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President George
Bush signed two appropriations bills on Oct. 23, providing
funds for the Dept. of Defense and military construction programs.
The bills are the first signed into law for fiscal 2003 which
began Oct. 1. Eleven other spending bills remain pending in
Congress. Lawmakers earlier approved a stopgap spending bill
to keep the government running through Nov. 22. Congress is
in recess until after the Nov. 5 election.
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President Bush, flanked by Vice
President Cheney and Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, signs
defense spending bills (photo courtesy of the White
House)
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"The Dept. of Defense and the military
construction appropriations bills I sign today will make our
country more secure, make our military forces more prepared,
and reward military families for their sacrifice in service,"
Bush said during the Rose Garden ceremony.
The milcon bill provides $10.5
billion for building and upgrading military installations
and for family housing units. Although the measure provides
$835 million more than Bush requested, it represents a 1%
decrease from the 2002 total. Within that sum, DOD family
housing operation, maintenance and construction received $4.2
billion, a 2% boost. That includes $1.3 billion for construction
of new family housing units and improvements to existing facilities.
Another $2.9 billion will go for family housing operation
and maintenance.
Other military construction work,
including barracks, ports, airport runways and health-care
facilities, will receive $5.6 billion, down 5% from the fiscal
2002 mark. The 2003 total includes $1.2 billion for barracks,
$799 million for antiterrorism and force protection, $151
million for hospital and medical facilities and $18 million
for child development centers.
The measure also includes $501
million for environmental cleanup at former military bases
that have been closed. That includes $20 million to expedite
environmental cleanup at those sites.
The $355-billion defense spending
bill includes $1.3 billion for environmental cleanup at active
posts, about the same funding the program received in 2002.
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