THE 0.38 PERCENT ACROSS-THE-BOARD CUT IN FY2000 APPROPRIATIONS

CRS Report for Congress
The 0.38 Percent Across-the-Board Cut
in FY2000 Appropriations
February 25, 2000
Robert Keith
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division


Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

ABSTRACT
As the federal budget process for FY2000 unfolded in 1999, Congress and the
President used various budgetary devices and techniques in order to avoid exceeding
the discretionary spending limits, which would have triggered automatic spending cuts
under a sequester. One of the devices was the inclusion of a 0.38% across-the-board
cut in the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2000 (P.L. 106-113; H.R. 3194).
According to OMB estimates, the 0.38% cut was expected to yield savings of $2.4
billion in budget authority and $1.4 billion in outlays for the fiscal year.
A report regarding the implementation of the cut was submitted to Congress on
February 7, 2000, in the Analytical Perspectives volume of the President’s budget.
According to the report, a total of $2,356,909,000 in discretionary budget authority
was rescinded in 492 accounts. The largest share of the cuts, amounting to $1.055
billion and involving 70 accounts, was allocated to military activities of the
Department of Defense. The other departments with cuts in excess of $100 million
included the Departments of Transportation ($179.6 million), Health and Human
Services ($166.8 million), and Education ($108.6 million).
This report will not be updated.



The 0.38 Percent Across-the-Board Cut
in FY2000 Appropriations
Summary
As the federal budget process for FY2000 unfolded in 1999, Congress and the
President used various budgetary devices and techniques in order to avoid exceeding
the discretionary spending limits, which would have triggered automatic spending cuts
under a sequester, and “using” the Social Security surplus. These devices included
emergency spending designations, advance appropriations, and rescissions, among
others. According to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the adjustments
and savings from these devices amounted to tens of billions of dollars and averted the
need for a sequester; discretionary spending enacted for FY2000 was $1.6 billion
under the budget authority limit and $3.5 billion under the outlay limit.
One of the devices used to prevent the violation of the discretionary spending
limits was the inclusion of a 0.38% across-the-board cut in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act for FY2000 (P.L. 106-113; H.R. 3194). According to OMB
estimates, the 0.38% cut was expected to yield savings of $2.4 billion in budget
authority and $1.4 billion in outlays for the fiscal year. Without the enactment of the
cut or comparable offsets, the limit for discretionary budget authority would have
been exceeded by about $0.8 billion and a sequester would have occurred.
House and Senate interest in an across-the-board spending cut encompassed
several different annual appropriations measures and evolved from a sense-of-the-
Senate statement (offered to S. 1650), to a 0.97% cut (in H.R. 3064), and finally to
the 0.38% cut. In fashioning the 0.38% spending cut, Congress included several
important features: (1) reductions made pursuant to the provision were to take the
form of rescissions of FY2000 budget authority; (2) the required spending cuts were
to be applied only to the total discretionary budget authority made available to each
department and agency, not to any mandatory resources; (3) reductions were to be
applied uniformly to each account for the Department of Defense (and the defense
activities of the Department of Energy), except that no reductions were to be made
in military personnel accounts; (4) with regard to nondefense activities, there was no
stated requirement that reductions be applied uniformly to each department’s or
agency’s accounts, but there was a requirement that no “program, project, or activity”
within an account be reduced by more than 15 percent; and (5) the OMB director was
instructed to include in the President’s budget for FY2001 a report specifying the
reductions made to each account under the requirement.
The report required of the OMB director was submitted to Congress on
February 7, 2000, in the Analytical Perspectives volume of the President’s budget.
According to the report, a total of $2,356,909,000 in discretionary budget authority
was rescinded in 492 accounts, including $9.7 million for the legislative branch and
$14.0 million for the judicial branch. The largest share of the cuts, amounting to
$1.055 billion and involving 70 accounts, was allocated to military activities of the
Department of Defense. The other departments with cuts in excess of $100 million
included the Departments of Transportation ($179.6 million), Health and Human
Services ($166.8 million), and Education ($108.6 million).



Contents
Background ................................................ 1
Legislative Action on Across-the-Board Cut Proposals...............2
S. 1650...............................................2
H.R. 3064.............................................3
H.R. 3194 (P.L. 106-113).................................5
Design and Implementation of the 0.38 Percent Cut..................8
List of Boxes
Box 1. FY2000 Across-the-Board Cut of 0.97 Percent ..................4
Box 2. FY2000 Across-the-Board Cut of 0.38 Percent...................6
List of Tables
Table 1. Summary of FY2000 Rescissions Made Under the Requirement for a 0.38
Percent Cut...............................................10



The 0.38 Percent Across-the-Board Cut
in FY2000 Appropriations
Background
As the federal budget process for FY2000 unfolded in 1999, during the first
session of the 106th Congress, a policy emerged of keeping the level of discretionary
spending (i.e., spending controlled through the annual appropriations process) within
the statutory limits while at the same time not “using” the Social Security surplus (i.e.,
incurring an on-budget deficit).1
One of the purposes in adhering to the discretionary spending limits was to avoid
a sequester at the end of the session.2 A sequester involves automatic, largely across-
the-board reductions in discretionary spending in order to eliminate any breach of the
limits. (A separate sequestration process entails automatic reductions in mandatory
spending if the enactment of revenue or mandatory spending measures causes a
violation of a “pay-as-you-go” requirement.) Under the Balanced Budget and
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, as amended, the director of the Office and
Management and Budget (OMB) is charged with determining within 15 days after the
close of a congressional session whether a sequester of either kind is required for the
fiscal year.
In order to enhance its efforts in trying to stay within the discretionary spending
limits, Congress and the President used various budgetary devices and techniques,
including emergency spending designations, advance appropriations, rescissions,
offsets in mandatory programs, obligation and payment delays, and directed scoring.3
These devices either resulted in upward adjustments in the limits, as was the case with
the emergency spending designations, or were counted as savings for the fiscal year.
According to OMB, the adjustments and savings from these devices amounted to tens
of billions of dollars and averted the need for a sequester; in the aggregate,


1 This issue is discussed in more depth in: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research
Service, Discretionary Spending Limits and the Social Security Surplus, by Robert Keith,
CRS Report RL30353 (Washington: October 27, 1999), 8 pages.
2 This process is discussed in detail in: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research
Service, The Sequestration Process and Across-the-Board Spending Cuts for FY2000, by
Robert Keith, CRS Report RL30363 (Washington: November 5, 1999), 16 pages.
3 These budgetary devices and techniques are discussed in: (1) U.S. Congressional Budget
Office, The Economic and Budget Outlook: Fiscal Years 2001-2010 (Washington: January
2000), pages 76-77; and (2) U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management
and Budget, OMB Final Sequestration Report to the President and Congress for Fiscal Year

2000 (Washington: January 25, 2000), see especially Table 2 on pages 4-6.



discretionary spending enacted for FY2000 was $1.6 billion under the budget
authority limit and $3.5 billion under the outlay limit.4
The Congressional Budget Office also issues sequestration estimates, but they
are advisory only; only the determinations made by the OMB director can trigger a
sequester. For FY2000, CBO indicated that discretionary spending exceeded the
limits by $6.7 billion in budget authority and $15.2 billion in outlays, which would5
have necessitated an across-the-board cut of about four percent.
One of the devices used to prevent the violation of the discretionary spending
limits that garnered public attention was the inclusion of a 0.38% cut across-the-board
cut in the omnibus appropriations act used to wrap up consideration of the regular
appropriations acts for FY2000. According to estimates made by OMB following the
measure’s enactment, the 0.38% cut was expected to yield savings of $2.351 billion
in budget authority and $1.356 billion in outlays for the fiscal year (the final OMB
estimate of the savings in budget authority was increased to $2.357 billion). Without
the enactment of the 0.38% cut, and absent any comparable offsets, the limit for
discretionary budget authority would have been exceeded by about $0.8 billion and
a sequester would have occurred.
Legislative Action on Across-the-Board Cut Proposals
House and Senate interest in an across-the-board spending cut surfaced relatively
late in the session, after much of the annual appropriations process had been
completed. Legislative action on across-the-board cut proposals encompassed several
different annual appropriations measures, beginning with S. 1650 and including H.R.
3064 and H.R. 3194. The formulation of the proposal evolved through the different
stages of legislative action, from a sense-of-the-Senate statement, to a 0.97% cut, and
finally to a 0.38% cut.
S. 1650. On September 29, 1999, the Senate began consideration of S. 1650,
its initial version of the Labor-HHS-Education Appropriations Act for FY2000. On
October 1, Senator Don Nickles, the assistant majority leader, offered an amendment
(numbered 1851) to the bill stating the sense of the Senate that an across-the-board
cut in appropriations should be adopted, if necessary, to avoid incurring an on-budget
deficit. On October 6, he offered a further amendment (numbered 1889) to his
underlying amendment. Amendment numbered 1889 was similar to the underlying
amendment and focused on “protecting Social Security surpluses,” stating the sense
of the Senate that
Congress should ensure that the fiscal year 2000 appropriations measures do not
result in an on-budget deficit (excluding the surpluses generated by the Social


4 OMB Final Sequestration Report, ibid., Table 6, pages 13-14.
5 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Final Sequestration Report for Fiscal Year 2000
(Washington: December 2, 1999), page 1.

Security trust funds) by adopting an across-the-board reduction in all discretionary6
appropriations sufficient to eliminate such deficit if necessary.
In describing his amendments, Senator Nickles indicated that an across-the-board
cut of 1% of discretionary appropriations might be needed to eliminate an estimated
overage of about $5 billion; other Senators provided estimates that the overage might
be much larger and that a cut of 5.5% might be needed. On October 6, the Senate
adopted amendment numbered 1889 by a vote of 54-46. After tabling another
amendment dealing with the issue, offered by Senator Frank Lautenberg, Senator
Nickles withdrew his underlying amendment. The Senate passed the bill the next day
without an across-the-board cut provision.
H.R. 3064. Following a veto by President Clinton on September 28 of the first
District of Columbia Appropriations Act for FY2000, the House and Senate
developed a second version, H.R. 3064, which also included the Labor-HHS-
Education appropriations for FY2000. The conferees on the measure inserted an
across-the-board cut provision in Section 1001 of Division C of the act (see Box 1).
The House agreed to the conference report on the measure on October 28 by a vote
of 218-211; the Senate agreed to it on November 2 by a vote of 49-48.
Unlike the language that the Senate had considered earlier, Section 1001 set in
place the requirement for a specific cut in discretionary appropriations—0.97% of the
total provided for each account. The section also provided that the pay of Members
of Congress, a permanent rather than an annual appropriation, would be subject to the
cut. (Under the sequestration process, the pay of Members of Congress is not subject
to reduction.)
Senator Ted Stevens, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee,
described the provision as a placeholder—in the face of a certain veto—until the final
necessary reductions could be negotiated with the Clinton Administration:
We have included ... against my best wishes, an across-the-board cut. That is
primarily because only the administration can identify some of the areas we can
reduce safely without harming the programs, and I am confident when we come to
what we call the final period to devise a bill, we will work out with the
administration some offsets that will take care of the bill. I am hopeful we will
have no across-the-board cut, but if it comes, it will not be as large as the one in7


this bill right now.
6 The text of amendments number 1851 and 1889, and the accompanying remarks of Senator
Nickles, are found in the Congressional Record of October 1, 1999 (No. 131) at pages
S11774-80 and page S 11808.
7 See the remarks of Senator Ted Stevens in the Congressional Record of November 2, 1999
(No. 152), at page S13623.

Box 1. FY2000 Across-the-Board Cut of 0.97 Percent
(Section 1001 of H.R. 3064)


Sec. 1001. (a) Across-the-Board Rescissions.—There is hereby rescinded an amount equal
to 0.97 percent of—
(1) the budget authority provided (or obligation limitation established) for fiscal
year 2000 for any discretionary account in any fiscal year 2000 appropriation law;
(2) the budget authority provided (or obligation limitation established) in any
advance appropriation for fiscal year 2000 for any discretionary account in any prior
fiscal year appropriation law; and
(3) the budget authority provided in any fiscal year 2000 appropriation law that
would have been estimated as increasing direct spending for fiscal year 2000 under
section 252 of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 were
it included in a law other than an appropriation law and not designated as an
emergency requirement.
(b) Proportionate Application.—Any rescission made by subsection (a) shall be
applied proportionately—
(1) to each discretionary account and each item of budget authority described
in subsection (a)(3); and
(2) within each such account and item, to each program, project, and activity
(with programs, projects, and activities as delineated in the appropriation Act or
accompanying report for the relevant fiscal year covering such account or item, or
for accounts and items not included in appropriation Acts, as delineated in the most
recently submitted President's budget).
(c) Subsequent Appropriation Laws.—In the case of any fiscal year 2000
appropriation law enacted after the enactment of this section, any rescission required by
subsection (a) shall take effect immediately after the enactment of such law.
(d) OMB Reports.—Within 30 days after the date of the enactment of this section
(or, if later, 30 days after the date of the enactment of any fiscal year 2000 appropriation
law), the Director of the Office of Management and Budget shall submit to the Committees
on Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Senate a report specifying the
amount of each rescission made pursuant to this section.
(e) Same Percentage Reduction Applicable to Pay For Members of Congress.—
(1) In General—In determining rates of pay for service performed in any fiscal
year beginning after September 30, 1999, the rate of pay for a Member of Congress
shall be determined as if the fiscal year 2000 pay adjustment (taking effect in January

2000) had resulted in a rate equal to—


(A) the rate of pay that would otherwise have taken effect for the position
involved beginning in January 2000 (if this section had not been enacted),
reduced by
(B) the same percentage as specified in subsection (a).
(2) Definitions—For purposes of this subsection—
(A) the term `Member of Congress' refers to any position under
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of section 601(a)(1) of the Legislative
Reorganization Act of 1946 (2 U.S.C. 31(1)(A)-(C)); and
(B) the term `fiscal year 2000 pay adjustment' means the adjustment in
rates of pay scheduled to take effect in fiscal year 2000 under section 601(a)(2)
of the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946 (2 U.S.C. 31(2)).

President Clinton vetoed H.R. 3064 on November 3.8 In his veto message to
Congress, he stated:
I am vetoing H.R. 3064 because the bill, including the offsets section, is deeply
flawed. It includes a misguided 0.97 percent across-the-board reduction that will
hurt everything from national defense to education and environmental programs
... The bill is clearly unacceptable. I have submitted a budget that would fund
these priorities without spending the Social Security surplus, and I am committed
to working with the Congress to identify acceptable offsets for additional spending
for programs that are important to all Americans.
H.R. 3194 (P.L. 106-113). The House’s third version of a measure providing
FY2000 appropriations for the District of Columbia, H.R. 3194, became, in
conference, a vehicle for four additional regular appropriations acts and several
legislative measures. In addition to dramatically expanding the scope of H.R. 3194,
the conferees changed its title to the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2000.9
The House adopted the conference report on November 18, 1999, by a vote of
296-135; the Senate adopted it the next day by a vote of 74-24. President Clinton
signed the measure into law on November 29 as P.L. 106-113 (113 Stat. 1501-

1537). 10


P.L. 106-113 is divided into two parts. Division A sets forth the full text of the
FY2000 appropriations for the District of Columbia. Division B provides
appropriations for the remaining four regular appropriations acts (in Section 1000(a)).
Instead of including the full text of each act, however, the subsection enacts individual
measures by cross-reference. Each of the four acts, in a form reflecting the final
budget agreement reached between President Clinton and Congress, was introduced
as a separate bill on November 17, 1999; these four bills are cross-referenced as
introduced on that date.
Section 1000(a) of Division B also enacts five other measures by cross-reference.
Each of these measures also was introduced as a separate bill on November 17. The
first of these other cross-referenced measures, H.R. 3425, deals with “miscellaneous
appropriations” and includes in Title III (Fiscal Year 2000 Offsets and Rescissions)
many of the savings required by the budget agreement. In particular, Section 301 of


8 See District of Columbia Appropriations Act, 2000—Veto Message From the President of
the United States (H.Doc.No. 106-154) in the Congressional Record of November 3, 1999
(No. 153), on pages H11441-11443.
9 For more detailed information on the contents and structure of the act, see: U.S. Library of
Congress, Congressional Research Service, FY2000 Consolidated Appropriations Act:
Reference Guide, by Robert Keith, CRS Report RS20403 (Washington: updated November

30, 1999), 4 pages.


10 On November 19, the House and Senate both passed H.Con.Res. 239, a measure making
a technical correction in the enrollment of the Consolidated Appropriations Act. The
correction dealt solely with a portion of H.R. 3194 containing State Department
authorizations.

H.R. 3425 requires a government-wide cut of 0.38% in discretionary appropriations
(see Box 2).
Box 2. FY2000 Across-the-Board Cut of 0.38 Percent
(Section 301 of H.R. 3425, as Cross-Referenced in P.L. 106-113)
Sec. 301. (a) Government-Wide Rescissions.—There is hereby rescinded an
amount equal to 0.38 percent of the discretionary budget authority provided (or
obligation limit imposed) for fiscal year 2000 in this or any other Act for each
department, agency, instrumentality or entity of the Federal Government.
(b) Restrictions.—In carrying out the rescissions made by subsection (a),—
(1) no program, project or activity of any department, agency,
instrumentality or entity may be reduced by more than 15 percent (with
“programs, projects, and activities” as delineated in the appropriations Act or
accompanying report for the relevant account, or for accounts and items not
included in appropriations Acts, as delineated in the most recently submitted
President’s budget),
(2) no reduction shall be taken from any military personnel account, and
(3) the reduction for the Department of Defense and Department of
Energy Defense Activities shall be applied proportionately to all Defense
accounts.
(c) Report.—The Director of the Office of Management and Budget shall
include in the President’s budget submitted for fiscal year 2001 a report specifying
the reductions made to each account pursuant to this section.
The remaining cross-referenced measures deal with: (1) amendments to the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 pertaining to Medicare and related programs; (2)
authorizations for the State Department; (3) the federal Milk Marketing Orders
program; and (4) the Intellectual Property and Communications Omnibus Reform Act
of 1999.
While the across-the-board cut provision sparked some strong criticism during
House and Senate floor debate on the conference report, its legislative history is
relatively sparse. The joint explanatory statement accompanying the conference
report on the measure merely indicated: “The conference agreement includes several11
offsets and rescissions.”
In the House, Speaker Dennis Hastert and other House leaders discussed it
briefly in the context of reducing waste, fraud, and abuse:
!Speaker Dennis Hastert
This bill also takes a very important first step in eliminating government waste.
Every year our government spends billions and billions of dollars, and we are


11 See H.Rept. 106-479 in the Congressional Record of November 17, 1999 (No. 163—Part
II), at pages H12230-12609 (especially page H12503).

saying in this bill, let us take 38 cents out of every $100 that the Federal
Government spends and find waste and abuse. I think that is doable, and I think
next year we ought to do the same thing, over and over again, because that is what
the American people expect us to do.
The across-the-board spending cut in this bill will force the agencies of government
to take a close look at their budget and see what frivolous spending can be
eliminated. Taxpayers deserve to have their money spent responsibly, and this bill
will save the American taxpayers from over $1 billion in excess spending.
(Congressional Record, November 18, 1999 (No. 164), page H12800.)
!Majority Leader Richard Armey
Beginning in 1998, fiscal year 1999, and now with this budget agreement in fiscal
year 2000, we will have retired a third of a trillion dollars' worth of debt for the
American people. We will have stopped the raid on Social Security forever. We
will have enforced this with an across-the-board spending reduction that
acknowledges truly it is time now to be disciplined to eliminate waste, inefficiency,
fraud in the use of the taxpayers' dollars. A new commitment of good government
in government. (Congressional Record, November 18, 1999 (No. 164), page
H12766.)
!Majority Whip Tom DeLay
We tried to cut waste by just suggesting a 1 percent across-the-board cut.
Incredibly, the Democrats maintain that a measly 1 percent of waste could not be
found in the Federal Government. Well, even the President eventually agreed with
us. Now we have an across-the-board spending cut. (Congressional Record,
November 18, 1999 (No. 164), page H12767.)
Representative David Obey, the ranking minority member of the House
Appropriations Committee, was sharply critical of the provision. In the course of
asserting that the FY2000 appropriations measures involved about $45 billion in
“gimmicks,” he observed:
Another issue at the center of negotiations was whether to include a small
across-the-board cut. This cut was not necessary to reach the offset targets to
make sure the bill was paid for; more than enough money was available from other
sources. It is simply an attempt by the majority to create a symbol that could be
used to pretend that in the midst of this orgy of gimmickry in spending, that they
are continuing to be fiscally responsible. (Congressional Record, November 18,

1999 (No. 164), page H12742.)


There was hardly any discussion of the provision during Senate consideration of
the conference report. Senator John McCain suggested that it represented an
abdication of budgetary responsibility: “It resorts to an across-the-board budget cut
to avoid dipping into the Social Security surplus, rather than making the hard choices
among other spending priorities.”12


12 See the remarks of Senator John McCain in the Congressional Record of November 19,

1999 (No. 165—Part II), at page S15036.



In his statement made upon signing H.R. 3194 into law on November 29,
President Clinton did not make any reference to the across-the-board cut.13
Design and Implementation of the 0.38 Percent Cut
In fashioning the 0.38% spending cut, Congress included several important
features. First, reductions made pursuant to the provision were to take the form of
rescissions of FY2000 budget authority (i.e., appropriations and offsetting
collections). Rescissions permanently cancel budget authority.
Second, the required spending cuts were to be applied only to the total
discretionary budget authority made available to each department and agency. Any
mandatory resources made available to a department or agency (e.g., permanent
appropriations to fund an entitlement program) would not be affected by the
requirement.
Third, reductions were to be applied uniformly to each account for the
Department of Defense (and the defense activities of the Department of Energy),
except that no reductions were to be made in military personnel accounts. With
regard to nondefense activities, there was no stated requirement that reductions be
applied uniformly to each department’s or agency’s accounts. However, there was
a requirement that no “program, project, or activity” (PPA) within an account be14
reduced by more than 15 percent.
Finally, the OMB director was instructed to include in the President’s budget for
FY2001 a report specifying the reductions made to each account under the
requirement.
Unlike the earlier provision in H.R. 3064 providing for a 0.97% cut, pay for
Members of Congress was not made subject to the reductions.
On November 24, 1999, OMB issued Bulletin 00-01 (Rescission of FY2000
Discretionary Budget Authority), providing guidance to agencies in how to comply
with the requirement for the 0.38% cut. OMB advised agencies to observe the
following guidelines beyond those specified in the act:
!Reductions should be taken from the least critical funding available
to the agency;
!Reductions should be considered from enacted funding above the
President's request;
!Wherever possible, no reductions should be taken that would require
reductions-in-force; and


13 See his statement in the Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents (Vol. 35, No. 48)
of December 6, 1999, at pages 2458-2465.
14 In the case of accounts funded by annual appropriations acts, the PPAs are defined in the
acts and accompanying reports. Generally, PPAs are listed in the President’s budget under
the “Program and Financing” schedule for each account.

!Agencies should make targeted recommendations rather than an
across-the-board funding cut.
The report required of the OMB director was part of the budget that President
Clinton submitted to Congress on February 7, 2000. The 17-page report was
included in the Analytical Perspectives volume as a separate chapter.15
According to the report, a total of $2,356,909,000 in discretionary budget
authority was rescinded in 492 accounts (see Table 1). This included $9.7 million for
the legislative branch and $14.0 million for the judicial branch.
Reductions in individual accounts ranged from $2 thousand for the “U.S.
Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad” account, to $116.4
million for the “Operation and Maintenance, Navy” account. The largest share of the
cuts, amounting to $1.055 billion and involving 70 accounts, was allocated to military
activities of the Department of Defense. The other departments with cuts in excess
of $100 million included the Departments of Transportation ($179.6 million), Health
and Human Services ($166.8 million), and Education ($108.6 million).
On January 10, 2000, the OMB communications office issued a fact sheet giving
a preliminary assessment regarding implementation of the cuts at the sub-account
level. According to media reports based on the fact sheet, OMB indicated that the
cuts would be applied to three broad areas: (1) programmatic cuts amounting to $1.7
billion; (2) reductions in 2,372 congressional earmarks amounting to $478 million; and16
(3) cuts in salaries and expenses amounting to $193 million. The three agencies with
the largest numbers of cuts to earmarked projects are the Department of
Transportation (nearly 600 projects amounting to $61 million), the Environmental
Protection Agency (more than 300 projects amounting to $23 million), and the
Department of Housing and Urban Development (nearly 500 projects amounting to
$19 million).
The OMB factsheet indicated that agencies intended to avail themselves of the
authority to cut individual programs and projects within accounts by as much as 15%
in order to spare others from any reduction and to target less-critical ones. Programs
expected to be completely protected from reduction included the Head Start pre-
school program; the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program; Superfund, the
Lands Legacy program; and the Clean Water Action Plan, among others. In making
many of the cuts in the Department of Transportation, infrastructure programs were
expected to be cut in order to protect safety-sensitive programs, including operations
of the Federal Aviation Administration and the Coast Guard. Cuts to 180 highway


15 See section 21 in: U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and
Budget, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2001, Analytical Perspectives
(Washington: February 2000), Section 21, “Report on the Government-Wide Rescissions in
the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2000 (P.L. 106-113),” pages 381-397.
16 BNA, Inc., Daily Report for Executives (No. 07), Tuesday, January 11, 2000,
“Appropriations: White House Cuts Under FY2000 Budget Trim Spending by 0.38% or
$2.35 Billion,” page A-36.

projects were expected to range from 5% to 12%, while 409 transit projects were
expected to be cut uniformly by 0.38%.17
Table 1. Summary of FY2000 Rescissions Made Under the
Requirement for a 0.38 Percent Cut
Number ofRescissions
Categoryaccounts($ millions)
Legislative branch219.733
Judicial branch913.961
Department of Agriculture3395.927
Department of Commerce1832.691
Department of Defense—Military701,054.939
Department of Education9108.643
Department of Energy2166.340
Department of Health and Human Services45166.847
Department of Housing and Urban Development291.040
Department of the Interior3131.346
Department of Justice1570.344
Department of Labor933.219
Department of State2525.441
Department of Transportation16179.638
Department of the Treasury1747.117
Department of Veterans’ Affairs179.519
Corps of Engineers115.690
Environmental Protection Agency728.848
Executive Office of the President151.151
Federal Emergency Management Agency412.734
General Services Administration120.022
International Assistance Programs2052.495


17 See Daily Report for Executives, ibid., and, in the same issue, “Transportation: OMB
Targets 590 Earmarked Projects For Cuts as Part of 0.38 Percent Reduction,” page A-31.

Number ofRescissions
Categoryaccounts($ millions)
National Aeronautics and Space Administration351.881
National Science Foundation414.866
Small Business Administration23.280
Social Security Administration324.083
All other accounts9025.114
Total 492 2,356.909