Common
Sense Budget Act: The Details
Bill
# H.R.4898
'To
reallocate funds toward sensible priorities
such as improved children''s education, increased
children''s access to health care, expanded
job training, and increased energy efficiency
and conservation through a reduction of wasteful
defense spending, and for other purposes.'
Original
Sponsor:
Lynn Woolsey (D-CA 6th)
Cosponsor
Total: 39
(last sponsor added 04/04/2006)
39 Democrats
About This Legislation:
To reallocate funds toward sensible priorities
such as improved children's education, increased
children's access to health care, expanded job
training, and increased energy efficiency and
conservation through a reduction of wasteful
defense spending, and for other purposes.
Detailed,
up-to-date bill status information on H.R.4898.
Full
text:
Common
Sense Budget Act of 2006 (Introduced in House)
HR
4898 IH
109th
CONGRESS, 2d Session
H.
R. 4898
To reallocate funds toward sensible priorities
such as improved children's education, increased
children's access to health care, expanded job
training, and increased energy efficiency and
conservation through a reduction of wasteful
defense spending, and for other purposes.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March
8, 2006
Ms. WOOLSEY (for herself, Ms. LEE, Mr. GRIJALVA,
Mr. KUCINICH, Mr. DAVIS of Illinois, Mr. NADLER,
Mr. MCDERMOTT, Mr. OWENS, Mr. MCGOVERN, Mr.
CLAY, Mr. CONYERS, Mr. HONDA, Ms. JACKSON-LEE
of Texas, Mr. STARK, Ms. SCHAKOWSKY, and Ms.
MCKINNEY) introduced the following bill; which
was referred to the Committee on Armed Services,
and in addition to the Committees on Energy
and Commerce, Education and the Workforce, Homeland
Security, and International Relations, for a
period to be subsequently determined by the
Speaker, in each case for consideration of such
provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of
the committee concerned
A
BILL
To reallocate funds toward sensible priorities
such as improved children's education, increased
children's access to health care, expanded job
training, and increased energy efficiency and
conservation through a reduction of wasteful defense
spending, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives
of the United States of America in Congress
assembled,
SECTION
1. SHORT TITLE.
This
Act may be cited as the `Common Sense Budget
Act of 2006'.
SEC.
2. FINDINGS.
Congress
finds the following:
(1)
The Department of Defense's increasingly large
budget provides for total defense spending that
is greater than that of the other 192 countries
in the world combined, yet--
(A)
the United States now ranks 25th in the world
in infant mortality, behind most of the nations
of Western Europe and the industrialized Far
East, while $60,000,000,000 of the United States
defense budget is expended annually on weapons
designed to thwart Soviet Union aggression during
the Cold War and other wasteful programs;
(B)
Federal spending on elementary and secondary
education has fallen to less than 10 percent
of the proposed 2007 outlays for the Department
of Defense, while schools throughout the Nation
are eliminating programs in music, foreign language,
and physical education;
(C)
61,000,000 individuals in the United States
lack health insurance during some period of
any given year, and half that number of individuals
(over 10,000,000 of whom are children) lack
such insurance for the entire year;
(D)
the Government Accountability Office estimates
that--
(i)
1/3 of the Nation's public schools, serving
14,000,000 children, need extensive repair or
need to have their entire physical plants replaced;
(ii)
85 percent of the Nation's public schools, 73,000
facilities serving 40,000,000 children, need
some repair work; and
(iii)
the total cost for the repairs and replacement
described in this subparagraph is over $120,000,000,000;
(E)
research conducted by the National Center for
Education Statistics shows that middle school
students in the United States rank 18th in science
test scores and 19th in math test scores internationally,
behind students in such countries as the Republic
of Korea, the Slovak Republic, Singapore, the
Russian Federation, and Malaysia; and
(F)
the Government Accountability Office estimated
in 2003 that the Department of Defense could
not account for over $1,000,000,000,000 in funds
appropriated to the Department of Defense.
(2)
The United States spends over $20,000,000,000
annually to maintain its nuclear arsenal, although
many of the weapons in that arsenal no longer
have practical utility. The United States needs
to eliminate spending on obsolete weapons systems
and use the funds saved to meet urgent domestic
needs for health care, education, job training,
and increased energy efficiency and conservation.
(3)
The Department of Defense is spending billions
of dollars developing space weapons and preparing
plans to deploy them, although--
(A)
those expenditures and plans contravene White
House policy, in place for a decade, that emphasizes
arms control and nonproliferation pacts; and
(B)
the development of those weapons is opposed
by many United States allies, who have rightly
stated that a shift in policy towards that development
will create an arms race in space.
(4)
The United States needs to reduce its dependence
on foreign oil by promoting long-term energy
security through greater investment in sustainable
and renewable energy alternatives.
(5)
The United States is facing unprecedented challenges
to national security and broader national interests.
Sustainable development and humanitarian assistance
programs should be a central part of United
States foreign policy. To address the root causes
of instability and terrorism and undercut the
ability of terrorist organizations to recruit
effectively, the United States needs to address
the global challenges of poverty, illiteracy,
unemployment, disease, and disaster by increasing
funding for sustainable development and humanitarian
assistance programs.
SEC.
3. REDUCTIONS IN AMOUNTS AVAILABLE FOR CERTAIN
DEFENSE AND ENERGY PROGRAMS.
(a)
Reductions in Amounts Available for Programs-
(1)
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PROGRAMS-
(A)
IN GENERAL- Notwithstanding any other provision
of law, of the amounts appropriated or otherwise
available for fiscal year 2007 for each program
or account of the Department of Defense specified
in subparagraph (B)--
(i)
the amount available in such fiscal year for
such program or account shall be reduced by
the amount specified with respect to such program
or account in that subparagraph; and
(ii)
an amount equal to the aggregate amount of all
such reductions under clause (i) shall be available
instead for the purposes set forth in subsection
(b).
(B)
SPECIFIED PROGRAMS AND ACCOUNTS AND AMOUNTS-
The programs and accounts, and amounts with
respect to such programs and accounts, specified
in this subparagraph are as follows:
(i)
The F-22 fighter aircraft program, $2,800,000,000.
(ii)
The F-35 Joint Strike fighter aircraft program,
$3,300,000,000.
(iii)
The C-130J aircraft program, $1,600,000,000.
(iv)
The V-22 Osprey aircraft program, $2,100,000,000.
(v)
The Virginia class submarine program, $2,300,000,000.
(vi)
The next generation destroyer (DD(X)) program,
$3,400,000,000.
(vii)
The Ballistic Missile Defense program, $8,300,000,000.
(viii)
Cross-service accounts for research, development,
test, and evaluation, $5,000,000,000.
(ix)
Accounts providing funds for personnel and other
costs associated with drawdowns and other reductions
in the Armed Forces, $5,000,000,000.
(x)
Space weapons programs, $5,000,000,000.
(xi)
The Future Combat System, $2,700,000,000.
(xii)
Programs relating to the operations of the Department
of Defense that can be combined to achieve efficiencies
in such operations, $5,000,000,000.
(2)
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS-
Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
of the amounts appropriated or otherwise available
for fiscal year 2007 for the Department of Energy
for the National Nuclear Security Administration
for national security programs--
(A)
the amount available in such fiscal year for
such programs shall be reduced by $14,000,000,000;
and
(B)
an amount equal to the amount of the reduction
under subparagraph (A) shall be available instead
for the purposes set forth in subsection (b).
(b)
Domestic Programs- From amounts made available
under subsection (a)--
(1)
$10,000,000,000 shall be made available to carry
out the modernization of school facilities under
section 8007(b) of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7707(b));
(2)
$10,000,000,000 shall be made available to carry
out State child health plans under title XXI
of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1397aa
et seq.);
(3)
$5,000,000,000 shall be made available to carry
out employment and training activities under
chapter 5 of subtitle B of title I of the Workforce
Investment Act of 1998 (29 U.S.C. 2861 et seq.);
(4)
$10,000,000,000 shall be made available to the
Secretary of Energy for such programs as that
Secretary may specify to increase energy efficiency
and conservation and increase investment in
sustainable and renewable energy alternatives;
(5)
$13,000,000,000 shall be made available to the
Secretary of State for such sustainable development
and humanitarian assistance programs as that
Secretary may specify to alleviate the global
challenges of poverty, illiteracy, unemployment,
disease, and disaster;
(6)
$5,000,000,000 shall be available to the Secretary
of Homeland Security to improve safeguards pursuant
to the Homeland Security Act of 2002;
(7)
$5,000,000,000 shall be made available to reduce
the deficit; and
(8)
$2,000,000,000 shall be made available for medical
research.
SEC.
4. EFFECTIVE DATE.
This
Act takes effect 90 days after the date of enactment
of this Act.