The Administration supports House passage of the FY 2003 Treasury, Postal
Service, General Government Appropriations Bill, as reported by the House
Committee. In particular, we appreciate the level of support provided to the
Department of the Treasury enforcement programs and the Internal Revenue
Service.
The Administration also applauds the House Committee for reporting a bill that
is fiscally responsible. The President supports a discretionary spending total
of $759.1 billion -- consistent with the House-passed Budget Resolution -- and
this bill falls acceptably within that total allocation. Such a total provides
for needed resources for national defense and homeland security while
restraining overall government spending. Only within such a fiscal environment
can we encourage continued economic growth and a quick return to a balanced
budget. The Committee's actions strongly endorse these principles.
The Administration would like to take this opportunity to share additional views
and highlight specific concerns with the Committee version of the bill.
Department of the Treasury
The Administration strongly objects to Section 641 of the bill, which lifts the
locality pay freeze for Secret Service Uniformed Division officers as of January
1, 2003. The President has requested significant flexibility in hiring
processes, compensation systems and practices, and performance management to
recruit, retain, and develop a motivated, high-performance and accountable
workforce in the legislation he recently submitted to create the Department of
Homeland Security. Accordingly, the Administration urges the House to consider
these principles as this bill moves through the Congress.
Executive Office of the President (EXOP)
The Administration is very concerned that the Committee has only provided $5
million of the $45 million requested in the President's budget for the E-Gov
Fund, the cornerstone of the electronic government initiative highlighted in the
President's Management Agenda. Adequate central funding is critical for
consolidating and integrating overlapping agency IT inititiatives to improve
efficiency, responsiveness and access to government services, as well as to
recognize savings in the billions of dollars from this integrated
government-wide approach. The Administration also strongly objects to moving
the E-Gov fund to the Executive Office of President (EOP) from the General
Services Administration (GSA). This fund is used for cross-agency IT-related
programs which GSA, not the EOP, is responsible for managing. GSA is much
better positioned to manage this fund, and has considerable experience in doing
so with other such funds. The Administration urges the House to support the
President's request.
The Administration also objects to the Committee's reductions in requested
funding for Office of National Drug Control Policy's (ONDCP) operations. Such
reductions could require a 20 percent reduction in ONDCP staff currently on
board, jeopardize the achievement of the President's goals for reducing drug use
in our Nation, and significantly impair the management of ONDCP programs. The
Administration also objects to the funding level and restrictions placed on the
Youth Antidrug Media Campaign. The Administration urges the House to redirect
increases provided above the President's request for the High Intensity Drug
Trafficking Areas and Counterdrug Technology Assessment Center programs to fund
these important programs.
The Administration continues to strongly support the proposed consolidated
appropriation for EXOP and greatly regrets that the House committee failed to
adopt it. The Administration urges the House, as a matter of comity between the
branches and efficient use of resources, to adopt the Administration's
consolidation proposal. This proposal would have consolidated the current 16
separate EXOP appropriations into one and would enable the President to
effectively manage and align EOP resources consistent with decision-making in an
efficient and straightforward manner, while enhancing the accuracy of the
financial systems and reducing the administrative volume and cost of processing
transactions through the U.S. Treasury.
Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
The Administration believes that the additional funds earmarked to establish a
telecommuting training program to educate Federal managers about the logistics
and benefits of telecommuting are unnecessary. The President's budget funds
OPM's Telework and Telecommuting program. Helpful information for employees and
managers is already available at http://www.telework.gov/
Government-wide Language Provisions
The Administration strongly opposes the provision in the bill that provides a
4.1 percent pay raise for Federal civilian employees. The President's budget
proposes a pay raise of 2.6 percent for Federal civilian employees, and the
Administration continues to believe that proposal is both reasonable and
responsible. We urge the Congress to adopt the President's budget policy. The
additional cost of this increased pay level is $1.5 billion over the President's
request. This congressional policy would divert critical resources from
programs across the Government.
We are disappointed that the House has not embraced the Administration's
proposal for full cost budgeting for retirement pension costs and
post-retirement health benefits and would like to take this opportunity to
reaffirm the importance of the proposal. At a time when corporate financial
statements are being questioned, we need to ensure that the Federal Government
reports its costs appropriately. The Administration's proposal would be a major
step in more accurately measuring program costs in the Federal budget -- agency
by agency, account by account, and program activity by program activity. This
proposal does not affect the budget surplus or deficit. Including these costs
where they are generated provides a more transparent and full budgeting for
federal programs.
The Administration is disappointed that the House Committee does not include the
proposal to amend the Federal Employees' Compensation Act (FECA) to allow the
Department of Labor to add an administrative surcharge to the amount billed to
agencies for their workers' compensation costs. By allocating the cost of
administering FECA to customer agencies in proportion to their program usage,
this proposal would strengthen incentives to monitor and reduce FECA costs and
improve workplace safety. The Administration urges the House to adopt this
important reform to strengthen management of the FECA program.
The Administration opposes section 513 of the Committee bill that continues the
one-year moratorium on the application of Cost Accounting Standards (CAS) to
experience-rated contracts awarded under the Federal Employees Health Benefits
Program (FEHBP). These accounting standards ensure that Federal contractors
accumulate and report consistently on their incurred contract costs. Government
contractors, including those that contract with FEHBP, must be held to the
highest accounting principles and standards. Additionally, a statutory
moratorium is not required as existing law provides for an administrative
process to exempt or waive classes or categories of contracts from any or all
CAS requirements.
The Administration appreciates that the Committee has continued current law
provisions (sections 509 and 510) that prohibit the use of Federal funds for
abortions in the FEHBP, except in cases where the life of the mother is
endangered, or the pregnancy is the result of an act of rape or incest.
Potential Floor Amendments
The Administration understands that an amendment may be offered on the Floor
that would effectively shut down the Administration's Competitive Sourcing
initiative to fundamentally improve the performance of the government's many
commercial activities. Last week, the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee
adopted a similarly egregious amendment. Now is the wrong time to short-circuit
implementation of the common sense principle of competition -- a proven
prescription for reaping significant cost savings and performance enhancements
-- especially since numerous agencies are starting to make real progress. The
principle of competition was unanimously adopted by the recent
congressionally-mandated Commercial Activities Panel. Prohibiting the funding
for public-private competitions is akin to mandating a monopoly regardless of
the impact on services to citizens and the added costs to taxpayers. If the
final version of the bill would contain such a provision, the President's senior
advisers would recommend that he veto the bill.
The Administration understands that an amendment may be offered on the House
floor that would weaken current sanctions against the Cuban government. The
Administration believes it is vitally important to maintain these sanctions.
The function of the travel sanctions is to prevent unlicensed tourism to Cuba
that provides economic resources to the Castro regime while doing nothing to
help the Cuban people, and these sanctions should not be removed. Sanctions
also help ensure that humanitarian and cultural exchanges are genuine, reaching
out to the Cuban people and especially to civil society and democracy activists,
and not become activities whose main effect is to strengthen the regime.
Lifting the sanctions now would provide a helping hand to a desperate and
repressive regime, whereas the President's policy calls for reaching out to help
the Cuban people. As noted in the July 11 letter from Secretaries Powell and
O'Neill, the President's senior advisors would recommend that he veto a bill
that contained such changes.
Infringement on Executive Authority
The Administration objects to a number of provisions in the bill that would
require committee approval before Executive Branch execution. For example,
section 403 would require that any transfers for Federal Buildings Fund
activities "shall be approved in advance by the Committees on Appropriations".
The Administration will interpret these provisions to require only notification
of Congress, since any other interpretation would contradict the Supreme Court
ruling in INS v. Chadha.
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