STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 4909 – National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017
(Rep. Thornberry, R-TX, and Rep. Smith, D-WA)
The Administration
appreciates the House Armed Services Committee's continued support of
our national defense and supports a number of provisions in H.R. 4909,
the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year (FY)
2017. However, the Administration strongly objects to many provisions
in this bill that impede the Administration's ability to carry out the
President's defense strategy.
H.R. 4909 fails to
provide our troops with the resources they need to keep our Nation
safe. Instead of fully funding wartime operations such as INHERENT
RESOLVE to defeat ISIL, the bill would redirect $18 billion of Overseas
Contingency Operations (OCO) funds toward base budget programs that the
Department of Defense (DOD) did not request, cutting off critical
funding for wartime operations after April 30, 2017.
Not only is this approach dangerous, but it is also wasteful. The bill
would buy excess force structure without the money to sustain it,
effectively creating hollow force structure that would undermine DOD's
efforts to restore readiness. Furthermore, the bill's funding approach
attempts to unravel the dollar-for-dollar balance of defense and
non-defense funding increases provided by the Bipartisan Budget Act
(BBA) of 2015, threatening future steps needed to reverse over $100
billion of future sequestration cuts to DOD. By gambling with
warfighting funds, the bill risks the safety of our men and women
fighting to keep America safe, undercuts stable planning and efficient
use of taxpayer dollars, dispirits troops and their families, baffles
our allies, and emboldens our enemies.
In addition, H.R. 4909
would impose other unneeded costs, constraining DOD's ability to balance
military capability, capacity, and readiness. The President's defense
strategy depends on investing every dollar where it will have the
greatest effect. The Administration's FY 2017 proposals will accomplish
this by continuing and expanding critical reforms that divest unneeded
force structure, balance growth in compensation, modernize military
health care, and reduce wasteful overhead. The bill fails to adopt many
of these reforms, including failing to authorize a new Base Realignment
and Closure (BRAC) round.
View the full report here.
Senate Amendment to H.R. 2577 – Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2017
(Sen. Cochran, R-MS)
This Statement of
Administration Policy provides views on the Senate Amendment to H.R.
2577, containing the text of the bills making appropriations for the
Departments of Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development, and
for military construction, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and
related agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2017, and for other purposes.
The
Administration welcomes the bill's investments in military
infrastructure, housing, services for men and women in our armed forces
and their families, rental assistance for low-income families, the
elderly, and the disabled, as well as its investments in programs that
reduce lead-based paint hazards for low-income families with children.
The Administration also appreciates the Committee's commitment to fund
the benefits and services our veterans have earned, help reduce the
claims backlog, support medical and prosthetic research, and provide the
requested advanced appropriations. In addition, the Administration
appreciates the bill's support of surface transportation priorities,
including TIGER grants, Transit New Starts and Amtrak and passenger rail
service. Furthermore, the Administration welcomes the bill's support
of the Federal Aviation Administration, including the Next Generation
Air Transportation System initiative, as well as key functions in the
Office of the Secretary initiated in the FAST ACT.
However,
the Administration is concerned that the bill underfunds critical
investments in ending homelessness and revitalizing distressed
communities, leaving over 40,000 chronically homeless individuals and
homeless families with children unserved, and failing to address the
widening opportunity gap confronting the Nation's poorest
neighborhoods. Additionally, the bill does not support the President's
full vision for a 21st Century Clean Transportation Plan that
expands transportation options for American families, while reducing
carbon emissions, cutting oil consumption, and creating new jobs.
Further, the Administration is concerned that the bill includes
provisions that would undermine the safety of the Nation's highway
system and includes unwarranted restrictions on the use of funds to
construct, renovate, or expand any facility in the United States to
house individuals held in the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, as
these restrictions further impede the Executive Branch's efforts to
responsibly close the facility.
View the full report here.
Source: Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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