Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies (THUD): FY2008 Appropriations

The FY2008 Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies appropriations bill (THUD) provides funding for the Department of Transportation (DOT), the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and five independent agencies related to these two departments.

The Bush Administration requested $100.3 billion (after scorekeeping adjustments) for FY2008, an increase of $300 million (less than 1%) over FY2007. DOT would receive $64.5 billion, $1.3 billion more than provided in FY2007. HUD would receive $35.6 billion, $1.0 billion less than provided in FY2007.

A conference agreement (H.Rept. 110-446) on H.R. 3074, the FY2008 THUD appropriations bill, followed both the House- and Senate-passed versions of the bill in recommending more funding for both DOT and HUD than requested by the Administration. The conference agreement was published on November 13, 2007, and brought to the House floor and approved on November 14. The President threatened to veto the conference agreement because it exceeded the amount requested. The Senate did not take up the agreement.

On December 19, 2007, a revised THUD appropriations act was passed as Division K of H.R. 2764, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, FY2008 (P.L. 110-161). Division K, the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2008, provided $103.6 billion (after rescissions and other adjustments) in total budgetary resources for the agencies included in the THUD appropriations bill, $4.0 billion more than the FY2007 level, $3.3 billion over the Administration request, and $2.2 billion less than the amount agreed in H.Rept. 110-446. DOT received $65.5 billion, an increase of $2.3 billion over FY2007. HUD received $37.6 billion, $1.4 billion over the FY2007 level.

For DOT, the agreement recommended increases in the requested level for highways, transit, Amtrak, and aviation. The agreement also included a provision included in both the House- and Senate-passed bills that would bar FY2008 funding from being used to establish a cross-border trucking demonstration program, which allows Mexican trucking companies to operate beyond the commercial zones on the United States-Mexico border. DOT has announced that it would not establish any new cross-border trucking demonstration programs, but would continue to operate the program it established on September 6, 2007 (after passage of the House and Senate THUD bills but before passage of the final appropriations act). For HUD, the agreement recommends increases in the requested level for Section 8 tenant-based rental assistance, Housing for the Elderly, Housing for the Disabled, and the Community Development Block Grant program, and recommends funding for HUD programs that were slated for elimination in the President’s budget. The act includes a 2% rescission applied to funding designated for projects under certain programs whose funding is extensively earmarked.

This report will not be updated.

Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies (THUD): FY2008 Appropriations

February 14, 2008 (RL34046)

Contents

Summary

The FY2008 Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies appropriations bill (THUD) provides funding for the Department of Transportation (DOT), the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and five independent agencies related to these two departments.

The Bush Administration requested $100.3 billion (after scorekeeping adjustments) for FY2008, an increase of $300 million (less than 1%) over FY2007. DOT would receive $64.5 billion, $1.3 billion more than provided in FY2007. HUD would receive $35.6 billion, $1.0 billion less than provided in FY2007.

A conference agreement (H.Rept. 110-446) on H.R. 3074, the FY2008 THUD appropriations bill, followed both the House- and Senate-passed versions of the bill in recommending more funding for both DOT and HUD than requested by the Administration. The conference agreement was published on November 13, 2007, and brought to the House floor and approved on November 14. The President threatened to veto the conference agreement because it exceeded the amount requested. The Senate did not take up the agreement.

On December 19, 2007, a revised THUD appropriations act was passed as Division K of H.R. 2764, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, FY2008 (P.L. 110-161). Division K, the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2008, provided $103.6 billion (after rescissions and other adjustments) in total budgetary resources for the agencies included in the THUD appropriations bill, $4.0 billion more than the FY2007 level, $3.3 billion over the Administration request, and $2.2 billion less than the amount agreed in H.Rept. 110-446. DOT received $65.5 billion, an increase of $2.3 billion over FY2007. HUD received $37.6 billion, $1.4 billion over the FY2007 level.

For DOT, the agreement recommended increases in the requested level for highways, transit, Amtrak, and aviation. The agreement also included a provision included in both the House- and Senate-passed bills that would bar FY2008 funding from being used to establish a cross-border trucking demonstration program, which allows Mexican trucking companies to operate beyond the commercial zones on the United States-Mexico border. DOT has announced that it would not establish any new cross-border trucking demonstration programs, but would continue to operate the program it established on September 6, 2007 (after passage of the House and Senate THUD bills but before passage of the final appropriations act). For HUD, the agreement recommends increases in the requested level for Section 8 tenant-based rental assistance, Housing for the Elderly, Housing for the Disabled, and the Community Development Block Grant program, and recommends funding for HUD programs that were slated for elimination in the President's budget. The act includes a 2% rescission applied to funding designated for projects under certain programs whose funding is extensively earmarked.

This report will not be updated.


Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies (THUD): FY2008 Appropriations

Most Recent Developments

On December 26, 2007, the President signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 (H.R. 2764), into law (P.L. 110-161). This act incorporated 11 of the 12 FY2008 appropriations bills; the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2008, was included as Division K of the act. The THUD appropriations act provided $103.6 billion (after rescissions and other adjustments) in total budgetary resources, $4.0 billion more than the FY2007 level. DOT received $65.5 billion, an increase of $2.3 billion over FY2007. HUD received $37.6 billion, $1.4 billion over the FY2007 level.

In an exchange of amendments between the Senate and the House, Congress converted the State, Foreign Operations, and Related Agencies Appropriations bill, 2008, into the Consolidated Appropriations bill, 2008, and completed action on the new bill during December 17-19, 2007. Prior to that, on November 14, 2007, the conference committee on the FY2008 THUD appropriations bill (H.R. 3074) had reported a conference agreement (H.Rept. 110-446) on November 13, 2007, and the House had approved the agreement on November 14, 2007. The conference agreement recommended $105.8 billion (after rescissions and other adjustments), $6.2 billion more than the FY2007 enacted funding level, and $5.5 billion over the Administration's budget request. The President threatened to veto the bill for exceeding the requested funding level. The Senate did not take up the agreement.

During the period between the beginning of FY2008 (October 1, 2007) and the signing of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008, Congress provided funding through a series continuing resolutions, generally at FY2007 funding levels.

On September 12, 2007, the Senate passed H.R. 3074, which provides $105.9 billion (after rescissions and other adjustments) for transportation and housing and urban development appropriations for FY2008. The Senate Committee on Appropriations had reported a draft of the legislation (in the form of S. 1789) on July 16, 2007. The committee recommended a total of $104.7 billion (after rescissions and other adjustments); $1.2 billion was added to the bill during deliberations on the Senate floor for highway bridge repair and replacement, in response to concerns about the integrity of bridges raised by the collapse of an interstate highway bridge in Minnesota on August 1, 2007. This is $5.9 billion (6%) more than the comparable amount for FY2007, and $5.6 billion (6%) more than requested for FY2008.

On July 24, 2007, the House passed H.R. 3074, which provides $104.4 billion (after rescissions and other adjustments) in THUD appropriations for FY2008. This is $4.4 billion (4%) more than the comparable amount provided for FY2007, and $4.1 billion (4%) more than requested for FY2008.

Overview

The President's Budget Request

The President's net FY2008 request for the programs covered by this appropriations bill was $100.3 billion (after scorekeeping adjustments). This was $300 million (less than 1%) over the net total provided for FY2007.

The DOT request was $64.5 billion, $1.3 billion (2%) more than the amount provided for FY2007. This increase was largely for highway (net $1.7 billion increase) and transit (net $447 million increase) programs. These increases reflected the increase in the FY2008 authorized funding level over the FY2007 level for these two programs, which receive almost all of their funding from transportation trust funds. However, the request did not provide the full authorized funding level: it was $631 million below the authorized level for highway programs and $309 million below the authorized level for transit programs.

The HUD request was $35.6 billion, $1.0 billion (3%) less than the amount provided for FY2007. This reduction reflected the Administration's continued effort to reduce or eliminate funding for a number of HUD programs that it regards as ineffective or inefficient. Secretary Jackson's introductory letter to the FY2008 HUD budget summary document noted, "In a budget season marked by the President's goal to continue to support what works and cut the Federal budget deficit, the FY2008 HUD budget request demonstrates an effort to prioritize funding towards programs with measurable, documented results."1

The Administration's FY2008 budget request included spending reductions that had also been proposed by the Administration in previous budget requests, without success. These proposed reductions from FY2007 funding included roughly $1 billion from reductions in several HUD programs and elimination of several other programs, and roughly $1 billion from cuts to several DOT programs. Among the programs proposed for reductions or elimination were

  • DOT's Airport Grants (-$764 million), Amtrak (-$494 million), and subsidies for air service to small communities (-$59 million) programs;
  • HUD's Community Development Funds (-$735 million), Housing for the Elderly (-$160 million), and Housing for the Disabled (-$112 million) programs; and
  • HUD's HOPE VI, Rural Housing and Economic Development, Brownfields Redevelopment, and Section 108 Loan Guarantees programs, for which no funding was requested (-$130 million total).

House and Senate Action

Both the House and the Senate have passed versions of H.R. 3074, the FY2008 appropriations bill, for THUD. Both chambers rejected the Administration's proposed reductions, and provided increases for both DOT and HUD over both the FY2007 levels and the FY2008 requested levels.

The House-passed version of H.R. 3074 would provide a total of $104.4 billion, $4.1 billion (4%) more than requested and $4.4 billion (4%) more than the FY2007 funding. Within that total the bill provides $65.5 billion for DOT ($1.1 billion more than requested and $2.4 billion more than FY2007), $38.7 billion for HUD ($3.1 billion more than requested and $2.0 billion more than FY2007), and $235 million for the related agencies ($1 million more than requested and $12 million more than FY2007).

The Senate-passed version of H.R. 3074 would provide a total of $105.9 billion, $5.6 billion (6%) more than requested and $6.3 billion (6%) more than the FY2007 level. Within that total, the bill provides $66.9 billion for DOT ($2.4 billion more than requested and $3.8 billion more than the FY2007 level), $38.7 billion for HUD ($3.1 billion more than requested and $2.1 billion over the FY2007 level), and $235 million for the other independent agencies ($1 million more than requested and $12 million over the FY2007 level). The Senate bill's major funding difference with the House bill is in providing more funding for DOT; most of that additional funding is for repairs to bridges in response to the collapse of an interstate highway bridge in Minnesota after passage of the House version of the bill.

The Conference Agreement

The conference agreement on H.R. 3074 recommended a total of $105.8 billion. This is $5.5 billion (6%) more than requested and $6.2 billion (6%) more than the FY2007 enacted level. The agreement recommends $66.7 billion for DOT, $2.2 billion more than requested and $3.5 billion more than provided in FY2007. The conferees recommended $38.7 billion for HUD, $3.1 billion more than the budget request and $2.4 billion more than the amount provided in FY2007.

The conference agreement was reported on November 13, 2007. It was brought to the House floor on November 14, 2007, and approved by a vote of 270-147 later that day. The primary topics of discussion during consideration of the agreement had to do with the time available to review the bill and additions made by conferees. Some members complained that not only had the rule that members should be given three days to review a bill before voting on it been waived, but also that the informal practice that members be given at least 24 hours to review a bill was being ignored. There were also criticisms of the number of earmarks in the bill, and of the addition by conferees of some earmarks that had not been in either the House- or Senate-passed versions of the bill (a practice known as "air-dropping" earmarks).

Complaints were also voiced about a provision (Section 193) added by conferees that would prohibit any funds in the agreement from being used to provide budget justifications to any congressional committee, other than the appropriations committees, prior to May 31, 2008. In 2006, the Office of Management and Budget began directing agencies to make their budget justifications available to the public, and to post the justifications on the Internet, within two weeks of the transmittal of those materials to Congress in early February. A similar provision was inserted in the conference agreement on the Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Act of 2006 (TTHUD) (P.L. 109-115, Section 182), and was added to the Senate-passed version of the FY2007 TTHUD appropriations bill (H.R. 5576); that bill was never passed by the Senate, and the prohibition was not included in the continuing resolution that provided funding for those agencies for FY2007 (P.L. 110-5).

The President issued a Statement of Administration Policy on the conference agreement, threatening to veto the bill for exceeding the level of funding requested by the Administration. The margin of passage of the bill in the House was less than the two-thirds majority that would be required to override a veto.

The Consolidated Appropriations Act

In December 2007, with 11 unfinished appropriations bills, including the THUD bill, several of which faced veto threats from the President for exceeding the level of funding requested in the Administration budget proposal, Congress decided to combine the unfinished appropriations bills into one consolidated appropriations act. The legislative vehicle used was H.R. 2764, originally the Department of State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2008. The THUD appropriations act became Division K of the Consolidated Appropriations Act. After negotiations with the Administration over the total level of spending in the bill, Congress agreed to reduce the overall level of spending in the bill, leaving it up to each appropriations subcommittee to achieve the agreed-upon reduction. The THUD committee did so through rescission of contract authority in certain programs and a 2% rescission applied to the earmarked projects in the bill (see sections 129 and 186 in Title I, and under the heading "Community Development Fund" in Title II).

Table 1 notes the status of the FY2008 THUD appropriations bill.

Table 1. Status of FY2008 Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations

Bill

Subcommittee
Markup

House
Report

House
Passage

Senate
Report

Senate
Passage

Conf.
Report

Conference
Report
Approval

Public
Law

House

Senate

House

Senate

H.R. 3074

6/11/07

7/10/07

H.Rept. 110-238

7/18/07

7/24/07
268-153

S.Rept. 110-131

7/16/07

9/12/07
88-7

110-446
11/13/07

11/14/07
270-147

H.R. 2764

12/17/07
253-154

 

12/18/07
76-17

12/17/07a

12/26/07
P.L. 110-161

a. An explanatory statement was published in the Congressional Record on December 17, 2007, accompanying the House amendment that transformed H.R. 2764 into the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008. Section 4 of the House amendment specified that the accompanying explanatory statement would have the same effect as if it were a joint explanatory statement of a committee of conference (Congressional Record, December 17, 2007, Book II, H15741). The explanatory statement for the THUD appropriations act is Division K of the explanatory statement, located in the Congressional Record, December 17, 2007, Book III, H16458-H16640. The text of the act and the explanatory statement for Division K is also available in a committee print published by the House Committee on Appropriations in January 2008.

Table 2 lists the total funding provided for each of the titles in the bill for FY2007 and the amount requested for that title for FY2008.

Table 2. Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations, FY2007-FY2008

(millions of dollars)

Title

FY2007
Enacted

FY2008
Request

FY2008
House

FY2008
Senate

FY2008 Conf
(H.R. 3074)

FY2008
Enacted
(H.R. 2764)

Title I: Department of Transportation

$63,181

$64,479

$65,542

$66,913

$66,712

$65,527

Title II: Housing and Urban Development

36,633

35,597

38,666

38,737

38,659

37,637

Title III: Related Agencies

223

234

235

235

435

415

Total

$100,038

$100,310

$104,444

$105,885

$105,806

$103,579

Source: Budget table provided by the House Appropriations Committee and published in connection with the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008. A budget table for the THUD appropriations act was published at the end of Division K of the explanatory statement in the Congressional Record of December 17, 2007, pps. H16632-H16640. However, there are some inconsistencies between the figures in that table and with the funding levels set by the legislative text as printed in the Congressional Record on the same date. However, the account-level budget table included in Division K of the joint explanatory statement published in the committee print on H.R. 2764 by the House Committee on Appropriations in January 2008 is correct (see note in Division K, page 2589, of the committee print). Thus, for THUD figures the table in the committee print should be used in place of the table printed in the Congressional Record. This table is on pp. 2590-2612 of the committee print, available at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/congress/house/appropriations/08conappro.html. "Total" represents total budgetary resources after scorekeeping adjustments. Totals may not add up due to rounding and scorekeeping adjustments.

Changing Appropriations Subcommittee Structures

Since 2003, the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations have reorganized their subcommittee structure three times. In 2003, a new subcommittee (Homeland Security) was added; in order to maintain the existing number of subcommittees at 13, the Transportation appropriations subcommittees were combined with the Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government appropriations subcommittees, becoming the Subcommittees on Transportation, Treasury, and Independent Agencies.

In early 2005, the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations again reorganized their subcommittee structures. The House Committee on Appropriations reduced its number of subcommittees from 13 to 10. This change included combining the Transportation, Treasury, and Independent Agencies subcommittee with the District of Columbia subcommittee; to the resulting subcommittee, in addition, jurisdiction over appropriations for the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Judiciary, as well as several additional independent agencies, was added. The subcommittee was then known as the Subcommittee on Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, The Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent Agencies (or TTHUD).

The Senate Committee on Appropriations reduced its number of subcommittees to 12. The Senate also added jurisdiction over appropriations for the Departments of Housing and Urban Development and the Judiciary to the Transportation, Treasury, and Independent Agencies subcommittee. The Senate retained a separate District of Columbia Appropriations subcommittee. As a result, the areas of coverage of the House and Senate subcommittees with jurisdiction over this appropriations bill were almost, but not quite, identical; the major difference being that in the Senate the appropriations for the District of Columbia originate in a separate bill.

At the beginning of the 110th Congress in 2007, the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations again reorganized their subcommittee structures. The House and Senate committees divided the responsibilities of the TTHUD subcommittees between two subcommittees: Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies (THUD); and Financial Services and General Government, whose jurisdiction included the Treasury Department, the Judiciary, the Executive Office of the President, the District of Columbia, and many of the independent agencies formerly under the jurisdiction of the TTHUD subcommittees.

These changes make year-to-year comparisons of Transportation and Housing and Urban Development appropriation bills complex, as their appropriations appear in different bills in combination with various other agencies. Other factors, such as supplemental appropriations for response to disasters (such as the damage caused by the Gulf Coast hurricanes in the fall of 2005) and changes in the makeup of the Department of Transportation (portions of which were transferred to the Department of Homeland Security in 2004), also complicate comparisons of year-to-year funding. Table 3 shows funding trends over the five-year period FY2003-FY2007, and the amounts requested for FY2008, for the Departments of Transportation and Housing and Urban Development. The purpose of Table 3 is to indicate trends in the funding for these agencies, so emergency supplemental appropriations are not included in the figures. The agencies generally experienced funding increases during the period FY2003-FY2007.

Table 3. Funding Trends for Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies, FY2003-FY2008

(billions of current dollars)

Department

FY2003a

FY2004b

FY2005c

FY2006d

FY2007

FY2008 Request

FY2008 Enactede

Title I: Transportationf

$55.7

$58.4

$59.6

$59.5

$63.2

$64.5

$65.5

Title II: Housing and Urban Development

31.0

31.2

31.9

34.0

36.2

35.6

37.6

Source: United States House of Representatives, Committee on Appropriations, Comparative Statement of Budget Authority tables from fiscal years 2003 through 2008. Figures for FY2006 do not reflect emergency appropriations.

a. FY2003 figures reflect a 0.65% across-the-board rescission.

b. FY2004 figures reflect a 0.59% across-the-board rescission.

c. FY2005 figures reflect a 0.83% across-the-board rescission.

d. FY2006 figures reflect a 1.0% across-the-board rescission, but do not reflect emergency supplemental appropriations provided for DOT and HUD. DOT and HUD received emergency funding for response to the effects of the Gulf Coast hurricanes; DOT's total FY2006 funding, including emergency funding, was $62.3 billion; HUD's total FY2006 funding, including emergency funding, was $45.5 billion.

e. FY2008 figures do not reflect a 2.0% rescission applied to most programs with designated earmarks.

f. Figures for Department of Transportation appropriations for FY2003 have been adjusted for comparison with FY2004 and later figures by subtracting the United States Coast Guard, the Transportation Security Administration, the National Transportation Safety Board, and the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, and by adding the Maritime Administration.

Transportation Appropriations

Table 4. Department of Transportation Appropriations, FY2007-FY2008

(in millions of dollars; totals may not add)

Department or Agency (Selected Accounts)

FY2007
Enacted

FY2008
Request

FY2008
House

FY2008
Senate

FY2008
Enacted

Office of the Secretary of Transportation

$171

$96

$150

$160

$157

 

Essential Air Servicea

109

50

110

110

110

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)

 

 

Operations (trust fund & general fund)

8,374

8,726

8,717

8,762

8,740

 

Facilities & Equipment (F&E) (trust fund)

2,516

2,462

2,515

2,517

2,514

 

Grant-in-aid for Airports (AIP) (trust fund) (limit. on oblig.)

3,515

2,750

3,600

3,515

3,515

 

Research, Engineering & Development (trust fund)

130

140

140

149

147

Subtotal, FAA

14,482

14,077

14,622

14,593

14,604

Federal Highway Administration (FHWA)

 

 

(Limitation on Obligations)

39,086

39,585

40,216

41,216

41,216

 

(Exempt Obligations)

739

739

739

739

739

 

Additional funds (trust fund)

 

Additional funds (general fund)

23

40

30

 

Rescissions of contract authority

(4,343)

(2,000)

(3,385)

(3,121)

(4,107)

Subtotal, FHWAb

36,255

37,915

37,565

39,070

38,068

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA)

517

528

528

531

530

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)c

821

833

813

813

815

Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)

1,478

1,081

1,667

1,657

1,561

 

Amtrak

1,294

800

1,450

1,370

1,325

Federal Transit Administration (FTA)

 

 

General Funds

1,747

1,550

1,838

1,692

1,590

 

Capital Investment Grants (New Starts)

1,566

1,400

1,700

1,566

1,569

 

Trust Funds

7,263

7,872

7,873

7,873

7,768

Subtotal, FTA

8,975

9,422

9,710

9,565

9,358

St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation

16

17

17

17

17

Maritime Administration (MARAD)d

214

295

292

326

307

Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA)

 

 

Pipeline safety program

75

75

79

82

80

 

Emergency preparedness grants

14

28

28

28

28

Subtotal, PHMSA

134

148

154

156

154

Research and Innovative Technology Administration (RITA)

8

12

12

12

12

Office of Inspector General

64

66

66

66

66

Surface Transportation Board

25

22

25

24

25

Total, Department of Transportation

$63,181

$64,479

$65,542

$66,913

$65,527

Source: Figures are from a budget table published by the House Appropriations Committee in a committee print combining the text and explanatory statement for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 (H.R. 2764/P.L. 110-161). Because of differing treatment of offsets, the figures for "FY2008 Request" will not always match the Administration's budget figures from other sources. The figures within this table may differ slightly from those in the text due to supplemental appropriations, rescissions, and other funding actions. Columns may not add due to rescissions, rounding, and exclusion of smaller program line-items.

a. The total comes from a $50 million annual authorization for the Essential Air Service program to be funded out of overflight fee collections and an additional amount appropriated for the program.

b. FHWA was appropriated $39.8 billion for FY2007. The $36.3 billion figure represents the budgetary total after subtraction of a $3.5 billion rescission of previously provided contract authority and the transfer of $121 million to NHTSA. The House and Senate committees recommended $41.0 billion for FHWA for FY2008; rescissions of contract authority resulted in those proposals being scored as $37.6 billion and $37.9 billion, respectively.

c. The House and Senate committees recommended $836 million and $835 million, respectively, in new funding for NHTSA; those totals were reduced by rescissions of unobligated contract authority.

d. MARAD was appropriated $291 million for FY2007. The $214 million figure represents the budgetary total after subtraction of a $74 million rescission of previously appropriated funds for the National Defense Tank Vessel Program.

Department of Transportation Budget and Key Policy Issues

The President's FY2008 budget proposed a total of $64.5 billion for the Department of Transportation (DOT).2 This was $1.3 billion (2%) more than the $63.2 billion enacted for FY2007. The major funding changes requested from the FY2007 enacted levels were

  • an increase of $500 million (1%) in the obligation limitation for highways and $447 million (5%) for transit, reflecting the authorized levels in the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU) (P.L. 109-59);
  • an increase of $12 million (10%) for the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Administration, reflecting a requested increase in grants to states for emergency preparedness;
  • an increase of $4 million (55%) for the Research and Innovative Technology Administration;
  • decrease of $765 million (-22%) in the Federal Aviation Administration's Airport Improvement Program, similar to a requested decrease for FY2007 that was rejected by Congress;
  • a decrease of $494 million (-38%) in the request for Amtrak, similar to a requested decrease for FY2007 that was rejected by Congress; and
  • a decrease of $59 million (-54%) in funding for the Essential Air Service Program.

The Administration request also proposed restructuring the FAA budget, reflecting the Administration's reauthorization proposal for the FAA.

Both chambers have passed bills providing a higher level of DOT funding than requested by the Administration: $65.5 billion ($1.1 billion more) by the House and $66.9 billion ($2.4 billion more) by the Senate. The major difference between the House and Senate totals is that the Senate version provides an additional $1 billion for the FHWA's Bridge Repair and Replacement Program and an additional appropriation of up to $195 million for emergency funding to Minnesota, both in response to the collapse of the Interstate 35 bridge in Minneapolis on August 1, 2007. Neither chamber supported the Administration's requested decreases in the various transportation accounts. Nor did either chamber's bill reflect the proposed restructuring of the FAA budget, as Congress is still considering the reauthorization of the FAA. Among the largest increases over the requested levels were those for the FHWA Bridge Program ($1 billion by the Senate), the FAA Aviation Improvement Program ($850 million by the House, $765 million by the Senate), and for Amtrak ($600 million by the House, $570 million by the Senate), and the inclusion by both of a $631 million increase in funding for the federal-aid highway program (authorized by the Revenue-Aligned Budget Authority (RABA) mechanism included in SAFETEA-LU).

Conferees reported a conference agreement on the bill on November 13, 2007. The conference committee recommended $66.7 billion for DOT. This is $3.5 billion more than the amount enacted for FY2007 and $2.2 billion more than the Administration request for FY2008. The agreed-upon increases include an additional $1 billion for highway bridge repair and replacement and an additional $631 million reflecting the RABA adjustment to the authorized funding level for the federal highway program; an additional $750 million for the FAA airport grant program, restoring the cut proposed by the budget request; and an additional $475 million for Amtrak (the budget requested a $394 million cut from the FY2007 level). This agreement was approved by the House on November 14, 2007, but was not taken up in the Senate.

Congress passed an FY2008 THUD appropriations act as Division K of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 (H.R. 2764/P.L. 110-161). The THUD appropriations act provided $65.5 billion for DOT, $2.3 billion more than enacted in FY2007 and $1.0 billion more than the Administration request, but less than the amount agreed to by the conference committee. Compared to the Administration request, the act included the additional $1 billion for highway bridge repair and replacement, the additional $631 million RABA adjustment, the additional $750 million for the FAA airport grant program, and an additional $425 million for Amtrak.

The Administration's budget for DOT identified three priorities of the FY2008 request: reauthorization of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), a new highway congestion initiative, and alteration of Amtrak's spending priorities.3

FAA Reauthorization

The FAA's authorization was scheduled to expire at the end of FY2007, but has been extended. The Administration's proposal for aviation reauthorization includes reform of the financial structure of the air traffic control system, a reform reflected in the budget request for FAA. The Administration proposal would also change the revenue sources for FAA funding. Reauthorization of the FAA is still under consideration by Congress. (For more information about FAA reauthorization, see CRS Report RL33920, Federal Aviation Administration Reauthorization: An Overview of Selected Provisions in Proposed Legislation Considered by the 110th Congress, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].)

Highway Congestion Initiative

The highway congestion initiative would redirect $175 million (largely from unused funds previously designated by Congress for specific projects) for pilot programs in cities to test comprehensive congestion reduction strategies, including such strategies as congestion pricing, flexible work schedules to reduce the concentration of commuter traffic during peak rush hour periods, and more use of real-time traffic information to encourage drivers to adjust the timing and route of their trips in light of current traffic conditions.

The House rejected the request for $175 million for the congestion initiative, noting that DOT has considerable discretion with regard to awarding grants from the FY2007 funding for highway and transit discretionary programs, and that a congestion initiative should be more comprehensive in scope than the Administrative proposal, involving other modes besides highways.

The Senate approved $136 million for the congestion initiative, but provided the funds from the additional funding produced by the RABA mechanism, rather than by taking money from projects previously designated by Congress.

The final THUD appropriations act directs the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to provide a review of DOT's implementation of its congestion initiative in FY2007 to the Appropriations Committee by March 31, 2008. The act also limits the amount of FTA's bus program funds that DOT may use for the congestion initiative in FY2008 to not more than 10% of the unallocated funds.4

Reducing Amtrak's Federal Subsidy

For FY2008, the House provided $1.4 billion for Amtrak—$475 million for operating assistance and $925 million in capital assistance and debt service—plus another $50 million for a matching grant program to encourage state investment in passenger rail. The Senate provided $1.37 billion for Amtrak—$485 million for operating assistance and $885 million for capital assistance and debt service—plus another $100 million for a matching grant program to encourage state investment in passenger rail. Both amounts represent an increase over the $1.3 billion provided for FY2007. The Senate also approved a floor amendment eliminating a provision in the FY2006 THUD appropriations act (P.L. 109-115, 119 Stat. 2414, continued in FY2007 by P.L. 110-5, 121 Stat. 9) that prohibited Amtrak from offering discounts of more than 50% off the normal peak fare on a route. Both of the House and Senate appropriations committees expressed concerns about Amtrak's failure to reach collective bargaining agreements with the majority of its workforce since the expiration of the previous agreements several years ago, and about the role of freight railroads in Amtrak's poor on-time performance.

The conference agreement recommended $1.375 billion for Amtrak—$475 million for operating assistance and $900 million for capital assistance and debt service. This is $80 million (6%) more than the amount provided for FY2007. The conference agreement also recommended $75 million for a matching grant program to encourage states to invest in passenger rail service. The grants would provide a 50% federal share of the capital costs of improving existing intercity passenger rail service and providing new intercity passenger rail service.

The final THUD act provided $1.325 billion for Amtrak—$475 million for operating assistance and $850 million for capital assistance and debt service. This is $31 million more than the amount provided in FY2007. The act also provided $30 million for a matching grant program to encourage states to invest in intercity passenger rail service. The grant program would provide a 50% federal share of the capital costs of improving existing intercity passenger rail service and providing new intercity passenger rail service.

The Administration requested $900 million for Amtrak for FY2008. This was $394 million (31%) less than the amount provided in FY2007, and of the $900 million requested, $100 million would not go to Amtrak directly, but to a matching grant program to encourage states to invest in intercity passenger rail-related capital improvements. Only $300 million was requested for operating assistance; Amtrak received $490 million in operating assistance in FY2006 and FY2007.

Amtrak's Board of Directors, whose current members have been appointed by the Bush Administration, submits a separate grant request to Congress each year. For FY2008, the Board requested $1.5 billion to maintain operations and $100 million for a matching grant program to encourage states to make intercity passenger rail-related capital improvements.

For the past several years, the Administration has sought to force changes in Amtrak's operations, and in intercity passenger rail policy in general, by requesting less funding for Amtrak than is needed to maintain Amtrak's status quo level of operations, arguing that "only a constrained budget will force Amtrak to change the way it conducts business."5 In its FY2008 budget, the Administration states that it expects "the Board's newly-installed management to make significant changes required to enable the company to succeed without Federal operating subsidies."6 In previous years, Congress has provided more funding for Amtrak than requested by the Administration, though less than requested by Amtrak's Board, while imposing conditions on Amtrak in the annual appropriations bill.

Amtrak is a quasi-governmental corporation that provides intercity passenger rail service throughout the country and operates and maintains rail infrastructure in the Northeast. It operates at a deficit, and requires federal support each year to continue its operations. Amtrak's authorization expired at the end of FY2002. Reauthorization efforts since then have been stalled by fundamental disagreements between Congress and the Administration over the future shape of federal intercity passenger rail policy.

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)

The FAA budget provides both capital and operating funding for the nation's air traffic control system, and also provides federal grants to airports for airport planning, development, and expansion of the capacity of the nation's air traffic infrastructure. The President's budget requested $14.1 billion for FY2008, $1.0 billion less than was provided for FY2007.7 Most of that reduction would come from the Airport Improvement Program. Both of the House and Senate approved $14.6 billion for FAA for FY2008, as did the conference agreement and the final THUD appropriations act.

Airport Improvement Program (AIP)

The President's budget proposed a cut of $764 million to AIP funding, from $3.5 billion in FY2007 to $2.8 billion for FY2008. A similar cut was proposed by the Administration for FY2007, but was not supported by Congress.

Both the House and Senate rejected the proposed cut. The House approved $3.6 billion for FY2008, a $95 million increase over FY2007. The Senate approved $3.5 billion, the same amount provided in FY2007. The conference agreement also recommended $3.5 billion; the final THUD appropriations act provided that amount.

AIP funds are used to provide grants for airport planning and development, and for projects to increase airport capacity (such as construction of new runways) and other facility improvements. Some Members of Congress have expressed concern at proposed cuts in the AIP program in the face of forecasts of growth in aviation traffic.

Essential Air Service

The President's budget requested $50 million for the Essential Air Service program, a $59 million (54%) reduction from the $109 million provided for FY2007. A similar decrease was proposed by the Administration for FY2007, but was rejected by Congress. Both the House and Senate again rejected the proposed cut, providing $110 million for FY2008. The conference agreement also recommended $110 million; the final THUD appropriations act provided that amount.

This program seeks to preserve air service to small airports in rural communities by subsidizing the cost of that service. Supporters of the Essential Air Service program contend that preserving airline service to rural communities was part of the deal Congress made in exchange for deregulating airline service in 1978, which was expected to reduce air service to rural areas. Some Members of Congress have expressed concern that the proposed cut in funding for the Essential Air Service program could lead to a reduction in the transportation connections of rural communities. Previous budget requests from the current Administration, as well as budget requests from previous Administrations, have also proposed reducing funding to this program.

Federal Highway Administration (FHWA)

The President's budget requested $40.3 billion in new funding for federal highway programs for FY2008, an increase of $600 million (2%) over the comparable level of $39.7 billion provided in FY2007.8 These increases reflect the originally authorized level of funding provided for surface transportation programs by SAFETEA (P.L. 109-59).

The authorized level of FY2008 highway funding was increased by $631 million over its original level as a result of higher-than-expected revenues to the Highway Trust Fund, an adjustment provided for in SAFETEA through a mechanism known as RABA. The Administration request did not include this additional funding. The DOT Secretary noted that the Highway Trust Account is projected to go into deficit in FY2009 unless some preventive action is taken, and stated that not requesting the additional $631 million authorized for FY2008 by the RABA adjustment was one of the steps the Administration was taking to forestall the projected FY2009 deficit.9

The House approved $41.0 billion in new funding for federal highway programs for FY2008, an increase of $1.1 billion (3%) over the comparable FY2007 amount. This represented the full authorized level for FY2008, as increased by the $631 million RABA adjustment. The Senate approved $42.2 billion in new funding, adding $1 billion to the FHWA bridge program and up to $195 million in emergency funding for repair of the Interstate 35 bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The conference agreement also recommended $42.2 billion in new funding.

The final THUD appropriations act provided $42.0 billion10 in new funding and up to $195 million in emergency funding for the I-35 bridge in Minnesota. This is $2.3 billion over the FY2007 enacted figure and $1.7 billion more than the Administration requested. The increase is due to increases in the authorized level of highway funding (including an increase due to a RABA adjustment that was not requested by the Administration) and $1 billion provided for inspection and repair of highway bridges following the collapse of the I-35 bridge in Minnesota.

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA)

The Administration requested the authorized level of funding for FMCSA, $528 million. This is $11 million (2%) over the amount provided for FY2007; $300 million of the request is for grants to states to enforce commercial truck and bus safety regulations.

The House approved $528 million, the authorized level and the amount requested by the Administration, the Senate approved $531 million, and the conference agreement recommended $530 million. The final THUD appropriations act provided $530 million.

Both of the House and Senate bills, the conference agreement, and the final THUD appropriations act include a provision (Section 136) that prohibits any funds in the act from being used to "establish" a cross-border trucking demonstration program allowing Mexican trucking companies to operate beyond the commercial zone (a zone extending 20 miles into the United States from the U.S.-Mexico border). The DOT had implemented such a program on September 7, 2007. DOT continued to operate the program after passage of the FY2008 act, contending that FY2008 funding used for the program would not be used to establish the program, but to continue its operation.

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)

The Administration requested $833 million for NHTSA, the amount authorized for FY2008. This is an increase of $12 million (1%) over the amount provided for FY2007; $599 million of this amount is for grants to states for highway safety programs to reduce deaths and injuries from motor vehicle crashes.

The House approved $836 million in new funding, $3 million more than authorized and requested. The Senate approved $835 million in new funding, $2 million more than the level authorized and requested. The conference agreement recommended $838 million in new funding ($815 million after a $23 million rescission of contract authority). The final THUD appropriations act provided $838 million ($815 million after a rescission of contract authority).

Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)

The Administration requested $1.081 billion for FRA for FY2008. This is a decrease of $400 million (28%) from the $1.478 billion provided for FY2007. The largest portion of FRA's budget is for support of Amtrak, and virtually all of the proposed reduction was in funding for Amtrak, as discussed above. The next largest portion of FRA's budget is for safety programs intended to reduce railroad accidents. The Administration requested $148 million, $2 million (1%) less than provided for FY2007. The other component of the FRA budget is research and development of rail safety improvements. The Administration requested $32 million for this, $2 million (6%) less than the $35 million provided for FY2007.

The House approved $1.667 billion for FRA, an increase of $188 million over FY2007 and $586 million over the Administration request. Aside from $35 million for a rail line relocation grant program that was authorized in SAFETEA, but not previously funded, and an extra $1 million for research and development, all of the increase over the Administration request is for Amtrak.

The Senate approved $1.657 billion for FRA, an increase of $179 million over the FY2007 funding and $577 million over the Administration request. All but $7 million of the increase over the Administration request is related to Amtrak.

The conference agreement recommends $1.656 billion. This represents the same level of funding as FY2007 for FRA's safety and operations account, an increase of $1.5 million over the FY2007 funding for FRA's research and development program, an increase of $81 million over the FY2007 funding for Amtrak, and funds for two programs that were not funded in FY2007—$75 million for a capital grant program for states to support passenger rail service and $20 million for a rail line relocation and improvement program.

The final THUD appropriations act provided $1.561 billion. This is $83 million over the FY2007 enacted level. Most of the increase was for passenger rail activities.

Federal Transit Administration (FTA)

The Administration requested $9.422 billion for FTA for FY2008. This was an increase of $447 million (5%) over the amount provided for FY2007,11 but was $309 million below the authorized FY2008 funding. The increase was in funds provided to states and localities through formula programs. The requested reduction from the authorized funding level was in the popular New Starts program, which helps fund the construction of new transit projects and extensions to existing transit systems. The Administration requested $1.4 billion for New Starts, a decrease of $166 million (1%) from the FY2007 figure and $309 million (2%) less than the authorized level of $1.7 billion. The Administration defended the reduction in New Starts funding by saying that difficult budget choices had to be made,12 and asserted that it had requested enough funding to cover all the New Starts projects that were ready for funding in FY2008, as well as having set aside funding for projects that might become ready for funding during FY2008. The request also included $100 million for the newly created Small Starts portion of the New Starts program, which provides funding for projects whose total cost is less than $250 million. The Small Starts portion is authorized for $200 million for FY2008, but that program's regulations had not been finalized as of the publication of the Administration budget request, so the Administration did not expect that the program would be able to make $200 million in grants in FY2008.

The House approved $9.710 billion for FTA, the authorized level for FY2008. This is $701 million more than the FY2007 level and $288 million more than the Administration request. The House provided the $1.7 billion authorized funding level for the Capital Improvement (i.e., New Starts) program, including the $200 million authorized for the new Small Starts portion of that program. The House Appropriations Committee's report on the bill recommended several recipients for a portion of the Small Starts funding.

The Senate approved $9.565 billion for FTA, an increase of $590 million over the FY2007 level and $143 million over the Administration request, but $134 million less than the authorized level for FY2008. The primary difference from the House funding, and the authorized level, was the $1.566 billion provided for the New Starts program. This is the same amount provided for FY2007, and $166 million more than requested for FY2008, but $134 million less than the FY2008 authorized level. The Senate committee also recommended several recipients for a portion of the funding provided for the Small Starts component of the New Starts program. The Senate also approved a floor amendment prohibiting FTA from finalizing its proposed New Start evaluation rule.

The conference agreement recommended $9.649 billion for FTA. The primary difference between this level and the levels approved by the House and Senate was the funding for the New Starts program: the House approved $1.700 billion, the Senate $1.566 billion, and the conference agreement recommended $1.650 billion.

The final THUD appropriations act provided $9.358 billion for FTA. This is $348 million over the FY2007 enacted level, while $358 million below the FY2008 authorized funding level (and $320 million below the amount recommended by the conference committee). Most of the difference from the authorized level was due to a reduction of $104 million in the amount provided for formula and bus grants, a further rescission of $105 million of bus funding, and an appropriation of approximately $131 million less than the authorized level provided for the Capital Grants program.

Maritime Administration (MARAD)

The Administration requested $295 million for MARAD for FY2008, $4 million (2%) above the $291 million enacted for FY2007.13 MARAD supports the maritime transportation sector. The largest components of its budget are the Maritime Security Program and Operations and Training.

The Administration requested $154 million (identical to the amount provided for FY2007) for the Maritime Security Program. This provides payments of roughly $2.6 million per ship to retain a fleet of 60 active, militarily useful, privately owned vessels to be available to the federal government in the event they are needed for security purposes. A total of $115 million was requested for Operations and Training, $4 million (3%) more than the $111 million provided for FY2007. This program funds the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, State Maritime Schools, and MARAD's operations.

The House approved $295 million in new funding for MARAD, $4 million more than the comparable amount for FY2007 and equal to the amount requested for FY2008. The Senate approved $330 million in new funding for MARAD, $39 million more than the comparable FY2007 figure and $35 million more than requested. The increase is largely due to $20 million provided for assistance to small shipyards and $10 million provided for loan guarantees under the Maritime Guaranteed Loan Program; no funding was provided for either of those purposes in FY2007, nor was any requested for FY2008.

The conference agreement recommended $313 million in new funding for MARAD for FY2008. The final THUD appropriations act provided this amount. This is $23 million more than the comparable amount provided for FY2007 and $18 million more than the comparable amount requested for FY2008. These increases are largely due to additional funding provided for MARAD's operations and training account, $10 million provided for assistance to small shipyards, and $5 million provided for loan guarantees under the Maritime Guaranteed Loan Program. No funding was provided for the latter two purposes in FY2007, nor was any requested for FY2008.

Housing and Urban Development Appropriations

Table 5. Appropriations: Housing and Urban Development, FY2007-FY2008

(budget authority in billions of dollars)

Program

FY2007
Enacteda

FY2008
Request

FY2008
House

FY2008
Senate

FY2008
Conf.b

FY2008 Enactedc

Appropriations

Tenant-Based Rental Assistance (Sec. 8 vouchers; includes advance appropriations)

 

 

 

 

 

 

15.920

16.000

16.330

16.599

16.443

16.391d

Project-Based Rental Assistance (Sec.8)

5.976

5.813

6.480

5.813

6.382

6.382

Public housing capital fund

2.439

2.024

2.439

2.500

2.439

2.439

Public housing operating fund

3.864

4.000

4.200

4.200

4.200

4.200

HOPE VI

0.099

0.000e

0.120

0.100

0.120

0.100

Native American housing block grants

0.624

0.627

0.627

0.630

0.630

0.630

Indian housing loan guarantee

0.006

0.007

0.007

0.007

0.007

0.007

Native Hawaiian Block Grant

0.009

0.006

0.009

0.009

0.009

0.009

Native Hawaiian loan guarantee

0.001

0.001

0.001

0.001

0.001

0.001

Housing, persons with AIDS (HOPWA)

0.286

0.300

0.300

0.300

0.300

0.300

Rural Housing Economic Development

0.017

0.000

0.017

0.017

0.017

0.017

Community Development Fund (Including CDBG)

3.772

3.037

4.180

4.060

4.000

3.866

Sec.108 loan guarantee; subsidy

0.004

0.000

0.004

0.006

0.005

0.005

Brownfields redevelopment

0.010

0.000

0.010

0.010

0.010

0.010

HOME Investment Partnershipsf

1.757

1.967

1.764g

1.970

1.767

1.704

Homeless Assistance Grants

1.442

1.586

1.561

1.586

1.586

1.586

Self-help and Assisted Homeownership

0.049

0.070

0.060

0.070

0.060

0.060

Housing for the elderly

0.735

0.575

0.735

0.735

0.735

0.735

Housing for the disabled

0.237

0.125

0.237

0.237

0.237

0.237

Housing Counseling Assistancef

f

0.050f

f

f

f

f

Rental Housing Assistance

0.026

0.028h

0.028h

0.028h

0.028h

0.028h

Research and technology

0.050

0.065

0.058

0.061

0.061

0.051

Fair housing activities

0.046

0.045

0.046

0.052

0.050

0.050

Lead Hazard Control

0.150

0.116

0.130

0.157

0.145

0.145

Salaries and expenses

0.581i

0.654

0.643

1.206j

1.222k

1.212k

Working capital fund

0.195

0.220

0.125

0.173

0.155

0.155

Manufactured Housing Fees Trust Fundl

0.013

0.016

0.016

0.016

0.016

0.016

Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversightl

0.066m

0.066

0.066

0.066

0.066

0.066

FHA Expensesl

0.722

0.767

0.745

0.169j

0.169k

0.169k

GNMA Expensesl

0.011

0.011

0.011

0.010

n

n

Inspector General

0.089m

0.088

0.083g

0.112

0.112

0.112

 

Appropriations Subtotal

39.195

38.263

41.029

40.900

40.972

40.683

Rescissions

Housing Certificate Fund (Section 8) rescission

-1.650

-1.300

-1.300

-1.100

-1.250

-1.250

HOPE VI rescission

0.000

-0.099e

0.000

0.000

0.000

0.000

Neighborhood Initiatives (NI) rescission

0.000

-0.050o

0.000

0.000

0.000

0.000

Economic Developments Initiative (EDI) rescission

0.000

-0.307o

0.000

0.000

0.000

0.000

Rental Housing Assistance rescission

0.000

-0.028h

-0.028h

-0.028h

-0.028h

-0.038h

Section 8 Voucher rescission

0.000

0.000

0.000

0.000

0.000

-0.723d

 

Rescissions Subtotal

-1.650

-1.783

-1.328

-1.128

-1.278

-2.011

Offsetting Receipts/Program Savingsp

Manufactured Housing Fees Trust Fund

-0.013

-0.016

-0.016

-0.016

-0.016

-0.016

Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight

-0.066m

-0.066

-0.066

-0.066

-0.066

-0.066

Federal Housing Administration (FHA)

-0.652

-0.250

-0.250

-0.250

-0.250

-0.250

GNMA

-0.181

-0.185

-0.163

-0.163

-0.163

-0.163

Legislative Proposalsq

NA

-0.366

-0.540

-0.540

-0.540

-0.540

 

Offsets Subtotal

-0.912

-0.883

-1.035

-1.035

-1.035

-1.035

Total

36.633

35.597

38.666

38.737

38.659

37.637

Source: Prepared by CRS on the basis of the President's FY2008 Budget documents, HUD Congressional Budget Justifications, H.R. 3074 , H.Rept. 110-238, S.Rept. 110-131, funding tables updated for floor action provided by the House and Senate Appropriations Committees, H.Rept. 110-446, and the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 (P.L. 110-161).

a. The FY2007 year-long continuing resolution funded most accounts at their FY2006 enacted level; however, the CR specified higher or lower funding levels for some HUD accounts.

b. The House-Senate conference agreement for HUD was approved by the House but never considered by the Senate. It was replaced with a HUD funding bill included as Division K in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008.

c. The account-level funding table for Division K- Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2008, included in the joint explanatory statement as printed in the Congressional Record on December 17, 2007 (beginning on page H16632), is not consistent with the funding levels set by the legislative text as printed in the Congressional Record on the same date. However, the account-level table included in the joint explanatory statement posted on the House Rules Committee website, prior to floor consideration of the bill, is consistent with the legislative text printed in the Congressional Record, and is also consistent with tables provided to CRS by the House Appropriations Committee. As a result, the table posted on the House Rules Committee website was used in place of the table printed in the Congressional Record.

d. The Consolidated Appropriations Act includes $4.158 billion in advance appropriations for tenant-based rental assistance to become available in FY2009. An amount of $4.193 billion in advance appropriations provided in FY2007 became available at the beginning of FY2008. Of the advance appropriations provided in FY2007 for use in FY2008, P.L. 110-161 rescinds $723 million.

e. The President requested that Congress rescind the amount provided in FY2007 for HOPE VI.

f. Housing counseling assistance is typically funded as a set-aside in the HOME account. In FY2007, it was funded at $42 million within HOME. In recent years, including FY2008, the President's budget has requested that the program be funded in a separate account. Both the House and Senate bills, as well as the conference agreement, and final enacted bill included funding for housing counseling as a set-aside within the HOME account for FY2008. The House version of H.R. 3074 would have provided $49 million (see table note g), the Senate version would have provided $150 million, the conference agreement would have provided $50 million, and the final, enacted bill provided $50 million.

g. A floor amendment would have transferred $6.76 million from the Inspector General account to the HOME account to be used for housing counseling assistance.

h. As proposed by the President, House bill, Senate bill, and conference agreement, the $28 million for rental housing assistance would have been fully offset by a rescission of $28 million in unobligated and recaptured balances from the rental housing assistance account. The FY2008 enacted funding bill provided $28 million for rental housing assistance but rescinded $38 million in unobligated balances, leaving a net offset of $10 million.

i. The CR appropriated such sums as may be necessary to fund 50% of the cost of the statutory cost-of-living increase approved for FY2007. The amount shown here may change if estimates of the cost of this provision change.

j. The Senate-passed funding bill proposed to change the way that HUD's salaries and expenses were funded. Traditionally, HUD has transferred funds from FHA and GNMA to cover the agency's management and administrative salaries. According to the committee report, the committee has eliminated such transfers and replaced them with direct appropriations to specific salaries and expenses accounts within each HUD mission area in order to provide more transparency. The net funding levels for salaries and expenses and FHA and GNMA administrative costs match the President's request.

k. Similar to the Senate bill, the conference agreement would have funded HUD's salaries and expenses directly, at the President's requested level, in new accounts. P.L. 110-161 funded the account using the same structure as the conference agreement, but provided $10 million less for non-personnel expenses.

l. The cost of these accounts is generally covered (partially, if not fully) by offsetting receipts that are listed elsewhere in this table.

m. The FY2007 emergency supplemental appropriations law (P.L. 110-28) provided $7 million in additional funding for HUD's Inspector General and authorized over $6 million in additional funding for the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, fully offset by additional OFHEO fees.

n. $8.25 million for GNMA expenses is included in the HUD salaries and expenses account.

o. The President's budget requested a rescission of FY2007 EDI and NI funds within the CDF account, but no EDI or NI funds were provided in FY2007.

p. Estimates of offsetting receipts are subject to change.

q. The President proposed a series of cost-saving/revenue-increasing FHA modernization proposals, several of which were adopted by Congress. The President's budget also included a new $4 million legislative proposal for HUD oversight of the Government Sponsored Enterprises, which was not adopted by Congress.

Department of Housing and Urban Development Budget and Key Policy Issues

On February 5, 2007, President Bush released his FY2008 budget request, 10 days before the Congress finished work on the FY2007 spending bills by enacting a revised year-long continuing resolution (P.L. 110-5). The FY2007 CR funded most HUD programs at their FY2006 level, but with decreases for some programs and increases for other programs. The CR provided HUD with more than $36.6 billion for FY2007. The 110th Congress also enacted a FY2007 supplemental funding bill, the U.S. Troop Readiness, Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability Act (P.L. 110-28), which contained several provisions that made changes within the FY2007 funding levels for HUD programs. (For more details, see CRS Report RL33344, The Department of Housing and Urban Development: FY2007 Budget, by [author name scrubbed] et al.)

The President's FY2008 budget requested about a billion-dollar decrease in funding for HUD. Although the budget called for increased funding for programs for the homeless, persons with AIDS, and first-time homebuyers, several programs were targeted for elimination (HOPE VI, Rural Housing and Economic Development, Brownfields Redevelopment, and Section 108 Loan Guarantees) or funding cuts (Section 202 Housing for the Elderly, Section 811 Housing for the Disabled, the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program, Lead Hazard Reduction, Fair Housing programs, and the Public Housing Capital Fund). The FY2008 funding debate was also influenced by the ongoing decline in receipts from the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) available to offset the cost of the budget. For FY2007, it was estimated that FHA would generate a net surplus of more than $650 million that could offset the cost of the HUD budget; for FY2008, the amount was estimated to be about $250 million, although legislative proposals were offered to increase the amount. (For a more detailed discussion, see CRS Report RL34022, The Department of Housing and Urban Development: FY2008 Appropriations, by [author name scrubbed] et al.)

On July 11, 2007, the House Appropriations Committee approved its version of the FY2008 Departments of Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (THUD) funding bill (H.R. 3074). The following day, the Senate Appropriations Committee approved its version (S. 1789). Both bills would have increased funding above the President's request for a number of HUD programs, including Section 8 tenant-based rental assistance, Housing for the Elderly and Housing for the Disabled, and CDBG. Both bills also would have provided funding for all programs that were slated for elimination in the President's budget. On July 24, 2007, the House approved H.R. 3074. Several floor amendments were adopted that would have made administrative changes to HUD programs, but only one amendment changed funding levels, by transferring $6.76 million to housing counseling assistance from HUD's Inspector General account. On September 11, 2007, the Senate began consideration of its version of H.R. 3074 after substituting the content with the language of S. 1789. On September 12, 2007, the Senate approved the legislation after adopting several housing-related amendments, including:

  • set-aside of $100 million in the HOME account to fund foreclosure prevention activities;
  • transfer of $380,000 from HUD's salaries and expenses account to the fair housing account in order to fund the creation and promotion of translated materials to help in serving persons with limited English proficiency;
  • a set-aside of $25 million in the HOME account to fund the American Dream Downpayment Initiative; and
  • a transfer of $2.4 million from the Working Capital Fund to the Research and Technology account to provide additional funding for tribal colleges and universities.

On November 8, 2007, House and Senate conferees agreed to a FY2008 THUD funding bill. The total for HUD in the conference agreement (H.Rept. 110-446) was lower than the House and Senate-passed levels, but higher than the President's request. The agreement was reported on November 13, 2007, and was approved by the House on November 14, 2007. According to a Statement of Administration Policy released by the Office of Management and Budget, the President intended to veto the bill, since its funding level was above his request. The full Senate never considered the conference agreement.

On December 19, 2007, Congress enacted the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 (attached to H.R. 2764), to fund most of the federal government, including HUD, for the remainder of the fiscal year. The overall HUD funding level provided in the Consolidated Appropriations Act is less than originally approved by the House, Senate, or House-Senate conference committee, but is about $2 billion higher than the President's request. It funds most HUD programs at the levels provided in the conference agreement (H.Rept. 110-446), although it reduces funding for some programs, including the HOPE VI program, the HOME program, and the Community Development Block Grant program. It also reduces funding for HUD's Research and Technology, Working Capital, and Management Expenses accounts. Additionally, the bill contains a rescission of $723 million in advance appropriations for the Section 8 voucher program. The bill was signed into law by the President on December 26, 2007 (P.L. 110-161).

Tenant-Based Rental Assistance (Section 8 Vouchers)

The President's budget requested $16 billion for Tenant-Based Rental Assistance, a slight increase over the $15.9 billion enacted for FY2007. H.R. 3074, as passed by the House, would have provided $16.3 billion. The Senate-passed version of the bill would have increased funding for Tenant-Based Rental Assistance to $16.6 billion. The conference agreement would have funded the account between the House- and Senate-passed levels, at $16.4 billion. P.L. 110-161 funded Tenant-Based Rental Assistance just below the conference agreement level, but also included a rescission of $723 million, leaving the total amount available for the account at $15.6 billion.

The majority of tenant-based rental assistance funding is dedicated to voucher renewals. Since FY2004, Congress has made changes each year in how HUD is to distribute voucher renewal funding to public housing authorities (PHAs). For example, the FY2007 CR did not adopt the same allocation formula that was in place in FY2006. In FY2006, PHAs were funded based on what they had received in FY2005, with some adjustments. For FY2007, Congress directed HUD to fund PHAs based on their actual leasing and costs from the previous 12 months, with some adjustments.

In his FY2008 budget, the President requested that PHAs receive renewal funding using a formula similar to the one in place in FY2006. The House-passed version of H.R. 3074 adopted a formula similar to the one requested by the President. The committee report (H.Rept. 110-38) noted that the committee chose not to use updated data for allocating FY2008 funding because the committee wanted to give PHAs additional time to adjust to their FY2007 allocations before changing the formula again, since HUD had delayed allocating FY2007 funding under the new formula. The Senate-passed bill would have allocated funding based on PHAs' most recent 12 months of leasing and cost data, with adjustments, similar to the formula used in the FY2007 CR. The conference agreement would have used a formula similar to the one included in the Senate version of the bill.

The final appropriations act, P.L. 110-161, allocates renewal funding using a different formula from the House, Senate, or House-Senate conference agreement. Renewal funds will be allocated to PHAs based on their leasing and cost data from the prior year, plus inflation and other adjustments, and then reduced by the amount by which their unusable program reserves exceed 7% of their FY2007 funding allocation. As noted earlier, P.L. 110-161 reduced the total funding for renewals with a rescission of $723 million, the amount estimated to be available in unusable agency reserves. (For more information, see CRS Report RL33929, Recent Changes to the Section 8 Voucher Renewal Funding Formula, by [author name scrubbed], and CRS Report RL34002, Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program: Issues and Reform Proposals, by [author name scrubbed].)

Prior to FY2008, no new vouchers—called incremental vouchers—had been funded since FY2002. Both the House and Senate bills for FY2008 proposed funding for new incremental vouchers targeted to certain populations. The House version of H.R. 3074 would have provided $30 million for incremental vouchers for certain non-elderly disabled families and homeless veterans. The Senate bill would have provided $105 million for incremental vouchers for homeless veterans and for families with children in the child welfare system or youth transitioning out of foster care. The conference agreement would have provided $135 million for incremental vouchers for the same populations.

P.L. 110-161 provides $125 million for incremental vouchers for homeless veterans, families with children in the child welfare system or youth transitioning out of foster care, and non-elderly disabled families.

Public Housing

The President's FY2008 budget requested a $130 million increase in funding for the public housing Operating Fund. In recent years, HUD has not requested, and Congress has not provided, sufficient appropriations to fund all PHAs at 100% of their Operating Fund formula eligibility. Instead, PHAs generally receive some percentage of their eligible budgets, referred to as the proration level. The FY2007 CR provided $3.8 billion for the Operating Fund, which resulted in a proration of 83%. For FY2008, the President requested $4 billion ($3.99 billion for formula grants), which is estimated to result in a proration level of just over 80%. The FY2008 appropriations law (P.L. 110-161)—as proposed in the House bill, Senate bill, and their conference agreement—provides $200 million more than the President's request for the Operating Fund. (For more information, see CRS Report RS22557, Public Housing: Fact Sheet on the New Operating Fund Formula, by [author name scrubbed].)

For FY2008, the President requested $2 billion for the Capital Fund, a $400 million reduction from FY2007 funding. The majority of the reduction would come from the formula grants that HUD provides to PHAs to use to modernize their public housing. Both the House- and Senate-passed bills would have increased funding above the President's requested level for the public housing Capital Fund. The House bill would have funded the account at the FY2007 level ($400 million above the President's request), and the Senate bill would have provided almost $500 million above the President's request. P.L. 110-161—like the House-Senate conference agreement—funds the account at the House-passed level.

For FY2008, the President again requested that Congress provide no new funds for the HOPE VI program, and that Congress rescind the $99 million provided to the program in FY2007. P.L. 110-161—like the House bill, Senate bill, and the House-Senate conference agreement—provides funding for the HOPE VI program and does not rescind FY2007 funding, as requested in the President's budget. P.L. 110-161 funds the program at $100 million, which is less than the amount proposed in the House bill and House-Senate conference agreement ($120 million), but the same as proposed by the Senate bill.

Community Development Programs

The President's FY2008 budget recommendation for the formula portion14 of the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program was approximately $3 billion, 20% less than the $3.7 billion appropriated for distribution to entitlement communities and states in FY2007. As approved by the House, H.R. 3074 would have provided $3.9 billion for CDBG formula grants. The Senate-passed version of H.R. 3074 would have funded CDBG formula grants at $3.7 billion. The conference agreement would have provided $3.8 billion. P.L. 110-161 funds CDBG at $3.6 billion, less than the amount proposed by the House, Senate, or House-Senate conference agreement.

In addition to the CDBG program, the Community Development Fund account has also been used to fund other community development programs, including congressionally directed projects through the Economic Development Initiatives (EDI) and Neighborhood Initiatives (NI) programs. The President's budget proposed eliminating funding for EDIs and NIs, characterizing these programs as duplicative of the activities funded by the CDBG formula grant program. Both House and Senate bills would have provided funding for EDI and NI earmarks. The House-passed version of H.R. 3074 recommended $160 million for EDIs and $20 million for NIs; the Senate-passed version would have provided $248 million for EDIs and $40 million for NIs. The conference agreement would have provided $184 million for EDIs and $27 million for NIs. P.L. 110-161 provides slightly less than the conference agreement: $180 million for EDIs and $26 million for NIs.

The Administration's budget also proposed eliminating funding for several community development programs funded outside of the Community Development Fund account, including Brownfields Redevelopment, Section 108 loan guarantees, and Rural Housing and Economic Development Grants. The President's request for no new funding for these accounts was rejected in the House and Senate bills, as well as the House-Senate conference agreement and P.L. 110-161. The House bill would have funded Section 108 loan guarantees at $3.7 million, Brownfields Redevelopment at $9.9 million and Rural Housing and Economic Development Grants at the enacted level for FY2007, $16.8 million. The Senate bill would have provided $6 million for Section 108 loan guarantees, $10 million for Brownfields Redevelopment, and $17 million for Rural Housing and Economic Development. P.L. 110-161—as proposed in the House-Senate conference agreement—provides $4.5 million for Section 108 loan guarantees, $10 million for Brownfields Redevelopment, and $17 million for Rural Housing and Economic Development.

Homeless Programs

The President's budget for FY2008 proposed to increase funding for the Homeless Assistance Grants by $144 million above the FY2007 level, to $1.586 billion. However, $25 million of the FY2008 requested appropriation would have been transferred to the Department of Labor to fund a Prisoner Re-Entry Initiative under the President's request. As in past years, the Administration also proposed to consolidate the three competitive Homeless Assistance Grants—the Supportive Housing Program (SHP), the Shelter Plus Care (S+C) program, and the Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation for Single Room Occupancy Dwellings (SRO) program—into one competitive grant.

As passed by the House, H.R. 3074 did not include the Prisoner Re-Entry Initiative, and instead proposed to fund the homeless programs at $25 million less than the President's request—$1.561 billion. The Senate-passed bill also did not fund the Prisoner Re-Entry Initiative; however, it would have funded the homeless programs at $1.586 billion, the same level recommended by the President. Of that amount, $25 million would have funded a new demonstration program to rapidly rehouse homeless families living in shelters. P.L. 110-161—as proposed in the House-Senate conference agreement—adopts the Senate-passed funding level and includes funding for the demonstration program. None of the funding bills considered by Congress, including P.L. 110-161, included the President's proposal to consolidate the competitive grants. However, separate legislation introduced in both the House (H.R. 840) and Senate (S. 1518) proposed to consolidate the programs. (For more information about the distribution of the Homeless Assistance Grants, see CRS Report RL33764, The HUD Homeless Assistance Grants: Distribution of Funds, by [author name scrubbed].)

Housing Programs for the Elderly and the Disabled

The President's FY2008 budget proposal for the Section 202 Housing for the Elderly program would have reduced funding by almost $160 million (nearly 29%) from the FY2007 level, to $575 million. The House-passed version of H.R. 3074 would have provided just under $735 million for elderly housing programs, while the Senate-passed version would have provided exactly $735 million. P.L. 110-161—as proposed in the House-Senate conference agreement—provides $735 million for the Section 202 program. (For more information, see CRS Report RL33508, Section 202 and Other HUD Rental Housing Programs for Low-Income Elderly Residents, by [author name scrubbed].)

The President's FY2008 budget, like that for FY2007, proposed to cut funding for the Section 811 Housing for the Disabled program nearly in half. In FY2007, the program was funded at just under $237 million. In FY2008, the Administration's budget requested $125 million for the Section 811 Housing for the Disabled program. The decrease would have resulted from the President's proposal to stop funding the capital grants component of the program and to only fund the rental voucher component of the program. The House-passed bill would have provided funding at the FY2007 level (just under $237 million); the Senate-passed bill, conference agreement, and P.L. 110-161 included $237 million for Section 811.

Federal Housing Administration (FHA)

For FY2008, the FHA account was expected to generate $250 million in offsetting receipts, which is less than the amount of administrative expenses expected to be incurred by the account. This is a significant change from a few years ago when the income to the insurance funds (which was regularly in excess of $1 billion) exceeded the costs and resulted in negative appropriations for FHA. This decline in offsetting receipts tracks FHA's declining market share.

The President's FY2008 budget included three legislative proposals that it estimated would generate $362 million in budget savings. The first proposal was to remove the aggregate limit on the number of Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs) and set the loan limit for HECMs at 100% of the conforming loan limits, rather than allowing them to vary by area. The second proposal was to amend the National Housing Act to permit HUD to increase the loan limits on the various multifamily housing programs by up to 170% on an area-by-area basis and by up to 215% on a project-by-project basis. The third proposal was to increase the fee charged by the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) for guaranteeing mortgage-backed securities by six basis points. P.L. 110-161—as proposed in the House bill, Senate bill, and House-Senate conference agreement—adopted only the first two proposals, but with larger estimates of savings ($540 million, as shown under the heading Legislative Proposals in Table 5).

The President's budget also proposed to move several accounts from the General Insurance/Special Risk Insurance fund to the Mutual Mortgage Insurance fund. None of the appropriations bills considered by Congress, including P.L. 110-161, adopted the President's proposed transfer.

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Coordinator, Analyst in Transportation Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Coordinator, Specialist in Transportation Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Aviation Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Transportation Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Transportation Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Transportation Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Housing Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Analyst in Federalism and Economic Development Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Analyst in Housing Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Analyst in Housing Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
[author name scrubbed], Legislative Attorney ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Key Policy Staff

Area of Expertise

Name

CRS
Div.

Phone
#

Department of Transportation

Aviation Safety, Federal Aviation Administration

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

Airport Improvement Program, Transportation Infrastructure Policy, Transportation Trust Funds

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

Federal Railroad Administration; Maritime Administration; Surface Transportation Board

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

Airport Improvement Program, Federal Highway Administration

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

Surface transportation policy; transit policy

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

Amtrak, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, Federal Transit Administration, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Surface Transportation Safety

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

Department of Housing and Urban Development

Low-income housing programs and issues and general HUD: Section 8, Public Housing, HOPE VI, HOME

[author name scrubbed]

DSP

[phone number scrubbed]

Community Development programs and issues: Community Development Block Grants (CDBG), EZ/EC, Brownfields redevelopment

[author name scrubbed]

G&F

[phone number scrubbed]

Housing programs and issues for special populations: Elderly (202), Disabled (811), Homeless, AIDS housing

[author name scrubbed]

DSP

[phone number scrubbed]

Homeownership and other housing issues: FHA, Rural, Indian housing, Fair Housing

[author name scrubbed]

DSP

[phone number scrubbed]

Related Agencies

Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board

[author name scrubbed]

ALD

[phone number scrubbed]

Federal Maritime Commission

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

National Transportation Safety Board

[author name scrubbed]

RSI

[phone number scrubbed]

Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation

[author name scrubbed]

G&F

[phone number scrubbed]

United States Interagency Council on Homelessness

[author name scrubbed]

DSP

[phone number scrubbed]

ALD = American Law Division
DSP = Domestic Social Policy Division
G&F = Government and Finance Division
RSI = Resources, Science, and Industry Division

Footnotes

1.

United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, Fiscal Year 2008 Budget Summary, p. 1.

2.

This total includes $66.9 billion in new appropriations and $2.4 billion in rescissions.

3.

United States Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2008, pp. 108-110.

4.

According to FTA, a total of $96.6 million was unallocated. "FTA Supplemental Fiscal Year 2008 Apportionments and Allocations and Program Information," Federal Register, vol. 73, no. 28 (Monday, February 11, 2008), p. 7790.

5.

United States Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2007, p. 222.

6.

United States Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2008, p. 110.

7.

Total enacted new FY2007 FAA funding was $15.1 billion. The net total was reduced to $14.5 billion by a rescission of contract authority.

8.

The FY2007 enacted figure and FY2008 request were reduced, for accounting purposes, by rescissions of contract authority, resulting in net budgetary totals of $36.3 billion for FY2007 and $37.9 billion for the FY2008 request.

9.

Testimony of Mary Peters, Secretary, U.S. Department of Transportation, before the U. S. House of Representatives Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies, March 14, 2007.

10.

The FY2008 enacted figure was reduced, for accounting purposes, by a rescission of contract authority, resulting in a net budgetary total of $38.1 billion.

11.

Not counting $35 million in emergency funding provided in an FY2007 supplemental funding act (P.L. 110-28).

12.

Funding for the New Starts Program comes from the General Fund, while almost all other FTA programs are funded from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund.

13.

MARAD's FY2007 enacted appropriation was scored at $214 million, the $291 million total being reduced by $76 million in rescissions of previously appropriated funding, primarily from the National Defense Tank Vessel Program.

14.

The CDBG program also generally receives some funding for Indian tribes and other purposes. For more information, see CRS Report RL34022, The Department of Housing and Urban Development: FY2008 Appropriations, by [author name scrubbed] et al.