Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
September 15, 2022
The CRS Appropriations Status Table is an online tool for tracking legislation that provides
annual funding for federal programs, projects, and activities. It displays the status of regular
Ben Leubsdorf
appropriations bills, continuing resolutions, supplemental appropriations measures, and budget
Research Librarian
resolutions. This report describes how to access and navigate information presented on the
Appropriations Status Table. A companion video is available on CRS.gov.
Justin Murray
Senior Research Librarian
Carol Wilson
Research Librarian
Congressional Research Service
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Contents
Overview ......................................................................................................................................... 1
Accessing the Table ......................................................................................................................... 1
Navigating the Table ........................................................................................................................ 2
Regular Appropriations ............................................................................................................. 3
Example: FY2022 Agriculture Appropriations ................................................................... 4
Continuing Resolutions ............................................................................................................. 5
Example: H.J.Res. 75 .......................................................................................................... 5
Supplementals ........................................................................................................................... 6
Example: H.R. 7691 ............................................................................................................ 6
Budget Resolutions ................................................................................................................... 7
Example: S.Con.Res. 14 ..................................................................................................... 7
Figures
Figure 1. CRS.gov Navigation Links .............................................................................................. 1
Figure 2. Congress.gov Navigation Links ....................................................................................... 2
Figure 3. Appropriations Status Table ............................................................................................. 3
Figure 4. FY2022 Agriculture Appropriations Information ............................................................ 5
Figure 5. FY2022 Continuing Resolution (H.J.Res. 75) Information ............................................. 6
Figure 6. FY2022 Supplemental (H.R. 7691) Information ............................................................. 7
Figure 7. FY2022 Budget Resolution Information .......................................................................... 8
Contacts
Author Information .......................................................................................................................... 8
Congressional Research Service
Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Overview
Congress produces annual appropriations legislation providing discretionary funding for a broad
range of government programs, projects, and activities. The CRS Appropriations Status Table is
an online tool for tracking such legislation. It displays the status of regular appropriations bills,
continuing resolutions, supplemental appropriations measures, and budget resolutions.
This report describes how to access and navigate the information presented on the Appropriations
Status Table. For general background on annual appropriations, see CRS Report R47106,
The
Appropriations Process: A Brief Overview, by James V. Saturno and Megan S. Lynch.
Accessing the Table
Congressional users can access the Appropriations Status Table at https://www.crs.gov/
AppropriationsStatusTable. The CRS.gov homepage includes a direct link (
Appropriations
Status Table) directly below the
Of Note highlighted reports.
Figure 1. CRS.gov Navigation Links
Source: CRS.gov, annotated screenshot.
Noncongressional users can access a public version at https://crsreports.congress.gov/
AppropriationsStatusTable.1 The Congress.gov homepage provides a direct link (
Status Table)
1 The CRS.gov version of the table contains additional features, such as links to related CRS reports.
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
under the
Bill Searches and Lists heading, directly below and on the right side of the main
search box.2
Figure 2. Congress.gov Navigation Links
Source: Congress.gov, annotated screenshot.
Navigating the Table
Users can select a fiscal year for the table using the drop-down menu at the top of the page.
Archived tables are available back to FY1999.
An expandable
Last updated and other notes section near the top of the page contains a
timestamp for the table’s last update and a list of major actions included on the table.
Bills Passed shows how many regular appropriations bills have completed various stages of the
legislative process, with expandable headings for
House,
Senate,
Both Chambers,
Vetoed, and
Signed by President.
Additional Resources provides links to material from CRS and the Congressional Budget Office.
The main body of the table has four tabs:
Regular Appropriations,
Continuing Resolutions,
Supplementals, and
Budget Resolutions.3
2 The
CRS Status Table link to the CRS.gov version is only visible to congressional users.
3 For more information on different types of appropriations bills, see CRS Report R47106,
The Appropriations
Process: A Brief Overview, by James V. Saturno and Megan S. Lynch.
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Figure 3. Appropriations Status Table
Source: CRS.gov/AppropriationsStatusTable, screenshot.
Regular Appropriations
The
Regular Appropriations tab displays the status of the 12 annual appropriations bills, which
align with the jurisdictions of the 12 House and Senate Appropriations subcommittees.4
Omnibus (or consolidated) measures, which combine two or more of the regular bills, appear in rows at the
top of the table. Standalone regular appropriations bills are listed alphabetically. When a
standalone appropriations bill is incorporated into an omnibus measure, the standalone bill’s entry
on the table directs users to the entry for that omnibus measure.
From left to right, the table provides information on major steps in the legislative process:5
4 For more information, see CRS Report RL31572,
Appropriations Subcommittee Structure: History of Changes from
1920 to 2021, by James V. Saturno.
5 Consideration of a bill does not always involve all possible steps in the legislative process, so entries for individual
measures may not include information in every column.
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Bill name and number, links to information on
Congress.gov, and links to CRS overview reports.
(+) Notes
Dates and vote tallies for subcommittee action.
At the bottom of each row on the
table is a
Notes field. It is
Dates and vote tallies for committee action, with links
collapsed by default but can be
to corresponding reports.
expanded with a single click. It
often includes useful information
Dates and vote tallies for initial passage by the House
and context including links to
and Senate, with links to roll call votes.
committee press releases, brief
explanations of procedural actions,
Dates and vote tallies for final passage by the House
breakdowns by division for
and Senate, with links to roll call votes.
omnibus legislation, and
Date the President signed (or vetoed) the legislation
information on locating an
and, if enacted, the public law number.
explanatory statement.
Example: FY2022 Agriculture Appropriations
A user looking for information on FY2022 appropriations for agriculture-related programs would
consult the third row of the 2022 table (see
Figure 4).
First column (
Appropriation Bills): Agriculture. Links to H.R. 4356, S. 2599,
and CRS Report R46951,
Agriculture and Related Agencies: FY2022
Appropriations, by Jim Monke.
Second column (
Subcommittee Approval): House subcommittee approved H.R.
4356 by voice vote on June 25, 2021. Senate subcommittee approved S. 2599 by
voice vote on August 2, 2021.
Third column (
Committee Approval): House Appropriations Committee
approved H.R. 4356 by voice vote on June 30, 2021. Senate Appropriations
Committee approved S. 2599 by a 25-5 vote on August 4, 2021. Links to
committee reports that accompany the appropriations bills, H.Rept. 117-82 and
S.Rept. 117-34.
Fourth column (
Initial Passage): The House considered the Agriculture
appropriations bill as part of an omnibus measure, H.R. 4502, which has its own
separate entry on the table. The Senate bill did not advance beyond the
Committee Approval stage.
Fifth column (
Resolution of House-Senate Differences): The Agriculture
appropriations bill became part of another omnibus appropriations measure, H.R.
2471, which passed both chambers. Agriculture is Division A of H.R. 2471,
which has its own separate entry at the top of the table.
Sixth column (
Presidential Approval): Blank, due to presidential approval being
noted in the separate entry for H.R. 2471 at the top of the page.
The expandable Notes section provides additional information: House and Senate
Appropriations Committee press releases, legislative developments involving the
two omnibus measures containing Agriculture appropriations, and guidance on
obtaining and navigating the enacted omnibus law’s explanatory statement.
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Figure 4. FY2022 Agriculture Appropriations Information
Source: CRS.gov/AppropriationsStatusTable, annotated screenshot.
Continuing Resolutions
When regular appropriations acts are not enacted by the start of the federal fiscal year (October
1), one or more continuing appropriations acts (commonly known as
continuing resolutions or
CRs) may continue funding for programs and activities funded in the previous fiscal year.6 The
second table tab,
Continuing Resolutions, provides information on CRs.7
The Continuing Resolutions screen has the same layout as the Regular Appropriations screen.
Example: H.J.Res. 75
The fourth row for FY2022 contains information on H.J.Res. 75, a short-term CR (see
Figure 5).
First column (
Appropriation Bills): FY2022 Extension of Continuing
Appropriations Act, with funding through March 15, 2022. Link to H.J.Res. 75.
Second column (
Subcommittee Approval), third column (
Committee
Approval), fourth column (
Initial Passage): blank, the resolution did not go
through subcommittee/committee consideration and passed each chamber once.
Fifth column (
Resolution of House-Senate Differences): House passed H.J.Res.
75 by voice vote on March 9, 2022, under the procedural terms of a special rule,
H.Res. 973. Senate passed H.J.Res. 75 by voice vote on March 10, 2022.
Sixth column (
Presidential Approval): President signed the CR, designated as
P.L. 117-95, on March 11, 2022.
6 For more information, see CRS Report R46595,
Continuing Resolutions: Overview of Components and Practices,
coordinated by Kevin P. McNellis.
7 Continuing resolutions (CRs) may be in the form of standalone measures, or they can be part of a measure
incorporating other provisions and titles. In some cases, regular appropriations bills will also contain continuing
appropriations provisions. In these cases, the measure is included on both the Regular Appropriations screen and the
Continuing Resolutions screen.
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Figure 5. FY2022 Continuing Resolution (H.J.Res. 75) Information
Source: CRS.gov/AppropriationsStatusTable, annotated screenshot.
Supplementals
The third table tab,
Supplementals, contains information on appropriations measures that provide
funding for selected activities, such as disaster response and recovery, in addition to the funding
provided in regular appropriations bills.8
The Supplementals screen has the same layout as the Regular Appropriations screen.9
Example: H.R. 7691
The seventh row for FY2022 contains information on a supplemental appropriations bill related
to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine (see
Figure 6).
First column (
Appropriation Bills): FY2022 Additional Ukraine Supplemental
Appropriations. Links to H.R. 7691 and CRS Insight IN11877,
Supplemental
Funding for Ukraine: Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related
Programs (SFOPS), by Emily M. Morgenstern.
Second column (
Subcommittee Approval), third column (
Committee
Approval), fourth column (
Initial Passage): blank, the bill did not go through
subcommittee/committee consideration and passed each chamber once.
Fifth column (
Resolution of House-Senate Differences): House passed H.R.
7691 by a 368-57 vote on May 10, 2022, under the procedural terms of a special
rule, H.Res. 1097. Senate passed H.R. 7691 by an 86-11 vote on May 19, 2022.
Sixth column
(Presidential Approval): President signed the bill, designated as
P.L. 117-128, on May 21, 2022.
8 For more information, see the “Supplemental Appropriations” section in CRS Report R47106,
The Appropriations
Process: A Brief Overview, by James V. Saturno and Megan S. Lynch.
9 Regular appropriations bills or CRs that contain supplemental appropriations provisions are included on multiple
sections of the Table as applicable.
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Figure 6. FY2022 Supplemental (H.R. 7691) Information
Source: CRS.gov/AppropriationsStatusTable, annotated screenshot.
Budget Resolutions
The fourth table tab,
Budget Resolutions, is the one part of the table that does not track
appropriations legislation. The Budget Resolutions tab tracks consideration of the House-Senate
agreement on a budget plan for the upcoming fiscal period.10 Congress can adopt a budget
resolution for each fiscal year but does not always do so, either because the chambers decide not
to develop a resolution or because the chambers are unable to reach agreement on one.11
The layout of the Budget Resolutions screen is similar but not identical to the other screens.
There is no column for Subcommittee Approval as budget resolutions are not originated by or
referred to a subcommittee. There is also no column for Presidential Approval because the
legislative vehicle for a Budget Resolution is a concurrent resolution and concurrent resolutions
do not become law. The Committee Approval column here refers to the House and Senate Budget
Committees rather than the Appropriations Committees.
Example: S.Con.Res. 14
S.Con.Res. 14 was adopted as the budget resolution for FY2022 (see
Figure 7).
First column (
Budget Resolution): FY2022 Budget Resolution. Link to
S.Con.Res. 14.
Second column (
Committee Approval): blank, there were no committee votes.
Third column (
Initial Passage): Senate adopted S.Con.Res. 14 on August 11,
2021, 50-49. House adopted S.Con.Res. 14 on August 24, 2021, 220-212.
Fourth column (
Resolution of House-Senate Differences): blank, there was no
need to reconcile different versions.
10 For more information, see CRS Report R46468,
A Brief Overview of the Congressional Budget Process, by James V.
Saturno.
11 For more information, see CRS Report R44296,
Deeming Resolutions: Budget Enforcement in the Absence of a
Budget Resolution, by Megan S. Lynch.
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
The expandable Notes section contains additional information including an
explanation of H.Res. 601, which provided for the automatic adoption of
S.Con.Res. 14 by the House.
Figure 7. FY2022 Budget Resolution Information
Source: CRS.gov/AppropriationsStatusTable, annotated screenshot.
Author Information
Ben Leubsdorf
Carol Wilson
Research Librarian
Research Librarian
Justin Murray
Senior Research Librarian
Congressional Research Service
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Navigating the Appropriations Status Table
Acknowledgments
Jamie L. Hutchinson, Visual Information Specialist, prepared the figures in this report.
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not
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