H.R.1547 - Stephanie Tubbs Jones Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act of 2009

To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide for collegiate housing and infrastructure grants. view all titles (2)

All Bill Titles

  • Official: To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide for collegiate housing and infrastructure grants. as introduced.
  • Short: Stephanie Tubbs Jones Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act of 2009 as introduced.

This Bill currently has no wiki content. If you would like to create a wiki entry for this bill, please Login, and then select the wiki tab to create it.

Sponsor

Representative

Shelley Berkley

D-NV

View Co-Sponsors (181)
 
Introduced
 
House
Passes
 
Senate
Passes
 
President
Signs
 

 
03/17/09
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Latest Action Mar 17, 2009Referred to the House Committee on W... Related Bills (1) & Issues (6)
3/17/2009--Introduced.Stephanie Tubbs Jones Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act of 2009 - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to allow tax-exempt charitable or educational organizations to make collegiate housing and infrastructure improvement grants to certain tax-exempt social clubs (

Official Summary

3/17/2009--Introduced.Stephanie Tubbs Jones Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act of 2009 - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to allow tax-exempt charitable or educational organizations to make collegiate housing and infrastructure improvement grants to certain tax-exempt social clubs (e.g., college fraternities and sororities) which apply such grants to their collegiate housing property.

...Read the Rest

FEED
Recent News Coverage

Hmmmm, no news coverage found for this bill at this time. This means that this this bill has not yet been mentioned on a publicly-searchable news website by either its official number (for example, "H.R. 3200") or title (for example, "America's Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009"). As soon as that changes, our daily automated search across the Web will catch it and include it here. If this bill is of interest to you, you can write a letter to the editor referring to this bill by name, and if your letter is published on the Web, a link back your letter will appear here within about one day. Or, if you know of a news article about this bill to display here, email us the web address of this page and the web address of your suggested news article: Our editorial team will post relevant links as quickly as possible. Thanks for helping to build public knowledge about Congress.

FEED
Recent Blog Coverage

View All (13)  |  View Top Rated

03/12/10
Talking Points: 03/09/2010 « ASUW Senate Blog

Vote Count 68-0-1. R-16-23, “Resolution in Support of the Stephanie Tubbs Jones Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act (CHIA) (H.R. 1547/S. 781)”. Vote Count 62-2-9. Posted in Uncategorized. « Talking Points: 03/02/2010 ...

Add to My Political Notebook Save to Notebook Rate
01/13/10
Collegiate housing and infrastructure act

File Format: Microsoft Word - View as HTMLPass the Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act of 2009. (HR 1547/S.781) Make College MoreAffordable by Preserving Not-for-Profit Student Housing ...

Add to My Political Notebook Save to Notebook Rate
06/22/09
Collegiate Housing & Infrastructure Bill | Eta Iota News

The Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act (HR 1547/S 781) would level the playing field by allowing non-university owned not-for- profit student housing, like fraternities and sororities, to enjoy the benefit of tax deductible ...

Add to My Political Notebook Save to Notebook Rate

Users supporting H.R.1547 (4) are also:

Supporting Bill Supporting Senator Supporting Representative
  • H.R.1207 Federal Reserve Trans...
  • S.271 Fuel Reduction using ...
  • H.R.1084 Commercial Advertisem...
  • S.1 American Recovery and...
  • S.118 Section 202 Supportiv...
Opposing Bill Opposing Senator Opposing Representative

Bill's Views

  • Today: 1
  • Past Seven Days: 12
  • All-Time: 525

100%

Users Support Bill

4 in favor / 0 opposed
Write Your Representative
Track with MyOC

OpenCongress is a free and open-source joint project of two non-profit organizations, the Participatory Politics Foundation and the Sunlight Foundation.