This Statement of Administration Policy provides the Administration's views
on S. 2237, the Department of the Interior and Related Agencies
Appropriations Bill, FY 1999, as reported by the Senate Appropriations
Committee. Your consideration of the Administration's views would be
appreciated. Due to inadequate funding levels for priority programs and at
least 24 objectionable language riders, discussed below, the President's
senior advisers would recommend that he veto the bill if it were presented
to him as approved by the Committee.
The Administration appreciates efforts by the Senate to accommodate certain
of the President's priorities within the 302(b) allocation. However, the
allocation is simply insufficient to make the necessary investments in
programs funded by this bill. The only way to achieve the appropriate
investment level is to offset discretionary spending by using savings in
other areas.
The President's FY 1999 Budget proposes levels of discretionary spending
for FY 1999 that conform to the Bipartisan Budget Agreement by making
savings in mandatory and other programs available to help finance this
spending. In the Transportation Equity Act, Congress -- on a broad,
bipartisan basis -- took similar action in approving funding for surface
transportation programs together with mandatory offsets. In addition, this
year, as in the past, such mandatory offsets have been approved by the
House and Senate in other appropriations bills. The Administration urges
the Congress to consider such mandatory proposals for other priority
discretionary programs, including those funded through this bill.
The Administration's specific concerns with funding and language provisions
of the Senate Committee bill are discussed below.
Departments of the Interior and Agriculture
The Administration strongly objects to inadequate funding provided by the
Committee for high priority programs within these two departments,
including:
- Everglades restoration and other land acquisition funding from the
Land and Water Conservation Fund;
- the Clean Water Action Plan to clean up America's ground and surface
waterways;
- the Disaster Information Network providing enhanced data to protect
Americans;
- BIA education operations and construction, the Indian Country law
enforcement initiative, and the land consolidation pilot project and
other trust system reforms;
- the Endangered Species Programs, including landowner incentive
grants;
- key Forest Service natural resource protection, road maintenance and
general administration programs, while increasing the timber program by
$20 million; and,
- finally, specific earmarks for many unrequested projects that would
limit the land management agencies' ability to allocate funds for high
priority needs.
The Administration urges the Senate to report a clean bill that does not
attempt to roll back environmental protections and circumvent the public
hearing process by attaching riders to appropriation bills. Unfortunately,
the Committee bill contains at least 24 objectionable riders, 22 in bill
language and two additional ones in report language. The Administration
strongly objects to such language, including provisions that would:
- unwisely terminate the Interior Columbia Basin Ecosystem Management
Project in six Northwest States;
- establish an unprecedented easement for the community of King Cove
for a road and utilities across a wilderness area in Alaska in the
Izembek National Wildlife Refuge;
- mandate a high timber sale level on the Tongass National Forest in
Alaska, regardless of environmental impacts, other resource priorities,
and the ongoing public process for finalizing the Tongass Forest Plan;
- continue to delay rules that would establish the fair market value
for Federal and Indian oil leases, costing the Treasury $64 million a
year in underpaid royalties;
- delay implementation of environmental protections for hardrock
mining reclamation on Federal lands;
- institute for the first time a means-test for tribes as a basis for
redistributing Tribal Priority Allocation funding;
- amend an authorizing statute, the 1992 Elwha Act, to significantly
change the congressionally approved plan for restoring Elwha River and
Olympic National park and leave the National Park Service owning two
non-compliant dams without the funds to remove them;
- hinder efforts to restore endangered and threatened Pacific salmon
runs in the Columbia and Snake Rivers;
- require the Forest Service to maximize commercial wood harvesting
before the agency conducts prescribed burning projects, effectively
stopping most prescribed burns and endangering lives and property;
- prohibit Grizzly Bear reintroduction into the Selway-Bitteroot area
of Idaho and Montana;
- prohibit Park Service regulation of commercial fishing in Glacier
Bay National Park in Alaska;
- undermine the CFO Act and the responsibilities of USDA top
management by encouraging the Forest Service to select and implement a
financial computer system that is independent of the Department of
Agriculture;
- transfer the jurisdiction over the valued Land Between The Lakes
National Recreation Area from the Tennessee Valley Authority, where it
has been successfully managed for over thirty-five years, to the U.S.
Forest Service, a disruptive change that would involve additional
transition costs without improving service;
- place unnecessary limits on Federal land acquisitions in Alaska;
- prevent the Forest Service from charging fair market value for
summer vacation homes in an Idaho national forest, undermining the
current effort to reappraise all such leases nationwide;
- require the Forest Service to trade timber in return for restoration
practices, an adverse precedent that could devolve into a perpetual
cycle of using logging to pay for land management;
- require unauthorized four-wheel-drive roads to be obliterated before
any other type of road can be decommissioned, virtually preventing work
on regular roads that pose serious environmental risks and are ready to
be removed;
- waive environmental laws and automatically extend the term of
grazing leases that are undergoing review by the Bureau of Land
Management even though authority already exists to protect lease holders
from termination of leases undergoing review;
- force the Forest Service to sell all Alaskan timber sales using an
outdated, impracticable appraisal method that undermines the public
return on national forest management;
- prohibit the Department of the Interior from using FY 1999 funds to
transfer land into trust status in Minnesota, setting a precedent for
limitations on trust land acquisition; and,
- amend, in two different provisions, the National Forest Management
Act, to prohibit forest plan revisions, thus requiring continued use of
inadequate and dated forest plans -- even beyond their statutory 15 year
lifespan.
In addition, the Senate Committee Report includes objectionable language,
including language that would:
- require timber sale offers from national forests to be 3.8 billion
board feet rather than the 3.4 billion board feet assumed in the FY 1999
Budget; and,
- direct the National Park Service to maintain aviation access to a
gravel airstrip within the Denali National Park, effectively overturning
a 1997 Environmental Impact Statement calling for eventually closing the
airstrip and relying on a paved airstrip 10 miles away.
Land and Water Conservation Fund
The Administration strongly objects to the Committee's cuts in land
acquisition funding to protect our national parks, forests, refuges, and
public lands. The Committee has provided $233 million of the $270 million
requested, with Everglades land acquisition funds cut by half. This
reduction in funding would prevent the Administration from making
significant land acquisitions such as Cumberland Island National Seashore
in Georgia and West Eugene Wetland in Oregon.
The Administration also objects to the Committee's continued inaction on
the promised congressional release of the $362 million appropriated in FY
1998 for Federal priority land acquisitions. As requested by Congress, the
Administration has submitted a list of proposed land acquisitions. In
response, the Committee has not only held back the FY 1998 Title V funding
but also has funded some items on the Administration's 1998 list with FY
1999 funding, resulting in critical acquisitions planned for both years
being delayed or unfunded.
Millennium Program
The Administration appreciates very much the $13 million provided to the
National Park Service and the Smithsonian for Millennium Program projects.
We strongly urge the Senate to provide full funding with maximum
flexibility and discretion for allocation in order to preserve other
important cultural and historic treasures for the next millennium that are
in danger of deteriorating beyond repair. Many of these projects are
time-sensitive and cannot be delayed.
Department of Energy
While higher than the House Committee mark, the Senate Committee's funding
level represents a highly objectionable $162 million reduction to the
President's request for Energy Conservation. The Committee mark would be
damaging to progress in partnerships with industry on improved industrial
energy efficiency, development of more efficient autos and trucks, and
designs and materials for more efficient buildings.
The President's budget requests $36 million for payment to the State of
California for the Retired Teachers System associated with the sale of Elk
Hills, which is not included in the Committee bill. The Administration
prefers that this payment be appropriated consistent with the FY1996
Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 104-106).
The Administration would like to work with the Congress to restore funding
to these important Department of Energy programs as the bill moves through
the process.
Indian Health Service
The Administration is concerned that the Committee bill does not include
funding increases requested for the President's Race Initiative, alcohol
and substance abuse initiative, and for first-year construction of the Fort
Defiance Health Facility. The Administration intends to work with the
Senate to fund these important initiatives within funds available for the
Indian Health Service.
The Administration strongly objects to the Committee's inclusion of
authorizing language, without hearings or tribal consultation, that
requires contract support costs to be distributed to tribes on a pro-rata
(proportional) basis.
Cultural Agencies
The Administration appreciates the Senate's support for the National
Endowment for the Arts (NEA). We urge the Senate to provide funding for
NEA and NEH at the President's requested level of $136 million each and for
the Institute for Museum and Library Services at the requested level of $26
million.
Likewise, the Administration appreciates the Senate's support for the other
cultural agencies funded by this bill, including funding for the National
Museum of the American Indian and the full request for the National Gallery
of Art, the Holocaust Museum, and the Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts. However, the Administration urges the Senate to provide the full $40
million request for repair and restoration in the Smithsonian Institution
and the requested funding for digitization of the Smithsonian collections.
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