| Legislative Notice 11 |
May 2, 1997 |
S. 672 - Supplemental Approproations and Recissions Act, FY97
Reported by the Commitee on Appropriations on April 30, 1997, by a mostly party-line vote of
16-12 (Senators Boxer and Dorgan voted yea; Senator Gregg voted nay). (S. Rept. 105-16)
NOTEWORTHY
- S. 672, the Senate bill, as reported, includes $7.7 billion in discretionary spending and
total rescissions of $7.7 billion which offsets the new discretionary budget authority
recommended in the bill (see chart, page 10).
- The bill includes $5.6 billion in emergency appropriations for natural disasters, $1.8
billion for defense accounts, and $274 million in non-emergency discretionary
supplemental funds.
- The bill includes $753 million for veterans compensation and pensions and $125 million
for SSI. The bill creates a $125 million block grant to provide SSI benefits for elderly and
disabled legal immigrants to meet anticipated demands for an additional two months
beyond the August 22 statutory eligibility cutoff created by last year's welfare reform bill.
This provision was added at the request of the leadership.
- S. 672 contains language providing "safety net" continuing resolution for FY98 to
prevent a government shutdown in the event the regular annual appropriations acts are not
enacted into law by October 1, 1997, with funding at 98 percent of the previous year's
appropriations. A motion to strike this provision is anticipated.
- Also, S. 672 includes language (1) to waive endangered species provisions for the
operation and repair of flood control projects damaged by recent floods; (2) to bar
funding for the use of sampling data in the next census; and (3) to tighten last year's
moratorium on Interior's effort to revoke certain rights-of-way on federal lands. Expect
floor amendments on these issues.
HIGHLIGHTS
Listed below are the major components of S. 672:
Spending
$1.8 billion, Bosnia peacekeeping
$5.6 billion, disaster assistance
(includes $3.5 billion for FEMA and 547 million for Army Corps of
Engineers)
$197 million, national park repairs
$125 million, SSI assistance to legal aliens
$100 million, UN payment
$58 million, WIC program
$31 million, D.C. schools and police
Offsets
$1.8 billion rescissions and unused defense funds
$3.65 billion rescission in public housing funds
$778 million unused airport improvement funds
$588 million unused rail and bus funds
$365 million rescission in NASA facilities funds
$271 million unused transit funds
$85 million rescission in FHA general program
$30 million reduction, Corps of Engineers
$28 million rescissions, Energy Department (clean coal $17 million; SPR $11 million)
The House Appropriations Committee reported their supplemental bill, H.R. 1469, on April 29th,
and the House is expected to consider it on Wednesday, May 7th.
BILL PROVISIONS
Title I--Department of Defense
Appropriations
- The Committee appropriated a total of $1.8 billion as follows: $1.7 billion for
contingency operations in Bosnia and Southwest Asia; $20 million for POW payments
and $72 million for the Reserve Mobilization Income Insurance Fund and $50 million
(see Section 103) plus $6.5 million (see Section 105). This is $293 million less than the
requested amount of $2.1 billion, which included $2 billion for Bosnia and Southwest
Asia.
- In providing the funding, however, the Committee funded military personnel
requirements for the Bosnia and Southwest Asia operations from the respective service
(Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force Military Personnel) accounts, and included
only operations and maintenance funding in the "Overseas Contingency Operations
Transfer Fund" account.
- The Committee also believes that the request for drawdown recovery costs should not be
included under the emergency appropriation designation. However, it decided to provide
funding for drawdown costs linked to either Bosnia or Southwest Asia, and encouraged
the DoD to resubmit the remaining requirements for reprogramming consideration.
- Changing past procedure, the Committee directed a subdivision of the Overseas
Contingency Operations Transfer Fund to identify costs by individual contingency
operation, with the requirement that the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) notify
the Committee 30 days prior to the DoD expecting to exceed the total allotment for a
given contingency. This change was proposed to place cost controls on contingency
operations. At the same time, the quarterly reporting requirement is retained.
- The Committee report includes a "General Provision" (Sec. 106) prohibiting the
obligation of any funds in support of operations or activities in Bosnia 60 days after
enactment of this act, unless the President submits a comprehensive cost report to
Congress outlining all expenditures in Bosnia since December 1, 1995.
Department of Defense Offsets
The Committee recommends a number of rescissions to fully offset the cost of contingency
operations and funding increases requested by the DoD. They are as follows:
- $389 million, based on the increased value of the dollar relative to foreign currencies in
countries where the DoD operates;
- $284 million, based on lower than projected levels of inflation; and,
- $225 million from "expiring balances," where appropriation amounts in individual accounts
will expire because the funds remain unobligated when the period of availability ends.
- In addition, the Committee recommends rescissions totaling $666 million from certain
programs based on program delays, contract savings, reevaluation of project priority,
slow execution, or program restructuring. Some of these are:
- $69 million from the 1997 Army Missile Procurement account for the Army Tactical Missile
System (ATACMS);
- $150 million from the 1997 Air Force Missile Procurement account for the Titan IV program
restructure;
- $100 million from the 1997 Air Force's Research, Development, Test and Evaluation
(RDT&E) classified program; and,
- $80 million from the National Imaging and Mapping Agency's (NIMA) RDT&E, Defense-Wide, 1997 account.
- The Committee specifically denied the administration's request to rescind $62 million of
FY 1997 funds appropriated for the "National Guard and Reserve equipment" account,
and directs that these funds be immediately released to the National Guard Bureau for
programmed obligations.
Title II--Natural Disasters and Other Emergencies
Department of Agriculture
- Emergency Conservation Program: $77 million ($40 million over the President's request)
to provide cost-sharing assistance to farmers and ranchers whose farmland was damaged
by flooding and other natural disasters.
- Watershed and Flood Prevention Operations: $161 million ($76.9 million over the
President's request) to reduce hazards to life and property in watersheds damaged by
recent and prior-year disasters.
- Rural housing assistance ($4 million) and rural utilities assistance ($6.5 million).
- Forest Service: $67.4 million for construction and repairs to the national forest system.
Department of Commerce
- Economic Development Assistance: $54.7 million for emergency grants, of which $45
million is to provide assistance to areas whose economies have been undermined by
natural disasters and other dislocations.
- National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration: $10.8 million for severe damage to
fish hatcheries in the Pacific Northwest due to flooding and other natural disasters.
Department of Defense
- Corps of Engineers: Total of $547 million, including $390 million for flood control and
coastal emergencies; $20 million for dredging and emergency flooding needs in the lower
Mississippi River and its tributaries as a result of the severe flooding in the Ohio River
basin; and $137 million for repairs of damage caused by the winter flooding in the Pacific
Northwest, California, Texas, and Ohio River Valley to navigation channels and harbors,
locks and dams, reservoirs, and flood control channels.
Department of Interior
- Bureau of Reclamation: $7.4 million to repair damage to facilites that occurred during the
winter flooding in the western States, particularly California and Nevada.
- Bureau of Land Management: A total of $4.8 million (of which $4.4 million is derived by
transfer of unused funds) for road and bridge repairs due to snow and flood damage.
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: $91 million for construction; $5 million for land
acquisition; and $3.4 million for resource management.
- National Park Service: $187.3 million, of which $176 million is for the repair and
replacement of facilities and grounds at Yosemite National Park. Also, Title II of the bill
provides an additional $10 million nonemergency appropriation for phase 2 of the
Yosemite transportation plan proposed by the administration (which is offset by a
rescission of clean coal technology funds).
- U.S. Geological Survey: $4.7 million for repair at hydrologic streamflow measurement
stations.
- Bureau of Indian Affairs: $20.5 million for operation of Indian programs and emergency
construction repairs related to flood and snow damage. Also, the Committee provides $3
million to the Indian Health Service (no funds were requested by the administration).
Department of Transportation
- Federal Highway Administration (FHA): $650 million for emergency relief activities of
the FHA to repair highway damage resulting from floods. The Committee has included
bill language lifting the $100 million limit on obligations per state for the December
1996-97 flooding in impacted states.
- National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB): $14.1 million for the TWA flight 800
accident investigation costs directly attributable to the NTSB.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Community Planning and Development: $100 million for community development block
grant funds to remain available until September 30, 2000, for emergency expenses
resulting from flooding.
Federal Emergency Management Agency
- For FEMA disaster relief, $3.5 billion to cover the current estimate of the costs arising
from disasters occurring in FY97 and including those projected for the balance of FY97
based on the 5-year historical average cost of disaster relief. Bill language is included
prohibiting the expenditure of $2.5 billion of the funds provided herein until the FEMA
Director submits his legislative proposal to control disaster relief costs (see below). The
Committee notes that sufficient funds are made available to meet all anticipated
obligations this fiscal year.
- According to the committee report, "The number of major disaster declarations in the
1992-96 period has increased 54 percent above the preceding 5-year period; and FEMA's
calculation of the 5-year historical average cost of disaster relief for FY98, excluding the
Northridge earthquake, is $2.3 billion, an increase of 28 percent over last year's 5-year
average of $1.8 billion. FEMA acknowledges that the escalation in costs is due not only
to the increase in large-scale disasters, but also because 'the scope of Federal disaster
assistance has expanded, the Federal role in response has expanded considerably, and
State and local governments are increasingly turning to the Federal Government for
assistance'." In response to repeated congressional directives to submit proposals to
reform this program to be fiscally responsible, the FEMA Director has committed to
submitting a comprehensive proposal, including proposed legislation, by July 4, 1997.
The committee report goes on to say, "Should the Agency fail to meet this deadline, the
Committee will be forced to take steps to effectuate cost savings at FEMA, including a
reduction to FEMA's operating programs.
Department of Health and Human Services
- Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund: $15 million for the purpose of
supporting multicenter research studies on environmental risk factors associated with
breast cancer and factors related to regional variations in breast cancer incidence and
mortality. The Committee requests the Secretary to provide a report on the research plan
and allocation methodology accompanying these additional funds by July 1, 1997.
Title III--Other Supplementals
Department of Agriculture
- Farm Service Agency: $12.6 million to subsidize the cost of farm operating direct loans.
This amount will fund an estimated additional $100 million in direct loans for FY97.
- Food and Consumer Service: $58 million for the special supplemental nutrition program
for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). This additional amount is sufficient to fund the
estimated 444,000 shortfall in state agency projected caseload maintenance requirements
for the balance of FY97.
Department of State
- International Organizations and Conferences: $100 million as a down payment for the
United Nations intended to bolster diplomatic efforts to negotiate a reduction in U.S.
contributions to the U.N. However, the bill prohibits the obligation or expenditure of the
money until specifically authorized. Also, the Secretary of State is directed to report to
the Committee on its success in lowering our arrears to the U.N. not later than June 15,
1997, and to report a list of offsets for any outstanding arrears which the administration
wishes to fund in FY98 or future years.
District of Columbia
- Federal Payment to the District of Columbia: $31.2 million, of which $22.4 million is for
emergency capital improvements to those D.C. public school facilities that have the most
immediate facility improvement needs. The balance of $8.8 million is for the
Metropolitan Police Department to be used for a 10-percent pay raise for police officers.
Department of Interior
- National Park Service: $10 million in nonemergency funds for implementation of phase 2
of the Yosemite Vally transportation plan. This amount is offset by a rescission of funds
from the clean coal technology program.
Department of Transportation
- Coast Guard: $6.5 million for TWA flight 800 accident search and rescue, salvage
operations support, etc; and $4.2 million for Coast Guard retired pay.
- Federal Avaiation Administration: $15.5 million for the grants-in-aid for airports to make
funds available for the unanticipated costs incurred by state and local agencies related to
support efforts in the 1996 ValuJet flight 592 and TWA flight 800 air tragedies.
- Federal Highway Administration: $933.2 million in additional Federal-aid highway
obligational authority for FY97.
U.S. Postal Service
- Payment to the Postal Service Fund: $5.4 million in FY98 for payment to the postal
service fund.
Federal Election Commission
- Although the President requested $1.7 million for "startup costs associated with
investigations and audits pursuant to the Federal Election Campaign Act," the Committee
did not provide any funds.
Department of Education
- Education for the Disadvantaged: $198.2 million in additional funding for Title I grants to
local education agencies to prevent some of the poorest states from losing Title I funds
due to the Department's decision to use a blended rate in calculating Title I allocations.
General Provisions
Chapter 10 the Committee Report contains 25 general provisions, including the following:
- 2000 Census: The Committee specifies that none of the funds made available in any
appropriations act for FY97 may be used by the Department of Commerce to plan or
otherwise prepare for the use of sampling in taking the 2000 decennial census.
- Rights-of-Way: Section 310 tightens the language included in last year's omnibus
appropriations bill that imposed a permanent moratorium on the Department of Interior's
efforts to issue new rules changing existing rights-of-way that were established on federal
lands prior to 1976.
- Endangered Species Act Waiver: Section 311 allows for immediate repair and operation
of federal flood control projects that were damaged during 1996 and 1997 by waiving the
requirements of the Endangered Species Act for formal consultations under the Act and
protecting persons operating and repairing the projects from the "takings" provisions in
the Act.
- Small Business Delay: Section 322 prohibits the Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
between July 1 and December 31, 1997, from imposing or enforcing penalties on small
businesses who are not in compliance with the electronic federal tax payment system
(EFTPS). This provision will protect small businesses against potential penalties of 10
percent on each tax payment that does not completely meet the requirements of EFTPS.
- Repeal of Section 1555 of the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act: Section 323 repeals
section 1555 which provides state and local governments with the ability to purchase
goods and services from the federal supply schedule managed by the General Services
Administration. Due to problems with the provision, Congress mandated a moratorium
on its implementation. The Committee believes that section 1555 is likely to result in
increased costs to the Federal Government and recommends that the section be repealed..
Social Services Block Grant
- Title VI of the bill creates a social services block grant to provide temporary SSI benefits
for elderly and disabled legal immigrants. The Committee provides $125 million to assist
states and local goverments to meet anticipated demands for an additional two months
beyond the August 22 statutory eligibility cutoff created by last year's welfare reform bill.
Further action on this matter is expected to be considered by the authorizing committee.
Government Shutdown Prevention Act
- Title VII includes language providing continuing appropriations for FY98 at 98 percent of
the 1997 levels in the event the regular annual appropriations acts are not enacted into law
by October 1, 1997. The text is the same as S. 547 introduced by Senators McCain,
Hutchison, Lott, Stevens, Craig, Nickles, Ashcroft, and Warner on April 10, 1997. In
introducing the bill, Senator McCain stated that "This bill creates a statutory continuing
resolution as sort of a safety net CR, which would trigger only if the appropriation acts do
not become law or if there is no governing continuing resolution in place."
POSSIBLE AMENDMENTS
As of press time, we do not have a comprehensive list of specific amendments. However, the
following amendments to strike provisions in the bill are anticipated.
Bumpers. Strike language that would block implementation of a new Interior Department policy
on rights-of-way on federal land.
Byrd. Strike Title VII of the bill that contains the text of S. 547, the Government Shutdown
Prevention Act.
Hollings. Strike language that would prohibit funding for the use of sampling data in the next
census.
Reid. Strike language waiving formal consultation requirements and "takings" liability under the
Endangered Species Act for operating and repairing flood control projects damaged by flooding
in 1996 and 1997.
An amendment to add $1.7 million requested by the administration for the FEC may be offered.