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Generally, the homeland security appropriations bill includes all annual appropriations for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), providing resources to every departmental component.1 The following figures show two perspectives on the budget authority for DHS enacted for FY20172 and requested by the Donald Trump Administration for FY2018, as well as the funding levels provided in H.R. 3355, the House committee-reported homeland security appropriations bill3354, which included the House-passed homeland security appropriations bill, the unnumbered Senate Appropriations Committee draft released on November 21, 2017, and P.L. 115-141, Division F of which was the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2018.
Figure 1 shows total net discretionary appropriations for DHS divideddistributed by departmental component, and ordered from largest to smallest by FY2017 enacted annual funding level.
In Figure 1, the first column shows (by component) the budget authority provided in P.L. 115-31, which included the FY2017 annual appropriations act for DHS as the first five titles of Division F, and supplemental appropriations for DHS as the sixth. Supplemental funding is shown in black to distinguish it from annual appropriations. Appropriations with the disaster relief designation are shown. Appropriations with the disaster relief or emergency designations (in the case of FEMA) or Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) designation (in the case of the Coast Guard) are shown immediately above the segment for their DHS component with a pattern to distinguish them from net discretionary appropriations. The second column shows a similar breakdown by component for the FY2018 request, while the third shows the House Appropriations Committee-reported proposed-passed funding levels as outlined in H.R. 3355 and H.Rept. 115-239.
Divisions E and M of H.R. 3354.4 Funding levels from the Senate Appropriations Committee draft released on November 21, 2017, appear in the fourth column, and the final column shows the annual appropriations provided as a part of the consolidated appropriations act for FY2018.5
The purpose of this figure is to provide a visual comparison between the size of budget authority recommended or provided to DHS components. To accomplish this, supplemental appropriations are not reflected in the figure due to the difference in scale between the largest supplemental appropriations and the average component funding level.
Figure 1. Department of Homeland Security Net Discretionary Budget Authority and (billions of dollars; |
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Source: CRS analysis of H.Rept. 115-239, the explanatory statement accompanying the unnumbered Senate draft, and P.L. 115-141 and its explanatory statement as printed in the Congressional Record of March 22, 2018, pp. H2544-H2608.
Notes
Abbreviations: CBP, Customs and Border Protection; USCG, U.S. Coast Guard; ICE, Immigration and Customs Enforcement; TSA, Transportation Security Administration; FEMA, Federal Emergency Management Agency; USSS, U.S. Secret Service; NPPD, National Protection and Programs Directorate; S&T, Science and Technology Directorate; MD, Management Directorate; DNDO, Domestic Nuclear Detection Office; A&O, Analysis and Operations; FLETC, Federal Law Enforcement Training Center; OIG, Office of the Inspector General; OSEM, Office of the Secretary and Executive Management; OHA, Office of Health Affairs; USCIS, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services; SAC, Senate Appropriations Committee. |
While the total net discretionary budget authority, when adjusted for the effect of rescissions, provides the "score" that is measured against the bill's discretionary spending allocation, it does not represent the total budget authority provided to DHS. "Net" discretionary appropriations are the net balance of discretionary appropriations minus any offsetting collections. Such collections are addressed in the appropriations legislation, and provide significant resources to some components of DHS, such as the Transportation Security Administration and National Protection and Programs Directorate. They do not include mandatory spending, resources derived directly from fee collections without annual congressional action, or resources covered by adjustments to the discretionary spending limits.36 Congress controls the reprogramming of these resources through detailed tables provided in appropriations committee reports, conference reports, and statements of managers.
Figure 2 uses the data drawn from these detailed tables to show a more complete picture of the resources available to eight DHS components: U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the U.S. Coast Guard, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Transportation Security Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Secret Service, and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services—the seven operational components—and the National Protection and Programs Directorate.
In Figure 2, these eight components are listed along the bottom axis. Each component's funding level as a section of the figure has threefive bars, representing the same threefive phases of the appropriations process as in Figure 1: funding described in the explanatory statement accompanying the enacted FY2017 appropriations for DHS; requested by the Trump Administration for FY2018; andpassed by the House in H.R. 3354; recommended by the HouseSenate Appropriations Committee for FY2018 in H.Rept. 115-239in their unnumbered draft; and enacted in P.L. 115-141. The bottom segment of each bar represents net discretionary budget authority—the same amount for each as represented in Figure 1. As in Figure 1, supplemental appropriations (which would be included in calculations of both net and total discretionary budget authority in the act) are reflected separately from annual appropriations.
On top of these segments
On top of these bases are several other types of segments, representing fee revenues, offsetting collections, mandatory spending,47 and funding covered by adjustments to discretionary spending limits under the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA; P.L. 112-25).5 in annual appropriations.8 Unlike in Figure 1, supplemental appropriations are reflected in Figure 2—although those provided for FY2018 are too large to be accommodated at the same scale as the rest of the figure. Therefore, the full length of this bar is truncated, but labeled with its actual value. A small inset graphic shows the scale of supplemental appropriations relative to the other appropriations.
The resulting diagram allows for easier comparison of changes in individual component appropriations, and provides a more accurate description of each component's overall resource level. Among the changes it illuminates are the increase in CBP's budget for proposed border barrier funding,; partial acceptance of increases in ICE operations funding by the House Appropriations Committee,; an increase in discretionary spending to support the TSA's budget in the absence of the Trump Administration's proposed fee increase, and House Appropriations Committee rejection of proposed cuts; increased funding for Coast Guard acquisitions as proposed in the Senate Appropriations Committee draft; and increased funding for FEMA in the omnibus, as opposed to the Administration's proposed reductions in FEMA's grant programs.
Figure 2. Department of Homeland Security Budget Authority by Selected DHS Component, FY2017-FY2018 (billions of dollars of budget authority controlled for reprogramming through appropriations committee reports) |
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Source: CRS analysis of H.Rept. 115-239, the explanatory statement accompanying the unnumbered Senate draft, and P.L. 115-141 and its explanatory statement as printed in the Congressional Record of March 22, 2018, pp. H2544-H2608. Note: For underlying data and notes on data, see Table 1. Abbreviations: |
Table 1 provides a complete breakdown of the nettotal discretionary budget authority outlined in Figure 19 and the five aspects of funding outlined in Figure 2 for all DHS components.
These aspects of funding controlled for reprogramming through the appropriations reports do not reflect all funding available to these components. Much of DHS's mandatory spending, including spending on flood insurance claims, as well as trust funds for the Coast Guard and the Secret Service, is not reflected in the detailed appropriations committee-generated tables that control reprogrammings.
Table 1. Department of Homeland Security Budget Authority by DHS Component, FY2017-FY2018
(thousands of dollars of budget authority controlled for reprogramming through appropriations committee reports)
Component / Funding Aspect |
FY2017 Enacted |
FY2018 Request |
House
|
Senate Committee Draft FY2018 Enacted |
|||||||
Customs and Border Protection |
14,280,721 |
16,403,729 |
16, 15,882,689 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
12,168,881 |
13,907,061 |
13, 13,543,021 14,017,522 |
||||||||
Annual |
11,414,668 |
13,907,061 |
13, 13,543,021 14,017,522 |
||||||||
Supplemental |
772,213 |
0
|
— — |
0 |
|||||||
Offsetting Collections |
39,000 |
39,000 |
39,000 39,000 |
||||||||
Fees |
2,054,840 |
2,457,668 |
2,300,668 |
2,300,668 |
2,300,668 |
Emergency Supplemental |
— |
— |
— |
— |
149,494 |
U.S. Coast Guard |
10,617,203 |
10,441,258 |
10,486,258 |
12,847,458 |
12,942,817 |
||||||
Net Discretionary |
8,787,571 |
8,768,258 |
8,813,258 |
11,011,458 |
10,268,607 |
||||||
Mandatory |
1,666,940 |
1,673,000 |
1,673,000 |
1,673,000 |
1,676,117 |
||||||
Budget Control Act Adjustment (OCO) |
162,692 |
— |
— |
163,000 |
163,000 |
Emergency Supplemental |
— |
— |
— |
— |
835,093 |
Immigration and Customs Enforcement |
6,796,240 |
7,942,072 |
7,426 | ,552
7,041,588 |
7,516,441 |
||||||
Net Discretionary |
6,435,240 |
7,565,462 |
7,049 | ,942
6,664,978 |
7,075,874 |
||||||
Annual |
6,198,332 |
7,565,462 |
7,049 | ,942
6,664,978 |
7,075,874 |
||||||
Supplemental |
236,908 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
||||||
Fees |
361,000 |
376,610 |
376,610
|
376,610
|
376,610
|
Emergency Supplemental
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
— 63,957 |
|
Transportation Security Administration |
7,771,340 |
7,582,228 |
7,656 | ,937
7,632,110 |
7,896,236 |
||||||
Net Discretionary |
5,186,140 |
4,121,669 |
4,696 | ,378
4,671,551 |
4,925,355 |
||||||
Offsetting Collections |
2,130,000 |
2,970,000 |
2,470,000 2,470,000 |
||||||||
Fees |
205,200 |
240,559 |
240,559 |
240,559 |
240,559 |
||||||
Mandatory |
250,000 |
250,000 |
250,000 |
250,000 |
250,000 |
Emergency Supplemental |
— |
— |
— |
— |
10,322 |
Federal Emergency Management Agency |
|
10,773,070 |
11,567,500 11,514,942 70,783,529 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
4,723,532 |
3,726,570 |
4,571,000 3,959,722 4,984,029 Emergency-designated Annual Appropriations — — — 558,720 — |
||||||||
Offsetting Collections |
181,799 |
253,500 |
203,500 |
||||||||
Budget Control Act Adjustment (Disaster Relief) |
6,713,000 |
6,793,000 |
6,793,000 6,793,000 7,366,000 Emergency Supplemental 7,400,000 — — 58,230,000 |
||||||||
U.S. Secret Service |
2,045,578 |
1,943,626 |
1,957,495 1,956,313 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
2,045,578 |
1,943,626 |
1,957,495 1,956,313 |
||||||||
Annual |
1,914,578 |
1,943,626 |
1,957,495 1,956,313 |
||||||||
Supplemental |
131,000 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
||||||
National Protection and Programs Directorate |
3,269,850 |
3,277,489 |
3,249,276
3,279,207 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
1,818,772 |
1,801,434 |
1,773,221 |
1,803,202 |
1,911,402 |
||||||
Offsetting Collections |
1,451,078 |
1,476,055 |
1,476,055 1,476,005 |
||||||||
Science and Technology Directorate |
781,746 |
627,324 |
638,100
|
719,916 840,943 |
|||||||
Net Discretionary |
781,746 |
627,324 |
638,100
|
719,916 840,943 |
|||||||
Management Directorate |
673,624 |
768,664 |
666,687 784,211 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
673,624 |
768,664 |
666,687 784,211 |
||||||||
Domestic Nuclear Detection Office |
352,484 |
330,440 |
309,988 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
352,484 |
330,440 |
309,988 |
||||||||
Analysis and Operations |
263,551 |
252,405 |
252,405
|
250,005 245,905 |
|||||||
Net Discretionary |
263,551 |
252,405 |
252,405
|
250,005 245,905 |
|||||||
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center |
242,518 |
272,759 |
260,099
241,159 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
242,518 |
272,759 |
241,159 |
||||||||
Office of the Inspector General |
175,000 |
133,974 |
154,830
|
127,000 168,000 |
|||||||
Net Discretionary |
175,000 |
133,974 |
154,830
|
127,000 168,000 |
|||||||
Office of the Secretary and Executive Management |
137,034 |
130,307 |
132,426 139,602 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
137,034 |
130,307 |
132,426 139,602 |
||||||||
Office of Health Affairs |
123,548 |
111,319 |
119,319
|
113,169 121,569 |
|||||||
Net Discretionary |
123,548 |
111,319 |
119,319
|
113,169 121,569 |
|||||||
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services |
4,181,364 |
4,442,039 |
4,442,039 4,483,039 |
||||||||
Net Discretionary |
121,139 |
131,513 |
131,513
132,513 |
||||||||
Fees |
4,060,225 |
4,310,526 |
4,310,526 4,350,526 |
||||||||
TOTAL NET DISCRETIONARY BUDGET AUTHORITY PLUS |
52,434,298 |
53,058,785 |
54,001,903
|
51,385,785
|
52,307,696
|
53,817,828 115,029,362 |
Sources: CRS analysis of Division F of P.L. 115-31 and its explanatory statement as printed in the Congressional Record of May 3, 2017, pp. H3807-H3873, and H.Rept. 115-239.
Note: Totals do not reflect the impact of rescissions.
These five aspects of funding controlled for reprogramming through the appropriations reports do not reflect all funding available to these components. Much of DHS's mandatory spending, including spending on flood insurance claims, as well as trust funds for the Coast Guard and the Secret Service, is not reflected in the detailed appropriations committee-generated tables that control reprogrammings.
Author Contact Information
1. |
Under the Trump Administration's FY2018 budget request, as in previous years, DHS also is expected to receive resources through appropriations in permanent law, as well as reimbursements and transfers from other parts of the federal government. However, the DHS appropriations act is the primary vehicle through which Congress annually funds and directs the financial activities of the department. |
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2. |
P.L. 115-31, Division F. |
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3. |
Details on FY2018 supplemental appropriations for DHS can be found in a number of products, including CRS Report R45084, 2017 Disaster Supplemental Appropriations: Overview.
Some border security funding was separated from the homeland security appropriations bill during the process of bringing appropriations legislation to the floor. Details of these events can be found in CRS Report R44927, Department of Homeland Security Appropriations: FY2018. P.L. 115-141. Funding for DHS appears in Division F. |
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The mandatory spending reflected here is composed of two elements: Coast Guard retired pay, which is considered mandatory spending but requires congressional action nonetheless; and $250 million from the Aviation Security Capital Fund. |
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For the DHS appropriations legislation, these have included funding designated as disaster relief and funding designated as supporting Overseas Contingency Operations. For more details about adjustments to discretionary spending limits under the BCA, see CRS Report R41965, The Budget Control Act of 2011. |
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9. |
Total discretionary budget authority was calculated for this exercise as a sum of net discretionary budget authority and funding designated as emergency requirements, disaster relief, or as supporting Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO). |