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CRS Releases Guide to Fiscal 2007 Treasury Appropriations

JUL. 14, 2006

RL33551

DATED JUL. 14, 2006
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
  • Authors
    Peterman, David Randall
    Frittelli, John
  • Institutional Authors
    Congressional Research Service
  • Subject Area/Tax Topics
  • Jurisdictions
  • Language
    English
  • Tax Analysts Document Number
    Doc 2006-13659
  • Tax Analysts Electronic Citation
    2006 TNT 139-19
Citations: RL33551

 

CRS Report for Congress

 

Received through the CRS Web

 

Order Code RL33551

 

 

July 14, 2006

 

 

David Randall Peterman and John Frittelli

 

Coordinators

 

Resources, Science, and Industry Division

 

 

Appropriations are one part of a complex federal budget process that includes budget resolutions, appropriations (regular, supplemental, and continuing) bills, rescissions, and budget reconciliation bills. The process begins with the President's budget request and is bound by the rules of the House and Senate, the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 (as amended), the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990, and current program authorizations.

This report is a guide to one of the regular appropriations bills that Congress considers each year. It is designed to supplement the information provided by the Subcommittee on Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, District of Columbia of the House Committee on Appropriations, and by the Subcommittee on Transportation, Treasury, the Judiciary, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies of the Senate Committee on Appropriations. It summarizes the current legislative status of the bill, its scope, major issues, funding levels, and related legislative activity. The report lists the key CRS staff relevant to the issues covered and related CRS products.

This report is updated as soon as possible after major legislative developments, especially following legislative action in the committees and on the floor of the House and Senate.

 

NOTE: A Web Version of this document with active links is available to congressional staff at [http://beta.crs.gov/cli/level_2.aspx?PRDS_CLI_ITEM_ID=73].
Transportation, the Treasury, Housing and Urban

 

Development, the Judiciary, the District of Columbia,

 

the Executive Office of the President, and

 

Independent Agencies (TTHUD):

 

FY2007 Appropriations

 

 

Summary

The Bush Administration requested $138.5 billion, after scorekeeping adjustments, for these agencies for FY2007, an increase over the $136.2 billion provided in their FY2006 appropriations act (after a 1.0% across-the-board rescission that was included in the FY2006 Department of Defense Appropriations Act, P.L. 109-148). The total FY2006 funding, after scorekeeping adjustments, for the agencies in this bill was $146.3 billion, due to emergency supplemental funding provided to deal with the effects of the Gulf Coast hurricanes of 2005.

The House-passed version of H.R. 5576, the FY2007 Departments of Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development, The Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies appropriations bill, provides a net total of $139.6 billion for FY2007, $3.4 billion (2%) over comparable FY2006 enacted levels and $1.1 billion (less than 1%) over the Administration's request. The House provided significant increases over the requested levels of funding for aviation programs and Amtrak, for a number of programs under the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and for the Executive Office of the President.

Other provisions in the House-passed bill include provisions directing Amtrak to achieve operating improvements, a provision prohibiting the Internal Revenue Service from using private collection agencies to collect overdue taxes, a provision to provide the same pay increase to civilian federal employees as to military personnel for calendar year 2007 (2.7%), a provision that would restrict outsourcing of federal work, and a provision that would ease restrictions on U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba. This report will be updated.

                            Key Policy Staff

 

 

                                                              CRS     Telephone

 

 Area of Expertise                      Name                  Div.        #

 

 

      Title I: Department of Transportation

 

 

 Aviation Safety, Federal Aviation      Bart Elias            RSI       7-7771

 

 Administration

 

 

 Airport Improvement Program,           John Fischer          RSI       7-7766

 

 Transportation Infrastructure

 

 Policy, Transportation Trust Funds

 

 

 Federal Railroad Administration;       John Frittelli        RSI       7-7033

 

 Maritime Administration; Surface

 

 Transportation Board

 

 

 Airport Improvement Program,           Bob Kirk              RSI       7-7769

 

 Federal Highway Administration

 

 

 Amtrak, Federal Motor Carrier          Randy Peterman        RSI       7-3267

 

 Safety Administration, Federal

 

 Transit Administration, High-Speed

 

 Rail, National Highway Traffic

 

 Safety Administration, Surface

 

 Transportation Safety

 

 

      Title II: Department of the Treasury

 

 

 Treasury, Internal Revenue             Gary Guenther         G&F       7-7742

 

 Service

 

 

      Title III: Department of Housing and Urban Development

 

 

 Low-income housing programs and        Maggie McCarty        DSP       7-2163

 

 issues and general HUD: Section 8,

 

 Public Housing, HOPE VI, HOME

 

 

 Community Development programs         Eugene Boyd           DSP       7-8689

 

 and issues: Community Development

 

 Block Grants (CDBG), EZ/EC,

 

 Brownfields redevelopment

 

 

 Housing programs and issues for        Libby Perl            DSP       7-7806

 

 special populations: Elderly (202),

 

 Disabled (811), Homeless, AIDS

 

 housing

 

 

 Homeownership and other housing        Bruce Foote           G&F       7-7805

 

 issues: FHA, Rural, Indian

 

 housing, Fair Housing

 

 

      Title IV: The Judiciary

 

 

 Judiciary                              Steve Rutkus          G&F       7-7162

 

 

 Judiciary                              Lorraine Tong         G&F       7-5846

 

 

      Division B: District of Columbia

 

 

 District of Columbia                   Eugene Boyd           G&F       7-8689

 

 

      Title V: Executive Office of the President and Funds Appropriated to the

 

      President

 

 

 Executive Office of the President      Barbara Schwemle      G&F       7-8655

 

 

      Title VI: Independent Agencies

 

 

 Generally                              Virginia McMurtry     G&F       7-8678

 

 

 Architectural and Transportation       Nancy Jones           ALD       7-6976

 

 Barriers Compliance Board

 

 

 Consumer Product Safety Commission     Bruce Mulock          G&F       7-7775

 

 

 Election Assistance Commission         Kevin Coleman         G&F       7-7878

 

 

 Federal Deposit Insurance              Pauline Smale         G&F       7-7832

 

 Corporation: OIG

 

 

 Federal Election Commission            Joe Cantor            G&F       7-7876

 

 

 Federal Labor Relations Authority      Gerald Mayer          DSP       7-7815

 

 

 Federal Maritime Commission            John Frittelli        RSI       7-7033

 

 

 General Services Administration        Stephanie Smith       G&F       7-8674

 

 

 National Transportation Safety Board   Bart Elias            RSI       7-7771

 

 

 Merit Systems Protection Board         Barbara Schwemle      G&F       7-8655

 

 

 National Archives; E-Government Fund   Harold Relyea         G&F       7-8679

 

 in GSA

 

 

 Office of Personnel Management;        Barbara Schwemle      G&F       7-8655

 

 Office of Special Counsel

 

 

 National Credit Union Administration   Pauline Smale         G&F       7-7832

 

 

 Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation  Eugene Boyd           G&F       7-8689

 

 

 Selective Service Commission           David Burrelli        FDT       7-8033

 

 

 United States Interagency Council      Maggie McCarty        DSP       7-2163

 

 on Homelessness

 

 

 US Postal Service                      Nye Stevens           G&F       7-0208

 

 

      Title VIII: General Provisions, Government-Wide

 

 

 Government-wide General Provisions     Barbara Schwemle      G&F       7-8655

 

 

 Competitive Sourcing                   L. Elaine Halchin     G&F       7-0646

 

 

 Cuba                                   Mark Sullivan         FDT       7-7689

 

 

 ALD = American Law Division

 

 DSP = Domestic Social Policy Division

 

 FDT = Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division

 

 G&F = Government & Finance Division

 

 RSI = Resources, Science, and Industry Division

 

 

                                Contents

 

 Most Recent Developments

 

 

 Overview

 

           Different Appropriations Subcommittee Structures

 

 

 Title I: Transportation Appropriations

 

      Department of Transportation Budget and Key Policy Issues

 

           Amtrak

 

           Aviation

 

                Airport Improvement Program

 

                Essential Air Service

 

           Surface Transportation

 

           Maritime Administration

 

 

 Title II: Treasury Appropriations

 

      Department of the Treasury Budget and Key Policy Issues

 

           Internal Revenue Service (IRS)

 

 

 Title III: Department of Housing and Urban Development

 

      Department of Housing and Urban Development Budget and Key

 

           Policy Issues

 

           Community Development Fund/Block Grants

 

           Housing Programs for the Elderly and the Disabled

 

           Public Housing/HOPE VI

 

 

 Title IV: The Judiciary

 

      The Judiciary Budget and Key Policy Issues

 

           FY2007 Request

 

           House Action

 

           Supreme Court

 

           U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

 

           U.S. Court of International Trade

 

           Courts of Appeals, District Courts, and Other Judicial Services

 

                Salaries and Expenses

 

                Court Security

 

                Defender Services

 

                Fees of Jurors and Commissioners

 

           Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts (AOUSC)

 

           Federal Judicial Center

 

           United States Sentencing Commission

 

           Judiciary Retirement Funds

 

           Administrative Provisions

 

 

 Title V: District of Columbia Appropriations

 

      District of Columbia Budget and Key Policy Issues

 

           President's Request

 

           District Budget

 

           House Bill

 

 

 Title VI: Executive Office of the President and Funds Appropriated to the

 

      President

 

      Executive Office of the President Budget and Key Policy Issues

 

 

 Title VII: Independent Agencies

 

           Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA)

 

           Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB)

 

           Office of Personnel Management (OPM)

 

           Federal Election Commission (FEC)

 

           General Services Administration (GSA)

 

           Federal Buildings Fund (FBF)

 

           Electronic Government Fund (E-gov Fund)

 

           National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)

 

           Postal Service

 

 

 Title IX : General Provisions Government-Wide

 

      Cuba Sanctions

 

 

                              List of Tables

 

 

 Table 1. Status of FY2007 Departments of Transportation, the Treasury, and

 

      Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, the District of Columbia,

 

      the Executive Office of the President, and Independent Agencies

 

      Appropriations

 

 

 Table 2. Transportation/Treasury et al. Appropriations, by Title, FY2006-

 

      FY2007

 

 

 Table 3. Funding Trends for Transportation/Treasury et al. Appropriations,

 

      FY2002-FY2006

 

 

 Table 4. Title I: Department of Transportation Appropriations, FY2006 to

 

      FY2007

 

 

 Table 5. Title II: Department of the Treasury Appropriations, FY2005 to FY2006

 

 

 Table 6. Title III: Housing and Urban Development Appropriations, FY2006 to

 

      FY2007

 

 

 Table 7. Title IV: The Judiciary Appropriations, FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

 Table 8. Title V: District of Columbia Appropriations, FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

 Table 9. Title VI: Executive Office of the President (EOP) and Funds

 

      Appropriated to the President Appropriations, FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

 Table 10. Title VII: Independent Agencies Appropriations, FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

 Table 11. General Services Administration Appropriations, FY2006 to FY2007

 

Transportation, the Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the

 

Judiciary, the District of Columbia, the Executive Office of the

 

President, and Independent Agencies

 

(TTHUD): FY2007 Appropriations

 

 

Most Recent Developments

 

 

On June 14, 2006, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 5576, the FY2007 Departments of Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies Appropriations bill. The House approved an overall funding level of $139.6 billion (after budgetary scorekeeping adjustments), an $8 billion (6%) increase over the amount in the FY2006 Act1 and a $1 billion (less than 1%) increase over the Administration's request. The House approved the Appropriations Committee's recommendations to provide the same pay raise (2.7%) to federal civilian workers as that provided for uniformed military personnel for calendar year 2007, to impose performance requirements on Amtrak, to prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from using private collection agencies to collect taxes, and to restrict the outsourcing of federal work. The House approved several amendments to the bill, including ones increasing funding for Amtrak and for selected programs in the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and to ease restrictions on U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba (the Administration has threatened to veto the bill if it contained provisions weakening sanctions on Cuba2).

 

Overview

 

 

The President's FY2007 request for the programs covered by this appropriations bill was $138.5 billion. This was $2.3 billion (2%) over the total in the FY2006 Act (after a 1.0% across-the-board rescission applied to the FY2006 funding). The FY2007 request included cuts from the FY2006 funding level for grants to airports (-$764 million), Amtrak (-$394 million), and housing programs for elderly and disabled in the Department of Housing and Urban Development (-$307 million). The FY2007 request for the Executive Office of the President was $225 million less than the FY2006 figure; that reduction was primarily due to the proposed transfer of the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program ($225 million in FY2006) from the Executive Office of the President to the Department of Justice.

The President's FY2007 budget request proposals included:

  • funding Amtrak, the provider of intercity passenger rail service, at $900 million, down from $1.2 billion in FY2006;

  • reducing funding for the Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) Airport Improvement Program (AIP) to $2.8 billion, $700 million below its 'guaranteed' authorization level, which would make the entire appropriations bill subject to a point of order. The proposed level is also below the AIP formula threshold of $3.2 billion, which could result in a halving of most AIP formula distributions;

  • reducing funding for community and economic development programs under the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to $6.8 billion, $815 million below the amount provided in the FY2006 Act;

  • reducing funding for housing for elderly and disabled persons under HUD by $307 million (32%), from $971 million for FY2006 to $664 million for FY2007;

  • eliminating the annual $29 million payment to the United States Postal Service for revenue forgone, as well as the absence of any funding requested for Postal Service security measures.

 

The House did not support most of these proposed changes. The House-passed version of H.R. 5576, the FY2007 Departments of Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development, The Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies Appropriations bill, provided $139.6 billion, $1.1 billion (less than 1%) over the Administration's request. The bill generally reflected recommendations of the House Committee on Appropriations; the House did approve amendments increasing Amtrak's FY2007 funding from $900 million to $1.1 billion, and approved amendments increasing funding for several programs within the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The White House objected to several provisions in the bill, and issued a veto threat against the bill if it included any provision easing sanctions on Cuba.3

Different Appropriations Subcommittee Structures. In early 2005, the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations reorganized their subcommittee structures. The House Committee on Appropriations reduced its number of subcommittees to ten. This change combined the Transportation, Treasury, and Independent Agencies subcommittee with the District of Columbia subcommittee; to the resulting subcommittee, in addition, jurisdiction over appropriations for the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Judiciary as well as several additional independent agencies was added.

The Senate Committee on Appropriations reduced its number of subcommittees to 12. The Senate also added jurisdiction over appropriations for the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, and the Judiciary, to the Transportation, Treasury, and Independent Agencies subcommittee; the Senate retained a separate District of Columbia Appropriations subcommittee. As a result, the area of coverage of the House and Senate subcommittees with jurisdiction over this appropriations bill are almost, but not quite, identical; the major difference being that in the Senate the appropriations for the District of Columbia originate in a separate bill.

Table 1 notes the status of the FY2007 Transportation et al. appropriations bill.

        Table 1. Status of FY2007 Departments of Transportation, the

 

          Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary,

 

        the District of Columbia, the Executive Office of the President,

 

                  and Independent Agencies Appropriations

 

 

      Subcommittee

 

        Markup            House          House          Senate

 

                          Report        Passage         Report

 

 House          Senate

 

 

                          H.Rept.       6/14/06

 

 5/25/06                  109-495       406-22

 

                          6/9/06

 

 

                               Conference

 

 Senate         Conf.            Report              Public

 

 Passage       Report           Approval             Law

 

                          House          Senate

 

 

Table 2 lists the total funding provided for each of the titles in the bill (the last two titles cover general provisions affecting this bill and general provisions affecting the entire federal government) for FY2006 and the amount requested for that title for FY2007.

    Table 2. Transportation/Treasury et al. Appropriations, by Title,

 

                              FY2006-FY2007

 

                             (millions of dollars)

 

 

                              FY2006      FY2007     FY2007   FY2007   FY2007

 

                              Enacted*    Request    House    Senate   Enacted

 

                 Title                                         Passed

 

 Title I:  Department of     $60,677     $64,432    $64,720

 

 Transportation

 

 

 Title II:  Department of     11,689      11,606     11,522

 

  the Treasury

 

 

 Title III:  Housing and      33,974      34,118     35,309

 

 Urban Development

 

 

 Title IV:  The Judiciary      5,756       6,260      6,063

 

 

 Title V:  District of           603         597        575

 

 Columbia

 

 

 Title VI:  Executive Office     736         503        723

 

 of the President

 

 

 Title VII:  Independent      19,989      20,999     20,708

 

 Agencies

 

 

 Title VIII-VIIII:  General      --           --         --               --

 

 Provisions

 

 

 Total                      $137,623     $138,516    $139,620

 

 

      Source: Budget tables in H.Repts. 109-307 and 109-495. "Total" is

 

 from "total budgetary resources" line in budget table. Totals may not add due

 

 to rounding and score keeping adjustments.

 

 

                                   FOOTNOTES

 

 

      * The FY2006 figures represent the amounts enacted by the FY2006

 

 Transportation/Treasury et al. appropriations act (P.L. 109-115). The Defense

 

 appropriations act (P.L. 109-148) contained an across-the-board rescission of

 

 non-emergency spending of 1.0%; also DOT and HUD received emergency

 

 supplemental funding for FY2006 to deal with the effects of several

 

 hurricanes; those changes are not reflected in these figures.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES

 

 

Table 3 shows funding trends over the five-year period FY2002-FY2006, and the amounts requested for FY2007, for the titles in the bill. The agencies generally experienced funding increases during the period FY2002-FY2006.

       Table 3. Funding Trends for Transportation/Treasury et al.

 

 

         Department         FY2002  FY2003c  FY2004d  FY2005e  FY2006f  FY2007

 

 Title I: Transportationa    $57.4   $55.7    $58.4    $59.6    $60.7     64.7

 

 

 Title II: Treasuryb          10.5    10.8     11.1     11.2     11.7     11.5

 

 

 Title III: Housing and       30.2    31.0     31.2     31.9     34.0     35.3

 

 Urban Development

 

 

 Title IV: Judiciary           4.7     5.4      5.2      5.4      5.8      6.1

 

 

 Title V: District of          0.4     0.5      0.5      0.6      0.6      0.6

 

 Columbia

 

 

 Title VI: Executive Office    0.8     0.8      0.8      0.8      0.7      0.7

 

 of the President

 

 

 Title VII: Independent         --      --       --     19.8     19.9     20.7

 

 Agencies

 

 

      Source: United States House of Representatives, Committee on

 

 Appropriations, Comparative Statement of Budget Authority tables from fiscal

 

 years 2001 through 2007. Figures for 2006 do not reflect emergency

 

 appropriations. Figures for 2007 are from table in H.Rept. 109-485.

 

 

                                   FOOTNOTES

 

 

      a Figures for Department of Transportation appropriations for

 

 FY2002-FY2003 have been adjusted for comparison with FY2004 and later figures

 

 by subtracting the United States Coast Guard, the Transportation Security

 

 Administration, the National Transportation Safety Board, and the

 

 Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, and by adding the

 

 Maritime Administration.

 

 

      b Figures for Department of the Treasury appropriations for

 

 FY2002-FY2003 have been adjusted for comparison with FY2004 and later figures

 

 by subtracting the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms; the Customs

 

 Service; the United States Secret Service; and the Law Enforcement Training

 

 Center.

 

 

      c FY2003 figures reflect a 0.65% across-the-board rescission.

 

 

      d FY2004 figures reflect a 0.59% across-the-board rescission.

 

 

      e FY2005 figures reflect a 0.83% across-the-board rescission.

 

 

      f FY2006 figures are as enacted in the FY2006 appropriations act

 

 (P.L. 109-115) and do not reflect a 1.0% across-the-board rescission or

 

 emergency supplemental funding provided for DOT and HUD. DOT and HUD received

 

 emergency funding for response to the effects of the Gulf Coast hurricanes;

 

 DOT's total FY2006 funding, including emergency funding, was $63.0 billion;

 

 HUD's total FY2006 funding, including emergency funding, was $45.5 billion.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES

 

 

Title I: Transportation Appropriations

 

 

   Table 4. Title I: Department of Transportation Appropriations,

 

                          FY2006 to FY2007

 

             (in millions of dollars -- totals may not add)

 

 

                              FY2006      FY2007     FY2007   FY2007   FY2007

 

   Department or Agency       Enacteda    Request    House    Senate   Enacted

 

   (Selected Accounts)                               Passed

 

 

 Office of the Secretary      $   237     $   174    $   185

 

   of Transportation

 

       Essential Air              109          --        117

 

         Serviceb

 

 Federal Aviation              13,711      12,774     15,154

 

   Administration (FAA)

 

       Operations (trust        8,104       8,366      8,360

 

         fund & general fund)

 

       Facilities & Equipment   2,555       2,503      3,110

 

         (F&E) (trust fund)

 

       Grant-in-aid Airports    3,515       2,750      3,700

 

         (AIP) (trust fund)

 

         (limit. on oblig.)

 

       Research, Engineering      137         130        134

 

         & Development

 

         (trust fund)

 

 Federal Highway               33,392      39,825     37,661c

 

   Administration (FHWA)

 

       (Limitation on          35,672      39,086     39,086

 

         Obligations)

 

       (Exempt Obligations)       739         739        739

 

       Additional funds         2,750          --         --

 

         (trust fund)

 

       Additional funds            19          --         --

 

         (general fund)

 

 Federal Motor Carrier Safety     490         517        517

 

   Administration (FMCSA)

 

 National Highway Traffic         806         815        822

 

   Safety (FAA)

 

   Administration (NHTSA)

 

 Federal Railroad               1,511       1,085      1,085

 

   Administration (FRA)

 

       Amtrak                   1,294         900        900d

 

 Federal Transit                8,504       8,846      8,932

 

   Administration (FTA)

 

       General Funds            1,594       1,583      1,670

 

       Trust Funds              6,910       7,263      7,263

 

 St. Lawrence Seaway               16           8         17

 

   Development Corporation

 

 Maritime Administration          306         223        224

 

   (MARAD)

 

 Pipeline and Hazardous           115         121        121

 

   Materials Safety

 

   Administration

 

       Pipeline safety program     72          76         76

 

       Emergency preparedness      14          28         28

 

         grants

 

 Research and Innovative            6           8           6

 

   Technology Administration

 

 Office of Inspector General       62          64          64

 

 Surface Transportation Board      25          22          24

 

 

 Total, Department of          62,316      64,432      64,720

 

 Transportation

 

 

 Note: Figures are from the budget authority table in H.Rept. 109-495.

 

 FY2007 figures do not reflect floor amendments increasing or

 

 decreasing funding for different programs. Because of differing

 

 treatment of offsets, the totals will not always match the

 

 Administration's totals. The figures within this table may differ

 

 slightly from those in the text due to supplemental appropriations,

 

 rescissions, and other funding actions. Columns may not add due to

 

 rounding or exclusion of smaller program line-items.

 

 

                                FOOTNOTES

 

 

      a These figures reflect the 1.0% across-the-board rescission

 

 included in P.L. 108-447.

 

 

      b The total comes from a $50 million annual authorization for

 

 the Essential Air Service program to be funded out of overflight fee

 

 collections and an additional amount appropriated for the program.

 

 

      c The budget table in H.Rept. 109-495 gives a net total of $34.

 

 411 billion for FHWA for FY2007 in the bill, but appears to double-count a

 

 $2.2 billion rescission of contract authority. The FHWA net total figure in

 

 the text of the bill is $37.661billion (p. 29).

 

 

      d Amtrak's appropriation was increased to $1.2 billion by a

 

 floor amendment.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES

 

 

Department of Transportation Budget and Key Policy Issues

The President's budget proposed $64.4 billion for the Department of Transportation (DOT). This was $2.1 billion (3%) more than the $62.3 billion enacted for FY2006, including emergency spending, and $4.3 billion (7%) more than the amount provided in the FY2006 appropriations act (after then 1% rescission). The major funding changes requested from the FY2006 enacted levels were an increase of $3.5 billion (10%) in the obligation limitation for highways, reflecting the authorized level in the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU) (P.L. 109-59) as well as an increase due to higher-than-projected Highway Trust Fund revenues; a decrease of $394 million (30%) in the request for Amtrak; and a decrease of $765 million (22%) in the Federal Aviation Administration's Airport Improvement Program.

The House Committee on Appropriations recommended $64.7 billion for DOT, $287 million (less than 1%) more than the Administration request and $2.4 billion (4%) above total FY2006 funding. The primary changes from the President's request were additional funding for the Federal Aviation Administration ($1.5 billion), bringing the Airport Improvement Program and Facilities and Equipment Program up to their FY2007 authorized funding levels. The Committee also recommended an increase of $100 million (7%) for the Federal Transit Administration's Capital Grants (New Starts) Program. The House supported the Committee's recommendations regarding transportation funding, except that the House voted to add another $214 million (24%) for Amtrak (discussed below) and $6.7 million for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's Operations and Research Program, for the Office of Fuel Economy to study how best to promote an increase in the corporate average fuel economy (CAFÉ) by the auto industry.

The Administration's budget for DOT identified three agency-specific goals influencing the budget request: improving aviation and surface transportation safety through increased funding for safety programs, improving transportation mobility through investments in additional infrastructure and through investments in technology to increase the effective capacity of the transportation systems, and restraining spending and managing for results by, among other initiatives, restructuring federal intercity passenger rail policy and its provider, Amtrak, and eliminating the Railroad Rehabilitation and Improvement Financing Program.4

Amtrak. Amtrak is a quasi-governmental corporation that operates and maintains rail infrastructure in the Northeast and operates passenger rail service throughout the country. It operates at a deficit and requires federal support to continue operations. Amtrak's authorization expired at the end of FY2002. Reauthorization efforts have been stalled by fundamental disagreements between Congress and the Administration over the future shape of federal intercity passenger rail policy.

The Administration, which has appointed all the current members of the Amtrak Board of Directors, has sought to force changes in intercity passenger rail policy over the past several years by requesting less funding for Amtrak than is needed to maintain the status quo, arguing that "only a constrained budget will force Amtrak to change the way it conducts business."5 Congress has responded by providing more funding for Amtrak than requested by the Administration, while imposing conditions on Amtrak in the appropriations bills.

The Administration requested $900 million for Amtrak for FY2007. The Administration's proposal received bipartisan criticism in both the House and the Senate. The Administration has asserted in the past that it would support increased funding for intercity passenger rail if significant reforms are enacted. Some Members of Congress have questioned where that additional money would come from, given the competing demands from other transportation modes and from other agencies in the appropriations bill that funds DOT.

The House Committee on Appropriations recommended $900 million for grants to Amtrak for FY2007. The Committee also recommended a number of requirements for Amtrak, including that Amtrak be required to submit a comprehensive business plan and a detailed plan for improving its managerial cost accounting system; to cut system overhead expenses by 10% annually; and to achieve savings through operating efficiencies in its food and beverage service, and first class service, resulting in these services breaking even by the end of FY2007.

In its consideration of H.R. 5576, the House approved an amendment 266-158 to increase Amtrak's FY2007 appropriation by $214 million, from $900 million to $1.114 billion. This is $180 million less than the $1.294 billion Amtrak is receiving in FY2006 (after the 1.0% across-the-board rescission), and significantly less than the $1.4 billion the DOT IG testified Amtrak needed in FY2007.6

Aviation. The Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) budget provides both capital and operating funding for the nation's air traffic control system, as well as providing federal grants to airports for airport planning, development, and expansion of the capacity of the nation's air traffic infrastructure. The President's budget requested $12.8 billion in net funding for FY2007, $937 million less than was enacted for FY2006. The President's request included $18 million to hire 1,136 air traffic controllers in FY2007. This was expected to result in a net gain of around 132 controllers after retirements expected in FY2007.

The House Committee recommended $15.2 billion for FY2007, $1.4 billion over the level enacted for FY2006 and $2.4 billion over the Administration request. The increases brought the FAA's capital programs up to their FY2007 authorized funding levels. The House supported this recommendation.

The House also adopted, 291-137, an amendment restricting foreign control over the business decisions of U.S. airlines. The DOT has proposed a rule whose stated purpose is to promote foreign investment in U.S. airlines.7 In response to concerns raised about the implications of this proposed rule for national security, the House adopted an amendment prohibiting the use of any funds provided in the FY2007 appropriations bill to finalize or implement the proposed rule.

Airport Improvement Program. The President's budget proposed a cut to the Airport Improvement Program (AIP), from $3.5 billion in FY2006 to $2.8 billion for FY2007. The House provided $3.7 billion, the FY2007 authorized level.

AIP funds are used to provide grants for airport planning and development, and for projects to increase airport capacity (such as building new runways) and other facility improvements. Some Members of Congress have expressed concern at proposed cuts in the AIP program in the face of forecasts of renewed growth in aviation traffic.

Essential Air Service. The President's budget proposed a $59 million (54%) reduction in funding for the Essential Air Service program, from $109 million (FY2006) to $50 million. The House Committee on Appropriations recommended $117 million. The House-passed bill provided $117 million, though the source of funding for $67 million of that was struck from the bill on a point of order.

This program seeks to preserve air service to small airports in rural communities by subsidizing the cost of that service. Supporters of the Essential Air Service program contend that preserving airline service to rural communities was part of the deal Congress made in exchange for deregulating airline service in 1978, which was expected to reduce air service to rural areas. Some Members of Congress expressed concern that the proposed cut in funding for the Essential Air Service program could lead to a reduction in the transportation connections of rural communities. Previous budget requests from the Current Administration, as well as budget requests from previous Administrations, have also proposed reducing funding to this program.

Surface Transportation. The President's budget requested $39.8 billion for federal highway programs for FY2007, an increase of $3.5 billion (10%) over the comparable level of $36.3 billion provided in FY2006.8 The budget also requested $8.8 billion for federal transit programs for FY2007, an increase of $342 million (4%) over the $8.5 billion provided in FY2006. These increases reflect the authorized level of funding provided (and "guaranteed") for surface transportation programs by SAFETEA (P.L. 109-59), except that the request was $100 million less than the authorized level for transit. The authorized level of FY2007 highway funding included an increase of $842 million as a result of higher-than-expected revenues to the Highway Trust Fund, an adjustment provided for in SAFETEA known as Revenue-Aligned Budget Authority, or RABA.

The House approved the requested (authorized) level for highway programs9 $37.0 billion for federal highway programs and added $100 million to the Capital Grants (New Starts) transit program to bring the transit funding up to its authorized level of $8.9 billion.

The Administration requested $517 million (a 6% increase) for the Federal Motor Carrier Administration (FMCSA) and $815 million (a 1% increase) for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The House Committee on Appropriations recommended the requested level for FMCSA and recommended an additional $6 million to the amount requested for NHTSA. The House concurred with these recommendations.

Maritime Administration. The Administration requested $299 million for the Maritime Administration for FY2007, $7 million (2%) below the $306 million enacted for FY2006. As in its FY2006 budget, the Administration did not request any new funding for National Defense Tanker Vessel Construction Program, and requested that $74 million Congress appropriated in FY2005 for this program be rescinded. The House provided $300 million, and supported the request to rescind the $74 million for the National Defense Tanker Vessel Construction Program. That rescission, plus a $2 million rescission of administrative expenses for the Maritime Guaranteed Loan Program, brought the net total funding down to $224 million.

The National Defense Tanker Vessel Construction Program is intended to decrease the Department of Defense's reliance on foreign-flag oil tankers by supporting the construction of up to five privately-owned product-tanker vessels in the United States. It would provide up to $50 million per vessel for the construction, in U.S. shipyards, of commercial tank vessels that are capable of carrying militarily useful petroleum products and that would be available for the military's use in time of war.

 

Title II: Treasury Appropriations

 

 

Department of the Treasury Budget and Key Policy

 

Issues10

 

 

This section examines the FY2007 budget for the Treasury Department and its operating bureaus. The FY2007 budget for the largest operating bureau, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), is examined in the following section.

The Treasury Department performs a variety of crucial governmental functions. Heading the list are protecting the nation's financial system against illicit activities such as money laundering, collecting tax revenue, enforcing tax laws, managing and accounting for federal debt, administering the federal government's finances, regulating financial institutions, and producing and distributing coins and currency.

At its most basic level of organization, Treasury consists of departmental offices and operating bureaus. In general, the offices are responsible for formulating and implementing policy initiatives and managing Treasury's operations, while the bureaus perform specific duties assigned to Treasury, largely through statutory mandates. The bureaus account for over 95% of the agency's funding and work force.

With one possible exception, the bureaus can be divided into those engaged in financial management and regulation and those engaged in law enforcement. In recent decades, the Comptroller of the Currency, U.S. Mint, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Financial Management Service (FMS), Bureau of Public Debt, Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI), and Office of Thrift Supervision have undertaken tasks related to the management of the federal government's finances or the supervision and regulation of the U.S. financial system. By contrast, law enforcement has been the central focus of the work done by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms; U.S. Secret Service; Federal Law Enforcement Training Center; U.S. Customs Service; Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN); and the Treasury Forfeiture Fund. Since the creation of the Department of Homeland Security in 2002, Treasury's involvement in law enforcement has shrunk considerably, as most of the law enforcement agencies within the Treasury were transferred to the Department of Homeland Security (the law enforcement functions of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms were transferred to the Department of Justice and renamed the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives). The single possible exception to this simplified dichotomy is the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), whose main duties embrace both the collection of tax revenue and the enforcement of tax laws and regulations.

         Table 5. Title II: Department of the Treasury Appropriations,

 

                                FY2005 to FY2006

 

                             (millions of dollars)

 

                                                        FY2007

 

                                     FY2006    FY2007   House   FY2007  FY2007

 

 Program or Account                  Enacted*  Request  Passed  Senate  Enacted

 

 

 Departmental Offices                   $195     $224     $224

 

 

 Department-wide Systems and

 

 Capital Investments                      24       34       34

 

 Office of Inspector General              17       17       17

 

 Treasury Inspector General for

 

 Tax Administration                      132      136      136

 

 Air Transportation

 

 Stabilization Program                     3        -        -

 

 Community Development Financial

 

 Institutions Fund                        55        8       40

 

 Treasury Building and Annex

 

 Repair and Restoration                   10        -

 

 Financial Crimes Enforcement

 

 Network                                  73       90       84

 

 Financial Management Service            234      234      234

 

 Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and

 

 Trade Bureau                             90       93       93

 

 Bureau of the Public Debt               175      178      178

 

 Internal Revenue Service, Total      10,545   10,592   10,482

 

    Processing, Assistance and

 

    Management                         4,095    4,045        -

 

    Taxpayer Services                      -        -    2,059

 

    Tax Law Enforcement                4,678    4,762        -

 

    Enforcement                            -        -    4,757

 

    Information Systems                1,583    1,602        -

 

    Operations Support                     -        -    3,438

 

    Business Systems Modernization       197      167      212

 

    Health Insurance Tax Credit

 

    Administration                        20       15       15

 

    Rescission                          (29)        -

 

 Total Appropriations, Dept. of

 

 the Treasury                        $11,581** $11,606  $11,522

 

 

 Source: Figures are from a budget authority table provided by the House

 

 Committee on Appropriations. Because of differing treatment of offsets, the

 

 totals will not always match the Administration's totals. The figures within

 

 this table may differ slightly from those in the text due to supplemental

 

 appropriations, rescissions, and other funding actions. Columns may not add

 

 due to rounding or exclusion of smaller program line-items.

 

 

                          FOOTNOTES TO TABLE

 

 

      * FY2006 figures reflect an across-the-board rescission of 1%.

 

 

      ** Excludes a rescission of $29 million for the IRS account.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES TO TABLE

 

 

Funding for many bureaus comes largely from annual appropriations. Such is the case for the IRS, FMS, Bureau of Public Debt, FinCEN, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, Office of the Inspector General, Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, and the CDFI. But there are exceptions. In contrast, the Treasury Franchise Fund, U.S. Mint, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Office of Thrift Supervision finance their operations largely from the fees they collect for services and products they provide.

In FY2006, Treasury is receiving $11.581 billion in appropriated funds -- after allowing for an across-the-board 1% rescission -- or $363 million more than it received in FY2005. Most of this money is being used to finance the operations of the IRS, whose budget totals $10.545 billion. The remaining $1.036 billion is divided among Treasury's other bureaus and departmental offices in the following amounts: departmental offices (which includes the Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence -- or TFI -- and the Office of Foreign Assets Control), $195 million; department-wide systems and capital investments, $24 million; Office of Inspector General, $17 million; Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA), $132 million; Air Transportation Stabilization program, $3 million (to be available until spent); CDFI, $55 million (to be available until September 30, 2007); Treasury building and annex repair and restoration, $10 million; FinCEN, $73 million; Financial Management Service, $234 million; Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (ATB), $9 million; and Bureau of the Public Debt, $175 million.

For FY2007, the Bush Administration is asking Congress to approve $11.606 billion in funding for Treasury -- or 0.2% more than the amount enacted for FY2006, after allowing for the 1% rescission. Most of the requested funding would go to the IRS, whose budget would total $10.592 billion. The remaining $1.014 billion would be distributed among Treasury's other bureaus and departmental offices in the following amounts: departmental offices, $224 million; departmental systems and capital investments, $34 million; Office of Inspector General, $17 million; TIGTA, $136 million; no funding for the Air Transportation Stabilization program; CDFI, $8 million; no funding for Treasury building and annex repair and restoration; FinCEN, $90 million; FMS, $234 million; ATB, $93 million; and Bureau of the Public Debt, $178 million. Except for the air transportation stabilization program, Treasury building and annex repair and restoration, and CDFI, all accounts would be funded at the same level as, or at higher levels than, in FY2006.

Under the Administration's budget proposal, total full-time employment at Treasury would decline from an estimated 112,520 in FY2006 to 110,261 in FY2007.11 An anticipated loss of 2,241 full-time jobs at the IRS in FY2007 would explain most of this decline.

According to budget documents and recent congressional testimony by senior Treasury officials (including former Secretary John Snow), the proposed budget for FY2007 is intended to support six strategic objectives: (1) promote economic growth and security; (2) strengthen national security; (3) enforcing tax laws fairly and efficiently; (4) managing the federal government's finances; (5) strengthening financial institutions; and (6) managing Treasury's operations efficiently.12

One policy issue raised by the budget proposal is the extent to which it would support or promote these objectives, and at what budgetary cost. The Bush Administration claims that the proposal promotes the first objective by giving Treasury's Office of Tax Policy $500,000 to construct more reliable computer-based models for analyzing the dynamic economic effects of revenue proposals, reorganizing the CDFI, and expanding the budget for the Office of International Affairs by $9.4 million. It maintains that the proposal would support the second objective by increasing the budget for TFI by about $8 million. TFI collects and analyzes financial intelligence, develops and implements measures to combat money laundering, administers the provisions of the Bank Secrecy Act enforced by Treasury, enforces economic sanctions against foreign entities, and conducts criminal investigations of alleged financial crimes. The Administration contends that its proposal would support the third objective by adding $137 million to the IRS's FY2006 budget for tax law enforcement and giving the ATB the authority to assess user fees for claims for drawbacks of excise taxes paid on alcohol used in the production of non-beverage products and applications to approve the content of labels for alcoholic beverages. To support the fourth objective, the Administration is seeking an additional $2.4 million to pursue a variety of initiatives, including improving the securities services offered to retail customers, streamlining collections and payments processes through the increased use of e-commerce technologies, and strengthening accounting operations through use of FedDebt and Debt Check. And in support of the sixth objective, the Administration wants to invest $1.8 million in Treasury-wide management training and $34 million in ongoing projects aimed at modernizing Treasury's information technology infrastructure, such as the Treasury Foreign Intelligence Network.

Congressional consideration of the Administration's FY2007 budget request for Treasury commenced in the House with a series of hearings held by the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, and District of Columbia in March and April 2006. On June 9, the House Appropriations Committee favorably reported (H.Rept. 109-495) by voice vote a measure (H.R. 5576) to provide funding for Treasury and certain other federal agencies in FY2007. The Committee considered 18 amendments and adopted four of them, one of which would bar the IRS from proceeding with a plan to hire private debt collectors to assist in the collection of certain delinquent individual tax debt. Following the consideration of 49 amendments spread over two days of floor debate, the House approved the measure on June 14 by a vote of 406 to 22 and sent it to the Senate.

As passed by the House, H.R. 5576 would grant the Treasury Department $11.522 billion in funding in FY2007 -- or $59 million less than the amount enacted for FY2006 and $84 million less than the level of funding requested by the Bush Administration. The IRS would receive $10.482 billion -- or $63 million less than its budget in FY2006 and $110 million less than the amount requested by the Administration. As recommended by the Appropriations Committee in its report on H.R. 5576, the House endorsed a new account structure for the IRS. The bill would also prohibit the IRS from using any appropriated funds to implement a plan to hire private debt collectors. In addition, H.R. 5576 would increase funding in FY2007 relative to FY2006 for the following accounts: departmental offices, +$29 million; FinCEN, +11 million; department-wide systems and capital investments, +$10 million; TIGTA, +$4.5 million; Bureau of Public Debt, +$3 million; Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, +$2 million; and Office of Inspector General, +$0.5 million. Two accounts would be funded at lower levels than in FY2006: CDFI, -$14 million; and FMS, -$0.2 million. Two accounts would receive no funding in FY2007: the Air Transportation Stabilization program and Treasury building and annex repair and restoration.

Internal Revenue Service (IRS). To finance its operations and many spending programs, the federal government levies individual and corporate income taxes, social insurance taxes, excise taxes, estate and gift taxes, customs duties, and miscellaneous taxes and fees. The federal agency responsible for administering and collecting these taxes and fees (except for customs duties) is the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). In discharging this responsibility, the IRS receives and processes tax returns and related documents and tax payments, disburses refunds, enforces compliance through audits and other methods, collects delinquent taxes, and provides a variety of services to taxpayers to help them understand their rights and responsibilities under the federal tax code and resolve problems. In FY2005, the agency collected $2.287 trillion before refunds, the largest component of which was individual income tax revenue of $1.107 trillion.

The IRS relies on three sources for its operating budget: appropriated funds, user fees, and so-called reimbursables, which are payments the IRS receives from other federal agencies and state governments for services it provides. Nearly the entire budget is derived from appropriated funds: in FY2006, these funds are expected to account for about 98% of IRS's operating budget, with user fees and reimbursables each adding another 1%. Appropriated funds are distributed among five accounts: (1) processing, assistance, and management, which provides resources for pre-filing taxpayer assistance, filing and account services, administrative services for IRS employees, and senior IRS management; (2) tax law enforcement, which covers the cost of compliance services, research and statistical analysis, and administration of the earned income tax credit; (3) information systems, which addresses the improvement and maintenance of the agency's information and management systems; (4) business systems modernization (or BSM), which provides funds for developing new systems for tax administration and acquiring the hardware and software needed to integrate them into IRS's operations; and (5) health insurance tax credit administration, which covers the cost of administering the refundable tax credit for health insurance established by the Trade Adjustment Assistance Reform Act of 2002.

In FY2006, the IRS is receiving $10.545 billion in appropriated funds -- or $309 million more than it received in FY2005. Of this amount, $4.095 billion is intended for processing, assistance, and management; $4.678 billion for tax law enforcement; $1.583 billion for information systems management; $197 million for the BSM program; and $20 million to administer the health insurance tax credit. These amounts reflect an across-the-board rescission of 1% for all discretionary nondefense spending but do not take into account a $29 million rescission of unobligated balances in the accounts for processing, assistance, and management and the health care tax credit. Certain restrictions apply to the use of these funds. Specifically, the IRS may not reorganize or reduce its workforce in FY2006 without the consent of the House and Senate Appropriations Committees. In addition, the IRS cannot compete in the market for tax return preparation software, and no planned reductions in taxpayer service can be implemented in FY2006 until TIGTA completes a report on the effects of such reductions on taxpayer compliance. Finally, the IRS must develop, in consultation with the IRS Oversight Board and the National Taxpayer Advocate, a five-year plan for improving taxpayer services without undermining efforts to reduce the tax gap through improved tax law enforcement and submit it to the Committees.

The Bush Administration is asking Congress to appropriate $10.592 billion for IRS operations in FY2007 -- or $47 million more than the amount enacted for FY2006 (including the 1% rescission). Of this amount, $4.045 billion (or $50 million less than in FY2006) would be used for processing, assistance, and management; $4.762 billion (or $84 million more than in FY2006) for tax law enforcement; $1.602 billion (or $19 million more than in FY2006) for maintaining and upgrading information systems; $167 million (or $30 million less than in FY2006) for the BSM program; and $15 million (or $5 million less than in FY2006) for administering the health insurance tax credit. Under this budget proposal, total full-time employment at the IRS is expected to decrease from an estimated 96,736 individuals in FY2006 to 94,495 individuals in FY2007.13

According to budget documents issued by the Administration, the FY2007 budget request for the IRS is intended to support three key objectives in the agency's current five-year strategic plan: (1) improving taxpayer service; (2) strengthening enforcement of the tax laws; and (3) modernizing IRS's management of its resources to achieve its service and enforcement objectives.14 The proposed budget also strives to strike an "appropriate balance between enforcement and taxpayer service." Two important issues for lawmakers raised by the request are how it would support these objectives and what the appropriate allocation of resources is between enforcement and service to taxpayers.

It appears that the proposed budget continues a trend several years in the making of putting greater stress on enforcement at the expense of the modernization effort and, to a lesser extent, taxpayer service. From FY2003 to FY2006, the proportion of appropriated funds devoted to processing, assistance, and management (a large share of which covers the cost of assisting and educating taxpayers) edged downward from 40% to 39%; the proportion going into tax law enforcement rose from 39% to 44%; and the proportion funneled into the BSM program dropped from 4% to 2%. If the Administration's budget request were to be enacted as submitted, the proportion of appropriated funds going to processing, assistance, and management would fall to 38%; the proportion devoted to tax law enforcement would rise to 45%; and the proportion funneled into the BSM program would drop below 2%.

A primary driving force behind this shift in IRS priorities is the Administration's stated desire to reduce the federal tax gap, which is the difference between what taxpayers owe and what they pay on time. According to the latest estimate by the IRS, the net gap in 2001 was between $257 billion to $298 billion.15 The budget proposal would rely on a combination of changes in tax law, improvements in IRS's "administrative procedures," and the development of a "sound technological infrastructure" to reduce the tax gap.16 Among the proposed changes in tax law are a clarification of the liability of employee leasing companies and their clients for federal employment taxes and an expansion of information reporting requirements for payment card issuers, and for payments made by federal, state, and local governments to acquire goods and services.17

H.R. 5576 would provide IRS with $10.482 billion in appropriated funds. This amount is $63 million less than the agency is receiving in FY2006 and $110 million less than the amount requested by the Bush Administration.

The bill would revise the IRS budget by creating three new accounts: taxpayer services, enforcement, and operations support; it would retain the current accounts for BSM and the health insurance tax credit. Under this structure, the IRS would receive $2.059 billion for taxpayer services, $4.757 billion for enforcement, $3.438 billion for operations support; $212 million for the BSM program; and $15 million for administration of the health insurance tax credit. Of the funds for taxpayer services, $8 million would be reserved for low-income taxpayer clinic grants and $4 million for the tax counseling for the elderly program. No restrictions would be placed on the IRS's ability to close taxpayer assistance centers (TACs), with one exception: the IRS would be required to notify the House and Senate Appropriations Committees of any decision to close one or more TACs at least 30 days before making a public announcement. Of the funds for enforcement, $55 million would be used to support IRS activities related to the Interagency Crime and Drug Enforcement program. H.R. 5576 would also allow the IRS to transfer up to 20% of appropriated funds among the accounts for taxpayer services, enforcement, and operations support after giving the House and Senate Appropriations Committees 30 days' advance notice.

One of the more controversial provisions in H.R. 5576 related to the IRS budget in FY2007 concerns the agency's current program to hire private firms to collect individual income tax debt. Under the program, which was authorized by the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-357) and begun in 2005, the IRS plans to hire as many as 12 contractors to assist in the collection of certain delinquent individual tax debt under a set of stringent rules intended to protect taxpayer rights and the confidentiality of taxpayer information.18 In early March 2006, the agency awarded collection contracts to three firms but was forced to suspend them after two unsuccessful bidders filed a formal protest. In early June, the Government Accountability Office denied the protest, clearing the way for the program to resume.19 Section 208 of Title II of H.R. 5576 would prohibit the IRS from using any of the funds appropriated by the bill to "enter into, renew, extend, administer, implement, enforce, or provide oversight of any qualified collection contract."

 

Title III: Department of Housing and Urban Development

 

 

               Table 6. Title III: Housing and Urban Development

 

                        Appropriations, FY2006 to FY2007

 

                        (budget authority in $ billions)

 

 

 Program                          FY2006   FY2007   FY2007   FY2007  FY2007

 

                                 enacted   request  House    Senate  Enacted

 

 Appropriations

 

 

 Tenant Based Rental

 

 Assistance (includes

 

 advanced appropriation)

 

 (Sec. 8)                        $15.418  $15.920  $15.846

 

 

 Project Based Rental

 

 Assistance (Sec.8)                5.037    5.676    5.476

 

 

 Sec. 8 supplementala              0.390    0.000    0.000

 

 

 Public housing

 

 capital fund                      2.439    2.178    2.208b

 

 

 Public housing

 

 operating fund                    3.564    3.564    3.564

 

 

 HOPE VI                           0.099c   0.000c   0.000b

 

 

 Native American housing

 

 block grants                      0.624    0.626    0.626

 

 

 Native Hawaiian Block Grant       0.009    0.006    0.009

 

 

 Housing, persons with AIDS

 

 (HOPWA)                           0.286    0.300    0.300

 

 

 Rural Housing Economic

 

 Development                       0.017    0.000    0.000

 

 

 Community Development Fund

 

 (Including CDBG)d                 4.178    3.032    4.215e

 

 

 CDF supplementala                11.500    0.000    0.000

 

 

 Brownfields redevelopment         0.010    0.000    0.000e

 

 

 HOME Investment Partnerships      1.757    1.917    1.917

 

 

 Homeless Assistance Grants        1.327    1.536f   1.536

 

 

 Self-help Homeownership           0.060    0.040    0.060

 

 

 Housing for the elderly           0.735    0.545    0.747

 

 

 Housing for the disabled          0.237    0.119    0.240

 

 

 Housing Counseling Assistance     0.000    0.045    0.000g

 

 

 Rental Housing Assistance         0.026    0.025    0.025

 

 

 Research and technology           0.056    0.068    0.056

 

 

 Fair housing activities           0.046    0.045    0.045

 

 

 Office, lead hazard control       0.150    0.115    0.150

 

 

 Salaries and expenses             0.573    0.590h   0.493h

 

 

 Working capital fund              0.195    0.220    0.000i

 

 

 Manufactured Housing Fees

 

 Trust Fundj                       0.013    0.016    0.016

 

 

 Office of Federal Housing

 

 Enterprise Oversightj             0.060    0.062    0.062

 

 

 FHA Expensesj                     0.727    0.734    0.714

 

 

 GNMA Expensesj                    0.011   0.061k    0.011

 

 

 Inspector General                 0.081    0.083    0.083

 

 

 Loan Guaranteesl                  0.009    0.007    0.008

 

 

   Appropriations Subtotal

 

   without supplemental           37.743   37.527   38.405

 

 

   Appropriations Subtotal

 

   with supplemental              49.633   37.527   38.405

 

 

 Rescissions

 

 

 Sec. 8 recaptures

 

 (rescission)m                    -2.050   -2.000   -2.000

 

 

 HOPE VI rescission                0.000   -0.099    0.000

 

 

 Brownfields redevelopment

 

 rescission                       -0.010    0.000    0.000

 

 

 Economic Development

 

 Initiative Rescission             0.000   -0.356n   0.000

 

 

   Rescissions Subtotal           -2.060   -2.455   -2.000

 

 

 Offsetting Collections and

 

 Receipts

 

 

 Manufactured Housing Fees

 

 Trust Fund                       -0.013   -0.016   -0.016

 

 

 Office of Federal Housing

 

 Enterprise Oversight             -0.060   -0.062   -0.062

 

 

 Federal Housing

 

 Administration (FHA)             -1.648   -0.652   -0.849

 

 

 GNMA                             -0.368   -0.224k  -0.181

 

 

   Offsets Subtotal               -2.089   -0.954   -1.108

 

 

 Total before supplementals      $33.594  $34.118  $35.297

 

 

 Total with supplementals        $45.484  $34.118  $35.297

 

 

 Source: Prepared by CRS based on H.R. 5576 and H. Rept 109-495. FY2006 figures

 

 are adjusted to reflect the 1% across-the-board rescission enacted in P.L.

 

 109-148.

 

 

                          FOOTNOTES TO TABLE

 

 

      a P.L. 109-148 provided emergency supplemental hurricane

 

 recovery funds, including $390 million for the Section 8 voucher program and

 

 $11.5 billion for CDBG. These special purpose funds were not a part of the

 

 regular FY2006 appropriations law (P.L. 109-115).

 

 

      b A floor amendment added $30 million to the Public Housing

 

 Capital Fund. Floor statements indicated that the funding was intended for the

 

 HOPE VI program; however, no language was included in the bill directing that

 

 the funds be used for HOPE VI.

 

 

      c The President's FY2007 budget requests that Congress rescind

 

 the $99 million it provided for the HOPE VI program in FY2006.

 

 

      d The Community Development Fund account funds the CDBG program

 

 and other related community development programs. CDBG accounts for the

 

 largest portion of the CDF account.

 

 

      e A floor amendment added $15 million to the Community

 

 Development Fund. Floor statements indicated that the funds were to be used

 

 for Brownfields.

 

 

      f The President's request includes $25 million that would be

 

 transferred to the Department of Labor.

 

 

      g The FY2006 and House-passed bill fund this program as a $42

 

 million set-aside within the HOME program.

 

 

      h The President's requested assumed $4 million in savings from a

 

 legislative proposal. The House-passed bill does not assume such savings.

 

 

      i The House Appropriations Committee reported version included

 

 $100 million for the Working Capital Fund. A floor amendment decreased the

 

 account by $100 million to offset a $70 million increase in funding for

 

 tenant-based rental assistance.

 

 

      j The administrative costs of these programs are generally paid

 

 by offsetting receipts collected by the program. In some cases, the

 

 administrative costs are fully offset by collected fees; in others, they are

 

 partially offset, and in others, the offsetting receipts are larger than the

 

 administrative costs, and the excess are used to offset the total cost of the

 

 HUD budget. See the offsetting receipts portion of Table 6.

 

 

      k The President's budget documents indicate that a new GNMA

 

 proposal will cost $43 million, but its costs will be offset by an additional

 

 $43 million in offsetting receipts. The House bill does not include that

 

 assumption.

 

 

      l This line includes funding for three HUD loan guarantee

 

 programs: Indian Housing Loan Guarantees ($4 million in FY2006, requested at

 

 $6 million in FY2007, $4 million in House bill), Native Hawaiian Loan

 

 Guarantees ($1 million in FY2006, requested at $1 million in FY2007, $1

 

 million in House bill), and Section 108 Loan Guarantees ($4 million in FY2006,

 

 requested at $0 in FY2007, $3 million in House bill).

 

 

      m Each year, unobligated balances are recaptured from the

 

 Housing Certificate Fund, an account that previously funded the tenant-based

 

 and project-based Section 8 rental assistance programs and which still

 

 contains long-term Section 8 contracts funded with prior years'

 

 appropriations.

 

 

      n The President's FY2007 budget requests that Congress rescind

 

 the full amount it provided in FY2006 for Economic Development Initiative and

 

 Neighborhood Initiative earmarks within the CDF account.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES TO TABLE

 

 

Department of Housing and Urban Development Budget and Key Policy Issues20

The President's FY2007 budget proposes to fund the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) at approximately $34.1 billion, just over HUD's $33.6 billion budget for FY2006 (not including FY2006 supplementals related to Hurricane Katrina). Although the overall request appears to be an increase, the amount requested actually results in a slight decrease, with a number of HUD programs slated for funding cuts. This seeming contradiction results from a decrease in the amount of offsetting receipts available to subsidize the HUD budget. As can be seen in Table 6, appropriations would decline by more than $200 million and offsetting receipts would decline by more than $1 billion.

On June 14, 2006, the House passed its version of the FY2007 Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the Judiciary, District of Columbia and Independent Agencies (TTHUD) Appropriations bill (H.R. 5576), providing $35.3 billion for HUD. Floor amendments increasing funding for Section 8 vouchers, lead based paint hazard control, HOPE VI, supportive housing for the elderly, and brownfields redevelopment were added to the bill. (For more details on the proposed HUD budget, see CRS Report RL33344, The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD): Fiscal Year 2007 Budget.)

Community Development Fund/Block Grants. For the second consecutive year, the Administration included in its budget request a proposal that would eliminate and/or replace a number of federal economic and community development programs. Last year, the Administration's FY2006 budget recommendations included a proposal that would have consolidated the activities of at least 18 existing community and economic development programs, including the Community Development Block Grant program (CDBG), into a two-part grant proposal called the "Strengthening America's Communities Initiative" (SACI). (For more information on SACI, see CRS Report RL32823, An Overview of the Administration's Strengthening America's Communities Initiative.) The CDBG formula grant would be funded just under $3 billion in FY2007, compared to $3.7 billion in FY2006. The FY2007 budget would eliminate funding for Brownfields redevelopment, Section 108 loan guarantees, Rural Housing and Economic Development.

The House-passed bill, H.R. 5576, includes about $4.2 billion for the Community Development Fund, $1.2 billion more than the Administration request. The funding level recommended by the House includes about $3.9 billion for the CDBG formula program, $57.4 million for Indian tribes, $250 million for Economic Development Initiative earmarks, and $20 million for Neighborhood Initiative earmarks. Although the bill as reported provided no funding for the Brownfields Redevelopment program or Section 108 loan guarantees, funding for both programs was provided through floor amendments ($3 million for Section 108 and $15 million for Brownfields). No funding was included for Rural Housing and Economic Development.

Housing Programs for the Elderly and the Disabled. The Administration's budget proposed to reduce funding for the Section 202 housing for the elderly program from $734.6 million in FY2006 to $545.5 million in FY2007, a cut of almost 26%. However, the House- passed bill would fund the program at approximately $746.6 million, about $12 million more than FY2006. A floor amendment (H.Amdt. 1020) added $12 million for the Section 202 program to the $734.6 million included in the reported bill.

For the second year in a row, the Administration's budget proposed to halve funding for the Section 811 housing for the disabled program, to $118.8 million from $236.6 million in FY2006. As passed by the House, H.R. 5576 would increase funding to nearly $240 million. A floor amendment (H.Amdt. 1020) added $3 million for the Section 811 program to the $236.6 million included in the reported bill.

Public Housing/HOPE VI. The President proposed almost $2.2 billion for the public housing Capital Fund, an 11% reduction from the FY2006 funding level of about $2.4 billion. As in FY2006, the President has asked Congress to provide no new money for the HOPE VI program for FY2007, and to rescind the funding that Congress provided in the previous year before the Department awards it to grantees. The committee-reported bill would have funded the Capital Fund and HOPE VI at the President's request. A floor amendment (H.Amdt. 1016) offered by Representative Artur Davis added $30 million to the Capital Fund, although his floor statements indicated it was intended for the HOPE VI program. Language was not added to the bill directing the funds to be used for HOPE VI, so it is unclear whether the additional $30 million will be distributed via the Capital Fund formula or though the competitive HOPE VI program. The House-passed version of the FY2007 funding bill would not rescind FY2006 HOPE VI funds.

 

Title IV: The Judiciary

 

 

The Judiciary Budget and Key Policy Issues21

As a co-equal branch of government, the Judiciary presents its budget to the President, who transmits it to Congress unaltered. Table 7 shows the FY2006 enacted amount, the FY2007 request, and the House-passed amount.

        Table 7. Title IV: The Judiciary Appropriations,

 

                        FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

                         (millions of dollars)

 

 

                                   FY2006   FY2007    FY2007  FY2007   FY2007

 

 Budget Groupings an Accounts      Enacted  Request   House   Senate   Enacted

 

 

 Supreme Court

 

 

 -- Salaries and Expenses           $60.1    $63.4     $63.4

 

 -- Building and Grounds              5.6     13.0      13.0

 

              Subtotal               65.7     76.4      76.4

 

 U.S. Court of Appeals for the

 

 Federal Circuit                     23.8     26.3      26.0

 

 

 U.S. Court of International Trade   15.3     16.2      16.2

 

 

 Courts of Appeals, District Courts, and Other Judicial

 

 Services

 

 

 -- Salaries and Expenses         4,330.2  4,691.2   4,560.1

 

 -- Court Security                  368.3    410.3     400.3

 

 -- Defender Services               709.8    803.9     750.0

 

 -- Fees of Jurors and

 

 Commissioners                       60.7     63.1      63.1

 

 

 Subtotal                         5,469.0  5,968.5   5,773.5

 

 

 Administrative Office of the U.S.

 

 Courts                              69.6     75.3      73.8

 

 

 Federal Judicial Center             22.1     23.8      23.5

 

 

 United States Sentencing

 

 Commission                          14.3     15.7      15.5

 

 

 Judicial Retirement Funds           40.6     58.3      58.3

 

 Total                           $5,720.4 $6,260.5  $6,063.2

 

 

 Source: Data were provided by the Administrative Office of the

 

 U.S. Courts and the House Appropriations Committee (Congressional

 

 Record, June 14, 2006, pp. H3969-H3970). The FY2006 enacted

 

 amount includes a 1% across-the-board government-wide rescission and

 

 the supplemental $18 million contained in P.L. 109-148. Subparts may

 

 not add up to totals due to rounding. The Vaccine Injury Trust Fund

 

 is included in the Salaries and Expenses account.

 

 

In his 2005 Year End Report on the Federal Judiciary,22 released on January 1, 2006, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., highlighted appropriations issues and their importance in maintaining an independent Judiciary that can fulfill its mission. The Chief Justice expressed concern about the high cost of rent the Judiciary pays to the General Services Administration (GSA), and asked Congress for rent relief. The rent now constitutes about 20% of the total judiciary budget. In early 2006, legislation was introduced in both the House and Senate which would direct GSA to establish rental fees that would not exceed the actual costs of operating and maintaining the space it provides the Judiciary. On February 8, 2006, Representative James F. Sensenbrenner, Jr., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee (for himself and Representative Lamar S. Smith) introduced H.R. 4710, the Judiciary Rent Reform Act of 2006, which was referred to the House Judiciary Committee and the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee (and subsequently referred to the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings and Emergency Management). On February 15, 2006, Senator Arlen Specter, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee (for himself, and Senators Patrick J. Leahy, John Cornyn, Saxby Chambliss, Dianne Feinstein, Joseph R. Biden, Jr., James M. Talent, Daniel K. Inouye, Richard M. Burr, and Wayne A. Allard), introduced S. 2292, a similar measure, which was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee. On April 27, 2006, the Senate committee reported S. 2292.

Chief Justice Roberts also expressed concern that judicial pay has not kept pace with inflation over the years, and attributed increasing numbers of judges leaving the bench to this pay issue. On February 10, 2006, Senator Dianne Feinstein (for herself, Senator Patrick J. Leahy, and Senator John F. Kerry) introduced S. 2276, the Federal Judicial Fairness Act of 2006, to increase federal judges' salaries by 16.5%. In addition, S. 2276 would end the current linkage between congressional and judicial salaries, which has prevented increases in judicial salaries when Congress takes action to withhold annual cost of living increases from its Members. S. 2276 was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee. On March 28, 2006, Representative Adam B. Schiff (for himself and Representative Judy B. Biggert) introduced H.R. 5014, the Federal Judicial Fairness Act, a companion bill to S. 2276, which was referred to the House Judiciary Committee. Both bills are pending in the respective Judiciary committees.

Judicial security, the safe conduct of court proceedings and the security of judges in courtrooms and off-site, continues to be an issue of concern. The Chief Justice noted that the violence directed at judges in 2005 had shocked the nation, and that "we must take every step to ensure that our own judges, to whom so much of the world looks as models of independence, never face violent attack for carrying out their duties." At the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies hearings held on the judiciary budget request on April 4-5, 2006, Chairman Joseph Knollenberg expressed his view that court security was a "top priority."23

Appropriations for the Judiciary -- about two-tenths of 1% (0.2%) of the entire federal budget -- are divided into budget groups and accounts. Two accounts that fund the Supreme Court (the salaries and expenses of the Supreme Court and the expenditures for the care of its building and grounds) together make up about 1.2% of the total judiciary budget. The structural and mechanical care of the Supreme Court building, and care of its grounds, are the responsibility of the Architect of the Capitol. The rest of the Judiciary's budget provides funding for the "lower" federal courts and for related judicial services. The largest account, about 75% of the total budget -- the Salaries and Expenses account for the U.S. Courts of Appeals, District Courts, and Other Judicial Services -- covers the salaries of circuit and district judges (including judges of the territorial courts of the United States), justices and judges retired from office or from regular active service, judges of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, bankruptcy judges, magistrate judges, and all other officers and employees of the federal Judiciary not specifically provided for by other accounts; and the necessary expenses of the courts. The Judiciary budget does not fund three "special courts" in the U.S. court system: the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, the U.S. Tax Court, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims. Federal courthouse construction also is not funded within the Judiciary's budget.

FY2007 Request. For FY2007, the Judiciary requested $6.26 billion in total appropriations, a 9.4% increase over the $5.72 billion enacted for FY2006. The FY2007 budget request includes funding for 33,631 full-time-equivalent (FTE) positions -- an increase of 417 FTEs or 1.3% above the FY2006 estimate of 33,214 FTEs. The requested additional positions are a continuation of efforts to restore some positions lost in previous years as well as to provide for expected workload increases. Of the total budget request increase of $540.1 million, $461.8 million (86%) would fund pay adjustments and other inflation-related increases needed to maintain current services. The remaining $78.3 million (14%) of the $540.1 million increase is for expected workload changes and program enhancements.

House Action. On April 4, 2006, the House subcommittee held a hearing on the Supreme Court budget request for FY2007, and heard testimony from Supreme Court Justices Anthony Kennedy and Clarence Thomas. Another hearing was held the following day to hear testimony on the overall judiciary budget request from Judge Julia Smith Gibbons, United States Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals and Chair of the Budget Committee of the Judicial Conference of the United States, and then-Director of the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts Leonidas R. Mecham. Among issues raised at the hearings were judicial pay, televising the Supreme Court proceedings, rent paid to GSA, the Supreme Court building modernization project, and workload.

On May 26, 2006, the subcommittee held a markup on the bill and approved a total of $6.1 billion for the Judiciary. By voice vote, on June 6, 2006, the House Appropriations Committee approved the recommended $6.1 billion funding level -- a $342.8 million (6.0%) increase over the FY2006 level, but $197.3 million (3.2%) less than the FY2007 request. Three days later, on June 9, 2006, the committee reported H.R. 5576. On June 14, 2006, the House passed H.R. 5576 to provide the Judiciary with the same level of funding the committee had approved.

Following are highlights of the FY2007 Judiciary budget:

Supreme Court. For FY2007, the total request for the Supreme Court (salaries and expenses plus buildings and grounds) is $76.4 million, a 16.2% increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $65.7 million. The total request comprises two accounts: (1) Salaries and Expenses -- $63.4 million was requested, compared with the FY2006 enacted amount of $60.1 million; and (2) Care of the Building and Grounds -- $13.0 million was requested, compared with $5.6 million enacted for FY2006. Most of the requested increase in salaries and expenses was to fund increases in salary and benefit costs, inflationary fixed costs, and five new positions. The Buildings and Grounds account increased by $7.4 million (132.7%), including the Supreme Court Building roofing system repairs, maintenance of the building, and grounds operations, and continuation of the building modernization project. The House approved the full amount requested for this account.

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. The FY2007 request for this account is $26.3 million -- a $2.5 million (10.6%) increase over the $23.8 million appropriated for FY2006. The request provides for pay and other inflationary adjustments, increased health benefit costs, and increased rental costs related to space for senior judges. The requested increase also includes $926,000 for information technology upgrades, infrastructure requirements for a disaster recovery plan, and the implementation of courtroom technology in two of this circuit's three courtrooms. The House approved $26.0 million for this account -- a $2.2 million increase over the FY2006 level, but $0.3 million less than the FY2007 request.

U.S. Court of International Trade. The FY2007 request is for $16.2 million -- a $0.9 million (5.5%) increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $15.3 million that the judiciary budget submission ascribes largely to increases in pay and benefits. The House approved the full amount requested for this account.

Courts of Appeals, District Courts, and Other Judicial Services. This budget group includes 12 of the 13 courts of appeals and 94 district judicial courts located in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the territories of Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. Making up about 95% of the judiciary budget, the four accounts in the group -- salaries and expenses, court security, defender services, and fees of jurors and commissioners -- fund most of the day-to-day activities and operations of the federal circuit and district courts.

Salaries and Expenses. The FY2007 Salaries and Expenses request for this budget group is $4,691.2 million -- a $361.0 million (8.3%) increase over the FY2006 level of $4,330.2 million. According to the budget request, about 99% of this increase is required for pay increases and other adjustments needed to maintain the courts' current services. For example, of the $361.0 million increase requested, $106.7 million is requested for pay and benefit adjustments for court personnel. Another $46.9 million of the increase is for increased rent to GSA and related costs, such as equipment.24 In addition, $42.6 million is requested for the Judiciary Technology Fund to support existing and newly installed information technology systems, and to continue the implementation of new information systems. Another increase of $22.1 million would fund 257 FTEs -- additional support staff needed to address the courts' anticipated workload increase during the year (as a result of an expected increase in the number of immigration-related cases along the southwest border with Mexico).25 Finally, according to the judiciary budget request, to maintain the same level of services provided in FY2006, a $115.1 million increase is needed in this account for FY2007 because of an anticipated shortfall of funds from fee collections and carryover funds from previous years. In addition to appropriated funds, this account receives other funds, including current year fee collections, carryover of fee balances from the prior year, and no-year appropriation balances. In FY2007, these non-appropriated funds are projected to total $285.9 million. The House approved $4,560.1 million26 for this account -- a $229.9 million increase over the FY2006 level, but $131.1 million less than the FY2007 request.

Court Security. This account provides for protective guard services, security systems, and equipment for courthouses and other federal facilities to ensure the safety of judicial officers, employees, and visitors. Under this account, a major portion of the funding is transferred to the U.S. Marshal Service for administering the Judicial Facility Security Program to pay for court security officers. The FY2007 request is $410.3 million -- a $42.1 million (11.4%) increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $368.3 million. This increase is reportedly driven by pay and benefit adjustments and other adjustments needed to maintain current services. The increase would also cover the costs for 34 additional court security officers expected to be needed during FY2007. Payment to the Federal Protective Service (FPS) is also covered under this account. The FY2007 request for FPS is $67.9 million -- a $7.4 million increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $60.5 million. In addition, $16.8 million is requested for security systems, perimeter (outside the building) security, and equipment for court security and for probation and pretrial service offices. An additional $6.6 million is requested to replace VCRs with digital video recorders. The House approved $400.3 million for this account -- a $32.0 million increase over the FY2006 level, but $10 million less than the FY2007 request.

Defender Services. This account funds the operations of the federal public defender and community defender organizations, and the compensation, reimbursement, and expenses of private practice panel attorneys appointed by the courts to serve as defense counsel to indigent individuals accused of federal crimes.

The FY2007 request is $803.9 million -- a $94.1 million (13.3%) increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $709.8 million. The increase requested is reportedly to provide for pay increases and other inflationary adjustments, and to fund workload increases arising from Supreme Court rulings. The request also provides for the startup of new federal defender organizations scheduled to open in FY2007. Currently, five judicial districts are not served by a Federal Defender Office: Alabama (Northern), Georgia (Southern), Kentucky (Eastern), Mississippi (Northern), and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. The requested funding would provide for 80 FTEs to cope with the projected caseload increase of 5,500 cases. The House approved $750 million for this account -- a $40.2 million increase over the FY2006 level, but $53.8 million less than the FY2007 request.

Fees of Jurors and Commissioners.This account funds the fees and allowances provided to grand and petit jurors, and the compensation of jury and land commissioners. The FY2007 request is $63.1 million -- a $2.4 million (3.9%) increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $60.7 million. The increase is due mainly to inflationary costs associated with expenses paid to jurors. The House approved the full amount requested for this account.

Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts (AOUSC). As the central support entity for the Judiciary, the AOUSC provides a wide range of administrative, management, program, and information technology services to the U.S. courts. The AOUSC also provides support to the Judicial Conference of the United States, and implements conference policies and applicable federal statutes and regulations. The FY2007 request for this account is $75.3 million -- a $5.7 million (8.3%) increase over the FY2006 level of $69.6 million. The increase is reportedly for pay increases and other inflationary adjustments and for the anticipated reduction in nonappropriated funds. The AOUSC also receives non-appropriated funds from fee collections and carryover balances to supplement its appropriation requirements. The House approved $73.8 million for this account -- a $4.2 million increase over the FY2006 level but $1.5 million less than the FY2007 request.

Federal Judicial Center. As the Judiciary's research and education entity, the center undertakes research and evaluation of judicial operations for the Judicial Conference committees and the courts. In addition, the center provides judges, court staff, and others with orientation and continuing education and training. The center's FY2007 request is $23.8 million -- a $1.7 million (7.5%) increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $22.1 million. The increase is reportedly to fund adjustments to pay and other expenses due to inflation, and also to restore staff to the FY2005 level (nine additional FTEs). The House approved $23.5 million for this account -- a $1.4 million increase over the FY2006 level, but $0.3 million less than the FY2007 request.

United States Sentencing Commission. The commission promulgates sentencing policies, practices, and guidelines for the federal criminal justice system. The FY2007 request is $15.7 million -- a $1.4 million (10.4%) increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $14.3 million. According to the budget request, the increase would provide for pay increases and other inflationary adjustments, and five FTE positions in the research and data collection area for one year. Supreme Court decisions and recent legislation have reportedly increased the commission's workload, and the need for data collection and analytical requirements. The House approved $15.5 million for this account -- a $1.2 million increase over the FY2006 level, but $0.2 million less than the FY2007 request.

Judiciary Retirement Funds. This mandatory account provides for three trust funds that finance payments to retired bankruptcy and magistrate judges, retired Court of Federal Claims judges, and spouses and dependent children of deceased judicial officers. The FY2007 request is for $58.3 million -- a $17.7 million (43.6%) increase over the FY2006 appropriation of $40.6 million. The requirements for this account are calculated annually by an independent actuary company. The large increase reflects a change in methodology that a new actuary company has adopted to more accurately project future liabilities that had not been taken into account in the past. (The new methodology included a larger population of people who are likely to join the retirement system.) The House approved the full amount requested for this account.

Administrative Provisions. Some administrative provisions continue language that has appeared in previous years. The House-passed bill includes the following provisions, which apply to the Judiciary only:

 

Section 401: To permit funds in the bill for salaries and expenses for the Judiciary to be available for employment of experts and consultant services (as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109).

Section 402: To permit up to 5 percent of any appropriation made available for fiscal year 2007 to be transferred between Judiciary appropriations accounts -- provided that no appropriation shall be decreased by more than 5 percent or increased by more than 10 percent by any such transfer except in certain circumstances. In addition, the language provides that any such transfer shall be treated as a reprogramming of funds (under sections 805 and 810 of the accompanying bill), and shall not be available for obligation or expenditure except in compliance with the procedures set forth in that section.

Section 403: To authorize not to exceed $11,000 to be used for official reception and representation expenses incurred by the Judicial Conference of the United States.

Section 404: To require a financial plan for the Judiciary within 90 days of enactment of this Act.

Section 405: To amend the Judicial Improvements Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-650) (extension of a temporary federal district judgeship in Wichita, Kansas).

Title V: District of Columbia Appropriations27

 

 

     Table 8. Title V: District of Columbia Appropriations,

 

                        FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

                         (millions of dollars)

 

 

                                                 FY2007

 

                           FY2006*   FY2007      House     FY2006    FY2006

 

                                     Request     Passed    Senate    Enacted

 

 

 Total Federal Payments    $599.0     $597.2     $575.2

 

 

 Source: Figures are from a budget authority table provided by

 

 the House Committee on Appropriations.

 

 

 * FY2006 figure reflects an across-the-board rescission of 1.0%.

 

 

District of Columbia Budget and Key Policy Issues

President's Request. The Administration's proposed FY2007 budget includes $597.2 million in federal payments to the District of Columbia. The courts and criminal justice system (court operations, defender services, offender supervision and criminal justice coordinating council) represent $456 million, or 76%, of the request.

District Budget. On May 9, 2006, the District's city council approved the city's $9.2 billion operating budget for FY2007, and $2.6 billion in capital outlays including $63 million to finance a new baseball stadium. The District's budget also includes a request for $634 million in special federal payments, which is $37 million more than the $597 million proposed by the President and $59 million more than the amount that was passed by the House.

House Bill. The House provided $575.2 million for the District, $22 million less than the Administration requested and $24 million less than enacted for FY2006. The House approved the $479 million in FY2007 court and criminal justice funding. This is $23 million more than the $456 million requested by the Administration. The House would also provide $76 million in special federal payments in support of elementary, secondary, and post-secondary education initiatives, as requested by the Administration. This includes $13 million in special federal assistance to improve the city's public schools, $13 million in support of public charter schools, $14.8 million in assistance in support of scholarships to private and religious schools, and $35.1 million for the District's college tuition assistance program, which is $2.2 million more than appropriated in FY2006.

The House also provided $5 million in special federal payments to the District's Chief Financial Officer for various education, economic development, health and social service activities, and $7 million in federal payments to the District Water and Sewer Authority. The House bill does not include a provision appropriating $20 million to fund improvements and expansion of the Navy Yard Metro Station, which would service the new major league baseball stadium and the expanding federal presence in the Federal Center Southeast area. Instead, the House bill would provide the requested $20 million elsewhere in the bill as an earmark under the Department of Transportation's capital investment account.

In addition to recommending $599 million in special federal payments to the District of Columbia, the bill also contains a number of general provisions, including a number of so-called "social riders." Consistent with provisions included in previous appropriations acts, the bill would prohibit the use of federal and District funds to finance or administer a needle exchange program intended to reduce the spread of AIDS and HIV; or provided abortion services except in instances of rape, incest, or the health of the mother is threatened. The bill would also prohibit the city from decriminalizing the use of marijuana for medical purposes, and limit the city's ability to use District funds to lobby for congressional voting representation or statehood.

 

Title VI: Executive Office of the President and

 

Funds Appropriated to the President

 

 

Executive Office of the President Budget and Key Policy Issues

 Table 9. Title VI: Executive Office of the President (EOP) and

 

      Funds Appropriated to the President Appropriations,

 

                        FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

                       (in thousands of dollars)

 

 

                                                        FY2007

 

                                  FY2006     FY2007     House   FY2007 FY2007

 

          Office                  Enacted*   Request    Passed  Senate Enacted

 

 

 Compensation of the President        $450      $450      $450

 

 

 The White House Office (WHO)

 

 (salaries and expenses)            53,292    51,952    51,952

 

 

 Executive Residence, White

 

 House (operating expenses)         12,312    12,041    12,041

 

 

 White House Repair and

 

 Restoration                         1,683     1,600     1,600

 

 

 Council of Economic Advisors

 

 (CEA)                               4,000     4,002     4,002

 

 

 Office of Policy Development

 

 (OPD)                               3,465     3,385     3,385

 

 

 National Security Council (NSC)     8,618     8,405     8,405

 

 

 Office of Administration (OA)      88,429   102,417    91,393

 

 

 Office of Management and Budget

 

 (OMB)                              76,161    68,780    76,185

 

 

 Office of National Drug Control

 

 (ONDCP)                            26,639    23,309    26,928

 

 

 Federal Drug Control Programs

 

 (total)                           447,381   221,760   440,600

 

 

 -- High Intensity Drug

 

 Trafficking Areas Program         224,730       0**   227,000

 

 (HIDTAP)

 

 

 -- Other Federal Drug Control

 

 Programs                          192,951   212,160   194,000

 

 

 -- Counter-drug Technology

 

 Assessment Center (CTAC)           29,700     9,600    19,600

 

 

 Unanticipated Needs                   990    11,789     1,000

 

 Unanticipated Needs for Natural

 

 Disasters (emergency)                   0   -11,789         0

 

 

 Office of the Vice President

 

 (salaries and expenses)             4,410     4,352     4,352

 

 

 Official Residence of the Vice

 

 President (operating expenses)        322       317       317

 

 

 Total, EOP and Funds

 

 Appropriated to the President    $728,152  $502,770  $722,610

 

 

 Source: Figures are from the President's budget request and

 

 the House Committee on Appropriations report (H.Rept. 109-495), and

 

 are rounded. The table includes an offset of a rescission under the

 

 unanticipated needs account.

 

 

 * FY2006 figures reflect an across-the-board rescission of 1.0%.

 

 

 ** The FY2007 budget proposed to transfer the HIDTAP to the

 

 Department of Justice.

 

 

All but three offices in the Executive Office of the President (EOP) are funded in the same appropriations act, entitled the Departments of Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies.28

The Office of Administration (OA) and the Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) are the only accounts under the EOP (not including the federal drug control programs) for which increased funding was requested for FY2007. The $14 million OA increase primarily results from the movement of funds from other EOP components to the OA for enterprise services (discussed in more detail below). The CEA increase is 0.05%. For the Unanticipated Needs account, the budget requested $11.789 million, which is then offset by the requested rescission of $11.789 million from the Unanticipated Needs for Natural Disasters account. As for the remaining accounts, except for that on Compensation of the President, which is unchanged, decreased appropriations are requested for all other accounts under the EOP in FY2007. The OMB and ONDCP accounts have the largest reductions -- 9.7% and 12.5%, respectively -- from their FY2006 appropriation levels after the rescission. The reductions primarily result from the movement of funds from these accounts to the Office of Administration for the continued centralization of enterprise services. OMB also would lose 11 FTEs (full-time equivalent employees).

The FY2007 budget, like the FY2006 budget, proposed to transfer the HIDTAP to the Department of Justice and to fund the program at $207.6 million. For FY2006, the conference committee continued to fund the program under the EOP. For the sixth consecutive fiscal year, the President's FY2007 budget proposed to consolidate and financially realign several salaries and expenses accounts that directly support the President into a single annual appropriation, called "The White House." This consolidated appropriation would total $184.252 million in FY2007 for the accounts proposed to be consolidated, an increase of 7.0% from the $172.249 million appropriated in FY2006 (after the 1.0% rescission).29 The increase primarily results from the Enterprise Services Initiative discussed below. The nine accounts included in the consolidated appropriation would be the following:

  • Compensation of the President,

  • White House Office,

  • Executive Residence at the White House,

  • White House Repair and Restoration,

  • Office of Policy Development,

  • Office of Administration,

  • Council of Economic Advisers, and

  • National Security Council.30

 

The EOP budget submission stated that consolidation "presents the best means for the President to realign or reallocate the resources and staff available in response to changing needs and priorities or emergent national needs."31 The conference committees on the FY2002 through FY2006 appropriations acts decided to continue with separate appropriations for the EOP accounts to facilitate congressional oversight of their funding and operation.

The FY2007 budget requested a general provision in Title VI to continue and expand the authority for the EOP to transfer 10% of the appropriated funds among several accounts under the EOP. The authority would cover the following accounts in FY2007:

  • The White House,32

  • Office of Management and Budget (OMB),

  • Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP),

  • Special Assistance to the President and the Official Residence of the Vice President (transfers would be subject to the approval of the Vice President),

  • Council on Environmental Quality and Office of Environmental Quality,

  • Office of Science and Technology Policy,

  • Office of the United States Trade Representative.33

 

The OMB Director (or such other officer as the President designates in writing) would be able to, 15 days after notifying the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations, transfer up to 10% of any such appropriation to any other such appropriation. The transferred funds would be merged with, and available for, the same time and purposes as the appropriation receiving the funds. Such transfers could not increase an appropriation by more than 50%. According to the EOP budget submission, the transfer authority would "allow the President to address, in a limited way, emerging priorities and shifting demands" and would "provide the President with flexibility and improve the efficiency of the EOP." The authority "is not intended to be used for new missions or programs" and the need for it "arises in part due to the large number of small accounts at the President's discretion, as well as the need to be responsive to a dynamic environment."34

The Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2005 (Section 533, Title V, Division H) authorized transfers of up to 10% of FY2005 appropriated funds among the accounts for the White House Office, OMB, ONDCP, and the Special Assistance to the President and Official Residence of the Vice President. For FY2006, P.L. 109-115, the Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, the District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Act, 2006 (Section 725) authorized transfers of up to 10% among the accounts for the White House and the Special Assistance to the President and Official Residence of the Vice President.

An enterprise services initiative is included in the FY2007 budget request to make the administration of certain services simpler and more efficient. Services included in the initiative would be expanded to include burn bag pickup costs, employee transportation subsidies, and Flexible Spending Account administrative fees. The budgets for these services in the WHO, Executive Residence at the White House, OPD, NSC, CEA, OMB, ONDCP, Office of Science and Technology Policy, United States Trade Representative, and the Council on Environmental Quality would be moved into the OA. In order to "be consistent with other EOP components," the budgets for health unit services, space-related rent costs, and rent-based Federal Protective Service in OMB and ONDCP also would be included in the OA.35

As reported and as passed by the House, the FY2007 TTHUD appropriations bill continues separate appropriations for the EOP accounts. The provision authorizing the transfer of up to 10% of funds within the EOP also is continued. Notable among the appropriations for the EOP accounts are the following.

  • An appropriation of up to $1.5 million for the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, an account under the White House Office, was recommended by the House committee. Under an amendment (No. 1025) offered by Representative Christopher Shays and agreed to by the House by voice vote on June 13, 2006, funding for the Board would be increased by $750,000.

  • An appropriation of $91.4 million is provided for the OA, $11 million less than the FY2007 budget request. Funding for the OMB and ONDCP rental payments to GSA, $7.4 million and $3.6 million, respectively, is continued under salaries and expenses for those respective accounts.

  • An appropriation of $26.9 million is provided for ONDCP. The increase of $3.6 million over the FY2007 budget request is accounted for by continuing the funding for rental payments to GSA under this account rather than transferring it to the OA.

  • An appropriation of $19.6 million is provided for the CTAC, $10 million more than the FY2007 budget request. The increase is for the Technology Transfer Program whose termination was requested by the Administration.

  • An appropriation of $227 million, $2.3 million above the FY2006 enacted level after the rescission, for the HIDTAP (High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program) was recommended by the House committee. Increased funding is recommended for the Appalachian, Central Valley, and Lake County HIDTAs (High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas). The program is continued under the EOP, rather than under the Department of Justice as the FY2007 budget requested. Under an amendment (No. 1026) offered by Representative Darlene Hooley and agreed to by the House on a 348 to 76 (Roll No. 273) vote on June 13, 2006, funding for the HIDTAP would be increased by $8 million.

  • An appropriation of $194 million is provided for Other Federal Drug Control Programs, $18.2 million less than the FY2007 budget request. The Drug Free Communities initiative is funded at $80 million (rather than at $79.2 million, as requested), the National Drug Court Institute is funded at $1 million (rather than at $990,000, as requested), the National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws is funded at $1 million (no funding was requested), and the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign is funded at $100 million (rather than at $120 million, as requested).

  • An appropriation of $1 million is provided for unanticipated needs. The rescission of $11.8 million in emergency funds (from the Unanticipated Needs for Natural Disasters Account) to offset nonemergency appropriations, as requested in the FY2007 budget, is not included.

 

The report accompanying the bill addresses several policy issues. It expresses the Appropriations Committee's "serious concerns about the continued forced implementation" of the E-Gov initiative on departments and agencies. Stating its belief that "Many aspects of this initiative are fundamentally flawed, contradict underlying program statutory requirements and have stifled innovation by forcing conformity to an arbitrary government standard," the committee notes that the FY2007 bill continues the "government-wide general provision that precludes the use of funds" for the initiative without prior consultation with the committee.36

The report notes the committee's "concern that the ONDCP has resisted focusing its programs to fighting the alarming rise in domestic methamphetamine production, trafficking and abuse" and states that future funding of the office's priorities cannot be ensured if Congress continues to be ignored. The Director of the ONDCP is directed to include "an analysis of options and recommendations for the future course of counterdrug technology research" in the office's budget submission for FY2008. The committee directs the ONDCP Director to submit a financial plan, which will be updated every six months, to the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations prior to the initial obligation of funds provided for FY2007. The first plan is due within 30 days of the act's enactment. Any new projects and changes in the funding of ongoing projects must receive the prior approval of the appropriations committees.37

In a statement of administration policy on H.R. 5576, OMB urged that the White House accounts be consolidated, the authority to transfer up to 10% of budgetary resources within EOP accounts be expanded, and the Enterprise Services initiative be expanded, as requested in the FY2007 budget. The Administration expressed concern about the House action to reduce funding for the National Youth Anti- Drug Media Campaign by $20 million.38

 

Title VII: Independent Agencies

 

 

In addition to funding for the aforementioned Departments and agencies, a diverse collection of 21 independent agencies receive funding through Title VII of this appropriations bill. Table 9 lists their respective appropriations for FY2006 as enacted, and for FY2007 as requested in the President's Budget and as passed by the House. Discussion then focuses on key budget and policy issues in the larger agencies.

   Table 10. Title VII: Independent Agencies Appropriations,

 

                        FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

                       (in millions of dollars)

 

 

                                                       FY2007

 

                                     FY2006   FY2007   House    FY2007  FY2007

 

           Agency                    Enacted  Request  Passed   Senate  Enacted

 

                                         *

 

 

 Architectural and Transportation

 

 Barriers Compliance Board               $6       $6      $6

 

 

 Consumer Product Safety

 

 Commission                              63       63      63

 

 

 Election Assistance Commission          14       17      17

 

 

 Federal Deposit Insurance

 

 Corporation: Office of Inspector

 

 General (transfer)                      31       26      26

 

 

 Federal Election Commission             55       57      57

 

 

 Federal Labor Relations Authority       25       25      25

 

 

 Federal Maritime Commission             20       21      21

 

 

 General Services Administration        217      450     203

 

 

 Merit Systems Protection Board          38       39      39

 

 

 Morris K. Udall Foundation               4        0       2

 

 

 National Archives and Records

 

 Administration                         326      338     346

 

 

 National Credit Union

 

 Administration

 

       Limitation on direct loans     1,500    1,500   1,500

 

       Community Development

 

       Revolving Loan Fund              941      941     941

 

 

 National Transportation Safety

 

 Board                                   77       80      82

 

 

 Neighborhood Reinvestment

 

 Corporation                            117      120     120

 

 

 Office of Government Ethics             11       11      11

 

 

 Office of Personnel Management

 

 (total)                             18,742   19,607  19,580

 

 

      Salaries and Expenses             123      113     113

 

 

      Government Payments for

 

 

      Annuitants, Employees Health

 

      Benefits                        8,393    8,780   8,780

 

 

      Government Payments for

 

      Annuitants, Employee Life

 

      Insurance                          36       39      39

 

 

      Payment to Civil Service

 

      Retirement and Disability Fund 10,072   10,532  10,532

 

 

 Office of Special Counsel               15       16      16

 

 Selective Service System+               25       24      24

 

 United States Interagency Council

 

 on Homelessness                          2        2       2

 

 

 United States Postal Service           116       80     109

 

 United States Tax Court                 48       47      47

 

 

 Total, Independent Agencies        $19,936  $20,999 $20,708

 

 

 Source: Figures are rounded and come from the President's

 

 budget request for FY2007, or the House Committee on Appropriations

 

 report to accompany H.R. 5576 (H. Rept. 109-495).

 

 

 * FY2006 figures reflect an across-the-board rescission of 1.0%.

 

 

 + Selective Service System is included in House bill; in Senate, this

 

 agency is in the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs

 

 appropriations bill.

 

 

Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA). The FLRA, to the extent feasible, will continue to implement the five government- wide goals of the President's Management Agenda during FY2007. Under the strategic management of human capital goal, the FLRA plans to implement cost savings measures to address projected changes in workload resulting from the implementation of the BRAC (Base Realignment and Closure) decisions and new personnel systems at the Departments of Defense (DOD) and Homeland Security (DHS). The FLRA reports that its regional workload has declined by 32% between 2001 and 2004, and that this trend may continue because of the DOD and DHS reforms. The agency also plans to streamline and consolidate the FLRA's training functions and implement additional workforce flexibilities through OPM.

Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB). The MSPB request for increased funding for FY2007 is to cover pay raises, performance management training for staff, and higher space rental rates. Additionally, $495,000 of the amount requested is to relocate the San Francisco office to a building which is fully compliant with current earthquake standards. The MSPB will continue to adjudicate appeals, but with faster processing times, under the new personnel systems currently being implemented at DOD and DHS. The Board also is in the process of hiring the additional staff authorized by Congress in FY2006 and needed to meet the increased demands of DOD and DHS.

Office of Personnel Management (OPM). Funding for the following projects is included in OPM's FY2007 request for salaries and expenses: Enterprise Human Resources Integration ($6.913 million) and Human Resources Line of Business ($1.435 million). A priority of the agency during 2007 will be the implementation of reforms to the position classification, pay, and performance management systems included in the Working For America Act draft legislative proposal submitted to Congress in July 2005 (not yet introduced). OPM also will give priority to the issues of recruitment, the hiring process, training, career and professional development, dental and vision benefits, and health benefits options. The agency's Inspector General will continue to develop a prescription drug audit program, which includes pharmacy benefit managers, to assist in recovering inappropriate expenses charged in previous years and negotiating more favorable contracts.

The House bill as passed provides the same appropriation for OPM salaries and expenses as requested by the President, but the allocation of the funding is changed. An increase in funds is denied for pay and performance modernization, and instead, the Management Services Division account is increased. The bill does not fund an increase for the retirement systems modernization project and therefore, reduces the amount authorized to be transferred from trust funds. The Committee report accompanying the bill directs the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to continue to monitor implementation of the retirement modernization program and update the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations by March 1, 2007, "as to OPM's progress in converting the agency's paper personnel file system into a secure digital system." It includes several directives for OPM:

  • to continue implementing and refining the new human resources management systems at the Departments of Homeland Security and Defense before expanding such systems to other departments and agencies.

  • to submit to the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations an operating plan for FY2007 signed by the OPM Director. The plan must be submitted within 60 days of the act's enactment. It must include "funding levels including an identification of carryover funds for the various offices, centers, programs, and initiatives covered in the budget justification and supporting documents referenced in the House and Senate appropriations reports and the statement of the managers."

  • to include changes -- dollars requested broken out between trust fund and general funds for specific programs or activities within organizations, a total that includes reimbursements, and a breakout of direct appropriation and reimbursement -- in future budget justifications.

  • to continue efforts to include "clear, detailed, and concise information on how the programs will be funded and how they will be measured" in the budget justification.

 

Federal Election Commission (FEC). The FEC administers federal campaign finance law, including overseeing disclosure requirements, limits on contributions and expenditures, and the presidential election public funding system; the FEC retains civil enforcement authority for the law.

The President's fiscal 2007 budget proposed an appropriation of $57.1 million for the FEC, a 5.5% increase above the fiscal 2006 appropriation of $54.2 million. Of this amount, at least $4.7 million was proposed to be designated for internal automated data systems and $5,000 for representational and reception expenses. Both the House Appropriations Committee and the full House accepted the overall amount proposed by the Administration but raised the $4.7 million minimum for automated data systems to $6.5 million. The agency was further authorized to collect registration fees for conferences, with such fees credited to the agency to help defray costs of such conferences. In addition, the Committee report commended the FEC on the implementation of its Administrative Fine Program, which allows the agency to assess fines for reporting violations, but it expressed concern that the program had not yet been authorized beyond December 31, 2008. The Committee urged the FEC to work with the authorizing committee to achieve permanent authorization of the program prior to the FY2008 appropriations request.

General Services Administration (GSA). The General Services Administration administers federal civilian procurement policies pertaining to the construction and management of federal buildings, disposal of real and personal property, and management of federal property and records. It is also responsible for managing the funding and facilities for former Presidents and presidential transitions. Typically only about 1% of GSA's total budget is funded by direct appropriations.

For FY2007, the President requested $52.5 million for government-wide policy and $83 million for operating expenses; $44 million for the Office of Inspector General; $3 million for allowances and office staff for former Presidents; and $16.9 million to be deposited into the Federal Citizen Information Center Fund. H.R. 5576, as reported and passed in the House, mirrors these figures.

Federal Buildings Fund (FBF). Most GSA spending is financed through the Federal Buildings Fund (FBF). Rent assessments from agencies paid into the FBF provide the principal source of its funding. Congress may also provide direct funding into the FBF. Congress directs the GSA as to the allocation or limitation on spending of funds from the FBF in provisions found accompanying GSA's annual appropriations.

   Table 11. General Services Administration Appropriations,

 

                        FY2006 to FY2007

 

 

                       (in millions of dollars)

 

 

                               FY2006     FY2007     FY2007    FY2007   FY2007

 

           Fund/Office         Enacted    Request    House     Senate   Enacted

 

 

 Federal Buildings Fund

 

 

 Limitations on Availability

 

 of Revenues                   $7,753     $8,047     $7,740

 

 

 Limitations on Obligation:

 

 New Construction Projects        792        690        384

 

 

 Limitations on Obligation:

 

 Repairs and Alterations          861        866        866

 

 

 Request for Additional

 

 Amount                                      245

 

 

 General Activities Accounts

 

 

 Government-wide Policy            53         53         53

 

 

 Operating Expenses               100         83         83

 

 

 Office of Inspector General       43         44         44

 

 

 Allowances and Office Staff

 

 for Former Presidents              3          3          3

 

 

 Federal Citizen Information

 

 Center Fund                       15         17         17

 

 

 Electronic Gov't (E-Gov) Fund      3          5          3

 

 

 GSA direct appropriations total $217       $450       $203

 

 

 Source: The President's budget request for FY2007, or the

 

 House Committee on Appropriations report to accompany H.R. 5576 (H.

 

 Rept. 109-495).

 

 

As reported and passed in the House, there is a limitation of $7,740 million for the FBF, a decrease of $12 million below the FY2006 enacted levels, and a decrease of $307 million below the President's request. To carry out the purposes of the FBF, $383.9 million shall remain available until expended for new construction projects, and $866.2 million shall remain available until expended for repairs and alterations. This amount includes $10 million to implement a glass fragmentation program, and $10 million to implement a chlorofluorocarbons program.

For FY2007, the President had requested that an additional amount of $245 million be deposited in the FBF, and that $690 million remain available until expended for new construction projects from the FBF. For repairs and alterations, $866 million was to remain available until expended.

Electronic Government Fund (E-gov Fund). Originally unveiled in advance of the President's proposed budget for FY2002, the E-gov Fund and its appropriation has been a somewhat contentious matter between the President and Congress. The President's initial $20 million request was cut to $5 million, which was the amount provided for FY2003, as well. Funding thereafter was held at $3 million for FY2004, FY2005, and FY2006. Created to support interagency e-gov initiatives approved by the Director of OMB, the fund and the projects it funds have been subject to close scrutiny by, and accountability to, congressional appropriators. The President requested $5 million for FY2007, but the House approved the usual $3 million, as recommended by appropriators.

National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The custodian of the historically valuable records of the federal government since its establishment in 1934, NARA also prescribes policy and provides both guidance and management assistance concerning the entire life cycle of federal records. It also administers the presidential libraries system; publishes the laws, regulations, and presidential and other documents; assists the Information Security Oversight Office (ISOO), which manages federal security classification and declassification policy; the Public Interest Declassification Board, which advises the President and other executive branch officials on the collection, review, and declassification of records of archival value and public interest; and the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC), which makes grants nationwide to help nonprofit organizations identify, preserve, and provide access to materials that document American history.

For FY2007, the President had requested $338 million for NARA, a modest increase over the $326 million appropriated for the agency for FY2006. Of this requested amount, the following distributions were specified: $289.6 for operating expenses, a slight increase over the $280 appropriated for FY2006; $45 million for the electronic records archive; $13 million for repairs and restoration; and no requested funds for the NHPRC, which had received $7 million in FY2006.

House appropriators recommended $355.5 million for NARA, adjusted by $10 million for debt reduction. The House, with one $8 million floor offset amendment, approved $337.5 million for NARA, which was approximately $0.5 million less than the amount requested for the agency in the President's budget. Of this amount, the following distributions were specified: $281.6 million for operating expenses; $45.4 million for the electronic records archive; and $13 million for repairs and restoration. For the NHPRC account, $7.5 million was recommended and approved, $2 million provided for operations and the remainder for grants.

Postal Service.39 The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is self-supporting; it generates nearly all of its funding -- about $71 billion annually -- by charging users of the mail for the costs of the services it provides. Congress does provide a regular appropriation, however, to compensate USPS for revenue it forgoes in providing, at congressional direction, free mailing privileges for the blind and for overseas voting. Congress has also provided some funds in recent years for bio-terrorism detection in the wake of the anthrax events of 2001.

Under the Revenue Forgone Reform Act of 1993, Congress is authorized to reimburse USPS $29 million each year until 2035, for services provided below cost to non-profit organizations at congressional direction in the 1990s, but not paid for at the time. For the past 13 years, the Postal Service appropriation has consisted of that amount, plus an estimate of the amount needed to pay for mail for the blind and overseas voters for the current year.

In its FY2007 Budget, the Administration proposed an appropriation of $79.9 million, including $60.7 million for revenue forgone in FY2007 and a reconciliation adjustment for underestimated mail volume in FY2004 of $19.2 million. The Postal Service, which submits its own request as an independent entity, estimated that the FY2007 amount needed for the blind and overseas voting would be $80.1 million, or $19.4 million more than OMB requested, and asked Congress to appropriate that amount. Both proposals would supplement the FY2007 amount with a $19.2 million reconciliation adjustment reflecting that actual use of the subsidy in FY2004 was underestimated by that amount. The Postal Service's request also includes a reconciliation adjustment of $24.4 million reflecting the amount by which actual expenditures for FY2005 exceeded the amount appropriated that year. Thus the Postal Service's request for FY2007 is $152.7 million: including $80.1 million for FY2007 revenue forgone, $43.6 million as a reconciliation adjustment for two years, and $29 million as the annual payment under the Revenue Forgone Reform Act of 1993.

The Administration's FY2007 budget not only estimates a lower usage figure for mail for the blind than does the Postal Service, it also proposes to eliminate the usual $29 million annual payment for revenue forgone in past years that is set forth in the Revenue Forgone Reform Act. It also proposed termination of the payment in FY2005 and FY2006, but Congress chose to provide the funding. USPS argues that cancelling the payment could result in the whole 28-year obligation, totaling $841 million, being written off as a bad debt and charged to current postal rate-payers. The Administration's budget also proposed that the $79.9 million it requests would not be available for obligation until October 1, 2007, which is in FY2008, following a practice for the postal appropriation established several years ago.

The House bill, as reported by committee and passed by the House, adopted the Administration's recommendation by providing $79.9 million for the current year's revenue forgone, as an advance appropriation, but departed from it in once again approving the annual $29 million for revenue forgone in the past. The Committee report (H.Rept 109-495) commented that the method OMB uses to estimate revenue forgone expenditures, which is to take an average of past expenses, is "inaccurate" compared to the Postal Service's estimate which is based on current audits of mail volume.

 

Title IX : General Provisions Government-Wide

 

 

The Transportation, Treasury, et al., Appropriations Act customarily includes general provisions which apply either government-wide or to specific agencies or programs. There also may be general provisions at the end of each individual title within the appropriations act which relate only to agencies and accounts within that specific title. The Administration's proposed language for government-wide general provisions is included in the FY2007 Budget, Appendix.40 Most of the provisions continue language that has appeared under the General Provisions title for several years. For various reasons, Congress has determined that reiterating the language is preferable to making the provisions permanent. Presented below are some of the government-wide general provisions that were proposed for elimination in the FY2007 budget. Inclusion of the provisions in the House bill as passed is noted.
  • Section 809, which prohibits payment to political appointees who are filling positions for which they have been nominated, but not confirmed. Included as Section 909 of the House bill.

  • Section 819, which prohibits the obligation or expenditure of appropriated funds for employee training that (1) does not meet identified needs for knowledge, skills, and abilities bearing directly upon the performance of official duties; (2) contains elements likely to induce high levels of emotional response or psychological stress in some participants; (3) does not require prior employee notification of the content and methods to be used in the training and written end of course evaluation; (4) contains any methods or content associated with religious or quasi-religious belief systems or "new age" belief systems; or (5) is offensive to, or designed to change, participants' personal values or lifestyle outside the workplace. Included as Section 919 of the House bill.

  • Section 820, which prohibits the use of appropriated funds to implement or enforce employee non-disclosure agreements if they do not contain whistleblower protection clauses. Included as Section 920 of the House bill.

  • Section 823, which requires that the Committees on Appropriations approve the release of any "non-public" information, such as mailing or telephone lists, to any person or any organization outside the federal government. Included as Section 923 of the House bill.

  • Section 834, which states that Congress recognizes the United States Anti-Doping Agency as the official anti-doping agency for Olympic, Pan American, and Paralympic sports in the United States. Included as Section 934 of the House bill.

  • Section 836, which prohibits the use of appropriated funds to implement or enforce restrictions or limitations on the Coast Guard Congressional Fellowship Program or to implement OPM's proposed regulations limiting the detail of executive branch employees to the legislative branch. Included as Section 936 of the House bill.

  • Section 837, which requires agencies to report to Congress on the amount of the acquisitions made from entities that manufacture the articles, materials, or supplies outside the United States. Not included in the House bill.

  • Section 839, which requires appropriate executive department and agency heads either to transfer funds to, or reimburse, the Federal Aviation Administration to ensure the uninterrupted, continuous operation of the Midway Atoll airfield. Not included in the House bill.

  • Section 840, which provides certain requirements for conducting a public-private competition for the performance of an activity that is not inherently governmental for executive agencies with less than 100 full-time employees. Not included in the House bill.

  • Section 842, which prohibits the use of funds to convert an activity or function of an executive agency to contractor performance if more than 10 federal employees perform the activity, unless the analysis reveals that savings would exceed 10 percent of the most efficient organization's personnel-related costs for performance of the activity or function by federal employees, or $10 million, whichever is lesser. Included as Section 939 of the House bill.

  • Section 845, which precludes contravention of the Privacy Act. Included as Section 942 of the House bill.

 

Among new government-wide general provisions in the FY2007 bill are those providing a 2.7% pay adjustment for federal civilian employees, including those in the Departments of Homeland Security and Defense (Section 940), and prohibiting the use of funds to send or otherwise pay for more than 50 employees from a federal department or agency to attend a single conference outside the United States (Section 951). This latter provision was added to the bill by an amendment offered by Representative Scott Garrett and agreed to by the House by voice vote on June 14, 2006. The Statement of Administration Policy on H.R. 5576 strongly opposed the 2.7% pay adjustment, stating that it exceeds the annual pay increase required by the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act for federal employees and the average private sector pay adjustment.41

 

Cuba Sanctions42

 

 

Since the early 1960s, U.S. policy toward Communist Cuba under Fidel Castro has consisted largely of efforts to isolate the island nation through comprehensive economic sanctions, including prohibitions on U.S. financial transactions -- the Cuban Assets Control Regulations (CACR) -- that are administered by the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). Restrictions on travel have been a key and often contentious component of U.S. efforts to isolate the Cuban government. The regulations have not banned travel itself, but have placed restrictions on any financial transactions related to travel to Cuba. In June 2004, the Bush Administration significantly tightened restrictions on travel, and there was considerable negative reaction to the Administration's tightening of restrictions for family visits and educational travel.

Some U.S. commercial agricultural exports to Cuba have been allowed since 2001 under the terms of the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of 2000 or TSRA, but with numerous restrictions and licensing requirements. Exporters are denied access to U.S. private commercial financing or credit, and all transactions must be conducted in cash in advance or with financing from third countries. Since late 2001, Cuba has purchased about $1.2 billion in agricultural products from the United States. Overall U.S. exports to Cuba amounted to about $7 million in 2001, $146 million in 2002, $259 million in 2003, $400 million in 2004, and $369 million in 2005, the majority in agricultural products.43

In February 2005, the Administration tightened U.S. economic sanctions against Cuba by further restricting how U.S. agricultural exporters may be paid for their sales. OFAC amended the CACR to clarify that the term "payment of cash in advance" for U.S. agricultural sales to Cuba means that the payment is to be received prior to the shipment of the goods. This differs from the practice of being paid before the actual delivery of the goods, a practice that had been utilized by most U.S. agricultural exporters to Cuba since such sales were legalized in late 2001. U.S. agricultural exporters and some Members of Congress strongly objected that the action constituted a new sanction that violated the intent of TSRA, and could jeopardize millions of dollars in U.S. agricultural sales to Cuba. OFAC Director Robert Werner maintained that the clarification "conforms to the common understanding of the term in international trade."44 In July 2005, OFAC clarified that, for "payment of cash in advance" for the commercial sale of U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba, vessels can leave U.S. ports as soon as a foreign bank confirms receipt of payment from Cuba. OFAC's action would reportedly ensure that the goods would not be vulnerable to seizure for unrelated claims while still at the U.S. port. Supporters of overturning OFAC's February 2005 amendment, such as the American Farm Bureau Federation, were pleased by the clarification but indicated that they would still work to overturn the February rule.45

Since 2000, either one or both houses have approved provisions in the annual Treasury Department appropriations bill that would ease U.S. economic sanctions on Cuba (especially on travel and on U.S. agricultural exports) but none of these provisions have ever been enacted. This year, the House-passed version of the FY2007 Transportation-Treasury-Housing appropriations bill, H.R. 5576, includes a provision (Section 950) that would prevent Treasury Department funds from being used to implement the February 2005 amendment to the Cuba embargo regulations that tightened restrictions on "payment of cash in advance" for U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba.46 The Administration's Statement of Policy on the bill maintains that the President would veto the bill if it contained any provision that would weaken current sanctions on Cuba. The provision was added during June 14, 2006 House floor consideration of the bill when the House approved H.Amdt. 1049 (Moran, Kansas) by voice vote.

On the same day, the House rejected two additional Cuba amendments: H.Amdt 1050 (Rangel), that would have prohibited funds from being used to implement the economic embargo of Cuba, was rejected by a vote of 183-245; H.Amdt. 1051 (Lee), that would have prohibited funds from being used to implement the Administration's June 2004 tightening of restrictions on educational travel to Cuba, was rejected by a vote of 187-236. An additional Cuba amendment, H.Amdt. 1032 (Flake), that would have prohibited the use of funds to amend regulations relating to travel for religious activities in Cuba, was withdrawn from consideration.

For additional information, see CRS Report RL32730, Cuba: Issues for the 109th Congress, by Mark P. Sullivan; CRS Report RL33499, Exempting Food and Agriculture Products from U.S. Economic Sanctions: Status and Implementation, by Remy Jurenas; and CRS Report RL31139, Cuba: U.S. Restrictions on Travel and Remittances, by Mark P. Sullivan.

 

FOOTNOTES

 

 

1 FY2006 funding for some agencies funded in this act, notably the Departments of Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development, was increased in supplemental appropriations acts to deal with the effects of the hurricanes that struck Florida and the Gulf Coast in 2005. Total enacted FY2006 funding, including supplemental funding, after scorekeeping adjustments, was $147.0 billion.

2 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Statement of Administration Policy, H.R. 5576 -- Transportation, Treasury, Housing, the Judiciary, and the District of Columbia Appropriations Bill, FY2007, June 14, 2006, p. 6.

3 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Statement of Administration Policy, H.R. 5576 -- Transportation, Treasury, Housing, the Judiciary, and the District of Columbia Appropriations Bill, FY2007, June 14, 2006.

4 Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2007, pps. 216-224.

5 Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2007, p. 222.

6 Mark R. Dayton, Senior Economist, Office of the Inspector General, United States Department of Transportation, "Intercity Passenger Rail and Amtrak," Testimony before the Subcommittee on Transportation, Treasury, the Judiciary, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, March 16, 2006, p. 1.

7 Notice of proposed rulemaking published in the Federal Register on November 7, 2005 (70 Fed. Reg. 67389); supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking published in the Federal Register on May 5, 2006 (71 Fed. Reg. 26425). For more information, see CRS Report RL33255, Legal Developments in International Civil Aviation, by Todd B. Tatelman.

8 In addition to the $36.3 billion in funding for federal-aid highways and exempt contract authority provided in FY2006, the DOT also received $3.5 billion in emergency relief funding to respond to the effects of the Gulf Coast hurricanes.

9 $39.1 billion in obligation limitations and $739 million in exempt obligations. A $2.2 billion rescission of contract authority brings the net total after score-keeping adjustments down to $37.7 billion.

10 For more details on the FY2007 budget proposal for the Treasury Department, see CRS Report RL32898, Appropriations for the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service in FY2007: Issues for Congress, by Gary Guenther.

11 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Budget in Brief FY2007 (Washington: 2006), p. 11.

12 Ibid., pp. 3-7.

13 Ibid., p. 11.

14 Ibid., p. 60.

15 The net gap is the estimated amount of overdue or unpaid taxes after the IRS has received late tax payments and exhausted its efforts to collect overdue taxes through enforcement action. See Internal Revenue Service, New IRS Study Provides Preliminary Tax Gap Estimates, IR-2005-38 (Washington, March 29, 2005).

16 Treasury Department, Budget in Brief FY2007, p. 60.

17 Ibid., p. 68.

18 For more details on the program, see CRS Report RL33231, The Internal Revenue Service's Use of Private Debt Collection Agencies: Current Status and Issues for Congress, by Gary Guenther.

19 Heidi Glenn and Dustin Stamper, "House Agrees to Eliminate IRS Debt Collection Program," Tax Notes, June 19, 2006, p. 1335.

20 For more details on the proposed HUD budget, see CRS Report RL33344, The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD): Fiscal Year 2007 Budget, by Maggie McCarty, Libby Perl, Bruce Foote, Eugene Boyd, and Meredith Peterson. For a similarly detailed examination of the FY2006 budget, see CRS Report RL32869, The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD): Fiscal Year 2006 Budget, by Maggie McCarty, Libby Perl, Bruce Foote, and Eugene Boyd.

21 For a more detailed examination of judiciary funding, see CRS Report RL33339, Judiciary Appropriations for FY2007, by Lorraine H. Tong.

22 See [http://www.supremecourtus.gov/publicinfo/year- end/2005year-endreport.pdf] for the Chief Justice's report.

23 For an examination of judicial security issues and legislation, see CRS Report RL33464, Judicial Security: Responsibilities and Current Issues, by Lorraine H. Tong, and CRS Report RL33473, Judicial Security: Comparison of Legislation in the 109th Congress, by Nathan James.

24 The Judiciary's FY2007 request for rent paid to GSA is $997.8 million -- a $32.4 million (3.3%) increase over the $965.5 million FY2006 appropriation.

25 Workload increases are expected from cases created by an additional 1,500 border patrol agents, positions for whom have recently been funded. The additional FTEs are reportedly needed for additional probation and pretrial service officers and clerks' office staff.

26 This amount includes $4.0 million for the Vaccine Injury Trust Fund.

27 Prior to the reorganization of House and Senate Committee on Appropriations subcommittee structures at the beginning of the 109th Congress, both houses of Congress had a separate Appropriations Subcommittee for the District of Columbia appropriations. Appropriations for the District of Columbia are now included in the responsibilities of the House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development, The Judiciary, District of Columbia, while in the Senate, there is still a separate Appropriations Subcommittee on the District of Columbia.

28 Of the three exceptions, the Council on Environmental Quality and Office of Environmental Quality are funded in the House Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Act and the Senate Interior and Related Agencies Act. The Office of Science and Technology Policy and the Office of the United States Trade Representative are funded under the same appropriations act entitled Science, State, Justice, and Commerce, and Related Agencies (House) and Commerce, Justice, and Science (Senate).

29 P.L. 109-148, the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2006, at Division B, Title III, § 3801(a), required a 1.0% government-wide across-the-board rescission in discretionary spending accounts. The FY2006 appropriation for the EOP accounts proposed to be consolidated totaled $173.983 million before the rescission.

30 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the United States Government Fiscal Year 2007, Appendix (Washington: GPO, 2006), pp. 1039-1048. (Hereafter referred to as FY2007 Budget, Appendix.)

31 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Fiscal Year 2007 Congressional Budget Submission (Washington: [Feb. 2006]), p. EOP-11. (Hereafter cited as EOP Budget Submission.)

32 The accounts under the White House are Compensation of the President, White House Office, Executive Residence at the White House, White House Repair and Restoration, Council of Economic Advisers, Office of Policy Development, National Security Council, and the Office of Administration.

33FY2007 Budget, Appendix, p. 1040.

34EOP Budget Submission, p. EOP-12.

35EOP Budget Submission, p. EOP-13.

36 H.Rept. 109-495, p. 181.

37 Ibid., pp. 182 and 185.

38 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Statement of Administration Policy, H.R. 5576 -- Transportation, Treasury, Housing, the Judiciary, and the District of Columbia Appropriations Bill, FY2007, June 14, 2006, pp. 3-4. (Hereafter referred to as Administration Policy on H.R. 5576.)

39 Also see CRS Report RS21025, The Postal Revenue Forgone Appropriation: Overview and Current Issues, by Nye Stevens.

40FY2007 Budget, Appendix, pp. 9-14. The 800 section numbers refer to the provisions as they were enacted in P.L. 109-115, the Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, the District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Act, 2006.

41 U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Statement of Administration Policy, H.R. 5576 -- Transportation, Treasury, Housing, the Judiciary, and the District of Columbia Appropriations Bill, FY2007, June 14, 2006, p. 4.

42 Prepared by Mark P. Sullivan, Specialist in Latin American Affairs, Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division.

43 World Trade Atlas. Department of Commerce Statistics.

44 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Testimony of Robert Werner, Director, OFAC, before the House Committee on Agriculture, March 16, 2005.

45 Christopher S. Rugaber, "Treasury Clarifies Cuba Farm Export Rule, and Baucus Relents on Nominees," International Trade Reporter, August 4, 2005.

46 A similar provision was included in both the House- passed and Senate-passed versions of the FY2006 Transportation appropriations bill, H.R. 3058, but it was dropped in the conference report to the bill (H.Rept. 109-307). The Administration had threatened to veto the measure over the provision.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
  • Authors
    Peterman, David Randall
    Frittelli, John
  • Institutional Authors
    Congressional Research Service
  • Subject Area/Tax Topics
  • Jurisdictions
  • Language
    English
  • Tax Analysts Document Number
    Doc 2006-13659
  • Tax Analysts Electronic Citation
    2006 TNT 139-19
Copy RID