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1 (January 3, 2007)

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                                                                       Order Code RS22149
                                                                    Updated January 3, 2007





~ CRS Report for Congress


              Exemptions from Environmental Law

                   for the Department of Defense:
               Background and Issues for Congress

                                   David M. Bearden
                            Analyst in Environmental Policy
                       Resources, Science, and Industry Division

       Summary


            Since FY2003, DOD has sought broader exemptions from environmental laws that
        it argues are needed to preserve training capabilities and ensure military readiness.
        There has been disagreement in Congress over the need for broader exemptions in the
        absence of data on the overall impact of environmental requirements on training and
        readiness. There also has been disagreement over the potential impacts of broader
        exemptions on environmental quality. Although Congress has enacted certain
        exemptions that DOD requested, it has opposed others. After considerable debate, the
        107'h Congress enacted an exemption from the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, and the 108th
        Congress enacted exemptions from the Marine Mammal Protection Act and certain parts
        of the Endangered Species Act. These exemptions were contentious to some because
        of concerns about the weakening of protections for animals and plants. As in recent
        years, DOD again requested exemptions from the Clean Air Act, the Solid Waste
        Disposal Act, and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
        Liability Act (CERCLA), as part of its FY2007 defense authorization proposal.
        Concerns within Congress about human health and environmental risks motivated
        opposition to these exemptions. In response, the 109'h Congress did not include these
        exemptions in FY2007 defense authorization legislation (H.R. 5122) or FY2007 defense
        appropriations legislation (H.R. 5631 and H.R. 5385).


        Introduction

            Over time, Congress has included exemptions in several environmental statutes to
       ensure that requirements of those statutes would not restrict military training needs to the
       extent that national security would be compromised. These exemptions provide authority
       for suspending compliance requirements for actions at federal facilities, including military
       installations, on a case-by-case basis. Most of these exemptions may be granted for
       activities that would be in the paramount interest of the United States, whereas others



                 Congressional Research Service ' The Library of Congress
                       Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress

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