Center

Justice Management Division

Kansas City Plant (Allied Signal Inc)

Kansas City Region

Kennedy Space Center

Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory (KAPL)

Langley Research Center

Law Library of Congress

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL)

Legal Services Corporation

Library of Congress Online Public Access Catalog

Library of Congress

Loan Guaranty Service

Local History & Genealogy

Local Offices

Logistics Directorate (J-4)

Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)

Lower Colorado Region

Lydon Baines Johnson Library and Museum

Main: Humanities & Social Sciences

Management Service Office

Manpower and Reserve Affairs

Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory

Manufacturing Extension Partnership

Manufacturing Technology Division

Manuscript Division

Mapping and Analysis for Public Safety

Marine Corps Combat Development Command

Marine Corps Recruiting Command

Marine Corps Systems Command

Marine Corps Uniform Board

Marine Expeditionary Units

Marine Mammal Commission

Maritime Administration

Market Access Compliance (MAC)

Marketing and Regulatory Programs

Marshall Space Flight Center

Materials Management Service (MMS)

Materials Science and Engineering Laboratory

Materials Science and Technology Division

Mathematical, Computer, and Information Sciences Division

Measurement and Standards Laboratories

Mechanics and Energy Conversion Science and Technology Division

Medical Science and Technology Division

Medicare Payment Advisory Commission

Merit Systems Protection Board

Miamisburg Environmental Management Project (Mound)

Microform Reading Room

Mid-Pacific Region

Migratory Bird Conservation Commission

Mike Monroney Aeronautical Center

Mine Safety and Health Administration

Minerals Management Service

Minerals and Geology Management

Minority Business Development Agency

Missile Defense Agency

Mississippi River Commission

Moffett Federal Airfield

Morris K. Udall Scholarship and Excellence in National Environmental Policy Foundation

Motion Picture and Television Reading Room

Motor Carrier and Highway Safety

NASA Centers

NASA Headquarters

NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps

National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

National Agricultural Library

National Agricultural Statistics Service

National Air and Space Museum

National Applied Resource Sciences Center

National Arboretum

National Arboretum

National Archives Trust Fund Board

National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)

National Assessment of Educational Progress

National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare

National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare

National Business Center (NBC)

National Cancer Institute

National Capital Planning Commission

National Cemetery Administration (NCA)

National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine

National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE)

National Center for Education Research

National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)

National Center for Environmental Health

National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention

National Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention

National Center for Health Statistics

National Center for Infectious Diseases

National Center for Injury Prevention and Control

National Center for Minority Health and Health Disparities

National Center for Research Resources

National Center for Toxicological Research (NCTR)

National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities

National Chaplain Center

National Climatic Data Center (NCDC)

National Commission on Libraries and Information Science

National Communications System

National Council on Disability

National Credit Union Administration (NCUA)

National Criminal Justice Reference Service

National Defense University

National Drug Intelligence Center

National Economic Council

National Endowment for the Arts

National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)

National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)

National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service (NESDIS)

National Eye Institute

National Finance Center

National Gallery of Art

National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC)

National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency

National Guard

National Guideline Clearinghouse

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)

National Historical Publications and Records Commission

National Human Genome Research Institute

National Human Resource Management Center (NHRMC)

National Ice Center

National Immunization Program

National Indian Gaming Commission

National Information Resource Management Center

National Information Technology Center

National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC)

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

National Institute of Corrections

National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institute of Justice

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institute of Nursing Research

National Institute of Standards and Technology

National Institute on Aging

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research

National Institute on Drug Abuse

National Institutes of Health

National Interagency Fire Center

National Invasive Species Council

National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)

National Law Enforcement and Corrections Technology Center (JustNet)

National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS)

National Library of Education

National Library of Medicine

National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS)

National Mediation Board

National Mine Health and Safety Academy

National Museum of African Art

National Museum of American History

National Museum of Natural History

National Museum of the American Indian

National Nuclear Security Administration

National Ocean Service (NOS)

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)

National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC)

National Park Foundation

National Park Service NatureNet

National Park Service

National Petroleum Technology Office (NPTO)

National Portrait Gallery

National Postal Museum

National Quality Program

National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak)

National Reconnaissance Office

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

National Research and Development Centers

National Response Center

National Rural Development Partnership (NRDP)

National Science Foundation (NSF)

National Security Agency/Central Security Service

National Security Council

National Severe Storms Laboratory

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

National Telecommunications and Information Administration

National Training Center

National Transportation Library

National Transportation Safety Board

National War College

National Weather Service (NWS)

National Wild Horse and Burro Program

National Zoological Park

Natural Resources Conservation Service

Naval Criminal Investigative Service

Naval Expeditionary Warfare

Naval Petroleum Reserve

Naval Research Laboratory

Naval Space Science & Technology Program Office

Navigation Center

Navy Science and Technology Ship Office

Nevada Operations Office

Nevada Test Site

New Brunswick Laboratory (NBL)

New York Region

Newspaper and Current Periodical Room

Ninth Circuit via FindLaw

Nixon Presidential Materials

Nonproliferation and Disarmament Fund

Northern Command

Northwest Power and Conservation Planning Council

Nuclear Incident Response Team

Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)

Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education

Oak Ridge National Laboratories

Oak Ridge Operations (ORO)

Oak Ridge Operations’ Environmental Management Program

Oakland Operations Office

Occupational Health and Environmental Services (OHES)

Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)

Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission

Ocean Atmosphere and Space Department

Office for Civil Rights

Office for Civil Rights

Office for Domestic Preparedness

Office for Public Health Emergency Preparedness

Office for Victims of Crime

Office of Acquisition and Materiel Management

Office of Acquisition and Property Management

Office of Administration

Office of Administration

Office of Administration

Office of Administrative Law Judges

Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research OCTR

Office of Aircraft Services

Office of Allowances

Office of American Indian Trust

Office of Applied Science

Office of Asset Management

Office of Authentication

Office of Biological and Environmental Research

Office of Boating Safety

Office of Bridge Technology

Office of Budget and Management Services

Office of Budget and Program Analysis

Office of Budget

Office of Business Innovations (OBI)

Office of Business Liaison

Office of Chief Financial Officer

Office of Chief Information Officer

Office of Children’s Health

Office of Citizen Services and Communications

Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management(RW)

Office of Communications and Knowledge Transfer

Office of Communications

Office of Community Development

Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS)

Office of Community Planning and Development

Office of Compliance

Office of Comptroller

Office of Congressional Affairs

Office of Congressional Relations

Office of Congressional and Intergovernmental Affairs

Office of Congressional and Intergovernmental Relations

Office of Congressional and Legislative Affairs

Office of Congressional and Public Affairs

Office of Defense Programs (DP)

Office of Defense Trade Controls

Office of Departmental Operations and Coordination

Office of Disability Employment Policy

Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

Office of Dispute Resolution

Office of Domestic Finance

Office of Economic Adjustment

Office of Economic Impact and Diversity

Office of Educational Partnerships

Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (OESE)

Office of Energy Assurance

Office of Enforcement

Office of English Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and Academic Achievement for Limited English Proficient Students

Office of Environment, Safety and Health (EH)

Office of Environmental Management (EM)

Office of Equal Opportunity Program

Office of Equal Opportunity

Office of Ethics

Office of Executive Secretariat

Office of Extramural Research, Education, and Priority Populations

Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity

Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives

Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs

Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight

Office of Federal Student Aid

Office of Field Policy and Management

Office of Finance: Electronic Funds Transfer Enrollment and W-9 Forms

Office of Financial Management

Office of Financial Management

Office of FirstGov

Office of Fissile Materials Disposition

Office of Fossil Energy

Office of General Counsel

Office of General Counsel

Office of General Counsel

Office of General Counsel

Office of General Counsel

Office of Genomics and Disease Prevention

Office of Global Programs

Office of Government Ethics

Office of Governmentwide Policy

Office of Hearings and Appeals

Office of Hearings and Appeals

Office of Hearings and Appeals

Office of Housing/Federal Housing Authority (FHA)

Office of Human Resources

Office of Independent Oversight & Performance Assurance (OA)

Office of Indian Education Programs

Office of Indian Education

Office of Information Resources Management

Office of Information and Privacy

Office of Information and Technology

Office of Information

Office of Innovation and Improvement

Office of Inspector General

Office of Inspector General

Office of Inspector General

Office of Inspector General

Office of Inspector General

Office of Inspector General

Office of Inspector General

Office of Inspector General

Office of Insular Affairs

Office of Intelligence Policy and Review

Office of Intergovernmental and Interagency Affairs

Office of Intergovernmental and Public Liaison

Office of International Affairs

Office of International Information Programs (IIP)

Office of International Trade

Office of Justice Programs

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinqunecy Prevention

Office of Labor Relations

Office of Labor-Management Standards

Office of Law Enforcement

Office of Lead Hazard Control

Office of Legal Counsel

Office of Legal Policy

Office of Legislation and Congressional Affairs

Office of Legislative Affairs

Office of Legislative Affairs

Office of Legislative and Congressional Affairs