Order Code IB10101
Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
The Environmental Protection Agency’s
FY2003 Budget
Updated October 18, 2002
Martin R. Lee
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Homeland Security
EPA’s Budget by Appropriations Accounts
Science and Technology
Environmental Programs and Management
Office of Inspector General
Buildings and Facilities
Oil Spill Response
Superfund
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks
State and Tribal Assistance Programs
LEGISLATION
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS, REPORTS, AND DOCUMENTS
CHRONOLOGY


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The Environmental Protection Agency’s FY2003 Budget
SUMMARY
For FY2003, the President requested
S. 2797 would provide the request of $1.27
$7.62 billion in budget authority for the Envi-
billion, whereas H.R. 5605 would provide
ronmental Protection Agency (EPA), $458
$1.42 billion. There is some concern over
million less than the total FY2002 appropria-
EPA’s proposed decline in Superfund cleanup
tion of $8.08 billion. Of the FY2003 request,
activities, and that the taxpayers would now
the Administration would allocate $133 mil-
pay for most of the appropriation, as the
lion for homeland security activities. A total
industry-supported trust fund balance declines.
of $188 million was allocated for these activi-
ties in FY2002, which included $176 million
The adequacy of federal funding to help
in supplemental funding for terrorism-related
meet state and local wastewater and drinking
activities. The Administration has not re-
water capital needs has been an ongoing issue,
quested nearly $500 million to continue activi-
and estimates of funding needs are as high as
ties earmarked in the FY2002 appropriation,
$1 trillion over the next 20 years. The FY2003
most of which were for water infrastructure
request for the State and Tribal Assistance
projects.
Grants (STAG) account to address these and
other needs is $3.46 billion, $275 million less
As reported by the Senate Committee on
than in FY2002, assuming a discontinuance of
Appropriations, S. 2797 (S.Rept. 107-222)
earmarked funding. S. 2797 would provide
would provide $8.30 billion for EPA in
$4.01 billion, adding $140 million for special
FY2003. As reported by the House Committee
needs grants. H.R. 5605 would provide $3.79
on Appropriations, H.R. 5605 (H.Rept. 107-
billion, including $228 million for targeted
740) would provide $8.20 billion. Both bills
projects. The STAG request includes $1.21
would restore much of the water infrastructure
billion for Clean Water State Revolving Funds
funding. Continuing resolutions are expected
(SRF). S. 2797 would provide $1.45 billion,
to provide funding at least at the same level as
and H.R. 5605 would provide $1.30 billion.
in FY2002, while Congress continues its work
The STAG request also includes $850 million
on the appropriations bills. The current reso-
for the Drinking Water SRF. H.R. 5605 would
lution (P.L. 107-244) provides funding at the
provide the requested amount, and S. 2797
FY2002 level, through November 22, 2002.
would provide $875 million.
While the EPA request is presented
As part of the STAG account, S. 2797
according to 10 goals (clean air, safe food,
and H.R. 5605 would provide the request of
etc.), EPA’s appropriations bill continues to
$75 million for Mexican border water pro-
be organized according to traditional accounts.
jects. The request also includes $40 million
The President’s FY2003 request includes
for State of Alaska projects. S. 2797 would
$670 million for the Science and Technology
provide $45 million, and H.R. 5605 would
account. S. 2797 would provide $710 million,
provide $35 million. For state and tribal
whereas H.R. 5605 would provide $715 mil-
administrative grants, S. 2797 would provide
lion. For the Environmental Programs and
the request of $1.16 billion, whereas H.R.
Management account, the request is $2.05
5605 would provide $1.17 billion. S. 2797
billion. S. 2797 would provide $2.14 billion,
also would provide the request of $200 mil-
and H.R. 5605 would provide $2.11 billion.
lion for the Brownfields program. H.R. 5605
To clean up toxic waste sites under Superfund,
would provide nearly the same amount.
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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
As of the beginning of FY2003, Congress had not completed action on the
appropriations bill for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Continuing resolutions
are expected to provide funding at least at the same level as enacted for FY2002, while
Congress continues its work on the appropriations bills. The current resolution (P.L. 107-
244) provides funding for EPA at the same level as enacted for FY2002, through November
22, 2002. On July 25, 2002, the Senate Committee on Appropriations approved a total of
$8.30 billion for EPA in reporting the Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and
Urban Development, and Independent Agencies (known as “VA-HUD”) Appropriations Bill
for FY2003 (S. 2797, S.Rept. 107-222). The House Committee on Appropriations approved
a total of $8.20 billion for EPA on October 10, 2002, in reporting its version of the bill (H.R.
5605, H.Rept. 107-740). Both amounts would exceed the Administration’s request of $7.62
billion for FY2003, as well as the FY2002 funding level of $8.08 billion. Floor action has
not occurred on either bill to date.

In addition to appropriations, the House passed the FY2003 budget resolution
(H.Con.Res. 353, H.Rept. 107-376) on March 20, 2002, and the Senate Budget Committee
reported its version of the resolution (S.Con.Res. 100, S.Rept. 107-141) on April 11, 2002.
Both measures contain funding assumptions related to EPA’s budget. However, it appears
unlikely that a final agreement on the budget resolution will be reached, due to large
differences in overall funding levels.

BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
The FY2003 EPA request of $7.62 billion is $458.3 million, or 5.7%, less than the
total FY2002 funding level of $8.08 billion, which included $175.6 million in supplemental
funding for terrorism-related activities provided by P.L. 107-117, Division B. (The amount
indicated for EPA’s request does not include an additional $107 million that the
Administration has proposed in order to shift the full cost of federal employee pensions and
health benefits to the agency’s budget. Consequently, variations of this amount can be found
in figures used for EPA’s total request. The House Committee on Appropriations and the
Senate Committee on Appropriations criticized the Administration for including this
proposed amount, since providing it would require legislation. Both committees indicated
that, for the purposes of budget estimates, future spending proposals should be sent to
Congress without assuming the enactment of legislative proposals.) The Administration’s
request seeks fairly level funding for many EPA programs, but would eliminate about $500
million for activities that received earmarked funding in the FY2002 conference report
(H.Rept. 107-272).
Figure 1 depicts EPA funding by major categories – operating programs, state
assistance, and Superfund – since FY1983. Within these broad categories are $2.05 billion
for environmental programs and management, $670 million for science and technology, and
$1.27 billion for Superfund in the FY2003 proposal. Also under the proposal, funding
would decrease by $275 million in the State and Tribal Assistance Grants (STAG) account,
which incorporates Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Funds (SRFs) monies
and traditional state program assistance and management grants. The request for this account
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includes $1.21 billion for Clean Water SRFs, $850 million for Drinking Water SRFs, $75
million for Mexican Border projects, and $1.16 billion for traditional grants to states for
administering their programs.
As reported by the Senate Budget Committee, the FY2003 budget resolution, S. Con.
Res. 100, assumes that the Clean Water SRF will be fully funded, the Superfund request will
be increased by $113 million, and that a proposed shift in enforcement responsibilities will
be denied. It also contains a sense of the Senate that Superfund funding should be adequate
to clean up the remaining sites. The House-passed FY2003 budget resolution, H.Con.Res.
353, assumes full funding of EPA’s operating programs.
The major issue associated with the request is the discontinuance of funding for a
number of activities which received about $500 million in earmarked funding in FY2002,
much of which was allocated to about 300 wastewater infrastructure projects. The
Administration’s budget document argues, “Congressional earmarks include research
projects targeted to specific institutions that bypass the normal competitive process; projects
that benefit a limited geographic area with no national significance; and infrastructure
projects that bypass the State formula allocation and priority-setting process.” It also
calculates that the FY2002 appropriation contained 479 earmarks totaling $494 million.
Many Members of Congress disagree with the Administration on the earmarks issue overall
and assert Congress’ right to decide funding priorities in this way. Given their enormous
popularity, reinstatements, or new earmarks, of much of this funding is being pursued during
the FY2003 appropriations process.
Figure 1. EPA Funding, FY83 to FY02 Enacted and FY03 Request
State Assistance
Operating Programs
Superfund & LUST
$ Billion
10.00
8.02 8.18
7.59 7.56
7.72
7.36
6.88
8.00
6.67
6.64
6.80
6.60 6.53
6.09
5.54 5.53
5.30 5.06
6.00
4.37
4.18
3.70
3.68
4.00
2.00
0.00
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
Prepared by the Congressional Research Service.
FY2002 totals include $175 million supplemental funding.
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EPA’s FY2003 budget presentation, now referred to as the “2003 Annual Plan,” was
the fifth presented under provisions of the 1993 Government Performance and Results Act
(GPRA), which directs that a performance plan accompany the budget. In 2000, EPA
submitted a second GPRA-mandated strategic plan spelling out its mission and 10 major
goals and associated objectives. Its FY2003 budget justification is aligned with these 10
goals which are:
1. Clean Air
2. Clean and Safe Water
3. Safe Food
4. Preventing Pollution and Reducing Risk in Communities, Homes, Workplaces and
Ecosystems
5. Better Waste Management, Restoration of Contaminated Waste Sites, and Emergency
Response
6. Reduction of Global and Cross-border Environmental Risks
7. Quality Environmental Information
8. Sound Science, Improved Understanding of Environmental Risk, and Greater
Innovation to Address Environmental Problems
9. A Credible Deterrent to Pollution and Greater Compliance with the Law
(Enforcement)
10. Effective Management
Homeland Security
In the FY2003 budget proposal, the President seeks $133.4 million for EPA’s homeland
security activities. This is 29% less than the total appropriation of $188.1 million in FY2002.
In addition to homeland security funding allocated directly to EPA in FY2002, P.L. 107-206
(H.R. 4775) included another $16.1 million in supplemental FY2002 funds for the Capitol
Police Board to reimburse EPA. This law also would have appropriated $50 million more
in FY2002 funds to EPA for drinking water facility vulnerability assessments if the President
had declared these emergency funds by September 1, 2002, which he did not do. EPA has
several responsibilities, including protecting its own facilities, determining the vulnerability
of the nation’s water infrastructure, responding to contamination of buildings, monitoring
of air quality at contaminated sites, and conducting research on better cleanup technologies.
The justification for the 29% reduction is, according to EPA, that the special funds,
almost all of which ($175.6 million) were in the emergency FY2002 terrorism supplemental
(P.L. 107-117, Division B), were one-time expenses. Of the $133.4 million requested, most
– $75 million – would be directed to conducting research on better technologies and
assessments to clean up contaminated buildings. The request also includes $19 million to
upgrade EPA security. The next largest allocation would be $17 million for more
vulnerability assessments for smaller water systems along with $5 million in state grants
relating to homeland security. Other portions of the request include $5.5 million for the
newly created West Coast Environmental Response Team, and an additional $7.7 million to
improve EPA’s response capabilities. The issues for EPA’s homeland security activities are
how adequate the Agency’s resources are to protect its own facilities, to promote protection
of the nation’s infrastructure, and to develop better knowledge about responding to bio- and
chemical-terrorism.
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EPA’s Budget by Appropriations Accounts
Traditionally, EPA’s budget has been presented, considered, and enacted according to
several major appropriations accounts. These accounts, including environmental programs
and management, science and technology, Office of Inspector General, buildings and
facilities, and oil spills, representing about 37% of EPA’s FY2003 request, are sometimes
referred to as the “operating programs” and reflect the heart of the Agency’s research,
regulatory, and enforcement efforts. Two trust fund-based accounts — about 18% of EPA’s
FY2003 request –- are Superfund and the Leaking Underground Storage Tank (LUST) Trust
Fund. All state supporting activities are reflected in the State and Tribal Assistance Grants
(STAG) account. About 45% of EPA’s FY2003 request is allotted to this account. Table 1
shows the breakdown of EPA’s funding by appropriations accounts.
Table 1. EPA Major Appropriations Accounts: FY1999-FY2002
Enacted, FY2003 Request, and Legislative Action
(in millions of dollars)
FY2002
FY1999
FY2000
FY2001
S 2797
HR 5605
P.L. 107-
FY2003
Account
P.L. 105-
P.L. 106-
P.L. 106-
S.Rept.
H.Rept.
73; P.L.
Request
276
74
377
107-222
107-740
107-117
Operating
Programs
Science and
Technology 640.0
645.0
709.1
788.4
670.0
710.0
714.6
Environmental
Programs and
Management
1,848.0
1,895.3
2,039.2
2,093.5
2,047.7
2,140.5
2,111.7
Buildings &
Facilities
57.0
62.5
28.3
25.3
42.9
42.9
42.9
Office of
Inspector
General
31.2
32.4
40.8
34.0
35.3
35.3
35.3
Oil Spill
Response
15.0
14.9
14.6
15.0
15.6
15.6
15.6
Superfund
1,500.0
1,400.0
1,392.4
1,311.3
1,273.0
1,273.0
1,422.9
Leaking
Underground
Storage Tank
Trust Fund

72.5
69.8
70.7
73.0
72.3
72.3
72.3
State and
Tribal
Assistance
Grants

3,406.8
3,581.0
3,623.3
3,738.3
3,463.8
4,009.6
3,789.2
EPA Total
All Programs

7,590.4
7,591.7
8,018.9
8,078.8
7,620.5
8,299.1
8,204.5
Note: The total amount indicated for the FY2003 request does not include the Administration’s proposal for an additional
$107 million to shift the full costs of federal employee retirement pensions and health benefits to the agency’s budget.
Funding for this proposal would require legislation that has not been enacted. In FY2000, the conferees elected to fund
the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
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Registry (ATSDR) – a total of $130 million – independent of the Superfund appropriation. FY2002 figures include $175.6
million in terrorism supplemental funds included in P.L. 107-117, Division B. P.L. 107-206 (H.R. 4775) included $16.1
million in supplemental FY2002 funds for the Capitol Police Board to reimburse EPA. The Act would have appropriated
$50 million more for FY2002for drinking water facility vulnerability assessments if the President had declared these
emergency funds by September 1, 2002, which he did not do.
Within the many EPA programs, there are numerous issues with respect to
implementing and administering the media (air, water, etc.) protection programs, wastewater
treatment funding, and Superfund.
Science and Technology
The Science and Technology (S&T) account incorporates elements of the former
research and development account (also called extramural research) as well as EPA’s in-
house research, development, and technology efforts. The FY2003 request of $670.0
million for the S&T account represents a 15% decrease when compared to the total FY2002
funding level of $788.4 million. The Senate Committee on Appropriations approved $710.0
million for the S&T account, reinstated $9.75 million for the Science to Achieve Results
(STAR) program, which the Administration has proposed to move to the National Science
Foundation, and added $10 million to the request for small drinking water system arsenic
removal research. The House Committee on Appropriations approved $714.6 million for the
S&T account, and provided $5.0 million to retain the STAR program at EPA.
Increasing under the President’s budget proposal would be S&T funds for clean air
(3%), clean and safe water, (3%), and quality information (0.5%) goals; safe food, pollution
prevention, and enforcement S&T allocations would decline slightly. The main decreases –
about 72%, or $42.3 million – would be for waste management, almost all from
contaminated site/emergency response activities related to September 11th, and $74.9 million
from safe water goals reflecting completion of vulnerability assessments. In report language,
the Senate Committee on Appropriations directs EPA to provide, by March 31, 2003, a full
accounting of how the agency has expended drinking water security funds. While the
Administration’s decision not to request about $5.3 million added by Congress in FY2002
funds is a contributing factor, S&T funds allocated for the global/cross border goal would
decline 20% due to the Administration’s decision to reduce research funds for alternative
vehicle technologies. S&T funds for the effective management goal would decline 42%
under the proposal, reflecting completion of the Research Triangle Park facility.
EPA’s role in climate research and in the Bush Administration’s Climate Protection
Program (CPP), formerly the Climate Change Technology Initiative (CCTI), has been an
issue. EPA requests $136.9 million for its objective to “reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions”
(research and programmatic activities) in FY2003, a 6%, or $8.4 million, decrease when
compared to the FY2002 funding level of $145.3 million. About $38 million, or 28%, of
the request is under the S&T account; the rest is under the Environmental Programs and
Management request.
There is no funding change planned for the $21 million research program in climate
change. Most categories of the Climate Protection Program would remain at about the same
levels. This includes some research and incentive programs related to buildings, carbon
removal, international capacity building, and state/local programs. What is driving the overall
decrease is the Administration’s decision to reduce climate change transportation-related
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activities from $30.8 million to $21.6 million in FY2003, a $9.3 million or a 30% reduction.
This reflects the Administration’s decision to discontinue activities on high-efficiency fuel
engines and developing an 85 miles per gallon family size prototype vehicle. Neither S.
2797, nor H.R. 5605, proposes specific funding levels for climate change activities. (For a
discussion of climate change issues, see the CRS Electronic Briefing Book on Climate
Change [http://www.congress.gov/brbk/html/ebgcc1.html].)
Environmental Programs and Management
The Environmental Programs and Management (EPM) account — representing about
a quarter of the Agency’s resources — reflects the heart of the Agency’s regulatory, standard-
setting, and enforcement efforts for various media programs such as water quality, air quality,
and hazardous waste management. The President’s FY2003 budget sought $2.05 billion,
$46.7 million, or 2.2%, less than the FY2002 funding level of $2.09 billion. The Senate
Committee on Appropriations would provide $2.14 billion, and the House Committee on
Appropriations would provide $2.11 billion. Many controversial regulatory/standard setting
issues can be associated with this account. (CRS Issue Brief IB10067, Environmental
Protection Issues in the 107th Congress,
discusses some of them.)
EPM allocations for clean air, safe food, pollution prevention, global activities,
information, enforcement and effective management goals would remain roughly the same
as in FY2002. The EPM allocation for clean/safe water would be reduced $63.2 million, or
13%, under the plan. This reflects the Administration’s decision not to request about $93.6
million in congressional earmarks in the EPM account. For waste management/emergency
response, the EPM allocation would increase $24.8 million or 15%, almost all of which is
accounted for by the new Brownfields grant program administration responsibilities, for
which the Administration has proposed $29.5 million. (Another $170.5 million in
Brownfields grants would be funded separately under the State and Tribal Assistance Grants
account, for a total Brownfields request of $200 million.) The Senate Committee on
Appropriations approved the total request for the Brownfields program, but the House
Committee on Appropriations would provide $2.3 million less for Brownfields
administrative costs under the EPM account. For sound science activities, the EPM portion
would increase 6%, or $3.6 million. This reflects the elimination of the Common Sense
Initiative ($1.8 million) which the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has labeled as
“ineffective” and the addition of $9.6 million in EPM funds for an expanded regulatory
development process, strengthened economic analyses, and regulatory innovation.
Another program that OMB has labeled as “ineffective” is the environmental education
program. The President’s budget plans to end EPA’s activities authorized under the 1990
National Environmental Education Act ($9.2 million in FY2002) and transfer them to the
National Science Foundation (NSF). As discussed earlier, it also would eliminate EPA’s
STAR Fellowship Program ($9.75 million in FY2002), which has been funded under the
S&T account, and would transfer those functions to the NSF “as part of a larger effort to
increase environmental science education programs” there. (The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration’s Sea Grant program’s funding level of $57 million would also
be transferred to NSF under this plan.) According the NSF’s budget summary, NSF would
work in partnership with the relevant agencies to sustain each program’s major objectives
while incorporating NSF’s experience with merit-based, competitive processes. The Senate
Committee on Appropriations did not approve the Administrations’s proposal to transfer
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EPA’s environmental education and STAR program activities to the NSF, and would provide
funding in FY2003 at the same level as enacted for FY2002. The House Committee on
Appropriations also rejected the Administration’s transfer proposal, and would continue
funding for the environmental education program at the FY2002 enacted level. While the
House Committee on Appropriations would reinstate the STAR program at EPA, it would
reduce funding for the program to $5.0 million in FY2003.
The EPM account funds most of EPA’s enforcement effort. For EPA’s enforcement
goal the budget seeks $402.5 million, $8.9 million, or 2% more than in FY2002. This reflects
$15.0 million in new funds under the STAG account for proposed enforcement grants to
states, while at the same time EPA’s own enforcement resources would be reduced $10.0
million under the EPM account. This would involve a reduction of 99 full time equivalent
positions (or FTEs). Appropriators rejected a similar plan during the consideration of the
FY2002 request. The Senate Budget Committee-reported version of the FY2003 budget
resolution, S. Con. Res. 100, assumes that this proposal will not be adopted. The Senate
Committee on Appropriations also denied this requested change and included extensive
report language on enforcement. It directed the agency to stop redirecting civil enforcement
resources to criminal enforcement and to restore civil enforcement funding. It also directed
the agency to develop a plan to fill vacant positions in the Office of Enforcement and
Compliance. The House Committee on Appropriations also denied the requested shift in
enforcement responsibilities.
Office of Inspector General
The President’s FY2003 budget sought, and both the Senate Committee on
Appropriations and the House Committee on Appropriations approved, $35.3 million for the
Office of Inspector General, $1.3 million more than in FY2002.
Buildings and Facilities
The Administration requested $42.9 million for the Buildings and Facilities account for
FY2003, which is $17.6 million, or 69.5%, more than the FY2002 funding level, reflecting
new security needs. Both the Senate Committee on Appropriations and the House
Committee on Appropriations approved the requested amount.
Oil Spill Response
For EPA’s oil spill response activities, the President’s FY2003 budget sought $15.6
million, $600,000 more than in FY2002. Both the Senate Committee on Appropriations and
the House Committee on Appropriations approved the requested amount.
Superfund
In its FY2003 request, EPA sought $1.27 billion for the Superfund account, about $38
million less than the FY2002 funding level of $1.31 billion (which included $41.3 million
in supplemental funding for terrorism-related activities). The Senate Committee on
Appropriations approved the request amount of $1.27 billion, whereas the House Committee
on Appropriations would provide $1.42 billion. Taxing authority to support the Superfund
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Trust Fund expired on December 31, 1995, and since then the fund balance has been
declining. It is anticipated that trust monies will only be available in significant amounts
through FY2003. (Also part of the President’s FY2003 budget is a $200 million request for
cleaning up certain urban sites, called Brownfields, that have development potential. None
of this is funded under the Superfund account. Most of this, $170.5 million for grants, would
be funded in the State and Tribal Assistance Grants account, and the remainder of $29.5
million would be funded as EPA’s administrative expenses under the EPM account.) As
reported by the Senate Budget Committee, the FY2003 budget resolution, S.Con.Res. 100,
includes a Sense of the Senate on Superfund which states:
(a) FINDINGS- The Senate finds the following:
(1) The most contaminated, toxic sites in the country are cleaned up through the
Superfund program;
(2) The President’s budget assumes sharp reductions in the number of Superfund sites to
be cleaned up in fiscal year 2003; and
(3) This resolution provides a significant increase in funding for the Superfund program
for fiscal year 2003 compared to the President’s budget proposal.
(b) SENSE OF THE SENATE- It is the sense of the Senate that funding for Superfund
be at a level sufficient to significantly increase the number of toxic waste sites cleaned
up through the Superfund program.
The Senate Budget Committee’s resolution also assumes that the $1.27 billion request
for Superfund will be increased by $133 million. As indicated above, the Senate Committee
on Appropriations approved the requested amount, but would not provide an increase in
funding. As passed by the House, the FY2003 budget resolution, H.Con.Res. 353, does not
contain any funding assumptions regarding the level of support to provide for Superfund, nor
does it include any commentary on the implementation of the program. The House
Committee on Appropriations would increase the program’s funding to $1.42 billion.
Two major studies have concluded that the nation’s toxics cleanup program has major
challenges ahead and requires large funding levels for the next few years. Looking ahead,
the General Accounting Office (GAO) has estimated that by 2008, 85% of all non-federal
National Priority List sites will be cleaned up (GAO/RCED-00-25, Superfund: Information
on the Program’s Funding and Status
). This will entail annual appropriations on the average
of at least $875 million through FY2008, according to GAO. GAO estimates that it will cost
between $8.2 billion and $11.7 billion for studies, design and remedial work to clean up all
remaining sites. On July 10, 2001, Resources for the Future (RFF) released its EPA-funded
report requested by the House and Senate appropriations committees. Superfund’s Future:
What Will It Cost?
estimates that for fiscal years 2000 through 2009, EPA will have to spend
$14 billion to $16.4 billion on the Superfund program and that appropriations will have to
be maintained at current levels through these years. RFF anticipated in its base case scenario
that “EPA’s need for Superfund monies will not decrease appreciably below FY1999
expenditures of $1.54 billion until 2006...”.
In FY2003, EPA’s budget proposal anticipates 285 removal response actions, down 17,
or 6%, when compared to FY2002. It also anticipates 40 construction completions, 7 or 18%
fewer than in FY2002. The reduction in these measures of the Superfund program has caused
some concern, given the remaining Superfund cleanup challenges.
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The President’s FY2003 budget does not propose renewing the taxes that support the
Superfund Trust Fund. It indicates that the balance of the fund on October 1, 2002, the
beginning of FY2003, will be $427 million. The requested appropriation of nearly $1.3
billion includes $593 million, or 46%, derived from the fund and $700 million from general
appropriations. With an estimated balance of $28 million anticipated at the beginning of
FY2004, the fund could only be a very minor contributor for that year although some income
sources for the fund - recoveries, interest, offsetting receipts - could increase the amount
available. If the Superfund account levels are to be maintained, general revenues would have
to fund a significant part of the program for that year.
The President’s FY2003 budget represents a significant change in hazardous waste
cleanup policy. For the first time in the Superfund program’s 22-year history, the taxpayer
would be funding the majority -- 54% -- of the program. Some have interpreted this as a
departure from a longstanding “polluter pays” policy in which the industry-maintained trust
fund supported the majority - roughly 70% - of the Superfund program for many years. On
February 25, 2001, in response to questions about the Administration’s support of the
Superfund program, the President stated: “...we’re looking at ways to reform the system to
make sure it works, to make sure it actually accomplishes what Congress wants it to
accomplish.”
The role of general revenues for Superfund cleanup will be a continuing matter for the
appropriators to consider. Whether the Superfund tax is reinstated is likely to be a point of
contention. Superfund tax issues have generally been addressed by the revenue committees.
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks
The President’s FY2003 budget sought $72.3 million, about the same as in FY2002, for
the Leaking Underground Storage Tank (LUST) program, which assists states in addressing
substandard underground petroleum storage tanks. Both the Senate Committee on
Appropriations and the House Committee on Appropriations approved the requested amount.
The status of state LUST programs is a significant issue. Many states are finding it
difficult to finance their programs. At the same time, the fact that the balance of the LUST
Trust Fund has passed the $2.0 billion threshold and the likelihood it will grow even larger,
if not drawn upon significantly, has led some to call for allowing greater use of the fund
balance by states. (For further discussion, refer to CRS Report RS21201, Leaking
Underground Storage Tanks: Program Status and Issues
.)
State and Tribal Assistance Programs
The FY2003 request for the State and Tribal Assistance Grants (STAG) account is once
again particularly controversial in Congress since the President requests $3.46 billion, $274.5
million (or 7.3%) less than FY2002 funding level of $3.74 billion. This reflects the
Administration’s decision not to request funds for activities and grants earmarked in the
FY2002 conference report. The Senate Committee on Appropriations approved $4.01
billion, adding $140 million for special needs grants. The House Committee on
Appropriations approved $3.79 billion, adding $228 million for targeted projects. The chief
elements of the STAG request include:
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! $1.21 billion, as compared to the FY2002 funding level of $1.35 billion for
Clean Water State Revolving Funds; the Senate Committee on
Appropriations approved $1.45 billion; the House Committee on
Appropriations approved $1.30 billion;
! $850.0 million for Drinking Water State Revolving Funds, the same as in
FY2002; the Senate Committee approved $875 million; the House
Committee approved the requested amount;
! $75.0 million for Mexican Border infrastructure projects, the same as in
FY2002 and as approved by the both the House and Senate Committees;
! $40.0 million for Alaska Native Village water infrastructure projects, the
same as in FY2002; the Senate Committee approved $45.0 million; the
House Committee approved $35.0 million;
! $1.16 billion, $79 million more than in FY2002, for traditional grants to
states for their administration of various environmental programs; the Senate
Committee approved the requested increase; the House Committee approved
$1.17 billion; and
! $170.5 million for the Brownfields program, including $50 million for
assessment grants and $120.5 million for capitalizing Brownfields state
revolving funds; both the House and Senate Committees approved the
requested amounts.
The major capital needs that communities face for funding drinking water and
wastewater facility construction remain the chief issue associated with the STAG account.
The primary federal contribution to help meet these needs has been through the Clean Water
Act and Safe Drinking Water Act State Revolving Fund (SRF) programs. Under these
programs, EPA makes grants to states to capitalize state funds from which states loan monies
to communities.
Despite these programs, the total national needs estimated by EPA and various
stakeholders remain great. EPA’s 1996 needs survey for Clean Water SRF monies estimated
remaining needs at $139.5 billion through the year 2016, while sewerage agencies estimate
funding needs may be as high as $330 billion. EPA acknowledges that funding needs exceed
levels in the 1996 needs survey and is working on more current assessments. The needs of
small communities remain a special component of this problem. Since most localities are
now financing projects through SRF loans, any remaining direct grants for special projects
have become controversial.
EPA’s 2001 drinking water needs survey indicated that public water systems need to
invest $151 billion over 20 years. Part of the increase is attributable to new regulations and
about half due to installation and rehabilitation of transmission and distribution systems.
One estimate has spotlighted the FY2003 total water SRF request even more. A
stakeholder group, the Water Infrastructure Network (WIN), in Clean and Safe Water for the
21st Century
, estimates total wastewater and drinking water capital needs at around $1 trillion
over the next 20 years, even more if operation and maintenance (O&M) needs are added in.
(O&M needs currently are not eligible for federal assistance). WIN estimates that 20-year
capital funding needs for wastewater are about $460 billion and for drinking water are about
$480 billion. WIN foresees a $23 billion per year funding gap: $12 billion for wastewater and
$11 billion for drinking water capital needs.
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On September 30, 2002, EPA issued its Clean Water and Drinking Water Infrastructure
Gap Analysis, which estimates that funding needs for wastewater will be $271 billion and
for drinking water will be $263 billion, over the next 20 years. These estimates include the
costs of O&M needs, and are based on the assumption that current spending levels will
remain the same. Assuming a spending increase of 3% per year, EPA’s estimates are $31
billion for wastewater needs and $45 billion for drinking water needs.
As reported by the Senate Budget Committee, the FY2003 budget resolution, S. Con.
Res. 100, assumes full funding of the Clean Water SRF. This appears to mean the FY2002
funding level of $1.35 billion, and would assume that the $1.21 billion request would be
increased by about $150 million. As indicated above, the Senate Committee on
Appropriations approved $1.45 billion.
For state administrative grants, the President’s FY2003 budget sought, and the Senate
Committee on Appropriations approved, $1.16 billion, $79 million more than the FY2002
funding level of $1.08 billion. These grants fund state programs which administer various
environmental protection programs. Most state grant programs would be funded at FY2002
levels. Funding for state section 106 water grants would be reduced $12 million, or 6%,
while funding for water quality cooperative agreements would double to a level of $39
million. Under the President’s FY2003 budget, new areas would also be funded: $15 million
for state enforcement grants and $170.5 million for Brownfields grants. The latter includes
$50 million for state administration and assessments and $120.5 million for capitalizing
Brownfields revolving funds in the states. The President’s FY2003 budget seeks funding of
$20 million for the Targeted Watersheds Project for grants to watershed stakeholders “to
implement watershed restoration efforts in a discrete set of priority watersheds.”
As discussed earlier, considerable interest has focused on the proposal to shift more
enforcement responsibility to the states. The Administration has requested $15 million in
FY2003 for new grants to state enforcement programs, and correspondingly, would reduce
the number of FTEs in EPA’s enforcement office by some 100 positions. During
consideration of the FY2002 request, appropriators rejected a similar proposal, and both the
Senate Committee on Appropriations and the House Committee on Appropriations rejected
this proposal again for FY2003.
LEGISLATION
S. 2797 (Mikulski)
Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and
Independent Agencies Appropriations Bill for FY2003. Reported July 25, 2002, from the
Senate Committee on Appropriations (S.Rept. 107-222).
H.R. 5605 (Walsh)
Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and
Independent Agencies Appropriations Bill for FY2003. Reported October 10, 2002, from
the House Committee on Appropriations (H.Rept. 107-740).
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CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS, REPORTS, AND DOCUMENTS
U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on VA-HUD-
Independent Agencies. EPA’s FY2003 Appropriation. Hearings, 107th Congress, 2nd
Session. March 12, 2002. Washington, GPO (to be published)
Senate. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on VA-HUD-Independent Agencies.
EPA’s FY2003 Appropriation. Hearings, 107th Congress, 2nd Session. March 20, 2002.
Washington, GPO (to be published)
U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Subcommittee on
Water Resources and the Environment. EPA’s FY2003 Budget. Hearings, 107th
Congress, 2nd Session. February 14, 2002. Washington, GPO. (to be published)
U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Environment and Public Works. EPA’s FY2002
Budget Proposal. Hearings, 107th Congress, 2nd Session. February 13, 2002.
Washington, GPO. (to be published)
CHRONOLOGY
02-04-02 – President submits FY2003 budget request, including $7.62 billion for EPA.
07-25-02 – Senate Committee on Appropriations reports S. 2797 (S.Rept. 107-222), which
includes $8.30 billion for EPA.
10-10-02 – House Committee on Appropriations reports H.R. 5605 (H.Rept. 107-740),
which includes $8.20 billion for EPA.
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