|
LOBBYING REPORT |
Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 (Section 5) - All Filers Are Required to Complete This Page
2. Address
| Address1 | 910 RALEIGH ROAD |
Address2 |
|
| City | CHAPEL HILL |
State | NC |
Zip Code | 27515 |
Country | USA |
3. Principal place of business (if different than line 2)
| City |
|
State |
|
Zip Code |
|
Country |
|
|
5. Senate ID# 51811-12
|
||||||||
|
6. House ID# 348070000
|
||||||||
| TYPE OF REPORT | 8. Year | 2016 |
Q1 (1/1 - 3/31) | Q2 (4/1 - 6/30) | Q3 (7/1 - 9/30) | Q4 (10/1 - 12/31) |
9. Check if this filing amends a previously filed version of this report
| 10. Check if this is a Termination Report | Termination Date |
|
11. No Lobbying Issue Activity |
| INCOME OR EXPENSES - YOU MUST complete either Line 12 or Line 13 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12. Lobbying | 13. Organizations | ||||||||
| INCOME relating to lobbying activities for this reporting period was: | EXPENSE relating to lobbying activities for this reporting period were: | ||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
| Provide a good faith estimate, rounded to the nearest $10,000, of all lobbying related income for the client (including all payments to the registrant by any other entity for lobbying activities on behalf of the client). | 14. REPORTING Check box to indicate expense accounting method. See instructions for description of options. | ||||||||
|
Method A.
Reporting amounts using LDA definitions only
Method B. Reporting amounts under section 6033(b)(8) of the Internal Revenue Code Method C. Reporting amounts under section 162(e) of the Internal Revenue Code |
|||||||||
| Signature | Digitally Signed By: KIMREY W. RHINEHARDT |
Date | 4/22/2016 1:49:17 PM |
LOBBYING ACTIVITY. Select as many codes as necessary to reflect the general issue areas in which the registrant engaged in lobbying on behalf of the client during the reporting period. Using a separate page for each code, provide information as requested. Add additional page(s) as needed.
15. General issue area code VET
16. Specific lobbying issues
Monitor new legislation affecting student veterans attending public universities.
Monitor implementation of legislation affecting student veterans.
Monitor Administration actions regarding student veterans.
17. House(s) of Congress and Federal agencies Check if None
U.S. SENATE, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Veterans Affairs - Dept of (VA), President of the U.S.
18. Name of each individual who acted as a lobbyist in this issue area
| First Name | Last Name | Suffix | Covered Official Position (if applicable) | New |
Kimrey |
Rhinehardt |
|
Lauch Faircloth, George Voinovich, Richard Burr |
19. Interest of each foreign entity in the specific issues listed on line 16 above Check if None
LOBBYING ACTIVITY. Select as many codes as necessary to reflect the general issue areas in which the registrant engaged in lobbying on behalf of the client during the reporting period. Using a separate page for each code, provide information as requested. Add additional page(s) as needed.
15. General issue area code SCI
16. Specific lobbying issues
Oppose efforts to reduce funding for Social, Behavioral, and Economic research at NSF and other federal research agencies.
Oppose efforts to arbitrarily cap cost reimbursement associated with federally-funded research at institutions of higher education.
Minimize the number of federal research grants at NSF and other agencies that require cost-sharing.
Advocate for a long-term vision for space programs, a balanced NASA portfolio across programs and missions, and a commitment to build the next-generation workforce.
Monitor dual use research policy proposals.
Support reauthorization of the America COMPETES Act ensuring an increase in the productivity of the national science and technology enterprise.
Support legislation or regulatory action to mandate public access to taxpayer-funded research at the NIH and other federal agencies without diminishing copyright protection currently accorded scholarly work.
Support legislation that combats abusive practices in the patent system without weakening the strength of patents.
Monitor efforts to reform copyright law in the digital age.
17. House(s) of Congress and Federal agencies Check if None
U.S. SENATE, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
18. Name of each individual who acted as a lobbyist in this issue area
| First Name | Last Name | Suffix | Covered Official Position (if applicable) | New |
Kimrey |
Rhinehardt |
|
Lauch Faircloth, George Voinovich, Richard Burr |
19. Interest of each foreign entity in the specific issues listed on line 16 above Check if None
LOBBYING ACTIVITY. Select as many codes as necessary to reflect the general issue areas in which the registrant engaged in lobbying on behalf of the client during the reporting period. Using a separate page for each code, provide information as requested. Add additional page(s) as needed.
15. General issue area code BUD
16. Specific lobbying issues
FY 2016 Budget and Appropriations, including programmatic appropriations requests.
CRomnibus, Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act,
Agriculture
Commerce-Justice-Science
Defense
Energy-Water
Financial Services
Homeland Security
Interior-Environment
Labor-HHS-Education
Legislative Branch
Military Construction VA
State-Foreign Ops
Transportation-HUD
Budget Resolution
17. House(s) of Congress and Federal agencies Check if None
U.S. SENATE, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
18. Name of each individual who acted as a lobbyist in this issue area
| First Name | Last Name | Suffix | Covered Official Position (if applicable) | New |
Kimrey |
Rhinehardt |
|
Lauch Faircloth, George Voinovich, Richard Burr |
19. Interest of each foreign entity in the specific issues listed on line 16 above Check if None
LOBBYING ACTIVITY. Select as many codes as necessary to reflect the general issue areas in which the registrant engaged in lobbying on behalf of the client during the reporting period. Using a separate page for each code, provide information as requested. Add additional page(s) as needed.
15. General issue area code EDU
16. Specific lobbying issues
Higher Education Federal Regulatory Compliance issues,
Reauthorization of the Higher Education Act
Support and promote legislation and Administration priorities in accordance with the following GENERAL PRINCIPLES:
Consolidate the fourteen higher education tax benefit programs into one tax benefit program. The new tax benefit should be permanent and targeted to lower and modest income students and families.
Provide financial assistance to students who demonstrate financial need and are academically prepared to succeed.
Encourage simplicity and predictability in student financial aid programs.
Increase access to higher education, including pre-college advising and outreach.
Encourage credential persistence & completion for all students.
Support college savings, financial literacy and minimize student indebtedness.
Reduce administrative requirements and support accountability.
Empower student financial aid professionals with the flexibility to respond to the specific needs of their students.
Recommend policies that accommodate the diversity of academic delivery models.
Eliminate statutory requirements that use financial aid to enforce unrelated social policies.
Validate proposed policy recommendations with research and data analysis.
One Federal Grant Program:
Consolidate federal higher education grants into one Super Pell program.
Align continued grant eligibility with student progress to degree.
Permit students to use the grant during any academic term.
One Federal Loan Program:
Streamline federal student loan programs into a single, income-based repayment program.
Implement increased borrower limits: one limit for undergraduate students and one limit for graduate students.
Loan repayment should be tied to income.
Limit the amount a student may borrow based upon enrollment.
Permanently stabilize the program interest rate at 3% plus a markup equal to the interest rate on the 10-year United States Treasury note.
Simplify the Aid Determination Process.
Simplify the financial aid application (FAFSA) and reduce the required data fields.
Require federal agencies to leverage data that resides in other federal databases.
Allow students to submit the FAFSA form earlier.
Use prior-prior year income data for financial aid determination.
Inform students of financial aid eligibility earlier.
TAX BENEFITS FOR STUDENTS AND FAMILIES
Federal tax benefits designed to impact college affordability, access, and completion are well-intentioned but flawed. Tax-based student aid:
is poorly targeted;
does not reach students when they need it most;
is complex and difficult to use; and
is poorly understood and limits the impact of its intent.
UNC SYSTEM POLICY PRIORITY
Consolidate the fourteen higher education tax benefit programs into one tax benefit program. The new tax benefit should be permanent and targeted to lower and modest income students and families.
17. House(s) of Congress and Federal agencies Check if None
U.S. SENATE, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Education - Dept of
18. Name of each individual who acted as a lobbyist in this issue area
| First Name | Last Name | Suffix | Covered Official Position (if applicable) | New |
Kimrey |
Rhinehardt |
|
Lauch Faircloth, George Voinovich, Richard Burr |
19. Interest of each foreign entity in the specific issues listed on line 16 above Check if None
LOBBYING ACTIVITY. Select as many codes as necessary to reflect the general issue areas in which the registrant engaged in lobbying on behalf of the client during the reporting period. Using a separate page for each code, provide information as requested. Add additional page(s) as needed.
15. General issue area code HCR
16. Specific lobbying issues
Implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act - sought exemption for student workers from employer mandate H.R. 5262, H.R. 210, Student Worker Exemption Act
TAX-EXEMPT STATUS FOR HOSPITALS
UNC Health Care serves patients across the state, including underserved and rural populations. UNC Health Care provides $300 million of uncompensated care annually. Including recently affiliated hospitals, the number is $424 million annually.
UNC SYSTEM POLICY PRIORITY
Determine common definitions and reforms in such areas as community benefit, charitable care, charges to the uninsured and debt collection.
Monitor implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) and minimize negative impact on student health insurance plans.
Support legislation to address workforce shortages in key health professions.
Direct HHS to adopt state reciprocity agreements for practitioner licensure. Such action should be in coordination with physicians, health care practitioners and patient advocates.
Medicare and Medicaid
Support fair and adequate payment rates for physicians, and support efforts to tie reimbursement rates to reasonable measures of quality over the entire health care sector.
Increase federal funding and raise the statutory cap to enable training of additional resident physicians (Increase GME/IME Caps for Residents).
Increase Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) to help offset dramatic cuts states may implement due to the weakened economy.
Preserve the Medicare Bad Debt Moratorium and maintain the current funding level for bad debts.
Ensure that the severity case mix reimbursement is adequate for teaching hospitals (Diagnosis Related Groups (DRG) Refinements).
Monitor prospective allocation changes for Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments.
17. House(s) of Congress and Federal agencies Check if None
U.S. SENATE, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
18. Name of each individual who acted as a lobbyist in this issue area
| First Name | Last Name | Suffix | Covered Official Position (if applicable) | New |
Kimrey |
Rhinehardt |
|
Lauch Faircloth, George Voinovich, Richard Burr |
19. Interest of each foreign entity in the specific issues listed on line 16 above Check if None
LOBBYING ACTIVITY. Select as many codes as necessary to reflect the general issue areas in which the registrant engaged in lobbying on behalf of the client during the reporting period. Using a separate page for each code, provide information as requested. Add additional page(s) as needed.
15. General issue area code GOV
16. Specific lobbying issues
The Administration and Congress should harmonize, streamline, and, when possible, eliminate unnecessary and duplicative regulations and reporting requirements.
The Administration and Federal agencies should not impose requirements or mandates without the proper statutory authority provided by Congress. When regulations, requirements or mandates are necessary, the Administration and Federal agencies should follow an open and public rule-making process in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
Advance recommendations of the Alexander-Mikulski-Burr-Bennet Task Force on regulations and requirements under Department of Education (ED) jurisdiction.
Engage the House and Senate Committees of jurisdiction on regulatory reform, unfunded mandates reform, and the Congressional Review Act (CRA).
Pursue legislation that reinforces the Government Accountability Office (GAO) ruling that federal agencies must submit sub-regulatory guidance for review as rules under the CRA.
Clarify the definition of rule. Congress should make it clear that the term is intended to be expansive and specifically include documents that implement or interpret law or policy.
Advocate for amendment of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) to clarify that sub- regulatory guidance is subject to the act.
Narrow the definition of good cause exception and require agencies to provide justification to the House and Senate Committees of jurisdiction when using the exception.
Require federal agencies to perform a cost analysis of sub-regulatory guidance compliance. The sub-regulatory guidance and cost analysis should be published in the Federal Register for public comment.
Advocate for proper rule-making process within the bounds of EDs statutory authority for new requirements. Rule-making should be inclusive with reasonable timelines.
ED should avoid issuing interpretive rules, policy statements or other guidance that set new legal standards or requirements of the public. If such rules, statements or guidance are necessary then ED should seek public comment.
Coordinate rather than duplicate efforts to support student Veterans. Five separate federal agencies have efforts to protect student veterans.
Repeal the Affordable Care Act provision mandating employer-sponsored health care for employees working 30-hours-per-week and replace with a provision that applies the threshold to employees working a 40-hours-per-week.
Reconcile the differences between immigration reform proposals offered by the Administration and Congress.
Support EEO initiatives that are narrowly tailored to remedy documented discrimination in the workplace and carefully drafted to minimize burdens, confusion and unintended consequences.
Monitor implementation of the new omni-circular, OMB Circular A-81.
17. House(s) of Congress and Federal agencies Check if None
U.S. SENATE, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Office of Management & Budget (OMB), Education - Dept of, Natl Institutes of Health (NIH), Centers For Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), Centers For Disease Control & Prevention (CDC), Health & Human Services - Dept of (HHS), Labor - Dept of (DOL), President of the U.S., U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS)
18. Name of each individual who acted as a lobbyist in this issue area
| First Name | Last Name | Suffix | Covered Official Position (if applicable) | New |
Kimrey |
Rhinehardt |
|
The Honorable Richard Burr, The Honorable George V. Voinovich, The Honorable Lauch Faircloth |
19. Interest of each foreign entity in the specific issues listed on line 16 above Check if None
Information Update Page - Complete ONLY where registration information has changed.
20. Client new address
| Address |
|
||||||
| City |
|
State |
|
Zip Code |
|
Country |
|
21. Client new principal place of business (if different than line 20)
| City |
|
State |
|
Zip Code |
|
Country |
|
22. New General description of client’s business or activities
LOBBYIST UPDATE
23. Name of each previously reported individual who is no longer expected to act as a lobbyist for the client
|
|
||||||||
| 1 |
|
3 |
|
||||||
| 2 |
|
4 |
|
ISSUE UPDATE
24. General lobbying issue that no longer pertains
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AFFILIATED ORGANIZATIONS
25. Add the following affiliated organization(s)
Internet Address:
| Name | Address |
Principal Place of Business (city and state or country) |
||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
26. Name of each previously reported organization that is no longer affiliated with the registrant or client
| 1 | 2 | 3 |
FOREIGN ENTITIES
27. Add the following foreign entities:
| Name | Address |
Principal place of business (city and state or country) |
Amount of contribution for lobbying activities | Ownership percentage in client | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
|
% | |||||||||||||
28. Name of each previously reported foreign entity that no longer owns, or controls, or is affiliated with the registrant, client or affiliated organization
| 1 | 3 | 5 |
| 2 | 4 | 6 |