From: | meuser@cats.ucsc.edu |
Date: | 21 Apr 1995 23:03:43 |
Reply: | cpeo-military |
Subject: | funding cuts |
I thought you might find this interesting: >From regs@rtk.net Wed Apr 19 10:23:11 1995 Received: from cdp.igc.org by cats.ucsc.edu with SMTP id KAA04881; Fri, 21 Apr 1995 10:46:21 -0700 Received: (from notes) by cdp.igc.org (8.6.12/Revision: 1.196 ) id TAA07330 for "conf-loka.fastnet"; Wed, 19 Apr 1995 19:36:25 -0700 Date: 19 Apr 1995 10:23:11 X-Conference: loka.fastnet From: regs@rtk.net Subject: FW: Fact sheet on funding cuts. To: Recipients of conference <fastnet@igc.org> Message-ID: <Chameleon.4.01.950417082707.regs@happy.rtknet.org> X-Gateway: conf2mail@igc.org Errors-To: owner-fastnet@igc.org Precedence: bulk Lines: 165 Status: RO For your information, a fact sheet on funding cuts for DOD cleanup. Please feel free to repost, etc. Military Cleanups: Losing the Funding War CONGRESS BEGINS ASSAULT: PROGRAM NOT WELL DEFENDED SITUATION Before leaving Washington for Easter recess, Congress slashed $300 million dollars out of the Department of Defense Environmental Restoration Account (DERA) for Fiscal Year 1995. This cut is 15 percent of the approved budget of $1.78 billion. However, since this cut comes about halfway through the fiscal year, the impact will be significant. The cut in the cleanup budget comes as part the fiscal year Defense Supplemental Spending bill (H.R. 889), intended to increase funding for defense training and "readiness" functions and to offset costs related to peacekeeping operations. Combined with earlier cuts, Congress has slashed close to 25 percent of the cleanup budget since last year (fiscal year 1994). By comparison, the total Department of Defense budget declined about six percent. President Clinton has requested $1.622 billion for DERA for Fiscal Year 1996. Congress has not yet acted on this budget but key legislators have hinted that deep cuts are possible. FUNDING FOR DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION ACCOUNT (figures in billions of $) FY94 FY95 FY95 FY95 FY96 Approved Cut* Final Clinton Request DERA 1.96 1.78 0.30 1.48 1.62 * Recently approved by Congress. WHAT IS DERA? The Department of Defense Environmental Restoration Account (DERA) is the key budget account which funds assessment, planning, and cleanup of toxic contamination at operating military facilities. Funding for most closing military facilities comes from a separate funding account. The most recent Defense Department information indicates that more than 10,000 potentially-contaminated sites await assessment and/or cleanup at more than 776 operating military facilities. In addition, more than 2,800 sites at formerly-used military facilities require attention and work. Environmental cleanup of closing military facilities is funded through another budget account, the Base Realignment and Closure Account (BRAC), because these cleanups are placed on a "fast-track" to speed conversion and closure. Environmental cleanups at closing military bases have not been seriously cut, however, Congress may consider changing the rules for speeding up cleanups at these facilities. WHAT DO BUDGET CUTS MEAN? Communities, activists, local officials, state regulators which have been affected by military contamination are becoming deeply concerned about the funding cuts for military cleanup. Large budget cuts will mean that environmental cleanup my be delayed or scaled back. Lower-priority cleanups or public safety activities may be cancelled. California Governor Pete Wilson recently wrote to Defense Secretary William Perry: "The continued erosion of cleanup funding inevitably will threaten the health of armed services personnel and civilians who work at military bases where contamination is present. It will also exacerbate economic suffering in communities that are struggling to redevelop closing bases." THE CHALLENGE AHEAD Activity on the budget for Fiscal Year 1996 has just begun. Recent budget cuts to the Fiscal Year 1995 budget indicate that Congress may seek to slash DERA to provide more funding for other Defense Department activities such as weapons procurement or training activities. The budget and appropriations process in Congress lasts several months and includes several key decision points. They include: * Passage of the Budget Resolution. The House of Representatives and the Senate will enact budget resolutions which set spending and revenue targets for the Fiscal Year in very broad strokes. The Budget Resolution provides direction for Congress and is not signed by the President. Passage of the Budget Resolution is expected in May and a final negotiated version will likely be adopted by both the House and Senate by the end of May. * The Defense Bill. The House and Senate pass Defense Authorization bills. The differences are negotiated and then passed by both bodies. The President must sign this final version to become law. This bill is largely developed by the House and Senate Armed Services Committees (the House has been renamed the Committee on National Security). This bill will make policy changes and set authorized budget levels for Defense Department program and accounts. The House and Senate usually enact their versions of the Defense Bill in July. The negotiations on the legislation are is usually completed before August. * Appropriations. The House and Senate Appropriations Committees are the key funding bodies in Congress. In a sense, the Appropriations Committees actually write the check for federal spending. First the House and later the Senate enact appropriations legislation to set the actual (not authorized) funding levels for the Department of Defense and other federal agencies. The legislation is largely developed by the Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense (Subcommittee on National Security in the House). These bills are usually enacted in June or July and the final negotiated conference occurs in September. The President must sign these this bill to become law. THE NEED FOR EDUCATION Although some Members of Congress have expressed concern about budget cuts for military cleanups, there has been very little debate on the issue in Congress. In part this may be due to the relative inexperience of many Members of Congress. The elections of 1992 and 1994 each brought large new freshman classes to Congress, legislators who were not around when the cleanup program was started. Many Members of Congress, and their staff, do not understand what the Defense cleanup program does and why it exists. While few would argue that the Defense cleanup program could not be improved, it is important that key decision-makers in Congress gain an understanding of the value of cleanups to public health, to strong local economies, and to community relations. ACTION NEEDED Please contact your Senators and Representatives and ask them to oppose cuts in Defense environmental cleanup funding. Mention any specific facilities you are concerned about and the need for progress on cleaning them up. Advertise any progress made at your facility if you participate in a restoration advisory board or other public participation vehicle. Invite her/him to a local forum or community meeting on facility cleanup. Remind them that closing military bases must be cleaned up before they can be converted to help the local economy. FOR MORE INFORMATION: Gawain Kripke Friends of the Earth 202/783-7400 ext. 212 Internet: foe@essential.org ----------End of Original Message---------- ------------------------------------- Name: Citizens for Sensible Safeguards E-mail: regs@rtk.net c/o OMB Watch, 1742 Conn. Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20009 Phone: 202/234-8494 FAX: 202/234-8584 Date: 04/17/95 Time: 08:24:56 EST ------------------------------------- | |
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