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U.S. EPA FY2020 Appropriations


EPA    FY2020 Proposed Appropriations
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and
other federal departments and agencies are operating under
a continuing resolution (CR), P.L. 116-69 (H.R. 3055),
generally at FY2019 enacted levels through December 20,
2019. The legislative vehicle for the CR, H.R. 3055, was
previously passed by the House as a five-bill omnibus
appropriations package on June 25, 2019, and by the Senate
as a four-bill amendment on October 31, 2019. Division C
of the House- and Senate-passed bills, the Department of
the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies
Appropriations Act, 2020, included funding for EPA.
Title II of Division C in House-passed H.R. 3055 would
provide $9.53 billion for EPA for FY2020, $3.31 billion
(53.1%) above the FY2020 request of $6.22 billion and
$264.2 million (2.9%) more than the FY2019 total enacted
appropriations of $9.26 billion (includes Titles II and IV of
Division E in P.L. 116-6 and emergency supplemental
appropriations in Title VII of P.L. 116-20) after rescissions
of unobligated balances. Title II of Division C in Senate-
passed H.R. 3055 would provide $9.01 billion for EPA for
FY2020,  $516.9 million (5.4%) less than the House-passed
bill, $2.79 billion (44.8%) above the FY2020 request, and
$252.6 million (2.7%) less than the total FY2019 enacted
appropriations after rescissions. Figure 1 presents trends in
requested and enacted appropriations for EPA from
FY2008  through FY2019  and proposed for FY2020.

Figure  1. EPA Appropriations: Requested   and Enacted
FY2008-FY20   19, FY2020  Requested  and Proposed
(Not Adjusted  for Inflation)

   Nominal $ in bilions      l Requested  Enacted

                £    ., cv yA R Sen1

   $?       flu.                            3056 Atnd
              +r






           &1v 7

Source: CRS using information from the Congressional Record; House,
Senate, and conference reports; and EPA's FY2020 Congressional
Budget Justification. Enacted amounts reflect rescissions and
supplemental appropriations, including $7.22 billion for EPA in the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-5).
Unlike recent proposed and enacted appropriations, House-
passed H.R. 3055 and the Senate-passed amendment do not
include rescissions of unobligated balances for EPA. The
President's FY2020 request proposed a total $377.0 million
rescission, and P.L. 116-6 rescinded a total of $210.5
million in unobligated balances for FY2019.


Updated December  5, 2019


The funding in the House and Senate-passed bills would
generally support the existing federal and state framework
for implementing and enforcing requirements under
multiple federal pollution-control statutes. The bills would
not approve the President's request to eliminate funding for
certain programs and activities or to return some federal
responsibilities to states and reduce funding for state
implementation grants.
Title II of H.R. 3052 (H.Rept. 116-100, reported June 3,
2019), the Department of the Interior, Environment, and
Related Agencies Appropriations, 2020, provided the basis
for the EPA funding included in House-passed H.R. 3055.
Title II of S. 2580 (S.Rept. 116-123), the Department of the
Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies
Appropriations, 2020, provided the basis for the Senate-
passed amendment.  The House and Senate Appropriations
Committees  emphasized that the proposed FY2020
appropriations for EPA program activities take into account
funding amounts reported in EPA's FY2019 operating plan,
which reflect rescission reductions. The Senate committee
refers to this adjustment as Budget Rebaselining.
EPA Appropriations Accounts
More  than a dozen federal laws authorize EPA operations.
Funding is annually appropriated to EPA among 10
accounts established by Congress over time: State and
Tribal Assistance Grants (STAG), Environmental Programs
and Management  (EPM),  Hazardous Substance Superfund
(Superfund), Science and Technology (S&T), Leaking
Underground  Storage Tank (LUST) Trust Fund Program,
Buildings and Facilities, Office of Inspector General, Inland
Oil Spill Program, Hazardous Waste Electronic Manifest
System Fund, and Water Infrastructure Finance and
Innovation Act (WIFIA) Program.
Historically, the STAG and EPM accounts have received
the largest shares of funding, followed by the Superfund
and S&T  accounts. The STAG  account funds grants for
water infrastructure, brownfields site assessment and
remediation, diesel emissions reduction, targeted airsheds,
and categorical grants to states and tribes for
implementing federal pollution control programs. The EPM
account funds additional grants and many cross-cutting
agency activities. The Superfund account supports the
environmental remediation of priority sites elevated for
federal attention. The S&T account funds scientific research
to inform agency regulatory decisions.
As indicated in Figure 2, the proportional distribution of
funding among  the EPA appropriations accounts has
remained similar over the past decade. House-passed H.R.
3055 would fund each account generally at the FY2019
level or greater and the Senate-passed amendment generally
the same or less, not including rescissions.


igross.gov

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