TOPICS
TOPICS
With money in hand, DHS proceeds with big-ticket programs
The Homeland Security Department plans to spend about $8.6 billion in fiscal 2005 on programs that have a price tag of $50 million or more, the department's chief financial officer said Tuesday.
Andrew Maner, who became chief financial officer last January, outlined the department's recently approved fiscal 2005 budget during a briefing in Washington. Maner said DHS has $40.7 billion in total funding for the fiscal year, of which $28.9 billion is allotted for discretionary spending.
He said the department is pursuing 44 projects with an estimated life-cycle acquisition cost of at least $50 million.
According to Maner, 20 of those projects are within the Border and Transportation Security directorate; eight are within the Coast Guard; seven are departmentwide; four are within the Citizenship and Immigration Services bureau; four are in the Emergency Preparedness and Response directorate; and one is within the Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection directorate.
The fiscal 2005 budget includes $1.8 billion more in discretionary funds than the previous year, Maner said. "This is a very, very solid and robust budget growth by any standard," he said.
"I think '05 is certainly going to be a year where our partners in the private sector are going to be playing a huge role," he added.
President Bush signed the budget into law Monday. DHS also released a fact sheet Monday outlining its spending programs.
The budget includes about $420 million for border and port security, including the expansion of pre-screening cargo containers in high-risk areas and the detection of individuals attempting to illegally enter the country. About $340 million was allocated to expand US-VISIT in 2005, a program to track foreign visitors entering and exiting the United States.
The Coast Guard's budget is up to $6.3 billion for the fiscal year, a 9 percent increase over the previous year.
About $2.5 billion will be available for Project BioShield in 2005, particularly for the development and pre-purchase of necessary medical countermeasures against weapons of mass destruction, and improved bio-surveillance by expanding air monitoring for biological agents in high-threat cities and other potential targets such as stadiums and transit systems, DHS said.
The Transportation Security Administration received $5.1 billion, a $679 million increase over 2004.
Additionally, the budget provides a total of $4 billion for state and local assistance programs; $3.6 billion for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement bureau; $3.1 billion for the Emergency Preparedness and Response directorate; $1.1 billion for the Science and Technology directorate; and $894 million for the Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection directorate.
COMMENTS
- Nope - they are not listening and ain't gonna. Since you legacy Customs types seem to think that the world respects your gold tin you should wake up and realize that they don't. Can't you see that ICE is supposed to enforce all the crap that these putzes wanted to sweep under the rug in the first place all these years (drugs, aliens, etc...). At least old Customs used to raise money. ICE can't do that and will , like the old INS, be starved out of existence, unless you count the cadre of lawyers that will be paid big bucks to rationalize how DHS has walked away from protecting America save for all of the non-existent terrorists that are used as an excuse for avoiding any enforcement of the immigration and other laws that impact the money people that support this farce of a republic. Get out while you can. GovExec.com reader Posted October 24, 2004 7:55 PM
- As yet another example of the affect of inept and irresponsible legacy INS management techniques and personnel, newly hired ICE agents in basic training at FLETC are being told that there is no money in ICE and that the new hires will have to be furloughed until FY 2006......when will this end? When will congress do something about this debacle that is ICE? IS ANYBODY LISTENING????????? GovExec.com reader Posted October 21, 2004 10:13 AM
- NOW, maybe CBP will lift its "outside personnel" hiring restriction and start filling some jobs! GovExec.com reader Posted October 20, 2004 8:03 AM









