Representative Scott DesJarlais's Voting Records

Environment

Biographical

Full Name: Scott DesJarlais
Current Office: U.S. House - District 4, Republican
First Elected: 11/02/2010
Last Elected: 11/06/2012
Next Election: 2014
Gender: Male
Family: Wife: Amy; 3 Children: Tyler, Ryan, Maggie
Birth Date: 02/21/1964
Birth Place: Des Moines, IA
Home City: South Pittsburgh, TN
Issue Category

Environment Key Votes

Date Bill No. Bill Title Vote
9/21/12 HR 3409 Stop the War on Coal Act of 2012
Bill Passed - House (233 - 175)
Yea
8/02/12 HR 6233 Agricultural Disaster Assistance Act of 2012
Bill Passed - House (223 - 197)
Yea
7/12/12 HR 4402 National Strategic and Critical Minerals Production Act of 2012
Bill Passed - House (256 - 160)
Yea
6/21/12 HR 4480 Domestic Energy and Jobs Act
Bill Passed - House (248 - 163)
Yea
6/19/12 HR 2578 Conservation and Economic Growth Act
Bill Passed - House (232 - 188)
Yea
4/18/12 HR 4348 Extension of Surface Transportation Funding and Approval of the Keystone XL Pipeline
Bill Passed - House (293 - 127)
Yea
2/29/12 HR 1837 Water Resources in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Valley
Bill Passed - House (246 - 175)
Yea
12/08/11 HR 1633 Limits Regulation of Farm Dust
Bill Passed - House (268 - 150)
Yea
10/14/11 HR 2273 Coal Residuals Reuse and Management Act
Bill Passed - House (267 - 144)
Yea
10/06/11 HR 2681 Repeals EPA Emissions Regulations for Cement Manufacturers
Bill Passed - House (262 - 161)
Yea
9/23/11 H Amdt 800 Requires the EPA to Consider Costs and Feasibility of Air Quality Standards
Amendment Adopted - House (227 - 192)
Yea
9/23/11 H Amdt 799 Suspends Cross State Air Pollution Rule
Amendment Adopted - House (234 - 188)
Yea
7/13/11 HR 2018 Amending Clean Water Laws
Bill Passed - House (239 - 184)
Yea
6/22/11 HR 2021 Impact of Drilling on Air Quality
Bill Passed - House (253 - 166)
Yea
4/07/11 HR 910 Energy Tax Prevention Act
Bill Passed - House (255 - 172)
Yea

About the Selection and Descriptions of Key Votes

Project Vote Smart provides easy access to Congressional and State voting records and maintains a collection of key votes grouped by issue. Key votes typically include the initial passage of legislation and final conference report vote versions (the compromised versions of bills passed in separate House and Senate versions). Vote Smart uses the following criteria to select key votes:

  1. The vote should be helpful in portraying how a member stands on a particular issue
  2. The vote should be clear for any person to understand
  3. The vote has received media attention
  4. The vote was passed or defeated by a very close margin
  5. Occasionally, if a specific bill is consistently inquired about on the Voter's Research Hotline, the vote will be added

Descriptions of the votes are written by Vote Smart staff and based on information included in the Congressional Record, State House Journals, or Senate Journals, with additional background information from newspapers, magazines, etc. Vote Smart provides summaries for each selected key vote. The summary does not necessarily reflect the final version of the bill.

The Key Votes Program follows Project Vote Smart's strict policies, procedures and structure that guarantee absolute impartiality and accuracy. In order to ensure that all Key Votes are non-partisan in their selection and language, each is approved by a group of over 160 political scientists and journalists from all fifty states.