JOURNAL - OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP71B00364R000100150001-0
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
153
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
April 25, 2012
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
December 18, 1969
Content Type:
NOTES
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a
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES
L. Mendel Rivers (D., S. C.), Chairman
Philip Philbin (D., Mass.)
F. Edward Hebert (D., La.)
Melvin O. Price (D., Ill. )
O. C. Fisher (D., Texas)
Charles E. Bennett (D., Fla.
James A. Byrne (D., Pa.)
Samuel S. Stratton (D. , N. Y. )
Otis Pike (D., N. Y. )
Richard Ichord (D. , Mo. )
Lucien N. Nedzi (D., Mich. )
Alton Lennon (D. , N.C.)
William J. Randall (D. , Mo. )
G. Elliott Hagan (D. , Ga. )
Charles Wilson (D. , Calif. )
Robert L. Leggett (D., Calif. )
Floyd V. Hicks (D., Wash.)
Speedy O. Long (D., La.)
Richard White (D., Texas)
Bill Nichols (D. , Ala. )
Jack Brinkley (D., Ga.)
Robert H. Mollohan (D. , W. Va. )
W. C. Daniel (D., Va.)
Jorge Luis Cordova Diaz, Puerto Rico
Staff Members
Leslie C. Arends (R. , Ill. )
Alvin E. O'Konski (R., Wis.)
William G. Bray (R. , Ind.)
Robert C. Wilson (R., Calif.
Charles S. Gubser (R. , Calif.)
Alexander Pirnie (R., N. Y. )
Durward G. Hall (R., Mo.)
Donald D. Clancy (R., Ohio)
Robert T. Stafford (R. , Vt. )
Carleton J. King (R., N. Y. )
William L. Dickinson (R., Ala.
Charles W. Whalen (R., Ohio)
Ed Foreman (R., N.M.)
John E. Hunt (R. , N. J. )
G. William Whitehurst (R., Va.
Robert J. Corbett (R. , Pa. )
J. Glenn Beall, Jr. (R. , Md. )
John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel
Frank M. Slatinshek, Assistant Chief Counsel
Earl J. Morgan, Professional Staff Member
Ralph Marshall, Professional Staff Member
John T. Reddan, Counsel, Special Subcommittee on Armed Services
Investigating
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FILE: 4 ? a 4r,
30 Dec 1969
CABLE: DOD= 4613
DATE: 30 Dec. 1969
SUBJECT': travels of Reps. James A. Bryne, Charles H. Wilson, William Bray,
John J. Ford, Lt. Coll. Walter C. Schrupp. .
FILED: Rep James A. Bryne
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Journal - Office of Legislative Co.nsel Page 2
Thursday - 18 December 1969
3. At his request, I met with George Murphy,
on the staff of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, who is interested
in a matter involving uranium under Euratom control. (See Memo for
the Record for details. )
4. Advised by the Senate Armed Services
Committee that our retirement legislation has been scheduled for Committee
consideration along with several other legislative items for tomorrow
morning at 10:00 a. m. Colonel White will be available as a standby witness.
I talked to Mr. Paul
Goulding, Administrative Aide to Senator Claiborne Pell D., R.I.), and
told him I had personally reviewed the file on The Colonel's
file had been carefully reviewed by our personnel people and had been
referred to appropriate Agency components. This extensive review did not
result in identification of a position at this time that would take advantage of
his offer to serve with the Agency. I also advised Mr. Goulding that BALPA
and OPRED limit the probability that the Agency will be able to utilize the
Colonel's services in the foreseeable future.
5. In response to his call of yesterday
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6. Received from Colonel Harold
Gould, Consultant, House Science and Astronautics Committee, invitations
for Agency invitees, Messrs. Dave Brandwein, 25X1
and to attend the 11th meeting of the Panel on Science an
Technology, January 27 through 29. Colonel Gould noted in passing that the
Soviet Embassy has evidenced an interest in attending the panel discussions
for the first time this year.
7. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, House Armed
Services Committee staff, and briefed him on the Soviet budget.
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Thursday - 11 December 1969
1. I I Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House Appro-
priations Committee staff, in response to his call of yesterday afternoon
and provided limited comment on the Henry Taylor Washington Daily News
column of 10 December 1969 for his use in responding to questions by
Committee members. Mr. Michaels noted in passing that he will be
continuing with the Committee through the 31st of the month and will then
be going to private industry. He also indicated that although Mr. Ralph
Preston has been designated to head up the Defense Subcommittee staff
no mention has been made by the Chairman whether Mr. Preston or some
other individual will be succeeding Mr. Michaels in the CIA Subcommittee
staff position.
Met with Russ Blandford, House Armed_, Serv
Committee staff, and told him that I had rechecked the information provided
.E.Duse Appropriations Committee concerning Soviet and ChiCom aid to
North Vietnam. Those briefings were consistent with the information given
to him earlier in the week. Mr. Blandford thanked me for rechecking the
matter and indicated that apparently there had been a garble in the informa-
tion he had received which was attributed to House Appropriations Committee
and briefings provided that Committee by the Agency.
I briefed Mr. Blandford on the SS-11.
3. I delivered to the office of Represen-
tative Lee Hamilton (D., Ind.) a personal letter from the Director.
4. Delivered FBIS items which mentioned their
names to the offices of Senator Mike Mansfield (D., Mont.), Senator Barry
Goldwater (R., Ariz.), Senator Russell Long (D., La.) and Senator Charles
McC. Mathias (R., Md.).
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Tuesday - 9 December 1969
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STATOTHR
STATOTHR
1. I Again called Mrs. Vergie Cass,
Personal Secretary to Senator Abraham A. Ribicoff D. Conn.), about
the Senator's request for information on Mrs. Cass
recalled that it had been necessary to cancel Mr. Maury's appointment
with Senator Ribicoff because of his father's illness and said he had been
completely tied up with the tax bill since then. I told Mrs. Cass that
we merely wanted to be sure that the Senator understood that we were
available at his convenience and wanted to be responsive to his request.
She thanked me and said she would call me.
2. Met with Brian Corcoran, on the staff
of Senator Henry M. Jackson (D., Wash.), and briefed him on the case
of Mr. Corcoran expressed no disagreement with our
handling of the case and said that Senator Jackson was not aware of Mr.
letter. They are handling it strictly as a routine constituent
directly sending a copy of our response to Senator Jackson along with a
covering note.
inquiry. Mr. Corcoran merely suggested that we respond to
3. Checked again with Ed Braswell, on
the staff of the Senate, Armed Services Committee, about the chances of
having our retirement bill considered at a Committee meeting on Thursday.
Mr. Braswell said he had tried to get a decision on this from Senator Stennis
last night and was unsuccessful. He will try again this evening and will let
us know as soon as he has an answer. Mr. Braswell mentioned that the
situation was getting difficult since Senator Stennis is involved in appropri-
ation hearings and the Senate is having morning sessions this week.
4. I IMet with Frank Slatinshek, Counsel, House
Armed Services Committee, and briefed him on Soviet underground nuclear
testing and Soviet Y-class submarine construction in the Pacific area.
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Tuesday - 9 December 1969
5. Met with Chairman George Miller (D., Calif.),
House Science and Astronautics Committee, who told me that the press
of business will be such between now and the close of the session that he
is going to withhold scheduling of an Agency briefing until after January
10. Chairman Miller noted in passing that he is looking forward with great
anticipation to visiting the South Pole during the Christmas holidays.
I briefed the Chairman on a Soviet space failure.
6. Talked to Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, who advised that the figures he gave me
last week- n-Soviet and Chinese aid to North Vietnam should have read
1. 2 billion and 800 million respectively. These figures ostensibly were
given to the House Appropriations Committee by the Agency earlier in the
year. I advised Mr. Blandford that both the original figures he gave me
last week and the revised figures are incorrect but that I would recheck
the matter and be back in touch with him.
7. Met with Mr. Ralph Devlin, House
Post Office and Civil Service Committee, who advised that in hearings
last Friday on H. R. 15024 (a bill to provide a 5 per cent increase in
annuities based on involuntary separation from Civil Service between
1 November 1969 and 2 January 1970) the Committee Chairman and
Minority Leader indicated almost unalterable opposition to the bill.
I met later with the Bill Clerk of the Senate Post Office and Civil
Service Committee, Donna Yee, who advised that the Committee reported
H. R. 9233 yesterday to include an amendment providing for 5 per cent
increase in annuities payable for involuntary separation having a commencing
date after 1 November 1969 and before 2 January 1970. (Apparently no
hearing was held on this annuity increase before reporting the bill to the
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Acting Legislative ounse
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8 December 1969
SUBJECT: Meeting with John Blandford re Soviet and Chinese
Aid to North Vietnam
1. Met with Mr. John Blandford, Chief Counsel, House Armed
Services Committee, and in response to his earlier question told him
that we do not have any information on which to base a judgment whether
Soviet assistance or support for the U. S. position in the Paris Peace
Talks or American attempts toward negotiation settlement in Vietnam
will be forthcoming. We really can't read the Russians' purpose at this
time. As for aid provided North Vietnam, I indicated that we were not
able to verify the figures provided by him on Soviet and Chinese aid to
the North Vietnamese of 1.8 billion and 200 million respectively. I also
briefed him on the aid provided by the USSR, Communist China and
Eastern Europe for 1968 and for the period 1954 to 1968.
and 200 million had been utilized by the Appropriations Committee in
floor statements and was apparently provided by "the intelligence com-
munity. " He had no problem with the figures provided by us, but
appeared concerned by the disparity between the filaure*-u.sed by Appro-
2. M:r. Blandford indicated that the figures provided of 1.8 billion
priations and our breakdown.
Assistant Legi lative Counsel
Distribution:
Orig - Subj
1 - Chrn
OLC/JGO:sml (10 Dec. '69)
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Monday - 8 December 1969
9, Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services _ommittee and reviewed with him the question of
Soviet attitude or possible support for the United States' position in the
Paris Peace Talks and American attempts toward negotiation settlement
in Vietnam. I also discussed with him aid provided the North Vietnamese
by the Soviets, Communist China, and Eastern Europe for the year 1968
and for the period 1954 to 1968. (See Memorandum of Record for details.)
I briefed Mr. Blandford on the following items:
a. Soviet SS-9 ICBM;
b. Sino-Soviet border dispute;
c. Soviet ABM testing;
d. Soviet tactical fighters.
10.1 I Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, and briefed him on the following items:
a. Sino-Soviet border dispute;
b. Soviet ABM testing;
c. Soviet tactical fighters.
Mr. Gould for the call. Mr. Goodwin's office has been advised.
11. h . (Received a call from Colonel Harold Gould,
House Science and Astronautics Committee, who advised that Represen-
tative Ken Hechler (D., W.Va.) was called during the afternoon by a
Scripps-Howard representative concerning the authenticity of news reports
concerning an "explosion" ears this summer in the Soviet Union.
Mr. Gould passed the foregoing as a matter of information since the staff
had received a total of four calls during the day on this item. No Agency
action is requested. Mr. Gould noted in passing that the responses given
were that the Committee staff had no information on the subject. I thanked
Acting Legislative Counsel
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Friday - 5 December 1969
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Messrs. Maury and
on a visit to Capitol Hill. Senator Henry M. Jackson (D., Wash.) met
with them for about approximately 45 minutes. (See Memo for the
Record for details. )
1.
Mr. Peter
earlier in the week by Mr. Blandford concerning Soviet attitude toward
the American position at the Paris Peace Talks and the monetary cost of
Soviet and Communist Chinese support given North Vietnam.
Mr. Slatinshek requested that the matter be covered with Mr. Blandford
on his return to the office on Monday. I briefed Mr. Slatinshek on the
Soviet SS-9 ICBM.
Bagley and
met with Mr. Darrell St. Clair
OCI, accompanied by
Clerk of the Senate,
and debriefed him on the recent congressional delegation trip to the
International Parliamentarian Union Meeting in New Delhi, India.
Mr. St. Claire noted in particular the treatment accorded the delegation,
headed by Senator John Sparkman (D., Ala.), in visits to Nepal and
Pakistan as well as India. No followup action is required from the
meeting. (See emorandum for the Record for details.)
3. Met with Mrs. Reed, Assistant
to Representative Philip Philbin (D., and cave her a copy of
the Agency's letter of 3 October 1969 to an applicant
for reemployment. Mrs. Reed is acting on constituent personnel matters
during Mr. Gaucher's absence this week from the office.
4. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek,. House Armed
Services Committee staff, and discussed with him the questions raised
5. Chairman Mahon announced the designa-
tion of Mr. Ralph Preston to head up the Defense Subcommittee staff in
yesterday's meeting of the full House Appropriations Committee.
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Tuesday - 2 December 1969
10. I briefed Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, on the following items:
a. Soviet oceanographic research;
b. Soviet SL-12 space booster;
c. Soviet SS-4 MRBM;
d. Soviet underground nuclear testing.
11.1 I Met with Representative Wendell
Wyatt (R., Oreg.) and gave him a copy of the Lambert Los Angeles Times
Green Beret item of 9 November. Representative Wyatt expressed his
appreciation for the paper and noted again that he had enjoyed visiting the
Agency and meeting with the Director.
12. Spoke with Robert Hull, Department
of State, concerning progress o the Foreign Service Retirement Act
amendments paralleling the Daniels/McGee bill and learned that the report
has not yet been written and most likely will not be considered by the full
committee until February or March of next year. (An interesting side effect
is that this delay enhances the retirement inducement aspects of the bill,
which also adopts the three-month cost-of-living formula which will be
applied against a Consumer Price Index base of 1968 and probably result
in a 9 percent or more annuity increase to those retiring following enactment.)
We also discussed the possible ramifications of the Hogan and Daniels
bills extending the recent 5 percent cost-of-living adjustment to near term 25X1
future annuities resulting from involuntary separation.
egislative Counsel
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Tuesday - 2 December 1969
6. Carl Marcy, Chief of Staff, Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, called and said that Messrs. James Lowenstein
and Richard Moose, of the Committee staff, would be travelling to
Saigon on Committee business, arriving on 7 December and leaving on
18 December. Mr. Marcy asked that the Director send a cable to the
field advising the Agency people to cooperate with Lowenstein and Moose
as they did with Messrs. Pincus and Paul.
Later in the day, Mr. Lowenstein called to advise that he and
Mr. Moose would be staying at the Caravelle Hotel in Saigon. He said
that they would be interested in seeing our people separately from the
country team. Lowenstein said that their primary interest would center
on the status of the pacification program, the prospects for Vietnamization,
and the general political and military situations in both Saigon and the
field. He said they expected to travel extensively outside of Saigon.
7. Met with Mr. John Martiny, Counsel,
House Post Office and Civil Service Committee, and received from him
a copy of H. R. 15024 which was introduced by Mr. Daniels and Mr. Dulski
last night. This bill will provide a 5 per cent increase in certain annuities
for involuntary separation having a commencing date after November 1, 1969,
but before January 2, 1970. This is an Administration bill introduced at the
request of the Department of Defense. Mr. Martiny advised that hearings
probably will be scheduled for next week.
8. et with Messrs. John Blandford and Frank
Slatinshek, House Armed Services Committee staff, and thanked them for
the Committee's action in the expeditious passage of H. R. 14571.
Mr. Blandford noted that information has been provided the Chair-
man concerning the dollar cost of Soviet and Chinese support to North
Vietnam and requested verification of the amounts together with certain
other information. (See Memorandum for the Record.)
9. Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House
Appropriations Committee staff, who advised that as yet no changes have
been made in staff assignment of the Committee. Mr. Michaels also
advised that he will be staying with the Committee through the month of
December.
i
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Journal Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Monday - 1 December 1969
5. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Assistant
Chief Counsel, House Armed Services Committee- who advised that
the bill amending the CIA Retirement Act would be the first Armed
Services Committee bill to be considered by the House later in the day.
The bill is scheduled for consideration on the Consent Calendar of the
House.
I briefed Mr. Slatinshek on Soviet SL-12 space booster and Soviet
nuclear testing.
6. Met with Mr. James Wilson and Mr. W. H.
Boone, House Science and Astronautics Committee staff, and briefed
them on the Soviet SL-12 booster.
7. Received from Mr. George Norris,
House Science and Astronautics Committee staff, the personal resume
of a person who might be of interest to the Agency.
;JOHN M. MAURY
\,,..iLegislative Counsel
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Mr.
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Monday - 24 November 1969
5. Mrs. Cc_ss, Personal Secretary to
Senator Abraham Ribicoff, called to say that the Senator was called out
of town due to the illness of his father and therefore they would have to
cancel Mr. Maury's appointment with the Senator for today. Mrs. Cass
will call and advise us when the Senator will be available.
6. Received a call from Mr. John R.
Blandford, Chief Counsel, House Armed S rvi es?6 ~ mm ttee who
advised that Chairman Rivers would like to meet with the Director
as early as possible this morning. After relaying the message to the
Director's office, I advised Mr. Blandford that the Director was not
yet in his office but that he would call Chairman Rivers as soon as he
arrived.
7. Talked to Dr. Charles Reichardt, Director
of Intelligence, omic nergy Commission, as a followup to his call of
Friday concerning congressional correspondence involving AEC, Air
Force and Agency interests, and advised him that we could see no need
of specifying Agency interest in the draft response prepared by AEC.
Dr. Reichardt agreed and requested that the appropriate office in the Air
Force be alerted in the event further inquiry is necessary and that he be
advised of the appropriate office or individual for contact at the Air Force.
OSA, has been advised. (See Memorandum for the
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the Record.)
8~ I Met with Major General John Murphy, Director,
Legislative Liaison, Office of the Secretary of the Air Force, and discussed
briefly with him congressional correspondence received by the Atomic
Energy Commission concerning AEC, Air Force and Agency interests.
General Murphy advised that he would be available to respond on this matter
should further followup with Air Force be desired. (See Memorandum for
Legislative Counsel
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Friday - 21 November 1969
10. I Met with Mr. Robert Michaels who
advised that as yet Chairman Mahon, House Appropriations Committee,
has made no new assignments or adjustments in the Committee staff.
Mr. Michaels also advised that he had talked with Representative John
Marsh (D., Va.) who indicated that he had talked to Chairman Mahon
about a visit to the Agency by himself, Representative Burt Talcott (R. ,
Calif.), and possibly others. Mr. Michaels had no details on the conver-
sation other than Marsh has talked to the Chairman and will be visiting the
Agency.
11. I Melt with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Assistant
Chief Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, it tee, and reviewed with him
the status of H.R. 14571, a bill to amend the CIA Retirement Act. In response
to my questions Mr. Slatinshek indicated that the material I provided him
prior to the consideration of the bill by the full Committee answers all questions
he can foresee from Committee members or others in taking the bill to the
floor. He does not anticipate any difficulty in passage of the bill which is now
scheduled on the consent calendar of the House. Mr. Slatinshek also advised
that he has reviewed our bill along with others with Mr. Ed Braswell, Senate
Armed Services Committee staff. Mr. Braswell likewise foresees little
difficulty in handling the bill on the Senate side after passage by the House.
12. Met separately with Mr. John R. Blandford and
Mr. Frank Slatinshek, House _Ar_medServices Committee staff, and briefed
them on ChiCom personnel trenches.
the first of the week on a possible debriefing meeting,later in th_e week.
13. vlet with Mr. Darrell St. Claire, Chief
Clerk of the Senate, who has just returned from rather extensive travels
with Senate designees to the Commonwealth Parliamentarian Meeting. He
feels that the Agency might be interested in reviewing with him some of his
observations of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee visit to Nepal and
Pakistan. As he was pressed for time, it was decided we would talk further
JOHN M. MAURY
Legislative Counsel
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Tuesday - 18 November 1969
5. Called Mrs. Cass, Personal Secretary
to Senator Abraham Ri icof . , Conn. ), to remind that we have information
on a certain individual about whom the Senator had inquired of the Director
a couple weeks ago. Mrs. Cass apologized and explained that the Senator
had been out of town almost continually since then, and had been preoccupied
with hearings since returning yesterday but she would call me in the next
day or two.
6. FE, called
to say that Mr. Joseph Wolf, of the State Department, currently has AID's
proposed response to Senator Fulbright's questions about AID contracts with
Air America and Continental Airlines. Wolf has some reservations about
their response and is seeking Whit:, House. guidance.
7. Everett Harper, on the staff of the Senate
Preparedness Subcommittee, ca ed and asked if appropriate members of
the Preparedness staff could be briefed this week on the SAM programs of
foreign countries. He said they were particularly interested in ranges,
altitudes, and response times. I told him I would check on this and be
back in touch.
8. Hand carried to George Murphy, on the
staff of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, an FBIS item containing a
speech given by Defense Minister Grechko at the recent Soviet parade.
Murphy gave me a list of the Soviet delegation to the SALT talks and asked
if I would check this list to see if any of the persons were Soviet intelligence
types.
9. Called Robert Hull, Department of State
to advise that our Retirement c amendments had been reported out of
the full House Armed Services Committee and to learn of the status of the
t amendments.
Foreign ervice Ac_
cpNf14ENTa
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Tuesday - 18 November 1969
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1. Met with Chairman Mendel Rivers after
the House Armed Services ommittee meeting and thanked him for the
expeditious approval given H. R. 1457 1, the Agency's retirement bill. The
Chairman accepted my expression of appreciation and noted that this clears
the bill for consideration by the House of Representatives. (See Memoran-
dum for the Record.)
2. Talked to Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Assis-
tant Chief Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, who told me that he
is filing the report on H. R. 14571 this afternoon. The bill will be placed on
the consent calendar. In keeping with the fact that our bill contains only
material authorized in the Daniels-McGee bill for civil service retirees,
the Committee does not anticipate problems in passage by the House of
Representatives. Mr. Slatinshek noted in the report (with regard to the
question of cost) that the Director of Central Intelligence had advised the
Committee that only minimal increase in cost will be involved in implementing
h a horit set forth in the act.
3. Accompanied General Cushman and Colonel
White to a session of the House Armed Services Committee where the Agency
retirement legislation was considered and reporte out on t e basis of
presentation by Committee Assistant Chief Counsel Slatinshek. See Memo
for Record.
for Record.
4. Received a call from John Lehman, of Dr.
Kissinger's staff in the White House, who asked about the Director's
appearance yesterday before the Symington Subcommittee. See Memo
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel
Monday - 17 November 1969 .
(Left copy of briefing book with Mr. Slatinshe
Page 4
12. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek,
Assistant Chief ounsel, souse Armed Services Committee, and reviewed
with him various matters relating to the Agency's retirement bill which is
scheduled for hearing before the full Committee tomorrow.
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI
DDS
DDS &T
OPPB
EA/DDP
,IJ
egislative Counsel
/JOHN M. MAURY .
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Journal - Office of L egisl ive Counsel
Monday - 17 November 1969
blessing.
Page 2
6. Representative QI Marsh
(D, Va.) called to say that and Representative Burt L. Talcott
(R. , Calif.) would like to bring seven of their colleagues--Republicans
and Democrats--out for an Agency breakfast briefing on Wednesday,
26 November. I told Marsh that we would be glad to cooperate, but for
protocol. and jurisdictional reasons we wanted to make sure this was
cleared with Chairman Mahon. Marsh said this could be done, and
he could write a letter to the Director formally requesting the meeting
so At was clear that it was not or. Agency initiative. I said the letter
would be fine, and should note that the request had the Chairman's
Marsh asked if I would care to join informally with the
Virginia delegation- -both House and Senate--for a social evening on
Tuesday, 25 November. I said I would be happy to. Marsh said they
would also like to have the Director and I said I_ wasn't sure that he
would be free but Marsh said he planned to invite him.
Marsh also commented that he thought Representative
Wilbur Mills (D., Ark.) would very much appreciate a chance to get
better acquainted with the Agency, possibly by visiting Headquarters
for a formal briefing.
7. In response to his call to
advised Fra SLa ins e r ? staff, that
General Cushman and Colonel White would be the Agency witnesses appearing
before the full House Armed Services Committee on H. R. 14571, CIA Retire-
ment Act amendments.
Internal Security Subcommittee,
g, J. Sourwine, Chief Counsel, Senate
information concerning
said that the Subcommittee had confidential
He wanted to know if we could be of any help in supplying him
information concerning the He said ordinarily they
would ask State for this type of information, but that the normal "protocol"
approach does not seem to be indicated in this case. I said I would check
and be back in touch.
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Thursday - 13 November 1969
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1. Met with Russ Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services Commi ge . who told me that the full Committee
will be meeting on Tuesday but that it would be necessary to check with
Frank Slatinshek as to whether the CIA bill has been included on the
agenda.
I briefed Mr. Blandford on several items of current intelligence.
(See Memorandum for the Record.)
2. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Assistant
Chief Counsel, House Armed Servicese Co m,;_who advised that the
Chairman had not yet approved the agenda for the meeting of the full
Committee on 18 and 20 November. It is Mr. Slatinshek's present intent
to include our bill on the 18th and to handle it without any formal presen-
tation by the Agency. He requested, however, that we continue in a
standby status ready to appear on Tuesday or Thursday until he can get
a full reading from the Chairman which may not be possible prior to the
meeting of the Committee. I thanked Mr. Slatinshek for his consideration
and told him that we are ready to go whenever it would please the Chairman.
I briefed Mr. Slatinshek on several items of current intelligence.
(See Memorandum for the Record.)
3. 1 met separately with Chairman George P.
Miller (D., Calif.), Representative Olin Teague (D., Tex.), and
Mr. W. H. Boone, Senior Technical Advisor, House Science and Astro-
nautics Committee, and briefed them on a possible Soviet space activity.
Chairman Miller advised that he would like to set up a full briefing to bring
certain of his Subcommittee Chairmen up-to-date on Soviet space activities
after his return from Cape Kennedy. Chairman Miller did not specify a
date.
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Wednesday - 12 November 1969
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1. I IMet with Mr. Carl Marcy, Senate Foreign
Relations Committee staff, and advised him that the current negotiations
on which the Chairman had been] briefed. (See Memorandum for the Record.)
2. Met with Mrs. Edna Johnson, Acting
Executive Secretary, House Armed Services Committee, who advised that
the CIA Retirement Act amendments bill is being scheduled for the next
listed meeting of the full Committee. No date has been determined by the
Chairman as yet for the next meeting of the full Committee.
3. Miss Marko, of Tobin Associates,
Incorporated, called to arrange a meeting between Mr. Arsan, of Minnesota
Mining and Manufacturing Company, and the Agency's procurement officer
to discuss MMM's duplicating processing line. In response to my question
she explained that Mr. Tobin had served for a long time as an assistant to
Representative John Blatnik (D., Minn.). The matter was turned over to
Mr. Blake's office.
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4. Mr. Jay Sourwine, Chief Counsel, Senate
Internal Security Subcommittee, called on the -aalley we recently returned
to him covering, the testimony of nd said they still 25X1
needed n r to the question to on evidence of U. S. nationals being
trained ~e He said they would go back t irectly on this if the 25`25X1
Agency prefers. Sourwine said he assumed tha e Agency has no objection to
the publication of the transcript in its present form once the missing answer
is supplied. I told him we would be back in touch.
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JOT .a RNA L
OFFIG ,2 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Mo;:._.ay - 10 November 1969
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1. William Miller, Special Assistant
to Senator John Sherman Cooper . , Ky. ), called and said that the
Senator has become quite interested in Sino-Soviet affairs and would
like to have a briefing on Wednesday at 4:00 p. m. if this could be
arranged. Mr. Miller said Senator Cooper is particularly interested
in what the Soviets have done to change their posture, including the
nuclear field. I told Mr. Miller that I would check on this and be
back in touch with him on Wednesday morning. /DDI, has
been alerted. )
2. Received word from Senator Tydings'
office that he does not have a strong personal interest in the case of
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who told me that the Symington Sub-
committee will be meeting on Tuesday, 11 November. The transcript of the
Director's testimony on Laos will be needed for the meeting. He also
advised that Senator Symington had stated at the opening of today's hearings
that the declassified transcript of the Philippines hearings will not be released
on Friday, 14 November, as originally planned. There are parts of the tran-
script which State Department now believes should remain classified. Release
of the transcript will be postponed until next week. (See Memorandum for
the Record.)
but merely wanted to try to be of some assistance to
him, since he appears to be a well educated linguist. No official
response to the Senator's letter to the Director is required.
3. Met with Mr. Arthur Kuhl, Chief Clerk,
items:
4. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Assistant Chief
Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, and briefed him on the following
e. Soviet equipment deployment;
d. Soviet/ChiCom negotiations;
a. North Vietnamese troop infiltration;
b. Lebanese/Fedayeen agreement;
c. ChiCom patrol boat production;
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~EMET
JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Thursday - 6 November 1969
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that he had discussed
1, Called Robert Hull, Department of
State, on the outcome of their executive session hearing yesterday before
the Hays Subcommittee on State Department Organization and Foreign
Operations, House Foreign Affairs Committee, on Daniels/McGee-type
amendments to the Foreign Service retirement system. Hull said that
the Subcommittee had approved a bill including the benefits and, to State's
surprise, the financing provisions of the Daniels/McGee bill. He said
that they had circulated the Agency's bill now pending before House Armed
Services. Committee- which he felt prompted their Subcommittee to make
sure they kept pace with whatever Chairman Rivers was doing for the CIA
retirement system.
2. Hand carried to Bill Woodruff, on the staff of
the Senate Appropriations Committee, a list of Soviet and Chinese Communist
military developments since 9 June 1969 in response to his request. Woodruff
said he would talk to Senator Russell about this and be back in touch with us
about a possible briefing of the Defense Subcommittee. Woodruff also advised
Russell and "it went sailing through.`
3. Mr. Edward Kenney, Minority Counsel to
the Senate Preparedness Subcommittee, queried me about statements made
by Senator Fulbright concerning CIA operations in Laos following the Director's
briefing of the Symington Subcommittee. Kenney indicated that Senator
Thurmond is very concerned about disclosure of presumably classified
information, by Senator Fulbright in this statement. (See Memo for the
Record for details. )
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INTERNAL Ubt VN67
STAT
Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Thursday - 6 November 1969
9. (Internal Use Only - JGO) Talked to Mr. Don Shasteen, Execu-
tive Assistant to Senator Carl Curtis (R., Neb.), who indicated that
has rather extensive connections in Latin
America where he apparently lived at one time and still does lecturing at the
university level. I explained some of the problems of employment of indivi-
duals in the 50-year-old bracket and told him a recruiter would contact
irect, and would use the Senator's reference as an introduction.
appreciated by the Senator. Office of Personnel has been advised.
Mr. as een appreciated the suggestion and indicated that it would be
10. (Internal Use Only - JGO) Met with Mr. John R. Blandford,
Chief Counsel, House Armed Services committee. and briefed him on
the various conversations with Representative Jonathan Bingham (D., N.Y.),
concerning Representative Bingham's interest in CIA and the 25X1
congressional role therein, and alerted him to the fact that the Committee
might expect a call from Mr. Bin-gham or his assistant, Mr. Roger Majak.
With regard to the Agency's retirement bill, Mr. Blandford advised
that the full Committee is not scheduled..to meet during the coming week.
The next date for a meeting in all probability will be Tuesday, 18 November.
The present intention is to present the bill before the full Committee at its
next meeting.
11. (Internal Use Only - JGO) Met with Miss Dorothy Fosdick, STATOTHR
Senate Subcommittee on National Security and International Operations of
the Government Operations Committee staff, and provided a suggested response
for Senator Henry Jackson's (D., Wash.) use in replying t
Also chatted with her briefly concerning correspondence received from
the inquiry will be filed
without response.
Legislative Counsel
STATI NTL
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Goodwin EA/DDP
DDI Item 7 - Mr. Goodwin
DDS Item9 -OP
DDS&T
OPPB Y
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Counsel
items:
ADDENDUM TO JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Thursday - 6 November 1969
Briefed Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
House Armed Services Committee, on the following
a. Soviet MRV test;
b. m,Ddified SS-11 ICBM test;
c. maneuverable satellite launching;
d. Soviet MRBM development.
JOHN M. MAURY
=Legislative Counsel
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston.
Mr. Goodwin
DDI
DDS
DDS&T
OPPB
EA/DDP
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T A r- t' t 2
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U
STAT
tioing ?o Vietnam
ASHINGTOk. Aug. 18 (UPI)
-Secretary of t-e Army Stan-
ley R. Resor flew to AsiatoLlay
on a trip that wib include a
visit to the war one and a re-
view of the inves igation in the
Special Forces asp, in South
Vietnam.
The trio will take him to
Hawaii, Guam, South Korea and
Japan as well as Vietnam.
Meanwhile Rerresentativis L.
Mendel Rivers, cr airman of the
House Armed Services Commit-
tee, called on the Army to re-
lease the eight ;pen under de-
tention so that t?rw can prepare
their defense.
A Pentagon s:; okesnan said
that Mr. Resor's trio had been
scheduled for slrne time, but
that the Secretary would par-
ticipate in "a c, real review"
of the special Fn ccs case,
Two Army !,gal officers,
Maj. Cobert Comeau and Capt.
Stephen M. Sach , are also be-
ing dispatched t:r South Viet-i
nam to keep wat h on the case,
the Pentagon saut, adding:
"A careful rr~iew will be;
made to detern;ine what in-
formation may do made public
without prejudice any potential
prosecution and without COM-1~
promising the rights of any
potential defendants."
The Army ha been under
criticism from members of Con-
gress for its handiin2 of the
case. Little information hash
been disclosed.
Mr. Rivers, er- a letter to
Secretary of bete--nse Melvili R.I
Laird, voiced obv~etions to they
treatment of the accused and;
to the withholdir-g of informa-'
tian about the case.
_' .`Fran 1%7 the rnenrbr rs of, he
!Commit e._.ciri-Axr "~~ices
..are getti g a little bit diaturbed
by the as?nne`r irk, , ich e
only inf ii attar made-, a .il-
able to his c.r r es from,_-f he
newspap rs," Mr Rivers wrote.
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lalissliy'
tee on Wednesday anu
duocorneupfora
itagon
authority, to do this is
161 tary procure=
gf'h
eek to let his
i~6c C`aTnmit~,~Q,v c'Iasslfy
Oman L. Mendel Riversr
Vales, 1~Iade. b~~ His Panel
a 66y& C. Wilson
senators tried to gt t 13cfer-se
Department analys"s on such
projects as the C-,5. k airplane
and Navy attack rnircrai=t car-
riers.
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird refused to pr?wide sena-
tors with such internal papers.
Rivers, then--if oe got the
access authority into law-
would be helping ; lie doves in
Congress who have been chal-
lenging military projects all
year.
make informed judgments on
these matters."
Laird is trying to head off
this effort. He said as much in
the speech he prepared=but
did not deliver in full-for"his
National Press Club appear-
ance yesterday.
"We mean to preserve tile
principle of free discuss,oi in
efense Department and
the decision-making pf'oness
within Defense by contfnufrig
our ' practices of generating
working papers for internal
use by the Secretary of De-
fense." Laird said.
Laird said he intends to suet
ply to Congress other papers
on military issues "containing
a fair statement of all legiti-
mate viewpoints and alterna.
"You know," saic= an official
of the House Arm' d Services
Committee, "we can't be
wrong all the time. Ek'en a bad
clock is right once a-day. It
would be nice if you put in the
story that we're trying to
make sure Congress gets all
other government
_it F?f sh "
infor_
any
MM power 'to wield the se-
stamp
aces tTieI melt-which
dace..-to Pentagon and o er
e?ut vera eh informatio1
ormation or restricted
The part of the bill covering
th
Ilerally - b he xecu fv
ch for classifying defense
within comtees
dance withstandaards use
rvices" the bill says, "nnay
tin secrecy to the con
al military committees.
he committees on' 17MM
Uf way to muzzle dissident
tiers of Rivers' commit-
ianuage in the
would give broad auTior-
1e who worked on Me-leg-
ion.
e said the' langue
ved from that covefft gthe
1n't Committee on tozzic
*gy-and is not desigiie in
t er on sensitive natters,
ing to a cdi 1ttets
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WASHINGTON POST DATE- I ?E ~ PAlt06 1"AGE 2
Debate Was Ikief, Angry,
-Record Is Long, Quiet
By Richard L. L;, ens
Washington Poe" Sto If Writer
Editing of the bitter douse opposition, saying he had in-
debate Friday on the military forma?ion that the Soviets
procurement bill shows again werr working on a new
that you can't believe all you oomhcr, and then moved to
read in the Congressional Rec. cut off debate without letting
ord. anyone else speak. His oppo-
An angry tone was set early nc?n;s raged in anger but were
Friday after Rep. Robert L voted down.
Leggett (D-Calif.) moved to re it it appears from Friday's
duce funds for developing a Record that the debate ran on
new long-range bomber, say for two pages before Rivers
ing there was no evidence than moved to end it.
the Soviet Union was workin;;- ~, :,,: , ff ials sa what
u[ a me z a~parentl happened was that
f Armed Services C tcfl~rc members subsequently
Irma en a
V1 IIMClt, I.,,C11 1G11104t 0 11, --
Berord before the vote and
teaL the Government Printing
Oft ice decided the only sensi-
IbLe place to print them was
before the debate was ended.
V e three-day battle ended
lat=- Friday with Rivers rnak
w: a harsh attack on Leggett'
an Rep. John E. Moss (D-
: '_;if.) thundering a reply. But
i in word of that remained in
h, itc cord.
character of members and
implied that voters in
1
1 ? gett's defense-heavy dis-
ti ct should find a congress-1
n as more friendly to the mili-Illli
i .eggett said he would not
rely to the "indictment." But
o=s shouted at Rivers: `Let j
;ere be any retaliation on~
I+eopped from the Record.!
-loss said he decided to erase
11; i -remarks when he received
A few months ago a sharp
change between Rivers
id Appropriations Commit-
;re Chairman George H.
ahon (D-Tex.) over military
~ofs, such as letting a sub-
s,arsne sink at the dock, were
:,1 sanitized as to make it ap-
,'ar to be a friendly conversa-
on.
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STAT
Russia Believed Putting
Space Bomb on Missiles
failed but the next six work, d J
the Soviets waited until last Sep-
tember to try the syateni a =ain.
The latest test series, accts; f
FOBS, along with a contii img
expansion of Soviet ICBMs and
missile-launching submarizies,
prompted Secretary of Defy nse
Melvin R. Laird to assem bey ore
Congress early this year tT e is
no question that the Soviets are
seeking a first-strike capab lily
against the United States.
Strategists speak of a first
strike capability as being power
enough to hit your opponent with
so much force in a surprise at-
tack that he is unable to recover
and deal you unacceptable dhns-
age in return.
The whole American strategy
of the past decade has been de-
signed to deprive the Soviets of
this capability.
The Soviets first began tes.irig
FOBS in late 1966. After 13 allots I
in that series-the first: seven .
to defense leaders, was success-
ful.
4'r"QPS be
(3? yPdl now," nnP said in an
'keeordding to analysts, the So-
',lets would probably use FOBS
to send nuclear warhea4s.over
the South Pole toward the `Unit-
ed States and avoid most of the
detection provided by America's
ballistic missile early warning
system in Alaska and Canada.
The continent has less radar
detection capability toward the
south than the north, the direc-
tion which a Soviet missile at-
tack would most likely develop.
This "back door" approach
could cut the warning time to
the United States from the 12 to
15 minutes afforded by the
BMFWS line to as little as 3
minutes.
talks.
Precisely what use is inten led
for the space bomb-called the
Fractional Orbital Bombard-
ment System-has never teen
clear to defense planners., bu, its
significance is of some conevrn.
Defense leaders believe there
would be one possible major use
for such a weapon-a surpY*ise
attack against American .ra-
tegic bomber bases.
The question of what the
FOBS poses for the United
States is expected to axis ''his
month when U.S. negotiiia`ats
By BOB HORTON
Associated Press staff writer
TTiah AM!- nffi We
at^?r -.d rlPnlnvino ifc nJ_v an P
bomb aboa d t c pi, ,$, p -
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Friday - 31 October 1969
Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
12. Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House
Appropriations Committee staff, who told me that he will be away from
the city during the coming week but will be returning on Monday, 10 November.
He will continue to work with the Chairman and the Committee staff for at
least the next several weeks. No replacement or other staff person has been
designated by the Chairman to work with us. During the coming week matters
of Committee interest will be handled directly with the Chairman and members
of the CIA Subcommittee.
13. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, who indicated that he intends to present
the Agency's amendments to the retirement act before the full Committee
together with the military retirement amendments which are pending before
the Committee. When such presentation can be made is not yet known.
I briefed Mr. Slatinshek on the following items:
a. Soviet low altitude defense measure;
b. Soviet SS-9 test;
c. Soviet leadership differences;
d. Soviet SS-11 test.;
e. Soviet air-to-surface missile test;
f. statement re new Soviet bomber production;
g. Soviet third-quarter industrial growth.
cc:
ER
O /DDCI
.Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI
DDS
DDS&T
OPPB
EA/DDP
JOHN M. MAURY
Legislative Counsel
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel
Wednesday - 29 October 1969
Page 2
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4. Al Tarabochia on the staff of the
Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, called to advise us that the
galley proof of the Subcommittee's interview with
pickup in the next day or two.
Tarabochia also wished to advise us
was available for our review. I told him I would drop by and
informed the Subcommittee that he had a means of getting out of
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i
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Tarabochia was merely passing this piece of information on to us.
Division is being advised.
5. Hand carried to Bill Woodruff, on the staff
Russell's reaction to Woodruff Is briefing of him on the
dated 15 October. (See. Memo for the Record. )
letter dated 28 October. I also discussed with Woodruff Chairman
of the Senate Appropriations Committee, our
25XT25X1
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6. Met with Ed Braswell, on the staff of
the Senate Armed Services Committee, to discuss our retirement legislation
and the possibility of our bill being introduced in the Senate. Braswell
strongly recommends that we proceed first with the House Committee on
this legislation in view of Chairman Stennis' present involvement in the
conferences on the Defense Procurement bill and the pressure on him to
next take up the draft legislation. (See Memo for the Record. )
7. Met with George Murphy, on the staff of
the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, to discuss several outstanding
items including the ase, the Joint Committee's lett"
ACDA on the Beecher article of 2 October, and his interest in
(See Memo for the Record. )
8. Chairman Mendel Rivers, House Armed
Services Committe, introduced the CIA Retirement bill today in the
House of Representatives.
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Page 2
Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel
Tuesday - 28 October 1969
6. Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, and discussed the introduction
of the proposed amendments to the Agency's retirement act. Mr. Blandford
indicated that the pressing business of the Chairman and the members at the
present time are quite burdensome and could result in delay pending action
on the amendments by the Senate Committee. He advised that he would take
a further look at the matter during the day after receipt of the Agency's letter
to the Speaker of the House formally transmitting the legislation for considera-
tion by the Committee.
I met later in the day with M-,.. Frank Slatinshek, Assistant Chief
Counsel, who told me that he had gone over the legislative package with
Mr. Blandford after receipt of the letter to, the Speaker. The bill will be
put in for introduction by the Chairman hopefully later in the week.
7. Briefed Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Arme mittees on the following items:
a. Soviet low altitude defense measures;
b. Soviet SS-9 test;
c. Soviet leadership differences.
8. Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House Appropria-
tions Committee staff, and finalized arrangements for the Director's meeting
with the CIA Subcommittee on Wednesday, 29 October.
9. Talked to Mr. Walter Pincus, on the staff of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, after the Director's appearance before
the Committee. Mr. Pincus advised that the Committee does not plan to
request Agency witnesses for the hearings on.Thailand scheduled to begin
on Monday, 10 November.
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Monday - 27 October 1969
1. Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House Appro-
priations Committee staff, who advised that Chairman Mahon has scheduled
the CIA Subcommittee meeting for 10:00 a. m. on Wednesday, 29 October.
See Memorandum for the Record.
2. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, House
Armed Services Committee staff, and gave him a draft report on the
Agency's retirement act amendments. Mr. Slatinshek advised that the
Chairman's schedule is such that there is some difficulty in getting to him
for introduction of the bill. He suggested that I talk to Mr. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, in the morning.
3. Met with Mr. Arthur Kuhl, Chief Clerk, Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, and confirmed the arrangements for the
Director's appearance at 10:00 a. m. on Tuesday, 28 October before the
Symington Subcommittee on U. S. Agreements and Commitments Abroad.
4. Received a call from Representative Cornelius
Gallagher (D., N. J.) and in response to his request made an appointment for
10:00 a. m. on Wednesday, 29 October for a to meet with 25X1
Office of Personnel.
5. Received a call from Mr. Mel Christopher,
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency Congressional Office, concerning
a letter to the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy which will be coming over
this afternoon for our review from Mr. William Hancock, AqDA General
Counsel. See Memorandum for the Record.
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SECS
Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Friday - 24 October 1969
'working on an expose of some of Chairman Rivers' activities.
6. Met with Mr. Russ Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, whom I briefed on certain Soviet
weapons supp xe to 17orlh orea ar;.d recent Middle East developments
and the latest attempted Soviet moon probe.
7. Met with Phil Kelleher, former Counsel
of the House Armed Services Com ttee,who filled me in on. some of the
inner workings of the Committee (with several of whose members he
remains in very close touch). He spoke of having been visited recently
by several journalists, including Tom Lambert and Neil Sheehan, who are
;JOHN M.
-/ Legislative Counsel
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI
DDS
DDS&T
OPPB
EA/DDP
SECRE 1
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE, COUNSEL
Thursday - 23 October 1969
get clarification.
4. and I paid a courtesy
call on Representative John Marsh (D., Va.) whom we filled in on the
highlights of the Green Beret case in which he was interested. Marsh
if he will be successful. Michaels suggested that we be prepared to
provide either a substantive briefing or a budget presentation until we
1. Briefed James Gehrig, Staff Director,
Senate Space Committee, on the recent Soviet space failure.
2. Met with J. Russ Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, whom I briefed on the
latest Soviet lunar probe and the UAR fighter aircraft inventory.
I asked Blandford about the possibility of his giving a
talk to a group of our senior officers in early November but he begged
off because of his heavy schedule.
3. Called on Robert Michaels, on the
staff of the House Appropriations Committee, to say we were all sorry
to hear of his resignation and much appreciated his past assistance to
us. He said he had no idea what Chairman Mahon wished us to discuss
before his Subcommittee on 29 October--that when he had asked Mahon
about this Mahon had simply said "we will talk about it later. " Michaels
will keep trying to get an answer from Mahon but can't predict when and
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S
loo,
Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Thursday - 23 October 1969
25X1
25X1
5. I Received a call from Mr. John R.
Blandford, Chief Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, who
requested copies of the FBIS intercepts from Hanoi Radio concerning the
Moratorium. Mr. Blandford requested that the material furnished be
unclassified so that the Chairman may be free to use the material as he
sees fit. FBIS has been advised.
6. I Met with Chairman George P. Miller, House
Science and Astronautics Committee, and briefed him on a Soviet Cosmos
mission.
7. Met with Miss Berniece Kalinowski,
personal secretary to Mr. Frank Slatinshek, House Armed Services Com-
,mittee staff, and advised her for Mr. Slatinshek that the proposed amend-
ments to the Agency's retirement act were approved by Bureau of the
Budget.
from one place to another while in the District.
advised.
g. Met with Mrs. Strand, in the office
of Representative Ogden Reid (R., N. Y.), who advised that she talked to
Dr. Brady, of the Good Counsel College, today. Dr. Brady advised her
that there are no foreign students in the group who will be attending the
briefing at the Agency on 5 November. Dr. Brady is forwarding a list of
the names of students and faculty members who will be attending. She also
advised that the group will have their own bus transportation to move them
comes well recommended to the Committee. Mrs. Stockstill told her that
there are no openings at present but that she will keep her in mind. I thanked
Mrs. Stockstill for the information and told her that I would be pleased to pro-
vide anything she might need from the Agency.
has been
Met with Mrs. Oneta Stockstill,
staff, who advised that she had interviewed
today and found her a delightful person.
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'CLASSIFIED CONFIDLNTIA[. SECRET
OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP
TO
NAME AND ADDRESS
DATE
INITIALS
I
JMM
2
3
4
5
6
ACTION.
DIRECT REPLY
PREPARE REPLY
APPROVAL
DISPATCH
RECOMMENDATION
COMMENT
FILE
RETURN
RETURN
CONCURRENCE
INFORMATION
SIGNATURE
Remarks:
This is the suggested draft House Armed
Services Committee report which Frank
Slatinshek requested last week. I thought you
might like to review before Joe takes it down
to Frank. The fiscal data section (clipped)
was reviewed with John Clarke and he con-
curred. I also reviewed with John Warner.
LLM
FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER
FROM: NAME. ADDRESS AND PHONE NO.
DATE
2Oct6
UNCLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL
SECRET
4 LL 14IM '. . . . - Li Lis ! a ?,..P i.'f
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AMENDING THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
RETIREMENT ACT OF 1964 FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES
October , 1969. Ordered to be printed
Mr. , from the Committee on Armed Services,
submitted the following
o accompany H. R.
The Committee on Armed Services, to whom was referred
the bill (H. R. ) to amend the Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees, as amended, and for
other purposes, having considered the same, reports favorably
thereon without amendment and recommends that the bill do pass.
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STATEMENT ON H. R. 14571
The purpose of the bill is to bring the Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees, as amended, into
conformity with appropriate changes recently made in the Civil Service
Retirement Act, P. L. 91-93.
Specifically, the bill will increase benefits under the CIA Retire-
ment Act as follows:
1. Using high three instead of high five for computing
annuities ;
2. Adding accumulated sick leave in computation of annuity;
3. Adding 1 percent to cost-of-living increases of annuities;
4. Authorizing surviving spouse to remarry after age 60
without loss of annuity and restoration of annuity on dissolution
of remarriage before that age;
5. Upgrading survivorship benefits by increasing the fixed
annuity for children; establishing a minimum survivor annuity;
and reducing, in death in. service cases, the minimum length
of service requirement from five years to 18 months.
In addition, the bill increases Agency and participant contributions
to the fund from 6. 5 percent to 7 percent of basic salary.
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EXPLANATION OF BILL BY SUBSECTIONS
Section 1 increases both the Agency's and the participant's contri-
butions to the Fund from six and one-half percent to seven percent of
basic salary.
Section 2(a) revises the formula for computing annuities by basing
"average basic salary" either on the highest three consecutive years
rather than the highest five consecutive years, or over a shorter period,
where applicable, to obtain the increased survivor protection afforded
by section 4.
Section 2(b) provides for retention of annuity following remarriage
under the conditions spelled out in section 2(d).
Section 2(c) increases the annuities of children of deceased
annuitants.
Section 2(d) permits payment of annuity to surviving spouse
upon remarriage occurring on or after age 60, and on or after 18 July
1966, and provides restoration of annuity terminated for remarriage
prior to attaining age sixty if remarriage is dissolved.
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Section 2(e) authorizes the crediting. of accumulated sick leave
for annuity computation purposes.
Section 3 preserves for survivors of participants retired for
disability the additional service credit which may have been granted to
such retirees.
Section 4 increases survivorship protection in death in service
cases: by reducing the minimum length of service requirement from
five years to 18 months; by establishing a minimum survivor annuity;
and by incorporating the provisions in section 2 relating to remarriage.
Section 5(a) adds 1 percent to each cost-of-living adjustment
effected under the cost-of-living provision of the Act.
Section 5(b) assures that the new annuities for surviving children
will be adjusted in accordance with the cost-of-living provisions of the
Act.
Section 6 provides effective dates in phase with similar amend-
ments approved for the Civil Service retirement system.
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The financing provision of the proposed amendments increases
Agency and participant contributions from 6. 5 to 7 percent, in consonance
with the comparable provision of P. L. 91-93. Under the CIA Retirement
Act the Director prepares the estimates of the annual appropriations
required to be made to the fund and causes actuarial valuations of the
fund to be made at intervals of five years, or oftener, if deemed necessary
by him. The Committee has been assured that if the amendments are
enacted future appropriation requests will include appropriate provision
to maintain the fund on a sound fiscal base.
Enactment into law of this measure will involve a total additional
cost for the first year in the approximate amount of $
Note: The amount would be approximately $135, 000 for FY 1970 and
$270, 000 for FY 1971. This cost is attributed to the increase in the
Agency's contribution rate by one-half percent of basic salary starting
January 1970. However, we recommend against including this paragraph
because the figure provided could form the basis for extrapolation of the
type of information protected from disclosure by P. L. 81-110, section 6.,
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DEPARTMENTAL DATA
Enactment of this legislation has the support of the Central
Intelligence Agency and the approval of the Bureau of the Budget as
evidenced by the letter from the Director of the Central Intelligence
Agency dated 23 October 1969 which is set out below and made a
part of this report.
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CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
WASHINGTON, 0. C. 20505
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
2 3 OCT 1969
The Honorable John W. McCormack
Speaker of the House of Representatives
Washington, D. C. 20515
My dear Mr. Speaker:
This letter transmits for the consideration of the Congress a
proposed'draft bill to amend the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement
Act of 1964 for Certain Employees, as amended. The proposed bill
brings the CIA Retirement Act into consonance with certain provisions
of the Civil Service retirement system.
Public Law 91-93, approved October 20, 1969, made significant
improvements in the benefits of the Civil Service retirement system.
Contribution rates were increased also. The improvement in benefits
includes using "high three" instead of "high five" for computing annuities,
permitting accumulated sick leave to be added in the computation of
annuities, adding 1 percent to cost-of-living adjustment for annuitants,
making the remarriage provisions partially retroactive, and improving
survivor benefits.
A number of key features in the CIA Retirement Act, as passed in
1964, were adopted from provisions of law then applicable to Civil Service
retirees. These features included the provisions amended by P. L. 91-93.
The reasons for changing these benefits under the Civil Service
retirement system apply with equal force to the CIA system. This CIA
retirement system would be completely undermined if it did not keep
pace with the improved benefits and effective dates of P.'L. 91-93. On
the other hand, enactment of the proposed bill will assure that appropriate
provisions of the CIA retirement system remain in line with those of the
Civil Service system.
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We would appreciate early and favorable consideration of the
proposed bill. The Bureau of the Budget has advised that there i no
objection to presenting, the propozed bill to they Con rea s from the
standpoint of the AdIrIL-lietratioali; prover .na.
, 15ncerely,
Richard z olzian
Director
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The Honorable John W. McCormack
Speaker of the House of Representatives
Washington, D. C. 20515
My dear Mr. Speaker:
This letter transmits for the consideration of the Congress a
proposed draft bill to amend the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement
Act of 1964 for Certain Employees, as amended. The proposed bill
brings the CIA Retirement Act into consonance with certain provisions
of the Civil Service retirement system.
Public Law 91-93, approved October 20, 1969, made significant
improvements in the benefits of the Civil Service retirement system.
Contribution rates were increased also. The improvement in benefits
includes using "high three" instead of "high five" for computing annuities,
permitting accumulated sick leave to be added in the computation of
annuities, adding 1 percent to cost-of-living adjustment for annuitants,
making the remarriage provisions partially retroactive, and improving
survivor benefits.
A number of key features in the CIA Retirement Act, as passed in
1964, were adopted from provisions of law then applicable to Civil Service
retirees. These features included the provisions amended by P. L. 91-93.
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The reasons for changing these benefits under the Civil Service
retirement system apply with equal force to the CIA system. This CIA
retirement system would be completely undermined if it did not keep
pace with the improved benefits and effective dates of P. L. 91-93. On
the other hand, enactment of the proposed bill will assure that appropriate
provisions of the CIA retirement system remain in line with those of the
Civil Service system.
We would appreciate early and favorable consideration of the
proposed bill. The Bureau of the Budget has advised that there is no
objection to presenting the proposed bill to the Congress from the
standpoint of the Administration's program.
Sincerely,
Richard Helms
Director
2
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CHANGES IN EXISTING LAW
In compliance with clause 3 of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of Representatives, there is
herewith printed in parallel columns the text of provisions of existing law which would be repealed or
amended by the various provisions of the bill as reported..
EXISTING LAW
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Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement Act of 1964 for
Certain Employees, as amended,
(78 Stat. 1043; 50 U.S.C. 403
note)
Sec. 211. (a) Six and one-half per centum of
the basic salary received by each participant
shall be contributed to the fund for the payment
of annuities, cash benefits, refunds and
allowances. An equal sum shall also be con-
tributed from the respective appropriation or
fund which is used for payment of his salary.
The amounts deducted and withheld from basic
salary together with the amounts so contributed
from the appropriation or fund shall be deposited
by the Agency to the credit of the fund.
THE BILL AS REPORTED
Sec. 1. Section 211 (a) of the Central Intelligence
Agency Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees
as amended, (78 Stat. 1043; 50 U.S.C. 403 note) is
further amended by striking out "Six and one-half
per centum" in the first sentence and inserting
"Seven per centurn".
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Sec. 221. (a) The annuity of a participant shall
be equal to 2 per centum of his average basic salary
for the highest five consecutive years of service,
for which full contributions have been made to the
fund, multiplied by the number of years, not exceeding
thirty-five, of service credit obtained in accordance
with the provisions of sections 251 and 252. In determin-
ing the aggregate period of service upon which the
annuity is to be based, the fractional part of a month, if
any, shall not be counted.
(b) At the time of retirement, any married
participant may elect to receive a reduced annuity
and to provide for an annuity payable to his wife or
her husband, commencing on the date following such
participant's death and terminating upon the death or
remarriage of such surviving wife or husband. The
annuity payable to the surviving wife or husband after
such participant's death shall be 55 per centum of the
amount of the participant's annuity computed as pre-
scribed in paragraph (a) of this section, up to the full
amount of such annuity specified by him as.the base
for the survivor benefits. The annuity of the partici-
pant making such election shall be reduced by 2 1/2
per centum of any amount up to $3, 600 he specified
;=s the base for the survivor benefit plus 10 per centum
of any amount over $3, 600 so specified.
Sec. 2. Section 221 of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50
U.S. C. 403 note) is amended:
(a) by striking out in paragraph (a)
"five consecutive years of service, " and
inserting "three consecutive years of
service /or, in the case of an annuity
computed under section 232 and based on
less than three years, over the total
service/, ";
(b) by striking out from the first
sentence of paragraph (b) "or remarriage
of such surviving wife or husband and
inserting: "or upon remarriage prior to
attaining age sixty of such surviving wife
or husband";
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(c) (1) If an annuitant dies and is survived by
a wife or husband and by a child or children, in
addition to the annuity payable to the surviving
wife or husband, there shall be paid to or on
behalf of each child an annuity equal to the
smallest of: (i) 40 per centum of the annuitant's
average basic salary, as determined under para-
graph (a) of this section, divided by the number of
children; (ii) $600; or (iii) $1, 800 divided by the
number of children.
(2) If an annuitant dies and is not survived by
a wife or husband but by a child or children, each
surviving child shall be paid an annuity equal to the
smallest of: (i) 50 per centun-i of the annuitant's
average basic salary, as determined under para-
graph (a) of this section, divided by the number of
children; (ii) $720; or (iii) $2,160 divided by the
number of children.
(c) by striking out in paragraph (c) the
items "40 per centum", "$600", "$1, 80011,
"50 per centum", "$720", and "$Z,160",
and inserting "60 per centum", "$900",
"$2,
70011, "75 per centum", "$1, 080", and
"$3,
240";
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(d) by adding new paragraph (g):
"(g) In the case of remarriage on or
after age sixty an annuity shall be payable
if remarriage has occurred on or after
July 18, 1966, and if the surviving wife
or husband, immediately before such
remarriage, was receiving an annuity
from the Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement and Disability Fund. The
annuity of a surviving spouse terminated
as a result of remarriage which occurred
prior to age sixty and on or after July
1966, shall be restored at the same rate
commencing on the day the remarriage is
dissolved by death, annulment, or divorce,
if
"(1) the surviving spouse elects to
receive this annuity instead of a survivor
benefit to which he may be entitled, under
this or another retirement system for
Government employees, by reason of the
remarriage; and
11(2) any lump sum paid on termina-
tion of the annuity is returned to the fund.
"No annuity shall be paid by reason of
this paragraph for any period prior to
No annuity shall be
terminated solely by reason of the
enactment of this paragraph."; and
*insert enactment date of Daniels/MCGe~
bill
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(e) by adding new paragraph (h):
"(h) In computing an annuity under
this section the service credit of a partici-
pant who retires, except under section 231,
on an immediate annuity or dies leaving a
survivor or survivors entitled to annuity
includes, without regard to the limitations
imposed by paragraph (a), the days of
unused sick leave to his credit under a
formal leave- system, except that these days
will not be counted in determining average
basic salary or annuity eligibility. The
contribution specified in section 252 shall
not be required for days of unused sick leave
credited under this paragraph.".
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Sec. 231. (a) Any participant who has five years of
service credit toward retirement under the system,
excluding military or naval-service that is credited
in accordance with provisions of section 251 or 252
(a) (2), and who becomes totally disabled or
incapacitated for useful and efficient service by
-reason of disease, illness, or injury not due to
vicious habits, intemperance, or willful misconduct
on his part, shall, upon his own application or upon
order of the Director, be retired on an annuity
computed as prescribed in section 221. If the disabled
or incapacitated participant is under sixty and has less
than twenty years of service credit toward his retire-
ment under the system at the time he is retired, his
annuity shall be computed on the assumption that he
has had twenty years of service, but the additional
service credit that may accrue to a participant under
this provision shall in no case exceed the difference
between his age at the time of retirement and age
sixty, but this provision shall not increase the annuity
of any survivor.
Sec. 232. (b) If a participant, who has at least five
years of service credit toward retirement under the
system, excluding military or naval service that is
credited in accordance with the provisions of section
251 or 252 (a) (2), dies before separation or retirement
from the Agency and is survived by a widow or a
dependent widower, as defined in section 204, such
widow or dependent widower shall be entitled to an
annuity equal to 55 per centum of the annuity computed
in accordance with the provisions of section 221 (a).
Sec. 3. Section 231 (a) of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50
U.S.C. 403 note) is amended by striking
", but this provision shall not increase
the annuity of any survivor" from the last.
sentence.
Sec. 4. (a) Section 232 (b) of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50 U. S. C
403 note) is amended:
(1) by striking "five years" and
inserting "18 months";
(2) by inserting, - after "221 (a)", ",
except that the computation of the annuity
of the participant under such section shall
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The annuity of such widow or dependent widower
shall commence on the date following death of
the participant and shall terminate upon death or
remarriage of the widow or dependent widower,
or upon the dependent widower's becoming capable
of self-support.
(c) If a participant who has at least five years
of service credit toward retirement under the
system, excluding military or naval service that
is credited in accordance with the provisions of
section 251 or 252 (a) (2), dies before separation
or retirement from the Agency and is survived by
a wife or a husband and a child or children, each
surviving child shall be entitled to an annuity com-
puted in accordance with the provisions of section
221 (c) (1). The child's annuity shall begin and be
terminated in accordance with the provisions of
section 221 (e). Upon the death of the surviving
wife or husband or termination of the annuity of a
child, the annuities of any remaining children shall
be recomputed and paid as though such wife or husband
or child had not survived the participant.
-be at least the smaller of (i) 40 per centum
of the participant's average basic salary,
or (ii) the sum obtained under such section
.after increasing the participant's service
--'6f the type last performed by the difference
between his age at the time of death and age
sixty"; and
(3) by striking "remarriage of the
widow or dependent widower" and inserting
"upon remarriage prior to attaining age
sixty of the widow or dependent widower
(subject to the payment and restoration
provisions of section 221 (g) ) ".
(b) Sections 232 (c) and (d) are
amended by striking "five years" and
inserting "18 months".
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. (d) If a participant who has at least five years
of service credit toward retirement under the
system, excluding military or naval service that
is credited in accordance with the provisions of
section 251 or 252 (a) (2), dies before separation
or retirement from the Agency and is not survived
by a wife or husband, but by a child or children, each
surviving child shall be entitled to an annuity computed
in accordance with the provisions of section 221 (c) (2).
The child's annuity shall begin and terminate in accor-
dance with the provisions of section 221 (e). Upon
termination of the annuity of -a child, the annuities of
any remaining children shall be recomputed and paid
as though that child had never been entitled to the
benefit.
Sec. 291. (a) On the basis of determinations made
by the Director pertaining to per centum change in
.the Price Index, the following adjustments shall be
made:. . .
(2) Each month beginning with November 1966,
the Director shall determine the per centurn change
in the price index. Effective the first day of the third
month which begins after the price index shall have
equaled a rise of at least 3 per centum for three con-
secutive months over the price index for the base month,
each annuity payable from the fund which has a commencing
date not later than such effective date shall be increased
by the per centum rise in the price index (calculated on
the highest level of the price index during the three con-
secutive months) adjusted to the nearest one-tenth of 1 per
centum.
Sec. 5. Section 291 of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50
U.S.C. 403 note) is amended:
(a) by inserting "1 per centum plus"
immediately after the word "by" in
paragraph (a) (2); and
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(b) Eligibility for an annuity increase under this
section shall be governed by the commencing date
of each annuity payable from the fund as of the
effective date of an increase, except as follows:
(2) Effective from its commencing date, an
annuity payable from the fund to a child under
section 221 (c), which annuity commences the day
after annuitant's death and after January 1, 1967,
shall be increased by (a) 2 per centum if the
annuity from which it is derived commenced on
or before January 1, 1966, or (b) 1 per centum if
the annuity from which it is derived commenced
on or between January 2, 1966, and January 1, 1967.
(3) For the purposes of computing an annuity
which commences after January 1, 1967, to a child
under section 221 (c), the items 600, $720, $1, 800,
and $2, 160 appearing in section 221 (c) shall be
increased by 10. 2 per centum plus the total per
centum increase allowed and in force under section
291 (a) (2) for employee annuities, and, in the case
of a deceased annuitant, the items 40 per centum and
50 per centum appearing in section 221 (c) shall be
increased by the total per centum increase allowed
and in force under this section to the annuitant at
,death; or if death occurred between January 1, 1967,
and date of enactment, the per centum increase the
i
(b) by amending paragraphs (b) (2)
and (b) (3) to read:
"(2) For the purpose of computing the
annuity of a child under section 221 (c)
that commences after October 31, 1969,
the items $900, $1, 080, $2, 700, and
$3, 240 appearing in section 221 (c) shall
be increased by the total per centum
increases allowed and in force under this
section on or after such day, and, in case
of a deceased annuitant, the items 60 per
centum and 75 per centum appearing in
section 221 (c) shall be increased by the
total per centum allowed and in force to
the annuitant under this section on or after
such day.
"(3) The annuity of each surviving child
receiving an annuity under section 221
immediately prior to November 1, 1969,
shall be recomputed effective November 1,
1969, in accordance with paragraph (b) (2).
No increase allowed and in force prior to
such date under section 291 shall be included
in the recomputation of any such annuity,
and this paragraph shall not operate to
reduce any annuity. ".
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n e Af'T 1QR0
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To amend the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement Act of 1964
for Certain. Employees, as amended, and for other purposes.
1 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives
2 of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
3 SECTION 1. Section 211 (a) of the Central Intelligence
4 Agency Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees, as
5 amended, (78 Stat. 1043; 50 U.S.C. 403 note) is further
amended by striking out "Six and one-half per centum" in
7 the first sentence and inserting "Seven per centum".
SEC. 2. Section 221 of the Central Intelligence Agency
9 Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended:
10 (a) by striking out in paragraph (a) "five consecutive
11 years of service, " and inserting "three consecutive years
12 of service [or, in the case of an annuity computed under
13 section 232 and based on less than three years, over the
14 total service], 11;
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1 (b) by striking out from the first sentence of paragraph (b)
2 "or remarriage of such surviving wife or husband" and inserting
3 "or upon remarriage prior to attaining age sixty of such surviving
4 wife or husband";
5 (c) by striking out in paragraph (c) the items "40 per centum",
6 "$600", "$1, 800", "50 per centum", "$720", and $2, 160", and
7 inserting "60 per centum", "$900", "$2, 700", "75 per centum",
8 "$1, 080", and "$3, 240";
13 before such remarriage, was receiving an annuity from the
14 Central Intelligence Agency Retirement and Disability Fund.
15 The annuity of a surviving spouse terminated as a result of
16 remarriage which occurred prior to age sixty and on or after
17 July 18, 1966, shall be restored at the same rate commencing
18 on the day the remarriage is dissolved by death, annulment,
19 or divorce, if--
(d) by adding new paragraph (g):
10. "(g) In the case of remarriage on or after age sixty an
11 annuity shall be payable if remarriage has occurred on or after
12 July 18, 1966, and if the surviving wife or husband, immediately
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1 "(1) the surviving spouse elects to receive this annuity
2 instead of a survivor benefit to which he may be entitled, under
3 this or another retirement system for Government employees,
4 by reason of the remarriage; and
5 "(2) any lump sum paid on termination of the annuity is
6 returned to the fund.
7 "No annuity shall be paid by reason of this paragraph for any
8 period prior to October 20, 1969. No annuity shall be terminated
9 solely by reason of the enactment of this paragraph."; and
10. (e) by adding new paragraph (h) :
11 "(h) In computing an annuity under this section the service
12 credit of a participant who retires, except under section 231,
13 on an immediate annuity or dies leaving a survivor or survivors
14 entitled to annuity includes, without regard to the limitations
15 imposed by paragraph (a) , the days of unused sick leave to his
16 credit under a foii-ixa.i leave system, except that these days will
17 not be counted in determining average basic salary or annuity
18 eligibility. The contribution specified in section 252 shall not
19 be required for days of unused sick leave credited under this
20 paragraph.".
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1 SEC. 3. Section 231 (a) of the Central Intelligence Agency
2 Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended by striking
3 ", but this provision shall not increase the annuity of any survivor"
4 from the last sentence.
9 tion of the annuity of the participant under such section shall be
10. at least the smaller of (i) 40 per centum of the participant's
11 average basic salary, or (ii) the sum obtained under such section
12 after increasing the participant's service of the type last performed
13 by the difference between his age at the time of death and age sixty";
14 and
15 (3) by striking "remarriage of the widow or dependent widower"
16 and inserting "upon remarriage prior to attaining age sixty of the
17 widow or dependent widower (subject to the payment and restoration
18 provisions of section 221 (g)) ".
19 (b) Sections 232 (c) and (d) are amended by striking "five years"
20 and inserting "18 months".
SEC. 4. (a) Section 232 (b) of the Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended:
(1) by striking "five years" and inserting "18 months";
(2) by inserting, after "221 (a)" , ", except that the computa-
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1 SEC. 5. Section 291 of the Central Intelligence Agency
2 Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended:
3 (a) by inserting " 1 per centum plus" immediately after the
4 word "by" in paragraph (a) (2); and
5 (b) by amending paragraphs (b) (2) and (b) (3) to read:
6 "(2) For the purpose of computing the annuity of a child
7 under section 221 (c) that commences after October 31, 1969,
8 the items $900, $1, 080, $2, 700, and $3, 240 appearing in
9 section 221 (c) shall be increased by the total per centum
10 increases allowed and in force under this section on or after
11 such day, and, in case of a deceased annuitant, the items 60
12 per centum and 75 per centum appearing in section 221 (c) shall
13 be increased by the total per centum allowed and in force to
14 the annuitant under this section on or after such day.
"(3) The annuity of each surviving child receiving an annuity
under section 221 immediately prior to November 1, 1969, shall
be recomputed effective November 1, 1969, in accordance with
paragraph (b) (2). No increase allowed and in force prior to
such date under section 291 shall be included in the recomputation
20 of any such annuity, and this paragraph shall not operate to reduce
21 any annuity. ".
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1 SEC. 6. (a) The amendments made by section 1 shall be
2 become effective at the beginning of the first applicable pay period
3 beginning after December 31, 1969.
4 (b) The amendments made by sections 3, 4, and 2, with the
5 exception of 2 (c), shall become effective October 20, 1969.
6 (c) The amendments made by sections 2 (c) and 5 shall
7 become effective November 1, 1969.
8 (d) The amendments made by sections 2 (a), 2 (e), 3, and
9 4 (a) (1)-(2) shall not apply in the cases of persons retired or
10. otherwise separated prior to October 20, 1969, and the rights
11 of such persons and their survivors shall continue in the same
12 manner and to the same extent as if such sections had not been
13 enacted.
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Tuesday - 21 October 1969
10. Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House Armed ServicesCommitteer and briefed him on the
following items:
a. Soyu:z 6, 7 and 8;
b. Soviet bomber test;
c. Soviet-ChiCom border.
11. I I Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, House
firmed Services Committee staff, and gave him the dates for insertion
in the draft of the CIA retirement bill which was given to him last
week. Mr. Slatinshek told me that the Chairman is away until tomorrow
or possibly Thursday. Consideration of Committee handling of the bill
will have to await the Chairman's return.
12. Escorted FE Division, to
the Senate Foreign a ations Committee's rooms in preparation for the
Director's appearance on Thursday. We met with Mrs. Mary McLaughlin,
who is acting in the absence of Mr. Arthur Kuhl, Committee Clerk, and
confirmed appropriate portions of the security and administrative arrange-
ments for the. Agency's appearance on Thursday.
Although he does have a short outline from a news publication that he was
furnished, it is not sufficient for Committee needs.
he be provided with a biographic sketch
13. Met with Mr. Al Tarabochia, on the
staff of the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, who requested that
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Friday -.17 October 1969
4. Met with Russ Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, who does not foresee a request for
Committee briefing in the immediate future. The present Committee
workload is occupying the full attention of the members of the staff. In
the area of general congressional matters, Russ commented on the Senate's
Symington Subcommittee hearings on Laos scheduled for next week. He
commented somewhat philosophically that it is his feeling this is a price
we have to pay to maintain our democratic form of government. He did not
comment on the Director's appearance, but seemed to be puzzled as to the
purpose to be served by these hearings.
I briefed Mr. Blandford on the following items:
a. Soyuz 6, 7 and 8;
b. testing of a Soviet aircraft;
c. Soviet-Chinese border defenses.
JOHN M. MAURY
Legislative Counsel
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI
DDS
DDS &T
OPPB
EA/DDP
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Wednesday - 15 October 1969
_D3, who will be away unt--~ .1 Mon a.y a-r_d at the suggestion of Zafra's office,
s-,:Doke with Mr. Dave McAfee on t1- best timing for submitting the Agency's
counterpart of the Daniels bill for 303 clearance, assuming the Daniels
bill is signed by the President. dtee Memorandum for the Record.
In the absence of Victor Zafra,
-Lion previously furnish ed on t:, , current Soviet Soyuz mission.
Mr. Nilson provided a cope of the October 1969 issue of the
Government Executive wags . corn rye an item for our information.
.19 of this issue carries an iaen en,:Ltled "CIA Internal Fricton."
Mr. Goodwin's office .as been advsed.
~.rmed Services Committee --at- E, aand separately with Mr. James WJso n,
I -I-
ouse Science and. Lsuroaau._cs lJ~i:_ ttee staff, and updated the infor..a-
Met w:ah My r. Frank Slatinshek, House
1Z. Met brief y with Mr. Robert Michaels, House
Appropriations Committee staff, who advised that no action has been taken
by the Chairman on possible realig'a'nent of the Defense Subcommittee staff. 25X1
I brought Mr. Michaels up-to-date on the current Soyuz mission.
/JOHN M. MAURY
Legislative Counsel
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI
DDS
DDS&T
OPPB
EA/DDP
Item 5 - FBIS
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14 October 1969
CIA Retirement Act amendments package as
delivered to Mr. Frank Slatinshek, House Armed
Services Committee staff. P. L. 88-643 and
P. L. 90-539 were also given to him,
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J_ ?s v v e
A BILL
To amend the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement Act of 1964
for Certain Employees, as amended, and for other purposes.
1 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives
2 of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
3 SECTION 1. Section 211 (a) of the Central Intelligence
4 Agency. Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees, as
5 amended, (78 Stat. 1043; 50 U.S.C. 403 note) is further
6 amended by striking out "Six and one-half per centum" in
7 the first sentence and inserting "Seven per centum".
8 SEC. 2. Section 221 of the Central Intelligence Agency
9 Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended :
10 (a) by striking out in paragraph (a) "five consecutive
11 years of service, " and inserting "three consecutive years
12 of service [or, in the case of an annuity computed under
13 section 232 and based on less than three years, over the
14 total service],
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1 (b) by striking out from the first sentence of paragraph (b)
2 "or remarriage of such surviving wife or husband" and inserting
3 "or upon remarriage prior to attaining age sixty of such surviving
4 wife or husband";
5 (c) by striking out in paragraph (c) the items "40 per centum",
6 "$600", "$1, 800", "50 per centum", "$720", and $2, 160", and
7 inserting "60 per centum", "$900", 11$2, 70011, "75 per centum",
8 "$1, 080", and "$3, 240";
9 (d) by adding new paragraph (g):
10 "(g) In the case of remarriage on or after age sixty an
11 annuity shall be payable if remarriage has occurred on or after
12 July 18, 1966, and if the surviving wife or husband, immediately
13 before such remarriage, was receiving an annuity from the
14 Central Intelligence Agency Retirement and Disability Fund.
15 The annuity of a surviving spouse terminated as a result of
16 remarriage which occurred prior to age sixty and on or after
17 July 18, 1966, shall be restored at the same rate commencing
18 on the day the remarriage is dissolved by death, annulment,
19 or divorce, if--
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1 11(l) the surviving spouse elects to receive this annuity
2 instead of a survivor benefit to which he may be entitled, under
3 this or another retirement system for Government employees,
4 by reason of the remarriage; and
5 "(2) any lump sum paid on termination of the annuity is
6 returned to the fund.
7 "No annuity shall be paid by reason of this paragraph for any
8 period prior to No annuity shall be terminated
9 solely by reason of the enactment of this paragraph. "; and
10 (e) by adding new paragraph (h) :
11 "(h) In computing an annuity under this section the service
12 credit of a participant who retires, except under section 231,
13 on an immediate annuity or dies leaving a survivor or survivors
14 entitled to annuity includes, without regard to the limitations
15 imposed by paragraph (a) , the days of unused sick leave to his
16 credit under a formal leave system, except that these days will
17 not be counted in determining average basic salary or annuity
18 eligibility. The contribution specified in section 252 shall not
19 be required for days of unused sick leave credited under this
20 paragraph. ".
*Insert enactment date of Daniels /McGee bill.
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1 SEC. 3. Section 231 (a) of the Central Intelligence Agency
2 Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended by striking
3 ", but this provision shall not increase the annuity of any survivor"
4 from the last sentence.
5 SEC. 4. (a) Section 232 (b) of the Central Intelligence Agency
6 Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended:
7 (1)
8 (2)
by striking "five years" and inserting "18 months";
by inserting, after "221 (a)" , " , except that the computa-
9 tion of the annuity of the participant under such section shall be
10 at least the smaller of (i) 40 per centum of the participant's
11 average basic salary, or (ii) the sum obtained under such section
12 after increasing the participant's service of the type last performed
13 by the difference between his age at the time of death and age sixty";
14 and
15 (3) by striking "remarriage of the widow or dependent widower"
16 and inserting "upon remarriageprior to attaining age sixty of the
17 widow or dependent widower (subject to the payment and restoration
18 provisions of section 221 (g)) ".
19 (b) Sections 232 (c) and (d) are amended by striking "five years"
20 and inserting "18 months".
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1 SEC. 5. Section 291 of the Central Intelligence Agency
2 Retirement Act (50 U. S. C. 403 note) is amended:
3 (a) by inserting " 1 per centum plus" immediately after the
4 word "by" in paragraph (a) (2) ; and
5 (b) by amending paragraphs (b) (2) and (b) (3) to read:
6 "(2) For the purpose of computing the annuity of a child
7 under section 221 (c) that commences after October 31, 1969,
8 the items $900, $1, 080, $2, 700, and $3, 240 appearing in
9 section 221 (c) shall be increased by the total per centum
10 increases allowed and in force under this section on or after
11 such day, and, in case of a deceased annuitant, the items 60
12 per centum and 75 per centum appearing in section 221 (c) shall
13 be increased by the total per centum allowed and in force to
14 the annuitant under this section on or after such day.
16
"(3) The annuity of each surviving child receiving an annuity
under section 221 immediately prior to November 1, 1969, shall
be recomputed effective November 1, 1969, in accordance with
paragraph (b) (2). No increase allowed and in force prior to
such date under section 291 shall be included in the recomputa.tion
20 of any such annuity, and this paragraph shall not operate to reduce
21 any annuity.".
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1 SEC. 6. (a) The amendments made by section 1 shall be
2 become effective at the beginning of the first applicable pay period
3 beginning after December 31, 1969.
4 (b) The amendments made by sections 3, 4, and 2, with the
5 exception of 2 (c), shall become effective
6 (c) The amendments made by sections 2 (c) and 5 shall
7 become effective November 1, 1969.
8 (d) The amendments made by sections 2 (a), 2 (e), 3, and
4 (a) (l)-(2) shall not apply in the cases of persons retired or
10 . otherwise separated prior to *, and the rights
11 of such persons and their survivors shall continue in the same
12 manner and to the same extent as if such sections had not been
13 enacted.
*Insert date of enactment of Daniels/McGee bill.
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SECTIONAL ANALYSIS
Section 1 increases both the Agency's and the participant's contri-
butions to the Fund from six and one-half percent to seven percent of
basic salary.
Section 2(a) revises the formula for computing annuities by basing
"average basic salary" either on the highest three consecutive years
rather than the highest five consecutive years, or over a shorter period,
where applicable, to obtain the increased survivor protection afforded
by section 4.
Section 2(b) makes necessary language change to conform to the
new provisions on remarriage spelled out in section 2(d).
Section 2(c) increases the annuities of children of deceased
annuitants.
Section 2(d) brings the provisions of the CIA retirement system
into line with those of the Civil Service system concerning annuity payments
to a surviving spouse upon remarriage or upon dissolution of such marriage
by death, annulment, or divorce.
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Section 2(e) authorizes the crediting. of accumulated sick leave
for annuity computation purposes.
Section 3 preserves for survivors of participants retired for
disability the additional service credit which may have been granted to
such retirees.
Section 4 increases survivorship protection in death in service
cases: by reducing the minimum length of service requirement from
five years to 18 months; by establishing a minimum survivor annuity;
and by incorporating the provisions in section 2 relating to remarriage.
Section 5(a) adds 1 percent to each cost-of-living adjustment
effected under the cost-of-living provision of the Act.
Section 5(b) assures that the new annuities for surviving children
will be adjusted in accordance with the cost-of-living provisions of the
Act.
Section 6 provides effective dates in phase with similar amend-
ments approved for the Civil Service retirement system.
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14 O CT 1969
In compliance with clause 3 of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of Representatives, there is
herewith printed in parallel columns the text of provisions of existing law which would be repealed or
amended by the various provisions of the bill as reported.
CHANGES IN EXISTING LAW
Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement Act of 1964 for
Certain Employees, as amended,
(78 Stat. 1043; 50 U.S.C. 403
note)
Sec. 211. (a) Six and one-half per centum of
the basic salary received by each participant
shall be contributed to the fund for the payment
of annuities, cash benefits, refunds and
allowances. An equal sum shall also be con-
tributed from the respective appropriation or
fund which is used for payment of his salary.
The amounts deducted and withheld from basic
salary together with the amounts so contributed
from the appropriation or fund shall be deposited
by the Agency to the credit of the fund.
THE BILL AS REPORTED
Sec. 1. Section 211 (a) cf the Central Intelligence
Agency Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees,
as amended, (78 Stat. 1043; 50 U.S.C. 403 note) is
further amended by striking out "Six and one-half
per centum" in the first sentence and inserting
"Seven per centum".
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Sec. 221. (a) The annuity of a participant shall
be equal to 2 per centum of his average basic salary
for the highest five consecutive years of service,
for which full contributions have been made to the
fund, multiplied by the number of years, not exceeding
thirty-five, of service credit obtained in accordance
with the provisions of sections 251 and 252. In determin-
ing the aggregate period of service upon which the
annuity is to be based, the fractional part of a month, if
any, shall not be counted.
(b) At the time of retirement, any married
participant may elect to receive a reduced annuity
and to provide for an annuity payable to his wife or
her husband, commencing on the date following such
participant's death and terminating upon the death or
such surviving wife or husband. The
to the surviving wife or husband after
such participant's death shall be 55 per centum of the
amount of the participant's annuity computed as pre-
scribed in paragraph (a) of this section, up to the full
amount of such annuity specified by him as the base
for the survivor benefits. The annuity of the partici-
pant making such election shall be reduced by 2 1/2
per centum of any amount up to $3, 600 he specified
1~e base for the survivor benefit plus 10 per centum
:y amount over $3, 600 so specified.
Sec. 2. Section 221 of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50
U. S. C . 403 note) is amended:
ca) by striking out in paragraph (a)
"five consecutive years of service, " and
inserting "three consecutive years of
service /or, in the case of an annuity
computed under section 232 and based on
less than three years, over the total
service/, ";
(b) by striking out from the first
sentence of paragraph (b) "or remarriage
of such surviving wife or husband and
inserting: "or upon remarriage prior to
attaining age sixty of such surviving wife
or husband ";
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(c) (1) If an annuitant dies and is survived by
a wife or husband and by a child or children, in
addition to the annuity payable to the surviving
wife or husband, there shall be paid to or on
behalf of each child an annuity equal to the
smallest of: (i) 40 per centum of the annuitant's
average basic salary, as determined under para-
graph (a) of this section, divided by the number of
children; (ii) $600; or (iii) $1, 800 divided by the
number of children.
(2) If an annuitant dies and is not survived by
a wife or husband but by a child or children, each
surviving child shall be paid an annuity equal to the
smallest of: (i) 50 per centum of the annuitant's
average basic salary, as determined under para-
graph (a) of this section, divided by the number of
children; (ii) $720; or (iii) $2,160 divided by the
number of children.
(c) by striking out in paragraph (c) the
items "40 per centum", "$600", "$1, 800",
"50 per centum", "$720", and "$2,169",
and inserting "60 per centum", "$900",
"$2, 700", "75 per centum", "$1, 080", and
"$3, 240";
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(d) by adding new paragraph (g):
"(g) In the case of remarriage on or
after age sixty an annuity shall be payable
if remarriage has occurred on or after
July 18, 1966, and if the surviving wife
or husband, immediately before such
remarriage, was receiving an annuity
from the Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement and Disability Fund. The
annuity of a surviving spouse terminated
as a result of remarriage which occurred
prior to age sixty and on or after July 18,
1966, shall be restored at the same rate
commencing on the day the remarriage is
dissolved by death, annulment, or divorce,
if
"(1) the surviving spouse elects to
receive this annuity instead of a survivor
benefit to which he may be entitled, under
this or another retirement system for
Government employees., by reason of the
remarriage; and
"(2) any lump sum paid on termina-
tion of the annuity is returned to the fund.
"No annuity shall be paid by reason of
this paragraph for any period prior to
.'. No annuity shall be
terminated solely by reason of the
enactment of this paragraph. "; and
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(e) by adding new paragraph (h):
"(h) In computing an annuity under
this section the service credit of a partici-
pant who retires, except under section 231,
on an immediate annuity or dies leaving a
survivor or survivors entitled to annuity
includes, without regard to the limitations
imposed by paragraph (a), the days of
unused sick leave to his credit under a
formal leave system, except that these days
will not be counted in determining average
basic salary or annuity eligibility. The
contribution specified in section 252 shall
not be required for days of unused sick leave
credited under this paragraph."
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Sec. 231. (a) Any participant who has five years of
service credit toward retirement under the system,
excluding military or naval service that is credited
in accordance with provisions of section 251 or 252
(a) (2), and who becomes totally disabled or
incapacitated for useful and efficient service by
reason of disease, illness, or injury not due to
vicious habits, intemperance, or willful misconduct
on his part, shall, upon his own application or upon
order of the Director, be retired on an annuity
computed as prescribed in section 221. If the disabled
or incapacitated participant is under sixty and has less
than twenty years of service credit toward his retire-
ment under the system at the time he is retired, his
annuity shall be computed on the assumption that he
has had twenty years of service, but the additional
service credit that may accrue to a participant under
this provision shall in no case exceed the difference
between his age at the time of retirement and age
sixty, but this provision shall not increase the annuity
of any survivor.
Sec. 232. (b) If a participant, who has at least five
years of service credit toward retirement under the
system, excluding military or naval service that is
credited in accordance with the provisions of section
251 or 252 (a) (2), dies before separation or retirement
from the Agency and is survived by a widow or a
dependent widower, as defined in section 204, such
widow or dependent widower shall be entitled to an
annuity equal to 55 per centum of the annuity computed
in accordance with the provisions of section 221 (a).
Sec. 3. Section 231 (a) of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50
U. S. C . 403 note) is amended by striking
", but this provision shall not increase
the annuity of any survivor" from the last
sentence.
Sec. 4. (a) Section 232 (b) of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50 U.S.C.
403 note) is amended:
(1) by striking "five years" and
inserting "18 months";
(2) by inserting, after "221 (a)", ",
except that the computation of the annuity
of the participant under such section shall
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The annuity of such widow or dependent widower
shall commence on the date following death of
the participant and shall terminate upon death or
remarriage of the widow or dependent widower,
or upon the dependent widower's becoming capable
of self-support.
(c) If a participant who has at least five years
of service credit toward retirement under the
s,, excluding military or naval service that
is credited in accordance with the provisions of
section 251 or 252 (a) (2), dies before separation
or retirement from the Agency and is survived by
a wife or a husband and a child or children, each
surviving child shall be entitled to an annuity com-
puted in accordance with the provisions of section
221 (c) (1). The child's annuity shall begin and be
terminated in accordance with the provisions of
section 221 (e). Upon the death of the surviving
wife or husband or termination of the annuity of a
child, the annuities of any remaining children shall
be recomputed and paid as though such wife or husband
or child had not survived the participant.
be at least the smaller of (i) 40 per centum
of the participant's average basic salary,
or (ii) the sum obtained under such section
after increasing the participant's service
of the type last performed by the difference
between his age at the time of death and age
sixty"; and
(3) by striking "remarriage of the
widow or dependent widower" and inserting
"upon remarriage prior to attaining age
sixty of the widow or dependent widower
(subject to the payment and restoration
provisions of section 221 (g) ) ".
(b) Sections 232 (c) and (d) are
amended by striking "five years" and
inserting "18 months".
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(d) If a participant who has at least five years
of service credit toward retirement under the
system, excluding military or naval service that
is credited in accordance with the provisions of
section 251 or 252 (a) (2), dies before separation
or retirement from the Agency and is not survived
by a wife or husband, but by a child or children, each
surviving child shall be entitled to an annuity computed
in accordance with the provisions of section 221 (c) (2).
The child's annuity shall begin and terminate in accor-
dance with the provisions of section 221 (e). Upon
termination of the annuity of a child, the annuities of
any remaining children shall be recomputed and paid
as though that child had never been entitled to the
benefit.
Sec. 291. (a) On the basis of determinations made
by the Director pertaining to per centum change in
the Price Index, the following adjustments shall be
made:. . .
(2) Each month beginning with November 1966,
the Director shall determine the per centum change
in the price index. Effective the first day of the third
month which begins after the price index shall have
equaled a rise of at least 3 per centum for three con-
secutive months over the price index for the base month,
each annuity payable from the fund which has a commencing
date not later than such effective date shall be increased
by the per centum rise in the price index (calculated on
the highest level of the price index during the three con-
secutive months) adjusted to the nearest one-tenth of 1 per
c entum.
Sec. 5. Section 291 of the Central
Intelligence Agency Retiremotzt Act (50
U.S.C. 403 note) is amended:
(a) by inserting "1 per cerium plus"
immediately after the word " _,y" in
paragraph (a) (2); and
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(b) Eligibility for an annuity increase under this
section shall be governed by the commencing date
of each annuity payable from the fund as of the
effective date of an increase, except as follows: ...
(2) Effective from its commencing date, an
annuity payable from the fund to a child under
section 221 (c), which annuity commences the day
after annuitant's death and after January 1, 1967,
shall be increased by (a) 2 per centum if the
annuity from which it is derived commenced on
or before January 1, 1966, or (b) 1 per centum if
the annuity from which it is derived commenced
on or between January 2, 1966, and January 1, 1967.
(3) For the purposes of computing an annuity
which commences after January 1, 1967, to a child
under section 221 (c), the items $600, $720, $1, 800,
and $2, 160 appearing in section 221 (c) shall be
increased by 10. 2 per centum plus the total per
centum increase allowed and in force under section
291 (a) (2) for employee annuities, and, in the case
of a deceased annuitant, the items 40 per centum and
50 per centum appearing in section 221 (c) shall be
increased by the total per centum increase allowed
and in force under this section to the annuitant at
death; or if death occurred between January 1, 1967,
and date of enactment, the per centum increase the
annuitant would have received.
(b) by amending paragraphs (b) (2)
and (b) (3) to read:
"(2) For the purpose of computing the
annuity of a child under section 221 (c)
that commences after October 31, 1969,
the items $900, $1, 080, $2, 700, and
$3, 240 appearing in section 221 (c) shall
be increased by the total per centum
increases allowed and in force under this
section on or after such day, and, in case
of a deceased annuitant, the items 60 per
centum and 75 per centum appearing in
section 221 (c) shall be increased by the
total per centum allowed and in force to
the annuitant under this section on or after
such day.
"(3) The annuity of each surviving child
receiving an annuity under section 221
immediately prior to November 1, 1969,
shall be recomputed effective November 1,
1969, in accordance with paragraph (b) (2).
No increase allowed and in force prior to
such date under section 291 shall be included
in the recomputation of any such annuity,
and this paragraph shall not operate to
reduce any annuity. ".
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PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE CIA RETIREMENT ACT
"The Director of Central Intelligence may (in order to achieve or
maintain parity with provisions relating to Civil Service Retirement in
Subchapter III of Chapter 83 of Title 5, United States Code which have been
amended subsequent to the enactment of the Central Intelligence Agency
Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees (50 U. S. C. 403 note) )
recommend the adjustment of comparable provisions of the Central Intelli-
gence Agency Retirement Act of 1964 for Certain Employees, as amended
(50 U.S. C. 403 note) by transmitting to Congress the adjustment to be made
together with his findings. The adjustment shall have the force and effect
of statute at the end of the first period of 60 calendar days of continuous
session of Congress after the date on which the transmittal is received
unless, between the date of transmittal and the end_ of the 60-day period
either House passes a resolution stating in substance that the House does
not favor the adjustment. The Director of Central Intelligence shall have
the transmittal delivered to both Houses on the same. day and to each
House while it is in session. Adjusted provisions shall be printed in the
Statutes at Large in the same volume as the public laws and shall be printed
in the Federal Register. "
Statutory Precedent .
5 U. S. C. 901, et seq.
P. L. 90-206, Sec. 225(i)
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Calendar No. 333
91ST CONGRESS SENATE REPORT
1st Session J No. 91-339
Mr. McGEE, from the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service,
submitted the following
The Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, to which was re-
ferred the bill (S. 2754) to amend subchapter III of chapter 83 of
title 5, United States Code, relating to civil service retirement, and
for other purposes, having considered the same, reports favorably
thereon without amendment and recommends that the bill do pass.
Summary of the Bill
Title I provides a permanent, solution to the financial problems of
the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund by authorizing annu-
al payments directly from the Treasury to the Fund equal to the "lost
interest" on the unfunded liability of the Fund created by the Govern-
ment's failure to contribute sufficient funds, the gradual increase in
liability caused by past increased retirement benefits, and salary in-
creases; and to transfer from the Treasury annually funds sufficient
to pay the cost of annuity payments based on military service.
Title I also provides that future benefit increases and the effect of
future salary increases will be paid for by amortizing the cost of such
benefits and increases in equal installments over a 30-year period. This
will authorize appropriations by thee Cong ress, not direct transfer of
money.
Title I also increases both employee and agency contributions from
61/2 percent of payroll to 7 percent of payroll, effective January 1, 1970.
Contributions by employees of the 'Congress are increased to 7i/2 per-
cent, and contributions by Members of Congress are increased to 8
percent.
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I
"Tit le I I increases benefits auuler the 1etirement Act;
1_. Uses "high-3" instead of --high-5" for computing civil service
annuities.
-2. Permits adding sick leave accumulated at time of retirement to
the comptttattion of annuity.
.'>. Adds 1 percent to cast-of-living increases for annuitants.
4. Makes the remarriage provisions of the I9tifi Act. partly retro-
act.i ve.
a. Improve survivor benefits for employees and retired disabled
employees who die in service or after disability retirement.
G. Exempts up to $23,000 of civil service retireineiit annuities front
Federal income taxation.
7. Permits an employee of the Congress to receive 21/2 percent credit
for a]I yeai of ('ongressional eniploytnent rather than Iitntting such
credit to 15 years.
Title I of S. 2754 provides a long-terns, permanent solution to the
problem of the unfunded liability of thet Civil Service Retirement and
Disability Fund.
Silica fts ctreation in 19211, the Retirement Fund hashad an unfunded
deficit. The actmtrial theory of the retirement -yN-tei is that the nor-
mal cost will be fully met if a percentage of paX, is withheld from the
eniploye&s salary, a percentage of payroll i contributed by each
agency and the total is invested at interest. This actuarial cleteriaaina
iiota takes into nx taunt. the age and longevity of the group, and a nor-
mal progression in salary throughout a career in the Federal service.
It. does not take into account extending retirement benefits to new
groups, improving retirement benefits, increases lit salary enacted by
Congress from time to time. the (iovernnient's failure to make pay-
ments in soma years, or the Government's failure, to pay the interest
on flip nuftuaded liability.
't'he resaalI is that the Fund has a liability which is not funded
tIiron _h agency and employee contrihutions.'All service performed
prior to August 1. 1920. for instance. 'was credited even though no
m'vinent. was made for such service. Increases in salary enacted by
("ongrc s increase the average salary base for annuity computation.
taut. emitributions are not made by either the employee or the agency
to pay for the cost which such increases make in the future annuity
when past service is credited at the new average salary rate. The Fund
;also loses the interest on the unfunded liability which~would have been
earned if payment had been made.
of the total liability of S7h billion now owed by the Fund (than is,
the present value of all payments promised for service already per-
formed). $57.7 billion was not funded as of June 30, 1969.
Ueceilits now exceed disbursem ent.s, and will continue to do so until
1975, Thereafter, however. anittuty payments will exceed income from
employee and agency contributions and earnings, and by I9fti7 the
liquid assets of time Ftutd will Abe depleted.
l f action to prevent depletion of the Fund is not taken at this
time, an annual appropriation will be necessary each year after 19i;7,
and the impact upon the budget will be significant. It. will also sub-
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ject the payment of annuities to the procedures of budget requests
and appropriations.
In 1963, the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service considered
legislation to provide for a gradual increase in agency contributions
to the Fund to meet the interest on the unfunded liability by the year
1986. That legislation proposed a mandatory increase in agency con-
tribution from 61/2 percent to 171jz percent over a 22-year period to
meet the $1,574 million annual cost (in 1963) of lost interest on the
unfunded liability. Action on that legislation was postponed.
In 1967, the administration proposed that legislation be enacted to
authorize ,,L permanent indefinite appropriation for a transfer of funds
from the Treasury to the credit of the 'Civil Service Retirement and
Disability Fund, beginning at 10 percent of the lost interest and
increasing over a period of 10 years to meet the full 'amnount of the
lost interest on the unfunded liability; and that future liberalizations
of the program be paid by amortizing the cost of the liberalizations in
equal annual payments over a 30-year period. That is the legislation
embodied in title I of S. 2754.
This method of funding the cost of future benefit changes will de-
pend upon the willingness of the Congress and the administration to
include in annual appropriations and 'budget requests funds necessary
to meet the amortized cost of increased 'benefits. I't will be 'of no con-
sequence whatsoever to enact title I of S. 2754 unless both the Con-
gress, through its appropriation process, and the Executive branch, in
its recommendation of funds necessary for each fiscal year, face the
fact that further inaction will result in a bankrupt retirement fund in
18 years.
Neither branch of the Government can ignore the cost implications
of Federal retirement benefits. At the present time, the liability of the
Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund is increased by $2.55
every time a'$1 pay increase is enacted. The $1.3 billion pay increase for
classified and postal employees which became effective July 1, 1969,
increased the future liability of the Fund by $3.4 billion. The annual
interest on the present unfunded liability which was not paid at the
end of fiscal year 1969 added more than 51.9 billion to the total liability
of the Fund. The nine statutory salary increases, four civil service re-
tirement laws, and the nine annual. installments of lost interest on the
unfunded liability of the Fund which have occurred since June 30,
1960, have doubled the unfunded liability-from $31.1 billion in 1960
to $61.1 billion in 1969.
The obligation of the Government to insure that payments for re-
tired employees are made, and made when due, requires that action
be taken now to insure that there will be an adequate amount in the
Fund after 1987 to meet all obligations incurred.
3ITr TARY .ERVICE CREDIT
The financing provisions of tide I have been amended to provide
that the cost of military service credited for civil service retirement
shall be paid annually by a transfer of funds from the Treasury to the
Civil Service Retirement avd Disability Fund equal to the annual dis-
bursement of annuities attributable to the crediting of military serv-
ice. To avoid an undue impact upon the budget, the transfer is amor-
tized over a 10-year period.
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tinder existing law, service credited for civil service retirement
annuities includes years of &-tive service in the military service of the
United States. At the present tinge, this amounts to 4.5 percent of an-
nuities, or an annual cost of $95 million. Neither the employee nor any
agency of the Government contributes any moneto the Fund for this
credit. Thus. an employee who retires from the-civil service after 15
years of civilian service and 5 years of military service receives
an annuity based on 20 years' service, although he and his agency have
paid for only 15 years' service. The cost of crediting military service
is made tip out. of the Fund.
The committer. recommendation requires that the Treasury pay to
the Fund the amount of annual annuity payments resulting from mili-
tar-v service credit. This payment will result in an annual payment. to
the Fund -beginning at approximately $9.5 million and rising over a
20-near period to a maximum of $306 million a year. Thereafter, be-
Of the restrictions of the Social Security Act relating to military
service performed after December .31, 1956 which results in a social
security benefit, service will not he permanently creditable for civil
service retirement purposes. The annual payment will decline to a level
figure of approximately $100 million in thedistant.future.
The committee believes that the transfer of funds is appropriate and
desir-able because the normal cost, estimated by the Commission in de-
ternrinin an appropriate rate of contribution for agencies and em-
ployees includes 0.22 per cent of pa---roll for military service credit even
though it benefits only some employees and it, is not civilian service
to the Federal (7orernanent.. The argument that such a transfer is
merely bookkeeping is effect in view of the fact that. employees pay
for the credit which only about one-half of all employees receive. Caar-
ried to its ronelusirnr, the argument would support the position that
all Government financial transactions are merely bookkeeping :and all
money should be appropriated in a lump sum.
TI'T'LE 1I-IRET1REME T BENEFITS
The committee has reported favorably the following amendments
to the Civil Service Retirement Art :
11IG11-3 a%-FRAGE
The committee approves language to change the basic period for
computing civil service annuities from the highest 5 consecutive years
to time highest 3 consecutive years. Under existing law, in effect since
1930, the formula for computing an employee's annuity is to multiply
his number of years of service by a percentage of salary received over
the best 5 consecutive years of earnings, The additional cost incurred
will be 0.07 percent: of payroll, equal to $15.4 million increase in normal
cost of the system.
CrnEulT FOR ISXCRE1) SICK LEAVE
Time committee approves language for crediting, for retirement pur-
poses, accumulated sick leave which an employee has at the time of
his retirement.
Tinder the Annual and Sick Leave Act. of 1951, -each employee sub-
ject to the Act is entitled to sick leave on an accumulative basis. For
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each biweekly pay period, he is credited with 4 hours of sick leave.
There is no restriction on'the total number of hours he may accumul ate.
An employee who works 30 years in the civil service has earned 390
days of sick leave, equal to about a year and a half of normal work-
ing days. At the time of his retirement his sick leave, if any, is forfeited.
The Civil Service Commission estimates that about half of all Fed-
eral employees retire with no accumulated sick leave and about half
of them retire with an average t )f days of unused sick leave.. The
problem of the use (or abuse) of sick leave is one that should be
handled properly by admi.nistrat ive officers of the Executive branch;
but regardless of the reasons for the use (or abuse) of sick leave, an
employee who retires with 6 months' accumulated sick leave has de-
voted more time serving his Government than an employee who re-
tires with no accumulated sick leave.
The additional cost incurred by crediting unused sick leave will be
0.06 percent of payroll, or $13.2 million increase in normal cost.
The committee would like for the Civil Service Commission to con-
sult with Federal agencies during t e, calendar year 1970 to survey
the use of sick leave after the enactment of this Act to determine
whether there has been any significant effect upon its use by employees,
and to report to this committee. at the beginning of the 92d Congress
on the results of its survey.
The committee approves provisions increasing all cost-of-living ad-
justments under section 8340 of title 5, United States Code, by 1 per-
cent beyond the Consumer Price Index figure used as a basis for
adjustments.
Under existing law, whenever the Consumer Price Index shows a
3-percent increase for each of 3 consecutive months over the base
month, annuities are adjusted by the highest percentage of any of the
3 months and that month becomes the. new base month for the purpose
of future adjustments. Since the cost-of-living provisions of the Civil
Service Retirement Act were revised in 1965, cost-of-living adjust-
ments have been made in January 1967, May 1968, and March of 1969-
each 3.9 percent.
In order to take into account the increased productivity of a na-
tional economy, as well as the possible inaccuracy of the Consumer
Price Index as an indicator of purchased goods, particularly for re-
tired employees, the committee approves the addition of a 1-percent
adjustment with each cost-of-living increase.
SURVIVOR ANNUITIES UNDER TIIT: ACT OF JULY 18, 1966
Section 506 of Public Law 89-504 amended the CiviA Service Re-
tirement Act to provide that when the surviving spouse of a Federal
employee remarries after attaining age 60, her civil service annuity
would not be terminated, or i r she remarried prior to age 60 and the
marriage wa.s terminated,'h.er annuity could be reinstated. The benefits
provided by that Act (signed by the President, July 18, 1966) were
not retroactive and had no effect upon the survivor annuity of any
spouse whose annuity was ba. ed on a death or retirement occurring
prior to the date of enactment of the legislation. The effect of this
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avas that IWU snr'viyiug spouses of two Fedora) emph Xees, one of
whom retired on .lily 17, 19G16 and the other of whom retired oil July
11), 196G. would be. treated quite differently= if they remarried at any
time after their hushands' deaths. I' enty years later, the same two
snrrivirrg spouses could remarry after achieving age ?60, and one would
rciutinue to receive her annuity while the other would not.
It has been the general i liev of the committee to refrain from
recommending legislation which has a rotruaetive effect Mein civil
service retirenu'nt, however, iii this instance the equities of the sitaa-
tiola are such that law? cage permitting continuance of annuity in the
rase of a slcolisse whose survivor aiamrity is based on a death or retire-
tne'iit oerllrrrng prmi to July 1' , 19tit6, }ant whose remarriage Occalrrrcl
ore nr cr.#tri' the date of enactment of the 19#G Art, should be approved.
Tit addition, --nagre authorizing the corotinamnce of such an annuity
whenever the survivor of it Federal employee has been incorrectly ad-
vise-ft by Government authority beta yen the ell, ective (Lite of the 194616
Art and the effective date of this Act that such remarriage would not.
Aftwt her annuity is approved. It is unfortunate that in some rii uaai-
sianrp,, officials of Fsectative agencies have advised in employee of
rights or benefits under prevailing law or regulations which advice is
rrronernrs. "l'he surviving spouse of a Federal employee who receives a
letter flonu Government agent-y indicating that her annuity will not
be jeopardized by her remarriage should be able to rely upon such
information.
The committee proposes to amend the Civil Service Retirement Art
to improve very substatnt.iall't the survivor benefits for employees who
die with little Federal service, for employees who die after retiring
upon a disability annuity. and for the surviving children of Federal
employees.
I -nder esi' ting law, no eiyil service employee earns any vested an-
nuity rights or benefits until he has completed di years of sera ice
under the {'iyil serviea Retirement Art. 'I'hlts, an employee who dies
kith --f years 11 ntcintlis and 29 days of Federal civilian service under
the Act. is entitled to no Benefits and his survivors receive only a refund
of the deductions which have been made front his payroll check in each
fray- period during his years of service. Had he lived another day, such
an elliployee would have vested annauity benefits for his survivors
which would pay to ouch of his rbildreil approximately $61 a inoi1tIi
and Would pay- to his siirviying Slaonse a 55-percent remainder of his
earned annuity.
An employee Who retires on a disability annuity of 441 percent of
salary under the Civil Service Retirement Act and who thereafter
dies. leaves his family with rnininial benefits, because the basis for
tire disability annuity wllirln lie rceeived as a retired employee is sub-
:t:rntiarlly reduced in deterauiningr sillwivor am itity' benefits.
For example, Joe Jones is a 27-year-old civil service employee wida
ii years' service and an average salary of $10,000 at year. He dies,
leaving a wife and two small children. Mrs. Jones receives a survivor
annuity equal to .? percent, of iris rYeOu>rl annuity. After 0 ?ears'
service. ,Joe has an earned annuity of 9t..!t per-cent of fiis average salary,
or *925 a year. lfr . ,Zones` annuity is $527 a year, or'AU al month. Each
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7
child is entitled to a survivor annuity of $61 a month. The total sur-
vivor annuity for Jones' widow and the children is $1,991 a. year,
subject to cost-of-living adjustments related to the Consumer Price
Index.
If Jones had been employed in. private industry subject to, the So-
cial Security Act under similar pay and tenure, his survivors would
have received the "maximum family benefit" of $4,982.40 a year. This
would result from applicable current social security law which under
existing limitations would give Mrs. Jones and each child $138.40 a
month. When the older child reaches majority, the other child and the
widow's benefit would increase to $153 a month each, almost twice the
benefit payable to all three under the Civil Service Retirement Act's
survivor provisions.
In the case of a civil service. employee who is disabled and subse-
quently dies, the example is similar. Had Jones retired on a disability
annuity, his annuity would be the smaller of 40 percent of his aver-
age salary or his annuity projected to age 60. In most cases, the 40-
percent clause applies, and Jones would receive $4,000 a year. But if
he died after disability retirement, the 40-percent provision would
be eliminated and his survivors would be entitled only to a survivor
annuity based on his earned annuity. Mrs. Jones would receive the
same $527 a year for herself and the samo $1,464 for the children.
Had Jones been retired on disability under social security, the surviv-
or's annuity would be the same as that described in the first example.
Using social security as a comparison is not entirely relevant when
evaluating benefits under the Civil Service Retirement Act, because
the two systems have different basic purposes. Civil service retire-
ment is a long term, staff retirement plan based on earnings and length
of service; but that it is a staff retirement plan should not obscure the
fact that 3 million employees} rely upon its protection for survivor
benefits as well as retirement. and are excluded from participation
under social security.
Adequate protection, particnlarl.y for the younger employee whose
earnings are low and service is short:, has been a. major goal of this
committee and the administration for several. years. Legislation to
provide a transfer of credit from civil service to social security has
been proposed, but no encouraging action has been taken by the Com-
mittees on Post Office and Civil Service, the Committee on Finance,
or the Committee on Ways and Means.
In 1967, employee, unions initially supported such a plan in public
hearings before the House, Connnittee on Post Office and Civil Service.
but subsequently provisions necessary to effect the transfer of credit
were stricken from a bill reported by the. Committee on Ways and
Means. This committee is inclined to believe that Federal employees
do not, desire to establish a close relationship between social security
and civil service retirement.
Until the issue of transfers between retirement systems can be satis-
factorily resolved, the survivors of Federal employees who die with
fewer than 5 years' service, or those who die with a vested annuity but
little service will continue to suffer drastic curtailment of income. The
committee believes it is in Ilse best interest of the employee and the
Government to improve substantially the survivor protection offered
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these employees at this time, solely through amendment,; to the Civil
Service Retirement Act, and continue the effort to work out a transfer
system at a later date.
Accordingly, the committee recommends that when an employee
serves 18 consecutive months in a position under the Civil Service lie-
tirement Act, his annuity rights (for survivor protection only) shall
vest, and in the event. of his death thereafter, his widow shall be en-
titled to an annuity equal to 55 percent of 40 percent. of his average
salary. If he dies after retiring on disability, his wife will be en-
title(d' to at least 55 percent of his disability salary.
Although this is a very substantial improvement. in the retirement
program, it is not a great windfall. Mrs. Jones, in the example cited
above, would be entitled to a survivor annuity of $2,200 it year rather
than $527.
The committee also recommends that the survivor annuity for the
mimarried children under 18 years of age of a Federal employee (or
an unmarried child between 18 and 22 who is a full-time student) be
increased from the present minimum standards. Existing law pays
benefit of $600 a year, or 40 percent of the employer's average salary
divided by (lie number of children. or $1.800 a rear divided by the
number of children, m-Michever ik lcss.'The cost-of-living adjustments
in effect since 1962 have raised the actual minimum payment to $732
per child per, year for not, to exceed three children.
The committee recommends that the minimum be increased to S900
a year, 60 percent of average salary divided by the number of children.
or 52,700 divided by the number of children. whichever is less. This
is an actual increase. of $168 per child per year under existing annuity
Payment schedules, or about =25 percent. The, cost-of-living adjust-
merrts Made since 1962 would be eliminated and a new base period for
future adjustments would be established. Proportional increases are
made in the survivor annuity of it child who has lost both parents.
The total cost of the entire survivor annuity- amendment proposed
by the committee will be $46 million a year in normal cost. This is
equal to 0.21 percent of payroll. The survivor annuity amendments
relating to extension of coverage to short-term employees and a new
guaranteed minimum for the survivors of an employee who dies after
retirement on a disability annuity, will cost 0.17 percent of payroll;
and the increases in the survivor annuities for children presently- on
time rolls and those corning on the rolls in the future is 0.04 percent of
payroll.
Yoder the provisions of the Civil Service Retirement Act relating
to employees of the Congress, the first 15 years of military service
and Congressional service are computed at 21/1 "percent, of the employ-
er's high-.) average rather than the normal percentage computation
used for civil service employees generally (11/2 percent for the first
years. 1'1/4 percent for the next 5 years, and 2 percent for the re-
mninder). This has been a part of tine Civil Service Retirement Act
for some years and compensates employees of the Congress because
their jobs generally depend upon the good health and political fortunes
of a Senator or Representative.
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9
The committee approves language to remove the limitation on the
number of years of 'Congressional employee service computed at 21/2
percent (not to exceed a total maximum annuity of 80 percent of the
high-3 average), to limit military service creditable at 21/2 percent
to 5 years, and to increase the Congressional employee's contribution
from 61/2 percent to 71/2 percent of gross pay.
The committee proposes several new amendments to the: Civil Serv-
ice Retirement Act to provide basic and significant changes in the
Civil Service Retirement System :
Finally, the committee recommends that the Civil Service Retire-
ment Act be amended to exclude an. amount not to exceed $3,000 in
annuity payments from Federal income taxes.
Under existing 'law, civil service retirement annuities are not sub-
ject to Federal income tax until the employee's total. contribution to the
Retirement Fund has been paid by annuity payments. Ordinarily, it
takes about 3 years for this to Happen. Thereafter, civil. service re-
tirement annuity payments are ordinary income.
Neither social security nor railroad retirement benefits, both paid by
the Federal Government, are subjer.t to Federal income tax. The com-
mittee has received repeated suggestions by retired employees that at
least a portion of civil service. annuities be exempted from income
taxes.
The anticipatedloss of revenue resulting from the committee amennd-
ment cannot be accurately estimated. 'Considering that annuitants and
their spouses past the age of 65 each receive a double exemption and
a retirement credit under the provisions, of the Internal Revenue Code,
the taxable income after all. deductions is small and the amount of -in-
come tax paid to the Federal Government is not substantial. But it is
also clear that retired Federal employees are discriminated against
when compared to social security or railroad retirement annuitants. In
any case, the committee believes that it is clearly equitable and socially
desirable to exempt u reasonable portion of the civil service retirement
annuity from Federal taxation.
The provisions of this amendment are similar to the provisions of
S. 2087, which was introduced on May 8, 1969, and referred to the
Committee on Post Office and Civil Service.
The bill as reported by the comrnittoe will increase the normal cost
of the civil service retirement system from the present figure of 13.86
percent of payroll to 13.98 percent of payroll. This cost figure takes
into account the reduction in the cost caused by charging the general
fund of the Treasury with the funding of retirement credit for mili-
tary service.
The unfunded liability will be increased by the benefits enacted in
this legislation by $1.4 billion and will be reduced by the transfer of
funds relating to military service credit 'by $4.7 billion, resulting in a
net decrease of the unfunded liability of $3.3 billion.
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tit:?n-I(m ar. ;k :%I,Y is
Section 101 adds several new rlefiuit.ions to the provision: of title 5,
1-sited Star's Code, relating to civil service retirement in order
to implement the new provisions of the hill relating to retirement
finatwcing.
Section 101(8) defines `'arormaI cost." 'NormaI cast is the contribaut ion
naeressary, invested at interest, to pay for the benefits authorized by
law. The present normal cost of the ss?stem is 13.RG percent, of payroll,
but the cuntribution is 13 percent.
The benefits and added contribution included in this hill will in-
crease norrmal cost to 18.98 percent and contribution Io 14 percent.
Section 101 (3) defines "fund balance" to mean cash on hand hems
iuvestmentsat par.
Section 101(3) defines"unfundedliabilitv."
The total Inability of the Fund now is about 578 billion, of which
about $;58 billion is not funded ill any manner other than the full faith
and creditof the Government of the -sited States.
Section 102 increase` agency and employee contribution from (1.5
pen-eaat to 7 percent of payroll.
Section 102 increases the contribution of an employee of the Con-
,rre:a from G..) percent to 7.5 percent-, to pay for the added benefits in
section 203 of the bill, and Increases a Member's contribution to R
percent.
Se bona 102 (b)
makes the new contribution rate effective on the first
pay period beginning in 1970.
Sc-vtion 108 authorizes the Civil Service (onimission to pay the
expenses of administering the retirement program (and other retire-
Ioent programs) out of the Civil Service Retirement and Disability
Fund.
This language is presently contained in annual appropriation hills.
Section 103 enacts two new subsections relating to retirement
financing.
Section 9348(g) of existing law, commonly known as the 'nionlas
hider (named for Coangressma n Albert Thomas. chairman of the In-
dependent. Ofli(-es Appropriations Subcomnnmittee), prohibits the pay-
nncnt of liberalizations in the retirement program until appropriations
are made to pay the cost. The benefit chain- -as in retirement aluani-
ties enacted in 1962, for instance, were not paid until June 1003. be-
cause appropriations were not made until that time. Annual appropri-
at ions have been made since 196 to pay the annual cost of the 5-percent
increase,
The new lan-ruage repeals the Thomas Rider and provides that here-
after liberalized benefits or increases in salary will automatically
authorize appropriations over a 30-Lear period, in equal annual install-
ments, to pay the cost of the added unfunded liability caused lrv such
benefits or salary increases.
'I'he effect, will be to stop the increase in the growth of the unfunded
liability bN. paving the cost on an annual basis. The Commission esti-
mates that the unfunded liability will cease to rrrow in fiscal ear 197th
111(l will remain constant thereafter at a aboutWTO.8 billion.'
The new subsection 434S(g) authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury
to trannsfer money from the Treasury to the Fund at the end of each
fiscal Year to paay the interest on the unfunded liability as well as Clue
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cost of military service credit. To avoid a severe impact on the budget,
the payment would be graduated over a 10-year period, becoming fully
effective in fiscal year 1980, at a level cost of $2,990 million.
Section 104 is a technical amendment revising language in title 5
relating to annual reports. The substance of the report requirement is
not changed.
Section 105 repeals a report requirement on the annual cost of the
annuity increases enacted by Congress in 1958. Such costs will here-
after be paid out of the Fund and annual reports or annual appropria-
tions will not be necessary. This is a technical amendment.
Section 201 revises the computation factor so that the "average
salary" used to compute annuities for retired employees will be the
highest 3 consecutive years rather than the highest 5 consecutive years
and so that average salary for shorn terra will conform to the new
survivor annuity amendments.
Section 202permits an employee. retiring with accumulated sick
leave to have such leave credited towards his length of service for an-
nuity purposes.
Section 203 allows an employee of the Congress to compute his total
congressional service on the 2.5 percent formula, rather than limiting
such computation to riot more than 15 years' Congressional service.
'I'he Congressional. employees wouldVpay an additional 1 percent for
this additional benefit.
Section '204- adds 1 percent to each cost-of-living increase for retired
employees.
Under existing law, whenever the Consumer Price Index rises 3
percent for each of 3 consecutive months, all civil service annuities
are increased by the highest percentage figure within thoseo months.
This provision would add another 1 percent to the increase.
Section 204(b) increases the minimum survivor annuity for the
children of a deceased Federal em pl oyee.
Section 205 changes the remarriage provisions of the 1966 retirement
bill. Under the law, which applies only to persons eligible after the
date of enactment, the surviving spouse of an employee or annuitant
who remarries after age 60 does not lose her annuity, or if she remar-
ried prior to age -60, she can have her annuity reinstated if the second
marriage is terminated. The liberalization applies to no spouse whose
annuity is based on a death or retirement occurring prior to July 18,
1966 (date of enactment).
This change permits the Nv i do w to continue receiving her annuity
or to have 'such annuity reinstated if her spouse died or retired prior
to July 18, 1966, but her rem;irria e, did or does not occur until. after
such date.
Section 205 also permits the widow of an employee whose survivor
annuity has been terminated by remarriage to have her annuity rein-
stated if she was advised by (}ivernment authority that her remar-
riage would not affect her annuity.
'Section 206 provides the new survivor annuity language for Federal
employees who have at least 18 months' service or who retire on dis-
ability.
Section 207 exempts up to $3,000 of civil service retirement annui-
ties from Federal income taxes
Section 208 provides effective dates.
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^ . E
12
('IIANGES IN EXISTING LAW
111 compliance with subsection 4 of rule XXIX of the Standing
Rules of the Senate, changes in existing lawn made by the bill as re-
ported are shown its follows (existing law in which no change is pro-
posed is shown in roman; existing law proposed to be omitted is en-
closed in black brackets; new matter is shown in italic) :
I. TITLE' 5, UNITED s,rATES CODE'
CHAPTER 13-SPECIAL AUTHORITY
?1308. Annual reports
(c) The ('omniission shall publish an annual report on the opera-
tion of subchapter III of chapter 83 of this title, including a stateinen.t
concerning the status of the Civil Service Retirement and Disability
Fund [on a normal cost pins interest basis].
* * * * *
SITBCHAPTER III-CIVIL SERVICE RETIREMENT
8331. Definitions
(4) "average pity-" means the largest annual rate resulting
from averaging an employee':; or Member's rates of basic pay in
effect-
(A) over any [5] 3 consecutive years of creditable service
or, in the case of an annuity tinder subsection (d) or (e) (1) of
.section 8341 of this title based on service of less than 3 years,
over the period of service; or
(B) at a Member's option over all periods of Member
service after August 2, 1946, used in the computation of an
:utnuity under this sitbcltapter;
with each rate weighted by the time it was in effect;
(15) "price index" means the Consumer Price Index (all
items-United States city average) published monthly by tho
Bureau of Labor Statistics; [undj
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(16) "base month" means the month for which the price index
showed it percent rise forming the basis for a cost-of-living
annuity increase[.];
(17) "normal cost" means the entry-age normal cost computed by
the Civil Service Commission in accordance with generally accepted
actuarial practice and expressed as a level percentage of aggregate
basic pay;
(18) "Fund balance" means the sum of-
(A) the investments )f the Fund calculated at par value; and
(B) the cash balance Q f the I+'und on the books of the Treasury;
and
(19) "unfunded liability" means the esitmated excess of the
present value of all benefits payable from the Fund to employees and
Members, and former employees and Members, subject to this sub-
chapter, and to their survivors, over the sum of-
(A) the present value of deductions to be withheld from the
future basic pay of employees and Members currently subject to
this subchapter and of future agency contributions to be made in
their behalf; plus
(B) the present value of Government payments to the Fund
under section 8348(f) q f this title; plus
(C) the Fund balance as of the date the unfunded liability is
determined.
? 8334. Deductions, contributions, and deposits
(a) (1) The employing agency shall deduct and withhold [6%] 7
percent of the basic pay of an employee, [and] 7% percent of the
basic pay of a Congressional ernployee, and 8 percent of the basic pay
of a Member [, and an]. An equal amount shall be contributed from
the appropriation or fund used to pay the employee or, in the case of
an elected official, from an appropriation or fund available for pay-
ment of other salaries of the same office or establishment. When an
employee in the legislative branch is paid by the Clerk of the House
of Representatives, the Clerk may pay from the contingency fund of
the House the contribution that otherwise would be contributed
from the appropriation or fund used to pay the employee.
(2) The amounts so deducled and withheld, together with the
amounts so contributed, shall be deposited in the Treasury of the
United States to the credit of the Fund under such procedures as the
Comptroller General of the United States may prescribe. Deposits
made by an employee or Member [under this section] also shall be
credited to the Fund.
(b) Each employee or Member is deemed to consent and agree to
these deductions from. basic pay. Notwithstanding any law or regu-
lation affecting the pay of an employee or Member, payment less these
deductions is it full and complete discharge and acquittance of all
claims and demands for regular services during the period covered
by the payment, except the right to the benefits to which the employee
or Member is entitled under this subchapter.
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(c) Each employee or Member credited with civilian service after
.July 31, 1920, for which retirement deductions or deposits have not
6)een made. ma deposit with interest an amount equal to the following
percentages of his basic pay received for that service:
1'ercentare
of basic px,y Service period
---------------- 2% ---------- August 1. 1920. to June 30, 1926.
3'f, J my 1, 11128, to J title 30, 194_^.
5 ----- July 1, 1942. to J Luau 30, IM.
6 _-__---- July 1. 1948, to October 31. M&
61.'. ... [afur Octob"r 31. 1936.1 Nozemxr I, 1966, to December 31,
:---------- -1lrr Drrember3l. 1&;9.
11-,ber or employee f o r Can-
yreaaionatemployeeService -_-__ ---------- -4up i41,1910,toJune 30.1994.
3+r ..... _ .lute I, 19111, to June 10, 1948.
Jutu 1. 1942, to .June 30, 194.8.
Julu1,1048,M4crour37,19a4.
,AG Naamber 1. 19,14. to&cemGer 31, 1962.
y________ After Decembir 31, 1969.
V,,nteefor Member service. _.._ 24_________ August 1. 1920, to Juiw 30,1926.
3+V ._.---- July 1. 1926, to JLill c30.1'.M42.
5 _- ------- Juty1,1942,toAugust 1,1946.
6.-- ------- AuLust 2. R46. to October 31, 19,56.
7 [After Oelobe1 31, 1956.] Sole nther 1, 1954, to December 31,
111'19.
S Alit r De,onber 51, I9E9.
\otwitlistanding the foregoing provisions of this subsection, the de-
posit with respect to a period of service referred to in section 8332(b)
(6) [which was performed prior to the effective date of the National
Guard Technicians Acct of 1963] of this title performed before January 1,
11169. shall be an amount equal to 55 [per centtnn] percent of a deposit
computed in accordance with such provisions.
(d) Each employee or Member who has received it, refund of retire-
iuellt deductions under this or any other retirement system established
for cinplov ces of the Government covering service for which he may
be allowed credit under this subchapter may deposit the amount re-
ceived. with interest.. Credit may not be allowed for the service covered
by the refund until the deposit is made.
(e) interest under subsection (c) or (d) of this seeticu is computed
front the chid-point of each service period included in the coin pit tit tion,
or frotu the date refund was paid, to the date of deposit or commencing
(late of annuity, whichever is earlier. The interest is computed at the
rote of 4 percent a year to December 31. 1947, and 3 percent a year
thereafter compounded annually. The deposit may be made in one or
inure iusta-lhnent .interest. ^tayy not be charged for a period of sepa-
ration from the service which bean before October 1, 1956.
(f) Under such regulations as the Civil Service Commission may
prescribe, atlnounts deducted under subsection (a) of this section and
deposited under subsections (c) and (d) of this section shall be entered
en individual retirement records.
(g) Deposit May not be required for- -
(1) service before August 1, 1920;
(2) military service;
(3) service for the Panama Railroad Company before Jun-
ttary 1, 1924; [or]
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(4) service performed before January 1, 1950, by natives of
the Pribilof Islands in the taking and curing of fur seal skins and
other activities in connection with the administration of the
Pribilof Islands[.]; or
(5) clays of unused sick leave credited under section 8339(m) of
this title.
(h) For the purpose of survivor annuity, deposits authorized by
subsections (c) and (d) of this section may also. be made by the sur-
vivor of an employee or Member.
? 8339. Computation of annuity
(a) Except as otherwise provided by this section the annuity of an
employee retiring under this subchapter is-
(1) 1) percent of his average pay multiplied by so much of his
total service as does not exceed 5 years; plus
(2) 1~4 percent of his average pay multiplied by so much of his
total service as exceeds 5 years but does not exceed 10 years; plus
(3) 2 percent of his average pay multiplied by so much of his
total service as exceeds 10 years.
However, when it results in a larger annuity, 1 percent of his average
pay plus $25 is substituted for the percentage specified by paragraph
(1), (2), or (3) of this subsection, or any combination thereof.
(b) The annuity of a Congressional employee, or former Con-
gressional employee, retiring under this subchapter is computed under
subsection (a) of this section, except:, if he has had-
(1) at least 5 years' service as it Congressional employee or
Member or any combination thereof; and
(2) deductions withheld from his pay or has made deposit cov-
ering his last 5 years of civilian service;
his annuity is computed, with res{sect to [so much of] his service as a
Congressional employee, [and] his military service [as does] not
[exceed a total of 15] exceeding ,5 years, and any Member service, by
multiplying 2z percent of his average pay by the years of that service.
(c) The annuity of a Member, or former Member with title to
Member annuity, retiring under this subchapter is computed under
subsection (a) of this section, except, if he has had at least 5 years'
service as a Member or Congressional employee or any combination
thereof, his annuity is computed with respect to--
(1) his service as a Member and so much of his military service
as is creditable for the purpose of this paragraph;
(2) [so much of] his Cotn ressional employee service [as does
not exceed 15 years];
by multiplying 2% percent of his average pay by the years of that
service.
(d) The annuity of an employee retiring under section 8336(c) of
this title is 2 percent of his average pay multiplied by his total service.
(e) The annuity computed under subsections (a)-(d) of this sec-
tion may not exceed 80 percent of--
(1) the average pay of the employee; or
(2) the greater of-
(A) the final basic pay of the Member; or
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(11) the final basic- pay of the appointive position of a for-
mer Member who elects to have his annuity computed or re-
computed under section 8344(b) (1) of this title.
(f) The annuity of an employee or Member retiring under section
3337 of this title fs at least the smaller of--
(1) 40 percent of his average pay; or
(2) the sum obtained under subsections (a)-(e) of this section
after increasing his service of the type last performed by the
period elapsing between the date of separation and the date he
becomes 60 years of age.
[However, this subsection does not increase the annuity of a survivor.]
(e) The annuity computed under subsections (a), (b), and (e) of
this section for an employee retiring under section 8336(d) of this
title is reduced by 'ti of I percent, for each full month the employee is
somber 55 years of age at the date of separation. The annuity computed
under subsections (c) and (e) of this section for a. Member retiring
sunder the second or t.h rd sentence of section 8336(f) of this title or
the third sentence of section 8338(b) of this title is reduced by )f8 of
I percent for each full month not in excess of 60 mont.las, and 16 of 1
percent for each full month in excess of GO months, the Member is
under 60 years of age at the date of separation.
(h) The annuity computed under subsections (a)-(g) of this
section is reduced by 10 percent of a deposit described by section
3334(c) of this title remaining unpaid, unless the employee or Mein-
her elects to eliminate the service involved for the purpose of an-
nnity computation.
(i) The annuity computed under subsections (a)-(h) of this sec-
tion [(excluding any increase because of retirement under section 8337
of this title)] for it married employee or Member retiring under this
subchapter, or any portion of that annuity designated in writing for
the purpose of section 8341(b) of this title by the employee or Metu-
ber at the time of retirement, is reduced by 23 percent of so much
thereof as does not exceed $3,600 and by 10 percent of so much thereof
as exceeds $3,600, unless the employee or Member notifies the Civil
Service Commission in writing at the time of retirement that be does
not desire his spouse to receive an annuity under section 8341(b) of
this title.
(j) At the time of retiring under section 8336 or 8338 of this title,
an unmarried cmldo.vec or Member who is found to be in good health
by the Commission may elect as reduced annuity instead of an annuity
computed under subsections (a)-(h) of this section and name in writ-
ing an individual having an insurable interest in the employee or
Member to receive an annuity under section 8341(c) of this title after
the death of time retired employee or Member. The annuity of the em-
ployee or Member making the election is reduced by 10 percent, and
by 5 percent for each full 5 years the individual named is younger
than the retiring employee or Member. However, the total reduction
may not exceed 40 percent.
(k) The annuity computed under subsections (a)-(j) of this
see-ion for an employee who is it citizen of the United States is increased
by 16,36 for each year of service in the employ of---
(1) the Alaska Engineering Commission, or The Alaska, Rail-
road, in Alaska between March 12, 1914, and July 1, 1923; or
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(2) the Isthmian Canal Commission, or the Panama Railroad
Company on the Isthmus of Panama between May 4, 1904, and
April 1, 1914.
(1) In determining service for the purpose of computing an annuity
under each paragraph of this section, 45 per centum of each year, or
fraction thereof, of service referred to in section 8332(b)(6) which
was performed prior to the effective date of the National Guard Tech-
nicians Act of 1968 shall be disregarded.
(m) In computing any annuity under subsections (a)-(d) of this
section, the total service of an employee who retires on an immediate
annuity or dies leaving a survivor or survivors entitled to annuity includes,
without regard to the limitations imposed by subsection (e) of this section,
the days of unused sick leave to his credit under a formal leave system,
except that these days will not be counted in determining average pay or
annuity eligibility under this subchapter.
8340. Cost-of-living adjustment of annuities
(a) Effective December 1, 1965, each annuity payable from the Fund
having a commencing date before December 2, 1965, is increased by-
(1) the percent rise in the price index, adjusted to the nearest
3io of 1 percent, determined by the Civil Service Commission on
the basis of the annual average price index for calendar year 1962
and the price index for the base month of July 1965; plus
(2) 632 percent if the commencing date (or in the case of the
survivor of a deceased annuitant the commencing date of the
annuity of the retired employee) occurred before October 2, 1956,
or 1% percent if the commencing date (or in the case of the sur-
vivor of a deceased annuitant the commencing date of the annuity
of the retired employee) occurred after October 1, 1956.
Each annuity payable from the, Fund (other than the immediate
annuity of an annuitant's survivor or of a child entitled under section
8341(e) of this title) having a commencing date after December 1,
1965, but before January 1, 1966, is increased from its commencing
date as if the annuity commencing date were December 1, 1965. Each
survivor annuity authorized by--
(A) section 8 of the Act of May 29, 1930, as amended to July 6,
1950; or
(B) section 2 of the Act of June 25, 1958 (72 Stat. 219) ;
is increased by any additional amount required to make the total
increase under this subsection equal to the smaller of 15 percent or $10
a month.
(b) Each month the Commission shall determine the percent change
in the price index. Effective the first day of the third month that
begins after the price index change equals a rise of at least 3 percent
for 3 consecutive months over the price index for the base month, each
annuity payable from the Fund having a commencing date not later
than that effective date shall be increased by 1 percent plus the percent
rise in the price index (calculated on the highest level of the price
index during the 3 consecutive months) adjusted to the nearest
~io of 1 percent.
(c) Eligibility for an annuity increase under this section is gov-
erned by the commencing date of each annuity payable from the Fund
as of the effective date of an increase, except as follows:
(1) Effective from its commencing date, an annuity payable
from the Fund to an annuitant's survivor (except a child entitled
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tinder section 8341(e) of this title), which annuity commences the
day after the death of the anmiituut and after the' effective date of
tlhe first increase under this section, shall be increased by the total
percent. increase the annuitant was receiving under this section at
death, However, the increase in it survivor annuity authorized by
section 8 of the Act of May 29, 1930, as amended to Jul - 6, 1950,
shall be computed as if (he ootnuity commencing date had been the
effective date of the first increase under this section.
(2) For the purpose of computing [an] the annuity of [that
conunences after the effective date of the first increase under this
section to] a child under section 8341(e) of this title that corn-
oterrces on, as alter time first day of the first month that begins cm or
"
ter the date of enactment of the (vit Service llt~tirement.lmen'finents
and [$2,160] $3,2440 appearing in section 8341(e) of this title shall
be increased by the total percent increases allowed and in force
sunder this section [or employee annuities that commenced after
October i, 1956] on or after such day and, in case of it deceased
;tnrutitant, the items [40] 6(J per vent and [50175 percent ap-
pearing in section 8341(e) of this title shall be increased by the
total percent increase allowed and in force [tinder this section]
to the annuitant [at death] tinder this section an or after such day.
(d) This section does not authorize an increase in an additional
annuity purchased at retirement by voluntary contributions.
(e) The monthly installanent of annuity after adjustment under
this section shall be fixed at the nearest dollar. However, the monthly
installment shall after adjustment reflect an increase of at least $1.
(f) Effective September 1, 196G, or on the commencing date of atI-
nuity, whichever is later, the annuity of each surviving spouse whose
entitlement to annuity payable front the Fund resulted from the death
of----
(1) an employee or Member before October 11, 1962; or
(2) a retired employee or Member whose retirement was based
on it separation from service before October 11, 1962;
is increased by 10 percent.
?&111. Survivor annuities
(d) If an employee or Member dies after completing at least [5
years] 18 consecutive months of civilian service. the .vidow or de-
pendent widower of the employee or Member is entitled to an annuity
equal to 55 percent of an annuity computed under section 8339 (a)-
(e) and (1t) of this title as may apply with respect to the employee
or [Member.] Member, except that in the computation of the annuity
under such section, the annuity of the employee or ?Member shall be at
least the smaller of (i) Ap:0 percent of leis average pay, or (ii) the sum
obtained under such section after increasing his service of the type last
performed by the period elapsing between the date of death and the date
he would have become 60 years of age. The annuity of the widow or
dependent. widower commences on the day after the employee or
.Member dies. This annuity and the right thereto terminate on the
last day of the month before
(1) tine widow or dependent widower dies;
(2) the dependent widower becomes capable of self-support;
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(3) the widow or dependent widower of an employee remarries
before becoming 60 years of age; or
(4) the widow or dependent widower of a Member remarries.
(e) (1) If an employee or Member dies after completing at least
[5 years] 18 consecutive months of civilian service, or an employee or
Member dies after retiring under this subchapter, and is survived by
a spouse, each surviving child is entitled to an annuity equal to the
smallest of-
(A) [40] 60 percent of the average pay of the employee or
Member divided by the number of children;
(B) [$600] $900; or
(C) [$1,800] $2,700 divided by the number of children;
subject to section 8340 of thi, title. If the employee or Member
is not survived by a spouse, each surviving child is entitled to
an annuity equal to the smallest of-
(i) [50] 75 percent of the average pay of the employee or
Member divided by the number of children;
(ii) [$720] $1,080; or
(iii) [$2,160] $3,240 divided by the number of children;
subject to section 8340 of this title.
? 8345. Payment of benefits; commencement, termination, and
waiver of annuity
(a) Each annuity is stated as '.in annual. amount, one-twelfth of
which, fixed at the nearest dollar, constitutes the monthly rate
payable on the first business day o-f the month after the month or other
period for which it has accrued.
(b) Except as otherwise provided, the annuity of an employee or
Member commences on the day after he is separated from the service,
or on. the day after his pay ceases and he meets the service and the
age or disability requirements for title to annuity. An annuity payable
from the Fund allowed after September 5, 1960, commences on the
day after the occurrence of the event on which payment thereof is
based.
(c) The annuity of a retired employee or Member terminates on the
day death or other terminating event provided by this subchapter
occurs. The annuity of a survivor terminates on the last day of the
month before death or other terminating event occurs.
(d) An individual entitled to annuity from the Fund may decline
to accept all or any part of the annuity by a waiver signed and filed
with the Civil Service Commission. The waiver may be revoked in
writing at any time. Payment of the annuity waived may not be made
for the period during which the waiver was in effect.
(e) Payment due a minor, or an individual mentally incompetent
or under other legal disability, may be remade to the person who is
constituted guardian or other fiduciary by the law of the State of
residence of the claimant or is otherwise legally vested with the care
of the claimant or his estate. If guardian or other fiduciary of the
individual under legal disability has not been appointed under the
law of the State of residence of the claimant, payment may be made
to any person who, in the judgment of the Commission, is responsible
for the care of the claimant, and the payment bars recovery by any
other person.
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(f) An amount, not to exceed $3,000 each year, which is received by Alk
an annuitant or a survivor annuitant under this subchapter and, except
for this subsection, which would be -included as gross income for purposes
of the Federal income tax lad's, shall not be included as gross income
aifader such laws.
8348. Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund
(it) There is a Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund. The
Fund-
(I) is ap ropriated for the paaynment of-
[(f)1 (.4) benefits as provided by this subchapter; and
[(2)] (. B) administrative expenses incurred by the Civil
Service Commission in placing in effect each annuity adjust-
ment granted under section 8340 of this title[.]; and
(2) is made available, subject to such annual limitation as the
Congress may prescribe, for any expenses incurred by the Commis-
sion in connection with the administration of this chapter and other
retirement and annuity statutes.
(b) The Secretary of the Treasury may accept and credit to the
Fund money received in the form of a donation. gift, legacy, or be-
quest, or otherwise contributed for the benefit of civil service em-
ployees generally.
(c) The Secretary shall immediately invest, in interest-bearing
securities of the United States such currently available portions of the
Fund its are not immediately required fur payments from the Fund.
The income derived from tlte.,e investments constitutes a part of the
Fund.
(d) The purposes for which obligations of the United States may
he issued under the Second I.ibertv Bond Act, as amended, are ex-
tended to authorize the issuance at par of public-debt obligations for
purchase by the Fund. The obligations issued for purchase by the Fund
shall have maturities fixed with due regard for the needs of the Fund
nand bear interest at. is rate equal to the average market yield computed
as of the end of (lie calendar month next preceding the date of the is-
sue, borne by all marketable interest-bearing obligations of the United
States then forming a part of the public debt which are not due or
callable until after the expiration of 4 years from the end of that cal-
endar month. If the average market Yield is not a multiple of !g of 1
percent, the rate of interest on the obligations shall be the multiple of
1 of 1 percent nearest the average market yield.
(e) Tile Secretary may purchase other interest-bearing obligations
of the United States, or obligations guaranteed as to both principal
and interest by the United States, on original issue or at the market
price only if he determines that the purchases are in the, public interest.
[(f) The Commission shall submit estimates of the appropriations
necessary to finance the Fund on it naarnnal cost-plus-interest basis a and
to carry out this subchapter.]
E(g) Money now or hereafter contained in the Fund may not be
used to pay an increase in annuity benefits or a new annuity benefit
tinder this subchapter or an earlier statute which is authorized by
aaniendment thereof until and unless an appropriation is made to the
Fund in an amount- which the Commission estimate; to be sufficient to Aft
prevent an innnnediate increase in the unfunded accrued liability of
the Fluid.]
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of
(f) Any statute which authorizes- -
(1) new or liberalized benefits payable from the Fund, including
annuity increases other than under section 8840 of this title;
(2) extension of the coverage of this subchapter to new groups of
employees; or
(3) increases in pay in which benefits are computed;
is deemed to authorize appropriations to the Fund to finance the unfunded
liability created by that statute, in 80 equal annual installments with
interest computed at the rate used in the then most recent valuation of the
Civil Service Retirement System and with the first payment thereof due
as of the end of the fiscal year in which each new or liberalized benefit,
extension of coverage, or increase in pay is effective
(g) At the end of each fiscal year, the Commission shall notify the
Secretary of the Treasury of the amount equivalent (1) to interest on the un-
funded liability computed for that year at the interest rate used in the then
most recent valuation of the System, and (2) that portion of disbursement
for annuities for that year, which the Commission estimates is attributable
credit allowed for military service. Before closing the accounts for each
fiscal year, the Secretary shall credit to the Fund, as a Government con-
tribution, out of any money in the Treasury of the United States not
otherwise appropriated, the following percentages of such amounts: 10
percent for 1971; 20 percent for 1972; 30 percent for 1978; 4-0 percent for
1974; 50 percent for 1975; 60 percent for 1976; 70 percent for 1977; 80
percent for 1978; 90 percent for 1979; and 100 percent for 1980 and for
each fiscal year thereafter. The Commission shall report to the President
and to the Congress the sums credited to the Fund under this subsection.
II. TITLE I, INDEPENDENT OFFICES APPROPRIATION
ACT, 1962
PAYMENT TO CIVIL SERVICE RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY FUND
For financing the annuity benefits and increases provided by the
Act of June 25, 1958 (72 Stat. 218), 344,637,000, to be credited to the
civil service retirement and disability fund [: Provided, That the Civil
Service Commission shall include annually, in its estimates to the
Bureau of the Budget, estimates of the appropriations necessary to
reimburse the civil service retirement and disability fund for the
amounts paid out of the fund by reason of the enactment of Public
Law 85-465, and the Bureau of the Budget shall submit such estimates
annually to the Congress].
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Tuesday - 14 October 1969
6. As a followup to her call of yesterday
afternoon, I met with Mrs. Gwen Harrison, Administrative Assistant to
Representative William Mailliard (R., Calif.), and provided the requested
news clipping for use in responding to constituent inquiries on the Green
Beret matter.
Services Committee staff, and updated the information previously provided
on the current Soviet Soyuz mission.
7. Gave to Pat Valentine, in the office of
Representative Tom Railsback (A., Ill.), material for the Congressman's use
in responding to a congressional inquiry about the CIA.
8. McL.srs. met with 25X1
Mr. Frank Slatinshek, House Armen Services Committee staff,, and reviewed
with him the proposed Agency legislation to update the CIA retirement system.
(See Memorandum for the Record.)
11 9. Met with vvlr. Frank Slatinshek, House Armed
10. Met with M.C. James Wilson, House Science and
Astronautics Committee staff, and briefed him on the current Soviet Soyuz
mission.
11. Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House Appro-
priations Committee stn , who confirmed his earlier advice to me that he
intends to retire at the end of the month and take the benefits of the Daniels/
McGee bill. He told me that no official notice has been taken by the Chairman
of the intended retirement and no designations have been made and there have
been no conversations with regard to succession on the Defense Subcommittee
staff. He assumes that in all probability Ralph Preston will succeed him and
he will advise me at the earliest possible moment of any word on the subject
so that we can start working with Ralph.
I updated the information previously furnished Mr. Michaels on the
current Soviet Soyuz mission.
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14 October 1969
MEMORANDUM FOR THE RECORD
.SUBJECT: Meeting with Frank Slatinshek re Agency
Retirement System
1. Messrs. R'?iller, met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek,
House Armed Services Committee sta? , an reviewed with him the proposed
Agency legislation to update the CIA retirement system. In Mr. Slatinshek's
judgment it would be pointless to even present the Agency's administrative
authority provision that would allow administrative updating of the Agency
retirement system as legislation changes are made in the Civil Service
Retirement Act. This is a matter that the Chairman and Committee consider
their responsibility: to oversee changes in our system as they might be desired
from time to time.
handling of the bill.
that in all probability only pro forma hearings would be involved in Committee
2. Mr. Slatinshek is in accord that the effective dates of the various
provisions of our bill should coincide with the effective dates set forth in the
Daniels/McGee bill. He requested that the Committee copy of our official
letter to the Speaker updating the legislation be sent forward at the earliest
possible date so that the Chairman can get it into the hopper. It was indicated
Assistant Legislative Counsel
Distribution:
Orig - Subj C~,er?rru-t.
I Chrn
OLC/JGO:sml (15 Oct '69)
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel
Monday - 13 October 1969
6.
Page 2
J. Sourwine, Chief Counsel, Senate
Internal ecuri y oub committee, asked if we had any information on or
security" and received no information. He said if we had no interest then
He said he had already checked with those responsible for "interna
25X1
25X1
7, I IIn an chance encounter I asked Carl Marcy,
Chief of Staff, Senate Foreign Relations Committee, about the Symington
Subcommittee hearings on IS. S. involvements in Southeast Asia and what role
his staff was playing therein. He said that Messrs. Pincus and Paul were
"running this show on their own, " but that he personally was following the
hearings with interest and expected they would produce some very far-reaching
results indeed.
8. Met with Russ Blandford, Chief Counsel, House
Armed Services Committee, and briefed him on:
a. Recent developments regarding Soviet strategic
missile deployment.
b. Preliminary analysis regarding a new Soviet aircraft.
c. Current Soviet Soyuz mission.
25X1
Blandford complained that items a. and b, above confirmed his belief that
Agency estimates on such matters were often too conservative.
I also discussed with Mr. Blandford a recent personnel case! in which25X1
he was interested. (See Memo for Record; for details)
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI DDS DDS&T
OPPB EA/DDP
'JOHN M. MAURY
`/Legislative Counsel
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4UL i
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Friday - i0 October 1969
1. I Provided George Murphy, on the
staff of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, with a report "Soviet
Design and Development of Advanced Digital Computers. "
2. Hand carried to Mrs. Verda Barnes,
Administrative Assistant to Senator Frank Church (D. , Idaho), a
covering Agency authorities for declining to provide information in
connection with the Green Beret case.
suggested reply to a constituent inquiry from
3. Hand carried to Ed Braswell, on the staff
of the Senate Armed Services Committee, an Agency report entitled:
"Panama, one Year After the Coup" in connection with Senator Stennis'
expressed interest in Panama.
I also provided Braswell with a package of materials in
connection with our request for legislation comparable to the Daniels /
McGee bills.
one hour to meet with us before Tuesday.
4. Met with Frank Slatinshek,
House Armed Services Committee staff, and scheduled a meeting for
Tuesday afternoon, 14 October, to discuss our proposed amendments
to the Agency retirement bill. The Committee's workload is such that
Frank is committed through the weekend and does not have the necessary
/ JOHN M. MAURY
~
Legislative Counsel
cc:
ER
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI
DDS
DDS&T
OPPB
EA/DDP
~Ea ~T
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10 October 1969
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SUBJECT: Meeting with Colonel George Carey re Briefing
of House Armed Services on Sensitive Information
1. Met with Colonel George Carey, Jr., USAF, by chance at the
House Armed Services Committee staff rooms and reviewed the problem
faced by his office in the handling of the information on Soviet variable
geometry aircraft which is now available in the sanitized at the 25X1
"Secret" level.
Chairman Rivers is receiving the attention that it warrants.
information at the "Secret" level with its very recent history of handling by
later in the evening and was pleased that this matter of the release o suc
at the "Secret" level. He also noted that he had talked to our
tion with Mark of whether there would be any restrictions on showing this
document to Chairman Rivers since the information was now being released
2. Colonel Carey advised that in the original go around his authority
for briefing Chairman Rivers and Russell Blandford about the report from
a highly classified collection project had not only been given him from his
front office at DIA, but had also been cleared through General Jim Lawrence
(Jack Stempler's office) with the Secretary of Defense. He noted that at the
time of that briefing Chairman Rivers had been very pointed in his remarks
that this was information that should be given to the American public. He
had cautioned the Chairman on this and pointed out the sensitivity of the
information. In keeping with this background experience, when the sanitized
the same subject matter was received, Colonel Carey called
hOSR/DDI, to verify that the release of this information was
appropriate for inclusion in the DIA daily bulletin. He also raised the ques-
Distribution:
Orig - Subj
1 - Chrn
OLC/JGO/sml (13 Oct 169)
Assi Legislative Uounsel
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Thursday - 9 October 1969
7. Met with Miss Berniece Kalinowski,
personal secretary to Frank Slatinshek, House Armed Services Committee
staff, who advised that Mr. Slatinshek will be tied up at least through today
in conference on the defense bill and that the earliest he would have any
time for discussion of the Agency's retirement bill would be tomorrow
afternoon.
8. Met with Mr. James Wilson, House Science
and Astronautics ommi ee staff, and briefed him on a Soviet space
activity. Chairman Miller is in California until the first of the week.
9. Received a call from Mr. Robert Michaels,
Staff Assistant, House Appropriations Committee, who wanted to be sure
that the Agency had seen the article entitled "The CIA and The Green Berets:
A Strange Case of Mistaken Identies (sic)?" by L. Fletcher Prouty who is
touted by the Armed Forces Journal as an individual highly knowledgeable
on CIA and its activities. He advised that the information in this article is
contrary to the information provided the Appropriations Committee yesterday
by the Secretary of the Army. On meeting with Mr. Michaels I gave him a
copy of a previous article by Prouty that appeared in The New Republic of 23
and 30 August 1969 and advised that the biographic sketch on Prouty that
appeared in the Armed Forces Journal was somewhat inflated. I also
reviewed with Mr. Michaels some of the details of the Prouty article.
Although he is still concerned that such misinformation about the Agency is
-appearing in the public press, no further response or information is desired
from the Agency at this time.
10. Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, Staff
Assistant, House Appropriations Committee, and gave him certain Agency
personnel information for the Chairman. (See Journal item #5 of 19 Septem.-
-ber for details.)
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Tuesday - 7 October 1969
25X1
I. I I Delivered to the offices of Senators Hugh
Scott and Mike Gravel FBIS items in which their names were mentioned.
Senator Gravel's Executive Assistant said that the FBIS item which dealt
with Senator Gravel's opposition to the AEC nuclear test at Amchitka was
very timely. The Senator had discussed this test with the Soviets previously
and plans to meet with Ambassador Dobrynin on this same matter tomorrow.
2. Talked with Ed Bauser and George Murphy,
on the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy staff, concerning Mr. Bauser's
letter to the Director forwarding the William Beecker column which
appeared in the New York Times on 2 October. After some discussion,
Bauser and Murphy accepted my oral response to the effect that the report
referred to in the column on "spy capabilities" was being prepared under
the aegis of the National Security Council and therefore could not be made
available by the Agency. No written response is necessary. (See Memo for
the Record for 'details. )
4. I talked with Mr. Pat Holt, senior staff man on
the Senate Foreign Re ations ad hoc Subcommittee on U. S. Agreements
and Commitments Abroad, about the hearings on Laos scheduled for next
week (see Memorandum for the Record.).
5. Met with Mrs. Oneta Stockstill, Executive
Secretary, House Armed Services Committee, who told me that no further
consideration has been given by the Committee to filling the vacancies in the
various subcommittees which were occasioned by the death of Representative
William Bates (R., Mass. ). It may be assumed that Representative Charles
Gubser (R., Calif.) will in all probability be named to the CIA Subcommittee,
'but it may be some time before such decision is made by the Committee.
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Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Tuesday - 7 October 1969
6. Met with Mr. Frank Slatinshek, Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, and talked in general terms about
amendment of the Agency's retirement bill in consonance with the Daniels -
McGee bill passed by the House and the Senate. Mr. Slatinshek advised
that the Chairman will be introducing amending legislation possibly this
afternoon to update the military retirement system in keeping with the
liberalized authority for cost of living increases set forth in the Daniels-
McGee bill. He told me it is anticipated that the House will accept the
McGee version on the floor tomorrow. As for our bill, Frank requested a
draft of the Agency's adaptation of the Daniels-McGee bill provisions together
with a draft of any additional provisions the Agency might desire for his
personal study. It is his opinion that it would be a waste of time to even
forward a copy of our draft, "Administrative Authority Amendment, " which
would authorize the Director to adopt future changes in civil service retire-
ment legislation. Such a measure could not hope for Committee passage at
this time, let alone passage by the House of Representatives.
7. Met with Miss Louise Ellis, House Armed
Services Committee staff, and reviewed with her the updating of security
clearances. Appropriate documentation was completed.
8. Met with Mr. Pat Holt, Consultant,
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who advised that Senator J. Fulbright
(D. , Ark.) will be travelling to Trinidad as an official delegate of the United
States Senate to the Commonwealth Parliamentarian Meeting and should have
no need for support or assistance by the Agency during the visit.
Milrae Jensen, Staff Assistant, advised me later in the day that
Senators Fulbright and Marlow Cook (R0 , Ky.) will be accompanied by
Mr. Seth Tillman, Committee Consultant. The congressional delegation
will be departing for Trinidad on 14 October and returning to Washington on
19 October.
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STAT
CONFER
N CE IS NEXT STEP
' By SHIRLEY ELDER
Star Special Writer
The congressional struggle
over defense spending is far
from finished.
There must now be a confer-
ence between the two Armed
Services Committees to resolve
differences between the $20 bil-
lion Senate bill and, the $21.3
billion version passed late Fri-
day by the House.
After that, the fight will begin
again on financing the projects
authorized in the single. bill
drafted by the conferees.
The liberals, who made it
clear this year that Congress
wilt not idly approve military
spending requests, are ready td
dpi ; i t i to every step of the way.
x let ady, Sen. Edward W.
l3roroke, R-Mass., has objected to
la provision in the House bill that
threatens a cut-off in military
rescarcli funds to colleges that
refuse to cooperate in ROTC
programs.
That is "plainly intended to
intimidate colleges and universi?
ties",
Liberal critics of defense
spending in both the House and
the sedate probably are better
organized this year than any-
l:imo in recent history.
Although they knew they
world will few -- if any -
important floor battles, they put
together comprehensive sehed-
tIes of proposed cuts in both the
house and the Senate.
In the House debate, just fin-
ished, there was never any
doubt that the pro-military
forces of Armed Services Chair.
man L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C.,
would triumph.
But the victory, rather than
Rivers' prestige, has
"~ l rill"
given new recognition to the
so-called "Fearless Five," jun-
ior members of Rivers' commit-
tee who led the assault on the
bill. Their peak strength in the
432-member House was 141 votes
against deployment of the Safe-
guard antiballistic missile.
Rivers is not impressed by the
unusual challenge. He warned in
a v a n c e that "Johnny.
come-lately military experts"
would try to poke holes in his
$21.3 billion bill.
For Rivers, it becomes a very
personal thing. After disposing
of a string of amendments, he
complained about the "abuse
that was heaped on my shoul-
ders."
But the bitterness that flowed
from Rivers' sensitivity toward
the ri.ilitary, and his pride in the
bill, is largely eliminated from
the permanent record of the
House debates.
Gone is an attack by Rivers on
one of the "Fearless Five," Rep.
Robert L. Leggett, D-Calif. In it,
Rivers recalled Leggett's refusal
to give up debate time to "know
the facts" about something.
"I'm afraid that's the only
statement he has made during
this debate that was entirely ac-
curate," Rivers said sarcastical-
ly. He noted there are a number
of military bases in Leggett's
district and warned that the mil-
itary "has a ,capacity for know-
ing ing who their friends are."
Response Deleted Too
Gone from the record also is
L e g g e t t 's peace-making re-
sponse: "We really are not far
apart." And his comment that
the expression of critical views
on military bills "may be par-
tially suicidal."
Gone too is a fiery defense of suggestion of the Pentagon,
Leggett by a fellow Californian, from the Cheyenne to the Cobra
Pep. John E. Moss, who said he helicopter.
was speaking for the rest of the There also is a major philo-
Democratic delegation when he sophical difference between the
said "we take umbrage" at Riv- Senate and House bills on re-
ers' attack, search and development. The
"Let there be any retaliation Senate eliminated a total of
against that (California) delega- $794.4 million in itemized cuts,
ti on," Moss said, "and, by God, mostly in controversial new
we'l: fight you all the way." weapons programs.
Both Rivers' and Leggett's re- Rivers directed that all but
marks, along with a plea for $54.6 million of these cuts be
fair play from Rep. Allard K. restored and ordered, instead, a
htfwen:;tein, D.-N.Y., will appear 9.8 percent across the board re-
Icier in what's known as "exten- duction, leaving it to the defense
sion of remarks," but not in the chiefs to decide where to cut
official record of the debate, back. some $800 million in proj-
which, congressmen may change ects. The Pentagon asked for
or correct before it is published. $8.2 billion in research and de-
Moss apparently had all his velopment funds.
words permanently deleted. The Nixon administration orig-
Most of the dissension grew
out of the angry reaction of lib-
erals to Rivers' repeated, and
always successful, efforts to cut
off debate
Several .
key amendments were
never discussed at all and two
were under such strict time lim-
its that each congressman was
heard for only 45 seconds.
Rivers said he felt everything
that needed to be said had been
sai t ,several times over in the
long Senate debate, Ile was im-
patient to get the bill through
vita the least intrusion on his
collea;us,-' time and, in the end
total defense authorization bill.
That was trimmed below $20 bil-
lion in the Senate, mostly by
Stennis' committee.
Defense requests for restora-
tion of Senate cuts came to
$968.8 million, making the new
administration r e q u e s t total
$20.9 billion.
The House bill contains none
of the provisions of the Senate
measure relating to Congres-
sional oversight of possible
wasteful and inefficient military
spending. Efforts to add' the
same amendments failed on the
he dlid. Not a dollar was changed'
by i he liberal effort.
be largest dollar items added
in he house are $1 billion for
Navy warships, a pet Rivers
project; $52 million diverted at
the Pentagon's request from a
fifth C5A cargo jet squadron to
F5 Freedom Fighters; and $86
million switched, also at the
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7 ? T 7 ' ~ T 1 A T l 1 1 N . ! 1 r * 1 A',..Q I I 1{
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STAT I N ..
STAT
E Ai T6CR 'II SA)( THE
ff"
STRATI ICI.C...A RCRAF? _. .C ,. HQU~ ?FLOG 0
R , G =ARC .BI II II-1G ER I E `.. ; $ N 'tl1':
RUSSIANS ARE BUILDING A BOMBER. EFY ANYBODY IN THE UN TE,D STATES
V1 R
INCLIJOIQ I R N~i-~I
ARE YOU F L oN THE
RS?--T I.S.', . Y r : T4
V
OF THREE-'FOURTHS OF A MINUTE FOR THOSE. ON THEIR FEE A
TO Bl HEARD, REP. JOHN B. ANDERSON, R-ILL., CHAIRMAN OF THE ;:HOUSE
REPUBLICAN CONFERENCE AND A PART OF THE GOP LEADERSHIP TEAM, TOOK'HIS
45 SECONDS TO DELIVER A BLAZING ATTACK ON WHAT HE CALLED "GAG RULE"
PROCEDURE IN EFFECT ON THE BILL.
"TO RESTRICT THE MEMBERS OF THIS HOUSE, THE GREATEST DELIBERATIVE
BODY IN THE WORLD, TO 45 SECONDS TO DISCUSS $7 BILLION' AUTHORIZATION
IS AN OUTRAGE," ANDERSON ROARED. "IT'S GAG RULE. MY CONSTITUENTS PAY
PART OF THESE COSTS AND THEY EXPECT THESE MATTERS TO BE' CONSIDERED!"
REP. ANDREW JACOBS D IND., USED HIS BRIEF TIME,ALLOTMENT TO JOIN
IN THE PROTEST. "A CIVILIZED BODY DOES NOT STIFLE.OPPOSITIQN,"
JACOBS SAID. "IT ANSWERS IT. SHAME ON THIS HOUSE TODAY! SHAME ON THIS
HOUSE.
.BOTH ANDERSON AND JACOBS WERE APPLAUDED,. ALTHOUGH AS. RIVERS WAS
QUICK TO POINT OUT, A MAJORITY OF MEMBERS VOTING HAD SUPPORTED HIS
AND OTHER MOVES TO LIMIT DEBATE. AND IN OTHE t SPEECHES! RIVERS' FAIRNESS
HAD BEEN WARMLY LAUDED.
.RIVERS STIRRED INITIAL RESENTMENT EARLY IN THE DAY'S DEB TE AFTER
w 1 1.
REP, ROBERT. L?: ' N o1N
Sa1.OO . M4.ILLIQN.._IQ....,Dt-A.II OR F Q , .FAT , 1 Vti r. 'NE ..,Dj.~f#, KIEV, .M. NNED
BOMBER PLANE. IN TH :_?FIVE; MINLtIES ~-~QR~iBL]..Y &LO.T". -. 'tE:SPONSOR OF AN
L1E
AiFNt c4Zt T 4t ;.. ~ . ! A ., ~- ..N V Tr P1 .AT~. , y,MidsI
AGE .. f"~4)SSX,~_ ' SAS RE1fk:RtLLV,G.. T B.Q ELcflNST I.CX1ON .
` I Sl~..D, ( Rk,. ER~w I. ~E .R 4 " f 11 .. ,9 J_H&f E. A,.:MEW .EPVDER ,I JOVE THAT
at. j_E
14 M
ALL I)EBA E N THIS I MENDME CLOSES
-T ftE" Off "SU " 9D HI T5 M _UN A' ' 91 STANDING VOTE. WITHOUT
FURTHER DISCUSSION THE AMENDMENT WAS KILLED ON A VOICE: VOTE.
II1_ TII -~P,~1ST?, f1HTEM ,P .S S D.A -SR, ? S ND REN. DONALD M.
iW"
E
AF E MEMBERS HAD APPROVED A D BA
BILLION RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT SECTION, WITH A RESULTING TIME ALLQTMENI
T SKING THE RIGMT
(M L ITATR
lil&& ;THIN+1YON--HANDLERS OF A $21.3 BILLION DEFENSE BUYING BILL,
PROV(KINGG OUTCRIES OF "OUTRAGEI" AND "SHAMEI", CLAMPED SUCH TIGHT
RULES ON HOUSE DEBATE TODAY THAT DISSENTERS AT ONE.POINT WERE LIMITED
TO 45 SECONDS EACH IN WHICH TO PRESENT THEIR ARGUMENTS.
RESTRICTING AMENDMENTS WERE KNOCKED DOWN IN RAPID FIRE ORDER AS
THE BILL'S MANAGERS PRESSED TOWARD CERTAIN PASSAGE OF THE. ANNUAL
PROCUREMENT BILL LATER TODAY. ASKED SERVICES COMMITTEE.CHAIRMAN L.
MENDEL RIVERS, D-S.C., WAS CHARGED WITH HAVING RUN ROUGH SHOD OVER
OPPONENTS.
TV I IMITATION ON THE BILLS $7
.
Y) .
n(: I ire ~,,: N i9
h
'
ou
ress item for t
r
T7
Rcf: Nu
wAy 4k,
THE BILL IS ONE THE'SENATE DEBATED EIGHT-,,WEEKS BEFORE APPROVING THE
MEASURE. THIS WAS THE THIRD DAY OF DEBATE IN THE. HOUSE, AND THE
OUTCOME WAS ,A FOREGONE CONSLUSION. MAIN LIMITING AMENDMENTS OFFERED
BY A SO,-CALLED "FEARLESS FIVE" MINORITY OF DISSENTERS ON RIVERS'
COMMITTEE HAD GONE DOWN THE DRAIN AND THEIR;,,.SPONSORS CONCEDED OTHERS .
WERE DOOMED..
O 3
a
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I)P -: i R I B I I"i'ION:
STATE
>
Military is iaan ing critics accuoed Chairman T, Mendel Rivers,
D S10., and the House itself of riding roughshod over their
i bi.
tail lc~ i QCUxmc
t're'ss 11tint y/or 11cri 1)(11
r..,17WX
1b ,1eo
military ending Read 280
By JIM .ADAMS
. nsociated Press Writer
WASHINGTON AP _ ,A. di utL..Qv
eta 1' abort Z Z et#~ '- :.x., td, Gl a lti q..,a i ..
in eia -.n- i ..1~ Q7/! c? ~c ' t udxe.
ft~g~: .air ,rA Ra$r3 the 9n A't'!~t R WWAAl u~ntar WAV to 1i&rrin& Anrt1 a
o'rorts to cut $2.2 billion from the ill, including $23
million for aU.S. Advanced Manned Strategic bomber.,
tV 1J1. a case s 2nd
1O
gra b QUA
JC21O'a 1 Oct. 3
T-rogram. C
elections.
The spending critics '' major out pro opals were turned apido
Thursday but the House did vote to hill. the Sheridan tank
Rope -Donald M. Fraser, l -Miami., said, the strategic bomber question
rr)d other o~neending out Iroioaals. were too important to. ire run
rou Itohod ovor ao we have just seen. $ s He said. if Howse members are
is tw 1l.ing to debate issues they should"fie defeated. in the 1970
li.e'cnes ani, msWe?`d o ea o . a "ur er `; " r e ci t u ect. ,..The
Coomment: LEGCO has a copy.
Thu>e comments represent the initial and tentative reaction of the Of 06
refCtirrent In tellictence to the attached item from the news servir :,
:3 t)R I.
Item: No. j7 Ref: Nu.
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TRANSMITTAL SLIP 1*4
ROOM NO.
BUILDING
REMARKS:
A L) -P
o
ilc
AiJ
FROM:
ROOM NO.
BUILDING
EXTENSION
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TOP S)ECRE' ' SECRI"I'T, (.,ON F;l t_)1_, i i A r, c .1.;~ ~,~ -.
1)1STRIBIJTI()N:
STAT
I'ri's Item f?urr I/t(, I)l;l
JPI-120
(M TLITAF'Y PROCUREMENT )
-
WASHINGTON--CONTRARY TO EARLI`-:F' RI PORTS, RUSSIA 1` t 1;:
ADVANCED NEW 11Alr,I ED 13O r1 1Z 11"1E CtsAIIL.
T{'~ !1Y.
1^1IT`TFE ASSE1~T1 -)
AR'1ED SERVICES C(1
_,
,
ni'E SOSU'tH ChOLIIIA DF.[SOC.RAT, ;, ;f. IN 3 OllI(^'' sli A 'r r ,
HE
A}', 1LANF. It)tliL ,ATr-
DEVELOPMENT OF A SIr1II
.
_.
INFORMATION _..SO rLCRFT }N! CO Lt I i ,iAR IT EVEN It'{
SERVICES C(?rIr1IT}EE
"S
ID
AR
F:, i!U;~ Ai 1 . I rTl -
CO''
R
H
1
}+
F
ERE
' H:Ps WERE WRONG IN N Ai)V IS1"`( . TIL
I L
SI:I~VICES
A1 1r;D
G
DISSI/NTIf1
FIVE
"THERE IS NO EVIDENCE" THAT RUS:'IA IS ADDING A NEW BOMBER TO 11E..1R
ARSENAL. ~1
"WE HAVE EVERY REASONTO BELIEVE RUSSIA IN WELL ON THE w'Ay
?'
1
'
.)1i f
C KE}~ ,1L
DEVELOPMENT OF A BRAND NEW E OMBER," FTIVERE; A 11).
DISCREPANCY, HE TOLD THE RULES GROUP:
"THERE:.. RE ONLY _T.WQ,?MEN3i RS.JOF tHr (ARME'=) S1 1~G' LC1 ,) ; ~rr,l t.k
CLEARF .,TEQR.,T,1f,G...kUG1 EaT . ~'., E RET INFORM AT ION IY: LLF A.;,.,
S
THE COMMITTEE' i:',IOE u`
R-ILL
DS
.,
,
(REP. LESLIE C. AREN
THIS (THE CONTRARY REPORT ON THE POMP,I:)t) IS INIACCIII?ATE.
RIVERS ALSO TOLD THE RULES G:,OU- PRESIDENT NIXON SUPF'O C1 'i.`~
COMMITTEE'S INCLUSION IN THE AN'IUAL DEFENSE F 'HYIN , BILL Ch'
UNBUDGETED $1 BILLION TO SPEED UP MODERNIZATION 01 T11> AV ;
1 1
1 )II': I i
`
.
COMMITTEE ALLOTTED $3.5 BILLION INTE AD OF
FOR NEW NAVY CONSTRUCTION.
"THE PRESIDENT TOLD ME HE'LL GO ALONG WITH IT," I IV1.'
NAVY IS JUST ABOUT WORN OUT. OVER 50 PER CENT
YEAR OLD. OVER 50 PER CEr,)T OF RUSSIA'S SHIPS ART.
RIVERS ASKED. THE COMMITTEE TO CLEAR THE PILL TO - II1,. 11c
ACTION STARTING TOMORROW, UNDER A RULE ALLOWING ONLY THI;EE
O'NEILL JR., DASS. , TP PROVIDE AT LEAST 1 C HL)U-F OR
V; 1
o
PER
`1
1 +
OF IT ALLOTTED TO MEMBERS OPPO )INS A STEPUP IN
SOME OTHER PROVISIONS OF THE BILL.
n
"THE SENATE SPENT 56 DAYS CONSIDERING ITS ter I':J" )11 ! 1.1 .
'
O'NEILL ASSERTED. "THERE'S NO REASON WHY WE IN HOUS1~ 11
THURSDAY."
N
IT BY 6 P
.
.
. c 1 1 1' I t
HA'`
'.
ARENDS SAID HE WAS CONCERNED THAT THERE ALREADY
'
HA F
I
IS X1
1
MUCH IDLE CHATTER" ABOUT CRITICAL DEFENSE
M CH TIME TM THE HOUSE WE ALSO WILL GET INTO IDLE CI{ATT i-.
U
r .N I n r.
IN THE END THE COMMITTEE PROVIDED FOR FOUR }1O11ICl OF
TO BE FOLLOWED BY ADDITIONAL TIf1E ON SPECIFIC Ar11 II 1 i T: . 1
SPENT EIGHT WEEKS ON THE BILL, FINALLY f-f:1~FA111`I(i '(~ >I'
CURB SUCH SPECIFIC MILITARY PRJGRAMS.
AT A NEWS CONFERENCE TODAY A FIVE-MAN A MED S %RV (IC" ;`IN,
DESCRIBING THEMSELVES AS "THE FEARLESS FIVE"- TO MU I
!
1 SUPPORT FOR AMENDMENTS TO BAR DEPLOYMENT OF THE At"" It '1UY (A-) .
vJF1 UKnUJ I fwC91?J_..J,
MISSILE, DEVELOP A NEW FIGHTER FOR USE OF FRIENDLY NATIC" }
UP DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMSA--ADVANCED MANNED STRATEGIC AIRui AET, l~l;
MANNED BOMBER.
9/30--E0315PED
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Tuesday - 30 September 1969
1.1 Talked with Richard Kimmel, of the
Joint Committee on Atomic Energy staff. In connection with his earlier
inquiry, I advised him that we had no references in our files to there being
2. I (George Murphy, Joint Committee on Atomic
Energy staff, calmed to make it clear that the announcement made by Senator
George Aiken on the 10th ChiCom nuclear test was not based on information
provided him by the Joint Committee.
3. Upon learning that Chairman L. Mendel Rivers,
House Armed Services Committee, had mentioned, in his open testimony
before the House Rules Committee on the procurement bill, the fact that
the Soviets had a new bomber I immediately notified Messrs. Duckett 25X1
and Goodwin.
Received a call from Mr. John Childers,
in the office of Senator Charles H. Percy R. , Ill. ), who requested an
employment interview for After checking with 25X1
briefing provided the International Relations Studies Group of the Good
Counsel College a year ago. If possible at this time, Representative Reid
would like to schedule a similar meeting for Wednesday, November 5. I
thanked Mrs. Strand for her call and advised that I would relay the
Representative's inquiry and be back in touch with her.
Office of Personnel, I advised Mr. Childers that an
appointment has been scheduled for Tuesday, 7 October at 10:00.
5. Received a call from Mrs. Strand,
in the office of Representative Ogden R. Reid (R. , N. Y. ), concerning the
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Monday - 29 September 1969
4. Delivered to Diane Daines, in the
office of Representative Laurence J. Burton (R. , Utah), a suggested reply
to a constituent, and was thanked for our help.
5. Delivered to William Woodruff, Senate
Committee on Appropriations staff, a letter with attachments from the
Executive Director- Comptroller and a receipt was obtained.
6. Returned to the office of Representative Joel
Broyhill the Congressman's letter on behalf of who 25X1
apparently is confused and believes he has applied for a guard position with
the Agency'when, apparently, he has applied-for a guard position at the
Pentagon.
7. Mr. Rasmussen, in the office of
Representative Lee Hamilton (D., Ind. ), called and said they would like to
be put on permanent distribution for the Asia and Pacific and the Latin
America and West Europe Area Books and would like to 1 ontinue to receive
the White Book as well. (See Journal of 19 September. )
FBIS, was advised.
8 Received from Mrs. Mary McLaughlin, Senate
Foreign Relations Committee staff, copies 1, 2, and 3 of 3 of the transcript
of the CIA briefing of Tuesday, 23 January 1968. These transcripts are
forwarded to the Agency for safekeeping and are subject to the call of the
Committee. (See Journal of 17 September. )
9. Met with Miss Doris L. Scott, House Armed
Services Committee staff, and briefed her on certain compartmented
clearances. Appropriate documentation was completed.
10. At the request of Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, I met with Chairman Mendel
Rivers in his office and briefed him on ChiCom nuclear testing and testing
of a possible new Soviet missile. Representative Rivers expressed his
appreciation for the briefing and indicated his desire that we be sure to come
by to talk to him on matters such as these.
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel
Monday - 29 September 1969
Page 3
11. I Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, and briefed him on the following items:
a. Chicom nuclear testing;
b. Soviet testing of a possibly new missile;
c. Soviet Y-class submarine patrols; and
d. Warsaw pact military exercises.
12. Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House Appropria-
tions Committee staff, and briefer: hin on the following items:
Chicom nuclear testing;
Soviet testing of a possibly new missile;
c. Soviet Y-class submarine patrols; and
d. Warsaw pact military exercises.
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13. Received a call from Scott Cohen,
in the office of Senator Charles H. Percy R. Ill. ), who requested a
personnel interview for After making the
arrangements with Office of Personnel, I advised Mr. Cohen
that the interview was scheduled for 2: 00 p. m. this afternoon.
he contact the Air Force. )
14. Returned to Dorothy Fosdick, Staff Director,
National Security a. ternation.al Operations Subcommittee, the materials
she had given us on (Mr. Maury advised her
on Friday that the Agency had no association with either the individuals nor
do we have any information on the mentioned in the news 25X1
reports. It was suggested that if Senator Jackson desired to pursue the matter,
cc:
Ex/Dir-Comet
O/DDCI .
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
DDI DDS DDS&T
OPPB EA/DDP
Item 7 - FBIS
Item. 13 - Pers.
Acting Legislative Counsel
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Office of Legislative Counsel
Thursday'- 25 September 1969
9. I Met separately with Messrs. John Reddan and
John Lally, House Armed Services Committee staff, and briefed them on
updating of security clearances of_staff_personnel of the Committee.
Appropriate documentation was completed on each individual.
10. Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, and briefed him on several items of
current intelligence (see Memorandum for the Record).
priations Committee staff, and briefed him on several items of current
intelligence (see Memorandum for the Record).
Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House Appro-
Page 3
.12. I Met with Mr. Walter Mote, Administrative
Assistant to the Vice President. Mr. Mote told me that he had suggested to
Bill Anders, of the National Aeronautics and Space Council, that he contact
me to insure that Chairman Miller, of the House Science and Astronautics
Committee, is in direct contact with the Agency for such intelligence briefings
as he may desire. This was occasioned by the departure of Mr. Mrozinski
from the Space Council's staff. I thanked Mx. Mote and responded that the
Agency has had direct contact with Chairman Miller over the years and that
we see no need for change in our procedures with him. Mr. Mote advised that
this step of insuring direct contact with the Chairman was warranted by problems
that have been encountered in the past in Council dealings with other members of
the House Science and Astronautics Committee.
n response to his earlier request
delivered to Charles Lomb
ard, Senate Republican Policy
Committee staff, two copies of an article by N.I. Krylov entitled "The
Instructive Lessons of History" which was contained in the FBIS USSR
Area Book for 2 September 1969.
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25 September 1969
SUBJECT: Meeting with Mr. John Blandford, House Armed
Services Committee Staff
Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel, House Armed
Services Committee, and briefed him on the following items:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
resumption of Soviet/ChiCom propaganda;
ChiCom nuclear test;
Soviet moon probe;
North Vietnamese troop movements;
Soviet support of Egyptian air defense;
Soviet Far East ground force.
Distribution:
Orig - Subj
1 - Ch rn
OLC/JGO:sml (26 Sept. 1969)
'egislative Counsel
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel
Monday - 22 September 1969
Page 3
7. Lunched with Representative G. William
Whitehurst (R. , Va. ), of the House Armed Services Committee, to whom
I explained in confidence the facts regarding the Green Beret case as we
understood them. Mr. Whitehurst gave me his impression of some of the
personalities and problems of the Committee, and particularly of the loss
of leadership which the Republican members feel as a result of the death
of Representative William Bates.
8. Acting Chief FE Division,
and I went to a White House meeting in the office of Ken BeLieu, Deputy
Assistant to the President for Con,-,ressional Relations, where Ambassador
McClintock, Assistant Secretary of Defense Nutter and representatives of
Dr. Ehrlichman and Dr. Kissinger discussed the problems which the
Symington Subcommittee investigation of U. S. overseas involvements poses
for the Executive Branch. See Memo for Record for details.
Ex/Dir- Compt
O/DDCI
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
OPPB
DDI
DDS
DDS & T
EA/DDP
Item 4 - D/Personnel
--,egislative Counsel
JOHN M. MAURY
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.. .. Ld1.7~Urt .(1 I lVI9 1vr MfYV ovI I{_Im
UNCLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL SECRET
OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP
STAT
STAT
TO
NAME AND ADDRESS
DATE
INITIALS
Ex/Dir
2
3
QLC D43
4
5
6
ACTION
DIRECT REPLY
PREPARE REPLY
APPROVAL
DISPATCH
RECOMMENDATION
COMMENT
_
F1 LE
RETURN
CONCURRENCE
INFORMATION
SIGNATURE
Remarks : '
FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER
FROM: NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NO.
DATE
OLC 7D43
UNCLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL
SECRET
FORM NO. f07 Use nrevinus editinns rent
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STAT
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Monday - 22 September 1969
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1.l I Met with Mr. Robert Michaels, House Appro-
priations Committee staff, and discussed with him Senator John Cooper's
(R., Ky.) and Senator Stuart Symington's (D., Mo.) remarks of last week
concerning U.S. operations in Laos and other FE countries. (See Memo-
randum for the Record.)
I briefed Mr. Michaels on the following items:
a. the Kosygin and Chou En-lai meeting;
b. Soviet military buildup on the ChiCom border;
c. Soviet intelligence collection in the Far East;
d. Soviet SS-11 launchers;
e. Soviet FOBs;
f. Soviet-ChiCom propaganda;
g. _ ChiCom native designed fighter aircraft production.
Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel,
House Armed Services Committee, who advised that he has talked to
about his meeting with the Executive Director of the
Agency concerning his employment with the Agency recommended by
Mr. Blandford. Mr. Blandford has received- a memorandum outlining the
meeting which nd he requested. Mr. Blandford told me that he
now considers the case closed. sees no point in pursuing the
application further.
Discussed with Mr. Blandford the statements reported in the press
by Senator John Cooper (R., Ky.) and Senator Stuart Symington (D., Mo.)
concerning U.S. activities in Laos and the Far East. The hearings scheduled
by Symington will begin on 14 October. (See Memorandum for the Record.)
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22 September 1969
MEMORANDUM FOR THE RECORD
SUBJECT: Meeting with John Blandford re Review of U.S. Activities
in the Far East
1. Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief Counsel, House Armed
Services Committee, and discussed. with him Senator John Cooper's (R., Ky. )
statements last week on the floor of the Senate concerning the need for Senate
Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees to review United States
activities in Laos and other countries in the Far East and John Finney's column
in the New York Times on Saturday, 20 September, relating to Senator Stuart
Symington's (D., Mo.) outline of hearings scheduled to begin on 14 October to
review U. S. activities in Laos and the Far East. Mr. Blandford indicated that
he had been tied up all day Saturday and did not see Finney's item although he
was familiar with Senator Cooper's remarks.
2. Mr. Blandford's immediate reaction was that this is a matter for
White House determination. He is of the opinion that if the White House and
the intelligence community cannot see what is being attempted here by members
of the other body - to lay bare the intelligence structure and activities through
the American press - then there is little that can be done to forestall the dis-
memberment of the intelligence community. He noted that the Armed Services
Committee intends a closer look-see at intelligence but the present schedule of
the Committee will not allow such hearings in the foreseeable future. He gave
me the impression that the Committee is having difficulty moving legislation
and conducting hearings that are scheduled.
Assistan egis ative oosnse
Distribution:
Orig - Subject
1 - Chrono
OLC/JGO/sml (23 Sept. 1969)
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Wednesday - 17 September 1969
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1. Left with Mr. Larry Conrad, on the
staff of Senator Birch Bayh's (D. , Ind.) Subcommittee on Constitutional
Amendments, a new paper containing a revision of Senator Ervin's
proposed amendments to S. 782. This new paper includes explanations
of our revisions.
which we had gained from
2. Met with George Murphy, on the staff of
the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, and provided him with the FBIS
book containing a recent speech by Marshal Krylov and I briefed Murphy
on the Soviet FOBs test of 15 September.
Murphy renewed his request for information on the knowledge
Ed Bauser's letter for a security review on the Committee's document
having to do with the chronology of the development of the H bomb.
Murphy felt that an answer along the lines which we proposed would be
satisfactory.
talked wit urphy about our proposed response to
3. 1 delivered to Mrs. Innis McDonald,
secretary to Mr. Ralph Marshall., House Armed Services Committee
staff, an unclassified blind memorandum dated 15 September 1969 entitled
"Soviet Airborne and Control Aircraft (AWAC)." This paper was provided
in response to a request by Mr. Marshall for Representative Richard
Ichord (D., Mo.) after the Director's briefing of the House Armed Services
Committee on 29 July.
4. I met with Mrs. Mary McLaughlin, Senate
Foreign Relations Committee staff, concerning the transcripts of Agency
briefings that are held by the Committee. These transcripts are being
collected from the various Committee offices for transmittal to the
Agency for safekeeping. Mrs. McLaughlin will call me when they have
been collected.
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15 September 1969
Soviet Airborne and Control Aircraft (AWAC)
The Soviets are known to be testing an airborne
warning and control aircraft (AWAC) that will, when
operational, enable them to improve their early
warning and air intercept capability. The TU-114
Cleat turboprop passenger transport has been modified
to carry a large dish shaped radome housing a long
range surveillance radar for early warning. Pictures
of the aircraft released last year by the Soviets
indicate that it may also have the ability to direct
Soviet fighters in airborne controlled intercepts.
AWAC, when deployed off the Soviet coast along
attack approaches, will enable the Soviets to detect
approaching bombers, several hundred miles further
from Soviet territory than they could with ground
based radar, and to direct fighters against them.
The operational deployment of this type aircraft
would force enemy planes to descend to lower alti-
tudes and to make early use of ECM thus reducing
their range and increasing the probability of their
being detected.
The number of these aircraft now in existence
is limited. Published estimates indicate that thirty
or so of the TU-114 Cleat were built for use as
transports. Some of these are still in service
with Aeroflot, according to Soviet flight schedules.
Recently, however, the newer turbofan IL-62 has
replaced the TU-114 on Aeroflot's international
flights. Most of the TU-114 Cleats still in service
will probably be similarly replaced, making them
available for conversion to the AWAC version.
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Qis
Office of Legislative Counsel Page 3
Wednesday - 17 September 1969
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7. As a followup to the suggestion by
Mr. Charles Ducander, Executive Director and Chief Counsel, House
Science and Astronautics Committee, I have scheduled an appointment for
9:30 a. m. on Friday, 19 September, to meet with Chairman Miller concern-
ing existing procedures for briefing him about Soviet space activities.
(See Journal item No. 8 for Monday, 15 September.)
g. I met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, and briefed him on Soviet
FOBS testing.
9. Returned to Angela Jakobowski, in
the office of Representative John V Tunney D. Calif. their request
about employment possibilities for She had not yet
determined whether interested in intelligence and accepted the
case back willingly. (She said DIA had sent them a "report" on
Dropped by the office of Representa-
tive William D. Hathaway (D., Maine) in connection with his scheduled
visit to Headquarters the morning of 24 September, but both the Congress-
man and his secretary, Miss McNally, were out. I left a message that I
would check back to confirm the arrangements for the 24th.
ll. Delivered to Dorothy Herbert, in
the office of Senator Charles McC. Mathias (R., Md.), a suggested reply
to a constituent's inquiry concerning the Agency's "mercenary soldiers"
Miss Herbert said that she did not know whether the Agency would comment
on speculation concerning its activities. I explained our "no comment"
policy and she said she fully appreciated our position. She asked for some
extra copies of the Agency's pamphlet for use in handling similar inquiries
from constituents in the future, which have been sent.
,_ ,JOHN M. MAUR Y
Legislative Counsel
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EA/DDP
DD/S
DD/I
OPPB
DD/S&T
Ex/Dir-C ompt
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
items 9. 10 - Security
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Tuesday 16 September 1969
4. Accompanied the Director who briefed the
-CIA Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee on the Green Beret
case and recent items of intelligence significance.
for details.
Senate Foreign Relations re U. S. involvements abroad. said he has 25X1
discussed the problem with DOD Congressional Liaison, General Counsel
and ISA representatives, none of whom are inclined to raise the problem of
the Subcommittee's jurisdiction over military and intelligence matters.
5, Discussed with General Counsel of
NSA problems of their appearance before the Symington Subcommittee of
material will be provided in documentary form, that NSA will maintain custody
of the transcript of the hearing, and that no public releases will be made.
Paul on Thursday, 18 September and try to ensure that no sensitive COMINT
said he plans to see Subcommittee Investigators, Pincus and
indicated that Admiral Gayler may shortly be seeing Senator Symington
on these and other questions. till hopes for Agency guidance before 25X1
testifying before the Subcommittee on 29 September.
7~ Mr. Roland Paul, on Senator Symington's
Subcommittee on U. S. Agreements and Commitments Abroad, called and
posed four questions which he would like to have answered by next week.
(See Memo for the Record for details. ) The questions have been passed on
to the DDI.
8.I Talked to Mrs. Jeannette Markell, Personal
Secretary to Senator Charles McC. Mathias (R., Md.), and she made an
appointment for me to see the Senator next Monday concerning a Manchester
Guardian article which he had forwarded to us.
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Tuesday - 16 September 1969
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1. I IMet with Representative William Bray
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(R. , Ind.) concerning the letter written by one
advised Representative Bray that the FBI has prior interest in the
individual because of his apparent knowledge of criminal activities.
Representative Bray thought this was fine and that we should drop the
matter. He advised that even though the man appeared somewhat unstable
he had passed the letter on for our review in order that we might evaluate
the worth of his information. No further action is required. The original
letter furnished by Representative Bray was returned to him.
that Representative Bray had passed to Mr. Maury.
2. Met with Miss Nancy Leonhardt,
in the office of Representative Harold Collier (R., Ill.), and discussed
with her the letter received by Representative Collier from
Miss Leonhardt advised that an acknowledgement of the
receipt of the letter had been sent out and that in all probability no further
response would be made unless should write again. In
that event their office would contact the De artment of Army for any light
they can shed on the allegations of that she has been
accused of being a spy as a result a visit to East Berlin in 1966.
Miss Leonhardt thanked me for comin b and advised that no written
response is necessary to letter.
3 ~ I Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House Armed Services Committee, after the completion of the
Director's briefing of the CIA Subcommittee.- Mr. Blandford advised that
the meeting had been a satisfactory one and noted that a followup meeting
will be required to get into the many other questions to update the world-
wide intelligence picture. Mr. Blandford further advised that it may be
some time before the full Committee will schedule another meeting of the
Subcommittee.
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Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel
Monday" 15 September 1969
Page 2
6. Met with. Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House rme vices Committee and reviewed with him
the arrangements for tomorrow's meeting of the CIA Subcommittee.
Mr..Blandford advised that in his estimate a major portion of the time
will be consumed in discussion of the Green Beret matter. He advised
that we might anticipate rather pointed questioning concerning the coup
in Libya and the anticipated course of events in that country. He noted
that some members are becoming increasingly pointed in their remarks
and criticism of intelligence and in particular of the Defense Intelligence
Agency.
7. Mr. Dave Brandwein, FMSAC, advised
that he had received a call from a staff member of the National Aero-
nautics and Space Council who indicated that Chairman Miller of the House
Science and Astronautics Committee had evidenced some concern that the
departure of Mr. Roman Mrozinski from the Council could result in
changes in transmission of information to the Committee on Soviet space
matters. Mr. Brandwein advised that both the Senate and House com-
mittees are in direct contact with the Agency's Office of Legislative
Counsel and that any transmission of information from the Agency would
be direct to these committees.
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Office of Legislative Counsel Page 2
Friday - 12 September 1969
4. Met with Mrs. Oneta Stockstill, Executive
Secretary, House Armed Services Committee, who advised that the
Chairman has scheduled a meeting of the CIA Subcommittee for Tuesday,
16 September, at 10:00 a.m. The meeting was confirmed later in the
day to Mr. Blandford.
5. Met with Mr. John R. Blandford, Chief
Counsel, House.Armed, See s rr, , ar,, and reviewed with him a
draft agenda of points of interest to the Committee for the DCI briefing
scheduled for Tuesday, 16 September. (See Memorandum for the Record.)
6.I I Discussed briefly with Mr. John H.
Martiny, Counsel, House Post Office and Civil Service Committee, the
scheduled hearings of the Committee on position classification chaired by
Representative James M. Hanley (D., N. Y.) and received a copy of the
prepared statement of John F. Griner, President, American Federation
of Government Employees, on H.R. 13008. Mr. James D. Hill, General
Counsel, Air Traffic Control Association, did not have a prepared
statement.
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Office of Legislative Counsel
Thursday - 11 September 1969
Harold Hughes . , Iowa), called on behalf of
Page 3
9.I Mr. Fitch, in the office of Senator
who is interested in employment with the Agency as a geographer. An
appointment was scheduled for 12 September at 11:00 a.m. with
Personnel.
10. Met with Representative Charles
Bennett (D. , a, an e ivere o him the Agency response concerning
the retirement of Representative Bennett commented
in general that it is hard for an individual like o find anything
at age 60 and that he would guess that "is bored not doing any-
thing. " Representative Bennett thanked me for coming by.
11. , Met with Mr. John J. Ford, House Armed
Services professional staff, and reviewed with him the updating of security
clearances. Appropriate documentation was completed.
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JOHN M. MAURY
Legislative Counsel
Mr. Houston
Mr. Goodwin
EA/DDP Items 7 & 9 - OP
OPPB
DD/I L
cc:
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O/DDCI
DD /S
DD /S &T
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CO Lllk 1 u1`U..
JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Thursday - 11 September 1969
1. In response to his request of 8 September,
conveyed the available facts regarding
I called Jay Sourwine, Senate Internal Security Subcommittee staff, and
2. Russ Blandford, Chief Counsel, House
Armed Services Committee, call ed regarding the application of
whom Blandford had strongly recommended for employment. Blandford
but this time he wasn't kidding about it and he wanted "thoughtful immediate
action. " He said he hadn't asked the Agency for many such favors but he
wanted results this time particularly in view of the fact that had 25X1
excellent qualifications including past Agency service. I told Blandford
I would check immediately to see where the case stood.
said he knew all about how we give "thoughtful consideration" to such cases
3, I Larry Conrad, Constitutional Rights Sub-
committee of Senate Judiciary Committee staff, called regarding our proposed
changes in Senator Ervin's suggested draft revision of S. 782. Conrad said
that Senator Ervin and other staff members were confused as to the intent and
significance of some of our proposed changes in the Senator's language and
would like a clarifying statement from us explaining whether our proposals
involved substantive matters or were merely changes of form. If they were
intended to change the substance of Ervin's language, they would like an
explanation. I told Conrad we would respond shortly.
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JOURNAL
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Wednesday - 10 September 1969
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1. I I Met with Colonel James Brower, in the office
of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Legislation, and received from
him copies of exchange of Departm