Sep 20, 2007

Funding Folly

Many thanks to the reader who sent this. I've waded through the markups to find numbers, but as you can see from the LA Monitor story below, nobody really knows what the numbers will be yet.
Pinky

Gussie and Pinky,
I thought you might be interested in some 'factual' budget data as found on www.thomas.gov.

Senate Energy and Water committee Markup:
NNSA
Appropriations, 2007 $9,216,013,000
Budget estimate, 2008 $9,386,833,000
Committee recommendation $9,564,545,000

Weapons
Appropriations, 2007 $6,275,583,000
Budget estimate, 2008 $6,511,312,000
Committee recommendation $6,489,024,000

Status: [not official] full Senate hasn't voted


House Energy and Water committee Markup:
NNSA "The Committee provides $8,786,881,000 for the NNSA, a reduction of $599,952,000 below the budget request and a reduction of $294,132,000 below the current year level."

Weapons "The Committee's recommendation provides $5,879,137,000, for Weapons Activities, a reduction of $632,175,000 below the budget request and a reduction of $396,446,000 below the current year level."
Status: [not official] full House voted and sent to Senate


Budget action taking shape

ROGER SNODGRASS Monitor Assistant Editor

New Mexico's U.S. senators both see the range of possibilities for the LANL budget to be narrowing slightly, two weeks into their fall work calendar.

In an interview with New Mexico radio reporters Tuesday, Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., said that a continuing resolution was likely, adding that he thought it would extend funding at current levels for a month or more.

Then, an energy and water bill would be folded into an omnibus funding measure that Congress would try to pass "in late October or early November."

There has been uncertainty about whether a continuing resolution to keep the department in business after the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30 would use the House version of the bill, the Senate appropriation committee version, the administration's request or some other arithmetic.

Current levels might enable the laboratory to avoid the deep cuts threatened in the House bill, although a number of policy disagreements would have to be resolved some other way.

Notably, the itemized funding for the Reliable Replacement Warhead program is zeroed out in the House Bill and reduced by a third in the unfinished Senate bill.

As he has said before, Bingaman did not rule out cuts.

"I think there'll be cuts," he said. "I don't think they'll be as dramatic or drastic as the House of Representatives has proposed."

A spokesperson for Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., said his understanding was that the continuing resolution at current levels was not finalized.

"The senator has not gone so far as to say that would be rolled into an omnibus bill for all of '08," noted Domenici's press secretary, Chris Gallegos.

"He (Domenici) is still working to get the Senate to take up their energy and water bill in early October, which would then set the stage for getting a conference agreement out of the Senate and House bills."

He added that with four of the 12 appropriations bills now passed there was still hope that a negotiated agreement between House and Senate conferees would be preferable to an omnibus bill at current levels.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

LANS has already decided to make some significant layoffs to help ease future budgetary problems, regardless of what happens with the FY08 budget. They feel that FY08 gives them the best opening LANL has had in some time at rectifying staffing issues.

Those who are sitting around hoping that St. Pete will come, yet again, to save the day are going to be in for a rude awakening. It's not business as usual this year.

Anonymous said...

People are only fooling themselves if they think it is "business as usual this year." The day of LANL feeding at the public teat is over, like it or not.

Evolve or die.

Anonymous said...

I don't believe in evolution. I believe in the intelligent designs set in place by those from above, like Mike and Terry. Faith will prevail.