TOPICS
TOPICS
Senate panel clears $32.1B Interior bill
Working speedily, the Senate Interior-Environment Appropriations Subcommittee approved on Tuesday a $32.1 billion fiscal 2010 spending bill for land, water and firefighting improvements that is 16 percent higher than this fiscal year's spending levels.
Senate Interior-Environment Appropriations Subcommittee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., pushed through the bill on a voice vote.
The bill is $4.5 billion above the fiscal 2009 enacted level and comes in $225 million, or 0.7 percent, below President Obama's request. The House Appropriations Committee has approved a $32.3 billion fiscal 2010 Interior-Environment appropriations bill.
Feinstein told panel members to submit proposed amendments to her and Interior-Environment Appropriations Subcommittee ranking member Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn. Those amendments that can be cleared will be offered in a package as a manager's amendment when the full committee takes up the bill Thursday.
The biggest boost over fiscal 2009 comes in funding for the EPA, which was allocated $10.2 billion, an amount $2.5 billion, or 33 percent, above fiscal 2009. It includes $3.6 billion for water and sewer infrastructure improvements.
The subcommittee said in a statement that, together with economic stimulus funds, there would be "an unprecedented $11 billion provided to states to fund water infrastructure over a two-year period."
The bill includes $6 billion for operations of national parks, national forests, national wildlife refugees and Bureau of Land Management lands -- an increase of $350 million, or 6 percent, over fiscal 2009.
Feinstein and Alexander both singled out the inclusion of $3.5 billion for fighting wildfires and reducing fire risks by the Forest Service and Interior Department as possibly sufficient to avoid future emergency requests.
That amount is an increase of $576 million, or 19 percent, above fiscal 2009 non-emergency funding levels. Feinstein said that amount should hopefully be enough to get through fiscal 2010 without emergency supplemental money.
The Indian Health Service received $4 billion, which is $449 million over fiscal 2009. The Bureau of Indian Affairs was assigned $2.6 billion for education and police activities. The Land and Water Conservation Fund for preserving parks, forests and wildlife refuges was given $419 million, an increase of $127 million over fiscal 2009.
COMMENTS
- Who is kidding who? When you add $3.5 billion for firefighting next year that money will be spent one way or another and the agencies will still ask for more regardless of the fire conditions. This year they gave all casual firefighters a 25% raise - Last year a Senator from CA had an earmark that gave only CA firefighters a 25% pay increase for two years. Guess what it had to be spent. This budget has been broken for a very long time and it's unfortunately no one seems to care. Increase the budgets and the deficits and continue with the same old process. Congratulations Congress for another great year. Babyboomer Posted June 24, 2009 10:26 AM









