this is why they are called the extendrs even after they have expiry. expiring provisions will expire unless orders can justify their continuation. in short, they should be the expiryrs -- expirers. there is safety in numbers. that they do their best to coalesce as a single herd and try to migrate across the tundra with as little attention as possible, you should break up the herd. reviewing each in detail may not be practical in a single year, given how many they are, but you can identify specific -- grips. -- grips. you should also schedule these out over time. if you're expire at any given time, you will be able to give each one more attention. third, i think you should change the tempore tax cuts. this has an unfortunate side effect. long term tax policies often get chopped into 1-year segments. in addition, 10 years of often can be used to pay for a single leader of the extension. you could require that it be assumed to be lasting no less than five years than the initial base line. proponents would then have to round up enough budget offsets to pay