[Congressional Record Volume 141, Number 170 (Tuesday, October 31, 1995)]
[Senate]
[Pages S16384-S16400]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




   ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 1996--CONFERENCE 
                                 REPORT

  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I submit a report of the committee 
conference on H.R. 1905 and ask for its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The report will be stated.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The committee of conference on the disagreeing votes of the 
     two Houses on the amendments of the Senate to the bill (H.R. 
     1905) making appropriations for energy and water development 
     for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1996, and for other 
     purposes, having met, after full and free conference, have 
     agreed to recommend and do recommend to their respective 
     Houses this report, signed by a majority of the conferees.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the Senate will proceed to 
the consideration of the conference report.
  (The conference report is printed in the House proceedings of the 
Record of October 26, 1995.)
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, it is my understanding that there will 
be a request for a rollcall vote on the adoption of this conference 
report. Therefore, I am advised in behalf of the leader that there will 
be another vote today expected on this conference report. We will work 
it as expeditiously as we can. But I understand one Senator wants to 
speak and will not be here until around 5 o'clock. So we will not 
finish any sooner than that.
  Does the Senator from Arkansas wish to speak?
  Mr. PRYOR. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from New Mexico. I 
think he just answered my question. I was just going to ask the Senator 
from New Mexico if he could give us approximately the time for a vote. 
I guess it would be sometime after 5.
  I thank the Senator.
  Mr. DOMENICI. I thank the Senator very much.
  Mr. President, I have a brief statement, and I believe Senator 
Johnston will have a statement. And then we will proceed with questions 
and some colloquies.
  Mr. President, I am pleased to present the conference report on the 
fiscal year 1995 energy and water development appropriations bill. This 
conference report on the bill, H.R. 1905, passed the House of 
Representatives earlier today, October 31, 1995, by a vote of 402 yeas 
to 24 nays.
  The conference on this bill was held on October 24 and 25, 1995, and 
the conference report was printed in the Congressional Record of 
October 26, 1995. Since that time, the printed conference report has 
been available. Therefore, I will not elaborate on the disposition of 
all the items agreed to in conference.
  The conference agreement provides a total of $19,336,311,000 in new 
budget obligational authority. This amount is $1,225,733,000 less than 
the President's budget request and $706,688,000 less than the enacted, 
fiscal year 1995 level. It is $653,854,000 over the House passed bill, 
and $832,841,000 below the Senate passed bill.
  As you know, there are two principle functions within the Energy and 
Water Development appropriations bill. These functions are separated 
into defense and domestic discretionary accounts. The bill provides 
$10,656,458,000 in defense discretionary budget authority for the 
Department of Energy's atomic energy defense activities. This amount is 
$459,325,000 below the budget request but $552,678,000 above the 
current level. For domestic discretionary accounts, which include the 
U.S. Army Corps of Engineer's Civil Works Program, the Bureau of 
Reclamation, several independent agencies, and the nondefense 
activities of the Department of Energy, the conference bill provides 
$8,679,853,000. This amount is $766,408,000 below the budget request 
and $1,259,366,000 below the current level.
  Due to this dramatic reduction in nondefense spending, our ability to 
fund new initiatives is extremely limited, and most existing programs 
are cut significantly below both the current year and the President's 
request. The conference bill makes significant reductions in the Army 
Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation, solar and renewable 
energy, the Appalachian Regional Commission, and the Tennessee Valley 
Authority.
  We have made some very difficult decisions in the nondefense 
activities of the Department of Energy. However, we have done our best 
to protect the basic science research capabilities of the Department of 
Energy. While we have made significant reductions in the areas 
mentioned above, we have held the line on biological and environmental 
research, basic energy sciences, high energy physics, and nuclear 
energy.
  These are the fundamental basic science missions of the Department of 
Energy that we must maintain to ensure the best possible future for the 
Nation. These are missions relating to such areas as the human genome 
program and other medical research activities, global environmental 
research, materials and chemical sciences, and the physical sciences.
  Title I of the conference bill provides appropriations for the U.S. 
Army Corps of Engineers' Civil Works Program. The conference agreement 
provides $3,201,272,000, which is $106,178,000 less than the budget 
request and $137,647,000 less than the current enacted level.
  For title II, the Department of the Interior, the conference 
agreement includes a total of $844,342,000. This is $11,325,000 above 
the budget request and $27,057,000 below the current level. Within this 
total, the bill provides $800,203,000 for the Bureau of Reclamation, 
which is $11,325,000 more than the budget request and $31,033,000 less 
than the current level.
  A total of $15,389,490,000 is provided in title III for the 
Department of Energy programs, projects, and activities. Of this 
amount, $10,639,458,000 is provided for atomic energy defense 
activities, which is $457,825,000 below the President's budget request 
and $553,611,000 above the current appropriated level.
  Included in the total provided for atomic energy defense activities 
is $5,557,532,000 for defense environmental restoration and waste 
management. This amount is $429,204,000 below the budget request but 
$664,841,000 above the current level. The increase over the 1995 
appropriation results primarily from the transfer of facilities from 
the 

[[Page S16385]]

old materials production account to the Defense Environmental 
Restoration and Waste Management program.
  The conference action on DOE's Defense Environmental Management 
Program seeks, to the extent possible, to protect funding necessary to 
meet existing cleanup milestones established in compliance agreements. 
The conference agreement also seeks to reduce Environmental Management 
Program personnel at headquarters, where practicable, in an effort to 
apply available dollars to the cleanup effort.
  Title IV, which includes appropriations for the Tennessee Valley 
Authority, the Appalachian Regional Commission, the Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission, and other independent agencies, provides $311,550,000 in 
budget authority. This amount is $57,513,000 below the President's 
request and $143,859,000 below the current year's level.
  I recommend to the Senate that this conference report be approved 
promptly in order to complete action on this appropriations bill and 
clear it for the President's consideration and approval. It is our 
understanding that the President will sign this bill.
  Mr. President, the House and Senate have worked hard for several 
weeks and have agreed upon a conference proposal which not only 
represents significant reductions from the current year's enacted 
appropriated levels, but is the leanest energy and water development 
appropriations bill since fiscal year 1990. We have heard the call of 
the new Republican majority to change the way Government does business 
and are proud to Present a bill that cuts budgets, cuts bureaucracy, 
and streamlines operations.
  I wish to express my appreciation and thanks to our House colleagues 
led by the chairman of the House subcommittee, Congressman John Myers, 
and the ranking minority member, Congressman Tom Bevill. I would like 
to express my continued admiration and respect for the distinguished 
Senator from Louisiana and our former chairman, Senator Johnston and 
thank him for his hard work and support. Of course, I want to also 
thank my friend, the Chairman of the full Appropriations Committee, 
Senator Hatfield and the ranking member of the full Appropriations 
Committee, Senator Byrd. It is always a pleasure to work with them 
both. Also, I want to express my appreciation to all the Senate 
conferees and staff members of the subcommittee.
  Mr. President, obviously, on the domestic side of this budget, we are 
providing substantially less than last year and less than the President 
asked--that is what is happening in every domestic bill--and we think 
we have done it in such a way that should receive maximum support from 
the Senate. There was no objection to any of this in the conference by 
either our side or the Democratic side.
  When it comes to defense, it is obvious that we are in a great 
transition period with reference to our nuclear deterrent capabilities 
and we are in a transition period as to what we are going to do for the 
next 40 years as we build down our nuclear arsenal and attempt to 
safeguard it and maintain it and make sure that our nuclear deterrent 
capability remains inviolate for the next 20 to 40 years.
  A new approach to this is being taken in this bill. The roots are 
being laid for a concept called a science-based stockpile stewardship 
program wherein the three defense nuclear laboratories--Livermore, Los 
Alamos, and Sandia--will lead the defense activities in the 
preservation and safekeeping of the nuclear deterrent stockpile. This 
requires some new scientific capabilities because of one additional 
fact. That is, currently the United States has agreed that we will have 
no more underground testing of nuclear weapons. That used to be done in 
order to calibrate, in order to determine safety, wellbeing, longevity, 
and all kinds of things with reference to the system; that is, the 
nuclear deterrent system. We have decided as a nation not to do that, 
and so the science-based stockpile stewardship program requires that we 
engage the best of our science in producing new equipment and new 
instrumentation along with new computers to perform modeling of this 
capability so we can keep this arsenal safe, and the stewardship of it 
will be adequacy and deliverability at all times.
  This costs a little more money than we had thought. Some new 
equipment is going to be built, a new facility at Livermore, and we 
have started that here in this bill. Los Alamos and Sandia will have a 
mission each with reference to it. In other words, we are going to be 
able to simulate one way or another what we used to find out in an 
underground nuclear explosion. And when we do that and do it right, we 
will be able to maintain the system by replacing parts and the like as 
we move toward building it down and maintaining it for a long period of 
time.
  So for some who wonder what the Department of Energy does in the 
defense work, this is the hub of it. There are a lot of other things. 
But they are going to be charged--and the Defense Department has agreed 
with this new approach--with essentially doing what I have just 
described, and that is be the frontrunning institutions in the United 
States and hopefully in the world in seeing to it that our nuclear 
deterrent is always safe and deliverable and exactly what we expect as 
we move it down dramatically to a smaller number.
  Now I yield the floor to my colleague, Senator Johnston.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
  Mr. JOHNSTON. Mr. President, one of the most able Senators I have 
ever served with is the distinguished Senator from New Mexico. He also 
happens to be one of my best friends in this body. So it is with real 
enthusiasm that I have undertaken to work on this appropriations bill 
with him. By and large, he has produced, considering the challenges, an 
excellent bill, for which I congratulate him. I congratulate his staff 
as well. Our staffs have worked together as a team. I have worked 
together as a team with him to produce this bill. So I have great 
praise for him and great admiration for him, and I might say great 
affection for him all at the same time.
  Now, as sometimes is customary in this body, pride goeth before a 
fall and praise goeth before criticism, and while I mean every word of 
the praise, Mr. President, I am here to say that I cannot vote for the 
bill because of one particular area of this bill, which is called 
nuclear waste.
  Mr. President, the conference agreement on the fiscal year 1996 
energy and water development appropriation bill, H.R. 1905, provides 
$19,336,311,000 in new budget obligational authority, including 
scorekeeping adjustments. This amount is $707 million less than fiscal 
year 1995 appropriations, and is $1.225 billion less than the 
President's budget request for this bill. The agreement is $654 million 
more than the bill as passed by the House, but $833 million less than 
the bill as passed by the Senate.
  I concur in the explanation and summary given by the senior Senator 
from New Mexico [Mr. Domenici], chairman of the subcommittee. I 
congratulate Senator Domenici on bringing his maiden voyage to this 
conclusion. This is his first appropriation bill as chairman, and he 
was the chairman of our conference committee also. I commend him for 
his hard work. I also want to express my appreciation to our House 
colleagues, led by our good friends Representative John Myers, of 
Indian, and Representative Tom Bevill of Alabama. They have worked 
together as a team for many years and I am proud of our association. We 
have had a long tradition of bipartisan cooperation and compromise in 
this subcommittee, and I hope that spirit will continue. I would like 
to thank all of the House and Senate conferees.
  Mr. President, I would like to mention several Louisiana items 
contained within the conference agreement. I am pleased that we have 
included authority for the Corps of Engineers to design and construct 
flood control improvements to rainfall drainage systems, in Jefferson, 
Orleans, and St. Tammany parishes in Louisiana. These areas have 
suffered disastrous floods due to torrential rainfall that occurred in 
southeast Louisiana in May 1995, which resulted in the loss of seven 
lives, inundation of 35,000 homes and estimated property and 
infrastructure losses exceed $3 billion. The chairman of the House 
Appropriations Committee, Mr. Livingston, is to be commended for 
proceeding and I strongly supported the inclusion of this beginning in 
the conference report.

[[Page S16386]]

  Also, included in the report is language directing the Secretary of 
the Army, acting through the Chief of Engineers, to design and 
construct a regional visitor's center in the vicinity of Shreveport, 
LA, as a part of the Red River Waterway project. The successful 
prosecution of this project which provides navigation from the 
Mississippi River to Shreveport, is a source of great pride to me. It 
is a project I have worked on during my entire career in the Senate, 
and navigation has now been completed.
  The conference agreement also approves an amount of $7 million for 
the Biomedical Research Foundation of Northwest Louisiana to create the 
Center for Biomedical Technology Innovation. The center will serve as a 
focal point for the ongoing biomedical research and development that is 
carried out at many of the national laboratories, and for the clinical 
testing of products that result from that research. It will focus 
specifically on the development of instrumentation for minimally 
invasive procedures--including advanced imaging technologies--
technologies for individual self care, telemedicine, and medical 
robotics. Priority will be given to those technologies which are most 
likely to reduce the cost of care. The center will be housed within the 
Foundation's Biomedical Research Institute, and managed by a consortium 
organized and led by the Biomedical Research Foundation.
  Mr. President, the conference agreement, in nearly all cases, 
represents a fair and reasonable disposition of the differences between 
the House and Senate, and I hope the conference report will be 
approved. I regret that I cannot support the conference report.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Will the Senator yield before he continues?
  Mr. JOHNSTON. Yes, I will.
  Mr. DOMENICI. I say that it has not been my privilege heretofore in 
all the years that we have served for me to chair an appropriations 
subcommittee and have my friend from Louisiana as ranking member. For 
the most part it has been reversed; if I was in the Chamber, he was 
chairman and I was ranking member. But that has not even occurred on 
this bill heretofore, and I cannot give sufficient accolades in this 
Record about this Senator. Frankly, I am going to miss him tremendously 
in the Senate, and I think the Senate is going to miss him because of 
the kinds of things he is going to say right now. It is true that there 
is a very, very serious deficiency in this bill, but I will answer it 
when he is finished and I thank him and his wonderful staff for all the 
help here and in the past as we put these things together. We have 
maintained a significant nuclear deterrent capability regardless of the 
criticism for the Department of Energy.
  We have maintained that because of the stalwart service of Senators 
like Bennett Johnston on this appropriations bill. For those who are 
not aware of it, this is where the defense work takes place and is 
appropriated to maintain a nuclear stockpile. And over the years he has 
worked diligently in that regard.
  There is a waste problem that comes from nuclear energy, and he is 
right, it is a serious problem. I do not believe we could have fixed it 
in this bill in that regard and disagreed. But I did want to make that 
statement before he proceeds. I say thank you very much to the Senator.
  Mr. JOHNSTON. Mr. President, I thank the Senator for his generous 
remarks. Everything he says about what this bill accomplishes is 
exactly true. Mr. President, there is no more difficult nor unpleasant 
task in all of the Senate than dealing with the question of nuclear 
waste.
  First of all, you have to disagree with your friends from Nevada, two 
of the most competent, most able, and two of my best friends in this 
Senate. But, Mr. President, it has been my job over a decade to have 
the principal responsibility for nuclear waste. Both as chairman of the 
appropriations subcommittee--this subcommittee--and as chairman of the 
authorizing committee, it has been my duty to keep it going.
  Now, sometimes you try to do what is right and be with your 
colleagues. But, Mr. President, this program of nuclear waste is too 
big, it is too important, to deal with it on personalities. We have 
collected $10 billion for nuclear waste. We have spent $5 billion on 
nuclear waste and have almost nothing to show for it.
  Mr. President, of all the programs in the Federal Government, there 
is probably more waste, there is probably more mismanagement through 
the years in this program than in any other program that I know of in 
the Federal Government. Not only that, Mr. President, it is a program 
which affects most Americans because there are over 100 reactors out 
there. There are about 80 reactor sites in this country, each of which 
is a potential nuclear waste dump unless we solve this problem, not to 
mention, in addition, the Hanford and Idaho National Labs, as well as 
Savannah River in South Carolina.
  So, Mr. President, this is not an issue that is going to go away. It 
is an issue that is with us right now.
  Now, what have we done in this bill? Mr. President, we have cut back 
to less than half the requested funding from the Department of Energy. 
What is that going to mean? By reducing funding to $315 million, we are 
going to have to stop all work on the environmental impact statement. 
We are going to have to stop the license application to the Nuclear 
Regulatory Commission. We are going to have to fire between 875 and 
1,300 employees. There will be no work going forward on interim 
storage. It leaves only a research program with no prospect for 
completing the repository any time in the foreseeable future.
  As a matter of fact, I have put quotes up there from the Director of 
Nuclear Waste, which says:

       Under the funding levels the program has historically 
     received, the schedules for . . . start of operation in 2010 
     are not achievable . . .

  That is, under funding levels that they have historically received, 
which is higher than this level.

       A flat funding profile would be insufficient to carry out 
     the program of developing geologic disposal capability by 
     2010 as currently projected.

  That is, if we had level funding at higher levels than this bill 
calls for, we will not get nuclear waste capability by 2010.
  What that means, Mr. President, is it is going to cost the consumer 
of electricity from $5 to $7 billion additional, because that is what 
they have to pay for temporary storage onsite up to 2010. That does not 
carry us beyond 2010.
  You can spool those figures up. It is going to cost that $5 to $7 
billion, while at the same time we have collected $10 billion for DOE 
to solve the problem the DOE cannot solve. It cannot solve it at these 
levels of funding problems. We are paying for it twice and not solving 
the problem.
  Mr. President, if you want to get a scandal that the people can 
understand out there, then do something like let somebody charge up a 
meal with a bunch of drinks or something to some defense contractor or 
somebody in the Federal Government. Everybody gets all exercised. They 
understand that they are cheating on the Federal Government. They are 
cheating, you know, violating some ethical rule.
  But when you have a program of this size, the sheer enormity of it 
seems somehow to pass everybody's consciousness. Well, it may pass 
everybody else's consciousness, but I had responsibility for this, and 
I want to put in the Record what is happening. Ten billion dollars has 
been collected, and there is no way to solve the problem at these 
funding levels. You are going to have to spend another $5 to $7 
billion, with a ``B.'' Mr. President, those are not incidental dollars; 
those are huge dollars.
  Then what is the American public going to say a few years from now 
when I guess somebody is going to finally wake up? They are going to 
say, ``What have you done with all that money and the problem is not 
solved?''
  The problem cannot be solved--the Director tells me, Dr. Dreyfus 
tells me, at this level we will never solve the problem. His official 
quotes do not say that. It says:

       If the program receives funding at the levels contemplated 
     in the Administration funding proposal, the Department would 
     be able to carry out the program . . ..
       Any major reduction . . . would require restructuring of 
     the program plan with significant delays . . ..

  Now, look up there at the top and you get the DOE request; $630 
million 

[[Page S16387]]

was requested this year. We are down to $315 million. Next year it goes 
up to $684 million, then to $713 million, then to $732 million.
  At the rate we are going, Mr. President, we will be lucky to maintain 
the $315 million, which means you cannot solve the problem.
  Now, what does the administration say? The administration says--
privately they will tell you, ``Look. This is an election year.'' At 
least that is what they say inside. But officially they say, ``We 
should not put any interim storage out at Yucca Mountain until we 
determine whether the site is suitable.'' They do not define what 
suitability in the site is, but a few years ago they said, ``If we have 
this funding at that level, we can determine suitability by the year 
2002.'' That means if you give them that kind of money. So if you do 
not give them that kind of money, according to that definition at that 
time, it would be, I guess, who knows when before you would determine 
even suitability of this site.
  Mr. President, you cannot solve the problem. Look. Rather than do 
what we are doing now--and I have been trying to get this at Yucca 
Mountain--we honestly ought to abolish this program, abolish the tax, 
and let the nuclear utilities have the responsibility for their own 
program and have the money with which to do it. That would be much 
better than playing out this charade.
  Mr. President, it is a charade. The President does not want to solve 
it. The Congress seems to be incapable of solving it. The antinuclear 
activists out there, of which there are many, they do not want to solve 
it because by not solving it then they are able to show that nuclear 
energy does not work.
  Let me tell you, Mr. President, people are not going to build nuclear 
utilities in this country, not at any time for the foreseeable future, 
and we can foresee a pretty long time. And that is because of the 
economics of this program. They do not need to try to kill this program 
in order to try to make nuclear energy nonviable. That has already 
occurred. All they are doing is creating a problem all across this 
country and creating a big expense for taxpayers.
  There is a conspiracy here, in effect, Mr. President: The 
administration, which has a do-nothing attitude; the antinuclear 
groups, of which there are many; and many out there who want to kill 
the program; and, believe it or not, the scientists.
  You say, ``scientists. They are supposed to be the ones in there 
trying to solve the problem.'' There is a phenomenon, Mr. President, in 
our Government now where sometimes you call on scientists to make a 
judgment in which they may not have a direct interest but their 
discipline has an interest, and it is sort of like, if you ask the 
scientists what has to be done, they will give you the most expensive 
answer because that is in the interest of the science. It is kind of 
like asking the trial lawyers, ``What do you think we ought to do on 
damage awards? Should we decrease damage awards?'' They would say, 
``Oh, no. You have got to watch out for the victim.''
  Well, the scientists, unfortunately, Mr. President, always go with 
the most expensive thing. We asked the National Research Council, a 
part of the National Academy of Sciences, to study one aspect of this 
thing and to look into the question of human intrusion. In other words, 
when you go to build a repository, how much of a safeguard do you have 
to put on that and to what standards must you build that? Let me tell 
you what the National Research Council said. I really want to get this 
off of my chest because I have been seething ever since we got this 
report. It is the most outrageous thing I have ever seen by a 
scientist. It says:

       We considered a stylized intrusion scenario consisting of 
     one bore hole of a specified diameter drilled from the 
     surface through a canister of waste to the underlying 
     aquifer.

  What that means is that when we get around to building the 
repository, in order to ensure its safety, we must ensure that somebody 
is going to put a derrick up there and drill a hole down which pierces 
one of these canisters and goes down to the underlying aquifer. You 
say, how could that possibly happen? You have fences out there and you 
have guards. I do not know how it happens.
  I can think of a couple of scenarios. One would be that a meteorite 
hits the country and destroys civilization, as it did--that is the 
notion, at least--when the dinosaurs died. Another is that you have 
some big volcano that virtually kills all life except maybe some 
cavemen, a few who survived and are able to rebuild civilization; or a 
nuclear war that virtually wipes out all civilization, except some 
people in caves.
  I must say, Mr. President, if those scenarios happen, then why are 
you worried about nuclear waste anyway? I mean, civilization is gone. 
But if civilization survives, there is no way that you would not know 
that the Yucca Mountain repository is there. There is no way you would 
not know that. We are not going back in civilization, back in the time 
of the ancient Greeks, when the location of the town of Messinia was 
lost and they go back in and dug and found out where it was. Mr. 
President, civilization is marching forward, not backward. We are not 
going to get into the situation where, some day, people are going to be 
digging up there and find out that New York City was up there on the 
Hudson River. They are going to know that. They are going to know where 
Yucca Mountain is. But just assume that this takes place and 
civilization is wiped out. How are they going to drill this bore hole 
through Yucca Mountain and happen to hit a canister?
  Well, there are two assumptions. One is that they know what they are 
doing. If they know what they are doing, they are not going to be 
drilling on Yucca Mountain because there is no mineral activity out 
there by which you would drill a hole. The second is that they do not 
know what they are doing, and they are going around randomly drilling 
holes all over the country.
  Now, what do you think the chances are, Mr. President--a scientist 
ought to be able to tell you what the chances are, if you are doing a 
random hole in the thousands upon thousands of square miles in the 
United States, and you have one little area that is a nuclear waste 
dump, and of the nuclear waste dump, most of it does not have the 
canisters, just what are the chances of that? Is it 1 in 10 billion, 1 
in a trillion, 1 in 5 trillion? These scientists ought to be able to 
say that. But indeed, no, they say that you have to assume ``one bore 
hole of the specified diameter drilled from the surface through a 
canister of waste to the underlying aquifer.''
  How did they penetrate this without knowing that they have penetrated 
a canister? It is the most absurd thing. In any event, I digressed for 
a moment just to tell you what we are up against on this program. We 
have the scientists, we have the administration, we have the 
antinuclear activists, we have the people in Nevada, none of whom want 
to put in this program, all of which would be fine if we were starting 
out with a question of whether we are going to do nuclear energy or 
not, you could take this into consideration.
  But, Mr. President, we have nuclear waste now. We are generating it 
at the rate of about 2,000 metric tons each year. There are 30,000 
metric tons of nuclear waste now stored, principally, in what we call 
``swimming pools,'' where you basically put the rods down in pools of 
water, unprotected from anything. That is the only plan we really have. 
There are 67 powerplants in 32 States that will have run out. By the 
year 2010, we will have 85,000 metric tons to be stored.
  Mr. President, we just simply cannot ignore this problem. I proposed 
an amendment, Mr. President, in the conference committee which said, 
let us do the long-lead-time things we need to do, the environmental 
impact statement, the preliminary design, on an interim storage 
facility, and if you cannot start construction until 1998 and if, in 
the meantime, it is found to be not a suitable site, then you would 
stop all activity on both the interim storage facility, as well as the 
final storage--the repository, the underground facility, and move on to 
some other place.
  Now, Mr. President, that was rejected by the conference--rejected on 
the grounds that a bill is moving through the House, and that that bill 
will have a chance to be enacted next year. Mr. President, next year we 
have the same problems we have this year. That is, you have an 
administration 

[[Page S16388]]

that would oppose that bill, that has threatened to veto that bill, and 
you still have to produce the same 67 votes--only next year is an 
election year.
  Just what are we going to do, Mr. President? We are collecting the 
money--$10 billion is already collected--and we have spent $5 billion. 
We have a program which the director says cannot work. We are facing an 
assurance of having to spend some $5 billion to $7 billion between now 
and the year 2010 on temporary storage, and that is not funded. That is 
going to have to be paid for by the utilities.
  Mr. President, I will be retiring from the U.S. Senate at the end of 
next year, and I am sure my friends from Nevada--though we are good 
friends--will perhaps breathe a sigh of relief and will say this guy 
who has been trying to cram that nuclear waste down our throats in 
Nevada is gone and our problem is solved. Well, Mr. President, if we 
are not to do this activity in Nevada, then I say it is time to 
terminate the program in Nevada, terminate the collection of the tax, 
and move on to an alternative program. Let the utilities themselves 
build their own, what we call, ``dry cast storage'' on-site. That is 
the activity that is going to cost the $5 to $7 billion between now and 
the year 2010. Or, if there is another site other than Nevada, then let 
us start picking that site. Let us start looking at others. I think 
they have a formation up in Maine which was suitable; and Texas, down 
in Deaf Smith County, I believe it was. Another one is up in Hanford. 
There was a site down in Mississippi. Potential sites are all over the 
country. Of course, there is the Savannah River. There was one in 
Tennessee. Let us start looking at those sites, because you have to put 
it somewhere. It either has to be on-site or somewhere.
  Like the old joke about somebody who was found by an irate husband in 
the closet of his home and he said, ``What are you doing there?'' and 
he said, ``Everybody has to be somewhere.''
  Believe me, nuclear waste has got to be somewhere. What we are saying 
in the Congress is that we do not know, we will put the problem off. 
Mr. President, I have seen this problem put off year after year after 
year while the cost escalates.
  It was back in 1982 when we passed the Nuclear Waste Policy Act. That 
act called for us to pick three sites--first a larger number of sites 
and whittle that down to three sites--and then the three sites would be 
``characterized.'' That is, determined whether the three sites would be 
suitable as a place for the repository, and then the DOE was to pick 
one of those three.
  When we first passed that legislation, the cost of characterization 
was supposed to be $60 million per site. I thought, just to determine 
whether a site is suitable--that is outrageous. I remember thinking 
that so clearly.
  A few years passed and we had a hearing on it and we asked what was 
the cost of characterization and activity that was going forward at 
that time. They said, ``Well, it is going to be $1.2 billion per 
site.''
  I then introduced legislation to call on the Department of Energy to 
pick one of the three sites and characterize that and thereby save $2.4 
billion. My version did not pass because when it got to the conference 
committee with the House they said go ahead and name Yucca Mountain--do 
it politically, not scientifically. They had the votes.
  It so happened that the Speaker of the House was from Texas, one of 
the three sites. The majority leader was from Washington, the other 
site. That left Nevada. Nevada got picked. I must say in all fairness 
Nevada probably would have been scientifically picked at least. That 
was the indication I got at the time.
  But I think Nevada had a proper cause to complain because it was, in 
fact, a political decision rather than a scientific decision, although 
that might well have been the place where it would have been picked.
  We then proceeded with Yucca Mountain. What has happened in the 
meantime, we are now told that the cost of characterization of Yucca 
Mountain is not $60 million as initially estimated, not $1.2 billion as 
later estimated, but $6.3 billion--not to build the facility, just to 
determine whether it is suitable.
  How in the world did it go up that much in cost? Well, I think to a 
large extent because these scientists made these kind of determinations 
that you have to assume all kind of silly scenarios like drilling bore 
holes down through the canisters, like doing every conceivable study to 
keep these scientists busy for the rest of their lives and for their 
sons' and grandsons' and granddaughters' lives ad infinitum.
  It is an expanding scope of work which probably is not capable of 
being done no matter how much money we put in here and certainly not at 
the levels that are contained in this bill.
  Mr. President, I hate to sound a discordant note on what is otherwise 
an excellent job that the Senator from New Mexico has done. In his 
defense, he has a bill to pass. He has responsibility for that bill. 
The President has said he would veto this bill if we came up with 
interim storage. I can understand that judgment. I have a lot of 
sympathy for that judgment. I say that in his defense.
  At the same time, Mr. President, this body needs to understand, the 
Congress needs to understand, the nuclear industry needs to understand, 
the American public and taxpayers and ratepayers need to understand 
that they are being made the victims of a gigantic shell game, a great 
rip-off, in which $10 billion has been collected, $5 billion has been 
spent, and there is no way to solve the problem in the direction we are 
going.
  It will not be solved. People out there who think the Congress has a 
program that will eventually lead to a repository, they are wrong, Mr. 
President. It will lead to nothing but an endless stream of money 
stretching from here to infinity, with no waste dump at the end.
  What will happen in the meantime is that the ratepayer will not only 
have to pay that $10 billion already paid, but the tax at 1 mill per 
kilowatt hour will continue, and in addition to that, the ratepayers of 
these utilities--these 80 sites around the country--their ratepayers 
will have to pay for temporary storage on site. Mr. President, $5 
billion to $7 billion worth between now and the year 2010.
  Now, are we going to pass that authorizing legislation later this 
year or later next year? Mr. President, I hope so. But I can say I have 
no confidence that is so. The history of this program has been delay, 
avoid the tough decision, get by until after the next election, get by 
until after the next career, make an excuse, spend some more money, 
fund some more scientists, and never, whatever you do, do not ever look 
at the program. Do not ever analyze what they are doing. That can be 
very, very, disquieting when you find out some of the incredible 
judgments which have gone into this gigantic waste of money.
  It has been, Mr. President, it has been just incredible to consider 
what has been wasted on this program. No one looks into it--at least no 
one listens to the alarms--because no one seems to understand.
  We talk about the bore holes; what does that mean? The scientists 
must have a reason for that, right? EPA set a carbon 14 discharge level 
of one-millionth background radiation, for the amounts of the carbon 
contained in the body naturally. Nobody said anything. We tried to 
straighten that out with legislation. We gave it to the scientists and 
all we got was babble.
  This report is an embarrassment to the National Academy of Sciences, 
Mr. President. It is almost unintelligible. The nuclear waste director 
says this means that you cannot build a repository--cannot build one no 
matter how much money. It just cannot pass the test.
  Some of the scientists who did the report said, ``Oh, no, this will 
make it easy to do it.'' It is babble, Mr. President.
  Mr. President, I hope by my little soliloquy here on the floor today 
that we can awaken a little interest in this subject, that we can alert 
people who ought to be interested in it, people in the nuclear industry 
ought to be interested in this. Ratepayers ought to be interested in 
this. The National Association of Regulated Utility Commissioners ought 
to be interested in this.
  Some years ago they said look, if you do not get this program 
straightened out, we are going to discontinue allowing you to rate base 
the 1 mill per kilowatt hour fee. That means that they 

[[Page S16389]]

were going to not pass it on to customers because it was a program that 
could not work, but we are going to require utilities to eat it--that 
is, to have their stockholders pay for it. I am telling you, this 
program cannot work. Who says so? Dr. Dreyfus, who is running the 
program, says that at these levels of funding, you cannot have an 
appropriate program. You cannot have a workable program.

  I hope we get a little attention here. I hope early next year we can 
pass legislation. If we cannot, we ought to shut this program down.
  I would like to reiterate my praise for the distinguished chairman of 
this committee for, otherwise, a very good bill. This is not his fault, 
because he is operating under a veto threat. But it, unfortunately, is 
going to be his responsibility because he now occupies the position 
which I did for so many years, which is the guy who has to make the 
program work. And as of right now, it is not working and cannot work.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Gorton). The Senator from New Mexico.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, let me once again compliment my friend 
from Louisiana, Senator Johnston. I am not sure how many people were 
listening today. But I tell you, there ought to be a lot. Because you 
have just expressed and explained thoroughly one of the real disasters, 
in terms of the U.S. Government's inability to cope with a serious 
problem in a realistic way.
  I can recall about 3 years ago when Senator Johnston was presiding, 
the issue came up and this project was then going to cost about $3.7 
billion. It now comes close to $6 billion, I understand--a little more 
than the $5 billion the Senator indicated. One of the Senators on the 
committee said, ``How much do you think it would cost to build it?'' 
Everybody scurried around. ``Build the facility?'' The conclusion was 
it would cost far less than we are going to spend characterizing the 
mountain.
  He gave a rather practical suggestion, it seemed to me. You give this 
suggestion to average Americans, they would have said, ``Do it.'' He 
said, ``Why don't you just build it and then find out after it is 
built? Do all the kinds of tests you want as to whether it will 
succeed. If it will not work, close it down. At least you will have 
something there finished and completed.'' Now we are just boring holes 
in and doing scientific work to try to achieve a goal that seems like, 
scientifically, the standards have been set so high we are never going 
to achieve it.
  We do not have any disagreement on it. I think at this point we are 
never going to get that depository finished. We are never going to 
prove up the requirements. There are going be more lawsuits around, and 
you will never get a permanent repository in that site--not for a long 
time, if ever.
  So the issue comes, as I see it, what do we try to do on this bill? 
Let me suggest, so there is no doubt about it, we would have put an 
interim storage facility in this bill and it would have been sited in 
the State of Nevada, but for the fact that the President of the United 
States has sent a rather clear signal through his high-level staff that 
they would veto a bill that designated that site or any other site 
specifically.
  I might say to my friend from Louisiana, as hard as he tried with his 
amendment, when he finished it all, it was actually designating Nevada 
as the site before we really knew that we would have a final site here. 
He couched it differently but that is a truism.
  Essentially, what he, the President of the United States, was saying, 
and his advisers, was: Do not site it there unless the permanent 
repository is there or we will veto it.
  The Senator from New Mexico has very few alternatives. What I wanted 
to do was to spend $400 million in this bill and use $85 million to 
move ahead with the temporary facility, the temporary storage, the 
interim storage. But we cannot do the interim storage without an 
authorization bill or without a President signing something. I think my 
colleague would agree with that. Whether he signs an appropriation bill 
or authorizing bill, the President of the United States has to sign 
something for Congress to be able to fund an interim storage facility 
there or anywhere, because the law does not now permit the Federal 
Government to build such a facility anywhere.
  Having said that, it is clear to me that we ought to at least provide 
some money in this bill to fund the eventuality of us getting an 
authorizing bill through here that the President would sign.
  I say to my friend, Senator Johnston, I do not deny the authenticity 
and truthfulness of his remarks, because he is suggesting it probably 
will not happen, the President will veto it. It is an election year. 
But I think we had to do some work and say here is some money. So we 
fenced $85 million in this bill--put a fence around it--and we said it 
will be spent for an interim facility if in fact this is authorized and 
permitted by the Government of the United States. That money is sitting 
there. We are saying to the legislators in the authorizing committees 
here in the Energy Committee, its counterpart in the House: Pass a 
bill. You can start the project.
  Will the President sign it if we pass it? We do not know. But let me 
suggest we cannot stall this too much longer. Sooner or later, a 
President must sign something that will let us move in a different 
direction.
  My original plans were $400 million, $85 million fenced for the 
interim facility. It turns out that I left the bill that way, and I am 
fully aware that the $315 million does not satisfy the Director of the 
program, Mr. Dan Dreyfus' needs to keep this program going on schedule 
as he wanted it going on schedule. But we were going to tone it down 
some. If we were building a temporary facility, we were going to cut 
the expenditures on the permanent facility and spread it out a lot 
longer. I think we are still on that path.
  I might say for the record, this Senator is not going to be carrying 
this bill very many years on this floor with funding for the permanent 
deep repository if we have not solved the issue of an interim storage 
facility. In fact, I may not carry it one more time without that, in 
terms of continuing what seems to me to be a borderline hoax, in terms 
of promising the American people we are going to have an underground 
permanent repository.
  The reason I say that is because, in spite of the good work by the 
current Director, Mr. Dan Dreyfus, who used to work for the Energy 
Committee--and we are all very, very complimentary of his work--the 
rules and regulations that we live by, under that project, just may be 
so that man cannot comply. It may be we cannot comply.
  So I hope everyone understands today on the floor of the Senate, with 
very little attention, some very, very serious remarks have been made 
about the competency of this process, of the legislative process and 
the President, to work to get something done that must be done.
  I want to add one other comment. The Senator might not remember it, 
but I remember it. I speak to my friend from Louisiana. I think some of 
us figured, when then Senator Gary Hart of the State of Colorado 
proposed that we had to close the loop on atomic energy and had to have 
a permanent repository, I think some of us were thinking, ``Well, if 
that gets out of hand, it is calculated to stop nuclear power.''
  In fact, we may go back to the Record and find that either you or I 
said that. We might have said it. That is what it was. It was an 
approach that said you need to close it at the tail end with a 
permanent repository. If you cannot do it, then you cannot have nuclear 
waste and therefore you cannot have nuclear energy.
  The calculation is coming true. Not because we cannot do it, but 
because we refuse to do it in a commonsense, practical way that is 
really consistent with engineering and science achievement. So that is 
about where we are.
  I ask unanimous consent to have the letter printed in the Record 
wherein the President's staff indicates they would veto this bill and 
move onto another project.
  There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the 
Record, as follows:

[[Page S16390]]



                              Office of Management and Budget,

                                 Washington, DC, October 13, 1995.
     Hon. Pete V. Domenici,
     Chairman, Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development 
         Appropriations, Committee on Appropriations, U.S. Senate, 
         Washington, DC.
       Dear Mr. Chairman: The purpose of this letter is to provide 
     the Administration's views on H.R. 1905, the Energy and Water 
     Development Appropriations Bill, FY 1996, as passed by the 
     House and by the Senate. As you develop the conference 
     version of the bill, your consideration of the 
     Administration's views would be appreciated.
       The Administration is committed to balancing the Federal 
     budget by FY 2005. The President's budget proposes to reduce 
     discretionary spending for FY 1996 by $5 billion in outlays 
     below the FY 1995 enacted level. The Administration does not 
     support the level of funding assumed by the House or Senate 
     Committee 602(b) allocations. The Administration must 
     evaluate each bill both in terms of funding levels provided 
     and the share of total resources available for remaining 
     priorities. The House-passed version of the bill is $1.8 
     billion below the President's request, and the Senate version 
     is $0.3 billion below the request. With respect to the 
     overall funding levels for programs covered by H.R. 1905, we 
     generally prefer the Senate's recommended funding levels.
       The Administration has very serious concerns about certain 
     language provisions that may be included in the final bill. 
     One is a provision that would direct the construction of an 
     interim storage facility for nuclear wastes at a specific 
     site. Others are provisions that would override environmental 
     and other laws in specific situations, such as those 
     concerning the Bonnevile Power Administration fish program 
     and, potentially, the Animas/La Plata water project. If these 
     provisions were contained in the final bill, the President's 
     senior advisers would recommend that he veto the bill.
       Since taking office, the Administration has developed and 
     implemented a number of policies to increase government 
     efficiency, known as ``Reinventing Government,'' and to 
     concentrate resources on investment programs critical to 
     ensuring a strong economic future. The Administration is 
     disappointed that neither the House nor the Senate, in action 
     on this bill, has been more sensitive to these priorities.


           department of energy--nuclear waste disposal fund

       The Administration strongly objects to any language that 
     would designate a nuclear waste interim storage facility at a 
     specific site. Any potential siting decision concerning such 
     a facility should ultimately be based on scientific analyses. 
     If an interim facility is to be developed, FY 1996 spending 
     on it should only be devoted to non-site-specific design and 
     engineering, with the majority of FY 1996 monies in this 
     account continuing to support the scientific investigation of 
     the proposed permanent waste repository.
       The Administration is disappointed with the funding levels 
     in both the House and Senate versions of the bill for the 
     Civilian Radioactive Waste Management program. The 
     Administration urges the conferees to consider seriously the 
     funding level proposed in the President's budget in order to 
     support fully the scientific work on the permanent repository 
     program.


                 bonneville power administration (bpa)

       The Administration strongly opposes the inclusion of 
     section 509, General Provisions, in the Senate version of the 
     bill. This section, though somewhat vague, would limit BPA's 
     annual fish and wildlife expenditures and introduce language 
     specifying that BPA's spending is adequate to meet 
     environmental requirements, which overrides existing 
     environmental laws. The inclusion of such an override is 
     unacceptable to the Administration. The Administration is 
     working with the Congress and the various interested groups 
     in the Northwest to try to identify a core program of fish 
     recovery activities that could provide a stable base for 
     several years at a reasonable cost.


                     department of energy--general

       The Administration is committed to maintaining the 
     Department of Energy and to moving forward in its 
     restructuring and realignment. We are disappointed that both 
     the House and Senate propose to cut the Department 
     significantly below the FY 1996 request in many areas. 
     Although the Administration appreciates the Senate's overall 
     restoration of nearly $250 million in reductions made by the 
     House to the request for energy supply, research and 
     development, we are concerned about the remaining cuts to 
     many key areas, including the Climate Change Action Plan 
     initiatives and the Department's global climate change 
     research and technology development efforts.


                  department of energy--nuclear energy

       The Administration strongly objects to the House action 
     that would eliminate funds requested for the Department of 
     Energy to assist countries with Soviet-designed nuclear power 
     plants in addressing the health and safety problems posed by 
     these plants. The requested $83.5 million was substantially 
     restored by the Senate. Failing to provide these funds would 
     undercut the nuclear safety program developed in concert with 
     other G-7 countries, countries of Central and Eastern Europe, 
     and the New Independent States of the former Soviet Union.
       The House version of the bill does not provide the $3.9 
     million requested for completing the processing and 
     stabilization of North Korean spent fuel, which is currently 
     underway. The fuel stabilization effort is important because 
     it will help to ensure that this fuel is not processed to 
     recover plutonium. This program is part of a United States 
     commitment to encourage North Korea to abandon its nuclear 
     weapons program. This key non-proliferation goal would be 
     threatened by the House's action. The Administration urges 
     the conferees to provide the full $3.9 million, as 
     recommended by the Senate.


       department of energy--solar and renewable energy programs

       Both the House and the Senate propose significant cuts to 
     the Administration's request for solar and renewable energy 
     research programs. These programs help to create jobs, 
     increase energy security, and protect the environment. The 
     House version of the bill, in particular, would eliminate or 
     drastically reduce many programs that have been making 
     notable technical progress, including many of the most cost-
     effective implementation programs for reducing greenhouse-gas 
     emissions. The Administration urges the conferees to provide 
     funding at least at the Senate level.


                 department of energy--defense programs

       The Administration believes that the Senate additions above 
     the President's request for nuclear weapons stockpile 
     management are unnecessary, especially given the deep cuts 
     made to many of the President's investment initiatives in 
     both the House and Senate versions of the bill.
       The Administration strongly urges that the conferees 
     provide the Department of Energy with the flexibility to 
     implement dual-use Cooperative Research and Development 
     Agreements in the weapons programs.
       The Administration objects to the House's proposed 
     elimination of funding for detailed design of the National 
     Ignition Facility (NIF). The Senate proposal to fund the NIF 
     at the President's requested level would simply allow design 
     work to continue without delay and would not initiate any 
     construction activities.


                 Department of Energy--Energy Research

       The Administration commends both the House and Senate for 
     supporting the Science Facilities Initiative. However, 
     funding levels proposed by both the House and Senate for the 
     U.S. Magnetic Fusion Energy program send a clear message that 
     the program must be substantially restructured. While the 
     Administration concurs in principle, the President's 
     Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology has concluded 
     that funding over the next several years must be at the level 
     of $320 million to preserve the most indispensable elements 
     of the U.S. fusion effort and associated international 
     collaboration while maintaining momentum toward the goal of 
     practical fusion energy. The Administration urges the 
     conferees to provide at least $275 million for FY 1996.


           Department of Energy--Departmental Administration

       The Administration is concerned about the personnel 
     implications of both the House and Senate cuts to the 
     President's requested level of funding for the Department's 
     departmental administration. Funding at least at the House 
     level is necessary to provide an orderly downsizing and to 
     ensure proper departmental oversight during a time of 
     substantial change at the Department.


                        Army Corps of Engineers

       The Administration is disappointed that both the House and 
     Senate have rejected a budget reduction strategy for the Army 
     Corps of Engineers that would commit resources to those 
     missions with the Clearest Federal role, while devolving 
     others to State and local governments. Given this rejection, 
     the Administration plans to continue to work with Congress on 
     a budget reduction strategy for the Corps. The Administration 
     urges the conferees to remove language contained in both the 
     House and Senate versions of the bill that would limit the 
     flexibility of the Secretary of the Army in his current 
     efforts to restructure the Army Corps of Engineers.
       The out-year cost of unrequested new starts is a concern, 
     even though the first year cost is relatively small. For 
     example, those in the House version of the bill would only 
     cost $10 million in the first year, but would require $650 
     million to complete fully. The Administration urges the 
     conferees to trim the list of projects, especially in the 
     area of beach and shoreline protection projects.
       The Administration is disappointed with the decision of the 
     House and the Senate not to provide funding for several much-
     needed environmental studies and research activities. The 
     Administration requests that the final bill provide 
     flexibility for the Corps to allocate its wetlands protection 
     funds to activities deemed to be most effective.


                         Bureau of Reclamation

       The Administration urges the conferees to adopt the House 
     level of funding for the Bureau of Reclamation's Safety of 
     Dams Corrective Action program. This funding is necessary to 
     accomplish needed repairs to Federal dams.


                       Other independent agencies

       The Administration commends the Senate for restoring funds 
     for the independent river basin commissions. The restored 
     funding is in keeping with the increasing emphasis on State 
     and local resource and project management for local flood 
     control.

[[Page S16391]]

       We look forward to working with the conferees to address 
     our mutual concerns.
           Sincerely,
                                                  Alice M. Rivlin,
                                                         Director.

  Mr. DOMENICI. Let me go through Animas-La Plata--Animas-La Plata and 
some sufficiency language which would have deemed that project to have 
complied with all environmental requirements; that is what the word 
``sufficiency'' would have meant. In conference, language was sought to 
make it sufficient with reference to environmental requirements. 
Obviously, the President's staff--the chief advisor said in that same 
letter, which is now in the Record, that if sufficiency language, 
getting rid of any future environmental contention regarding that 
project was put in, they would also recommend a veto.
  It is hard to tell how many of these are for real, when a President's 
staff says it. But I took this one as pretty serious and a compromise 
was worked out. I am going to put my interpretation of that compromise 
in the Record.
  Suffice it to say, there is no sufficiency language in this bill. 
There is language that says we should proceed with the project, but it 
is clear that no environmental contests are waived. So that means, on 
the one hand, we are starting to fund the project here in this bill 
with another piece of money--$10 million. And we are saying, let us 
proceed. But we do in no way waive any challenges that might be made to 
it.
  Mr. President, I have a few brief comments about language included in 
the energy and water conference report that pertains to construction of 
the Animas-La Plata water project. The language in the report directs 
the Secretary of the Interior ``to proceed without delay'' with those 
portions of the project identified in the October 25, 1991, final 
biological opinion.
  There has been much talk about just what this language means. 
Specifically, opponents of the project have attempted to paint this as 
so-called sufficiency language exempting the project from any further 
environmental analyses required by Federal law. Mr. President, this is 
not the case. The report language does not override existing Federal 
environmental requirements, nor does it prevent further judicial 
review. Consequently, those who say this report language is an attack 
on the environment or a subterfuge of the judicial process are simply 
wrong.
  At the same time, however, the language makes it clear that the 
Congress is absolutely committed to the swift and successful completion 
of this project. Under the terms of the 1988 Colorado Ute Indian Water 
Rights Settlement Act, the United States has a trust obligation to the 
Southern Ute and Ute Mountain Ute Indian Tribes to complete the 
project.
  The final bill provides $19.3 billion in budget authority and $11.5 
billion in new outlays to finance the operations of the Army Corps of 
Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation, the Energy Supply Research and 
Development and Atomic Energy Defense and Related Programs of the 
Department of Energy, and several independent agencies.
  When outlays from prior year budget authority and other completed 
actions are taken into account, the bill totals $19.3 billion in budget 
authority and $19.7 billion in outlays for fiscal year 1996.
  The subcommittee which I chair is within its section 602(b) 
allocation for both budget authority and outlays.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that a table displaying the 
Budget Committee scoring of the final bill be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

    ENERGY AND WATER SUBCOMMITTEE--SPENDING TOTALS--CONFERENCE REPORT   
               [Fiscal year 1996, in millions of dollars]               
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Budget             
                                                    authority   Outlays 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Defense discretionary:                                                  
  Outlays from prior-year BA and other actions                          
   completed.....................................  ..........      4,039
  H.R. 1905, conference report...................      10,656      6,402
  Scorekeeping adjustment........................  ..........  .........
                                                  ----------------------
    Subtotal defense discretionary...............      10,656     10,441
                                                  ======================
Nondefense discretionary:                                               
  Outlays from prior-year BA and other actions                          
   completed.....................................  ..........      4,171
  H.R. 1905, conference report...................       8,680      5,100
  Scorekeeping adjustment........................  ..........  .........
                                                  ----------------------
    Subtotal nondefense discretionary............       8,680      9,271
Mandatory:                                                              
  Outlays from prior-year BA and other actions                          
   completed.....................................  ..........  .........
  H.R. 1905, conference report...................  ..........  .........
  Adjustment to conform mandatory programs with                         
   Budget........................................  ..........  .........
      Resolution assumptions.....................  ..........  .........
                                                  ----------------------
      Subtotal mandatory.........................  ..........  .........
                                                  ======================
      Adjusted bill total........................      19,336     19,712
                                                  ======================
Senate Subcommittee 602(b) allocation:                                  
  Defense discretionary..........................      10,928     10,632
  Nondefense discretionary.......................       8,680      9,272
  Violent crime reduction trust fund.............  ..........  .........
  Mandatory......................................  ..........  .........
                                                  ----------------------
    Total allocation.............................      19,608     19,904
                                                  ======================
Adjusted bill total compared to Senate                                  
 Subcommittee 602(b) allocation:                                        
  Defense discretionary..........................        -272       -191
  Nondefense discretionary.......................          -0         -1
  Violent crime reduction trust fund.............  ..........  .........
  Mandatory......................................  ..........  .........
                                                  ----------------------
      Total allocation...........................        -272       -192
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Details may not add to totals due to rounding. Totals adjusted for
  consistency with current scorekeeping conventions.                    

  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I think Senator McCain has been waiting. 
I yield the floor.
  Mr. McCAIN. Mr. President, I have been informed by the Senator from 
North Dakota that he is going trick-or-treating with his children 
tonight at 6. I find that a transcendent priority. I will be extremely 
brief and submit my written comments for the Record. I hope all my 
colleagues will also make their comments brief so it is possible for 
those Members with children to be able to partake in this time-honored 
family tradition.
  Mr. President, I will be relatively brief. I am again disturbed to 
find unauthorized projects and unappropriated projects in the 
conference report. I have said to the Senator from New Mexico on 
numerous occasions that deprives me of my ability to scrutinize, and 
vote, if necessary, on projects. It is my initial screening--as I say, 
I will submit a written statement for the Record--20 unauthorized 
projects are in this, ranging understandably from Petersburg, WV, to 
Arkansas City, KS, New Orleans, LA, White River, IN, to a Pennsylvania 
environmental pilot program. The conference report modifies the bill by 
increasing the authorization from $17 to $50 million for water and 
sewer projects. Mr. President, $3.5 million is appropriated in the 
conference report. The authorization is only available for projects 
within two Members' congressional districts.
  Mr. President, this is wrong. It is wrong to do that.
  There is funding for the central Indianapolis waterfront concept 
master plan.
  Mr. President, the Corps of Engineers' authority is not to be 
involved in waterfront master plans unless it has to do with flood 
control.
  The Arkansas City flood control project in Kansas was unauthorized. I 
will read several of them.
  The Homer project in Alaska, $3.8 million; Dog River, AL, project, 
$200,000; Sacramento River, CA, $300,000; West Dade, FL, $150,000; 
Holmes Beach County, FL, $150,000; Ohio River, Greenway, IN, $500,000; 
Indianapolis waterfront, $2 million.
  Mr. President, none of these have been authorized. They were inserted 
in the conference. Mr. President, we deserve better. I do not know if 
these projects are good or bad, and the American people certainly do 
not know. And there will be nothing in the Congressional Record to let 
us know if they are good or bad.
  I notice that we are going to fund the Appalachian Commission this 
year for a considerable amount of money. I think it is $140 million. 
That clearly is something that should not continue since every part of 
America now needs the same kind of assistance that those States which 
are now included in the Appalachian Regional Commission receive.
  Mr. President, I think that it is important for us to understand--
another one, $2 million, acting through the Corps of Engineers, to 
authorize the director to proceed with engineering, design, and 
construction of projects for flood control improvement for the 
rainwater drainage systems in Jefferson, New Orleans, and St. Tampa 
Parish, LA--authorized to be appropriated $25 million for the 
initiation and partial accomplishment of projects described in these 
reports. My understanding is that there has been no screening, and that 
there has been no request for authorization. There has been nothing 
except that this was stuck in, in the conference report. The corps has 
not finished its studies as to whether this is needed.

[[Page S16392]]

  Mr. President, again, I have no doubt that some of these projects are 
worthwhile, and have great virtue. But we do not know whether they do 
or not because they are placed in the conference into the conference 
report without authorization and without any kind of screening.
  I would like to finally say there are several appropriations bills, 
including the transportation bill and several other appropriations 
bills, which are excellent, where the business of putting in projects 
in conference that were in neither the authorization nor the 
appropriation bills has largely been done away with. I wish I could say 
that is the same for this bill. It is not the case. And I think that we 
should reject this practice over time.
  Mr. President, I hope my friend from North Dakota enjoys his evening 
and his children.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. FORD addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Kentucky.
  Mr. FORD. Mr. President, we have been listening to two very well 
briefed men who are handling this piece of legislation here on the 
floor. When we begin to talk about nuclear storage and that sort of 
thing, spending hundreds of millions of dollars, it kind of goes over 
some heads. But I want to talk about something that affects real people 
now. Several weeks ago, Mr. President, in the House an amendment was 
floated to this bill, and to the reconciliation bill, to sell the Power 
Marketing Administrations. The Power Marketing Administrations with 
hydroelectric furnish low-cost power to rural areas in this country. To 
do even better than that, the amendment came out on the bill that would 
sell the lakes that provide the water to generate the electricity.
  I want to tell you. A furor occurred down in my part of the country 
because you have recreation, fishing, camping, and swimming on these 
various lakes--four of them in Kentucky where a father has taken a son 
fishing and camping, and now that son is taking his son to the lake 
fishing and camping. And it is something a family of low income can 
enjoy.
  So with all these furors that followed this suggestion, our people in 
my part of the State said, ``Sell the lakes? Never.'' The calls came to 
Washington, and Speaker Gingrich was contacted. And he assured them 
that this was off the table--that it would not be considered. But it 
would be considered when the communities have calmed down a little bit, 
and it would be revisited when the communities are more comfortable 
with the sale, I believe the Speaker said. But Mr. Kasich, the chairman 
of the Budget Committee, said that they will be sold but it will be 
done a little later because of the furor. Then the proposal to sell the 
Power Marketing Administrations was proposed, and another furor 
followed. Again, the Speaker said that this would be off the table.
  So you have to watch around this place, Mr. President, because there 
is always someone trying to back door you.
  If you think the Power Marketing Administrations are off the table, 
or if the power lines and the facilities to generate this electricity 
is off the table, you ought to read page 476 of the reconciliation bill 
from the House.
  We have in the statutory language now that the Secretaries of Energy, 
Interior, and Army cannot sell power marketing administrations. Well, 
on page 476 of the House reconciliation bill, they repeal those 
prohibitions. And in the next section they authorize and say, ``The 
Secretaries shall''--that is plural, of Energy, Interior, and Army--
``shall secure and enter into arrangements with an experienced private-
sector firm to serve as advisor to the Secretaries with respect to the 
sale of the facilities used to generate and transmit the electrical 
power marketed by Southeastern Power Administration, Southwestern Power 
Administration, and Western Power Administration.''
  And so prior to December 31, 1996, they shall come back with their 
report to sell. And in these instructions in the reconciliation bill in 
the House, they say they can cluster the generated facilities where 
they might be sold at a higher price.
  That does not seem to me that power marketing administrations and the 
facilities used for such a transmission line are off the table. Lo and 
behold, Mr. President, in this bill--in this bill--we are about to pass 
here in the Senate, there is no language under amendment 51.
  It says:

       The conferees agree that the statutory limitations do not 
     prohibit the legislative branch from initiating or conducting 
     studies or collecting information regarding the sale or 
     transfer of the power marketing administrations to non-
     Federal ownership.

  Mr. President, the power marketing administrations are not off the 
table. We are just being backdoored, making big headlines, big 
statements, ``They are off the table,'' then insert them in language, 
try to hide it, and in the language of this bill, as an afterthought, I 
suspect, they authorized GAO for the study.
  Mr. President, I am torn about whether to vote for this piece of 
legislation or not because it does authorize GAO to make the study for 
the sale of these power marketing administrations. So I want to just 
say to my folks that have an interest in it all across the country--all 
across the country--that you better be careful because the majority has 
made up its mind it is going to sell the power marketing 
administrations. And the testimony in the House committee said that 
rates would go up, the rates would go up.
  If you want rural electrical rates to go up, you just sell your power 
marketing administration, and you will see what happens to you. This 
majority is trying to sell everything.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I also want to thank the Senator from 
Arizona for his comments. I am not sure how the Senator arrived at the 
number of 20 unauthorized projects, and I do not agree with that 
number, but it is accurate that the conference report does include some 
authorizations for the Corps of Engineers water projects.
  When the energy and water development bill passed the Senate it 
included four provisions which addressed on-going projects. The 
conference agreement includes four additional provisions. For example, 
a provision is included in response to the devastating flooding which 
occurred earlier this year in New Orleans, LA, which allows the Corps 
of Engineers to undertake additional measures to limit the flood 
damages in that city. Another provision allows the corps to transfer 
land to the city of Prestonsburg, KY, for a public park.
  So, while the conference agreement does include some small 
authorizations, I do not understand how the Senator arrived at his 
figure of 20 unauthorized projects in the conference report.
  Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, I would like to clarify a single sentence 
in the conference report accompanying H.R. 1905 relating to economic 
development activities. Within the Department of Energy environmental 
management account, in the nuclear material and facilities 
stabilization section, there is a sentence that provides: 
``Additionally, none of these funds should be used for economic 
development activities.''
  It is my understanding that this language was included because there 
was concern by some members of Congress that money was being diverted 
from cleanup and restoration efforts and used for economic development. 
It is clear from this language that money should not be used for 
economic development activities when those activities are unrelated to 
the project for which the money was appropriated. However, where this 
money can be used both to achieve its intended purposes and assist in 
community transition and diversification, it should be so used.
  The Department of Energy should allow the use of these funds to 
achieve as many positive results as possible and leverage this money to 
assist the communities they serve in achieving economic 
diversification.
 Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, I would like to engage in a brief 
colloquy with the distinguished chairman of the Energy and Water 
Appropriations Subcommittee, Senator Domenici. Included in the 
conference report to the fiscal year 1997 Energy and Water 
Appropriations bill are provisions related to the Bonneville Power 
Administration. I would like to focus on these provisions for a moment.
  As the chairman is aware, a longer term regional review initiative 
was recently announced by the Bonneville 

[[Page S16393]]

Power Administration and the department of energy. It is my 
understanding, as a member of the conference, that the conferees were 
aware of and supported this reexamination of Bonneville's statutory 
authorities and responsibilities. However, it is my understanding that 
the conferees did not intend their action in this conference report to 
prejudice any future regional discussions regarding the comprehensive 
regional review of Bonneville and the electric utility industry in the 
Northwest.
  The sharing of benefits established in the Northwest Power Act of 
1980 has been accomplished in large part through a provision in the act 
known as the residential exchange. It is my understanding that 
conferees believe there should continue to be a fair sharing of the 
benefits from the Bonneville system for all ratepayers across the 
region, consistent with existing law. To further this objective, the 
conferees provided for $145 million to maintain the residential 
exchange benefits at approximately the fiscal year 1996 level. It was 
not intended that BPA's residential exchange payment of $145 million in 
fiscal year 1997 be recouped from BPA's residential exchange customers 
in the remaining years of the 5-year rate period.
  The conference report now before the Senate encourages BPA and its 
customers to work together to phase out the residential exchange by 
October 1, 2001. Furthermore, it is my understanding that the conferees 
did not intend this encouragement to affect the current development of 
rates by BPA because the outcome of the regional review and settlement 
discussions are not known at this time.
  Mr. President, Let me ask the Senator from New Mexico, if this 
comports with his understanding?
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, let me say in answer to my friend from 
Oregon, the distinguished chairman of the full committee and the author 
of the provision we are now discussing, that his statement does indeed 
comport with my understanding.
  Mr. HATFIELD. I thank my friend for engaging in this dialog with 
me.


                      kotzebue wind energy project

  Mr. STEVENS. Mr. President, I have a concern regarding the conference 
report to H.R. 1905, the energy and water development appropriations 
bill for fiscal year 1996, and would like to ask Senator Domenici, the 
distinguished chairman of the subcommittee, a question about the 
Kotzebue wind energy project in the State of Alaska.
  Mr. DOMENICI. I would be pleased to try and clarify anything of 
concern to my friend from Alaska.
  Mr. STEVENS. On page 90 of the original Senate report (S. Rept. 104-
120), the Appropriations Committee highlighted the Kotzebue project and 
directed the Department of Energy ``* * * to provide technical 
assistance and other appropriate support for this project.'' 
Unfortunately, on page 60 of the statement of managers accompanying the 
conference report to H.R. 1905 (H. Rept. 104-293), the House and Senate 
conferees indicate that neither technical support nor other support is 
provided for the Kotzebue project.
  I am disappointed by the language in the statement of managers. I 
want to clarify that the conferees certainly did not intend that the 
Department of Energy halt its current and future assistance for 
Kotzebue, which is an ongoing DOE wind energy project. Under the 
Department's sustainable technology energy partnerships [STEP] program, 
Kotzebue Electric Association, with the State of Alaska, will receive 
$580,000 in fiscal year 1995 funds from the Department's Wind Program 
for its 50/50 cost-shared project that will result in the installation 
of wind turbines near Kotzebue. This pilot project is at the forefront 
of Alaska's activities to promote wind energy for many of the State's 
remote communities. The project will provide information on the 
potential of wind energy as a reliable power source in our extreme 
arctic climate.
  Furthermore, based on current DOE estimates, approximately $50,000 in 
fiscal year 1996 funds will be required to provide necessary technical 
assistance and support for the ongoing Kotzebue project, which will 
eventually provide 5MW of wind generation for Kotzebue plus outlying 
villages.
  Mr. DOMENICI. I appreciate the Senator's explanation of DOE's 
continuing involvement in this project, and agree that termination of 
support for the project would jeopardize many years of work. 
Accordingly, we did not intend to prohibit the Department of Energy or 
any other agency from continuing and completing on-going technical 
assistance and other support for the Kotzebue, AK, wind project.
  Mr. STEVENS. I thank the chairman for this clarification. I take it 
the conference merely meant that no funds have been earmarked for the 
Kotzebue project. It does not object to the project.
  Mr. DOMENICI. The Senator is correct.


                            Animas-La Plata

  Mr. CAMPBELL. Mr. President, I rise to commend the conferees to the 
energy-water development appropriations bill for their action on the 
Animas-La Plata water project. This conference, led ably by Senators 
Domenici and Johnston and Congressmen Myers and Bevill, has taken a 
decisive step toward the expedient completion of the Animas-La Plata 
water project.
  In 1868, more than 125 years ago, the Ute Bands signed a treaty with 
the United States. This treaty entitled the Utes to water. One hundred 
years later, the Ute Tribes were not receiving their entitlement. 
Finally, in 1972, the United States filed suit on behalf of the Ute 
Tribes in an effort to quantify the native Americans' water rights.
  Mr. President, the Ute Tribes have encountered procedural hurdles and 
stiff opposition at every turn. Even though the United States promised 
this water to these tribes, who more than 100 years ago had been 
relegated by the Federal Government to dry, arid, lands, the fact is 
that the Utes have not been provided the water that they were clearly 
entitled to in the middle of the last century.
  In 1984, events took a turn for the better. All the interested 
parties, including the Ute Mountain Utes, the Southern Utes, Federal 
agencies, the States of Colorado and New Mexico, the local water 
districts, and other involved parties sat down at the negotiating 
table. They worked together, and within 2 years, in 1986, they came to 
an agreement on how water would finally be provided to the Utes.
  Mr. President, I suggest to my colleagues that this was a rare 
display of cooperation. Water rights disputes in the arid West can be 
bitter, emotional fights of deep acrimony and enormous economic 
consequence. The Utes could have asserted their Winters Doctrine 
priority water rights in a manner that would simply have disrupted the 
social and economic health of the Four Corners area. Instead, they 
chose good faith negotiation. And we are not holding up our end.
  The agreement, in essence, was this: The United States shall provide 
water to the Ute Tribes, and in return, the Ute Tribes shall defer 
their precious senior water rights. The Utes surrendered their most 
valuable tribal asset, in return for which the United States promised 
to provide water.
  The United States would provide water not by taking it away from 
neighboring towns, farms and mines. Rather, the United States would 
build the Animas-La Plata project so water could be acquired. This 
project would create an off-stream reservoir, so that it would not be 
necessary to dam the Animas River, which would in turn supply the Ute 
Tribes and non-Indians in the region with water.
  In 1988, as a Member of the House of Representatives, I introduced 
legislation to implement and ratify this agreement. The Colorado Ute 
Indian Water Rights Settlement Act of 1988 passed the House of 
Representatives by a wide margin, and it passed this body without a 
dissenting vote.
  After Congress decided to provide water by building the Animas-La 
Plata project, the Ute Tribes discovered a new and unexpected enemy: 
The professional environmental advocacy groups of this country.
  Mr. President, when we passed the Settlement Act in 1988, at that 
time the Animas-La Plata project had already met, and was in full 
compliance with, all the requirements of our environmental statutes, 
including the National Environmental Policy Act, the Clean Water Act 
and the Endangered 

[[Page S16394]]

Species Act. A final environmental impact statement had already been 
completed, all the appropriate consultations had occurred, all the 
necessary permits were in place.
  When we ordered the Bureau of Reclamation to build the project, we 
expected the Bureau to do just that.
  But environmental groups have advanced claim after unfounded claim 
against this project. Environmental groups contend that more studies 
and more reviews are needed to complete this project, when in fact, 
this project has been the focus of years of study and five reports 
issued pursuant to environmental statutes.
  This project has been the subject of two separate biological opinions 
under the Endangered Species Act, an environmental impact statement and 
a draft supplemental environmental impact statement under the National 
Environmental Policy Act, and a section 404(r) permit exemption under 
the Clean Water Act.
  This project has been reviewed with a fine-toothed comb, but 
environmental groups have threatened more years--40 years, to quote one 
of them--of litigation and delay. Their avowed purpose is to kill the 
Animas-La Plata project.
  Mr. President, I have heard talk of alternatives to this project. 
Opponents of this project suggest that we should consider more 
alternatives. Any party is free to propose an alternative at any time. 
Some have even suggested that there may be a viable alternative to the 
Animas-La Plata project. However, those who claim that we should 
consider more alternatives are simply seeking to kill this project. 
They are not interested in providing water to the Ute Tribes as the 
1988 Settlement Act requires.
  If a so-called alternative does not meet all of the terms of the 
settlement, then it is no alternative at all. Some groups claim they 
can muster an alternative, but the only proposed alternatives would 
take water away from parties to the 1986 agreement. Mr. President, that 
is not an alternative. That is a sham and a dealbreaker.
  Why does this situation exist? It exists because environmental 
extremists simply oppose all major water projects --even an off-stream 
project like this one, designed to minimize environmental impact. They 
ignore the social, recreational and economic benefits a water project 
and settlement such as this can bring to an arid Western region. They 
disagree with the congressional policy decision to meet the water 
demands of the Ute Indian Tribes and other water consumers.
  They do not want the Animas-La Plata project to be built, even though 
that is what Congress has ordered. Because they oppose large water 
projects, they use environmental statutes as an underhanded subterfuge 
to tie up projects in court. With crafty attorneys, they can delay a 
project for years, and maybe even kill it.
  Mr. President, this is what the environmentalists want. They do not 
care about economic security or even the unsatisfied water claims of 
two tribes of native Americans. They will stop at nothing to meet their 
extreme ideological agenda. Frankly, I am also disappointed that this 
administration has placed the ideological goals of the Fish and 
Wildlife Service and EPA ahead of its trust responsibility to native 
Americans.
  If the project dies, then this Nation will have again broken its word 
to native Americans. I urge my colleagues not to follow this shameful 
path of dishonor and deceit. There are enough of these unfortunate 
incidents in the history of this Nation's dealings with native 
Americans.
  Mr. President, the language before the Senate in the Energy-Water 
Development Appropriations conference report directs the Secretary of 
the Interior to proceed, quote, ``without delay'' and construct the 
Animas-La Plata project. I urge my colleagues to support this action. 
This project is the best alternative, in the eyes of Congress, to 
settle this water rights dispute.
  I would like to take this opportunity to thank the chairman of the 
Energy-Water Development Subcommittee, Senator Domenici, for his fine 
efforts on behalf of the Animas-La Plata project. The Senator's efforts 
are a credit to his uncompromising dedication to the native Americans 
of Colorado and New Mexico, and I'm sure the people of New Mexico 
appreciate his service as much as my constituents in Colorado.


                        biofuels energy systems

  Mr. GRAMS. Mr. President, I want to clarify the intent of the Energy 
and Water Development appropriations conference committee with regard 
to their support of the Biofuels Research and Development Program 
within the Department of Energy. Based upon contact my office has had 
with the Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development Appropriations, 
it was never the intent of the committee to exclude the other 48 States 
when it made note of projects in Hawaii and Vermont. Projects, 
including those in my own State of Minnesota, would be eligible to 
apply for available funds as would be the rest of the country. 
Furthermore, I understand that it was never the intent of the committee 
to discourage a continuation of the ongoing biomass electric program in 
all States parallel to the ongoing biomass fuels research and 
development program.
  While I have received word of the intent of this clarification, I 
want the record to reflect that I will be carefully watching the 
interpretation of this conference language by the Department of Energy. 
Should there be any misunderstanding, I will work with the 
distinguished chairman of the Energy and Water Subcommittee to rectify 
this matter.
  I also seek unanimous consent to have the attached colloquy between 
the House Energy Subcommittee Chair and my Minnesota colleague, 
Representative Minge, on this matter be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the colloquy was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

            Colloquy Between Representatives Myers and Minge

       Mr. Minge. I wish to thank the ranking member for the time 
     and Chairman Myers for entering into this colloquy. I would 
     also commend the chairman and ranking Member for reporting a 
     balanced bill, particularly in support of the Biofuels R&D 
     Program within the Department of Energy. And I would like to 
     clarify the intent of the conference committee with regard to 
     this program. Am I correct in understanding that nothing in 
     the conference report prohibits continuing research, 
     development and demonstration on energy crops for fuels and 
     electricity or in any way discourages a continuation of the 
     ongoing biomass electric program in all States in parallel to 
     the ongoing biomass fuels research, development and 
     demonstration program, on the understanding that the 
     expenditures for the biomass electric program do not reduce 
     the conferees' allocations to other biofuels programs?
       Mr. Myers. Yes, the gentleman from Minnesota is absolutely 
     correct.
       Mr. Minge. I wish to thank the Chairman in regard to the 
     intent of the conference committee.


 disproportionate civilian r&d cuts in energy and water appropriations 
                       will hurt in the long run

  Mr. BINGAMAN. Mr. President, I rise to express serious concern about 
the cuts made to civilian energy research and development programs in 
the energy and water appropriations conference report that will be 
adopted by the Senate today. While some level of reduction to 
Government programs may be expected in order to reduce and eventually 
eliminate the deficit, the drastic cuts in our civilian R&D programs, 
not just in this bill, but across the civilian research agencies--with 
the possible exception of the National Institutes of Health--are 
shortsighted.
  Overall, this budget proposes a 17-percent reduction in our civilian 
energy R&D from the level requested in the President's budget. An ever 
larger percentage--35 percent--is cut from solar and renewable energy 
R&D. A chart comparing budget request levels versus the decisions 
contained in the conference report, which I ask unanimous consent be 
included in the Record at the conclusion of my remarks, shows the 
magnitude of the cuts in the energy and water appropriations bill. Cuts 
that will start us down a path that will ultimately and inevitably harm 
our Nation's economy and energy security.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (See exhibit 1.)
  Mr. BINGAMAN. The Republican budget resolution adopted in June will 
reduce our civilian R&D budget to a four decade low as a percentage of 
our economy by the year 2002. These cuts will not be made up by the 
private sector, who are showing, through deep cuts being made in their 
own research 

[[Page S16395]]

budgets, an ever narrower focus and an unwillingness to invest in long-
term research projects. So our research dollars will be shrinking while 
those of our economic rivals, Germany and Japan for example, continue 
to rise. Recognizing the importance of civilian research investments, 
they and other industrialized countries around the world are seeking to 
emulate the successful American model of the last half century, just as 
we seem to be abandoning it.
  In the energy arena, our investments have paid off in terms of 
lowering energy costs and creating new technical advancements in 
photovoltaic, wind energy, solar thermal, biofuels, and geothermal 
systems. These developments are positioning the United States as a 
world leader in new technologies. This has been confirmed by a recently 
completed report of the Yergin Task Force on Strategic Energy R&D which 
found that ``DOE energy R&D has resulted in billions of dollars' worth 
of annual consumer energy savings and new business opportunities.'' In 
addition, the Yergin report concluded that technological R&D 
advancements from both the public and private sectors are imperative in 
order for our Nation to meet its future energy needs.
  With all of the significant accomplishments these R&D efforts have 
yielded, with huge potential in energy products and services markets 
over the next 25 years, and with the serious trade deficit we now face, 
I ask my colleagues, how do these cuts make sense? Well, Mr. President, 
in my opinion, they do not.
  I plan to vote for the energy and water conference report today. 
Given where many Republicans started several months ago on the defense 
side of this bill, the conference report we are voting on today is not 
as bad as it could have been. Essentially the bill preserves the 
President's initiatives for stockpile stewardship and arms control 
verification and nonproliferation technologies, vital programs for our 
long-term national security. However, the details that have emerged on 
the DOE civilian research budget present a very bleak story--one I fear 
will put our Nation's well-being and prosperity at considerable risk in 
the long run. I urge the President to continue to fight for adequate 
investments in energy research even if he reluctantly signs the bill 
into law.

                               Exhibit 1

  CUTS IN ENERGY R&D--FISCAL YEAR 1996 ENERGY AND WATER APPROPRIATIONS  
                                  BILL                                  
                        [In millions of dollars]                        
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   Request    Conference
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Solar and Renewable R&D.........................     423.4        275.2 
Nuclear Energy R&D..............................     379.8        231.0 
Environment, Safety and Health..................     164.6        128.4 
Energy Research.................................   1,721.4      1,518.5 
    (Of which:                                                          
Biological and Environmental....................    (428.7)      (419.5)
Fusion..........................................     363.3)      (244.1)
Basic Energy Sciences...........................    (805.3)      (791.7)
Other Energy Research)..........................    (124.2)       (63.3)
Energy Support Activities.......................     102.6         32.0 
    (Of which: University and Science Education                         
     Programs)..................................     (55.0)       (20.0)
General Science and Research....................   1,011.7        981.0 
                                                 -----------------------
    Total DOE Civilian Research.................   3,803.5      3,166.1 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fiscal year 1995 Total = $3,628.5 million.                              
Cut from Requested Level = $637.4 million or 17 percent.                
Cut from fiscal year 1995 Level = $462.4 million or 13 percent.         

                        animas-la plata project

  Mr. BINGAMAN. Mr. President, there is one more important point I want 
to make about this bill. I understand language regarding the Animas-La 
Plata project was considered which would have read, ``In order to 
ensure the timely implementation of the Colorado-Ute Indian Water 
Rights Settlement Act of 1988, and notwithstanding any other provisions 
of law, the Secretary of the Interior is directed to proceed without 
further delay with construction of those facilities approved for 
construction in the Final Biological Opinion for the Animas-La Plata 
Project, Colorado and New Mexico, dated October 25, 1991.'' I 
understand this language including the phrase ``notwithstanding any 
other provision of law'' was rejected.
  The conferees adopted substitute language which says, ``In order to 
ensure the timely implementation of the Colorado Ute Indian Water 
Rights Settlement Act of 1988, the Secretary of the Interior is 
directed to proceed without delay with construction of those facilities 
in conformance with the final Biological Opinion for the Animas-La 
Plata project, Colorado and New Mexico, dated October 25, 1991.''
  I understand conferees adopted the language they did because they are 
frustrated with the pace of the work to comply with existing law before 
the Secretary can legally proceed to implement the Colorado Ute Indian 
Water Rights Settlement Act. Efforts to finalize numerous steps 
required to begin construction of the project, including completion of 
a satisfactory supplemental environmental impact statement 
demonstrating compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act, 
Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act have taken several 
years. Based on assurances from members of the administration and the 
conference committee, the amendment is intended to provide clear 
direction to the Bureau of Reclamation to complete the work necessary 
to move forward by complying expeditiously with these and other 
provisions of law. The House added $5 million to the administration's 
budget request for the project for fiscal year 1996, and the Senate 
concurred, to assist the Bureau in its effort to comply with the 
directions of the amendment.
  Mr. WELLSTONE. In the conference report language, it is stated that 
$55.3 million is provided for biofuels energy systems. When $27.65 
million is taken out for biochemical and thermochemical conversion, 
that leaves another $27.65 million. Then $3.94 million goes to the 
regional biomass program and full funding is provided for biomass power 
projects in Vermont and Hawaii. There is no instruction for the 
remainder of the nonbiochemical and nonthermo- chemical biomass 
funding. Am I correct in stating that that remainder could be applied 
to the Biomass Power for Rural Development Program?
  Mr. DOMENICI. The Senator from Minnesota is correct. DOE could apply 
the funding as he describes.
  I do not think there is anything further on our side.
  I ask for the yeas and nays.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
  There is a sufficient second.
  The yeas and nays were ordered.
  Mr. FORD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. GORTON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that further 
proceedings under the quorum call be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. GORTON. Mr. President, during the past 6 months the Northwest 
congressional delegation and the Clinton administration have spent a 
great deal of time in an attempt to control the costs imposed on the 
Bonneville Power Administration's ratepayers by the Endangered Species 
Act mandating recovery of certain salmon runs of the Columbia and Snake 
River systems.
  The threat of a financial collapse of the Bonneville Power 
Administration and the reality of exploding fish recovery costs borne 
by the region prompted this attention. The Bonneville Power 
Administration bears many financial burdens to threaten its ability to 
remain competitive. The entire electricity industry is being rocked by 
fierce winds of change that were not anticipated when the Northwest 
Power Act was passed by Congress in 1980.
  The most immediate and increasing burden on BPA and its ratepayers 
arises out of Endangered Species Act-mandated salmon recovery costs.
  Until just a few weeks ago, Clinton administration officials at the 
National Marine Fisheries Service estimated that BPA's share of salmon 
recovery costs for fiscal year 1996 would exceed $600 million. As a 
consequence, the Clinton administration decided, quite correctly, that 
neither a collapse of BPA nor huge rate increases in salmon costs would 
be tolerated by the people of the Pacific Northwest, and so the 
administration announced that BPA's salmon recovery costs would be 
administratively capped at $435 million for the year. That agreement is 
incorporated in this bill.
  The Clinton administration also made the political calculation that 
the 

[[Page S16396]]

President could not afford to anger national environmental 
organizations by supporting any legislative efforts to control salmon 
recovery costs borne by Northwest ratepayers. After all, earlier this 
year, this administration enraged those organizations by signing a 
rescission bill that included provisions on salvage timber and 
Northwest timber harvest programs. So the administration, aware of this 
slow-burning anger among its environmental constituents, decided that 
it could not support a legislative remedy that would help the 
ratepayers of the region because that action would further outrage a 
vital political constituency.
  The only positive aspect of the resulting agreement is that it 
represents the first acknowledgement on the part of the administration 
that there is an economic limit on Columbia and Snake River salmon 
costs. But this agreement, while it represents our acknowledgement of 
fiscal reality, is severely flawed and incomplete.
  The agreement is flawed because it is so vague. First, we have not 
seen any paper outlining the agreement. Second, without legislation, 
there is no real legal protection for BPA, or for the investment 
already made by the region's ratepayers.
  Without such protection, BPA said that many of its customers would 
leave the system and purchase power from cheaper alternative sources. 
BPA said that letting its salmon costs escalate uncontrollably would 
push it to the brink of financial ruin. It was, in my view, no idle 
threat.
  But the best that BPA can now tell its customers is that the 
administration promises that $435 million a year from BPA should be 
enough for fish and, if not, there will be a pool of $325 million in 
Federal dollars if costs exceed that $435 million.
  Mr. President, if the BPA is on the verge of financial ruin, how can 
a promise from the administration to not spend more than $435 million 
provide the certainty that BPA says it needs? What confidence can we 
have in an agreement that can be broken if an administration official 
decides next year that BPA should spend more than the $435 million? The 
answer: no confidence. And what happens if a Federal judge is asked to 
decide whether the $435 million was derived by political science rather 
than biological science and finds that number insufficient to meet the 
Endangered Species Act? Answer--the cap will be broken.
  What happens if that Federal judge issues orders that require BPA to 
spend more than the $325 million in taxpayers' dollars made available 
by the agreement? Answer--taxpayers and ratepayers will pay more.
  This agreement provides little, if any, assurance to BPA customers 
that they--or the Federal Treasury--will not be forced to pick up the 
tab for ESA-mandated salmon recovery. In short, this agreement, with 
all of its what ifs, increases the likelihood that the BPA will soon be 
right back where it started--on the brink of financial ruin because of 
rapidly escalating salmon-recovery costs.
  The agreement is also incomplete. This agreement does nothing to 
provide any certainty or predictability for other economic interests 
along the Columbia and Snake Rivers system. BPA gets short-term relief 
from this agreement with the administration, but no certainty.
  Other rivers system users--ports, PUD's, irrigators, agriculture, 
private utilities, non-Federal hydroelectric projects, recreational, 
and commercial users--are left with even less protection from Federal 
decisions to drawdown reservoirs, spill water over dams, increase water 
flows or even order dam removal.
  Arguably, this agreement by the administration to limit BPA fish 
costs, while not changing Federal salmon policy, increases the chances 
that fish costs will be shifted onto other economic entities in the 
region. Clearly, these entities are not disinterested spectators. They 
are affected greatly by the vagaries of BPA policies and NMFS decisions 
about how the water from the Columbia and Snake Rivers will be used. 
The characteristics of this administration's environmental policies are 
inherent all across this agreement--environmentalists are listened to, 
but working people do not count.
  This agreement is flawed because it fails to deal with the root of 
BPA's and the region's problem. The root problem is not how much BPA 
and its ratepayers spend on fish recovery. The root of the problem is 
that this administration has used the ESA to craft a salmon policy that 
forces the most expensive possible measures for the least productive 
returns.
  Despite BPA's agreement with the administration, the necessity to 
control BPA and the region's fish and wildlife costs is hardly 
resolved. Many will use this agreement as an opportunity to declare 
victory and go home. but if this agreement accomplishes anything, it 
illustrates the need for dramatic action now on legislation 
fundamentally to change salmon restoration and conservation practices 
on the Columbia and Snake Rivers system.
  This agreement is unlikely, in the long term, adequately to stabilize 
BPA's financial position. And, despite the claims of an administration 
cabinet member that this agreement will recover the species, it clearly 
will do little to restore an abundant Northwest fishery. Why? Because 
this agreement perpetuates the status quo, a status quo that has 
accomplished little if any salmon recovery.
    
    
  Presently, I am typecast as an enemy of salmon. I would like to dwell 
upon this typecast for a moment. Our last great regional natural 
resource debate was, of course, over the extent of measures to protect 
the northern spotted owl. I will make a confession. While I do not 
desire the extinction of that bird, I do not worry overly about its 
survival. I believe that it will survive, regardless of Federal 
policies designed to protect it, but more fundamentally, I don't worry 
because I don't believe that that bird is vital to the human condition 
or to life on this planet--while I believe that families and people 
are. I believe that preserving a reasonable amount of owl habitat--our 
old growth forests--is important, but, in truth, if you wish to portray 
me as opposed to the proposition that owls are more important than 
people, you are not far off the mark.
  I see salmon in a completely different light. I am committed to 
conserving and restoring an abundant Northwest salmon fishery. My 
legislative proposal to accompany the energy and water appropriations 
conference report would have locked into place a $500 million a year 
commitment to Columbia and Snake Rivers river salmon recovery.
  But ensuring a healthy salmon resource in the Northwest is not a 
broad enough goal for the Columbia and Snake Rivers system--we must 
also consider anadromous and nonana- dromous fish, and resident fish 
populations. I will support Federal legislation that provides that 
consideration and also assures comparable proportionate commitments to 
salmon runs in other Northwest river systems. I am convinced that, 
within reason, Northwest citizens will make large investments to 
restore the region's fishery.
  I believe that the region is committed to such an unprecedented 
environmental investment because salmon are important to our Northwest 
economy--they are important to our society, our culture, our lives.
  Let me emphasize this point. I will support Federal legislation that 
requires electric ratepayers in the Pacific Northwest to pay for salmon 
recovery. I believe that people of the region are committed to this 
goal and are willing to pay for it. I ask only two conditions in 
return: First, that the level of expenditures be reasonably 
predictable, and second, that the expenditures be for scientifically 
credible measures to strengthen the overall fishery.
  While it is inaccurate to claim that I am antisalmon, it is 
definitely true that I disagree profoundly with the administration's 
salmon management policies.
  What exactly is the current Federal salmon management policy in the 
Northwest? Beyond spending a lot of money, I'm not sure anyone can 
honestly tell us what's been accomplished, or even what the goal of the 
recovery plan for Columbia and Snake Rivers salmon is. This is a plan 
that only a bureaucrat could develop and understand--it's easy to write 
a plan like this when there is no political accountability, and you are 
spending someone else's money. That's what the Federal recovery plan 
for salmon boils down to.

[[Page S16397]]

  Today, Federal management of the Columbia and Snake Rivers system is 
driven by the ESA and it concentrates on the weakest salmon runs for 
recovery.
  Fact: This administration's ESA strategy on the Columbia and Snake 
Rivers does not even propose to restore a vibrant Northwest fishery in 
any reasonable period of time. Fact: this recovery plan does not say 
that our national goal is to have the Columbia and Snake brimming with 
millions of fish. Instead, the ESA requires the region to focus on 
saving weak salmon runs--not full species of salmon, not even 
subspecies of salmon but only on what are called distinct population 
segments. There actions may mean increasing the number of one listed 
run of Snake River sockeye from 10 in 1994 to 50 by 2000 forty 
individual fish. Despite the protestations of NMFS biologists, and 
inside-the-beltway theorists, these recovery measures for sockeye 
salmon have no connection to an abundant salmon resource.
  NMFS states that recovery of the listed salmon runs will require 50 
years, and acknowledges that a century of extraordinary measures is 
probably necessary. To those involved in tribal, commercial, and 
recreational fishing, I warn that NMFS, empowered by the ESA, is 
planning for a century with no fishing.
  Do not misunderstand, people in the Northwest do care about 
conserving and enhancing wild salmon. Wild salmon are valuable. But 
they are valuable because their survival and enhancement can play a 
large role in the recovery of an abundant and healthy resource. We have 
learned that some degree of genetic diversity is important to healthy 
salmon stocks. The problem with the current law is that it empowers 
Federal regulators to spend unlimited amounts of money to save 
genetically distinct salmon runs as a goal in itself and not as a 
measure to a broader goal.
  The goal of Federal regulators is not an abundant fishery, nor is 
their goal connected in any way to economic reality. Federal policy--
driven by saving one genetically distinct run--is in conflict with 
rebuilding an abundant fishery. A fraction of the dollars the Federal 
Government is taking from the Northwest economy, dedicated to recovery 
of there specific fish populations, would produce a infinitely greater 
return if focused on fish populations throughout the system, including 
saveable salmon runs and some wild stocks.

  I make these points about current Federal salmon policy because the 
agreement arranged by the Clinton administration and BPA does nothing 
to change what is wrong with current Federal fish management policies 
and practices. This agreement literally papers over the problems 
inherent in poor Federal policy with dollars--dollars paid by Northwest 
ratepayers and U.S. taxpayers.
  But in the end, this flawed Federal policy will not be papered over. 
As long as Northwest salmon recovery measures and costs are dictated by 
the Federal Government and the EPA we will court failure. We will have 
higher costs and little, if any, increase in the number of salmon to 
show for it.
  It is time to change the direction of our salmon recovery policies 
and the agreement by this administration and BPA does nothing to do so.
  Northwest salmon policy should be changed so that it is directed at 
three goals. First, we must restore an abundant fishery resource. 
Second, we must enhance the fishery with the least possible economic 
dislocation. Third, we must give the authority over decisions for 
salmon recovery back to the region.
  Mr. President, I have my own views about effective salmon recovery 
measures, but I will fight hard to see that Federal law is changed so 
that nobody in Washington, DC--including me--will make the decisions on 
how best to conserve and enhance fish populations in the Northwest. The 
region must be given the freedom itself to make those decisions. If our 
region, after an inclusive and thoughtful process, decides to spend 
$500 million a year to restore one weak run of salmon--I will almost 
certainly disagree--but as a U.S. Senator, I would defend, absolutely, 
the region's authority to make that choice.
  I often disagree with our Northwest Indian tribes on issues of public 
policy but our Northwest tribes should be heard on how best to restore 
an abundant fishery. I often disagree with Washington State's 
representatives on the NW Power Planning Council, but I believe that 
the Council should be involved in helping to make these decisions. The 
heads of Northwest fishery agencies and our best scientists should have 
a significant voice in this process. The region should decide which 
salmon runs to enhance--not D.C. bureaucrats.
  Northwest salmon management measures should be decided by the people, 
local governments and interests in the Northwest. Today, the region is 
barred from making these decisions because of Federal law. Federal law 
grants to one agency, the National Marine Fisheries Service, nearly 
total control over our Columbia and Snake Rivers systems. I want to 
dramatically alter this miserable status quo--I want the people of the 
region to make their own decisions on these issues.
  Mr. President, our country is now in a state of revolution over the 
excessive role the Federal Government plays in our daily lives. The 
proposition that we should take power from the Federal Government and 
put it in the hands of local people is driving the debate on issues 
ranging from education to telecommunications to transportation to 
welfare. In the opinion of this Senator, the revolution should not stop 
there.
  It shouldn't stop there because these aren't the only fields in which 
a revolution is occurring. Another is clearly underway in the way our 
country delivers energy to families and businesses. In the Northwest, 
this requires a thorough review of BPA and the Northwest utility 
marketplace.
  Our region is just beginning to explore what to do in the face of 
changes that will dramatically reshape the region's energy marketplace. 
Over the next few months, I will be seeking the opinions of all who are 
concerned about what the future holds for Northwest energy policies. We 
will need to ask questions--tough questions--that don't merely tinker 
around the edges but delve deeper in order to create more competition 
and less reliance on government subsidies. In a word--overhaul.
  In this process our region will also explore what to do about ESA-
mandated salmon recovery measures and how to pay for them. I intend to 
participate in this process. Questions of energy policy, the role of 
the Northwest Power Planning Council and salmon recovery and its cost 
will come before Congress in the next several years.
  I believe that residents of the Pacific Northwest will not continue 
to tolerate exploding costs in the name of salmon recovery, when the 
immediate benefits are so slight and the promised benefits are esoteric 
and distant.
  Much of the Northwest was built based on a model of Federal answers 
to regional needs. Those decisions were appropriated at one point in 
time because our region could not, without Federal aid, have developed 
and grown. But current salmon recovery measures still reflect the old 
faith in centralized Federal answers to regional problems.
  Now, however, like nearly every issue before the Congress, the answer 
to the problems of the last 50 years may not be the answers to the 
problems of the next 50 years. Policies that assure centralized Federal 
control of energy and salmon policy demand careful review and dramatic 
change. The status quo is not the answer to the region's problems.
  Mr. McCAIN. Will the Senator yield for a question?
  Mr. GORTON. Yes.
  Mr. McCAIN. Does the Senator know and the other Members know it is 
Halloween and not only do Members have children who they would like to 
go to Halloween with, but there are members of the staff here and all 
over Capitol Hill that would like to observe Halloween?
  I know these are important issues. I know the Senator from Nevada is 
here. We had one Senator who has already had to leave to miss a vote. I 
ask my colleagues just once to let us go ahead and have this vote and 
submit written statements for the Record.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I----
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington has the floor.
  Mr. GORTON. I will yield to the Senator.
  Mr. DOMENICI. How much time did the Senator from Nevada want?
  Mr. BRYAN. Mr. President, 5 minutes.
  
[[Page S16398]]

  Mr. DOMENICI. How much time does the Senator from Washington need?
  Mr. GORTON. I suppose I would take about 10 minutes.
  I think the way in which the question could be answered, I suppose, 
would be to have the vote tomorrow.
  Mr. DOMENICI. I think the leader wants to get this bill finished 
tonight.
  Is there any reason on this side the Senators want a rollcall vote? 
Could we just agree the Senator would have 10 minutes?
  Mr. GORTON. I think I can probably complete in that period of time.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Does the Senator from Nevada want 5?
  Could we agree to vote at 6:05 p.m.?
  Mr. JOHNSTON. From this side I do not think that a vote is necessary.
  Mr. DOMENICI. It is.
  Mr. WELLSTONE. Yes, it is.
  Mr. DOMENICI. I ask unanimous consent that the rollcall vote which 
has been ordered start at 6:05 p.m.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. BIDEN. Reserving the right to object.
  Can the Senator put his statement in the Record--he will not change 
the outcome of the vote--so I can catch a 6 o'clock train and get home?
  Mr. GORTON. I will not put my statement in the Record. I do wish to 
make it.
  Mr. BIDEN. I have no objection.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there any objection to the request?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. GORTON. Mr. President, I was going to say, under those 
circumstances I am perfectly willing to allow the vote to take place 
now and make statements afterward, if that will help the Senator from 
Delaware.
  Mr. BIDEN. That would be wonderful, Mr. President.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the modification?
  Mr. BRYAN. I agree.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senate will proceed to vote now. And Senators can put their 
statements in the Record or make statements after the vote.
  The question is on agreeing to the conference report.
  The yeas and nays have been ordered. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. LOTT. I announce that the Senator from Oregon [Mr. Hatfield] and 
the Senator from Idaho Mr. [Kempthorne] are necessarily absent.
  I further announce that, if present and voting, the Senator from 
Oregon [Mr. Hatfield] would vote ``yea.''
  Mr. FORD. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey [Mr. Bradley] 
and the Senator from Arkansas [Mr. Pryor] are necessarily absent.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cochran). Are there any other Senators in 
the Chamber desiring to vote?
  The result was announced--yeas 89, nays 6, as follows:

                      {Rollcall Vote No. 558 Leg.

                                YEAS--89

     Abraham
     Akaka
     Ashcroft
     Baucus
     Bennett
     Biden
     Bingaman
     Bond
     Boxer
     Breaux
     Bryan
     Bumpers
     Burns
     Byrd
     Campbell
     Chafee
     Coats
     Cochran
     Cohen
     Conrad
     Coverdell
     Craig
     D'Amato
     Daschle
     DeWine
     Dodd
     Dole
     Domenici
     Dorgan
     Exon
     Faircloth
     Feingold
     Feinstein
     Ford
     Frist
     Glenn
     Gorton
     Graham
     Gramm
     Grams
     Grassley
     Gregg
     Harkin
     Hatch
     Heflin
     Helms
     Hollings
     Hutchison
     Inhofe
     Inouye
     Jeffords
     Kassebaum
     Kennedy
     Kerrey
     Kerry
     Kohl
     Kyl
     Lautenberg
     Leahy
     Levin
     Lott
     Lugar
     Mack
     McConnell
     Mikulski
     Moseley-Braun
     Moynihan
     Murkowski
     Murray
     Nickles
     Nunn
     Pell
     Pressler
     Reid
     Robb
     Rockefeller
     Roth
     Santorum
     Sarbanes
     Shelby
     Simon
     Simpson
     Snowe
     Specter
     Stevens
     Thompson
     Thurmond
     Warner
     Wellstone

                                NAYS--6

     Brown
     Johnston
     Lieberman
     McCain
     Smith
     Thomas

                             NOT VOTING--4

     Bradley
     Hatfield
     Kempthorne
     Pryor
  So, the conference report on H.R. 1905 was agreed to.
  Mr. LAUTENBERG. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. DOLE. I move to lay the motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.
  Mr. CRAIG. Mr. President, thank you. The bill that has just passed is 
extremely important to my State as it is to a good many States in this 
Nation.
  Mr. President, this bill funds Yucca Mountain at $400 million for 
fiscal year 1996 with $85 million set for a monitored retrieval site.
  What does that mean? That means that to create a managed site to 
handle high-level nuclear waste until Yucca Mountain is completed. The 
bill does not designate where this MRS would be located.
  Under the terms of the current Nuclear Waste Disposal Act, an MRS 
cannot be placed in the same State where the permanent repository is 
located. This means that this Congress must act, and I hope it would 
act soon on a bill to designate a site for a monitored retrievable 
storage.
  This administration continues to fight a program to open a permanent 
nuclear waste repository. They ask for no money in their budget request 
and they continue to be less than helpful in getting an MRS 
operational.
  This is a national disgrace, Mr. President. This country has spent 
over $5 billion--let me repeat, $5 billion--of electrical ratepayers' 
money at Yucca Mountain, and what do we have to show for it? A 1-mile 
hole in the ground. Which is a start, I have to admit but we have a 
long way to go before an application can even be filed to begin the 
process of opening a repository facility.
  I have introduced S. 1271, the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1995. I 
hope we could move on legislation like this.
  Mr. President, 32 States currently generate power from nuclear 
energy. A brief summary of a percentage of nuclear energy consumed on a 
State-by-State basis is included for the Record, Mr. President.
  It is phenomenal to me that 82 percent of Vermont, 74 percent of 
Connecticut and 74 percent of Maine's power is generated by nuclear 
energy. These States should be working every day to open up an MRS and 
a geologic repository so their States do not have to shut down their 
nuclear power.
  I will say they are simply years away from doing that--and not tens 
of years but a very, very short period of time.
  It is time for this Senate to come to grips with the issue of nuclear 
waste. The Governor of my State recently entered into an agreement with 
the Secretary of Energy to finally remove the DOE and defense nuclear 
materials that are stored at the National Engineering Laboratory in 
Idaho.
  It is imperative that we move forward with operating facilities to 
meet the terms of that agreement which will remove all materials from 
Idaho in the year 2035.
  Mr. President, there is a uniqueness about this agreement. It is no 
longer just a signed piece of paper between DOE and a Governor. There 
is a Federal court order that the Department of Energy is now operating 
under to deal with the issues of Idaho and to deal with the issues 
across the Nation.
  That means 10,851 shipments of spent fuel and transuranic waste will 
be leaving Idaho. This is the first time Idaho has ever had a schedule 
for removal. That schedule is now in place and a Federal judge says to 
DOE they must respond.
  Mr. President, it is time that this Senate and this Congress came 
together in its obligation to the American people to build the 
facilities necessary to solve this very, very important problem.
  Some day, some ratepayer and some taxpayer is going to catch on to 
the fact that we are simply spending money and not addressing a 
problem. Mr. President, $5 billion, $10 billion later, one nuclear 
reactor down, the lights dark in a portion of a major city in this 
country because the power can no longer be supplied--that should not be 
the answer to our problem. We should respond and we should respond in a 
timely fashion.
  I thank the Senator from Washington for allowing me to proceed.
  Mr. GORTON. Mr. President, before the last vote, I had the floor and 
I was asked shortly after I began my remarks under this bill to allow 
the vote to take place so that various people can go home.
  I ask unanimous consent that the remarks I am about to make be 
consolidated with those I made before the vote 

[[Page S16399]]

and be printed in the Record before the vote.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. SARBANES. Reserving the right to object, I ask unanimous consent 
that Senator Kerry be recognized after the completion of Senator 
Gorton's statement.
  Mr. REID. I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection heard.
  Mr. KERRY. Could the Senator inform us how long he will anticipate 
speaking?
  Mr. GORTON. Approximately 10 minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Approximately 10 minutes.
  Mr. REID. I was similarly situated with the distinguished Senator 
from Washington. Both of us agreed to forbear making a statement so the 
vote could proceed.
  I simply want the Senator from Washington--we simply agreed to not 
make our statement so that everybody could cast a vote, and those who 
wanted to go home went home.
  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, the Senator is correct, and I think that is 
fair.
  I ask unanimous consent that I be permitted to proceed after the 
Senator from Nevada has completed.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DOLE. How much time are we talking about here?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Ten minutes.
  Mr. KERRY. I cannot say because it depends on--there is no way I can 
answer that.
  Mr. DOLE. Have you got consent to speak for more than 5 minutes?
  Mr. KERRY. I have consent to have the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There was no specific time.
  Mr. DOLE. We did not go into morning business? Because we have a 
speaker on this side who wishes to speak and I wonder how long he is 
going to have to wait.
  Mr. KERRY. Maybe the majority leader and I could visit for a minute 
and see if we could work that out, Mr. President. Would that meet the 
minority leader's approval?
  Mr. DOLE. Fine. I just do not want to start speaking here and never 
get back to this side of the aisle.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington still controls the 
time.
  Mr. DOLE. Why do we not visit while the Senator from Washington 
speaks?
  Mr. SARBANES. Are we limiting everyone to 5 minutes?
  Mr. DOLE. I thought we had gotten the regular, routine morning 
business for 5 minutes. Apparently not.
  Mr. SARBANES. The Senator from Washington, as I understand it, will 
speak for more than 5 minutes. We have no objection to that.
  Mr. GORTON. Both the Senators from Washington and Nevada are speaking 
on the bill we just passed, deferring their right to speak before the 
vote in order to accommodate Members who wanted to leave.
  Mr. SARBANES. We understand that.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. There have been no other time agreements or 
restrictions.
  Mr. DOLE. There has been no consent on who speaks?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. It will be the Senator from Washington, who 
has the floor now, then the Senator from Nevada has been recognized to 
speak following that, and then we had consent for Senator John Kerry of 
Massachusetts to follow.
  The Senator from Washington.
  Mr. GORTON. Was my unanimous-consent agreement to have the speech 
consolidated before the vote?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (The remarks of Mr. Gorton appear at an earlier point in the Record.)
  Mr. BRYAN addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
  Mr. BRYAN. I thank the Chair.
  Mr. President, the energy and water conference report that was just 
adopted earlier this evening is correct when it concludes that the 
Nation's nuclear waste policy with respect to permanent disposal is 
deeply flawed.
  It is a program that has cost some $5 billion, and the solution to 
the nuclear waste issue in America is no closer to resolution today 
than it was in 1982. The reason for that, Mr. President, is that 
politics and not science has been a driving force. The second reason is 
because of unrealistic deadlines that have been constantly mandated on 
the program that have been counterproductive.
  Based upon some of the comments made by a number of my colleagues 
this evening, the Nation is about ready to commit another serious error 
in nuclear waste policy as it relates to interim or short-term storage 
or, as it has been characterized by some, a monitored retrieval storage 
system.
  Mr. President, we have been to that show before. In the early 1980's 
the advocates of nuclear power, in urging upon the Congress the 
adoption of an AFR program, Away From Reactor Program, indicated that 
unless action was taken immediately, a number of nuclear reactors 
around the country would be forced to close down because of the nuclear 
waste problem and the Nation would face an energy crisis. The Congress 
did not respond to the request made by the nuclear power industry, and 
no nuclear reactor was closed as a consequence.
  In the debate that is about to ensue on the interim storage issue, we 
are about ready to fall into that similar trap that was foisted upon us 
by Congress in 1987 in urging unrealistic deadlines and that science is 
to take a second place to the politics of nuclear waste.
  I think it may be helpful, Mr. President, to respond and to go into a 
little of the history of the program.
  In 1982, the Congress enacted the Nuclear Waste Policy Act. I think 
the Congress attempted to develop a sensible policy. Its underlying 
premise is that we should search the entire country looking at various 
types of repositories. We would look in the New England States of 
America for granite, look in the Southeast for salt domes. We would 
look in parts of the West for a volcanic material called tuff. Those 
three sites would be evaluated and studied--``characterized'' is the 
technical terminology that is used. And those three sites would be 
forwarded to the President of the United States, and the President 
would make a decision.
  The law also contemplated that there would be regional bounds, or 
equity; that is, no part of the country would bear the entire burden of 
the Nation's nuclear waste disposal.
  Mr. President, no sooner had that policy been signed into law by 
President Reagan in the early part of 1983, than immediately politics 
became a driving force. In the campaign year that ensued, candidates 
for the Presidency asserted that, if elected--the promise was made to 
constituents of particular States that those States would be off limits 
in terms of being considered for a nuclear waste repository.
  Indeed, the Department of Energy itself was immersed in the politics 
of nuclear waste and in an internal memorandum concluded that New 
England with granite as a possible repository site would be eliminated 
because the politics--the politics, not the science, Mr. President--
would be too difficult. So one particular region of the country would 
be written off.
  Ultimately it was decided that a repository should not attempt to be 
sited east of the Mississippi River, not because of the science, not 
because of the geology, but because of the politics.
  So I repeat, Mr. President, this is a program that has been driven 
not by science, but by politics and with the imposition of totally 
unrealistic time lines.
  That is not just the conclusion of the Senator from Nevada. That is 
the conclusion of virtually every independent comment or observation. 
The technical review committee, the General Accounting Office, and 
others have all lamented that politics and unrealistic deadlines have 
caused the problem.
  Mr. President, fast forward to 1987, 5 years after the enactment of 
the Nuclear Waste Policy Act. In a conference report done in the still 
of evening, without an opportunity to debate the merits of this 
amendment, an addition was inserted into the conference report which 
indicated that rather than three sites being studied or characterized, 
only one site would be studied and that site would be Yucca Mountain in 
Nevada.
  I know of no scientist worthy of that name who would assert as a 
matter of 

[[Page S16400]]

public policy and good science that that was a sensible judgment. And 
yet the politics dictated that the State of Nevada, a small State with 
a small congressional representation, should be targeted out as the 
site and the only site to be characterized.
  This was not done in the context of public policy debate. It was not 
done where the representatives of Nevada had an opportunity to debate 
the merits or demerits. This was done surreptitiously in a conference 
report, and as the Members of the Chamber fully understand, that means 
that it is impossible to debate an amendment to remove that provision 
up or down.
  I wish I could say that that is the only tragic experience that the 
State of Nevada has had with the politics of nuclear waste. In 1992, 
the issue before the Congress was in an energy bill. In neither the 
House nor the Senate was debate or consideration given, as that piece 
of legislation was processed, to a reduction of health and safety 
standards that would apply only at Yucca Mountain.
  Once again, Mr. President, the State of Nevada was victimized by 
having a provision inserted into the energy bill that had not been 
debated, had not been considered by the Members of either House, and 
was added to the conference report. Once again, the State was 
disadvantaged in terms of raising legitimate public health and safety 
issues because the conference report is up or down, no opportunity to 
amend.
  The 1987 amendments are known ignominiously in Nevada as the ``screw 
Nevada'' plan. The 1992 amendments are ``screw Nevada II,'' and I am 
afraid that we are about to see unfold in this Congress what might be 
``screw Nevada III.''
  Mr. President, the State of Nevada continually seems to be focused 
with a nuclear bull's-eye on either Yucca Mountain or the Nevada test 
site. As in 1981 when the Away From Reactor Program was debated, again 
we hear the hysteria beginning to mount that unless we provide for 
interim storage, nuclear reactors will close and, indeed, regions of 
our country may be left without power.
  Nonsense. No nuclear reactor closed in 1981 as a result of the 
failure to adopt the AFR program. And no nuclear reactors are about 
ready to close today because of the failure to provide for an interim 
storage.
  There are two provisions, Mr. President, that currently exist in the 
Nuclear Waste Policy Act that I apprehend are in danger. One is a 
matter of fairness. One simply states that if a State is being 
characterized, studied, evaluated for the permanent high-level nuclear 
waste repository, it may not be designated as an interim storage, an 
MRS, monitor retrieval storage. Nuclear waste, whatever one feels about 
the propriety or the soundness of pursuing nuclear power, ought not to 
be the burden of a single State. And the Congress in 1992, to effect 
some semblance of fairness, made that point that if you are being 
considered for the permanent repository, you ought not to have to be 
considered for the interim storage.
  Recognizing another political fact of life, a reality, the Congress 
further concluded that an interim storage ought not to be selected 
until after the permanent site is selected because of the concern that 
everybody in this Chamber fully understands, that once an interim site 
is chosen, it will de facto--de facto--become the permanent site. That 
is the state of the record.

  What is involved with all of this hysteria about the need to have 
immediately an interim storage? It is the hysteria and propaganda of a 
nuclear power industry. Current law authorizes on-site storage, called 
dry-cast storage, and a number of responsible nuclear utilities have 
availed themselves of it.
  Not far from the Nation's Capital, I was privileged to visit such a 
nuclear reactor site in Calvert Cliffs where on-site dry-cast storage 
currently exists. It results in no change in the law and is available 
as a result of it having been licensed by the Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission.
  This provides a window of opportunity of approximately 100 years for 
us to deal responsibly and sensibly with the issue of nuclear waste and 
not driven by the immediacy of the politics nor of the unrealistic 
deadlines that are being thrust upon us.
  I know most Members of the Chamber would assume Nevada is the only 
one with a dog in this fight. That is simply not the case. Mr. 
President, there are 43 States that will be affected by the transfer of 
nuclear waste across the country. Some of the largest cities in the 
country, some of the most populous areas will be affected by some 
16,000 shipments that literally will move from every point on the 
compass.
  Not only do we apprehend the possibility of an accident, there are 
literally hundreds and hundreds of derailments each year in which a 
shipment of high-level nuclear waste could be the subject of an 
accident, more recently in Hyder, AZ, as we tragically found out the 
possibility of an act of terrorism. I cannot think of a more inviting 
target: a train load of high-level nuclear waste en route to a major 
metropolitan area to be targeted for an act of terrorism. As we have 
learned in the Hyder, AZ, incident, it took but a matter of minutes and 
did not require much sophistication to effect that tragedy.
  Mr. President, in this Congress, we have heard a lot about State's 
rights. Most of the debates in the major pieces of legislation that we 
have had have constantly emphasized the importance of returning to the 
States, to abandon the notion that the Federal Government has 
preeminent wisdom on major public policy issues, to allow the States to 
make decisions for themselves.
  It is for that reason I find it inconsistent with that philosophy 
that a number of my colleagues in the Chamber are suggesting that the 
Federal Government must preempt local government decisions and somehow 
formulate this policy of having an interim storage site chosen by this 
Congress and the site to be chosen is Nevada. That makes no sense to 
me, Mr. President, and I see no reason why that need be done.
  I might also point out to my colleagues that there is a certain 
hypocrisy. A number of my colleagues have gotten up and have expressed 
their strong support and commitment for nuclear power. Many apprehend 
that the industry, which is on its death bed in terms of its economic 
vitality and its prospects in the financial markets of the world, they 
believe passionately that locating an interim-storage site will 
regenerate interest in terms of the financial markets in the country in 
nuclear power. That is fine if they believe that. We have heard 
impassioned pleas by the distinguished senior Senator from Louisiana.
  Let me just say to my colleagues that those of you who believe that a 
nuclear power future is the future that you envision or contemplate for 
America, and if you think that that is the kind of public policy we 
need to adopt, volunteer your own State. Volunteer your own State. The 
current law permits a State to step forward and say, ``Look, we will 
voluntarily accept an interim site,'' and if that is what you believe 
and you are honest with your convictions and consistent with your 
convictions and believe it is in the national interest, then go ahead 
and volunteer your own State.
  What I take strong exception to and bitterly resent is the notion 
that somehow only Nevada can be the solution for the interim and the 
permanent nuclear waste problem in America. I do so, Mr. President, 
because Nevada has not chosen to have a nuclear power future. We have 
no nuclear reactors in Nevada. We do not want nuclear reactors in 
Nevada. We had no part of the decision made by many States to locate 
nuclear reactors in their own States and their own communities, and 
Nevada ought not to be called upon to bear the burden of the Nation's 
high-level nuclear waste when it neither sought such a policy nor 
participated in the decision of other States to do so.
  So, end this hypocrisy for those of my colleagues who want nuclear 
power to continue as a source of energy for America. Step forward and 
do the responsible thing if that is what you believe: Volunteer your 
own State. You can do so, but leave my State out of that equation, 
because we did not buy into the nuclear bargain that you did.
  Mr. President, I thank you, and I yield the floor to the 
distinguished Senator from Massachusetts.
  Mr. KERRY addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Grams). The Senator from Massachusetts.

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