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the bank usually keeps the records of all congressional bills. hope it helps!
There are multiple sources that maintain a record of all congressional bills. The primary source is the official website of the United States Congress, which has a legislative database called Congress.gov. It provides comprehensive information on bills, resolutions, and legislative activities. Additionally, there are other platforms, such as GovTrack.us and OpenCongress.org, that also offer searchable databases of congressional bills.
A federal bill is a bill that originates in either the House of Representatives or Senate. These bills are published in the Congressional Record.
bills
The congressional members that submit the final bills that authorize specific spending are the members of the House and Senate. They have budget committees that submit the bills.
All Federal Reserve notes are printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.Explanations and myth-bustingEven though bills have different Federal Reserve District indicators on them, they're not actually printed in each district. All bills are printed at BEP plants in Washington and Fort Worth; when a district bank requests more bills the BEP prints whatever denominations are needed and marks them with the district letter (or name, for $1 and $2 bills).The US Mint is NOT involved in printing bills. The Mint's only responsibilities are striking of coins and medals. It's a separate agency from the BEP.
private bills
Congressional committees
US $2 bills are printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the same agency that prints all US currency. Contrary to popular myth, $2 bills aren't rare, haven't been discontinued, and are still being produced. They only make up about 1% of all paper money in circulation but that still amounts to hundreds of millions of bills.
Joint Committes
In congressional committees.
Bills