Defense Cleanup and Environmental Programs: Authorization and Appropriations for FY2005

CRS Report for Congress
Defense Cleanup and Environmental Programs:
Authorization and Appropriations for FY2005
Updated December 20, 2004
David M. Bearden
Analyst in Environmental Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division


Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Defense Cleanup and Environmental Programs:
Authorization and Appropriations for FY2005
Summary
The Department of Defense (DOD) administers five environmental programs:
environmental cleanup, compliance, pollution prevention, environmental technology,
and conservation. The Department of Energy (DOE) manages defense nuclear waste
and cleans up contaminated nuclear weapons sites. In the second session of the 108th
Congress, the most controversial issues regarding these activities were whether to
provide further exemptions for military readiness activities from certain air quality
and hazardous waste cleanup requirements, and whether to provide DOE with the
authority to classify certain radioactive tank wastes at nuclear weapons sites in Idaho,
South Carolina, and Washington in a manner that would permit these wastes to be
permanently disposed of on-site in those states.
The Ronald W. Reagan National Defense Authorization Act for FY2005 (P.L.
108-375, H.R. 4200) authorizes $1.35 billion for cleanup at active military
installations and Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS), $40 million more than
requested. The increase is for cleanup at FUDS sites. The law authorizes the
Administration’s request of $246 million in new funds for environmental cleanup at
base closure sites. Total funding for cleanup at these sites would be $322 million,
including the use of unobligated balances and proceeds from land sales and leases
from base closures. Funding for DOD’s other environmental activities is authorized
under several larger accounts. The law also authorizes $6.96 billion for DOE’s
cleanup of nuclear weapons sites, slightly more than requested, and provides targeted
authority for permanent on-site disposal of radioactive tank wastes in Idaho and
South Carolina. The law does not include the environmental exemptions from air
quality and hazardous waste cleanup requirements that DOD requested.
In addition to defense authorization legislation, the 108th Congress completed
action on the two FY2005 appropriations bills that fund cleanup and other
environmental activities administered by DOD. The Department of Defense
Appropriations Act for FY2005 (P.L. 108-287, H.R. 4613) provides $1.36 billion for
cleanup at active military installations and FUDS sites, $10 million more than
authorized and $50 million more than requested. The increase is devoted to cleanup
at FUDS sites. As in authorization legislation, funding for DOD’s other
environmental activities is not specified but is provided under several larger
accounts. The Military Construction Appropriations Act for FY2005 (P.L. 108-324,
H.R. 4837) provides $246 million in new funds for cleanup at base closure sites, the
same as authorized and requested.
Action was also completed on FY2005 appropriations for DOE’s cleanup of
former nuclear weapons sites. The Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2005
(P.L. 108-447, H.R. 4818) provides $7.03 billion for this activity, subject to an
across-the-board rescission of 0.8%, an increase relative to FY2004 and the
Administration’s request. Of this amount, $292 million is allocated to the disposal
of radioactive tank wastes. This report will be updated to reflect DOD allocations
of FY2005 funding for environmental activities for which amounts were not
specified in bill or report language, but were provided as part of larger accounts.



Contents
In troduction ......................................................1
Environmental Activities on Military Lands.............................3
Environmental Cleanup.........................................3
Environmental Compliance......................................6
Pollution Prevention...........................................7
Environmental Technology......................................7
Conservation .................................................7
Military Readiness Issues............................................8
Congressional Action on Environmental Exemptions......................9
Cleanup of Former Nuclear Weapons Sites.............................11
Applicable Requirements.......................................11
Cleanup Status and Costs.......................................11
Appropriations Accounts.......................................12
Administration’s Cleanup Reform Initiative........................12
High-level Waste Proposal.....................................13
Cleanup of Other Radioactive Contamination...........................14
Authorization Legislation for FY2005.................................15
Cleanup of Current and Former Military Lands......................15
Cleanup of Former Nuclear Weapons Sites.........................17
Appropriations for FY2005.........................................18
Department of Defense........................................19
Military Construction..........................................20
Energy and Water Development.................................20
List of Figures
Figure 1. Funding for Defense Cleanup and Environmental Programs: FY1990
through FY2004 Enacted and the FY2005 Administration Request.......2
List of Tables
Table 1. Defense Environmental Restoration Accounts: FY2004 Enacted, FY2005
Request, and Action on Appropriations............................19
Table 2. Base Realignment and Closure Account: FY2004 Enacted, FY2005
Request, and Action on Appropriations............................20
Table 3. Defense Environmental Management Accounts: FY2004 Enacted, FY2005
Request, and Action on Appropriations............................21



Defense Cleanup and Environmental
Programs: Authorization and
Appropriations for FY2005
Introduction
In response to requirements under federal environmental laws, the Department
of Defense (DOD) administers five programs to address cleanup and other
environmental needs on over 30 million acres of land located on active military
installations, and on former military properties. In addition to DOD’s environmental
programs, the Department of Energy (DOE) is responsible for managing defense
nuclear waste, and cleaning up contamination at former nuclear weapons sites. (See
Figure 1 for a history of funding for these activities.) The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and the states are responsible for providing oversight and enforcing
applicable laws and regulations.
Congress authorizes defense-related environmental programs in the annual
authorization bill for National Defense, but it funds these programs under three
appropriations bills. Environmental cleanup at active and former military
installations, environmental compliance, pollution prevention, environmental
technology, and conservation primarily receive funding in the annual appropriations
bill for the Department of Defense. Environmental cleanup at bases that have been
designated for closure since 1988 is funded in the annual appropriations bill for
Military Construction. DOE’s management of defense nuclear waste and cleanup of
contamination at former nuclear weapons sites is funded in the annual appropriations
bill for Energy and Water Development.
The second session of the 108th Congress completed action on defense
authorization legislation for FY2005, the two FY2005 appropriations bills that fund
DOD, and an FY2005 consolidated appropriations bill that includes funding for
DOE’s cleanup of former nuclear weapons sites. Among the prominent issues in the
debate of authorization legislation and appropriations for FY2005 were: (1) the
adequacy, cost, and pace of environmental cleanup; (2) whether additional
environmental exemptions are needed to preserve military training capabilities; and
(3) whether to provide DOE with the authority to classify radioactive tank wastes in
Idaho, South Carolina, and Washington in a manner that would permit these wastes
to be permanently disposed of on-site in those states, rather than in a centralized
geologic repository, such as Yucca Mountain in Nevada.
This report provides background information on each defense-related
environmental program, discusses key funding issues, and examines relevant
provisions in authorization legislation and appropriations for FY2005.



Figure 1. Funding for Defense Cleanup and Environmental Programs:
FY1990 through FY2004 Enacted and the FY2005 Administration Request


Billions of Dollars
14.00
11.0710.9212.00
10.51 9.97 10.63 10.19 10.31 10.26 10.82 10.79 10.54
9.939.92
10.00
7.368.00
5.256.00
3.054.00
2.00
iki/CRS-RL32537
g/w 0.00
s.or 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005R
leakEnvironmental Technologyn/an/an/a0.430.410.280.220.210.210.260.290.290.230.230.250.19
://wikiPollution Preventionn/an/an/a0.300.340.290.250.260.260.230.280.210.230.220.170.17
httpConservation n /a n/a n /a 0.12 0.10 0.15 0.11 0.09 0.14 0.13 0.16 0.18 0.16 0.16 0.14 0.17
Base Closure Cleanupn/a0.370.620.490.540.640.850.680.830.760.360.790.610.540.340.32
Current and Former Site Cleanup0.601.071.131.641.971.481.411.311.301.271.301.311.271.311.341.31
Environmental Compliance0.791.111.932.121.982.042.232.021.911.891.661.631.671.751.561.67
Corps of Engineers FUSRAPn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a0.140.140.150.140.140.140.140.14
Department of Energy Cleanup1.662.703.684.835.175.095.565.625.525.585.726.276.486.726.606.95
Prepared by the Congressional Research Service using data from enacted appropriations, Operation and Maintenance Overviews of the
Department of Defense, and congressional budget justifications of the Department of Energy. N/A = account or program not yet established;
FUSRAP = Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program; 2005R = Administration Request for FY2005.
Although the FY2005 defense appropriations bills include line-item accounts for a few environmental activities other than cleanup, they do no
specify the total amount of funding for all of DOD's other environmental programs, including environmental compliance, conservation,
pollution prevention, and environmental technology. DOD will allocate funding for these activities from the Operation and Maintenance,
Procurement, and Research and Development Accounts. This table will be updated to indicate final FY2005 funding levels when these
allocations are announced in DOD's Operation and Maintenance Overview for FY2006.

Environmental Activities on Military Lands
DOD administers five environmental programs to comply with federal
environmental laws on lands within its jurisdiction. In terms of funding, the two
largest programs focus on cleaning up past contamination and on complying with
pollution control laws and regulations that apply to day-to-day operations at military
installations. Three other programs have smaller budgets. They focus on pollution
prevention, environmental technology, and conservation of natural and cultural
resources.1 While there are line-item accounts in defense authorization legislation
and appropriations bills for environmental cleanup, there are no line-item accounts
for DOD’s other environmental activities. Instead, they are funded out of
appropriations for the following accounts: Operation and Maintenance, Procurement,
Military Construction, and Research and Development. DOD allocates funding out
of these accounts based on the availability of annual appropriations and the
competing needs of national security activities.
DOD proposed a total of $3.82 billion in funding for all of the above
environmental activities for FY2005, $17 million more overall than the amount of
$3.80 billion in FY2004. Among the individual programs, DOD proposed an
increase in funding for compliance, conservation, and pollution prevention, and a
decrease for cleanup and environmental technology. Background information on
each of these programs, key funding issues, and the Administration’s FY2005 request
are discussed below. Relevant provisions in defense authorization legislation and
appropriations for FY2005 are discussed later in this report.
Environmental Cleanup. DOD administers a Defense Environmental
Restoration Program to investigate and clean up hazardous waste sites at active and
closed military installations, and other former military properties located in the
United States. This program is divided into two subcomponents. The Military
Munitions Response Program addresses the removal of unexploded ordnance (UXO)
and other munitions on former training ranges, and the cleanup of munitions-related
contamination. The Installation Restoration Program addresses the cleanup of non-
munitions contamination at all other areas on military sites. EPA and the states are
responsible for overseeing the cleanup of these lands to ensure that DOD complies
with applicable requirements.2 The Defense Environmental Restoration Program
does not address cleanup at overseas military installations. Rather, the commanding


1 For additional information on each program, refer to the Defense Environmental Network
and Information Exchange (DENIX) website at [http://www.denix.osd.mil].
2 DOD is subject to the requirements of two federal statutes in conducting its cleanup
activities: the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
(CERCLA, commonly known as Superfund) and the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (RCRA). CERCLA addresses the release or threatened release of hazardous substances
in the United States, and requires contamination to be cleaned up to a level that is protective
of human health and the environment (42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq.). RCRA specifies
requirements for storing and disposing of solid and hazardous waste, and requires corrective
action to clean up environmental contamination that occurs as a result of storage and
disposal practices (42 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.). With authorities provided by these statutes,
DOD is also subject to state cleanup requirements.

officer of each overseas installation is responsible for administering the cleanup of
contamination on these properties in accordance with applicable requirements of the
host nation.3
Active Installations and Former Military Properties. Funding for
cleanup at active and former military installations is authorized under five Defense
Environmental Restoration Accounts in the annual authorization bill for National
Defense, and is appropriated to these accounts in the annual appropriations bill for
the Department of Defense. Three of these accounts reserve funding for the Army,
Navy, and Air Force. One devotes funding to a more general category of Defense-
wide sites, and another is dedicated to cleaning up Formerly Used Defense Sites
(FUDS).4 For the past several years, annual appropriations for these five accounts
combined has been around $1.30 billion, fluctuating somewhat from year to year.
For FY2005, the Administration requested $1.31 billion for the above accounts,
$34 million less overall than the FY2004 appropriation of $1.34 billion. Among the
individual accounts, cleanup funding for Army, Navy, and Air Force sites would
increase by varying amounts, whereas the FUDS account would decrease by nearly
$68 million. The adequacy of funding for cleanup at FUDS sites has been a
contentious issue, as some of these properties are now being used for civilian
purposes that may present a pathway of human exposure to contamination. Some
FUDS sites also were the location of former training ranges where unexploded
ordnance and other munitions hazards may be present.
As of the end of FY2003, DOD estimated that $29.90 billion would be needed
to complete cleanup at active military installations and FUDS sites.5 Of this amount,
$16.30 billion would be for the removal of unexploded ordnance and cleanup of
munitions-related contamination. DOD has not completed its investigation of former
training ranges under the Military Munitions Response Program. Estimates of
cleanup funding needs may increase in future years as the extent of safety hazards
and munition-related contamination is determined, and additional sites with
unexploded ordnance are identified.
Military Base Closures. Cleanup at base closure sites is authorized
separately under the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Account in the annual
authorization bill for National Defense. (Base closure sites are separate from FUDS
sites, which were decommissioned prior to 1988.) Appropriations for base closure
activities, including cleanup, are provided under the BRAC account in the annual
appropriations bill for Military Construction. Congress authorized four rounds of


3 The cleanup of contamination at overseas military installations is subject to requirements
specified in the Status of Forces Agreement with each host nation. These requirements are
generally not as strict as CERCLA and RCRA, and their stringency varies widely from
country to country.
4 FUDS sites are properties that DOD owned or leased in the past and are now devoted to
civilian uses. Many of the FUDS sites were used during World War II and prior years.
5 Department of Defense. Defense Environmental Restoration Program Annual Report to
Congress for FY2003. April 2004. Appendix B, p. B-6-1, p. B-10-1, and Appendix C, p.
C-6-1, p. C-9-1.

base closures in 1988, 1991, 1993, and 1995, and established a separate BRAC
account for each round. These accounts have now been consolidated into one
account. The closure and realignment of military bases designated under these four
rounds was complete in FY2001. Since that time, BRAC funds have only been used
to pay environmental cleanup expenses. In addition to appropriations to the BRAC
accounts, proceeds from the sale or lease of property on closed bases support cleanup
of contamination on these lands.
Total cleanup funding for base closure sites has declined in recent years from
$830 million in FY1998 to $344 million in FY2004. Although funding has declined
over the past several years, DOD continues to estimate substantial funding needs for
cleanup. As of the end of FY2003, DOD estimated that $3.32 billion in additional
funding would be necessary to complete all planned cleanup actions at base closure
sites.6 Funding needs for cleanup at base closure sites may rise in future years if
additional military bases are selected for closure. The National Defense
Authorization Act for FY2002 (P.L. 107-107) authorized a new round of base
closings in 2005.7
The expense of closing and realigning additional bases, and the costs of cleaning
up these bases for other land uses, would cause funding needs for the BRAC account
to rise. The amount of funding that would be necessary to clean up additional base
closure sites would depend on the type and extent of contamination, and the actions
that would be necessary to protect human health and the environment. The degree
of cleanup that is required depends on the intended land use of the property after it
is transferred. Cleanup at active military installations is typically based on industrial
land use, which allows the least stringent cleanup standards to be applied. The
cleanup required at such installations could become more stringent, if they were
closed and transferred for other land uses that would present a higher possibility of
human exposure to contamination, such as residential development.
The adequacy of funding to meet cleanup needs at base closure sites has been
a contentious issue, due to potential risks to human health and the environment, and
the public’s desire to redevelop these properties for civilian uses. The completion of
cleanup is key to redevelopment, because the land cannot be used for its intended
purpose until it is cleaned up to the extent that it would be safe for that purpose. In
March 2004, the General Accounting Office (GAO, now renamed the Government
Accountability Office) reported that 44% of the land on closed military bases had not
been transferred for redevelopment as of the end of FY2003. GAO stated that
“environmental cleanup has long been a key factor in slowing the transfer process.”8
The Administration proposed to continue the downward trend in cleanup
funding for base closure sites in FY2005. The President’s FY2005 budget included


6 Ibid., Appendix B, p. B-10-1, and Appendix C, p. C-9-1.
7 For further information, see CRS Report RS21822, Military Base Closures: DOD’s 2005
Internal Selection Process, by Daniel Else and David Lockwood.
8 General Accounting Office. Military Base Closures: Observations on Preparations for the
Upcoming Base Realignment and Closure Round. GAO-04-558T. March 25, 2004. pp. 9-

10.



$246 million for the BRAC account. This amount is $124 million less than the
FY2004 appropriation of $370 million. DOD proposed to allocate $322 million for
cleanup at base closure sites in FY2005, using the funds that it has requested for the
BRAC account, along with unobligated funds from prior year appropriations and
proceeds from the sale and lease of base closure properties. This funding level is $22
million less than DOD’s allocation of $344 million for FY2004.
Environmental Compliance. In general, DOD and all other federal agencies
are required to comply with federal laws and regulations to control pollution to the
same extent as any other entity. However, numerous federal pollution control
statutes include exemptions for purposes of national security, or for activities that are
in the “paramount interest” of the United States.9 EPA and the states are authorized
to take enforcement action against DOD, including the assessment of fines and
penalties, if the Department does not comply with applicable requirements for which
an exemption has not been granted. The granting of such exemptions has been
extremely rare, resulting in DOD being subject to pollution control requirements for10
most all of its routine operations.
The federal pollution control statutes that most commonly apply to routine
military operations include the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), and Safe Drinking Water Act. Common
types of environmental compliance projects at military installations include 1) storing
and disposing of solid and hazardous waste, 2) replacing and upgrading wastewater
treatment plants, 3) monitoring the effectiveness of wastewater treatment systems,
and 4) testing and replacing underground storage tanks.
DOD did not begin to track the amount of funding spent on environmental
compliance activities until FY1990. DOD allocates funding for compliance from
several accounts, including Operation and Maintenance, Military Construction, and
Procurement. DOD’s budget for environmental compliance peaked at $2.23 billion
in FY1996, and there has been an overall downward trend in compliance costs since
that time. DOD attributes this decline to the success of its pollution prevention
efforts to reduce the generation of waste, lessening the need for treatment and
disposal and other compliance actions. However, DOD estimates that it will need to


9 The authority for exemptions from pollution control requirements for federal facilities are
included in: the Clean Air Act [42 USC 7418(b)], Clean Water Act [33 USC 1323(a)],
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act [42 USC 6961(a)], and Safe Drinking Water Act
[42 USC 300(j)(6)]. Exemption authority is also provided in the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act [42 USC 9620(j)], Endangered
Species Act [16 USC 1536(j)], Marine Mammal Protection Act [16 USC 1371(f)], and
Noise Control Act [42 USC 4903]. For additional information, see CRS Report RS21217,
Exemptions for Military Activities in Federal Environmental Laws, by Robert Meltz.
10 For example, a Presidential exemption from solid and hazardous waste requirements under
RCRA has been granted on an annual basis for the Air Force’s Groom Lake facility in
Nevada. President Bush granted the most recent exemption for this facility in September
2003. (68 Federal Register 60277.) The exemption was scheduled to expire in September
2004. Based on past precedent, it likely will continue to be renewed on annual basis, as long
as classified activities continue at this facility. Groom Lake is the only military installation
in the United States that receives an annual exemption from an environmental requirement.

allocate more funding for compliance in FY2005 to meet wastewater and
underground storage tank requirements and various requirements applicable to Navy
training ranges, as well as the need for greater funding to pay increased manpower
costs. For FY2005, DOD estimated that it will need to allocate a total of $1.67
billion to comply with applicable pollution control requirements at its installations,
$104 million more than in FY2004.11
Pollution Prevention. The purpose of the Pollution Prevention Program is
to reduce or eliminate waste and pollution, as a means to lower the costs of
environmental compliance and to prevent future cleanup liabilities. As noted above,
DOD attributes the overall downward trend in environmental compliance costs to the
success of its pollution prevention efforts. This program seeks to reduce: 1) the use
of hazardous materials, 2) the production of solid waste, and 3) the release of toxic
substances, air emissions, and water pollution. Through this program, DOD also
funds the implementation of executive orders on waste prevention, recycling, and
procurement of environmentally preferable products. The pollution prevention
budget has ranged from $340 million in FY1994 to $165 million in FY2004. DOD
allocates funding for this program from the accounts for Operation and Maintenance,
Military Construction, and Procurement. For FY2005, DOD planned to allocate
$171 million, nearly $6 million more than in FY2004.12 The increase would support
Navy programs to reduce water pollution from vessels.
Environmental Technology. The environmental technology program
supports the research and development of more efficient and less costly methods to
manage solid and hazardous waste. These efforts are aimed at helping DOD to
comply more easily with pollution control laws and regulations. The program also
supports the research and development of more effective and less costly methods to
clean up contamination in soil, surface water, and groundwater. Integral to the
cleanup of former training ranges, the program supports the research and
development of advanced technologies to detect unexploded ordnance. Some
Members of Congress, states, environmental organizations, and communities have
advocated higher funding for the development of detection technologies that would
help to improve the accuracy and pace of identifying safety hazards for removal. The
environmental technology budget has ranged from $430 million in FY1993 to around
$210 million in FY1997 and FY1998. DOD allocates funding for environmental
technology out of its Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Accounts. DOD
planned to allocate $186 million for FY2005, $64 million less than in FY2004.13 The
proposed decrease was due to the completion of several projects administered by the
Army to research new cleanup and pollution prevention technologies.
Conservation. The conservation program aims to protect the natural,
historical, and cultural resources of over 30 million acres of public land that DOD
administers. Activities funded under this program are necessary to comply with


11 Department of Defense. Operation and Maintenance Overview: FY2005 Budget
Estimates. February 2004. p. 112.
12 Ibid.
13 Ibid., p. 113.

federal laws that protect such resources, including the Endangered Species Act and
the National Historic Preservation Act. The conservation budget has ranged from
$180 million in FY2001 to $90 million in FY1997. DOD allocates funding for
conservation from the accounts for Operation and Maintenance, Military
Construction, and Procurement. DOD estimated that it will need to allocate $169
million in FY2005 to comply with resource protection requirements and to support
related activities, nearly $28 million more than in FY2004.14 The increase in funding
would be for the purchase of conservation easements on lands adjacent to military
installations. These lands would serve as buffers to ease the burden of habitat
management on military installations, as a means of preventing encroachment on
lands needed for training. Congress provided the authority for this practice in the
National Defense Authorization Act for FY2003 (P.L. 107-314). (For further
discussion, see CRS Report RL31456, Defense Cleanup and Environmental
Programs: Authorization and Appropriations for FY2003, by David M. Bearden.)
Military Readiness Issues
A prominent issue has been the extent to which requirements to clean up
contamination, control pollution, and protect natural resources restrict the use of
military lands for training. Central to this issue is whether environmental exemption
authority should be expanded to preserve training capabilities. Congress included
exemptions in several statutes to ensure that military training needs would not be
restricted to the extent that national security would be compromised. These
exemptions provide the President with the authority to suspend compliance
requirements for actions at federal facilities on a case-by-case basis. Such
exemptions may be granted if doing so would be either in the “paramount interest of
the United States” or in the “interest of national security.” Most of these exemptions
are limited to one year, but can be renewed.15
DOD argues that existing exemptions are too onerous and time-consuming to
obtain on a case-by-case basis due to the vast number of training exercises that it
conducts on hundreds of military installations across the country. DOD also argues
that the time limitations placed upon most exemptions are not compatible with many
training activities, due to their ongoing or recurring nature. Instead, DOD favors
modifications to numerous environmental statutes that would provide greater
flexibility for conducting combat training and other readiness activities without
restriction or delay. However, some Members of Congress, states, environmental
organizations, and communities have opposed such modifications, pointing to the
lack of data to demonstrate the extent to which environmental requirements have
restricted training exercises and compromised readiness overall. They argue that
expanding exemption authority without justification for its need would unnecessarily
weaken environmental protection.


14 Ibid.
15 The Safe Drinking Water Act does not impose a time limit on exemptions from
compliance. Under the Endangered Species Act, a special committee “shall grant” an
exemption if the Secretary of Defense finds it necessary for national security. This
committee may place a time limit on an exemption, but it is not required to do so.

The cumulative effect of environmental requirements on military readiness
capabilities is difficult to determine due to the lack of a system to comprehensively
track individual cases in which training has been restricted or compromised. In 2002,
GAO found that DOD’s readiness reports do not indicate the extent to which
environmental requirements restrict combat training activities, and that such reports
indicate a high level of readiness overall.16 However, GAO noted individual
instances of environmental restrictions at numerous military installations, and in light
of this fact, recommended that DOD’s reporting system be improved to more
accurately identify problems for training that might be attributed to restrictions
imposed by environmental requirements. A more recent GAO report found that
environmental restrictions are only one of several factors, including urban growth,
that affect DOD’s ability to carry out training activities, and that DOD continues to
be unable to measure the impact of encroachment on readiness.17
Congressional Action on Environmental Exemptions
As part of its defense authorization proposals for FY2003, FY2004, and
FY2005, DOD submitted a Readiness and Range Preservation Initiative (RRPI) to
Congress, requesting targeted exemptions for military readiness activities.18 DOD
proposed this initiative in response to its stated concern that environmental
requirements have increasingly imposed restrictions on combat training exercises, a
key component of military readiness. The initiative originally proposed targeted
exemptions for military readiness activities from certain requirements under six
environmental laws: Clean Air Act, Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), Endangered Species Act, Marine
Mammal Protection Act, Migratory Bird Treaty Act, and Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act (RCRA).
Thus far, Congress has provided modified versions of DOD’s proposed
exemptions from wildlife protection requirements under three of the above statutes.
These exemptions were contentious, and there was considerable debate prior to their
enactment. The National Defense Authorization Act for FY2003 provided a broad
exemption for military readiness activities from the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.19
(See CRS Report RL31456, Defense Cleanup and Environmental Programs:
Authorization and Appropriations for FY2003.) The National Defense Authorization
Act for FY2004 provided an exemption from the designation of critical habitat under
the Endangered Species Act on military lands, if certain conditions are met.20 Other
provisions of that act provided a broad exemption from the Marine Mammal


16 General Accounting Office. Military Training: DOD Needs a Comprehensive Plan to
Manage Encroachment on Training Ranges. GAO-02-727T. May 2002.
17 General Accounting Office. Military Training: DOD Approach to Managing
Encroachment on Training Ranges Still Evolving. GAO-03-621T. April 2003.
18 DOD’s legislative proposal for FY2005 and its justification are available at DOD’s
website at [https://www.denix.osd.mil/denix/Public/Library/Sustain/RRPI/rrpi.html].
19 P.L. 107-314, Section 315.
20 P.L. 108-136, Section 318.

Protection Act for “national defense.”21 The act also modified the definition of
“harassment” of marine mammals, as it applies to military readiness activities, and
required the consideration of impacts on military readiness in the issuance of permits
for incidental takings. (See CRS Report RL32183, Defense Cleanup and
Environmental Programs: Authorization and Appropriations for FY2004.)
In defense authorization legislation and appropriations for FY2003 and FY2004,
Congress did not provide the exemptions from the Clean Air Act, RCRA, and
CERCLA, which DOD had requested. None of the defense authorization and
appropriations bills for FY2005 include exemptions from these three statutes either,
as discussed later in this report. While the exemptions that Congress has granted
were contentious to those concerned about the weakening of wildlife protections,
there has been broader opposition to exemptions from the Clean Air Act, RCRA, and
CERCLA, due to concern about risks to human health from the potential exposure
to air pollution and hazardous substances.
As proposed by DOD, the Clean Air Act language would have exempted
emissions generated by military readiness activities from requirements to “conform”
to State Implementation Plans (SIPs) for achieving federal air quality standards.
Under current law, activities of federal agencies which would increase emissions
beyond limitations established in a state’s SIP are prohibited, unless offsetting
reductions from other sources are made. DOD argued that this exemption would
provide greater flexibility for transferring training operations to areas with poor air
quality, without the possibility of restrictions on these operations due to the
emissions that they would produce. DOD stated that the impact on air quality would
be minimal, claiming that its emission are relatively minor compared to other
sources. States, environmental organizations, and public health advocates argued
that the impacts on air quality could be greater and present a risk to human health,
especially if localized “hot spots” of pollution were to develop in communities
adjacent to military installations where emissions were not controlled.
DOD’s proposed exemptions from RCRA and CERCLA would have defined
“solid waste” and “release” in federal statute as not including military munitions on
operational ranges. Whether environmental cleanup requirements under these two
statutes apply depends on whether a substance is a solid waste, or whether there has
been a release of a hazardous substance. In effect, the proposed exemption would
have allowed munitions and munitions-related contamination to remain on a training
range indefinitely, as long as the range remained operational. DOD stated that this
exemption would codify existing federal regulations under the Military Munitions
Rule, and argued that it would not present greater risks to human health and the
environment. Some Members of Congress, states, environmental organizations, and
communities countered that the proposed language was broader than current
regulation, and that the definition of operational range would allow DOD to designate
practically any lands on a military installation as such, thereby exempting munitions
and related contamination from environmental cleanup.


21 P.L. 108-136, Section 319.

The above and other issues were addressed in a hearing held jointly by the
Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality and the Subcommittee on Environment and
Hazardous Materials of the House Energy and Commerce Committee on April 21,
2004. Some Members stated their support for greater environmental compliance
flexibility for military readiness purposes. Other Members highlighted the lack of
data to determine the extent to which such flexibility was needed, and expressed
concern that the impacts of the proposed exemptions on human health and the
environment would be greater than DOD had characterized. Issues were also raised
in association with this hearing as to whether the House Energy and Commerce
Committee or the House Armed Services Committee had jurisdiction over DOD’s
proposal. Subsequent to the contentious hearing debate, exemptions from the Clean
Air Act, RCRA, or CERCLA were not included in FY2005 defense authorization
legislation and appropriations bills.
Cleanup of Former Nuclear Weapons Sites
At the end of the Cold War in the late 1980s, the United States ceased its
production of nuclear weapons. However, radioactive and other hazardous wastes
generated from the production of nuclear weapons continue to pose a risk to human
health and the environment. Since the beginning of the U.S. atomic energy program,
the Department of Energy (DOE) and its predecessor agencies have been responsible
for managing the production of nuclear weapons and related waste. In later years,
DOE expanded its efforts to include the environmental restoration of radioactive
sites, and those with other hazardous contamination. In 1989, the Bush
Administration established an Environmental Management Program within DOE to
consolidate the Department’s efforts to clean up contamination from defense nuclear
waste, as well as waste from civilian nuclear energy research.22
Applicable Requirements. In carrying out the Environmental Management
Program, DOE is subject to requirements of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954,
CERCLA, and RCRA. DOE is not subject to external agency oversight of its
compliance with the Atomic Energy Act. However, EPA and the states play a
significant oversight role in DOE’s compliance with CERCLA and RCRA. DOE has
signed numerous legally binding compliance agreements with EPA and the states to
perform cleanup activities and dispose of wastes according to specific deadlines,
which would fulfill the requirements of these two latter statutes.
Cleanup Status and Costs. Much attention has focused on the amount of
time and money needed to treat, manage, and dispose of defense nuclear waste and
to clean up related contamination. The waste management and cleanup challenges
are substantial. DOE reports that there are 114 large sites in 31 states and one U.S.
territory where the production of nuclear weapons, and civilian nuclear energy
research and development activities, resulted in radioactive and other hazardous
contamination. Together, these sites occupy approximately 2 million acres, which is
equivalent to the land area of Rhode Island and Delaware combined.


22 For additional information on the Environmental Management Program, refer to DOE’s
website at [http://www.em.doe.gov].

According to DOE, all response actions were complete at 76 of these sites as of
the end of FY2003, at a cost of approximately $70 billion. However, most of the
sites that have been cleaned up thus far are relatively small and are among the least
hazardous. The sites where cleanup remains underway contain some of the most
severely contaminated areas. DOE estimates that cleanup at the remaining sites will
not be complete until 2035, at a cost of $142 billion. The greatest outstanding
cleanup liabilities are at defense sites that were involved in the production of nuclear
weapons.
Appropriations Accounts. Two appropriations accounts fund cleanup at
defense nuclear waste sites. The Defense Site Acceleration Completion Account
provides funding for activities that are directly involved in the cleanup of
contaminated sites and the acceleration of site completion. The Defense
Environmental Services Account funds activities that indirectly support the mission
of accelerated cleanup and closure, such as policy development and coordination, and
the integration of mission activities across the complex of sites. Congress authorizes
funding for these accounts in the annual authorization bill for National Defense, and
appropriates funding for these activities in the annual appropriations bill for Energy
and Water Development.
Administration’s Cleanup Reform Initiative. At the Administration’s
request, Congress established these two accounts in FY2004 to focus funding on
DOE’s cleanup reform initiative to lower costs and speed the pace of cleanup.23 DOE
launched its cleanup reform initiative in FY2003. While there has been broad
support for accelerating cleanup and reducing costs, questions have been raised as to
how these goals could be achieved without weakening environmental protection.
DOE’s initiative is based on assessing the risk of exposure to determine which
cleanup remedies are selected. Risk is currently one of many factors that DOE uses
to select cleanup remedies. Altering the current process to use risk as the primary
factor could result in decisions to contain waste on site as a means of preventing
exposure, rather than removing it. While containment can often be accomplished
more quickly and at less cost, the possibility of future exposure remains if the method
of containment fails over time. Some Members of Congress, states, environmental
organizations, and communities have expressed concern about this approach.
DOE proposed to continue its cleanup reforms in FY2005 and requested a total
of $6.95 billion for the two above accounts. Of this amount, $5.97 billion would
have been allocated to the Defense Site Acceleration Completion Account, and $982
million would have been allocated to the Defense Environmental Services Account.
The total request for both accounts was approximately $350 million more than the
FY2004 appropriation of $6.60 billion.


23 Congress previously authorized and appropriated funding for the cleanup of defense
nuclear wastes sites under three accounts: Defense Environmental Restoration and Waste
Management Account, Defense Facilities Closure Projects Account, and Defense
Environmental Management Privatization Account. Prior to these accounts, Congress set
aside funding for cleanup of these sites under the Atomic Energy Defense Activities
Account, which was a centralized account that funded multiple purposes.

High-level Waste Proposal. As part of the Administration’s cleanup reform
initiative, the requested $350 million increase was for a “High-level Waste Proposal”
to speed the closure of tanks storing high-level radioactive and other chemical wastes
at the Hanford site in Washington, the Savannah River site in South Carolina, and at
the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL). The
volume of these wastes is substantial. For example, DOE reports that at the Hanford
site there are over 50 million gallons of high-level radioactive and chemical wastes
stored beneath the surface in 177 tanks. The tank wastes at Hanford, and the other
two sites, that are classified as “high-level” radioactive wastes must be removed and
safely stored in a centralized geologic repository, as required by the Nuclear Waste
Policy Act (NWPA). For more information, see CRS Report RL32163, Radioactive
Waste Streams: An Overview of Waste Classification for Disposal, by Anthony
Andrews.
DOE has proposed to speed the closure of the tanks at these three sites by
classifying some of the waste as “incidental to reprocessing,” and to dispose of it as
low-level waste by mixing and immobilizing it with a cement “grout” inside the tank.
DOE issued this proposal under an internal agency “order” (Order 435.1).24 Some
Members of Congress, states, environmental organizations, and communities
opposed DOE’s proposal, arguing that none of the tank wastes should be allowed to
remain in place because of the possibility that the grout might not mix thoroughly
with the waste to contain it safely and prevent leaks. However, others asserted that
methods to remove all of the tank residues would generate a new hazardous waste
stream that would need to be managed properly to prevent exposure. There also could
be significant risks of exposure to workers who would remove the residues.
Thus far, DOE has grouted high-level radioactive wastes in two tanks at the
Savannah River site. The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) legally
challenged DOE’s authority to dispose of these wastes in this manner. In 2003, the
U.S. District Court for Idaho ruled that DOE does not have the authority to classify
the tank wastes at the Savannah River site, or any other site, as anything other than
high-level radioactive waste.25 Consequently, these wastes would have to be
removed and disposed of in a centralized geologic repository as required by the
NWPA.
DOE appealed the 2003 ruling, and on November 5, 2004, the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed the above district court opinion, ruling that the
challenge to Order 435.1 was not “ripe” for review.26 The court found that the
district court decision predated DOE application of Order 435.1 to a particular
situation, and thus there was no present conflict with the NWPA.27 The court
determined that while it was possible that DOE might violate the NWPA at some


24 Department of Energy. DOE Order 435.1: Radioactive Waste Management.
25 NRDC v. Abraham, 271 F. Supp. 2d. 1260 (D. Id. 2003).
26 Natural Resources Defense Council v. Abraham, No. 03-35711, 2004 WL 2480949 (Nov.

5, 2004).


27 Natural Resources Defense Council, slip op. at 3.

point, it might just as likely comply with all applicable law.28 Thus, under the terms
of the circuit court opinion, DOE may engage in activities pursuant to Order 435.1,
and NRDC or others then would be free to bring suit if they believe those activities
violate the law.
Prior to the appeals court ruling, the Secretary of Energy asked Congress to
enact legislation that would provide DOE with statutory authority to classify some
of the tank wastes as incidental to reprocessing at Hanford, Savannah River, and the
INEEL, thereby exempting them from disposal requirements for high-level
radioactive waste in the NWPA. Whether the wastes could be left in the tanks and
grouted in place would ultimately depend on the concurrence of state regulatory
agencies who issue the permits for tank closures.
Congress included authority in the Ronald W. Reagan National Defense
Authorization Act for FY2005 (P.L. 108-375) for DOE to grout some of the tank
wastes at Savannah River and the INEEL, discussed later in this report. However,
the authority was not extended to Hanford, where most of the leaking tanks are
located. As noted above, DOE still may pursue the grouting of tanks at Hanford
under Order 435.1, but could be subject to legal challenge at that site.
Cleanup of Other Radioactive Contamination
In addition to former nuclear weapons production sites, smaller sites were
contaminated with low-level radiation from the processing and storage of uranium
and thorium ores during the early years of the U.S. nuclear weapons program. The
majority of these sites were owned and operated by private contractors from the
1940s to the 1960s. Cleanup at these sites is performed under the Formerly Utilized
Sites Remedial Action Program (FUSRAP), currently administered by the Army
Corps of Engineers. DOE’s predecessor agency, the Atomic Energy Commission,
established this program in 1974 under authorities provided in the Atomic Energy
Act. In response to concerns about the pace and cost of cleanup under DOE’s
management, Congress included provisions in the Energy and Water Development
Appropriations Act for FY1998 (P.L. 105-62) to transfer the FUSRAP program to
the Army Corps of Engineers.
The Corps reports that a total of 49 sites with radioactive contamination have
been identified since 1974, and that cleanup is complete at 28 of these sites. As of
April 2004, the Corps reported that cleanup was ongoing or planned at the remaining
21 sites.29 Prior to FY1998, cleanup at these sites was funded out of available funds
allocated to DOE’s former Defense Environmental Restoration and Waste
Management Account, and to the prior Atomic Energy Defense Activities Account.
Since the creation of a dedicated account for FUSRAP and transfer of the program
to the Corps, Congress has provided approximately $140 million in annual funding.
The Administration requested this amount again for FY2005.


28 Id. at 4.
29 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program
Update. April 2004. p. 3. For further information, refer to the Army Corps of Engineers
website at [http://hq.environmental.usace.army.mil/programs/fusrap/fusrap.html].

Authorization Legislation for FY2005
The House and Senate passed the conference agreement on the Ronald W.
Reagan National Defense Authorization Act for FY2005 (H.R. 4200, H.Rept. 108-
767) on October 9, 2004. The President signed the bill into law (P.L. 108-375) on
October 28, 2004. The law authorizes funding for national defense programs,
including defense-related environmental activities administered by DOD and DOE.
As in past years, the law specifies funding for environmental cleanup on current and
former military lands and at former nuclear weapons sites. It does not specify
funding for DOD’s other environmental activities, including environmental
compliance, conservation, pollution prevention, and environmental technology.
Funding for these activities is authorized as part of the accounts for Operation and
Maintenance, Military Construction, Procurement, and Research and Development.
The law also includes provisions that address various environmental issues
related to defense activities. Among the most controversial are provisions that, in
effect, amend the Nuclear Waste Policy Act to provide targeted authority in South
Carolina and Idaho for DOE to classify certain radioactive wastes in a manner that
would allow these wastes to be permanently disposed of on-site. Neither the law, nor
the original House and Senate bills, included environmental exemptions from the
Clean Air Act, CERCLA, or RCRA, which DOD requested. Funding authorized by
the law for environmental cleanup, and selected provisions relevant to cleanup, are
discussed below. (For a discussion of the law as a whole, see CRS Report RL32305,
Authorization and Appropriations for FY2005: Defense, by Stephen Daggett and
Amy Belasco.)
Cleanup of Current and Former Military Lands. The law authorizes a
total of $1.35 billion in FY2005 for the five Defense Environmental Restoration
Accounts that fund the cleanup of past contamination at active military installations,
and at Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS) that are now being used for civilian
purposes. The authorization is $40 million more than the Administration’s request
of $1.31 billion. The increase is devoted to cleanup at FUDS sites, for which $257
million is authorized out of the total $1.35 billion. However, the FY2005
authorization for FUDS sites is $28 million less than the FY2004 appropriation of
$285 million. The law authorizes an additional $246 million for the Base
Realignment and Closure Account (BRAC), the same as requested. As discussed
earlier, DOD had proposed a total of $322 million for cleanup at base closure sites
in FY2005, using funds from the BRAC account, unobligated funds from prior year
appropriations, and proceeds from the sale and lease of base closure properties.
The law also addresses the cleanup of groundwater contamination, which is
common at many military installations. Groundwater contamination often requires
more time and money to remediate than soil or surface water contamination,
especially if the groundwater must be pumped and treated. The law requires GAO
to conduct a study of alternative technologies for the cleanup of groundwater
contamination, and to submit the study to Congress by April 1, 2005. The Senate bill
had included a similar provision. In conducting the study, GAO is to identify:
!current technologies used or field tested by DOD to remediate
groundwater contamination;



!potential cost-effective technologies that could be used by DOD,
which are being researched or are under development by commercial
vendors, or are already commercially available but not being used on
military lands; and
!potential barriers to the application of these technologies from the
standpoint of cost, capability, or legal restrictions on their use.
The law also directs GAO to conduct a separate site-specific study of drinking
water contamination at Camp LeJeune, North Carolina, and of the effects of this
contamination on human health.
Related to groundwater contamination, the law includes a “Sense of Congress”
provision that addresses the cleanup of perchlorate, a substance commonly used in
munitions propellants. This substance has been found in groundwater at numerous
military installations across the country and has been detected in many public water
supplies and private drinking water wells.30 Consequently, there has been significant
public concern about the potential risks of perchlorate to human health. There
currently is not an enforceable federal or state drinking water standard for this
substance that could be applied to cleaning it up. The National Academy of Sciences
(NAS) is studying the health effects of perchlorate to assist EPA in developing a
federal drinking water standard. The state of California is in the process of
developing a standard as well, and is awaiting the results of the NAS study. In the
absence of a generally applicable cleanup standard, EPA has applied state public
health goals to the cleanup of perchlorate at certain sites.31 (For further discussion
of perchlorate, see CRS Report RS21961, Perchlorate Contamination of Drinking
Water: Regulatory Issues and Legislative Actions, by Mary Tiemann.)
The Sense of Congress provision in the law states that DOD should develop a
plan to remediate perchlorate contamination to ensure that the Department can
respond “quickly and appropriately” once a drinking water standard is established.
It also states that DOD should:
!continue remediation that is underway;
!in the absence of a drinking water standard, develop a plan for
remediation at sites where perchlorate is present in groundwater or
surface water at levels that the Secretary of Defense determines pose
a hazard to human health; and
!continue evaluating and prioritizing sites for cleanup without waiting
for the establishment of a federal standard.
The Senate bill included a similar provision, but did not identify who would
determine whether contamination levels pose a hazard to human health for the
purposes of developing an interim plan for remediation, until a drinking water


30 For a list of military installations in the United States where perchlorate contamination
has been found in groundwater, refer to EPA’s website at
[ ht t p: / / www.epa.gov/ f e df ac/ pdf / Rel eases_04_29_04-wi t h-dat esDB.pdf ] .
31 For a list of examples, refer to EPA’s website at
[ h t t p : / / www.e p a . go v/ f e df a c / doc ume n t s / p e r c h l o r a t e _s i t e _s umma r i e s .ht m] .

standard is established. The Senate bill also had specified that the plan to be
developed to remediate perchlorate once a drinking water standard is established was
to be “national” in scope, whereas the final bill does not indicate the scope.
A “Sense” of the House, Senate, or Congress expresses the opinion of that
respective chamber on the matter at hand, and is not legally binding.32 Consequently,
DOD is not required to comply with the direction provided in the Sense of Congress
provision in the law. Whether DOD could take the above actions would depend on
various factors, including the availability of appropriations.
A cleanup provision relevant to base closure sites was not adopted in the
conference agreement on H.R. 4200. The Senate bill would have authorized DOD
to reimburse private owners of former military property for cleanup actions taken
after the transfer of the land. CERCLA generally requires DOD to clean up
contamination on base closure sites prior to transfer of the land, and DOD is
retroactively liable for any cleanup actions that are needed after the transfer to
remediate contamination that was not originally addressed.33 The pace at which
DOD performs post-transfer cleanup on former military properties has been an issue
among private owners of these lands, who must wait for the completion of the
cleanup before the property can be used for its intended purpose. The authority that
would have been provided in the Senate bill would have allowed DOD to reimburse
private owners who wish to pay for the cleanup themselves, in order to speed the
pace of remediation.
Cleanup of Former Nuclear Weapons Sites. The law authorizes $6.96
billion for the two accounts that fund DOE’s cleanup of former nuclear weapons
sites, slightly more than the Administration’s request of $6.95 billion. Of the
authorization for FY2005, $5.97 billion is allocated to the Defense Site Acceleration
Completion Account, and $986 million is allocated to the Defense Environmental
Services Account. The total authorization is $354 million more than the FY2004
appropriation of $6.60 billion.
Most of the increase, $286 million, is authorized for activities to prepare for the
permanent on-site disposal of certain radioactive wastes that are stored in
underground tanks in the states of Idaho and South Carolina. Wastes left in these
tanks would be sealed in place with a cement “grout,” subject to state approval,
monitoring by the Nuclear Regulator Commission, and subsequent appropriations by
Congress. (A discussion of appropriations for FY2005 is provided later in this
report.) Wastes removed from the tanks that are classified as high-level radioactive
wastes would be treated and stored for future disposal in a centralized geologic
repository (such as Yucca Mountain in Nevada), as required by the Nuclear Waste
Policy Act. P.L. 108-375 does not provide the authority to grout tank wastes in
Washington state, as the Administration had proposed.


32 For further discussion of this type of provision, see CRS Report 98-825, Sense of
Resolutions and Provisions, by Paul S. Rundquist.
33 42 U.S.C. 9620(h).

As discussed earlier, the Administration’s request for the legal authority to leave
some of the radioactive wastes in the tanks and seal them in place has been
controversial. The Administration and some Members of Congress argue that
providing authority for the grouting of radioactive tank wastes would save costs and
speed the closure of the tanks, while sufficiently protecting the environment by
immobilizing the waste to prevent it from seeping into soil or groundwater. Other
Members, states, and environmental organizations have expressed concerns about
long-term risks to the human health and the environment, if the tank grouting did not
mix thoroughly with the waste to contain it safely and prevent leaks. Concerns about
environmental risks have been strongest in the state of Washington, as over one-third
of the underground storage tanks are known or suspected to have leaked radioactive
wastes into groundwater at the Hanford site, which is located adjacent to the
Columbia River. As noted above, the tank waste disposal authority provided in P.L.

108-375 excludes the state of Washington (and Hanford).


In response to concerns about long-term environmental risks, P.L. 108-375 also
directs DOE to arrange for the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to study the
radioactive and other hazardous characteristics of wastes stored in underground tanks
in Washington, Idaho, and South Carolina, DOE’s current plans to dispose of and
monitor these wastes, and alternatives for disposal. The NAS is required to submit
a final report to Congress and DOE on the findings and recommendations of this
study within one year of entering this arrangement. The law authorizes $1.5 million
out of DOE’s defense environmental management funds for the NAS to conduct the
study. The House and Senate bills included similar provisions to require this study,
but the Senate bill would have authorized a lower amount of $750,000 for it.
For further discussion, see CRS Report RS21988, Radioactive Tank Wastes:
Disposal Authority in the Ronald W. Reagan National Defense Authorization Act for
FY2005, coordinated by David M. Bearden.
Appropriations for FY2005
In addition to defense authorization legislation, the second session of the 108th
Congress completed action on the two FY2005 appropriations bills that fund cleanup
and other environmental activities administered by DOD. The Department of
Defense Appropriations Act for FY2005 (P.L. 108-287) provides more funding than
in FY2004 for cleanup at active military installations, but decreases funding for
cleanup at FUDS sites. The Military Construction Appropriations Act for FY2005
(P.L. 108-324) provides less funding for the cleanup of base closure sites than in
FY2004. Neither law includes the exemptions from the Clean Air Act, CERCLA,
or RCRA, which DOD requested.
The second session of the 108th Congress also completed action on FY2005
appropriations for DOE’s cleanup of former nuclear weapons sites. The
Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2005 (P.L. 108-447, H.R. 4818) provides
funding for numerous federal agencies, including DOE. The law provides more
funding for the cleanup of former nuclear weapons sites than was appropriated for
FY2004, including funding for the disposal of radioactive tank wastes. Further
discussion of each law is provided below.



Department of Defense. The House and Senate passed the conference
agreement on the Department of Defense Appropriations Act for FY2005 (H.R.
4613, H.Rept. 108-622) on July 22, 2004. The President signed the bill into law
(P.L. 108-287) on August 5, 2004. The law appropriates specific funding levels for
environmental cleanup activities, but as in defense authorization legislation, there are
no comprehensive line-item accounts for DOD’s other environmental activities,
including environmental compliance, conservation, pollution prevention, and
environmental technology. As in past years, DOD will allocate funding for these
activities from funds appropriated by the law to the accounts for Operation and
Maintenance, Procurement, and Research and Development.
As indicated in the table below, the law provides $1.36 billion for the five
Defense Environmental Restoration Accounts that fund the cleanup of past
contamination at active military installations and FUDS sites, about $10 million more
than authorized for FY2005. The Administration had requested $1.31 billion. The
increase in funding is devoted to cleanup at FUDS sites. However, relative to
FY2004, funding for cleanup at FUDS sites declines. The law increases funding for
cleanup at active Army, Navy, and Air Force installations, as the Administration
requested. In addition to these funds, the law provides $10 million for the mitigation
of environmental impacts resulting from military activities on Indian lands.
Table 1. Defense Environmental Restoration Accounts: FY2004
Enacted, FY2005 Request, and Action on Appropriations
Defense EnvironmentalFY2004FY2005P.L. 108-287
Restoration AccountEnactedRequest(H.R. 4613)
Army $396,018,000 $400,948,000 $400,948,000
Navy $256,153,000 $266,820,000 $266,820,000
Air Force$384,307,000$397,368,000$397,368,000
Defense-wide $24,081,000 $23,684,000 $23,684,000
Formerly Used Defense Sites$284,619,000$216,516,000$266,516,000
Total $1,345,178,000 $1,305,336,000 $1,355,336,000
Regarding cleanup at military installations in general, the law limits the use of
“indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity” contracts to no more than 35% of the total
funding obligated for environmental cleanup projects in FY2004. Under this type of
contract, funds are awarded for an indefinite number of services for an indefinite
period of time. They are generally more suitable for complex cleanup projects
addressing extensive contamination that may present unforseen needs and require
more time to complete than originally estimated. There have been ongoing concerns
in Congress that the cost and scope of these contracts have become so large that they
are difficult to manage. In recent years, Congress has included provisions in DOD’s
appropriations bill to limit their use.
As the Administration requested, the law does not provide any funding for
payment to the Kaho’olawe Island Conveyance, Remediation, and Environmental
Restoration Trust Fund. The Navy has completed its planned cleanup actions on
Kaho’olawe Island, and transferred access authority back to the State of Hawaii in



November 2003. The Navy ceased its use of the island as a training range in 1995,
and began the cleanup of the former range according to standards for the removal of
munitions specified in a Memorandum of Agreement with the State of Hawaii,
signed in May 1994.34 There has been some disagreement as to whether the Navy has
cleaned up the island according to these standards. Whether additional funding may
be necessary for further cleanup of the island is uncertain. (For a discussion of the
law as a whole, see CRS Report RL32305, Authorization and Appropriations for
FY2005: Defense, by Stephen Daggett and Amy Belasco.)
Military Construction. The House passed the conference agreement on the
Military Construction Appropriations Act for FY2005 (H.R. 4837, H.Rept. 108-773)
on October 9, 2004, and the Senate passed it on October 11, 2004. The President
signed the bill into law (P.L. 108-324) on October 13, 2004. The law provides $246
million for the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) Account to fund
environmental cleanup. This amount is the same as the Administration requested,
and as authorized for FY2005. It is $124 million less than the FY2004 appropriation.
Including the $246 million appropriation for FY2005, the use of unobligated
balances from prior year appropriations, and the use of proceeds from sales and
leases of base closure properties, the total funding level for cleanup at base closure
sites is $322 million for FY2005.
Table 2. Base Realignment and Closure Account: FY2004
Enacted, FY2005 Request, and Action on Appropriations
FY2004FY2005P.L. 108-324
EnactedRequest(H.R. 4837)
$370,427,000 $246,116,000 $246,116,000
In addition to funding cleanup at base closure sites, the law provides greater
flexibility for the payment of environmental cleanup costs associated with the upkeep
of certain types of military housing. A similar provision was included in the final
versions of the FY2003 and FY2004 appropriations bills. This provision limits the
cost of maintaining and repairing general and flag officer quarters, unless Congress
is notified 30 days in advance that costs will exceed $35,000. However, if the costs
above this amount are solely for environmental cleanup activities that could not be
reasonably anticipated at the time of the budget submission, the law authorizes DOD
to notify Congress of the higher costs “after-the-fact.” Providing an exception from
early notification requirements for unforseen environmental costs could help to
ensure that cost limitations do not prevent DOD from taking timely action to comply
with requirements to address immediate threats to human health and the
environment. (For a discussion of the law as a whole, see CRS Report RL32310,
Appropriations for FY2005: Military Construction, by Daniel H. Else.)
Energy and Water Development. The House and Senate passed the
conference agreement on the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2005 (H.R.


34 For the full text of the Memorandum of Agreement, refer to the Navy’s website at
[http://www.hawaii.navy.mil/CNBDAT A/ Kahoolawe/LegalDocs/MOU.htm] .

4818, H.Rept. 108-792) on November 20, 2004, which included funding for
numerous federal agencies. Funding for DOE was included in Division C for Energy
and Water Development. The President signed the bill into law (P.L. 108-447) on
December 8, 2004. As indicated in the table below, P.L. 108-447 provides $7.03
billion for the two accounts that support DOE’s cleanup of former nuclear weapons
sites. Of this amount, $6.10 billion is allocated to the Defense Site Acceleration
Completion Account, and $938 million is allocated to the Defense Environmental
Services Account. These amounts are subject to an across-the-board rescission of
0.8% that applies to all programs funded in the law. If applied equally to these
accounts, the rescission would reduce the $7.03 billion appropriation for DOE’s
cleanup of former nuclear weapons sites by $56 million.
Table 3. Defense Environmental Management Accounts:
FY2004 Enacted, FY2005 Request, and Action on Appropriations
Defense EnvironmentalFY2004FY2005P.L. 108-447
Management AccountEnactedRequest(H.R. 4818)
Defense Site Acceleration$5,617,719,000$5,970,837,000$6,096,429,000
Completion
Defense Environmental$985,296,000$982,470,000$937,976,000
Services
Total $6,603,015,000 $6,953,307,000 $7,034,405,000
Note: The amounts in P.L. 108-447 do not reflect the 0.8% across-the-board rescission.
From the appropriation for the Defense Site Acceleration Completion Account,
P.L. 108-447 provides $292 million of the $350 million that the Administration
requested for its High-level Waste Proposal, prior to the across-the-board rescission.
Under this proposal, DOE would classify some of the radioactive tank wastes in
Idaho, South Carolina, and Washington as “incidental to reprocessing” and
permanently dispose of these wastes by “grouting” them in place on-site in each state.
As discussed earlier, the Ronald W. Reagan National Defense Authorization Act for
FY2005 (P.L. 108-375) provides targeted authority for grouting some of the
radioactive tank wastes in Idaho and South Carolina, if certain criteria are met,
subject to appropriations by Congress.
Of the amount for the High-level Waste Proposal, $163 million is allocated to
the Savannah River site in South Carolina for projects to prepare for the grouting of
tank wastes, and $97 million is allocated to the INEEL in Idaho for such projects.
The remaining appropriation of $32 million is allocated to Hanford in Washington
state. However, it appears questionable whether this appropriation for Hanford
would be sufficient legal authority to permit the grouting of tank wastes at that site,
as the waste disposal authority in P.L. 108-375 does not include Washington state.
There are differing court rulings regarding whether an appropriation of funding
by Congress for a specific activity alone provides sufficient authority for an agency
to carry out that activity, absent authority provided in other statutes or in apparent
contradiction of pre-existing authority. In short, Congress can validate otherwise
unauthorized or unlawful action in an appropriations act by clearly indicating that it



intends to alter or repeal pre-existing law, in addition to funding an activity. Whether
an appropriation for a specific activity constitutes an authorization may be subject to
some argument and possible legal challenge, unless Congress explicitly addresses the
authority in question.35 The conference report language allocating an appropriation
of $32 million for “waste incidental to reprocessing” activities at the Hanford site in
FY2005 does not expressly mention the grouting of tank wastes, raising the question
of the authority for the use of this disposal method at that site.
There also has been ongoing concern in Congress about the feasibility of DOE’s
overall plans to accelerate cleanup and lower costs at the 114 sites across the country
that make up the former defense nuclear weapons complex. Prior to the conference
agreement on H.R. 4818, the House Appropriations Committee noted in its report on
H.R. 4614 (H.Rept. 108-554) that recent delays in cleanup schedules and cost
overruns of certain projects raise questions regarding DOE’s ability to accelerate
cleanup. The committee also raised concerns regarding DOE’s delay in submitting
a report to Congress on statutory changes that may be necessary to allow accelerated
cleanup to proceed, and the need for agreements with the states on all elements of the
Performance Management Plans for each site. These plans outline how accelerated
cleanup would be accomplished.
The conference report on H.R. 4818 also includes $78 million for DOE’s Office
of Legacy Management, subject to the 0.8% across-the-board rescission. The
Administration requested $66 million, the same as the FY2004 appropriation. Of the
amount in the conference report, $47 million is allocated to defense sites, and the
remaining $31 million to non-defense sites. Congress provided the funding for DOE
to establish this office in the Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act for
FY2004 (P.L. 108-137). The primary function of the office is to assess long-term
stewardship needs once cleanup is complete, to ensure that DOE’s planned cleanup
remedies continue to be effective in the future. These planning assumptions are
based on a time frame of 150 years. DOE previously administered these
responsibilities under its Environmental Management program.
In addition to funding for DOE, P.L. 108-447 provides $165 million for the
Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program (FUSRAP), also subject to the
0.8% across-the-board rescission. The FUSRAP program is administered by the
Army Corps of Engineers as part of its civil works budget. The amount for FY2005
is more than the FY2004 appropriation of $141 million and the Administration’s
request of $140 million. As discussed earlier, the FUSRAP program addresses
radioactive contamination at sites where uranium and thorium ores were stored and
processed during the early years of the U.S. nuclear weapons program. In its report
on H.R. 4818, the conferees indicated that the increase in funding is for expediting
the completion of ongoing cleanup projects and funding new projects that are eligible
for inclusion in the program. (For a discussion of the bill as a whole, see CRS Report
RL32307, Appropriations for FY2005: Energy and Water Development, coordinated
by Carl Behrens.)


35 See, e.g., TVA v. Hill, 437 U.S. 153 (1978); Robertson v. Seattle Audubon Society, 503
U.S. 429 (1992); AFL-CIO v. Campbell, 659 F.2d 157, 160 (D.C.Cir. Dec 18, 1980).