[Congressional Record Volume 142, Number 117 (Friday, August 2, 1996)]
[Senate]
[Page S9462]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MILITARY CONSTRUCTION APPROPRIATIONS
Mr. BURNS. Mr. President, last night the House of Representatives
passed and sent to the Senate the conference report on military
construction, and that bill, too, is at the desk to be considered
today. We have worked very, very hard with both sides of the aisle to
work out our differences--and sometimes on the same side of the aisle.
I applaud my good friend from Vermont, with whom I used to serve on
D.C. Appropriations, on the work they have done on the D.C.
appropriations bill. And the work that Senator Bond has done in his
committee as far as VA-HUD.
We have worked very hard, too, on the thrust of military construction
in this particular year, not only dealing with less dollars but also
dealing with some very important items which have always been put on
the shelf. One of them is the environment because of the Base Closure
and Realignment Commission, and the other one is family housing and
support services for families that serve this country on our posts
around the world.
This bill provides the necessary funding for the planning, the
design, the construction, the alteration, and the improvement of
military facilities around the world, and included in that, of course,
is the appropriation that keeps us strong, the NATO Security Investment
Program. It also provides the funding to implement base closures and
realignment as called for by law.
Again, let me emphasize that in this bill there is included child
development centers. We worry about children. We hear speeches made
about children. Repairs are needed also for the damage that was done by
Hurricane Bertha. In this bill is funding for family support centers on
our bases and environmental compliance projects. I think one of the
most important parts of the funding in this bill is environmental
cleanup when these bases are closed and, of course, taking new actions
where active bases are still in operation; hospitals, public safety
such as fire stations.
There is $1.2 billion for the implementation of BRAC, $4 billion for
family housing. Out of a $9 billion appropriation, $4 billion will be
spent on families and family housing to improve the life of our
military people. Just to give you an idea on that: Yuma Marine Air
Station in Yuma, AR; Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base, 202 units,
spending $29 million; Lenmoore Naval Air Station in California;
Florida, Mayport Naval Station; in Hawaii, almost $60 million being
spent for family support and housing; in Maryland, just outside of
Washington here, the Naval Testing Center at Patuxent River; Camp
Lejeune, community centers; family centers in Texas, Corpus Christi
Naval Complex; Kingsville Naval Air Station; in Virginia, Chesapeake,
Wallops Island; State of Washington, at Bangor Naval Submarine Base,
and Everett Naval Air Station, Puget Sound.
The list goes on of those projects that are started or being planned
and started, and all of them in support of families that serve this
country. One has to remember that they, too, have to live, and we have
started a new project, the Secretary of Defense working with the
corporate sector in partnership for private housing off base, which is
a new approach. By the way, there is funding in the bill for his
program. There is certain types of community impact assistance that has
to be provided for our military who face the loss of a sale of private
residences due to installation realignments and due to some closures.
So, Mr. President, that is what is in limbo here whenever we start
talking about gumming up the process. Here is a bill that we have
worked very hard to overcome the objections on both sides of the aisle,
to make it through not only committee, subcommittee and full committee
and, yes, on the floor to pass a bill, send it to the House and then
conference and bring it back and it is ready to pass this body because
the House passed it last night and it is ready to be sent to the
President for his signature to implement what we think is very
important in support of our military families around the globe.
So, I ask, if we could work out this so-called flap and get the
process back on the move again, lay aside some of our emotions and do
the right thing and allow us to bring the conference report of the
military construction to this floor, pass it, and let us send it to the
President.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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