[House Report 107-253]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]



107th Congress                                                   Report
                        HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
 1st Session                                                    107-253

======================================================================



 
MAKING APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT, THE UNITED STATES 
  POSTAL SERVICE, THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT, AND CERTAIN 
  INDEPENDENT AGENCIES, FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING SEPTEMBER 30, 2002, 
  AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES

                                _______
                                

                October 26, 2001.--Ordered to be printed

                                _______
                                

 Mr. Istook, from the committee of conference, submitted the following

                           CONFERENCE REPORT

                        [To accompany H.R. 2590]

      The committee of conference on the disagreeing votes of 
the two Houses on the amendment of the Senate to the bill (H.R. 
2590) ``making appropriations for the Treasury Department, the 
United States Postal Service, the Executive Office of the 
President, and certain Independent Agencies, for the fiscal 
year ending September 30, 2002, and for other purposes'', 
having met, after full and free conference, have agreed to 
recommend and do recommend to their respective Houses as 
follows:
      That the House recede from its disagreement to the 
amendment of the Senate, and agree to the same with an 
amendment, as follows:
      In lieu of the matter stricken and inserted by said 
amendment, insert:
That the following sums are appropriated, out of any money in 
the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the Treasury 
Department, the United States Postal Service, the Executive 
Office of the President, and certain Independent Agencies, for 
the fiscal year ending September 30, 2002, and for other 
purposes, namely:

                  TITLE I--DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

                          Departmental Offices


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Departmental Offices 
including operation and maintenance of the Treasury Building 
and Annex; hire of passenger motor vehicles; maintenance, 
repairs, and improvements of, and purchase of commercial 
insurance policies for, real properties leased or owned 
overseas, when necessary for the performance of official 
business; not to exceed $3,500,000 for official travel 
expenses; not to exceed $3,813,000, to remain available until 
expended for information technology modernization requirements; 
not to exceed $150,000 for official reception and 
representation expenses; not to exceed $258,000 for unforeseen 
emergencies of a confidential nature, to be allocated and 
expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury 
and to be accounted for solely on his certificate, 
$177,142,000: Provided, That of these amounts $2,900,000 is 
available for grants to State and local law enforcement groups 
to help fight money laundering: Provided further, That of these 
amounts $2,000,000 shall be available for a grant associated 
with research on transfer pricing, and that such sum shall be 
transferred within 90 days of enactment of this Act.

        Department-Wide Systems and Capital Investments Programs


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For development and acquisition of automatic data 
processing equipment, software, and services for the Department 
of the Treasury, $68,828,000, to remain available until 
expended: Provided, That these funds shall be transferred to 
accounts and in amounts as necessary to satisfy the 
requirements of the Department's offices, bureaus, and other 
organizations: Provided further, That this transfer authority 
shall be in addition to any other transfer authority provided 
in this Act: Provided further, That none of the funds 
appropriated shall be used to support or supplement the 
Internal Revenue Service appropriations for Information 
Systems.

                      Office of Inspector General


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Office of Inspector General 
in carrying out the provisions of the Inspector General Act of 
1978, as amended, not to exceed $2,000,000 for official travel 
expenses, including hire of passenger motor vehicles; and not 
to exceed $100,000 for unforeseen emergencies of a confidential 
nature, to be allocated and expended under the direction of the 
Inspector General of the Treasury, $35,424,000.

           Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Treasury Inspector General 
for Tax Administration in carrying out the Inspector General 
Act of 1978, as amended, including purchase (not to exceed 150 
for replacement only for police-type use) and hire of passenger 
motor vehicles (31 U.S.C. 1343(b)); services authorized by 5 
U.S.C. 3109, at such rates as may be determined by the 
Inspector General for Tax Administration; not to exceed 
$6,000,000 for official travel expenses; and not to exceed 
$500,000 for unforeseen emergencies of a confidential nature, 
to be allocated and expended under the direction of the 
Inspector General for Tax Administration, $123,746,000.

           Treasury Building and Annex Repair and Restoration

    For the repair, alteration, and improvement of the Treasury 
Building and Annex, $28,932,000, to remain available until 
expended.

                 Expanded Access to Financial Services


                     (including transfer of funds)


    To develop and implement programs to expand access to 
financial services for low- and moderate-income individuals, 
$2,000,000, such funds to become available upon authorization 
of this program as provided by law and to remain available 
until expended: Provided, That of these funds, such sums as may 
be necessary may be transferred to accounts of the Department's 
offices, bureaus, and other organizations: Provided further, 
That this transfer authority shall be in addition to any other 
transfer authority provided in this Act.

                  Financial Crimes Enforcement Network


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Financial Crimes Enforcement 
Network, including hire of passenger motor vehicles; travel 
expenses of non-Federal law enforcement personnel to attend 
meetings concerned with financial intelligence activities, law 
enforcement, and financial regulation; not to exceed $14,000 
for official reception and representation expenses; and for 
assistance to Federal law enforcement agencies, with or without 
reimbursement, $45,837,000, of which not to exceed $3,400,000 
shall remain available until September 30, 2004; and of which 
$7,790,000 shall remain available until September 30, 2003: 
Provided, That funds appropriated in this account may be used 
to procure personal services contracts.

                         Counterterrorism Fund

    For necessary expenses, as determined by the Secretary, 
$40,000,000, to remain available until expended,to reimburse 
any Department of the Treasury organization for the costs of providing 
support to counter, investigate, or prosecute unexpected threats or 
acts of terrorism, including payment of rewards in connection with 
these activities: Provided, That use of such funds shall be subject to 
prior notification of the Committees on Appropriations in accordance 
with guidelines for reprogramming and transfer of funds.

                Federal Law Enforcement Training Center


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Federal Law Enforcement 
Training Center, as a bureau of the Department of the Treasury, 
including materials and support costs of Federal law 
enforcement basic training; purchase (not to exceed 52 for 
police-type use, without regard to the general purchase price 
limitation) and hire of passenger motor vehicles; for expenses 
for student athletic and related activities; uniforms without 
regard to the general purchase price limitation for the current 
fiscal year; the conducting of and participating in firearms 
matches and presentation of awards; for public awareness and 
enhancing community support of law enforcement training; not to 
exceed $11,500 for official reception and representation 
expenses; room and board for student interns; and services as 
authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, $105,680,000, of which $650,000 
shall be available for an interagency effort to establish 
written standards on accreditation of Federal law enforcement 
training; and of which up to $18,892,000 for materials and 
support costs of Federal law enforcement basic training shall 
remain available until September 30, 2004, and of which up to 
20 percent of the $18,892,000 also shall be available for 
travel, room and board costs for participating agency basic 
training during the first quarter of a fiscal year, subject to 
full reimbursement by the benefitting agency: Provided, That 
the Center is authorized to accept and use gifts of property, 
both real and personal, and to accept services, for authorized 
purposes, including funding of a gift of intrinsic value which 
shall be awarded annually by the Director of the Center to the 
outstanding student who graduated from a basic training program 
at the Center during the previous fiscal year, which shall be 
funded only by gifts received through the Center's gift 
authority: Provided further, That notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, students attending training at any Federal 
Law Enforcement Training Center site shall reside in on-Center 
or Center-provided housing, insofar as available and in 
accordance with Center policy: Provided further, That funds 
appropriated in this account shall be available, at the 
discretion of the Director, for the following: training United 
States Postal Service law enforcement personnel and Postal 
police officers; State and local government law enforcement 
training on a space-available basis; training of foreign law 
enforcement officials on a space-available basis with 
reimbursement of actual costs to this appropriation, except 
that reimbursement may be waived by the Secretary for law 
enforcement training activities in foreign countries undertaken 
pursuant to section 801 of the Antiterrorism and Effective 
Death Penalty Act of 1996, Public Law 104-32; training of 
private sector security officials on a space-available basis 
with reimbursement of actual costs to this appropriation; and 
travel expenses of non-Federal personnel to attend course 
development meetings and training sponsored by the Center: 
Provided further, That the Center is authorized to obligate 
funds in anticipation of reimbursements from agencies receiving 
training sponsored by the Federal Law Enforcement Training 
Center, except that total obligations at the end of the fiscal 
year shall not exceed total budgetary resources available at 
the end of the fiscal year: Provided further, That the Federal 
Law Enforcement Training Center is authorized to provide 
training for the Gang Resistance Education and Training program 
to Federal and non-Federal personnel at any facility in 
partnership with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms: 
Provided further, That the Federal Law Enforcement Training 
Center is authorized to provide short-term medical services for 
students undergoing training at the Center.


     acquisition, construction, improvements, and related expenses


    For expansion of the Federal Law Enforcement Training 
Center, for acquisition of necessary additional real property 
and facilities, and for ongoing maintenance, facility 
improvements, and related expenses, $33,434,000, to remain 
available until expended.

                      Interagency Law Enforcement


                 interagency crime and drug enforcement


    For expenses necessary to conduct investigations and 
convict offenders involved in organized crime drug trafficking, 
including cooperative efforts with State and local law 
enforcement, as it relates to the Treasury Department law 
enforcement violations such as money laundering, violent crime, 
and smuggling, $107,576,000, of which $7,827,000 shall remain 
available until expended.

                      Financial Management Service


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Financial Management Service, 
$212,850,000, of which not to exceed $9,220,000 shall remain 
available until September 30, 2004, for information systems 
modernization initiatives; and of which notto exceed $2,500 
shall be available for official reception and representation expenses.

                Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco 
and Firearms, including purchase of not to exceed 822 vehicles 
for police-type use, of which 650 shall be for replacement 
only, and hire of passenger motor vehicles; hire of aircraft; 
services of expert witnesses at such rates as may be determined 
by the Director; for payment of per diem and/or subsistence 
allowances to employees where a major investigative assignment 
requires an employee to work 16 hours or more per day or to 
remain overnight at his or her post of duty; not to exceed 
$20,000 for official reception and representation expenses; for 
training of State and local law enforcement agencies with or 
without reimbursement, including training in connection with 
the training and acquisition of canines for explosives and fire 
accelerants detection; not to exceed $50,000 for cooperative 
research and development programs for Laboratory Services and 
Fire Research Center activities; and provision of laboratory 
assistance to State and local agencies, with or without 
reimbursement, $823,316,000, of which $3,500,000 shall be 
available for retrofitting and upgrades of the National Tracing 
Center Facility in Martinsburg, West Virginia; of which not to 
exceed $1,000,000 shall be available for the payment of 
attorneys' fees as provided by 18 U.S.C. 924(d)(2); of which up 
to $2,000,000 shall be available for the equipping of any 
vessel, vehicle, equipment, or aircraft available for official 
use by a State or local law enforcement agency if the 
conveyance will be used in joint law enforcement operations 
with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and for the 
payment of overtime salaries including Social Security and 
Medicare, travel, fuel, training, equipment, supplies, and 
other similar costs of State and local law enforcement 
personnel, including sworn officers and support personnel, that 
are incurred in joint operations with the Bureau of Alcohol, 
Tobacco and Firearms, and of which $13,000,000, to remain 
available until expended, shall be available for disbursements 
through grants, cooperative agreements or contracts to local 
governments for Gang Resistance Education and Training: 
Provided, That no funds made available by this or any other Act 
may be used to transfer the functions, missions, or activities 
of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to other 
agencies or Departments in fiscal year 2002: Provided further, 
That no funds appropriated herein shall be available for 
salaries or administrative expenses in connection with 
consolidating or centralizing, within the Department of the 
Treasury, the records, or any portion thereof, of acquisition 
and disposition of firearms maintained by Federal firearms 
licensees: Provided further, That no funds appropriated herein 
shall be used to pay administrative expenses or the 
compensation of any officer or employee of the United States to 
implement an amendment or amendments to 27 CFR 178.118 or to 
change the definition of ``Curios or relics'' in 27 CFR 178.11 
or remove any item from ATF Publication 5300.11 as it existed 
on January 1, 1994: Provided further, That none of the funds 
appropriated herein shall be available to investigate or act 
upon applications for relief from Federal firearms disabilities 
under 18 U.S.C. 925(c): Provided further, That such funds shall 
be available to investigate and act upon applications filed by 
corporations for relief from Federal firearms disabilities 
under 18 U.S.C. 925(c): Provided further, That no funds under 
this Act may be used to electronically retrieve information 
gathered pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(4) by name or any 
personal identification code.

                     United States Customs Service


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the United States Customs 
Service, including purchase and lease of up to 1,235 motor 
vehicles of which 550 are for replacement only and of which 
1,215 are for police-type use and commercial operations; hire 
of motor vehicles; contracting with individuals for personal 
services abroad; not to exceed $40,000 for official reception 
and representation expenses; and awards of compensation to 
informers, as authorized by any Act enforced by the United 
States Customs Service, $2,079,357,000, of which such sums as 
become available in the Customs User Fee Account, except sums 
subject to section 13031(f)(3) of the Consolidated Omnibus 
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985, as amended (19 U.S.C. 
58c(f)(3)), shall be derived from that Account; of the total, 
not to exceed $150,000 shall be available for payment for 
rental space in connection with preclearance operations; not to 
exceed $4,000,000 shall be available until expended for 
research; not less than $100,000 shall be available to promote 
public awareness of the child pornography tipline; not less 
than $200,000 shall be available for Project Alert; not less 
than $1,000,000 shall be provided to develop a curriculum for 
the training of law enforcement dogs to combat and respond to 
terrorist activities specifically related to chemical and 
biological threats; not to exceed $5,000,000 shall be available 
until expended for conducting special operations pursuant to 19 
U.S.C. 2081; not to exceed $8,000,000 shall be available until 
expended for the procurement of automation infrastructure 
items, including hardware, software, and installation; not to 
exceed $33,151,000 shall be available until expended for the 
procurement and deployment of non-intrusive inspection 
technology; and not to exceed $5,000,000 shall be available 
until expended for repairs to Customs facilities: Provided, 
That of the total amount of funds made available for forced 
child labor activities in fiscal year 2002, not to exceed 
$4,400,000 shall remain available until expended for operations 
and support of such activities: Provided further, That uniforms 
may be purchased without regard to the general purchase price 
limitation for the current fiscal year: Provided further, That 
notwithstanding any other provision of law, the fiscal year 
aggregate overtime limitation prescribed in subsection 5(c)(1) 
of the Act of February 13, 1911 (19 U.S.C. 261 and 267) shall 
be $30,000.


                   harbor maintenance fee collection


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For administrative expenses related to the collection of 
the Harbor Maintenance Fee, pursuant to Public Law 103-182, 
$3,000,000, to be derived from the Harbor Maintenance Trust 
Fund and to be transferred to and merged with the Customs 
``Salaries and Expenses'' account for such purposes.


  operation, maintenance and procurement, air and marine interdiction 
                                programs


    For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
operation and maintenance of marine vessels, aircraft, and 
other related equipment of the Air and Marine Programs, 
including operational training and mission-related travel, and 
rental payments for facilities occupied by the air or marine 
interdiction and demand reduction programs, the operations of 
which include the following: the interdiction of narcotics and 
other goods; the provision of support to Customs and other 
Federal, State, and local agencies in the enforcement or 
administration of laws enforced by the Customs Service; and, at 
the discretion of the Commissioner of Customs, the provision of 
assistance to Federal, State, and local agencies in other law 
enforcement and emergency humanitarian efforts, $177,860,000, 
which shall remain available until expended: Provided, That no 
aircraft or other related equipment, with the exception of 
aircraft which is one of a kind and has been identified as 
excess to Customs requirements and aircraft which has been 
damaged beyond repair, shall be transferred to any other 
Federal agency, department, or office outside of the Department 
of the Treasury, during fiscal year 2002 without the prior 
approval of the Committees on Appropriations.


                        automation modernization


    For expenses not otherwise provided for Customs automated 
systems, $427,832,000, to remain available until expended, of 
which $5,400,000 shall be for the International Trade Data 
System, and not less than $300,000,000 shall be for the 
development of the Automated Commercial Environment: Provided, 
That none of the funds appropriated under this heading may be 
obligated for the Automated Commercial Environment until the 
United States Customs Service prepares and submits to the 
Committees on Appropriations a plan for expenditure that: (1) 
meets the capital planning and investment control review 
requirements established by the Office of Management and 
Budget, including OMB Circular A-11, part 3; (2) complies with 
the United States Customs Service's Enterprise Information 
Systems Architecture; (3) complies with the acquisition rules, 
requirements, guidelines, and systems acquisition management 
practices of the Federal Government; (4) is reviewed and 
approved by the Customs Investment Review Board, the Department 
of the Treasury, and the Office of Management and Budget; and 
(5) is reviewed by the General Accounting Office: Provided 
further, That none of the funds appropriated under this heading 
may be obligated for the Automated Commercial Environment until 
such expenditure plan has been approved by the Committees on 
Appropriations.

                           United States Mint


               united states mint public enterprise fund


    Pursuant to section 5136 of title 31, United States Code, 
the United States Mint is provided funding through the United 
States Mint Public Enterprise Fund for costs associated with 
the production of circulating coins, numismatic coins, and 
protective services, including both operating expenses and 
capital investments. The aggregate amount of new liabilities 
and obligations incurred during fiscal year 2002 under such 
section 5136 for circulating coinage and protective service 
capital investments of the United States Mint shall not exceed 
$43,000,000. From amounts in the United States Mint Public 
Enterprise Fund, the Secretary of the Treasury shall pay to the 
Comptroller General an amount not to exceed $250,000 to 
reimburse the Comptroller General for the cost of a study to be 
conducted by the Comptroller General on any changes necessary 
to maximize public interest and acceptance and to achieve a 
better balance in the numbers of coins of different 
denominations in circulation, with particular attention to 
increasing the number of $1 coins in circulation.

                       Bureau of the Public Debt


                     administering the public debt


    For necessary expenses connected with any public-debt 
issues of the United States, $191,353,000, of which not to 
exceed $15,000 shall be available for official reception and 
representation expenses, and of which not to exceed $2,000,000 
shall remain available until expended for systems 
modernization: Provided, That the sum appropriated herein from 
the General Fund for fiscal year 2002 shall be reduced by not 
more than $4,400,000 as definitive security issue fees and 
Treasury Direct Investor Account Maintenance fees are 
collected, so as to result in a final fiscal year 2002 
appropriation from the General Fund estimated at $186,953,000. 
In addition, $40,000, to be derived from the Oil Spill 
Liability Trust Fund to reimburse the Bureau for administrative 
and personnel expenses for financial management of the Fund, as 
authorized by section 1012 of Public Law 101-380.

                        Internal Revenue Service


                 processing, assistance, and management


    For necessary expenses of the Internal Revenue Service for 
pre-filing taxpayer assistance and education, filing and 
account services, shared services support, general management 
and administration; and services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 
3109, at such rates as may be determinedby the Commissioner, 
$3,797,890,000, of which up to $3,950,000 shall be for the Tax 
Counseling for the Elderly Program, of which $7,000,000 shall be 
available for low-income taxpayer clinic grants, and of which not to 
exceed $25,000 shall be for official reception and representation 
expenses.


                          tax law enforcement


    For necessary expenses of the Internal Revenue Service for 
determining and establishing tax liabilities; providing 
litigation support; conducting criminal investigation and 
enforcement activities; securing unfiled tax returns; 
collecting unpaid accounts; conducting a document matching 
program; resolving taxpayer problems through prompt 
identification, referral and settlement; compiling statistics 
of income and conducting compliance research; purchase (for 
police-type use, not to exceed 850) and hire of passenger motor 
vehicles (31 U.S.C. 1343(b)); and services as authorized by 5 
U.S.C. 3109, at such rates as may be determined by the 
Commissioner, $3,538,347,000, of which not to exceed $1,000,000 
shall remain available until September 30, 2004, for research.


             earned income tax credit compliance initiative


    For funding essential earned income tax credit compliance 
and error reduction initiatives pursuant to section 5702 of the 
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (Public Law 105-33), $146,000,000, 
of which not to exceed $10,000,000 may be used to reimburse the 
Social Security Administration for the costs of implementing 
section 1090 of the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997.


                          information systems


    For necessary expenses of the Internal Revenue Service for 
information systems and telecommunications support, including 
developmental information systems and operational information 
systems; the hire of passenger motor vehicles (31 U.S.C. 
1343(b)); and services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, at such 
rates as may be determined by the Commissioner, $1,563,249,000, 
which shall remain available until September 30, 2003.


                     business systems modernization


    For necessary expenses of the Internal Revenue Service, 
$391,593,000, to remain available until September 30, 2004, for 
the capital asset acquisition of information technology 
systems, including management and related contractual costs of 
said acquisitions, including contractual costs associated with 
operations authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109: Provided, That none of 
these funds may be obligated until the Internal Revenue Service 
submits to the Committees on Appropriations, and such 
Committees approve, a plan for expenditure that: (1) meets the 
capital planning and investment control review requirements 
established by the Office of Management and Budget, including 
Circular A-11 part 3; (2) complies with the Internal Revenue 
Service's enterprise architecture, including the modernization 
blueprint; (3) conforms with the Internal Revenue Service's 
enterprise life cycle methodology; (4) is approved by the 
Internal Revenue Service, the Department of the Treasury, and 
the Office of Management and Budget; (5) has been reviewed by 
the General Accounting Office; and (6) complies with the 
acquisition rules, requirements, guidelines, and systems 
acquisition management practices of the Federal Government.


          administrative provisions--internal revenue service


    Sec. 101. Not to exceed 5 percent of any appropriation made 
available in this Act to the Internal Revenue Service may be 
transferred to any other Internal Revenue Service appropriation 
upon the advance approval of the Committees on Appropriations.
    Sec. 102. The Internal Revenue Service shall maintain a 
training program to ensure that Internal Revenue Service 
employees are trained in taxpayers' rights, in dealing 
courteously with the taxpayers, and in cross-cultural 
relations.
    Sec. 103. The Internal Revenue Service shall institute and 
enforce policies and procedures that will safeguard the 
confidentiality of taxpayer information.
    Sec. 104. Funds made available by this or any other Act to 
the Internal Revenue Service shall be available for improved 
facilities and increased manpower to provide sufficient and 
effective 1-800 help line service for taxpayers. The 
Commissioner shall continue to make the improvement of the 
Internal Revenue Service 1-800 help line service a priority and 
allocate resources necessary to increase phone lines and staff 
to improve the Internal Revenue Service 1-800 help line 
service.

                      United States Secret Service


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the United States Secret Service, 
including purchase of not to exceed 1,149 vehicles for police-
type use, of which 945 shall be for replacement only, and hire 
of passenger motor vehicles; purchase of American-made side-car 
compatible motorcycles; hire of aircraft; training and 
assistance requested by State and local governments, which may 
be provided without reimbursement; services of expert witnesses 
at such rates as may be determined by the Director; rental of 
buildings in the District of Columbia, and fencing, lighting, 
guard booths, and other facilities on private or other property 
not in Government ownership or control, as may be necessary to 
perform protective functions; for payment of per diem and/or 
subsistence allowances to employees where a protective 
assignment during the actual day or days of the visit of a 
protectee require an employee to work 16 hours per day or to 
remain overnight at his or her post of duty; the conducting of 
and participating in firearms matches; presentation of awards; 
for travel of Secret Service employees on protective missions 
without regard to the limitations on such expenditures in this 
or any other Act if approval is obtained in advance from the 
Committees on Appropriations; for research and development; for 
making grants to conduct behavioral research in support of 
protective research and operations; not to exceed $25,000 for 
official reception and representation expenses; not to exceed 
$100,000 to provide technical assistance and equipment to 
foreign law enforcement organizations in counterfeit 
investigations; for payment in advance for commercial 
accommodations as may be necessary to perform protective 
functions; and for uniforms without regard to the general 
purchase price limitation for the current fiscal year, 
$920,615,000, of which $1,633,000 shall be available for 
forensic and related support of investigations of missing and 
exploited children, and of which $3,009,000 shall be available 
as a grant for activities related to the investigations of 
exploited children and shall remain available until expended: 
Provided, That up to $18,000,000 provided for protective travel 
shall remain available until September 30, 2003.


     acquisition, construction, improvements, and related expenses


    For necessary expenses of construction, repair, alteration, 
and improvement of facilities, $3,457,000, to remain available 
until expended.

             General Provisions--Department of the Treasury

    Sec. 110. Any obligation or expenditure by the Secretary of 
the Treasury in connection with law enforcement activities of a 
Federal agency or a Department of the Treasury law enforcement 
organization in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 9703(g)(4)(B) from 
unobligated balances remaining in the Fund on September 30, 
2002, shall be made in compliance with reprogramming 
guidelines.
    Sec. 111. Appropriations to the Department of the Treasury 
in this Act shall be available for uniforms or allowances 
therefor, as authorized by law (5 U.S.C. 5901), including 
maintenance, repairs, and cleaning; purchase of insurance for 
official motor vehicles operated in foreign countries; purchase 
of motor vehicles without regard to the general purchase price 
limitations for vehicles purchased and used overseas for the 
current fiscal year; entering into contracts with the 
Department of State for the furnishing of health and medical 
services to employees and their dependents serving in foreign 
countries; and services authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109.
    Sec. 112. The funds provided to the Bureau of Alcohol, 
Tobacco and Firearms for fiscal year 2002 in this Act for the 
enforcement of the Federal Alcohol Administration Act shall be 
expended in a manner so as not to diminish enforcement efforts 
with respect to section 105 of the Federal Alcohol 
Administration Act.
    Sec. 113. Not to exceed 2 percent of any appropriations in 
this Act made available to the Federal Law Enforcement Training 
Center, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, Bureau of 
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, United States Customs Service, 
Interagency Crime and Drug Enforcement, and United States 
Secret Service may be transferred between such appropriations 
upon the advance approval of the Committees on Appropriations. 
No transfer may increase or decrease any such appropriation by 
more than 2 percent.
    Sec. 114. Not to exceed 2 percent of any appropriations in 
this Act made available to the Departmental Offices, Office of 
Inspector General, Treasury Inspector General for Tax 
Administration, Financial Management Service, and Bureau of the 
Public Debt, may be transferred between such appropriations 
upon the advance approval of the Committees on Appropriations. 
No transfer may increase or decrease any such appropriation by 
more than 2 percent.
    Sec. 115. Not to exceed 2 percent of any appropriation made 
available in this Act to the Internal Revenue Service may be 
transferred to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax 
Administration's appropriation upon the advance approval of the 
Committees on Appropriations. No transfer may increase or 
decrease any such appropriation by more than 2 percent.
    Sec. 116. Of the funds available for the purchase of law 
enforcement vehicles, no funds may be obligated until the 
Secretary of the Treasury certifies that the purchase by the 
respective Treasury bureau is consistent with Departmental 
vehicle management principles: Provided, That the Secretary may 
delegate this authority to the Assistant Secretary for 
Management.
    Sec. 117. None of the funds appropriated in this Act or 
otherwise available to the Department of the Treasury or the 
Bureau of Engraving and Printing may be used to redesign the $1 
Federal Reserve note.
    Sec. 118. The Secretary of the Treasury may transfer funds 
from ``Salaries and Expenses'', Financial Management Service, 
to the Debt Services Account as necessary to cover the costs of 
debt collection: Provided, That such amounts shall be 
reimbursed to such Salaries and Expenses account from debt 
collections received in the Debt Services Account.
    Sec. 119. Funds appropriated by this Act, or made available 
by the transfer of funds in this Act, for intelligence and 
intelligence-related activities of the Department of the 
Treasury 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 2002 until 
enactment of the Intelligence Authorization Act for fiscal year 
2002.
    Sec. 120. Section 122 of Public Law 105-119 (5 U.S.C. 3104 
note), as amended by Public Law 105-277, is further amended in 
subsection (g)(1), by striking ``3 years'' and inserting ``4 
years''; and by striking ``, the United States Customs Service, 
and the United States Secret Service''.
    Sec. 121. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made 
available by this or any other Act may be used by the United 
States Mint to construct or operate any museum without the 
explicit approval of the House Committee on Financial Services 
and the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban 
Affairs.
    Sec. 122. None of the funds appropriated or made available 
by this Act may be used for the production of Customs 
Declarations that do not inquire whether the passenger had been 
in the proximity of livestock.
    Sec. 123. In addition to any other transfer authority in 
this Act and upon approval of the Committees on Appropriations, 
the Secretary of the Treasury may transfer out of any 
appropriations available in this title such sums as are 
necessary to meet financial statement audit requirements of the 
United States Customs Service and the Financial Management 
Service, not to exceed a total of $3,000,000.
    This title may be cited as the ``Treasury Department 
Appropriations Act, 2002''.

                        TITLE II--POSTAL SERVICE

                   Payment to the Postal Service Fund

    For payment to the Postal Service Fund for revenue forgone 
on free and reduced rate mail, pursuant to subsections (c) and 
(d) of section 2401 of title 39, United States Code, 
$76,619,000, of which $47,619,000 shall not be available for 
obligation until October 1, 2002: Provided, That mail for 
overseas voting and mail for the blind shall continue to be 
free: Provided further, That 6-day delivery and rural delivery 
of mail shall continue at not less than the 1983 level: 
Provided further, That none of the funds made available to the 
Postal Service by this Act shall be used to implement any rule, 
regulation, or policy of charging any officer or employee of 
any State or local child support enforcement agency, or any 
individual participating in a State or local program of child 
support enforcement, a fee for information requested or 
provided concerning an address of a postal customer: Provided 
further, That none of the funds provided in this Act shall be 
used to consolidate or close small rural and other small post 
offices in fiscal year 2002.
    This title may be cited as the ``Postal Service 
Appropriations Act, 2002''.

TITLE III--EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT AND FUNDS APPROPRIATED TO 
                             THE PRESIDENT

        Compensation of the President and the White House Office


                     compensation of the president


    For compensation of the President, including an expense 
allowance at the rate of $50,000 per annum as authorized by 3 
U.S.C. 102, $450,000: Provided, That none of the funds made 
available for official expenses shall be expended for any other 
purpose and any unused amount shall revert to the Treasury 
pursuant to section 1552 of title 31, United States Code: 
Provided further, That none of the funds made available for 
official expenses shall be considered as taxable to the 
President.


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses for the White House as authorized by 
law, including not to exceed $3,850,000 for services as 
authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109 and 3 U.S.C. 105; subsistence 
expenses as authorized by 3 U.S.C. 105, which shall be expended 
and accounted for as provided in that section; hire of 
passenger motor vehicles, newspapers, periodicals, teletype 
news service, and travel (not to exceed $100,000 to be expended 
and accounted for as provided by 3 U.S.C. 103); and not to 
exceed $19,000 for official entertainment expenses, to be 
available for allocation within the Executive Office of the 
President, $54,651,000: Provided, That $10,740,000 of the funds 
appropriated shall be available for reimbursements to the White 
House Communications Agency.

                 Executive Residence at the White House


                           operating expenses


    For the care, maintenance, repair and alteration, 
refurnishing, improvement, heating, and lighting, including 
electric power and fixtures, of the Executive Residence at the 
White House and official entertainment expenses of the 
President, $11,695,000, to be expended and accounted for as 
provided by 3 U.S.C. 105, 109, 110, and 112-114.


                         reimbursable expenses


    For the reimbursable expenses of the Executive Residence at 
the White House, such sums as may be necessary: Provided, That 
all reimbursable operating expenses of the Executive Residence 
shall be made in accordance with the provisions of this 
paragraph: Provided further, That, notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, such amount for reimbursable operating 
expenses shall be the exclusive authority of the Executive 
Residence to incur obligations and to receive offsetting 
collections, for such expenses: Provided further, That the 
Executive Residence shall require each person sponsoring a 
reimbursable political event to pay in advance an amount equal 
to the estimated cost of the event, and all such advance 
payments shall be credited to this account and remain available 
until expended: Provided further, That the Executive Residence 
shall require the national committee of the political party of 
the President to maintain on deposit $25,000, to be separately 
accounted for and available for expenses relating to 
reimbursable political events sponsored by such committee 
during such fiscal year: Provided further, That the Executive 
Residence shall ensure that a written notice of any amount owed 
for a reimbursable operating expense under this paragraph is 
submitted to the person owing such amount within 60 days after 
such expense is incurred, and that such amount is collected 
within 30 days after the submission of such notice: Provided 
further, That the Executive Residence shall charge interest and 
assess penalties and other charges on any such amount that is 
not reimbursed within such 30 days, in accordance with the 
interest and penalty provisions applicable to an outstanding 
debt on a United States Government claim under section 3717 of 
title 31, United States Code: Provided further, That each such 
amount that is reimbursed, and any accompanying interest and 
charges, shall be deposited in the Treasury as miscellaneous 
receipts: Provided further, That the Executive Residence shall 
prepare and submit to the Committees on Appropriations, by not 
later than 90 days after the end of the fiscal year covered by 
thisAct, a report setting forth the reimbursable operating 
expenses of the Executive Residence during the preceding fiscal year, 
including the total amount of such expenses, the amount of such total 
that consists of reimbursable official and ceremonial events, the 
amount of such total that consists of reimbursable political events, 
and the portion of each such amount that has been reimbursed as of the 
date of the report: Provided further, That the Executive Residence 
shall maintain a system for the tracking of expenses related to 
reimbursable events within the Executive Residence that includes a 
standard for the classification of any such expense as political or 
nonpolitical: Provided further, That no provision of this paragraph may 
be construed to exempt the Executive Residence from any other 
applicable requirement of subchapter I or II of chapter 37 of title 31, 
United States Code.


                   white house repair and restoration


    For the repair, alteration, and improvement of the 
Executive Residence at the White House, $8,625,000, to remain 
available until expended, of which $1,306,000 is for six 
projects for required maintenance, safety and health issues, 
and continued preventative maintenance; and of which $7,319,000 
is for 3 projects for required maintenance and continued 
preventative maintenance in conjunction with the General 
Services Administration, the United States Secret Service, the 
Office of the President, and other agencies charged with the 
administration and care of the White House.

 Special Assistance to the President and the Official Residence of the 
                             Vice President


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses to enable the Vice President to 
provide assistance to the President in connection with 
specially assigned functions; services as authorized by 5 
U.S.C. 3109 and 3 U.S.C. 106, including subsistence expenses as 
authorized by 3 U.S.C. 106, which shall be expended and 
accounted for as provided in that section; and hire of 
passenger motor vehicles, $3,925,000.


                           operating expenses


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For the care, operation, refurnishing, improvement, heating 
and lighting, including electric power and fixtures, of the 
official residence of the Vice President; the hire of passenger 
motor vehicles; and not to exceed $90,000 for official 
entertainment expenses of the Vice President, to be accounted 
for solely on his certificate, $318,000: Provided, That 
advances or repayments or transfers from this appropriation may 
be made to any department or agency for expenses of carrying 
out such activities.

                      Council of Economic Advisers


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Council of Economic Advisers 
in carrying out its functions under the Employment Act of 1946 
(15 U.S.C. 1021), $4,211,000.

                      Office of Policy Development


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Office of Policy Development, 
including services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109 and 3 U.S.C. 
107, $4,142,000.

                       National Security Council


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the National Security Council, 
including services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, $7,494,000.

                        Office of Administration


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Office of Administration, 
including services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109 and 3 U.S.C. 
107, and hire of passenger motor vehicles, $46,955,000, of 
which $11,775,000 shall remain available until expended for the 
Capital Investment Plan for continued modernization of the 
information technology infrastructure within the Executive 
Office of the President: Provided, That $4,475,000 of the 
Capital Investment Plan funds may not be obligated until the 
Executive Office of the President has submitted a report to the 
Committees on Appropriations that (1) includes an Enterprise 
Architecture, as defined in OMB Circular A-130 and the Federal 
Chief Information Officers Council guidance; (2) presents an 
Information Technology (IT) Human Capital Plan, to include an 
inventory of current IT workforce knowledge and skills, a 
definition of needed IT knowledge and skills, a gap analysis of 
any shortfalls, and a plan for addressing any shortfalls; (3) 
presents a capital investment plan for implementing the 
Enterprise Architecture; (4) includes a description of the IT 
capital planning and investment control process; and (5) is 
reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget, 
is reviewed by the General Accounting Office, and is approved 
by the Committees on Appropriations.

                    Office of Management and Budget


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Office of Management and 
Budget, including hire of passenger motor vehicles and services 
as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, $70,752,000, of which not to 
exceed $5,000,000 shall be available to carry out the 
provisions of chapter 35 of title 44, United States Code, and 
of which not to exceed $3,000 shall be available for official 
representation expenses: Provided, That, as provided in 31 
U.S.C. 1301(a), appropriations shall be applied only to the 
objects for which appropriations were made except as otherwise 
provided by law: Provided further, That none of the funds 
appropriated in this Act for the Office of Management and 
Budget may be used for the purpose of reviewing any 
agricultural marketing orders or any activities or regulations 
under the provisions of the Agricultural Marketing Agreement 
Act of 1937 (7 U.S.C. 601 et seq.): Provided further, That none 
of the funds made available for the Office of Management and 
Budget by this Act may be expended for the altering of the 
transcript of actual testimony of witnesses, except for 
testimony of officials of the Office of Management and Budget, 
before the Committees on Appropriations or the Committees on 
Veterans' Affairs or their subcommittees: Provided further, 
That the preceding shall not apply to printed hearings released 
by the Committees on Appropriations or the Committees on 
Veterans' Affairs: Provided further, That none of the funds 
appropriated in this Act may be available to pay the salary or 
expenses of any employee of the Office of Management and Budget 
who, after February 15, 2002, calculates, prepares, or approves 
any tabular or other material that proposes the sub-allocation 
of budget authority or outlays by the Committees on 
Appropriations among their subcommittees: Provided further, 
That of the amounts appropriated, not to exceed $6,331,000 
shall be available to the Office of Information and Regulatory 
Affairs, of which $1,582,750 shall not be obligated until the 
Office of Management and Budget submits a report to the 
Committees on Appropriations that provides an assessment of the 
total costs and benefits of implementing Executive Order No. 
13166: Provided further, That such assessment shall be 
submitted no later than 120 days after enactment of this Act.

                 Office of National Drug Control Policy


                         salaries and expenses


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For necessary expenses of the Office of National Drug 
Control Policy; for research activities pursuant to the Office 
of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 1998 (21 
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.); not to exceed $10,000 for official 
reception and representation expenses; and for participation in 
joint projects or in the provision of services on matters of 
mutual interest with nonprofit, research, or public 
organizations or agencies, with or without reimbursement, 
$25,263,000; of which $2,350,000 shall remain available until 
expended, consisting of $1,350,000 for policy research and 
evaluation, and $1,000,000 for the National Alliance for Model 
State Drug Laws: Provided, That the Office is authorized to 
accept, hold, administer, and utilize gifts, both real and 
personal, public and private, without fiscal year limitation, 
for the purpose of aiding or facilitating the work of the 
Office.


                counterdrug technology assessment center


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For necessary expenses for the Counterdrug Technology 
Assessment Center for research activities pursuant to the 
Office of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 
1998 (21 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.), $42,300,000, which shall remain 
available until expended, consisting of $20,064,000 for 
counternarcotics research and development projects, and 
$22,236,000 for the continued operation of the technology 
transfer program: Provided, That the $20,064,000 for 
counternarcotics research and development projects shall be 
available for transfer to other Federal departments or 
agencies.

                     Federal Drug Control Programs


             high intensity drug trafficking areas program


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For necessary expenses of the Office of National Drug 
Control Policy's High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program, 
$226,350,000, for drug control activities consistent with the 
approved strategy for each of the designated High Intensity 
Drug Trafficking Areas, of which no less than 51 percent shall 
be transferred to State and local entities for drug control 
activities, which shall be obligated within 120 days of the 
date of the enactment of this Act: Provided, That up to 49 
percent, to remain available until September 30, 2003, may be 
transferred to Federal agencies and departments at a rate to be 
determined by the Director: Provided further, That, of this 
latter amount, not less than $2,100,000 shall be used for 
auditing services and activities: Provided further, That High 
Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Programs designated as of 
September 30, 2001, shall be funded at no less than fiscal year 
2001 levels unless the Director submits to the Committees on 
Appropriations, and the Committees approve, justification for 
changes in those levels based on clearly articulated priorities 
for the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Programs, as well 
as published Office of National Drug Control Policy performance 
measures of effectiveness.


                        special forfeiture fund


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For activities to support a national anti-drug campaign for 
youth, and for other purposes, authorized by 21 U.S.C. 1701 et 
seq., $239,400,000, to remain available until expended, of 
which $180,000,000 shall be to support a national media 
campaign, as authorized in the Drug-Free Media Campaign Act of 
1998, of which $4,800,000 shall be made available no later than 
30 days after the enactment of this Act to the United States 
Anti-Doping Agency for their anti-doping efforts; of which 
$50,600,000 shall be to continue a program of matching grants 
to drug-free communities, as authorized in chapter 2 of the 
National Narcotics Leadership Act of 1988, as amended; of which 
$1,000,000 shall be available to the National Drug Court 
Institute; and of which $3,000,000 shall be for the Counterdrug 
Intelligence Executive Secretariat: Provided, That such funds 
may be transferred to other Federal departments and agencies to 
carry out such activities.


                          unanticipated needs


    For expenses necessary to enable the President to meet 
unanticipated needs, in furtherance of the national interest, 
security, or defense which may arise at home or abroad during 
the current fiscal year, as authorized by 3 U.S.C. 108, 
$1,000,000.
    This title may be cited as the ``Executive Office 
Appropriations Act, 2002''.

                     TITLE IV--INDEPENDENT AGENCIES

 Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses of the Committee for Purchase From 
People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled established by Public 
Law 92-28, $4,629,000.

                      Federal Election Commission


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses to carry out the provisions of the 
Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, as amended, $43,689,000, 
of which no less than $5,128,000 shall be available for 
internal automated data processing systems, and of which not to 
exceed $5,000 shall be available for reception and 
representation expenses.

                   Federal Labor Relations Authority


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses to carry out functions of the 
Federal Labor Relations Authority, pursuant to Reorganization 
Plan Numbered 2 of 1978, and the Civil Service Reform Act of 
1978, including services authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, including 
hire of experts and consultants, hire of passenger motor 
vehicles, and rental of conference rooms in the District of 
Columbia and elsewhere, $26,524,000: Provided, That public 
members of the Federal Service Impasses Panel may be paid 
travel expenses and per diem in lieu of subsistence as 
authorized by law (5 U.S.C. 5703) for persons employed 
intermittently in the Government service, and compensation as 
authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109: Provided further, That 
notwithstanding 31 U.S.C. 3302, funds received from fees 
charged to non-Federal participants at labor-management 
relations conferences shall be credited to and merged with this 
account, to be available without further appropriation for the 
costs of carrying out these conferences.

                    General Services Administration


                        real property activities


                         federal buildings fund


                 limitations on availability of revenue


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For an additional amount to be deposited in, and to be used 
for the purposes of, the Fund established pursuant to section 
210(f) of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act 
of 1949, as amended (40 U.S.C. 490(f)), $8,000,000. The 
revenues and collections deposited into the Fund shall be 
available for necessary expenses of real property management 
and related activities not otherwise provided for, including 
operation, maintenance, and protection of federally owned and 
leased buildings; rental of buildings in the District of 
Columbia; restoration of leased premises; moving governmental 
agencies (including space adjustments and telecommunications 
relocation expenses) in connection with the assignment, 
allocation and transfer of space; contractual services incident 
to cleaning or servicing buildings, and moving; repair and 
alteration of federally owned buildings including grounds, 
approaches and appurtenances; care and safeguarding of sites; 
maintenance, preservation, demolition, and equipment; 
acquisition of buildings and sites by purchase, condemnation, 
or as otherwise authorized by law; acquisition of options to 
purchase buildings and sites; conversion and extension of 
federally owned buildings; preliminary planning and design of 
projects by contract or otherwise; construction of new 
buildings (including equipment for such buildings); and payment 
of principal, interest, and any other obligations for public 
buildings acquired by installment purchase and purchase 
contract; in the aggregate amount of $6,100,382,000, of which 
(1) $386,280,000 shall remain available until expended for 
construction (including funds for sites and expenses and 
associated design and construction services) of additional 
projects at the following locations:
    New Construction:
            Alabama:
                    Mobile, United States Courthouse, 
                $11,290,000
            Arkansas:
                    Little Rock, United States Courthouse 
                Annex, $5,022,000
            California:
                    Fresno, United States Courthouse, 
                $121,225,000
            District of Columbia:
                    Washington, United States Courthouse Annex, 
                $6,595,000
                    Washington, Southeast Federal Center Site 
                Remediation, $5,000,000
            Florida:
                    Ft. Pierce, United States Courthouse, 
                $2,269,000
                    Miami, United States Courthouse, 
                $15,000,000
                    Orlando, United States Courthouse, 
                $4,000,000
            Illinois:
                    Rockford, United States Courthouse, 
                $4,933,000
            Iowa:
                    Cedar Rapids, United States Courthouse, 
                $9,785,000
            Maine:
                    Jackman, Border Station, $868,000
            Maryland:
                    Montgomery County, FDA Consolidation, 
                $19,060,000
                    Prince Georges County, National Center for 
                Environmental Prediction, $3,000,000
                    Suitland, United States Census Bureau, 
                $2,813,000
                    Suitland, National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
                Administration II, $34,083,000
            Massachusetts:
                    Springfield, United States Courthouse, 
                $6,473,000
            Michigan:
                    Detroit, Ambassador Bridge Border Station, 
                $9,470,000
            Mississippi:
                    Gulfport, United States Courthouse, 
                $3,000,000
                    Jackson, United States Courthouse, 
                $6,710,000
            Montana:
                    Raymond, Border Station, $693,000
            New Mexico:
                    Las Cruces, United States Courthouse, 
                $4,110,000
            New York:
                    Brooklyn, United States Courthouse Annex--
                GPO, $3,361,000
                    Buffalo, United States Courthouse Annex, 
                $716,000
                    Champlain, Border Station, $500,000
                    New York, United States Mission to the 
                United Nations, $4,617,000
            Oklahoma:
                    Norman, NOAA Norman Consolidation Project, 
                $8,000,000, to be directly transferred to the 
                National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
            Oregon:
                    Eugene, United States Courthouse, 
                $4,470,000
            Pennsylvania:
                    Erie, United States Courthouse Annex, 
                $30,739,000
            Tennessee:
                    Nashville, United States Courthouse, 
                $14,700,000
            Texas:
                    Del Rio III, Border Station, $1,869,000
                    Eagle Pass, Border Station, $2,256,000
                    El Paso, United States Courthouse, 
                $11,193,000
                    Fort Hancock, Border Station, $2,183,000
                    Houston, Federal Bureau of Investigation, 
                $6,268,000
            Utah:
                    Salt Lake City, United States Courthouse, 
                $3,000,000
            Virginia:
                    Norfolk, United States Courthouse Annex, 
                $11,609,000
            Nationwide:
                    Non-prospectus construction, $5,400,000:
Provided, That funding for any project identified above may be 
exceeded to the extent that savings are effected in other such 
projects, but not to exceed 10 percent of the amounts included 
in an approved prospectus, if required, unless advance approval 
is obtained from the Committees on Appropriations of a greater 
amount: Provided further, That all funds for direct 
construction projects shall expire on September 30, 2003, and 
remain in the Federal Buildings Fund except for funds for 
projects as to which funds for design or other funds have been 
obligated in whole or in part prior to such date; (2) 
$826,676,000 shall remain available until expended for repairs 
and alterations which includes associated design and 
construction services: Provided further, That funds in the 
Federal Buildings Fund for Repairs and Alterations shall, for 
prospectus projects, be limited to the amount by project, as 
follows, except each project may be increased by an amount not 
to exceed 10 percent unless advance approval is obtained from 
the Committees on Appropriations of a greater amount:
    Repairs and Alterations:
            Alabama:
                    Montgomery, Frank M. Johnson, Jr. Federal 
                Building--United States Courthouse, $4,000,000
            California:
                    Laguna Niguel, Chet Holifield Federal 
                Building, $11,711,000
                    San Diego, Edward J. Schwartz Federal 
                Building, United States Courthouse, $13,070,000
            Colorado:
                    Lakewood, Denver Federal Center, Building 
                67, $8,484,000
            District of Columbia:
                    Washington, 320 First Street, Federal 
                Building, $8,260,000
                    Washington, Internal Revenue Service Main 
                Building, Phase 2, $20,391,000
                    Washington, Main Interior Building, 
                $22,739,000
                    Washington, Main Justice Building, Phase 3, 
                $45,974,000
            Florida:
                    Jacksonville, Charles E. Bennett Federal 
                Building, $23,552,000
                    Tallahassee, United States Courthouse, 
                $4,894,000
            Illinois:
                    Chicago, Federal Building, 536 South Clark 
                Street, $60,073,000
                    Chicago, Harold Washington Social Security 
                Center, $13,692,000
                    Chicago, John C. Kluczynski Federal 
                Building, $12,725,000
            Iowa:
                     Des Moines, 210 Walnut Street, Federal 
                Building, $11,992,000
            Missouri:
                    Kansas City, Federal Building, 811 Grand 
                Boulevard, $1,604,000
                    St. Louis, Federal Building, 104/105 
                Goodfellow, $20,212,000
            New Jersey:
                    Newark, Peter W. Rodino Federal Building, 
                $5,295,000
            Nevada:
                    Las Vegas, Foley Federal Building--United 
                States Courthouse, $26,978,000
            Ohio:
                    Cleveland, Anthony J. Celebrezze Federal 
                Building, $22,986,000
                    Cleveland, Howard M. Metzenbaum United 
                States Courthouse, $27,856,000
            Oklahoma:
                    Muskogee, Federal Building--United States 
                Courthouse, $8,214,000
            Oregon:
                    Portland, Pioneer Courthouse, $16,629,000
            Pennsylvania:
                    Pittsburgh, United States Post Office and 
                Courthouse, $12,600,000
            Rhode Island:
                    Providence, United States Federal Building 
                and Courthouse, $5,039,000
            Wisconsin:
                    Milwaukee, Federal Building--United States 
                Courthouse, $10,015,000
            Nationwide:
                    Design Program, $33,657,000
                    Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning 
                Modernization--Various Buildings, $6,650,000
                    Transformers--Various Buildings, 
                $15,588,000
            Basic Repairs and Alterations, $351,796,000:
Provided further, That additional projects for which 
prospectuses have been fully approved may be funded under this 
category only if advance approval is obtained from the 
Committees on Appropriations: Provided further, That the 
amounts provided in this or any prior Act for ``Repairs and 
Alterations'' may be used to fund costs associated with 
implementing security improvements to buildings necessary to 
meet the minimum standards for security in accordance with 
current law and in compliance with the reprogramming guidelines 
of the appropriate Committees of the House and Senate: Provided 
further, That the difference between the funds appropriated and 
expended on any projects in this or any prior Act, under the 
heading ``Repairs and Alterations'', may be transferred to 
Basic Repairs and Alterations or used to fund authorized 
increases in prospectus projects: Provided further, That all 
funds for repairs and alterations prospectus projects shall 
expire on September 30, 2003, and remain in the Federal 
Buildings Fund except funds for projects as to which funds for 
design or other funds have been obligated in whole or in part 
prior to such date: Provided further, That the amount provided 
in this or any prior Act for Basic Repairs and Alterations may 
be used to pay claims against the Government arising from any 
projects under the heading ``Repairs and Alterations'' or used 
to fund authorized increases in prospectus projects; (3) 
$186,427,000 for installment acquisition payments including 
payments on purchase contracts which shall remain available 
until expended; (4) $2,952,050,000 for rental of space which 
shall remain available until expended; and (5) $1,748,949,000 
for building operations which shall remain available until 
expended: Provided further, That funds available to the General 
Services Administration shall not be available for expenses of 
any construction, repair, alteration and acquisition project 
for which a prospectus, if required by the Public Buildings Act 
of 1959, as amended, has not been approved, except that 
necessary funds may be expended for each project for required 
expenses for the developmentof a proposed prospectus: Provided 
further, That funds available in the Federal Buildings Fund may be 
expended for emergency repairs when advance approval is obtained from 
the Committees on Appropriations: Provided further, That amounts 
necessary to provide reimbursable special services to other agencies 
under section 210(f)(6) of the Federal Property and Administrative 
Services Act of 1949, as amended (40 U.S.C. 490(f)(6)) and amounts to 
provide such reimbursable fencing, lighting, guard booths, and other 
facilities on private or other property not in Government ownership or 
control as may be appropriate to enable the United States Secret 
Service to perform its protective functions pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3056, 
shall be available from such revenues and collections: Provided 
further, That revenues and collections and any other sums accruing to 
this Fund during fiscal year 2002, excluding reimbursements under 
section 210(f)(6) of the Federal Property and Administrative Services 
Act of 1949 (40 U.S.C. 490(f)(6)) in excess of $6,100,382,000 shall 
remain in the Fund and shall not be available for expenditure except as 
authorized in appropriations Acts.


                         policy and operations


    For expenses authorized by law, not otherwise provided for, 
for Government-wide policy and oversight activities associated 
with asset management activities; utilization and donation of 
surplus personal property; transportation; procurement and 
supply; Government-wide responsibilities relating to automated 
data management, telecommunications, information resources 
management, and related technology activities; utilization 
survey, deed compliance inspection, appraisal, environmental 
and cultural analysis, and land use planning functions 
pertaining to excess and surplus real property; agency-wide 
policy direction; Board of Contract Appeals; accounting, 
records management, and other support services incident to 
adjudication of Indian Tribal Claims by the United States Court 
of Federal Claims; services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109; and 
not to exceed $7,500 for official reception and representation 
expenses, $143,139,000, of which $25,887,000 shall remain 
available until expended.


                      office of inspector general


    For necessary expenses of the Office of Inspector General 
and services authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, $36,346,000: 
Provided, That not to exceed $15,000 shall be available for 
payment for information and detection of fraud against the 
Government, including payment for recovery of stolen Government 
property: Provided further, That not to exceed $2,500 shall be 
available for awards to employees of other Federal agencies and 
private citizens in recognition of efforts and initiatives 
resulting in enhanced Office of Inspector General 
effectiveness.


                       electronic government fund


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For necessary expenses in support of interagency projects 
that enable the Federal Government to expand its ability to 
conduct activities electronically, through the development and 
implementation of innovative uses of the Internet and other 
electronic methods, $5,000,000 to remain available until 
expended: Provided, That these funds may be transferred to 
Federal agencies to carry out the purposes of the Fund: 
Provided further, That this transfer authority shall be in 
addition to any other transfer authority provided in this Act: 
Provided further, That such transfers may not be made until 10 
days after a proposed spending plan and justification for each 
project to be undertaken has been submitted to the Committees 
on Appropriations.

           allowances and office staff for former presidents


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For carrying out the provisions of the Act of August 25, 
1958, as amended (3 U.S.C. 102 note), and Public Law 95-138, 
$3,196,000: Provided, That the Administrator of General 
Services shall transfer to the Secretary of the Treasury such 
sums as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of such 
Acts.

                    General Services Administration

                          General Provisions--

    Sec. 401. The appropriate appropriation or fund available 
to the General Services Administration shall be credited with 
the cost of operation, protection, maintenance, upkeep, repair, 
and improvement, included as part of rentals received from 
Government corporations pursuant to law (40 U.S.C. 129).
    Sec. 402. Funds available to the General Services 
Administration shall be available for the hire of passenger 
motor vehicles.
    Sec. 403. Funds in the Federal Buildings Fund made 
available for fiscal year 2002 for Federal Buildings Fund 
activities may be transferred between such activities only to 
the extent necessary to meet program requirements: Provided, 
That any proposed transfers shall be approved in advance by the 
Committees on Appropriations.
    Sec. 404. No funds made available by this Act shall be used 
to transmit a fiscal year 2003 request for United States 
Courthouse construction that: (1) does not meet the design 
guide standards for construction as established and approved by 
the General Services Administration, the Judicial Conference of 
the United States, and the Office of Management and Budget; and 
(2) does not reflect the priorities of the Judicial Conference 
of the United Statesas set out in its approved 5-year 
construction plan: Provided, That the fiscal year 2003 request must be 
accompanied by a standardized courtroom utilization study of each 
facility to be constructed, replaced, or expanded.
    Sec. 405. None of the funds provided in this Act may be 
used to increase the amount of occupiable square feet, provide 
cleaning services, security enhancements, or any other service 
usually provided through the Federal Buildings Fund, to any 
agency that does not pay the rate per square foot assessment 
for space and services as determined by the General Services 
Administration in compliance with the Public Buildings 
Amendments Act of 1972 (Public Law 92-313).
    Sec. 406. Funds provided to other Government agencies by 
the Information Technology Fund, General Services 
Administration, under section 110 of the Federal Property and 
Administrative Services Act of 1949 (40 U.S.C. 757) and 
sections 5124(b) and 5128 of the Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996 (40 
U.S.C. 1424(b) and 1428), for performance of pilot information 
technology projects which have potential for Government-wide 
benefits and savings, may be repaid to this Fund from any 
savings actually incurred by these projects or other funding, 
to the extent feasible.
    Sec. 407. From funds made available under the heading 
``Federal Buildings Fund, Limitations on Availability of 
Revenue'', claims against the Government of less than $250,000 
arising from direct construction projects and acquisition of 
buildings may be liquidated from savings effected in other 
construction projects with prior notification to the Committees 
on Appropriations.
    Sec. 408. The amount expended by the General Services 
Administration during fiscal year 2002 for the purchase of 
alternative fuel vehicles shall be at least $5,000,000 more 
than the amount expended during fiscal year 2001 for such 
purpose.
    Sec. 409. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
General Services Administration is directed to maintain the 
vehicle rental rates and per mile rates charged for buses used 
by schools and dormitories funded by the Bureau of Indian 
Affairs that were in effect on April 30, 2001 until such time 
as appropriations to the Bureau of Indian Affairs funding for 
the Student Transportation Program for schools and dormitories 
funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs equals or exceeds $3 per 
mile.
    Sec. 410. Designation of Judge Bruce M. Van Sickle Federal 
Building and United States Courthouse. (a) The Federal building 
and courthouse located at 100 1st Street, SW, Minot, North 
Dakota, shall be known and designated as the ``Judge Bruce M. 
Van Sickle Federal Building and United States Courthouse''.
    (b) Any reference in law, map, regulation, document, paper, 
or other record of the United States to the Federal building 
and courthouse referred to in section (a) shall be deemed to be 
a reference to the Judge Bruce M. Van Sickle Federal Building 
and United States Courthouse.
    Sec. 411. Section 410 of Appendix C of Public Law 106-554 
(114 Stat. 2763A-146) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``a 125 foot wide right-of-way'' 
        and inserting ``up to a 125 foot wide right-of-way'';
            (2) by striking ``northeast corner of the existing 
        port'' and inserting ``southeast corner of the existing 
        port'';
            (3) striking ``approximately 4,750 feet'' and 
        inserting ``and then west to a connection with State 
        Highway 11 between approximately 5,000 and 7,000 
        feet'';
            (4) by striking ``a road to be built by the County 
        of Luna, New Mexico to connect to'';
            (5) by striking ``Provided further, That 
        notwithstanding any other provision of law, Luna County 
        shall construct the roadway from State Highway 11 to 
        the terminus of the northbound road to be constructed 
        by the General Services Administration in time for 
        completion of the road to be constructed by the General 
        Services Administration in time for completion of the 
        road to be constructed by the General Services 
        Administration:''; and
            (6) by striking ``consisting of approximately 12 
        acres'' and inserting ``consisting of approximately 
        10.22 acres''.
    Sec. 412. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
United States Government is directed to deed block four (4) of 
the LOCH HAVEN REPLAT, as recorded in Plat Book ``Q'', Page 9, 
Public Records of Orange County, Florida, back to the City of 
Orlando, Florida, for park and recreation purposes, under the 
same terms that the land was deeded to the United States 
Government by the City of Orlando in the recorded deed from the 
City dated September 20, 1951.
    Sec. 413. Designation of G. Ross Anderson, Jr. Federal 
Building and United States Courthouse. (a) The Federal building 
and courthouse located at 315 S. McDuffie Street, Anderson, 
South Carolina, shall be known and designated as the ``G. Ross 
Anderson, Jr. Federal Building and United States Courthouse''.
    (b) Any reference in a law, map, regulation, document, 
paper, or other record of the United States to theFederal 
building and courthouse referred to in subsection (a) shall be deemed 
to be a reference to the G. Ross Anderson, Jr. Federal Building and 
United States Courthouse.

                     Merit Systems Protection Board


                         salaries and expenses


                     (including transfer of funds)


    For necessary expenses to carry out functions of the Merit 
Systems Protection Board pursuant to Reorganization Plan 
Numbered 2 of 1978 and the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, 
including services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, rental of 
conference rooms in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, 
hire of passenger motor vehicles, and direct procurement of 
survey printing, $30,555,000 together with not to exceed 
$2,520,000 for administrative expenses to adjudicate retirement 
appeals to be transferred from the Civil Service Retirement and 
Disability Fund in amounts determined by the Merit Systems 
Protection Board.

 Morris K. Udall Scholarship and Excellence in National Environmental 
                           Policy Foundation


 morris k. udall scholarship and excellence in national environmental 
                           policy trust fund


    For payment to the Morris K. Udall Scholarship and 
Excellence in National Environmental Policy Trust Fund, 
pursuant to the Morris K. Udall Scholarship and Excellence in 
National Environmental and Native American Public Policy Act of 
1992 (20 U.S.C. 5601 et seq.), $1,996,000, to remain available 
until expended: Provided, That up to 60 percent of such funds 
may be transferred by the Morris K. Udall Scholarship and 
Excellence in National Environmental Policy Foundation for the 
necessary expenses of the Native Nations Institute: Provided 
further, That not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Morris K. Udall Scholarship and 
Excellence in National Environmental Policy Foundation shall 
submit to the Committees on Appropriations a report describing 
the distribution of such funds.


                 environmental dispute resolution fund


    For payment to the Environmental Dispute Resolution Fund to 
carry out activities authorized in the Environmental Policy and 
Conflict Resolution Act of 1998, $1,309,000, to remain 
available until expended.

              National Archives and Records Administration


                           operating expenses


    For necessary expenses in connection with the 
administration of the National Archives (including the 
Information Security Oversight Office) and archived Federal 
records and related activities, as provided by law, and for 
expenses necessary for the review and declassification of 
documents, and for the hire of passenger motor vehicles, 
$244,247,000: Provided, That the Archivist of the United States 
is authorized to use any excess funds available from the amount 
borrowed for construction of the National Archives facility, 
for expenses necessary to provide adequate storage for 
holdings: Provided further, That of the funds made available, 
$22,302,000 is for the electronic records archive, $16,337,000 
of which shall be available until September 30, 2004.


                        repairs and restoration


    For the repair, alteration, and improvement of archives 
facilities, and to provide adequate storage for holdings, 
$39,143,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, That 
the Archivist of the United States is authorized, pursuant to 
44 U.S.C. 2903, to construct a new Southeast Regional Archives 
on land to be acquired (Federal site), by direct payment or the 
provision of site improvements, from the State of Georgia or 
Clayton County or some other governmental authority thereof; 
such Federal site to be located near the campus of Clayton 
College and State University in Clayton County, Georgia, and 
abut land designated for construction of the Georgia State 
Archives facility, with both archival facilities co-located on 
a combined site. Of the funds provided in this account, 
$28,500,000 shall be available until expended to be used for 
acquiring the Federal site, construction, and related services 
for building the new Federal archival facility, other related 
costs for improvement of the combined site which may also 
indirectly benefit the Georgia State Archives facility, and 
other necessary expenses.

        National Historical Publications and Records Commission


                             grants program


    For necessary expenses for allocations and grants for 
historical publications and records as authorized by 44 U.S.C. 
2504, as amended, $6,436,000, to remain available until 
expended.

                      Office of Government Ethics


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses to carry out functions of the Office 
of Government Ethics pursuant to the Ethics in Government Act 
of 1978, as amended and the Ethics Reform Act of 1989, 
including services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, rental of 
conference rooms in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, 
hire of passenger motor vehicles, and not to exceed $1,500 for 
official reception and representation expenses, $10,117,000.

                     Office of Personnel Management


                         salaries and expenses


                  (including transfer of trust funds)


    For necessary expenses to carry out functions of the Office 
of Personnel Management pursuant to Reorganization Plan 
Numbered 2 of 1978 and the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, 
including services as authorized by 5U.S.C. 3109; medical 
examinations performed for veterans by private physicians on a fee 
basis; rental of conference rooms in the District of Columbia and 
elsewhere; hire of passenger motor vehicles; not to exceed $2,500 for 
official reception and representation expenses; advances for 
reimbursements to applicable funds of the Office of Personnel 
Management and the Federal Bureau of Investigation for expenses 
incurred under Executive Order No. 10422 of January 9, 1953, as 
amended; and payment of per diem and/or subsistence allowances to 
employees where Voting Rights Act activities require an employee to 
remain overnight at his or her post of duty, $99,636,000, of which 
$3,200,000 shall remain available until expended for the cost of the 
governmentwide human resources data network project; and in addition 
$115,928,000 for administrative expenses, to be transferred from the 
appropriate trust funds of the Office of Personnel Management without 
regard to other statutes, including direct procurement of printed 
materials, for the retirement and insurance programs, of which 
$21,777,000 shall remain available until expended for the cost of 
automating the retirement recordkeeping systems: Provided, That the 
provisions of this appropriation shall not affect the authority to use 
applicable trust funds as provided by sections 8348(a)(1)(B), 8909(g), 
and 9004(f)(1)(A) and (2)(A) of title 5, United States Code: Provided 
further, That no part of this appropriation shall be available for 
salaries and expenses of the Legal Examining Unit of the Office of 
Personnel Management established pursuant to Executive Order No. 9358 
of July 1, 1943, or any successor unit of like purpose: Provided 
further, That the President's Commission on White House Fellows, 
established by Executive Order No. 11183 of October 3, 1964, may, 
during fiscal year 2002, accept donations of money, property, and 
personal services in connection with the development of a publicity 
brochure to provide information about the White House Fellows, except 
that no such donations shall be accepted for travel or reimbursement of 
travel expenses, or for the salaries of employees of such Commission.

                      Office of Inspector General


                         salaries and expenses


                  (including transfer of trust funds)


    For necessary expenses of the Office of Inspector General 
in carrying out the provisions of the Inspector General Act, as 
amended, including services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, 
hire of passenger motor vehicles, $1,498,000; and in addition, 
not to exceed $10,016,000 for administrative expenses to audit, 
investigate, and provide other oversight of the Office of 
Personnel Management's retirement and insurance programs, to be 
transferred from the appropriate trust funds of the Office of 
Personnel Management, as determined by the Inspector General: 
Provided, That the Inspector General is authorized to rent 
conference rooms in the District of Columbia and elsewhere.


      government payment for annuitants, employees health benefits


      For payment of Government contributions with respect to 
retired employees, as authorized by chapter 89 of title 5, 
United States Code, and the Retired Federal Employees Health 
Benefits Act (74 Stat. 849), as amended, such sums as may be 
necessary.


       government payment for annuitants, employee life insurance


    For payment of Government contributions with respect to 
employees retiring after December 31, 1989, as required by 
chapter 87 of title 5, United States Code, such sums as may be 
necessary.


        payment to civil service retirement and disability fund


    For financing the unfunded liability of new and increased 
annuity benefits becoming effective on or after October 20, 
1969, as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 8348, and annuities under 
special Acts to be credited to the Civil Service Retirement and 
Disability Fund, such sums as may be necessary: Provided, That 
annuities authorized by the Act of May 29, 1944, as amended, 
and the Act of August 19, 1950, as amended (33 U.S.C. 771-775), 
may hereafter be paid out of the Civil Service Retirement and 
Disability Fund.

                       Office of Special Counsel


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses to carry out functions of the Office 
of Special Counsel pursuant to Reorganization Plan Numbered 2 
of 1978, the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (Public Law 95-
454), the Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989 (Public Law 101-
12), Public Law 103-424, and the Uniformed Services Employment 
and Reemployment Act of 1994 (Public Law 103-353), including 
services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, payment of fees and 
expenses for witnesses, rental of conference rooms in the 
District of Columbia and elsewhere, and hire of passenger motor 
vehicles; $11,891,000.

                        United States Tax Court


                         salaries and expenses


    For necessary expenses, including contract reporting and 
other services as authorized by 5 U.S.C. 3109, $37,305,000: 
Provided, That travel expenses of the judges shall be paid upon 
the written certificate of the judge.
    This title may be cited as the ``Independent Agencies 
Appropriations Act, 2002''.

                      TITLE V--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                                This Act

    Sec. 501. 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. 502. The expenditure of any appropriation under this 
Act for any consulting service through procurement contract, 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 3109, shall be limited to those contracts 
where such expenditures are a matter of public record and 
available for public inspection, except where otherwise 
provided under existing law, or under existing Executive order 
issued pursuant to existing law.
    Sec. 503. None of the funds made available by this Act 
shall be available for any activity or for paying the salary of 
any Government employee where funding an activity or paying a 
salary to a Government employee would result in a decision, 
determination, rule, regulation, or policy that would prohibit 
the enforcement of section 307 of the Tariff Act of 1930.
    Sec. 504. None of the funds made available by this Act 
shall be available in fiscal year 2002 for the purpose of 
transferring control over the Federal Law Enforcement Training 
Center located at Glynco, Georgia, and Artesia, New Mexico, out 
of the Department of the Treasury.
    Sec. 505. No part of any appropriation contained in this 
Act shall be available to pay the salary for any person filling 
a position, other than a temporary position, formerly held by 
an employee who has left to enter the Armed Forces of the 
United States and has satisfactorily completed his period of 
active military or naval service, and has within 90 days after 
his release from such service or from hospitalization 
continuing after discharge for a period of not more than 1 
year, made application for restoration to his former position 
and has been certified by the Office of Personnel Management as 
still qualified to perform the duties of his former position 
and has not been restored thereto.
    Sec. 506. No funds appropriated pursuant to this Act may be 
expended by an entity unless the entity agrees that in 
expending the assistance the entity will comply with sections 2 
through 4 of the Act of March 3, 1933 (41 U.S.C. 10a-10c, 
popularly known as the ``Buy American Act'').
    Sec. 507. (a) Purchase of American-Made Equipment and 
Products.--In the case of any equipment or products that may be 
authorized to be purchased with financial assistance provided 
under this Act, it is the sense of the Congress that entities 
receiving such assistance should, in expending the assistance, 
purchase only American-made equipment and products.
    (b) Notice to Recipients of Assistance.--In providing 
financial assistance under this Act, the Secretary of the 
Treasury shall provide to each recipient of the assistance a 
notice describing the statement made in subsection (a) by the 
Congress.
    Sec. 508. If it has been finally determined by a court or 
Federal agency that any person intentionally affixed a label 
bearing a ``Made in America'' inscription, or any inscription 
with the same meaning, to any product sold in or shipped to the 
United States that is not made in the United States, such 
person shall be ineligible to receive any contract or 
subcontract made with funds provided pursuant to this Act, 
pursuant to the debarment, suspension, and ineligibility 
procedures described in sections 9.400 through 9.409 of title 
48, Code of Federal Regulations.
    Sec. 509. No funds appropriated by this Act shall be 
available to pay for an abortion, or the administrative 
expenses in connection with any health plan under the Federal 
employees health benefit program which provides any benefits or 
coverage for abortions.
    Sec. 510. The provision of section 509 shall not apply 
where the life of the mother would be endangered if the fetus 
were carried to term, or the pregnancy is the result of an act 
of rape or incest.
    Sec. 511. Except as otherwise specifically provided by law, 
not to exceed 50 percent of unobligated balances remaining 
available at the end of fiscal year 2002 from appropriations 
made available for salaries and expenses for fiscal year 2002 
in this Act, shall remain available through September 30, 2003, 
for each such account for the purposes authorized: Provided, 
That a request shall be submitted to the Committees on 
Appropriations for approval prior to the expenditure of such 
funds: Provided further, That these requests shall be made in 
compliance with reprogramming guidelines.
    Sec. 512. None of the funds made available in this Act may 
be used by the Executive Office of the President to request 
from the Federal Bureau of Investigation any official 
background investigation report on any individual, except 
when--
            (1) such individual has given his or her express 
        written consent for such request not more than 6 months 
        prior to the date of such request and during the same 
        presidential administration; or
            (2) such request is required due to extraordinary 
        circumstances involving national security.
    Sec. 513. The cost accounting standards promulgated under 
section 26 of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act 
(Public Law 93-400; 41 U.S.C. 422) shall not apply with respect 
to a contract under the Federal Employees Health Benefits 
Program established under chapter 89 of title 5, United States 
Code.
    Sec. 514. For the purpose of resolving litigation and 
implementing any settlement agreements regarding the nonforeign 
area cost-of-living allowance program, the Office of Personnel 
Management may accept and utilize (without regard to any 
restriction on unanticipated travel expenses imposed in an 
Appropriations Act) funds made available to the Office pursuant 
to court approval.
    Sec. 515. No funds appropriated or otherwise made available 
under this Act shall be made available to any person or entity 
that has been convicted of violating the Buy American Act (41 
U.S.C. 10a-10c).

                      TITLE VI--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                Departments, Agencies, and Corporations

    Sec. 601. Funds appropriated in this or any other Act may 
be used to pay travel to the United States for the immediate 
family of employees serving abroad in cases of death or life 
threatening illness of said employee.
    Sec. 602. No department, agency, or instrumentality of the 
United States receiving appropriated funds under this or any 
other Act for fiscal year 2002 shall obligate or expend any 
such funds, unless such department, agency, or instrumentality 
has in place, and will continue to administer in good faith, a 
written policy designed to ensure that all of its workplaces 
are free from the illegal use, possession, or distribution of 
controlled substances (as defined in the Controlled Substances 
Act) by the officers and employees of such department, agency, 
or instrumentality.
    Sec. 603. Unless otherwise specifically provided, the 
maximum amount allowable during the current fiscal year in 
accordance with section 16 of the Act of August 2, 1946 (60 
Stat. 810), for the purchase of any passenger motor vehicle 
(exclusive of buses, ambulances, law enforcement, and 
undercover surveillance vehicles), is hereby fixed at $8,100 
except station wagons for which the maximum shall be $9,100: 
Provided, That these limits may be exceeded by not to exceed 
$3,700 for police-type vehicles, and by not to exceed $4,000 
for special heavy-duty vehicles: Provided further, That the 
limits set forth in this section may not be exceeded by more 
than 5 percent for electric or hybrid vehicles purchased for 
demonstration under the provisions of the Electric and Hybrid 
Vehicle Research, Development, and Demonstration Act of 1976: 
Provided further, That the limits set forth in this section may 
be exceeded by the incremental cost of clean alternative fuels 
vehicles acquired pursuant to Public Law 101-549 over the cost 
of comparable conventionally fueled vehicles.
    Sec. 604. Appropriations of the executive departments and 
independent establishments for the current fiscal year 
available for expenses of travel, or for the expenses of the 
activity concerned, are hereby made available for quarters 
allowances and cost-of-living allowances, in accordance with 5 
U.S.C. 5922-5924.
    Sec. 605. Unless otherwise specified during the current 
fiscal year, no part of any appropriation contained in this or 
any other Act shall be used to pay the compensation of any 
officer or employee of the Government of the United States 
(including any agency the majority of the stock of which is 
owned by the Government of the United States) whose post of 
duty is in the continental United States unless such person: 
(1) is a citizen of the United States; (2) is a person in the 
service of the United States on the date of the enactment of 
this Act who, being eligible for citizenship, has filed a 
declaration of intention to become a citizen of the United 
States prior to such date and is actually residing in the 
United States; (3) is a person who owes allegiance to the 
United States; (4) is an alien from Cuba, Poland, South 
Vietnam, the countries of the former Soviet Union, or the 
Baltic countries lawfully admitted to the United States for 
permanent residence; (5) is a South Vietnamese, Cambodian, or 
Laotian refugee paroled in the United States after January 1, 
1975; or (6) is a national of the People's Republic of China 
who qualifies for adjustment of status pursuant to the Chinese 
Student Protection Act of 1992: Provided, That for the purpose 
of this section, an affidavit signed by any such person shall 
be considered prima facie evidence that the requirements of 
this section with respect to his or her status have been 
complied with: Provided further, That any person making a false 
affidavit shall be guilty of a felony, and, upon conviction, 
shall be fined no more than $4,000 or imprisoned for not more 
than 1 year, or both: Provided further, That the above penal 
clause shall be in addition to, and not in substitution for, 
any other provisions of existing law: Provided further, That 
any payment made toany officer or employee contrary to the 
provisions of this section shall be recoverable in action by the 
Federal Government. This section shall not apply to citizens of 
Ireland, Israel, or the Republic of the Philippines, or to nationals of 
those countries allied with the United States in a current defense 
effort, or to international broadcasters employed by the United States 
Information Agency, or to temporary employment of translators, or to 
temporary employment in the field service (not to exceed 60 days) as a 
result of emergencies.
    Sec. 606. Appropriations available to any department or 
agency during the current fiscal year for necessary expenses, 
including maintenance or operating expenses, shall also be 
available for payment to the General Services Administration 
for charges for space and services and those expenses of 
renovation and alteration of buildings and facilities which 
constitute public improvements performed in accordance with the 
Public Buildings Act of 1959 (73 Stat. 749), the Public 
Buildings Amendments of 1972 (87 Stat. 216), or other 
applicable law.
    Sec. 607. In addition to funds provided in this or any 
other Act, all Federal agencies are authorized to receive and 
use funds resulting from the sale of materials, including 
Federal records disposed of pursuant to a records schedule 
recovered through recycling or waste prevention programs. Such 
funds shall be available until expended for the following 
purposes:
            (1) Acquisition, waste reduction and prevention, 
        and recycling programs as described in Executive Order 
        No. 13101 (September 14, 1998), including any such 
        programs adopted prior to the effective date of the 
        Executive order.
            (2) Other Federal agency environmental management 
        programs, including, but not limited to, the 
        development and implementation of hazardous waste 
        management and pollution prevention programs.
            (3) Other employee programs as authorized by law or 
        as deemed appropriate by the head of the Federal 
        agency.
    Sec. 608. Funds made available by this or any other Act for 
administrative expenses in the current fiscal year of the 
corporations and agencies subject to chapter 91 of title 31, 
United States Code, shall be available, in addition to objects 
for which such funds are otherwise available, for rent in the 
District of Columbia; services in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 
3109; and the objects specified under this head, all the 
provisions of which shall be applicable to the expenditure of 
such funds unless otherwise specified in the Act by which they 
are made available: Provided, That in the event any functions 
budgeted as administrative expenses are subsequently 
transferred to or paid from other funds, the limitations on 
administrative expenses shall be correspondingly reduced.
    Sec. 609. No part of any appropriation for the current 
fiscal year contained in this or any other Act shall be paid to 
any person for the filling of any position for which he or she 
has been nominated after the Senate has voted not to approve 
the nomination of said person.
    Sec. 610. No part of any appropriation contained in this or 
any other Act shall be available for interagency financing of 
boards (except Federal Executive Boards), commissions, 
councils, committees, or similar groups (whether or not they 
are interagency entities) which do not have a prior and 
specific statutory approval to receive financial support from 
more than one agency or instrumentality.
    Sec. 611. Funds made available by this or any other Act to 
the Postal Service Fund (39 U.S.C. 2003) shall be available for 
employment of guards for all buildings and areas owned or 
occupied by the Postal Service and under the charge and control 
of the Postal Service, and such guards shall have, with respect 
to such property, the powers of special policemen provided by 
the first section of the Act of June 1, 1948, as amended (62 
Stat. 281; 40 U.S.C. 318), and, as to property owned or 
occupied by the Postal Service, the Postmaster General may take 
the same actions as the Administrator of General Services may 
take under the provisions of sections 2 and 3 of the Act of 
June 1, 1948, as amended (62 Stat. 281; 40 U.S.C. 318a and 
318b), attaching thereto penal consequences under the authority 
and within the limits provided in section 4 of the Act of June 
1, 1948, as amended (62 Stat. 281; 40 U.S.C. 318c).
    Sec. 612. None of the funds made available pursuant to the 
provisions of this Act shall be used to implement, administer, 
or enforce any regulation which has been disapproved pursuant 
to a resolution of disapproval duly adopted in accordance with 
the applicable law of the United States.
    Sec. 613. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
and except as otherwise provided in this section, no part of 
any of the funds appropriated for fiscal year 2002, by this or 
any other Act, may be used to pay any prevailing rate employee 
described in section 5342(a)(2)(A) of title 5, United States 
Code--
            (1) during the period from the date of expiration 
        of the limitation imposed by section 613 of the 
        Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 
        2001, until the normal effective date of the applicable 
        wage survey adjustment that is to take effect in fiscal 
        year 2002, in an amount that exceeds the rate payable 
        for the applicable grade and step of the applicable 
        wage schedule in accordance with such section 613; and
            (2) during the period consisting of the remainder 
        of fiscal year 2002, in an amount that exceeds, as a 
        result of a wage survey adjustment, the rate payable 
        under paragraph (1) by more than the sum of--
                    (A) the percentage adjustment taking effect 
                in fiscal year 2002 under section 5303 of title 
                5, United States Code, in the rates of pay 
                under the General Schedule; and
                    (B) the difference between the overall 
                average percentage of the locality-based 
                comparability payments taking effect in fiscal 
                year 2002 under section 5304 of such title 
                (whether by adjustment or otherwise), and the 
                overall average percentage of such payments 
                which was effective in fiscal year 2001 under 
                such section.
    (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no 
prevailing rate employee described in subparagraph (B) or (C) 
of section 5342(a)(2) of title 5, United States Code, and no 
employee covered by section 5348 of such title, may be paid 
during the periods for which subsection (a)is in effect at a 
rate that exceeds the rates that would be payable under subsection (a) 
were subsection (a) applicable to such employee.
    (c) For the purposes of this section, the rates payable to 
an employee who is covered by this section and who is paid from 
a schedule not in existence on September 30, 2001, shall be 
determined under regulations prescribed by the Office of 
Personnel Management.
    (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, rates of 
premium pay for employees subject to this section may not be 
changed from the rates in effect on September 30, 2001, except 
to the extent determined by the Office of Personnel Management 
to be consistent with the purpose of this section.
    (e) This section shall apply with respect to pay for 
service performed after September 30, 2001.
    (f) For the purpose of administering any provision of law 
(including any rule or regulation that provides premium pay, 
retirement, life insurance, or any other employee benefit) that 
requires any deduction or contribution, or that imposes any 
requirement or limitation on the basis of a rate of salary or 
basic pay, the rate of salary or basic pay payable after the 
application of this section shall be treated as the rate of 
salary or basic pay.
    (g) Nothing in this section shall be considered to permit 
or require the payment to any employee covered by this section 
at a rate in excess of the rate that would be payable were this 
section not in effect.
    (h) The Office of Personnel Management may provide for 
exceptions to the limitations imposed by this section if the 
Office determines that such exceptions are necessary to ensure 
the recruitment or retention of qualified employees.
    Sec. 614. During the period in which the head of any 
department or agency, or any other officer or civilian employee 
of the Government appointed by the President of the United 
States, holds office, no funds may be obligated or expended in 
excess of $5,000 to furnish or redecorate the office of such 
department head, agency head, officer, or employee, or to 
purchase furniture or make improvements for any such office, 
unless advance notice of such furnishing or redecoration is 
expressly approved by the Committees on Appropriations. For the 
purposes of this section, the word ``office'' shall include the 
entire suite of offices assigned to the individual, as well as 
any other space used primarily by the individual or the use of 
which is directly controlled by the individual.
    Sec. 615. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no 
executive branch agency shall purchase, construct, and/or lease 
any additional facilities, except within or contiguous to 
existing locations, to be used for the purpose of conducting 
Federal law enforcement training without the advance approval 
of the Committees on Appropriations, except that the Federal 
Law Enforcement Training Center is authorized to obtain the 
temporary use of additional facilities by lease, contract, or 
other agreement for training which cannot be accommodated in 
existing Center facilities.
    Sec. 616. Notwithstanding section 1346 of title 31, United 
States Code, or section 610 of this Act, funds made available 
for fiscal year 2002 by this or any other Act shall be 
available for the interagency funding of national security and 
emergency preparedness telecommunications initiatives which 
benefit multiple Federal departments, agencies, or entities, as 
provided by Executive Order No. 12472 (April 3, 1984).
    Sec. 617. (a) None of the funds appropriated by this or any 
other Act may be obligated or expended by any Federal 
department, agency, or other instrumentality for the salaries 
or expenses of any employee appointed to a position of a 
confidential or policy-determining character excepted from the 
competitive service pursuant to section 3302 of title 5, United 
States Code, without a certification to the Office of Personnel 
Management from the head of the Federal department, agency, or 
other instrumentality employing the Schedule C appointee that 
the Schedule C position was not created solely or primarily in 
order to detail the employee to the White House.
    (b) The provisions of this section shall not apply to 
Federal employees or members of the armed services detailed to 
or from--
            (1) the Central Intelligence Agency;
            (2) the National Security Agency;
            (3) the Defense Intelligence Agency;
            (4) the offices within the Department of Defense 
        for the collection of specialized national foreign 
        intelligence through reconnaissance programs;
            (5) the Bureau of Intelligence and Research of the 
        Department of State;
            (6) any agency, office, or unit of the Army, Navy, 
        Air Force, and Marine Corps, the Federal Bureau of 
        Investigation and the Drug Enforcement Administration 
        of the Department of Justice, the Department of 
        Transportation, the Department of the Treasury, and the 
        Department of Energy performing intelligence functions; 
        and
            (7) the Director of Central Intelligence.
    Sec. 618. No department, agency, or instrumentality of the 
United States receiving appropriated funds underthis or any 
other Act for fiscal year 2002 shall obligate or expend any such funds, 
unless such department, agency, or instrumentality has in place, and 
will continue to administer in good faith, a written policy designed to 
ensure that all of its workplaces are free from discrimination and 
sexual harassment and that all of its workplaces are not in violation 
of title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, the Age 
Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, and the Rehabilitation Act of 
1973.
    Sec. 619. None of the funds made available in this Act for 
the United States Customs Service may be used to allow--
            (1) the importation into the United States of any 
        good, ware, article, or merchandise mined, produced, or 
        manufactured by forced or indentured child labor, as 
        determined pursuant to section 307 of the Tariff Act of 
        1930 (19 U.S.C. 1307); or
            (2) the release into the United States of any good, 
        ware, article, or merchandise on which the United 
        States Customs Service has in effect a detention order, 
        pursuant to such section 307, on the basis that the 
        good, ware, article, or merchandise may have been 
        mined, produced, or manufactured by forced or 
        indentured child labor.
    Sec. 620. No part of any appropriation contained in this or 
any other Act shall be available for the payment of the salary 
of any officer or employee of the Federal Government, who--
            (1) prohibits or prevents, or attempts or threatens 
        to prohibit or prevent, any other officer or employee 
        of the Federal Government from having any direct oral 
        or written communication or contact with any Member, 
        committee, or subcommittee of the Congress in 
        connection with any matter pertaining to the employment 
        of such other officer or employee or pertaining to the 
        department or agency of such other officer or employee 
        in any way, irrespective of whether such communication 
        or contact is at the initiative of such other officer 
        or employee or in response to the request or inquiry of 
        such Member, committee, or subcommittee; or
            (2) removes, suspends from duty without pay, 
        demotes, reduces in rank, seniority, status, pay, or 
        performance of efficiency rating, denies promotion to, 
        relocates, reassigns, transfers, disciplines, or 
        discriminates in regard to any employment right, 
        entitlement, or benefit, or any term or condition of 
        employment of, any other officer or employee of the 
        Federal Government, or attempts or threatens to commit 
        any of the foregoing actions with respect to such other 
        officer or employee, by reason of any communication or 
        contact of such other officer or employee with any 
        Member, committee, or subcommittee of the Congress as 
        described in paragraph (1).
    Sec. 621. (a) None of the funds made available in this or 
any other Act may be obligated or expended for any employee 
training that--
            (1) does not meet identified needs for knowledge, 
        skills, and abilities bearing directly upon the 
        performance of official duties;
            (2) contains elements likely to induce high levels 
        of emotional response or psychological stress in some 
        participants;
            (3) does not require prior employee notification of 
        the content and methods to be used in the training and 
        written end of course evaluation;
            (4) contains any methods or content associated with 
        religious or quasi-religious belief systems or ``new 
        age'' belief systems as defined in Equal Employment 
        Opportunity Commission Notice N-915.022, dated 
        September 2, 1988; or
            (5) is offensive to, or designed to change, 
        participants' personal values or lifestyle outside the 
        workplace.
    (b) Nothing in this section shall prohibit, restrict, or 
otherwise preclude an agency from conducting training bearing 
directly upon the performance of official duties.
    Sec. 622. No funds appropriated in this or any other Act 
may be used to implement or enforce the agreements in Standard 
Forms 312 and 4414 of the Government or any other nondisclosure 
policy, form, or agreement if such policy, form, or agreement 
does not contain the followingprovisions: ``These restrictions 
are consistent with and do not supersede, conflict with, or otherwise 
alter the employee obligations, rights, or liabilities created by 
Executive Order No. 12958; section 7211 of title 5, United States Code 
(governing disclosures to Congress); section 1034 of title 10, United 
States Code, as amended by the Military Whistleblower Protection Act 
(governing disclosure to Congress by members of the military); section 
2302(b)(8) of title 5, United States Code, as amended by the 
Whistleblower Protection Act (governing disclosures of illegality, 
waste, fraud, abuse or public health or safety threats); the 
Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982 (50 U.S.C. 421 et seq.) 
(governing disclosures that could expose confidential Government 
agents); and the statutes which protect against disclosure that may 
compromise the national security, including sections 641, 793, 794, 
798, and 952 of title 18, United States Code, and section 4(b) of the 
Subversive Activities Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 783(b)). The definitions, 
requirements, obligations, rights, sanctions, and liabilities created 
by said Executive order and listed statutes are incorporated into this 
agreement and are controlling.'': Provided, That notwithstanding the 
preceding paragraph, a nondisclosure policy form or agreement that is 
to be executed by a person connected with the conduct of an 
intelligence or intelligence-related activity, other than an employee 
or officer of the United States Government, may contain provisions 
appropriate to the particular activity for which such document is to be 
used. Such form or agreement shall, at a minimum, require that the 
person will not disclose any classified information received in the 
course of such activity unless specifically authorized to do so by the 
United States Government. Such nondisclosure forms shall also make it 
clear that they do not bar disclosures to Congress or to an authorized 
official of an executive agency or the Department of Justice that are 
essential to reporting a substantial violation of law.
    Sec. 623. No part of any funds appropriated in this or any 
other Act shall be used by an agency of the executive branch, 
other than for normal and recognized executive-legislative 
relationships, for publicity or propaganda purposes, and for 
the preparation, distribution or use of any kit, pamphlet, 
booklet, publication, radio, television or film presentation 
designed to support or defeat legislation pending before the 
Congress, except in presentation to the Congress itself.
    Sec. 624. None of the funds appropriated by this or any 
other Act may be used by an agency to provide a Federal 
employee's home address to any labor organization except when 
the employee has authorized such disclosure or when such 
disclosure has been ordered by a court of competent 
jurisdiction.
    Sec. 625. None of the funds made available in this Act or 
any other Act may be used to provide any non-public information 
such as mailing or telephone lists to any person or any 
organization outside of the Federal Government without the 
approval of the Committees on Appropriations.
    Sec. 626. No part of any appropriation contained in this or 
any other Act shall be used for publicity or propaganda 
purposes within the United States not heretofore authorized by 
the Congress.
    Sec. 627. (a) In this section the term ``agency''--
            (1) means an Executive agency as defined under 
        section 105 of title 5, United States Code;
            (2) includes a military department as defined under 
        section 102 of such title, the Postal Service, and the 
        Postal Rate Commission; and
            (3) shall not include the General Accounting 
        Office.
    (b) Unless authorized in accordance with law or regulations 
to use such time for other purposes, an employee of an agency 
shall use official time in an honest effort to perform official 
duties. An employee not under a leave system, including a 
Presidential appointee exempted under section 6603(2) of title 
5, United States Code, has an obligation to expend an honest 
effort and a reasonable proportion of such employee's time in 
the performance of official duties.
    Sec. 628. Notwithstanding 31 U.S.C. 1346 and section 610 of 
this Act, funds made available for fiscal year 2002 by this or 
any other Act to any department or agency, which is a member of 
the Joint Financial Management Improvement Program (JFMIP), 
shall be available to finance an appropriate share of JFMIP 
administrative costs, as determined by the JFMIP, but not to 
exceed a total of $800,000 including the salary of the 
Executive Director and staff support.
    Sec. 629. Notwithstanding 31 U.S.C. 1346 and section 610 of 
this Act, the head of each Executive department and agency is 
hereby authorized to transfer to the ``Policy and Operations'' 
account, General Services Administration, with the approval of 
the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, funds made 
available for fiscal year 2002 by this or any other Act, 
including rebates from charge card and other contracts. These 
funds shall be administered by the Administrator of General 
Services to support Government-wide financial, information 
technology, procurement, and other management innovations, 
initiatives, and activities, as approved by the Director ofthe 
Office of Management and Budget, in consultation with the appropriate 
interagency groups designated by the Director (including the Chief 
Financial Officers Council and the Joint Financial Management 
Improvement Program for financial management initiatives, the Chief 
Information Officers Council for information technology initiatives, 
and the Procurement Executives Council for procurement initiatives). 
The total funds transferred shall not exceed $17,000,000. Such 
transfers may only be made 15 days following notification of the 
Committees on Appropriations by the Director of the Office of 
Management and Budget.
    Sec. 630. (a) In General.--Hereafter, in accordance with 
regulations promulgated by the Office of Personnel Management, 
an Executive agency which provides or proposes to provide child 
care services for Federal employees may use appropriated funds 
(otherwise available to such agency for salaries and expenses) 
to provide child care, in a Federal or leased facility, or 
through contract, for civilian employees of such agency.
    (b) Affordability.--Amounts so provided with respect to any 
such facility or contractor shall be applied to improve the 
affordability of child care for lower income Federal employees 
using or seeking to use the child care services offered by such 
facility or contractor.
    (c) Advances.--Notwithstanding 31 U.S.C. 3324, amounts paid 
to licensed or regulated child care providers may be in advance 
of services rendered, covering agreed upon periods, as 
appropriate.
    (d) Definition.--For purposes of this section, the term 
``Executive agency'' has the meaning given such term by section 
105 of title 5, United States Code, but does not include the 
General Accounting Office.
    (e) Notification.--None of the funds made available in this 
or any other Act may be used to implement the provisions of 
this section absent advance notification to the Committees on 
Appropriations.
    Sec. 631. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a 
woman may breastfeed her child at any location in a Federal 
building or on Federal property, if the woman and her child are 
otherwise authorized to be present at the location.
    Sec. 632. Nothwithstanding section 1346 of title 31, United 
States Code, or section 610 of this Act, funds made available 
for fiscal year 2002 by this or any other Act shall be 
available for the interagency funding of specific projects, 
workshops, studies, and similar efforts to carry out the 
purposes of the National Science and Technology Council 
(authorized by Executive Order No. 12881), which benefit 
multiple Federal departments, agencies, or entities: Provided, 
That the Office of Management and Budget shall provide a report 
describing the budget of and resources connected with the 
National Science and Technology Council to the Committees on 
Appropriations, the House Committee on Science; and the Senate 
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation 90 days 
after enactment of this Act.
    Sec. 633. Any request for proposals, solicitation, grant 
application, form, notification, press release, or other 
publications involving the distribution of Federal funds shall 
indicate the agency providing the funds and the amount 
provided. This provision shall apply to direct payments, 
formula funds, and grants received by a State receiving Federal 
funds.
    Sec. 634. Subsection (f) of section 403 of Public Law 103-
356 (31 U.S.C. 501 note) is amended by striking ``October 1, 
2001'' and inserting ``October 1, 2002''.
    Sec. 635. Section 3 of Public Law 93-346 as amended (3 
U.S.C. 111 note) is amended by inserting ``, utilities 
(including electrical) for,'' after ``military staffing''.
    Sec. 636. Section 6 of Public Law 93-346 as amended (3 
U.S.C. 111 note) is amended by inserting ``, or for use at 
official functions in or about,'' after ``about''.
    Sec. 637. During fiscal year 2002 and thereafter, the head 
of an entity named in 3 U.S.C. 112 may, with respect to 
civilian personnel of any branch of the Federal Government 
performing duties in such entity, exercise authority comparable 
to the authority that may by law (including chapter 57 and 
sections 8344 and 8468 of title 5, United States Code) be 
exercised with respect to the employees of an Executive agency 
(as defined in 5 U.S.C. 105) by the head of such Executive 
agency, and the authority granted by this section shall be in 
addition to any other authority available in law.
    Sec. 638. Each Executive agency covered by section 630 of 
the Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999 
(as contained in section 101(h) of division A of Public Law 
105-277) shall submit a report 60 days after the close of 
fiscal year 2001 to the Office of Personnel Management 
regarding its efforts to implement the intent of such section 
630. The Office of Personnel Management shall prepare a summary 
of the information received and shall submit the summary report 
to the House Committee on Appropriations 90 days after the 
close of fiscal year 2001.
    Sec. 639. (a) Prohibition of Federal Agency Monitoring of 
Personal Information on Use of Internet.--None of the funds 
made available in this or any other Act may be used by any 
Federal agency--
            (1) to collect, review, or create any aggregate 
        list, derived from any means, that includes the 
        collection of any personally identifiable information 
        relating to an individual's access to or use of any 
        Federal Government Internet site of the agency; or
            (2) to enter into any agreement with a third party 
        (including another government agency) to collect, 
        review, or obtain any aggregate list, derived from any 
        means, that includes the collection of any personally 
        identifiable information relating to an individual's 
        access to or use of any nongovernmental Internet site.
    (b) Exceptions.--The limitations established in subsection 
(a) shall not apply to--
            (1) any record of aggregate data that does not 
        identify particular persons;
            (2) any voluntary submission of personally 
        identifiable information;
            (3) any action taken for law enforcement, 
        regulatory, or supervisory purposes, in accordance with 
        applicable law; or
            (4) any action described in subsection (a)(1) that 
        is a system security action taken by the operator of an 
        Internet site and is necessarily incident to the 
        rendition of the Internet site services or to the 
        protection of the rights or property of the provider of 
        the Internet site.
    (c) Definitions.--For the purposes of this section:
            (1) The term ``regulatory'' means agency actions to 
        implement, interpret or enforce authorities provided in 
        law.
            (2) The term ``supervisory'' means examinations of 
        the agency's supervised institutions, including 
        assessing safety and soundness, overall financial 
        condition, management practices and policies and 
        compliance with applicable standards as provided in 
        law.
    Sec. 640. (a) Section 8335(a) of title 5, United States 
Code, is amended by striking the period at the end of the first 
sentence and inserting: ``or completes the age and service 
requirements for an annuity under section 8336, whichever 
occurs later.''.
    (b) The amendment made by subsection (a) takes effect on 
the date of enactment with regard to any individual subject to 
chapter 83 of title 5, United States Code, who is employed as 
an air traffic controller on that date.
    Sec. 641. (a) In General.--Title 5, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 4507 the following:

``Sec. 4507a. Awarding of ranks to other senior career employees

    ``(a) For the purpose of this section, the term `senior 
career employee' means an individual appointed to a position 
classified above GS-15 and paid under section 5376 who is not 
serving--
            ``(1) under a time-limited appointment; or
            ``(2) in a position that is excepted from the 
        competitive service because of its confidential or 
        policy-making character.
    ``(b) Each agency employing senior career employees shall 
submit annually to the Office of Personnel Management 
recommendations of senior career employees in the agency to be 
awarded the rank of Meritorious Senior Professional or 
Distinguished Senior Professional, which may be awarded by the 
President for sustained accomplishment or sustained 
extraordinary accomplishment, respectively.
    ``(c) The recommendations shall be made, reviewed, and 
awarded under the same terms and conditions (to the extent 
determined by the Office of Personnel Management) that apply to 
rank awards for members of the Senior Executive Service under 
section 4507.''.
    (b) Regulations.--Section 4506 of title 5, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``the agency awards program'' and 
inserting ``the awards programs''.
    (c) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections for chapter 
45 of title 5, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after the item relating to section 4507 the following:

``4507a. Awarding of ranks to other senior career employees.''.
    (d) The amendments made by this section shall take effect 
for awards granted in 2003.
    Sec. 642. Section 640(c) of the Treasury and General 
Government Appropriations Act, 2000 (Public Law 106-58; 2 
U.S.C. 437g note) is amended by striking ``violations occurring 
between January 1, 2000 and December 31, 2001'' and inserting 
``violations that relate to reporting periods that begin on or 
after January 1, 2000, and that end on or before December 31, 
2003''.
    Sec. 643. (a) None of the funds appropriated by this Act 
may be used to enter into or renew a contract which includes a 
provision providing prescription drug coverage, except where 
the contract also includes a provision for contraceptive 
coverage.
    (b) Nothing in this section shall apply to a contract 
with--
            (1) any of the following religious plans:
                    (A) Personal Care's HMO; and
                    (B) OSF Health Plans, Inc.; and
            (2) any existing or future plan, if the carrier for 
        the plan objects to such coverage on the basis of 
        religious beliefs.
    (c) In implementing this section, any plan that enters into 
or renews a contract under this section may not subject any 
individual to discrimination on the basis that the individual 
refuses to prescribe or otherwise provide for contraceptives 
because such activities would be contrary to the individual's 
religious beliefs or moral convictions.
    (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to require 
coverage of abortion or abortion-related services.
    Sec. 644. The Congress of the United States recognizes the 
United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) as the official anti-
doping agency for Olympic, Pan American, and Paralympic sport 
in the United States.
    Sec. 645. (a) Section 1238(e)(3) of the Floyd D. Spence 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as 
enacted by Public Law 106-398) is amended by adding at the end 
the following: ``The executive director and any personnel who 
are employees of the United States-China Security Review 
Commission shall be employees under section 2105 of title 5, 
United States Code, for purposes of chapters 63, 81, 83, 84, 
85, 87, 89, and 90 of that title.''.
    (b) The amendment made by this section shall take effect on 
January 3, 2001.
    Sec. 646. (a) The adjustment in rates of basic pay for the 
statutory pay systems that takes effect in fiscal year 2002 
under sections 5303 and 5304 of title 5, United States Code, 
shall be an increase of 4.6 percent.
    (b) Funds used to carry out this section shall be paid from 
appropriations which are made to each applicable department or 
agency for salaries and expenses for fiscal year 2002.
    Sec. 647. Not later than six months after the date of 
enactment of this Act, the Inspector General of each applicable 
department or agency shall submit to the Committee on 
Appropriations a report detailing what policies and procedures 
are in place for each department or agency to give first 
priority to the location of new offices and other facilities in 
rural areas, as directed by the Rural Development Act of 1972.
    Sec. 648. Deadline for Submission of Annual Reports by 
United States-China Security Review Commission.--Section 
1238(c)(1) of the Floyd D. Spence National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as enacted into law by 
section 1 of Public Law 106-398) is amended by striking 
``March'' and inserting ``June''.
    Sec. 649. Subsection (a) of section 2105 of title 44, 
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
    ``(a)(1) The Archivist is authorized to select, appoint, 
employ, and fix the compensation of such officers and 
employees, pursuant to part III of title 5, as are necessary to 
perform the functions of the Archivist and the Administration.
    ``(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the Archivist is 
authorized to appoint, subject to the consultation requirements 
set forth in paragraph (f)(2) of section 2203 of this title, a 
director at each Presidential archival depository established 
under section 2112 of this title. The Archivist may appoint a 
director without regard to subchapter I and subchapter VIII of 
chapter 33 of title 5, United States Code, governing 
appointments in the competitive service and the Senior 
Executive Service. A director so appointed shall be responsible 
for the care and preservation of the Presidential records and 
historical materials deposited in a Presidential archival 
depository, shall serve at the pleasure of the Archivist and 
shall perform such other functions as the Archivist may 
specify.''.
    Sec. 650. Reauthorization of Breast Cancer Research Special 
Postage Stamp. (a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as 
the ``Breast Cancer Research Stamp Act of 2001''.
    (b) Reauthorization and Inapplicability of Limitation.--
            (1) In general.--Section 414 of title 39, United 
        States Code, is amended by striking subsection (g) and 
        inserting the following:
    ``(g) For purposes of section 416 (including any regulation 
prescribed under subsection (e)(1)(C) of that section), the 
special postage stamp issued under this section shall not apply 
to any limitation relating to whether more than 1 semipostal 
may be offered for sale at the same time.
    ``(h) This section shall cease to be effective after 
December 31, 2003.''.
            (2) Effective date.--The amendment made by this 
        subsection shall take effect on the earlier of--
                    (A) the date of enactment of this Act; or
                    (B) July 29, 2002.
    (c) Rate of Postage.--Section 414(b) of title 39, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``of not to 
        exceed 25 percent'' and inserting ``of not less than 15 
        percent''; and
            (2) by adding after the sentence following 
        paragraph (3) the following: ``The special rate of 
        postage of an individual stamp under this section shall 
        be an amount that is evenly divisible by 5.''.
    Sec. 651. Amendment to Title 39. Section 5402(d) of title 
39, United States Code, is amended by--
            (1) inserting ``(1)'' after ``(d)''; and
            (2) inserting at the end the following:
    ``(2)(A) In the exercise of its authority under paragraph 
(1), the Postal Service may require any air carrier to accept 
as mail shipments of day-old poultry and such other liveanimals 
as postal regulations allow to be transmitted as mail matter. The 
authority of the Postal Service under this subparagraph shall not apply 
in the case of any air carrier who commonly and regularly refuses to 
accept any live animals as cargo.
    ``(B) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
Postal Service is authorized to assess, as postage to be paid 
by the mailers of any shipments covered by subparagraph (A), a 
reasonable surcharge that the Postal Service determines in its 
discretion to be adequate to compensate air carriers for any 
necessary additional expense incurred in handling such 
shipments.
    ``(C) The authority of the Postal Service under 
subparagraph (B) shall apply during the period beginning on the 
date of enactment of this paragraph, and ending June 30, 
2002.''.
    Sec. 652. The 9/11 Heroes Stamp of 2001. (a) Short Title.--
This section may be cited as the ``9/11 Heroes Stamp Act of 
2001''.
    (b) In General.--In order to afford the public a direct and 
tangible way to provide assistance to the families of emergency 
relief personnel killed or permanently disabled in the line of 
duty in connection with the terrorist attacks against the 
United States on September 11, 2001, the United States Postal 
Service shall issue a semipostal in accordance with subsection 
(c).
    (c) Requirements.--The provisions of section 416(a), (c), 
(d), and (f) of title 39, United States Code, shall apply as 
practicable with respect to the semipostal described in 
subsection (b), subject to the following:
            (1) Rate of postage.--Section 414(c) of title 39, 
        United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``of not 
                to exceed 25 percent'' and inserting ``of not 
                less than 15 percent''; and
                    (B) by adding after the sentence following 
                paragraph (2) the following: ``The special rate 
                of postage of an individual stamp under this 
                section shall be an amount that is evenly 
                divisible by 5.''.
            (2) Disposition of amounts becoming available.--All 
        amounts becoming available from the sale of the 
        semipostal (as determined under such section) shall be 
        transferred to the Federal Emergency Management Agency 
        under such arrangements as the Postal Service shall by 
        mutual agreement with such agency establish in order to 
        carry out the purposes of this section.
            (3) Commencement and termination dates.--Stamps 
        under this section shall be issued--
                    (A) beginning on the earliest date 
                practicable; and
                    (B) for such period of time as the Postal 
                Service considers necessary and appropriate, 
                but in no event after December 31, 2004.
    (d) Limitation.--For purposes of section 416 of title 39, 
United States Code (including any regulation prescribed under 
subsection (e)(1)(C) of that section), the semipostal postage 
stamp issued under this section shall not apply to any 
limitation relating to whether more than one semipostal may be 
offered for sale at the same time.
    (e) Design.--It is the sense of the Congress that the 
semipostal issued under this section should depict, by such 
design as the Postal Service considers to be most appropriate, 
the efforts of emergency relief personnel at the site of the 
World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in 
Arlington, Virginia.
    (f) Definitions.--For purposes of this section--
            (1) the term ``emergency relief personnel'' means 
        firefighters, law enforcement officers, paramedics, 
        emergency medical technicians, members of the clergy, 
        and other individuals (including employees of legally 
        organized and recognized volunteer organizations, 
        whether compensated or not) who, in the course of 
        professional duties, respond to fire, medical, 
        hazardous material, or other similar emergencies; and
            (2) the term ``semipostal'' has the meaning given 
        such term by section 416 of title 39, United States 
        Code.

SEC. 653. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SEMIPOSTAL STAMP.

    (a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as the ``Stamp 
Out Domestic Violence Act of 2001''.
    (b) In General.--In order to afford the public a direct and 
tangible way to contribute to funding for domestic violence 
programs, the United States Postal Service shall issue a 
semipostal in accordance with subsection (c).
    (c) Requirements.--The provisions of section 416 of title 
39, United States Code, shall apply as practicable with respect 
to the semipostal described in subsection (b), subject to the 
following:
            (1) Disposition of amounts becoming available.--All 
        amounts becoming available from the sale of the 
        semipostal (as determined under such section) shall be 
        transferred to the Department of Health and Human 
        Services under such arrangements as the Postal Service 
        shall by mutual agreement with such agency establish in 
        order to carry out the purposes of this section.
            (2)  Commencement and termination dates.--Stamps 
        under this section shall be issued--
                    (A) beginning on the earliest date 
                practicable, but not later than January 1, 
                2004; and
                    (B) for such period of time as the Postal 
                Service considers necessary and appropriate, 
                but in no event after December 31, 2006.
    (d) Limitation.--For purposes of section 416 of title 39, 
United States Code (including any regulation prescribed under 
subsection (e)(1)(C) of that section), the semipostal stamp 
issued under this section shall not apply to any limitation 
relating to whether more than one semipostal may be offered for 
sale at the same time.
    (e) Definition.--For purposes of this section the term 
``semipostal'' has the meaning given such term by section 416 
of title 39, United States Code.
    This Act may be cited as the ``Treasury and General 
Government Appropriations Act, 2002''.
    And the Senate agree to the same.

                                   Ernest J. Istook, Jr.,
                                   Frank R. Wolf,
                                   Anne M. Northup,
                                   John E. Sununu,
                                   John E. Peterson,
                                   Todd Tiahrt,
                                   John E. Sweeney,
                                   Don Sherwood,
                                   C.W. Bill Young,
                                   Steny H. Hoyer,
                                   Carrie P. Meek,
                                   David E. Price,
                                   Peter J. Visclosky,
                                   Steven R. Rothman,
                                   David R. Obey,
                                 Managers on the Part of the House.

                                   Byron L. Dorgan,
                                   Barbara A. Mikulski,
                                   Mary L. Landrieu,
                                   Jack Reed,
                                   Robert C. Byrd,
                                   Ben Nighthorse Campbell,
                                   Richard C. Shelby,
                                   Mike DeWine,
                                   Ted Stevens,
                                Managers on the Part of the Senate.
                      JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT

    The managers on the part of the House and the Senate at the 
conference on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses on the 
amendment of the Senate to the bill (H.R. 2590), making 
appropriations for the Treasury Department, the United States 
Postal Service, the Executive Office of the President, and 
certain Independent Agencies, for the fiscal year ending 
September 30, 2002, and for other purposes, submit the 
following joint statement to the House and the Senate in 
explanation of the effect of the action agreed upon by the 
managers and recommended in the accompanying conference report.
    The conference agreement on the Treasury and General 
Government Appropriations Act, 2002, incorporates some of the 
language and allocations set forth in House Report 107-152 and 
Senate Report 107-57. The language in these reports should be 
complied with unless specifically addressed in the accompanying 
statement of managers.
    Senate Amendment: The Senate deleted the entire House bill 
after the enacting clause and inserted the Senate bill. The 
conference agreement includes a revised bill.
    Throughout the accompanying explanatory statement, the 
managers refer to the Committee and the Committees on 
Appropriations. Unless otherwise noted, in both instances, the 
managers are referring to the House Subcommittee on Treasury, 
Postal Service, and General Government and the Senate 
Subcommittee on Treasury and General Government.
    In a number of instances, House Report 107-152 and Senate 
Report 107-57 direct agencies to report to the Committees by 
specific dates that have now passed. In those instances, and 
unless alternative dates are provided in the accompanying 
explanatory statement, agencies are directed to provide these 
reports to the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations no 
later than January 2, 2002.

             Reprogramming and Transfer of Funds Guidelines

    The conference agreement includes the following 
reprogramming guidelines which shall be complied with by all 
agencies funded by the Treasury and General Government 
Appropriations Act, 2002:
            1. Except under extraordinary and emergency 
        situations, the Committees on Appropriations will not 
        consider requests for a reprogramming or a transfer of 
        funds, or use of unobligated balances, which are 
        submitted after the close of the third quarter of the 
        fiscal year, June 30;
            2. Clearly stated and detailed documentation 
        presenting justification for the reprogramming, 
        transfer, or use of unobligated balances shall 
        accompany each request;
            3. For agencies, departments, or offices receiving 
        appropriations in excess of $20,000,000, a 
        reprogramming shall be submitted if the amount to be 
        shifted to or from any object class, budget activity, 
        program line item, or program activity involved is in 
        excess of $500,000 or 10 percent, whichever is greater, 
        of the object class, budget activity, program line 
        item, or program activity;
            4. For agencies, departments, or offices receiving 
        appropriations less than $20,000,000, a reprogramming 
        shall be submitted if the amount to be shifted to or 
        from any object class, budget activity, program line 
        item, or program activity involved is in excess of 
        $50,000, or 10 percent, whichever is greater, of the 
        object class, budget activity, program line item, or 
        program activity;
            5. For any action where the cumulative effect of 
        below threshold reprogramming actions, or past 
        reprogramming and/or transfer actions added to the 
        request, would exceed the dollar threshold mentioned 
        above, a reprogramming shall be submitted;
            6. For any action which would result in a major 
        change to the program or item which is different than 
        that presented to and approved by either of the 
        Committees, or the Congress, a reprogramming shall be 
        submitted;
            7. For any action where funds earmarked by either 
        of the Committees for a specific activity are proposed 
        to be used for a different activity, a reprogramming 
        shall be submitted; and
            8. For any action where funds earmarked by either 
        of the Committees for a specific activity are in excess 
        of the project or activity requirement, and are 
        proposed to be used for a different activity, a 
        reprogramming shall be submitted.
    Additionally, each request shall include a declaration 
that, as of the date of the request, none of the funds included 
in the request have been obligated, and none will be obligated, 
until the Committees on Appropriations have approved the 
request.

                  terrorist acts of september 11, 2001

    The conferees condemn the terrorist attacks against the 
United States on September 11, 2001, and express profound 
sorrow for the victims and their families. These attacks 
underscore the need to ensure that the resources necessary to 
keep our society safe are available. The conferees are 
dedicated to ensuring that sufficient resources are available 
to respond to this crisis and are committed to working with all 
the agencies under the jurisdiction of this bill, including the 
Office of Homeland Security, to ensure the safety of our 
Nation.

                  TITLE I--DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY


                          Departmental Offices


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $177,142,000 instead of 
$174,219,000 as proposed by the House and $187,322,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. The conferees have included $677,000 
for non-pay inflation, an additional $763,000 for the 
anticipated pay adjustment, $3,356,000 for initiatives proposed 
by the Administration, $1,600,000 as a grant for local law 
enforcement support in Hawaii, and $2,000,000 as a grant to 
Florida International University for transfer pricing research. 
The conferees agree with the direction provided by the House 
with respect to e-learning for employees.

        Department-Wide Systems and Capital Investments Programs


                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $68,828,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $69,028,000 as proposed by the Senate. 
Within this amount, the conferees direct that not less than 
$7,993,000 be spent on the Treasury-wide Critical 
Infrastructure project .

                      Office of Inspector General


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $35,424,000 instead of 
$35,508,000 as proposed by the House and $35,150,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount are increases 
of $84,000 for non-pay inflation and an additional $190,000 for 
the anticipated pay adjustment. The conferees fully concur with 
the Senate report language regarding the Inspector General's 
mid-year alteration of performing certain financial audits. The 
conferees also concur with the Senate report language on the 
movement of staff resources from performing financial audits to 
conducting investigations.

           Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $123,746,000 instead of 
$123,474,000 as proposed by the House and $123,799,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount are increases 
of $229,000 for non-pay inflation, an additional $675,000 for 
an anticipated pay adjustment, and $500,000 for bimonthly 
audits of IRS taxpayer assistance centers.

           Treasury Building and Annex Repair and Restoration

    The conferees agree to provide $28,932,000 instead of 
$30,932,000 as proposed by the House and $32,932,000 as 
proposed by the Senate.

                 Expanded Access to Financial Services


                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $2,000,000 instead of 
$10,000,000 as proposed by the House and a rescission of 
$8,000,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                  Financial Crimes Enforcement Network


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $45,837,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $45,702,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                       FinCEN Lease Renegotiation

    The conferees are aware that the present lease arrangement 
for the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) expires 
in fiscal year 2003, and recognize that FinCEN has special 
needs for space and facilities, both to address growing demands 
on its resources by customer agencies and in light of new 
requirements arising after the September 11th terrorist attack. 
The conferees therefore encourage FinCEN, working with the 
Department of the Treasury, to ensure that its decisions on 
office space facilitate the best use of FinCEN resources by 
joint investigations and task forces, especially where co-
location is required and enhanced building security is a 
necessity.

                         Counterterrorism Fund

    The conferees agree to provide $40,000,000 for the 
Counterterrorism Fund instead of $36,879,000 as proposed by the 
House and $44,879,000 as proposed by the Senate. The conferees 
agree that such funding is available to counter, investigate or 
prosecute unexpected threats or acts of terrorism, subject to 
prior notification of the Committees in accordance with 
reprogramming and transfer guidelines.

                Federal Law Enforcement Training Center


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $105,680,000 instead of 
$102,132,000 as proposed by the House and $106,317,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount is $3,298,000 
to cover additional training costs associated with the U.S. 
Secret Service rebalancing initiative and the U.S. Customs 
Service Northern Border initiative, $363,000 for the 
anticipated pay adjustment, as well as $1,250,000 to continue 
and expand the rural law enforcement education collaboration of 
the National Center for State and Local Training.

     acquisition, construction, improvements, and related expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $33,434,000 as proposed by 
the Senate instead of $27,534,000 as proposed by the House.

                      Interagency Law Enforcement


                 interagency crime and drug enforcement

    The conferees agree to provide $107,576,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $106,965,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                      Financial Management Service


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $212,850,000 instead of 
$213,211,000 as proposed by the House and $212,316,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount are increases 
of $361,000 for non-pay inflation and an additional $895,000 
for the anticipated pay adjustment.

                Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $823,316,000 instead of 
$816,816,000 as proposed by the House and $821,421,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. The conferees include $9,655,000 for 
non-pay inflation, an additional $3,140,000 forthe anticipated 
pay adjustment, $500,000 to improve firearms licensing and regulatory 
operations, $3,000,000 to expand the Integrated Violence Reduction 
Strategy, and $3,500,000 to upgrade the National Tracing Center. The 
conferees also provide that $13,000,000 shall remain available until 
expended for grants, cooperative agreements or contracts to local 
governments for the Gang Resistance Education and Training program, as 
proposed by the Senate.

                             ATF Automation

    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm's (ATF) 
continued leadership in alcohol beverage regulation is 
particularly important because the 21st Amendment prohibits the 
transportation or importation of alcohol beverages for delivery 
or use within a State in violation of the laws of such State. 
States have worked with ATF to develop complementary 
enforcement mechanisms. For example, alcohol beverages can be 
sold in most States upon submission to the State of the ATF-
issued Certificate of Label Approval. As Congress has mandated 
individual label review, and a government warning on all 
labels, ATF's efforts to carry out those laws are essential. 
However, ATF's existing paper-intensive label approval system 
creates a crushing workload, leading to employee turnover, 
frustration, and delays in processing applications.
    ATF officials identified funds in fiscal year 2001 to 
upgrade the label approval process. The agency has also begun 
working with the Financial Management Service in an effort to 
automate industry production reports, which are required to 
support tax audits and other regulatory activities. The 
conferees encourage ATF to sustain efforts to automate routine 
compliance measures mandated by the Federal Alcohol 
Administration Act, and to implement new initiatives in 
cooperation with State officials and industry members.

                     United States Customs Service


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $2,079,357,000, instead of 
$2,056,604,000 as proposed by the House and $2,022,453,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount are $33,476,000 
for non-pay inflation and $9,247,000 for the anticipated pay 
adjustment; $800,000 for tobacco smuggling task forces, 
$1,317,000 as authorized by the African Growth and Opportunity 
Act, $5,000,000 for the Intellectual Property Rights Center and 
investigations initiative, $33,151,000 for non-intrusive 
inspection technology, $28,152,000 for a Northern Border hiring 
initiative, $750,000 for agricultural trade research, $250,000 
for a Vermont Trade Center, and $450,000 for screening scrap 
metal. The conferees direct that not less than $1,000,000 of 
available funds shall be used to develop a canine training 
curriculum to combat and respond to terrorist activities 
related to chemical and biological weapons threats.

                   BORDER PORTS OF ENTRY ORGANIZATION

    The conferees are interested in the continuing growth in 
commercial and passenger traffic along the U.S. border ports of 
entry. Given the events surrounding the terrorist attacks on 
September 11, 2001, the conferees are also concerned about the 
heightened security requirements at all ports of entry. Growth 
in traffic and concurrent security requirements demand that 
resources be allocated expeditiously to secure our borders 
while facilitating the free flow of trade. Therefore, the 
conferees are closely following the infrastructure improvements 
for the Southern and Northern ports identified in the U.S. Port 
of Entry Infrastructure Study 2000, and look forward to the 
recommendations of the Border Station Partnership Council. 
Given the potential infrastructure enhancements, along with 
highway improvements on both sides of the border, airport 
improvements, security enhancements, as well as increased NAFTA 
activity, the conferees request that Customs submit a report to 
the Committees on Appropriations on how it plans to change 
existing port or border infrastructure, including any 
concomitant changes in the size or organization of Customs 
Service border operations.

                Intellectual Property Rights Initiative

    The conferees have agreed to provide $5,000,000 for the 
investigative efforts of the Intellectual Property Rights 
Center (IPR Center) to combat cyberpiracy and counterfeiting, 
such as software counterfeiting, as proposed in the Senate 
bill. The conference agreement assumes that this funding will 
be used for the hiring and strategic placement of additional 
Customs Special Agents in domestic and overseas offices to 
enhance enforcement of U.S. intellectual property laws, as well 
as to support and enhance the operation of the IPR Center to 
combat intellectual property rights violations. The conferees 
direct the Customs Service to notify the Committees on 
Appropriations on its spending plan prior to obligating these 
funds, and also to provide a status report on the initiative to 
the Committees not later than July 31, 2002.

                   Harbor Maintenance Fee Collection


                     (Including Transfer of Funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $3,000,000 as proposed by 
the Senate, instead of $2,993,000 as proposed by the House.

  OPERATION, MAINTENANCE AND PROCUREMENT, AIR AND MARINE INTERDICTION 
                                PROGRAMS

    The conferees agree to provide $177,860,000 instead of 
$181,860,000 as proposed by the House and $172,637,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. This amount includes funding for non-
pay inflation; $7,000,000 for the Training Standardization 
Branch; $4,200,000 for electro-optical and infrared imaging 
systems; and $2,938,000 for additional marine interceptor craft 
and safety equipment.

                        AUTOMATION MODERNIZATION

    The conferees agree to provide $427,832,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $357,832,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                    AUTOMATED COMMERCIAL ENVIRONMENT

    The conferees strongly believe that continued oversight of 
the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) program by GAO and 
Treasury is critical to successful adherence to the ACE 
expenditure plan. Periodic review of investment increments 
allows for oversight of the capital planning and architecture 
development, and is consistent with best practices. The 
conferees direct that regular quarterly reports continue to be 
provided until ACE becomes functional.
    Additionally, the conferees direct Customs to submit 
requests for release of funds, including a cost-benefit 
analysis, in a timely manner, but in no case less than 30 days 
before the anticipated need for the funds.

                           United States Mint


               UNITED STATES MINT PUBLIC ENTERPRISE FUND

    The conferees agree to include new bill language 
establishing a spending level for capital investments by the 
U.S. Mint for circulating coinage and protective services of 
$43,000,000. The conferees also agree to include a requirement 
that the United States Mint Public Enterprise Fund pay $250,000 
for a study by the General Accounting Office on public interest 
and acceptance of circulating coinage.
    The conferees recognize the initial steps the Director has 
taken to investigate and remedy many of the ongoing problems 
and concerns raised by the House and Senate Appropriations 
Committees. The conferees are aware of the challenges facing 
the U.S. Mint and look forward to a close working relationship 
with its new Director.
    The conferees are concerned with the direction of the 
marketing campaigns that the U.S. Mint is using to promote the 
Golden Dollar coin and the circulating commemorative quarters 
authorized under P.L. 105-124. The conferees are also concerned 
with the lack of information regarding the nature and extent to 
which the Golden Dollar coin is being used in commerce as 
contained within the report, Report to Congress on the 
Marketing of the Golden Dollar, submitted to the Congress by 
the U.S. Mint. The conferees are especially concerned with the 
lack of consultation by the Mint with the Congress on these 
promotional efforts. Therefore, the U.S. Mint shall not draw 
funds from the United States Mint Public Enterprise Fund to 
further promote the Golden Dollar coin or the circulating 
commemorative quarters until the Director submits and the 
Committees on Appropriations approve a marketing plan for such 
promotional efforts. This requirement shall not be construed to 
limit the sales or marketing of either of these coins for sale 
directly to the public through the U.S. Mint's traditional 
numismatic sales channels.
    The conferees remain concerned with the amount of travel 
outside the continental United States that is being conducted 
by the U.S. Mint. Therefore, the conferees direct the U.S. Mint 
not to draw funds from the United States Mint Public Enterprise 
Fund for travel outside the continental United States without 
specific approval of the Director of the Mint. The Director 
shall submit a report on the cost of such travel occurring 
during fiscal year 2002 to the Committees on Appropriations no 
later than October 31, 2002.

                       Bureau of the Public Debt


                     ADMINISTERING THE PUBLIC DEBT

    The conferees agree to provide $186,953,000 instead of 
$187,927,000 as proposed by the House and $187,318,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount are increases 
of $974,000 for non-pay inflation and an additional $609,000 
for the anticipated pay adjustment. Within these funds, the 
conferees have provided sufficient amounts to pay for 
administrative services by the Bureau of the Public Debt in 
association with the South Dakota Trust Fund and the Cheyenne 
River Sioux Tribe Terrestrial Wildlife Restoration and Lower 
Brule Sioux Tribe Terrestrial Restoration Trust Fund, as 
authorized by sections 603(f) and 604(f) of Public Law 106-53.

                        Internal Revenue Service


                 PROCESSING, ASSISTANCE, AND MANAGEMENT

    The conferees agree to provide $3,797,890,000 instead of 
$3,808,434,000 as proposed by the House and $3,786,347,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount are increases 
of $12,543,000 for non-pay inflation,$1,000,000 for low-income 
taxpayer clinics, and $1,000,000 for volunteer income tax assistance.

                          TAX LAW ENFORCEMENT

    The conferees agree to provide $3,538,347,000 as proposed 
by the House instead of $3,535,198,000 as proposed by the 
Senate.

             EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT COMPLIANCE INITIATIVE

    The conferees agree to provide $146,000,000 as proposed by 
the House and the Senate.

                          INFORMATION SYSTEMS

    The conferees agree to provide $1,563,249,000 as proposed 
by the Senate instead of $1,573,065,000 as proposed by the 
House. The conferees are concerned about the degree to which 
development-related investments funded in this account are 
coordinated and integrated with the information technology 
improvements funded in the business systems modernization 
account. The conferees further believe that the development-
related activities funded under this account should be managed 
with careful diligence and appropriate centralized control.

                     BUSINESS SYSTEMS MODERNIZATION

    The conferees agree to provide $391,593,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $419,593,000 as proposed by the Senate.

          ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE

    Section 101. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
which allows the transfer of 5 percent of any appropriation 
made available to the IRS to any other IRS appropriation 
subject to Congressional approval.
    Section 102. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
which requires the IRS to maintain a training program in 
taxpayers' rights, dealing courteously with taxpayers, and 
cross-cultural relations.
    Section 103. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
which requires the IRS to institute and enforce policies and 
practices that will safeguard the confidentially of taxpayer 
information.
    Section 104. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
with respect to the IRS 1-800 help line service.

                      United States Secret Service


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $920,615,000 instead of 
$920,112,000 as proposed by the House and $899,615,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. This includes the costs of non-pay 
inflation and the anticipated pay adjustment. The conferees 
also provide $1,633,000 for forensic support to the National 
Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), and 
$3,009,000 for grants to NCMEC.

      ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, IMPROVEMENT, AND RELATED EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $3,457,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $3,352,000 as proposed by the Senate.

             General Provisions--Department of the Treasury

    Section 110. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that requires the Secretary of the Treasury to comply with 
certain reprogramming guidelines when obligating or expending 
funds for law enforcement activities.
    Section 111. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that allows the Department of the Treasury to purchase 
uniforms, insurance, and motor vehicles without regard to the 
general purchase price limitation, and enter into contracts 
with the Department of State for health and medical services 
for Treasury employees in overseas locations.
    Section 112. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that requires the expenditure of funds so as not to diminish 
efforts under section 105 of the Federal Alcohol Administration 
Act.
    Section 113. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that authorizes transfers, up to 2 percent, between law 
enforcement appropriations under certain circumstances.
    Section 114. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that authorizes the transfer, up to 2 percent, between the 
Departmental Offices, Office of Inspector General, Treasury 
Inspector General for Tax Administration, Financial Management 
Service, and Bureau of Public Debt appropriations under certain 
circumstances.
    Section 115. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that authorizes transfer, up to 2 percent, between the Internal 
Revenue Service and the Treasury Inspector General for Tax 
Administration under certain circumstances.
    Section 116. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
regarding the purchase of law enforcement vehicles.
    Section 117. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
proposed by the House that prohibits the Department of the 
Treasury and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing from 
redesigning the $1 Federal Reserve Note.
    Section 118. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that provides for transfer from and reimbursements to the 
Salaries and Expenses appropriation of the Financial Management 
Service for the purposes of debt collection.
    Section 119. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
authorizing the transfer of funds for intelligence and 
intelligence-related activities.
    Section 120. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
that extends the pilot project for designated critical 
occupations for one additional year.
    Section 121. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
as proposed by the Senate that requires the approval of the 
authorizing committees for the construction and operation of 
any museum by the U.S. Mint.
    Section 122. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
as proposed by the Senate limiting the use of funds for the 
production of Customs declarations that do not inquire whether 
the passenger had been in the proximity of livestock.
    Section 123. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
that authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to transfer, upon 
the advance approval of the Committees on Appropriation, a 
total of up to $3,000,000 to the U.S. Customs Service and the 
Financial Management Service for the purposes of financial 
audits.

                        TITLE II--POSTAL SERVICE


                   Payment to the Postal Service Fund

    The conferees agree to provide $143,712,000, as proposed by 
the House and Senate. Of this amount $47,619,000 is provided as 
an advance appropriation for free mail to the blind and 
overseas voters, as proposed by the House. The conferees 
include an additional $29,000,000 for prior year reimbursement 
shortfalls, as proposed by the House and Senate. Additional 
funds of $67,093,000 reflect the advance appropriation provided 
in the fiscal year 2001 appropriations bill.

                    Mail Sorting Practices in Hawaii

    The conferees are aware that Hawaii has only one mail 
sorting station, on the island of Oahu. Standard practice 
dictates that mail sent within Hawaii be sent to Oahu for 
sorting and delivery, even mail sent within a given island. In 
light of the disruption of the Nation's air transportation and 
mail delivery system caused by the recent terrorist attacks, 
the conferees urge the Postal Service to develop a procedure by 
which mail that originates on the same island to which it is 
addressed can be kept and sorted on that island. The conferees 
agree that the Postal Service should examine the feasibility of 
implementing procedures that take into account Hawaii's unique 
geography.

                       Postal Service Authorities

    The conferees direct both the United States Postal Service 
and the Postal Rate Commission to independently report, 90 days 
after enactment of this Act, on the scope of existing authority 
of the US Postal Service, under title 39, United States Code, 
and title 39, Code of Federal Regulations, to introduce and 
provide new products and services (including the introduction 
and provision of new products and services on an experimental 
or market test basis) and to enter into negotiated service 
agreements with individual customers or groups of customers. 
Such reports shall include background on the use of such 
authority within the past 24 months and shall be provided to 
the Committees on Appropriations, the Senate Committee on 
Governmental Affairs, and the House Committee on Government 
Reform.

                           Semi-Postal Stamps

    The conferees have included and modified a Senate provision 
reauthorizing the Breast Cancer Research Special Postage Stamp, 
included and modified a Senate provision authorizing the 9/11 
Heroes Stamp Act of 2001, and included a new provision 
authorizing the Stamp Out Domestic Violence Act of 2001. The 
conferees agree that each of these causes are in the national 
public interest and are appropriate at this time. The conferees 
expect that any future candidates for semi-postal stamps will 
be selected by the Postal Service through the congressionally-
authorized process.

TITLE III--EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT AND FUNDS APPROPRIATED TO 
                             THE PRESIDENT


        Compensation of the President and the White House Office


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $54,651,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $54,165,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                 Executive Residence at the White House


                           OPERATING EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $11,695,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $11,914,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                   WHITE HOUSE REPAIR AND RESTORATION

    The conferees agree to provide $8,625,000 as proposed by 
the House and Senate for 9 separate construction projects. For 
each project in excess of $100,000, with the exception of 
computer upgrades and software development, and prior to the 
obligation of funds, the conferees direct the National Park 
Service to submit to the Committees on Appropriations a 
prospectus that includes, at minimum, a complete description of 
the project's scope and design, major work items to be 
completed, estimated total obligations by activity 
(construction cost, design and review cost, management and 
inspection), estimated construction schedules including start 
and completion dates for both design and construction, and 
estimated construction cost by major work item.

Special Assistance to the President and Official Residence of the Vice 
                               President


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $3,925,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $3,896,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                           OPERATING EXPENSES

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $318,000 as proposed by the 
House instead of $314,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                      Council of Economic Advisers


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $4,211,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $4,192,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                      Office of Policy Development


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $4,142,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $4,119,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                       National Security Council


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $7,494,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $7,447,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                        Office of Administration


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $46,955,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $46,032,000 as proposed by the Senate. The 
conferees agree to include bill language withholding a portion 
of the funds appropriated for the Capital Investment Plan 
pending the submission of a report, as proposed by the House.

                    Office of Management and Budget


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $70,752,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $70,519,000 as proposed by the Senate. The 
conferees modify a provision proposed by the House related to a 
cost and benefit assessment of Executive Order 13166 and agree 
to delete a provision related to subsidy estimates of certain 
loans.

                           sba loan programs

    The conferees are concerned that since the enactment of the 
Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, the subsidy rate for the 
Small Business Administration's 7(a) and 504 loan programs has 
been reestimated downwards, and that borrowers and lenders in 
both programs have been paying higher than necessary fees to 
participate in the programs. This is a direct result of the 
fact that the subsidy rate model developed to determine a 
program's subsidy rate uses default assumptions that do not 
reflect recent program performance of either the 7(a) program 
or the 504 program, or the legislative and administrative 
changes made to these programs in the 1990's. The conferees 
also note that although the Administration reports it has begun 
to update the 7(a) program's subsidy rate model, which is 
welcome, no written verification has been given that they have 
begun to address the 504 program's subsidy rate calculation 
issue.
    Finally, the conferees understand that the Small Business 
Administration has submitted to the Office of Management and 
Budget for review new subsidy rate estimates for inclusion in 
the President's budget submission for FY 2003. The conferees 
direct that, within 30 days after enactment of this act, the 
Office of Management and Budget and the Small Business 
Administration submit a progress report to the House and Senate 
Committees on Small Business, the Committees on Appropriations, 
and the Committees on the Budget on this subject.

                     INTERNATIONAL FOOD ASSISTANCE

    The House bill contained a provision based upon concerns of 
the proper role for the Office of Management and Budget in the 
administration of international food assistance programs. In 
lieu of the House bill language, the conferees direct the 
Office of Management and Budget to work closely with USDA and 
AID, as well as other appropriate Federal departments and 
agencies, with the expectations that agencies will work 
together to standardize eligibility standards and deadlines for 
aid; define program goals with measurable standards of 
performance; ensure that performance is appropriately measured 
and evaluated; and fully utilize all Federal expertise to 
ensure that the best possible assistance is being provided to 
the private voluntary organizations operating the programs. The 
Office of Management and Budget is also expected to keep the 
Committees on Appropriations fully apprised of on-going action 
with respect to this multi-agency effort.

                 Office of National Drug Control Policy


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $25,263,000 instead of 
$25,267,000 as proposed by the House and $25,096,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. This includes $167,000 for non-pay 
inflation.

                COUNTERDRUG TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT CENTER

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $42,300,000 instead of 
$42,000,000 as proposed by the Senate and $40,000,000 as 
proposed by the House. Of this funding, $20,064,000 is for the 
basic research and development program and $22,236,000 is for 
continuation of the technology transfer program.
    The conferees include $2,000,000 to provide neuroimaging 
technology to an institution that can conduct substance abuse 
research and train Native American physicians in substance 
abuse research as described in the Senate report, and $300,000 
to support research into the relationship between genetic 
factors leading to conditions such as Alzheimer's Disease and 
environmental factors, particularly substance abuse.

                     Federal Drug Control Programs


             HIGH INTENSITY DRUG TRAFFICKING AREAS PROGRAM

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $226,350,000 as proposed by 
the Senate instead of $233,882,000 as proposed by the House. 
The conferees fully fund the Administration's request, and 
include an additional $20,000,000 to increase funding for or 
expand existing High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTAs), 
or to fund newly designated HIDTAs. The conferees provide that 
existing HIDTAs shall be funded at no less than fiscal year 
2001 levels unless the Office of National Drug Control Policy 
(ONDCP) Director submits to the Committees, and the Committees 
approve, justification for changes in those levels based on 
clearly articulated priorities for the HIDTA program, as well 
as published ONDCP performance measures of effectiveness. 
Similarly, while the conferees provide additional funding that 
may be used for newly designated HIDTAs, they direct that no 
funds may be obligated for such purposes until similar 
justification is provided to the Committees for approval.
    The ability to evaluate effectiveness of individual HIDTAs, 
and to match funding needs against budgets, depends on reliable 
and consistent methodology for performance measurement and 
management. This is particularly important given the key role 
HIDTAs play in bringing together many divergent counterdrug 
agencies and crosscutting programs--which also exacerbates the 
problem of isolating the impact of HIDTAs. The conferees direct 
that the HIDTA program shall employ the performance measurement 
methodology and data collection identified by the HIDTA 
Performance Management Working Group in 1999. These would 
emphasize three main areas: increasing compliance with HIDTA 
developmental standards; dismantling or disabling at least 5 
percent of targeted drug trafficking organizations; and 
reducing specific types of violent crime. The conferees 
support, and include funding for, ONDCP validation and 
verification of HIDTA management and performance, including the 
use of on-site reviews and external financial evaluations.
    As ONDCP reviews proposals for the increased HIDTA funding 
provided, the conferees direct it to consider the following: 
increases for Central Florida, Rocky Mountain, Midwest (for 
Missouri, Iowa and North Dakota), Chicago, Southwest Border 
(for Arizona, New Mexico and West Texas), Southeast Michigan, 
Appalachian, Lake County, Gulf Coast, Hawaii, Philadelphia/
Camden, Oregon, and Milwaukee HIDTAs; and funding for expansion 
of HIDTAs in North Texas (to Oklahoma counties), and the 
Northwest (to counties in southwest andeastern Washington); and 
possible designation of Arkansas and North Carolina, which have sought 
designation in recent years.

                        special forfeiture fund

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $239,400,000 instead of 
$238,600,000 as proposed by the House and $249,400,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. This includes $180,000,000 for the 
National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, of which $5,000,000 
shall be spent on purchasing advertising time and space 
specifically targeted at combating the drug Ecstasy. It also 
includes $50,600,000 for the Drug-Free Communities Act program, 
$4,800,000 for the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, $1,000,000 for the 
National Drug Courts Institute, and $3,000,000 for the 
Counterdrug Intelligence Executive Secretariat.

                  drug-free communities act evaluation

    The conferees recognize the importance of evaluating 
performance of the Drug-Free Communities Program, and expect 
that ONDCP will utilize up to $750,000 of total funding 
provided for this purpose. The conferees direct ONDCP to work 
with the authorizing committees of jurisdiction to ensure 
authorization for such funding is included in forthcoming ONDCP 
reauthorization legislation.

                     TITLE IV--INDEPENDENT AGENCIES


 Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $4,629,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $4,498,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                      Federal Election Commission


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $43,689,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $43,993,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                     election administration reform

    The conferees support efforts to achieve election 
administration reform and are aware of several legislative 
initiatives currently being considered in both the Senate and 
the House. The conferees support bipartisan efforts to produce 
legislation that assists State and local governments while 
respecting their primacy in the conduct of elections. The 
conferees will consider appropriations for election 
administration reform when such reform measures become 
authorized.

                   Federal Labor Relations Authority


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $26,524,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $26,378,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                    General Services Administration


                         federal buildings fund

                 limitations on availability of revenue

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $6,100,382,000 in new 
obligational authority instead of $6,072,138,000 as proposed by 
the House and $6,217,350,000 as proposed by the Senate. The 
conferees directly appropriate $8,000,000 into the Fund to 
cover a portion of the new obligational needs of the Fund.

                      construction and acquisition

    The conferees agree to provide $386,280,000 instead of 
$348,816,000 as proposed by the House and $477,544,000 as 
proposed by the Senate.

                      orlando, florida, courthouse

    The conferees agree to provide $4,000,000 for additional 
design of the Orlando, Florida, courthouse. These additional 
design funds, subject to House and Senate authorization, are 
being provided to ensure that the new Orlando courthouse will 
meet the security, community, and space needs of the judiciary. 
Subject to the required authorizations, the conferees expect 
the General Services Administration (GSA) to move forward with 
obligation of these funds and incorporation of the GSA and 
judiciary agreed upon design elements.

                      port of entry infrastructure

    The conferees strongly concur with the port of entry 
infrastructure language contained in Senate Report 107-57. The 
conferees agree that GSA, in conjunction with the Office of 
Management and Budget, the Customs Serviceand the Immigration 
and Naturalization Service, should develop a multi-year plan to address 
the growing facilities construction backlog, starting with the fiscal 
year 2003 budget submission.

                        repairs and alterations

    The conferees agree to provide $826,676,000, the level 
proposed by the House instead of $844,880,000 as proposed by 
the Senate.

                            rental of space

    The conferees agree to provide $2,952,050,000 instead of 
$2,959,550,000 as proposed by the House and the Senate.

                          building operations

    The conferees agree to provide $1,748,949,000 as proposed 
by the Senate instead of $1,750,669,000 as proposed by the 
House. Within this amount the conferees direct that GSA conduct 
a study of hurricane vulnerabilities and risk mitigation 
strategies, including perforated metal technology applications, 
for Federal buildings in the southeastern United States as 
proposed by the House. Also within this amount the conferees 
direct that GSA provide $1,000,000 for an automated external 
defibrillator pilot program in buildings within its 
jurisdiction in accordance with guidelines developed in 
partnership with the Department of Health and Human Services as 
proposed by the Senate. The conferees further direct GSA to 
submit a report to the Committees on Appropriations no later 
than June 1, 2002, on the steps it has taken to meet the goals 
of the pilot program as expressed in Senate Report 107-57.

                         policy and operations

    The conferees agree to provide $143,139,000 instead of 
$137,947,000 as proposed by the House and $145,749,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. The conferees have included $9,982,000 
for the Federal computer incident response capability, 
$3,822,000 for activities associated with the Lorton complex, 
$8,582,000 for activities associated with Governor's Island, 
$758,000 for non-pay inflation, an additional $432,000 for the 
anticipated pay adjustment, $250,000 for the virtual archive 
storage terminal, $1,000,000 for digital learning technologies, 
$750,000 for the government services rural outreach initiative, 
$1,700,000 for a grant to the Oklahoma Centennial Commission, 
and $1,750,000 for a one-time grant to the Dwight D. Eisenhower 
Memorial Commission.

                      office of inspector general

    The conferees agree to provide $36,346,000 instead of 
$36,478,000 as proposed by the House and $36,025,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount are increases 
of $133,000 for non-pay inflation and an additional $188,000 
for the anticipated pay adjustment.

                       electronic government fund

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $5,000,000 as proposed by 
the House and the Senate. The conferees support, in general, 
the purpose of the fund and recommend the Administration work 
with the House Committee on Government Reform and the Senate 
Committee on Governmental Affairs to clarify the status of its 
authorization. The conferees encourage the use of these funds 
for interagency electronic government projects for which 
matching funds are provided. The conferees are aware of 
interagency groups, such as the Chief Information Officer 
Council chaired by the Office of Management and Budget, that 
have wide experience and expertise in electronic government and 
information technology and suggest that these groups could make 
key contributions in the review and selection of projects.

           allowances and office staff for former presidents

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $3,196,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $3,376,000 as proposed by the Senate.

          General Provisions--General Services Administration

    Section 401. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that provides that accounts available to GSA shall be credited 
with certain funds received from government corporations.
    Section 402. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that provides that funds available to GSA shall be available 
for the hire of passenger motor vehicles.
    Section 403. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that authorizes GSA to transfer funds within the Federal 
Buildings Fund to meet program requirements subject to approval 
by the Committees on Appropriations.
    Section 404. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that prohibits the use of funds to submit a fiscal year 2003 
budget request for courthouse construction projects that does 
not meet design guide criteria, does not reflect the priorities 
of the Judicial Conference of the United States, and is not 
accompanied by a standardized courtroom utilization study.
    Section 405. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that provides that no funds may be used to increase the amount 
of occupiable square feet or provide cleaning services, 
security enhancements, or any other service usually provided to 
any agency which does not pay the requested rental rates.
    Section 406. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that provides that funds provided by the Information Technology 
Fund for pilot information technology projects may be repaid to 
the Fund.
    Section 407. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
that permits GSA to pay claims of up to $250,000 arising from 
construction projects and the acquisition of buildings.
    Section 408. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
requiring GSA to increase its fiscal year 2002 expenditures for 
purchasing alternative fuel vehicles by $5,000,000 above its 
fiscal year 2001 expenditures, as proposed by the House.
    Section 409. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
directing GSA to maintain the vehicle rates and per mile rates 
charged for buses leased by schools and dormitories funded by 
the Bureau of Indian Affairs, as proposed by the Senate.
    Section 410. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
naming a Federal building and courthouse in Minot, North 
Dakota, as proposed by the Senate.
    Section 411. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
modifying section 410 of Appendix C of Public Law 106-554 
concerning the construction of a road in New Mexico, as 
proposed by the Senate.
    Section 412. The conferees agree to include and modify a 
new provision proposed by the Senate to transfer property in 
Orlando, Florida.
    Section 413. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
naming a Federal building in Anderson, South Carolina, as 
proposed by the Senate.

                     Merit Systems Protection Board


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

                     (including transfer of funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $30,555,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $30,375,000 as proposed by the Senate.

 Morris K. Udall Scholarship and Excellence in National Environmental 
                           Policy Foundation


 MORRIS K. UDALL SCHOLARSHIP AND EXCELLENCE IN NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL 
                           POLICY TRUST FUND

    The conferees agree to provide $1,996,000 as proposed by 
the Senate instead of $2,500,000 as proposed by the House.

              National Archives and Records Administration


                           OPERATING EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $244,247,000 as proposed by 
the House and by the Senate. The conferees agree with the 
direction provided by the House.

                        REPAIRS AND RESTORATION

    The conferees agree to provide $39,143,000 instead of 
$24,643,000 as proposed by the House and $41,143,000 as 
proposed by the Senate. Included in this amount is $28,500,000 
for a new Southeast Regional archives facility.

        National Historical Publications and Records Commission


                             GRANTS PROGRAM

    The conferees agree to provide $6,436,000 as proposed by 
the Senate instead of $10,000,000 as proposed by the House. The 
conferees are aware ofa grant application being made by 
Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, regarding historical documents and urge 
that this application be given due consideration.

                      Office of Government Ethics


                         salaries and expenses

    The conferees agree to provide $10,117,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $10,060,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                     Office of Personnel Management


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

                  (including transfer of trust funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $99,636,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $99,036,000 as proposed by the Senate.

            Federal Wage Grade System for Bureau of Prisons

    The conferees are concerned that the wage surveys utilized 
in determining the cost of labor for Federal wage grade 
positions are inadequate with respect to Bureau of Prisons 
employees. Wage grade employees in the Bureau of Prisons are 
often in ``mixed jobs'' that have no private sector equivalent. 
These employees are hired for one primary skill, but they also 
are trained as security officers and perform security functions 
in conjunction with their other duties. The conferees direct 
the Office of Personal Management to review and report to the 
Committees on Appropriations on how the current survey 
instrument quantifies the cost of labor with respect to mixed 
wage grade jobs at the Bureau of Prisons. The report should 
include a comparison of the average wage rates for employees at 
each Federal prison facility, a review of any differences in 
how the surveys are conducted in different wage areas, and a 
set of recommendations for determining how to quantify the cost 
of labor in a given wage area if there are no private sector 
comparables. The report is due no later than 90 days after the 
date of enactment of this Act.

                      Office of Inspector General


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

                  (including transfer of trust funds)

    The conferees agree to provide $1,498,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $1,398,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                       Office of Special Counsel


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $11,891,000 as proposed by 
the House instead of $11,784,000 as proposed by the Senate.

                        United States Tax Court


                         SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The conferees agree to provide $37,305,000 as proposed by 
the Senate instead of $37,809,000 as proposed by the House.

                      TITLE V--GENERAL PROVISIONS


                                This Act

    Section 501. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
limiting the expenditure of funds to the current year unless 
expressly provided in this Act.
    Section 502. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
limiting the expenditure of funds for consulting services under 
certain conditions.
    Section 503. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the use of funds to engage in activities that would 
prohibit the enforcement of section 307 of the 1930 Tariff Act.
    Section 504. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the transfer of control over the Federal Law 
Enforcement Training Center out of the Department of the 
Treasury.
    Section 505. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
concerning employment rights of Federal employees who return to 
their civilian jobs after assignment with the Armed Forces.
    Section 506. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
that requires compliance with the Buy American Act.
    Section 507. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
concerning prohibition of contracts that use certain goods not 
made in America.
    Section 508. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting contract eligibility where fraudulent intent has 
been proven in affixing ``Made in America'' labels.
    Section 509. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the expenditure of funds for abortions under the 
FEHBP, as proposed by the House.
    Section 510. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
that would authorize the expenditure of funds for abortions 
under the FEHBP if the life of the mother is in danger or the 
pregnancy is a result of an act of rape or incest, as proposed 
by the House.
    Section 511. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
providing that fifty percent of unobligated balances may remain 
available for certain purposes.
    Section 512. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
restricting the use of funds for the White House to request 
official background reports without the written consent of the 
individual who is the subject of the report.
    Section 513. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
that cost accounting standards under the Federal Procurement 
Policy Act shall not apply to the FEHBP.
    Section 514. The conferees agree to continue a provision 
regarding non-foreign area cost of living adjustments.
    Section 515. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
prohibiting the use of funds to any person or entity convicted 
of violating the Buy American Act, as proposed by the House.

                      TITLE VI--GENERAL PROVISIONS


                Departments, Agencies, and Corporations

    Section 601. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
authorizing agencies to pay costs of travel to the United 
States for the immediate families of Federal employees assigned 
to foreign duty in the event of a death or a life threatening 
illness of the employee.
    Section 602. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
requiring agencies to administer a policy designed to ensure 
that all of its workplaces are free from the illegal use of 
controlled substances.
    Section 603. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
regarding price limitations on vehicles to be purchased by the 
Federal Government.
    Section 604. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
allowing funds made available to agencies for travel to also be 
used for quarters allowances and cost-of-living allowances.
    Section 605. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the Federal Government, with certain specified 
exceptions, from employing non-U.S. citizens whose posts of 
duty would be in the continental United States.
    Section 606. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
ensuring that agencies will have authority to pay GSA bills for 
space renovation and other services.
    Section 607. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
allowing agencies to finance the costs of recycling and waste 
prevention programs with proceeds from the sale of materials 
recovered through such programs.
    Section 608. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
providing that funds may be used by certain groups to pay rent 
and other service costs in the District of Columbia.
    Section 609. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the use of funds to pay the salary of any nominee 
after the Senate voted not to approve the nomination.
    Section 610. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
precluding the financing of groups by more than one Federal 
agency absent prior and specific statutory approval.
    Section 611. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
authorizing the Postal Service to employ guards and give them 
the same special police powers as GSA guards.
    Section 612. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the use of funds for enforcing regulations 
disapproved in accordance with the applicable law of the United 
States.
    Section 613. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
limiting the pay increases of certain prevailing rate 
employees.
    Section 614. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
limiting the amount of funds that can be used for redecoration 
of offices under certain circumstances.
    Section 615. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the expenditure of funds for the acquisition of 
additional law enforcement training facilities.
    Section 616. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
to allow for interagency funding of national security and 
emergency telecommunications initiatives.
    Section 617. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
requiring agencies to certify that a Schedule C appointment was 
not created solely or primarily to detail the employee to the 
White House.
    Section 618. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
requiring agencies to administer a policy designed to ensure 
that all of its workplaces are free from discrimination and 
sexual harassment.
    Section 619. The conferees agree to modify and continue the 
provision prohibiting the importation of any goods manufactured 
by forced or indentured child labor.
    Section 620. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the payment of the salary of any employee who 
prohibits, threatens or prevents another employee from 
communicating with Congress.
    Section 621. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting Federal training not directly related to the 
performance of official duties.
    Section 622. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the expenditure of funds for implementation of 
agreements in nondisclosure policies unless certain provisions 
are included.
    Section 623. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting use of appropriated funds for publicity or 
propaganda designed to support or defeat legislation pending in 
Congress.
    Section 624. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting any Federal agency from disclosing an employee's 
home address to any labor organization, absent employee 
authorization or court order.
    Section 625. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting funds to be used to provide non-public information 
such as mailing or telephone lists to any person or 
organization outside the Federal Government without the 
approval of the Committees on Appropriations.
    Section 626. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
prohibiting the use of funds for propaganda and publicity 
purposes not authorized by Congress.
    Section 627. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
directing agency employees to use official time in an honest 
effort to perform official duties.
    Section 628. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
authorizing the use of funds to finance an appropriate share of 
the Joint Financial Management Improvement Program.
    Section 629. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
authorizing agencies to transfer funds to the Policy and 
Operations account of GSA to finance an appropriate share of 
the Joint Financial Management Improvement Program.
    Section 630. The conferees agree to continue and make 
permanent the provision authorizing agencies to provide 
childcare in Federal facilities.
    Section 631. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
authorizing breastfeeding at any location in a Federal building 
or on Federal property.
    Section 632. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
that permits interagency funding of the National Science and 
Technology Council and provides for a report on the budget and 
resources of the National Science and Technology Council.
    Section 633. The conferees agree to continue the provision 
requiring that any request for proposals, solicitation, grant 
application, form, notification, press release, or other 
publications involving the distribution of Federal funds shall 
indicate the agency providing the funds and the amount 
provided. This provision shall apply to direct payments, 
formula funds, and grants received by a State receiving Federal 
funds.
    Section 634. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
to extend the authorization for franchise fund pilots for one 
year, as proposed by the House and Senate.
    Section 635. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
to clarify that the Department of the Navy will provide and pay 
for utilities for the official residence of the Vice President 
without reimbursement, as proposed by the House and Senate.
    Section 636. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
authorizing the Secretary of the Navy to accept gifts of 
consumable items, or funds for them, to be accepted for use at 
official functions at the Vice President's residence, including 
the hosting of foreign dignitaries, as proposed by the House 
and Senate.
    Section 637. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
clarifying that certain title 5 authorities are available with 
respect to civilian personnel of the White House Office, the 
Executive Residence at the White House, the Office ofthe Vice 
President, the Domestic Policy Council, and the Office of 
Administration, as proposed by the House and Senate.
    Section 638. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
requiring the Office of Personnel Management to submit a report 
regarding telecommuting centers, as proposed by the House.
    Section 639. The conferees agree to continue and modify a 
provision prohibiting the use of funds to monitor personal 
information relating to the use of Federal internet sites; the 
conferees apply this provision government-wide.
    Section 640. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
amending title 5 to clarify retirement benefits for air traffic 
controllers, as proposed by the House.
    Section 641. The conferees agree to include and modify a 
new provision as proposed by the House and Senate amending 
title 5 that would make Federal employees in service technical 
positions eligible for Presidential rank awards.
    Section 642. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
extending authority for the Federal Election Commission to 
assess administrative fines for straightforward violations of 
reporting deadlines from December 31, 2001 to December 31, 
2003, as proposed by the House.
    Section 643. The conferees agree to continue, with a 
technical modification, the provision addressing contraceptive 
coverage in health plans participating in the FEHBP.
    Section 644. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
clarifying that the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency is the official 
anti-doping agency for Olympic games, as proposed by the 
Senate.
    Section 645. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
clarifying the status of certain employees of the United 
States-China Security Review Commission, as proposed by the 
Senate.
    Section 646. The conferees agree to continue and modify a 
provision regarding pay for Federal employees.
    Section 647. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
directing departments and agencies to comply with the Rural 
Development Act of 1972, as proposed by the Senate.
    Section 648. The conferees agree to include and modify a 
new provision extending the deadline for the submission of 
annual reports by the United States-China Security Review 
Commission, as proposed by the Senate.
    Section 649. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
allowing the National Archives to establish SES positions at 
Presidential Libraries.
    Section 650. The conferees agree to include and modify a 
new provision extending authorization of the ``Breast Cancer 
Research Stamp'', as proposed by the Senate.
    Section 651. The conferees agree to include and modify a 
new provision regarding the transportation of day-old poultry, 
as proposed by the Senate.
    Section 652. The conferees agree to include and modify a 
new provision authorizing the ``9/11 Heroes Stamp'', as 
proposed by the Senate.
    Section 653. The conferees agree to include a new provision 
authorizing the ``Stamp Out Domestic Violence'' Stamp.

                   CONFERENCE TOTAL--WITH COMPARISONS

    The total new budget (obligational) authority for the 
fiscal year 2002 recommended by the Committee of Conference, 
with comparisons to the fiscal year 2001 amount, the 2002 
budget estimates, and the House and Senate bills for 2002 
follow:

                        [In thousands of dollars]

New budget (obligational) authority, fiscal year 2001...     $30,574,722
Budget estimates of new (obligational) authority, fiscal 
    year 2002...........................................      32,035,351
House bill, fiscal year 2002............................      32,464,769
Senate bill, fiscal year 2002...........................      32,363,450
Conference agreement, fiscal year 2002..................      32,493,069
Conference agreement compared with:
    New budget (obligational) authority, fiscal year 
      2001..............................................      +1,918,347
    Budget estimates of new (obligational) authority, 
      fiscal year 2002..................................        +457,718
    House bill, fiscal year 2002........................         +28,300
    Senate bill, fiscal year 2002.......................        +129,619

                                   Ernest J. Istook, Jr.,
                                   Frank R. Wolf,
                                   Anne M. Northup,
                                   John E. Sununu,
                                   John E. Peterson,
                                   Todd Tiahrt,
                                   John E. Sweeney,
                                   Don Sherwood,
                                   C.W. Bill Young,
                                   Steny H. Hoyer,
                                   Carrie P. Meek,
                                   David E. Price,
                                   Peter J. Visclosky,
                                   Steven R. Rothman,
                                   David R. Obey,
                                 Managers on the Part of the House.

                                   Byron L. Dorgan,
                                   Barbara A. Mikulski,
                                   Mary L. Landrieu,
                                   Jack Reed,
                                   Robert C. Byrd,
                                   Ben Nighthorse Campbell,
                                   Richard C. Shelby,
                                   Mike DeWine,
                                   Ted Stevens,
                                Managers on the Part of the Senate.

                                  
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