[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 50 (Thursday, April 7, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2426-H2505]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AND FURTHER ADDITIONAL CONTINUING APPROPRIATIONS
ACT, 2011
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, pursuant to the rule, I call
up the bill (H.R. 1363) making appropriations for the Department of
Defense for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2011, and for other
purposes, and ask for its immediate consideration.
The Clerk read the title of the bill.
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Ms. Foxx). Pursuant to House Resolution 206,
the bill is considered read.
The text of the bill is as follows:
H.R. 1363
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. TABLE OF CONTENTS.
The table of contents for this Act is as follows:
Division A--Department of Defense Appropriations, 2011
Division B--Further Continuing Appropriations, 2011
DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE APPROPRIATIONS, 2011
The following sums are appropriated, out of any money in
the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the fiscal year
ending September 30, 2011, for military functions
administered by the Department of Defense and for other
purposes, namely:
TITLE I
MILITARY PERSONNEL
Military Personnel, Army
For pay, allowances, individual clothing, subsistence,
interest on deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station
travel (including all expenses thereof for organizational
movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between
permanent duty stations, for members of the Army on active
duty, (except members of reserve components provided for
elsewhere), cadets, and aviation cadets; for members of the
Reserve Officers' Training Corps; and for payments pursuant
to section 156 of Public Law 97-377, as amended (42 U.S.C.
402 note), and to the Department of Defense Military
Retirement Fund, $41,042,653,000.
Military Personnel, Navy
For pay, allowances, individual clothing, subsistence,
interest on deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station
travel (including all expenses thereof for organizational
movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between
permanent duty stations, for members of the Navy on active
duty (except members of the Reserve provided for elsewhere),
midshipmen, and aviation cadets; for members of the Reserve
Officers' Training Corps; and for payments pursuant to
section 156 of Public Law 97-377, as amended (42 U.S.C. 402
note), and to the Department of Defense Military Retirement
Fund, $25,912,449,000.
Military Personnel, Marine Corps
For pay, allowances, individual clothing, subsistence,
interest on deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station
travel (including all expenses thereof for organizational
movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between
permanent duty stations, for members of the Marine Corps on
active duty (except members of the Reserve provided for
elsewhere); and for payments pursuant to section 156 of
Public Law 97-377, as amended (42 U.S.C. 402 note), and to
the Department of Defense Military Retirement Fund,
$13,210,161,000.
Military Personnel, Air Force
For pay, allowances, individual clothing, subsistence,
interest on deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station
travel (including all expenses thereof for organizational
movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between
permanent duty stations, for members of the Air Force on
active duty (except members of reserve components provided
for elsewhere), cadets, and aviation cadets; for members of
the Reserve Officers' Training Corps; and for payments
pursuant to section 156 of Public Law 97-377, as amended (42
U.S.C. 402 note), and to the Department of Defense Military
Retirement Fund, $27,105,755,000.
Reserve Personnel, Army
For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities,
travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Army
Reserve on active duty under sections 10211, 10302, and 3038
of title 10, United States Code, or while serving on active
duty under section 12301(d) of title 10, United States Code,
in connection with performing duty specified in section
12310(a) of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing
reserve training, or while performing drills or equivalent
duty or other duty, and expenses authorized by section 16131
of title 10, United States Code; and for payments to the
Department of Defense Military Retirement Fund,
$4,333,165,000.
Reserve Personnel, Navy
For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities,
travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Navy
Reserve on active duty under section 10211 of title 10,
United States Code, or while serving on active duty under
section 12301(d) of title 10, United States Code, in
connection with performing duty specified in section 12310(a)
of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing reserve
training, or while performing drills or equivalent duty, and
expenses authorized by section 16131 of title 10, United
States Code; and for payments to the Department of Defense
Military Retirement Fund, $1,940,191,000.
Reserve Personnel, Marine Corps
For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities,
travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Marine
Corps Reserve on active duty under section 10211 of title 10,
United States Code, or while serving on active duty under
section 12301(d) of title 10, United States Code, in
connection with performing duty specified in section 12310(a)
of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing reserve
training, or while performing drills or equivalent duty, and
for members of the Marine Corps platoon leaders class, and
expenses authorized by section 16131 of title 10, United
States Code; and for payments to the Department of Defense
Military Retirement Fund, $612,191,000.
Reserve Personnel, Air Force
For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities,
travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Air Force
Reserve on active duty under sections 10211, 10305, and 8038
of title 10, United States Code, or while serving on active
duty under section 12301(d) of title 10, United States Code,
in connection with performing duty specified in section
12310(a) of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing
reserve training, or while performing drills or equivalent
duty or other duty, and expenses authorized by section 16131
of title 10, United States Code; and for payments to the
Department of Defense Military Retirement Fund,
$1,650,797,000.
National Guard Personnel, Army
For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities,
travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Army
National Guard while on duty under section 10211, 10302, or
12402 of title 10 or section 708 of title 32, United States
Code, or while serving on duty under section 12301(d) of
title 10 or section 502(f) of title 32, United States Code,
in connection with performing duty specified in section
12310(a) of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing
training, or while performing drills or equivalent duty or
other duty, and expenses authorized by section 16131 of title
10, United States Code; and for payments to the Department of
Defense Military Retirement Fund, $7,511,296,000.
National Guard Personnel, Air Force
For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities,
travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Air
National Guard on duty under section 10211, 10305, or 12402
of title 10 or section 708 of title 32, United States Code,
or while serving on duty under section 12301(d) of title 10
or section 502(f) of title 32, United States Code, in
connection with performing duty specified in section 12310(a)
of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing
training, or while performing drills or equivalent duty or
other duty, and expenses authorized by section 16131 of title
10, United States Code; and for payments to the Department of
Defense Military Retirement Fund, $3,060,098,000.
TITLE II
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Operation and Maintenance, Army
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance of the Army, as authorized by law;
and not to exceed $12,478,000 can be used for emergencies and
extraordinary expenses, to be expended on the approval or
authority of the Secretary of the Army, and payments may be
made on his certificate of necessity for confidential
military purposes, $33,306,117,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Navy
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance of the Navy and the Marine Corps,
as authorized by law; and not to exceed $14,804,000 can be
used for emergencies and extraordinary expenses, to be
expended on the approval or authority of the Secretary of the
Navy, and payments may be made on his certificate of
necessity for confidential military purposes,
$37,809,239,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Marine Corps
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance of the Marine Corps, as authorized
by law, $5,539,740,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Air Force
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance of the Air Force, as authorized by
law; and not to exceed $7,699,000 can be used for emergencies
and extraordinary expenses, to be expended on the approval or
authority of the Secretary of the Air Force, and payments may
be made on his certificate of necessity for confidential
military purposes, $36,062,989,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide
(including transfer of funds)
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance of activities and agencies of the
Department of Defense (other than the military departments),
as authorized by law, $30,210,810,000:
[[Page H2427]]
Provided, That not more than $50,000,000 may be used for the
Combatant Commander Initiative Fund authorized under section
166a of title 10, United States Code: Provided further, That
not to exceed $36,000,000 can be used for emergencies and
extraordinary expenses, to be expended on the approval or
authority of the Secretary of Defense, and payments may be
made on his certificate of necessity for confidential
military purposes: Provided further, That of the funds
provided under this heading, not less than $31,659,000 shall
be made available for the Procurement Technical Assistance
Cooperative Agreement Program, of which not less than
$3,600,000 shall be available for centers defined in 10
U.S.C. 2411(1)(D): Provided further, That none of the funds
appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act may be
used to plan or implement the consolidation of a budget or
appropriations liaison office of the Office of the Secretary
of Defense, the office of the Secretary of a military
department, or the service headquarters of one of the Armed
Forces into a legislative affairs or legislative liaison
office: Provided further, That $8,251,000, to remain
available until expended, is available only for expenses
relating to certain classified activities, and may be
transferred as necessary by the Secretary of Defense to
operation and maintenance appropriations or research,
development, test and evaluation appropriations, to be merged
with and to be available for the same time period as the
appropriations to which transferred: Provided further, That
any ceiling on the investment item unit cost of items that
may be purchased with operation and maintenance funds shall
not apply to the funds described in the preceding proviso:
Provided further, That the transfer authority provided under
this heading is in addition to any other transfer authority
provided elsewhere in this Act.
Operation and Maintenance, Army Reserve
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance, including training, organization,
and administration, of the Army Reserve; repair of facilities
and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles; travel and
transportation; care of the dead; recruiting; procurement of
services, supplies, and equipment; and communications,
$2,840,427,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Navy Reserve
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance, including training, organization,
and administration, of the Navy Reserve; repair of facilities
and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles; travel and
transportation; care of the dead; recruiting; procurement of
services, supplies, and equipment; and communications,
$1,344,264,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Marine Corps Reserve
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance, including training, organization,
and administration, of the Marine Corps Reserve; repair of
facilities and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles;
travel and transportation; care of the dead; recruiting;
procurement of services, supplies, and equipment; and
communications, $275,484,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Air Force Reserve
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
operation and maintenance, including training, organization,
and administration, of the Air Force Reserve; repair of
facilities and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles;
travel and transportation; care of the dead; recruiting;
procurement of services, supplies, and equipment; and
communications, $3,291,027,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Army National Guard
For expenses of training, organizing, and administering the
Army National Guard, including medical and hospital treatment
and related expenses in non-Federal hospitals; maintenance,
operation, and repairs to structures and facilities; hire of
passenger motor vehicles; personnel services in the National
Guard Bureau; travel expenses (other than mileage), as
authorized by law for Army personnel on active duty, for Army
National Guard division, regimental, and battalion commanders
while inspecting units in compliance with National Guard
Bureau regulations when specifically authorized by the Chief,
National Guard Bureau; supplying and equipping the Army
National Guard as authorized by law; and expenses of repair,
modification, maintenance, and issue of supplies and
equipment (including aircraft), $6,454,624,000.
Operation and Maintenance, Air National Guard
For expenses of training, organizing, and administering the
Air National Guard, including medical and hospital treatment
and related expenses in non-Federal hospitals; maintenance,
operation, and repairs to structures and facilities;
transportation of things, hire of passenger motor vehicles;
supplying and equipping the Air National Guard, as authorized
by law; expenses for repair, modification, maintenance, and
issue of supplies and equipment, including those furnished
from stocks under the control of agencies of the Department
of Defense; travel expenses (other than mileage) on the same
basis as authorized by law for Air National Guard personnel
on active Federal duty, for Air National Guard commanders
while inspecting units in compliance with National Guard
Bureau regulations when specifically authorized by the Chief,
National Guard Bureau, $5,963,839,000.
United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
For salaries and expenses necessary for the United States
Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, $14,068,000, of which
not to exceed $5,000 may be used for official representation
purposes.
Environmental Restoration, Army
(including transfer of funds)
For the Department of the Army, $464,581,000, to remain
available until transferred: Provided, That the Secretary of
the Army shall, upon determining that such funds are required
for environmental restoration, reduction and recycling of
hazardous waste, removal of unsafe buildings and debris of
the Department of the Army, or for similar purposes, transfer
the funds made available by this appropriation to other
appropriations made available to the Department of the Army,
to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes
and for the same time period as the appropriations to which
transferred: Provided further, That upon a determination
that all or part of the funds transferred from this
appropriation are not necessary for the purposes provided
herein, such amounts may be transferred back to this
appropriation: Provided further, That the transfer authority
provided under this heading is in addition to any other
transfer authority provided elsewhere in this Act.
Environmental Restoration, Navy
(including transfer of funds)
For the Department of the Navy, $304,867,000, to remain
available until transferred: Provided, That the Secretary of
the Navy shall, upon determining that such funds are required
for environmental restoration, reduction and recycling of
hazardous waste, removal of unsafe buildings and debris of
the Department of the Navy, or for similar purposes, transfer
the funds made available by this appropriation to other
appropriations made available to the Department of the Navy,
to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes
and for the same time period as the appropriations to which
transferred: Provided further, That upon a determination
that all or part of the funds transferred from this
appropriation are not necessary for the purposes provided
herein, such amounts may be transferred back to this
appropriation: Provided further, That the transfer authority
provided under this heading is in addition to any other
transfer authority provided elsewhere in this Act.
Environmental Restoration, Air Force
(including transfer of funds)
For the Department of the Air Force, $502,653,000, to
remain available until transferred: Provided, That the
Secretary of the Air Force shall, upon determining that such
funds are required for environmental restoration, reduction
and recycling of hazardous waste, removal of unsafe buildings
and debris of the Department of the Air Force, or for similar
purposes, transfer the funds made available by this
appropriation to other appropriations made available to the
Department of the Air Force, to be merged with and to be
available for the same purposes and for the same time period
as the appropriations to which transferred: Provided
further, That upon a determination that all or part of the
funds transferred from this appropriation are not necessary
for the purposes provided herein, such amounts may be
transferred back to this appropriation: Provided further,
That the transfer authority provided under this heading is in
addition to any other transfer authority provided elsewhere
in this Act.
Environmental Restoration, Defense-Wide
(including transfer of funds)
For the Department of Defense, $10,744,000, to remain
available until transferred: Provided, That the Secretary of
Defense shall, upon determining that such funds are required
for environmental restoration, reduction and recycling of
hazardous waste, removal of unsafe buildings and debris of
the Department of Defense, or for similar purposes, transfer
the funds made available by this appropriation to other
appropriations made available to the Department of Defense,
to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes
and for the same time period as the appropriations to which
transferred: Provided further, That upon a determination
that all or part of the funds transferred from this
appropriation are not necessary for the purposes provided
herein, such amounts may be transferred back to this
appropriation: Provided further, That the transfer authority
provided under this heading is in addition to any other
transfer authority provided elsewhere in this Act.
Environmental Restoration, Formerly Used Defense Sites
(including transfer of funds)
For the Department of the Army, $316,546,000, to remain
available until transferred: Provided, That the Secretary of
the Army shall, upon determining that such funds are required
for environmental restoration, reduction and recycling of
hazardous waste, removal of unsafe buildings and debris at
sites formerly used by the Department of Defense, transfer
the funds made available by this appropriation to other
appropriations made available to the Department of the Army,
to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes
and for
[[Page H2428]]
the same time period as the appropriations to which
transferred: Provided further, That upon a determination
that all or part of the funds transferred from this
appropriation are not necessary for the purposes provided
herein, such amounts may be transferred back to this
appropriation: Provided further, That the transfer authority
provided under this heading is in addition to any other
transfer authority provided elsewhere in this Act.
Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster, and Civic Aid
For expenses relating to the Overseas Humanitarian,
Disaster, and Civic Aid programs of the Department of Defense
(consisting of the programs provided under sections 401, 402,
404, 407, 2557, and 2561 of title 10, United States Code),
$108,032,000, to remain available until September 30, 2012.
Cooperative Threat Reduction Account
For assistance to the republics of the former Soviet Union
and, with appropriate authorization by the Department of
Defense and Department of State, to countries outside of the
former Soviet Union, including assistance provided by
contract or by grants, for facilitating the elimination and
the safe and secure transportation and storage of nuclear,
chemical and other weapons; for establishing programs to
prevent the proliferation of weapons, weapons components, and
weapon-related technology and expertise; for programs
relating to the training and support of defense and military
personnel for demilitarization and protection of weapons,
weapons components and weapons technology and expertise, and
for defense and military contacts, $522,512,000, to remain
available until September 30, 2013: Provided, That of the
amounts provided under this heading, not less than
$13,500,000 shall be available only to support the
dismantling and disposal of nuclear submarines, submarine
reactor components, and security enhancements for transport
and storage of nuclear warheads in the Russian Far East and
North.
Department of Defense Acquisition Workforce Development Fund
For the Department of Defense Acquisition Workforce
Development Fund, $217,561,000.
TITLE III
PROCUREMENT
Aircraft Procurement, Army
For construction, procurement, production, modification,
and modernization of aircraft, equipment, including ordnance,
ground handling equipment, spare parts, and accessories
therefor; specialized equipment and training devices;
expansion of public and private plants, including the land
necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances,
and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant
and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and
other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes,
$5,254,791,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Missile Procurement, Army
For construction, procurement, production, modification,
and modernization of missiles, equipment, including ordnance,
ground handling equipment, spare parts, and accessories
therefor; specialized equipment and training devices;
expansion of public and private plants, including the land
necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances,
and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant
and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and
other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes,
$1,570,108,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Procurement of Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army
For construction, procurement, production, and modification
of weapons and tracked combat vehicles, equipment, including
ordnance, spare parts, and accessories therefor; specialized
equipment and training devices; expansion of public and
private plants, including the land necessary therefor, for
the foregoing purposes, and such lands and interests therein,
may be acquired, and construction prosecuted thereon prior to
approval of title; and procurement and installation of
equipment, appliances, and machine tools in public and
private plants; reserve plant and Government and contractor-
owned equipment layaway; and other expenses necessary for the
foregoing purposes, $1,461,086,000, to remain available for
obligation until September 30, 2013.
Procurement of Ammunition, Army
For construction, procurement, production, and modification
of ammunition, and accessories therefor; specialized
equipment and training devices; expansion of public and
private plants, including ammunition facilities, authorized
by section 2854 of title 10, United States Code, and the land
necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances,
and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant
and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and
other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes,
$1,847,066,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Other Procurement, Army
(including transfer of funds)
For construction, procurement, production, and modification
of vehicles, including tactical, support, and non-tracked
combat vehicles; the purchase of passenger motor vehicles for
replacement only; communications and electronic equipment;
other support equipment; spare parts, ordnance, and
accessories therefor; specialized equipment and training
devices; expansion of public and private plants, including
the land necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and
such lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances,
and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant
and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and
other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes,
$8,145,665,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013: Provided, That of the funds made
available in this paragraph, $15,000,000 shall be made
available to procure equipment, not otherwise provided for,
and may be transferred to other procurement accounts
available to the Department of the Army, and that funds so
transferred shall be available for the same purposes and the
same time period as the account to which transferred.
Aircraft Procurement, Navy
For construction, procurement, production, modification,
and modernization of aircraft, equipment, including ordnance,
spare parts, and accessories therefor; specialized equipment;
expansion of public and private plants, including the land
necessary therefor, and such lands and interests therein, may
be acquired, and construction prosecuted thereon prior to
approval of title; and procurement and installation of
equipment, appliances, and machine tools in public and
private plants; reserve plant and Government and contractor-
owned equipment layaway, $16,170,868,000, to remain available
for obligation until September 30, 2013.
Weapons Procurement, Navy
For construction, procurement, production, modification,
and modernization of missiles, torpedoes, other weapons, and
related support equipment including spare parts, and
accessories therefor; expansion of public and private plants,
including the land necessary therefor, and such lands and
interests therein, may be acquired, and construction
prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; and
procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, and
machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant and
Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway,
$3,221,957,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Procurement of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps
For construction, procurement, production, and modification
of ammunition, and accessories therefor; specialized
equipment and training devices; expansion of public and
private plants, including ammunition facilities, authorized
by section 2854 of title 10, United States Code, and the land
necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances,
and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant
and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and
other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes,
$790,527,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy
For expenses necessary for the construction, acquisition,
or conversion of vessels as authorized by law, including
armor and armament thereof, plant equipment, appliances, and
machine tools and installation thereof in public and private
plants; reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned
equipment layaway; procurement of critical, long lead time
components and designs for vessels to be constructed or
converted in the future; and expansion of public and private
plants, including land necessary therefor, and such lands and
interests therein, may be acquired, and construction
prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title, as follows:
Carrier Replacement Program, $1,721,969,000.
Carrier Replacement Program (AP), $908,313,000.
NSSN, $3,430,343,000.
NSSN (AP), $1,691,236,000.
CVN Refueling, $1,248,999,000.
CVN Refuelings (AP), $408,037,000.
DDG-1000 Program, $77,512,000.
DDG-51 Destroyer, $2,868,454,000.
DDG-51 Destroyer (AP), $47,984,000.
Littoral Combat Ship, $1,168,984,000.
Littoral Combat Ship (AP), $190,351,000.
LHA-R, $942,837,000.
Joint High Speed Vessel, $180,703,000.
Oceanographic Ships, $88,561,000.
LCAC Service Life Extension Program, $83,035,000.
Service Craft, $13,770,000.
For outfitting, post delivery, conversions, and first
destination transportation, $295,570,000.
In all: $15,366,658,000, to remain available for obligation
until September 30, 2015: Provided, That additional
obligations may be incurred after September 30, 2015, for
engineering services, tests, evaluations, and other
[[Page H2429]]
such budgeted work that must be performed in the final stage
of ship construction: Provided further, That none of the
funds provided under this heading for the construction or
conversion of any naval vessel to be constructed in shipyards
in the United States shall be expended in foreign facilities
for the construction of major components of such vessel:
Provided further, That none of the funds provided under this
heading shall be used for the construction of any naval
vessel in foreign shipyards.
Other Procurement, Navy
(including transfer of funds)
For procurement, production, and modernization of support
equipment and materials not otherwise provided for, Navy
ordnance (except ordnance for new aircraft, new ships, and
ships authorized for conversion); the purchase of passenger
motor vehicles for replacement only, and the purchase of
seven vehicles required for physical security of personnel,
notwithstanding price limitations applicable to passenger
vehicles but not to exceed $250,000 per vehicle; expansion of
public and private plants, including the land necessary
therefor, and such lands and interests therein, may be
acquired, and construction prosecuted thereon prior to
approval of title; and procurement and installation of
equipment, appliances, and machine tools in public and
private plants; reserve plant and Government and contractor-
owned equipment layaway, $5,804,963,000, to remain available
for obligation until September 30, 2013: Provided, That of
the funds made available in this paragraph, $15,000,000 shall
be made available to procure equipment, not otherwise
provided for, and may be transferred to other procurement
accounts available to the Department of the Navy, and that
funds so transferred shall be available for the same purposes
and the same time period as the account to which transferred.
Procurement, Marine Corps
For expenses necessary for the procurement, manufacture,
and modification of missiles, armament, military equipment,
spare parts, and accessories therefor; plant equipment,
appliances, and machine tools, and installation thereof in
public and private plants; reserve plant and Government and
contractor-owned equipment layaway; vehicles for the Marine
Corps, including the purchase of passenger motor vehicles for
replacement only; and expansion of public and private plants,
including land necessary therefor, and such lands and
interests therein, may be acquired, and construction
prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title,
$1,236,436,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Aircraft Procurement, Air Force
For construction, procurement, and modification of aircraft
and equipment, including armor and armament, specialized
ground handling equipment, and training devices, spare parts,
and accessories therefor; specialized equipment; expansion of
public and private plants, Government-owned equipment and
installation thereof in such plants, erection of structures,
and acquisition of land, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned equipment
layaway; and other expenses necessary for the foregoing
purposes including rents and transportation of things,
$13,483,739,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013: Provided, That none of the funds
provided in this Act for modification of C-17 aircraft,
Global Hawk Unmanned Aerial Vehicle and F-22 aircraft may be
obligated until all C-17, Global Hawk and F-22 contracts
funded with prior year ``Aircraft Procurement, Air Force''
appropriated funds are definitized unless the Secretary of
the Air Force certifies in writing to the congressional
defense committees that each such obligation is necessary to
meet the needs of a warfighting requirement or prevents
increased costs to the taxpayer, and provides the reasons for
failing to definitize the prior year contracts along with the
prospective contract definitization schedule: Provided
further, That the Secretary of the Air Force shall expand the
current HH-60 Operational Loss Replacement program to meet
the approved HH-60 Recapitalization program requirements.
Missile Procurement, Air Force
For construction, procurement, and modification of
missiles, spacecraft, rockets, and related equipment,
including spare parts and accessories therefor, ground
handling equipment, and training devices; expansion of public
and private plants, Government-owned equipment and
installation thereof in such plants, erection of structures,
and acquisition of land, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned equipment
layaway; and other expenses necessary for the foregoing
purposes including rents and transportation of things,
$5,424,764,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Procurement of Ammunition, Air Force
For construction, procurement, production, and modification
of ammunition, and accessories therefor; specialized
equipment and training devices; expansion of public and
private plants, including ammunition facilities, authorized
by section 2854 of title 10, United States Code, and the land
necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title;
and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances,
and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant
and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and
other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes,
$731,487,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013.
Other Procurement, Air Force
(including transfer of funds)
For procurement and modification of equipment (including
ground guidance and electronic control equipment, and ground
electronic and communication equipment), and supplies,
materials, and spare parts therefor, not otherwise provided
for; the purchase of passenger motor vehicles for replacement
only, and the purchase of two vehicles required for physical
security of personnel, notwithstanding price limitations
applicable to passenger vehicles but not to exceed $250,000
per vehicle; lease of passenger motor vehicles; and expansion
of public and private plants, Government-owned equipment and
installation thereof in such plants, erection of structures,
and acquisition of land, for the foregoing purposes, and such
lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and
construction prosecuted thereon, prior to approval of title;
reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned equipment
layaway, $17,568,091,000, to remain available for obligation
until September 30, 2013: Provided, That of the funds made
available in this paragraph, $15,000,000 shall be made
available to procure equipment, not otherwise provided for,
and may be transferred to other procurement accounts
available to the Department of the Air Force, and that funds
so transferred shall be available for the same purposes and
the same time period as the account to which transferred.
Procurement, Defense-Wide
(including transfer of funds)
For expenses of activities and agencies of the Department
of Defense (other than the military departments) necessary
for procurement, production, and modification of equipment,
supplies, materials, and spare parts therefor, not otherwise
provided for; the purchase of passenger motor vehicles for
replacement only; expansion of public and private plants,
equipment, and installation thereof in such plants, erection
of structures, and acquisition of land for the foregoing
purposes, and such lands and interests therein, may be
acquired, and construction prosecuted thereon prior to
approval of title; reserve plant and Government and
contractor-owned equipment layaway, $4,009,321,000, to remain
available for obligation until September 30, 2013: Provided,
That of the funds made available in this paragraph,
$15,000,000 shall be made available to procure equipment, not
otherwise provided for, and may be transferred to other
procurement accounts available to the Department of Defense,
and that funds so transferred shall be available for the same
purposes and the same time period as the account to which
transferred.
Defense Production Act Purchases
For activities by the Department of Defense pursuant to
sections 108, 301, 302, and 303 of the Defense Production Act
of 1950 (50 U.S.C. App. 2078, 2091, 2092, and 2093),
$34,346,000, to remain available until expended.
TITLE IV
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND EVALUATION
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Army
For expenses necessary for basic and applied scientific
research, development, test and evaluation, including
maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and operation of
facilities and equipment, $9,710,998,000, to remain available
for obligation until September 30, 2012.
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Navy
For expenses necessary for basic and applied scientific
research, development, test and evaluation, including
maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and operation of
facilities and equipment, $17,736,303,000, to remain
available for obligation until September 30, 2012: Provided,
That funds appropriated in this paragraph which are available
for the V-22 may be used to meet unique operational
requirements of the Special Operations Forces: Provided
further, That funds appropriated in this paragraph shall be
available for the Cobra Judy program.
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Air Force
For expenses necessary for basic and applied scientific
research, development, test and evaluation, including
maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and operation of
facilities and equipment, $26,517,405,000, to remain
available for obligation until September 30, 2012.
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-Wide
For expenses of activities and agencies of the Department
of Defense (other than the military departments), necessary
for basic and applied scientific research, development, test
and evaluation; advanced research projects as may be
designated and determined by the Secretary of Defense,
pursuant to law; maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and
operation of facilities and equipment, $20,797,412,000, to
remain available for obligation until September 30, 2012:
Provided, That
[[Page H2430]]
of the funds made available in this paragraph, $3,200,000
shall only be available for program management and oversight
of innovative research and development.
Operational Test and Evaluation, Defense
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
independent activities of the Director, Operational Test and
Evaluation, in the direction and supervision of operational
test and evaluation, including initial operational test and
evaluation which is conducted prior to, and in support of,
production decisions; joint operational testing and
evaluation; and administrative expenses in connection
therewith, $194,910,000, to remain available for obligation
until September 30, 2012.
TITLE V
REVOLVING AND MANAGEMENT FUNDS
Defense Working Capital Funds
For the Defense Working Capital Funds, $1,434,536,000.
National Defense Sealift Fund
For National Defense Sealift Fund programs, projects, and
activities, and for expenses of the National Defense Reserve
Fleet, as established by section 11 of the Merchant Ship
Sales Act of 1946 (50 U.S.C. App. 1744), and for the
necessary expenses to maintain and preserve a U.S.-flag
merchant fleet to serve the national security needs of the
United States, $1,474,866,000, to remain available until
expended: Provided, That none of the funds provided in this
paragraph shall be used to award a new contract that provides
for the acquisition of any of the following major components
unless such components are manufactured in the United States:
auxiliary equipment, including pumps, for all shipboard
services; propulsion system components (engines, reduction
gears, and propellers); shipboard cranes; and spreaders for
shipboard cranes: Provided further, That the exercise of an
option in a contract awarded through the obligation of
previously appropriated funds shall not be considered to be
the award of a new contract: Provided further, That the
Secretary of the military department responsible for such
procurement may waive the restrictions in the first proviso
on a case-by-case basis by certifying in writing to the
Committees on Appropriations of the House of Representatives
and the Senate that adequate domestic supplies are not
available to meet Department of Defense requirements on a
timely basis and that such an acquisition must be made in
order to acquire capability for national security purposes.
TITLE VI
OTHER DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PROGRAMS
Defense Health Program
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, for medical and
health care programs of the Department of Defense as
authorized by law, $31,382,198,000; of which $29,671,764,000
shall be for operation and maintenance, of which not to
exceed 1 percent shall remain available until September 30,
2012, and of which up to $16,212,121,000 may be available for
contracts entered into under the TRICARE program; of which
$534,921,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2013, shall be for procurement; and of which
$1,175,513,000, to remain available for obligation until
September 30, 2012, shall be for research, development, test
and evaluation: Provided, That, notwithstanding any other
provision of law, of the amount made available under this
heading for research, development, test and evaluation, not
less than $10,000,000 shall be available for HIV prevention
educational activities undertaken in connection with United
States military training, exercises, and humanitarian
assistance activities conducted primarily in African nations.
Chemical Agents and Munitions Destruction, Defense
For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the
destruction of the United States stockpile of lethal chemical
agents and munitions, to include construction of facilities,
in accordance with the provisions of section 1412 of the
Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1986 (50 U.S.C.
1521), and for the destruction of other chemical warfare
materials that are not in the chemical weapon stockpile,
$1,467,307,000, of which $1,067,364,000 shall be for
operation and maintenance, of which no less than
$111,178,000, shall be for the Chemical Stockpile Emergency
Preparedness Program, consisting of $35,130,000 for
activities on military installations and $76,048,000, to
remain available until September 30, 2012, to assist State
and local governments; $7,132,000 shall be for procurement,
to remain available until September 30, 2013; and
$392,811,000, to remain available until September 30, 2012,
shall be for research, development, test and evaluation, of
which $385,868,000 shall only be for the Assembled Chemical
Weapons Alternatives (ACWA) program.
Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense
(including transfer of funds)
For drug interdiction and counter-drug activities of the
Department of Defense, for transfer to appropriations
available to the Department of Defense for military personnel
of the reserve components serving under the provisions of
title 10 and title 32, United States Code; for operation and
maintenance; for procurement; and for research, development,
test and evaluation, $1,156,957,000: Provided, That the
funds appropriated under this heading shall be available for
obligation for the same time period and for the same purpose
as the appropriation to which transferred: Provided further,
That upon a determination that all or part of the funds
transferred from this appropriation are not necessary for the
purposes provided herein, such amounts may be transferred
back to this appropriation: Provided further, That the
transfer authority provided under this heading is in addition
to any other transfer authority contained elsewhere in this
Act.
Office of the Inspector General
For expenses and activities of the Office of the Inspector
General in carrying out the provisions of the Inspector
General Act of 1978, as amended, $306,794,000, of which
$305,794,000 shall be for operation and maintenance, of which
not to exceed $700,000 is available for emergencies and
extraordinary expenses to be expended on the approval or
authority of the Inspector General, and payments may be made
on the Inspector General's certificate of necessity for
confidential military purposes; and of which $1,000,000, to
remain available until September 30, 2013, shall be for
procurement.
TITLE VII
RELATED AGENCIES
Central Intelligence Agency Retirement and Disability System Fund
For payment to the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement
and Disability System Fund, to maintain the proper funding
level for continuing the operation of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement and Disability System,
$292,000,000.
Intelligence Community Management Account
For necessary expenses of the Intelligence Community
Management Account, $649,732,000.
TITLE VIII
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Sec. 8001. No part of any appropriation contained in this
Act shall be used for publicity or propaganda purposes not
authorized by the Congress.
Sec. 8002. During the current fiscal year, provisions of
law prohibiting the payment of compensation to, or employment
of, any person not a citizen of the United States shall not
apply to personnel of the Department of Defense: Provided,
That salary increases granted to direct and indirect hire
foreign national employees of the Department of Defense
funded by this Act shall not be at a rate in excess of the
percentage increase authorized by law for civilian employees
of the Department of Defense whose pay is computed under the
provisions of section 5332 of title 5, United States Code, or
at a rate in excess of the percentage increase provided by
the appropriate host nation to its own employees, whichever
is higher: Provided further, That, in the case of a host
nation that does not provide salary increases on an annual
basis, any increase granted by that nation shall be
annualized for the purpose of applying the preceding proviso:
Provided further, That this section shall not apply to
Department of Defense foreign service national employees
serving at United States diplomatic missions whose pay is set
by the Department of State under the Foreign Service Act of
1980: Provided further, That the limitations of this
provision shall not apply to foreign national employees of
the Department of Defense in the Republic of Turkey.
Sec. 8003. No part of any appropriation contained in this
Act shall remain available for obligation beyond the current
fiscal year, unless expressly so provided herein.
Sec. 8004. No more than 20 percent of the appropriations
in this Act which are limited for obligation during the
current fiscal year shall be obligated during the last 2
months of the fiscal year: Provided, That this section shall
not apply to obligations for support of active duty training
of reserve components or summer camp training of the Reserve
Officers' Training Corps.
(transfer of funds)
Sec. 8005. Upon determination by the Secretary of Defense
that such action is necessary in the national interest, he
may, with the approval of the Office of Management and
Budget, transfer not to exceed $4,000,000,000 of working
capital funds of the Department of Defense or funds made
available in this Act to the Department of Defense for
military functions (except military construction) between
such appropriations or funds or any subdivision thereof, to
be merged with and to be available for the same purposes, and
for the same time period, as the appropriation or fund to
which transferred: Provided, That such authority to transfer
may not be used unless for higher priority items, based on
unforeseen military requirements, than those for which
originally appropriated and in no case where the item for
which funds are requested has been denied by the Congress:
Provided further, That the Secretary of Defense shall notify
the Congress promptly of all transfers made pursuant to this
authority or any other authority in this Act: Provided
further, That no part of the funds in this Act shall be
available to prepare or present a request to the Committees
on Appropriations for reprogramming of funds, unless for
higher priority items, based on unforeseen military
requirements, than those for which originally appropriated
and in no case where the item for which reprogramming is
requested has been denied by the Congress: Provided further,
That a request for multiple reprogrammings of funds using
authority
[[Page H2431]]
provided in this section shall be made prior to June 30,
2011: Provided further, That transfers among military
personnel appropriations shall not be taken into account for
purposes of the limitation on the amount of funds that may be
transferred under this section.
Sec. 8006. (a) With regard to the list of specific
programs, projects, and activities (and the dollar amounts
and adjustments to budget activities corresponding to such
programs, projects, and activities) contained in the tables
titled ``Explanation of Project Level Adjustments'' in the
explanatory statement regarding this Act, the obligation and
expenditure of amounts appropriated or otherwise made
available in this Act for those programs, projects, and
activities for which the amounts appropriated exceed the
amounts requested are hereby required by law to be carried
out in the manner provided by such tables to the same extent
as if the tables were included in the text of this Act.
(b) Amounts specified in the referenced tables described in
subsection (a) shall not be treated as subdivisions of
appropriations for purposes of section 8005 of this Act:
Provided, That section 8005 shall apply when transfers of the
amounts described in subsection (a) occur between
appropriation accounts.
Sec. 8007. (a) Not later than 60 days after enactment of
this Act, the Department of Defense shall submit a report to
the congressional defense committees to establish the
baseline for application of reprogramming and transfer
authorities for fiscal year 2011: Provided, That the report
shall include--
(1) a table for each appropriation with a separate column
to display the President's budget request, adjustments made
by Congress, adjustments due to enacted rescissions, if
appropriate, and the fiscal year enacted level;
(2) a delineation in the table for each appropriation both
by budget activity and program, project, and activity as
detailed in the Budget Appendix; and
(3) an identification of items of special congressional
interest.
(b) Notwithstanding section 8005 of this Act, none of the
funds provided in this Act shall be available for
reprogramming or transfer until the report identified in
subsection (a) is submitted to the congressional defense
committees, unless the Secretary of Defense certifies in
writing to the congressional defense committees that such
reprogramming or transfer is necessary as an emergency
requirement.
(transfer of funds)
Sec. 8008. During the current fiscal year, cash balances
in working capital funds of the Department of Defense
established pursuant to section 2208 of title 10, United
States Code, may be maintained in only such amounts as are
necessary at any time for cash disbursements to be made from
such funds: Provided, That transfers may be made between
such funds: Provided further, That transfers may be made
between working capital funds and the ``Foreign Currency
Fluctuations, Defense'' appropriation and the ``Operation and
Maintenance'' appropriation accounts in such amounts as may
be determined by the Secretary of Defense, with the approval
of the Office of Management and Budget, except that such
transfers may not be made unless the Secretary of Defense has
notified the Congress of the proposed transfer. Except in
amounts equal to the amounts appropriated to working capital
funds in this Act, no obligations may be made against a
working capital fund to procure or increase the value of war
reserve material inventory, unless the Secretary of Defense
has notified the Congress prior to any such obligation.
Sec. 8009. Funds appropriated by this Act may not be used
to initiate a special access program without prior
notification 30 calendar days in advance to the congressional
defense committees.
Sec. 8010. None of the funds provided in this Act shall be
available to initiate: (1) a multiyear contract that employs
economic order quantity procurement in excess of $20,000,000
in any one year of the contract or that includes an unfunded
contingent liability in excess of $20,000,000; or (2) a
contract for advance procurement leading to a multiyear
contract that employs economic order quantity procurement in
excess of $20,000,000 in any one year, unless the
congressional defense committees have been notified at least
30 days in advance of the proposed contract award: Provided,
That no part of any appropriation contained in this Act shall
be available to initiate a multiyear contract for which the
economic order quantity advance procurement is not funded at
least to the limits of the Government's liability: Provided
further, That no part of any appropriation contained in this
Act shall be available to initiate multiyear procurement
contracts for any systems or component thereof if the value
of the multiyear contract would exceed $500,000,000 unless
specifically provided in this Act: Provided further, That no
multiyear procurement contract can be terminated without 10-
day prior notification to the congressional defense
committees: Provided further, That the execution of
multiyear authority shall require the use of a present value
analysis to determine lowest cost compared to an annual
procurement: Provided further, That none of the funds
provided in this Act may be used for a multiyear contract
executed after the date of the enactment of this Act unless
in the case of any such contract--
(1) the Secretary of Defense has submitted to Congress a
budget request for full funding of units to be procured
through the contract and, in the case of a contract for
procurement of aircraft, that includes, for any aircraft unit
to be procured through the contract for which procurement
funds are requested in that budget request for production
beyond advance procurement activities in the fiscal year
covered by the budget, full funding of procurement of such
unit in that fiscal year;
(2) cancellation provisions in the contract do not include
consideration of recurring manufacturing costs of the
contractor associated with the production of unfunded units
to be delivered under the contract;
(3) the contract provides that payments to the contractor
under the contract shall not be made in advance of incurred
costs on funded units; and
(4) the contract does not provide for a price adjustment
based on a failure to award a follow-on contract.
Funds appropriated in title III of this Act may be used
for a multiyear procurement contract as follows:
Navy MH-60R/S Helicopter Systems.
Sec. 8011. Within the funds appropriated for the operation
and maintenance of the Armed Forces, funds are hereby
appropriated pursuant to section 401 of title 10, United
States Code, for humanitarian and civic assistance costs
under chapter 20 of title 10, United States Code. Such funds
may also be obligated for humanitarian and civic assistance
costs incidental to authorized operations and pursuant to
authority granted in section 401 of chapter 20 of title 10,
United States Code, and these obligations shall be reported
as required by section 401(d) of title 10, United States
Code: Provided, That funds available for operation and
maintenance shall be available for providing humanitarian and
similar assistance by using Civic Action Teams in the Trust
Territories of the Pacific Islands and freely associated
states of Micronesia, pursuant to the Compact of Free
Association as authorized by Public Law 99-239: Provided
further, That upon a determination by the Secretary of the
Army that such action is beneficial for graduate medical
education programs conducted at Army medical facilities
located in Hawaii, the Secretary of the Army may authorize
the provision of medical services at such facilities and
transportation to such facilities, on a nonreimbursable
basis, for civilian patients from American Samoa, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Marshall
Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, Palau, and Guam.
Sec. 8012. (a) During fiscal year 2011, the civilian
personnel of the Department of Defense may not be managed on
the basis of any end-strength, and the management of such
personnel during that fiscal year shall not be subject to any
constraint or limitation (known as an end-strength) on the
number of such personnel who may be employed on the last day
of such fiscal year.
(b) The fiscal year 2012 budget request for the Department
of Defense as well as all justification material and other
documentation supporting the fiscal year 2012 Department of
Defense budget request shall be prepared and submitted to the
Congress as if subsections (a) and (b) of this provision were
effective with regard to fiscal year 2012.
(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to apply to
military (civilian) technicians.
Sec. 8013. None of the funds made available by this Act
shall be used in any way, directly or indirectly, to
influence congressional action on any legislation or
appropriation matters pending before the Congress.
Sec. 8014. None of the funds appropriated by this Act
shall be available for the basic pay and allowances of any
member of the Army participating as a full-time student and
receiving benefits paid by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs
from the Department of Defense Education Benefits Fund when
time spent as a full-time student is credited toward
completion of a service commitment: Provided, That this
section shall not apply to those members who have reenlisted
with this option prior to October 1, 1987: Provided further,
That this section applies only to active components of the
Army.
Sec. 8015. (a) None of the funds appropriated by this Act
shall be available to convert to contractor performance an
activity or function of the Department of Defense that, on or
after the date of the enactment of this Act, is performed by
Department of Defense civilian employees unless--
(1) the conversion is based on the result of a public-
private competition that includes a most efficient and cost
effective organization plan developed by such activity or
function;
(2) the Competitive Sourcing Official determines that, over
all performance periods stated in the solicitation of offers
for performance of the activity or function, the cost of
performance of the activity or function by a contractor would
be less costly to the Department of Defense by an amount that
equals or exceeds the lesser of--
(A) 10 percent of the most efficient organization's
personnel-related costs for performance of that activity or
function by Federal employees; or
(B) $10,000,000; and
(3) the contractor does not receive an advantage for a
proposal that would reduce costs for the Department of
Defense by--
(A) not making an employer-sponsored health insurance plan
available to the workers who are to be employed in the
performance of that activity or function under the contract;
or
(B) offering to such workers an employer-sponsored health
benefits plan that requires
[[Page H2432]]
the employer to contribute less towards the premium or
subscription share than the amount that is paid by the
Department of Defense for health benefits for civilian
employees under chapter 89 of title 5, United States Code.
(b)(1) The Department of Defense, without regard to
subsection (a) of this section or subsection (a), (b), or (c)
of section 2461 of title 10, United States Code, and
notwithstanding any administrative regulation, requirement,
or policy to the contrary shall have full authority to enter
into a contract for the performance of any commercial or
industrial type function of the Department of Defense that--
(A) is included on the procurement list established
pursuant to section 2 of the Javits-Wagner-O'Day Act (section
8503 of title 41, United States Code);
(B) is planned to be converted to performance by a
qualified nonprofit agency for the blind or by a qualified
nonprofit agency for other severely handicapped individuals
in accordance with that Act; or
(C) is planned to be converted to performance by a
qualified firm under at least 51 percent ownership by an
Indian tribe, as defined in section 4(e) of the Indian Self-
Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
450b(e)), or a Native Hawaiian Organization, as defined in
section 8(a)(15) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C.
637(a)(15)).
(2) This section shall not apply to depot contracts or
contracts for depot maintenance as provided in sections 2469
and 2474 of title 10, United States Code.
(c) The conversion of any activity or function of the
Department of Defense under the authority provided by this
section shall be credited toward any competitive or
outsourcing goal, target, or measurement that may be
established by statute, regulation, or policy and is deemed
to be awarded under the authority of, and in compliance with,
subsection (h) of section 2304 of title 10, United States
Code, for the competition or outsourcing of commercial
activities.
(transfer of funds)
Sec. 8016. Funds appropriated in title III of this Act for
the Department of Defense Pilot Mentor-Protege Program may be
transferred to any other appropriation contained in this Act
solely for the purpose of implementing a Mentor-Protege
Program developmental assistance agreement pursuant to
section 831 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 1991 (Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note),
as amended, under the authority of this provision or any
other transfer authority contained in this Act: Provided,
That subsection (j) of section 831 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991 is amended by striking
``September 30, 2010'' and inserting ``September 30, 2011'',
and by striking ``September 30, 2013'' and inserting
``September 30, 2014''.
Sec. 8017. None of the funds in this Act may be available
for the purchase by the Department of Defense (and its
departments and agencies) of welded shipboard anchor and
mooring chain 4 inches in diameter and under unless the
anchor and mooring chain are manufactured in the United
States from components which are substantially manufactured
in the United States: Provided, That for the purpose of this
section, the term ``manufactured'' shall include cutting,
heat treating, quality control, testing of chain and welding
(including the forging and shot blasting process): Provided
further, That for the purpose of this section substantially
all of the components of anchor and mooring chain shall be
considered to be produced or manufactured in the United
States if the aggregate cost of the components produced or
manufactured in the United States exceeds the aggregate cost
of the components produced or manufactured outside the United
States: Provided further, That when adequate domestic
supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense
requirements on a timely basis, the Secretary of the service
responsible for the procurement may waive this restriction on
a case-by-case basis by certifying in writing to the
Committees on Appropriations that such an acquisition must be
made in order to acquire capability for national security
purposes.
Sec. 8018. None of the funds available to the Department
of Defense may be used to demilitarize or dispose of M-1
Carbines, M-1 Garand rifles, M-14 rifles, .22 caliber rifles,
.30 caliber rifles, or M-1911 pistols, or to demilitarize or
destroy small arms ammunition or ammunition components that
are not otherwise prohibited from commercial sale under
Federal law, unless the small arms ammunition or ammunition
components are certified by the Secretary of the Army or
designee as unserviceable or unsafe for further use.
Sec. 8019. No more than $500,000 of the funds appropriated
or made available in this Act shall be used during a single
fiscal year for any single relocation of an organization,
unit, activity or function of the Department of Defense into
or within the National Capital Region: Provided, That the
Secretary of Defense may waive this restriction on a case-by-
case basis by certifying in writing to the congressional
defense committees that such a relocation is required in the
best interest of the Government.
Sec. 8020. In addition to the funds provided elsewhere in
this Act, $15,000,000 is appropriated only for incentive
payments authorized by section 504 of the Indian Financing
Act of 1974 (25 U.S.C. 1544): Provided, That a prime
contractor or a subcontractor at any tier that makes a
subcontract award to any subcontractor or supplier as defined
in section 1544 of title 25, United States Code, or a small
business owned and controlled by an individual or individuals
defined under section 4221(9) of title 25, United States
Code, shall be considered a contractor for the purposes of
being allowed additional compensation under section 504 of
the Indian Financing Act of 1974 (25 U.S.C. 1544) whenever
the prime contract or subcontract amount is over $500,000 and
involves the expenditure of funds appropriated by an Act
making Appropriations for the Department of Defense with
respect to any fiscal year: Provided further, That
notwithstanding section 430 of title 41, United States Code,
this section shall be applicable to any Department of Defense
acquisition of supplies or services, including any contract
and any subcontract at any tier for acquisition of commercial
items produced or manufactured, in whole or in part by any
subcontractor or supplier defined in section 1544 of title
25, United States Code, or a small business owned and
controlled by an individual or individuals defined under
section 4221(9) of title 25, United States Code.
Sec. 8021. Funds appropriated by this Act for the Defense
Media Activity shall not be used for any national or
international political or psychological activities.
Sec. 8022. During the current fiscal year, the Department
of Defense is authorized to incur obligations of not to
exceed $350,000,000 for purposes specified in section
2350j(c) of title 10, United States Code, in anticipation of
receipt of contributions, only from the Government of Kuwait,
under that section: Provided, That upon receipt, such
contributions from the Government of Kuwait shall be credited
to the appropriations or fund which incurred such
obligations.
Sec. 8023. (a) Of the funds made available in this Act, not
less than $30,374,000 shall be available for the Civil Air
Patrol Corporation, of which--
(1) $27,048,000 shall be available from ``Operation and
Maintenance, Air Force'' to support Civil Air Patrol
Corporation operation and maintenance, readiness, counterdrug
activities, and drug demand reduction activities involving
youth programs;
(2) $2,424,000 shall be available from ``Aircraft
Procurement, Air Force''; and
(3) $902,000 shall be available from ``Other Procurement,
Air Force'' for vehicle procurement.
(b) The Secretary of the Air Force should waive
reimbursement for any funds used by the Civil Air Patrol for
counter-drug activities in support of Federal, State, and
local government agencies.
Sec. 8024. (a) None of the funds appropriated in this Act
are available to establish a new Department of Defense
(department) federally funded research and development center
(FFRDC), either as a new entity, or as a separate entity
administrated by an organization managing another FFRDC, or
as a nonprofit membership corporation consisting of a
consortium of other FFRDCs and other nonprofit entities.
(b) No member of a Board of Directors, Trustees, Overseers,
Advisory Group, Special Issues Panel, Visiting Committee, or
any similar entity of a defense FFRDC, and no paid consultant
to any defense FFRDC, except when acting in a technical
advisory capacity, may be compensated for his or her services
as a member of such entity, or as a paid consultant by more
than one FFRDC in a fiscal year: Provided, That a member of
any such entity referred to previously in this subsection
shall be allowed travel expenses and per diem as authorized
under the Federal Joint Travel Regulations, when engaged in
the performance of membership duties.
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, none of the
funds available to the department from any source during
fiscal year 2011 may be used by a defense FFRDC, through a
fee or other payment mechanism, for construction of new
buildings, for payment of cost sharing for projects funded by
Government grants, for absorption of contract overruns, or
for certain charitable contributions, not to include employee
participation in community service and/or development.
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, of the
funds available to the department during fiscal year 2011,
not more than 5,750 staff years of technical effort (staff
years) may be funded for defense FFRDCs: Provided, That of
the specific amount referred to previously in this
subsection, not more than 1,125 staff years may be funded for
the defense studies and analysis FFRDCs: Provided further,
That this subsection shall not apply to staff years funded in
the National Intelligence Program (NIP) and the Military
Intelligence Program (MIP).
(e) The Secretary of Defense shall, with the submission of
the department's fiscal year 2012 budget request, submit a
report presenting the specific amounts of staff years of
technical effort to be allocated for each defense FFRDC
during that fiscal year and the associated budget estimates.
(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the
total amount appropriated in this Act for FFRDCs is hereby
reduced by $125,000,000.
Sec. 8025. None of the funds appropriated or made
available in this Act shall be used to procure carbon, alloy
or armor steel plate for use in any Government-owned facility
or property under the control of the Department of Defense
which were not melted and rolled in the United States or
Canada: Provided, That these procurement restrictions shall
apply to any and all Federal Supply Class 9515, American
Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM) or American Iron and
[[Page H2433]]
Steel Institute (AISI) specifications of carbon, alloy or
armor steel plate: Provided further, That the Secretary of
the military department responsible for the procurement may
waive this restriction on a case-by-case basis by certifying
in writing to the Committees on Appropriations of the House
of Representatives and the Senate that adequate domestic
supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense
requirements on a timely basis and that such an acquisition
must be made in order to acquire capability for national
security purposes: Provided further, That these restrictions
shall not apply to contracts which are in being as of the
date of the enactment of this Act.
Sec. 8026. For the purposes of this Act, the term
``congressional defense committees'' means the Armed Services
Committee of the House of Representatives, the Armed Services
Committee of the Senate, the Subcommittee on Defense of the
Committee on Appropriations of the Senate, and the
Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations of
the House of Representatives.
Sec. 8027. During the current fiscal year, the Department
of Defense may acquire the modification, depot maintenance
and repair of aircraft, vehicles and vessels as well as the
production of components and other Defense-related articles,
through competition between Department of Defense depot
maintenance activities and private firms: Provided, That the
Senior Acquisition Executive of the military department or
Defense Agency concerned, with power of delegation, shall
certify that successful bids include comparable estimates of
all direct and indirect costs for both public and private
bids: Provided further, That Office of Management and Budget
Circular A-76 shall not apply to competitions conducted under
this section.
Sec. 8028. (a)(1) If the Secretary of Defense, after
consultation with the United States Trade Representative,
determines that a foreign country which is party to an
agreement described in paragraph (2) has violated the terms
of the agreement by discriminating against certain types of
products produced in the United States that are covered by
the agreement, the Secretary of Defense shall rescind the
Secretary's blanket waiver of the Buy American Act with
respect to such types of products produced in that foreign
country.
(2) An agreement referred to in paragraph (1) is any
reciprocal defense procurement memorandum of understanding,
between the United States and a foreign country pursuant to
which the Secretary of Defense has prospectively waived the
Buy American Act for certain products in that country.
(b) The Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Congress a
report on the amount of Department of Defense purchases from
foreign entities in fiscal year 2011. Such report shall
separately indicate the dollar value of items for which the
Buy American Act was waived pursuant to any agreement
described in subsection (a)(2), the Trade Agreement Act of
1979 (19 U.S.C. 2501 et seq.), or any international agreement
to which the United States is a party.
(c) For purposes of this section, the term ``Buy American
Act'' means chapter 83 of title 41, United States Code.
Sec. 8029. During the current fiscal year, amounts
contained in the Department of Defense Overseas Military
Facility Investment Recovery Account established by section
2921(c)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act of 1991
(Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2687 note) shall be available
until expended for the payments specified by section
2921(c)(2) of that Act.
Sec. 8030. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
the Secretary of the Air Force may convey at no cost to the
Air Force, without consideration, to Indian tribes located in
the States of Nevada, Idaho, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Montana, Oregon, Minnesota, and Washington relocatable
military housing units located at Grand Forks Air Force Base,
Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mountain Home Air Force Base,
Ellsworth Air Force Base, and Minot Air Force Base that are
excess to the needs of the Air Force.
(b) The Secretary of the Air Force shall convey, at no cost
to the Air Force, military housing units under subsection (a)
in accordance with the request for such units that are
submitted to the Secretary by the Operation Walking Shield
Program on behalf of Indian tribes located in the States of
Nevada, Idaho, North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Oregon,
Minnesota, and Washington. Any such conveyance shall be
subject to the condition that the housing units shall be
removed within a reasonable period of time, as determined by
the Secretary.
(c) The Operation Walking Shield Program shall resolve any
conflicts among requests of Indian tribes for housing units
under subsection (a) before submitting requests to the
Secretary of the Air Force under subsection (b).
(d) In this section, the term ``Indian tribe'' means any
recognized Indian tribe included on the current list
published by the Secretary of the Interior under section 104
of the Federally Recognized Indian Tribe Act of 1994 (Public
Law 103-454; 108 Stat. 4792; 25 U.S.C. 479a-1).
Sec. 8031. During the current fiscal year, appropriations
which are available to the Department of Defense for
operation and maintenance may be used to purchase items
having an investment item unit cost of not more than
$250,000.
Sec. 8032. (a) During the current fiscal year, none of the
appropriations or funds available to the Department of
Defense Working Capital Funds shall be used for the purchase
of an investment item for the purpose of acquiring a new
inventory item for sale or anticipated sale during the
current fiscal year or a subsequent fiscal year to customers
of the Department of Defense Working Capital Funds if such an
item would not have been chargeable to the Department of
Defense Business Operations Fund during fiscal year 1994 and
if the purchase of such an investment item would be
chargeable during the current fiscal year to appropriations
made to the Department of Defense for procurement.
(b) The fiscal year 2012 budget request for the Department
of Defense as well as all justification material and other
documentation supporting the fiscal year 2012 Department of
Defense budget shall be prepared and submitted to the
Congress on the basis that any equipment which was classified
as an end item and funded in a procurement appropriation
contained in this Act shall be budgeted for in a proposed
fiscal year 2012 procurement appropriation and not in the
supply management business area or any other area or category
of the Department of Defense Working Capital Funds.
Sec. 8033. None of the funds appropriated by this Act for
programs of the Central Intelligence Agency shall remain
available for obligation beyond the current fiscal year,
except for funds appropriated for the Reserve for
Contingencies, which shall remain available until September
30, 2012: Provided, That funds appropriated, transferred, or
otherwise credited to the Central Intelligence Agency Central
Services Working Capital Fund during this or any prior or
subsequent fiscal year shall remain available until expended:
Provided further, That any funds appropriated or transferred
to the Central Intelligence Agency for advanced research and
development acquisition, for agent operations, and for covert
action programs authorized by the President under section 503
of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended, shall
remain available until September 30, 2012.
Sec. 8034. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
funds made available in this Act for the Defense Intelligence
Agency may be used for the design, development, and
deployment of General Defense Intelligence Program
intelligence communications and intelligence information
systems for the Services, the Unified and Specified Commands,
and the component commands.
Sec. 8035. Of the funds appropriated to the Department of
Defense under the heading ``Operation and Maintenance,
Defense-Wide'', not less than $12,000,000 shall be made
available only for the mitigation of environmental impacts,
including training and technical assistance to tribes,
related administrative support, the gathering of information,
documenting of environmental damage, and developing a system
for prioritization of mitigation and cost to complete
estimates for mitigation, on Indian lands resulting from
Department of Defense activities.
Sec. 8036. (a) None of the funds appropriated in this Act
may be expended by an entity of the Department of Defense
unless the entity, in expending the funds, complies with the
Buy American Act. For purposes of this subsection, the term
``Buy American Act'' means chapter 83 of title 41, United
States Code.
(b) If the Secretary of Defense determines that a person
has been convicted of intentionally affixing a label bearing
a ``Made in America'' inscription to any product sold in or
shipped to the United States that is not made in America, the
Secretary shall determine, in accordance with section 2410f
of title 10, United States Code, whether the person should be
debarred from contracting with the Department of Defense.
(c) In the case of any equipment or products purchased with
appropriations provided under this Act, it is the sense of
the Congress that any entity of the Department of Defense, in
expending the appropriation, purchase only American-made
equipment and products, provided that American-made equipment
and products are cost-competitive, quality competitive, and
available in a timely fashion.
Sec. 8037. None of the funds appropriated by this Act
shall be available for a contract for studies, analysis, or
consulting services entered into without competition on the
basis of an unsolicited proposal unless the head of the
activity responsible for the procurement determines--
(1) as a result of thorough technical evaluation, only one
source is found fully qualified to perform the proposed work;
(2) the purpose of the contract is to explore an
unsolicited proposal which offers significant scientific or
technological promise, represents the product of original
thinking, and was submitted in confidence by one source; or
(3) the purpose of the contract is to take advantage of
unique and significant industrial accomplishment by a
specific concern, or to insure that a new product or idea of
a specific concern is given financial support: Provided,
That this limitation shall not apply to contracts in an
amount of less than $25,000, contracts related to
improvements of equipment that is in development or
production, or contracts as to which a civilian official of
the Department of Defense, who has been confirmed by the
Senate, determines that the award of such contract is in the
interest of the national defense.
Sec. 8038. (a) Except as provided in subsections (b) and
(c), none of the funds made available by this Act may be
used--
[[Page H2434]]
(1) to establish a field operating agency; or
(2) to pay the basic pay of a member of the Armed Forces or
civilian employee of the department who is transferred or
reassigned from a headquarters activity if the member or
employee's place of duty remains at the location of that
headquarters.
(b) The Secretary of Defense or Secretary of a military
department may waive the limitations in subsection (a), on a
case-by-case basis, if the Secretary determines, and
certifies to the Committees on Appropriations of the House of
Representatives and Senate that the granting of the waiver
will reduce the personnel requirements or the financial
requirements of the department.
(c) This section does not apply to--
(1) field operating agencies funded within the National
Intelligence Program;
(2) an Army field operating agency established to
eliminate, mitigate, or counter the effects of improvised
explosive devices, and, as determined by the Secretary of the
Army, other similar threats; or
(3) an Army field operating agency established to improve
the effectiveness and efficiencies of biometric activities
and to integrate common biometric technologies throughout the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 8039. The Secretary of Defense, notwithstanding any
other provision of law, acting through the Office of Economic
Adjustment of the Department of Defense, may use funds made
available in this Act under the heading ``Operation and
Maintenance, Defense-Wide'' to make grants and supplement
other Federal funds in accordance with the guidance provided
in the explanatory statement regarding this Act.
(rescissions)
Sec. 8040. Of the funds appropriated in Department of
Defense Appropriations Acts, the following funds are hereby
rescinded from the following accounts and programs in the
specified amounts:
``Procurement of Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army,
2009/2011'', $86,300,000.
``Other Procurement, Army, 2009/2011'', $147,600,000.
``Aircraft Procurement, Navy, 2009/2011'', $26,100,000.
``Aircraft Procurement, Air Force, 2009/2011'',
$116,900,000.
``Aircraft Procurement, Army, 2010/2012'', $14,000,000.
``Procurement of Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army,
2010/2012'', $36,000,000.
``Missile Procurement, Army, 2010/2012'', $9,171,000.
``Aircraft Procurement, Navy, 2010/2012'', $284,847,000.
``Procurement of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps, 2010/
2012'', $11,576,000.
Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy,
2010/2014'': DDG-51 Destroyer, $22,000,000.
``Other Procurement, Navy, 2010/2012'', $9,042,000.
``Aircraft Procurement, Air Force, 2010/2012'',
$151,300,000.
``Other Procurement, Air Force, 2010/2012'', $36,600,000.
``Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Army, 2010/
2011'', $53,500,000.
``Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Air Force,
2010/2011'', $198,600,000.
``Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-Wide,
2010/2011'', $10,000,000.
Sec. 8041. None of the funds available in this Act may be
used to reduce the authorized positions for military
(civilian) technicians of the Army National Guard, Air
National Guard, Army Reserve and Air Force Reserve for the
purpose of applying any administratively imposed civilian
personnel ceiling, freeze, or reduction on military
(civilian) technicians, unless such reductions are a direct
result of a reduction in military force structure.
Sec. 8042. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available in this Act may be obligated or expended for
assistance to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
unless specifically appropriated for that purpose.
Sec. 8043. Funds appropriated in this Act for operation
and maintenance of the Military Departments, Combatant
Commands and Defense Agencies shall be available for
reimbursement of pay, allowances and other expenses which
would otherwise be incurred against appropriations for the
National Guard and Reserve when members of the National Guard
and Reserve provide intelligence or counterintelligence
support to Combatant Commands, Defense Agencies and Joint
Intelligence Activities, including the activities and
programs included within the National Intelligence Program
and the Military Intelligence Program: Provided, That
nothing in this section authorizes deviation from established
Reserve and National Guard personnel and training procedures.
Sec. 8044. During the current fiscal year, none of the
funds appropriated in this Act may be used to reduce the
civilian medical and medical support personnel assigned to
military treatment facilities below the September 30, 2003,
level: Provided, That the Service Surgeons General may waive
this section by certifying to the congressional defense
committees that the beneficiary population is declining in
some catchment areas and civilian strength reductions may be
consistent with responsible resource stewardship and
capitation-based budgeting.
Sec. 8045. (a) None of the funds available to the
Department of Defense for any fiscal year for drug
interdiction or counter-drug activities may be transferred to
any other department or agency of the United States except as
specifically provided in an appropriations law.
(b) None of the funds available to the Central Intelligence
Agency for any fiscal year for drug interdiction and counter-
drug activities may be transferred to any other department or
agency of the United States except as specifically provided
in an appropriations law.
Sec. 8046. None of the funds appropriated by this Act may
be used for the procurement of ball and roller bearings other
than those produced by a domestic source and of domestic
origin: Provided, That the Secretary of the military
department responsible for such procurement may waive this
restriction on a case-by-case basis by certifying in writing
to the Committees on Appropriations of the House of
Representatives and the Senate, that adequate domestic
supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense
requirements on a timely basis and that such an acquisition
must be made in order to acquire capability for national
security purposes: Provided further, That this restriction
shall not apply to the purchase of ``commercial items'', as
defined by section 4(12) of the Office of Federal Procurement
Policy Act, except that the restriction shall apply to ball
or roller bearings purchased as end items.
Sec. 8047. None of the funds in this Act may be used to
purchase any supercomputer which is not manufactured in the
United States, unless the Secretary of Defense certifies to
the congressional defense committees that such an acquisition
must be made in order to acquire capability for national
security purposes that is not available from United States
manufacturers.
Sec. 8048. None of the funds made available in this or any
other Act may be used to pay the salary of any officer or
employee of the Department of Defense who approves or
implements the transfer of administrative responsibilities or
budgetary resources of any program, project, or activity
financed by this Act to the jurisdiction of another Federal
agency not financed by this Act without the express
authorization of Congress: Provided, That this limitation
shall not apply to transfers of funds expressly provided for
in Defense Appropriations Acts, or provisions of Acts
providing supplemental appropriations for the Department of
Defense.
Sec. 8049. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
none of the funds available to the Department of Defense for
the current fiscal year may be obligated or expended to
transfer to another nation or an international organization
any defense articles or services (other than intelligence
services) for use in the activities described in subsection
(b) unless the congressional defense committees, the
Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives,
and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate are
notified 15 days in advance of such transfer.
(b) This section applies to--
(1) any international peacekeeping or peace-enforcement
operation under the authority of chapter VI or chapter VII of
the United Nations Charter under the authority of a United
Nations Security Council resolution; and
(2) any other international peacekeeping, peace-
enforcement, or humanitarian assistance operation.
(c) A notice under subsection (a) shall include the
following:
(1) A description of the equipment, supplies, or services
to be transferred.
(2) A statement of the value of the equipment, supplies, or
services to be transferred.
(3) In the case of a proposed transfer of equipment or
supplies--
(A) a statement of whether the inventory requirements of
all elements of the Armed Forces (including the reserve
components) for the type of equipment or supplies to be
transferred have been met; and
(B) a statement of whether the items proposed to be
transferred will have to be replaced and, if so, how the
President proposes to provide funds for such replacement.
Sec. 8050. None of the funds available to the Department
of Defense under this Act shall be obligated or expended to
pay a contractor under a contract with the Department of
Defense for costs of any amount paid by the contractor to an
employee when--
(1) such costs are for a bonus or otherwise in excess of
the normal salary paid by the contractor to the employee; and
(2) such bonus is part of restructuring costs associated
with a business combination.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8051. During the current fiscal year, no more than
$30,000,000 of appropriations made in this Act under the
heading ``Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide'' may be
transferred to appropriations available for the pay of
military personnel, to be merged with, and to be available
for the same time period as the appropriations to which
transferred, to be used in support of such personnel in
connection with support and services for eligible
organizations and activities outside the Department of
Defense pursuant to section 2012 of title 10, United States
Code.
Sec. 8052. During the current fiscal year, in the case of
an appropriation account of the Department of Defense for
which the period of availability for obligation has expired
or which has closed under the provisions of section 1552 of
title 31, United States Code, and which has a negative
unliquidated or unexpended balance, an obligation or an
adjustment of an obligation may be charged to any
[[Page H2435]]
current appropriation account for the same purpose as the
expired or closed account if--
(1) the obligation would have been properly chargeable
(except as to amount) to the expired or closed account before
the end of the period of availability or closing of that
account;
(2) the obligation is not otherwise properly chargeable to
any current appropriation account of the Department of
Defense; and
(3) in the case of an expired account, the obligation is
not chargeable to a current appropriation of the Department
of Defense under the provisions of section 1405(b)(8) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991,
Public Law 101-510, as amended (31 U.S.C. 1551 note):
Provided, That in the case of an expired account, if
subsequent review or investigation discloses that there was
not in fact a negative unliquidated or unexpended balance in
the account, any charge to a current account under the
authority of this section shall be reversed and recorded
against the expired account: Provided further, That the
total amount charged to a current appropriation under this
section may not exceed an amount equal to 1 percent of the
total appropriation for that account.
Sec. 8053. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
the Chief of the National Guard Bureau may permit the use of
equipment of the National Guard Distance Learning Project by
any person or entity on a space-available, reimbursable
basis. The Chief of the National Guard Bureau shall establish
the amount of reimbursement for such use on a case-by-case
basis.
(b) Amounts collected under subsection (a) shall be
credited to funds available for the National Guard Distance
Learning Project and be available to defray the costs
associated with the use of equipment of the project under
that subsection. Such funds shall be available for such
purposes without fiscal year limitation.
Sec. 8054. Using funds made available by this Act or any
other Act, the Secretary of the Air Force, pursuant to a
determination under section 2690 of title 10, United States
Code, may implement cost-effective agreements for required
heating facility modernization in the Kaiserslautern Military
Community in the Federal Republic of Germany: Provided, That
in the City of Kaiserslautern and at the Rhine Ordnance
Barracks area, such agreements will include the use of United
States anthracite as the base load energy for municipal
district heat to the United States Defense installations:
Provided further, That at Landstuhl Army Regional Medical
Center and Ramstein Air Base, furnished heat may be obtained
from private, regional or municipal services, if provisions
are included for the consideration of United States coal as
an energy source.
Sec. 8055. None of the funds appropriated in title IV of
this Act may be used to procure end-items for delivery to
military forces for operational training, operational use or
inventory requirements: Provided, That this restriction does
not apply to end-items used in development, prototyping, and
test activities preceding and leading to acceptance for
operational use: Provided further, That this restriction
does not apply to programs funded within the National
Intelligence Program: Provided further, That the Secretary
of Defense may waive this restriction on a case-by-case basis
by certifying in writing to the Committees on Appropriations
of the House of Representatives and the Senate that it is in
the national security interest to do so.
Sec. 8056. None of the funds made available in this Act
may be used to approve or license the sale of the F-22A
advanced tactical fighter to any foreign government:
Provided, That the Department of Defense may conduct or
participate in studies, research, design and other activities
to define and develop a future export version of the F-22A
that protects classified and sensitive information,
technologies and U.S. warfighting capabilities.
Sec. 8057. (a) The Secretary of Defense may, on a case-by-
case basis, waive with respect to a foreign country each
limitation on the procurement of defense items from foreign
sources provided in law if the Secretary determines that the
application of the limitation with respect to that country
would invalidate cooperative programs entered into between
the Department of Defense and the foreign country, or would
invalidate reciprocal trade agreements for the procurement of
defense items entered into under section 2531 of title 10,
United States Code, and the country does not discriminate
against the same or similar defense items produced in the
United States for that country.
(b) Subsection (a) applies with respect to--
(1) contracts and subcontracts entered into on or after the
date of the enactment of this Act; and
(2) options for the procurement of items that are exercised
after such date under contracts that are entered into before
such date if the option prices are adjusted for any reason
other than the application of a waiver granted under
subsection (a).
(c) Subsection (a) does not apply to a limitation regarding
construction of public vessels, ball and roller bearings,
food, and clothing or textile materials as defined by section
11 (chapters 50-65) of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule and
products classified under headings 4010, 4202, 4203, 6401
through 6406, 6505, 7019, 7218 through 7229, 7304.41 through
7304.49, 7306.40, 7502 through 7508, 8105, 8108, 8109, 8211,
8215, and 9404.
Sec. 8058. (a) None of the funds made available by this Act
may be used to support any training program involving a unit
of the security forces or police of a foreign country if the
Secretary of Defense has received credible information from
the Department of State that the unit has committed a gross
violation of human rights, unless all necessary corrective
steps have been taken.
(b) The Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the
Secretary of State, shall ensure that prior to a decision to
conduct any training program referred to in subsection (a),
full consideration is given to all credible information
available to the Department of State relating to human rights
violations by foreign security forces.
(c) The Secretary of Defense, after consultation with the
Secretary of State, may waive the prohibition in subsection
(a) if he determines that such waiver is required by
extraordinary circumstances.
(d) Not more than 15 days after the exercise of any waiver
under subsection (c), the Secretary of Defense shall submit a
report to the congressional defense committees describing the
extraordinary circumstances, the purpose and duration of the
training program, the United States forces and the foreign
security forces involved in the training program, and the
information relating to human rights violations that
necessitates the waiver.
Sec. 8059. None of the funds appropriated or made
available in this Act to the Department of the Navy shall be
used to develop, lease or procure the T-AKE class of ships
unless the main propulsion diesel engines and propulsors are
manufactured in the United States by a domestically operated
entity: Provided, That the Secretary of Defense may waive
this restriction on a case-by-case basis by certifying in
writing to the Committees on Appropriations of the House of
Representatives and the Senate that adequate domestic
supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense
requirements on a timely basis and that such an acquisition
must be made in order to acquire capability for national
security purposes or there exists a significant cost or
quality difference.
Sec. 8060. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available by this or other Department of Defense
Appropriations Acts may be obligated or expended for the
purpose of performing repairs or maintenance to military
family housing units of the Department of Defense, including
areas in such military family housing units that may be used
for the purpose of conducting official Department of Defense
business.
Sec. 8061. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
funds appropriated in this Act under the heading ``Research,
Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-Wide'' for any new
start advanced concept technology demonstration project or
joint capability demonstration project may only be obligated
30 days after a report, including a description of the
project, the planned acquisition and transition strategy and
its estimated annual and total cost, has been provided in
writing to the congressional defense committees: Provided,
That the Secretary of Defense may waive this restriction on a
case-by-case basis by certifying to the congressional defense
committees that it is in the national interest to do so.
Sec. 8062. The Secretary of Defense shall provide a
classified quarterly report beginning 30 days after enactment
of this Act, to the House and Senate Appropriations
Committees, Subcommittees on Defense on certain matters as
directed in the classified annex accompanying this Act.
Sec. 8063. During the current fiscal year, none of the
funds available to the Department of Defense may be used to
provide support to another department or agency of the United
States if such department or agency is more than 90 days in
arrears in making payment to the Department of Defense for
goods or services previously provided to such department or
agency on a reimbursable basis: Provided, That this
restriction shall not apply if the department is authorized
by law to provide support to such department or agency on a
nonreimbursable basis, and is providing the requested support
pursuant to such authority: Provided further, That the
Secretary of Defense may waive this restriction on a case-by-
case basis by certifying in writing to the Committees on
Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Senate
that it is in the national security interest to do so.
Sec. 8064. Notwithstanding section 12310(b) of title 10,
United States Code, a Reserve who is a member of the National
Guard serving on full-time National Guard duty under section
502(f) of title 32, United States Code, may perform duties in
support of the ground-based elements of the National
Ballistic Missile Defense System.
Sec. 8065. None of the funds provided in this Act may be
used to transfer to any nongovernmental entity ammunition
held by the Department of Defense that has a center-fire
cartridge and a United States military nomenclature
designation of ``armor penetrator'', ``armor piercing (AP)'',
``armor piercing incendiary (API)'', or ``armor-piercing
incendiary tracer (API-T)'', except to an entity performing
demilitarization services for the Department of Defense under
a contract that requires the entity to demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the Department of Defense that armor piercing
projectiles are either: (1) rendered incapable of reuse by
the demilitarization process; or (2) used to manufacture
ammunition pursuant to a contract with the Department of
Defense or the manufacture of ammunition for export pursuant
to a License for Permanent Export of Unclassified Military
Articles issued by the Department of State.
[[Page H2436]]
Sec. 8066. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
Chief of the National Guard Bureau, or his designee, may
waive payment of all or part of the consideration that
otherwise would be required under section 2667 of title 10,
United States Code, in the case of a lease of personal
property for a period not in excess of 1 year to any
organization specified in section 508(d) of title 32, United
States Code, or any other youth, social, or fraternal
nonprofit organization as may be approved by the Chief of the
National Guard Bureau, or his designee, on a case-by-case
basis.
Sec. 8067. None of the funds appropriated by this Act
shall be used for the support of any nonappropriated funds
activity of the Department of Defense that procures malt
beverages and wine with nonappropriated funds for resale
(including such alcoholic beverages sold by the drink) on a
military installation located in the United States unless
such malt beverages and wine are procured within that State,
or in the case of the District of Columbia, within the
District of Columbia, in which the military installation is
located: Provided, That in a case in which the military
installation is located in more than one State, purchases may
be made in any State in which the installation is located:
Provided further, That such local procurement requirements
for malt beverages and wine shall apply to all alcoholic
beverages only for military installations in States which are
not contiguous with another State: Provided further, That
alcoholic beverages other than wine and malt beverages, in
contiguous States and the District of Columbia shall be
procured from the most competitive source, price and other
factors considered.
Sec. 8068. Funds available to the Department of Defense
for the Global Positioning System during the current fiscal
year, and hereafter, may be used to fund civil requirements
associated with the satellite and ground control segments of
such system's modernization program.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8069. Of the amounts appropriated in this Act under
the heading ``Operation and Maintenance, Army'', $147,258,300
shall remain available until expended: Provided, That
notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary of
Defense is authorized to transfer such funds to other
activities of the Federal Government: Provided further, That
the Secretary of Defense is authorized to enter into and
carry out contracts for the acquisition of real property,
construction, personal services, and operations related to
projects carrying out the purposes of this section: Provided
further, That contracts entered into under the authority of
this section may provide for such indemnification as the
Secretary determines to be necessary: Provided further, That
projects authorized by this section shall comply with
applicable Federal, State, and local law to the maximum
extent consistent with the national security, as determined
by the Secretary of Defense.
Sec. 8070. Section 8106 of the Department of Defense
Appropriations Act, 1997 (titles I through VIII of the matter
under subsection 101(b) of Public Law 104-208; 110 Stat.
3009-111; 10 U.S.C. 113 note) shall continue in effect to
apply to disbursements that are made by the Department of
Defense in fiscal year 2011.
Sec. 8071. In addition to amounts provided elsewhere in
this Act, $4,000,000 is hereby appropriated to the Department
of Defense, to remain available for obligation until
expended: Provided, That notwithstanding any other provision
of law, that upon the determination of the Secretary of
Defense that it shall serve the national interest, these
funds shall be available only for a grant to the Fisher House
Foundation, Inc., only for the construction and furnishing of
additional Fisher Houses to meet the needs of military family
members when confronted with the illness or hospitalization
of an eligible military beneficiary.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8072. Of the amounts appropriated in this Act under
the headings ``Procurement, Defense-Wide'' and ``Research,
Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-Wide'',
$415,115,000 shall be for the Israeli Cooperative Programs:
Provided, That of this amount, $205,000,000 shall be for the
Secretary of Defense to provide to the Government of Israel
for the procurement of the Iron Dome defense system to
counter short-range rocket threats, $84,722,000 shall be for
the Short Range Ballistic Missile Defense (SRBMD) program,
including cruise missile defense research and development
under the SRBMD program, $58,966,000 shall be available for
an upper-tier component to the Israeli Missile Defense
Architecture, and $66,427,000 shall be for the Arrow System
Improvement Program including development of a long range,
ground and airborne, detection suite, of which $12,000,000
shall be for producing Arrow missile components in the United
States and Arrow missile components in Israel to meet
Israel's defense requirements, consistent with each nation's
laws, regulations and procedures: Provided further, That
funds made available under this provision for production of
missiles and missile components may be transferred to
appropriations available for the procurement of weapons and
equipment, to be merged with and to be available for the same
time period and the same purposes as the appropriation to
which transferred: Provided further, That the transfer
authority provided under this provision is in addition to any
other transfer authority contained in this Act.
Sec. 8073. None of the funds available to the Department
of Defense may be obligated to modify command and control
relationships to give Fleet Forces Command administrative and
operational control of U.S. Navy forces assigned to the
Pacific fleet: Provided, That the command and control
relationships which existed on October 1, 2004, shall remain
in force unless changes are specifically authorized in a
subsequent Act.
Sec. 8074. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or
regulation, the Secretary of Defense may exercise the
provisions of section 7403(g) of title 38, United States
Code, for occupations listed in section 7403(a)(2) of title
38, United States Code, as well as the following:
Pharmacists, Audiologists, Psychologists, Social Workers,
Othotists/Prosthetists, Occupational Therapists, Physical
Therapists, Rehabilitation Therapists, Respiratory
Therapists, Speech Pathologists, Dietitian/Nutritionists,
Industrial Hygienists, Psychology Technicians, Social Service
Assistants, Practical Nurses, Nursing Assistants, and Dental
Hygienists:
(A) The requirements of section 7403(g)(1)(A) of title 38,
United States Code, shall apply.
(B) The limitations of section 7403(g)(1)(B) of title 38,
United States Code, shall not apply.
Sec. 8075. Funds appropriated by this Act, or made
available by the transfer of funds in this Act, for
intelligence activities are deemed to be specifically
authorized by the Congress for purposes of section 504 of the
National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 414) during fiscal
year 2011 until the enactment of the Intelligence
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011.
Sec. 8076. None of the funds provided in this Act shall be
available for obligation or expenditure through a
reprogramming of funds that creates or initiates a new
program, project, or activity unless such program, project,
or activity must be undertaken immediately in the interest of
national security and only after written prior notification
to the congressional defense committees.
Sec. 8077. The budget of the President for fiscal year
2012 submitted to the Congress pursuant to section 1105 of
title 31, United States Code, shall include separate budget
justification documents for costs of United States Armed
Forces' participation in contingency operations for the
Military Personnel accounts, the Operation and Maintenance
accounts, and the Procurement accounts: Provided, That these
documents shall include a description of the funding
requested for each contingency operation, for each military
service, to include all Active and Reserve components, and
for each appropriations account: Provided further, That
these documents shall include estimated costs for each
element of expense or object class, a reconciliation of
increases and decreases for each contingency operation, and
programmatic data including, but not limited to, troop
strength for each Active and Reserve component, and estimates
of the major weapons systems deployed in support of each
contingency: Provided further, That these documents shall
include budget exhibits OP-5 and OP-32 (as defined in the
Department of Defense Financial Management Regulation) for
all contingency operations for the budget year and the two
preceding fiscal years.
Sec. 8078. None of the funds in this Act may be used for
research, development, test, evaluation, procurement or
deployment of nuclear armed interceptors of a missile defense
system.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8079. In addition to the amounts appropriated or
otherwise made available elsewhere in this Act, $65,200,000
is hereby appropriated to the Department of Defense:
Provided, That upon the determination of the Secretary of
Defense that it shall serve the national interest, he shall
make grants in the amounts specified as follows: $20,000,000
to the United Service Organizations; $24,000,000 to the Red
Cross; $1,200,000 to the Special Olympics; and $20,000,000 to
the Youth Mentoring Grants Program: Provided further, That
funds available in this section for the Youth Mentoring
Grants Program may be available for transfer to the
Department of Justice Youth Mentoring Grants Program.
Sec. 8080. None of the funds appropriated or made
available in this Act shall be used to reduce or disestablish
the operation of the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron of
the Air Force Reserve, if such action would reduce the WC-130
Weather Reconnaissance mission below the levels funded in
this Act: Provided, That the Air Force shall allow the 53rd
Weather Reconnaissance Squadron to perform other missions in
support of national defense requirements during the non-
hurricane season.
Sec. 8081. None of the funds provided in this Act shall be
available for integration of foreign intelligence information
unless the information has been lawfully collected and
processed during the conduct of authorized foreign
intelligence activities: Provided, That information
pertaining to United States persons shall only be handled in
accordance with protections provided in the Fourth Amendment
of the United States Constitution as implemented through
Executive Order No. 12333.
[[Page H2437]]
Sec. 8082. (a) At the time members of reserve components of
the Armed Forces are called or ordered to active duty under
section 12302(a) of title 10, United States Code, each member
shall be notified in writing of the expected period during
which the member will be mobilized.
(b) The Secretary of Defense may waive the requirements of
subsection (a) in any case in which the Secretary determines
that it is necessary to do so to respond to a national
security emergency or to meet dire operational requirements
of the Armed Forces.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8083. The Secretary of Defense may transfer funds
from any available Department of the Navy appropriation to
any available Navy ship construction appropriation for the
purpose of liquidating necessary changes resulting from
inflation, market fluctuations, or rate adjustments for any
ship construction program appropriated in law: Provided,
That the Secretary may transfer not to exceed $100,000,000
under the authority provided by this section: Provided
further, That the Secretary may not transfer any funds until
30 days after the proposed transfer has been reported to the
Committees on Appropriations of the House of Representatives
and the Senate, unless a response from the Committees is
received sooner: Provided further, That any funds
transferred pursuant to this section shall retain the same
period of availability as when originally appropriated:
Provided further, That the transfer authority provided by
this section is in addition to any other transfer authority
contained elsewhere in this Act.
Sec. 8084. For purposes of section 7108 of title 41,
United States Code, any subdivision of appropriations made
under the heading ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy'' that
is not closed at the time reimbursement is made shall be
available to reimburse the Judgment Fund and shall be
considered for the same purposes as any subdivision under the
heading ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy'' appropriations
in the current fiscal year or any prior fiscal year.
Sec. 8085. (a) None of the funds appropriated by this Act
may be used to transfer research and development,
acquisition, or other program authority relating to current
tactical unmanned aerial vehicles (TUAVs) from the Army.
(b) The Army shall retain responsibility for and
operational control of the MQ-1C Sky Warrior Unmanned Aerial
Vehicle (UAV) in order to support the Secretary of Defense in
matters relating to the employment of unmanned aerial
vehicles.
Sec. 8086. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or
regulation, during the current fiscal year and hereafter, the
Secretary of Defense may adjust wage rates for civilian
employees hired for certain health care occupations as
authorized for the Secretary of Veterans Affairs by section
7455 of title 38, United States Code.
Sec. 8087. Up to $15,000,000 of the funds appropriated
under the heading ``Operation and Maintenance, Navy'' may be
made available for the Asia Pacific Regional Initiative
Program for the purpose of enabling the Pacific Command to
execute Theater Security Cooperation activities such as
humanitarian assistance, and payment of incremental and
personnel costs of training and exercising with foreign
security forces: Provided, That funds made available for
this purpose may be used, notwithstanding any other funding
authorities for humanitarian assistance, security assistance
or combined exercise expenses: Provided further, That funds
may not be obligated to provide assistance to any foreign
country that is otherwise prohibited from receiving such type
of assistance under any other provision of law.
Sec. 8088. None of the funds appropriated by this Act for
programs of the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence shall remain available for obligation beyond the
current fiscal year, except for funds appropriated for
research and technology, which shall remain available until
September 30, 2012.
Sec. 8089. For purposes of section 1553(b) of title 31,
United States Code, any subdivision of appropriations made in
this Act under the heading ``Shipbuilding and Conversion,
Navy'' shall be considered to be for the same purpose as any
subdivision under the heading ``Shipbuilding and Conversion,
Navy'' appropriations in any prior fiscal year, and the 1
percent limitation shall apply to the total amount of the
appropriation.
Sec. 8090. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, not
more than 35 percent of funds provided in this Act for
environmental remediation may be obligated under indefinite
delivery/indefinite quantity contracts with a total contract
value of $130,000,000 or higher.
Sec. 8091. The Director of National Intelligence shall
include the budget exhibits identified in paragraphs (1) and
(2) as described in the Department of Defense Financial
Management Regulation with the congressional budget
justification books:
(1) For procurement programs requesting more than
$20,000,000 in any fiscal year, the P-1, Procurement Program;
P-5, Cost Analysis; P-5a, Procurement History and Planning;
P-21, Production Schedule; and P-40, Budget Item
Justification.
(2) For research, development, test and evaluation projects
requesting more than $10,000,000 in any fiscal year, the R-1,
RDT&E Program; R-2, RDT&E Budget Item Justification; R-3,
RDT&E Project Cost Analysis; and R-4, RDT&E Program Schedule
Profile.
Sec. 8092. The Secretary of Defense shall create a major
force program category for space for each future-years
defense program of the Department of Defense submitted to
Congress under section 221 of title 10, United States Code,
during fiscal year 2011. The Secretary of Defense shall
designate an official in the Office of the Secretary of
Defense to provide overall supervision of the preparation and
justification of program recommendations and budget proposals
to be included in such major force program category.
Sec. 8093. (a) Not later than 60 days after enactment of
this Act, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
shall submit a report to the congressional intelligence
committees to establish the baseline for application of
reprogramming and transfer authorities for fiscal year 2011:
Provided, That the report shall include--
(1) a table for each appropriation with a separate column
to display the President's budget request, adjustments made
by Congress, adjustments due to enacted rescissions, if
appropriate, and the fiscal year enacted level;
(2) a delineation in the table for each appropriation by
Expenditure Center and project; and
(3) an identification of items of special congressional
interest.
(b) None of the funds provided for the National
Intelligence Program in this Act shall be available for
reprogramming or transfer until the report identified in
subsection (a) is submitted to the congressional intelligence
committees, unless the Director of National Intelligence
certifies in writing to the congressional intelligence
committees that such reprogramming or transfer is necessary
as an emergency requirement.
Sec. 8094. The Director of National Intelligence shall
submit to Congress each year, at or about the time that the
President's budget is submitted to Congress that year under
section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, a future-
years intelligence program (including associated annexes)
reflecting the estimated expenditures and proposed
appropriations included in that budget. Any such future-years
intelligence program shall cover the fiscal year with respect
to which the budget is submitted and at least the four
succeeding fiscal years.
Sec. 8095. For the purposes of this Act, the term
``congressional intelligence committees'' means the Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of
Representatives, the Select Committee on Intelligence of the
Senate, the Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on
Appropriations of the House of Representatives, and the
Subcommittee on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations of
the Senate.
Sec. 8096. The Department of Defense shall continue to
report incremental contingency operations costs for Operation
New Dawn and Operation Enduring Freedom on a monthly basis in
the Cost of War Execution Report as prescribed in the
Department of Defense Financial Management Regulation
Department of Defense Instruction 7000.14, Volume 12, Chapter
23 ``Contingency Operations'', Annex 1, dated September 2005.
Sec. 8097. The amounts appropriated in title II of this
Act are hereby reduced by $483,000,000 to reflect excess cash
balances in Department of Defense Working Capital Funds, as
follows: From ``Operation and Maintenance, Army'',
$483,000,000.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8098. During the current fiscal year, not to exceed
$11,000,000 from each of the appropriations made in title II
of this Act for ``Operation and Maintenance, Army'',
``Operation and Maintenance, Navy'', and ``Operation and
Maintenance, Air Force'' may be transferred by the military
department concerned to its central fund established for
Fisher Houses and Suites pursuant to section 2493(d) of title
10, United States Code.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8099. Of the funds appropriated in the Intelligence
Community Management Account for the Program Manager for the
Information Sharing Environment, $24,000,000 is available for
transfer by the Director of National Intelligence to other
departments and agencies for purposes of Government-wide
information sharing activities: Provided, That funds
transferred under this provision are to be merged with and
available for the same purposes and time period as the
appropriation to which transferred: Provided further, That
the Office of Management and Budget must approve any
transfers made under this provision.
Sec. 8100. Funds appropriated by this Act for operation
and maintenance may be available for the purpose of making
remittances to the Defense Acquisition Workforce Development
Fund in accordance with the requirements of section 1705 of
title 10, United States Code.
Sec. 8101. (a) Any agency receiving funds made available in
this Act, shall, subject to subsections (b) and (c), post on
the public website of that agency any report required to be
submitted by the Congress in this or any other Act, upon the
determination by the head of the agency that it shall serve
the national interest.
(b) Subsection (a) shall not apply to a report if--
(1) the public posting of the report compromises national
security; or
(2) the report contains proprietary information.
[[Page H2438]]
(c) The head of the agency posting such report shall do so
only after such report has been made available to the
requesting Committee or Committees of Congress for no less
than 45 days.
Sec. 8102. (a) None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available by this Act may be expended for any Federal
contract for an amount in excess of $1,000,000 unless the
contractor agrees not to--
(1) enter into any agreement with any of its employees or
independent contractors that requires, as a condition of
employment, that the employee or independent contractor agree
to resolve through arbitration any claim under title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 or any tort related to or
arising out of sexual assault or harassment, including
assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional
distress, false imprisonment, or negligent hiring,
supervision, or retention; or
(2) take any action to enforce any provision of an existing
agreement with an employee or independent contractor that
mandates that the employee or independent contractor resolve
through arbitration any claim under title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 or any tort related to or arising out of
sexual assault or harassment, including assault and battery,
intentional infliction of emotional distress, false
imprisonment, or negligent hiring, supervision, or retention.
(b) None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made
available by this Act may be expended for any Federal
contract unless the contractor certifies that it requires
each covered subcontractor to agree not to enter into, and
not to take any action to enforce any provision of, any
agreement as described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of
subsection (a), with respect to any employee or independent
contractor performing work related to such subcontract. For
purposes of this subsection, a ``covered subcontractor'' is
an entity that has a subcontract in excess of $1,000,000 on a
contract subject to subsection (a).
(c) The prohibitions in this section do not apply with
respect to a contractor's or subcontractor's agreements with
employees or independent contractors that may not be enforced
in a court of the United States.
(d) The Secretary of Defense may waive the application of
subsection (a) or (b) to a particular contractor or
subcontractor for the purposes of a particular contract or
subcontract if the Secretary or the Deputy Secretary
personally determines that the waiver is necessary to avoid
harm to national security interests of the United States, and
that the term of the contract or subcontract is not longer
than necessary to avoid such harm. The determination shall
set forth with specificity the grounds for the waiver and for
the contract or subcontract term selected, and shall state
any alternatives considered in lieu of a waiver and the
reasons each such alternative would not avoid harm to
national security interests of the United States. The
Secretary of Defense shall transmit to Congress, and
simultaneously make public, any determination under this
subsection not less than 15 business days before the contract
or subcontract addressed in the determination may be awarded.
(e) By March 1, 2011, or within 60 days after enactment of
this Act, whichever is later, the Government Accountability
Office shall submit a report to the Congress evaluating the
effect that the requirements of this section have had on
national security, including recommendations, if any, for
changes to these requirements.
Sec. 8103. (a) Prohibition on Conversion of Functions
Performed by Federal Employees to Contractor Performance.--
None of the funds appropriated by this Act or otherwise
available to the Department of Defense may be used to begin
or announce the competition to award to a contractor or
convert to performance by a contractor any functions
performed by Federal employees pursuant to a study conducted
under Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-76.
(b) Exception.--The prohibition in subsection (a) shall not
apply to the award of a function to a contractor or the
conversion of a function to performance by a contractor
pursuant to a study conducted under Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) Circular A-76 once all reporting and
certifications required by section 325 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law
111-84) have been satisfactorily completed.
Sec. 8104. (a)(1) No National Intelligence Program funds
appropriated in this Act may be used for a mission critical
or mission essential business management information
technology system that is not registered with the Director of
National Intelligence. A system shall be considered to be
registered with that officer upon the furnishing notice of
the system, together with such information concerning the
system as the Director of the Business Transformation Office
may prescribe.
(2) During the current fiscal year no funds may be
obligated or expended for a financial management automated
information system, a mixed information system supporting
financial and non-financial systems, or a business system
improvement of more than $3,000,000, within the Intelligence
Community without the approval of the Business Transformation
Office, and the designated Intelligence Community functional
lead element.
(b) The Director of the Business Transformation Office
shall provide the congressional intelligence committees a
semi-annual report of approvals under paragraph (1) no later
than March 30 and September 30 of each year. The report shall
include the results of the Business Transformation Investment
Review Board's semi-annual activities, and each report shall
certify that the following steps have been taken for systems
approved under paragraph (1):
(1) Business process reengineering.
(2) An analysis of alternatives and an economic analysis
that includes a calculation of the return on investment.
(3) Assurance the system is compatible with the enterprise-
wide business architecture.
(4) Performance measures.
(5) An information assurance strategy consistent with the
Chief Information Officer of the Intelligence Community.
(c) This section shall not apply to any programmatic or
analytic systems or programmatic or analytic system
improvements.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8105. Of the funds appropriated in this Act for the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence, $50,000,000,
may be transferred to appropriations available to the Central
Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency, and the
National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, the Defense
Intelligence Agency and the National Reconnaissance Office
for the Business Transformation Transfer Funds, to be merged
with and to be available for the same time period and the
same purposes as the appropriation to which transferred:
Provided, That the transfer authority provided under this
provision is in addition to any other transfer authority
contained in this Act.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8106. In addition to funds made available elsewhere
in this Act, there is hereby appropriated $538,875,000, to
remain available until transferred: Provided, That these
funds are appropriated to the ``Tanker Replacement Transfer
Fund'' (referred to as ``the Fund'' elsewhere in this
section): Provided further, That the Secretary of the Air
Force may transfer amounts in the Fund to ``Operation and
Maintenance, Air Force'', ``Aircraft Procurement, Air
Force'', and ``Research, Development, Test and Evaluation,
Air Force'', only for the purposes of proceeding with a
tanker acquisition program: Provided further, That funds
transferred shall be merged with and be available for the
same purposes and for the same time period as the
appropriations or fund to which transferred: Provided
further, That this transfer authority is in addition to any
other transfer authority available to the Department of
Defense: Provided further, That the Secretary of the Air
Force shall, not fewer than 15 days prior to making transfers
using funds provided in this section, notify the
congressional defense committees in writing of the details of
any such transfer: Provided further, That the Secretary
shall submit a report no later than 30 days after the end of
each fiscal quarter to the congressional defense committees
summarizing the details of the transfer of funds from this
appropriation.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8107. From within the funds appropriated for
operation and maintenance for the Defense Health Program in
this Act, up to $132,200,000, shall be available for transfer
to the Joint Department of Defense-Department of Veterans
Affairs Medical Facility Demonstration Fund in accordance
with the provisions of section 1704 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010, Public Law 111-84:
Provided, That for purposes of section 1704(b), the facility
operations funded are operations of the integrated Captain
James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center, consisting of the
North Chicago Veterans Affairs Medical Center, the Navy
Ambulatory Care Center, and supporting facilities designated
as a combined Federal medical facility as described by
section 706 of Public Law 110-417: Provided further, That
additional funds may be transferred from funds appropriated
for operation and maintenance for the Defense Health Program
to the Joint Department of Defense-Department of Veterans
Affairs Medical Facility Demonstration Fund upon written
notification by the Secretary of Defense to the Committees on
Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the
Senate.
Sec. 8108. (a) Of the amounts made available in this Act
under the heading ``Operation and Maintenance, Navy'', not
less than $2,000,000, shall be made available for leveraging
the Army's Contractor Manpower Reporting Application,
modified as appropriate for Service-specific requirements,
for documenting the number of full-time contractor employees
(or its equivalent) pursuant to United States Code title 10,
section 2330a(c) and meeting the requirements of United
States Code title 10, section 2330a(e) and United States Code
title 10, section 235.
(b) Of the amounts made available in this Act under the
heading ``Operation and Maintenance, Air Force'', not less
than $2,000,000 shall be made available for leveraging the
Army's Contractor Manpower Reporting Application, modified as
appropriate for Service-specific requirements, for
documenting the number of full-time contractor employees (or
its equivalent) pursuant to United States Code title 10
section 2330a(c) and meeting the requirements of United
States Code title 10, section 2330a(e) and United States Code
title 10, section 235.
(c) The Secretaries of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and the
Directors of the Defense
[[Page H2439]]
Agencies and Field Activities (in coordination with the
appropriate Principal Staff Assistant), in coordination with
the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness,
shall report to the congressional defense committees within
60 days of enactment of this Act their plan for documenting
the number of full-time contractor employees (or its
equivalent), as required by United States Code title 10,
section 2330a.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 8109. In addition to amounts provided elsewhere in
this Act, there is appropriated $250,000,000, for an
additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance, Defense-
Wide'', to be available until expended: Provided, That such
funds shall only be available to the Secretary of Defense,
acting through the Office of Economic Adjustment of the
Department of Defense, or for transfer to the Secretary of
Education, notwithstanding any other provision of law, to
make grants, conclude cooperative agreements, or supplement
other Federal funds to construct, renovate, repair, or expand
elementary and secondary public schools on military
installations in order to address capacity or facility
condition deficiencies at such schools: Provided further,
That in making such funds available, the Office of Economic
Adjustment or the Secretary of Education shall give priority
consideration to those military installations with schools
having the most serious capacity or facility condition
deficiencies as determined by the Secretary of Defense.
Sec. 8110. In addition to amounts provided elsewhere in
this Act, there is appropriated $300,000,000, for an
additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance, Defense-
Wide'', to remain available until expended. Such funds may be
available for the Office of Economic Adjustment,
notwithstanding any other provision of law, for
transportation infrastructure improvements associated with
medical facilities related to recommendations of the Defense
Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
Sec. 8111. Section 310(b) of the Supplemental
Appropriations Act, 2009 (Public Law 111-32; 124 Stat. 1871)
is amended by striking ``1 year'' both places it appears and
inserting ``2 years''.
Sec. 8112. The Office of the Director of National
Intelligence shall not employ more Senior Executive employees
than are specified in the classified annex: Provided, That
not later than 90 days after enactment of this Act, the
Director of National Intelligence shall certify that the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence selects
individuals for Senior Executive positions in a manner
consistent with statutes, regulations, and the requirements
of other Federal agencies in making such appointments and
will submit its policies and procedures related to the
appointment of personnel to Senior Executive positions to the
congressional intelligence oversight committees.
Sec. 8113. For all major defense acquisition programs for
which the Department of Defense plans to proceed to source
selection during the current fiscal year, the Secretary of
Defense shall perform an assessment of the winning bidder to
determine whether or not the proposed costs are realistic and
reasonable with respect to proposed development and
production costs. The Secretary of Defense shall provide a
report of these assessments, to specifically include whether
any cost assessments determined that such proposed costs were
unreasonable or unrealistic, to the congressional defense
committees not later than 60 days after enactment of this Act
and on a quarterly basis thereafter.
Sec. 8114. (a) The Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for
Installations and Environment, in collaboration with the
Secretary of Energy, shall conduct energy security pilot
projects at facilities of the Department of Defense.
(b) In addition to the amounts provided elsewhere in this
Act, $20,000,000, is appropriated to the Department of
Defense for ``Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide'' for
energy security pilot projects under subsection (a).
Sec. 8115. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available by this Act may be obligated or expended to
pay a retired general or flag officer to serve as a senior
mentor advising the Department of Defense unless such retired
officer files a Standard Form 278 (or successor form
concerning public financial disclosure under part 2634 of
title 5, Code of Federal Regulations) to the Office of
Government Ethics.
Sec. 8116. Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, the Chief of
the Air Force Reserve, and the Director of the National Guard
Bureau, in collaboration with the Secretary of Agriculture
and the Secretary of the Interior, shall submit to the
Committees on Appropriations of the House and Senate, the
House Committee on Agriculture, the Senate Committee on
Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, the House Committee on
Natural Resources, and the Senate Committee on Energy and
Natural Resources a report of firefighting aviation assets.
The report required under this section shall include each of
the following:
(1) A description of the programming details necessary to
obtain an appropriate mix of fixed wing and rotor wing
firefighting assets needed to produce an effective aviation
resource base to support the wildland fire management program
into the future. Such programming details shall include the
acquisition and contracting needs of the mix of aviation
resources fleet, including the acquisition of up to 24 C-
130Js equipped with the Mobile Airborne Fire Fighting System
II (in this section referred to as ``MAFFS''), to be acquired
over several fiscal years starting in fiscal year 2012.
(2) The costs associated with acquisition and contracting
of the aviation assets described in paragraph (1).
(3) A description of the costs of the operation,
maintenance, and sustainment of a fixed and rotor wing
aviation fleet, including a C-130J/MAFFS II in an Air
National Guard tactical airlift unit construct of 4, 6, or 8
C-130Js per unit starting in fiscal year 2012, projected out
through fiscal year 2020. Such description shall include the
projected costs associated with each of the following through
fiscal year 2020:
(A) Crew ratio based on 4, 6, or 8 C-130J Air National
Guard unit construct and requirement for full-time equivalent
crews.
(B) Associated maintenance and other support personnel and
requirement for full-time equivalent positions.
(C) Yearly flying hour model and the cost for use of a
fixed and rotor wing aviation fleet, including C-130J in its
MAFFS capacity supporting the United States Forest Service.
(D) Yearly flying hour model and cost for use of a C-130J
in its capacity supporting Air National Guard tactical
airlift training.
(E) Any other costs required to conduct both the airlift
and firefighting missions, including the Air National Guard
unit construct for C-130Js.
(4) Proposed program management, utilization, and cost
share arrangements for the aircraft described in paragraph
(1) for primary support of the Forest Service and secondary
support, on an as available basis, for the Department of
Defense, together with any proposed statutory language needed
to authorize and effectuate the same.
(5) An integrated plan for the Forest Service and the
Department of the Interior wildland fire management programs
to operate the fire fighting air tanker assets referred to in
this section.
Sec. 8117. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Act, to reflect savings from revised economic assumptions,
the total amount appropriated in title II of this Act is
hereby reduced by $244,000,000, the total amount appropriated
in title III of this Act is hereby reduced by $258,000,000,
and the total amount appropriated in title IV of this Act is
hereby reduced by $175,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary
of Defense shall allocate this reduction proportionally to
each budget activity, activity group, subactivity group, and
each program, project, and activity, within each
appropriation account.
Sec. 8118. The total amount available in this Act for pay
for civilian personnel of the Department of Defense for
fiscal year 2011 shall be the amount otherwise appropriated
or made available by this Act for such pay reduced by
$723,000,000.
Sec. 8119. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available to the Department of Defense may be used for
the disestablishment, closure, or realignment of the Joint
Forces Command unless within 120 days of the enactment of
this Act--
(1) the Secretary of Defense notifies the congressional
defense committees of the proposed disestablishment, closure,
or realignment of the Joint Forces Command; and
(2) the Secretary submits to the congressional defense
committees a plan for the disestablishment, closure, or
realignment of the Joint Forces Command, which plan shall
contain at a minimum--
(A) an explanation of the projected savings of the proposed
disestablishment, closure, or realignment;
(B) a cost-benefit analysis of the proposed
disestablishment, closure, or realignment;
(C) the budgetary impact of the proposed disestablishment,
closure, or realignment;
(D) the strategic and operational consequences of the
proposed disestablishment, closure, or realignment; and
(E) an appropriate local economic assessment of the
proposed disestablishment, closure, or realignment, which
shall include at a minimum--
(i) a list of Federal, State, and local government
departments and agencies that are required by statute or
regulation to provide assistance and outreach for the
community affected by the proposed disestablishment, closure,
or realignment; and
(ii) a list of the contractors and businesses affected by
the proposed disestablishment, closure, or realignment.
Sec. 8120. The explanatory statement regarding this Act,
printed in the House of Representatives section of the
Congressional Record on or about April 6, 2011, by the
Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations of the House of
Representatives, shall have the same effect with respect to
the allocation of funds and implementation of this Act as if
it were a Report of the Committee on Appropriations.
Sec. 8121. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available by this Act or any other appropriations Act
may be used to transfer, release, or assist in the transfer
or release to or within the United States, its territories,
or possessions Khalid Sheikh Mohammed or any other detainee
who--
(1) is not a United States citizen or a member of the Armed
Forces of the United States; and
(2) is or was held on or after June 24, 2009, at the United
States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, by the Department
of Defense.
Sec. 8122. (a)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), none
of the funds appropriated or
[[Page H2440]]
otherwise made available by this Act or any other
appropriations Act may be used to transfer any individual
detained at Guantanamo to the custody or effective control of
the individual's country of origin, any other foreign
country, or any other foreign entity unless the Secretary of
Defense submits to Congress the certification described in
subsection (b) by not later than 30 days before the transfer
of the individual.
(2) Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any action taken by
the Secretary of Defense to transfer any individual detained
at Guantanamo to effectuate an order affecting the
disposition of the individual that is issued by a court or
competent tribunal of the United States having lawful
jurisdiction. The Secretary of Defense shall notify Congress
promptly upon issuance of any such order.
(b) The certification described in this subsection is a
written certification made by the Secretary of Defense, with
the concurrence of the Secretary of State, that the
government of the foreign country or the recognized
leadership of the foreign entity to which the individual
detained at Guantanamo is to be transferred--
(1) is not a designated state sponsor of terrorism or a
designated foreign terrorist organization;
(2) maintains effective control over each detention
facility in which an individual is to be detained if the
individual is to be housed in a detention facility;
(3) is not, as of the date of the certification, facing a
threat that is likely to substantially affect its ability to
exercise control over the individual;
(4) has agreed to take effective steps to ensure that the
individual cannot take action to threaten the United States,
its citizens, or its allies in the future;
(5) has taken such steps as the Secretary determines are
necessary to ensure that the individual cannot engage or re-
engage in any terrorist activity; and
(6) has agreed to share any information with the United
States that--
(A) is related to the individual or any associates of the
individual; and
(B) could affect the security of the United States, its
citizens, or its allies.
(c)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (3), none of the
funds appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act or
any other appropriations Act may be used to transfer any
individual detained at Guantanamo to the custody or effective
control of the individual's country of origin, any other
foreign country, or any other foreign entity if there is a
confirmed case of any individual who was detained at United
States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, at any time after
September 11, 2001, who was transferred to the foreign
country or entity and subsequently engaged in any terrorist
activity.
(2) The Secretary of Defense may waive the prohibition in
paragraph (1) if the Secretary determines that such a
transfer is in the national security interests of the United
States and includes, as part of the certification described
in subsection (b) relating to such transfer, the
determination of the Secretary under this paragraph.
(3) Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any action taken by
the Secretary to transfer any individual detained at
Guantanamo to effectuate an order affecting the disposition
of the individual that is issued by a court or competent
tribunal of the United States having lawful jurisdiction. The
Secretary shall notify Congress promptly upon issuance of any
such order.
(d) For the purposes of this section:
(1) The term ``individual detained at Guantanamo'' means
any individual who is located at United States Naval Station,
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as of October 1, 2009, who--
(A) is not a citizen of the United States or a member of
the Armed Forces of the United States; and
(B) is--
(I) in the custody or under the effective control of the
Department of Defense; or
(ii) otherwise under detention at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
(2) The term ``foreign terrorist organization'' means any
organization so designated by the Secretary of State under
section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1189).
Sec. 8123. (a) None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available by this Act or any other appropriations Act
may be used to construct or modify any facility in the United
States, its territories, or possessions to house any
individual described in subsection (c)) for the purposes of
detention or imprisonment in the custody or under the
effective control of the Department of Defense.
(b) The prohibition in subsection (a) shall not apply to
any modification of facilities at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
(c) An individual described in this subsection is any
individual who, as of June 24, 2009, is located at United
States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and who--
(1) is not a citizen of the United States or a member of
the Armed Forces of the United States; and
(2) is--
(A) in the custody or under the effective control of the
Department of Defense; or
(B) otherwise under detention at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
TITLE IX
OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
MILITARY PERSONNEL
Military Personnel, Army
For an additional amount for ``Military Personnel, Army'',
$11,468,033,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Military Personnel, Navy
For an additional amount for ``Military Personnel, Navy'',
$1,308,719,000: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph
is designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Military Personnel, Marine Corps
For an additional amount for ``Military Personnel, Marine
Corps'', $732,920,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Military Personnel, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Military Personnel, Air
Force'', $2,060,442,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Reserve Personnel, Army
For an additional amount for ``Reserve Personnel, Army'',
$268,031,000: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph
is designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Reserve Personnel, Navy
For an additional amount for ``Reserve Personnel, Navy'',
$48,912,000: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Reserve Personnel, Marine Corps
For an additional amount for ``Reserve Personnel, Marine
Corps'', $45,437,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Reserve Personnel, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Reserve Personnel, Air
Force'', $27,002,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
National Guard Personnel, Army
For an additional amount for ``National Guard Personnel,
Army'', $853,022,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
National Guard Personnel, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``National Guard Personnel,
Air Force'', $16,860,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Operation and Maintenance, Army
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Army'', $59,212,782,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Navy
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Navy'', $8,970,724,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is
[[Page H2441]]
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Marine Corps
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Marine Corps'', $4,008,022,000: Provided, That each amount
in this paragraph is designated as being for contingency
operations directly related to the global war on terrorism
pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and
as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S.
Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on
the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Air Force'', $12,989,643,000: Provided, That each amount in
this paragraph is designated as being for contingency
operations directly related to the global war on terrorism
pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and
as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S.
Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on
the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Defense-Wide'', $9,276,990,000: Provided, That each amount
in this section is designated as being for contingency
operations directly related to the global war on terrorism
pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and
as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S.
Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on
the budget for fiscal year 2010: Provided further, That of
the funds provided under this heading:
(1) Not to exceed $12,500,000 for the Combatant Commander
Initiative Fund, to be used in support of Operation New Dawn
and Operation Enduring Freedom.
(2) Not to exceed $1,600,000,000, to remain available until
expended, for payments to reimburse key cooperating nations
for logistical, military, and other support, including access
provided to United States military operations in support of
Operation New Dawn and Operation Enduring Freedom,
notwithstanding any other provision of law: Provided, That
such reimbursement payments may be made in such amounts as
the Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the
Secretary of State, and in consultation with the Director of
the Office of Management and Budget, may determine, in his
discretion, based on documentation determined by the
Secretary of Defense to adequately account for the support
provided, and such determination is final and conclusive upon
the accounting officers of the United States, and 15 days
following notification to the appropriate congressional
committees: Provided further, That the requirement to
provide notification shall not apply with respect to a
reimbursement for access based on an international agreement:
Provided further, That these funds may be used for the
purpose of providing specialized training and procuring
supplies and specialized equipment and providing such
supplies and loaning such equipment on a non-reimbursable
basis to coalition forces supporting United States military
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, and 15 days following
notification to the appropriate congressional committees:
Provided further, That the Secretary of Defense shall provide
quarterly reports to the congressional defense committees on
the use of funds provided in this paragraph.
Operation and Maintenance, Army Reserve
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Army Reserve'', $206,784,000: Provided, That each amount in
this paragraph is designated as being for contingency
operations directly related to the global war on terrorism
pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and
as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S.
Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on
the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Navy Reserve
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Navy Reserve'', $93,559,000: Provided, That each amount in
this paragraph is designated as being for contingency
operations directly related to the global war on terrorism
pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and
as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S.
Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on
the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Marine Corps Reserve
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Marine Corps Reserve'', $29,685,000: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Air Force Reserve
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Air Force Reserve'', $203,807,000: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Army National Guard
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Army National Guard'', $497,849,000: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Operation and Maintenance, Air National Guard
For an additional amount for ``Operation and Maintenance,
Air National Guard'', $417,983,000: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund
(including transfer of funds)
There is hereby established in the Treasury of the United
States the ``Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund''. For the
``Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund'', $400,000,000, to remain
available until September 30, 2012: Provided, That such sums
shall be available for infrastructure projects in
Afghanistan, notwithstanding any other provision of law,
which shall be undertaken by the Secretary of State, unless
the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense jointly
decide that a specific project will be undertaken by the
Department of Defense: Provided further, That the
infrastructure referred to in the preceding proviso is in
support of the counterinsurgency strategy, requiring funding
for facility and infrastructure projects, including, but not
limited to, water, power, and transportation projects and
related maintenance and sustainment costs: Provided further,
That the authority to undertake such infrastructure projects
is in addition to any other authority to provide assistance
to foreign nations: Provided further, That any projects
funded by this appropriation shall be jointly formulated and
concurred in by the Secretary of State and Secretary of
Defense: Provided further, That funds may be transferred to
the Department of State for purposes of undertaking projects,
which funds shall be considered to be economic assistance
under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 for purposes of
making available the administrative authorities contained in
that Act: Provided further, That the transfer authority in
the preceding proviso is in addition to any other authority
available to the Department of Defense to transfer funds:
Provided further, That any unexpended funds transferred to
the Secretary of State under this authority shall be returned
to the Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund if the Secretary of
State, in coordination with the Secretary of Defense,
determines that the project cannot be implemented for any
reason, or that the project no longer supports the
counterinsurgency strategy in Afghanistan: Provided further,
That any funds returned to the Secretary of Defense under the
previous proviso shall be available for use under this
appropriation and shall be treated in the same manner as
funds not transferred to the Secretary of State: Provided
further, That contributions of funds for the purposes
provided herein to the Secretary of State in accordance with
section 635(d) of the Foreign Assistance Act from any person,
foreign government, or international organization may be
credited to this Fund, to remain available until expended,
and used for such purposes: Provided further, That the
Secretary of Defense shall, not fewer than 15 days prior to
making transfers to or from, or obligations from the Fund,
notify the appropriate committees of Congress in writing of
the details of any such transfer: Provided further, That the
``appropriate committees of Congress'' are the Committees on
Armed Services, Foreign Relations and Appropriations of the
Senate and the Committees on Armed Services, Foreign Affairs
and Appropriations of the House of Representatives: Provided
further, That each amount in this paragraph is designated as
being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
Afghanistan Security Forces Fund
For the ``Afghanistan Security Forces Fund'',
$11,619,283,000, to remain available until September 30,
2012: Provided, That such funds shall be available to the
Secretary of Defense, notwithstanding any other provision of
law, for the purpose of allowing the Commander, Combined
Security Transition Command--Afghanistan, or the Secretary's
designee, to provide assistance, with the concurrence of the
Secretary of State, to the security forces of Afghanistan,
including the provision of equipment, supplies, services,
[[Page H2442]]
training, facility and infrastructure repair, renovation, and
construction, and funding: Provided further, That the
authority to provide assistance under this heading is in
addition to any other authority to provide assistance to
foreign nations: Provided further, That up to $15,000,000 of
these funds may be available for coalition police trainer
life support costs: Provided further, That contributions of
funds for the purposes provided herein from any person,
foreign government, or international organization may be
credited to this Fund and used for such purposes: Provided
further, That the Secretary of Defense shall notify the
congressional defense committees in writing upon the receipt
and upon the obligation of any contribution, delineating the
sources and amounts of the funds received and the specific
use of such contributions: Provided further, That the
Secretary of Defense shall, not fewer than 15 days prior to
obligating from this appropriation account, notify the
congressional defense committees in writing of the details of
any such obligation: Provided further, That the Secretary of
Defense shall notify the congressional defense committees of
any proposed new projects or transfer of funds between budget
sub-activity groups in excess of $20,000,000: Provided
further, That each amount in this paragraph is designated as
being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
Iraq Security Forces Fund
For the ``Iraq Security Forces Fund'', $1,500,000,000, to
remain available until September 30, 2012: Provided, That
such funds shall be available to the Secretary of Defense,
notwithstanding any other provision of law, for the purpose
of allowing the Commander, United States Forces-Iraq, or the
Secretary's designee, to provide assistance, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of State, to the security forces
of Iraq, including the provision of equipment, supplies,
services, training, facility and infrastructure repair, and
renovation: Provided further, That the authority to provide
assistance under this heading is in addition to any other
authority to provide assistance to foreign nations: Provided
further, That contributions of funds for the purposes
provided herein from any person, foreign government, or
international organization may be credited to this Fund and
used for such purposes: Provided further, That the Secretary
shall notify the congressional defense committees in writing
upon the receipt and upon the obligation of any contribution,
delineating the sources and amounts of the funds received and
the specific use of such contributions: Provided further,
That the Secretary of Defense shall, not fewer than 15 days
prior to obligating from this appropriation account, notify
the congressional defense committees in writing of the
details of any such obligation: Provided further, That the
Secretary of Defense shall notify the congressional defense
committees of any proposed new projects or transfer of funds
between budget sub-activity groups in excess of $20,000,000:
Provided further, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
PROCUREMENT
Aircraft Procurement, Army
For an additional amount for ``Aircraft Procurement,
Army'', $2,720,138,000, to remain available until September
30, 2013: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Missile Procurement, Army
For an additional amount for ``Missile Procurement, Army'',
$343,828,000, to remain available until September 30, 2013:
Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is designated as
being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
Procurement of Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army
For an additional amount for ``Procurement of Weapons and
Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army'', $896,996,000, to remain
available until September 30, 2013: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Procurement of Ammunition, Army
For an additional amount for ``Procurement of Ammunition,
Army'', $369,885,000, to remain available until September 30,
2013: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Other Procurement, Army
For an additional amount for ``Other Procurement, Army'',
$6,423,832,000, to remain available until September 30, 2013:
Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is designated
as being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
Aircraft Procurement, Navy
For an additional amount for ``Aircraft Procurement,
Navy'', $1,269,549,000, to remain available until September
30, 2013: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Weapons Procurement, Navy
For an additional amount for ``Weapons Procurement, Navy'',
$90,502,000, to remain available until September 30, 2013:
Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is designated as
being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
Procurement of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps
For an additional amount for ``Procurement of Ammunition,
Navy and Marine Corps'', $558,024,000, to remain available
until September 30, 2013: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Other Procurement, Navy
For an additional amount for ``Other Procurement, Navy'',
$316,835,000, to remain available until September 30, 2013:
Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is designated as
being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
Procurement, Marine Corps
For an additional amount for ``Procurement, Marine Corps'',
$1,589,119,000, to remain available until September 30, 2013:
Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is designated
as being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
Aircraft Procurement, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Aircraft Procurement, Air
Force'', $1,991,955,000, to remain available until September
30, 2013: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Missile Procurement, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Missile Procurement, Air
Force'', $56,621,000, to remain available until September 30,
2013: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Procurement of Ammunition, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Procurement of Ammunition,
Air Force'', $292,959,000, to remain available until
September 30, 2013: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Other Procurement, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Other Procurement, Air
Force'', $2,868,593,000, to remain available until September
30, 2013: Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on
[[Page H2443]]
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Procurement, Defense-Wide
For an additional amount for ``Procurement, Defense-Wide'',
$1,262,499,000, to remain available until September 30, 2013:
Provided, That each amount in this paragraph is designated
as being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H.
Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency requirement
pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th
Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal
year 2010.
National Guard and Reserve Equipment
For procurement of aircraft, missiles, tracked combat
vehicles, ammunition, other weapons and other procurement for
the reserve components of the Armed Forces, $850,000,000, to
remain available for obligation until September 30, 2013, of
which $250,000,000 shall be available only for the Army
National Guard: Provided, That the Chiefs of National Guard
and Reserve components shall, not later than 30 days after
the enactment of this Act, individually submit to the
congressional defense committees the modernization priority
assessment for their respective National Guard or Reserve
component: Provided further, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle Fund
(including transfer of funds)
For the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle Fund,
$3,415,000,000, to remain available until September 30, 2012:
Provided, That such funds shall be available to the
Secretary of Defense, notwithstanding any other provision of
law, to procure, sustain, transport, and field Mine Resistant
Ambush Protected vehicles: Provided further, That the
Secretary shall transfer such funds only to appropriations
made available in this or any other Act for operation and
maintenance; procurement; research, development, test and
evaluation; and defense working capital funds to accomplish
the purpose provided herein: Provided further, That such
transferred funds shall be merged with and be available for
the same purposes and the same time period as the
appropriation to which transferred: Provided further, That
this transfer authority is in addition to any other transfer
authority available to the Department of Defense: Provided
further, That the Secretary shall, not fewer than 10 days
prior to making transfers from this appropriation, notify the
congressional defense committees in writing of the details of
any such transfer: Provided further, That each amount in
this paragraph is designated as being for contingency
operations directly related to the global war on terrorism
pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and
as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S.
Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on
the budget for fiscal year 2010.
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND EVALUATION
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Army
For an additional amount for ``Research, Development, Test
and Evaluation, Army'', $143,234,000, to remain available
until September 30, 2012: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Navy
For an additional amount for ``Research, Development, Test
and Evaluation, Navy'', $104,781,000, to remain available
until September 30, 2012: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Air Force
For an additional amount for ``Research, Development, Test
and Evaluation, Air Force'', $484,382,000, to remain
available until September 30, 2012: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-Wide
For an additional amount for ``Research, Development, Test
and Evaluation, Defense-Wide'', $222,616,000, to remain
available until September 30, 2012: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
REVOLVING AND MANAGEMENT FUNDS
Defense Working Capital Funds
For an additional amount for ``Defense Working Capital
Funds'', $485,384,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
OTHER DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PROGRAMS
Defense Health Program
For an additional amount for ``Defense Health Program'',
$1,422,092,000, of which $1,398,092,000 shall be for
operation and maintenance, to remain available until
September 30, 2011, and of which $24,000,000 shall be for
research, development, test and evaluation, to remain
available until September 30, 2012: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense
For an additional amount for ``Drug Interdiction and
Counter-Drug Activities, Defense'', $440,510,000, to remain
available until September 30, 2012: Provided, That each
amount in this paragraph is designated as being for
contingency operations directly related to the global war on
terrorism pursuant to section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th
Congress) and as an emergency requirement pursuant to section
403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent
resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2010.
Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund
(including transfer of funds)
For the ``Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund'',
$2,793,768,000, to remain available until September 30, 2013:
Provided, That such funds shall be available to the
Secretary of Defense, notwithstanding any other provision of
law, for the purpose of allowing the Director of the Joint
Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization to
investigate, develop and provide equipment, supplies,
services, training, facilities, personnel and funds to assist
United States forces in the defeat of improvised explosive
devices: Provided further, That the Secretary of Defense may
transfer funds provided herein to appropriations for military
personnel; operation and maintenance; procurement; research,
development, test and evaluation; and defense working capital
funds to accomplish the purpose provided herein: Provided
further, That this transfer authority is in addition to any
other transfer authority available to the Department of
Defense: Provided further, That the Secretary of Defense
shall, not fewer than 15 days prior to making transfers from
this appropriation, notify the congressional defense
committees in writing of the details of any such transfer:
Provided further, That each amount in this paragraph is
designated as being for contingency operations directly
related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to section
3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an emergency
requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con. Res. 13
(111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for
fiscal year 2010.
Office of the Inspector General
For an additional amount for the ``Office of the Inspector
General'', $10,529,000: Provided, That each amount in this
paragraph is designated as being for contingency operations
directly related to the global war on terrorism pursuant to
section 3(c)(2) of H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) and as an
emergency requirement pursuant to section 403(a) of S. Con.
Res. 13 (111th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the
budget for fiscal year 2010.
GENERAL PROVISIONS--THIS TITLE
Sec. 9001. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
funds made available in this title are in addition to amounts
appropriated or otherwise made available for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2011.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 9002. Upon the determination of the Secretary of
Defense that such action is necessary in the national
interest, the Secretary may, with the approval of the Office
of Management and Budget, transfer up to $4,000,000,000
between the appropriations or funds made available to the
Department of Defense in this title: Provided, That the
Secretary shall notify the Congress promptly of each transfer
made pursuant to the authority in this section: Provided
further, That the authority provided in this section is in
addition to any other transfer authority available to the
Department of Defense and is subject to the same terms and
conditions as
[[Page H2444]]
the authority provided in the Department of Defense
Appropriations Act, 2011.
Sec. 9003. Supervision and administration costs associated
with a construction project funded with appropriations
available for operation and maintenance or the ``Afghanistan
Security Forces Fund'' provided in this Act and executed in
direct support of overseas contingency operations in
Afghanistan, may be obligated at the time a construction
contract is awarded: Provided, That for the purpose of this
section, supervision and administration costs include all in-
house Government costs.
Sec. 9004. From funds made available in this title, the
Secretary of Defense may purchase for use by military and
civilian employees of the Department of Defense in Iraq and
Afghanistan: (a) passenger motor vehicles up to a limit of
$75,000 per vehicle; and (b) heavy and light armored vehicles
for the physical security of personnel or for force
protection purposes up to a limit of $250,000 per vehicle,
notwithstanding price or other limitations applicable to the
purchase of passenger carrying vehicles.
Sec. 9005. Not to exceed $500,000,000 of the amount
appropriated in this title under the heading ``Operation and
Maintenance, Army'' may be used, notwithstanding any other
provision of law, to fund the Commander's Emergency Response
Program (CERP), for the purpose of enabling military
commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan to respond to urgent,
small scale, humanitarian relief and reconstruction
requirements within their areas of responsibility: Provided,
That projects (including any ancillary or related elements in
connection with such project) executed under this authority
shall not exceed $20,000,000: Provided further, That not
later than 45 days after the end of each fiscal year quarter,
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report regarding the source of funds and
the allocation and use of funds during that quarter that were
made available pursuant to the authority provided in this
section or under any other provision of law for the purposes
described herein: Provided further, That, not later than 30
days after the end of each month, the Army shall submit to
the congressional defense committees monthly commitment,
obligation, and expenditure data for the Commander's
Emergency Response Program in Iraq and Afghanistan: Provided
further, That not less than 15 days before making funds
available pursuant to the authority provided in this section
or under any other provision of law for the purposes
described herein for a project with a total anticipated cost
for completion of $5,000,000 or more, the Secretary shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a written
notice containing each of the following:
(1) The location, nature and purpose of the proposed
project, including how the project is intended to advance the
military campaign plan for the country in which it is to be
carried out.
(2) The budget, implementation timeline with milestones,
and completion date for the proposed project, including any
other CERP funding that has been or is anticipated to be
contributed to the completion of the project.
(3) A plan for the sustainment of the proposed project,
including the agreement with either the host nation, a non-
Department of Defense agency of the United States Government
or a third party contributor to finance the sustainment of
the activities and maintenance of any equipment or facilities
to be provided through the proposed project.
Sec. 9006. Funds available to the Department of Defense
for operation and maintenance may be used, notwithstanding
any other provision of law, to provide supplies, services,
transportation, including airlift and sealift, and other
logistical support to coalition forces supporting military
and stability operations in Iraq and Afghanistan: Provided,
That the Secretary of Defense shall provide quarterly reports
to the congressional defense committees regarding support
provided under this section.
Sec. 9007. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise
made available by this or any other Act shall be obligated or
expended by the United States Government for a purpose as
follows:
(1) To establish any military installation or base for the
purpose of providing for the permanent stationing of United
States Armed Forces in Iraq.
(2) To exercise United States control over any oil resource
of Iraq.
(3) To establish any military installation or base for the
purpose of providing for the permanent stationing of United
States Armed Forces in Afghanistan.
Sec. 9008. None of the funds made available in this Act
may be used in contravention of the following laws enacted or
regulations promulgated to implement the United Nations
Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment (done at New York on
December 10, 1984):
(1) Section 2340A of title 18, United States Code.
(2) Section 2242 of the Foreign Affairs Reform and
Restructuring Act of 1998 (division G of Public Law 105-277;
112 Stat. 2681-822; 8 U.S.C. 1231 note) and regulations
prescribed thereto, including regulations under part 208 of
title 8, Code of Federal Regulations, and part 95 of title
22, Code of Federal Regulations.
(3) Sections 1002 and 1003 of the Department of Defense,
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations to Address Hurricanes
in the Gulf of Mexico, and Pandemic Influenza Act, 2006
(Public Law 109-148).
Sec. 9009. (a) The Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
congressional defense committees not later than 45 days after
the end of each fiscal quarter a report on the proposed use
of all funds appropriated by this or any prior Act under each
of the headings Iraq Security Forces Fund, Afghanistan
Security Forces Fund, Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund, and
Pakistan Counterinsurgency Fund on a project-by-project
basis, for which the obligation of funds is anticipated
during the 3-month period from such date, including estimates
for the accounts referred to in this section of the costs
required to complete each such project.
(b) The report required by this subsection shall include
the following:
(1) The use of all funds on a project-by-project basis for
which funds appropriated under the headings referred to in
subsection (a) were obligated prior to the submission of the
report, including estimates for the accounts referred to in
subsection (a) of the costs to complete each project.
(2) The use of all funds on a project-by-project basis for
which funds were appropriated under the headings referred to
in subsection (a) in prior appropriations Acts, or for which
funds were made available by transfer, reprogramming, or
allocation from other headings in prior appropriations Acts,
including estimates for the accounts referred to in
subsection (a) of the costs to complete each project.
(3) An estimated total cost to train and equip the Iraq,
Afghanistan, and Pakistan security forces, disaggregated by
major program and sub-elements by force, arrayed by fiscal
year.
Sec. 9010. Funds made available in this title to the
Department of Defense for operation and maintenance may be
used to purchase items having an investment unit cost of not
more than $250,000: Provided, That, upon determination by
the Secretary of Defense that such action is necessary to
meet the operational requirements of a Commander of a
Combatant Command engaged in contingency operations overseas,
such funds may be used to purchase items having an investment
item unit cost of not more than $500,000.
(including transfer of funds)
Sec. 9011. Of the funds appropriated by this Act for the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence, $3,375,000
is available, as specified in the classified annex, for
transfer to other departments and agencies of the Federal
Government.
Sec. 9012. (a) The Task Force for Business and Stability
Operations in Afghanistan may, subject to the direction and
control of the Secretary of Defense and with the concurrence
of the Secretary of State, carry out projects in fiscal year
2011 to assist the commander of the United States Central
Command in developing a link between United States military
operations in Afghanistan under Operation Enduring Freedom
and the economic elements of United States national power in
order to reduce violence, enhance stability, and restore
economic normalcy in Afghanistan through strategic business
and economic opportunities.
(b) The projects carried out under paragraph (a) may
include projects that facilitate private investment,
industrial development, banking and financial system
development, agricultural diversification and revitalization,
and energy development in and with respect to Afghanistan.
(c) The Secretary may use up to $150,000,000 of the funds
available for overseas contingency operations in ``Operation
and Maintenance, Army'' for additional activities to carry
out projects under paragraph (a).
Sec. 9013. (a) Not more than 85 percent of the funds
provided in this title for Operation and Maintenance may be
available for obligation or expenditure until the date on
which the Secretary of Defense submits the report under
subsection (b).
(b) Not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on contractor
employees in the United States Central Command, including--
(1) the number of employees of a contractor awarded a
contract by the Department of Defense (including
subcontractor employees) who are employed at the time of the
report in the area of operations of the United States Central
Command, including a list of the number of such employees in
each of Iraq, Afghanistan, and all other areas of operations
of the United States Central Command; and
(2) for each fiscal year quarter beginning on the date of
the report and ending on September 30, 2012--
(A) the number of such employees planned by the Secretary
to be employed during each such period in each of Iraq,
Afghanistan, and all other areas of operations of the United
States Central Command; and
(B) an explanation of how the number of such employees
listed under subparagraph (A) relates to the planned number
of military personnel in such locations.
Sec. 9014. From funds made available in this title to the
Department of Defense for operation and maintenance, up to
$129,100,000 may be used by the Secretary of Defense,
notwithstanding any other provision of law, to support the
United States Government transition activities in Iraq by
undertaking facilities renovation and construction associated
with establishing Office of Security
[[Page H2445]]
Cooperation locations, at no more than four sites, in Iraq:
Provided, That not less than 15 days before making funds
available pursuant to the authority provided in this section,
the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a written notice containing a detailed
justification and timeline for each proposed site and the
source of funds.
Sec. 9015. Any reference to ``this Act'' in this division
shall apply solely to this division.
This division may be cited as the ``Department of Defense
Appropriations Act, 2011''.
DIVISION B--FURTHER CONTINUING APPROPRIATIONS, 2011
Sec. 2001. The Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011 (Public
Law 111-242) is further amended--
(1) by striking the date specified in section 106(3) and
inserting ``April 15, 2011''; and
(2) by adding after section 294, as added by the Additional
Continuing Appropriations Amendments, 2011 (Public Law 112-
6), the following new sections:
``Sec. 295. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Agricultural Programs--Agriculture Buildings
and Facilities and Rental Payments' at a rate for operations
of $262,093,000, of which $178,812,000 shall be available for
payments to the General Services Administration for rent and
of which $69,781,000 shall be for buildings operations and
maintenance expenses.
``Sec. 296. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Agricultural Programs--Departmental
Administration' at a rate for operations of $28,809,000:
Provided, That the second proviso under such heading in
Public Law 111-80 shall not apply to funds appropriated by
this Act.
``Sec. 297. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Agricultural Programs--National Agricultural
Statistics Service' at a rate for operations of $151,830,000:
Provided, That the amounts included under such heading in
Public Law 111-80 shall be applied to funds appropriated by
this Act by substituting `$33,494,000' for `$37,908,000'.
``Sec. 298. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Agricultural Programs--National Institute of
Food and Agriculture--Integrated Activities' at a rate for
operations of $24,874,000: Provided, That the amounts
included under such heading in Public Law 111-80 shall be
applied to funds appropriated by this Act as follows: by
substituting `$15,044,000' for `$45,148,000'; by substituting
`$10,948,000' for `$12,649,000'; by substituting `$0' for
`$14,596,000'; by substituting `$0' for `$4,388,000'; by
substituting `$0' for `$1,365,000'; by substituting `$0' for
`$3,054,000'; by substituting `$0' for `$5,000,000'; by
substituting `$0' for `$3,000,000'; by substituting `$0' for
`$732,000'; and by substituting `$0' for `$1,312,000'.
``Sec. 299. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 231, amounts
are provided for `Agricultural Programs--Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service--Salaries and Expenses' at a rate
for operations of $832,543,000: Provided, That the amounts
included under such heading in Public Law 111-80 shall be
applied to funds appropriated by this Act by substituting
`$45,219,000' for `$60,243,000'.
``Sec. 300. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Agricultural Programs--Farm Service Agency--
Salaries and Expenses' at a rate for operations of
$1,229,777,000.
``Sec. 301. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Conservation Programs--Natural Resources
Conservation Service--Watershed Rehabilitation Program' at a
rate for operations of $25,161,000.
``Sec. 302. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Conservation Programs--Natural Resources
Conservation Service--Resource Conservation and Development'
at a rate for operations of $24,730,000.
``Sec. 303. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Rural Development Programs--Rural Development
Salaries and Expenses' at a rate for operations of
$186,987,000.
``Sec. 304. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Rural Development Programs--Rural Housing
Service--Rental Assistance Program' at a rate for operations
of $956,570,000: Provided, That this section shall not apply
to the amounts made available by section 101 for the
liquidation of debts under such account.
``Sec. 305. Notwithstanding section 101, in connection
with the `Rural Development Programs--Rural Business-
Cooperative Service--Rural Economic Development Loans Program
Account', of the funds derived from interest on the cushion
of credit payments, as authorized by section 313 of the Rural
Electrification Act of 1936, $102,463,000 shall not be
obligated and $102,463,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 306. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Rural Development Programs--Rural Utilities
Service--Rural Water and Waste Disposal Program Account' at a
rate for operations of $551,230,000: Provided, That the
amounts included under such heading in Public Law 111-80
shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act by
substituting `$0' for `$17,500,000'.
``Sec. 307. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Domestic Food Programs--Food and Nutrition
Service--Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women,
Infants, and Children (WIC)' at a rate for operations of
$7,052,000,000.
``Sec. 308. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Foreign Assistance and Related Programs--
Foreign Agricultural Service--Food for Peace Title II Grants'
at a rate for operations of $1,455,000,000.
``Sec. 309. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Foreign Assistance and Related Programs--
Foreign Agricultural Service--McGovern-Dole International
Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program Grants' at a
rate for operations of $199,500,000: Provided, That the first
proviso under such heading in Public Law 111-80 shall not
apply to funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 310. Section 748 of Public Law 111-80 shall not
apply for fiscal year 2011.
``Sec. 311. Subsections (g)(5)(A), (h)(1)(C)(i),
(h)(2)(B)(i), (j)(5)(A), and (k)(8)(A) of section 749 of
Public Law 111-80 shall be applied to funds appropriated by
this Act by substituting `$0' for each of the dollar amounts
specified in such subsections.
``Sec. 312. Of the unobligated balances available for the
cost of broadband loans, as authorized by section 601 of the
Rural Electrification Act of 1936, $39,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 313. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 117, amounts
are provided for `Department of Commerce--Bureau of the
Census--Periodic Censuses and Programs' at a rate for
operations of $942,315,000.
``Sec. 314. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 240, amounts
are provided for `Department of Commerce--National Institute
of Standards and Technology--Construction of Research
Facilities' at a rate for operations of $80,000,000:
Provided, That the set-aside for a competitive construction
grant program under such heading in division B of Public Law
111-117 shall not apply to funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 315. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Justice--General Administration--
National Drug Intelligence Center' at a rate for operations
of $34,023,000.
``Sec. 316. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Justice--General Administration--
Tactical Law Enforcement Wireless Communications' at a rate
for operations of $136,143,000.
``Sec. 317. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Justice--United States Marshals
Service--Construction' at a rate for operations of
$16,625,000.
``Sec. 318. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Justice--Federal Bureau of
Investigation--Construction' at a rate for operations of
$106,915,000.
``Sec. 319. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Justice--Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives--Construction' at a rate for
operations of $0.
``Sec. 320. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Justice--Office of Justice
Programs--Weed and Seed Program Fund' at a rate for
operations of $0.
``Sec. 321. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `National Aeronautics and Space Administration--
Space Operations' at a rate for operations of $6,047,800,000:
Provided, That the proviso under such heading in division B
of Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds appropriated
by this Act.
``Sec. 322. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `National Aeronautics and Space Administration--
Construction and Environmental Compliance and Remediation' at
a rate for operations of $408,300,000: Provided, That such
rate shall not apply to amounts made available by section 101
from lease proceeds under such account: Provided further,
That the first proviso under such heading in division B of
Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds appropriated by
this Act.
``Sec. 323. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Corps of
Engineers-Civil--Construction', $100,000,000 is rescinded:
Provided, That no amounts in this section may be rescinded
from amounts that were designated by Congress as an emergency
requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on the budget
or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of
1985.
``Sec. 324. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 172, amounts
are provided for `Corps of Engineers-Civil--Mississippi River
and Tributaries' at a rate for operations of $240,000,000:
Provided, That the proviso under such heading in Public Law
111-85 shall not apply to funds appropriated by this Act:
Provided further, That of the unobligated balances of funds
made available in prior appropriation Acts for `Corps of
Engineers-Civil--Mississippi River and Tributaries' or `Corps
of Engineers-Civil--Flood Control, Mississippi River and
Tributaries, Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee', $22,000,000 is
rescinded: Provided further, That such rescission shall be
derived by cancelling unobligated balances for the Yazoo
Basin, Backwater Pump, Mississippi project: Provided further,
That no amounts in this section may be rescinded from amounts
that were designated by Congress as an emergency requirement
pursuant to a concurrent resolution on the budget or the
Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 325. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy', $11,243,000 is rescinded: Provided, That no amounts
in this section may be rescinded from amounts that were
designated
[[Page H2446]]
by Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant to a
concurrent resolution on the budget or the Balanced Budget
and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 326. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Electricity Delivery and Energy
Reliability', $2,400,000 is rescinded: Provided, That no
amounts in this section may be rescinded from amounts that
were designated by Congress as an emergency requirement
pursuant to a concurrent resolution on the budget or the
Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 327. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Nuclear Energy', $6,300,000 is
rescinded: Provided, That no amounts in this section may be
rescinded from amounts that were designated by Congress as an
emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on
the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 328. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Fossil Energy Research and
Development', $30,600,000 is rescinded: Provided, That no
amounts in this section may be rescinded from amounts that
were designated by Congress as an emergency requirement
pursuant to a concurrent resolution on the budget or the
Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 329. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Naval Petroleum and Oil Shale
Reserves', $2,100,000 is rescinded: Provided, That no amounts
in this section may be rescinded from amounts that were
designated by Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant
to a concurrent resolution on the budget or the Balanced
Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 330. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Energy--Energy Programs--
Strategic Petroleum Reserve' at a rate for operations of
$209,414,000: Provided, That of the unobligated balances of
funds made available under such heading in Public Law 110-
161, $14,493,000 is rescinded, to be derived from amounts
made available for new site land acquisition activities:
Provided further, That of the unobligated balances of funds
made available under such heading in Public Law 110-329,
$31,507,000 is rescinded, to be derived from amounts made
available for new site expansion activities, beyond land
acquisition: Provided further, That of the unobligated
balances of funds made available under such heading in Public
Law 111-85, $25,000,000 is rescinded: Provided further, That
of the unobligated balances of funds made available under
such heading in prior appropriation Acts, in addition to the
other amounts rescinded in this section, $15,300,000 is
rescinded: Provided further, That no amounts in this section
may be rescinded from amounts that were designated by
Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent
resolution on the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency
Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 331. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Clean Coal Technology', $18,000,000
is rescinded: Provided, That no amounts in this section may
be rescinded from amounts that were designated by Congress as
an emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution
on the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 332. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Energy Information Administration',
$400,000 is rescinded: Provided, That no amounts in this
section may be rescinded from amounts that were designated by
Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent
resolution on the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency
Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 333. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Energy--Energy Programs--Non-
Defense Environmental Cleanup' at a rate for operations of
$225,000,000.
``Sec. 334. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Energy--Energy Programs--Uranium
Enrichment Decontamination and Decommissioning Fund' at a
rate for operations of $514,000,000: Provided, That of the
unobligated balances of funds made available under such
heading in prior appropriation Acts, $10,000,000 is
rescinded: Provided further, That no amounts in this section
may be rescinded from amounts that were designated by
Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent
resolution on the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency
Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 335. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Science', $7,200,000 is rescinded:
Provided, That no amounts in this section may be rescinded
from amounts that were designated by Congress as an emergency
requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on the budget
or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of
1985.
``Sec. 336. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Energy--Energy Programs--Advanced
Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Loan Program' at a rate for
operations of $9,998,000.
``Sec. 337. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Energy Programs--Departmental Administration',
$11,900,000 is rescinded: Provided, That no amounts in this
section may be rescinded from amounts that were designated by
Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent
resolution on the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency
Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 338. Of the unobligated balances of funds made
available in prior appropriation Acts for `Department of
Energy--Atomic Energy Defense Activities--National Nuclear
Security Administration--Naval Reactors', $1,200,000 is
rescinded: Provided, That no amounts in this section may be
rescinded from amounts that were designated by Congress as an
emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on
the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 339. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 182, amounts
are provided for `Department of Energy--Atomic Energy Defense
Activities--National Nuclear Security Administration--Office
of the Administrator' at a rate for operations of
$399,793,000: Provided, That the last proviso under such
heading in Public Law 111-85 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act: Provided further, That of the
unobligated balances of funds made available under such
heading in prior appropriation Acts, $4,400,000 is rescinded:
Provided further, That no amounts in this section may be
rescinded from amounts that were designated by Congress as an
emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on
the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 340. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 183, amounts
are provided for `Department of Energy--Environmental and
Other Defense Activities--Defense Environmental Cleanup' at a
rate for operations of $5,096,000,000, of which $33,700,000
shall be transferred to the `Uranium Enrichment
Decontamination and Decommissioning Fund': Provided, That the
proviso under such heading in Public Law 111-85 shall not
apply to funds appropriated by this Act: Provided further,
That of the unobligated balances of funds made available
under such heading in prior appropriation Acts, $11,900,000
is rescinded: Provided further, That no amounts in this
section may be rescinded from amounts that were designated by
Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent
resolution on the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency
Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 341. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 184, amounts
are provided for `Department of Energy--Environmental and
Other Defense Activities--Other Defense Activities' at a rate
for operations of $823,000,000: Provided, That the proviso
under such heading in Public Law 111-85 shall not apply to
funds appropriated by this Act: Provided further, That of the
unobligated balances of funds made available under such
heading in prior appropriation Acts, $3,400,000 is rescinded:
Provided further, That no amounts in this section may be
rescinded from amounts that were designated by Congress as an
emergency requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on
the budget or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 342. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Denali Commission' at a rate for operations of
$10,700,000: Provided, That of the unobligated balances of
funds made available under such heading in prior
appropriation Acts, $15,000,000 is rescinded: Provided
further, That no amounts in this section may be rescinded
from amounts that were designated by Congress as an emergency
requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on the budget
or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of
1985.
``Sec. 343. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Treasury--Departmental
Offices--Department-Wide Systems and Capital Investments
Programs' at a rate for operations of $4,000,000, and the
first proviso under such heading in division C of Public Law
111-117 shall not apply to funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 344. Of the unobligated balances available under
the heading `Department of the Treasury--Treasury Forfeiture
Fund', $400,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 345. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Treasury--Financial
Management Service--Salaries and Expenses' at a rate for
operations of $232,838,000.
``Sec. 346. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Treasury--Alcohol and Tobacco
Tax and Trade Bureau--Salaries and Expenses' at a rate for
operations of $99,831,000, and the proviso under such heading
in division C of Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 347. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Treasury--Bureau of the
Public Debt--Administering the Public Debt' at a rate for
operations of $184,658,000.
``Sec. 348. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 250, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Treasury--Community
Development Financial Institutions Fund Program Account' at a
rate for operations of
[[Page H2447]]
$163,600,000, and the requirement to transfer funds to the
Capital Magnet Fund and the funding designation of $3,150,000
for an additional pilot project grant under such heading in
division C of Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 349. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Executive Office of the President and Funds
Appropriated to the President--Office of Management and
Budget--Salaries and Expenses' at a rate for operations of
$92,500,000.
``Sec. 350. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Executive Office of the President and Funds
Appropriated to the President--Partnership Fund for Program
Integrity Innovation' at a rate for operations of $0.
``Sec. 351. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Executive Office of the President and Funds
Appropriated to the President--Office of National Drug
Control Policy--Counterdrug Technology Assessment Center' at
a rate for operations of $0.
``Sec. 352. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 251, amounts
are provided for `Executive Office of the President and Funds
Appropriated to the President--Office of National Drug
Control Policy--Other Federal Drug Control Programs' at a
rate for operations of $142,400,000, of which $85,500,000
shall be for the Drug-Free Communities Program; and amounts
included under such heading shall be applied to funds
appropriated by this Act by substituting `$0' for
`$1,000,000', `$1,250,000', and `$250,000'.
``Sec. 353. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `The Judiciary--Supreme Court of the United
States--Care of the Building and Grounds' at a rate for
operations of $8,175,000.
``Sec. 354. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `The Judiciary--Courts of Appeals, District
Courts, and Other Judicial Services--Fees of Jurors and
Commissioners' at a rate for operations of $52,410,000.
``Sec. 355. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `District of Columbia--Federal Funds--Federal
Payment to the District of Columbia Courts' at a rate for
operations of $244,660,000, of which $59,000,000 shall be for
capital improvements.
``Sec. 356. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `District of Columbia--Federal Funds--Federal
Payment for Consolidated Laboratory Facility' at a rate for
operations of $0.
``Sec. 357. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `District of Columbia--Federal Funds--Federal
Payment for Housing for the Homeless' at a rate for
operations of $10,000,000.
``Sec. 358. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `District of Columbia--Federal Funds--Federal
Payment for Youth Services' at a rate for operations of $0.
``Sec. 359. Section 814 of division C of Public Law 111-
117 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act by
striking `Federal'.
``Sec. 360. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Election Assistance Commission--Salaries and
Expenses' at a rate for operations of $16,800,000, of which
$3,250,000 shall be transferred to the National Institute of
Standards and Technology for election reform activities
authorized under the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (Public
Law 107-252).
``Sec. 361. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 253, the
aggregate amount of new obligational authority provided under
the heading `General Services Administration--Real Property
Activities--Federal Buildings Fund--Limitations on
Availability of Revenue' for Federal buildings and
courthouses and other purposes of the Fund shall be available
at a rate for operations of $7,504,272,000, of which: (1) $0
is for `Construction and Acquisition'; and (2) $284,000,000
is for `Repairs and Alterations' for Special Emphasis
Programs and Basic Repairs and Alterations.
``Sec. 362. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `General Services Administration--Federal
Citizen Services Fund' at a rate for operations of
$34,689,000.
``Sec. 363. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `General Services Administration--Electronic
Government Fund' at a rate for operations of $17,000,000.
``Sec. 364. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `National Archives and Records Administration--
Electronic Records Archives' at a rate for operations of
$72,000,000, of which $52,500,000 shall remain available
until September 30, 2013.
``Sec. 365. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `National Archives and Records Administration--
National Historical Publications and Records Commission--
Grants Program' at a rate for operations of $6,000,000.
``Sec. 366. The amounts included under the heading `Office
of Personnel Management--Salaries and Expenses' in division C
of Public Law 111-117 shall be applied to funds appropriated
by this Act by substituting `$101,270,000' for `$102,970,000'
and by substituting `$111,038,000' for `$112,738,000'.
``Sec. 367. Notwithstanding section 156 of this Act and
section 503 of Public Law 111-83, amounts made available by
this Act for the Department of Homeland Security shall be
available for reprogramming or transfer between and within
appropriations to the extent necessary to address emergent
circumstances, to meet critical operational requirements, to
avoid furloughs or reduction in force, or to provide funding
for critical programs and activities required by law:
Provided, That such reprogrammings or transfers may not
result in the termination or initiation of a program,
project, or activity: Provided further, That the Committees
on Appropriations of the Senate and the House of
Representatives shall be notified 15 days in advance of such
reprogramming or transfer of funds.
``Sec. 368. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 186, amounts
are provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Office of
the Under Secretary for Management' at a rate for operations
of $239,933,000.
``Sec. 369. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Office of the
Chief Financial Officer' at a rate for operations of
$53,530,000.
``Sec. 370. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Office of the
Federal Coordinator for Gulf Coast Rebuilding' at a rate for
operations of $0.
``Sec. 371. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--U.S. Customs
and Border Protection--Automation Modernization' at a rate
for operations of $341,575,000, of which $153,090,000 shall
be for the Automated Commercial Environment.
``Sec. 372. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--U.S. Customs
and Border Protection--Border Security Fencing,
Infrastructure, and Technology' at a rate for operations of
$574,173,000.
``Sec. 373. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--U.S. Customs
and Border Protection--Air and Marine Interdiction,
Operations, Maintenance, and Procurement' at a rate for
operations of $516,326,000.
``Sec. 374. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement--Automation
Modernization' at a rate for operations of $75,000,000.
``Sec. 375. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement--Construction' at a rate
for operations of $0.
``Sec. 376. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Transportation
Security Administration--Surface Transportation Security' at
a rate for operations of $105,961,000.
``Sec. 377. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Transportation
Security Administration--Transportation Threat Assessment and
Credentialing' at a rate for operations of $162,999,000.
``Sec. 378. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 193, amounts
are provided for `Department of Homeland Security--National
Protection and Programs Directorate--Infrastructure
Protection and Information Security' at a rate for operations
of $859,000,000.
``Sec. 379. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--National
Protection and Programs Directorate--United States Visitor
and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology' at a rate for
operations of $334,613,000.
``Sec. 380. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 195, amounts
are provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Federal
Emergency Management Agency--State and Local Programs' at a
rate for operations of $2,417,500,000: Provided, That of the
amount provided by this Act for the State Homeland Security
Grant Program under such heading, $50,000,000 shall be for
the Driver's License Security Grant Program and $10,000,000
shall be for the Citizen Corps Program: Provided further,
That the amounts provided by this Act for the Citizen Corps
Program under such heading shall not be subject to the
requirements of subtitle A of title XX of the Homeland
Security Act of 2002 (6 U.S.C. 603 et seq.): Provided
further, That the amounts included under such heading in
Public Law 111-83 shall be applied to funds appropriated by
this Act as follows: in paragraph (1), by substituting
`$788,000,000' for `$950,000,000'; in paragraph (2), by
substituting `$788,000,000' for `$887,000,000'; in paragraph
(3), by substituting `$17,500,000' for `$35,000,000'; in
paragraph (4), by substituting `$35,000,000' for
`$41,000,000'; in paragraph (5), by substituting `$0' for
`$13,000,000'; in paragraph (6), by substituting
`$260,000,000' for `$300,000,000'; in paragraph (7), by
substituting `$260,000,000' for `$300,000,000'; in paragraph
(8), by substituting `$5,000,000' for `$12,000,000'; in
paragraph (9), by substituting `$0' for `$50,000,000'; in
paragraph (10), by substituting `$0' for `$50,000,000'; in
paragraph (11), by substituting `$0' for `$50,000,000'; in
paragraph (12), by substituting `$20,000,000' for
`$60,000,000' and by substituting `$0' for each subsequent
amount in such paragraph; and in paragraph (13), by
substituting `$244,000,000' for `$267,200,000': Provided
further, That the directed obligation provisions in
paragraphs 13(A), 13(B), and 13(C) under such heading in
Public Law 111-83 shall not apply to funds appropriated by
this Act: Provided further, That 5.5 percent of the amount
provided for `Federal Emergency Management Agency--State and
Local Programs' by this Act shall be transferred to the
`Federal Emergency Management Agency--Management and
Administration' account for program administration.
``Sec. 381. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Federal
Emergency
[[Page H2448]]
Management Agency--Flood Map Modernization Fund' at a rate
for operations of $194,000,000.
``Sec. 382. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 196, amounts
are provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Federal
Emergency Management Agency--National Predisaster Mitigation
Fund' at a rate for operations of $60,000,000: Provided, That
the directed obligation provision under such heading in
Public Law 111-83 shall not apply to funds appropriated by
this Act.
``Sec. 383. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Federal Law
Enforcement Training Center--Salaries and Expenses' at a rate
for operations of $235,919,000.
``Sec. 384. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Federal Law
Enforcement Training Center--Acquisition, Construction,
Improvements, and Related Expenses' at a rate for operations
of $38,456,000.
``Sec. 385. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 197, amounts
are provided for `Department of Homeland Security--Science
and Technology--Research, Development, Acquisition, and
Operations' at a rate for operations of $690,000,000.
``Sec. 386. Of the funds transferred to the Department of
Homeland Security when it was created in 2003, the following
amounts are rescinded from the following accounts and
programs:
``(1) `Operations', $1,692,000.
``(2) `Violent Crime Reduction Program', $4,871,492.
``(3) `Office for Domestic Preparedness', $10,568,934.
``Sec. 387. Of the unobligated balances made available to
the Department of Homeland Security pursuant to section 505
of Public Law 111-83, the following amounts are rescinded
from the following accounts:
``(1) `Office of the Secretary and Executive Management',
$1,437,015.
``(2) `Office of the Under Secretary for Management',
$821,104.
``(3) `U.S. Customs and Border Protection--Salaries and
Expenses', $8,500,000.
``(4) `U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement--Salaries
and Expenses', $8,500,000.
``(5) `Transportation Security Administration--Federal Air
Marshals', $2,429,978.
``(6) `Coast Guard--Operating Expenses', $13,508,196.
``(7) `Coast Guard--Reserve Training', $3,411,505.
``(8) `National Protection and Programs Directorate--
Infrastructure Protection and Information Security',
$861,290.
``(9) `United States Secret Service--Salaries and
Expenses', $602,956.
``(10) `Federal Emergency Management Agency--Management and
Administration', $814,153.
``(11) `Office of Health Affairs', $831,400.
``(12) `United States Citizenship and Immigration
Services', $7,945,983.
``(13) `Federal Law Enforcement Training Center--Salaries
and Expenses', $1,010,795.
``Sec. 388. Of the unobligated balances available for the
following accounts of the Department of Homeland Security,
the following amounts are rescinded:
``(1) `U.S. Customs and Border Protection--Automation
Modernization', $10,000,000.
``(2) `U.S. Customs and Border Protection--Border Security
Fencing, Infrastructure, and Technology', $119,000,000.
``(3) `Federal Emergency Management Agency--National
Predisaster Mitigation Fund', $19,603,000.
``(4) `Science and Technology--Research, Development,
Acquisition, and Operations', $6,500,000.
``(5) `Domestic Nuclear Detection Office--Research,
Development, and Operations', $15,700,000.
``(6) `Coast Guard--Acquisition, Construction, and
Improvements', $1,122,000.
``Sec. 389. Of the unobligated balances made available
under section 44945 of title 49, United States Code, $800,000
is rescinded.
``Sec. 390. Of the unobligated balances available for
accounts under the heading `Department of Homeland Security--
Transportation Security Administration', $15,000,000 is
rescinded (in addition to amounts otherwise rescinded by this
Act): Provided, That the Transportation Security
Administration shall not rescind any unobligated balances
from the following programs: explosives detection systems;
checkpoint support; aviation regulation and other
enforcement; and air cargo.
``Sec. 391. Of the unobligated balances available for
`Department of Homeland Security--National Protection and
Programs Directorate--Infrastructure Protection and
Information Security', the following amounts are rescinded:
``(1) $6,000,000, to be derived from amounts made available
for Next Generation Networks.
``(2) $9,600,000, to be derived from amounts which shall be
specified by the Secretary of Homeland Security in a report
submitted not later than 15 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act to the Committees on Appropriations of
the Senate and the House of Representatives, describing the
amounts rescinded and the original purpose of such funds.
``Sec. 392. Of the unobligated balances available in the
Department of the Treasury Forfeiture Fund established by
section 9703 of title 31, United States Code, as added by
section 638 of Public Law 102-393, $22,600,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 393. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 258, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--Bureau of Land
Management--Management of Lands and Resources' at a rate for
operations of $927,523,000: Provided, That the amounts
included under such heading in division A of Public Law 111-
88 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act by
substituting `$927,523,000' for `$959,571,000' the second
place it appears.
``Sec. 394. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 259, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--Bureau of Land
Management--Construction' at a rate for operations of
$3,590,000.
``Sec. 395. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 260, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--Bureau of Land
Management--Land Acquisition' at a rate for operations of
$22,212,000: Provided, That the proviso under such heading in
division A of Public Law 111-88 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 396. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 261, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--United States
Fish and Wildlife Service--Resource Management' at a rate for
operations of $1,235,052,000: Provided, That the amounts
included under such heading in division A of Public Law 111-
88 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act as
follows: by substituting `$20,945,000' for `$22,103,000'; and
by substituting `$10,474,000' for `$11,632,000'.
``Sec. 397. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 262, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--United States
Fish and Wildlife Service--Construction' at a rate for
operations of $23,737,000.
``Sec. 398. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 263, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--United States
Fish and Wildlife Service--Land Acquisition' at a rate for
operations of $57,471,000.
``Sec. 399. Of the unobligated amounts available for
`Department of the Interior--United States Fish and Wildlife
Service--Landowner Incentive Program' from prior year
appropriations, all remaining amounts are rescinded.
``Sec. 400. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--United States Fish
and Wildlife Service--Cooperative Endangered Species
Conservation Fund' at a rate for operations of $63,831,000:
Provided, That the amounts included under such heading in
division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be applied to funds
appropriated by this Act as follows: by substituting
`$24,835,000' for `$29,000,000'; by substituting `$4,987,297'
for `$5,145,706'; and by substituting `$38,996,000' for
`$56,000,000'.
``Sec. 401. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--United States Fish
and Wildlife Service--North American Wetlands Conservation
Fund' at a rate for operations of $40,000,000.
``Sec. 402. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--United States Fish
and Wildlife Service--Neotropical Migratory Bird
Conservation' at a rate for operations of $4,430,000.
``Sec. 403. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--United States Fish
and Wildlife Service--Multinational Species Conservation
Fund' at a rate for operations of $7,875,000.
``Sec. 404. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--United States Fish
and Wildlife Service--State and Tribal Wildlife Grants' at a
rate for operations of $80,000,000.
``Sec. 405. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--National Park
Service--Park Partnership Project Grants' at a rate for
operations of $0: Provided, That all of the provisos under
such heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall not
apply to funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 406. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 266, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--National Park
Service--Construction' at a rate for operations of
$210,066,000: Provided, That the last proviso under such
heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall not apply to
funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 407. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 267, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--National Park
Service--Land Acquisition and State Assistance' at a rate for
operations of $90,846,000: Provided, That the amounts
included under such heading in division A of Public Law 111-
88 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act as
follows: by substituting `$31,000,000' for `$40,000,000'; and
by substituting `$6,000,000' for `$9,000,000'.
``Sec. 408. Of the unobligated amounts available for
`Department of the Interior--National Park Service--Urban
Park and Recreation Fund', $625,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 409. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 268, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--United States
Geological Survey--Surveys, Investigations, and Research' at
a rate for operations of $1,076,355,000: Provided, That the
amounts included under such heading in division A of Public
Law 111-88 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act
by substituting `$53,500,000' for `$40,150,000'.
``Sec. 410. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--Bureau of Indian
Affairs--Indian Land and Water Claim Settlements and
Miscellaneous Payments to Indians' at a rate for operations
of $46,480,000, of which $0 shall be for the matter
pertaining to Public Law 109-379.
[[Page H2449]]
``Sec. 411. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--Bureau of Indian
Affairs--Indian Land Consolidation' at a rate for operations
of $0.
``Sec. 412. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--Departmental
Offices--Office of the Secretary--Salaries and Expenses' at a
rate for operations of $117,336,000.
``Sec. 413. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 270, amounts
are provided for `Department of the Interior--Departmental
Offices--Insular Affairs--Assistance to Territories' at a
rate for operations of $78,670,000: Provided, That the
amounts included under such heading in division A of Public
Law 111-88 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act
by substituting `$9,080,000' for `$9,280,000'.
``Sec. 414. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--Departmental
Offices--Insular Affairs--Compact of Free Association' at a
rate for operations of $5,422,000, of which $2,104,000 is for
section 122 of division A of Public Law 111-88.
``Sec. 415. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of the Interior--Department-wide
Programs--Wildland Fire Management' at a rate for operations
of $919,897,000: Provided, That the amounts included under
such heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be
applied to funds appropriated by this Act by substituting
`$0' for `$125,000,000': Provided further, That of the
unobligated balances available under such heading in division
A of Public Law 111-88 and prior appropriations Acts,
$150,000,000 is rescinded: Provided further, That no amounts
in this section may be rescinded from amounts that were
designated by Congress as an emergency requirement pursuant
to a concurrent resolution on the budget or the Balanced
Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
``Sec. 416. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 271, amounts
are provided for `Environmental Protection Agency--Science
and Technology' at a rate for operations of $826,370,000, of
which $0 shall be for the purposes specified in `Research/
National Priorities' under the heading `Science and
Technology' in the joint explanatory statement of the
managers accompanying Public Law 111-88 and $51,297,000 shall
be for `Homeland Security' under the heading `Science and
Technology' in the table of detailed funding recommendations
contained at the end of such joint explanatory statement.
``Sec. 417. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 272, amounts
are provided for `Environmental Protection Agency--
Environmental Programs and Management' at a rate for
operations of $2,779,851,000: Provided, That of the amounts
provided by this Act for such account, $0 shall be for cap
and trade technical assistance and $0 shall be for the
program specified in `Environmental Protection/National
Priorities' under the heading `Environmental Programs and
Management' in the joint explanatory statement of the
managers accompanying Public Law 111-88: Provided further,
That of the amounts provided by this Act for such account,
amounts are provided for the Geographic Programs specified in
such joint explanatory statement at a rate for operations of
$424,875,000: Provided further, That of such amount for
Geographic Programs, $300,000,000 shall be for the Great
Lakes Restoration Initiative: Provided further, That of the
amounts provided by this Act for such account, $15,142,000
shall be for `Homeland Security' under the heading
`Environmental Programs and Management' in the table of
detailed funding recommendations contained at the end of such
joint explanatory statement.
``Sec. 418. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Environmental Protection Agency--Hazardous
Substance Superfund' at a rate for operations of
$1,293,475,000: Provided, That the amounts included under
such heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be
applied to funds appropriated by this Act as follows: by
substituting `$1,293,475,000' for `$1,306,541,000' in the
second place it appears; and by substituting `September 30,
2010' for `September 30, 2009': Provided further, That of the
amounts provided by this Act for such account, $43,468,000
shall be for `Homeland Security' under the heading `Hazardous
Substance Superfund' in the table of detailed funding
recommendations contained at the end of the joint explanatory
statement of the managers accompanying Public Law 111-88.
``Sec. 419. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 274, amounts
are provided for `Environmental Protection Agency--State and
Tribal Assistance Grants' at a rate for operations of
$4,077,946,000: Provided, That the amounts included under
such heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be
applied to funds appropriated by this Act as follows: by
substituting `$1,700,000,000' for `$2,100,000,000'; by
substituting `$1,087,000,000' for `$1,387,000,000'; by
substituting `$14,500,000' for `$17,000,000'; by substituting
`$10,000,000' for `$13,000,000'; by substituting `$0' for
`$156,777,000'; by substituting `$0' for `$20,000,000'; and
by substituting `$1,106,446,000' for `$1,116,446,000'.
``Sec. 420. Notwithstanding section 101, the amounts
authorized to transfer under the heading `Environmental
Protection Agency--Administrative Provisions, Environmental
Protection Agency' in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall
be applied to funds appropriated by this Act by substituting
`$300,000,000' for `$475,000,000'.
``Sec. 421. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 276, amounts
are provided for `Department of Agriculture--Forest Service--
Forest and Rangeland Research' at a rate for operations of
$297,252,000.
``Sec. 422. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 277, amounts
are provided for `Department of Agriculture--Forest Service--
State and Private Forestry' at a rate for operations of
$272,797,000: Provided, That the amounts included under such
heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be applied
to funds appropriated by this Act by substituting
`$52,317,000' for `$76,460,000'.
``Sec. 423. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 278, amounts
are provided for `Department of Agriculture--Forest Service--
National Forest System' at a rate for operations of
$1,534,089,000.
``Sec. 424. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 279, amounts
are provided for `Department of Agriculture--Forest Service--
Capital Improvement and Maintenance' at a rate for operations
of $499,618,000: Provided, That the amounts included under
such heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be
applied to funds appropriated by this Act by substituting
`$50,731,000' for `$90,000,000'.
``Sec. 425. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 281, amounts
are provided for `Department of Agriculture--Forest Service--
Wildland Fire Management' at a rate for operations of
$2,172,387,000: Provided, That the amounts included under
such heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be
applied to funds appropriated by this Act by substituting
`$0' for `$75,000,000'.
``Sec. 426. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Agriculture--Forest Service--
FLAME Wildfire Suppression Reserve Fund' at a rate for
operations of $291,000,000.
``Sec. 427. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `National Gallery of Art--Repair, Restoration
and Renovation of Buildings' at a rate for operations of
$48,221,000: Provided, That the amounts included under such
heading in division A of Public Law 111-88 shall be applied
to funds appropriated by this Act by substituting
`$42,250,000' for `$40,000,000'.
``Sec. 428. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts--Operations and Maintenance' at a rate for operations of
$22,500,000: Provided, That the proviso under such heading in
division A of Public Law 111-88 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 429. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts--Capital Repair and Restoration' at a rate for
operations of $13,920,000.
``Sec. 430. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Commission of Fine Arts--National Capital Arts
and Cultural Affairs' at a rate for operations of $0.
``Sec. 431. Notwithstanding sections 101, 200, and 283,
amounts are provided for `Department of Labor--Employment and
Training Administration--Training and Employment Services' at
a rate for operations of $3,636,148,000, of which
$196,661,000 shall be for national activities described in
paragraph (3) under such heading in division D of Public Law
111-117: Provided, That the amounts included for national
activities under such heading in division D of Public Law
111-117 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this Act as
follows: by substituting `$44,561,000' for `$93,450,000', by
substituting `$0' for `48,889,000', by substituting
`$90,000,000' for `$108,493,000', by substituting `$0' for
`$125,000,000', and by substituting `$0' for `$65,000,000'.
``Sec. 432. Of the unobligated balances available in
`Department of Labor--Working Capital Fund', $3,900,000 is
permanently rescinded, to be derived solely from amounts
available in the Investment in Reinvention Fund (other than
amounts that were designated by the Congress as an emergency
requirement pursuant to a concurrent resolution on the budget
or the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of
1985).
``Sec. 433. Notwithstanding sections 101, 203, and 285,
amounts are provided for `Department of Health and Human
Services--Health Resources and Services Administration--
Health Resources and Services' at a rate for operations of
$6,982,520,000: Provided, That the eighteenth, nineteenth,
twenty-second, and twenty-fifth provisos under such heading
in division D of Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 434. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 204, amounts
are provided for `Department of Health and Human Services--
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention--Disease Control,
Research, and Training' at a rate for operations of
$6,044,273,000, of which $750,000,000 shall be derived from
funds transferred, pursuant to section 4002(c) of Public Law
111-148, from amounts appropriated by section 4002(b) of such
Public Law: Provided, That for purposes of this section,
section 4002(c) of Public Law 111-148 shall be applied as if
`, over the fiscal year 2008 level,' were stricken from such
section: Provided further, That the amount included before
the first proviso under such heading in division D of Public
Law 111-117 shall be applied to funds appropriated by this
Act by substituting `0' for `$20,620,000'.
``Sec. 435. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Health and Human Services--
Administration for Children and Families--Low Income Home
Energy Assistance' at a rate for operations of
$4,709,672,000, of which $200,000,000 shall be for payments
under section 2602(e) of the Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Act of 1981.
[[Page H2450]]
``Sec. 436. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 208, amounts
are provided for `Department of Health and Human Services--
Administration for Children and Families--Children and
Families Services Programs' at a rate for operations of
$9,269,747,000: Provided, That the fifteenth proviso under
such heading in division D of Public Law 111-117 shall not
apply to funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 437. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 286, in
addition to amounts otherwise made available by section 130,
amounts are provided for `Department of Health and Human
Services--Office of the Secretary--Public Health and Social
Services Emergency Fund' at a rate for operations of
$546,109,000, of which $65,578,000 shall be for expenses
necessary to prepare for and respond to an influenza pandemic
(none of which shall be available past September 30, 2011),
$35,000,000 shall be for expenses necessary for fit-out and
other costs related to a competitive lease procurement to
renovate or replace the existing headquarters building for
Public Health Service agencies and other components of the
Department of Health and Human Services, and $235,000,000
shall be for Hospital Preparedness Cooperative Agreement
Grants.
``Sec. 438. Of the unobligated balances available for
`Department of Education--Education for the Disadvantaged' in
division D of Public Law 111-117, $186,500,000 is rescinded,
to be derived from the amounts specified under such heading
for availability under section 1502 of the ESEA.
``Sec. 439. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 212, amounts
are provided for `Department of Education--School Improvement
Programs' at a rate for operations of $5,080,695,000, of
which $3,216,244,000 shall become available on July 1, 2011,
and remain available through September 30, 2012: Provided,
That of such amounts, no funds shall be available for
activities authorized under subpart 1 of part D of title II
of the ESEA or part Z of title VIII of the Higher Education
Act of 1965: Provided further, That the second, third, and
thirteenth provisos under such heading in division D of
Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds appropriated by
this Act.
``Sec. 440. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 213, amounts
are provided for `Department of Education--Innovation and
Improvement' at a rate for operations of $1,019,353,000, of
which no funds shall be available for activities authorized
under section 2151(c) of the ESEA, section 1504 of the ESEA,
or part F of title VIII of the Higher Education Act of 1965,
and $477,047,000 shall be for part D of title V of the ESEA:
Provided, That the first, second, third, fourth, fifth,
seventeenth, and eighteenth provisos under such heading in
division D of Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 441. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 214, amounts
are provided for `Department of Education--Safe Schools and
Citizenship Education' at a rate for operations of
$341,053,000, of which, notwithstanding section 2343(b) of
the ESEA, $2,578,000 is for the continuation costs of awards
made on a competitive basis under section 2345 of the ESEA
and $207,053,000 shall be for subpart 2 of part A of title IV
of the ESEA: Provided, That the first and third provisos
under such heading in division D of Public Law 111-117 shall
not apply to funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 442. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 216, amounts
are provided for `Department of Education--Rehabilitation
Services and Disability Research' at a rate for operations of
$3,478,026,000: Provided, That the second proviso under such
heading in division D of Public Law 111-117 shall not apply
to funds appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 443. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Education--Special Institutions
for Persons with Disabilities--National Technical Institute
for the Deaf' at a rate for operations of $65,677,000, of
which $240,000 shall be available for construction.
``Sec. 444. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 217, amounts
are provided for `Department of Education--Career, Technical,
and Adult Education' at a rate for operations of
$1,897,541,000, of which $1,106,541,000 shall become
available on July 1, 2011, and remain available through
September 30, 2012 and no funds shall be available for
activities authorized under subpart 4 of part D of title V of
the ESEA: Provided, That the first, second, third, seventh,
and eighth provisos under such heading in division D of
Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds appropriated by
this Act.
``Sec. 445. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 219, amounts
are provided for `Department of Education--Higher Education'
at a rate for operations of $2,094,985,000, of which no funds
shall be available for activities authorized under section
428L of part B of title IV of the Higher Education Act of
1965, subpart 1 of part D of title VII of the Higher
Education Act of 1965, part H of title VIII of the Higher
Education Amendments of 1998, section 1543 of the Higher
Education Amendments of 1992, or section 117 of the Carl D.
Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006: Provided,
That the seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth,
thirteenth, and fourteenth provisos under such heading in
division D of Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds
appropriated by this Act.
``Sec. 446. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Railroad Retirement Board--Dual Benefits
Payments Account' at a rate for operations of $57,000,000.
``Sec. 447. Of the funds appropriated for `Social Security
Administration--Limitation on Administrative Expenses' for
fiscal years 2010 and prior years (other than funds
appropriated by Public Law 111-5) for investment in
information technology and telecommunications hardware and
software infrastructure, $300,000,000 is rescinded (in
addition to the amounts rescinded by section 288).
``Sec. 448. Of the funds made available for `Military
Construction, Defense-Wide' in title I of division E of
Public Law 110-329, $23,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 449. Of the funds made available for `Military
Construction, Defense-Wide' in title I of division E of
Public Law 111-117, $125,500,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 450. Of the funds made available for `Military
Construction, Army' in title I of division E of Public Law
111-117, $160,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 451. Of the funds made available for `Military
Construction, Navy and Marine Corps' in title I of division E
of Public Law 111-117, $34,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 452. Of the funds made available for `Military
Construction, Air Force' in title I of division E of Public
Law 111-117, $87,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 453. Of the unobligated balances available for
`Department of Defense Base Closure Account 2005' from prior
appropriations (other than appropriations designated by law
as being for contingency operations directly related to the
global war on terrorism or as an emergency requirement),
$200,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 454. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Veterans Affairs--Departmental
Administration--Information Technology Systems' at a rate for
operations of $3,146,898,000: Provided, That of the funds
made available under such heading in division E of Public Law
111-117, $147,000,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 455. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Veterans Affairs--Departmental
Administration--Construction, Major Projects' at a rate for
operations of $1,151,036,000.
``Sec. 456. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 137, amounts
are provided for `International Security Assistance--Funds
Appropriated to the President--Foreign Military Financing
Program' at a rate for operations of $5,385,000,000, of which
not less than $3,000,000,000 shall be available for grants
only for Israel, $1,300,000,000 shall be available for grants
only for Egypt, and not less than $300,000,000 shall be
available for assistance for Jordan: Provided, That, for
purposes of this Act, the dollar amount in the first
paragraph of the fourth proviso under such heading in title
IV of division F of Public Law 111-117 shall be deemed to be
$789,000,000.
``Sec. 457. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of State--Administration of Foreign
Affairs--Civilian Stabilization Initiative' at a rate for
operations of $40,000,000.
``Sec. 458. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `United States Agency for International
Development--Funds Appropriated to the President--Civilian
Stabilization Initiative' at a rate for operations of
$10,000,000.
``Sec. 459. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of State--Administration of Foreign
Affairs--Educational and Cultural Exchange Programs' at a
rate for operations of $625,000,000.
``Sec. 460. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for the following accounts at a rate for operations
of $0: `Department of State--Administration of Foreign
Affairs--Buying Power Maintenance Account' and `Multilateral
Assistance--Funds Appropriated to the President--Contribution
to the Asian Development Fund'.
``Sec. 461. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of State--International
Organizations--Contributions to International Organizations'
at a rate for operations of $1,545,000,000.
``Sec. 462. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of State--International
Organizations--Contributions for International Peacekeeping
Activities' at a rate for operations of $2,095,000,000.
``Sec. 463. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Related Programs--United States Institute of
Peace' at a rate for operations of $42,676,000.
``Sec. 464. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Bilateral Economic Assistance--Funds
Appropriated to the President--Economic Support Fund' at a
rate for operations of $6,284,000,000.
``Sec. 465. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Bilateral Economic Assistance--Funds
Appropriated to the President--Assistance for Europe, Eurasia
and Central Asia' at a rate for operations of $716,354,000.
``Sec. 466. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Bilateral Economic Assistance--Independent
Agencies--Millennium Challenge Corporation' at a rate for
operations of $900,000,000.
``Sec. 467. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `International Security Assistance--Department
of State--Nonproliferation, Anti-terrorism, Demining and
Related Programs' at a rate for operations of $740,000,000.
``Sec. 468. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `International Security Assistance--Department
of State--Peacekeeping Operations' at a rate for operations
of $305,000,000.
[[Page H2451]]
``Sec. 469. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Multilateral Assistance--Funds Appropriated to
the President--International Organizations and Programs' at a
rate for operations of $350,550,000.
``Sec. 470. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Multilateral Assistance--Funds Appropriated to
the President--International Financial Institutions--
Contribution to the International Development Association' at
a rate for operations of $1,235,000,000.
``Sec. 471. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Multilateral Assistance--Funds Appropriated to
the President--International Financial Institutions--
Contribution to the Clean Technology Fund' at a rate for
operations of $250,000,000.
``Sec. 472. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Multilateral Assistance--Funds Appropriated to
the President--International Financial Institutions--
Contribution to the African Development Fund' at a rate for
operations of $125,000,000.
``Sec. 473. (a) Of the unobligated balances available from
funds appropriated under the heading `Export and Investment
Assistance--Export-Import Bank of the United States--Subsidy
Appropriation' in the Department of State, Foreign
Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2009
(division H of Public Law 111-8) and under such heading in
prior acts making appropriations for the Department of State,
foreign operations, and related programs, $150,000,000 is
rescinded.
``(b) Of the unobligated balances from funds appropriated
or otherwise made available for the Buying Power Maintenance
Account, $15,000,000 is rescinded.
``(c) Of the unobligated balances available for the
Development Assistance account, as identified by Treasury
Appropriation Fund Symbols 7206/111021, $1,000,000 is
rescinded.
``(d) Of the unobligated balances available for the
Assistance for the Independent States of the Former Soviet
Union account, as identified by Treasury Appropriation Fund
Symbols 7206/111093, 7207/121093, and 72X1093, $11,700,000 is
rescinded.
``(e) Of the unobligated balances available for the
International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement account,
as identified by Treasury Appropriation Fund Symbols 11X1022,
1106/121022, and 191105/111022, $7,183,000 is rescinded.
``Sec. 474. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Transportation--Office of the
Secretary--Transportation Planning, Research, and
Development' at a rate for operations of $9,800,000.
``Sec. 475. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Transportation--Federal Aviation
Administration--Facilities and Equipment' at a rate for
operations of $2,927,500,000.
``Sec. 476. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Transportation--Federal Aviation
Administration--Research, Engineering, and Development' at a
rate for operations of $187,000,000.
``Sec. 477. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Transportation--Federal Railroad
Administration--Capital Assistance for High Speed Rail
Corridors and Intercity Passenger Rail Service' at a rate for
operations of $1,000,000,000.
``Sec. 478. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Transportation--Federal Railroad
Administration--Railroad Research and Development' at a rate
for operations of $35,100,000.
``Sec. 479. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Transportation--Federal Transit
Administration--Capital Investment Grants' at a rate for
operations of $1,720,000,000.
``Sec. 480. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Transportation--Federal Transit
Administration--Research and University Research Centers' at
a rate for operations of $64,200,000.
``Sec. 481. Notwithstanding section 101, amounts are
provided for `Department of Housing and Urban Development--
Public and Indian Housing--Public Housing Operating Fund' at
a rate for operations of $4,626,000,000.
``Sec. 482. Notwithstanding sections 101 and 226, amounts
are provided for `Department of Housing and Urban
Development--Community Planning and Development--Community
Development Fund' at a rate for operations of $4,230,068,480,
of which $0 shall be for grants for the Economic Development
Initiative (EDI), $0 shall be for neighborhood initiatives,
and $0 shall be for grants specified in the last proviso of
the last paragraph under such heading in title II of division
A of Public Law 111-117: Provided, That the second and third
paragraphs under such heading in title II of division A of
Public Law 111-117 shall not apply to funds appropriated by
this Act.''.
This division may be cited as the ``Further Additional
Continuing Appropriations Amendments, 2011''.
This Act may be cited as the ``Department of Defense and
Further Additional Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011''.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Rogers) and
the gentleman from Washington (Mr. Dicks) each will control 30 minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Kentucky.
General Leave
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that
all Members may have 5 legislative days in which to revise and extend
their remarks and include extraneous material on H.R. 1363 and that I
may include tabular material on the same.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Kentucky?
There was no objection.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Madam Speaker, I rise today to support H.R. 1363, the Department of
Defense and Further Additional Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011.
I ask my colleagues, Madam Speaker, to support this bill so that we
can avoid a government shutdown and provide the necessary time to
finally complete negotiations on a final funding agreement for the rest
of the 2011 fiscal year.
This bill funds government operations for 1 week while reducing
spending by $12 billion. These cuts include funding rescissions,
reductions, and program terminations from nearly all areas of the
government. Virtually all of these cuts were also included in H.R. 1,
and many were included in the President's budget requests, the Senate's
alternative to H.R. 1, or the recent OMB CR proposal.
Most importantly, Madam Speaker, this bill supports our troops and
our national security by providing funding for our national defense for
the remainder of this fiscal year. Our troops and their families
deserve to have the financial security we promised them while we
continue to work towards a final budget agreement.
After months of uncertainty, it's high time we provide for our
national security in a responsible way. This means commonsense funding
that ensures the safety of our war fighters and the success of our
missions abroad.
However, while this legislation points us in the right direction on
security and spending cuts, what we all want right now is to wrap up
these negotiations, complete the process for 2011, and move our many
other important legislative items onto the table.
As I have said many times before, Madam Speaker, short-term measures
like this are not the preferable way to fund the government. So while
no one wants to fund the government in 1- or 2-week bursts, this short-
term CR is what we must do to prevent a government shutdown and allow
time to pass a smart and thoughtful bill for the rest of the year.
Madam Speaker, coming into this Congress, the Democrats left us with
a financial mess: soaring deficits, unchecked spending, and no budget,
not a single appropriations bill for 2011. And now that we're 6 months
into the fiscal year, the Senate Democrats have yet to produce any plan
to help clean up this mess.
Despite all the roadblocks we've faced throughout this process, we
must continue down the path to fiscal solvency, and this CR both
affords us the time required to complete negotiations as well as makes
the spending cuts needed to continue to help balance our budgets. We
are committed to making real spending cuts like these to reduce our
deficits both now and in the future. We are determined to complete this
work where Democrats failed to do so.
While answering our constituents' calls to reduce excessive
government spending, this bill provides time to negotiate in an honest
way to do what is only right for our constituents, our Nation, and our
financial future. Let's pass this bill and finally get this leftover
work from last year behind us once and for all.
Madam Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. DICKS. Madam Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the distinguished
former whip, the gentleman from South Carolina (Mr. Clyburn), who is
now the assistant minority leader.
Mr. CLYBURN. I thank my friend for yielding me the time.
Madam Speaker, my Republican friends bring to the floor today a
transparent political ploy that's an insult to our men and women in
uniform and their families.
It says that the Republican majority is willing to put up the funding
to arm and equip our troops fighting overseas for the remainder of the
year, but they won't find a way to fund the rest of the Federal
programs that assist their
[[Page H2452]]
spouses, children, and parents who are making significant sacrifices
keeping the home front together while their loved ones give all that
they have to keep all of us safe and free.
No, they're happy to submit them, their families, to the whims of a
budget debate that I'm concerned is rapidly moving toward a shutdown
that many of their supporters are clamoring for and seem pleased to
have happen.
This is no peace of mind for a soldier fighting in the field to
defend our freedoms and interests if his or her spouse or parents are
being furloughed at home or their children are being denied essential
services.
Is this bill going anywhere in the Senate? I don't think so and
certainly hope not. This kind of insensitivity should never be
codified.
Madam Speaker, the VA's backlog is extensive and growing. Let's stop
wasting time and raising anxieties. Let's get back to the negotiating
table so we can avoid a government shutdown and the damage it will do
to military families, working men and women, and our Nation's economy.
After all, it's two one-thousandth of 1 percent of the budget that's
in dispute here.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I would point out, Madam Speaker, that this
bill would prevent a shutdown. This keeps the government operating.
That's one aspect of it.
I yield 3 minutes to the very distinguished chairman of the Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee and former chairman of the full committee,
the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Young).
Mr. YOUNG of Florida. Mr. Chairman, thank you very much.
Make no mistake about it: This is a national defense appropriations
bill. This bill is based on one that was written under Chairman Dicks
last year and should have been brought to this floor and passed into
law last year. But for some reason, this one, along with every other
appropriations bill, didn't see the light of day. This may not be the
most perfect defense bill that we've ever produced here, but it is a
good bill and it will keep the Defense Department functioning.
And here's the problem for those of us who work every day of our
lives in national defense. We see what's happening. Under a continuing
resolution, the Defense Department is getting terribly close,
dangerously close, to affecting readiness, training, troops and their
families. This is not something we can allow to continue.
Put away the politics. Understand the importance of taking care of
our soldiers and our sailors and our airmen and our marines and their
families.
{time} 1220
Don't make them go without a paycheck because most of them live from
paycheck to paycheck. That's just not right, but that's the way it is.
Let's pass this bill, put the politics aside. Let us get the
Department of Defense away from a continuing resolution that is having
a very, very negative effect on our readiness and on our training.
I want to compliment Chairman Rogers for the good job that he has
done to get us to this point today. Let's pass this bill, and let's get
on with the business of the country, and especially defending our
country and defending those who defend our country.
Mr. DICKS. Madam Speaker, I yield 4 minutes to the distinguished
Democratic whip, Mr. Hoyer, my good friend from Maryland.
Mr. HOYER. I thank the gentleman for yielding. How I miss my magic
minute.
I want to say to the chairman of the Appropriations Committee, how
often he and I have said, you know, when we have these impasses, we
need a clean CR. This CR is unclean. This CR will not get us to where
you say you want to get, Mr. Chairman, and that's not shutting down the
government, because you know and I know the President will not sign
this bill. Why? Because you put in poison pills that you know are
unacceptable to him. Why? So you can get the votes on your side of the
aisle to vote for your bill to keep the government open. Why is that
difficult? Because so many of your folks, unless they get 100 percent,
are prepared to shut down the government. You and I both know that, Mr.
Chairman.
I have great respect for you. Very frankly, I think you and I could
go in a room and solve this in the next 30 seconds, but you and I are
not in that room. It is time, as the Speaker has said, to be adults.
Why is this viable piece of legislation on the floor? Because you
think you can hold the government ransom for an additional $12 billion.
I said that I would not support, after supporting the first two--which
I thought were reasonable to try to give us an opportunity to solve the
differences that exist between us--that I would not vote for a third
one, and I'm not going to vote for this one. It won't matter because
it's dead anyway, and you all know it's dead. But you're banking on the
fact that you know we don't want to shut down government. What's the
proof in the pudding? We did not shut it down when we had disagreements
with George Bush because we believed that reasonable people elected by
a diverse community in America who had differences of opinion were
expected by our public to come together, reason together, and act
productively together.
Now very frankly, I don't take a back seat to anybody on this floor
in my support of defense or the men and women in uniform, and Mr. Young
knows that, my dear friend, not a back seat to anyone. And yes, if we
passed a unanimous consent request to fund at present levels, defense
would continue. Should we have passed a defense bill last year? I think
we should have. I'm sorry we didn't. I urged that we do it. But the
Senate, as you might recall, would not allow any bills to come to the
floor, any bills--that is, the Republicans in the United States Senate
would not allow that to happen.
So now we are faced with not a let's-reason-together bill but an
additional $12 billion in cuts, which means that week by week by week
you think you will get to what you want, not a compromise, not an
agreement, but what you want. And you will do it $5 billion a week, $2
billion a week--this one is $12 billion a week. And you have no
expectation that that will pass or be signed by the President, but you
do it to pretend you want to keep government in operations. Newt
Gingrich has said don't worry about shutting down the government, as he
shut it down in 1995--and over Christmas--for 3 weeks, in '95 and '96.
Ladies and gentlemen on my side of the aisle, we ought to reject this
specious political act which pretends that we want to keep the
government open.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. DICKS. I yield the gentleman an additional 30 seconds.
Mr. HOYER. We ought to do, Mr. Chairman, what you and I have done in
the past as members of the Appropriations Committee: say we haven't
reached an agreement, we will do a clean CR at present levels while we
continue to negotiate on behalf of the American people to do what we
all want to do.
Mr. DICKS. If the gentleman will yield on that point, if we did that,
if we had a clean CR, the President would sign it into law.
Mr. HOYER. Absolutely. And that would pass the Senate as well.
I urge my colleagues to reject this CR and adopt a clean CR that will
keep the government in operation and allow us to come together and
reason together and pass a reasonable piece of legislation.
Announcement By the Speaker Pro Tempore
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair reminds the Members that remarks
must be addressed to the Chair and not to others in the second person.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, insofar as the military is
concerned, this is not a CR. This funds the Department for the balance
of the year. The rest of the bill, of course, is the CR.
I yield 3 minutes to the very hardworking chairman of the House Armed
Services Committee, the gentleman from California (Mr. McKeon).
Mr. McKEON. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
I rise in strong support of the bill before us that will fund our
troops through the end of the fiscal year, cut an additional $12
billion in Federal spending, and prevent a government shutdown.
Failure to pass this resolution would intentionally harm those who
have made great sacrifices in defense of our ideals and our values. We
simply cannot have our fighting forces on the
[[Page H2453]]
front lines in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya wondering if their families
at home will be provided for. It would be a grave injustice and a gross
affront to the civil-military relationship. Their pay cannot, should
not be disrupted, not for a week, not for a few days, not for a second.
Our men and women in uniform deserve better.
I don't even want to contemplate a government shutdown, but if it
should happen, people need to know that the pay to our military would
be suspended. This means we would have our troops on the front lines
risking their lives with their families at home, with bills to pay and
mouths to feed, and they wouldn't get their paycheck.
As Secretary Gates has said, many of our youngest sailors, soldiers,
airmen, and marines live from paycheck to paycheck. While wives and
husbands are off fighting to keep this Nation safe, we cannot have them
left wondering what's happening to their families.
I think we are mature enough to fix this problem. But if we don't,
failing to properly resource the Defense Department during the
difficult trials of war could arrest the momentum that has been
achieved through the blood, sweat, and tears of our troops.
The military is already overstretched, over-deployed and overworked.
Should this resolution fail, they will also be underpaid. We have too
much riding on these young men and women to sell them short. Let's work
together to figure out this budget, but let's also get this military
pay issue off the table first.
I encourage all Members to send a clear message to our military men
and women by supporting this critical troop funding appropriations
bill--this Congress believes in you, we support you, we honor your
dedication.
Mr. DICKS. I yield 3 minutes to the distinguished gentleman from
Virginia (Mr. Moran), former chairman of Interior, now the ranking
Democratic member of the Interior and Environment Subcommittee.
{time} 1230
Mr. MORAN. I thank the very distinguished former chair of the
Appropriations Committee and now ranking member of the committee as
well as of Defense.
Madam Speaker, none of us want any of our soldiers to go unpaid for 1
day or for one moment--obviously, they should not--but there are also
representatives of virtually every agency in the government who are
working for our goals and objectives throughout the world in combat
situations, many of them--in hardship situations. Much of the essential
work of the government, our people in the military would be the first
to say, is performed by people who don't happen to be in uniform. None
of them should go without pay.
This government represents the most important nation in the world,
and we are responsible for funding it. We represent the people, and
they work for the people. The problem with this bill is that the
decision to bring it up now is tantamount to shutting down that
government.
What we should be doing is exactly what Mr. Hoyer and Mr. Dicks have
suggested, which is to bring up a clean continuing resolution, to let
us get through the weekend, to come up with a long-term resolution for
the rest of the fiscal year, and then to fight out these ideological
battles in the fiscal year 2012 appropriations bills.
This is no way to run a government, Madam Speaker, but we do have
some precedent. The last time the Republican Party took over the
Congress back in 1995, some of my colleagues will recall, we also shut
down the government on two occasions for a total of 27 days during the
Christmas period. We know what happened then: 800,000 Federal
Government workers were furloughed, and it cost the taxpayers more than
$1.4 billion. Let me just mention some of the things that happened then
and that will happen again.
The Minerals Management Service had to shut down many of the rigs
that produce oil, which power this economy. It is estimated that the
companies which owned those rigs had to pay at least $525,000. They
couldn't get any oil. They were shut in. We had 200,000 U.S.
applications for passports which went unprocessed. Thirty thousand
applications by foreigners for visas, much of it for business that had
to be done in this country, were closed down. U.S. tourist industries
and airlines sustained millions of dollars in losses. That's what will
happen again.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. DICKS. I yield the gentleman an additional 30 seconds.
Mr. MORAN. Toxic waste cleanup was stopped at 609 sites; 2,400
Superfund workers were sent home; 368 National Park Service sites were
closed down; 7 million visitors weren't able to visit the parks; there
were more than 2 million visitors who couldn't go to national museums
and monuments; the Smithsonian will be shut down; Federal contractors
were furloughed.
Throughout this country, not just in the Federal Government, this
economy took a deep hit. Jobs were lost. Money was lost. People
couldn't pay their mortgages and their car payments. Don't let it
happen again, Madam Speaker. Let's pass a clean CR.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to a member
of our committee, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Carter).
Mr. CARTER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Madam Speaker, this past week or so ago, we had the NCOs of all the
Services come in to appear before the MilCon Subcommittee. The question
was asked, I believe, by my friends on the other side: What is the
number one concern of the United States military, of those who are
fighting our wars today--our wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and now in
Libya? What is their number one concern?
The top NCO of every Service said: Losing their paychecks and not
being able to care for their families back home.
Now, the Democrats are holding our poor troops hostage so that they
can have this agenda that is going to result in shutting down the
government. Let's make this clear. What we are offering today is to
continue the government in action for the next week but to make sure
that our troops know that their pay is going to be solid because we are
going to fund the Defense Department for the next 5 months.
This is intolerable. We offered in H.R. 1 to fund the entire
government and to fund our troops. The Democrats rejected it. We
offered again today to fund our troops--to make sure that they're going
to get paid and to make sure that the contracts are met and that
essential training services are there. They refused it. We have a
backup bill, H.R. 1297, which will just guarantee that the troops get
paid. They've refused it. Now the Commander in Chief of the military in
this country has announced that he is going to veto a bill that would
see to it that our soldiers get paid.
The number one worry of men and women in combat today: Will my folks
back home have a paycheck?
Now, that's not me saying that. That's the highest NCOs in the Army.
We need to respect that and we need to pass this.
Mr. DICKS. I yield 3 minutes to the distinguished gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Price), who is the ranking member on the Homeland
Security subcommittee.
Mr. PRICE of North Carolina. Madam Speaker, I rise in opposition to
this continuing resolution.
All of us know we are having this debate at a challenging and tense
time. We are facing an entirely unnecessary government shutdown, a
shutdown that has already been disruptive to critical governmental
functions and to our communities, and which may become radically more
so. But we all know--everyone in this Chamber knows--this could have
been avoided. This is a politically generated crisis.
In December, this House had the opportunity to pass an omnibus
appropriations bill--12 subcommittee bills, each written with
bipartisan cooperation, with substantial savings relative to the
President's budget request--and Republicans in the Senate refused to
even consider that omnibus bill.
So, failing that, we asked, What about a yearlong continuing
resolution with even more savings? Again, Republicans in the Senate
said they would filibuster such a bill, so here we are. What our
friends on the other side of the aisle opted for instead was a
potential March shutdown that they thought they could use to leverage
the tea party agenda.
[[Page H2454]]
Now, I and many others on this side of the aisle have been willing in
recent weeks to vote for two short-term continuing resolutions to give
the process of negotiation more time. We accepted additional cuts, cuts
that avoided real damage to the recovering economy or to critical
investments. Unfortunately, the resolution before us today breaks with
that pattern. It attempts to hold the House and the country hostage to
an extreme ideological position to which the Republican Conference has,
unfortunately, caved in.
This resolution proposes $12 billion in unacceptable and damaging
cuts, cuts that would threaten this fragile recovery, destroy jobs, and
pull back critical national investments. It takes, for example, $200
million from the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and
Children. It takes $150 million from Federal law enforcement. It would
take over $200 million from the Department of Energy's environmental
cleanup programs.
In the homeland security area, with which I am most familiar because
of the subcommittee I chaired and on which I now serve as ranking
member, it would reduce FEMA's State and local grants by 20 percent,
below 2010 levels. Both the State homeland security grants and the
urban area security grants would go to historically low levels.
The continuing resolution would decimate the Land and Water
Conservation Fund. It would radically cut the Clean Water and Drinking
Water Revolving Funds. It cuts the Centers of Excellence for veteran
students. It cuts school improvement investments by $148 million,
including efforts to improve education for returning veterans. It cuts
hundreds of millions from the Centers for Disease Control. It would cut
$1.5 billion from a critical national investment--high-speed rail. It
would cut public housing operating funds drastically.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. DICKS. I yield the gentleman an additional 30 seconds.
Mr. PRICE of North Carolina. Madam Speaker, these cuts are economic
folly. They have the potential to damage this fragile recovery and to
compromise critical national investments. Republicans may be willing to
risk a governmental shutdown to appease extremist elements, but we
cannot allow our country to be held hostage to their radical agenda.
{time} 1240
Pass a clean Continuing Resolution and continue the discussions. But
do not deliver this body blow to our economy.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I yield 2 minutes to the chairman on our
committee of the Subcommittee for Transportation and HUD, the gentleman
from Iowa (Mr. Latham).
Mr. LATHAM. I thank the gentleman from Kentucky.
The idea that this is somehow artificially created is unbelievable.
Is there any memory over on the other side here about what happened
last year for the first time since the Budget Act of 1974--that you
didn't even attempt to pass a budget last year? You initiated what the
majority on your side, both in the House and the Senate, and the
Presidency, did not pass one bill into law. That's why we're here
today. You know that's not artificial.
And I'm glad they got the talking points down from Senator Schumer
about being extreme. I tell you what's extreme is to continue to spend
this country into oblivion. You're going to have our kids and
grandchildren working for the Chinese if you continue this.
And that's why, Madam Speaker, today I rise in support of H.R. 1363,
the Troop Funding Bill. It's unfortunate that we have to be here in
this way today. But we have no choice because of the inaction of the
other side from last year.
This bill will provide much-needed certainty for our troops in the
field and would keep the government open for another week. It also
makes $12 billion in cuts in other programs, most of which were
proposed by the President and by the Democrats--the cuts that we're
talking about that are so supposedly draconian out of a $3.6 trillion
budget we can't cut $12 billion, apparently.
Now, many in the Senate would like to see the Department of Defense
budget used as an offset to continue the spending binge we're on here
in Washington. But we cannot allow our troops to be used as a
bargaining chip in negotiation. It's time to take the Department of
Defense off the table and fund our troops for the rest of this year.
Our brave men and women in the field are engaged in three different
wars--one just started again by this President--around the globe and
they deserve to know that they have the full support of this Congress.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I yield the gentleman an additional 30
seconds.
Mr. LATHAM. We owe it to those sacrificing for us both home and
abroad to ensure that there is not an interruption of their pay. This
measure continues to show the House Republicans' commitment to our men
and women in uniform while protecting the cause of freedom around the
world, as well as our commitment to fiscal sanity in cutting spending
while keeping the government open.
If this is rejected by the House and Senate Democrats and the White
House--and it's amazing the Commander in Chief of the military is going
to veto a bill that will fund his troops. I've never heard anything
more outrageous.
Mr. DICKS. I yield 2 minutes to the distinguished gentleman from New
York (Mr. Israel), who is a former member of the Appropriations
Committee doing great things in his new job.
Mr. ISRAEL. I thank the gentleman.
Mr. Speaker, Republicans came to Washington promising to change the
way Washington works. And what do they give us? This political stunt of
a resolution.
They came to the majority in 1994 and shut down the government. They
came back to the majority in 2010, and they want to shut down the
government, and they want to blame Democrats for doing that. The
American people see right through this.
They know that you demanded $73 billion in cuts and we agreed to $73
billion in cuts. Now you're saying you want more. They know that not
only do you want more, but you want to add restrictions on a women's
right to choose. They keep moving the goal posts further and further to
the far, far, far, far right. And it is enough.
Now, I keep hearing my friends on the other side of the aisle talk
about their concern about debt and deficits. And we agree. Let me
remind my friends on the other side of the aisle that several weeks
ago, we offered an amendment that would have reduced spending by asking
the top five richest oil companies in America just to forgo this year's
portion of their tax subsidy. And they said ``no.''
Let me remind my friends that several weeks ago, we offered to reduce
spending by eliminating funding for the Bridge to Nowhere. And they
said ``no.''
Keep spending on the top five richest, most profitable oil companies,
keep spending on the Bridge to Nowhere, but privatize Medicare for
senior citizens. Make them tighten their belts, make them sacrifice.
But when it comes to our friends in the special interests, spend,
spend, spend.
We see right through it. The American people see right through it.
It's time to do what we offered to do, which is to meet you where you
wanted to meet us until you moved those goal posts.
Enough, Madam Speaker.
Announcement By the Speaker Pro Tempore
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair will remind the Members that
remarks in debate must be addressed to the Chair and not to other
Members in the second person.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, may I inquire of the time
remaining on both sides?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Kentucky has 16\1/2\
minutes remaining, and the gentleman from Washington has 14\1/2\
minutes remaining.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to one of my
hardworking subcommittee chairmen on Appropriations, the chairman of
the Interior Subcommittee, the gentleman from Idaho (Mr. Simpson).
Mr. SIMPSON. There is a way to avoid the consequences of a government
shutdown that the government
[[Page H2455]]
from Virginia (Mr. Moran) spoke about just a few minutes ago, and that
is to pass this CR, put it on the President's desk so that he will sign
it. And I believe he will sign it.
The gentleman from North Carolina said this could have been avoided.
He's absolutely right. This could have been avoided. It could have been
avoided when the Democrats controlled the House and the Senate and the
Presidency last year by actually passing a budget or passing an
appropriation bill on the floor of the House.
Guess what? That never happened. You left us with this mess. And now
you complain about the way we're trying to clean it up.
The gentleman also said this is an ideological position on which the
Republicans will not yield. He's right. And that ideological position
is, this country is in a fiscal crisis, and we are going to get our
house back in order. If that's the position that we're being criticized
for, I welcome that criticism.
Mr. Speaker, nobody wants this government to be shut down. And
frankly, there is absolutely no reason to close down the government.
The smart thing to do would be to pass this 1-week CR that saves the
taxpayers $12 billion and addresses the dual goals of addressing the
fiscal crisis that we're in and averting a government shutdown.
It also funds our troops for the rest of this year. It enables our
congressional leaders and the White House to dot the I's and cross the
T's on the final spending bill for 2011. That would be the smart thing
to do.
Many of the spending reductions contained in this CR are spending
reductions that the President has submitted to Congress in either his
FY11 or FY12 budget request. Almost $1.3 billion of the spending
reductions come from my own subcommittee, the Interior and Environment
Subcommittee. And these are spending reductions that will probably be
in any final agreement that is made between Republicans and Democrats.
So the $12 billion is not extreme. It will be in the final agreement,
whatever that agreement is. There is absolutely no reason why the
Senate cannot pass this bill and send it to the White House. I believe
if you put it on the President's desk, he will sign it so that our
troops are funded.
Mr. DICKS. I yield 2 minutes to the gentlewoman from the District of
Columbia (Ms. Norton) who can explain why part of this CR is very
ideologically driven and extreme.
Ms. NORTON. I thank the gentleman for his efforts.
I'm here to say to my good friends on the other side, it's one thing
to beat up on the District of Columbia; it's another thing to drop a
bomb on the city. And that's what this CR does.
It takes the route of authoritarian governments and dictatorships by
dictating to a local government how it may spend its local funds. And
it may force the District of Columbia government to shut down, even
though the District government had a balanced budget, passed it last
spring and had it approved by the committees in this House and Senate
since last summer.
{time} 1250
But because the Congress can't figure out how to pass its own budget,
it now threatens to close down the District of Columbia government,
which doesn't have a dime in this federal budget, only local funds. My
amendment could have avoided all this by allowing local funds to
continue to be spent by the District of Columbia.
The other side has been engaged in many attacks on the city's right
to self-government, from stripping our vote in the Committee of the
Whole, approved by two Federal courts, to three riders in their H.R. 1.
But the ultimate attack on a local self-government is Federal
usurpation, a virtual taking of our local funds by not allowing the
city to use its own money to keep its own local government running.
Worse, there is an attempt to use the District of Columbia as a
bargaining chip in these negotiations. There have been no riders in
prior continuing resolutions. Shamefully, here the District of Columbia
is paired with a rider that no prisoners can be brought into the United
States with another that says D.C.'s local funds shall be captured by
keeping the city from spending its own local funds on abortion.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentlewoman has expired.
Mr. DICKS. I yield the gentlewoman an additional 30 seconds.
Ms. NORTON. How much more contempt can you show for the citizens who
live in the Nation's Capital? If the Republicans are going to require
Members to cite the Constitution in introducing legislation, I ask them
to stop tearing up the Constitution and throwing it in the faces of the
American citizens who live in the Nation's Capital.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. DICKS. I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from Vermont (Mr.
Welch).
Mr. WELCH. Thank you, Mr. Dicks.
There is something we have to acknowledge, whatever side of the issue
we are going to vote on: we are playing with fire. A government
shutdown is going to have two consequences: one, the obvious, and that
is folks that depend on governmental services are going to be
enormously inconvenienced. Contractors who are owed money from the
Federal Government won't be paid. Our citizens are going to be
adversely hurt. And folks who work honestly and hard every day for the
Federal Government are going to be out of a job. That's significant.
But what's really significant in the long term is that this is
sending a signal to the world, not just America, that the American
political process is fundamentally broken. If we are unable to reach an
agreement on a 1-week continuing resolution to keep government going,
what are the prospects for us when we face the challenge of a budget
next year? What are the prospects for us when we face the challenge
that looms ahead of us in May of raising the debt ceiling so that
America can honor the obligation that it has to pay its bills?
When the world begins to lose confidence that America's political
process can function, it is going to have a very dramatic and negative
impact on the economy. Interest rates are going to go up because the
cost of borrowing will go up because the anxiety about whether America
meets its obligations will increase. We are playing with fire here.
The biggest problem I have with the proposals that have been made
fiscally on the other side in my view is that they are designed to
fail. It's not that there isn't a legitimate concern about spending and
getting our fiscal house in order. You're right about that. We share
that. But if we're going to get from here to there, you cannot attack
100 percent of the problem on 12 percent of the budget.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I yield myself 30 seconds.
Chairman Simpson a moment ago referred and reminded us that we're in
this mess that we're in because the other side, when they controlled
the House last year, failed to pass a single appropriations bill and
left the mess in our hands when we took over in January. And now they
are complaining about the way we're trying to clean up their mess. It
reminds me a bit of Abraham Lincoln back in Illinois when he was
practicing law spoke of a man who was accused of killing his parents,
and in court made a plea that he was an orphan.
I yield 2 minutes, Madam Speaker, to the chairman on the Financial
Services Subcommittee on our full committee, the gentlelady from
Missouri (Mrs. Emerson).
Mrs. EMERSON. Madam Speaker, I rise in support of this resolution,
and really want to express, I believe the opinion of all of us, that we
do not want the Federal Government to shut down because doing so means
abrogating our responsibility to serve the American people from both
the legislative and executive branches.
We have all talked about how a shutdown also means our men and women
in uniform will face the uncertainty of serving without pay. Your
phones must be ringing like mine are, because we are hearing from so
many military families whom we represent. They are facing uncertainty
on top of uncertainty, posted overseas or with a family member away on
active duty in harm's way. They are just trying to keep their
households intact. And the President would veto such a piece of
legislation?
So this measure achieves two important goals. It ensures our military
operations and the pay of our military
[[Page H2456]]
members are uninterrupted, and it provides us another week to continue
negotiations. No one in this Congress should mistake this for easy
work, because it isn't. We are attempting to reduce discretionary
spending from historic heights, control the growth in the scope of
government, and give our children a future where the necessary
functions we enjoy today exist for them tomorrow. We are also
attempting to endow them with a future in which they can enjoy low
taxes, keep more of what they earn, and invest in new ideas and
opportunities, those things that have made our Nation great.
The negotiators and staff members on both sides of this effort are
working late hours, weekends; and I am convinced we all want to get
this right. But it would be more helpful if we could agree to work and
find consensus instead of ripping apart a 1-week bill that funds our
troops. I am not the only one to notice that we began the budget
process for 2012 this week at the very moment when we are trying to
resolve our responsibilities for 2011.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentlewoman has expired.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I yield the gentlelady an additional 30
seconds.
Mrs. EMERSON. I hope we can achieve that first goal this week so we
can move onto the next order of business, y'all, serving the people we
represent through the budget process, and making the difficult
decisions to curtail spending we can't afford. We shouldn't borrow, and
we sure don't want our children and our grandchildren to pay the bill
when it comes due.
Mr. DICKS. I yield 2 minutes to the distinguished gentlelady from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur), who is the most senior woman in the House of
Representatives and on the Appropriations Committee.
Ms. KAPTUR. I thank our distinguished ranking member, Mr. Dicks, for
yielding me this time.
Madam Speaker, in our tender economy, where job creation should be
our top priority, this flawed legislation moves us backwards. It gives
no confidence to the markets that anyone here in the majority knows
what they are doing. It is just more fits and starts and stops. This
bill is partial, it is short term, and it is a selective bill that
leaves the vast majority of budget choices off the table. It is
irresponsible.
It selects only some of our valiant fighting forces--some would say
``uses'' them--and extends paychecks for only some through the end of
September. But it leaves out the majority of Americans who expect good
government out of this Congress to ensure economic growth and a
continued recovery on the job front. The American people are sick and
tired of political antics. Let me point out this bill is so flawed it
leaves out the veterans who come home and can't get work and are lined
up with their families at food banks across this country. This bill
does nothing about reemploying them, nor assuring their sustenance as
employment and food commodity programs are left off the table.
{time} 1300
This resolution leaves out decisions regarding food supplies to those
pantries so essential to holding life together for our unemployed
veterans as well as for millions of other Americans facing hard times.
And what about those vets lined up to exercise their GI benefits at
local community colleges? This resolution turns its back on 2011
educational funding at community colleges that are an essential reentry
portal for returning veterans. So this bill is partial, selective and
lopsided.
What about those vets with disabilities who are lined up across our
country to get adjudication? This resolution turns its back on them and
those adjudication judges that also get paychecks, some as contracted
employees, from the government of the United States to do their job of
serving veterans.
Let me urge the majority to do what the American people sent us here
to do, and that is to govern, to govern for all, to not leave anyone
out, to not leave any veterans out, to not leave the vast majority of
Americans out.
I ask my colleagues to defeat this flawed resolution. Let us govern
responsibly by addressing the entire budget, not just a slice of it;
and let's turn the focus here to creating jobs which is what the
American people really want.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I yield 1 minute to a member of our
committee, and a good one, the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Dent).
Mr. DENT. Madam Speaker, passing this measure is absolutely the
responsible thing to do. We are on the brink of an avoidable,
potentially destructive government shutdown; and first and foremost we
ensure that our troops are funded for their service to the Nation.
Let's get that done.
The American people elected us to ensure the Federal Government runs
effectively and efficiently, and allowing even a temporary shutdown is
a failure of our most basic responsibility as Members of Congress.
Let's not forget the reason we are here today and in this
predicament. It was the inability of the Democratic leadership last
year to pass a budget. They didn't even try, and they failed to
complete any of the appropriations bills.
In fact, Senator Schumer has made it quite clear that a government
shutdown is in his political interest. Perhaps that's why the Senate
isn't doing anything. You know, they have two paces over there: slow
and glacial.
Today was a new day in the Senate. They started slowly and they're
winding down from there. I wish they would get to work and pass some
type of an appropriations bill.
We passed an appropriations bill; they passed nothing. We need to get
this done. It's important to fund the troops, it's important to keep
the government open, and this is the right way to do it.
Mr. DICKS. Madam Speaker, may I inquire as to how much time remains
on both sides.
Ms. FOXX. The gentleman from Washington has 8 minutes remaining, and
the gentleman from Kentucky has 10\1/2\ minutes remaining.
Mr. DICKS. I would invite the gentleman to go ahead with a couple of
more speakers at this juncture.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I yield 1 minute to a brand-
new member of our committee, and a hardworking one at that, the
gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Austria).
Mr. AUSTRIA. I thank the chairman for yielding and for his great
leadership.
Madam Speaker, just a reminder as to why we are standing here again
debating another CR on this floor is because the Democrat leadership in
the last Congress did not fulfill the most basic function that we have
in the United States Congress, and that is passing a budget or a single
appropriations bill.
As a member of this Appropriations Committee, I am pleased that today
we have a CR bill that will have another $12 billion worth of cuts and
that, as importantly, will fully fund the Department of Defense for the
rest of this fiscal year.
It was 47 days ago that we passed a bill in this House that would
have kept government open, that would have cut $100 billion from the
President's 2011 budget and would have fully funded our troops through
the end of 2011. Any bill we pass must include full funding for our men
and women serving in our military.
I represent Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, one of the largest Air
Force facilities in the country, and they could be forced to furlough
many of the 27,000 military, civilians, and contractors.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. AUSTRIA. We have to pass this CR budget with the military
component included.
Mr. DICKS. I continue to reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I yield 1 minute to another
new member of our committee and a new Member of Congress; but he is
doing a great job, the gentleman from Mississippi (Mr. Nunnelee).
Mr. NUNNELEE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
We're engaged in a budget battle for the future of our country, but
we have the freedom to engage in that battle because of the brave men
and women that have their lives on the line fighting for that freedom.
Have we forgotten? Only 10 years ago, there were those who would have
destroyed this very building and disrupted these proceedings by an act
of
[[Page H2457]]
terror, and we have men and women today fighting to make sure that
those acts of terror are never repeated. That's their mission.
It's unconscionable that we would send men and women into harm's way
and not fund their efforts. That's why we need to pass this bill,
because if we do, we will have the liberty to pursue our mission while
our men and women in uniform have the liberty to pursue theirs.
Thank you, Madam Speaker.
Mr. DICKS. I yield myself 15 seconds.
I would just remind the gentleman that if we had a clean CR, the
troops would also be taken care of, and a clean CR would be signed into
law by the President of the United States so it would be effective.
What is being proposed today will be vetoed. The President has
already sent a statement.
I yield 2 minutes to the gentlelady from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) who
is a distinguished member of this institution.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I thank the ranking member, and I thank the
Members on this floor today.
I believe that this is one of the most serious debates that we will
have in the history of this Congress. It is whether or not America
belongs to all people and not special interests.
Coming from the State of Texas, I can tell you that statistics will
say that we probably have the highest number of men and women serving
in the United States military, a large number of bases, a large number
of veterans; and we well know the values of those men and women who
sacrifice and leave their families and go overseas.
But I said yesterday on the floor of the House, we have values. As my
colleagues have said, can we say it one more time? We will support a
clean CR to pay our troops, to pay their families, to keep the doors of
our hospitals open, to provide Medicare for our seniors and Medicaid
and education for our children.
But, no, friends on the other side are strangled by special
interests, picket signs and loud shouts about ``shut it down.'' The
President has already said he will veto this silly legislative
initiative.
Why are we in the midst of a serious budget debate? By the way, the
Ryan budget that has been put out by the Republicans will deny 66
percent of citizens, of seniors, off of Medicare. They will be off. We
will not balance the budget under the Ryan budget until 2040. It will
cause $8 trillion more debt.
It's hard for America to understand this complicated process. It
seems so confusing, but, my friends, we're talking about last year
where people have already committed, making commitments to pay their
bills like you would make commitments.
And then in the middle, you would be shortchanged or cut off. Where
is the heart on the other side? Yes, yesterday I said shut the
government down if you have no heart because we're not going to
compromise our values.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentlewoman has expired.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. This is wrongheaded and misdirected. I ask
you to vote it down and vote with the American people.
Madam Speaker, I rise today in opposition to H.R. 1363, the
Department of Defense and Further Additional Continuing Appropriations
Act of 2011. While I support our men and women in the armed forces and
our need to ensure our national security, I cannot with clear
conscience support another continuing resolution that does not allow
vital programs to be fully funded.
We must consider the consequence of passing another continuing
resolution. Funding the government for a week at a time cripples
agencies, rendering them unable to look to the future and focus on how
to best serve the American people in the coming fiscal year.
The funding cuts in this particular continuing resolution are harmful
to countless Americans and many of my constituents in the 18th
Congressional District. We cannot continue to cut services for
children, senior citizens, and the underserved. We cannot allow budgets
to provide tax cuts to the wealthiest among us, while ignoring the
needs of less advantaged citizens. This bill will cut funding that
keeps Americans safe and healthy.
The Department of Health and Human Services will suffer deep funding
cuts under this proposal. Programs such as hospital preparedness
grants, which allocated 28 million dollars to hospitals in Texas last
year, will see its budget cut by $185 million dollars, money that could
be used to prepare communities and hospitals for public health
emergencies.
The Centers for Disease Control's Immunization and Respiratory
Disease Center will lose $156 million dollars. Cuts to this vital
program will surely impact the millions of dollars in grant money to
purchase and administer vaccines that Houston has received from the
Immunization and Respiratory Disease Center. These cuts will certainly
harm infants and children of low income families who rely on money
appropriated for vaccinations to prevent disease and death.
The proposed cut of $390 million from the LIHEAP contingency fund
will affect the 500,000 low-income households in Houston that were
receiving heating and energy discounts last year.
I urge my colleagues to consider the constituents in their home
districts who would be hurt by these cuts. I urge my colleagues to
consider the ramifications for the nation by cutting $495 million
dollars in FEMA First Responders grants, and the impact that cutting
$192 million from the Department of Energy's Environmental Clean Up
Program will have on future generations.
My Republican colleagues who support the passage of this continuing
resolution seem more concerned with placing controversial issues like
the right to choose in the text of the bill. Instead of placing
irrelevant ideological issues into a continuing resolution, we must
take this time to pass a responsible budget that reduces spending
without cutting programs essential to the well being of the American
people.
This bill contains many large and dangerous cuts in its one week of
CR government funding, including $2 billion in cuts to investments in
infrastructure projects that are needed for our nation's continued
economic growth. The bill makes reprehensible cuts to the most needy in
our elementary and secondary education system by rescinding some
$186,500,000 from funds already made available for the Department of
Education's Education for the Disadvantaged program.
The bill shamelessly resorts to the use of highly offensive,
inflammatory and controversial policy riders highlighted by the Red
Herring issue and attack on women embodied in prohibiting the District
of Columbia from using Federal funding and the District of Columbia's
own funds for abortions even when the life of the mother would be
endangered if the fetus were carried to term or where the pregnancy is
the result of an act of rape or incest.
President Obama found the one week CR and its policy riders so
objectionable that he declared his clear intention to veto the bill and
issued a call for Congress to work together to produce a responsible
appropriations measure to fund the remainder of fiscal year 2011 and
avoid a devastating government shutdown.
I join the President in his call for a responsible appropriations
measure to fund the remainder of fiscal year 2011 and avoid a
devastating government shutdown. By using this bill with its attached
one week CR, the Republicans are engaging in a high stakes masquerade
with dire stakes for the American people and business across the
country that rely on having a functioning Federal government. The
Republicans mask and hide their shame by putting reprehensible and
destructive funding cuts in H.R. 1363 which is supposed to provide for
a year of funding for our brave men and women serving in the armed
services. Shame on them for doing so and shame on them for bringing
this nation perilously close to a government shutdown.
Instead of this meager attempt to pass another fake, short-term CR
that does not address the issues facing the American people who are
counting on Congress to get this right, we need a Clean CR that does
not have outrageous Draconian cuts or hold our Veterans and the men and
women serving our country honorably as hostages for the sake of
Partisan point scoring. I urge my colleagues to join me in rejecting
this bill and calling for a proper CR which responsibly funds the
Federal government through fiscal year 2011.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the
gentleman from Alabama (Mr. Brooks) a member of the Armed Services
Committee.
Mr. BROOKS. Mr. Speaker, let's remind everybody why we are here. We
are here because we are trying to save our Federal Government from
unsustainable budget deficits.
During the regime of Nancy Pelosi as House Speaker and majority
leader over in the Senate, Harry Reid, we have had four consecutive
budget deficits that average $1.2 billion a year. Those are
unsustainable. They threaten our Federal Government's solvency; we are
facing a national bankruptcy.
{time} 1310
And so what are we trying to do today? We are trying to protect our
[[Page H2458]]
troops who are in Afghanistan and Iraq so that they don't have to worry
about whether their homes are going to be foreclosed on as they're off
doing battle and their kids and their wives are at home.
We have people from Colony, Alabama, a lady who has two young
children, aged 3, twins, and she is fighting on behalf of our country.
We have soldiers that I met in Afghanistan and Iraq that are fighting
on our behalf. I ask that this House and this Senate do what we should
do, and that is protect our troops by funding them adequately and don't
leave them in a position where they are not able to take care of their
own people at home.
Mr. DICKS. Madam Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I yield 3 minutes to the distinguished
gentleman from Indiana (Mr. Pence).
(Mr. PENCE asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. PENCE. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
I rise in support of the Department of Defense and Further Continuing
Appropriations Act. This 1-week continuing resolution will fully fund
the Department of Defense for the remainder of this fiscal year and
reduce government spending by $12 billion, and it is worthy of the
support of every Member of Congress.
Look, no one wants a government shutdown. But if we don't take a
stand for fiscal discipline in Washington, D.C., we're going to shut
down the future for our children and grandchildren.
To be honest with you, I'm frustrated that we're here again with
another stopgap measure. I'm frustrated that liberals in the Senate
continue to resist efforts to accept even modest budget cuts in this
year's budget. We're talking about a 2 percent reduction in this year's
budget. That's unacceptable to the liberals down the hallway. It seems
like liberals in the Senate would rather shut the government down than
accept a 2 percent cut in the Federal budget. It seems like liberals in
the Senate would rather shut the government down so they can continue
to borrow money from China to fund the largest abortion provider in
America.
But in this moment, I'm going to support this resolution because the
troops come first. We cannot put fiscal battles ahead of support for
those who are currently engaged in America's real battles. This CR
reaffirms our commitment to our troops. It fully funds DOD for the
balance of the year, and it reaffirms our commitment to our most
cherished ally, Israel, during these uncertain days.
Now, earlier this week, Senator Harry Reid said the biggest gap in
negotiations is between Republicans and Republicans. Nothing could be
further from the truth. The biggest gap in these negotiations over a
possible government shutdown are between liberals here in Washington,
D.C., and the American people. That's where the gaps lie. The American
people want to restore fiscal discipline and provide for the common
defense, and they know we can do it.
Today, Senator Reid took to the floor of the Senate and called this
very resolution ``a surefire way to shut down the government.'' And,
astonishingly, the Commander in Chief has threatened to veto a bill
that would fund our troops at a time of war. Astonishing.
Look, we are going to pass this continuing resolution. We are going
to fund our troops in harm's way and stationed all across the world and
all across this Nation. And if Democrats here in Washington would
rather play political games and shut down the government than support
our troops, defend our Treasury and respect our values, then I say shut
it down. And I'm certain the American people are going to know who to
blame.
Mr. DICKS. Madam Speaker, how much time do I have remaining?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Washington has 5\3/4\
minutes.
Mr. DICKS. I will yield myself 4\3/4\ minutes.
(Mr. DICKS asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. DICKS. I just want to make sure that everyone has heard the
Statement of Administration Policy that was issued today:
``The administration strongly opposes House passage of H.R. 1363,
making appropriations for the Department of Defense for the fiscal year
ending September 30, 2011, and for other purposes. As the President
stated on April 5, 2011, if negotiations are making significant
progress, the administration would support a short-term, clean
continuing resolution to allow for enactment of a final bill.
``For the past several weeks, the administration has worked
diligently and in good faith to find common ground on the shared goal
of cutting spending. After giving the Congress more time by signing
short-term extensions into law''--which, by the way, many of us voted
for--``the President believes that we need to put politics aside and
work out our differences for a bill that covers the rest of the fiscal
year. This bill is a distraction from the real work that would bring us
closer to a reasonable compromise for funding the remainder of fiscal
year 2011 and avert a disruptive Federal Government shutdown that would
put the Nation's economic recovery in jeopardy. The administration will
continue to work with the Congress to arrive at a compromise that will
fund the government for the remainder of the fiscal year in a way that
does not undermine future growth and job creation and that averts a
costly government shutdown. It is critical that the Congress send a
final bill to the President's desk that provides certainty to our men
and women in military uniform, their families, small businesses,
homeowners, taxpayers, and all Americans. H.R. 1363 simply delays that
critical final outcome.
``If presented with this bill, the President will veto it.''
I think the President is right.
What I suggested yesterday to the Rules Committee and to our chairman
was that we go forward with a clean CR, which we have done many times.
It would allow the President to sign this and us to finish our work. I
would much rather have preferred if the clean CR was at a point when
all three--the President, the Speaker, and the Majority Leader--had all
agreed and said, ``We're done; we need a little more time to do the
paperwork,'' but that is not the situation that we're in.
I also want to reiterate, with a clean CR, the troops will be paid
and they will receive their checks as they should. And the defense part
of this bill, I have worked on. It's a very good piece of legislation.
But when you throw in the District of Columbia abortion issue, it
really shows that you're not serious. That's why the American people I
think believe that this is ideology and not people working together in
a commonsense way to get this thing resolved.
So, again, I worry about what we're doing here in terms of economic
policy, that again the magnitude of these cuts are going to have a
negative effect on the economy. We need to create more jobs, to lower
the deficit, and put people back to work.
I urge that we defeat this bill.
Madam Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. May I inquire of the time remaining?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Kentucky has 4\1/2\
minutes remaining. The gentleman from Washington has 2 minutes
remaining.
Mr. DICKS. I believe that the Democratic whip may want to propound a
question to the chairman, so I am not going to yield back my time until
he has an opportunity to do that.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I am prepared to close.
Mr. DICKS. I yield 1 minute to the distinguished Democratic whip, my
good friend, the gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Hoyer).
{time} 1320
Mr. HOYER. Madam Speaker, I want to ask the chairman if he will yield
to me for the purposes of making a unanimous consent request that we
proceed with what we would call a clean CR, which would provide for the
funding of the troops, provide for the funding of all other government
agencies at the levels that we are currently at, which of course
involve all the cuts that have been made to date in the last two CRs
that we passed and for which I voted. I tell my friend, the reason I
want to propound this unanimous consent, it will in fact provide for a
document, an
[[Page H2459]]
act, to pass this House which I believe will in fact pass the Senate
and will in fact be signed by the President.
As a result, we will protect our troops and we will protect all other
services that government has available for the American people.
I ask my friend if he will yield to me for that purpose.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. DICKS. I yield the gentleman an additional 30 seconds.
Mr. HOYER. I think I have concluded, Madam Speaker, in asking the
chairman whether he would yield to me for the purposes of making that
unanimous consent so that we could have an act pass this House that we
know will be signed by the President and will protect the troops and
will keep the government open.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Kentucky.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, what the gentleman is asking
is if we will continue the status quo. We do not and cannot accept the
status quo.
Mr. HOYER. Will the chairman yield simply for me to clarify my
request?
Mr. DICKS. I yield my remaining time to the gentleman from Maryland.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Kentucky controls the
time.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the
gentlewoman from New York (Ms. Buerkle), a new Member of this body.
Ms. BUERKLE. Madam Speaker, I rise in support of this bill, the bill
to fund our troops. The last Congress failed to pass a budget, and
that's why we're here. That's why we're debating these CRs.
This continuing resolution is the right outcome, not only for the
American people, but for our military. This isn't a Democratic or
Republican issue, this is what's best for the American people, and most
importantly what's best for our troops. Give them certainty, give them
what they need to keep us safe and allow us to be here today with this
debate.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from
Arkansas (Mr. Griffin).
Mr. GRIFFIN of Arkansas. Madam Speaker, while we stand here debating
the course of our fiscal future, brave men and women are in harm's way,
taking the fight to our enemies around the world. Their families here
at home are doing all they can to keep a brave face and keep their
family going while their loved ones are abroad.
Sadly, because of the Senate's inaction, these families now face an
even greater challenge. Unless the Senate changes course and listens to
the American people, our U.S. military families will soon not receive
their paychecks. From my home State of Arkansas, we have over 5,000
active duty servicemembers as well as 246 Army National Guardsmen
deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq. My district is home to Little Rock
Air Force Base, where we have 5,500 airmen and over 15,000 military
family members.
Think about this, ladies and gentlemen: the men and women facing our
enemies every day don't know whether they will get paid. As the
standard bearer for the free world, it is unacceptable and, really,
just embarrassing that America can't pay its troops for their service.
This is not the time for servicemembers and their families to worry
about when the next check will arrive.
I support this bill.
Mr. DICKS. Madam Speaker, I yield myself the remaining time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Washington is recognized
for 1 minute.
Mr. DICKS. I just want to summarize again: I'm urging a ``no'' vote
on this continuing resolution. We have voted twice, many of us on this
side, for reasonable continuing resolutions that have gotten us to this
point. This one is unreasonable. The President has made it clear that
he will veto this bill.
I believe what the gentleman from Maryland was attempting to do was
the smart and pragmatic thing, and that was to go with a clean CR that
would have kept the government open, that would have protected the
troops, made sure that they got paid, and would have passed the Senate
and been adopted by the President and signed into law. But they have
chosen to put in a highly controversial rider on abortion in the
District of Columbia which is ideological. This is not something that a
serious appropriations committee would do in the middle of a government
crisis, and I hope the American people will understand that.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Kentucky is recognized
for 2\1/4\ minutes.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Thank you, Madam Speaker.
Let's try to summarize here. The Democrats left us, when we took
control of the House, in a mess. You hadn't passed a single
appropriations bill. You passed a CR until March 4. We prepared and put
into play and passed in the House a continuing resolution that would
have funded the government entirely for the balance of the year,
including the military, and sent it to the other body. And they have
said nothing, and that was 2 months ago.
When that time ran out in March, this body passed a second CR for 2
weeks. Sent that to the Senate. We haven't heard from them since. That
time ran out. We passed a third CR. We passed it to the Senate, not a
peep. Nothing.
And now a fourth time, now a fourth CR where we are going to give the
Senate another chance to come forward with what they propose in a CR.
They have yet to pass anything. And I have to say this, too: The White
House has been late in coming to the aid of their party. The White
House has been absent from the battle until the last few days.
And now you come to us and say, look, here's what we complain about
on your cleaning up our mess. And I say to you, this bill takes care of
our military, our young men and women fighting in three wars on the
other side of the world. And the Commander in Chief of the military is
saying I'm going to veto the bill that pays their salaries and supports
their families back home. I find that inexplicable, inexplicable that
the Commander in Chief would put an end to the pay of our soldiers.
The failure of the Senate to act and the failure of the White House
to act when we pass this bill means a vote to shut down the government.
Vote ``yes.''
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, pursuant to section 8120 of
Division A of H.R. 1363 as passed the House on April 7, 2011, Chairman
Rogers submits the following explanatory statement:
REPROGRAMMING GUIDANCE
For fiscal year 2011, the Department of Defense is directed to adhere
to the definition of Program, Project and Activity, and to follow the
guidance for Congressional Special Interest Items, Reprogrammings,
Reprogramming Reporting Requirements, and Funding Increases, as
specified in the Explanatory Statement, Division A, Department of
Defense Appropriations Act Fiscal Year 2010, Public Law 111-118.
CLASSIFIED ANNEX
A classified annex accompanying this Act will be forwarded under
separate cover.
Rescissions
Language is included that rescinds $1,213,536,000 from the following
programs:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2009 Appropriations:
Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army:
Future Combat Systems............................. $86,300,000
Other Procurement, Army:
Armored Security Vehicles......................... 55,000,000
Force XXII Battle Command Brigade and Below....... 30,600,000
Semi-trailers, Flatbed............................ 62,000,000
Aircraft Procurement, Navy:
KC-130J........................................... 12,000,000
F/A-18E/F......................................... 14,100,000
Aircraft Procurement, Air Force:
Global Hawk excess funds.......................... 49,000,000
C-130 AMP......................................... 31,900,000
HC/MC updated pricing............................. 36,000,000
2010 Appropriations:
Aircraft Procurement, Army:
Tactical SIGINT Payload........................... 14,000,000
Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army:
Future Combat Systems spin-outs................... 19,600,000
Improved Recovery Vehicle......................... 8,700,000
MK-19 Grenade Machine Gun Modifications........... 7,700,000
Missile Procurement, Army:
GMLRS............................................. 9,171,000
Aircraft Procurement, Navy:
EA-18G MYP savings................................ 89,120,000
F/A-18E/F MYP savings............................. 72,727,000
F-18 Series ECO................................... 17,000,000
E-6 Series........................................ 6,000,000
Joint Strike Fighter (AP)......................... 100,000,000
Procurement of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps:
General Purpose Bombs............................. 11,576,000
Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy:
DDG-51 main reduction gear savings................ 22,000,000
Other Procurement, Navy:
Minesweeping System Replacement................... 5,400,000
Aircraft Launch Recovery.......................... 3,642,000
Aircraft Procurement, Air Force:
B-2A.............................................. 5,900,000
B-52.............................................. 39,300,000
C-17 Modifications................................ 12,200,000
C-130J updated pricing............................ 7,000,000
C-130 AP updated pricing.......................... 15,100,000
[[Page H2460]]
HC/MC-130 AP...................................... 46,900,000
HC/MC-130 updated pricing......................... 13,200,000
Initial Spares--Joint Stars Re-engining........... 11,700,000
Other Procurement, Air Force:
FAB-T............................................. 36,600,000
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Army:
Aircraft Avionics--JTRS AMF....................... 10,200,000
HFDS.............................................. 15,000,000
Future Combat System--Class IV UAV Program of 12,000,000
Record...........................................
TUAV-TSP.......................................... 16,300,000
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Air Force:
B-2............................................... 90,000,000
Classified Program................................ 10,000,000
Alternative Fuels................................. 10,000,000
Small Diameter Bomb............................... 22,000,000
Engine CIP........................................ 15,000,000
JSTARS............................................ 14,600,000
RQ-4 UAV.......................................... 18,000,000
C-5 Airlift Squadrons............................. 19,000,000
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-
Wide:
BMD Hercules...................................... 10,000,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
M-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL, ARMY
BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. ....................... .......................
BASIC PAY............................ 6,392,861 6,392,861
RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 2,088,308 2,088,308
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 1,854,718 1,854,718
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 255,925 255,925
INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 97,698 97,698
SPECIAL PAYS......................... 300,939 300,939
ALLOWANCES........................... 198,601 198,601
SEPARATION PAY....................... 61,798 61,798
SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 487,469 487,469
TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 11,738,317 11,738,317
BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED ....................... .......................
PERSONNEL.
BASIC PAY............................ 13,682,488 13,682,488
RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 4,470,859 4,470,859
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 4,395,850 4,395,850
INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 102,851 102,851
SPECIAL PAYS......................... 1,269,047 1,129,047
Enlistment Bonuses--Excess to ....................... -40,000
Requirement.
Re-enlistment Bonuses--Excess to ....................... -100,000
Requirement.
ALLOWANCES........................... 806,471 806,471
SEPARATION PAY....................... 255,127 255,127
SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 1,046,710 1,046,710
TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 26,029,403 25,889,403
BA-3: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF CADETS... ....................... .......................
ACADEMY CADETS....................... 74,773 74,773
TOTAL, BA-3.......................... 74,773 74,773
BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED ....................... .......................
PERSONNEL.
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 1,313,309 1,313,309
SUBSISTENCE-IN-KIND.................. 817,691 817,691
FAMILY SUBSISTENCE SUPPLEMENTAL 748 748
ALLOWANCE.
TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 2,131,748 2,131,748
BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION ....................... .......................
TRAVEL.
ACCESSION TRAVEL..................... 202,699 202,699
TRAINING TRAVEL...................... 142,749 142,749
OPERATIONAL TRAVEL................... 494,937 494,937
ROTATIONAL TRAVEL.................... 674,831 674,831
SEPARATION TRAVEL.................... 198,439 198,439
TRAVEL OF ORGANIZED UNITS............ 12,137 12,137
NON-TEMPORARY STORAGE................ 12,639 12,639
TEMPORARY LODGING EXPENSE............ 38,931 38,931
TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 1,777,362 1,777,362
BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. ....................... .......................
APPREHENSION OF MILITARY DESERTERS... 2,233 2,233
INTEREST ON UNIFORMED SERVICES 648 648
SAVINGS.
DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 45,500 45,500
UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 188,778 188,778
EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 30,879 30,879
ADOPTION EXPENSES.................... 610 610
TRANSPORTATION SUBSIDY............... 8,007 8,007
PARTIAL DISLOCATION ALLOWANCE........ 338 338
RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS 138,731 138,731
(ROTC).
JUNIOR ROTC.......................... 50,201 50,201
TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 465,925 465,925
LESS REIMBURSABLES................... -245,251 -245,251
UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENTS............ 0 -789,624
Undistributed Transfer to Title IX... ....................... -789,624
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, ARMY......
41,972,277 41,042,653
MILITARY PERSONNEL, NAVY
BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. ....................... .......................
BASIC PAY............................ 3,680,703 3,680,703
RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 1,202,462 1,202,462
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 1,263,675 1,263,675
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 143,344 143,344
INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 155,148 155,148
SPECIAL PAYS......................... 355,821 355,821
ALLOWANCES........................... 104,291 104,291
SEPARATION PAY....................... 25,353 25,353
SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 278,666 278,666
TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 7,209,463 7,209,463
BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED ....................... .......................
PERSONNEL.
BASIC PAY............................ 8,257,803 8,257,803
RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 2,700,204 2,700,204
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 3,682,915 3,682,915
INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 100,499 100,499
SPECIAL PAYS......................... 839,787 814,787
Re-enlistment Bonuses--Excess to ....................... -5,000
Requirement.
Enlistment Bonuses--Excess to ....................... -20,000
Requirement.
ALLOWANCES........................... 498,621 498,621
SEPARATION PAY....................... 127,343 127,343
SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 631,722 631,722
TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 16,838,894 16,813,894
BA-3: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ....................... .......................
MIDSHIPMEN.
MIDSHIPMEN........................... 74,950 74,950
TOTAL, BA-3.......................... 74,950 74,950
BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED ....................... .......................
PERSONNEL.
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 685,085 685,085
SUBSISTENCE-IN-KIND.................. 419,333 419,333
FAMILY SUBSISTENCE SUPPLEMENTAL 12 12
ALLOWANCE.
TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 1,104,430 1,104,430
BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION ....................... .......................
TRAVEL.
ACCESSION TRAVEL..................... 76,220 76,220
TRAINING TRAVEL...................... 71,814 71,814
OPERATIONAL TRAVEL................... 219,685 219,685
ROTATIONAL TRAVEL.................... 354,275 354,275
SEPARATION TRAVEL.................... 103,806 103,806
TRAVEL OF ORGANIZED UNITS............ 39,368 39,368
[[Page H2461]]
NON-TEMPORARY STORAGE................ 5,760 5,760
TEMPORARY LODGING EXPENSE............ 6,386 6,386
OTHER................................ 6,406 6,406
TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 883,720 883,720
BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. ....................... .......................
APPREHENSION OF MILITARY DESERTERS... 261 261
INTEREST ON UNIFORMED SERVICES 1,427 1,427
SAVINGS.
DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 17,700 17,700
UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 88,350 88,350
EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 21,515 21,515
ADOPTION EXPENSES.................... 271 271
TRANSPORTATION SUBSIDY............... 8,030 8,030
PARTIAL DISLOCATION ALLOWANCE........ 190 190
RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS 27,345 27,345
(ROTC).
JUNIOR R.O.T.C....................... 14,093 14,093
TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 179,182 179,182
LESS REIMBURSABLES................... -339,690 -339,690
UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. 0 -13,500
Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... ....................... -13,500
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, NAVY......
25,950,949 25,912,449
MILITARY PERSONNEL, MARINE CORPS
BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. ....................... .......................
BASIC PAY............................ 1,433,200 1,433,200
RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 465,072 465,072
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 462,438 462,438
BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 59,613 59,613
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 50,011 50,011
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 27,921 27,9215
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 34,404 34,404
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 13,299 13,299
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 109,014 109,014
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 2,654,972 2,654,972
---.................... BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 4,910,560 4,910,560
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 1,591,322 1,591,322
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 1,660,161 1,660,161
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 9,158 9,158
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 288,654 288,654
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 278,060 278,060
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 65,101 65,101
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 372,411 372,411
---.................... TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 9,175,427 9,175,427
---.................... BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 489,789 489,789
---.................... SUBSISTENCE-IN-KIND.................. 324,565 324,565
---.................... FAMILY SUBSISTENCE SUPPLEMENTAL 750 750
ALLOWANCE.
---.................... TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 815,104 815,104
---.................... BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION --- ---
TRAVEL.
---.................... ACCESSION TRAVEL..................... 79,378 79,378
---.................... TRAINING TRAVEL...................... 10,079 10,079
---.................... OPERATIONAL TRAVEL................... 239,442 239,442
---.................... ROTATIONAL TRAVEL.................... 115,330 115,330
---.................... SEPARATION TRAVEL.................... 55,528 55,528
---.................... TRAVEL OF ORGANIZED UNITS............ 742 742
---.................... NON-TEMPORARY STORAGE................ 6,305 6,305
---.................... TEMPORARY LODGING EXPENSE............ 13,818 13,818
---.................... OTHER................................ 2,683 2,683
---.................... TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 523,305 523,305
---.................... BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. --- ---
---.................... APPREHENSION OF MILITARY DESERTERS... 1,823 1,823
---.................... INTEREST ON UNIFORMED SERVICES 19 19
SAVINGS.
---.................... DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 17,200 17,200
---.................... UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 69,359 69,359
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 4,249 4,249
---.................... ADOPTION EXPENSES.................... 159 159
---.................... TRANSPORTATION SUBSIDY............... 2,853 2,853
---.................... PARTIAL DISLOCATION ALLOWANCE........ 278 278
---.................... JUNIOR R.O.T.C....................... 5,573 5,573
---.................... TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 101,513 101,513
---.................... LESS REIMBURSABLES................... -20,160 -20,160
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. 0 -40,000
---.................... Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... --- -40,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, MARINE 13,250,161 13,210,161
CORPS.
MILITARY PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE
---.................... BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. --- ---
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 4,687,593 4,687,593
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 1,522,644 1,522,644
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 1,347,403 1,347,403
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 182,253 182,253
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 239,121 239,121
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 322,642 322,642
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 128,157 128,157
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 64,974 64,974
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 355,711 355,711
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 8,850,498 8,850,498
---.................... BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 8,540,083 8,540,083
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 2,781,402 2,781,402
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 3,038,904 3,038,904
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 36,980 36,980
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 396,103 380,103
---.................... Re-enlistment Bonuses - Excess to --- -16,000
Requirement.
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 570,857 570,857
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 124,411 124,411
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 653,317 653,317
---.................... TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 16,142,057 16,126,057
---.................... BA-3: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF CADETS... --- ---
---.................... ACADEMY CADETS....................... 75,383 75,383
---.................... TOTAL, BA-3.......................... 75,383 75,383
---.................... BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 872,055 872,055
---.................... SUBSISTENCE-IN-KIND.................. 169,924 169,924
---.................... FAMILY SUBSISTENCE SUPPLEMENTAL 37 37
ALLOWANCE.
---.................... TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 1,042,016 1,042,016
---.................... BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION.... --- ---
---.................... ACCESSION TRAVEL..................... 87,377 87,377
---.................... TRAINING TRAVEL...................... 72,521 72,521
[[Page H2462]]
---.................... OPERATIONAL TRAVEL................... 296,604 296,604
---.................... ROTATIONAL TRAVEL.................... 505,198 505,198
---.................... SEPARATION TRAVEL.................... 176,549 176,549
---.................... TRAVEL OF ORGANIZED UNITS............ 23,561 23,561
---.................... NON-TEMPORARY STORAGE................ 40,772 40,772
---.................... TEMPORARY LODGING EXPENSE............ 28,936 28,936
---.................... TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 1,231,518 1,231,518
---.................... BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. --- ---
---.................... APPREHENSION OF MILITARY DESERTERS... 131 131
---.................... INTEREST ON UNIFORMED SERVICES 2,179 2,179
SAVINGS.
---.................... DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 19,900 19,900
---.................... UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 49,143 49,143
---.................... SURVIVOR BENEFITS.................... 1,760 1,760
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 484 484
---.................... ADOPTION EXPENSES.................... 395 395
---.................... TRANSPORTATION SUBSIDY............... 6,903 6,903
---.................... PARTIAL DISLOCATION ALLOWANCE........ 1,578 1,578
---.................... RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS 45,571 45,571
(ROTC).
---.................... JUNIOR ROTC.......................... 16,185 16,185
---.................... TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 144,229 144,229
---.................... LESS REIMBURSABLES................... -363,946 -363,946
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE. 27,121,755 27,105,755
RESERVE PERSONNEL, ARMY
---.................... BA-1: RESERVE COMPONENT TRAINING AND --- ---
SUPPORT.
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 1,249,133 1,249,133
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... PAY GROUP B TRAINING (BACKFILL FOR 44,460 36,460
ACTIVE DUTY).
---.................... Projected Underexecution............. --- -8,000
---.................... PAY GROUP F TRAINING (RECRUITS)...... 268,215 268,215
---.................... PAY GROUP P TRAINING (PIPELINE 8,830 8,830
RECRUITS).
---.................... MOBILIZATION TRAINING................ 21,460 10,460
---.................... Projected Underexecution............. --- -11,000
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 177,121 177,121
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 293,439 283,439
---.................... Excessive Growth..................... --- -10,000
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 2,129,646 2,129,646
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 57,633 57,633
---.................... HEALTH PROFESSION SCHOLARSHIP........ 66,940 66,940
---.................... OTHER PROGRAMS....................... 80,288 80,288
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 4,397,165 4,368,165
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. 0 -35,000
---.................... Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... --- -35,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, ARMY....... 4,397,165 4,333,165
RESERVE PERSONNEL, NAVY
---.................... BA-1: RESERVE COMPONENT TRAINING AND --- ---
SUPPORT.
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 626,657 626,657
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... PAY GROUP B TRAINING (BACKFILL FOR 9,070 9,070
ACTIVE DUTY).
---.................... PAY GROUP F TRAINING (RECRUITS)...... 45,603 45,603
---.................... MOBILIZATION TRAINING................ 8,434 8,434
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 45,930 45,930
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 89,647 89,647
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 1,061,128 1,061,128
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 3,780 3,780
---.................... HEALTH PROFESSION SCHOLARSHIP........ 53,942 53,942
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 1,944,191 1,944,191
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. 0 -4,000
---.................... Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... --- -4,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, NAVY....... 1,944,191 1,940,191
RESERVE PERSONNEL, MARINE CORPS
---.................... BA-1: RESERVE COMPONENT TRAINING AND --- ---
SUPPORT.
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 196,974 196,974
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... PAY GROUP B TRAINING (BACKFILL FOR 36,116 36,116
ACTIVE DUTY).
---.................... PAY GROUP F TRAINING (RECRUITS)...... 96,138 96,138
---.................... MOBILIZATION TRAINING................ 3,724 3,724
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 16,810 16,810
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 27,688 27,688
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 216,537 216,537
---.................... PLATOON LEADER CLASS................. 12,256 12,256
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 11,198 11,198
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 617,441 617,441
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENTS............ 0 -5,250
---.................... Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... --- -1,250
---.................... MIP Marine Corps Reserve Intelligence --- -4,000
Program.
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, MARINE 617,441 612,191
CORPS.
RESERVE PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE
---.................... BA-1: RESERVE COMPONENT TRAINING AND --- ---
SUPPORT.
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 670,341 670,341
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... PAY GROUP B TRAINING (BACKFILL FOR 101,951 101,951
ACTIVE DUTY).
---.................... PAY GROUP F TRAINING (RECRUITS)...... 54,850 54,850
---.................... PAY GROUP P TRAINING (PIPELINE 50 50
RECRUITS).
---.................... MOBILIZATION TRAINING................ 447 447
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 163,272 163,272
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 243,233 243,233
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 378,772 378,772
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 18,295 18,295
---.................... HEALTH PROFESSION SCHOLARSHIP........ 51,331 51,331
---.................... OTHER PROGRAMS (ADMINISTRATION and 4,255 4,255
SUPPORT).
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 1,686,797 1,686,797
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENTS............ 0 -36,000
---.................... Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... --- -15,000
---.................... Below Budgeted End Strength.......... --- -21,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE.. 1,686,797 1,650,797
NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, ARMY
---.................... BA-1: RESERVE COMPONENT TRAINING AND --- ---
SUPPORT.
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 2,010,867 1,980,867
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... Unjustified Growth................... --- -30,000
---.................... PAY GROUP F TRAINING (RECRUITS)...... 510,859 510,859
---.................... PAY GROUP P TRAINING (PIPELINE 71,222 71,222
RECRUITS).
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 577,600 577,600
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 534,954 521,954
---.................... Recruiter Mandays--Excess to --- -13,000
Requirement.
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 3,788,954 3,788,954
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 129,840 129,840
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 7,624,296 7,581,296
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENTS............ 0 -70,000
---.................... Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... --- -70,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, ARMY 7,624,296 7,511,296
NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE
---.................... BA-1: RESERVE COMPONENT TRAINING AND --- ---
SUPPORT.
[[Page H2463]]
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 939,636 931,636
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... Inactive Duty Training--Unjustified --- -8,000
Growth.
---.................... PAY GROUP F TRAINING (RECRUITS)...... 99,839 99,839
---.................... PAY GROUP P TRAINING (PIPELINE 298 298
RECRUITS).
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 209,944 209,944
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 131,226 131,226
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 1,692,112 1,682,112
---.................... Bonuses--Unjustified Requirement..... --- -10,000
---.................... EDUCATION BENEFITS................... 30,543 30,543
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 3,103,598 3,085,598
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENTS............ 0 -25,500
---.................... Unobligated/Unexpended Balances...... --- -17,500
---.................... Lower than Budgeted Pay Grade Mix.... --- -8,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, AIR 3,103,598 3,060,098
FORCE.
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL............ 127,668,630 126,378,756
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
M-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY
111.................... MANEUVER UNITS....................... 1,087,321 1,087,321
112.................... MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............. 114,448 113,790
Deployment Offset.................... ....................... -658
113.................... ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADES.............. 773,540 769,338
Deployment Offset.................... ....................... -4,202
114.................... THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................. 794,806 767,727
Aircraft Lease for Casualty ....................... -18,500
Evacuation Funded in fiscal year
2011 OCO.
Transfer to Title IX - Chemical ....................... -8,579
Defense Equipment Sustainment.
115.................... LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....... 1,399,332 1,392,912
Transfer to Title IX - MRAP Vehicle ....................... -6,420
Sustainment at Combat Training
Centers.
116.................... AVIATION ASSETS...................... 897,666 867,666
Deployment Offset.................... ....................... -30,000
121.................... FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT... 2,520,995 2,314,041
Unjustified Increase for Travel...... ....................... -91,000
Removal of One-Time fiscal year 2010 ....................... -35,000
Costs.
Transfer to Title IX - Body Armor ....................... -71,660
Sustainment.
Transfer to Title IX - Rapid ....................... -9,294
Equipping Force Readiness.
122.................... LAND FORCES FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS. 596,117 574,946
Transfer to Title IX - Fixed Wing ....................... -21,171
Life Cycle Contract Support.
123.................... LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........ 890,122 950,122
UH-60 A to L Conversions............. ....................... +60,000
131.................... BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............. 7,563,566 7,281,191
Transfer from the Defense Health ....................... +30,625
Program for Centralized Management
of the Substance Abuse Program.
Army Tenant Pentagon Rent ....................... -33,000
Requirements.
Reduced Requirement for Collateral ....................... -50,000
Equipment in fiscal year 2011.
Transfer to Title IX - Overseas ....................... -200,000
Security Guards.
Transfer to Title IX - Senior Leader ....................... -30,000
Initiative - Comprehensive Soldier
Fitness Program.
132.................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION, 2,500,892 2,500,892
& MODERNIZATION.
133.................... MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL 390,004 390,004
HEADQUARTERS.
134.................... COMBATANT COMMANDER'S CORE OPERATIONS 167,758 167,758
138.................... COMBATANT COMMANDER'S DIRECT MISSION 464,851 464,851
SUPPORT.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 20,161,418 19,642,559
211.................... STRATEGIC MOBILITY................... 333,266 333,266
212.................... ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS............ 102,240 102,240
213.................... INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS.............. 5,736 5,736
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 2.......... 441,242 441,242
311.................... OFFICER ACQUISITION.................. 129,902 129,902
312.................... RECRUIT TRAINING..................... 74,705 74,705
313.................... ONE STATION UNIT TRAINING............ 63,223 63,223
314.................... SENIOR RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS 479,343 479,343
321.................... SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........... 1,082,517 1,027,334
Unjustified Growth in Supply and ....................... -40,000
Equipment Purchases.
Transfer to Title IX - Survivability ....................... -15,183
and Maneuverability Training.
322.................... FLIGHT TRAINING...................... 1,046,124 1,032,124
Budget Justification Does not Match ....................... -14,000
Summary of Price and Program Changes.
323.................... PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION... 163,607 163,607
324.................... TRAINING SUPPORT..................... 695,200 695,200
331.................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 544,014 524,014
Budget Justification Does not Match ....................... -20,000
Summary of Price and Program Changes.
332.................... EXAMINING............................ 153,091 153,091
333.................... OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..... 241,170 241,170
334.................... CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...... 220,771 220,771
335.................... JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS 175,347 183,347
Program Increase - Junior ROTC....... ....................... +8,000
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 3.......... 5,069,014 4,987,831
411.................... SECURITY PROGRAMS.................... 1,030,355 1,030,355
421.................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 587,952 557,826
First Destination Transportation Cost ....................... -30,126
of New Equipment is Financed in the
Cost of Equipment.
422.................... CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES............ 669,853 669,853
423.................... LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES.......... 503,876 503,876
424.................... AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT................ 435,020 435,020
431.................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 912,355 902,355
Unjustified Growth for Headquarters ....................... -10,000
Accounts.
432.................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 1,528,371 1,528,371
433.................... MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................. 368,480 328,480
Unsupported Request for 712 Temporary ....................... -40,000
Hires.
434.................... OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............. 261,829 261,829
435.................... OTHER SERVICE SUPPORT................ 1,145,902 1,149,822
Capitol 4th.......................... ....................... +3,920
436.................... ARMY CLAIMS ACTIVITIES............... 205,967 205,967
437.................... REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............... 168,664 168,664
441.................... INTERNATIONAL MILITARY HEADQUARTERS.. 462,488 476,888
Outfitting of NATO SOF Headquarters ....................... +14,400
Building.
442.................... MISCELLANEOUS SUPPORT OF OTHER 19,179 16,179
NATIONS.
Information Operations............... ....................... -3,000
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 8,300,291 8,235,485
FIVE PERCENT COST SAVINGS FOR ....................... -1,000
INVESTMENT IN ENERGY AND UTILITIES
PROJECTS THROUGH THE AMERICAN
RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 33,971,965 33,306,117
ARMY.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY
1A1A................... MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.. 4,429,832 4,429,832
1A2A................... FLEET AIR TRAINING................... 81,345 1,605,720
Transfer of Fleet Air Training ....................... +958,200
funding from SAG 3B2K.
Unjustified Administrative Overhead ....................... -4,225
Cost Growth.
Transfer of Chief of Naval Air ....................... +570,400
Training from SAG 3B2K.
1A3A................... AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA AND 38,932 38,932
ENGINEERING SERVICES.
1A4A................... AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.... 100,485 100,485
1A4N................... AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT.................. 355,520 355,520
1A5A................... AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........... 1,221,410 1,221,410
[[Page H2464]]
1A6A................... AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.... 27,448 27,448
1B1B................... MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.... 3,696,913 3,666,913
Unjustified Growth in Per Diem Days.. ....................... -30,000
1B2B................... SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT AND TRAINING. 728,983 728,983
1B4B................... SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............... 4,761,670 4,761,670
1B5B................... SHIP DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT........ 1,344,844 1,338,844
Transfer to RDTE, DW per Memorandum ....................... -1,500
of Agreement.
NAVSEA Process Requirements and ....................... -4,500
Improvement Office Budget
Realignment and Consolidation
Justified as Program Growth.
1C1C................... COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS................ 615,069 550,069
Overstatement of DISA Pricing ....................... -65,000
Adjustment.
1C2C................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE................... 89,340 89,340
1C3C................... SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE....... 177,397 177,397
1C4C................... WARFARE TACTICS...................... 416,068 416,068
1C5C................... OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND 316,525 316,525
OCEANOGRAPHY.
1C6C................... COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................ 1,083,618 870,817
Unjustified Growth for Naval ....................... -20,000
Expeditionary Combat Command.
Transfer to Title IX--Naval ....................... -192,801
Expeditionary Combat Command
Increases.
1C7C................... EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................ 165,985 165,985
1C8C................... DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT............. 2,836 2,836
1CCH................... COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS. 208,250 208,250
1CCM................... COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION 274,071 274,071
SUPPORT.
1D1D................... CRUISE MISSILE....................... 130,219 130,219
1D2D................... FLEET BALLISTIC MISSILE.............. 1,138,418 1,138,418
1D3D................... IN-SERVICE WEAPONS SYSTEMS SUPPORT... 89,184 89,184
1D4D................... WEAPONS MAINTENANCE.................. 459,561 459,561
1D7D................... OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT......... 366,751 361,751
Civilian Personnel Over-Pricing...... ....................... -5,000
BSIT................... ENTERPRISE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.... 820,507 1,031,207
Requested Transfer from OP,N line 147 ....................... +217,700
for NGEN Funding.
Overstatement of DISA Pricing ....................... -7,000
Adjustment.
BSM1................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 1,900,386 1,900,386
MODERNIZATION.
BSS1................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 4,502,857 4,452,857
Transfer to Title IX--Regional/ ....................... -50,000
Emergency Operations Center.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 29,544,424 30,910,698
2A1F................... SHIP PREPOSITIONING AND SURGE........ 424,047 424,047
2B1G................... AIRCRAFT ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS... 7,593 7,593
2B2G................... SHIP ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS....... 177,482 180,682
Program Increase--Ship Disposal ....................... +3,200
Program.
2C1H................... FLEET HOSPITAL PROGRAM............... 70,990 70,990
2C2H................... INDUSTRIAL READINESS................. 2,707 2,707
2C3H................... COAST GUARD SUPPORT.................. 23,845 23,845
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 2.......... 706,664 709,864
3A1J................... OFFICER ACQUISITION.................. 141,057 141,057
3A2J................... RECRUIT TRAINING..................... 10,853 10,853
3A3J................... RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS...... 143,504 143,504
3B1K................... SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........... 533,004 530,004
Transfer to Title IX--NAVSEA VSSS/EOD ....................... -3,000
Training.
3B2K................... FLIGHT TRAINING...................... 1,538,171 9,571
Transfer of Fleet Air Training ....................... -958,200
funding to SAG 1A2A.
Transfer of Chief of Naval Air ....................... -570,400
Training to SAG 1A2A.
3B3K................... PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION... 162,844 162,844
3B4K................... TRAINING SUPPORT..................... 171,153 171,153
3C1L................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 261,287 261,922
Program Increase--Naval Sea Cadet ....................... +635
Corps.
3C3L................... OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..... 145,560 145,560
3C4L................... CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...... 109,865 109,865
3C5L................... JUNIOR ROTC.......................... 50,369 53,369
Program Increase--Junior ROTC........ ....................... +3,000
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 3.......... 3,267,667 1,739,702
4A1M................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 829,010 829,010
4A2M................... EXTERNAL RELATIONS................... 7,632 7,632
4A3M................... CIVILIAN MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL 118,838 111,838
MANAGEMENT.
Overstated Requirement for Other ....................... -7,000
Intragovernmental Purchases.
4A4M................... MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL 194,775 194,775
MANAGEMENT.
4A5M................... OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............. 282,580 282,580
4A6M................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 503,067 496,089
Nuclear Command, Control and ....................... -6,978
Communications Systems Budget
Realignment and Consolidation
Justified as Program Growth.
4B1N................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 230,294 230,294
4B2N................... PLANNING, ENGINEERING AND DESIGN..... 259,990 259,990
4B3N................... ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT... 868,069 856,069
Civilian Personnel Over-Pricing...... ....................... -12,000
4B5N................... HULL, MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL 55,217 55,217
SUPPORT.
4B6N................... COMBAT/WEAPONS SYSTEMS............... 19,053 19,053
4B7N................... SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE SYSTEMS. 77,702 77,702
4C1P................... NAVAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE.......... 549,484 546,484
Civilian Personnel Over-Pricing...... ....................... -3,000
4D1Q................... INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS AND 5,567 5,567
AGENCIES.
999.................... OTHER PROGRAMS....................... 614,275 607,475
Classified Adjustment................ ....................... -6,800
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 4,615,553 4,579,775
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -127,200
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
FIVE PERCENT COST SAVINGS FOR ....................... -3,600
INVESTMENT IN ENERGY AND UTILITIES
PROJECTS THROUGH THE AMERICAN
RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 38,134,308 37,809,239
NAVY.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
1A1A................... OPERATIONAL FORCES................... 745,678 745,678
1A2A................... FIELD LOGISTICS...................... 658,616 658,616
1A3A................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 78,891 78,891
1B1B................... MARITIME PREPOSITIONING.............. 72,344 72,344
BSM1................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 594,904 594,904
MODERNIZATION.
BSS1................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 2,206,137 2,198,437
Collateral Equipment Decrease in ....................... -7,700
fiscal year 2011 not Properly
Accounted for in Budget
Documentation.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 4,356,570 4,348,870
3A1C................... RECRUIT TRAINING..................... 16,096 16,096
3A2C................... OFFICER ACQUISITION.................. 420 420
3B1D................... SPECIALIZED SKILLS TRAINING.......... 91,197 91,197
3B3D................... PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION... 32,379 32,379
3B4D................... TRAINING SUPPORT..................... 319,742 319,742
3C1F................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 233,663 233,663
3C2F................... OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..... 61,980 61,980
3C3F................... JUNIOR ROTC.......................... 19,497 19,497
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 3.......... 774,974 774,974
4A3G................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 29,569 29,569
4A4G................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 341,657 335,657
Administrative Efficiencies.......... ....................... -6,000
4B3N................... ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT... 87,570 87,570
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 458,796 452,796
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -34,400
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
FIVE PERCENT COST SAVINGS FOR ....................... -2,500
INVESTMENT IN ENERGY AND UTILITIES
PROJECTS THROUGH THE AMERICAN
RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 5,590,340 5,539,740
MARINE CORPS.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page H2465]]
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
011A................... PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................ 4,261,115 4,218,222
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -34,408
Execution.
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -8,485
Personnel.
011C................... COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES............ 2,995,278 2,933,353
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -61,925
Execution.
011D................... AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING.............. 1,573,602 1,508,352
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -13,598
Execution.
Transfer of Range Maintenance funding ....................... -33,652
to SAG 011R.
Removal of One-Time fiscal year 2010 ....................... -18,000
Cost for F-35A Beddown Costs.
011M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 2,189,481 2,176,793
Program Increase--Warner Robins Air ....................... +4,000
Logistics Center Aircraft Depot
Maintenance.
Air Force Requested Transfer to ....................... -10,879
OM,ANG for C-130s.
Air Force Requested Transfer to ....................... -5,809
OM,AFR for C-130s.
011R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 1,556,234 1,664,886
MODERNIZATION.
Transfer of Range Maintenance from ....................... +33,652
SAG 011D.
Adjustments to Meet Life, Health, ....................... +75,000
Safety and ADA Compliance Standards.
011Z................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 3,088,003 2,937,621
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -91,675
Execution.
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -58,707
Personnel.
012A................... GLOBAL C31 AND EARLY WARNING......... 1,511,243 1,450,927
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -16,013
Personnel.
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -44,303
Execution.
012C................... OTHER COMBAT OPERATIONS SUPPORT 1,035,291 1,020,300
PROGRAMS.
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -12,268
Execution.
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -2,723
Personnel.
012F................... TACTICAL INTELLIGENCE AND SPECIAL 595,028 595,028
ACTIVITIES.
013A................... LAUNCH FACILITIES.................... 342,355 342,355
013C................... SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS................ 811,022 811,022
015A................... COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION 797,754 791,754
SUPPORT.
Information Operations............... ....................... -6,000
015B................... COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS. 233,021 225,865
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -7,156
Personnel.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 20,989,427 20,676,478
021A................... AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................... 2,975,663 2,975,663
021D................... MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS............ 158,647 158,647
021M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 140,286 140,286
021R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 348,231 348,231
MODERNIZATION.
021Z................... BASE SUPPORT......................... 683,286 635,231
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -45,577
Personnel.
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -2,478
Execution.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 2.......... 4,306,113 4,258,058
031A................... OFFICER ACQUISITION.................. 114,403 114,403
031B................... RECRUIT TRAINING..................... 28,195 28,195
031D................... RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS (ROTC) 90,453 90,453
031R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 411,570 400,652
MODERNIZATION.
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -10,918
Personnel.
031Z................... BASE SUPPORT (ACADEMIES ONLY)........ 902,323 845,576
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -16,216
Execution.
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -40,531
Personnel.
032A................... SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........... 510,065 470,584
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -11,481
Personnel.
Growth in Overhead Expenses not ....................... -28,000
Justified by Increases to Training
Metrics.
032B................... FLIGHT TRAINING...................... 1,012,816 1,012,816
032C................... PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION... 221,553 221,553
032D................... TRAINING SUPPORT..................... 126,784 123,260
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -3,524
Personnel.
032M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 619 619
033A................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 150,222 143,635
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -1,487
Personnel.
Air Force Recruiting Information ....................... -5,100
Support System - Air Force Requested
Transfer to RDTE,AF.
033B................... EXAMINING............................ 409 409
033C................... OFF DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..... 172,643 172,643
033D................... CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...... 208,872 208,872
033E................... JUNIOR ROTC.......................... 77,692 81,692
Program Increase - Junior ROTC....... ....................... +4,000
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 3.......... 4,028,619 3,915,362
041A................... LOGISTICS OPERATIONS................. 1,110,471 1,082,427
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -28,044
Personnel.
041B................... TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES......... 949,018 937,913
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -5,866
Execution.
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -5,239
Personnel.
041M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 7,365 7,365
041R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 368,349 367,651
MODERNIZATION.
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -698
Personnel.
041Z................... BASE SUPPORT......................... 1,363,230 1,292,621
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -30,609
Personnel.
Pentagon Reservation Maintenance Fund ....................... -40,000
Pricing.
042A................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 657,268 657,268
042B................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 693,379 672,562
Unjustified Growth for Programming/ ....................... -20,817
Execution.
042G................... OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES......... 1,152,877 1,138,670
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -22,207
Personnel.
Analytical Support for the Executive ....................... +8,000
Agent for Space -Transfer from
RDTE,AF line 216.
042I................... CIVIL AIR PATROL CORPORATION......... 22,848 27,048
Civil Air Patrol Program Increase.... ....................... +4,200
043A................... SECURITY PROGRAMS.................... 1,159,342 1,141,160
Unsupported Request for Civilian ....................... -18,182
Personnel.
044A................... INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT................ 36,206 36,206
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 7,520,353 7,360,891
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -134,300
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
------------------------
FIVE PERCENT COST SAVINGS FOR ....................... -13,500
INVESTMENT IN ENERGY AND UTILITIES
PROJECTS THROUGH THE AMERICAN
RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR 36,844,512 36,062,989
FORCE.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
..................................... ....................... .......................
JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................ 420,940 420,940
SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND........... 3,944,330 3,930,330
Non-Standard Aviation Platforms ....................... -5,000
Sustainment and Logistical Support.
Removal of One-Time fiscal year 2010 ....................... -9,000
Congressional Increases.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 4,365,270 4,351,270
DEFENSE ACQUISITION UNIVERSITY....... 145,896 145,896
NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY.......... 97,633 97,633
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 3.......... 243,529 243,529
CIVIL MILITARY PROGRAMS.............. 156,043 164,043
STARBASE Youth Program............... ....................... +8,000
BUSINESS TRANSFORMATION AGENCY....... 143,441 143,441
DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY........ 486,143 482,643
Removal of One-Time fiscal year 2010 ....................... -3,500
Cost for Renewing Three Year License
for Software.
DEFENSE FINANCE AND ACCOUNTING 1,593 1,593
SERVICE.
DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY... 1,384,450 1,374,450
Multinational Information Sharing ....................... -10,000
Programs.
[[Page H2466]]
DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY........ 42,404 42,404
DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY............. 448,043 396,395
Facilities Sustainment............... ....................... -58,848
Procurement Technical Assistance ....................... +7,200
Program.
DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............... 255,878 255,878
DEFENSE POW /MISSING PERSONS OFFICE.. 24,155 24,155
DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY SECURITY AGENCY... 37,624 37,624
DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY...... 463,522 445,682
Core Operational Support Activities - ....................... -17,840
unnecessary increase.
DEFENSE DEPENDENTS EDUCATION......... 2,514,537 2,679,537
Military Spouse Career Advancement ....................... +165,000
Accounts.
DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY..... 824,153 794,353
Joint Advertising, Market Research ....................... -29,800
and Studies.
DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY... 1,112,849 1,107,849
Overstatement of NSPS to GS ....................... -5,000
Conversion.
DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY.. 683,853 539,369
Global Train and Equip (1206)........ ....................... -139,507
Stability Operations Fellowship ....................... -4,977
Program -- not authorized.
DEFENSE SECURITY SERVICE............. 518,743 518,743
OFFICE OF ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT........ 50,811 50,811
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE... 2,245,300 2,232,986
Battlefield Information Collection ....................... -15,000
and Exploitation System.
Combatant Commander's Exercise ....................... -26,500
Engagement and Training
Transformation (CE2T2).
Readiness and Environmental ....................... +60,186
Protection Initiative.
Overstatement of Civilian Personnel ....................... -24,500
Pay Requirements.
AT&L--Integrated Acquisition ....................... -6,500
Environment Internal Realignment not
Properly Accounted for in Budget
Documentation.
WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS SERVICES..... 604,130 594,330
Overstatement of Civilian Personnel ....................... -9,800
Pay Requirements.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 11,997,672 11,886,286
OTHER PROGRAMS....................... 13,977,425 13,685,725
Classified Adjustments............... ....................... -291,700
IMPACT AID........................... ....................... 40,000
IMPACT AID FOR CHILDREN WITH SEVERE ....................... 4,000
DISABILITIES.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 30,583,896 30,210,810
DEFENSE-WIDE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY RESERVE
111.................... MANEUVER UNITS....................... 1,282 1,282
112.................... MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............. 12,413 12,413
113.................... ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADES.............. 460,814 460,814
114.................... THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................. 168,020 168,020
115.................... LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....... 555,944 555,944
116.................... AVIATION ASSETS...................... 70,378 70,378
121.................... FORCES READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT.. 391,326 381,326
Decrease Requested Growth for Travel. ....................... -10,000
122.................... LAND FORCES SYSTEM READINESS......... 108,093 108,093
123.................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 136,854 136,854
131.................... BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............. 577,146 567,146
Unjustified Increase in Motor Pool ....................... -10,000
Operations Costs.
132.................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 234,486 234,486
MODERNIZATION.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 2,716,756 2,696,756
421.................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 12,717 12,717
431.................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 74,685 74,685
432.................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 3,797 3,797
433.................... PERSONNEL/FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATION... 9,245 9,245
434.................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 61,877 61,877
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4......... 162,321 162,321
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -18,650
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 2,879,077 2,840,427
ARMY RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY RESERVE
1A1A................... MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.. 599,649 599,649
1A3A................... INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE............. 13,209 13,209
1A4A................... AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.... 2,668 2,668
1A5A................... AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........... 140,377 140,377
1A6A................... AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.... 309 309
1B1B................... MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.... 65,757 62,757
Mismatch of OPTEMPO and Steaming Day ....................... -3,000
Performance Data.
1B2B................... SHIP OPERATIONAL SUPPORT AND TRAINING 587 587
1B4B................... SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............... 91,054 91,054
1C1C................... COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS................ 15,882 15,882
1C6C................... COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................ 140,186 140,186
1D4D................... WEAPONS MAINTENANCE.................. 5,492 5,492
BSIT................... ENTERPRISE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.... 56,046 56,046
BSMR................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 81,407 81,407
MODERNIZATION.
BSSR................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 131,988 131,988
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 1,344,611 1,341,611
4A1M................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 3,276 3,276
4A4M................... MILITARY MANPOWER & PERSONNEL........ 13,698 13,698
4A6M................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 2,628 2,628
4B3N................... ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT... 3,551 3,551
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 23,153 23,153
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -20,500
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 1,367,764 1,344,264
NAVY RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS RESERVE
1A1A................... OPERATING FORCES..................... 104,566 104,566
1A3A................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 16,392 16,392
BSM1................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 38,762 38,762
MODERNIZATION.
BSS1................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 99,924 92,424
Eliminate Growth in Administrative ....................... -7,500
Costs.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 259,644 252,144
BSM1................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 835 835
BSS1................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 15,871 15,871
3A1C................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 8,884 8,884
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 25,590 25,590
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -2,250
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 285,234 275,484
MARINE CORPS RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE RESERVE
011A................... PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................ 2,275,407 2,276,450
Air Force Requested Transfer to ....................... -2,017
OM,ANG for C-130s.
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +3,060
OM,AF for C-130s.
011G................... MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........... 111,742 111,742
011M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 415,687 418,436
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +2,749
OM,AF for C-130s.
011R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 88,822 88,822
MODERNIZATION.
011Z................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 277,985 277,985
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 3,169,643 3,173,435
042A................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 80,526 80,526
042J................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 24,353 24,353
[[Page H2467]]
042K................... MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL 19,716 19,716
MANAGEMENT.
042L................... OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............. 6,071 6,071
042M................... AUDIOVISUAL.......................... 726 726
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 131,392 131,392
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -13,800
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 3,301,035 3,291,027
AIR FORCE RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
111.................... MANEUVER UNITS....................... 807,193 807,193
112.................... MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............. 166,474 166,474
113.................... ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............... 607,567 607,567
114.................... THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................. 249,930 249,930
115.................... LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....... 35,657 35,657
116.................... AVIATION ASSETS...................... 838,895 854,895
Aircraft Maintenance Program Increase ....................... +16,000
121.................... FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT... 570,119 544,119
Distance Learning--Transfer from OCO ....................... +9,000
OM,ARNG SAG 135.
Realignment of Funding for the ....................... -35,000
Organizational Clothing and
Equipment Enterprise Environment not
Properly Accounted for in Budget
Documentation.
122.................... LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........ 121,980 121,980
123.................... LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........ 380,789 380,789
131.................... BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............. 933,514 853,514
Unjustified Growth for Information ....................... -80,000
Management Systems.
132.................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 621,843 661,843
MODERNIZATION.
Army National Guard Program Increase. ....................... +40,000
133.................... MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL 540,738 549,626
HEADQUARTERS.
Transfer from Defense Health Program ....................... +8,888
for Psychological Health--State
Directors for the National Guard.
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 5,874,699 5,833,587
421.................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 17,771 17,771
431.................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 183,781 151,463
Pay and Benefits Mismatch Between Op- ....................... -32,318
5 and Op-32.
432.................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 48,188 48,188
433.................... MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................. 8,020 8,020
434.................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 440,245 440,245
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 698,005 665,687
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -36,650
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
FIVE PERCENT COST SAVINGS FOR ....................... -8,000
INVESTMENT IN ENERGY AND UTILITIES
PROJECTS THROUGH THE AMERICAN
RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 6,572,704 6,454,624
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR NATIONAL GUARD
011F................... AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS.................. 3,519,452 3,525,525
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +2,017
OM,AFR for C-130s.
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +4,056
OM,AF for C-130s.
011G................... MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........... 762,937 762,937
011M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 598,779 605,602
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +6,823
OM,AF for C-130s.
011R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 315,210 355,210
MODERNIZATION.
Air National Guard Program Increase.. ....................... +40,000
011Z................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 668,176 668,176
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 1.......... 5,864,554 5,917,450
042A................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 41,930 41,930
042J................... RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........... 34,659 34,659
SUBTOTAL, BUDGET ACTIVITY 4.......... 76,589 76,589
UNDISTRIBUTED REDUCTION DUE TO ....................... -30,200
HISTORIC UNDEREXECUTION.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR 5,941,143 5,963,839
NATIONAL GUARD.
MISCELLANEOUS
OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS 5,000 0
TRANSFER ACCOUNT.
Unjustified Request.................. ....................... -5,000
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED 14,068 14,068
FORCES.
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY...... 444,581 464,581
Program Increase..................... ....................... +20,000
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY...... 304,867 304,867
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE. 502,653 502,653
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE- 10,744 10,744
WIDE.
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, FUDS...... 276,546 316,546
Program Increase..................... ....................... +40,000
OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER, AND 108,032 108,032
CIVIC AID.
COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION PROGRAM. 522,512 522,512
ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT 217,561 217,561
FUND.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE..... 167,878,542 165,560,124
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
P-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY
3...................... AERIAL COMMON SENSOR (ACS) (MIP)..... 88,483 0
Program Adjustment for Schedule Slip. ....................... -88,483
4...................... MQ-1 UAV............................. 459,310 434,310
Contract Savings..................... ....................... -25,000
5...................... RQ-11 (RAVEN)........................ 20,152 20,152
6...................... BCT UNMANNED AERIAL VEH (UAVS) INCR 1 44,206 26,568
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -17,638
8...................... HELICOPTER, LIGHT UTILITY (LUH)...... 305,272 305,272
9...................... AH-64 APACHE BLOCK III............... 332,681 332,681
10..................... AH-64 APACHE BLOCK III (AP-CY)....... 161,150 161,150
11..................... UH-60 BLACKHAWK (MYP)................ 1,250,566 1,250,566
12..................... UH-60 BLACKHAWK (MYP) (AP-CY)........ 100,532 100,532
13..................... CH-47 HELICOPTER..................... 1,101,293 1,101,293
14..................... CH-47 HELICOPTER (AP-CY)............. 57,756 57,756
15..................... HELICOPTER NEW TRAINING.............. 9,383 0
Unjustified Request.................. ....................... -9,383
17..................... MQ-1 PAYLOAD--UAS.................... 100,413 80,413
Tactical SIGINT Payload Schedule ....................... -20,000
Adjustment.
18..................... MQ-1 WEAPONIZATION--UAS.............. 14,729 14,729
19..................... GUARDRAIL MODS (MIP)................. 29,899 25,799
Airborne Precision Geolocation....... ....................... -4,100
20..................... MULTI SENSOR AIRBORNE RECON (MIP).... 16,981 16,981
21..................... AH-64 MODS........................... 393,769 393,769
23..................... CH-47 CARGO HELICOPTER MODS.......... 66,207 66,207
25..................... UTILITY/CARGO AIRPLANE MODS.......... 13,716 13,716
26..................... AIRCRAFT LONG RANGE MODS............. 814 814
27..................... UTILITY HELICOPTER MODS.............. 63,085 80,085
UH-60 A to L conversions............. ....................... +17,000
28..................... KIOWA WARRIOR........................ 94,400 42,300
Cockpit and Sensor Upgrade Program ....................... -52,100
Funding Ahead of Need.
29..................... AIRBORNE AVIONICS.................... 219,425 207,425
Contract Savings..................... ....................... -12,000
30..................... GATM ROLLUP.......................... 100,862 100,862
[[Page H2468]]
31..................... RQ-7 UAV MODS........................ 505,015 2,515
Funding Ahead of Need for ....................... -5,000
Installation.
Transfer to Title IX................. ....................... -497,500
34..................... SPARE PARTS (AIR).................... 7,328 9,956
Transfer from OP,A line 195 at Army ....................... +2,628
request.
35..................... AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY EQUIPMENT..... 24,478 24,478
36..................... ASE INFRARED COUNTER MEASURES........ 174,222 163,722
Excess to Requirement................ ....................... -10,500
37..................... AVIONICS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........... 4,885 4,885
38..................... COMMON GROUND EQUIPMENT.............. 76,129 76,129
39..................... AIRCREW INTEGRATED SYSTEMS........... 52,423 52,423
40..................... AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL.................. 82,844 82,844
41..................... INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES................ 1,567 1,567
42..................... LAUNCHER, 2.75 ROCKET................ 2,892 2,892
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY.... 5,976,867 5,254,791
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY
1...................... PATRIOT SYSTEM SUMMARY............... 480,247 613,847
PAC-3 Launchers and Missiles--Army ....................... +133,600
UFR.
2...................... SURFACE-LAUNCHED AMRAAM SYS SUMMARY.. 116,732 102,732
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -14,000
4...................... HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY................. 31,881 31,881
5...................... JAVELIN (AAWS-M) SYSTEM SUMMARY...... 163,929 163,929
6...................... TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY................. 30,326 24,326
Program Adjustment for Growth in ....................... -6,000
Management and Administration Costs.
7...................... TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY (AP-CY)......... 48,355 0
Excess to Requirement................ ....................... -48,355
8...................... BCT NON LINE OF SIGHT LAUNCH SYSTEM.. 350,574 0
Program Termination.................. ....................... -350,574
9...................... GUIDED MLRS ROCKET (GMLRS)........... 291,041 266,041
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -25,000
10..................... MLRS REDUCED RANGE PRACTICE ROCKETS 15,886 15,886
(RRPR).
11..................... HIGH MOBILITY ARTILLERY ROCKET SYSTEM 211,517 204,517
Program Adjustment, Carriers Procured ....................... -7,000
in fiscal year 2010.
12..................... PATRIOT MODS......................... 57,170 57,170
13..................... ITAS/TOW MODS........................ 13,281 13,281
14..................... MLRS MODS............................ 8,217 8,217
15..................... HIMARS MODIFICATIONS................. 39,371 39,371
16..................... HELLFIRE MODIFICATIONS............... 10 10
17..................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 19,569 19,569
18..................... AIR DEFENSE TARGETS.................. 3,613 3,613
19..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MISSILES)..... 1,208 1,208
20..................... PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT.............. 4,510 4,510
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY..... 1,887,437 1,570,108
PROCUREMENT OF WEAPONS AND TRACKED COMBAT VEHICLES, ARMY
4...................... STRYKER VEHICLE...................... 299,545 350,945
Transfer from OP,A line 9............ ....................... +61,300
Adjust Program Management Costs...... ....................... -9,900
9...................... STRYKER (MOD)........................ 146,352 85,052
Transfer to OP,A line 4.............. ....................... -61,300
10..................... FIST VEHICLE (MOD)................... 31,083 31,083
11..................... BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD)................ 215,133 204,133
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -11,000
12..................... HOWITZER, MED SP FT 155MM M109A6 105,277 5,277
(MOD).
Program Adjustment for Schedule Slip. ....................... -70,000
Transfer to RDTE,A line 116 for ....................... -30,000
Paladin PIM.
13..................... IMPROVED RECOVERY VEHICLE (M88A2 69,609 69,609
HERCULES).
14..................... ARMORED BREACHER VEHICLE............. 77,930 77,930
15..................... M88 FOV MODS......................... 9,157 9,157
16..................... JOINT ASSAULT BRIDGE................. 44,133 0
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -44,133
17..................... M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD)................. 230,907 230,907
18..................... ABRAMS UPGRADE PROGRAM............... 183,000 183,000
19..................... PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (TCV-WTCV)... 3,145 3,145
20..................... HOWITZER, LIGHT, TOWED, 105MM, M119.. 5,575 0
Funds Excess to Requirement.......... ....................... -5,575
21..................... M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN (7.62MM)..... 28,179 20,479
Pricing Correction................... ....................... -7,700
22..................... MACHINE GUN, CAL .50 M2 ROLL......... 79,496 0
Transfer to Title IX................. ....................... -79,496
23..................... LIGHTWEIGHT .50 CALIBER MACHINE GUN.. 18,941 18,941
25..................... MK-19 GRENADE MACHINE GUN (40MM)..... 4,465 4,465
26..................... MORTAR SYSTEMS....................... 17,082 17,082
27..................... M107, CAL. 50, SNIPER RIFLE.......... 235 235
28..................... XM320 GRENADE LAUNCHER MODULE (GLM).. 16,282 16,282
29..................... M110 SEMI-AUTOMATIC SNIPER SYSTEM 5,159 5,159
(SASS).
30..................... M4 CARBINE........................... 20,180 20,180
31..................... SHOTGUN, MODULAR ACCESSORY SYSTEM 7,153 7,153
(MASS).
33..................... HANDGUN.............................. 3,371 0
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -3,371
35..................... MK-19 GRENADE MACHINE GUN MODS....... 4,286 2,986
Tactical Engagement Simulator ....................... -1,300
Terminated.
36..................... M4 CARBINE MODS...................... 14,044 14,044
38..................... M249 SAW MACHINE GUN MODS............ 5,922 5,922
39..................... M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN MODS......... 15,852 15,852
40..................... M119 MODIFICATIONS................... 39,810 39,810
41..................... M16 RIFLE MODS....................... 3,855 3,855
43..................... MODIFICATIONS LESS THAN $5.0M (WOCV- 6,083 6,083
WTCV).
45..................... PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (WOCV-WTCV).. 7,869 7,869
46..................... INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS.............. 409 409
47..................... SMALL ARMS EQUIPMENT (SOLDIER ENH 4,042 4,042
PROG).
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY.... 1,723,561 1,461,086
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, ARMY
1...................... CTG, 5.56MM, ALL TYPES............... 195,406 195,406
2...................... CTG, 7.62MM, ALL TYPES............... 79,622 79,622
3...................... CTG, HANDGUN, ALL TYPES.............. 5,377 5,377
4...................... CTG, .50 CAL, ALL TYPES.............. 160,712 160,712
6...................... CTG, 25MM, ALL TYPES................. 15,887 15,887
7...................... CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES................. 95,222 95,222
8...................... CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES................. 167,632 167,632
9...................... 60MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES............... 14,340 14,340
10..................... 81MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES............... 24,036 24,036
11..................... CTG, MORTAR, 120MM, ALL TYPES........ 96,335 67,735
APMI Unit Cost Savings............... ....................... -28,600
12..................... CTG TANK 105MM: ALL TYPES............ 7,794 7,794
13..................... CTG, TANK, 120MM, ALL TYPES.......... 114,798 114,798
14..................... CTG, ARTY, 75MM: ALL TYPES........... 7,329 7,329
15..................... CTG, ARTY, 105MM: ALL TYPES.......... 76,658 76,658
16..................... CTG, ARTY, 155MM, ALL TYPES.......... 45,752 45,752
17..................... PROJ 155MM EXTENDED RANGE XM982...... 62,114 30,700
[[Page H2469]]
Exceeds Revised Requirement.......... ....................... -31,414
18..................... MODULAR ARTILLERY CHARGE SYSTEM 29,309 21,909
(MACS), ALL T.
Decrease to Reduce Backlog in MACS ....................... -7,400
M232 Production.
19..................... ARTILLERY FUZES, ALL TYPES........... 25,047 15,047
Program Delay, Precision Guidance Kit ....................... -10,000
20..................... MINES, ALL TYPES..................... 817 817
21..................... MINE, CLEARING CHARGE, ALL TYPES..... 8,000 8,000
22..................... ANTIPERSONNEL LANDMINE ALTERNATIVES.. 53,005 8,317
FRD Slipped to fiscal year 2012...... ....................... -44,688
23..................... INTELLIGENT MUNITIONS SYSTEM (IMS), 10,246 0
ALL TYPES.
Program Adjustment for Schedule Slip. ....................... -10,246
24..................... SHOULDER LAUNCHED MUNITIONS, ALL 43,873 43,873
TYPES.
25..................... ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL TYPES.......... 120,628 120,628
26..................... DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES...... 19,824 19,824
27..................... GRENADES, ALL TYPES.................. 41,803 41,803
28..................... SIGNALS, ALL TYPES................... 39,472 39,472
29..................... SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES................ 11,389 11,389
30..................... AMMO COMPONENTS, ALL TYPES........... 17,499 17,499
31..................... NON-LETHAL AMMUNITION, ALL TYPES..... 5,266 5,266
32..................... CAD/PAD ALL TYPES.................... 5,322 5,322
33..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION........... 9,768 9,768
34..................... AMMUNITION PECULIAR EQUIPMENT........ 12,721 12,721
35..................... FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 11,786 11,786
(AMMO).
36..................... CLOSEOUT LIABILITIES................. 100 100
37..................... PROVISION OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES... 144,368 144,368
38..................... LAYAWAY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES..... 9,504 9,504
39..................... MAINTENANCE OF INACTIVE FACILITIES... 9,025 9,025
40..................... CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS 178,367 178,367
DEMILITARIZATION, ALL.
41..................... ARMS INITIATIVE...................... 3,261 3,261
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 1,979,414 1,847,066
ARMY.
OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY
1...................... TACTICAL TRAILERS/DOLLY SETS......... 25,560 0
Army Requested Program Adjustment.... ....................... -25,560
2...................... SEMITRAILERS, FLATBED:............... 38,713 0
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -38,713
5...................... FAMILY OF MEDIUM TACTICAL VEH (FMTV). 918,195 693,495
Pricing Adjustment................... ....................... -224,700
6...................... FIRETRUCKS & ASSOCIATED FIREFIGHTING 21,317 21,317
EQUIPMENT.
7...................... FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL VEHICLES 549,741 549,741
(FHTV).
8...................... PALLETIZED LOAD SYS--EXTENDED SERVICE 100,108 56,208
PGM.
Program Adjustment for Schedule Slip. ....................... -43,900
9...................... ARMORED SECURITY VEHICLES (ASV)...... 114,478 114,478
10..................... MINE PROTECTION VEHICLE FAMILY....... 230,978 0
Transfer to Title IX................. ....................... -230,978
12..................... TRUCK, TRACTOR, LINE HAUL, M915/M916. 37,519 21,519
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -16,000
13..................... HVY EXPANDED MOBILE TACTICAL TRUCK 173,565 173,565
EXT SERV.
15..................... MODIFICATION OF IN SVC EQUIP......... 349,256 0
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -56,300
Transfer to Title IX................. ....................... -292,956
17..................... TOWING DEVICE--FIFTH WHEEL........... 234 234
18..................... AMC CRITICAL ITEMS, OPA1............. 746 746
19..................... HEAVY ARMORED SEDAN.................. 1,875 0
Slow Execution....................... ....................... -1,875
20..................... PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES.......... 3,323 1,323
Slow Execution....................... ....................... -2,000
21..................... NONTACTICAL VEHICLES, OTHER.......... 19,586 19,586
23..................... JOINT COMBAT IDENTIFICATION MARKING 11,411 11,411
SYSTEM.
24..................... WIN-T--GROUND FORCES TACTICAL NETWORK 421,798 391,798
Program Adjustment, Increment 2 Slow ....................... -20,000
Execution.
Program Adjustment, Area Common User ....................... -10,000
System Modernization Slow Execution.
25..................... JCSE EQUIPMENT (USREDCOM)............ 4,690 4,690
26..................... DEFENSE ENTERPRISE WIDEBAND SATCOM 115,744 115,744
SYSTEMS.
27..................... SHF TERM............................. 14,198 14,198
28..................... SAT TERM, EMUT (SPACE)............... 662 662
29..................... NAVSTAR GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM 32,193 32,193
(SPACE).
30..................... SMART-T (SPACE)...................... 10,285 10,285
31..................... SCAMP (SPACE)........................ 930 930
32..................... GLOBAL BRDCST SVC--GBS............... 4,586 4,586
33..................... MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (TAC SAT)........ 1,506 1,506
34..................... MOD-IN-SERVICE PROFILER.............. 938 938
35..................... ARMY GLOBAL CMD & CONTROL SYS (AGCCS) 20,387 20,387
36..................... ARMY DATA DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM (DATA 700 700
RADIO).
37..................... JOINT TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEM.......... 209,568 159,468
Program Reduction in Small Form ....................... -5,000
Factor-C Radio.
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -45,100
38..................... RADIO TERMINAL SET, MIDS LVT(2)...... 5,796 5,796
39..................... SINCGARS FAMILY...................... 14,504 12,604
Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -1,900
40..................... AMC CRITICAL ITEMS--OPA2............. 3,860 3,860
41..................... MULTI-PURPOSE INFORMATION OPERATIONS 9,501 9,501
SYSTEMS.
42..................... COMMS-ELEC EQUIP FIELDING............ 5,965 5,965
43..................... SPIDER APLA REMOTE CONTROL UNIT...... 26,358 6,758
Army Requested Program Adjustment.... ....................... -19,600
44..................... INTELLIGENT MUNITIONS SYSTEM REMOTE 6,603 0
CONTROL UNIT.
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -6,603
45..................... SOLDIER ENHANCEMENT PROGRAM COMM AND 5,125 5,125
ELECTRONICS.
46..................... COMBAT SURVIVOR EVADER LOCATOR (CSEL) 2,397 2,397
47..................... RADIO, IMPROVED HF (COTS) FAMILY..... 9,983 9,983
48..................... MEDICAL COMM FOR CBT CASUALTY CARE 23,606 23,606
(MC4).
49..................... CI AUTOMATION ARCHITECTURE (MIP)..... 1,465 1,465
50..................... TSEC--ARMY KEY MGT SYS (AKMS)........ 25,959 25,959
51..................... INFORMATION SYSTEM SECURITY PROGRAM- 63,340 54,858
ISSP.
Protected Information--Biometrics-- ....................... -8,482
Transfer to OP,A line 51x.
51x.................... FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS................. 0 8,482
Non-MIP Biometrics--Transfer from ....................... +8,482
OP,A line 51.
52..................... TERRESTRIAL TRANSMISSION............. 137 137
53..................... BASE SUPPORT COMMUNICATIONS.......... 28,406 28,406
54..................... WW TECH CON IMP PROG (WWTCIP)........ 11,566 11,566
55..................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS.................. 201,081 201,081
56..................... DEFENSE MESSAGE SYSTEM (DMS)......... 6,264 6,264
57..................... INSTALLATION INFO INFRASTRUCTURE MOD 178,242 178,242
PROGRAM.
58..................... PENTAGON INFORMATION MGT AND TELECOM. 10,427 10,427
64..................... JTT/CIBS-M (MIP)..................... 3,321 3,321
65..................... PROPHET GROUND (MIP)................. 71,517 71,517
68..................... DIGITAL TOPOGRAPHIC SPT SYS (DTSS) 441 441
(MIP).
70..................... DCGS-A (MIP)......................... 137,424 0
Transfer to Title IX................ ....................... -137,424
71..................... JOINT TACTICAL GROUND STATION (JTAGS) 9,279 9,279
72..................... TROJAN (MIP)......................... 28,345 28,345
73..................... MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (INTEL SPT) (MIP) 7,602 7,602
74..................... CI HUMINT AUTO REPRTING AND 7,416 7,416
COLL(CHARCS)(MIP).
[[Page H2470]]
75..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MIP).......... 18,721 18,721
76..................... LIGHTWEIGHT COUNTER MORTAR RADAR..... 32,980 80,080
Program Adjustment................... ....................... +47,100
77..................... WARLOCK.............................. 24,127 16,127
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -8,000
78..................... BCT UNATTENDED GROUND SENSOR......... 29,718 14,718
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -15,000
79..................... COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/SECURITY 1,394 1,394
COUNTERMEASURES.
80..................... CI MODERNIZATION (MIP)............... 1,263 1,263
81..................... FORWARD AREA AIR DEFENSE--GROUND 91,467 91,467
BASED SENSOR.
82..................... SENTINEL MODS........................ 30,976 30,976
83..................... SENSE THROUGH THE WALL (STTW)........ 24,939 24,939
84..................... NIGHT VISION DEVICES................. 70,528 70,528
85..................... LONG RANGE ADVANCED SCOUT 255,641 230,641
SURVEILLANCE SYS.
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -25,000
86..................... NIGHT VISION, THERMAL WPN SIGHT...... 248,899 248,899
87..................... SMALL TACTICAL OPTICAL RIFLE MOUNTED 8,520 8,520
MLRF.
89..................... COUNTER-ROCKET, ARTILLERY & MORTAR... 2,088 2,088
91..................... ARTILLERY ACCURACY EQUIP............. 6,042 0
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -6,042
94..................... PROFILER............................. 4,408 4,408
95..................... MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (FIREFINDER 2,843 2,843
RADARS).
96..................... FORCE XXI BATTLE CMD BRIGADE & BELOW 39,786 39,786
(FBCB2).
97..................... JOINT BATTLE COMMAND--PLATFORM (JBC- 147 147
P).
98..................... LIGHTWEIGHT LASER DESIGNATOR/ 65,970 65,970
RANGEFINDER.
99..................... COMPUTER BALLISTICS: LHMBC XM32...... 815 815
100.................... MORTAR FIRE CONTROL SYSTEM........... 16,475 16,475
101.................... COUNTERFIRE RADARS................... 275,867 0
Transfer to Title IX................. ....................... -275,867
102.................... ENHANCED SENSOR & MONITORING SYSTEM.. 2,062 2,062
103.................... TACTICAL OPERATIONS CENTERS.......... 53,768 43,768
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -10,000
104.................... FIRE SUPPORT C2 FAMILY............... 49,077 49,077
105.................... BATTLE COMMAND SUSTAINMENT SUPPORT 25,866 25,866
SYSTEM.
106.................... FAAD C2.............................. 42,511 32,511
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -10,000
107.................... AIR & MSL DEFENSE PLANNING & CONTROL 57,038 57,038
SYS.
108.................... KNIGHT FAMILY........................ 120,723 120,723
109.................... LIFE CYCLE SOFTWARE SUPPORT (LCSS)... 1,710 1,710
110.................... AUTOMATIC IDENTIFICATION TECHNOLOGY.. 10,858 10,858
111.................... TC AIMS II........................... 10,457 10,457
113.................... TACTICAL INTERNET MANAGER............ 1,594 1,594
114.................... NETWORK MANAGEMENT INITIALIZATION AND 18,492 18,492
SERVICE.
115.................... MANEUVER CONTROL SYSTEM (MCS)........ 96,162 96,162
116.................... SINGLE ARMY LOGISTICS ENTERPRISE 99,819 99,819
(SALE).
117.................... RECONNAISSANCE AND SURVEYING 15,466 15,466
INSTRUMENT SET.
119.................... GENERAL FUND ENTERPRISE BUSINESS 97,858 97,858
SYSTEM.
120.................... ARMY TRAINING MODERNIZATION.......... 36,158 36,158
121.................... AUTOMATED DATA PROCESSING EQUIPMENT.. 203,864 203,864
122.................... CSS COMMUNICATIONS................... 39,811 39,811
123.................... RESERVE COMPONENT AUTOMATION SYS 39,360 39,360
(RCAS).
124.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (A/V).......... 663 663
125.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (SURVEYING 6,467 6,467
EQUIPMENT).
128.................... PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (C-E)........ 542 542
129.................... BCT NETWORK.......................... 176,543 136,543
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -40,000
130.................... PROTECTIVE SYSTEMS................... 2,489 2,489
131.................... FAMILY OF NON-LETHAL EQUIPMENT (FNLE) 9,305 9,305
132.................... CBRN SOLDIER PROTECTION.............. 180,351 180,351
133.................... SMOKE & OBSCURANT FAMILY: SOF (NON 831 831
AAO ITEM).
134.................... TACTICAL BRIDGING.................... 62,817 62,817
135.................... TACTICAL BRIDGE, FLOAT-RIBBON........ 105,837 105,837
136.................... HANDHELD STANDOFF MINEFIELD DETECTION 43,871 43,871
SYS.
137.................... GROUND STANDOFF MINE DETECTION SYSTEM 35,002 35,002
138.................... EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL EQUIPMENT 54,093 54,093
139.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M, COUNTERMINE 3,655 3,655
EQUIPMENT.
141.................... HEATERS AND ECU'S.................... 20,610 20,610
143.................... SOLDIER ENHANCEMENT.................. 5,416 5,416
146.................... PERSONNEL RECOVERY SUPPORT SYSTEM 7,813 7,813
(PRSS).
147.................... GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM................ 110,524 96,024
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -14,500
148.................... MOUNTED SOLDIER SYSTEM............... 38,872 38,872
149.................... FORCE PROVIDER....................... 41,539 41,539
150.................... FIELD FEEDING EQUIPMENT.............. 23,826 23,826
151.................... CARGO AERIAL DELIVERY AND PERSONNEL 69,496 69,496
PARACHUTE SYSTEM.
152.................... MOBILE INTEGRATED REMAINS COLLECTION 26,532 26,532
SYSTEM.
153.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (ENGINEER 31,420 31,420
SUPPORT).
154.................... DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS, PETROLEUM AND 175,069 164,369
WATER.
Program Adjustment................... ....................... -10,700
155.................... WATER PURIFICATION SYSTEMS........... 3,597 0
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -3,597
156.................... COMBAT SUPPORT MEDICAL............... 30,365 30,365
157.................... MOBILE MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT SYSTEMS. 159,285 139,985
Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -19,300
158.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MAINT EQ)..... 3,702 3,702
159.................... GRADER, ROAD MOTORIZED, HVY, 6X4 48,379 48,379
(CCE).
160.................... SKID STEER LOADER (SSL) FAMILY OF 17,498 17,498
SYSTEM.
161.................... SCRAPERS, EARTHMOVING................ 12,452 12,452
163.................... MISSION MODULES-ENGINEERING.......... 62,111 54,111
Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -8,000
164.................... LOADERS.............................. 7,205 7,205
165.................... HYDRAULIC EXCAVATOR.................. 8,458 8,458
166.................... TRACTOR, FULL TRACKED................ 64,032 64,032
167.................... PLANT, ASPHALT MIXING................ 10,783 10,783
168.................... HIGH MOBILITY ENGINEER EXCAVATOR 64,959 60,959
(HMEE) FOS.
Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -4,000
169.................... CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT ESP........... 11,063 11,063
170.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (CONSTRUCTION 20,565 17,565
EQUIP).
Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -3,000
171.................... JOINT HIGH SPEED VESSEL (JHSV)....... 202,764 202,764
172.................... HARBORMASTER COMMAND AND CONTROL 37,683 37,683
CENTER(HCCC).
173.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (FLOAT/RAIL)... 8,052 8,052
174.................... GENERATORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT.. 113,573 113,573
175.................... ROUGH TERRAIN CONTAINER HANDLER 29,460 29,460
(RTCH).
176.................... FAMILY OF FORKLIFTS.................. 12,936 12,936
177.................... ALL TERRAIN LIFTING ARMY SYSTEM...... 17,352 17,352
178.................... COMBAT TRAINING CENTERS SUPPORT...... 23,400 23,400
179.................... TRAINING DEVICES, NONSYSTEM.......... 297,200 322,200
Training Range Upgrades.............. ....................... +25,000
180.................... CLOSE COMBAT TACTICAL TRAINER........ 64,912 64,912
181.................... AVIATION COMBINED ARMS TACTICAL 26,120 26,120
TRAINER.
182.................... GAMING TECHNOLOGY IN SUPPORT OF ARMY 4,964 4,964
TRAINING.
183.................... CALIBRATION SETS EQUIPMENT........... 38,778 38,778
[[Page H2471]]
184.................... INTEGRATED FAMILY OF TEST EQUIPMENT 104,472 104,472
(IFTE).
185.................... TEST EQUIPMENT MODERNIZATION (TEMOD). 19,166 18,166
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -1,000
186.................... RAPID EQUIPPING SOLDIER SUPPORT 42,229 21,229
EQUIPMENT.
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -21,000
187.................... PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEMS (OPA3)..... 56,195 56,195
188.................... BASE LEVEL COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT...... 1,873 1,873
189.................... MODIFICATION OF IN-SVC EQUIPMENT (OPA- 103,046 82,046
3).
Program Adjustment................... ....................... -21,000
190.................... PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (OTH)........ 2,233 2,233
192.................... SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR USER TESTING... 44,483 44,483
193.................... AMC CRITICAL ITEMS OPA3.............. 13,104 13,104
194.................... MA8975............................... 3,894 3,894
195.................... BCT UNMANNED GROUND VEHICLE.......... 20,046 20,046
196.................... BCT TRAINING/LOGISTICS/MANAGEMENT.... 61,581 31,581
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -30,000
197.................... INITIAL SPARES--C&E.................. 38,707 36,079
Transfer to AP,A line 34 at Army ....................... -2,628
request.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 2,560 2,560
xx..................... PROCUREMENT INNOVATION............... 0 15,000
Procurement Innovation............... ....................... +15,000
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY...... 9,765,808 8,145,665
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY
1...................... EA-18G............................... 1,028,801 971,241
Multi-year Procurement Savings....... ....................... -49,836
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -7,724
2...................... EA-18G (AP-CY)....................... 55,081 55,081
3...................... F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) HORNET (MYP)..... 1,784,894 1,684,086
Multi-year Procurement Savings....... ....................... -92,746
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -8,062
4...................... F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) HORNET (MYP) (AP- 2,295 2,295
CY).
5...................... JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER................. 1,667,093 1,653,093
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -14,000
6...................... JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER ADVANCE 219,895 219,895
PROCUREMENT (CY).
7...................... JSF STOVL............................ 2,289,816 555,716
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -42,500
Delete Two Aircraft.................. ....................... -391,600
Transfer Eight Aircraft to CTOL ....................... -1,300,000
Variant.
8...................... JSF STOVL (AP-CY).................... 286,326 286,326
9...................... V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT)................... 2,121,036 2,121,036
10..................... V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT) (AP-CY)........... 81,875 81,875
11..................... UH-1Y/AH-1Z.......................... 738,709 738,709
12..................... UH-1Y/AH-1Z (AP-CY).................. 69,360 58,560
Unjustified Cost Growth.............. ....................... -10,800
13..................... MH-60S (MYP)......................... 478,591 478,591
14..................... MH-60S (MYP) (AP-CY)................. 70,080 66,280
Unexecutable EOQ..................... ....................... -3,800
15..................... MH-60R............................... 897,933 897,933
16..................... MH-60R (AP-CY)....................... 162,006 129,006
Unexecutable EOQ..................... ....................... -33,000
17..................... P-8A POSEIDON........................ 1,824,437 1,820,560
Operational Flight Trainer Cost ....................... -2,155
Growth.
Weapons Tactics Trainer Cost Growth.. ....................... -1,722
18..................... P-8A POSEIDON (ADVANCED PROCUREMENT). 166,153 147,653
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -18,500
19..................... E-2C (EARLY WARNING) HAWKEYE (MYP)... 819,184 819,184
20..................... E-2C (EARLY WARNING) HAWKEYE (MYP) 118,619 118,619
(AP-CY).
21..................... C-40A................................ ....................... 74,100
Add One Aircraft..................... ....................... +74,100
22..................... JPATS................................ 266,065 26,274
Contract Delay....................... ....................... -234,849
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -4,942
26..................... MQ- UAV.............................. 47,484 43,984
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -3,500
27..................... STUASLO UAV.......................... 23,912 0
Program Delay........................ ....................... -23,912
29..................... EA-6 SERIES.......................... 14,891 0
Unjustified Request in Avionics and ....................... -8,900
Structural Improvements OSIP.
ICAP III OSIP Unjustified Request.... ....................... -5,991
30..................... AEA SYSTEMS.......................... 33,772 29,972
Low Band Transmitter Modification Kit ....................... -1,400
Pricing.
ECO growth........................... ....................... -2,400
31..................... AV-8 SERIES.......................... 19,386 19,386
32..................... F-18 SERIES.......................... 492,821 443,806
ECP 904 Modification Kit Cost Growth. ....................... -2,310
ECP 583R2 Installation Equipment Kit ....................... -3,780
Cost Growth.
ATFLIR Installation Equipment Kit ....................... -11,745
Cost Growth.
Mission Planning/Unique Planning ....................... -2,400
Component Growth.
OSIP 002-07 Excess ECO Funding....... ....................... -9,000
ECP6279 Radar Modification Kits Ahead ....................... -7,880
of Need.
OSIP 001-10 Integrated Logistics ....................... -2,500
Support Growth.
Unjustified Cost Growth.............. ....................... -9,400
33..................... H-46 SERIES.......................... 17,685 17,685
34..................... AH-1W SERIES......................... 11,011 11,011
35..................... H-53 SERIES.......................... 25,871 25,871
36..................... SH-60 SERIES......................... 67,779 67,779
37..................... H-1 SERIES........................... 3,060 3,060
38..................... EP-3 SERIES.......................... 90,323 90,323
39..................... P-3 SERIES........................... 221,982 186,982
Unjustified Cost Growth.............. ....................... -35,000
40..................... E-2 SERIES........................... 47,046 67,046
Reliability Enhancements for E-2C.... ....................... +20,000
41..................... TRAINER A/C SERIES................... 23,999 23,999
42..................... C-2A................................. 16,020 16,020
43..................... C-130 SERIES......................... 17,839 17,839
44..................... FEWSG................................ 21,928 16,696
AN/ALQ-167 Modification Kit Cost ....................... -5,232
Growth.
45..................... CARGO/TRANSPORT A/C SERIES........... 16,092 16,092
46..................... E-6 SERIES........................... 149,164 121,194
Block 1 Upgrade Training Kit Cost ....................... -5,040
Growth.
Block 1 Upgrade OSIP Support Funding ....................... -3,000
Growth.
SLEP Installation Delay.............. ....................... -2,630
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -17,300
47..................... EXECUTIVE HELICOPTERS SERIES......... 43,443 43,443
48..................... SPECIAL PROJECT AIRCRAFT............. 14,679 14,679
49..................... T-45 SERIES.......................... 61,515 46,215
Engine Surge OSIP Installation ....................... -500
Funding Ahead of Need.
Engine Surge OSIP Contract Delay..... ....................... -2,800
Required Avionics Modernization ....................... -3,900
Program Modification Kit Cost Growth.
Synthetic Aperture Radar OSIP ....................... -8,100
Contract Delay.
50..................... POWER PLANT CHANGES.................. 19,948 19,948
51..................... JPATS SERIES......................... 1,831 1,831
[[Page H2472]]
52..................... AVIATION LIFE SUPPORT MODS........... 8,084 2,984
Transfer to RDTE,N line 93 for Common ....................... -5,100
Mobile Aircrew Restraint System.
53..................... COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT................. 21,947 21,947
54..................... COMMON AVIONICS CHANGES.............. 101,120 79,820
CNS/ATM Installation Equipment ....................... -12,400
Contract Savings.
CNS/ATM Installation Funding Ahead of ....................... -1,400
Need.
Tactical Moving Map Capability ....................... -7,500
Modifications Funding Ahead of Need.
56..................... ID SYSTEMS........................... 20,397 20,397
57..................... RQ-7 SERIES.......................... 18,121 18,121
58..................... V-22 (TILT/ROTOR ACFT) OSPREY........ 21,985 21,985
59..................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 1,244,673 1,234,084
JPATS Contract Delay................. ....................... -10,589
60..................... COMMON GROUND EQUIPMENT.............. 322,063 322,063
61..................... AIRCRAFT INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES....... 17,998 17,998
62..................... WAR CONSUMABLES...................... 25,248 25,248
63..................... OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES............. 7,579 7,579
64..................... SPECIAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT............ 45,916 45,916
65..................... FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION..... 1,752 1,752
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY... 18,508,613 16,170,868
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY
1...................... TRIDENT II MODS...................... 1,106,911 1,106,911
2...................... MISSILE INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES........ 3,446 3,446
3...................... TOMAHAWK............................. 300,178 288,278
Production Engineering Support Growth ....................... -1,900
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -10,000
4...................... AMRAAM............................... 155,553 145,553
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -10,000
5...................... SIDEWINDER........................... 52,293 52,293
6...................... JSOW................................. 131,141 129,641
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,500
7...................... STANDARD MISSILE..................... 295,922 248,222
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -5,700
Smooth Production Ramp - SM 6........ ....................... -42,000
8...................... RAM.................................. 74,976 68,046
Contract Savings..................... ....................... -1,930
Program Rebaselined - Milestone C ....................... -5,000
Slip for Block II.
9...................... HELLFIRE............................. 43,495 41,995
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,500
10..................... AERIAL TARGETS....................... 43,988 42,888
ECM/Emitter Equipment Cost Growth.... ....................... -1,100
11..................... OTHER MISSILE SUPPORT................ 3,981 3,981
12..................... ESSM................................. 48,152 45,515
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -2,637
13..................... HARM MODS............................ 53,543 52,191
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,352
14..................... STANDARD MISSILES MODS............... 61,896 61,896
15..................... WEAPONS INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES........ 3,281 3,281
16..................... FLEET SATELLITE COMM FOLLOW-ON....... 505,734 505,734
18..................... ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........... 52,152 52,152
19..................... ASW TARGETS.......................... 10,123 5,197
Contract Delay....................... ....................... -4,926
20..................... MK-46 TORPEDO MODS................... 42,144 42,144
21..................... MK-48 TORPEDO ADCAP MODS............. 43,559 29,859
Contract Delay - Funds for 15 kits ....................... -13,700
and NRE.
22..................... QUICKSTRIKE MINE..................... 6,090 6,090
23..................... TORPEDO SUPPORT EQUIPMENT............ 43,766 43,766
24..................... ASW RANGE SUPPORT.................... 9,557 9,557
25..................... FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION..... 3,494 3,494
26..................... SMALL ARMS AND WEAPONS............... 14,316 14,316
27..................... CIWS MODS............................ 41,408 29,022
Block 1B Systems Ahead of Need....... ....................... -12,386
28..................... COAST GUARD WEAPONS.................. 20,657 13,259
CIWS Ahead of Need................... ....................... -5,698
MK160 Ahead of Need.................. ....................... -1,700
29..................... GUN MOUNT MODS....................... 43,991 40,791
Installation Funding Ahead of Need... ....................... -3,200
30..................... LCS MODULE WEAPONS................... 9,808 0
NLOS Program Termination............. ....................... -9,808
31..................... CRUISER MODERNIZATION WEAPONS........ 52,426 50,626
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,800
32..................... AIRBORNE MINE NEUTRALIZATION SYSTEMS. 23,007 23,007
35..................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 58,806 58,806
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY..... 3,359,794 3,221,957
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & MARINE CORPS
1...................... GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS................ 80,028 77,928
Direct Attack Moving Target ....................... -2,100
Capability Program Cost Growth.
3...................... AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL TYPES.......... 38,721 23,171
MK 66 Rocket Motor (Mod 4) Unit Cost ....................... -6,000
Efficiencies.
2.75 Launcher Unit Cost Efficiencies. ....................... -9,550
4...................... MACHINE GUN AMMUNITION............... 21,003 21,003
5...................... PRACTICE BOMBS....................... 33,666 31,666
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -2,000
6...................... CARTRIDGES & CART ACTUATED DEVICES... 53,667 52,167
Program Execution Delays............. ....................... -1,500
7...................... AIR EXPENDABLE COUNTERMEASURES....... 59,626 59,626
8...................... JATOS................................ 2,869 2,869
9...................... 5 INCH/54 GUN AMMUNITION............. 34,492 33,492
Product Improvement Growth........... ....................... -1,000
10..................... INTERMEDIATE CALIBER GUN AMMUNITION.. 37,234 37,234
11..................... OTHER SHIP GUN AMMUNITION............ 36,275 36,275
12..................... SMALL ARMS & LANDING PARTY AMMO...... 46,192 46,192
13..................... PYROTECHNIC AND DEMOLITION........... 11,310 10,079
MK-62 Firing Device Contract Delay... ....................... -1,231
14..................... AMMUNITION LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 4,105 4,105
15..................... SMALL ARMS AMMUNITION................ 64,839 64,839
16..................... LINEAR CHARGES, ALL TYPES............ 15,329 15,329
17..................... 40 MM, ALL TYPES..................... 62,835 62,835
18..................... 60MM, ALL TYPES...................... 17,877 17,877
19..................... 81MM, ALL TYPES...................... 41,053 41,053
20..................... 120MM, ALL TYPES..................... 6,458 6,458
21..................... CTG 25MM, ALL TYPES.................. 2,937 2,937
22..................... GRENADES, ALL TYPES.................. 9,298 8,092
Funded Ahead of Need for Scorpion.... ....................... -1,206
23..................... ROCKETS, ALL TYPES................... 13,995 13,995
24..................... ARTILLERY, ALL TYPES................. 70,423 67,546
Decrease to Reduce Backlog in MACS ....................... -2,877
M232 Production.
25..................... DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES...... 19,464 19,464
26..................... FUZE, ALL TYPES...................... 18,032 18,032
27..................... NON LETHALS.......................... 3,009 3,009
28..................... AMMO MODERNIZATION................... 8,985 8,985
[[Page H2473]]
29..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION........... 4,269 4,269
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & 817,991 790,527
MARINE CORPS.
SHIPBUILDING & CONVERSION, NAVY
1...................... CARRIER REPLACEMENT PROGRAM.......... 1,731,256 1,721,969
Consolidated Afloat Navy Enterprise ....................... -2,600
System Increment 1.
Surface Electronic Warfare ....................... -4,900
Improvement.
AN/UPX-29............................ ....................... -1,787
2...................... CARRIER REPLACEMENT PROGRAM (AP-CY).. 908,313 908,313
3...................... VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINE............. 3,441,452 3,430,343
Sonar System Hardware Cost Growth.... ....................... -5,795
Modular Mast Cost Growth............. ....................... -1,430
Propulsor Cost Growth................ ....................... -3,884
4...................... VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINE (AP-CY)..... 1,691,236 1,691,236
5...................... CVN REFUELING OVERHAUL............... 1,255,799 1,248,999
SSDS Program Management Excess....... ....................... -1,800
SSDS Software Growth................. ....................... -2,000
CEC Testing and Evaluation Excess.... ....................... -3,000
6...................... CVN REFUELING OVERHAULS (AP-CY)...... 408,037 408,037
9...................... DDG 1000............................. 186,312 77,512
Volume Search Radar.................. ....................... -108,800
10..................... DDG-51............................... 2,922,190 2,868,454
MK-12 IFF Cost Growth................ ....................... -4,986
CIWS Block 1B Cost Growth............ ....................... -2,256
Exterior Communication System Cost ....................... -6,294
Growth.
Main Reduction Gear Systems ....................... -10,200
Engineering Growth.
Main Reduction Gear Contract Savings. ....................... -30,000
11..................... DDG-51 (AP-CY)....................... 47,984 47,984
12..................... LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP................. 1,230,984 1,168,984
Cost Savings......................... ....................... -62,000
13..................... LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (AP-CY)......... 278,351 190,351
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -88,000
16..................... LHA REPLACEMENT (AP-CY).............. 949,897 942,837
C4ISR Cost Growth.................... ....................... -5,174
Rolling Airframe Missile System Cost ....................... -1,886
Growth.
18..................... INTRATHEATER CONNECTOR............... 180,703 180,703
19..................... OCEANOGRAPHIC SHIPS.................. 88,561 88,561
20..................... OUTFITTING........................... 306,640 295,570
JHSV-1 Outfitting Funding Phasing.... ....................... -3,426
LPD-25 Outfitting Funding Phasing.... ....................... -2,500
DDG-1000 Post-Delivery Phasing....... ....................... -1,757
LPD-23 Post-Delivery Phasing......... ....................... -3,387
21..................... SERVICE CRAFT........................ 13,770 13,770
22..................... LCAC SLEP............................ 83,035 83,035
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, SHIPBUILDING & CONVERSION, 15,724,520 15,366,658
NAVY.
OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY
1...................... LM-2500 GAS TURBINE.................. 12,137 10,525
Turbine Digital Fuel Controls Cost ....................... -1,612
Growth.
2...................... ALLISON 501K GAS TURBINE............. 14,923 14,923
4...................... OTHER NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT........... 23,167 23,167
5...................... SUB PERISCOPES & IMAGING EQUIP....... 85,619 73,559
AN/BVS-1 Mast Tech Insertion Spares.. ....................... -1,849
ISIS Tech Insertion Kits Ahead of ....................... -2,769
Need.
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,700
Contractor Repair Funding Growth..... ....................... -5,742
6...................... DDG MOD.............................. 296,691 289,691
Multi-Mission BMD Capability Upgrade ....................... -1,000
Kits Cost Growth.
Engineering Services Unjustified Cost ....................... -6,000
Growth.
7...................... FIREFIGHTING EQUIPMENT............... 11,974 9,304
Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus ....................... -1,570
Kits Excess to Requirements.
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,100
8...................... COMMAND AND CONTROL SWITCHBOARD...... 3,962 2,362
Unjustified Request.................. ....................... -1,600
9...................... POLLUTION CONTROL EQUIPMENT.......... 25,614 25,614
10..................... SUBMARINE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.......... 7,730 7,730
11..................... VIRGINIA CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 132,039 130,039
Spare Main Propulsion Shaft Ahead of ....................... -2,000
Need.
12..................... SUBMARINE BATTERIES.................. 44,057 31,057
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,500
Excess Installation Funding.......... ....................... -11,500
13..................... STRATEGIC PLATFORM SUPPORT EQUIP..... 22,811 22,811
14..................... DSSP EQUIPMENT....................... 3,869 3,869
15..................... CG-MODERNIZATION..................... 356,958 350,958
Engineering Services Unjustified Cost ....................... -6,000
Growth.
16..................... LCAC................................. 9,142 2,642
Personnel Transport Module Contract ....................... -6,500
Delay.
18..................... UNDERWATER EOD PROGRAMS.............. 15,908 15,908
19..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION........... 126,842 119,698
LCS Waterjets Spares Ahead of Need... ....................... -5,296
Voltage Regulators Ahead of Need..... ....................... -1,848
20..................... CHEMICAL WARFARE DETECTORS........... 7,470 7,470
21..................... SUBMARINE LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEM........ 13,016 13,016
22..................... REACTOR POWER UNITS.................. 438,503 438,503
23..................... REACTOR COMPONENTS................... 266,469 266,469
24..................... DIVING AND SALVAGE EQUIPMENT......... 10,227 10,227
25..................... STANDARD BOATS....................... 27,725 49,225
Range Support Craft.................. ....................... +21,500
26..................... OTHER SHIPS TRAINING EQUIPMENT....... 16,094 16,094
27..................... OPERATING FORCES IPE................. 49,856 91,476
Program Increase - Shipyard Capital ....................... +41,620
Investment Program.
28..................... NUCLEAR ALTERATIONS.................. 116,829 116,829
29..................... LCS MODULES.......................... 82,951 41,369
MCM Module Production Support Growth. ....................... -6,000
Consulting Services Growth........... ....................... -3,064
Excess Remote Multi-Mission Vehicle ....................... -7,600
Funding.
Mission Package Computer Environment ....................... -2,268
Units Ahead of Need.
AN/AQS-20A--Ahead of Need............ ....................... -22,650
30..................... LSD MIDLIFE.......................... 106,612 102,612
60-ton Deck Crane Contract Delay..... ....................... -1,000
Boat Davit and Ballast Control System ....................... -3,000
Installations Ahead of Need.
31..................... RADAR SUPPORT........................ 12,030 7,000
Periscope Detection Radar ....................... -3,500
Installation Funding Ahead of Need.
Excess Miscellaneous Funding......... ....................... -1,530
32..................... SPQ-9B RADAR......................... 8,887 5,687
Excess Antenna Funding............... ....................... -2,200
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,000
33..................... AN/SQQ-89 SURF ASW COMBAT SYSTEM..... 87,219 85,219
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -2,000
34..................... SSN ACOUSTICS........................ 237,015 234,015
[[Page H2474]]
Installation Costs Unjustified Growth ....................... -3,000
35..................... UNDERSEA WARFARE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT... 29,641 27,241
Common Data Link Modification ....................... -2,400
Installation Funding Ahead of Need.
36..................... SONAR SWITCHES AND TRANSDUCERS....... 14,056 13,056
TR-317 Module Cost Growth............ ....................... -1,000
37..................... SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC WARFARE SYSTEM.... 20,739 18,539
Next Generation Countermeasure ....................... -2,200
Funding Ahead of Need.
38..................... SSTD................................. 2,206 0
AN/SLQ-25D Ahead of Need............. ....................... -2,206
39..................... FIXED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM............ 57,481 57,481
40..................... SURTASS.............................. 8,468 8,468
41..................... TACTICAL SUPPORT CENTER.............. 18,586 18,586
42..................... AN/SLQ-32............................ 49,677 23,257
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -2,000
Block 1B3 Incremental Funding........ ....................... -7,520
Block 2 Incremental Funding.......... ....................... -16,900
43..................... SHIPBOARD IW EXPLOIT................. 105,624 105,624
44..................... AUTOMATED IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM (AIS) 1,299 1,299
45..................... SUBMARINE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT PROG..... 71,558 70,108
ESM Capability Insertion (CI-06) Kits ....................... -1,450
Ahead of Need.
46..................... COOPERATIVE ENGAGEMENT CAPABILITY.... 31,091 25,691
Planar Antenna Funding Ahead of Need. ....................... -5,400
47..................... TRUSTED INFORMATION SYSTEM (TIS)..... 338 338
48..................... NAVAL TACTICAL COMMAND SUPPORT SYSTEM 33,358 33,358
(NTCSS).
49..................... ATDLS................................ 2,273 2,273
50..................... NAVY COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM 8,920 8,920
(NCCS).
51..................... MINESWEEPING SYSTEM REPLACEMENT...... 81,441 60,710
Remote Minehunting System (RMS)...... ....................... -5,027
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -2,272
Expendable Mine Neutralization System ....................... -12,432
Funding Ahead of Need.
Assessment and Identification of Mine ....................... -1,000
Susceptibility Growth.
52..................... SHALLOW WATER MCM.................... 9,236 1,261
Cobra Block 1 Contract Delay......... ....................... -7,975
53..................... NAVSTAR GPS RECEIVERS (SPACE)........ 9,319 9,319
54..................... ARMED FORCES RADIO AND TV............ 3,328 3,328
55..................... STRATEGIC PLATFORM SUPPORT EQUIP..... 4,248 4,248
56..................... OTHER TRAINING EQUIPMENT............. 29,061 27,761
COTS Obsolescence Growth............. ....................... -1,300
57..................... MATCALS.............................. 16,747 14,747
ASPARCS Cost Growth.................. ....................... -2,000
58..................... SHIPBOARD AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL........ 7,658 7,658
59..................... AUTOMATIC CARRIER LANDING SYSTEM..... 15,169 10,782
AN/SPN-46 Radar Modification Kits ....................... -4,387
Ahead of Need.
60..................... NATIONAL AIR SPACE SYSTEM............ 17,531 17,531
61..................... AIR STATION SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........ 6,851 6,851
62..................... MICROWAVE LANDING SYSTEM............. 8,551 8,551
63..................... ID SYSTEMS........................... 29,572 23,122
AN/URN-25 TACAN Upgrade Kits Ahead of ....................... -2,450
Need.
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -4,000
64..................... TAC A/C MISSION PLANNING SYS (TAMPS). 9,098 7,798
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,300
65..................... DEPLOYABLE JOINT COMMAND AND CONT.... 8,542 8,542
66..................... TADIX-B.............................. 6,909 2,944
AN/USC-151 Upgrade Kit Ahead of Need. ....................... -3,965
67..................... GCCS-M EQUIPMENT TACTICAL/MOBILE..... 9,832 9,832
68..................... DCGS-N............................... 16,634 16,634
69..................... CANES................................ 34,398 10,264
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -24,134
70..................... RADIAC............................... 6,104 5,197
Air Particulate Detector Contract ....................... -907
Delay.
71..................... CANES-INTELL......................... 10,432 3,140
Ahead of Need........................ ....................... -7,292
72..................... GPETE................................ 5,861 5,861
73..................... INTEG COMBAT SYSTEM TEST FACILITY.... 4,445 4,445
74..................... EMI CONTROL INSTRUMENTATION.......... 4,737 4,737
75..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION........... 51,048 29,307
SPS-73 Tech Refresh/Obsolescence ....................... -741
Growth.
SPS-48 ECO and Support Cost Growth... ....................... -3,000
SPS-48 Upgrade Kits Ahead of Need.... ....................... -13,600
Installation Funding Ahead of Need... ....................... -4,400
78..................... SHIP COMMUNICATIONS AUTOMATION....... 260,551 230,174
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,500
ISNS Upgrade Kits Installation ....................... -9,000
Funding Ahead of Need.
CENTRIXS Installation Funding Ahead ....................... -1,425
of Need.
SCI Network Installation Funding ....................... -2,100
Ahead of Need.
ADNS Units Ahead of Need............. ....................... -16,352
79..................... MARITIME DOMAIN AWARENESS (MDA)...... 9,250 7,650
CENTRIXS Modification Kit ....................... -1,600
Installation Funding Ahead of Need.
80..................... COMMUNICATIONS ITEMS UNDER $5M....... 39,846 31,169
Battle Force Tactical Network Ahead ....................... -8,677
of Need.
82..................... SUBMARINE COMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT.... 59,013 55,737
Common Submarine Radio Room ....................... -1,029
Modification Kit Cost Growth.
CSSR Seawolf Ahead of Need........... ....................... -2,247
83..................... SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS..... 28,665 28,665
84..................... NAVY MULTIBAND TERMINAL (NMT)........ 161,021 161,021
85..................... JCS COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT......... 2,256 2,256
86..................... ELECTRICAL POWER SYSTEMS............. 1,309 1,309
87..................... NAVAL SHORE COMMUNICATIONS........... 3,422 3,422
88..................... INFO SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM (ISSP). 120,529 114,357
SV-21 Unit Cost Growth............... ....................... -1,672
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -2,000
CND Increment 2 Ahead of Need........ ....................... -2,500
89..................... CRYPTOLOGIC COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP..... 18,322 18,322
90..................... COAST GUARD EQUIPMENT................ 20,189 20,189
92..................... SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES................. 87,846 83,846
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -4,000
93..................... WEAPONS RANGE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 51,742 59,700
East Coast USWTR Support Funding ....................... -3,500
Carryover.
East Coast USWTR Ahead of Need....... ....................... -8,542
Training Range Upgrades.............. ....................... +20,000
94..................... EXPEDITIONARY AIRFIELDS.............. 8,429 8,429
95..................... AIRCRAFT REARMING EQUIPMENT.......... 11,134 11,134
96..................... AIRCRAFT LAUNCH & RECOVERY EQUIPMENT. 37,063 28,881
Advanced Recovery Control and ....................... -1,782
Aviation Data Management and Control
Systems Cost Growth.
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -1,400
Production Engineering Unjustified ....................... -5,000
Cost Growth.
97..................... METEOROLOGICAL EQUIPMENT............. 25,581 25,581
98..................... OTHER PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT......... 1,573 1,573
99..................... AVIATION LIFE SUPPORT................ 40,696 24,796
JHMCS Ahead of Need.................. ....................... -15,900
100.................... AIRBORNE MINE COUNTERMEASURES........ 35,855 35,855
101.................... LAMPS MK III SHIPBOARD EQUIPMENT..... 20,662 16,382
Units Ahead of Need.................. ....................... -4,280
[[Page H2475]]
102.................... PORTABLE ELECTRONIC MAINTENANCE AIDS. 12,812 10,612
Production Support Growth............ ....................... -2,200
103.................... OTHER AVIATION SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 12,018 12,018
104.................... NAVAL FIRES CONTROL SYSTEM........... 1,086 1,086
105.................... GUN FIRE CONTROL EQUIPMENT........... 8,076 8,076
106.................... NATO SEASPARROW...................... 11,121 10,161
ECP and Production Support Growth.... ....................... -960
107.................... RAM GMLS............................. 11,805 6,800
GMLS Ordalts Contract Delay.......... ....................... -5,005
108.................... SHIP SELF DEFENSE SYSTEM............. 54,290 45,902
Ship Self Defense System Modification ....................... -8,388
Kits Ahead of Need.
109.................... AEGIS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.............. 162,307 82,307
COTS Tech Refresh Growth............. ....................... -3,000
Ship Change Documentation Growth..... ....................... -4,500
Navy Requested Transfer to RDTE,DW ....................... -72,500
line 84 for Ballistic Missile
Defense.
110.................... TOMAHAWK SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........... 88,698 88,698
111.................... VERTICAL LAUNCH SYSTEMS.............. 5,698 5,698
112.................... STRATEGIC MISSILE SYSTEMS EQUIP...... 184,034 159,034
Fire Control Tech Refresh Growth..... ....................... -5,000
Contract Delays...................... ....................... -20,000
113.................... SSN COMBAT CONTROL SYSTEMS........... 88,004 77,390
TI-04 Modification Contract Savings.. ....................... -2,214
Excess TI-04 and Out Modification ....................... -8,400
Installation Funding.
114.................... SUBMARINE ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 5,282 5,282
115.................... SURFACE ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........ 8,323 8,323
116.................... ASW RANGE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.......... 7,121 7,121
117.................... EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL EQUIP.... 58,288 58,288
118.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION........... 3,546 2,480
Industrial Facilities Contract Delay. ....................... -1,066
119.................... ANTI-SHIP MISSILE DECOY SYSTEM....... 36,588 36,588
120.................... SURFACE TRAINING DEVICE MODS......... 7,337 7,337
121.................... SUBMARINE TRAINING DEVICE MODS....... 34,519 34,519
122.................... PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES.......... 3,719 3,719
123.................... GENERAL PURPOSE TRUCKS............... 584 584
124.................... CONSTRUCTION & MAINTENANCE EQUIP..... 13,935 10,435
Contract Delays...................... ....................... -3,500
125.................... FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT.............. 12,853 12,853
126.................... TACTICAL VEHICLES.................... 31,741 25,241
FMTV Contract Savings................ ....................... -2,300
Energy Initiative Unjustified ....................... -4,200
Requirement.
127.................... AMPHIBIOUS EQUIPMENT................. 3,132 3,132
128.................... POLLUTION CONTROL EQUIPMENT.......... 5,154 5,154
129.................... ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION............... 24,770 24,770
130.................... PHYSICAL SECURITY VEHICLES........... 1,128 1,128
131.................... MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT......... 15,504 14,030
General Purpose Forklift Cost Growth. ....................... -1,474
132.................... OTHER SUPPLY SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 6,655 6,655
133.................... FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION..... 6,315 6,315
134.................... SPECIAL PURPOSE SUPPLY SYSTEMS....... 66,549 66,549
135.................... TRAINING SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........... 11,429 11,429
137.................... COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT............ 47,306 37,840
BUPERS Software Cost Growth.......... ....................... -2,500
SPAWAR Hardware Items Cost Growth.... ....................... -1,080
ERP Kits Cost Growth................. ....................... -900
JFCOM National Small Unit Center..... ....................... -3,075
Future Pay and Personnel System Ahead ....................... -1,911
of Need.
138.................... EDUCATION SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.......... 2,067 2,067
139.................... MEDICAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT............ 7,679 5,679
Fleet Allowance List Outfitting Cost ....................... -2,000
Growth.
141.................... NAVAL MIP SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.......... 1,433 1,433
143.................... OPERATING FORCES SUPPORT EQUIPMENT... 12,754 12,754
144.................... C4ISR EQUIPMENT...................... 5,317 5,317
145.................... ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 20,033 20,033
146.................... PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT.......... 154,805 141,475
Shipboard Protection System ....................... -5,500
Installation Costs Excess to Need.
Shipboard Protection System Support ....................... -6,000
Cost Growth.
Biometrics Ahead of Need............. ....................... -1,830
XX..................... PROCUREMENT INNOVATION............... ....................... 15,000
Procurement Innovation............... ....................... +15,000
147.................... ENTERPRISE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.... 377,353 159,653
Navy Requested Transfer to OM, N ....................... -217,700
AGSAG BSIT for NGEN.
149.................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 215,906 215,906
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 19,767 19,767
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY...... 6,450,208 5,804,963
PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS
1...................... AAV7A1 PIP........................... 7,749 7,749
2...................... LAV PIP.............................. 41,277 41,277
4...................... EXPEDITIONARY FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM.... 9,723 9,723
5...................... 155MM LIGHTWEIGHT TOWED HOWITZER..... 10,356 10,356
6...................... HIGH MOBILITY ARTILLERY ROCKET SYSTEM 22,230 22,230
7...................... WEAPONS AND COMBAT VEHICLES UNDER $5 26,091 26,091
MILLION.
9...................... MODIFICATION KITS.................... 40,916 30,559
Unexecutable Program - M1A1 ....................... -10,357
Survivability Kits.
10..................... WEAPONS ENHANCEMENT PROGRAM.......... 13,115 13,115
11..................... GROUND BASED AIR DEFENSE............. 5,175 3,855
Program Adjustment................... ....................... -1,320
13..................... FOLLOW ON TO SMAW.................... 21,570 21,570
14..................... ANTI-ARMOR WEAPONS SYSTEM--HEAVY 20,315 20,315
(AAWS-H).
15..................... MODIFICATION KITS.................... 3,798 3,798
16..................... COMBAT OPERATIONS CENTER............. 10,776 10,776
17..................... REPAIR AND TEST EQUIPMENT............ 25,636 25,636
18..................... COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM................ 32,877 32,877
20..................... ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION (COMM & ELEC). 3,405 3,405
21..................... AIR OPERATIONS C2 SYSTEMS............ 67,568 67,568
22..................... RADAR SYSTEMS........................ 860 860
23..................... FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM.................. 3,906 3,906
24..................... INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 92,377 92,377
25..................... RQ-11 UAV............................ 32,490 16,490
Program Delay - Tier 2 UAS........... ....................... -16,000
26..................... DCGS-MC.............................. 4,582 0
DCGS-MC Program Delay................ ....................... -4,582
28..................... COMMON COMPUTER RESOURCES............ 258,947 218,947
Unjustified Request - MC Intranet.... ....................... -40,000
29..................... COMMAND POST SYSTEMS................. 33,021 33,021
30..................... RADIO SYSTEMS........................ 40,551 20,051
Program Delay - JTRS handheld........ ....................... -20,500
31..................... COMM SWITCHING & CONTROL SYSTEMS..... 32,279 22,279
Execution Delay - WNS-T.............. ....................... -10,000
32..................... COMM & ELEC INFRASTRUCTURE SUPPORT... 15,278 15,278
33..................... COMMERCIAL PASSENGER VEHICLES........ 1,157 1,157
34..................... COMMERCIAL CARGO VEHICLES............ 12,696 12,696
35..................... 5/4T TRUCK HMMWV (MYP)............... 4,849 0
[[Page H2476]]
Service Requested Reduction.......... ....................... -4,849
36..................... MOTOR TRANSPORT MODIFICATIONS........ 5,253 5,253
37..................... MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLE REPLACEMENT.. 11,721 11,721
38..................... LOGISTICS VEHICLE SYSTEM REPLACEMENT. 133,827 133,827
39..................... FAMILY OF TACTICAL TRAILERS.......... 19,156 19,156
40..................... TRAILERS............................. 8,075 8,075
41..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION........... 6,016 6,016
42..................... ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL EQUIP ASSORT... 5,110 5,110
43..................... BULK LIQUID EQUIPMENT................ 10,743 10,743
44..................... TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS................ 29,330 29,330
45..................... POWER EQUIPMENT ASSORTED............. 19,419 19,419
46..................... AMPHIBIOUS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT......... 11,718 11,718
47..................... EOD SYSTEMS.......................... 64,093 64,093
48..................... PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT.......... 16,419 16,419
49..................... GARRISON MOBILE ENGR EQUIP........... 10,976 10,976
50..................... MATERIAL HANDLING EQUIP.............. 24,376 24,376
51..................... FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION..... 2,748 2,748
52..................... FIELD MEDICAL EQUIPMENT.............. 6,722 6,722
53..................... TRAINING DEVICES..................... 5,668 5,668
54..................... CONTAINER FAMILY..................... 897 897
55..................... FAMILY OF CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT..... 18,261 18,261
57..................... BRIDGE BOATS......................... 12,567 12,567
58..................... RAPID DEPLOYABLE KITCHEN............. 4,283 4,283
59..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION........... 7,572 7,572
60..................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 13,524 13,524
..................... TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS.... 1,344,044 1,236,436
-------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
1...................... F-35................................. 3,729,242 4,064,442
Air Force Requested Transfer from AP, ....................... +29,700
AF line 43.
Production Support Carryover......... ....................... -60,000
Delete Five Aircraft................. ....................... -608,500
Transfer Eight Aircraft from STOVL ....................... 974,000
Variant.
2...................... F-35 (AP-CY)......................... 257,000 257,000
3...................... F-22A................................ 158,039 158,039
5...................... C-17A (MYP).......................... 14,283 48,683
Air Force Requested Transfer from AP, ....................... +114,400
AF line 88.
Slow Execution....................... ....................... -80,000
6...................... C-130J............................... 463,267 455,267
Updated Pricing...................... ....................... -8,000
7...................... C-130J ADVANCE PROCUREMENT (CY)...... 48,000 40,000
Updated Pricing...................... ....................... -8,000
8...................... HC-130J.............................. 349,300 307,800
Updated Pricing...................... ....................... -41,500
9...................... HC-130J (AP-CY)...................... 10,000 10,000
10..................... MC-130J.............................. 467,465 415,465
Updated Pricing...................... ....................... -52,000
11..................... MC-130J (AP-CY)...................... 60,000 60,000
14..................... JOINT CARGO AIRCRAFT................. 351,200 351,200
15..................... LIGHT MOBILITY AIRCRAFT.............. 65,699 65,699
16..................... USAFA POWERED FLIGHT PROGRAM......... 4,099 4,099
18..................... COMM VERT LIFT SPT PLATFORM (UH-1N).. 6,432 0
Air Force Requested Transfer to RDTE, ....................... -6,432
AF line 113.
19..................... V-22 OSPREY.......................... 393,098 393,098
20..................... V-22 OSPREY (AP-CY).................. 13,621 13,621
24..................... CIVIL AIR PATROL A/C................. 2,424 2,424
25..................... HH-60M OPERATIONAL LOSS REPLACEMENT.. 104,447 104,447
27..................... STUASLO.............................. 3,253 3,253
28..................... TARGET DRONES........................ 85,505 85,505
29..................... C-37A................................ 52,000 52,000
30..................... RQ-4 UAV............................. 649,629 503,029
Air Force Requested Transfer to AP, ....................... -25,600
AF line 31.
Unjustified Cost Increase, Sensors... ....................... -11,000
Unjustified Request, Spares.......... ....................... -110,000
31..................... RQ-4 UAV (AP-CY)..................... 90,200 72,300
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +25,600
AP,AF line 30.
Air Force Adjustment................. ....................... -43,500
32..................... MC 130 IN BA 04...................... 9,932 0
Air Force Requested Transfer to AC- ....................... -9,932
130 Recap Program.
xx..................... AC-130 Recap......................... ....................... 9,932
Air Force Requested Transfer from MC- ....................... +9,932
130 program.
34..................... MQ-9................................. 863,595 318,131
Spares............................... ....................... -167,788
Support Equipment - Forward Funding.. ....................... -42,000
Production Support - Forward Funding. ....................... -98,376
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -21,300
Transfer 12 Aircraft to Title IX..... ....................... -216,000
35..................... B-2A................................. 63,371 63,371
37..................... B-1B................................. 200,090 200,090
38..................... B-52................................. 69,074 21,074
CONECT--Funded Ahead of Need......... ....................... -35,000
Transfer to RDTE,AF line 117 for ....................... -13,000
Internal Weapons Bay.
39..................... A-10................................. 165,361 187,361
Program Increase--Helmet Mounting ....................... +22,000
Cueing System.
40..................... F-15................................. 302,235 337,041
C/D Flight Data Recorder--Early to ....................... -11,408
Need.
E-model Flight Data Recorder--Early ....................... -11,786
to Need.
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -4,000
AESA Radar for ANG F-15Cs............ ....................... +62,000
41..................... F-16................................. 167,188 167,188
42..................... F-22A................................ 492,199 437,739
Unjustified Request.................. ....................... -54,460
43..................... F-35 MODIFICATIONS................... 123,936 4,636
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -82,000
Air Force Requested Transfer to AP,AF ....................... -29,700
line 1.
Air Force Requested Transfer to ....................... -7,600
RDTE,AF line 81 for Auto GCAS.
44..................... C-5.................................. 740,369 37,252
Block Upgrade--Ahead of Need......... ....................... -21,260
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -5,400
Transfer C-5 RERP to New AP,AF Line.. ....................... -676,457
45..................... C-5 (AP-CY).......................... 166,900 106,900
Funded with fiscal year 2009 and 2010 ....................... -60,000
funds.
xx..................... C-5 RERP............................. ....................... 676,457
Transfer C-5 RERP from AP,AF line 44 ....................... +676,457
46..................... C-9C................................. 10 0
Program Terminated................... ....................... -10
47..................... C-17A................................ 351,614 217,547
OBIGGS Kits--Reduction of Four kits.. ....................... -13,800
Extended Range Retrofits Kits-- ....................... -5,267
Reduction of One Kit.
Excess to Need...................... ....................... -98,000
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -17,000
48..................... C-21................................. 339 339
49..................... C-32A................................ 12,113 12,113
[[Page H2477]]
50..................... C-37A................................ 12,162 12,162
51..................... GLIDER MODS.......................... 120 120
52..................... T6................................... 24,644 24,644
53..................... T-1.................................. 83 83
54..................... T-38................................. 28,288 26,288
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -2,000
56..................... KC-10A (ATCA)........................ 13,777 11,777
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -2,000
57..................... C-12................................. 7,645 7,645
58..................... MC-12W............................... 10,826 10,826
59..................... C-20 MODS............................ 736 736
60..................... VC-25A MOD........................... 13,175 13,175
61..................... C-40................................. 10,697 10,697
62..................... C-130................................ 257,339 296,939
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +65,000
RDTE,AF line 220 for Avionics
Upgrades to Special Mission Aircraft.
Excess to Need...................... ....................... -25,400
63..................... C-130 MODS INTEL..................... 3,963 3,963
64..................... C130J MODS........................... 80,205 64,205
Contract Slip--Crashworthy Seats..... ....................... -16,000
65..................... C-135................................ 44,228 37,428
Block 45 Contract Delay.............. ....................... -8,400
Low Cost Modifications............... ....................... +1,600
66..................... COMPASS CALL MODS.................... 176,558 101,558
EC-130 Program Full Funding Violation ....................... -75,000
67..................... DARP................................. 105,540 105,540
68..................... E-3.................................. 195,163 195,163
69..................... E-4.................................. 37,526 37,526
70..................... E-8.................................. 188,504 6,397
E-8 Reengining--Ahead of Need........ ....................... -120,407
Engine Installs--Ahead of Need....... ....................... -5,000
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -56,700
71..................... H-1.................................. 2,457 2,457
72..................... H-60................................. 11,630 41,930
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -1,700
Simulators and Low Cost Modifications ....................... +32,000
73..................... RQ-4 UAV MODS........................ 119,415 116,415
Unjustified Cost Increase--ASIP ....................... -3,000
sensors.
74..................... HC/MC-130 MODIFICATIONS.............. 1,944 1,944
75..................... OTHER AIRCRAFT....................... 159,423 15,723
Transfer FAB-T Funds to RDTE,AF line ....................... -119,700
180.
Delete FAB-T Funds--Early to Need... ....................... -24,000
76..................... MQ-1 MODS............................ 208,213 20,213
Excess to Need...................... ....................... -188,000
77..................... MQ-9 MODS............................ 108,922 0
Contract Delay--GCS.................. ....................... -50,884
Contract Delay--Reaper Retrofits..... ....................... -58,038
78..................... MQ-9 PAYLOAD--UAS.................... 115,383 0
Transfer to Title IX................ ....................... -115,383
79..................... CV-22 MODS........................... 13,964 13,964
80..................... INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR PARTS.......... 622,020 698,220
Unjustified Request--Joint Stars Re- ....................... -11,700
engining Spares.
Program Increase--F-22 Engine Spares. ....................... +100,000
Excess to Need...................... ....................... -12,100
81..................... AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT SUPPORT EQUIP... 91,701 58,301
Underexecution....................... ....................... -20,000
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -13,400
82..................... B-1.................................. 6,791 6,791
83..................... B-2A................................. 26,217 26,217
84..................... B-52................................. 3,443 1,743
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -1,700
85..................... C-5.................................. 195 195
87..................... KC-10A (ATCA)........................ 5,702 5,702
88..................... C-17A................................ 153,347 20,947
Air Force Requested Transfer to AP,AF ....................... -114,400
line 5.
Unjustified Funding for Shutdown ....................... -18,000
Activities.
89..................... C-130................................ 28,295 28,295
91..................... F-15 POST PRODUCTION SUPPORT......... 21,599 17,599
Excess to Need...................... ....................... -4,000
92..................... F-16 POST PRODUCTION SUPPORT......... 17,838 12,738
Excess to Need...................... ....................... -5,100
93..................... T-6.................................. 9,450 9,450
94..................... OTHER AIRCRAFT....................... 53,953 53,953
96..................... INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS.............. 24,619 24,619
97..................... WAR CONSUMABLES...................... 92,939 92,939
98..................... OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES............. 1,079,742 912,372
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -6,732
Transfer to Title IX................ ....................... -160,638
99..................... OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES--MQ-1....... 37,500 37,500
104.................... DARP................................. 19,117 19,117
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 12,981 12,981
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR 15,366,508 13,483,739
FORCE.
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
1...................... MISSILE REPLACEMENT EQ-BALLISTIC..... 60,647 60,647
2...................... JASSM................................ 215,825 215,825
3...................... SIDEWINDER (AIM-9X).................. 64,523 64,523
4...................... AMRAAM............................... 355,358 348,358
Support Funding Carryover............ ....................... -7,000
5...................... PREDATOR HELLFIRE MISSILE............ 44,570 44,570
6...................... SMALL DIAMETER BOMB.................. 134,884 119,884
Accounting Error..................... ....................... -15,000
7...................... INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS/POLLUTION 833 833
PREVENTION.
8...................... ADVANCED CRUISE MISSILE.............. 48 48
9...................... MM III MODIFICATIONS................. 123,378 133,178
Air Force Requested Transfer from ....................... +9,800
RDTE, AF line 175 for MEECN.
10..................... AGM-65D MAVERICK..................... 260 260
11..................... AGM-88A HARM......................... 4,079 4,079
12..................... AIR LAUNCH CRUISE MISSILE............ 10,795 10,795
13..................... INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR PARTS.......... 43,192 43,192
14..................... ADVANCED EHF......................... 38,078 38,078
15..................... ADVANCED EHF (AP-CY)................. 208,520 208,520
16..................... WIDEBAND GAPFILLER SATELLITES........ 517,601 517,601
17..................... WIDEBAND GAPFILLER SATELLITES (AP-CY) 58,110 58,110
18..................... GPS III SPACE SEGMENT................ 122,490 122,490
19..................... SPACEBORNE EQUIP (COMSEC)............ 14,894 14,894
20..................... GLOBAL POSITIONING (SPACE)........... 64,609 64,609
23..................... DEF METEOROLOGICAL SAT PROG (SPACE).. 88,719 88,719
24..................... EVOLVED EXPENDABLE LAUNCH VEH (SPACE) 1,153,976 1,153,976
26..................... SBIR HIGH (SPACE).................... 700,704 700,704
27..................... SBIR HIGH (SPACE) (AP-CY)............ 270,000 270,000
28..................... NATL POLAR-ORBITING OP ENV SATELLITE. 26,308 0
Program Termination--Early to Need... ....................... -26,308
33..................... SPECIAL UPDATE PROGRAMS.............. 247,584 247,584
[[Page H2478]]
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 893,287 893,287
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR 5,463,272 5,424,764
FORCE.
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR FORCE
1...................... ROCKETS.............................. 19,106 19,106
2...................... CARTRIDGES........................... 141,049 141,049
3...................... PRACTICE BOMBS....................... 34,094 23,442
BDU-56A/B CDI Program Delay.......... ....................... -10,652
4...................... GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS................ 183,845 183,845
5...................... JOINT DIRECT ATTACK MUNITION......... 104,642 179,361
Additional JDAM for War Reserve ....................... +74,719
Stockpile.
6...................... CAD/PAD.............................. 37,016 37,016
7...................... EXPLOSIVE ORDINANCE DISPOSAL (EOD)... 3,383 3,383
8...................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 1,000 1,000
9...................... MODIFICATIONS........................ 1,112 1,112
10..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5,000,000........... 5,015 5,015
11..................... FLARES............................... 72,758 72,758
12..................... FUZES................................ 57,337 57,337
13..................... SMALL ARMS........................... 7,063 7,063
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR 667,420 731,487
FORCE.
OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
1...................... PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLE........... 29,207 29,207
2...................... FAMILY MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLE....... 45,618 37,618
..................... Contract Savings..................... ....................... -8,000
3...................... CAP VEHICLES......................... 902 902
4...................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (CARGO).......... 31,773 31,773
5...................... SECURITY AND TACTICAL VEHICLES....... 52,867 48,867
..................... Up-Armored HMMWV Unjustified Cost ....................... -4,000
Growth.
6...................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M.................. 18,358 18,358
7...................... FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH RESCUE VEHICLES.. 26,924 26,924
9...................... ITEMS LESS THAT $5,000,000........... 14,501 14,501
10..................... RUNWAY SNOW REMOVAL & CLEANING EQUIP. 25,404 25,404
11..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M.................. 54,570 54,570
13..................... COMSEC EQUIPMENT..................... 216,381 180,381
..................... Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -36,000
14..................... MODIFICATIONS (COMSEC)............... 1,582 0
..................... Undefined Requirement................ ....................... -1,582
15..................... INTELLIGENCE TRAINING EQUIPMENT...... 2,634 2,634
16..................... INTELLIGENCE COMM EQUIP.............. 30,685 30,685
17..................... TRAFFIC CONTROL/LANDING.............. 6,517 6,517
18..................... NATIONAL AIRSPACE SYSTEM............. 112,056 88,940
..................... Site Activation Ahead of Need........ ....................... -23,116
19..................... THEATER AIR CONTROL SYS IMPRO........ 55,326 55,326
20..................... WEATHER OBSERVATION FORECAST......... 21,018 18,045
..................... OS-21 Contract Delays................ ....................... -2,973
21..................... STRATEGIC COMMAND AND CONTROL........ 28,164 28,164
22..................... CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN COMPLEX............ 18,416 15,716
..................... Contract Delays...................... ....................... -2,700
23..................... TAC SIGINT SPT....................... 377 377
25..................... GENERAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY....... 74,285 74,285
26..................... AF GLOBAL COMMAND & CONTROL SYSTEM... 9,210 9,210
27..................... MOBILITY COMMAND AND CONTROL......... 8,688 7,388
..................... Contract Delays...................... ....................... -1,300
28..................... AIR FORCE PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEM... 99,281 99,281
29..................... COMBAT TRAINING RANGES............... 29,637 49,637
..................... Training Range Enhancements.......... ....................... +20,000
30..................... C3 COUNTERMEASURES................... 11,112 11,112
31..................... GCSS-AF FOS.......................... 53,349 31,335
..................... ECSS Ahead of Need................... ....................... -20,914
..................... CMOS Excess to Need.................. ....................... -1,100
32..................... THEATER BATTLE MGT C2 SYS............ 20,525 20,525
33..................... AIR OPERATIONS CENTER (AOC).......... 58,284 38,534
..................... Technical Refresh Unjustified Growth. ....................... -15,000
..................... Recurring Events Unjustified Growth.. ....................... -4,750
34..................... INFORMATION TRANSPORT SYSTEMS........ 101,993 56,993
..................... Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -45,000
35..................... BASE INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE...... 193,830 113,830
..................... Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -80,000
36..................... AFNET................................ 151,643 91,643
..................... Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -60,000
37..................... VOICE SYSTEMS........................ 25,399 15,399
..................... Unjustified Growth................... ....................... -10,000
38..................... USCENTCOM............................ 36,020 36,020
39..................... SPACE BASED IR SENSOR PROG SPACE..... 24,804 24,804
40..................... NAVSTAR GPS SPACE.................... 5,279 5,279
41..................... NUDET DETECTION SYS (NDS) SPACE...... 5,926 5,926
42..................... AF SATELLITE CONTROL NETWORK SPACE... 60,383 60,383
43..................... SPACELIFT RANGE SYSTEM SPACE......... 91,004 91,004
44..................... MILSATCOM SPACE...................... 221,545 190,717
..................... FAB-T Early to Need.................. ....................... -7,538
..................... AFWET Modernization Enterprise ....................... -23,290
Terminal Ahead of Need.
45..................... SPACE MODS SPACE..................... 18,384 18,384
46..................... COUNTERSPACE SYSTEM.................. 18,801 18,801
47..................... TACTICAL C-E EQUIPMENT............... 268,140 242,995
..................... JTC Training and Rehearsal System ....................... -25,145
Ahead of Need.
48..................... COMBAT SURVIVOR EVADER LOCATER....... 34,925 34,925
49..................... RADIO EQUIPMENT...................... 14,541 7,041
..................... Contract Delays...................... ....................... -7,500
50..................... CCTV/AUDIOVISUAL EQUIPMENT........... 11,613 11,613
51..................... BASE COMM INFRASTRUCTURE............. 108,308 108,308
52..................... COMM ELECT MODS...................... 74,356 68,538
..................... ILS Ahead of Need.................... ....................... -2,300
..................... BMEWS Ahead of Need.................. ....................... -2,000
..................... OS-21 Contract Delays................ ....................... -1,518
53..................... NIGHT VISION GOGGLES................. 20,873 14,573
..................... Night Vision Cueing and Display ....................... -6,300
Contract Delays.
54..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5,000,000 (SAFETY).. 14,292 14,292
55..................... MECHANIZED MATERIAL HANDLING......... 12,853 12,853
56..................... BASE PROCURED EQUIPMENT.............. 4,788 4,788
57..................... CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS............... 28,390 27,190
..................... Rapid Airfield Damage Assessment ....................... -1,200
System Ahead of Need.
58..................... PRODUCTIVITY CAPITAL INVESTMENT...... 1,879 1,879
59..................... MOBILITY EQUIPMENT................... 38,558 38,558
60..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (BASE SUPPORT)... 4,989 4,989
62..................... DARP RC135........................... 23,296 23,296
63..................... DISTRIBUTED GROUND SYSTEMS........... 271,015 264,015
..................... Program Reduction.................... ....................... -7,000
65..................... SPECIAL UPDATE PROGRAM............... 489,680 439,680
..................... Classified Adjustment................ ....................... -50,000
66..................... DEFENSE SPACE RECONNAISSANCE PROGRAM. 32,668 32,668
XX..................... PROCUREMENT INNOVATION............... ....................... 15,000
[[Page H2479]]
..................... Procurement Innovation............... ....................... +15,000
70..................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 19,046 19,046
..................... CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 14,258,508 14,396,445
..................... Classified Adjustment................ ....................... +137,937
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE.. 17,845,380 17,568,091
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE
1...................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, BTA................. 4,000 4,000
2...................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCCA, ITEMS LESS 1,477 1,477
THAN $5M.
3...................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCMA................ 2,052 2,052
4...................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DHRA, PERSONNEL 32,263 32,263
ADMINISTRATION.
17..................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY......... 14,625 14,625
18..................... GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL SYS....... 5,275 5,275
19..................... GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM......... 2,803 2,803
20..................... TELEPORT PROGRAM..................... 78,227 78,227
21..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5M.................. 153,288 153,288
22..................... NET CENTRIC ENTERPRISE SERVICES 4,391 4,391
(NCES).
23..................... DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS NETWORK.. 86,206 86,206
24..................... PUBLIC KEY INFRASTRUCTURE............ 1,710 1,710
27..................... CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE............ 22,493 22,493
28..................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DLA................. 4,846 4,846
29..................... COST................................. 10,478 10,478
30..................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DODEA, AUTOMATION/ 1,451 1,451
EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT & LOGISTICS.
31..................... VEHICLES............................. 50 50
32..................... OTHER MAJOR EQUIPMENT................ 12,007 12,007
34..................... TERMINAL HIGH ALTITUDE AREA DEFENSE 858,870 586,870
FIELDING.
Production Delay Due to Investigation ....................... -272,000
of Failed Safety Component.
35..................... AEGIS FIELDING....................... 94,080 94,080
35A.................... ISRAELI COOPERATIVE PROGRAMS......... 0 205,000
Iron Dome Program.................... ....................... +205,000
45..................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM 2,546 2,546
(ISSP).
50..................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD................. 124,050 124,050
51..................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, INTELLIGENCE........ 20,138 20,138
53..................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS................. 11,526 11,526
54..................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS................. 27,179 27,179
55..................... SOF ROTARY WING UPGRADES AND 79,840 79,840
SUSTAINMENT.
55A.................... MH-47G............................... 0 100,449
SOCOM Requested Transfer from P,DW ....................... +100,449
line 56.
56..................... MH-47 SERVICE LIFE EXTENSION PROGRAM. 107,934 7,485
SOCOM Requested Transfer to P,DW line ....................... -100,449
55A.
57..................... MH-60 SOF MODERNIZATION PROGRAM...... 179,375 137,875
SOCOM Requested Transfer to RDTE,DW ....................... -25,100
line 268.
Quantity Reduction Due to Program ....................... -16,400
Delay.
58..................... NON-STANDARD AVIATION................ 179,949 58,681
Medium NSAV--Transfer to Title IX.... ....................... -121,268
60..................... SOF TANKER RECAPITALIZATION.......... 19,996 4,996
Contract Delays...................... ....................... -15,000
61..................... SOF U-28............................. 404 404
62..................... RQ-11 UAV............................ 2,090 2,090
63..................... CV-22 SOF MODIFICATION............... 124,035 124,035
64..................... MQ-1 UAV............................. 1,948 1,948
65..................... MQ-9 UAV............................. 1,965 1,965
66..................... STUASLO.............................. 12,148 12,148
67..................... C-130 MODIFICATIONS.................. 22,500 9,261
Low Cost Modifications--Execution.... ....................... -7,039
Aircrew Situational Awareness System. ....................... -6,200
68..................... AIRCRAFT SUPPORT..................... 489 489
69X.................... PROCUREMENT INNOVATION............... 0 15,000
Procurement Innovation............... ....................... +15,000
70..................... MK VIII MOD 1--SEAL DELIVERY VEH..... 823 823
71..................... SOF ORDNANCE REPLENISHMENT........... 79,608 79,608
72..................... SOF ORDNANCE ACQUISITION............. 24,215 24,215
73..................... COMM EQUIPMENT & ELECTRONICS......... 58,390 44,390
SOF Deployable Node Delays Due to ....................... -14,000
Protests.
74..................... SOF INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS............. 75,892 81,092
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +5,200
Requirement.
75..................... SMALL ARMS & WEAPONS................. 30,094 30,094
76..................... DCGS-SOF............................. 5,225 5,225
77..................... MARITIME EQUIPMENT MODS.............. 206 206
79..................... SOF COMBATANT CRAFT SYSTEMS.......... 11,706 8,306
Unvalidated Requirement--Large SFA ....................... -3,400
Craft.
80..................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS.............. 977 977
81..................... TACTICAL VEHICLES.................... 30,965 33,365
Program Increase--AFSOC Unfunded ....................... +2,400
Requirement.
82..................... MISSION TRAINING AND PREPARATIONS 28,354 18,354
SYSTEMS.
MH-60M Simulator Modernization ....................... -10,000
Program.
83..................... COMBAT MISSION REQUIREMENTS.......... 20,000 20,000
84..................... MILCON COLLATERAL EQUIPMENT.......... 102,556 102,556
88..................... SOF AUTOMATION SYSTEMS............... 52,353 52,353
89..................... SOF GLOBAL VIDEO SURVEILLANCE 9,714 9,714
ACTIVITIES.
90..................... SOF OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS 30,900 30,900
INTELLIGENCE.
91..................... SOF SOLDIER PROTECTION AND SURVIVAL 221 5,661
SYSTEMS.
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +5,440
Requirement.
92..................... SOF VISUAL AUGMENTATION, LASERS AND 18,626 18,626
SENSOR SYSTEM.
93..................... SOF TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEMS........... 35,234 37,554
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +2,320
Requirement.
94..................... SOF MARITIME EQUIPMENT............... 804 804
96..................... MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT.............. 7,774 7,774
97..................... SOF OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS......... 269,182 263,182
Program Increase--HSAC Unfunded ....................... +4,000
Requirement.
Program Adjustment................... ....................... -10,000
98..................... PSYOP EQUIPMENT...................... 25,266 25,266
99..................... INSTALLATION FORCE PROTECTION........ 90,635 90,635
100.................... INDIVIDUAL PROTECTION................ 74,686 74,686
101.................... DECONTAMINATION...................... 21,570 21,570
102.................... JOINT BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE PROGRAM..... 19,389 10,389
Reduction for Anthrax Vaccine ....................... -9,000
Purchased by HHS.
103.................... COLLECTIVE PROTECTION................ 27,542 27,542
104.................... CONTAMINATION AVOIDANCE.............. 136,114 136,114
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 682,643 681,643
Classified Adjustment................ ....................... -1,000
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE..... 4,280,368 4,009,321
DEFENSE PRODUCTION ACT
GALLIUM NITRIDE X-BAND MONOLITHIC 2,000 2,000
MICROWAVE INTEGRATED CIRCUITS.
GALLIUM NITRIDE RADAR AND ELECTRONIC 8,579 8,579
WARFARE MONOLITHIC MICROWAVE
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS.
GALLIUM NITRIDE ADVANCED ELECTRONIC 2,000 2,000
WARFARE MONOLITHIC MICROWAVE
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS.
BERYLLIUM SUPPLY INDUSTRIAL BASE..... 6,897 6,897
SPACE................................ 770 770
NATIONAL SECURITY SPACE INDUSTRIAL 8,500 10,900
AND SUPPLY BASE RISK MITIGATION
PROGRAM.
Program Increase..................... ....................... +2,400
[[Page H2480]]
ALTERNATIVE ENERGY FROM ORGANIC ....................... 3,200
SOURCES.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, DEFENSE PRODUCTION ACT........ 28,746 34,346
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT................... 111,189,951 102,121,873
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
R-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND EVALUATION, ARMY
1...................... IN-HOUSE LABORATORY INDEPENDENT 21,780 21,780
RESEARCH.
2...................... DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES............ 195,845 195,845
3...................... UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...... 91,161 87,561
..................... V72--Transfer to D55................. ....................... -3,300
..................... D55--Transfer from V72............... ....................... +3,300
..................... V72--Non-Department of Defense ....................... -3,600
funding.
4...................... UNIVERSITY AND INDUSTRY RESEARCH 98,087 98,087
CENTERS.
5...................... MATERIALS TECHNOLOGY................. 29,882 29,882
6...................... SENSORS AND ELECTRONIC SURVIVABILITY. 48,929 48,929
7...................... TRACTOR HIP.......................... 14,624 14,624
8...................... AVIATION TECHNOLOGY.................. 43,476 43,476
9...................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE TECHNOLOGY........ 17,330 17,330
10..................... MISSILE TECHNOLOGY................... 49,525 49,525
11..................... ADVANCED WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY.......... 18,190 18,190
12..................... ADVANCED CONCEPTS AND SIMULATION..... 20,582 20,582
13..................... COMBAT VEHICLE AND AUTOMOTIVE 64,740 64,740
TECHNOLOGY.
14..................... BALLISTICS TECHNOLOGY................ 60,342 60,342
15..................... CHEMICAL, SMOKE AND EQUIPMENT 5,324 10,924
DEFEATING TECHNOLOGY.
Emerging Chemical Agent Threat....... ....................... +5,600
16..................... JOINT SERVICE SMALL ARMS PROGRAM..... 7,893 7,893
17..................... WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS TECHNOLOGY..... 42,645 42,645
18..................... ELECTRONICS AND ELECTRONIC DEVICES... 60,859 60,859
19..................... NIGHT VISION TECHNOLOGY.............. 40,228 40,228
20..................... COUNTERMINE SYSTEMS.................. 19,118 19,118
21..................... HUMAN FACTORS ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY. 21,042 21,042
22..................... ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY..... 18,364 22,364
..................... Research, Development and Engineering ....................... +4,000
Command.
23..................... COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATIONS 25,573 25,573
TECHNOLOGY.
24..................... COMPUTER AND SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGY..... 6,768 6,768
25..................... MILITARY ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY...... 79,189 75,184
..................... Joint Integrated Base Defense Program ....................... -4,005
Office transfer to line 60 at
request of the Army.
26..................... MANPOWER/PERSONNEL/TRAINING 22,198 22,198
TECHNOLOGY.
27..................... WARFIGHTER TECHNOLOGY................ 27,746 27,746
28..................... MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY................... 96,797 96,797
29..................... WARFIGHTER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY....... 37,364 37,364
30..................... MEDICAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.......... 71,510 115,510
..................... Peer-Reviewed Neurotoxin Exposure ....................... +20,000
Treatment Parkinsons Research
Program.
..................... Neurofibromatosis Research........... ....................... +16,000
..................... Military Burn Trauma Research Program ....................... +8,000
31..................... AVIATION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY......... 57,454 57,454
32..................... WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS ADVANCED 64,438 64,438
TECHNOLOGY.
33..................... COMBAT VEHICLE AND AUTOMOTIVE ADV 89,499 125,819
TECHNOLOGY.
..................... Alternative Energy................... ....................... +36,320
34..................... COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATIONS ADV 8,102 8,102
TECH.
35..................... MANPOWER, PERSONNEL AND TRAINING ADV 7,921 7,921
TECH.
36..................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE ADVANCED 50,359 50,359
TECHNOLOGY.
37..................... TRACTOR HIKE......................... 8,015 8,015
38..................... NEXT GENERATION TRAINING & SIMULATION 15,334 15,334
SYSTEMS.
39..................... TRACTOR ROSE......................... 12,309 12,309
41..................... MILITARY HIV RESEARCH................ 6,688 26,688
..................... HIV Research......................... ....................... +20,000
42..................... COMBATING TERRORISM, TECHNOLOGY 10,550 10,550
DEVELOPMENT.
43..................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE TECHNOLOGY........ 18,350 18,350
44..................... MISSILE AND ROCKET ADVANCED 84,553 79,053
TECHNOLOGY.
..................... P 704 excessive growth without ....................... -5,500
strategy.
45..................... TRACTOR CAGE......................... 9,986 9,986
46..................... LANDMINE WARFARE AND BARRIER ADVANCED 26,953 26,953
TECH.
47..................... JOINT SERVICE SMALL ARMS PROGRAM..... 9,151 9,151
48..................... NIGHT VISION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY..... 39,912 39,912
49..................... ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY DEMO 15,878 15,878
50..................... MILITARY ENGINEERING ADVANCED 27,393 24,393
TECHNOLOGY.
..................... Program reduction.................... ....................... -3,000
51..................... ADVANCED TACTICAL COMPUTER SCIENCE 24,873 24,873
AND SENSOR TECHNOLOGY.
53..................... ARMY MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS 11,455 11,455
INTEGRATION.
54..................... ARMY MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS 27,551 27,551
INTEGRATION (SPACE).
56..................... LANDMINE WARFARE AND BARRIER--ADV DEV 15,596 15,596
57..................... SMOKE, OBSCURANT AND TARGET DEFEATING 2,425 2,425
SYS-ADV DEV.
58..................... TANK AND MEDIUM CALIBER AMMUNITION... 42,183 37,183
..................... AKE 120mm cartridge EMD Phase II ....................... -5,000
contract award delay.
59..................... ADVANCED TANK ARMAMENT SYSTEM (ATAS). 136,302 207,702
..................... S-MOD milestone B delay.............. ....................... -57,000
..................... Stryker DVH.......................... ....................... +128,400
60..................... SOLDIER SUPPORT AND SURVIVABILITY.... 18,556 8,239
..................... Joint Integrated Base Defense Program ....................... +4,005
Office--Transfer from line 25 at
request of the Army.
..................... REF funded in Title IX............... ....................... -14,322
61..................... TACTICAL ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE 17,962 12,162
SYSTEM--AD.
..................... Unsustained growth................... ....................... -5,800
62..................... NIGHT VISION SYSTEMS ADVANCED 0 5,159
DEVELOPMENT.
..................... CSP--Transfer from line 177 at ....................... +5,159
request of the Army.
63..................... ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY..... 4,695 4,695
64..................... WARFIGHTER INFORMATION NETWORK- 190,903 190,903
TACTICAL.
65..................... NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT........ 5,060 5,060
66..................... AVIATION--ADV DEV.................... 8,355 8,355
67..................... LOGISTICS AND ENGINEER EQUIPMENT--ADV 80,490 65,315
DEV.
JLTV EMD contract award delay........ ....................... -15,175
68..................... COMBAT SERVICE SUPPORT CONTROL SYSTEM 14,290 14,290
EVALUATION.
69..................... MEDICAL SYSTEMS--ADV DEV............. 28,132 28,132
70..................... SOLDIER SYSTEMS--ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT 48,323 48,323
71..................... INTEGRATED BROADCAST SERVICE......... 970 970
72..................... ENDURANCE UAVS....................... 93,000 93,000
73..................... AIRCRAFT AVIONICS.................... 89,210 74,210
SOSCOE Apache Block III integration ....................... -15,000
change in requirements.
74..................... ARMED, DEPLOYABLE OH-58D............. 72,550 72,550
75..................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....... 172,269 149,755
CIRCM test and evaluation funds ....................... -22,514
requested ahead of need.
76..................... JOINT TACTICAL RADIO................. 784 784
77..................... ALL SOURCE ANALYSIS SYSTEM........... 22,574 18,074
EMD contract award delay............. ....................... -4,500
78..................... TRACTOR CAGE......................... 23,194 23,194
79..................... INFANTRY SUPPORT WEAPONS............. 80,337 70,337
S62-- Milestone B delay.............. ....................... -10,000
80..................... MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLES............. 3,710 3,710
[[Page H2481]]
81..................... SMOKE, OBSCURANT AND TARGET DEFEATING 5,335 5,335
SYS--SDD.
82..................... JAVELIN.............................. 9,999 0
Lack of acquisition strategy......... ....................... -9,999
83..................... FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL VEHICLES.... 3,519 3,519
84..................... AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL.................. 9,892 9,892
85..................... LIGHT TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLES...... 1,990 1,990
86..................... NON-LINE OF SIGHT LAUNCH SYSTEM...... 81,247 0
Program termination.................. ....................... -81,247
89..................... FCS SYSTEMS OF SYSTEMS ENGR & PROGRAM 568,711 498,711
MGMT.
Program reduction.................... ....................... -70,000
90..................... FCS RECONNAISSANCE (UAV) PLATFORMS... 50,304 50,304
91..................... FCS UNMANNED GROUND VEHICLES......... 249,948 200,000
Program reduction.................... ....................... -49,948
92..................... FCS UNATTENDED GROUND SENSORS........ 7,515 7,515
93..................... FCS SUSTAINMENT & TRAINING R&D....... 610,389 610,389
95..................... NIGHT VISION SYSTEMS--SDD............ 52,549 52,549
96..................... COMBAT FEEDING, CLOTHING, AND 2,118 2,118
EQUIPMENT.
97..................... NON-SYSTEM TRAINING DEVICES--SDD..... 27,756 27,756
98..................... AIR DEFENSE COMMAND, CONTROL AND 34,209 34,209
INTELLIGENCE.
99..................... CONSTRUCTIVE SIMULATION SYSTEMS 30,291 30,291
DEVELOPMENT.
100.................... AUTOMATIC TEST EQUIPMENT DEVELOPMENT. 14,041 14,041
101.................... DISTRIBUTIVE INTERACTIVE SIMULATIONS 15,547 15,547
(DIS)--SDD.
103.................... COMBINED ARMS TACTICAL TRAINER (CATT) 27,670 27,670
CORE.
105.................... WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS--SDD........... 24,345 15,345
PGK Increment II EMD delay........... ....................... -9,000
106.................... LOGISTICS AND ENGINEER EQUIPMENT--SDD 41,039 41,039
107.................... COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATIONS 90,736 75,736
SYSTEMS--SDD.
JBC-P unsustained growth............. ....................... -15,000
108.................... MEDICAL MATERIEL/MEDICAL BIOLOGICAL 34,474 34,474
DEFENSE EQUIPMENT.
109.................... LANDMINE WARFARE/BARRIER--SDD........ 95,577 49,577
Project 016--Scorpion acceleration ....................... -16,000
funded in prior approval
reprogramming.
Project 415--ASTAMIDS/GSTAMIDS lack ....................... -30,000
of acquisition strategy.
110.................... ARTILLERY MUNITIONS.................. 26,371 26,371
111.................... COMBAT IDENTIFICATION................ 29,884 3,000
Unexecutable request................. ....................... -26,884
112.................... ARMY TACTICAL COMMAND & CONTROL 60,970 60,970
HARDWARE & SOFTWARE.
113.................... GENERAL FUND ENTERPRISE BUSINESS 13,576 13,576
SYSTEM (GFEBS).
114.................... FIREFINDER........................... 24,736 24,736
115.................... SOLDIER SYSTEMS--WARRIOR DEM/VAL..... 20,886 20,886
116.................... ARTILLERY SYSTEMS.................... 53,624 103,624
Program Increase..................... ....................... +20,000
Transfer from WTCV A line 12 for ....................... +30,000
Paladin PIM.
117.................... PATRIOT/MEADS COMBINED AGGREGATE 467,139 467,139
PROGRAM.
118.................... NUCLEAR ARMS CONTROL MONITORING 7,276 7,276
SENSOR NETWORK.
119.................... INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT... 23,957 23,957
120.................... ARMY INTEGRATED MILITARY HUMAN 100,500 60,500
RESOURCES SYSTEM (A-IMH).
Excessive growth without acquisition ....................... -40,000
strategy.
121.................... JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MISSILE (JAGM)... 130,340 130,340
122.................... SLAMRAAM............................. 23,700 23,700
123.................... PAC-2/MSE MISSILE.................... 62,500 62,500
124.................... ARMY INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE 251,124 251,124
DEFENSE (AIAMD).
125.................... MANNED GROUND VEHICLE................ 934,366 461,100
Program adjustment................... ....................... -473,266
126.................... AERIAL COMMON SENSOR................. 211,500 211,500
127.................... TROJAN--RH12......................... 3,697 3,697
128.................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....... 21,571 13,571
EW5--Unsustained growth.............. ....................... -8,000
129.................... THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......... 26,158 26,158
130.................... TARGET SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT........... 8,614 8,614
131.................... MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT................. 42,102 42,102
132.................... RAND ARROYO CENTER................... 20,492 20,492
133.................... ARMY KWAJALEIN ATOLL................. 163,788 163,788
134.................... CONCEPTS EXPERIMENTATION PROGRAM..... 17,704 17,704
136.................... ARMY TEST RANGES AND FACILITIES...... 393,937 412,257
Army Test Range Infrastructure ....................... +18,320
unfunded requirement.
137.................... ARMY TECHNICAL TEST INSTRUMENTATION 59,040 67,760
AND TARGETS.
Test and Evaluation Instrumentation ....................... +8,720
unfunded requirement.
138.................... SURVIVABILITY/LETHALITY ANALYSIS..... 41,812 43,412
Test and Evaluation Instrumentation ....................... +1,600
unfunded requirement.
139.................... DOD HIGH ENERGY LASER TEST FACILITY.. 4,710 4,710
140.................... AIRCRAFT CERTIFICATION............... 5,055 5,055
141.................... METEOROLOGICAL SUPPORT TO RDT&E 7,185 7,185
ACTIVITIES.
142.................... MATERIEL SYSTEMS ANALYSIS............ 18,078 19,278
Test and Evaluation Instrumentation ....................... +1,200
unfunded requirement.
143.................... EXPLOITATION OF FOREIGN ITEMS........ 5,460 5,460
144.................... SUPPORT OF OPERATIONAL TESTING....... 68,191 68,191
145.................... ARMY EVALUATION CENTER............... 61,450 64,090
Test and Evaluation Instrumentation ....................... +2,640
unfunded requirement.
146.................... SIMULATION & MODELING FOR ACQ, RQTS, 3,926 3,926
& TNG (SMART).
147.................... PROGRAMWIDE ACTIVITIES............... 73,685 73,685
148.................... TECHNICAL INFORMATION ACTIVITIES..... 48,309 48,309
149.................... MUNITIONS STANDARDIZATION, 53,338 44,042
EFFECTIVENESS AND SAFETY.
Project 862--155mm HE projectile ....................... -9,296
underfunded new start.
150.................... ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY MGMT 3,195 3,195
SUPPORT.
151.................... MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS (RESEARCH AND 16,154 16,154
DEVELOPMENT).
153.................... MLRS PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM..... 51,619 25,619
GMLRS AW EMD contract award delay.... ....................... -26,000
154.................... AEROSTAT JOINT PROJECT OFFICE........ 372,493 372,493
155.................... INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT TO CYBER (ISC) 2,360 2,360
MIP.
156.................... ADV FIELD ARTILLERY TACTICAL DATA 24,622 24,622
SYSTEM.
157.................... COMBAT VEHICLE IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS.. 204,481 204,481
158.................... MANEUVER CONTROL SYSTEM.............. 25,540 25,540
159.................... AIRCRAFT MODS/PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT 134,999 124,856
PROGRAMS.
P430--Chinook RW crashworthy seating ....................... -10,143
previously fully funded.
160.................... AIRCRAFT ENGINE COMPONENT IMPROVEMENT 710 710
PROG.
161.................... DIGITIZATION......................... 6,329 6,329
162.................... FORCE XXI BATTLE COMMAND, BRIGADE AND 3,935 3,935
BELOW (FBCB2).
163.................... MISSILE/AIR DEFENSE PRODUCT 24,280 24,280
IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
165.................... TRACTOR CARD......................... 14,870 14,870
167.................... JOINT TACTICAL GROUND SYSTEM......... 12,403 12,403
168.................... JOINT HIGH SPEED VESSEL (JHSV)....... 3,153 3,153
171.................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM. 54,784 11,905
Protected Information--Biometrics-- ....................... -42,879
Transfer to line 171x.
171x................... FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS................. 0 42,879
Protected Information--Biometrics-- ....................... +42,879
Transfer from line 171.
172.................... GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM......... 125,569 125,569
173.................... SATCOM GROUND ENVIRONMENT (SPACE).... 33,694 33,694
174.................... WWMCCS/GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL SYS 13,024 13,024
177.................... TACTICAL UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES.... 54,300 49,141
CSP--Transfer of HD IR funds to line ....................... -5,159
62 at request of the Army for
execution.
178.................... DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE 103,002 103,002
SYSTEMS.
179.................... MQ-1 SKY WARRIOR A UAV............... 123,156 123,156
180.................... RQ-11 UAV............................ 1,599 1,599
[[Page H2482]]
181.................... RQ-7 UAV............................. 7,805 7,805
183.................... BIOMETRICS ENABLED INTELLIGENCE...... 14,114 2,114
Protected Information--Biometrics.... ....................... -12,000
185.................... END ITEM INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS 61,098 61,098
ACTIVITIES.
xx..................... RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT INNOVATION.. 0 105,000
Research and Development Innovation.. ....................... +105,000
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 4,447 4,447
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 10,333,392 9,710,998
EVALUATION, ARMY.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & EVALUATION, NAVY
1...................... UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...... 108,679 108,679
2...................... IN-HOUSE LABORATORY INDEPENDENT 17,979 17,979
RESEARCH.
3...................... DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES............ 429,767 429,767
4...................... POWER PROJECTION APPLIED RESEARCH.... 98,150 98,150
5...................... FORCE PROTECTION APPLIED RESEARCH.... 107,448 147,448
Alternative Energy................... ....................... +40,000
6...................... MARINE CORPS LANDING FORCE TECHNOLOGY 43,776 43,776
8...................... COMMON PICTURE APPLIED RESEARCH...... 70,168 70,168
9...................... WARFIGHTER SUSTAINMENT APPLIED 113,724 113,724
RESEARCH.
10..................... RF SYSTEMS APPLIED RESEARCH.......... 83,902 83,902
11..................... OCEAN WARFIGHTING ENVIRONMENT APPLIED 49,491 49,491
RESEARCH.
12..................... JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS APPLIED 6,002 6,002
RESEARCH.
13..................... UNDERSEA WARFARE APPLIED RESEARCH.... 69,186 69,186
14..................... MINE AND EXPEDITIONARY WARFARE 36,833 36,833
APPLIED RESEARCH.
15..................... POWER PROJECTION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY. 117,908 117,908
16..................... FORCE PROTECTION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY. 61,877 61,877
17..................... COMMON PICTURE ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY... 96,720 96,720
18..................... WARFIGHTER SUSTAINMENT ADVANCED 98,261 98,261
TECHNOLOGY.
19..................... ELECTROMAGNETIC SYSTEMS ADVANCED 82,143 82,143
TECHNOLOGY.
20..................... MARINE CORPS ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY 115,089 115,089
DEMONSTRATION (ATD).
21..................... JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY 11,131 11,131
DEVELOPMENT.
22..................... WARFIGHTER PROTECTION ADVANCED 18,076 55,336
TECHNOLOGY.
C.W Bill Young Bone Marrow Donor ....................... +31,500
Recruitment and Research Program.
Program Increase--Tactical Athlete ....................... +5,760
Program.
23..................... UNDERSEA WARFARE ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY. 49,276 53,276
Program Increase--ASW Research....... ....................... +4,000
24..................... NAVY WARFIGHTING EXPERIMENTS AND 53,177 53,177
DEMONSTRATIONS.
25..................... MINE AND EXPEDITIONARY WARFARE 21,941 21,941
ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
XX..................... RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT INNOVATION.. 0 105,000
Research and Development Innovation.. ....................... +105,000
26..................... AIR/OCEAN TACTICAL APPLICATIONS...... 123,331 118,331
JMAPS program delay.................. ....................... -5,000
27..................... AVIATION SURVIVABILITY............... 9,480 9,480
28..................... DEPLOYABLE JOINT COMMAND AND CONTROL. 4,275 4,275
29..................... ASW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.............. 8,249 8,249
30..................... TACTICAL AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE..... 6,452 6,452
31..................... ADVANCED COMBAT SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY... 1,658 1,658
32..................... SURFACE AND SHALLOW WATER MINE 81,347 79,247
COUNTERMEASURES.
Unmanned Surface Sweep System program ....................... -2,100
delay.
33..................... SURFACE SHIP TORPEDO DEFENSE......... 57,796 50,796
Milestone B delay.................... ....................... -7,000
34..................... CARRIER SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.......... 93,830 91,830
Navy requested transfer to line 49 ....................... -2,000
for Automatic Test and Re-Test.
35..................... SHIPBOARD SYSTEM COMPONENT 51 51
DEVELOPMENT.
36..................... PILOT FISH........................... 81,784 81,784
37..................... RETRACT LARCH........................ 142,858 142,858
38..................... RETRACT JUNIPER...................... 134,497 134,497
39..................... RADIOLOGICAL CONTROL................. 1,358 1,358
40..................... SURFACE ASW.......................... 21,673 21,673
41..................... ADVANCED SUBMARINE SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT 608,566 559,266
Execution delays..................... ....................... -49,300
42..................... SUBMARINE TACTICAL WARFARE SYSTEMS... 5,590 5,590
43..................... SHIP CONCEPT ADVANCED DESIGN......... 17,883 17,883
44..................... SHIP PRELIMINARY DESIGN & FEASIBILITY 1,796 1,796
STUDIES.
45..................... ADVANCED NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEMS....... 366,509 366,509
46..................... ADVANCED SURFACE MACHINERY SYSTEMS... 5,459 5,459
47..................... CHALK EAGLE.......................... 447,804 447,804
48..................... LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)........... 226,288 189,588
LCS-2 post shakedown availability ....................... -15,800
delay.
LCS-1 post shakedown availability ....................... -500
planning funding excess.
NLOS missile termination............. ....................... -15,400
Program Increase--Mine Warfare ....................... +4,000
Testing Disruption.
Navy requested transfer to line 49 ....................... -2,000
for Automatic Test and Re-Test.
Program Increase--Small Business ....................... +8,000
Technology Insertion (Mine Warfare
Modules).
Savings from accelerated DT.......... ....................... -15,000
49..................... COMBAT SYSTEM INTEGRATION............ 24,344 34,344
Navy requested transfer from lines ....................... +10,000
34, 48, 107, 122 and 136 for
Automatic Test and Re-Test.
50..................... CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS............... 5,388 5,388
51..................... MARINE CORPS ASSAULT VEHICLES........ 242,765 222,765
Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle....... ....................... -165,000
Termination Liability, or SDD if ....................... +145,000
certified by the Secretary.
52..................... MARINE CORPS GROUND COMBAT/SUPPORT 40,505 28,505
SYSTEM.
JLTV EMD contract award delay........ ....................... -12,000
53..................... JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 25,873 25,873
DEVELOPMENT.
54..................... COOPERATIVE ENGAGEMENT............... 52,282 52,282
55..................... OCEAN ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY 13,560 13,560
DEVELOPMENT.
56..................... ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION............. 20,207 20,207
57..................... NAVY ENERGY PROGRAM.................. 30,403 34,403
Program Increase--Alternative Energy ....................... +4,000
from Organic Sources.
58..................... FACILITIES IMPROVEMENT............... 3,746 3,746
59..................... CHALK CORAL.......................... 71,920 71,920
60..................... NAVY LOGISTIC PRODUCTIVITY........... 4,139 4,139
61..................... RETRACT MAPLE........................ 219,463 219,463
62..................... LINK PLUMERIA........................ 58,030 58,030
63..................... RETRACT ELM.......................... 183,187 183,187
64..................... SHIP SELF DEFENSE.................... 4,385 4,385
65..................... LINK EVERGREEN....................... 41,433 41,433
66..................... SPECIAL PROCESSES.................... 36,457 36,457
67..................... NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT........ 9,196 9,196
68..................... LAND ATTACK TECHNOLOGY............... 905 905
69..................... NONLETHAL WEAPONS.................... 43,272 43,272
70..................... JOINT PRECISION APPROACH AND LANDING 159,151 159,151
SYSTEMS.
73..................... DIRECTED ENERGY AND ELECTRIC WEAPON ....................... 8,000
SYSTEMS.
Directed Energy Development and Test. ....................... +8,000
74..................... TACTICAL AIR DIRECTIONAL INFRARED 51,693 51,693
COUNTERMEASURES.
75..................... JOINT COUNTER RADIO CONTROLLED IED 56,542 50,242
ELECTRONIC WARFARE.
Program delay........................ ....................... -6,300
76..................... PRECISION STRIKE WEAPONS DEVELOPMENT 25,121 25,121
PROGRAM.
77..................... SPACE & ELECTRONIC WARFARE (SEW) 34,793 34,793
ARCHITECTURE/ENGINE.
78..................... ASW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT--MIP......... 2,161 2,161
79..................... SUBMARINE TACTICAL WARFARE SYSTEMS-- 4,253 4,253
MIP.
80..................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT--MIP.. 663 663
[[Page H2483]]
81..................... OTHER HELO DEVELOPMENT............... 44,329 44,329
82..................... AV-8B AIRCRAFT--ENG DEV.............. 22,867 22,867
83..................... STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT................ 45,667 45,667
84..................... MULTI-MISSION HELICOPTER UPGRADE 55,792 55,792
DEVELOPMENT.
85..................... AIR/OCEAN EQUIPMENT ENGINEERING...... 5,735 5,735
86..................... P-3 MODERNIZATION PROGRAM............ 3,574 3,574
87..................... WARFARE SUPPORT SYSTEM............... 3,733 3,733
88..................... TACTICAL COMMAND SYSTEM.............. 89,955 87,955
Systems engineering growth........... ....................... -2,000
89..................... ADVANCED HAWKEYE..................... 171,132 171,132
90..................... H-1 UPGRADES......................... 60,498 60,498
91..................... ACOUSTIC SEARCH SENSORS.............. 64,834 64,834
92..................... V-22A................................ 46,070 44,425
Fuel forward funded in fiscal year ....................... -1,645
2010 supplemental.
93..................... AIR CREW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT......... 8,689 11,189
Transfer from AP,N line 52 for Common ....................... +2,500
Mobile Aircrew Restraint System.
94..................... EA-18................................ 22,042 21,773
Fuel forward funded in fiscal year ....................... -269
2010 supplemental.
95..................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....... 80,819 80,819
96..................... VH-71A EXECUTIVE HELO DEVELOPMENT.... 159,785 159,785
97..................... NEXT GENERATION JAMMER (NGJ)......... 120,602 90,602
Technology development contract delay ....................... -30,000
98..................... JOINT TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEM--NAVY 687,723 627,723
(JTRS-NAVY).
Airborne Maritime Fixed unjustified ....................... -60,000
increase.
100.................... SURFACE COMBATANT COMBAT SYSTEM 193,933 193,933
ENGINEERING.
101.................... LPD-17 CLASS SYSTEMS INTEGRATION..... 1,373 1,373
102.................... SMALL DIAMETER BOMB (SDB)............ 44,091 24,091
Program delay........................ ....................... -20,000
103.................... STANDARD MISSILE IMPROVEMENTS........ 96,186 96,186
104.................... AIRBORNE MCM......................... 45,885 45,885
105.................... NAVAL INTEGRATED FIRE CONTROL-COUNTER 21,517 21,517
AIR SYSTEMS ENG.
106.................... ADVANCED ABOVE WATER SENSORS......... 274,371 274,371
107.................... SSN-688 AND TRIDENT MODERNIZATION.... 118,897 112,197
Navy requested transfer to line 49 ....................... -2,000
for Automatic Test and Re-Test.
Communications at Speed and Depth.... ....................... -4,700
108.................... AIR CONTROL.......................... 5,665 5,665
109.................... SHIPBOARD AVIATION SYSTEMS........... 70,117 70,117
110.................... COMBAT INFORMATION CENTER CONVERSION. 5,044 5,044
111.................... NEW DESIGN SSN....................... 155,489 171,489
Program Increase--Small Business ....................... +16,000
Technology Insertion.
112.................... SUBMARINE TACTICAL WARFARE SYSTEM.... 50,537 50,537
113.................... SHIP CONTRACT DESIGN/LIVE FIRE T&E... 153,686 166,686
Full Ship Shock Trial Alternative ....................... +13,000
transfer from line 136.
114.................... NAVY TACTICAL COMPUTER RESOURCES..... 4,443 4,443
115.................... MINE DEVELOPMENT..................... 5,455 5,455
116.................... LIGHTWEIGHT TORPEDO DEVELOPMENT...... 25,282 25,282
117.................... JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 10,489 10,489
DEVELOPMENT.
118.................... PERSONNEL, TRAINING, SIMULATION, AND 10,759 10,759
HUMAN FACTORS.
119.................... JOINT STANDOFF WEAPON SYSTEMS........ 12,567 12,567
120.................... SHIP SELF DEFENSE (DETECT & CONTROL). 45,930 45,930
121.................... SHIP SELF DEFENSE (ENGAGE: HARD KILL) 5,860 5,860
122.................... SHIP SELF DEFENSE (ENGAGE: SOFT KILL/ 84,525 82,525
EW).
Navy requested transfer to line 49 ....................... -2,000
for Automatic Test and Re-Test.
123.................... INTELLIGENCE ENGINEERING............. 6,820 6,820
124.................... MEDICAL DEVELOPMENT.................. 12,337 29,137
Wound Care Research.................. ....................... +10,400
Military Dental Research............. ....................... +6,400
125.................... NAVIGATION/ID SYSTEM................. 66,636 66,636
126.................... JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)--EMD...... 667,916 613,864
Block IV capabilities funding ahead ....................... -29,052
of need.
Underexecution of test program....... ....................... -25,000
127.................... JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)........... 707,791 676,806
Block IV capabilities funding ahead ....................... -29,000
of need.
Fuel forward funded in fiscal year ....................... -1,985
2010 supplemental.
128.................... INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT... 22,783 22,783
129.................... INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT... 28,280 28,280
130.................... NAVY INTEGRATED MILITARY HUMAN 27,444 15,444
RESOURCES SYSTEM.
Reduction to pre-development ....................... -12,000
activities.
131.................... CH-53K............................... 577,435 577,435
133.................... JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MISSILE (JAGM)... 100,846 100,846
134.................... MULTI-MISSION MARITIME AIRCRAFT (MMA) 929,240 941,240
Program Increase--Small Business ....................... +12,000
Technology Insertion.
136.................... DDG-1000............................. 549,241 534,241
Navy requested transfer to line 49 ....................... -2,000
for Automatic Test and Re-Test.
Full Ship Shock Trial Alternative ....................... -13,000
transfer to line 113.
137.................... TACTICAL COMMAND SYSTEM--MIP......... 1,318 1,318
138.................... SSN-688 AND TRIDENT MODERNIZATION-- 1,415 1,415
MIP.
139.................... TACTICAL CRYPTOLOGIC SYSTEMS......... 17,019 12,387
Execution delays..................... ....................... -4,632
140.................... THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......... 18,755 18,755
141.................... TARGET SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT........... 66,066 66,066
142.................... MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT................. 37,522 37,522
143.................... STUDIES AND ANALYSIS SUPPORT--NAVY... 8,149 8,149
144.................... CENTER FOR NAVAL ANALYSES............ 49,165 49,165
146.................... TECHNICAL INFORMATION SERVICES....... 662 662
147.................... MANAGEMENT, TECHNICAL & INTERNATIONAL 58,329 58,329
SUPPORT.
148.................... STRATEGIC TECHNICAL SUPPORT.......... 3,451 3,451
149.................... RDT&E SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 72,094 72,094
MANAGEMENT.
150.................... RDT&E SHIP AND AIRCRAFT SUPPORT...... 95,332 93,871
Fuel forward funded in fiscal year ....................... -1,461
2010 supplemental.
151.................... TEST AND EVALUATION SUPPORT.......... 376,418 376,418
152.................... OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION 15,746 15,746
CAPABILITY.
153.................... NAVY SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE 4,013 4,013
(SEW) SUPPORT.
154.................... SEW SURVEILLANCE/RECONNAISSANCE 19,700 19,700
SUPPORT.
155.................... MARINE CORPS PROGRAM WIDE SUPPORT.... 17,721 17,721
156.................... TACTICAL CRYPTOLOGIC ACTIVITIES...... 1,859 1,859
157.................... SERVICE SUPPORT TO JFCOM, JNTC....... 4,260 4,260
161.................... UNMANNED COMBAT AIR VEHICLE (UCAV) 266,368 266,368
ADVANCED COMPONENT.
162.................... STRATEGIC SUB & WEAPONS SYSTEM 81,184 71,184
SUPPORT.
Conventional Trident Modification.... ....................... -10,000
163.................... SSBN SECURITY TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..... 34,997 34,997
164.................... SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC WARFARE 6,815 6,815
DEVELOPMENT.
165.................... NAVY STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS........ 10,331 10,331
166.................... RAPID TECHNOLOGY TRANSITION (RTT).... 35,120 35,120
167.................... F/A-18 SQUADRONS..................... 148,438 148,438
168.................... E-2 SQUADRONS........................ 19,011 19,011
169.................... FLEET TELECOMMUNICATIONS (TACTICAL).. 26,894 26,894
170.................... TOMAHAWK AND TOMAHAWK MISSION 10,587 10,587
PLANNING CENTER (TMPC).
171.................... INTEGRATED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM....... 23,464 23,464
172.................... AMPHIBIOUS TACTICAL SUPPORT UNITS.... 4,357 4,357
173.................... CONSOLIDATED TRAINING SYSTEMS 50,750 50,750
DEVELOPMENT.
174.................... CRYPTOLOGIC DIRECT SUPPORT........... 1,519 1,519
175.................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE (EW) READINESS 39,398 39,398
SUPPORT.
[[Page H2484]]
176.................... HARM IMPROVEMENT..................... 14,207 12,207
Systems engineering growth........... ....................... -2,000
177.................... TACTICAL DATA LINKS.................. 28,854 28,854
178.................... SURFACE ASW COMBAT SYSTEM INTEGRATION 32,877 36,877
Program Increase--Small Business ....................... +4,000
Technology Insertion.
179.................... MK-48 ADCAP.......................... 26,234 34,234
Program Increase--Small Business ....................... +8,000
Technology Insertion.
180.................... AVIATION IMPROVEMENTS................ 133,611 100,890
F-135 engine ahead of need........... ....................... -27,000
Multi-purpose bomb rack program delay ....................... -5,721
181.................... NAVY SCIENCE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM...... 3,535 3,535
182.................... OPERATIONAL NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEMS.... 74,229 74,229
183.................... MARINE CORPS COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS.. 245,298 232,898
Joint Cooperative Target ....................... -12,400
Identification--Ground.
184.................... MARINE CORPS GROUND COMBAT/SUPPORTING 100,424 76,424
ARMS SYSTEMS.
Marine personnel carrier program ....................... -20,000
delay.
LAV-AT contract delay................ ....................... -4,000
185.................... MARINE CORPS COMBAT SERVICES SUPPORT. 19,466 19,466
186.................... USMC INTELLIGENCE/ELECTRONIC WARFARE 20,316 20,316
SYSTEMS (MIP).
187.................... TACTICAL AIM MISSILES................ 912 912
188.................... ADVANCED MEDIUM RANGE AIR-TO-AIR 2,633 2,633
MISSILE (AMRAAM).
189.................... JOINT HIGH SPEED VESSEL (JHSV)....... 3,586 3,586
194.................... SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS (SPACE)..... 422,268 422,268
195.................... CONSOLIDATED AFLOAT NETWORK 63,563 44,563
ENTERPRISE SERVICES.
Increment 1 transition contract delay ....................... -19,000
196.................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM. 25,934 25,934
199.................... CONSOLIDATED AFLOAT NETWORK 8,375 8,375
ENTERPRISE SERVICES--MIP.
201.................... COBRA JUDY........................... 36,527 36,527
202.................... NAVY METEOROLOGICAL AND OCEAN 63,878 63,878
SENSORS--SPACE (METOC).
203.................... JOINT MILITARY INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS. 4,435 4,435
204.................... TACTICAL UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES.... 35,212 18,912
Marinized UAS........................ ....................... -16,300
206.................... AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS...... ....................... 50,200
Program increase..................... ....................... +5,200
EP-3/SPA systems development......... ....................... +45,000
207.................... MANNED RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS........ 19,263 19,263
208.................... DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND SYSTEMS/ 8,377 8,377
SURFACE SYSTEMS.
209.................... DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND SYSTEMS/ 16,665 16,665
SURFACE SYSTEMS.
210.................... RQ-4 UAV............................. 529,250 529,250
211.................... MQ-8 UAV............................. 10,665 10,665
212.................... RQ-11 UAV............................ 512 512
213.................... RQ-7 UAV............................. 934 934
214.................... SMALL (LEVEL 0) TACTICAL UAS 26,209 26,209
(STUASL0).
215.................... SMALL (LEVEL 0) TACTICAL UAS 18,098 12,710
(STUASL0).
STUAS Lite termination............... ....................... -5,388
218.................... MODELING AND SIMULATION SUPPORT...... 8,158 8,158
219.................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE (NON-IF)........... 18,649 18,649
220.................... AVIONICS COMPONENT IMPROVEMENT 3,250 3,250
PROGRAM.
221.................... INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS.............. 46,173 46,173
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 1,284,901 1,499,901
Classified adjustment................ ....................... +215,000
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 17,693,496 17,736,303
EVALUATION, NAVY.
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & EVALUATION, AIR FORCE
1...................... DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES............ 350,978 350,978
2...................... UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...... 136,297 136,297
3...................... HIGH ENERGY LASER RESEARCH 13,198 13,198
INITIATIVES.
4...................... MATERIALS............................ 137,273 137,273
5...................... AEROSPACE VEHICLE TECHNOLOGIES....... 144,699 144,699
6...................... HUMAN EFFECTIVENESS APPLIED RESEARCH. 87,452 87,452
7...................... AEROSPACE PROPULSION................. 207,049 204,049
Unjustified program growth........... ....................... -3,000
8...................... AEROSPACE SENSORS.................... 157,497 159,897
Program Increase--Materials for ....................... +2,400
Structures, Propulsion, and
Subsystems.
9...................... SPACE TECHNOLOGY..................... 111,857 111,857
10..................... CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS............... 61,330 61,330
11..................... DIRECTED ENERGY TECHNOLOGY........... 103,596 122,396
Re-alignment of funding for ground ....................... +18,800
optical imaging research and
technology.
13..................... DOMINANT INFORMATION SCIENCES AND 117,283 115,783
METHODS.
Transfer to line 11.................. ....................... -1,500
14..................... HIGH ENERGY LASER RESEARCH........... 53,384 53,384
15..................... ADVANCED MATERIALS FOR WEAPON SYSTEMS 33,414 40,414
Transfer to line 11.................. ....................... -1,000
Metals Affordability Initiative...... ....................... +8,000
16..................... SUSTAINMENT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 2,935 2,935
(S&T).
17..................... ADVANCED AEROSPACE SENSORS........... 44,677 44,677
18..................... AEROSPACE TECHNOLOGY DEV/DEMO........ 53,588 52,588
Transfer to line 11.................. ....................... -1,000
19..................... AEROSPACE PROPULSION AND POWER 136,135 134,135
TECHNOLOGY.
Transfer to line 11.................. ....................... -2,000
21..................... ELECTRONIC COMBAT TECHNOLOGY......... 16,992 16,992
22..................... ADVANCED SPACECRAFT TECHNOLOGY....... 83,705 80,115
Transfer to line 11.................. ....................... -3,590
23..................... MAUI SPACE SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM (MSSS) 5,899 5,899
24..................... HUMAN EFFECTIVENESS ADVANCED 24,814 24,814
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
25..................... CONVENTIONAL WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY...... 15,755 15,755
26..................... ADVANCED WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY.......... 17,461 17,461
27..................... MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..... 39,701 47,701
Program Increase--Best Industrial ....................... +8,000
Process for Department of Defense
Depots.
28..................... BATTLESPACE KNOWLEDGE DEVELOPMENT & 32,382 32,382
DEMONSTRATION.
30..................... HIGH ENERGY LASER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY 1,847 1,847
PROGRAM.
XX..................... RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT INNOVATION.. 0 105,000
Research and Development Innovation.. ....................... +105,000
31..................... INTELLIGENCE ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.... 5,019 5,019
32..................... PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT.......... 3,576 1,000
Unjustified program request.......... ....................... -2,576
33..................... GPS III--OPERATIONAL CONTROL SEGMENT. 0 356,867
Operational Control Segment (OCX)-- ....................... +356,867
Transfer from line 212.
34..................... ADVANCED EHF MILSATCOM (SPACE)....... 351,817 394,817
Program Increase--Capabilities ....................... +43,000
Insertion Program.
35..................... POLAR MILSATCOM (SPACE).............. 164,232 164,232
36..................... SPACE CONTROL TECHNOLOGY............. 45,012 45,012
37..................... COMBAT IDENTIFICATION TECHNOLOGY..... 26,172 36,172
Program Increase--Automatic Dependent ....................... +10,000
Surveillance--Broadcast.
38..................... NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT........ 4,372 4,372
39..................... INTERNATIONAL SPACE COOPERATIVE R&D.. 635 635
40..................... SPACE PROTECTION PROGRAM (SPP)....... 8,349 8,349
42..................... INTEGRATED BROADCAST SERVICE......... 20,580 20,580
43..................... INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILE... 66,745 66,745
44..................... WIDEBAND GAPFILLER SYSTEM RDT&E 36,123 79,123
(SPACE).
Program Increase--Capabilities ....................... +43,000
Insertion Program.
45..................... POLLUTION PREVENTION (DEM/VAL)....... 2,534 2,534
46..................... JOINT PRECISION APPROACH AND LANDING 13,952 13,952
SYSTEMS.
[[Page H2485]]
47..................... NEXT GENERATION BOMBER............... 198,957 198,957
48..................... BATTLE MGMT COM & CTRL SENSOR 0 12,000
DEVELOPMENT.
Program Increase--GMTI Radar ....................... +12,000
Development.
49..................... HARD AND DEEPLY BURIED TARGET DEFEAT 22,389 22,389
SYSTEM.
50..................... JOINT DUAL ROLE AIR DOMINANCE MISSILE 9,799 9,799
51..................... REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS AND MATURATION. 34,339 34,339
52..................... NEXT-GENERATION MILSATCOM TECHNOLOGY 0 20,000
DEVELOPMENT.
Program Increase--Acquisition ....................... +20,000
Planning and Studies.
53..................... GROUND ATTACK WEAPONS FUZE 32,513 22,513
DEVELOPMENT.
Program delay........................ ....................... -10,000
54..................... ALTERNATIVE FUELS.................... 24,064 24,064
55..................... AUTOMATED AIR-TO-AIR REFUELING....... 85 85
56..................... OPERATIONALLY RESPONSIVE SPACE....... 93,978 125,978
Program Increase--Responsive Launch ....................... +32,000
Capabilities.
57..................... TECH TRANSITION PROGRAM.............. 12,260 12,260
58..................... NATIONAL POLAR-ORBITING OPERATIONAL 325,505 100,000
ENVIRONMENTAL SAT.
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -225,505
58A.................... DEFENSE WEATHER SATELLITE SYSTEM ....................... 75,000
(DWSS).
DWSS-only for defense sensor ....................... +75,000
development.
59..................... GLOBAL BROADCAST SERVICE (GBS)....... 18,171 18,171
60..................... NUCLEAR WEAPONS SUPPORT.............. 60,545 60,545
62..................... SPECIALIZED UNDERGRADUATE FLIGHT 8,066 8,066
TRAINING.
64..................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....... 89,966 89,966
65..................... JOINT TACTICAL RADIO................. 631 631
66..................... TACTICAL DATA NETWORKS ENTERPRISE.... 102,941 102,941
67..................... PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT.......... 50 50
68..................... SMALL DIAMETER BOMB (SDB)............ 153,505 100,505
SDB II--Contract Award Delay......... ....................... -53,000
69..................... COUNTERSPACE SYSTEMS................. 40,276 40,276
70..................... SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS SYSTEMS.... 426,525 350,425
SBSS Follow On....................... ....................... -45,100
Space Fence.......................... ....................... -35,000
Integration of Missile Defense Agency ....................... +4,000
radar systems into Space
Surveillance Network.
71..................... AIRBORNE ELECTRONIC ATTACK........... 25,937 25,937
72..................... SPACE BASED INFRARED SYSTEM (SBIRS) 530,047 530,047
HIGH EMD.
74..................... ARMAMENT/ORDNANCE DEVELOPMENT........ 6,693 6,693
75..................... SUBMUNITIONS......................... 1,622 1,622
76..................... AGILE COMBAT SUPPORT................. 37,987 37,987
77..................... LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEMS................. 10,650 10,650
78..................... COMBAT TRAINING RANGES............... 36,905 36,905
79..................... INTEGRATED COMMAND & CONTROL 10 10
APPLICATIONS (IC2A).
80..................... INTELLIGENCE EQUIPMENT............... 1,364 1,364
81..................... JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)........... 883,773 1,051,210
Air Force requested transfer from ....................... +159,837
line 135.
Air Force requested transfer for Auto ....................... +7,600
GCAS from AP,AF line 43.
82..................... INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILE... 71,843 71,843
83..................... EVOLVED EXPENDABLE LAUNCH VEHICLE 30,245 55,245
PROGRAM (SPACE).
Program Increase--EELV Common Upper ....................... +25,000
Stage.
85..................... NEXT GENERATION AERIAL REFUELING 863,875 0
AIRCRAFT.
Transfer to Tanker Transfer Fund..... ....................... -863,875
86..................... CSAR HH-60 RECAPITALIZATION.......... 12,584 0
Program Termination.................. ....................... -12,584
86A.................... HH-60 RDT&E.......................... 0 1,934
Terrain and Traffic Avoidance ....................... +1,934
Systems--Transfer from line 86.
88..................... HC/MC-130 RECAP RDT&E................ 15,536 15,536
91..................... SINGLE INTEGRATED AIR PICTURE (SIAP). 1,832 0
Program termination.................. ....................... -1,832
92..................... FULL COMBAT MISSION TRAINING......... 57,393 57,393
94..................... JOINT CARGO AIRCRAFT (JCA)........... 26,407 26,407
95..................... CV-22................................ 18,270 18,270
96..................... AIRBORNE SENIOR LEADER C3 (SLC3S).... 15,826 7,826
Contract award delay for SLC3S-A ....................... -8,000
Communications Program (SCP).
97..................... THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......... 21,245 21,245
98..................... MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT................. 61,587 61,587
99..................... RAND PROJECT AIR FORCE............... 26,752 26,752
101.................... INITIAL OPERATIONAL TEST & EVALUATION 20,665 20,665
102.................... TEST AND EVALUATION SUPPORT.......... 759,868 759,868
103.................... ROCKET SYSTEMS LAUNCH PROGRAM (SPACE) 23,551 23,551
104.................... SPACE TEST PROGRAM (STP)............. 47,623 47,623
105.................... FACILITIES RESTORATION & 46,327 46,327
MODERNIZATION--TEST & EVAL.
106.................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT--TEST AND 27,579 27,579
EVALUATION SUPPORT.
107.................... MULTI-SERVICE SYSTEMS ENGINEERING 18,901 18,901
INITIATIVE.
108.................... ACQUISITION AND MANAGEMENT SUPPORT... 24,968 24,968
109.................... GENERAL SKILL TRAINING............... 1,544 1,544
111.................... INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES............. 3,764 3,764
113.................... COMMON VERTICAL LIFT SUPPORT PLATFORM 0 4,000
Air Force requested transfer from ....................... +4,000
AP,AF line 18.
114.................... AIR FORCE INTEGRATED MILITARY HUMAN 43,300 23,300
RESOURCES SYSTEM.
Funding ahead of need................ ....................... -20,000
115.................... ANTI-TAMPER TECHNOLOGY EXECUTIVE 42,255 42,255
AGENCY.
117.................... B-52 SQUADRONS....................... 146,096 140,896
EHF Request--early to need........... ....................... -24,700
Program Increase to continue advanced ....................... +6,500
targeting pod integration.
Air Force requested transfer from ....................... +13,000
AP,AF line 38 for Internal Weapons
Bay.
118.................... AIR-LAUNCHED CRUISE MISSILE (ALCM)... 3,631 3,631
119.................... B-1B SQUADRONS....................... 33,234 33,234
120.................... B-2 SQUADRONS........................ 260,466 276,466
Program Increase--Mixed Loads and ....................... +16,000
Other Capabilities.
121.................... STRAT WAR PLANNING SYSTEM--USSTRATCOM 28,441 28,441
122.................... NIGHT FIST--USSTRATCOM............... 5,359 5,359
125.................... REGION/SECTOR OPERATION CONTROL 23,732 23,732
CENTER MODERNIZATION.
126.................... STRATEGIC AEROSPACE INTELLIGENCE 15 15
SYSTEM ACTIVITIES.
127.................... WARFIGHTER RAPID ACQUISITION PROCESS 10,580 10,580
(WRAP) RAPID TRAN.
128.................... MQ-9 UAV............................. 125,427 125,427
129.................... MULTI-PLATFORM ELECTRONIC WARFARE 15,574 15,574
EQUIPMENT.
130.................... A-10 SQUADRONS....................... 5,661 5,661
131.................... F-16 SQUADRONS....................... 129,103 129,103
132.................... F-15E SQUADRONS...................... 222,677 207,677
Contract award delays................ ....................... -15,000
133.................... MANNED DESTRUCTIVE SUPPRESSION....... 12,937 12,937
134.................... F-22 SQUADRONS....................... 576,330 511,330
Modernization program................ ....................... -100,000
MADL--Transfer from line 155......... ....................... +35,000
135.................... F-35 SQUADRONS....................... 217,561 0
Block 4 Development.................. ....................... -57,724
Air Force requested transfer to line ....................... -159,837
81.
136.................... TACTICAL AIM MISSILES................ 6,040 6,040
137.................... ADVANCED MEDIUM RANGE AIR-TO-AIR 62,922 62,922
MISSILE (AMRAAM).
138.................... JOINT HELMET MOUNTED CUEING SYSTEM 2,407 2,407
(JHMCS).
139.................... COMBAT RESCUE AND RECOVERY........... 944 944
140.................... COMBAT RESCUE--PARARESCUE............ 2,921 2,921
141.................... AF TENCAP............................ 11,648 11,648
142.................... PRECISION ATTACK SYSTEMS PROCUREMENT. 3,017 3,017
[[Page H2486]]
143.................... COMPASS CALL......................... 20,652 20,652
144.................... AIRCRAFT ENGINE COMPONENT IMPROVEMENT 147,396 120,626
PROGRAM.
F-135 Component Improvement Program-- ....................... -26,770
premature request.
146.................... JOINT AIR-TO-SURFACE STANDOFF MISSILE 20,000 20,000
(JASSM).
147.................... AIR AND SPACE OPERATIONS CENTER (AOC) 93,102 93,102
148.................... CONTROL AND REPORTING CENTER (CRC)... 58,313 58,313
149.................... AIRBORNE WARNING AND CONTROL SYSTEM 239,755 229,755
(AWACS).
Contract award and schedule delays ....................... -10,000
for Block 40/45 EMD and DRAGON.
151.................... ADVANCED COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS...... 67,532 67,532
153.................... COMBAT AIR INTELLIGENCE SYSTEM 3,310 3,310
ACTIVITIES.
154.................... THEATER BATTLE MANAGEMENT (TBM) C4I.. 15,170 15,170
155.................... FIGHTER TACTICAL DATA LINK........... 85,492 23,992
MADL--Transfer to line 134........... ....................... -61,500
157.................... C2ISR TACTICAL DATA LINK............. 1,584 1,584
158.................... COMMAND AND CONTROL (C2) 24,229 24,229
CONSTELLATION.
159.................... JOINT SURVEILLANCE AND TARGET ATTACK 168,917 168,917
RADAR SYSTEM.
160.................... SEEK EAGLE........................... 19,263 19,263
161.................... USAF MODELING AND SIMULATION......... 21,638 21,638
162.................... WARGAMING AND SIMULATION CENTERS..... 6,020 6,020
163.................... DISTRIBUTED TRAINING AND EXERCISES... 2,863 2,863
164.................... MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS............. 79,112 79,112
165.................... INFORMATION WARFARE SUPPORT.......... 2,294 2,294
166.................... CYBER COMMAND ACTIVITIES............. 1,117 1,117
173.................... SPACE SUPERIORITY INTELLIGENCE....... 10,006 10,006
174.................... E-4B NATIONAL AIRBORNE OPERATIONS 12,532 12,532
CENTER (NAOC).
175.................... MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY 78,784 68,984
COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK.
MMPU Production--Air Force requested ....................... -9,800
transfer to MP,AF line 9.
176.................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM. 140,017 140,017
177.................... GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM......... 3,393 3,393
178.................... GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM.... 3,055 5,212
Air Force requested transfer from ....................... +2,157
line 179.
179.................... JOINT COMMAND AND CONTROL PROGRAM 2,157 0
(JC2).
Air Force requested transfer to line ....................... -2,157
178.
180.................... MILSATCOM TERMINALS.................. 186,582 306,282
FAB-T--Air Force requested transfer ....................... +119,700
from AP,AF line 75.
182.................... AIRBORNE SIGINT ENTERPRISE........... 149,268 144,268
Program execution.................... ....................... -5,000
185.................... GLOBAL AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT (GATM). 5,708 5,708
186.................... CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE............ 2,030 2,030
187.................... DOD CYBER CRIME CENTER............... 279 279
188.................... SATELLITE CONTROL NETWORK (SPACE).... 21,667 21,667
189.................... WEATHER SERVICE...................... 32,373 32,373
190.................... AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL, APPROACH, & 33,268 33,268
LANDING SYSTEM (ATC).
191.................... AERIAL TARGETS....................... 63,573 58,573
Program execution.................... ....................... -5,000
194.................... SECURITY AND INVESTIGATIVE ACTIVITIES 469 469
196.................... DEFENSE JOINT COUNTERINTELLIGENCE 40 40
ACTIVITIES.
198.................... NAVSTAR GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM 165,936 165,936
(USER EQUIPMENT).
199.................... NAVSTAR GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM 34,471 34,471
(SPACE AND CONTROL).
201.................... SPACE AND MISSILE TEST AND EVALUATION 4,572 4,572
CENTER.
202.................... SPACE WARFARE CENTER................. 2,929 2,929
203.................... SPACELIFT RANGE SYSTEM (SPACE)....... 9,933 9,933
204.................... INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT TO INFORMATION 1,254 1,254
OPERATIONS.
206.................... AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS...... 168,963 90,263
Wide Area Airborne Surveillance ....................... -78,700
Program of Record--ahead of need.
207.................... MANNED RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS........ 15,337 15,337
208.................... DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE 93,398 85,898
SYSTEMS.
Program Reduction.................... ....................... -7,500
209.................... PREDATOR UAV (JMIP).................. 28,913 23,913
Program execution.................... ....................... -5,000
210.................... RQ-4 UAV............................. 251,318 220,318
Execution adjustment................. ....................... -31,000
211.................... NETWORK-CENTRIC COLLABORATIVE TARGET 7,267 7,267
(TIARA).
212.................... GPS III SPACE SEGMENT................ 828,171 446,304
Operational Control Segment (OCX)-- ....................... -381,867
Transfer to line 33.
213.................... JSPOC MISSION SYSTEM................. 132,706 109,506
JSPOC Mission System................. ....................... -28,000
Karnac............................... ....................... +4,800
214.................... INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT TO INFORMATION 5,512 5,512
WARFARE.
215.................... NUDET DETECTION SYSTEM (SPACE)....... 72,199 72,199
216.................... NATIONAL SECURITY SPACE OFFICE....... 10,630 0
Program termination--Funding ....................... -10,630
transferred to Executive Agent for
Space, OM,AF.
217.................... SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS OPERATIONS. 43,838 43,838
218.................... INFORMATION OPS TECHNOLOGY 21,912 21,912
INTEGRATION & TOOL DEVELOP.
219.................... SHARED EARLY WARNING (SEW)........... 2,952 2,952
220.................... C-130 AIRLIFT SQUADRON............... 113,107 43,472
Air Force requested transfer to AP,AF ....................... -69,635
line 61.
221.................... C-5 AIRLIFT SQUADRONS................ 58,990 58,990
222.................... C-17 AIRCRAFT........................ 177,212 162,212
Contract award delays................ ....................... -15,000
223.................... C-130J PROGRAM....................... 26,770 26,770
224.................... LARGE AIRCRAFT IR COUNTERMEASURES 17,227 17,227
(LAIRCM).
225.................... KC-135S.............................. 20,453 20,453
226.................... KC-10S............................... 56,669 41,669
Milestone B slip..................... ....................... -15,000
227.................... OPERATIONAL SUPPORT AIRLIFT.......... 4,988 4,988
228.................... C-STOL AIRCRAFT...................... 1,283 1,283
230.................... SPECIAL TACTICS/COMBAT CONTROL....... 7,345 7,345
231.................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE (NON-IF)........... 1,514 1,514
234.................... LOGISTICS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY 227,614 227,614
(LOGIT).
235.................... SUPPORT SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.......... 6,141 38,141
Alternative energy research and ....................... +32,000
integration.
235A................... AIR FORCE RECRUITING INFORMATION 0 5,100
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
Air Force Recruiting Information ....................... +5,100
Support System--Air Force requested
transfer from OM,AF.
236.................... OTHER FLIGHT TRAINING................ 667 667
237.................... JOINT NATIONAL TRAINING CENTER....... 9 9
239.................... OTHER PERSONNEL ACTIVITIES........... 116 116
240.................... JOINT PERSONNEL RECOVERY AGENCY...... 6,107 6,107
242.................... CIVILIAN COMPENSATION PROGRAM........ 7,811 7,811
243.................... PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION............. 11,179 11,179
244.................... FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT INFORMATION 49,816 49,816
SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 12,406,781 12,915,571
Classified Adjustment................ ....................... +508,790
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 27,247,302 26,517,405
EVALUATION, AIR FORCE.
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & EVALUATION, DEFENSE-WIDE
1...................... DTRA UNIVERSITY STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP 47,412 47,412
BASIC RESEARCH.
2...................... DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES............ 328,195 295,695
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -32,500
5...................... NATIONAL DEFENSE EDUCATION PROGRAM... 109,911 94,311
Unexecutable growth.................. ....................... -15,600
6...................... CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE 49,508 49,508
PROGRAM.
7...................... INSENSITIVE MUNITIONS--EXPLORATORY 22,448 20,448
DEVELOPMENT.
[[Page H2487]]
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -2,000
8...................... HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES & UNIV 15,067 23,067
(HBCU) SCIENCE.
Program Increase..................... ....................... +8,000
9...................... LINCOLN LABORATORY RESEARCH PROGRAM.. 32,830 32,830
10..................... INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATIONS 281,262 253,262
TECHNOLOGY.
DISCOVER contract award delays....... ....................... -10,000
Extreme Computing contract award ....................... -18,000
delays.
11..................... COGNITIVE COMPUTING SYSTEMS.......... 90,143 90,143
12..................... MACHINE INTELLIGENCE................. 44,682 44,682
13..................... BIOLOGICAL WARFARE DEFENSE........... 32,692 32,692
14..................... CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE 169,287 174,287
PROGRAM.
TMTI BA 5 unexecutable funding ....................... +5,000
transferred back to S&T at request
of the Department.
15..................... JOINT DATA MANAGEMENT ADVANCED 3,261 0
DEVELOPMENT.
Duplicate effort..................... ....................... -3,261
16..................... CYBER SECURITY RESEARCH.............. 10,000 5,000
Lack of authorization................ ....................... -5,000
17..................... HUMAN, SOCIAL AND CULTURE BEHAVIOR 9,499 7,999
MODELING (HSCB) APP.
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -1,500
18..................... TACTICAL TECHNOLOGY.................. 224,378 224,378
19..................... MATERIALS AND BIOLOGICAL TECHNOLOGY.. 312,586 307,586
Unsustained growth................... ....................... -5,000
20..................... ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY............... 286,936 266,936
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -20,000
21..................... WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION DEFEAT 212,742 212,742
TECHNOLOGIES.
22..................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS TECHNOLOGY 26,545 36,745
DEVELOPMENT.
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +15,200
Requirement.
Unexecutable growth.................. ....................... -5,000
24..................... JOINT MUNITIONS ADVANCED TECH 20,556 15,556
INSENSITIVE MUNITIONS AD.
Unjustified growth................... ....................... -5,000
25..................... SO/LIC ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.......... 44,423 44,423
26..................... COMBATING TERRORISM TECHNOLOGY 85,299 85,299
SUPPORT.
27..................... COUNTERPROLIFERATION INITIATIVES-- 295,163 295,163
PROLIF PREV & DEFEAT.
28..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY. 132,220 92,220
SM-3 Block IIB Development transfer ....................... -40,000
to line 84, AEGIS BMD.
29..................... JOINT ADVANCED CONCEPTS.............. 6,808 6,808
30..................... JOINT DOD-DOE MUNITIONS TECHNOLOGY 22,700 22,700
DEVELOPMENT.
31..................... AGILE TRANSPO FOR THE 21ST CENTURY 750 750
(AT21)--THEATER CA.
32..................... ADVANCED AEROSPACE SYSTEMS........... 303,078 241,378
ArcLight............................. ....................... -5,000
ISIS lack of transition partner...... ....................... -21,700
MoTr program delays.................. ....................... -15,000
Vulture program descope and delays... ....................... -20,000
33..................... SPACE PROGRAMS AND TECHNOLOGY........ 98,130 98,130
34..................... CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE 177,113 222,713
PROGRAM--ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.
TMTI BA 5 unexecutable funding ....................... +45,600
transferred back to S&T at request
of the Department.
35..................... JOINT ELECTRONIC ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY. 8,386 8,386
36..................... JOINT CAPABILITY TECHNOLOGY 206,917 191,917
DEMONSTRATIONS.
Unjustified growth................... ....................... -15,000
37..................... NETWORKED COMMUNICATIONS CAPABILITIES 30,035 25,035
Unjustified growth................... ....................... -5,000
38..................... JOINT DATA MANAGEMENT RESEARCH....... 6,289 4,289
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -2,000
39..................... BIOMETRICS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY.... 11,416 11,416
40..................... CYBER SECURITY ADVANCED RESEARCH..... 10,000 5,000
Lack of authorization................ ....................... -5,000
41..................... HUMAN, SOCIAL AND CULTURE BEHAVIOR 11,510 10,510
MODELING (HSCB) ADV.
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -1,000
42..................... DEFENSE-WIDE MANUFACTURING SCIENCE 18,916 42,916
AND TECHNOLOGY PROG.
Industrial Base Innovation Fund...... ....................... +24,000
43..................... JOINT ROBOTICS PROGRAM/AUTONOMOUS 9,943 9,943
SYSTEMS.
44..................... GENERIC LOGISTICS R&D TECHNOLOGY 20,542 20,542
DEMONSTRATIONS.
45..................... DEPLOYMENT AND DISTRIBUTION 29,109 29,109
ENTERPRISE TECHNOLOGY.
46..................... STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH 68,021 64,021
PROGRAM.
Unexecutable growth.................. ....................... -4,000
47..................... MICROELECTRONIC TECHNOLOGY 26,878 26,878
DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT.
48..................... JOINT WARFIGHTING PROGRAM............ 10,966 10,966
49..................... ADVANCED ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGIES.... 197,098 197,098
52..................... HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING 200,986 240,986
MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.
Program adjustment................... ....................... +40,000
53..................... COMMAND, CONTROL AND COMMUNICATIONS 219,809 219,809
SYSTEMS.
54..................... CLASSIFIED DARPA PROGRAMS............ 167,008 150,308
Poor justification materials......... ....................... -16,700
55..................... NETWORK-CENTRIC WARFARE TECHNOLOGY... 234,985 227,985
Unsustained growth................... ....................... -7,000
56..................... SENSOR TECHNOLOGY.................... 205,032 205,032
58..................... DISTRIBUTED LEARNING ADVANCED 13,986 13,986
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
59..................... SOFTWARE ENGINEERING INSTITUTE....... 30,910 30,910
61..................... QUICK REACTION SPECIAL PROJECTS...... 78,244 58,244
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -13,000
P826--Excess to Quick Reaction Fund ....................... -7,000
requirements.
62..................... JOINT EXPERIMENTATION................ 111,946 91,946
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -20,000
63..................... MODELING AND SIMULATION MANAGEMENT 38,140 33,140
OFFICE.
Unexecutable growth.................. ....................... -5,000
64..................... DIRECTED ENERGY RESEARCH............. 98,688 123,688
Program Increase..................... ....................... +25,000
65..................... TEST & EVALUATION SCIENCE & 97,642 97,642
TECHNOLOGY.
66..................... TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER.................. 23,310 17,310
Unjustified growth................... ....................... -6,000
67..................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS ADVANCED 30,806 38,806
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
SOF ACTD Programs.................... ....................... +8,000
68..................... AVIATION ENGINEERING ANALYSIS........ 4,234 4,234
69..................... SOF INFORMATION & BROADCAST SYSTEMS 4,942 4,942
ADVANCED TECHNOLOG.
69X.................... INNOVATIVE RESEARCH.................. 0 124,200
Program adjustment................... ....................... +124,200
70..................... NUCLEAR AND CONVENTIONAL PHYSICAL 32,132 32,132
SECURITY EQUIPMENT.
71..................... RETRACT LARCH........................ 21,592 21,592
72..................... JOINT ROBOTICS PROGRAM............... 9,878 9,878
73..................... ADVANCE SENSOR APPLICATIONS PROGRAM.. 18,060 18,060
74..................... ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY TECHNICAL 30,419 30,419
CERTIFICATION PROGRAM.
75..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TERMINAL 436,482 431,482
DEFENSE SEGMENT.
Funding no longer required for ....................... -5,000
transition to Reagan Test Site.
76..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE MIDCOURSE 1,346,181 1,311,181
DEFENSE SEGMENT.
Excess Award Fee and Test and ....................... -35,000
Integration Delays.
78..................... CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE 277,062 271,062
PROGRAM.
Improved Nerve Agent Treatment ....................... -5,000
System--slow obligation rate in
fiscal year 2010.
Lightweight Chemical/Biological ....................... -1,000
Ensemble execution delays.
79..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SENSORS.... 454,859 392,159
Transfer to line 88 for Concurrent ....................... -35,900
Test, Training and Operations.
Transfer to line 88 for TPY-2 C2BMC ....................... -13,000
Fielding.
Transfer to line 88 for BMDS Radars ....................... -13,800
Communications Sustainment (TPY-2).
81..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TEST & 1,113,425 1,008,525
TARGETS.
Transfer to lines 82 and 88.......... ....................... -94,900
[[Page H2488]]
Funding no longer required for move ....................... -5,000
to Reagan Test Site.
Program Growth in Program Operations ....................... -5,000
Systems Engineering and Systems
Management.
82..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE ENABLING 402,769 406,269
PROGRAMS.
Transfer from line 81................ ....................... +43,500
Excessive contractor support, ....................... -40,000
advisory services and program growth.
83..................... SPECIAL PROGRAMS--MDA................ 270,189 245,189
Transfer to higher priority near-term ....................... -25,000
MDA procurement programs.
84..................... AEGIS BMD............................ 1,467,278 1,569,278
Program growth....................... ....................... -12,000
Navy requested transfer from OP,N ....................... +72,500
line 109.
Aegis BMD Ships--Navy requested ....................... +1,500
transfer from OM,N line 1B5B.
SM-3 Block IIB Development--transfer ....................... +40,000
from line 28.
85..................... SPACE SURVEILLANCE & TRACKING SYSTEM. 112,678 112,678
87..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM 10,942 10,942
SPACE PROGRAMS.
88..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE C2BMC...... 342,625 456,725
Transfer from line 81 for Concurrent ....................... +51,400
Test, Training and Operations.
Transfer from line 79 for Concurrent ....................... +35,900
Test, Training and Operations.
Transfer from line 79 for TPY-2 C2BMC ....................... +13,000
Fielding.
Transfer from line 79 for BMDS Radar ....................... +13,800
Communications Sustainement (TPY-2).
90..................... BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE JOINT 68,726 58,726
WARFIGHTER SUPPORT.
Duplication of effort with MDA core ....................... -10,000
programs.
91..................... CENTER (MDIOC)....................... 86,198 86,198
92..................... REGARDING TRENCH..................... 7,529 7,529
93..................... SEA BASED X-BAND RADAR (SBX)......... 153,056 153,056
98..................... ISRAELI COOPERATIVE PROGRAMS......... 121,735 209,935
David's Sling Weapons Program........ ....................... +38,000
Arrow System Improvement Program ....................... +42,000
(ASIP).
Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor ....................... +8,200
Program.
99..................... HUMANITARIAN DEMINING................ 14,735 14,735
100.................... COALITION WARFARE.................... 13,786 13,786
101.................... DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CORROSION 4,802 39,502
PROGRAM.
Department of Defense Corrosion ....................... +34,700
Prevention and Control Program.
102.................... DOD UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEM (UAS) 49,292 49,292
COMMON DEVELOPMENT.
104.................... HUMAN, SOCIAL AND CULTURE BEHAVIOR 7,459 7,459
MODELING (HSCB) RES.
105.................... JOINT SYSTEMS INTEGRATION COMMAND 19,413 19,413
(JSIC).
106.................... JOINT FIRES INTEGRATION & 16,637 16,637
INTEROPERABILITY TEAM.
107.................... LAND-BASED SM-3 (LBSM3).............. 281,378 281,378
108.................... AEGIS SM-3 BLOCK IIA CO-DEVELOPMENT.. 318,800 318,800
109.................... PRECISION TRACKING SPACE SYSTEM RDT&E 66,969 36,969
Transfer to higher priority near-term ....................... -30,000
MDA procurement programs.
110.................... AIRBORNE INFRARED (ABIR)............. 111,671 76,671
Transfer to higher priority near-term ....................... -35,000
MDA procurement programs.
111.................... REDUCTION OF TOTAL OWNERSHIP COST.... 20,310 20,310
112.................... JOINT ELECTROMAGNETIC TECHNOLOGY 4,027 4,027
(JET) PROGRAM.
113.................... DEFENSE ACQUISITION CHALLENGE PROGRAM 24,344 24,344
(DACP).
114.................... NUCLEAR AND CONVENTIONAL PHYSICAL 7,973 7,973
SECURITY EQUIPMENT.
115.................... PROMPT GLOBAL STRIKE CAPABILITY 239,861 239,861
DEVELOPMENT.
116.................... CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE 407,162 300,562
PROGRAM.
Plague Vaccine--slow obligation rate ....................... -5,000
in fiscal year 2010.
TMTI BA 5 unexecutable funding ....................... -65,600
transferred back to S&T at request
of the Department.
Bioscavenger Increment II schedule ....................... -12,000
delays.
Decontamination Family of Systems ....................... -9,000
schedule delays.
Next Generation Chemical Standoff ....................... -9,000
Detection schedule delays.
SSI NBCRS growth without acquisition ....................... -6,000
strategy.
117.................... JOINT ROBOTICS PROGRAM............... 4,155 4,155
118.................... ADVANCED IT SERVICES JOINT PROGRAM 49,364 23,695
OFFICE (AITS-JPO).
Technology Initiatives Investment ....................... -25,669
Fund.
119.................... JOINT TACTICAL INFORMATION 20,954 20,954
DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM (JTIDS).
120.................... WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION DEFEAT 7,307 7,307
CAPABILITIES.
121.................... INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT... 11,937 11,937
122.................... DEFENSE INTEGRATED MILITARY HUMAN 11,800 11,800
RESOURCES SYSTEM.
123.................... BUSINESS TRANSFORMATION AGENCY R&D 184,131 181,166
ACTIVITIES.
VIPS Increment II contract award in ....................... -2,965
fiscal year 2012.
124.................... HOMELAND PERSONNEL SECURITY 391 391
INITIATIVE.
125.................... OUSD(C) IT DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES... 5,000 5,000
126.................... TRUSTED FOUNDRY...................... 35,512 35,512
128.................... GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM......... 17,842 17,842
130.................... WOUNDED ILL AND INJURED SENIOR 1,590 1,590
OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE.
132.................... DEFENSE READINESS REPORTING SYSTEM 5,113 5,113
(DRRS).
133.................... JOINT SYSTEMS ARCHITECTURE 8,052 8,052
DEVELOPMENT.
134.................... CENTRAL TEST AND EVALUATION 162,286 162,286
INVESTMENT DEVELOPMENT.
135.................... ASSESSMENTS AND EVALUATIONS.......... 2,500 2,500
136.................... THERMAL VICAR........................ 8,851 8,851
137.................... JOINT MISSION ENVIRONMENT TEST 10,287 10,287
CAPABILITY (JMETC).
138.................... TECHNICAL STUDIES, SUPPORT AND 49,282 49,282
ANALYSIS.
139.................... USD(A&T)--CRITICAL TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT 4,743 4,743
140.................... FOREIGN MATERIAL ACQUISITION AND 95,520 95,520
EXPLOITATION.
141.................... JOINT THEATER AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE 94,577 94,577
ORGANIZATION.
142.................... CLASSIFIED PROGRAM USD(P)............ 0 106,000
Classified Program USD(P)............ ....................... +106,000
143.................... FOREIGN COMPARATIVE TESTING.......... 32,755 27,755
Unjustified growth................... ....................... -5,000
144.................... SYSTEMS ENGINEERING.................. 29,824 37,024
Sustainment of fiscal year 2010 level ....................... +7,200
145.................... NUCLEAR MATTERS--PHYSICAL SECURITY... 6,264 6,264
146.................... SUPPORT TO NETWORKS AND INFORMATION 15,091 15,091
INTEGRATION.
147.................... GENERAL SUPPORT TO USD (INTELLIGENCE) 6,227 6,227
147X................... DEFENSE-WIDE ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT.. 0 12,000
Program Increase--contract management ....................... +12,000
services program.
148.................... CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE 120,995 120,995
PROGRAM.
155.................... SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH/ 2,189 2,189
CHALLENGE ADMINISTR.
156.................... DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY ANALYSIS.......... 13,858 11,158
P796--Technical Grand Challenge ....................... -2,700
Program.
157.................... FORCE TRANSFORMATION DIRECTORATE..... 19,701 19,701
158.................... DEFENSE TECHNICAL INFORMATION CENTER 61,054 58,554
(DTIC).
Excessive growth..................... ....................... -2,500
159.................... R&D IN SUPPORT OF DOD ENLISTMENT, 64,737 64,737
TESTING & EVALUATION.
160.................... DEVELOPMENT TEST AND EVALUATION...... 18,688 25,888
Sustainment of fiscal year 2010 level ....................... +7,200
161.................... DARPA AGENCY RELOCATION.............. 11,000 11,000
162.................... MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS (RESEARCH & 56,257 56,257
DEVELOPMENT).
163.................... BUDGET AND PROGRAM ASSESSMENTS....... 6,099 6,099
164.................... AVIATION SAFETY TECHNOLOGIES......... 10,900 10,900
165.................... JOINT STAFF ANALYTICAL SUPPORT....... 23,081 8,081
Growth without acquisition strategy.. ....................... -15,000
168.................... SUPPORT TO INFORMATION OPERATIONS 31,500 31,500
(IO) CAPABILITIES.
169.................... INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY RAPID 5,135 5,135
ACQUISITION.
170.................... CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE............ 10,000 10,000
171.................... INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT TO INFORMATION 21,272 21,272
OPERATIONS (IO).
173.................... WARFIGHTING AND INTELLIGENCE-RELATED 845 845
SUPPORT.
174.................... COCOM EXERCISE ENGAGEMENT AND 92,253 48,688
TRAINING TRANSFORMATION.
P 754--Initiatives funded by Services ....................... -33,315
P 764--NPSUE funding without program. ....................... -10,250
[[Page H2489]]
175.................... PENTAGON RESERVATION................. 20,482 20,482
176.................... MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS--MDA......... 29,754 29,754
177.................... IT SOFTWARE DEV INITIATIVES.......... 278 278
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 61,577 61,577
178.................... DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEM FOR 5,522 1,000
SECURITY (DISS).
Unjustified program.................. ....................... -4,522
179.................... REGIONAL INTERNATIONAL OUTREACH & 2,139 2,139
PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE.
180.................... OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE 290 290
SHARED INFORMATION SYSTEM.
181.................... CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE 6,634 6,634
(OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT).
183.................... JOINT INTEGRATION AND 44,139 44,139
INTEROPERABILITY.
185.................... CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 2,288 2,288
186.................... C4I INTEROPERABILITY................. 74,023 74,023
188.................... JOINT/ALLIED COALITION INFORMATION 9,379 9,379
SHARING.
195.................... NATIONAL MILITARY COMMAND SYSTEM-WIDE 467 467
SUPPORT.
196.................... DEFENSE INFO INFRASTRUCTURE 16,629 36,629
ENGINEERING AND INTEGRATION.
Cyber Security Pilot Programs........ ....................... +20,000
197.................... LONG HAUL COMMUNICATIONS (DCS)....... 9,130 9,130
198.................... MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY 9,529 9,529
COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK.
199.................... PUBLIC KEY INFRASTRUCTURE (PKI)...... 8,881 8,881
200.................... KEY MANAGEMENT INFRASTRUCTURE (KMI).. 45,941 45,941
201.................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM. 14,077 14,077
202.................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM. 388,827 388,827
205.................... C4I FOR THE WARRIOR.................. 2,261 2,261
206.................... GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM.... 26,247 25,047
Fiscal year 2012 testing............. ....................... -1,200
207.................... JOINT SPECTRUM CENTER................ 20,991 20,991
208.................... NET-CENTRIC ENTERPRISE SERVICES 3,366 3,366
(NCES).
209.................... JOINT MILITARY DECEPTION INITIATIVE.. 1,161 1,161
210.................... TELEPORT PROGRAM..................... 6,880 6,880
211.................... SPECIAL APPLICATIONS FOR 16,272 16,272
CONTINGENCIES.
214.................... CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE............ 501 501
216.................... CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE............ 2,251 2,251
217.................... CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE............ 10,486 10,486
221.................... POLICY R&D PROGRAMS.................. 9,136 9,136
223.................... NET CENTRICITY....................... 29,831 14,831
Unjustified growth................... ....................... -15,000
227.................... DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE 1,290 1,290
SYSTEMS.
230.................... DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE 3,513 3,513
SYSTEMS.
232.................... MQ-1 PREDATOR A UAV.................. 98 98
234.................... HOMELAND DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER 2,988 2,988
PROGRAM.
235.................... INT'L INTELLIGENCE TECHNOLOGY 1,416 1,416
ASSESSMENT, ADVANCEMENT.
245.................... INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS.............. 21,798 21,798
246.................... LOGISTICS SUPPORT ACTIVITIES......... 2,813 2,813
247.................... MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS (JCS)........ 2,807 2,807
249.................... NATO AGS............................. 93,885 93,885
250.................... MQ-9 UAV............................. 98 98
252.................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS AVIATION SYSTEMS 68,691 68,691
ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.
253.................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS TACTICAL SYSTEMS 1,582 1,582
DEVELOPMENT.
254.................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS INTELLIGENCE 23,879 25,479
SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +1,600
Requirement.
255.................... SOF OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS......... 62,592 63,692
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +4,000
Requirement.
Program termination.................. ....................... -2,900
256.................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS CV-22 DEVELOPMENT. 14,406 14,406
257.................... JOINT MULTI-MISSION SUBMERSIBLE...... 14,924 0
SOCOM requested transfer to line 269. ....................... -14,924
259.................... MISSION TRAINING AND PREPARATION 2,915 2,915
SYSTEMS (MTPS).
261.................... MC130J SOF TANKER RECAPITALIZATION... 7,624 7,624
262.................... SOF COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT AND 1,922 922
ELECTRONICS SYSTEMS.
Execution delays..................... ....................... -1,000
263.................... SOF TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEMS........... 2,347 2,347
264.................... SOF WEAPONS SYSTEMS.................. 479 479
265.................... SOF SOLDIER PROTECTION AND SURVIVAL 593 593
SYSTEMS.
267.................... SOF TACTICAL VEHICLES................ 1,994 994
Change in requirements............... ....................... -1,000
268.................... SOF ROTARY WING AVIATION............. 14,473 33,715
SOCOM requested transfer from P,DW ....................... +19,242
line 57.
269.................... SOF UNDERWATER SYSTEMS............... 13,986 28,910
SOCOM requested transfer from line ....................... +14,924
257.
270.................... SOF SURFACE CRAFT.................... 2,933 18,933
Program Increase--CCM Unfunded ....................... +16,000
Requirement.
271.................... SOF PSYOP............................ 4,193 4,193
272.................... SOF GLOBAL VIDEO SURVEILLANCE 5,135 5,135
ACTIVITIES.
273.................... SOF OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS 9,167 9,167
INTELLIGENCE.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 3,832,019 4,011,571
Classified adjustment................ ....................... +179,552
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 20,661,600 20,797,412
EVALUATION, DEFENSE-WIDE.
OPERATIONAL TEST & EVALUATION, DEFENSE
1...................... OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION...... 59,430 59,430
2...................... LIVE FIRE TEST AND EVALUATION........ 12,899 12,899
3...................... OPERATIONAL TEST ACTIVITIES AND 122,581 122,581
ANALYSES.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATIONAL TEST & EVALUATION, 194,910 194,910
DEFENSE.
TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 76,130,700 74,957,028
EVALUATION.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
P-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND
..................... STRATEGIC SHIP ACQUISITION........... 411,202 911,202
..................... Additional Mobile Landing Platform... ....................... +500,000
..................... DoD MOBILIZATION ASSETS.............. 158,647 158,647
..................... STRATEGIC SEALIFT SUPPORT............ 4,875 4,875
..................... SEALIFT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT..... 28,012 28,012
..................... READY RESERVE FORCE OPERATIONS AND 332,130 332,130
MAINTENANCE.
..................... MARITIME ADMINISTRATION SHIP ....................... 40,000
FINANCING GUARANTEE PROGRAM.
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND. 934,866 1,474,866
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
..................... OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE............ 29,915,277 29,671,764
---.................... IN-HOUSE CARE........................ 7,781,877 7,791,077
---.................... Army Substance Abuse Program-- 2,800 -2,800
Transfer to OM,A line 131.
---.................... Pain Management Task Force........... --- +12,000
---.................... PRIVATE SECTOR CARE.................. 16,034,745 15,673,745
---.................... TRICARE Underexecution............... --- -236,000
---.................... Global Deployment of the Force --- -125,000
medical research funding--DOD
requested transfer to maintain full
funding for the program.
---.................... CONSOLIDATED HEALTH CARE............. 2,122,483 2,085,770
---.................... Army Substance Abuse Program-- 27,825 -27,825
Transfer to OM,A line 131.
---.................... Psychological Health--State Directors --- -8,888
for the National Guard--Transfer to
OM,ARNG line 133.
[[Page H2490]]
---.................... INFORMATION MANAGEMENT/IT............ 1,452,330 1,452,330
---.................... MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS.............. 293,698 288,698
---.................... MHS Strategic Communications --- -5,000
efficiencies.
---.................... EDUCATION AND TRAINING............... 632,534 632,534
---.................... BASE OPERATIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS... 1,597,610 1,747,610
---.................... Medical Facilities Sustainment, --- +150,000
Restoration and Modernization.
..................... PROCUREMENT.......................... 519,921 534,921
---.................... Procurement of Medical Equipment and --- +15,000
IO&T - Navy.
..................... RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT............. 499,913 1,175,513
---.................... ALS.................................. --- +8,000
---.................... Armed Forces Institute of --- +4,800
Regenerative Medicine.
---.................... Autism Research...................... --- +6,400
---.................... Bone Marrow Failure Disease Research --- +4,000
Program.
---.................... Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy.......... --- +4,000
---.................... Global HIV/AIDS Prevention........... --- +10,000
---.................... Traumatic Brain Injury and --- +100,000
Psychological Health.
---.................... Global Deployment of the Force --- +125,000
medical research funding--Department
of Defense requested transfer to
maintain full funding for the
program.
---.................... Gulf War Illness Peer-Reviewed --- +8,000
Research Program.
---.................... Multiple Sclerosis................... --- +4,800
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Alzheimer Research..... --- +15,000
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Breast Cancer Research --- +150,000
Program.
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Cancer Research Program --- +16,000
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Lung Cancer Research --- +12,800
Program.
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Orthopedic Research --- +24,000
Program.
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Ovarian Cancer Research --- +20,000
Program.
---.................... Peer Reviewed Vision research in --- +4,000
conjunction with the DoD Vision
Center of Excellence.
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Prostate Cancer --- +80,000
Research Program.
---.................... Peer-Reviewed Spinal Cord Research --- +12,000
Program.
---.................... Research in Alcohol and Substance Use --- +5,200
Disorders.
---.................... SBIR to the core funded RDT&E........ --- +1,200
---.................... Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC)..... --- +6,400
---.................... Pain Management Task Force Research.. --- +4,000
---.................... Peer Reviewed Medical Research --- +50,000
Program.
---.................... TOTAL, DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM........ 30,935,111 31,382,198
CHEMICAL AGENTS AND MUNITIONS DESTRUCTION, DEFENSE
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
---.................... OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE............ 1,067,364 1,067,364
---.................... PROCUREMENT.......................... 7,132 7,132
---.................... RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND 392,811 392,811
EVALUATION.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, CHEMICAL AGENTS AND MUNITIONS 1,467,307 1,467,307
DESTRUCTION, DEFENSE.
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE
PC1293................. Supplies and Materials (non-fund)-- --- -1,000
NSA.
PC1329................. Other Intra-Governmental Purchases-- --- -2,500
Navy.
PC6501................. Other Intra-Governmental Purchases-- --- -2,000
OSD.
PC9206................. Other Intra-Governmental Purchases-- --- -4,000
OSD.
PC9205................. EUCOM Counternarcotics Operations --- -3,000
Support excessive growth.
PC1293................. International crime and narcotics --- -1,000
analytic tools excessive growth.
PC2360................. EUCOM Tactical Analysis Team Support --- -1,500
unauthorized new Start.
---.................... FFRDC cost growth and CN indicated no --- -11,394
need.
---.................... National Guard Counter-Drug Program-- --- +50,000
State Plans.
---.................... Young Marines--Drug Demand Reduction. --- +2,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER- 1,131,351 1,156,957
DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE.
JOINT IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICE DEFEAT FUND
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
4...................... STAFF AND INFRASTRUCTURE............. 215,868 0
---.................... Transfer to Title IX................. --- -215,868
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, JOINT IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE 215,868 0
DEVICE DEFEAT FUND.
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
---.................... OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE............ 282,354 305,794
---.................... Program Increase..................... --- +23,440
---.................... PROCUREMENT.......................... 1,000 1,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR 283,354 306,794
GENERAL.
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
---.................... TOTAL, OTHER DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 34,032,991 34,313,256
PROGRAMS.
-------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL, ARMY
---.................... BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. --- ---
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 1,237,779 1,237,779
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 313,278 313,278
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 349,839 349,839
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 44,752 44,752
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 2,835 2,835
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 159,261 159,261
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 56,632 56,632
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 1,303 1,303
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 94,650 94,650
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 2,260,329 2,260,329
---.................... BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 2,708,271 2,708,271
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 693,325 693,325
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 1,113,877 1,113,877
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 6,714 6,714
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 574,120 574,120
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 241,921 241,921
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 26,276 26,276
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 207,174 207,174
---.................... TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 5,571,678 5,571,678
---.................... BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 329,046 329,046
---.................... SUBSISTENCE-IN-KIND.................. 1,871,805 1,871,805
---.................... TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 2,200,851 2,200,851
---.................... BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION --- ---
TRAVEL.
---.................... ACCESSION TRAVEL..................... 45,512 45,512
---.................... OPERATIONAL TRAVEL................... 107,025 107,025
---.................... ROTATIONAL TRAVEL.................... 45,514 45,514
---.................... TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 198,051 198,051
---.................... BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. --- ---
---.................... INTEREST ON UNIFORMED SERVICES 16,102 16,102
SAVINGS.
---.................... DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 66,220 66,220
---.................... UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 192,223 192,223
---.................... RESERVE INCOME REPLACEMENT PROGRAM... 1,895 1,895
---.................... SGLI EXTRA HAZARD PAYMENTS........... 171,060 171,060
---.................... TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 447,500 447,500
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. --- 789,624
---.................... Undistributed Transfer from Title I.. --- +789,624
-------------------------------------------------
[[Page H2491]]
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, ARMY...... 10,678,409 11,468,033
MILITARY PERSONNEL, NAVY
---.................... BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. --- ---
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 213,340 213,340
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 59,067 59,067
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 67,023 67,023
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 7,315 7,315
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 1,543 1,543
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 16,667 16,667
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 16,754 16,754
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 14 14
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 16,320 16,320
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 398,043 398,043
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
---.................... BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 262,656 262,656
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 74,338 74,338
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 121,913 121,913
---.................... INCENTIVE PAYS....................... 325 325
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 80,007 80,007
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 27,692 27,692
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 3,535 3,535
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 20,093 20,093
---.................... TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 590,559 590,559
---.................... BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 28,639 28,639
---.................... SUBSISTENCE-IN-KIND.................. 14,546 14,546
---.................... TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 43,185 43,185
---.................... BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION --- ---
TRAVEL.
---.................... ACCESSION TRAVEL..................... 5,214 5,214
---.................... OPERATIONAL TRAVEL................... 23,903 23,903
---.................... ROTATIONAL TRAVEL.................... 30,110 30,110
---.................... SEPARATION TRAVEL.................... 3,132 3,132
---.................... TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 62,359 62,359
---.................... BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. --- ---
---.................... DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 3,800 3,800
---.................... UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 29,662 29,662
---.................... SGLI EXTRA HAZARD PAYMENTS........... 51,111 51,111
---.................... TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 84,573 84,573
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. --- 130,000
---.................... Higher than Budgeted Mobilization --- +110,000
Levels.
---.................... Increased Deployment Levels.......... --- +20,000
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, NAVY...... 1,178,719 1,308,719
MILITARY PERSONNEL, MARINE CORPS
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
---.................... BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. --- ---
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 40,079 40,079
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 13,308 13,308
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 18,565 18,565
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 1,760 1,760
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 10,747 10,747
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 4,805 4,805
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 4,176 4,176
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 93,440 93,440
---.................... BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 190,013 190,013
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 43,090 43,090
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 45,977 45,977
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 95,395 95,395
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 40,431 40,431
---.................... SEPARATION PAY....................... 3,017 3,017
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 13,435 13,435
---.................... TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 431,358 431,358
---.................... BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 21,420 21,420
---.................... TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 21,420 21,420
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
---.................... BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION --- ---
TRAVEL.
---.................... ACCESSION TRAVEL..................... 3,270 3,270
---.................... TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 3,270 3,270
---.................... BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. --- ---
---.................... DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 27,000 27,000
---.................... UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 19,942 19,942
---.................... SGLI EXTRA HAZARD PAYMENTS........... 48,345 48,345
---.................... TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 95,287 95,287
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. --- 88,145
---.................... Over Budgeted End Strength........... --- +88,145
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, MARINE 644,775 732,920
CORPS.
MILITARY PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE
---.................... BA-1: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF OFFICERS. --- ---
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 188,334 188,334
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 45,953 45,953
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 58,889 58,889
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 7,320 7,320
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 13,613 13,613
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 5,760 5,760
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 14,408 14,408
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 334,277 334,277
---.................... BA-2: PAY AND ALLOWANCES OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... PERSONNEL............................ --- ---
---.................... BASIC PAY............................ 472,896 472,896
---.................... RETIRED PAY ACCRUAL.................. 115,387 115,387
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING.......... 177,545 177,545
---.................... SPECIAL PAYS......................... 49,964 49,964
---.................... ALLOWANCES........................... 16,254 16,254
---.................... SOCIAL SECURITY TAX.................. 36,177 36,177
---.................... TOTAL, BA-2.......................... 868,223 868,223
---.................... BA-4: SUBSISTENCE OF ENLISTED --- ---
PERSONNEL.
---.................... BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR SUBSISTENCE...... 39,090 39,090
---.................... SUBSISTENCE-IN-KIND.................. 61,805 61,805
---.................... TOTAL, BA-4.......................... 100,895 100,895
---.................... BA-5: PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION --- ---
TRAVEL.
---.................... OPERATIONAL TRAVEL................... 5,957 5,957
---.................... TOTAL, BA-5.......................... 5,957 5,957
---.................... BA-6: OTHER MILITARY PERSONNEL COSTS. --- ---
---.................... DEATH GRATUITIES..................... 2,000 2,000
---.................... UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS................ 27,978 27,978
---.................... SGLI EXTRA HAZARD PAYMENTS........... 67,057 67,057
---.................... TOTAL, BA-6.......................... 97,035 97,035
[[Page H2492]]
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. --- 654,055
---.................... Higher than Budgeted Mobilization --- +378,000
Levels.
---.................... Over Budgeted End Strength........... --- +276,055
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE. 1,406,387 2,060,442
RESERVE PERSONNEL, ARMY
---.................... BA-1: UNIT AND INDIVIDUAL TRAINING... --- ---
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 104,230 104,230
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 9,886 9,886
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 153,915 153,915
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 268,031 268,031
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, ARMY....... 268,031 268,031
RESERVE PERSONNEL, NAVY
---.................... BA-1: UNIT AND INDIVIDUAL TRAINING... --- ---
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 7,019 7,019
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 38,683 38,683
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 3,210 3,210
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 48,912 48,912
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, NAVY....... 48,912 48,912
RESERVE PERSONNEL, MARINE CORPS
---.................... BA-1: UNIT AND INDIVIDUAL TRAINING... --- ---
---.................... SCHOOL TRAINING...................... 5,467 5,467
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 24,797 24,797
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 373 373
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 30,637 30,637
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. --- 14,800
---.................... Over Budgeted End Strength........... --- +14,800
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, MARINE 30,637 45,437
CORPS.
RESERVE PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE
---.................... BA-1: UNIT AND INDIVIDUAL TRAINING... --- ---
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 27,002 27,002
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 27,002 27,002
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, RESERVE PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE.. 27,002 27,002
NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, ARMY
---.................... BA-1: UNIT AND INDIVIDUAL TRAINING... --- ---
---.................... PAY GROUP A TRAINING (15 DAYS and 231,547 231,547
DRILLS 24/48).
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 550,090 550,090
---.................... ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT........... 46,485 46,485
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 828,122 828,122
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. --- 24,900
---.................... Support to Southwest Border.......... --- +24,900
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, ARMY 828,122 853,022
NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, AIR FORCE
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
---.................... BA-1: UNIT AND INDIVIDUAL TRAINING... --- ---
---.................... SPECIAL TRAINING..................... 21,060 11,060
---.................... Excess to Need....................... --- -10,000
---.................... TOTAL, BA-1.......................... 21,060 11,060
---.................... UNDISTRIBUTED ADJUSTMENT............. --- 5,800
---.................... Support to Southwest Border.......... --- +5,800
-------------------------------------------------
---.................... TOTAL, NATIONAL GUARD PERSONNEL, AIR 21,060 16,860
FORCE.
---.................... TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL............ 15,132,054 16,829,378
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
O-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY
131.................... BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............. 0 1,000,000
Increased Peacetime Base Operations --- +1,000,000
Support Costs to Redeployment of
Soldiers from Iraq.
135.................... ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES................ 47,638,208 44,608,615
Reduced Deployment Level............. --- -2,500,000
Transfer to SAG 421 for Subsistence --- -1,013,000
Transportation Costs.
Transfer from Overseas Contingency --- +80,000
Operations Transfer Fund for
Detainee Operations.
Transfer from JIEDDO--Synchronization --- +3,200
and Integration WTI Cell.
Transfer from JIEDDO--Thermal Station --- +13,000
(National IED Exploitation Facility
(NIEF)).
Transfer from JIEDDO--Beachcomber.... --- +3,000
Transfer from JIEDDO--Counter Bomber. --- +1,500
Transfer from JIEDDO--CREW-SSM --- +3,000
Universal Test Set.
Transfer from JIEDDO--Subtle Magnetic --- +1,000
Anomaly Detection Network Systems.
Transfer from JIEDDO--Technical --- +16,400
Collection Training Program.
Transfer from Title II--Chemical --- +8,579
Defense Equipment Sustainment.
Transfer from Title II--MRAP Vehicle --- +6,420
Sustainment at Combat Training
Centers.
Transfer from Title II--Body Armor --- +71,660
Sustainment.
Transfer from Title II--Rapid --- +9,294
Equipping Force Readiness.
Transfer from Title II--Fixed Wing --- +21,171
Life Cycle Contract Support.
Transfer from Title II--Overseas --- +200,000
Security Guards.
Transfer from Title II--Senior Leader --- +30,000
Initiative--Comprehensive Soldier
Fitness Program.
Transfer from Title II--Survivability --- +15,183
and Maneuverability Training.
136.................... COMMANDERS EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROGRAM 1,300,000 500,000
Program reduction.................... --- -400,000
Transfer to Afghanistan --- -400,000
Infrastructure Fund.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
M-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
137.................... RESET................................ 7,840,211 6,261,568
Army-Identified Excess Reset --- -1,578,643
Requirement.
411.................... SECURITY PROGRAMS.................... 2,358,865 2,364,265
Transfer from JIEDDO--Air Vigilance.. --- +5,400
421.................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 3,465,334 4,478,334
Transfer from SAG 135 for Subsistence --- +1,013,000
Transportation Costs.
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 62,602,618 59,212,782
ARMY.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY
1A1A................... MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.. 1,839,918 1,839,918
1A2A................... FLEET AIR TRAINING................... 3,453 3,453
[[Page H2493]]
1A3A................... AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & ENGINEERING 1,400 1,400
SVCS.
1A4A................... AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.... 26,837 26,837
1A4N................... AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT.................. 44,567 44,567
1A5A................... AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........... 233,114 281,114
Aircraft Depot Maintenance Increase.. --- +48,000
1B1B................... MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.... 1,151,465 1,151,465
1B2B................... SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING... 27,472 27,472
1B4B................... SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............... 1,266,556 1,290,556
Ship Depot Maintenance Increase...... --- +24,000
1C1C................... COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS................ 38,468 38,468
1C4C................... WARFARE TACTICS...................... 82,801 32,801
Navy Identified Excess to Requirement --- -50,000
for CENTCOM Operations.
1C5C................... OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND 24,855 24,855
OCEANOGRAPHY.
1C6C................... COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................ 2,737,727 2,930,528
Transfer from Title II--Naval --- +192,801
Expeditionary Combat Command
Increases.
1C7C................... EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................ 3,677 3,677
1CCH................... COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS. 7,000 7,000
1CCM................... COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION 7,455 7,455
SUPPORT.
1D3D................... IN-SERVICE WEAPONS SYSTEMS SUPPORT... 99,118 100,118
Transfer from JIEDDO--CREW-SSM --- +1,000
Universal Test Set.
1D4D................... WEAPONS MAINTENANCE.................. 82,519 82,519
1D7D................... OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT......... 16,938 16,938
BSIT................... ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............... 10,350 0
ONE-NET Baseline Budget Requirement.. --- -10,350
BSM1................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 28,250 49,250
MODERNIZATION.
Continuing Operations at Guantanamo --- +21,000
Bay--Transfer from Overseas
Contingency Operations Transfer Fund.
BSS1................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 381,749 436,249
Continuing Operations at Guantanamo --- +4,000
Bay--Transfer from Overseas
Contingency Operations Transfer Fund.
Transfer from JIEDDO--Counter Bomber. --- +500
Transfer from Title II--Regional/ --- +50,000
Emergency Operations Center.
2A1F................... SHIP PREPOSITIONING AND SURGE........ 27,300 27,300
2C1H................... FLEET HOSPITAL PROGRAM............... 4,400 4,400
2C3H................... COAST GUARD SUPPORT.................. 254,461 0
Transfer to Department of Homeland --- -254,461
Security.
3B1K................... SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........... 81,454 84,454
Transfer from Title II--NAVSEA VSSS/ --- +3,000
EOD Training.
3B4K................... TRAINING SUPPORT..................... 5,400 0
Training Support Baseline Budget --- -5,400
Requirement.
4A1M................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 4,265 4,265
4A2M................... EXTERNAL RELATIONS................... 467 467
4A3M................... CIVILIAN MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL 450 450
MANAGEMENT.
4A4M................... MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL 11,214 11,214
MANAGEMENT.
4A5M................... OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............. 2,706 2,706
4A6M................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 28,671 28,671
4B1N................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 300,868 300,868
4B3N................... ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT... 6,091 6,091
4B7N................... SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE SYSTEMS. 2,153 2,153
4C1P................... NAVAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE.......... 78,464 78,464
9999................... OTHER PROGRAMS....................... 22,581 22,581
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 8,946,634 8,970,724
NAVY.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
1A1A................... OPERATIONAL FORCES................... 2,448,572 2,317,572
..................... Excess to Requirement for Cargo UAS.. ....................... -90,400
..................... Transfer to RDTE,N for Cargo UAS..... ....................... -36,000
..................... Transfer to OP,N for AM-2 Matting.... ....................... -4,600
1A2A................... FIELD LOGISTICS...................... 514,748 517,248
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--Counter Bomber. ....................... +1,000
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--CREW-SSM ....................... +1,000
Universal Test Set.
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--Subtle Magnetic ....................... +500
Anomaly Detection Network Systems.
1A3A................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 523,250 523,250
1B1B................... MARITIME PREPOSITIONING.............. 7,808 7,808
BSS1................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 55,301 55,301
3B4D................... TRAINING SUPPORT..................... 223,071 223,071
4A3G................... SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........... 360,000 360,000
4A4G................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 3,772 3,772
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 4,136,522 4,008,022
MARINE CORPS.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
011A................... PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................ 1,896,647 1,896,647
011C................... COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES............ 1,954,759 1,954,759
011D................... AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING.............. 113,948 113,948
011M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 297,623 399,983
..................... Weapons System Sustainment........... ....................... +102,360
011R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 704,463 504,463
MODERNIZATION.
..................... Unjustified Growth from fiscal year ....................... -200,000
2010 Baseline.
011Z................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 1,780,052 1,780,052
012A................... GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING......... 128,632 128,632
012C................... OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS........ 397,894 397,894
013A................... LAUNCH FACILITIES.................... 28,975 28,975
013C................... SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS................ 34,091 34,091
015A................... COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION 127,861 127,861
SUPPORT.
021A................... AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................... 4,403,800 4,403,800
021D................... MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS............ 240,394 240,394
021M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 217,023 217,023
021R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 20,360 20,360
MODERNIZATION.
021Z................... BASE SUPPORT......................... 57,362 57,362
031R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 1,948 1,948
MODERNIZATION.
031Z................... BASE SUPPORT......................... 6,088 6,088
032A................... SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........... 45,893 45,893
032B................... FLIGHT TRAINING...................... 20,277 20,277
032C................... PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION... 1,500 1,500
032D................... TRAINING SUPPORT..................... 1,820 1,820
041A................... LOGISTICS OPERATIONS................. 292,030 292,030
041R................... FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & 10,500 10,500
MODERNIZATION.
041Z................... BASE SUPPORT......................... 31,985 31,985
042A................... ADMINISTRATION....................... 5,438 5,438
042B................... SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........... 247,149 247,149
042G................... OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES......... 113,082 113,082
043A................... SECURITY PROGRAMS.................... 305,689 305,689
..................... REDUCED DEPLOYMENT LEVELS............ ....................... -400,000
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR 13,487,283 12,989,643
FORCE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
1PL1................... JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................ 20,500 20,500
1PL2................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND........... 3,012,026 2,903,126
..................... Information Operations............... ....................... -49,400
..................... Leased Aircraft--Unjustified Request. ....................... -65,500
Transfer from JIEDDO--Wolfhound II... ....................... +6,000
ES18................... DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............... 14,799 14,799
4GT6................... DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY........ 27,000 27,000
4GT9................... DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY... 136,316 144,316
[[Page H2494]]
..................... Increase Afghanistan FOB Fiber ....................... +8,000
Connectivity.
4GTJ................... DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY... 74,862 74,862
4GTA................... DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY........ 120,469 116,969
..................... Overstatement of Habeas Corpus ....................... -3,500
Civilian Personnel Pricing.
4GTJ................... DEFENSE DEPENDENTS EDUCATION......... 485,769 501,769
..................... Additional Funding for Outreach and ....................... +16,000
Reintegration Services Under the
Yellow Ribbon Reintegration Program.
4GTD................... DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY.. 2,000,000 2,000,000
4GTI................... DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY...... 1,218 1,218
4GTN................... OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE... 188,099 173,099
..................... Knowledge Management................. ....................... -15,000
9999................... OTHER PROGRAMS....................... 3,345,300 3,299,332
..................... Classified Adjustments............... ....................... -49,168
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--Synchronization ....................... +3,200
and Integration WTI Cell.
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 9,426,358 9,276,990
DEFENSE-WIDE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY RESERVE
135.................... ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES................ 286,950 206,784
..................... Army Reserve Identified Excess to ....................... -80,166
Requirement.
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 286,950 206,784
ARMY RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY RESERVE
1A1A................... MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.. 49,089 49,089
1A3A................... INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE............. 400 400
1A5A................... AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........... 17,760 17,760
1B1B................... MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.... 9,395 9,395
1B4B................... SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............... 497 497
1C1C................... COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS................ 3,185 3,185
1C6C................... COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................ 12,169 12,169
4A4M................... MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL 1,064 1,064
MANAGEMENT.
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 93,559 93,559
NAVY RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS RESERVE
1A1A................... OPERATING FORCES..................... 23,571 23,571
BSS1................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 6,114 6,114
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 29,685 29,685
MARINE CORPS RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE RESERVE
011M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 116,924 191,124
..................... Weapons System Sustainment........... ....................... +74,200
011Z................... BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............... 12,683 12,683
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR 129,607 203,807
FORCE RESERVE.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
135.................... ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES................ 544,349 497,849
..................... Distance Learning--Transfer to ....................... -9,000
Baseline OM,ARNG SAG 121.
..................... Air OPTEMPO Duplicate Request........ ....................... -44,000
..................... Support to Southwest Border.......... ....................... +6,500
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, 544,349 497,849
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD.
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR NATIONAL GUARD
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
011F................... AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS.................. 152,896 152,896
011G................... MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........... 57,800 59,400
Support to Southwest Border.......... --- +1,600
011M................... DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................... 140,127 205,687
Weapons System Sustainment........... --- +65,560
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR 350,823 417,983
NATIONAL GUARD.
OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS TRANSFER FUND
OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS 1,551,781 0
TRANSFER FUND.
Transfer to OM,A SAG 135............. --- -80,000
Transfer to OM,N SAGs BSS1 and BSM1.. --- -25,000
Unjustified Program Change........... --- -1,446,781
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY 1,551,781 0
OPERATIONS TRANSFER ACCOUNT.
AFGHANISTAN INFRASTRUCTURE FUND
Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund - --- +400,000
Transfer from CERP.
---.................... ---.................................. --- ---
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, AFGHANISTAN INFRASTRUCTURE 0 400,000
FUND.
AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND
Afghan National Army................. 7,467,014 7,467,014
Infrastructure....................... 1,790,933 1,790,933
Equipment and Transportation......... 1,846,623 1,846,623
Training and Operations.............. 836,842 836,842
Sustainment.......................... 2,992,616 2,992,616
Afghan National Police............... 4,085,437 4,085,437
Infrastructure....................... 1,078,413 1,078,413
Equipment and Transportation......... 917,966 917,966
Training and Operations.............. 990,213 990,213
Sustainment.......................... 1,098,845 1,098,845
Related Activities................... 66,832 66,832
Detainee Operations - Sustainment.... 6,037 6,037
Detainee Operations - Training and 1,530 1,530
Operations.
Detainee Operations - Infrastructure. 58,265 58,265
COIN Activities...................... 1,000 1,000
TOTAL, AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES 11,619,283 11,619,283
FUND.
IRAQ SECURITY FORCES FUND
Defense Security Forces.............. 1,656,906 1,656,906
Equipment and Transportation......... 1,067,706 1,067,706
Training............................. 248,075 248,075
Sustainment.......................... 341,125 341,125
Interior Security Forces............. 268,094 268,094
Equipment and Transportation......... 220,469 220,469
Sustainment.......................... 47,625 47,625
Related Activities................... 75,000 75,000
Authorization Reduction.............. --- -500,000
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, IRAQ SECURITY FORCES FUND..... 2,000,000 1,500,000
=================================================
..................... TOTAL, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE..... 115,205,452 109,427,111
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page H2495]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
P-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY
2...................... C-12 CARGO AIRPLANE (OCO)............ 78,060 78,060
4...................... MQ-1 UAV (OCO)....................... 47,000 24,000
Reduction to Projected Battle Losses. ....................... -23,000
5...................... RQ-11 (RAVEN) (OCO).................. 17,430 17,430
9...................... AH-64 APACHE BLOCK III............... ....................... 34,600
War Replacement Aircraft............. ....................... +34,600
11..................... UH-60 BLACKHAWK (OCO)................ 40,500 373,400
Program Increase for Army National ....................... +80,000
Guard.
Three Combat Loss UH-60.............. ....................... +52,500
Accelerate 12 Aircraft............... ....................... +200,400
13..................... CH-47 HELICOPTER (OCO)............... 70,600 258,400
Accelerate Six Aircraft.............. ....................... +187,800
16..................... C12 AIRCRAFT MODS (OCO).............. 122,340 122,340
17..................... MQ-1 PAYLOAD--UAS (OCO).............. 3,600 3,600
19..................... GUARDRAIL MODS (MIP) (OCO)........... 30,200 6,000
Authorization Adjustment............. ....................... -24,200
20..................... MULTI SENSOR ABN RECON (MIP) (OCO)... 86,200 86,200
21..................... AH-64 MODS (OCO)..................... 199,200 654,200
AH-64A to AH-64D Conversion for the ....................... +455,000
Texas and Mississippi National Guard.
23..................... CH-47 CARGO HELICOPTER MODS (OCO).... 82,900 66,900
Cargo On/Off Loading System (COOLS) ....................... -16,000
ahead of need.
27..................... UTILITY HELICOPTER MODS (OCO)........ 14,530 14,530
28..................... KIOWA WARRIOR (OCO).................. 187,288 160,378
Fielded Fleet Upgrades............... ....................... +20,000
Limit Ramp Rate on Replacement ....................... -46,910
Aircraft.
29..................... AIRBORNE AVIONICS (OCO).............. 24,983 24,983
31..................... RQ-7 UAV MODS (OCO).................. 97,800 546,500
Funding Ahead of Need................ ....................... -1,000
Transfer from Title III.............. ....................... +497,500
Ahead of Need........................ ....................... -47,800
36..................... ASE INFRARED CM (OCO)................ 197,990 182,990
Excess to Need....................... ....................... 15,000
38..................... COMMON GROUND EQUIPMENT (OCO)........ 65,627 65,627
40..................... AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL (OCO)............ 7,555 0
Unjustified Request.................. ....................... -7,555
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY.... 1,373,803 2,720,138
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY
4...................... HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY (OCO)........... 190,459 190,459
6...................... TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY (OCO)........... 112,769 112,769
13..................... ITAS/TOW MODS (OCO).................. 40,600 40,600
TOTAL, MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY..... 343,828 343,828
PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY
4...................... STRYKER VEHICLE (OCO)................ ....................... 545,000
Transfer from Stryker Modifications, ....................... +445,000
line 9.
Increase for Stryker Double V Hull... ....................... +100,000
9...................... STRYKER VEHICLE MODS (OCO)........... 445,000 0
Transfer to Stryker Vehicle, line 4.. ....................... -445,000
22..................... MACHINE GUN, CAL .50, M2 ROLL........ ....................... 79,496
Transfer from Title III.............. ....................... +79,496
26..................... MORTAR SYSTEMS (OCO)................. 8,600 8,600
28..................... XM320 GRENADE LAUNCHER MODULE (OCO).. 22,500 22,500
32..................... COMMON REMOTELY OPERATED WEAPONS 100,000 100,000
STATION (OCO).
34..................... HOWITZER LT WT 155MM (T) (OCO)....... 62,000 62,000
36..................... M4 CARBINE MODS (OCO)................ 12,900 42,900
Program Increase..................... ....................... +30,000
37..................... M2 50 CAL MACHINE GUN MODS (OCO)..... 15,000 15,000
40..................... M119 MODIFICATIONS (OCO)............. 21,500 21,500
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY.... 687,500 896,996
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, ARMY
2...................... CTG, 7.62MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)......... 32,604 13,000
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -19,604
4...................... CTG, .50 CAL, ALL TYPES (OCO)........ 128,876 47,000
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -81,876
5...................... CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)........... 20,056 10,500
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -9,556
7...................... CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)........... 23,826 9,500
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -14,326
8...................... CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)........... 62,700 25,000
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -37,700
11..................... 120MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES (OCO)........ 120,160 26,900
APMI Unit Cost Savings............... ....................... -50,100
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -43,160
15..................... CTG, ARTY, 105MM: ALL TYPES (OCO).... 37,620 15,000
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -22,620
16..................... CTG, ARTY, 155MM: ALL TYPES (OCO).... 37,620 15,000
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -22,620
18..................... MODULAR ARTILLERY CHARGE SYS, ALL 15,048 6,000
TYPES (OCO).
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -9,048
19..................... ARTILLERY FUZES, ALL TYPES (OCO)..... 12,540 5,000
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -7,540
24..................... SHOULDER LAUNCHED MUNITIONS, ALL 17,556 0
TYPES (OCO).
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -17,556
25..................... ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL TYPES (OCO).... 139,285 139,285
26..................... DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES (OCO) ....................... 20,000
Per Army Request..................... ....................... +20,000
27..................... GRENADES, ALL TYPES (OCO)............ 2,000 0
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -2,000
31..................... NON-LETHAL AMMUNITION, ALL TYPES 15,000 0
(OCO).
Per Army Request..................... ....................... -15,000
40..................... CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS 37,700 37,700
DEMILITARIZATION, ALL TYPES (OCO).
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 702,591 369,885
ARMY.
OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY
5...................... FAMILY OF MEDIUM TACTICAL VEH (FMTV) 516,350 398,925
(OCO).
Battle Loss Replacement.............. ....................... +8,875
Contract Savings..................... ....................... -126,300
7...................... FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL VEHICLES 188,677 199,809
(OCO).
Battle Loss Replacement.............. ....................... +11,132
9...................... ARMORED SECURITY VEHICLES (ASV) (OCO) 52,780 52,780
10..................... MINE PROTECTION VEHICLE FAMILY (OCO). 136,700 367,678
Transfer from Title III.............. ....................... +230,978
14..................... HMMWV RECAPITALIZATION PROGRAM (OCO). 989,067 989,067
15..................... MODIFICATION OF IN SVC EQUIP (OCO)... 20,000 312,956
Transfer from Title III............. ....................... +292,956
24..................... WIN-T--GROUND FORCES TACTICAL NETWORK 8,163 8,163
(OCO).
27..................... SHF TERM (OCO)....................... 62,415 62,415
29..................... NAVSTAR GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM 13,500 63,500
(OCO).
[[Page H2496]]
Additional DAGRs..................... ....................... +50,000
40..................... AMC CRITICAL ITEMS--OPA2 (OCO)....... 3,946 3,946
47..................... RADIO, IMPROVED HF (COTS) FAMILY 78,253 78,253
(OCO).
48..................... MEDICAL COMM FOR CBT CASUALTY CARE 15,000 15,000
(OCO).
51x.................... FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS................. ....................... 38,172
Non-MIP Biometrics--Transfer from ....................... +38,172
RDTE,A line 171.
53..................... BASE SUPPORT COMMUNICATIONS (OCO).... 70,000 47,500
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -22,500
55..................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS (OCO)............ ....................... 55,000
Program Adjustment for Tactical Local ....................... +55,000
Area Network TACLAN).
57..................... INSTALLATION INFO INFRASTRUCTURE MOD 413,200 413,200
(OCO).
65..................... PROPHET GROUND (OCO)................. 18,900 18,900
70..................... DCGS-A (MIP) (OCO)................... 197,092 334,516
Transfer from Title III............. ....................... +137,424
74..................... CI HUMINT AUTO REPRTING AND COLL 52,277 47,377
(OCO).
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -4,900
75..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MIP) (OCO).... 5,400 5,400
76..................... LIGHTWEIGHT COUNTER MORTAR RADAR 25,000 10,000
(OCO).
Program Decrease..................... ....................... -15,000
77..................... WARLOCK (OCO)........................ 225,682 225,682
79..................... COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/SECURITY 455,639 455,639
COUNTERMEASURES (OCO).
81..................... FAAD GBS (OCO)....................... 167,460 167,460
84..................... NIGHT VISION DEVICES (OCO)........... 5,019 5,019
89..................... COUNTER-ROCKET, ARTILLERY & MORTAR (C- 291,400 251,200
RAM) (OCO).
Funded Ahead of Need................ ....................... -40,200
90..................... BASE EXPEDITIONARY TARGETING & SURV 486,050 408,050
SYS (OCO).
Program Decrease..................... ....................... -78,000
95..................... MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (FIREFINDER 69,800 69,800
RADARS) (OCO).
96..................... FORCE XXI BATTLE CMD BRIGADE & BELOW 135,500 135,500
(OCO).
98..................... LIGHTWEIGHT LASER DESIGNATOR/ 22,371 22,371
RANGEFINDER (OCO).
99..................... COMPUTER BALLISTICS: LHMBC XM32 (OCO) 1,800 1,800
101.................... COUNTERFIRE RADARS (OCO)............. 20,000 285,867
Transfer from Title III.............. ....................... +275,867
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -10,000
103.................... TACTICAL OPERATIONS CENTERS (OCO).... 43,800 43,800
104.................... FIRE SUPPORT C2 FAMILY (OCO)......... 566 13,566
Advanced Field Artillery Tactical ....................... +13,000
Data System.
105.................... BATTLE COMMAND SUSTAINMENT SUPPORT 420 420
SYS.
108.................... KNIGHT FAMILY (OCO).................. 49,744 49,744
110.................... AUTOMATIC IDENTIFICATION TECHNOLOGY 2,222 2,222
(OCO).
114.................... NETWORK MANAGEMENT INITIALIZATION & 5,000 5,000
SERVICE (OCO).
115.................... MANEUVER CONTROL SYSTEM (OCO)........ 60,111 60,111
121.................... AUTOMATED DATA PROCESSING EQUIP (OCO) 10,500 10,500
130.................... PROTECTIVE SYSTEMS (OCO)............. 5,690 5,690
135.................... TACTICAL BRIDGING, FLOAT RIBBON (OCO) 3,220 3,220
136.................... HANDHELD STANDOFF MINEFIELD DETECTION 0 28,000
SYSTEM.
Transfer from JIEDDO for Proper ....................... +28,000
Execution.
137.................... GRND STANDOFF MINE DETECTION SYSTEM 191,000 191,000
(OCO).
141.................... HEATERS AND ECU'S (OCO).............. 8,708 8,708
149.................... FORCE PROVIDER (OCO)................. 261,599 52,499
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -209,100
150.................... FIELD FEEDING EQUIPMENT (OCO)........ 29,903 29,903
154.................... DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS, PETROLEUM & 55,105 55,105
WATER (OCO).
155.................... WATER PURIFICATION SYSTEMS (OCO)..... 12,086 0
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -12,086
156.................... COMBAT SUPPORT MEDICAL (OCO)......... 8,680 8,680
157.................... MOBILE MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT SYSTEMS 41,398 41,398
(OCO).
159.................... GRADER, ROAD MTZD, HVY, 6X4 (CCE) 3,390 3,390
(OCO).
161.................... SCRAPERS, EARTHMOVING (OCO).......... 3,195 3,195
164.................... LOADERS (OCO)........................ 1,157 1,157
168.................... HIGH MOBILITY ENGINEER EXCAVATOR FOS 3,750 3,750
(OCO).
170.................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (CONST EQUIP) 4,140 4,140
(OCO).
174.................... GENERATORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIP (OCO) 37,480 37,480
175.................... ROUGH TERRAIN CONTAINER HANDLER (OCO) 4,562 4,562
177.................... ALL TERRAIN LIFTING ARMY SYSTEM (OCO) 56,609 58,049
Battle Loss Replacement.............. ....................... +1,440
179.................... TRAINING DEVICES, NONSYSTEM (OCO).... 28,624 28,624
180.................... CLOSE COMBAT TACTICAL TRAINER (OCO).. 8,200 0
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -8,200
184.................... INTEGRATED FAMILY OF TEST EQUIPMENT 622 622
(OCO).
186.................... RAPID EQUIPPING SOLDIER SUPT 58,590 38,590
EQUIPMENT (OCO).
Excess to Need....................... ....................... -20,000
187.................... PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEMS (OPA3) 77,000 77,000
(OCO).
192.................... SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR USER TESTING 1,987 1,987
(OCO).
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS (OCO)............ 775 775
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY....... 5,827,274 6,423,832
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY
3...................... F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) HORNET (MYP)..... ....................... 495,000
Strike Fighter Shortfall Mitigation-- ....................... +495,000
Nine Aircraft.
11..................... UH-1Y/AH-1Z (OCO).................... 88,500 88,500
19..................... E-2C (EARLY WARNING) HAWKEYE (MYP)... ....................... 175,000
Program Increase--Combat Loss ....................... +175,000
Replacement.
29..................... EA-6 SERIES (OCO).................... 15,000 12,700
Install Equipment Program Adjustment. ....................... -2,300
31..................... AV-8 SERIES (OCO).................... 72,100 65,371
Pod Upgrade Kits Cost Growth......... ....................... -1,529
GEN4 Pod Cost Growth................. ....................... -5,200
32..................... F-18 SERIES (OCO).................... 43,250 43,250
34..................... AH-1W SERIES (OCO)................... 35,510 35,510
35..................... H-53 SERIES (OCO).................... 36,248 27,148
Funded Ahead of Need................. ....................... -9,100
36..................... SH-60 SERIES (OCO)................... 6,430 6,430
39..................... P-3 SERIES (OCO)..................... 6,000 6,000
48..................... SPECIAL PROJECT AIRCRAFT (OCO)....... 6,100 6,100
53..................... COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT (OCO)........... 38,700 31,020
Directed Infrared Countermeasures ....................... -7,680
Installation Kit Cost Growth.
54..................... COMMON AVIONICS CHANGES (OCO)........ 14,100 14,100
55..................... COMMON DEFENSIVE WEAPON SYSTEM (OCO). 10,500 10,500
57..................... RQ-7 SERIES (OCO).................... 8,000 8,000
58..................... V-22 (TILT/ROTOR ACFT) OSPREY (OCO).. 36,420 36,420
59..................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS (OCO)........ 3,500 208,500
Aviation Spares...................... ....................... +205,000
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY.... 420,358 1,269,549
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY
5...................... SIDEWINDER (OCO)..................... 2,923 0
Non-combat Expenditures.............. ....................... -2,923
9...................... HELLFIRE (OCO)....................... 85,504 85,504
26..................... SMALL ARMS AND WEAPONS (OCO)......... 4,998 4,998
TOTAL, WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY..... 93,425 90,502
-------------------------------------------------
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & MARINE CORPS
1...................... GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS (OCO).......... 6,060 0
[[Page H2497]]
Contract Delay....................... ....................... -6,060
3...................... AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL TYPES (OCO).... 76,043 76,043
4...................... MACHINE GUN AMMUNITION (OCO)......... 69,660 68,660
20mm Linked TP, PGU-27 Cost Growth... ....................... -1,000
7...................... AIR EXPENDABLE COUNTERMEASURES (OCO). 33,632 33,632
11..................... OTHER SHIP GUN AMMUNITION (OCO)...... 455 455
12..................... SMALL ARMS & LANDING PARTY AMMO (OCO) 7,757 7,757
13..................... PYROTECHNIC AND DEMOLITION (OCO)..... 1,209 1,209
15..................... SMALL ARMS AMMUNITION (OCO).......... 19,498 19,498
16..................... LINEAR CHARGES, ALL TYPES (OCO)...... 4,677 4,677
17..................... 40 MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)............... 11,307 11,307
18..................... 60MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)................ 17,150 17,150
19..................... 81MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)................ 27,738 27,738
20..................... 120MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)............... 96,895 96,895
21..................... CTG 25MM, ALL TYPES (OCO)............ 990 990
22..................... GRENADES, ALL TYPES (OCO)............ 6,137 6,137
23..................... ROCKETS, ALL TYPES (OCO)............. 13,543 13,543
24..................... ARTILLERY, ALL TYPES (OCO)........... 137,118 137,118
25..................... DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES (OCO) 9,296 9,296
26..................... FUZE, ALL TYPES (OCO)................ 25,888 25,888
27..................... NON LETHALS (OCO).................... 31 31
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & 565,084 558,024
MARINE CORPS.
OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY
25..................... STANDARD BOATS (OCO)................. 30,706 23,706
Riverine Patrol Boats - Unjustified ....................... -7,000
Request.
57..................... MATCALS (OCO)........................ 27,080 25,080
ASPARCS - Unjustified Cost Growth.... ....................... -2,000
74..................... EMI CONTROL INSTRUMENTATION (OCO).... 1,800 1,800
94..................... EXPEDITIONARY AIRFIELDS (OCO)........ 0 4,600
AM-2 Matting Expeditionary Airfield - ....................... +4,600
Requested Transfer from OM,MC.
99..................... AVIATION LIFE SUPPORT (OCO).......... 26,024 10,024
CSEL Excess to Need.................. ....................... -16,000
117.................... EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL EQUIP 132,386 10,386
(OCO).
JCREW - Funding No Longer Required... ....................... -122,000
122.................... PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES (OCO).... 1,234 1,234
123.................... GENERAL PURPOSE TRUCKS (OCO)......... 420 420
124.................... CONSTRUCTION & MAINTENANCE EQUIP 55,474 41,474
(OCO).
Contract Delays...................... ....................... -14,000
126.................... TACTICAL VEHICLES (OCO).............. 91,802 91,802
129.................... ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION (OCO)......... 26,016 26,016
131.................... MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT (OCO)... 33,659 33,659
137.................... COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT (OCO)...... 2,775 2,775
146.................... PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT (OCO).... 46,417 38,917
ATFP Afloat - Ahead of Need.......... ....................... -7,500
149.................... SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS (OCO)........ 4,942 4,942
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY....... 480,735 316,835
PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS
2...................... LAV PIP (OCO)........................ 152,333 37,573
Baseline Budget Requirement.......... ....................... -114,760
5...................... 155MM LIGHTWEIGHT TOWED HOWITZER 103,600 103,600
(OCO).
6...................... HIGH MOBILITY ARTILLERY ROCKET SYSTEM 145,533 145,533
(OCO).
7...................... WEAPONS & COMBAT VEHICLES UNDER $5 M 7,329 7,329
(OCO).
9...................... MODIFICATION KITS (OCO).............. 12,000 12,000
10..................... WEAPONS ENHANCEMENT PROGRAM (OCO).... 18,571 18,571
16..................... UNIT OPERATIONS CENTER (OCO)......... 112,424 112,424
17..................... REPAIR AND TEST EQUIPMENT (OCO)...... 15,962 38,762
OCO Shortfall - ETMS and Obsolescence ....................... +22,800
Upgrades.
19..................... MODIFICATION KITS (OCO).............. 18,545 3,345
Unexecutable Funding - CESAS......... ....................... -15,200
20..................... ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION (COMM & ELEC) 11,549 11,549
(OCO).
21..................... AIR OPERATIONS C2 SYSTEMS (OCO)...... 41,031 41,031
22..................... RADAR SYSTEMS (OCO).................. 5,493 10,993
OCO Shortfall - TPS-59............... ....................... +5,500
23..................... FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM (OCO)............ 4,710 4,710
24..................... INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT (OCO). 82,897 82,897
26..................... DCGS-MC (OCO)........................ 21,789 21,789
28..................... COMMON COMPUTER RESOURCES (OCO)...... 29,412 29,412
29..................... COMMAND POST SYSTEMS (OCO)........... 36,256 36,256
30..................... RADIO SYSTEMS (OCO).................. 155,545 110,545
E-LMR - Not an OCO Requirement....... ....................... -45,000
31..................... COMM SWITCHING & CONTROL SYSTEMS 63,280 28,280
(OCO).
Previously Funded UUNS............... ....................... -35,000
35..................... 5/4T TRUCK HMMWV (MYP) (OCO)......... 12,994 0
Service Requested Reduction.......... ....................... -12,994
37..................... MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLE REPLACEMENT 80,559 80,559
(OCO).
38..................... LOGISTICS VEHICLE SYSTEM REP (OCO)... 109,100 109,100
39..................... FAMILY OF TACTICAL TRAILERS (OCO).... 22,130 22,130
42..................... ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL EQUIP ASSORT 17,799 27,399
(OCO).
OCO Shortfall - ECU and SFRS......... ....................... +9,600
43..................... BULK LIQUID EQUIPMENT (OCO).......... 1,628 16,758
OCO Shortfall - Tank and Pump Modules ....................... +15,130
44..................... TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS (OCO).......... 83,698 89,498
OCO Shortfall - Liquid Fuel Storage.. ....................... +5,800
45..................... POWER EQUIPMENT ASSORTED (OCO)....... 41,536 41,536
47..................... EOD SYSTEMS (OCO).................... 213,985 188,985
Excess to Requirement................ ....................... -25,000
48..................... PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT (OCO).... 5,200 5,200
50..................... MATERIAL HANDLING EQUIP (OCO)........ 58,264 58,264
53..................... TRAINING DEVICES (OCO)............... 55,864 55,864
54..................... CONTAINER FAMILY (OCO)............... 8,826 8,826
56..................... FAMILY OF INTERNALLY TRANSPORTABLE 28,401 28,401
VEHICLE (OCO).
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS..... 1,778,243 1,589,119
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
1...................... F-35 (OCO)........................... 204,900 0
Unjustified Request.................. ....................... -204,900
19..................... CV-22 (OCO).......................... ....................... 70,000
Program Increase - Provides for One ....................... +70,000
Additional Combat Loss Aircraft.
25..................... HH-60M OPERATIONAL LOSS REPLACEMENT 114,000 417,400
(OCO).
Program Increase (Adds 10 Aircraft, ....................... +303,400
Not Less Than Four for the Air
National Guard).
26..................... RQ-11 (OCO).......................... 9,380 9,380
34..................... MQ-9 (OCO)........................... 216,000 376,814
Spares............................... ....................... -55,186
Transfer 12 Aircraft from Title III.. ....................... +216,000
37..................... B-1B (OCO)........................... 8,500 8,500
39..................... A-10 (OCO)........................... 16,500 16,500
44..................... C-5 (OCO)............................ 73,400 73,400
47..................... C-17A (OCO).......................... 224,450 176,450
Program Decrease..................... ....................... -48,000
56..................... KC-10A (ATCA) (OCO).................. 3,540 3,540
62..................... C-130 (OCO).......................... 166,720 166,720
63..................... C-130 MODS INTEL (OCO)............... 10,900 10,900
[[Page H2498]]
66..................... COMPASS CALL MODS.................... 10,000 10,000
72..................... H-60 (OCO)........................... 81,000 153,200
Excess to Need for Radars............ ....................... -61,000
Program Increase--Transportable ....................... +92,800
Blackhawk Operation Simulators.
Program Increase--Control Display ....................... +12,500
Unit Mission Processors.
Program Increase--GPS/Inertial ....................... +27,900
Navigation Units.
75..................... OTHER AIRCRAFT (OCO)................. 61,600 61,600
78..................... MQ-9 PAYLOAD--UAS.................... 45,000 160,383
Transfer from Title III.............. ....................... +115,383
79..................... CV-22 MODS (OCO)..................... 830 830
80..................... INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR PARTS.......... 10,900 10,900
98..................... OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES (OCO)....... 57,500 218,138
Transfer from Title III.............. ....................... +160,638
104.................... DARP (OCO)........................... 47,300 47,300
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR 1,362,420 1,991,955
FORCE.
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
5...................... PREDATOR HELLFIRE MISSILE (OCO)...... 41,621 41,621
10..................... AGM-65D MAVERICK (OCO)............... 15,000 15,000
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE 56,621 56,621
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR FORCE
2...................... CARTRIDGES (OCO)..................... 30,801 30,801
4...................... GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS (OCO).......... 53,192 53,192
5...................... JOINT DIRECT ATTACK MUNITION (OCO)... 147,991 147,991
11..................... FLARES (OCO)......................... 20,486 20,486
12..................... FUZES (OCO).......................... 24,982 24,982
13..................... SMALL ARMS (OCO)..................... 15,507 15,507
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR 292,959 292,959
FORCE.
OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
2...................... MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLE (OCO)........ 7,350 5,350
Contract Savings..................... ....................... -2,000
5...................... SECURITY AND TACTICAL VEHICLES (OCO). 15,540 13,540
Uparmored HMMWV--Unjustified Cost ....................... -2,000
Growth.
11..................... ITEMS LESS THAN $5,000,000 (VEHICLES) 690 690
(OCO).
16..................... INTELLIGENCE COMM EQUIPMENT (OCO).... 1,400 1,400
19..................... THEATER AIR CONTROL SYS IMPROVEMEN... 4,354 4,354
20..................... WEATHER OBSERVATION FORECAST (OCO)... 9,825 0
OS-21 Contract Delays................ ....................... -9,825
28..................... AIR FORCE PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEM 6,100 6,100
(OCO).
38..................... USCENTCOM (OCO)...................... 28,784 28,784
44..................... MILSATCOM SPACE (OCO)................ 4,300 4,300
46..................... COUNTERSPACE SYSTEM (OCO)............ 8,200 8,200
47..................... TACTICAL C-E EQUIPMENT (OCO)......... 2,552 2,552
52..................... COMM ELECT MODS (OCO)................ 470 470
53..................... NIGHT VISION GOGGLES (OCO)........... 8,833 4,433
NVCD-NSL Contract Delays............. ....................... -4,400
57..................... CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (OCO)......... 131,559 16,759
JCREW Ahead of Need.................. ....................... -114,800
56..................... BASE PROCURED EQUIPMENT (OCO)........ 9,070 9,070
59..................... MOBILITY EQUIPMENT (OCO)............. 16,588 16,588
66..................... DEFENSE SPACE RECONNAISSANCE PROG 9,700 9,700
(OCO).
OTHER PROGRAMS (OCO)................. 2,822,166 2,736,303
Classified Adjustment................ ....................... -85,863
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE.. 3,087,481 2,868,593
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE
5...................... DIA SUPT TO CENTCOM INTELLIGENCE ACT 27,702 27,702
(OCO).
18..................... GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL SYS (OCO). 1,000 1,000
20..................... TELEPORT PROGRAM (OCO)............... 6,191 6,191
23..................... DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEM NETWORK 520 520
(OCO).
35..................... AEGIS FIELDING....................... 0 189,720
SM-3 Block IA--Additional 20 ....................... +189,720
Interceptors.
50..................... MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD (OCO)........... 5,700 5,700
52..................... UNDISTRIBUTED, INTELLIGENCE.......... 15,000 15,000
XX..................... OTHER PROGRAMS (OCO)................. 323,486 333,675
Classified Adjustment................ ....................... +10,189
55..................... ROTARY WING UPGRADES & SUSTAINMENT 5,600 5,600
(OCO).
55A.................... MH-47G............................... 0 28,500
Combat Loss Replacement Aircraft..... ....................... +28,500
56..................... MH-47 SERVICE LIFE EXTENSION PROG 4,222 15,222
(OCO).
Modifications for Combat Loss ....................... +11,000
Replacement Aircraft.
57..................... MH-60 SOF MODERNIZATION (OCO)........ 0 7,800
Modifications for Combat Loss ....................... +7,800
Replacement Aircraft.
58..................... NON-STANDARD AVIATION................ 0 121,268
Medium NSAV--Transfer from Title III. ....................... +121,268
63..................... CV-22 SOF MODIFICATION............... 0 15,000
Modifications for Combat Loss ....................... +15,000
Replacement Aircraft.
64..................... MQ-1 UAS (OCO)....................... 8,202 8,202
65..................... MQ-9 UAV (OCO)....................... 4,368 4,368
71..................... SOF ORDNANCE REPLENISHMENT (OCO)..... 75,878 65,878
Execution Delays..................... ....................... -10,000
72..................... SOF ORDNANCE ACQUISITION (OCO)....... 49,776 49,776
73..................... COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT & 9,417 31,817
ELECTRONICS (OCO).
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... 22,400
Requirement.
74..................... SOF INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS (OCO)....... 149,406 81,306
Leased Aircraft--Unjustified Request. ....................... -42,800
HF-TTL Baseline Budget Requirement... ....................... -25,300
81..................... TACTICAL VEHICLES (OCO).............. 36,262 91,262
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +55,000
Requirement.
83..................... COMBAT MISSION REQUIREMENTS (OCO).... 30,000 0
OCO Program Growth................... ....................... -30,000
88..................... SOF AUTOMATION SYSTEMS (OCO)......... 1,291 1,291
90..................... SOF OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS 25,000 25,000
INTELLIGENCE (OCO).
92..................... SOF VISUAL AUGMENTATION, LASERS & 3,200 22,700
SENSORS (OCO).
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +19,500
Requirement.
93..................... SOF TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEMS (OCO)..... 3,985 3,985
96..................... MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT (OCO)........ 5,530 5,530
97..................... SOF OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS (OCO)... 79,869 95,545
Program Increase--Unfunded ....................... +51,376
Requirement.
Requirement Addressed by ....................... -35,700
Reprogramming.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................. 2,941 2,941
-------------------------------------------------
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE..... 874,546 1,262,499
NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVE EQUIPMENT
NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVE EQUIPMENT. 0 850,000
Program Increase--Army Reserve....... ....................... +140,000
Program Increase--Navy Reserve....... ....................... +70,000
[[Page H2499]]
Program Increase--Marine Corps ....................... +70,000
Reserve.
Program Increase--Air Force Reserve.. ....................... +70,000
Program Increase--Army National Guard ....................... +250,000
Program Increase--Air National Guard. ....................... +250,000
MINE RESISTANT AMBUSH PROTECTED VEHICLE FUND
MINE RESISTANT AMBUSH PROTECTED 3,415,000 3,415,000
VEHICLE FUND.
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, PROCUREMENT................... 21,361,868 25,316,335
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
R-1 Budget Request Recommendation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & EVALUATION, ARMY
48..................... NIGHT VISION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY 0 23,100
(OCO).
..................... Program increase--Aviation night and ....................... +23,100
limited visibility sensor
demonstration.
60..................... SOLDIER SUPPORT AND SURVIVABILITY 57,900 14,900
(OCO).
..................... HFDS--Transfer to line 75 for ....................... -48,000
execution at request of the Army.
..................... REF--Transfer from Title IV for OCO ....................... +5,000
requirement.
61..................... TACTICAL ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE 0 7,800
SYSTEM--ADV DEV.
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--Air Vigilance.. ....................... +7,800
75..................... ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT (OCO). 5,400 48,000
..................... HFDS--Transfer from line 60 for ....................... +48,000
execution at request of the Army.
..................... Long-term development effort......... ....................... -5,400
77..................... ALL SOURCE ANALYSIS SYSTEM (OCO)..... 8,100 8,100
171.................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM 63,306 0
(OCO).
..................... Protected Information--Biometrics-- ....................... -25,134
Transfer to line 171x.
..................... Transfer to OP,A line 51 at request ....................... -38,172
of the Army.
171x................... FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS................. 0 25,134
..................... Non-MIP Biometrics--Transfer from ....................... +25,134
line 171.
178.................... DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE 16,200 16,200
SYSTEMS (OCO).
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 150,906 143,234
EVALUATION, ARMY.
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & EVALUATION, NAVY
19..................... ELECTROMAGNETIC SYSTEMS ADVANCED 14,100 10,680
TECHNOLOGY (OCO).
..................... Unjustified request.................. ....................... -3,420
53..................... JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 1,000 1,000
DEVELOPMENT (OCO).
75..................... JOINT COUNTER RADIO CONTROLLED IED 0 11,800
ELECTRONIC WARFARE (OCO).
..................... Network Enabled EW--Transfer from ....................... +11,800
JIEDDO.
124.................... MEDICAL DEVELOPMENT (OCO)............ 300 300
153.................... NAVY SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE 5,200 5,200
(SEW) SUPPORT (OCO).
204.................... TACTICAL UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES.... 0 36,000
..................... Transfer from OM,MC for Qualitative ....................... +36,000
Risk Assessment.
213.................... RQ-7 UAV (OCO)....................... 6,900 6,900
999.................... OTHER PROGRAMS (OCO)................. 32,901 32,901
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 60,401 104,781
EVALUATION, NAVY.
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & EVALUATION, AIR FORCE
17..................... ADVANCED AEROSPACE SENSORS........... 0 56,000
..................... Blue Devil Block 2--Transfer from ....................... +56,000
JIEDDO.
36..................... SPACE CONTROL TECHNOLOGY (OCO)....... 16,000 16,000
66..................... TACTICAL DATA NETWORKS ENTERPRISE 30,000 30,000
(OCO).
128.................... MQ9 UAV (OCO)........................ 0 88,500
..................... VADER/DDR on MQ-9--Transfer from ....................... +88,500
JIEDDO.
145.................... CSAF INNOVATION PROGRAM (OR ISR 0 112,000
INNOVATIONS).
..................... ISR Sensor Pilot Program............. ....................... +112,000
164.................... MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS (OCO)....... 4,443 4,443
211.................... NETWORK-CENTRIC COLLABORATIVE 6,100 6,100
TARGETING (OCO).
230.................... SPECIAL TACTICS/COMBAT CONTROL (OCO). 10,325 10,325
999.................... OTHER PROGRAMS (OCO)................. 199,373 161,014
..................... Classified Adjustment................ ....................... -38,359
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 266,241 484,382
EVALUATION, AIR FORCE.
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & EVALUATION, DEFENSE-WIDE
56..................... DARPA SENSOR TECHNOLOGY.............. 0 40,000
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--Wide Area ....................... +40,000
Surveillance Development Roadmap.
197.................... LONG-HAUL COMMUNICATIONS DCS (OCO)... 23,125 23,125
202.................... INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM 750 750
(OCO).
254.................... SPECIAL OPERATIONS INTELLIGENCE 9,440 9,440
SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT (OCO).
255.................... SOF Operational Enhancements......... 0 14,500
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--EW Family of ....................... +14,500
Systems.
999.................... OTHER PROGRAMS (OCO)................. 123,925 134,801
..................... Classified Adjustment................ ....................... +3,376
..................... Transfer from JIEDDO--Wallaby........ ....................... +7,500
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 157,240 222,616
EVALUATION, DEFENSE-WIDE.
..................... TOTAL, RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST & 634,788 955,013
EVALUATION.
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
..................... OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE............ 1,398,092 1,398,092
..................... IN-HOUSE CARE........................ 709,004 709,004
..................... PRIVATE SECTOR CARE.................. 538,376 538,376
..................... CONSOLIDATED HEALTH CARE............. 128,412 128,412
..................... INFORMATION MANAGEMENT/IT............ 2,286 2,286
..................... MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS.............. 518 518
..................... EDUCATION AND TRAINING............... 18,061 18,061
..................... BASE OPERATIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS... 1,435 1,435
..................... RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT............. 0 24,000
..................... Blast Recovery Monitors--Transfer ....................... +8,000
from JIEDDO.
..................... Body Blood Flow Monitor--Transfer ....................... +9,000
from JIEDDO.
..................... EMF Blast Pulse Effects--Transfer ....................... +7,000
from JIEDDO.
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM........ 1,398,092 1,422,092
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE
..................... AFGHANISTAN AIR MOBILITY............. 141,634 141,634
..................... AFGHANISTAN BORDER FACILITIES........ 5,000 5,000
..................... AFGHANISTAN BORDER POLICE EQUIP...... 19,500 19,500
..................... AFGHANISTAN BORDER TRAINING.......... 20,000 20,000
..................... CENTCOM SUPPORT--AFGHANISTAN......... 3,000 3,000
..................... COUNTER NARCOTICS POLICE AFGHANISTAN 25,295 25,295
FACILITIES.
..................... COUNTER NARCOTICS POLICE AFGHANISTAN 50,250 50,250
TRAINING.
..................... COUNTER NARCOTICS POLICE AFGHANISTAN 1,241 1,241
(CNP-A) EQUIPMENT.
..................... INTELLIGENCE AND TECHNOLOGY.......... 61,500 56,900
..................... Program Adjustment................... ....................... -4,600
..................... PAKISTAN............................. 49,590 49,590
..................... KAZAKHSTAN........................... 7,850 7,850
..................... KYRGYZSTAN........................... 27,900 27,900
[[Page H2500]]
..................... TAJIKISTAN........................... 8,500 8,500
..................... TURKMENISTAN......................... 10,350 10,350
..................... UZBEKISTAN........................... 8,500 8,500
..................... YEMEN................................ 17,000 17,000
..................... PROGRAM ADJUSTMENT................... ....................... -12,000
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER- 457,110 440,510
DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE.
JOINT IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICE DEFEAT FUND
1...................... ATTACK THE NETWORK................... 1,434,400 765,200
..................... Transfer to Staff and Infrastructure ....................... -238,800
for proper execution.
..................... Air Vigilance--outside JIEDDO ....................... -13,200
mission--Transfer to RDTE,A line 61
and OM,A line 411 for proper
execution.
..................... Blue Devil Block 2--Transfer to ....................... -56,000
RDTE,AF line 17 for proper execution.
..................... Copperhead--program terminated....... ....................... -125,000
..................... Electronic Warfare Family of Systems ....................... -14,500
(EW FoS)--Transfer to SOCOM, RDTE,DW
for proper execution.
..................... JUON Reserve......................... ....................... +100,000
..................... Solar ISE--outside JIEDDO mission.... ....................... -7,000
..................... Synchronization and Integration WTI ....................... -6,400
Cell--Transfer to OM,A SAG 135 and
OM,DW for proper execution.
..................... Thermal Station (National IED ....................... -13,000
Exploitation Facility (NIEF))--
Transfer to OM,A SAG 135 for proper
execution.
..................... VADER development--Transfer $88.5 ....................... -241,800
million to RDTE,AF line 128.
..................... Wallaby--Transfer to RDTE,DW for ....................... -7,500
proper execution.
..................... Wide Area Surveillance Development ....................... -40,000
Roadmap (WASDP)--Transfer to DARPA
for proper execution.
..................... Wolfhound II--Transfer to OM,DW for ....................... -6,000
proper execution.
2...................... DEFEAT THE DEVICE.................... 1,529,390 1,223,090
..................... ACES HY Roadmap--Program terminated.. ....................... -28,000
..................... Transfer to Staff and Infrastructure ....................... -105,000
for proper execution.
..................... Beachcomber--Transfer to OM,A SAG 135 ....................... -3,000
for proper execution.
..................... Counter Bomber--Transfer to OM,A SAG ....................... -3,000
135, OM,N, OM,MC and OM,AF for
proper execution.
..................... CREW -SSM--Universal Test Set-- ....................... -5,000
Transfer to OM,A SAG 135, OM,N and
OM,MC for proper execution.
..................... JUON Reserve......................... ....................... -105,000
..................... Networked Enabled EW--Transfer to ....................... -11,800
RDTE,N line 75 for proper execution.
..................... Personnel Borne IED/Vehicle Borne IED ....................... -28,000
(PBIED/VBIED)--Transfer to OP,A line
136 for proper execution.
..................... Starlite Development Program--Program ....................... -16,000
terminated.
..................... Transfer to OM,A SAG 135 and OM,MC ....................... -1,500
for proper execution.
3...................... TRAIN THE FORCE...................... 286,210 170,410
..................... Transfer to Staff and Infrastructure ....................... -75,400
for proper execution.
..................... Blast Recovery Monitors--Transfer to ....................... -8,000
DHP RDTE for proper execution.
..................... Body Blood Flow Monitor--Transfer to ....................... -9,000
DHP RDTE for proper execution.
..................... EMF Blast Pulse Effects--Transfer to ....................... -7,000
DHP RDTE for proper execution.
..................... Technical Collection Training ....................... -16,400
Program--Transfer to OM,A SAG 135
for proper execution.
4...................... STAFF AND INFRASTRUCTURE............. 0 635,068
..................... Transfer from Title VI............... ....................... +215,868
..................... Transfer from Attack the Network for ....................... +238,800
proper execution.
..................... Transfer from Defeat the Device for ....................... +105,000
proper execution.
..................... Transfer from Train the Force for ....................... +75,400
proper execution.
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, JOINT IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE 3,250,000 2,793,768
DEVICE DEFEAT FUND.
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
..................... OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL...... 10,529 10,529
..................... OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL...... 10,529 10,529
-------------------------------------------------
..................... TOTAL, OTHER DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 5,115,731 4,666,899
PROGRAMS.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mr. CONAWAY. Madam Speaker, playing politics with our troops and
their families is simply wrong.
We must not allow for a soldier's family to worry about making their
house payment or putting groceries on the table because Congress can't
pass a budget.
And while Senate Democrats and the President continue to drag their
feet, we have stepped up to do the right thing: To keep military
funding out of the debate.
I will not stand by and allow for this petty argument to damage those
servicemembers and their families who are on the front lines defending
our freedoms.
This temporary continuing resolution is just that: a temporary fix.
I am disappointed that we find ourselves in this situation.
Madam Speaker, the amount House Republicans are cutting over the next
six months, while historically large, is embarrassingly small compared
to the size of the deficit. I am ready to get on with this conversation
and get to the real plan here. We're ready to start talking about
trillions, not billions.
Yet, given the refusal to act by Harry Reid and the Administration,
this is what we're faced with today.
Madam Speaker, the American people want Washington to stop the
spending binge that is hurting our economy and threatening job growth
without shutting down the government.
It's been 47 days since the House passed H.R. 1 and Senate Democrats
still haven't passed a bill to keep the government running for the
fiscal year or offered a credible plan to cut spending.
This troop funding bill will give them another week to offer a
credible plan that shows Washington is serious about addressing its
spending addiction.
Mr. WEST. Madam Speaker, will we be Chamberlain or will we be
Churchill?
Neville Chamberlain, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom between
1937 and 1940, will forever be known for his foreign policy approach of
appeasement. Prime Minster Chamberlain, even with Germany's increasing
aggression in Europe, turned a blind eye to the impending danger and
did not prepare his nation for war.
Winston Churchill, who saw the dark clouds approaching, was looked
upon as an alarmist at the time, even though he saw the true danger.
Churchill stated: ``An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it
will eat him last.''
Madam Speaker: I once again will not be feeding the crocodile. I once
again will not be voting for yet another Continuing Resolution.
However, having spent 22 years in uniform, having served on the
battlefield in defense of this nation, I will be voting for the
Department of Defense Appropriations bill in order to support our men
and women in uniform. Our nation is involved in two conflicts and our
President has now involved us in a third. It is my constitutional
responsibilities to provide funding for the service members in uniform
who are defending our nation both at home and abroad.
Some would argue that comparing World War II to the debate on the
budget for Fiscal Year 2011 is not an appropriate comparison. However,
I would argue that Winston Churchill was prepared to lead his country
courageously, in the way that would ensure England's future. Today we
are also faced with the question of protecting America's future.
Since we are discussing history it is important to be clear on the
facts that have led us to this point. The Democrat Majority and
President Obama over the last two years have produced deficits of $1.4
and $1.25 trillion and the President has produced a Budget for Fiscal
Year 2012 which would add another $1.6 trillion. Our nation is faced
with raising a debt limit of $15 trillion. Three years of trillion
dollar deficits America is moving onto the same path that Spain,
Ireland and now Portugal are on.
The American people know that the federal government is collecting
$2.2 trillion and spending $3.7 trillion this year. The American people
know forty cents of every dollar the federal government spends is
borrowed, much of it from China. The American people also know our
nation is piling up new debt at the rate of $4 billion a day.
The 111th Congress was controlled by overwhelming Democrat majorities
in the House of Representatives and the United States Senate. Yet even
with these enormous majorities, Congress failed to pass a budget or any
of the Appropriations bills.
In November of 2010, the people of this country voted for a change.
They voted for a new direction for our nation. They voted because they
saw, as did Winston Churchill, the dark clouds on the horizon.
The Republican Majority passed H.R. 1 and fulfilled a promise to the
American people and sent the legislation to the U.S. Senate. However,
the Democrat Majority in the Senate dismissed H.R. 1 as too extreme.
Since the Senate rejected the legislation the chamber has not produced
any bill to bring to conference committee or even to use to negotiate.
Forty-seven days and we are still waiting.
[[Page H2501]]
President Obama appointed Vice President Biden as the Administration
point person on the negotiations with the Congress and instead of
getting down to a serious discussion he flew off to Europe. Clearly the
economy of Finland was more important than the failing economy that the
President's policies have produced for the United States.
All indications are that my Democrat colleagues want to get to the
point of a government shutdown in order to win political points. It
seems that their goal is the hope that by shutting the federal
government that the American people will see an intransigent Republican
Party and return the Democrats to power in the next election.
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi waits in the wings to take the Speaker's
gavel back. Should that happen we will go back to the days of spending,
taxing and regulating and embrace the policies that will put our
economic and national security again at risk.
However, the Republican Party must now share in the blame of how we
have arrived at this point. The Republican Leadership is approaching
100 days since taking the Majority and is now playing a game of high
stakes poker with the funding for the Federal Government. The House
Majority has now placed the funding for the Department of Defense and
the funding for the troops down as a bargaining chip.
In the last 100 days, the House Majority could have passed at any
point in time a separate stand alone Appropriations for the Department
of Defense and the funding for our men and women in uniform. However, I
am disgusted at the perception that Leaders in my own Party who did not
move a Defense Bill earlier and are now using the men and women in
uniform, the individuals who are defending our freedom, as a way to
pass yet another continuing resolution.
Madam Speaker, what will another week provide with regard to these
negotiations? Will it provide an opportunity for the Democrat Party and
Senator Schumer to create more exotic synonyms for the word ``extreme''
or will it allow the Leadership of the Republican Party to find other
essential government program to be used as vehicles to pass another
Continuing Resolutions.
Once again, it is time to conclude this debate on federal spending
and get our nation back on track by cutting spending for the long term
economic restoration of our Republic.
I voted for the Department of Defense Appropriation bill because, at
this moment in time, due to the complete failure by the Democrat
Majority in the Senate this is currently the only vehicle on the table.
But more importantly, my ``yes'' vote today was for my Brothers and
Sisters in uniform. My ``no'' sentiment reflects a disappointment in my
own leadership.
I believe today, more than ever, in the words of Winston Churchill
who said ``I was only the servant of my country and had I, at any
moment, failed to express her unflinching resolve to fight and conquer,
I should at once have been rightly cast aside.''
Mr. CONNOLLY of Virginia. Madam Speaker, it's time to stop holding
the American people hostage to the ideological whims of those who don't
understand that responsible governing is the art of compromise. We are
on the sixth continuing resolution in as many months for the current
fiscal year. It's time to get the job done, and thankfully negotiations
are underway. Yet the bill we are considering today undercuts that
effort and the sincerity of the majority to avoid a shutdown. This bill
perpetuates the ``my way or the highway'' philosophy of House
Republicans. It continues their blind assault on vital services to
constituents in every community in America like education, public
safety, clean water and Social Security. Further exposing their lack of
sincerity, this bill just puts the hard decisions off for another week.
Shutting down the government is not a victory but a defeat for us, the
American people and the democratic process. That's why I cannot be an
enabler for a reckless, meat axe approach to funding public services.
Let's reject this short-term approach in favor of a more responsible
bill. We owe my constituents and the citizens we all serve no less.
Let's do our jobs.
Mr. WOLF. Madam Speaker, I rise to support H.R. 1363, the Department
of Defense and Further Continuing Appropriations Act of 2011.
I am voting today for H.R. 1363 because I do not support a government
shutdown. H.R. 1363 will keep the government open. I am voting to
ensure that federal employees are not pawns in a game of ``shut-down
chicken.'' I am voting to ensure that FBI agents continue on the job. I
am voting to ensure that DEA agents, ATF agents, U.S. Marshals, Border
Patrol Agents, and CIA agents, are on the job. I am voting to ensure
that tax returns filed by mail and loans to small businesses continue
to be processed. I am voting to ensure that NIH research and clinical
trials continue. I am voting to ensure that veterans will be able to
receive walk-in services at clinics. I am voting to ensure that the
government honors signed contracts. I am voting to ensure that federal
employees, who are all essential, are able to continue to do the work
they do, day in and day out, to keep our nation running.
I am also voting for H.R. 1363 because it funds the Department of
Defense for the rest of the fiscal year. This bill provides economic
certainty to our troops and their families at a time when they are
sacrificing so much to support our military operations around the
world. We also need to provide that economic certainty to the entire
federal workforce and the American people who expect us to be on the
job working for them. We need to reach an agreement on a spending plan
for the remaining five and a half months of this fiscal year and get on
with the business of producing a budget for FY 2012 with a resolve to
continue to take steps to reverse our nation's mounting debt and
deficit spending.
I am voting for H.R. 1363 because it cuts $12 billion in
discretionary spending in one week. Twelve billion dollars. This may
well be the largest one week discretionary spending cut ever passed
through the House. The measure before us today is another responsible
step in the right direction until a long term agreement is reached.
The House has acted. Again and again, House Republicans have voted to
keep the government open by supporting continuing resolutions until a
long-term solution for the rest of the fiscal year is reached. We are
continuing to work to find a solution to the unfinished business left
by the leadership of the previous Congress. Passing H.R. 1363 will
enable us to move forward on the fiscal oversight needed to ensure long
term, fiscal solvency.
I am voting ``yes'' today because this measure continues our efforts
to tackle the debt while keeping the government open.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Madam Speaker, if the majority were genuinely
interested in avoiding a government shutdown, they would bring a clean,
one week CR to the floor to give the current negotiations time to reach
a successful conclusion. But that's not what we're being asked to vote
on today.
Instead, in the most cynical demonstration of bad faith, today's
legislation combines funding for our troops--which every Member of this
House supports, and which a clean CR would provide--with controversial
cuts and ideologically extreme poison pills that the majority knows the
nation doesn't want and the Senate and the President will not support.
As a result, in this moment of truth, the majority is deliberately
choosing to dive headlong into a government shutdown in order to pander
to its Tea Party base while the rest of America yearns for honorable
compromise and adult leadership.
As Ranking Member of the Budget Committee, and someone who actually
supported the last two CRs, I am willing to work in good faith with
Members on both sides of the aisle to break the current impasse. But I
will not participate in this kind of eleventh hour partisan
gamesmanship when our federal government's operations are at stake.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. All time for debate has expired.
Pursuant to House Resolution 206, the previous question is ordered on
the bill.
The question is on the engrossment and third reading of the bill.
The bill was ordered to be engrossed and read a third time, and was
read the third time.
{time} 1330
Motion to Recommit
Mr. HOYER. Madam Speaker, I have a motion to recommit at the desk.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is the gentleman opposed to the bill?
Mr. HOYER. Yes, Madam Speaker, I am.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Clerk will report the motion to
recommit.
The Clerk read as follows:
Mr. Hoyer moves to recommit H.R. 1363 to the Committee on
Appropriations with instructions to report the same back to
the House forthwith with the following amendment:
Strike all after the enacting clause and insert the
following:
[[Page H2502]]
That the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011 (Public Law
111-242) is further amended by striking the date specified in
section 106(3) and inserting ``April 15, 2011''.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I reserve a point of order on
the gentleman's motion.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. A point of order is reserved.
Pursuant to the rule, the gentleman from Maryland is recognized for 5
minutes in support of his motion.
Mr. HOYER. Thank you, Madam Speaker, and I want to thank the chairman
as well. I understand he has given me the 5 minutes, and I appreciate
that.
First of all, I want to say to my friend from Kentucky--and he is my
friend and we've worked together for many, many years. He told the
story about a gentleman who was in court and he was in court for
killing his two parents, and he pled for the mercy of the Court because
he was an orphan.
I tell my friend from Kentucky, particularly appropriate because he's
from Kentucky, because the mess that we have was created because some
folks from Kentucky would not give some votes to put appropriation
bills on the floor. To that extent I think that analogy is apt. The
gentleman complains of a mess that, frankly, was of the Republican
Members in the United States Senate refusing to allow bills to come to
the floor.
Madam Speaker, this motion to recommit, if adopted, A, will take care
of the troops; B, will keep the government open; and, C, importantly, I
would presume, from all of you who have protested how you want to
protect the troops, it will pass the Senate and be signed by the
President. So it will become law, and it can become law by tomorrow
night before 12 midnight when the government's authorization ends. So
it should commend itself to all Members of this House as a viable
document to protect the troops, keep the government open, and get
signed.
As the great legislator Henry Clay, who was elected Speaker the first
day he served in this House--Henry Clay was from where, Mr. Chairman?
From your great State. And Henry Clay said this: ``If you cannot
compromise, you cannot govern.'' Henry Clay.
And let me repeat that to my friends on your side of the aisle: ``If
you cannot compromise, you cannot govern.''
Too many of our Republican colleagues have refused to compromise. And
now you bring to the floor a resolution and say, If you only do what we
tell you to do, things will be fine. My, my, my, what a definition of
``compromise.'' Then you say, If the Senate will only do what we say,
we'd be fine. The first time, the second time, the third time, and now
here we are on the fourth time.
Now, I supported you, as you know, on the second time and third time
because I thought it was reasonable to give that opportunity, and the
cuts you were asking for, yes, I thought would be included at some
point in time.
The Senate, by the way, passed those two resolutions, as we indicated
they would. And the President signed them, as the gentleman is telling
me.
I'm getting a little help over here from the ranking member, and I
appreciate it.
But now we are on the brink of bringing the government to a halt.
That makes no sense, and anybody here knows that to be the case. My
friend Mr. Simpson, for whom I have a great deal of respect, knows that
it makes no sense. In fact, many of your folks who have said to shut it
down in the past are now saying, We don't want to shut it down, because
they know the American people think that makes no sense.
Republicans showed their priorities when they passed a spending bill
that cuts billions in scientific research, kicks 200,000 children out
of Head Start, and cuts college aid for millions of middle class
students.
Yes, we don't agree with those priorities. They're not our
priorities. We think we need to invest in growing this economy and
growing jobs. We think we need to invest in young people so that they
can have the educational opportunities. Ronald Reagan said Head Start
worked. George Bush I said it worked. George Bush II said it worked. We
don't want to cut 200,000 children out of that program. We think it's
important to make sure the future of our country is secured by
educating those children.
You have shown your priorities when you threatened a government
shutdown over divisive social policy riders. Governor Daniels, Governor
of Indiana, and a candidate for President, I understand, said, Take the
social issues and consider them on another bill; let's get the finances
of our country in order first.
That's what you say you want to do. We want to help you do that. We
will work with you on that. We have been working with you on it. That's
why I voted for the last two CRs, and the Senate passed them and the
President signed them.
But, Madam Speaker, this motion to recommit will allow for our troops
to be taken care of, as they should be; and, by the way, they will be
taken care of even if we have a shutdown because they are critical to
our national security.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. HOYER. I urge the adoption of this motion to recommit that will
be signed by the President of the United States.
Point of Order
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I wish to speak on the point
of order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman will state his point of order.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, the amendment, or motion,
proposes a net increase in budget authority in the bill. The amendment
is not in order under section 3(j)(3) of House Resolution 5, 112th
Congress, which states:
``It shall not be in order to consider an amendment to a general
appropriations bill proposing a net increase in budget authority in the
bill unless considered en bloc with another amendment or amendments
proposing an equal or greater decrease in such budget authority
pursuant to clause 2(f) of rule XXI.''
The amendment proposes a net increase in budget authority in the bill
in violation of such section.
I ask for a ruling from the Chair.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Does any other Member wish to speak on the
point of order?
Mr. HOYER. I do, Madam Speaker.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Maryland is recognized.
Mr. HOYER. Madam Speaker, this motion to recommit speaks directly to
the funding of government. The continuing resolution offered by the
gentleman from Kentucky, he has repeatedly said its objective is to
fund the government and keep the government open.
This is an alternative which argues for the fact that we want to pass
a piece of legislation that the President of the United States says he
will sign. It is simply for 1 week. It is simply a short period of time
while we negotiate.
I urge the Speaker to find this motion to recommit consistent with
the rules and consistent with the objectives of the legislation that is
under consideration.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair is prepared to rule.
The gentleman from Kentucky makes a point of order that the motion
offered by the gentleman from Maryland violates section 3(j)(3) of
House Resolution 5.
Section 3(j)(3) establishes a point of order against an amendment
proposing a net increase in budget authority in the pending bill.
The Chair has been persuasively guided by an estimate from the chair
of the Committee on the Budget that the motion proposes a net increase
in budget authority in the bill. Therefore, the point of order is
sustained. The motion is not in order.
{time} 1340
Mr. HOYER. Madam Speaker, I appeal the ruling of the Chair.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is, Shall the decision of the
Chair stand as the judgment of the House?
Motion to Table
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I move to table the motion.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion to table.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the ayes appeared to have it.
Mr. HOYER. Madam Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
[[Page H2503]]
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 9 of rule XX, this 15-
minute vote on the motion to table will be followed by a 5-minute vote
on passage of the bill, if arising without further proceedings in
recommittal.
The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were--yeas 236,
nays 187, not voting 9, as follows:
[Roll No. 245]
YEAS--236
Adams
Aderholt
Akin
Alexander
Amash
Austria
Bachmann
Bachus
Barletta
Bartlett
Barton (TX)
Bass (NH)
Benishek
Berg
Biggert
Bilbray
Bishop (UT)
Black
Blackburn
Bonner
Bono Mack
Boustany
Brady (TX)
Brooks
Broun (GA)
Buchanan
Bucshon
Buerkle
Burgess
Burton (IN)
Calvert
Camp
Campbell
Canseco
Cantor
Capito
Carter
Cassidy
Chabot
Chaffetz
Coble
Coffman (CO)
Cole
Conaway
Cravaack
Crawford
Crenshaw
Culberson
Davis (KY)
Denham
Dent
DesJarlais
Diaz-Balart
Dold
Dreier
Duffy
Duncan (SC)
Duncan (TN)
Ellmers
Emerson
Farenthold
Fincher
Fitzpatrick
Flake
Fleischmann
Fleming
Flores
Forbes
Fortenberry
Foxx
Franks (AZ)
Gallegly
Gardner
Garrett
Gerlach
Gibbs
Gibson
Gingrey (GA)
Gohmert
Goodlatte
Gosar
Gowdy
Granger
Graves (GA)
Graves (MO)
Griffin (AR)
Griffith (VA)
Grimm
Guinta
Guthrie
Hall
Hanna
Harper
Harris
Hartzler
Hastings (WA)
Hayworth
Heck
Heller
Hensarling
Herger
Herrera Beutler
Huelskamp
Huizenga (MI)
Hultgren
Hunter
Hurt
Issa
Jenkins
Johnson (IL)
Johnson (OH)
Johnson, Sam
Jones
Jordan
Kelly
King (IA)
King (NY)
Kingston
Kinzinger (IL)
Kline
Labrador
Lamborn
Lance
Landry
Lankford
Latham
LaTourette
Latta
Lewis (CA)
LoBiondo
Long
Lucas
Luetkemeyer
Lummis
Lungren, Daniel E.
Mack
Manzullo
Marchant
Marino
McCarthy (CA)
McCaul
McClintock
McCotter
McHenry
McKeon
McKinley
McMorris Rodgers
Meehan
Mica
Miller (FL)
Miller (MI)
Miller, Gary
Mulvaney
Murphy (PA)
Myrick
Neugebauer
Noem
Nugent
Nunes
Nunnelee
Olson
Palazzo
Paul
Paulsen
Pearce
Pence
Petri
Pitts
Platts
Poe (TX)
Pompeo
Posey
Price (GA)
Quayle
Reed
Rehberg
Reichert
Renacci
Ribble
Rigell
Rivera
Roby
Roe (TN)
Rogers (AL)
Rogers (KY)
Rogers (MI)
Rohrabacher
Rokita
Rooney
Ros-Lehtinen
Roskam
Ross (FL)
Royce
Runyan
Ryan (WI)
Scalise
Schilling
Schmidt
Schock
Schweikert
Scott (SC)
Scott, Austin
Sensenbrenner
Shimkus
Shuster
Simpson
Smith (NE)
Smith (NJ)
Smith (TX)
Southerland
Stearns
Stivers
Stutzman
Sullivan
Terry
Thompson (PA)
Thornberry
Tiberi
Tipton
Turner
Upton
Walberg
Walden
Walsh (IL)
Webster
West
Westmoreland
Whitfield
Wilson (SC)
Wittman
Wolf
Womack
Woodall
Yoder
Young (FL)
Young (IN)
NAYS--187
Ackerman
Altmire
Andrews
Baca
Baldwin
Barrow
Bass (CA)
Becerra
Berkley
Berman
Bishop (GA)
Bishop (NY)
Blumenauer
Boren
Boswell
Brady (PA)
Braley (IA)
Brown (FL)
Butterfield
Capps
Capuano
Cardoza
Carnahan
Carney
Carson (IN)
Castor (FL)
Chandler
Chu
Cicilline
Clarke (MI)
Clarke (NY)
Clay
Cleaver
Clyburn
Cohen
Connolly (VA)
Conyers
Cooper
Costa
Costello
Courtney
Critz
Crowley
Cuellar
Cummings
Davis (CA)
Davis (IL)
DeFazio
DeGette
DeLauro
Deutch
Dicks
Dingell
Doggett
Donnelly (IN)
Doyle
Edwards
Ellison
Engel
Eshoo
Farr
Fattah
Filner
Frank (MA)
Fudge
Garamendi
Gonzalez
Green, Al
Green, Gene
Grijalva
Gutierrez
Hanabusa
Hastings (FL)
Heinrich
Higgins
Himes
Hinchey
Hinojosa
Hirono
Holden
Holt
Hoyer
Inslee
Israel
Jackson (IL)
Jackson Lee (TX)
Johnson (GA)
Johnson, E. B.
Kaptur
Keating
Kildee
Kind
Kissell
Kucinich
Langevin
Larsen (WA)
Lee (CA)
Levin
Lewis (GA)
Lipinski
Loebsack
Lofgren, Zoe
Lowey
Lujan
Lynch
Maloney
Markey
Matheson
Matsui
McCarthy (NY)
McCollum
McDermott
McGovern
McIntyre
McNerney
Meeks
Michaud
Miller (NC)
Miller, George
Moore
Moran
Murphy (CT)
Nadler
Napolitano
Neal
Olver
Owens
Pallone
Pastor (AZ)
Payne
Perlmutter
Peters
Peterson
Pingree (ME)
Polis
Price (NC)
Quigley
Rahall
Rangel
Reyes
Richardson
Richmond
Ross (AR)
Rothman (NJ)
Roybal-Allard
Ruppersberger
Rush
Ryan (OH)
Sanchez, Linda T.
Sanchez, Loretta
Sarbanes
Schakowsky
Schiff
Schrader
Schwartz
Scott (VA)
Scott, David
Serrano
Sewell
Sherman
Shuler
Sires
Slaughter
Smith (WA)
Speier
Stark
Sutton
Thompson (CA)
Thompson (MS)
Tierney
Tonko
Towns
Tsongas
Van Hollen
Velazquez
Visclosky
Walz (MN)
Wasserman Schultz
Waters
Watt
Waxman
Weiner
Welch
Wilson (FL)
Woolsey
Wu
Yarmuth
NOT VOTING--9
Bilirakis
Frelinghuysen
Giffords
Honda
Larson (CT)
Pascrell
Pelosi
Sessions
Young (AK)
{time} 1403
Mr. CLYBURN, Ms. PINGREE of Maine, Mr. ALTMIRE, Ms. JACKSON LEE of
Texas, and Messrs. McNERNEY and WEINER changed their vote from ``yea''
to ``nay.''
So the motion to table was agreed to.
The result of the vote was announced as above recorded.
A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.
Stated for:
Mr. BILIRAKIS. Madam Speaker, on rollcall No. 245, had I been
present, I would have voted ``yea.''
Stated against:
Mr. LARSON of Connecticut. Mr. Speaker, on April 7, 2011 I missed
rollcall vote 245. Had I been present, I would have voted ``no'' or
``nay.''
Motion to Recommit
Mr. OWENS. Madam Speaker, I have a motion to recommit at the desk.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is the gentleman opposed to the bill?
Mr. OWENS. I am, in its current form.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Clerk will report the motion to
recommit.
The Clerk read as follows:
Mr. Owens moves to recommit the bill H.R. 1363 to the
Committee on Appropriations with instructions to report the
same back to the House forthwith with the following
amendment:
At the end of title VIII of division A, insert the
following new section:
Sec. 8124. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
division, the amounts provided by title I of this division
for the following accounts shall be as follows: ``Military
Personnel, Army'', $41,042,653,000; ``Military Personnel,
Navy'', $25,912,449,000; ``Military Personnel, Marine
Corps'', $13,210,161,000; ``Military Personnel, Air Force'',
$27,105,755,000; ``Reserve Personnel, Army'', $4,333,165,000;
``Reserve Personnel, Navy'', $1,940,191,000; ``Reserve
Personnel, Marine Corps'', $612,191,000; ``Reserve Personnel,
Air Force'', $1,650,797,000; ``National Guard Personnel,
Army'', $7,511,296,000; and ``National Guard Personnel, Air
Force'', $3,060,098,000.
Mr. OWENS (during the reading). I ask unanimous consent to dispense
with the reading.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from New York?
There was no objection.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I reserve a point of order on
the gentleman's motion.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. A point of order is reserved.
Pursuant to the rule, the gentleman from New York is recognized for 5
minutes in support of his motion.
Mr. OWENS. Thank you, Madam Speaker.
I rise in support of this motion because this motion will ensure that
the members of the armed services will be paid in the event of a
government shutdown. There is no group who deserves our support more
than the members of the armed services. As a veteran myself, I
recognize the implications of failing to pay those members of the armed
services who have given their time, their energy, their blood and, in
many cases, their lives in support of our freedom, the freedom that
allows us to be here today and to have this heated debate over the
direction of our country.
When I look around at what will happen if we fail to pass this
motion, we know that the President has indicated he will veto the
current underlying legislation, which means in effect we will be unable
to pay our military men and women.
The economic consequences to the communities in which our military
men and women reside--in my case Fort Drum, as well as many active
Reserve units in my district--would be horrific. They will not buy
gasoline, they will not buy groceries, they will not buy clothes. There
are tremendous economic consequences to the actions that we have failed
to take.
I have supported the continuing resolutions previously which have
saved $51
[[Page H2504]]
billion from the budget. I am not a person not in support of cutting,
but we must do cutting and the decrease in the Federal budget in a
responsible way--not one which injures our men and women, particularly,
as I said before, those who reside at Fort Drum and in and around that
community.
I think it's very important as we move forward with this discussion
that we keep foremost in our minds the men and women in the military. I
think we have not acted, in large measure, responsibly in this process.
We need to move to a continuing resolution which is economically based,
which will allow the recovery to continue, which will allow job growth
to move forward and not be focused on ideology or the slashing and
burning of programs which are highly inappropriate.
I yield back the balance of my time.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, I withdraw my reservation on
the point of order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The reservation is withdrawn.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. I rise in opposition to the motion.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. ROGERS of Kentucky. Madam Speaker, this procedural motion is
nothing more than a dilatory tactic which comes at a time when we can
least afford those types of things. Now is the time to act, not partake
in political games.
Our debate should be not about procedure. It should be about doing
our job. It should be about funding our troops, about keeping our
government running, and saving the taxpayer money.
The measure before us provides the essential funds for our men and
women who are in harm's way on three battlefields around the world.
Those who sacrifice so much for us should not be held hostage by
Washington's inaction while providing for our national defense. The
measure also gives us one more week for the Senate and the White House
to come to a resolution on funding the activities of the government,
and it cuts $12 billion in wasteful spending.
The American people expect us to stop the partisan bickering and get
our work done. The time for idle talk is over. Enough is enough.
This motion is purely a political gesture and should be defeated. I
think all Members should know, Madam Speaker, this bill is not a
political tactic. The real fact is that if you vote against this bill,
you are voting against the troops who are engaged in three wars.
I yield back the balance of my time.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Without objection, the previous question is
ordered on the motion to recommit.
There was no objection.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion to recommit.
The question was taken; and the Speaker pro tempore announced that
the noes appeared to have it.
Mr. OWENS. Madam Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 9 of rule XX, the Chair
will reduce to 5 minutes the minimum time for any electronic vote on
the question of passage.
The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were--yeas 191,
nays 236, not voting 5, as follows:
[Roll No. 246]
YEAS--191
Ackerman
Altmire
Andrews
Baca
Baldwin
Barrow
Bass (CA)
Becerra
Berkley
Berman
Bishop (GA)
Bishop (NY)
Blumenauer
Boren
Boswell
Brady (PA)
Braley (IA)
Brown (FL)
Butterfield
Capps
Capuano
Cardoza
Carnahan
Carney
Carson (IN)
Castor (FL)
Chandler
Chu
Cicilline
Clarke (MI)
Clarke (NY)
Clay
Cleaver
Clyburn
Cohen
Connolly (VA)
Conyers
Cooper
Costa
Costello
Courtney
Critz
Crowley
Cuellar
Cummings
Davis (CA)
Davis (IL)
DeFazio
DeGette
DeLauro
Deutch
Dicks
Dingell
Doggett
Donnelly (IN)
Doyle
Edwards
Ellison
Engel
Eshoo
Farr
Fattah
Filner
Frank (MA)
Fudge
Garamendi
Gonzalez
Green, Al
Green, Gene
Grijalva
Gutierrez
Hanabusa
Hastings (FL)
Heinrich
Higgins
Himes
Hinchey
Hinojosa
Hirono
Holden
Holt
Honda
Hoyer
Inslee
Israel
Jackson (IL)
Jackson Lee (TX)
Johnson (GA)
Johnson, E. B.
Jones
Kaptur
Keating
Kildee
Kind
Kissell
Kucinich
Langevin
Larsen (WA)
Larson (CT)
Lee (CA)
Levin
Lewis (GA)
Lipinski
Loebsack
Lofgren, Zoe
Lowey
Lujan
Lynch
Maloney
Matheson
Matsui
McCarthy (NY)
McCollum
McDermott
McGovern
McIntyre
McNerney
Meeks
Michaud
Miller (NC)
Miller, George
Moore
Moran
Murphy (CT)
Nadler
Napolitano
Neal
Olver
Owens
Pallone
Pascrell
Pastor (AZ)
Payne
Pelosi
Perlmutter
Peters
Peterson
Pingree (ME)
Polis
Price (NC)
Quigley
Rahall
Rangel
Reyes
Richardson
Richmond
Ross (AR)
Rothman (NJ)
Roybal-Allard
Ruppersberger
Rush
Ryan (OH)
Sanchez, Linda T.
Sanchez, Loretta
Sarbanes
Schakowsky
Schiff
Schrader
Schwartz
Scott (VA)
Scott, David
Serrano
Sewell
Sherman
Shuler
Sires
Slaughter
Smith (WA)
Speier
Stark
Sutton
Thompson (CA)
Thompson (MS)
Tierney
Tonko
Towns
Tsongas
Van Hollen
Velazquez
Visclosky
Walz (MN)
Wasserman Schultz
Waters
Watt
Waxman
Weiner
Welch
Wilson (FL)
Woolsey
Wu
Yarmuth
NAYS--236
Adams
Aderholt
Akin
Alexander
Amash
Austria
Bachmann
Bachus
Barletta
Bartlett
Barton (TX)
Bass (NH)
Benishek
Berg
Biggert
Bilbray
Bilirakis
Bishop (UT)
Black
Blackburn
Bonner
Bono Mack
Boustany
Brady (TX)
Brooks
Broun (GA)
Buchanan
Bucshon
Buerkle
Burgess
Burton (IN)
Calvert
Camp
Campbell
Canseco
Cantor
Capito
Carter
Cassidy
Chabot
Chaffetz
Coble
Coffman (CO)
Cole
Conaway
Cravaack
Crawford
Crenshaw
Culberson
Davis (KY)
Denham
Dent
DesJarlais
Diaz-Balart
Dold
Dreier
Duffy
Duncan (SC)
Duncan (TN)
Ellmers
Emerson
Farenthold
Fincher
Fitzpatrick
Flake
Fleischmann
Fleming
Flores
Forbes
Fortenberry
Foxx
Franks (AZ)
Gallegly
Gardner
Garrett
Gerlach
Gibbs
Gibson
Gingrey (GA)
Gohmert
Goodlatte
Gosar
Gowdy
Granger
Graves (GA)
Graves (MO)
Griffin (AR)
Griffith (VA)
Grimm
Guinta
Guthrie
Hall
Hanna
Harper
Harris
Hartzler
Hastings (WA)
Hayworth
Heck
Heller
Hensarling
Herger
Herrera Beutler
Huelskamp
Huizenga (MI)
Hultgren
Hunter
Hurt
Issa
Jenkins
Johnson (IL)
Johnson (OH)
Johnson, Sam
Jordan
Kelly
King (IA)
King (NY)
Kingston
Kinzinger (IL)
Kline
Labrador
Lamborn
Lance
Landry
Lankford
Latham
LaTourette
Latta
Lewis (CA)
LoBiondo
Long
Lucas
Luetkemeyer
Lummis
Lungren, Daniel E.
Mack
Manzullo
Marchant
Marino
McCarthy (CA)
McCaul
McClintock
McCotter
McHenry
McKeon
McKinley
McMorris Rodgers
Meehan
Mica
Miller (FL)
Miller (MI)
Mulvaney
Murphy (PA)
Myrick
Neugebauer
Noem
Nugent
Nunes
Nunnelee
Olson
Palazzo
Paul
Paulsen
Pearce
Pence
Petri
Pitts
Platts
Poe (TX)
Pompeo
Posey
Price (GA)
Quayle
Reed
Rehberg
Reichert
Renacci
Ribble
Rigell
Rivera
Roby
Roe (TN)
Rogers (AL)
Rogers (KY)
Rogers (MI)
Rohrabacher
Rokita
Rooney
Ros-Lehtinen
Roskam
Ross (FL)
Royce
Runyan
Ryan (WI)
Scalise
Schilling
Schmidt
Schock
Schweikert
Scott (SC)
Scott, Austin
Sensenbrenner
Sessions
Shimkus
Shuster
Simpson
Smith (NE)
Smith (NJ)
Smith (TX)
Southerland
Stearns
Stivers
Stutzman
Sullivan
Terry
Thompson (PA)
Thornberry
Tiberi
Tipton
Turner
Upton
Walberg
Walden
Walsh (IL)
Webster
West
Westmoreland
Whitfield
Wilson (SC)
Wittman
Wolf
Womack
Woodall
Yoder
Young (FL)
Young (IN)
NOT VOTING--5
Frelinghuysen
Giffords
Markey
Miller, Gary
Young (AK)
{time} 1426
So the motion to recommit was rejected.
The result of the vote was announced as above recorded.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the passage of the bill.
Under clause 10 of rule XX, the yeas and nays are ordered.
This is a 5-minute vote.
The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were--yeas 247,
nays 181, not voting 4, as follows:
[Roll No. 247]
YEAS--247
Adams
Aderholt
Akin
Alexander
Altmire
Austria
Bachus
Barletta
Barrow
Bartlett
Bass (NH)
Benishek
Berg
Biggert
Bilbray
Bilirakis
Bishop (GA)
Bishop (UT)
Black
Blackburn
Bonner
Bono Mack
Boren
Boswell
Boustany
Brady (TX)
Brooks
[[Page H2505]]
Broun (GA)
Buchanan
Bucshon
Buerkle
Burgess
Burton (IN)
Calvert
Camp
Campbell
Canseco
Cantor
Capito
Carter
Cassidy
Chabot
Chaffetz
Coble
Coffman (CO)
Cole
Conaway
Cooper
Cravaack
Crawford
Crenshaw
Culberson
Davis (KY)
Denham
Dent
DesJarlais
Diaz-Balart
Dold
Donnelly (IN)
Dreier
Duffy
Duncan (SC)
Duncan (TN)
Ellmers
Emerson
Farenthold
Fincher
Fitzpatrick
Flake
Fleischmann
Fleming
Flores
Forbes
Fortenberry
Foxx
Franks (AZ)
Gallegly
Gardner
Garrett
Gerlach
Gibbs
Gibson
Gingrey (GA)
Gohmert
Goodlatte
Gosar
Gowdy
Granger
Graves (GA)
Graves (MO)
Griffin (AR)
Griffith (VA)
Grimm
Guinta
Guthrie
Hall
Hanna
Harper
Harris
Hartzler
Hastings (WA)
Hayworth
Heck
Heller
Hensarling
Herger
Herrera Beutler
Holden
Huelskamp
Huizenga (MI)
Hultgren
Hunter
Hurt
Issa
Jenkins
Johnson (IL)
Johnson (OH)
Johnson, Sam
Jones
Jordan
Kelly
King (NY)
Kingston
Kinzinger (IL)
Kissell
Kline
Labrador
Lamborn
Lance
Landry
Lankford
Latham
LaTourette
Latta
Lewis (CA)
LoBiondo
Long
Lucas
Luetkemeyer
Lummis
Lungren, Daniel E.
Mack
Manzullo
Marchant
Marino
Matheson
McCarthy (CA)
McCaul
McClintock
McCotter
McHenry
McIntyre
McKeon
McKinley
McMorris Rodgers
Meehan
Mica
Miller (FL)
Miller (MI)
Miller, Gary
Murphy (PA)
Myrick
Neugebauer
Noem
Nugent
Nunes
Nunnelee
Olson
Palazzo
Paulsen
Pearce
Pence
Peterson
Petri
Pitts
Platts
Poe (TX)
Pompeo
Posey
Price (GA)
Quayle
Reed
Rehberg
Reichert
Renacci
Ribble
Rigell
Rivera
Roby
Roe (TN)
Rogers (AL)
Rogers (KY)
Rogers (MI)
Rohrabacher
Rokita
Rooney
Ros-Lehtinen
Roskam
Ross (AR)
Ross (FL)
Royce
Runyan
Ryan (WI)
Scalise
Schilling
Schmidt
Schock
Schrader
Schweikert
Scott (SC)
Scott, Austin
Sensenbrenner
Sessions
Shimkus
Shuler
Shuster
Simpson
Smith (NE)
Smith (NJ)
Smith (TX)
Southerland
Stearns
Stivers
Stutzman
Sullivan
Terry
Thompson (PA)
Thornberry
Tiberi
Tipton
Turner
Upton
Walberg
Walden
Walsh (IL)
Webster
West
Westmoreland
Whitfield
Wilson (SC)
Wittman
Wolf
Womack
Woodall
Yoder
Young (FL)
Young (IN)
NAYS--181
Ackerman
Amash
Andrews
Baca
Bachmann
Baldwin
Barton (TX)
Bass (CA)
Becerra
Berkley
Berman
Bishop (NY)
Blumenauer
Brady (PA)
Braley (IA)
Brown (FL)
Butterfield
Capps
Capuano
Cardoza
Carnahan
Carney
Carson (IN)
Castor (FL)
Chandler
Chu
Cicilline
Clarke (MI)
Clarke (NY)
Clay
Cleaver
Clyburn
Cohen
Connolly (VA)
Costa
Costello
Courtney
Critz
Crowley
Cuellar
Cummings
Davis (CA)
Davis (IL)
DeFazio
DeGette
DeLauro
Deutch
Dicks
Dingell
Doggett
Doyle
Edwards
Ellison
Engel
Eshoo
Farr
Fattah
Filner
Frank (MA)
Fudge
Garamendi
Gonzalez
Green, Al
Green, Gene
Grijalva
Gutierrez
Hanabusa
Hastings (FL)
Heinrich
Higgins
Himes
Hinchey
Hinojosa
Hirono
Holt
Honda
Hoyer
Inslee
Israel
Jackson (IL)
Jackson Lee (TX)
Johnson (GA)
Johnson, E. B.
Kaptur
Keating
Kildee
Kind
King (IA)
Kucinich
Langevin
Larsen (WA)
Larson (CT)
Lee (CA)
Levin
Lewis (GA)
Lipinski
Loebsack
Lofgren, Zoe
Lowey
Lujan
Lynch
Maloney
Markey
Matsui
McCarthy (NY)
McCollum
McDermott
McGovern
McNerney
Meeks
Michaud
Miller (NC)
Miller, George
Moore
Moran
Mulvaney
Murphy (CT)
Nadler
Napolitano
Neal
Olver
Owens
Pallone
Pascrell
Pastor (AZ)
Paul
Payne
Pelosi
Perlmutter
Peters
Pingree (ME)
Polis
Price (NC)
Quigley
Rahall
Rangel
Reyes
Richardson
Richmond
Rothman (NJ)
Roybal-Allard
Ruppersberger
Rush
Ryan (OH)
Sanchez, Linda T.
Sanchez, Loretta
Sarbanes
Schakowsky
Schiff
Schwartz
Scott (VA)
Scott, David
Serrano
Sewell
Sherman
Sires
Slaughter
Smith (WA)
Speier
Stark
Sutton
Thompson (CA)
Thompson (MS)
Tierney
Tonko
Towns
Tsongas
Van Hollen
Velazquez
Visclosky
Walz (MN)
Wasserman Schultz
Waters
Watt
Waxman
Weiner
Welch
Wilson (FL)
Woolsey
Wu
Yarmuth
NOT VOTING--4
Conyers
Frelinghuysen
Giffords
Young (AK)
{time} 1434
Mr. SCHRADER changed his vote from ``nay'' to ``yea.''
So the bill was passed.
The result of the vote was announced as above recorded.
A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.
____________________