Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies:
Overview of FY2019 Appropriations


Updated January 30, 2019
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
R44934




Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2018 Appropriations

Summary
The Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies appropriations bill includes funding for more
than 30 agencies and entities. They include most of the Department of the Interior (DOI) as well
as agencies within other departments, such as the Forest Service within the Department of
Agriculture and the Indian Health Service within the Department of Health and Human Services.
The bill also provides funding for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), arts and cultural
agencies, and other organizations and entities. At issue for Congress is determining the amount,
terms, and conditions of funding for FY2019 for agencies and programs within the bill.
From October 1, 2018, through December 21, 2018, Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies
received appropriations under a continuing resolution (CR) because no regular appropriations
were enacted before the start of the 2019 fiscal year. The CR expired after December 21, 2018,
before being extended on January 25, 2019, through February 15, 2019. Due to the lapse in funds,
a partial government shutdown went into effect. Agencies in the Interior bill generally operated
under “contingency” plans that summarize activities that would cease and activities that would
continue during a lapse in appropriations.
Currently, the CR generally provides funding at the FY2018 level (in Division G of P.L. 115-
141). It also generally provides funds for continuing projects and activities under the same
authority and conditions and to the same extent and manner as for FY2018. However, the CR
included certain exceptions (“anomalies”) that changed the purposes or amounts of funds,
extended expiring provisions of law, or made other changes to existing law.
For FY2019, President Trump requested $28.34 billion for Interior, Environment, and Related
Agencies. For DOI agencies (Title I), the request was $10.59 billion, or 37.4% of the total
requested. For EPA (Title II), the request was $6.19 billion, or 21.8% of the total. For the more
than 20 entities funded in Title III, the request was $11.56 billion, or 40.8% of the total. The
President’s request for FY2019 also included a legislative proposal to authorize a $1.52 billion
cap adjustment to the discretionary spending limits in law for certain wildland fire suppression
activities. Budget authority designated for those activities would cause the limits to be adjusted,
making those funds effectively not subject to the discretionary spending limits.
H.R. 6147 (115th Congress), as passed by the House on July 19, 2018, contained $35.31 billion
for FY2019 for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies. H.R. 6147 (115th Congress), as
passed by the Senate on August 1, 2018, included $35.91 billion for FY2019. Neither chamber
approved a discretionary cap adjustment for wildland fire suppression for FY2019 as proposed by
the President. However, Congress enacted a similar proposal as part of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141), although the adjustment becomes available in FY2020.
For FY2018, the total enacted appropriation for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies was
$36.59 billion, including $35.31 billion in regular appropriations (in P.L. 115-141) and $1.28
billion in emergency supplemental appropriations for disaster relief (in P.L. 115-72 and P.L. 115-
123). The President, House, and Senate each proposed less funding for FY2019 relative to the
FY2018 enacted total of $36.59 billion, proposing 22.5%, 3.5%, and 1.8% less, respectively. In
contrast, relative to the regular FY2018 appropriation of $35.31 billion, the President would have
reduced funding (19.8%), the House would have provided nearly level appropriations (<0.1%
decrease), and the Senate would have increased funding (1.7%) for FY2019.
For individual agencies and programs in the bill, there are many differences among the funding
levels enacted for FY2018 and those supported by the President, House, and Senate for FY2019.
This report highlights funding for selected agencies and programs that have been among the many
of interest to Congress, stakeholders, and the public.
Congressional Research Service

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Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Overview of Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies ............................................................. 2
Title I. Department of the Interior ............................................................................................. 3
Title II. Environmental Protection Agency ............................................................................... 4
Title III. Related Agencies......................................................................................................... 4

FY2019 Appropriations ................................................................................................................... 5
Components of President Trump’s Request .............................................................................. 5
Overview of FY2019 Requested, House-Passed, and Senate-Passed Appropriations as
Compared with FY2018 Enacted Appropriations .................................................................. 7
Selected Agencies and Programs............................................................................................... 9
Bureau of Land Management .............................................................................................. 9
Environmental Protection Agency ...................................................................................... 9
Fish and Wildlife Service .................................................................................................. 10
Forest Service .................................................................................................................... 11
Indian Affairs ..................................................................................................................... 11
Indian Health Service ......................................................................................................... 11
Land and Water Conservation Fund .................................................................................. 12
National Park Service ....................................................................................................... 12
Payments in Lieu of Taxes ................................................................................................ 13
Smithsonian Institution ..................................................................................................... 13
U.S. Geological Survey ..................................................................................................... 13
Wildland Fire Management .............................................................................................. 14

Figures
Figure 1. Components of President Trump’s FY2019 Request for Interior, Environment,
and Related Agencies ................................................................................................................... 7
Figure 2. Appropriations for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, by Major Title,
FY2018-FY2019 .......................................................................................................................... 8

Tables
Table 1. Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: FY2018-FY2019 Appropriations ........... 14

Contacts
Author Information ....................................................................................................................... 17
Congressional Research Service

Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

Introduction
This report focuses on FY2019 discretionary appropriations for Interior, Environment, and
Related Agencies.1 At issue for Congress is determining the amount of funding for agencies and
programs in the bill, and the terms and conditions of such funding.
This report first presents a short overview of the agencies and other entities funded in the bill. It
then describes the appropriations requested by President Trump for FY2019 for Interior,
Environment, and Related Agencies. Next, it briefly compares the appropriations enacted for
FY2018,2 requested by the President for FY2019, passed by the House on July 19, 2018, for
FY2019, and passed by the Senate on August 1, 2018, for FY2019.3 The comparison focuses on
several agencies and issues that have been among those of interest to Congress. They include the
Bureau of Land Management, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Fish and Wildlife
Service, Forest Service, Indian Affairs, Indian Health Service, Land and Water Conservation
Fund, National Park Service, Payments in Lieu of Taxes Program, Smithsonian Institution, U.S.
Geological Survey, and Wildland Fire Management.
Currently, Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies are generally receiving continuing
appropriations through February 15, 2019,4 at the FY2018 level (in Division G of P.L. 115-141).
Continuing appropriations are being provided because no regular appropriations have been
enacted for FY2019. The continuing resolution (CR) generally provides funds for continuing
projects and activities under the same authority and conditions and to the same extent and manner
as for FY2018. However, the CR included certain exceptions (“anomalies”) that changed the
purposes or amounts of funds, extended expiring provisions of law, or made other changes to
existing law.
From October 1, 2018, through December 21, 2018, Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies
also received appropriations under a CR because no regular appropriations were enacted before
the start of the 2019 fiscal year.5 However, the CR expired after December 21, 2018, before being
extended on January 25, 2019, through February 15, 2019. As a result of the lapse in funds, a
partial government shutdown went into effect between December 22, 2018, and January 25, 2019.
During that time, agencies in the Interior bill generally operated under “contingency” plans that

1 Hereinafter, the annual Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies appropriations bill is sometimes referred to as
the Interior bill. Many of the agencies that receive discretionary appropriations through the Interior bill also receive
mandatory appropriations under various authorizing statutes. This report does not address mandatory appropriations.
2 Regular appropriations for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies for FY2018 were included in Division G of
P.L. 115-141, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018. In addition, some agencies in the Interior bill also received
FY2018 emergency supplemental appropriations for disaster relief through other laws: P.L. 115-72, the Additional
Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017, and P.L. 115-123, Division B, Subdivision
1, Further Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2018.
3 In the 115th Congress, the House included FY2019 appropriations for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies in
Division A of H.R. 6147, as passed by the House on July 19, 2018. In the 115th Congress, the Senate also included
FY2019 appropriations for these agencies in Division A of H.R. 6147, as passed by the Senate on August 1, 2018. In
earlier action, the Senate Appropriations Committee reported S. 3073 (115th Congress) with FY2019 appropriations for
Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies.
4 Continuing appropriations through February 15, 2019, are being provided under H.J.Res. 28, which was signed by the
President on January 25, 2019.
5 Continuing appropriations were provided from October 1, 2018, through December 7, 2018, under P.L. 115-245, and
were extended through December 21, 2018, by P.L. 115-298.
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Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

summarize activities that would cease and activities that would continue during a lapse in
appropriations.6
In the 116th Congress, the House and Senate have considered a variety of other measures to
provide FY2019 funding to Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies. These measures include
relatively short-term as well as full-year funding. They are identified on the CRS Appropriations
Status Table at http://www.crs.gov/AppropriationsStatusTable/Index.
Appropriations are complex. Budget justifications for some agencies are large, often several
hundred pages long and containing numerous funding, programmatic, and legislative changes for
congressional consideration. Further, appropriations laws provide funds for numerous accounts,
activities, and subactivities, and the accompanying explanatory statements provide additional
directives and other important information. This report generally does not provide in-depth
information at the account and subaccount levels, nor does it detail budgetary reorganizations or
legislative changes enacted in law or proposed for FY2019. For information on a particular
agency or on individual accounts, programs, or activities administered by a particular agency,
contact the key policy staff listed at the end of this report. In addition, for selected reports related
to appropriations for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, such as individual agencies
(e.g., National Park Service) or cross-cutting programs (e.g., Wildland Fire Management), see the
“Interior & Environment Appropriations” subissue under the “Appropriations” Issue Area page
on the Congressional Research Service (CRS) website.7
Overview of Interior, Environment, and
Related Agencies
The annual Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies appropriations bill includes funding and
other provisions for agencies and programs in three separate federal departments and for
numerous related agencies. The Interior bill typically contains three primary appropriations titles
and a fourth title with general provisions. Title I provides funding for most Department of the
Interior (DOI) agencies,8 many of which manage land and other natural resource or regulatory
programs. Title I also typically includes general provisions related to DOI agencies. Title II
contains appropriations and administrative provisions for EPA. Title III, Related Agencies,
currently funds 23 agencies in other departments, such as the Forest Service in the Department of
Agriculture and the Indian Health Service in the Department of Health and Human Services; arts
and cultural agencies, including the Smithsonian Institution; and various other organizations and
entities. Title III also contains administrative provisions for some agencies funded therein. A
fourth title of the bill, General Provisions, typically contains additional guidance and direction for
agencies in the bill. In addition, in the FY2018 appropriations law and the House- and Senate-
passed bills for FY2019, Title IV also included appropriations, primarily for EPA. Selected major
agencies in the Interior bill are briefly described below.

6 Agency contingency plans are listed on the White House website at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/information-
for-agencies/agency-contingency-plans/.
7 For selected relevant reports, see Congressional Research Service (CRS), “Interior & Environment Appropriations,”
at http://www.crs.gov/search/#/0?termsToSearch=Interior%20%26%20Environment%20Appropriations&orderBy=
Date&navIds=4294930742.
8 The exceptions are the Bureau of Reclamation and the Central Utah Project, which receive appropriations through
Energy and Water Development appropriations laws. For information on FY2019 appropriations for these entities, see
CRS Report R45258, Energy and Water Development: FY2019 Appropriations, by Mark Holt and Corrie E. Clark.
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Title I. Department of the Interior
DOI’s mission is to protect and manage the nation’s natural resources and cultural heritage;
provide scientific and other information about those resources and natural hazards; and exercise
trust responsibilities and other commitments to American Indians, Alaska Natives, and affiliated
island communities.9 There are eight DOI agencies and two other broad accounts funded in the
Interior bill that carry out this mission. Hereinafter, these agencies and broad accounts are
referred to collectively as the 10 DOI “agencies.” DOI agencies funded in the Interior bill include
the following:10
 The Bureau of Land Management administers about 246 million acres of public
land, mostly in the West, for diverse uses such as energy and mineral
development, livestock grazing, recreation, and preservation. The agency also is
responsible for about 700 million acres of federal onshore subsurface mineral
estate throughout the nation and supervises the mineral operations on about 56
million acres of Indian trust lands.
 The Fish and Wildlife Service administers 89 million acres of federal land within
the National Wildlife Refuge System and other areas,11 including 77 million acres
in Alaska. It also manages several large marine refuges and marine national
monuments, sometimes jointly with other federal agencies. In addition, the Fish
and Wildlife Service is the primary agency responsible for implementing the
Endangered Species Act (16 U.S.C. §§1531 et seq.) through listing of species;
consulting with other federal agencies; collaborating with private entities and
state, tribal, and local governments; and other measures. It is also the primary
agency responsible for promoting wildlife habitat; enforcing federal wildlife
laws; supporting wildlife and ecosystem science; conserving migratory birds;
administering grants to aid state fish and wildlife programs; and coordinating
with state, international, and other federal agencies on fish and wildlife issues.
 The National Park Service administers 80 million acres of federal land within the
National Park System, including 418 separate units in the 50 states, District of
Columbia, and U.S. territories. Roughly two-thirds of the system’s lands are in
Alaska. The National Park Service has a dual mission—to preserve unique
resources and to provide for their enjoyment by the public. The agency also
supports and promotes some resource conservation activities outside the National
Park System through grant and technical assistance programs and cooperation
with partners.
 The U.S. Geological Survey is a science agency that provides physical and
biological information related to geological resources; climate and land use
change; natural hazards; and energy, mineral, water, and biological sciences and
resources. In addition, it is the federal government’s principal civilian mapping

9 This statement is taken from the Department of the Interior (DOI) website at https://www.doi.gov/whoweare.
10 In addition, Interior appropriations bills provide funding within two broad DOI accounts covering diverse programs.
In FY2018, the Departmental Offices account funded the Office of the Secretary, Insular Affairs, Office of the
Solicitor, Office of Inspector General, and Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians. The Department-Wide
Programs account funded DOI Wildland Fire Management, the Central Hazardous Materials Fund, the Natural
Resource Damage Assessment Fund, the Working Capital Fund, and the Office of Natural Resources Revenue.
11 This is the acreage over which the Fish and Wildlife Service has primary jurisdiction in the United States and the
territories, but the figure excludes acreage in marine national monuments over which the agency has jurisdiction.
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Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

agency and a primary source of data on the quality of the nation’s water
resources.
 The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management manages development of the nation’s
offshore conventional and renewable energy resources in the Atlantic, the Pacific,
the Gulf of Mexico, and the Arctic. These resources are located in areas covering
approximately 1.7 billion acres located beyond state waters, mostly in the Alaska
region (more than 1 billion acres) but also off all coastal states.12
 The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement provides regulatory and
safety oversight for resource development in the outer continental shelf. Among
its responsibilities are oil and gas permitting, facility inspections, environmental
compliance, and oil spill response planning.
 The Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement works with states
and tribes to reclaim abandoned coal mining sites. The agency also regulates
active coal mining sites to minimize environmental impacts during mining and to
reclaim affected lands and waters after mining.
Indian Affairs agencies provide and fund a variety of services to federally
recognized American Indian and Alaska Native tribes and their members.
Historically, these agencies have taken the lead in federal dealings with tribes.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs is responsible for programs that include government
operations, courts, law enforcement, fire protection, social programs, roads,
economic development, employment assistance, housing repair, irrigation, dams,
Indian rights protection, implementation of land and water settlements, and
management of trust assets (real estate and natural resources). The Bureau of
Indian Education funds an elementary and secondary school system, institutions
of higher education, and other educational programs.13
Title II. Environmental Protection Agency
EPA has no organic statute establishing an overall mission; rather, the agency administers various
environmental statutes, which have an express or general objective to protect human health and
the environment. Primary responsibilities include the implementation of federal statutes
regulating air quality, water quality, drinking water safety, pesticides, toxic substances,
management and disposal of solid and hazardous wastes, and cleanup of environmental
contamination. EPA also awards grants to assist states and local governments in implementing
federal law and complying with federal requirements to control pollution. The agency also
administers programs that provide financial assistance for public wastewater and drinking water
infrastructure projects.
Title III. Related Agencies
Title III of the Interior bill currently funds 23 agencies, organizations, and other entities, which
are collectively referred to hereinafter as the “Related Agencies.” Among the Related Agencies
funded in the Interior bill, roughly 95% of the funding is typically provided to the following:

12 For a discussion of state and federal waters, see CRS Report RL33404, Offshore Oil and Gas Development: Legal
Framework
, by Adam Vann.
13 Hereinafter, “Indian Affairs” refers to the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Bureau of Indian Education.
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Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

 The Forest Service in the Department of Agriculture manages 193 million acres
of federal land within the National Forest System—consisting of national forests,
national grasslands, and other areas—in 43 states, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands. It also provides technical and financial assistance to
states, tribes, and private forest landowners and conducts research on sustaining
forest resources for future generations.
 The Indian Health Service in the Department of Health and Human Services
provides medical and environmental health services for more than 2 million
American Indians and Alaska Natives. Health care is provided through a system
of facilities and programs operated by the agency, tribes and tribal organizations,
and urban Indian organizations. The agency operates 26 hospitals, 57 health
centers, and 21 health stations. Tribes and tribal organizations, through Indian
Health Service contracts and compacts, operate another 22 hospitals, 286 health
centers, 62 health stations, and 134 Alaska Native village clinics.14
 The Smithsonian Institution is a museum and research complex consisting of 19
museums and galleries, the National Zoo, and 9 research facilities throughout the
United States and around the world.15 Established by federal legislation in 1846
with the acceptance of a trust donation by the institution’s namesake benefactor,
the Smithsonian is funded by both federal appropriations and a private trust.
 The National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the
Humanities make up the National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities.
The National Endowment for the Arts is a major federal source of support for all
arts disciplines. Since 1965, it has awarded more than 145,000 grants, which
have been distributed to all states. The National Endowment for the Humanities
generally supports grants for humanities education, research, preservation, and
public humanities programs; creation of regional humanities centers; and
development of humanities programs under the jurisdiction of state humanities
councils. Since 1965, it has awarded approximately 63,000 grants. It also
supports a Challenge Grant program to stimulate and match private donations in
support of humanities institutions.
FY2019 Appropriations
Components of President Trump’s Request
For FY2019, President Trump requested $28.34 billion for the more than 30 agencies and entities
in the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies appropriations bill. The President also
requested the establishment of a new adjustment to the discretionary spending limits for certain
wildland fire suppression activities, and he requested $1.52 billion to be made available through

14 Department of Health and Human Services, Indian Health Service (IHS), Justification of Estimates for
Appropriations Committees
, p. CJ-232, at https://www.ihs.gov/budgetformulation/includes/themes/responsive2017/
display_objects/documents/FY2019CongressionalJustification.pdf#page=264. For additional information on the
agency, see CRS Report R43330, The Indian Health Service (IHS): An Overview, by Elayne J. Heisler.
15 These statistics are from the Smithsonian Institution’s website at http://www.si.edu/About.
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link to page 10 Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

the cap adjustment for FY2019.16 Budget authority designated for those activities would cause the
spending limits to be adjusted, making it effectively not subject to the limits.17
For the 10 major DOI agencies in Title I of the bill, the request was $10.59 billion, or 37.4% of
the $28.34 billion total requested. For EPA, funded in Title II of the bill, the request was $6.19
billion, or 21.8% of the total. For the 23 agencies and other entities funded in Title III of the bill,
the request was $11.56 billion, or 40.8% of the total.
Appropriations for agencies vary widely for reasons relating to the number, breadth, and
complexity of agency responsibilities; alternative sources of funding (e.g., mandatory
appropriations); and Administration and congressional priorities, among other factors. Thus,
although the President’s FY2019 request covered more than 30 agencies, funding for a small
subset of these agencies accounted for most of the total. For example, the requested
appropriations for three agencies—EPA, Forest Service, and Indian Health Service—were more
than half (57.4%) of the total request.18 Further, three-quarters (75.5%) of the request was for
these three agencies and two others, National Park Service and Indian Affairs.19
For DOI agencies, the FY2019 requests ranged from $121.7 million for the Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement to $2.70 billion for the National Park Service. The requests
for 5 of the 10 agencies exceeded $1 billion. Nearly half (48.3%) of the $10.59 billion requested
for DOI agencies was for two agencies—the National Park Service ($2.70 billion) and Indian
Affairs ($2.41 billion).
For Related Agencies in Title III, the requested funding levels exhibited even more variation. The
President sought amounts ranging from no funding for two entities—grants under National
Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs and the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission—to $5.42
billion for the Indian Health Service. The Forest Service would be the only other agency to
receive more than $4 billion. The next-largest request was for the Smithsonian Institution, at
$957.4 million. By contrast, 19 entities would each receive $62 million or less, including 12 with
appropriations of less than $10 million each.
Figure 1 identifies the share of the President’s FY2019 request for particular agencies in the
Interior bill.

16 For information on discretionary spending limits, see CRS Report R41965, The Budget Control Act of 2011, by Bill
Heniff Jr., Elizabeth Rybicki, and Shannon M. Mahan and CRS Report R44874, The Budget Control Act: Frequently
Asked Questions
, by Grant A. Driessen and Megan S. Lynch.
17 Congress enacted a budget cap adjustment for wildfire suppression costs, beginning in FY2020, as part of P.L. 115-
141, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018.
18 Information on the President’s FY2019 request for appropriations for the Forest Service is contained in CRS In
Focus IF10898, Forest Service: FY2018 Appropriations and FY2019 Request, by Katie Hoover. Information on the
President’s FY2019 request for appropriations for the Indian Health Service appropriations is contained in CRS Report
R45201, Indian Health Service (IHS) FY2019 Budget Request and Funding History: A Fact Sheet, by Elayne J. Heisler.
19 Information on the President’s FY2019 request for appropriations for the National Park Service is contained in CRS
In Focus IF10900, National Park Service: FY2019 Appropriations, by Laura B. Comay.
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Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

Figure 1. Components of President Trump’s FY2019 Request for
Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies

Source: Prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) with data from the House Appropriations
Committee.
Notes: Agencies shown in shades of red are in the Department of the Interior, Title I of the bill. The
Environmental Protection Agency, shown in green, is in Title II of the bill. Agencies shown in shades of gold are
Related Agencies, Title III of the bill. Figures may not add to total shown due to rounding.
Overview of FY2019 Requested, House-Passed, and Senate-Passed
Appropriations as Compared with FY2018 Enacted Appropriations
For FY2018, the total enacted appropriation for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies was
$36.59 billion. This total included $35.31 billion in regular appropriations and $1.28 billion in
emergency supplemental appropriations for disaster relief.20 As noted, for FY2019, the President
sought $28.34 billion for agencies in the Interior bill and a discretionary cap adjustment of $1.52
billion for wildland fire suppression. Neither the House nor the Senate version of H.R. 6147, as
passed during the 115th Congress, contained the cap adjustment.21
H.R. 6147, as passed by the House on July 19, 2018, would have provided $35.31 billion for
FY2019. H.R. 6147, as passed by the Senate on August 1, 2018, would have provided $35.91
billion for FY2019. Thus, when including the supplemental disaster funding, the President,

20 Of the $1.28 billion, $576.5 million was included in P.L. 115-72 for wildfire suppression and management by the
Forest Service and the Department of the Interior, and $698.9 million was included in P.L. 115-123 for various
activities of several agencies.
21 Neither the House nor the Senate version of the bill contained the cap adjustment for FY2019. However, a cap
adjustment was enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141), and is scheduled to go
into effect in FY2020.
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Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

House, and Senate would have provided less overall funding for FY2019 as compared to the
FY2018 enacted total of $36.59 billion, as follows:
 $8.25 billion (22.5%) less under the President’s request,
 $1.28 billion (3.5%) less under the House-passed bill, and
 $674.4 million (1.8%) less under the Senate-passed bill.
However, relative to the regular FY2018 appropriation of $35.31 billion (excluding the
supplemental disaster funding), for FY2019:
 the President’s request would reduce funding by $6.98 billion (19.8%),
 the House-passed bill would have provided nearly level appropriations, with a
decrease of $5.5 million (<0.1%), and
 the Senate-passed bill would have increased funding by $601.0 million (1.7%).
Figure 2 depicts the regular enacted appropriations for FY2018, requested by the President for
FY2019, in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress) as passed by the House for FY2019, and in H.R. 6147
(115th Congress) as passed by the Senate for FY2019. It shows the appropriations contained in
each of the three main appropriations titles of the Interior bill—Title I (DOI), Title II (EPA), and
Title III (Related Agencies)—and in the general provisions in Title IV. For FY2018 enacted
appropriations, it also depicts the emergency supplemental appropriations for disaster relief.
Table 1, at the end of this report, lists the appropriations for each agency that were enacted for
FY2018, requested by the President for FY2019, passed by the House in H.R. 6147 (115th
Congress) for FY2019, and passed by the Senate in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress) for FY2019. It
also contains the percentage changes between FY2018 enacted appropriations and the FY2019
levels requested by the President, passed by the House, and passed by the Senate.
Figure 2. Appropriations for Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, by Major
Title, FY2018-FY2019

Source: Prepared by CRS with data from the House and Senate Appropriations Committees.
Notes: This figure depicts appropriations enacted for FY2018, requested by the President for FY2019, contained
in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress) as passed by the House for FY2019, and contained in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress)
as passed by the Senate for FY2019. The FY2018 enacted total reflects $774.0 million in Title IV (General
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Provisions) of the law, of which $766.0 million was for EPA and $8.0 million was for other purposes. It also
reflects $1.28 billion in emergency supplemental appropriations for disaster relief (under P.L. 115-72 and P.L.
115-123). The FY2019 House-passed total reflects $373.0 million in Title IV of the bill, consisting of $375.0
million for EPA and a reduction of $2.0 million for specified purposes. The FY2019 Senate-passed total reflects
$766.0 million for EPA.
Selected Agencies and Programs
There are many differences among the FY2018 enacted appropriations and the FY2019 funding
requested by the President, passed by the House, and passed by the Senate. Selected agencies and
programs are highlighted below, among the many of interest to Members of Congress,
stakeholders, and the public. For the selected agencies and programs, the discussions below
briefly compare FY2018 regular annual funding with FY2019 levels requested by the
Administration, approved by the House in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress), and approved by the
Senate in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress).22 Including FY2018 emergency supplemental
appropriations would result in different comparisons for some of the agencies and programs
covered below.23
Bureau of Land Management
The Administration sought a decrease of 23.2% from the FY2018 appropriation ($1.33 billion)
for the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The request contained lower funding for many BLM
accounts and programs, including those for overall Management of Lands and Resources, and
Land Acquisition by the agency. The House and Senate versions of the bill included increased
appropriations for BLM for FY2019, of 4.1% and 0.9% respectively, with additional funds for the
Management of Lands and Resources. The Senate also would have provided an increase for Land
Acquisition, but the House would have reduced funds for that purpose. Further, the
Administration proposed a budget restructuring within the Management of Lands and Resources
account, to increase flexibility, cost savings, and program integration. The Senate, but not the
House, would have adopted this restructuring.24
Environmental Protection Agency
For FY2018, EPA received $8.06 billion in Title II of the regular appropriations law, and another
$766.0 million in Title IV of that law, for an FY2018 regular appropriation of $8.82 billion.25

22 In these descriptions, the names of appropriations accounts and major programs generally are capitalized.
23 For additional information on the agencies and programs discussed in this section, as well as other agencies and
programs in the Interior bill, see the CRS products referenced in this report and other products on the CRS website at
http://www.crs.gov/search/#/0?termsToSearch=Interior%20%26%20Environment%20Appropriations&orderBy=
Date&navIds=4294930742, or contact the CRS experts identified at the end of this report.
24 For additional information on appropriations for BLM for FY2019, see CRS In Focus IF10381, Bureau of Land
Management: FY2019 Appropriations
, by Carol Hardy Vincent.
25 The comparisons in this paragraph do not reflect EPA appropriations in Title IV of the Interior bill. Specifically, the
FY2018 appropriations law included $766.0 million in Title IV (of Division G, P.L. 115-141) for EPA water
infrastructure priorities and Superfund emergency response, removal, and remedial actions. (For a discussion of these
monies, see CRS In Focus IF10717, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) FY2018 Appropriations:
Congressional Action
, by Robert Esworthy and David M. Bearden.) For these activities, Title IV of H.R. 6147 as
passed by the Senate for FY2019 also included $766.0 million, and as passed by the House included $365.0 million.
Title IV of the House-passed bill also included $10.0 million for EPA grants for reducing lead in drinking water.
Further, for FY2018, an additional $63.2 million in emergency supplemental appropriations was provided (in P.L. 115-
123) for the Hazardous Substance Superfund ($6.2 million), the Leaking Underground Storage Tank Trust Fund ($7.0
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Relative to the FY2018 appropriations in Title II only ($8.06 billion), the EPA would have
received a decrease under the Administration’s request (23.2%) and under the House-passed bill
(1.6%), but it would have received level funding under the Senate-passed bill. The request
contained lower funding for several accounts,26 among them Science and Technology,
Environmental Programs and Management (including geographic programs), and State and Tribal
Assistance Grants (STAG, including categorical grants).27 However, the Administration sought
level funding in the STAG account for grants to states for wastewater infrastructure projects
through the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and for drinking water infrastructure grants to
states through the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund.28 Moreover, the Administration asked
for increased appropriations for two accounts, Buildings and Facilities and the Water
Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Program.29
The House and Senate versions of the bill both supported level (or nearly level) funding for some
accounts and programs (e.g., the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Drinking Water State
Revolving Fund). However, whereas the Senate would have provided level funding for many
accounts, the House more often supported decreases (e.g., Science and Technology, and
Environmental Programs and Management) or increases (e.g., Water Infrastructure Finance and
Innovation Program, and Hazardous Substance Superfund).30
Fish and Wildlife Service
For the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), differing amounts of reductions from the FY2018 level
($1.59 billion)31 were proposed for FY2019 by the Administration (23.1%), House (0.9%), and
Senate (1.2%). The Administration sought to reduce funding for the Resource Management
account overall, with cuts in programs such as ecological services, habitat conservation, and fish
and aquatic conservation, and to eliminate funding for programs including cooperative landscape
conservation and science support. The House and Senate versions of the bill would have
increased funding for Resource Management, with little change for many programs relative to
FY2018, and would have retained funding for cooperative landscape conservation and science
support. Citing “higher priorities,”32 the Administration also proposed eliminating discretionary

million), and State and Tribal Assistance Grants ($50.0 million).
26 The Administration’s FY2019 request proposed a rescission totaling $220.5 million, but did not specify amounts
within individual accounts. In contrast, the FY2018 enacted appropriation, and House-passed and Senate-passed bills
for FY2019, included account specific rescissions of unobligated balances.
27 Funds are allocated for “categorical” grants generally to support day-to-day implementation of environmental laws,
including a range of activities such as monitoring, permitting, standard setting, training, and other pollution control and
prevention activities.
28 For information on EPA state revolving funds and other water infrastructure appropriations for FY2018, see CRS In
Focus IF10883, Overview of U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Water Infrastructure Programs and FY2018
Appropriations
, by Mary Tiemann and Jonathan L. Ramseur.
29 This program was included as Title V, Subtitle C, in the Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014
(P.L. 113-121). For additional information, see CRS Report R43315, Water Infrastructure Financing: The Water
Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) Program
, by Jonathan L. Ramseur and Mary Tiemann.
30 For additional information on appropriations for EPA for FY2019, see CRS In Focus IF11067, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) FY2019 Appropriations
, by Robert Esworthy and David M. Bearden.
31 In addition, $210.6 million in emergency supplemental appropriations for FY2018 was provided (in P.L. 115-123)
for Construction.
32 See Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service, Budget Justifications and Performance Information,
Fiscal Year 201
9, p. CESCF-2 and RF-3, at https://www.doi.gov/sites/doi.gov/files/uploads/
fy2019_fws_budget_justification.pdf.
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appropriations for two other FWS accounts—the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation
Fund and the National Wildlife Refuge Fund.33 The House- and Senate-passed bills retained
discretionary funding for these accounts. Further, the Administration proposed relatively large
reductions from the FY2018 level for the Land Acquisition (89.1%) and Construction (79.3%)
accounts. The House and Senate supported smaller reductions for both accounts.34
Forest Service
For FY2019, the Administration requested 21.5% less for the Forest Service (FS) than was
enacted for FY2018 ($5.93 billion).35 Within the overall reduction, the President proposed
decreases for each FS account, including 81.6% less for Capital Improvement and Maintenance,
47.7% less for State and Private Forestry, and 10.6% less for the National Forest System. The
Administration also sought to eliminate funding for some programs, including Land Acquisition
(from the Land and Water Conservation Fund), Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration, and
cooperative forestry programs such as Forest Legacy. For FY2019, the House and Senate bills
would have provided overall increases for the FS of 3.3% and 6.1% respectively, with increases
for some FS accounts and retention of programs the Administration sought to eliminate. The
House and Senate supported differing levels of appropriations for major FS accounts, with the
House approving higher amounts than the Senate for the National Forest System and Capital
Improvement and Maintenance and the Senate approving higher amounts than the House for
Land Acquisition and Wildland Fire Management, among other differences.36
Indian Affairs
The Administration’s FY2019 requested appropriation for Indian Affairs (IA) was 21.2% less
than the FY2018 enacted amount ($3.06 billion). Most Indian programs would be funded at lower
levels, including human services, natural resources management, and public safety and justice.
Education and construction (including construction of educational facilities) were among the
largest dollar decreases in the budget request. The House- and Senate-passed measures contained
overall increases of 1.3% and 0.4% respectively for IA, with relatively stable funding for many
programs and activities as compared with FY2018 enacted amounts.
Indian Health Service
Under the Administration’s FY2019 request, the Indian Health Service (HIS) would receive 2.1%
less than the FY2018 appropriation ($5.54 billion). The overall decrease was comprised of a
variety of program reductions and increases. For example, the Administration proposed cutting
the Indian Health Facilities account (41.7%), including for maintenance and improvement of
facilities and construction of both health care and sanitation facilities, and proposed no funding
for programs including the Indian Health Care Improvement Fund, health education, and
community health representatives. However, the Administration requested additional monies for

33 Both the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund and the National Wildlife Refuge Fund also receive
mandatory funding under current law.
34 For additional information on appropriations for FWS for FY2019, see CRS In Focus IF10846, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service: FY2019 Appropriations
, by R. Eliot Crafton.
35 In addition, $646.3 million in emergency supplemental appropriations for FY2018 was provided (in P.L. 115-72 and
P.L. 115-123). Of the total, $184.5 million was for Wildland Fire Management, $342.0 million was for FLAME, $7.5
million was for State and Private Forestry, $20.7 million was for the National Forest System, and $91.6 million was for
Capital Improvement and Maintenance.
36 For additional information on appropriations for FS for FY2019, see CRS In Focus IF10898, Forest Service: FY2018
Appropriations and FY2019 Request
, by Katie Hoover.
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clinical services including hospital and health clinics, mental health, and alcohol and substance
abuse, and for contract support costs (to help tribes pay the costs of administering IHS-funded
programs). The Administration also sought to fund the Special Diabetes Program for Indians
through discretionary appropriations; currently the program has a direct appropriation.
The House and Senate bills would have approved increases of 6.7% and 4.2% respectively over
FY2018 appropriations for IHS. Both chambers included higher funding for clinical services than
enacted for FY2018 and requested by the Administration for FY2019, and both agreed with the
Administration’s proposed level for contract support costs. The House, but not the Senate,
included appropriations for the Indian Health Care Improvement Fund and would have provided
more than the FY2018 appropriation for the fund. Both chambers sought to retain funding for
health education and community health representatives. Both chambers also supported level
funding for most Indian Health Facilities programs but provided additional funds for facilities and
environmental health support. Neither chamber sought to fund the Special Diabetes Program for
Indians through discretionary appropriations.37
Land and Water Conservation Fund
The Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) has funded land acquisition for the four main
federal land management agencies,38 a matching grant program to states to support outdoor
recreation, and other purposes. The Administration did not seek discretionary appropriations for
most programs appropriated from the LWCF in FY2018,39 and it proposed an overall reduction of
$12.9 million due to rescisssions of prior-year funds for some program components. In contrast,
the House and Senate would have provided LWCF funding for the same programs as in FY2018,
including land acquisition by the federal land management agencies. However, both the House
and the Senate versions of the bill contained reductions from the FY2018 level ($425.0 million),
of 15.2% and 3.8% respectively.40
National Park Service
For FY2019, the Administration requested 15.6% less for the National Park Service (NPS) than
was enacted for FY2018 ($3.20 billion).41 Within the overall reduction, the President proposed
cuts for each NPS account and many programs, including Construction, the Historic Preservation
Fund, facility operations and maintenance, and heritage partnership programs. The President
proposed the elimination of funding for other programs, including grants to states for outdoor
recreation, line item acquisitions by the NPS, and the Centennial Challenge Program (a matching
grant program to encourage donations).
The House and Senate would have approved overall increases of 1.9% and 0.5% respectively for
the NPS for FY2019. Their bills sought to fund many accounts and programs at levels similar to

37 For additional information on appropriations for IHS for FY2019, see CRS Report CRS Report R45201, Indian
Health Service (IHS) FY2019 Budget Request and Funding History: A Fact Sheet
, by Elayne J. Heisler.
38 These agencies are the Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, and National Park Service, all within
the Department of the Interior, and the Forest Service within the Department of Agriculture.
39 The state grant program for outdoor recreation also receives mandatory funding under current law (the Gulf of
Mexico Energy Security Act of 2006, P.L. 109-432, Division C, §105).
40 For an overview of LWCF funding, see CRS Report RL33531, Land and Water Conservation Fund: Overview,
Funding History, and Issues
, by Carol Hardy Vincent.
41 In addition, $257.6 million in emergency supplemental appropriations for FY2018 was provided (in P.L. 115-123)
for Construction ($207.6 million) and the Historic Preservation Fund ($50.0 million).
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those enacted for FY2018. However, both chambers included increases for some programs (e.g.,
facility operations and maintenance) and reductions for other programs (e.g., line-item
acquisitions). In still other cases, the chambers differed as to the direction of the change, for
instance, with the House supporting an increase for the Historic Preservation Fund and the Senate
approving a decrease.42
Payments in Lieu of Taxes
The Payments in Lieu of Taxes Program (PILT) would have been reduced from the FY2018 level
($553.2 million) under the President’s request (15.9%), the House-passed bill (9.6%), and the
Senate-passed bill (9.6%).43 PILT compensates counties and local governments for nontaxable
lands within their jurisdictions. The authorized level for the program is calculated under a
formula that considers various factors and varies from year to year. The authorized payment is
currently subject to annual appropriations.44
Smithsonian Institution
For FY2019, the Smithsonian Institution (SI) would have received a decrease (8.2%) under the
Administration’s request, an increase (1.2%) under the House-passed bill, and essentially level
funding under the Senate-passed bill as compared with the FY2018 appropriation ($1.04 billion).
However, the Administration, House, and Senate all supported funding at or near the FY2018
level for most SI museums, research institutes, and other programs. A key difference was in
funding for the Facilities Capital account, which includes revitalization, planning and design, and
construction of facilities. The Administration requested a 29.6% decrease for this account, the
Senate approved a smaller decrease of 2.7%, and the House approved an increase of 1.8%. In
addition, the Administration, House, and Senate all supported an increase of 2.2% over the
FY2018 level for Facilities Services, which encompasses maintenance, operation, security, and
support of facilities.
U.S. Geological Survey
Relative to FY2018 appropriations ($1.15 billion),45 the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) would
have received a decrease (25.1%) under the Administration’s request, an increase (2.1%) under
the House-passed bill, and level funding under the Senate-passed bill. The request proposed
reduced funding for all eight major USGS program areas, including ecosystems, land resources,
natural hazards, and water resources. The request also would cut most subprograms, although in a
few cases it contained additional funds (e.g., for mineral and energy resources). In contrast, both
chambers would have maintained level funding or would have increased appropriations for all

42 For additional information on appropriations for NPS for FY2019, see CRS In Focus IF10900, National Park
Service: FY2019 Appropriations
, by Laura B. Comay. For historical information on NPS appropriations, see CRS
Report R42757, National Park Service Appropriations: Ten-Year Trends, by Laura B. Comay.
43 At the time the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141) was enacted, full funding for FY2018 was
estimated to be $530.0 million. Table 1 of this report shows $530.0 million for FY2018, and the corresponding
percentage change under the President’s request, House-passed bill, and Senate-passed bill for FY2019.
44 For on overview of PILT, including calculation of the payment, funding history, recent legislation, and related issues,
see CRS Report RL31392, PILT (Payments in Lieu of Taxes): Somewhat Simplified, by Katie Hoover.
45 In addition, $42.2 million in emergency supplemental appropriations for FY2018 was provided (in P.L. 115-123) for
Surveys, Investigations, and Research.
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USGS program areas except natural hazards, which would have declined by 4.8% in the House-
passed bill and by 12.0% in the Senate-passed bill.46
Wildland Fire Management
For FY2019, the Administration proposed $3.79 billion in discretionary appropriations for
Wildland Fire Management (WFM) of DOI and the FS, a 12.9% decrease from the FY2018
enacted level ($4.36 billion).47 However, the President also sought a $1.52 billion cap adjustment
to the discretionary spending limits in law, so that funding for certain wildland fire suppression
activities would not be subject to the limits. Including those funds, the total FY2019 request was
$5.31 billion. This would be an increase of 22.0% over the FY2018 appropriation. The House and
Senate bills contained increases of 3.1% and 12.0% respectively over the FY2018 appropriation.
Neither chamber’s bill included a discretionary cap adjustment for wildland fire suppression for
FY2019.48 Further, the Administration, House, and Senate did not support appropriations for
FY2019 for the FS or DOI FLAME accounts.49 The FS FLAME account received $342.0 million
in emergency supplemental appropriations in FY2018.50
Table 1. Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies:
FY2018-FY2019 Appropriations
(in thousands of dollars)
%
Change,
% Change,
% Change,
FY2018
FY2018
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
House
FY2019
Senate
FY2019
Enacted
Requested
FY2019
Passed (H.R.
House Passed (H.R.
Senate
Bureau or Agency
Approps.
Approps.
Request
6147)
Passed
6147)
Passed
Title I: Department of the







Interior
Bureau of Land Management
$1,331,944
$1,023,278
-23.2%
$1,386,956
4.1%
$1,343,398
0.9%
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
$1,594,646
$1,226,129
-23.1%
$1,580,395
-0.9%
$1,574,934
-1.2%
National Park Service
$3,202,162
$2,701,969
-15.6%
$3,261,554
1.9%
$3,218,565
0.5%
U.S. Geological Survey
$1,148,457
$859,680
-25.1%
$1,173,090
2.1%
$1,148,457
0%
Bureau of Ocean Energy
$114,166
$129,450
13.4%
$130,406
14.2%
$129,450
13.4%
Management

46 For additional information on appropriations for USGS for FY2019, see CRS In Focus IF10879, The U.S. Geological
Survey: FY2019 Appropriations and Background
, by Pervaze A. Sheikh and Peter Folger.
47 In addition, $576.5 million in emergency supplemental appropriations was provided for FY2018 (in P.L. 115-72),
consisting of $526.5 million for the FS and $50.0 million for DOI.
48 A cap adjustment was enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141), and is scheduled
to go into effect in FY2020.
49 The FLAME accounts were established in FY2010 to cover the costs of large or complex fires and to be used when
amounts provided in the FS and DOI Wildland Fire Management Accounts for suppression were exhausted. See 43
U.S.C. §1748a.
50 For additional information on funding for wildland fire management, see CRS Report R45005, Wildfire Management
Funding: Background, Issues, and FY2018 Appropriations
, by Katie Hoover and CRS Report R44966, Wildfire
Suppression Spending: Background, Issues, and Legislation in the 115th Congress
, by Katie Hoover and Bruce R.
Lindsay.
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%
Change,
% Change,
% Change,
FY2018
FY2018
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
House
FY2019
Senate
FY2019
Enacted
Requested
FY2019
Passed (H.R.
House Passed (H.R.
Senate
Bureau or Agency
Approps.
Approps.
Request
6147)
Passed
6147)
Passed
Bureau of Safety and
$123,439
$132,051
7.0%
$135,642
9.9%
$134,051
8.6%
Environmental Enforcement
Office of Surface Mining
$255,476
$121,673
-52.4%
$258,515
1.2%
$252,852
-1.0%
Reclamation and Enforcement
Bureau of Indian Affairs and
$3,063,642
$2,414,260
-21.2%
$3,103,642
1.3%
$3,077,045
0.4%
Bureau of Indian Education
Departmental Offices
$585,337
$443,976
-24.2%
$434,827
-25.7%
$466,464
-20.3%
Office of the Secretary
$124,182
$134,673
8.4%
$101,924
-17.9%
$131,673
6.0%
Insular Affairs
$224,057
$84,076
-62.5%
$104,051
-53.6%
$104,251
-53.5%
Office of the Solicitor
$66,675
$65,674
-1.5%
$65,674
-1.5%
$65,674
-1.5%
Office of Inspector General
$51,023
$52,486
2.9%
$52,486
2.9%
$52,486
2.9%
Office of the Special Trustee
$119,400
$107,067
-10.3%
$110,692
-7.3%
$112,380
-5.9%
for American Indians
Department-Wide Programsa
$1,165,991
$1,536,224
31.8%
$1,653,720
41.8%
$1,326,093
13.7%
Wildland Fire Management
$948,087
$870,384
-8.2%
$939,660
-0.9%
$1,116,076
17.7%
Central Hazardous Materials
$10,010
$2,000
-80.0%
$10,010
0%
$10,010
0%
Fund
Natural Resource Damage
$7,767
$4,600
-40.8%
$7,767
0%
$7,767
0%
Assessment Fund
Working Capital Fund
$62,370
$56,735
-9.0%
$58,778
-5.8%
$54,735
-12.2%
Office of Natural Resources
$137,757
$137,505
-0.2%
$137,505
-0.2%
$137,505
-0.2%
Revenue
Payments in Lieu of Taxesb
[$530,000]
$465,000
-12.3%
$500,000
-5.7%
[$500,000]
-5.7%
Subtotal, Title I: Department $13,115,260 $10,588,690
-19.3%
$13,118,747
<0.1%
$13,171,309
0.4%
of the Interior
Subtotal, Title II:
Environmental Protection

$8,058,488
$6,191,887
-23.2%
$7,931,488
-1.6%
$8,058,488
0%
Agencyc
Title III: Related Agencies







Dept. of Agri. Under Secretary
0%
$875
$875
0%
$875
0%
$875
for Natural Resources & Envt.
Forest Service
$5,934,664
$4,658,189
-21.5%
$6,131,637
3.3%
$6,298,429
6.1%
Indian Health Service
$5,537,764
$5,424,023
-2.1%
$5,907,614
6.7%
$5,772,116
4.2%
National Institute of
$77,349
$53,967
-30.2%
$80,000
3.4%
$78,349
1.3%
Environmental Health Sciences
Agency for Toxic Substances and
$74,691
$62,000
-17.0%
$62,000
-17.0%
$74,691
0%
Disease Registry
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Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

%
Change,
% Change,
% Change,
FY2018
FY2018
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
House
FY2019
Senate
FY2019
Enacted
Requested
FY2019
Passed (H.R.
House Passed (H.R.
Senate
Bureau or Agency
Approps.
Approps.
Request
6147)
Passed
6147)
Passed
Council on Environmental Quality
and Office of Environmental
$3,000
$2,994
-0.2%
$2,994
-0.2%
$3,005
0.2%
Quality
Chemical Safety and Hazard
$11,000
$9,500
-13.6%
$12,000
9.1%
$11,000
0%
Investigation Board
Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian
$15,431
$4,400
-71.5%
$7,750
-49.8%
$7,400
-52.0%
Relocation
Institute of American Indian and
Alaska Native Culture and Arts
$9,835
$9,960
1.3%
$9,960
1.3%
$9,960
1.3%
Development
Smithsonian Institution
$1,043,347
$957,444
-8.2%
$1,055,944
1.2%
$1,043,397
<0.1%
National Gallery of Art
$165,993
$146,900
-11.5%
$168,354
1.4%
$167,202
0.7%
John F. Kennedy Center for the
$40,515
$37,490
-7.5%
$40,515
0%
$41,290
1.9%
Performing Arts
Woodrow Wilson International
$12,000
$7,474
-37.7%
$12,000
0%
$12,000
0%
Center for Scholars
National Endowment for the Arts
$152,849
$28,949
-81.1%
$155,000
1.4%
$155,000
1.4%
National Endowment for the
$152,848
$42,307
-72.3%
$155,000
1.4%
$155,000
1.4%
Humanities
Commission of Fine Arts
$2,762
$2,771
0.3%
$2,771
0.3%
$2,771
0.3%
National Capital Arts and
$2,750
$0
-100%
$2,750
0%
$2,750
0%
Cultural Affairs
Advisory Council on Historic
$6,400
$6,440
0.6%
$6,440
0.6%
$6,440
0.6%
Preservation
National Capital Planning
$8,099
$7,948
-1.9%
$8,099
0%
$7,948
-1.9%
Commission
U.S. Holocaust Memorial
$59,000
$56,602
-4.1%
$58,000
-1.7%
$59,500
0.8%
Museum
Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial
$46,800
$31,800
-32.1%
$1,800
-96.2%
$1,800
-96.2%
Commission
Women’s Suffrage Centennial
$1,000
$0
-100%
$500
-50.0%
$1,000
0%
Commission
World War I Centennial
$7,000
$6,000
-14.3%
$3,000
-57.1%
$7,000
0%
Commission
Subtotal, Title III: Related
$13,365,972 $11,558,033
-13.5%
$13,885,003
3.9%
$13,918,923
4.1%
Agencies
Title IV: General Provisions







Treatment of Certain Hospitals
$8,000
$0
-100%
$0
-100%
$0
-100%
EPA Water Infrastructure &
$766,000
$0
-100%
$365,000
-52.3%
$766,000
0%
Superfund
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link to page 20 Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

%
Change,
% Change,
% Change,
FY2018
FY2018
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2019
Enacted-
FY2018
FY2019
Enacted-
House
FY2019
Senate
FY2019
Enacted
Requested
FY2019
Passed (H.R.
House Passed (H.R.
Senate
Bureau or Agency
Approps.
Approps.
Request
6147)
Passed
6147)
Passed
EPA Drinking Water Lead
$0
$0
0%
$10,000

$0
0%
Reduction Grants
Attorney Fees
$0
$0
0%
-$2,000

$0
0%
Subtotal, Title IV: General
$774,000
$0
-100%
$373,000
-51.8%
$766,000
-1.0%
Provisions
Total: Interior, Environment,
$35,313,720 $28,338,610
-19.8%
$35,308,238
<-0.1%
$35,914,720
1.7%
and Related Agencies
Subtotal, Supplemental
$1,275,427
$0
-100%
$0
-100%
$0
-100%
Emergency Appropriationsd
Total: Interior, Environment,
and Related Agencies with

$36,589,147 $28,338,610
-22.5%
$35,308,238
-3.5%
$35,914,720
-1.8%
Supplemental Emergency
Appropriations

Source: Prepared by CRS with data from the House and Senate Appropriations Committees.
Notes: This table depicts appropriations enacted for FY2018, requested by the President for FY2019, contained
in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress) as passed by the House for FY2019, and contained in H.R. 6147 (115th Congress)
as passed by the Senate for FY2019.
a. The FY2018 enacted figure and the FY2019 Senate-passed figure do not reflect appropriations for the
Payments in Lieu of Taxes Program, because these appropriations were included in the general provisions of
Title 1.
b. FY2018 enacted appropriations and FY2019 Senate-passed appropriations were included in the general
provisions of Title I. They are shown here under Department-Wide Programs for easier comparison with
FY2019 requested and House-passed appropriations, which were included under Department-Wide
Programs. In addition, at the time the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141) was enacted,
full PILT funding for FY2018 was estimated to be $530.0 million, as shown in this table. However, the actual
FY2018 PILT funding under the statutory formula was $553.2 million, as identified in the discussion of the
PILT program in the body of this report.
c. See also Title IV.
d. This line reflects total FY2018 emergency supplemental appropriations for disaster relief appropriated in
P.L. 115-72 and P.L. 115-123.


Author Information

Carol Hardy Vincent

Specialist in Natural Resources Policy


Key Policy Staff

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Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: Overview of FY2019 Appropriations

Area of Expertise
Name
Interior Appropriations, coordinator
Carol Hardy Vincent
Bureau of Indian Affairs, coordinator
Peter Folger
Bureau of Indian Education
Cassandria Dortch
Bureau of Land Management
Carol Hardy Vincent
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
Laura B. Comay
Marc Humphries
Bureau of Safety and Environmental
Laura B. Comay
Enforcement
Marc Humphries
Environmental Protection Agency
Robert Esworthy
Fish and Wildlife Service
R. Eliot Crafton
Forest Service
Katie Hoover
Indian Health Service
Elayne J. Heisler
Land and Water Conservation Fund
Carol Hardy Vincent
Office of Insular Affairs
R. Sam Garrett
Office of Natural Resources Revenue
Marc Humphries
Office of Surface Mining Reclamation
David M. Bearden
and Enforcement
National Endowment for the Arts and Shannon S. Loane
National Endowment for the
Humanities
National Park Service
Laura B. Comay
Payments in Lieu of Taxes
Katie Hoover
Smithsonian Institution
Shannon S. Loane
U.S. Geological Survey
Pervaze A. Sheikh
Wildland Fire Management
Katie Hoover



Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not
subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in
its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or
material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to
copy or otherwise use copyrighted material.

Congressional Research Service
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