DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AND RELATED AGENCIES APPROPRIATIONS, 1975

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CIA-RDP75B00380R000700040022-1
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August 5, 1974
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August 5, 1974 Approved EU e"~sglMX/p6 ffC RDP R,, 80R000700040022-1 S 14313 Senate on the disagreeing votes of the veterans' pensions or benefits, which are Senator yield for an observation, with two Houses thereon; and that Mr. EvINS fixed by law and are in a contractual and the understanding that he will not use of Tennessee, Mr. BOLAND, Mr. WHITTEN, legal position. It would be futile to try lose his right to the floor? Mr. SLACK, Mr. PASSMAN, Mr. MAHON, Mr. to make a reduction, and we should not. Mr. GOLDWATER. I am glad to yield. DAVIS of Wisconsin, Mr. ROBISON of New Everything to be reduced would be re- Mr. ERVIN. I would like to pay this York, Mr. MYERS, and Mr. CEDERBERG duced by 3 percent below what the Ap- tribute to the Senator from Arizo}1a, as were appointed managers of the confer- propriations Committee submitted to the a result of my long service with him in ence on the part of the House. Senate. the Senate. If he wrestles with his con- The message also announced that the Mr. GOLDWATER. Would the Senator science, his conscience will win. House disagrees to the amendments of be favorable to eliminating that cut from (Laughter) the Senate to the bill (H.R. 15405) mak- NASA, which is a part of this grouping Mr. GOLDWATER. I think it usually ing appropriations for the Department of of budgets? does, much to my disappointment. Transportation and related agencies for Mr. PROXMIRE. No. I would be op- Mr. President, at long last, the Senate the fiscal year ending June 30, 1975, and posed to that, for several reasons. No. 1, apepars to be making a determined effort for other purposes; agrees to the con- the NASA request is either at or above to do its part in bringing inflation under ference requested by the Senate on the the budget, and the others, in some cases, control. I applaud that effort. disagreeing votes of the two Houses are far below the budget. We have one There is no question in my mind that thereon; and that Mr. MCFALL, Mr. agency, for example, which is about 20 there is plenty of fat in the Federal YATES, Mr. STEED, Mrs. HANSEN of Wash- percent below the budget, and we are budget-fat that has contributed to the ington, Mr. BOLAND, Mr. MAHON, Mr. making a further cut of 3 percent. inflationary spiral. CONTE, Mr. MINSHALL, Mr. EDWARDS of I recognize that there is great merit I certainly intend to support any and Alabama, and Mr. CEDERBERG were ap- in the NASA position, and I also recog- all efforts to get the fat out. At the same pointed managers of the conference on nize that the Office of Management and time, I want to make sure we cut-the fat the part of the House. Budget has reduced it far below what and not the bone. The message further announced that many people feel is desirable and neces- Last week we had amendments offered the House has passed without amend- sary. We have to do this on an equal cutting appropriations for Public Works ment the Joint resolution (S.J. Res. 228) basis, or we have great difficulty justi- and the Department of Transportation. to extend the expiration date of the De- fying this kind of reduction. On Public Works the cuts failed, al- fense Production Act of 1950. Mr. GOLDWATER. I ask that because though I supported them. Friday, by a I think the Senator might agree that in- vote of 58 to 15, the Senate approved a cluding NASA in this group is illogical. 3.5 percent reduction for the Depart- ENROLLED BILLS SIGNED It is probably the only scientific appro- ment of Transportation, which I also The message further announced that priation we have. Well, the National Sci- supported. In both instances, the Senate the Speaker has affixed his signature to ence Foundation is in it. But the rest do had an opportunity to work its will on the following enrolled bills: not apply to science. I thought that the one Department and one set of programs. S. 3669. An act to amend the =Atomic Senator might be agreeable to skipping I submit the case is very different in Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and the NASA, so that we could get at the rest H.R. 15572, because we have a kind of Atomic Weapons Rewards Act of 1955, and of it, omnibus appropriations bill covering 11 for other purposes; and Mr. PROXMIRE. I am afraid not. I Departments, Agencies, Commissions, H.R. 14012. An act making appropriations would have to resist that. I do not see and a Foundation. They are: for the legislative branch for the fiscal year how we could do that. One could make a Housing and Urban Development; ending June 30, 1975, and for other pur- very strong appeal to skip the National Funds Appropriated to the President: poses. Science Foundation and to skip some of Disaster Relief; The enrolled bills were subsequently the other very worthy agencies here. American Battle Monuments Commis- signed by the Acting President pro As the Senator from Maryland has sion; tempore (Mr. JOHNSTON). said, these are people-oriented programs, Cemeterial Expenses, Army; raw all deserving programs, and good pro- Federal Communications Commission; grams. I do not see how we can make National Aeronautics and Space Ad- DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND an exception. ministration; URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AND RE- The purpose of this reduction would National Science Foundation; LATED AGENCIES APPROPRIA- be to ease the inflationary pressure. As Renegotiation Board; TIONS, 1975 the Senator from Arizona knows far Securities and Exchange Commission; The Senate continued with the con- better than I, NASA does use goods and Selective Service System; and sideration of the bill (H.R. 15572) mak- materials that are in short supply- Veterans' Administration. ing appropriations for the Department steel, chemicals, highly trained and As I noted earlier, there is quite a of Housing and Urban Development, for highly skilled people. For us to exempt grouping of unrelated items. As one Sen- space, science, veterans, and certain NASA under these circumtsances will be ator has alluded, most are people agen- other independent executive agencies, extremely difficult to Justify. Gies. But it is hard to see NASA right boards, commissions, corporations, and Mr. GOLDWATER. The Senator from now as a people agency, although I think offices for the fiscal year ending June 30, Wisconsin puts this particular Senator it is going to become one. 1975, and for other purposes. In a bad spot, because I have voted con- The funding histories of this group Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, a sistently for cuts and will continue to differ, and therefore a straight across parliamentary inquiry. vote for cuts. I have argued for years, as the board 31/2-percent cut will fall The PRESIDING. OFFICER. The Son- the Senator knows, that spending money unequally on them. ator will state it. we do not have has caused our inflation. In 1972, the Congress and executive Mr. GOLDWATER. Has the Senator As to whether I vote for this 3 percent approved a constant level budget of $3.4 from Maryland relinquished the floor? or not, I will have to go out and wrestle billion for NASA. The purpose of this Mr. MATHIAS. Yes. I am yielding the with my conscience. Right now, that is budget was to stabilize NASA's expendi- floor now. not bein gdone, but I might try. tures over the ensuing 5 to 7 years. A mix Mr. PROXMIRE. If anybody can of new starts were combined with exist- Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, I wrestle with the conscience of a con- ing programs. should like to ask a question of the Sen- servative, it is the distinguished Sena- No sooner was the ink dry on this ator from Wisconsin. tor from Arizona. agreement, then NASA took further cuts. Is it true that he proposes to offer an I might point out that NASA repre- If the constant level budget that was amendment that would cut this overall sents only part of this overall cut. The approved in the Congress had been budget item by 3 percent? cuts would be made equitably under the carried out, the NASA budget this year Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator is of er agencies, too. would be $3.750 billion. In other words, correct. My amendment would hake an Mr. GOLDWATER. I realize that. the NASA budget that we are approving across-the-board cut on all the con- thank the Senator from Wisconsin. today is one-half of a billion dollars trollable items. Obviously, we cannot cut Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, will the below what the Congress and the execu- Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 S 1.4314 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE f 2t (jtl~f i i i.a y'e agreed was a sound budget back in 1972. Now, the 3-percent cut that is being proposed is, in my opinion, a meat-ax approach. It does not take into account the funding history of the agencies involved. NASA, for example, has had to r.osorb most of the inflationary increases without relief. There are three multibillion-dollar envies provided for in 11.R. 1.5572. They ?e: the Veterans' Administration at $14 trillion; the National Aeronautics and 5-,pace Administration at $3.2 billion; and the Department of Housing and Urban 1 =evelopment at slightly over $3 billion. A look at the employment records of the three agencies involved tells part of the story. In 1966, NASA had 35,494 em- ployees. The Veterans' Administration had 154,823 and Housing and Urban Development had 14,329. In 1973, NASA had 27,540; VA had 16,129, and HUD had 17,780. Working the percentages :since 1966, HUD has increased 124.1 per- ?.ent, VA increased 108.6 percent and NASA has decreased 77.6 percent. Mr. President, I have a table compar- r~g NASA, the Veterans' Administration, .laid the Department of Housing and :trban Development employment, and I ;i.,k unanimous consent that it be printed it this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the table was ordered to be printed in. the RECORD, as follows: PAID CIVILIAN FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES WITH PERCENT KVIATIONS FROM 1966 EMPLOYMENT _ . _ _ _. 1966 35,494 154,823 14, 329 ---- Percent 100.00 100.00 100.00 1967__________ 35,703 157.576 14,618 Percenr 100.59 101.76 102.02 1968 34,318 155,174 15,574 Percent--.- 96.86 100.2.3 108.69 1969 ----------- 33,707 152,230 14,713 Percent---- 94.91 98.33 102.68 1970 ---------- 33,062 153,913 15, 422 P.:rcent-___ 93.15 99.41 107.63 '171----- 31,135 163,668 17,102 Percent---- 87.72 105.71 119.35 1972_ _ 28,665 163,988 10,462 Percent _ 80.76 105.92 114.89 1973_ _--__ 27.540 168,129 Y1,780 Pcrtent /7.59 108. 59 124.08 Source: Pay Structure of the Federal Civil Service, table 1. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, in the fiscal year 1965 the NASA budget was 3.79 percent of the total Federal budget. Since then it has gradually de- creased to a point where the estimate for 1974 is 0.98 percent. This is less than percent of all Federal expenditures. For this dollar investment, the lNa- l.ion gets untold benefits covering elec- tronics, medicine, computer technology, and a variety of other areas too numer- ous to mention. The NASA programs are an investment in the future. They will produce taxable dollars. They will in- crease the wealth of the Nation by pro- viding better ways of doing things. Mr. President, one of the better ways it doing things Is the Earth resources -r,nd technology satellites. They can de- tect crop disease, monitor pollution, and provide flood control information. They s;an also tell the farmers who live in the Southwest, which is my home, arid whether they are getting enough 1-.ec- lamation water, or whether they are not. time in the history of many of these A number of my colleagues would like children, they are being allowed to be to see the Earth :resources technology educated by people who are, in soma satellites continue tinder development. cases, thousands of miles away If this 3.4-percent cut stands, I am Another important thing that I an afraid that ERTS-,-, which is the next afraid we overlook is that in many c one that we shall have to put in orbit- the Western States such as Arizona and ERTS-B has already outlived its where 84 percent of the population is useful life, although it is producing re- confined In two cities, we have great markably well; we do not expect it to great areas where there is tit) medics, be in an operable stage much past Octo- attention: where we have no aospitalr ber. So we have to get ERTS-C up, if where it is impossible to get a doctor this valuable service provided to all the to go and live because there arl just no States and to foreign countries is to be enough people to take care of, We ar^ continued and improved on. now beginning to use satellites to trans; Mr. President, in testimony received mit medical information. This informs. before the CommiJee on Aeronautical tion will be fed to a compute:' and th and Space Sciences last fall, markets for answer to the symptoms will be fee space processing a-rid manufacturing in back to the parties involved. the amount of $2 billion per year were Already we are involved in a yreenti an ever, when the Budget Committee for-- strongly influenced by military con- amendment to the desk and ask fo; As nially begins its duties. We must look Im- siderations. Very well, then-why does immediate consideration. inediately for places where money can be the Defense Department not share in the The PRESIDING OFFICEF.. 'I'l}e. judiciously withheld in order to stem the cost of developing the shuttle? Wh;r does amendment will be stated. already too high level of Federal expen- it not even specify how the shuttle would The assistant legislative clerk react as ditures which are a major ingredient in be useful to the military? This whole follows: the current 12 percent rate of inflation. area of DOD involvement in the shut- On page 2, fine 9, after "$12,500,000- s i r ise Het us take a look at a few figures. As tle raises far more questions than it the period and insert the following I said, the committee recommendations answers. ": Provided. That none of these adndi 1 r,--_ for this year for the shuttle is $800 mil- Finally, all sides seem to agree that live funds may be used for the adri.ini r - lion for research and development, plus the shuttle is necessary if there is to be t;'on of the section 23 leasing program, or pro- any replacement program, unless the a ai:- approximately $86 million for shuttle- continuation of a manned space related facilities costs. Up to now, that is gram. Now, I was as thrilled as any other able, the Section 235 oandoSect onaaie pct - through fiscal year 1974, the amount American citizen when our astronauts grams, or any replacement programs, is made spent on the sou tle has been. on the went into space, and when they planted available for commitment, and con -Batted, order of a billion dollars. But this is only the American flag on the Moon. We can concurrent with the commitment of any the beginning. The total cost for level- all be proud of the heroic exploits of our contract authority under the Section 23 pro- oping the space shuttle, by NASA's own astronauts. But it ms,y well be that, in gram, or any replace ment progrv,,,, in estimates, will be $51/ billion-which the future, we will be able to obtain as ,; tted and rosaid Sect onli 23 moons c.,:. or means the billion we have spent thus far much useful scientific information from an replacement program or Y proerrtm." Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 19%4 Approved CFor Release ONGRESSIONAL /RECORD DP RQ $OR000700040022-1 S 14317 Mr. DAVITS. Mr. President, the pur- which, under the Budget Reform Act, MMr. JAVITS. And section 23. r. MATHIAS. And section 23. And, in pose of this amendment is to zero in on must now be used. the fact that what there is still contract I favor this action for several reasons. so mandating the balance, I think it ex= authority available under sections 235 The administration and HUD are now, presses on the part of Congress a sense and 236 which should be used before the as the Senator from New York has said, of what the policy should be and its im- section 23 leasing program designed to putting all their eggs in the section 23 portance. It is important but substan- d T th' kit is im ortant pro- m p l t replace both of those other programs is fully utilized. The amendment does allow for a rat- able utilization of section 23 in propor- tion to what is used of the contract au- thority under sections 235 and 236. This goes along, it seems to me, with the general concept of the committee as reported on page 7 of the Senate report. Our feeling is that these programs, especially section 236, are critically im- portant particularly to the big cities. In view of the fact that the Department wishes to rely entirely on section 23, it runs too much of a risk if it takes a long time, for example, to install that particu- lar program. Then you end up with a lapse in the existing programs, which are extremely beneficial, especially to us in the cities, and the figures I have show approximately $237 million left in sec- tion 235, and $167 million left in section 236. So this amendment takes an elemen- tary precaution to see that we are not completely out of any program for a cer- tain period of time which can really stimulate housing until such time as the expended section 23 program may be in- stalled, financed, and administered. It is just more of a lapse than we have any right to invite, especially with a tremendously falling number of housing starts today. I notice the committee at page 7 says: The Department now wishes to rely en- tirely on what is called the new Section 23 program, a program of leased housing to re- place the conventional public housing pro- gram, and Sections 235 and 236. The Committee feels that it would be a tragic error to take this course. First, Sec- tion 23 may not work. Second, if it does work, it could take a very long time to go into effect. Third, even if it works, It may not do two important things, namely, serv- ice the kind of low income families that public housing helped, and build in the regions of areas where housing is most needed. So, it seems to me, Mr. President, for these reasons that this would be a de- sirable amendment to take to confer- ence. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator from New York yield? Mr. JAVITS. I yield. Mr. PROXMIRE. I congratulate the Senator from New York on the amend- ment. The Senator is an amazing Sen- ator. He served years ago on the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, but he has not served for some time on it, and yet he is extraordinarily alert. I have been on the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee ever since I have been in the Senate. We have Just been in conference this morning on something very close to this issue, sec- tion 235 and section 236 of the authoriza- tion bill. The amendment of the Senator recognizes there are now some $240 mil- lion in appropriated but unspent section 235 funds, and about $170 million, I be- lieve, in section 236 funds. These are funds which have been impounded and y an lve basket. It is a new program. Now, section 23 may not work at all. cedurally, so I think it is a good amend- It is an untried program. ment, and I have no doubt that it will Second, if it does work, it may take a meet with considerable support in the very long time to get going. HUD claims other body. they will commit $1.2 billion in a year. They have mentioned this area in the I do not think that is at all possible. They House report on page 7 in which they have had this section 23 on the books now use committee language which tends to for many, many months, and they have yet to have one single start. There were no starts at all. When we approved public housing under the 1949 act we said that 810,000 units should be built in 6 years. It took 20 years to do that. When we passed section 221(d) (3) for moderate-income housing in 1962, we said we should build 45,000 units in a year. It was not until the sixth year that the total of 45,000 units were built. So section 23 may take a long time to work, if it works at all. Third, even if it works, it may not even reach the income groups now covered by public housing or by section 235 or section 236. It may not build in the suburbs or in the central city or it may work in one place but not in another. It may work in the South but not in New England; it may work in the West but not the Midwest. For all these reasons, it is wrong to put all our eggs in the section 23 basket. Section 235 was not a failure. Where it failed, as in Detroit, almost all the other programs failed because of corrup- tion. In Wisconsin, less than 3 percent have failed in a program where we ex- pected initially as high as 15 percent failures. One measure of its success is that the funds for section 235 are actuarially sound. That means that it has. worked as Congress intended. People have gotten off subsidy. The Government pays less than it did before in subsidies to those in section 235. This program has worked and should not be the victim of HUD's mismanagement and HUD's propaganda. I, for one, am happy to accept the amendment with a proviso as a part of the legislative or appropriation record for, I believe, sections 235 and 236 and section 23 units should march together, as the amendment provides. I do not, think the total funds for all of them should exceed the total originally pro- posed by HUD for section 23. We are not expapding funds; we are changing the mix. With that proviso, I am happy to ac- support the thesis that the Senator from New York has spoken on today. So, on be- half of the minority, I am happy to ac- cept it. Mr. JAVITS. I thank my colleague very much. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the amendment. (Putting the question.) The amendment was agreed to. Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote by which the amend- ment was agreed to. Mr. PROXMIRE. I move to lay that motion on the table. The motion to lay on the. table was agreed to. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I am happy to yield to the distinguished Sen- ator from California (Mr. CRANSTON). Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator very much. I have several questions of the Senator from Wisconsin, and I would like to dis- cuss with the distinguished chairman of the HUD, Space Science, Veterans' Sub- committee of the Appropriations Com- mittee (Mr. PROXMIRE), and its distin- guished ranking minority member (Mr. MATHIAS) a number of issues pertaining to VA medical appropriations as con- tained in the Appropriations bill reported from committee. At the outset, I would especially like to thank both of them and the other members of the committee for their continuing cooperation in working together on VA Appropriations and other matters of such great concern to. all of us. Particularly, I am most grateful for the opportunity they have provided to me to suggest certain matters which might be discussed in the committee report and for their sympathetic treatment for those items in the pending committee report. First, I would like to call attention to the language included in the report at my suggestion stating the strong view of the committee that VA medical and hos- pital personnel must not be included in any government-wide freeze which may be imposed by the President. The report clearly points out the disastrous impact this would have on the functioning of the VA medical and hospital program. cept the amendment. Specifically, the report states: I ask my distinguished colleague from The Committee is aware that the Presi- Maryland (Mr. MATHIAS), the ranking dent recently announced plans to make sub- Republican on the committee, for his stantial cutbacks in total Federal employ- views. ment throughout the Government. The Com- Mr. MATHIAS. I would concur with mittee wishes to express its very strong view the chairman's views. that any personnel freeze or other personnel I also thank the distinguished Sen- limitations resulting from such a Govern- ment-wide policy should not be applied to the medical and hospital employment within making this valuable suggestion which, the Veterans Administration. In 1972 the VA as I would interpret it, really seeks to hospital and medical program suffered from mandate a balance of section 235, 236- the effects of a Government-wide freeze on Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 1.4318 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE An qu-t ril,-lug which had an absolutely disastrous impact on the capacity of the VA system to provide quality patient care. Based on that perience. it is projected that over a full -F. ar the VA medical program could be e., - pected to lose over 11,000 ernplovees-based upon an attrition rate of between 10% and i ; - -especially in the fields of pathology, !.r.diclogy, nursing, and medical administra- tion. Of these. the vast majority would be in he cursing service (over 8.000), the most ri i,wal direct patient care category, where urinal VA attrition runs from 15% to 20w,. would like to ask the distinguished tor managers whether they will do their best to see that this same language `r; included in the joint explanatory state- ient to accompany the conference re- es; sr t. on this bill? .Vir. PROXMIRE. May I say to the cliatinguished Senator from California that I agree wholeheartedly. In an irnendment which I expect to offer shortly, which was discussed in part by the Senator from Arizona, one of the areas I feel we could not, should not, and must not reduce is the very area the Sen- ator has referred to. These are strong, ibsolute commitments we have to meet,, and.1 would agree wholeheartedly. Of course, I speak only for myself, and the Senator from Maryland speaks for himself, but we would do our best to pre- vail on our colleagues on the Senate side, and hope that the House would see clear to be with us; but I think the Senator from California is correct. Mr. MATHIAS. As one who is unhappi- ly all too well aware of the inadequacy of existing VA medical services in many regions, I could not in conscience sit still for any chance that they would be fur- her decreased, so I am happy to give that assurance. Mr. CRANSTON. It would be very use- f'ul if the joint explanatory statement to accompany the conference report would contain language similar to the report, and I was asking whether that would be the endeavor of each of you; is that correct? Mr. MATHIAS. Yes. A,1?. CRANSTON. You will both seek to have similar language In the amend- rent? y, PROXMIRE. That is my position, es. lir. MATHIAS. It certainly is mine. UIr. CRANSTON. Thank you very much. Second, Mr. President. I would like to point out for the Information of my col-- leagues what the distinguished subcom-. inittee chairman and I have previously discussed with regard to the adequacy of the amount included in the reported bill for VA medical care. The committee has sustained the House increase of approxi- mately $16 million for 1,000 new nursing personnel. I believe, however, that an ad-. dit.ional appropriation of at least $1503 B=illion more is needed to Improve the quality of VA medical care. I have dis- cussed this matter with high officials at the White House and the Office of Man- agement and Budget and have good rea- son to believe that a supplemental budget, request will be forthcoming from the ad- ministration this month. Frankly, Mr. President, I believe that the White House has already had ample time to submit such a supplemental request since it has had-for over 2 months-the report and findings on the VA hospital system which were submitted by the VA Chief Medical Director, Dr. John D. Chase, on May 31, 1974. 1 have discussed the recommendations to this report with Dr. Chase and strongly believe that the $150 million figure I have cited as necessary in sup- plemental appropriations for the VA medical program is fully in line with his findings. These funds are most urgently needed to increase core VA hospital staffing by at least 8,000 personnel, to activate certain projects to provide more ambulatory care space and facilities and for certain crucial specialized units, such as Intensive care units, and to ;provide for certain maintenance and repair of urgent electrical and other structural deficiencies, as well as to expedite cer- tain air-conditioning projects. I wish to emphasize that this $150 mil- lion figure is actually a conservative one-amounting to less than one-half the amount which VA hospital directors reported to the House Committee on Vet- erans' Affairs, in response to Its survey just completed, as representing addi- tional dollars which they need now and which were not provided in the target allowance based on the budget request. The total amount of that deficiency, on the basis of the House survey, is $305,- 282,000. So, Mr. President. I am not satisfied with the medical care or construction amounts in the pending measure. But I recognize the great desirability of pro- ceeding to consider additional appro- priations in committee, rather than on the floor, and in connection with a sup- plemental budget request if one can be forthcoming. Thus, l: have agreed to the request of the distinguished subcommit- tee chairman not to press a floor amend- ment at this time. It; is my intention to proceed, however, with a supplemental appropriation amendment at the next available opportunity whether or riot the administration comes forward with a supplemental request. My question for the distinguished floor managers is this: Can I have your as- surances that you will proceed to inves- tigate the report and findings of Dr. Chase's survey and that you will give sympathetic consideration to any sup- plemental request ghat may be forth- coming based on that survey for more VA medical care funds? Mr. PROXMIRE. May I say to the Sen- ator from California, that we will cer- tainly Investigate the report and find- ings of Dr. Chase's survey. If they send up a supplemental request, we will have hearings, call witnesses, give it consid- eration. I do not think the Senator froir. Cali- fornia would expect us to make a com- mitment until we know what is requested and consider it. I would give it high priority. but will not make any commitment that we would go ahead with any particular amount un- til we know what It is, and with the in- flation situation with what we can do. Mr. CRANSTON. ;f did not expect a commitment today. I am perfectly satin fled with a commitment for higi piorit and sympathetic consideration. Would the Senator from Mat ylaa- comment, also, on that point'? Mr. MATHIAS, Well, I would cel i ainl. feel that the report which attempted t, give the Congress some sort of ob,ihctiv view of the quality of veterans' incdi.cc care would be one of the most In ix rtaan items of business Congress could Luive. I would cooperate in every 'l'ay wits the chairman of the subcommittee i? calling Dr. Chase before the ccrnmittei calling witnesses we might need to sup element his testimony, calling , ?itr,esse who might even criticize his repo;-t, sa that we can get a thorough vier Ol jus what the levels of quality of ca -e That ought to be done, I think,, with out any delay whatever, as socis th, report is available, I think we out ht t look at it. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator Mr. President, we all want tc, proceecl in a bipartisan and a consensual man ner in respect to this appropristion fo. VA medical care. Because of the Vietnam I. Mi President, the problems of runnir)_c the vast VA medical system are more stag gering and complex than most A -neri cans realize. The Veterans' Afif,irs Sub- committee on Health and I-iosl_,itals which I am privileged to chair, has com- piled data showing the Vietnam war ha: resulted in an increase of seriously dis- abled veterans-more quadriplegic vet erans, more veterans with multiple iln juries-requiring intensive care anti re- habilitation. A survey of Army perst?naac released from the service demonstr.atee the severity of the disabilities the VA medical program must cope witl.A npu--- tation, paralysis of extremities fine:: nervous disorders comprise near!,. 6(. percent of the 12,466 servicemen >(!pa- rated for combat wounds and in,iuriea from 1964 through 1972. Of 18,556 Army personnel seam a-tec during the same period for both combat wounds and diseases buffered in Viet- nam, 58 percent were caused by c ri1) )Yini; Injuries to the bones, especial!: of the feet and legs. This compares with 21 percent in World War II and 24 percent in the Korean conflict. Another 13 per- cent of these Army medical retircc; sufi'et from mental disorders. The number of Vietnam veterar,?; re- ceiving medical care in VA facilities rep- resents a substantial proportion o) the patients. Of those veterans recoiling out- patient care in fiscal year 1973, 2.2 mil- lion were Vietnam veterans, or over 2u percent of the total 10.8 million,vhc ited outpatient facilities. In the f -st 0 months of fiscal year 1.974, 1.2 rnil,lion were Vietnam veterans or 20.7 lie? cent of the total 5.8 million veterans who vis- ited VA outpatient clinics. Admissions to VA hospitals of 'Iiet3:lan veterans for both years ran at ai)our 13 percent of all admissions--in li ca year 1973, 123,000 Vietnam veteran:; out of the 905,000 total veterans athiu led and in the first 9 months of i's,-al ear 1974, 97,000 Vietnam veterans out of the 713,000 total veterans admitted. These statistics clearly indicatehal Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE S 14319 the VA medical system must have an adequate number of neurosurgeons, plas- tic surgeons, psychiatrists and other highly _ skilled specialists, and nursing and technical personnel support them. As I have said, I believe we need at least $150 million more for, medical care than the administration requested in its fiscal year 1975 budget. We have an obli- gation to pay in full the human costs of this war by providing a truly first-class VA medical system for our, disabled vet- erans. But, at the same time I am sure that the distinguished floor managers would agree with me that we cannot defer this matter much further to accommodate a forthcoming supplemental budget re- quest at the expense of the seriously disabled veterans of the Indochina war and all our prior wars who must rely up- on the VA to tend to their wounds, treat their illnesses, and provide for their rapid recovery and rehabilitation. Would you agree? Mr. PROXMIRE. I would agree. Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, the Senator from Wisconsin referred to the amendment that he intends to offer shortly. I would like to ask if I am correct in my understanding that the amendment to be offered by the distinguished sub- committee chairman (Mr. PROXMIRE) to make across-the-board cuts-of 3 per- cent throughout the bill-in new obliga- tional authorities will exempt from those cuts the VA medical care, medical and prosthetic research, medical administra- tion and. miscellaneous operating ex- penses, readjustment benefits, general operating expenses, and compensation and pension items, and thus the only major itelfi to which it would apply would be to amounts appropriated for construc- tion within the overall VA budget? Am I correct? Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator is cor- rect for several reasons. One, of course, is the overwhelming moral reason, we have an obligation to our veterans and will fulfill that completely. The second reason is that we consider virtually. all of this uncontrollable, a matter of law, a matter of absolute ob- ligation by the Appropriations Commit- tee. We have no alternative on it, so the Senator's description is correct. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator very much. Mr. MATHIAS. Since the Senator from Wisconsin is the author of that amend- ment, I think his statement is the best evidence on it. Mr. CRANSTON. Yes, that is why I did not press for an analysis from the Senator from Maryland. Mr. MATHIAS. Let me say that I am not one who is very enthusiastic about this kind of amendment, to start with, but that I would have to oppose it ex- tremely vigorously if it were to cut into these items. But the Senator: from Wis- consin with his usual good judgment, I think, has made it clear that it will not. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator. Mr. President, finally, I want to ex- press my disappointment that the com- mittee has eliminated totally the $30 million added by the House for assist- ance for health manpower training in- stitutions as authorized by chapter 82, title 38. I believe that at least $20 mil- lion of this amount is fully justified and can be and will be obligated during this fiscal year, if appropriated, for grants to medical schools and other health manpower institutions as well as to VA hospitals pursuant to subchapters II, III, and IV of that chapter. This program has been traditionally a zero budget re- quest by the Office of Management and Budget since the enabling legislation was enacted in October 1972, in Public Law 92-541. I consider this program vital to the health care mission of the Veterans' Ad- ministration Department of Medicine and Surgery on the basis that health education and health research programs are an indispensible part of modern hos- pital-based medical programs and that these grants serve to strengthen greatly the capacity of VA hospitals and-their staffs to provide quality care to disabled veterans. I would like to urge the distinguished floor managers to study this matter carefully during the conference with the House committee and to be sympathetic in their evaluation of the $30 million which the House has added for the pur- poses I have just described. Would the distinguished floor managers agree that this matter should be carefully studied and agree to work with the House con- ferees to provide those funds which can be effectively used under this important program? Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, we will have to do that, because of course it is in conference, but I would like to call the attention of the Senator from California to page 35 of the report, two short paragraphs at the top of the page: The Committee has not recommended an appropriation for Assistance for Health Man- power Training Institutions, for fiscal year 1975. On July 23, 1974 the Committee was informed by the Veterans' Administration that a total of 77 grants had been tentatively approved with a first year funding require- ment of $25,738,000. These tentatively ap- proved grants were chosen from 190 that had been submitted with a first year cost of $71,466,000. To date only $930,000 has been obligated for, grants for new State Medical Schools, leaving $24,070,000 available for obligation from the prior appropriation of $25 million. For grants to existing affiliated medical schools $4,311,000 has been obligated and for grants to other Health Manpower Institu- tions a total of $3,242,000 has been obligated, leaving $12,447,000 available for obligation from the prior appropriation of $20 million. This is why we felt that there were funds here for this program. I am sure the Senator recognizes this is a new program, highly controversial program, and we should proceed with dispatch to the extent we can be satisfied it is workable. But also in view of the fact that it is new, we felt there ought to be some caution. That is why we cut it out. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator for that comment. It is my information that there now exists, in the pipeline, grant applications that can take a total justified expenditure of an additional $20 million to cover these grants. I 'would like to simply read one more paragraph which immediately follows those paragraphs from the report which the Senator read: The committee is aware that a zero ap- propriation for fiscal year 1975 will limit the ability of the Veterans Administration to make new grants under subchapters II, III, and IV of chapter 82, which was added to title 38 by that Public Law. Nonethe- less, the committee will certainly be follow- ing the appl'.cation process in connection with such new first-year grants, and will give consideration to providing funds in a supplemental appropriations act, if the need can be justified by those applications. I am grateful that that language was included. Mr. MATHIAS. If the Senator will yield, I believe we have given full assur- ance of the committee's interest in this field. It seemed to be redundant to ap- propriate when the funds were already on hand, unexpended and unobligated at this time. If there is real need, a pressing need, for further funds other than those which have not been ex- pended in the past, and which have carried over, we could give very prompt and, I think, very sympathetic consid- eration. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator very much. We will do our best to docu- ment that need. I understand there are applications for grants that would jus- tify an additional $20 million. I thank both Senators very much. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I send to the desk my amendments and ask the clerk that they be stated. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendments will be stated. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to read the amendments. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that further read- ing of the amendments be dispensed with. The PRESIDING OFFICER. With- out objection, it is so ordered. The amendments are as follows: Senators PsoxarmE, CHILES, HOLLINGS, and NIINN propose the following amendments to the bill H.R. 15572, a bill making appropriations for the Department of Hous- ing and Urban Development; for space, sci- ence, veterans, and certain other independent executive agencies, boards, commissions, corporations, and offices for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1975: On page 2 line 9, strike out $12,500,000 and insert in lieu thereof $12,125,000. On page 3 line 15, strike out $22,500,000 and insert in lieu thereof $21,825,000. On page 3 line 26, strike out $200,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $194,000,000. On page 4 line 13, strike out $125,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $121,250,000. On page 4 line 24, strike out $110,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $106,700,000. On page 5 line 5, strike out $39,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $37,830,000. On page 5, line 11, strike out $50,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $48,500,000. On page 5, line 20, strike out $70,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $67,900,000. On page 5, line 26, strike out $6,320,000 and insert in lieu thereof $6,130,400. On page 6, line 7, strike out $11,900,000 and insert in lieu thereof $11,543,000. On page 6, line 14, strike out $5,580,000 and insert in lieu thereof $5,412,000. Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE iI1fgtt-? t d, (In. page 6, line 17, strike cut $3,530,000 and insert In lieu thereof $8,424,000. ,. page 6. line 20, strike out $6,830,000 ,co insert in lieu thereof $6,ci25,000. .._ page 6, line 24, strike out $19,513,000 ci insert: in lieu thereof $18,927,000. ,,: page 7. line 4, strike out $29,446,000 insert in lieu thereof $28,562,000. f nr page 8 line 6, strike out $4,512,000 and +n ^rt. in lien, thereof $4,376,640. r as,. cage 9 line 2, strike out $265-.000 and in lieu thereof $257,050. ;,, page 9, line 18, strike out $46,900,000 mri insert in lieu thereof $46,759,000. in ,age 10, line 9, strike out $2,349,080,000 Olt! insert in lieu thereof $2,278,607,000. n, page 10, line 16, strike out $144,490,000 And insert in lieu thereof $140,155,000. !In page 13, line 8, strike out $749,124,000 ,ii d insert in lieu thereof $726,650,000. ,_W: page 14, line 8, strike out $675,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $660,958,000. On page 15. line 9, strike out $5,000,000 and insert In lieu thereof $4,860,000. On page 15, line 17, strike out $5,163,000 and insert in lieu thereof $5,008,000. in page lii, line-24, strike out $43,077,000 Slid insert in lieu thereof $42,947,000. tin page 16, lines 9 and 10, strike out $38.- 600,000 and insert in lieu thereof $37,345,000. On page 20, line 8, strike out $230,850,000 and insert In lieu thereof $223,924,000. On page 20, line 20, strike out $45,150,000 and insert In lieu thereof $43,796,000. On page 21, line 2, strike out $10,000,000 and insert in lieu thereof $9,700,000. i71a page 21, line 7, strike out $2,100,000 and insert in lieu thereof $2,037,000. On page 22, line 14, strike out $100,000 and insert in lieu thereof $97,000. +n r, PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the amend- roents be considered en bloc. 'rile PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. \'Ir. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I am proposing an amendment to cut 3 per- cent essentially from the controllable items in this bill. The cut would not affect three major categories of items: First. HUD's contractual housing pay- ments which have been reduced by $125 million by the committee; second, the $200 million disaster relief funds given to the President; third, those fixed items In the Veterans' Administration budget such as pension, veterans' benefits, and so forth, which are fixed items and which are paid as a right. What this means is that only about one-fourth of the total funds in this appropriation bill can be subject to this further 3-percent cut across the board. But they should be cut. In the subcommittee and full commit- tee of the Appropriations Committee we worked our will and increased a few pro- grams, cut others, and essentially granted the funds requested to still others. i"ihat I am proposing now is that we c=_it a further 3 percent across the board iii the controllable items. Inflation is the country's number one problem. If we are to meet inflation, we peed to cut the Federal budget. 's'wice the Senate has voted to cut the budget or place a ceiling on the budget of $295 billion, once by a vote of 74 to- 12. That is a $10 billion cut in a $305 billion. ladget, or about 3 percent. are two very strong Senate votes for a ago, I believe on Thursday or kriuay, $10 billion cut. If we mean business, we the Senate voted on the transportation should carry out that general intention appropriation bill. Senator Bvs1 the in the bills before us. manager of the bill brought in a. oieas- I am therefore proposing that we cut ure that was under the budget, under 3 percent from those controllable items the House, and then in addition t that in the bill. The amount of the controlla- he proposed a 3-percent floor cut, xr am- ble items is $5,337,474,000, and 3 percent proximately a 3-percent cut, on ai the of that amount is $160,124,000. controllable items in that measure '1Cha.t Let me say that I am not proposing to passed by a 4 to 1 vote. I think the Sen- cut veterans' benefits, pensions for vet- ate made it very clear that even t?lougti erans, their widows, or children, would, there were programs they wante 1 arid along with other uncontrollable items, supported, we must recognize th i,t in- make up well over two-thirds of the flation has now reached a stage n our funds in the bill. I am proposing we cut society where we have to act on i. those items which are not controllable. Mr. President, I do hope thi t the We should make no distinction between Senate will give these amencmerits, and among programs. Every agency favorable consideration. should have to take its fair share, Mr. DOLE. Will the Senator yield" namely, a 3-percent cut. Mr. PROXMIRE, I yield to tl e c14- The distinguished Senator from Arl- tinguished Senator from Kansas. zona (Mr. GOLDWATER) made a very elo- Mr. DOLE. Mr. President. I ask irialli- quent appeal as only he can-became he moos consent that I be joined as a co- Is so familiar with the space program- sponsor of the amendment. for the space program to be exempted. The PRESIDING OFFICER. ,A ithout Mr. President, I just cannot see any objection, it is so ordered. ground for picking them out any more Mr. DOLE, I have listened verb care- than I can the National Science Founda- fully to the Senator. It has beer Indi.- tion, the Securities and Exchange Com- cated in the past few days on the Sell. mission, or any other number of ?,gen- ate floor there is nothing troubling the ties which are absolutely essential for American people more than inflation. the operation of our Government in a According to a recent poll, 48 erceitt fair and equitable way, but which in my of the American people feel thzt the view can absorb a 3-percent cut. Government is responsible for inflation It is not as if we are cutting 50 peicent. and it is clear that Federal spen..i.ing is We are cutting 3 percent. I think all of one of the primary contributing factors. us have had enough experience in Gov- In this morning's Washington Post, I ernment to know that it is possible, or in noticed an article, which was ~reatiy business to know that it is possib'e, to heartening to me, entitled "Public Gives cut 3 percent without cutting the real Better Mark to Congress." This leading muscle or bone of any operation. Is especially heartening to me th-s year, These agencies are not necessarily fat as I am sure it is to other Senators. and lazy, but a 3-percent cut is some- However, upon reading further into thing they can do in this period of very the article, I was dismayed to see that serious inflation without great sacrifice, the improvement in public attitude to- Inflation is now running at double ward Congress only reflects tha'? of 29 digit numbers. Unquestionably, it is the percent of the population. At the saane No. 1 issue, the No. 1. problem, for 210 time, 64 percent feels that the C,ulg*, eat million Americans. I: think they feel is only doing a fair to poor job, overwhelmingly this Is something they One reason for the low public regard would like to have faced. for Congress is undoubtedly inflation, In my State of Wisconsin I recently which has become the biggest economic sent out a questionnaire to over 100,000 issue in the country today. The people people. I asked them whether they would are looking to us for action on this mat- favor a $10 billion cut in the Federal ter and we should not fail them. budget. As part of the answer, because it The time to act is now. Today we are was part of the same questionnaire, I considering the HUD appropriation bill indicated what they had to cut. I pointed and this measure presents an oppor'tu- to the military budget, the Space budget, nity to reduce inflationary . eden i1 and the various other'oudgets. spending. I was astonished by the response. By FEDERAL sPENDING RESPONSIBLE FOR ii ILA I furs a 10 to 1 margin, 89 percent to nine High Federal spending has been icleri- percent supported a Federal budget cut tified as one of the primary causes of of $10 billion. I think if you can get al- inflation. The President has stati.d that most 90 percent of the people in my a, $5 billion cut in the budget is ne ressal'Y. State to approve anything it is astonish- Others, both in the administration and ing. We have a State that disagrees on the Congress, have advocated cuts of $5 almost any issue you can find. I ant sure to $10 billion. The best econonlist in if you asked 100 people whether they the Nation have stated that a reduction loved their mother you would not get in Federal spending is absolutely es sen- that kind of response. tial to prevent inflation from get, ing out So I think it should be clear to the of hand. Senate of the United States that this is As I have said many times in the past something that the people want, some- week, the reduction of Federal saencli;cig thing that they recognize very wisely. If is one area where we could demonstrate we are going to do anything concrete our commitment to doing so,netii1cit .to, voted to do that on June 13. Prior itis something we should do. So for that to that, on May 9, we passed a similar reason I would hope this is adopted. amendment by about a 2-to-1 vote. Those One other point is that just a few days the Senate to reduce the budges. in tthe past few days. Cut were nearly r chieved Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 1974 Approved F ir AJ/OkE BDP7c 9 8000700040022-1 S 14321 in the Treasury and Public Works ap- propriation bills last Wednesday and Thursday. Finally on Friday, we were able to cut the transportation appropri- ation bill by 3.5 percent. VA BUDGET EXEMPTED It should be emphasized that this amendment specifically exempts the funds for the most vital veterans' pro- grams. Most veterans and their surviv- ors are having a difficult time as it is living on the meager pension and com- pensation they receive. Veterans have already made a sacri- fice for the country which we can never totally repay. Most of the funds in the VA budget are obligational expenditures. These funds cannot be reduced and I do not support cutting them. Hopefully, the Senator's effort today to cut 3 percent of the controllable items, not touching the contractual or fixed items, will be successful. Mr. PROXMIRE. I thank the Sena- tor from Kansas. I would like to say one more thing be- fore I yield to the Senator from Mary- land, Mr. President, As chairman of this subcommittee I had a chance to sit in on every single minute of the hearings on this bill. The hearings are very substantial. I ,am. con- vinced, on the basis of the record, that we can make this kind of reduction with- out any serious damage to the agencies. In fact, I think their performance might very well be improved. As the perform- ance of business is improved, the per- formance of even a family may be im- proved, if they are careful and more prudent about their spending. So for that reason, too, because I think I understand these agencies-they all had an opportunity to appear- under these circumstances this cut is a respon- sible cut and a reasonable cut. It should not cause any serious curtailment of serv- ices to the American people. I am happy to yield the floor. Mr. MATHIAS. Mr. President, our sub- committee operates, in. general, in such harmony and operates on the basis of consensus so often that I am very reluc- tant to oppose the suggestion that has been made by our chairman. But I do feel that it is necessary to oppose this amendment, and I think it has to be op- posed on both practical grounds and grounds of principle. The practical grounds are very real. When we consider the facts that have al- ready been given to the Senate by the Senator from Arizona (Mr. GOLDWATER) about the reductions in force and the re- ductions in level of expenditure that have been made in NASA, and then when we consider that by this amendment we will require, we will mandate, the riffing of approximately 3,000 more employees at NASA alone, we question whether that agency will really continue to have an independent existence, whether it really is worth it. Let us consider the impact of this amendment on the NASA program. I in- quired about that over the weekend, and I was advised that the Space Shuttle, which is already well beyond its pro= jected schedule, would be delayed by an additional 18 months. The Senator from Kansas says that he is concerned about inflation. I am concerned about inflation, and I think we all ought to save all the money we can. But if the Senator from Kansas wants to worry about inflation, he ought to consider the ultimate impact of this cut on inflation. As the Senator from Arizona has laid it out very clearly, we have ahead of us the prospect of saving 20 percent of the electricity which is transmitted by long- distance lines. If we can save 20 percent of the electricity on long-distance lines, we are going to do more for. inflation, more for the international currency posi- tion of this country, because of the sav- ing in the oil that would have to be bought overseas, than we possibly could by this amendment, which would cut very vital Government agencies and ex- penditures. I think the practical factor here is that this cut is too deep. I have joined the chairman time and again in any re- ductions that I thought were necessary, but- I believe that this one does go too far. I have said that I thought it was bad not only in practice but also in principle, and I think the form of the amendment demonstrates that point. It is not an across-the-board cut. The chairman-I salute him for that and support him in it-has exempted certain elements in this' bill from the cut. He has exempted the so-called uncontrollable items. We cannot have an across-the-board cut, by definition, and I think it indicates that we cannot have an across-the-board cut. There are some uncontrollable items, and this is not really an across-the-board cut. It is a cut which is directed at certain programs. It hits them so hard that it really raises serious questions about the viability of those programs at the levels at which they would be left if this amendment were adopted. Mr. PASTORE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. MATHIAS. I yield. Mr. PASTORE. I thought I heard the manager of the bill say that none of the veterans' pensions or payments to or- phans and widows would be cut. My question is this: Will the people who will have to administer these programs be cut? Mr. MATHIAS. It is my understanding that the general administrative expenses of the Veterans' Administration will be cut. Mr. PROXMIRE. No, that is not the case. The cut would be in construction. It would be confined to construction, so far as the Veterans' Administration is concerned. These are the amendments: page 20, line 8, VA construction, major projects; page 20, line 20, VA construction minor projects; page 21, line 2, VA grants for construction of State extended care fa- cilities; page 21, line 7, VA grants to the Republic of the Philippines; page 22, line 14, vocational rehabilitation revolving fund. There would be no reductions any- where else. We would not cut the people who would administer these programs, because we felt that these were obliga- tions of right, obligations under law, and we are not in a position to have the au- thority to make that reduction. Mr. PASTORE. I have another ques- tion for the manager of the bill or his counterpart on the Republican side of the aisle. We had a very scandalous rev- elation not too long ago with respect to some of our Vietnam veterans who had returned. Some of them were paraple- gics; some were quadriplegic. Some could not even light their cigarettes. They did not have the facilities. Many of these hospitals are very old-from World War I and World War II. They have not been modernized. They do not have the equip- ment to take care of some of the very peculiar injuries that have been caused by the kind of war that was conducted in Southeast Asia. Many of these hospitals are not air- conditioned, and some of these young people cannot even move, cannot even use a fan in order to give themselves a little fresh air. They have to just sit in the sweltering heat. Does this proposal mean that we cut this out, too? Mr. PROXMIRE. In the first place, it is a reduction of 3 percent below what the Appropriations Committee appropri- ated. Furthermore, last year $68 million was appropriated. This year, $223 million would be appropriated after the cut. So we increased this by more than three- fold over last year. Mr. PASTORE. I realize that as to the space program, that may be necessary. I am not going to defend that on the floor of the Senate this afternoon. I think that possibly we ought to take care of the people on Earth before we begin to explore any more out in the blue yonder. Why can we not exempt com- pletely the Veterans' Administration? We have these boys who, against their will, have served ,their country. They have returned maimed-some without arms, some without legs. If there is any money here to put a little air-condition- ing in a hospital where they are stretch- ed out on a bed, why do we take that out this afternoon? Why do we not exempt the Veterans' Administration com- pletely? Mr. PROXMIRE. We have exempted about 90 percent of it. The only part we have included is the construction of fa- cilities, and this construction is a mat- ter of timing. This is something that does go right to the heart of inflation. Steel is in short supply; many other elements that go into construction of these fa- cilities are in short supply. it is enor- mously increased over last last year. If it were a bigger cut than it is, I would agree with the Senator. But we do not cut any of the treatment for the veterans, any of the direct services for veterans, any of the pensions for vete- rans, or anything of that kind. Mr. PASTORE. I realize that. I am not saying it does. I handled this budget in the past, and the plan was to do it in a very gradual way, to modernize some of these veterans hospitals. Some of them are in very bad shape. We are saying to these veterans, "As far as you are concerned, you suffer a little more, because we have a little in- Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 S 14322 Approved For Re s ? Qffl iC J ffBOQJf &700040022-1 ugust 5, 1974, flation in this country." I think we should take it out of where we can and not put it on the backs of these veterans who were badly wounded. Mr. PROXMIRE. I say to the Senator from Rhode Island that we have given. by far, the greatest consideration to the veterans. Of the total amount in the bill, $21 billion, as the Senator from Rhode Island knows, about two-thirds, $14 bil- lion, is for the veterans. We exempted virtually all of that. t appreciate the remarks of the Sena- tor from Rhode Island. Mr. CHILES. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. PROXMIRE. I am happy to yield. Mr_ CHILES. Mr. President, I want to compliment the Senator from Wisconsin. T serve on this subcommittee. He has worked long and hard on the appropria- tions, ti; seems to me that the design of this amendment, which exempts completely those items having to do with veterans benefits and the hospital care, recog- nizes what we are trying to do for the veteran. At the same time, it recognizes that the veteran is suffering from in- flation as much as or more than anyone else, especially the Vietnam veteran. He is the victim of inflation, because he is in the highest category of the unemploy- ed today. He is the individual who is having the toughest time in the economy today. This is also true with respect to many of our other veterans who are drawing pensions and are trying to live on the pittance we are giving them-fixed funds-and at the same time we see the cost of living escalating. So anything we can do to try to stop inflation is going to be of more benefit to the people who are in this category than anyone else. I applaud the Senator, because I think that he-together with other Senators- is attempting to get a grip on inflation, and that is the most important thing that one can do for the veteran today. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield on that point? I should like to reinforce what I said to the Senator from Rhode Island and what the Senator from Florida is saying: Whereas we are cutting substantially in the other areas, we are cutting less than one-tenth of 1 percent of the veterans budget-one-tenth of 1 percent. We are cutting far more, in proportion 30 times more in these other budgets. And I think that is right, because I think the veterans deserve everything we can possibly provide them. Therefore, to slow down a little bit, slow down the facility construction by 3 percent this year, it seems to me, is just a modest step. Mr. CHILES. If the Senator would yield further, in the area of HUD, and I know it is very tough for those of us who are concerned with adequate hous- ing. and with trying to house people in America and provide adequate housing for them, to consider any cuts in this area. But I find the prime reason that we cannot have any more housing in this country is that the interest rates are so high, there is no construction money and the people cannot get funds to build houses. The reason for that, again, is infla- tion. If we want to get something started in housing in this country, if we want to start people being able to own a house again, we are going tc have to do some- thing. Mr. President, the observation that the junior Senator from Florida is making is that, I think, the amendment of the Senator from Wisconsin might help in the movement that some of us are trying to make to reduce the deficit we are laboring under this year. If we can cut the spending back to $295 billion and get back to the place where we are in a balanced budget situation, then perhaps we will be in a position to get something done about the interest rates. I think the interest rates are of more serious concern to housing starts, which are really affecting my State tremen- dously. I can tell the Senator that; un- employment is growing every day in my State because there is no construction money available. There are no funds for housing available, and people have stopped trying to buy a house or build a house because of the tremendous inter- est rates. So only if we can do something about that matter can we turn this sit- uation around in that regard. Mr. MATHIAS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question at this point? Mr. CHILES. I yield. Mr. MATHIAS. I certainly agree with him that we have to size every avail- able chance to economize. I think that Government spending does play a major role in inflation. I think the subcommit- tee, under the leadership of the Senator from Wisconsin, has already demon- strated its awareness of that in bringing the bill to the floor in its present :form. But what about problems such as that presented by the National Science Foun- dation's budget? In that budget, al- though we have already enacted a big energy bill with separate funding for the year that just ended, the have $98 million in indirect energy programs, and we are projecting for fiscal year 1975, $149 mil- lion in indirect energy programs. That is $66 million higher. These are program,, that are directed at one of the major causes of inflation, which is a shortage of energy. If we cut back the National Science Foundation- and in this bill we have already cut back the budget estimate by $6.4 million, and we shall cut it back tinder this aniend- ment roughly another $20 million; that is $26 million or a little more-a:re we not in the shape of the dog that finds itself chasing its tail? We are making what we hope is going to be an anti- inflationary move at the same time, that we are taking this step which may have proven, itself, to be inflationary. Mr. PROXMIRE, Mr. President, will the Senator yield on that point? Mr. CHILES. As I recall, we are talking about, before the cut, an increase of $174 million above last year. As I look at the programs of the National Science Foundation-and I support their pro- grams-I think it is important that we continue basic research and that we con- tinue some specific research. But we all know that there are many programs that are now being performed by the National Science Foundation that are certainly not productive for next year or for 5 years or 20 years from now, for instance, if they are studying the eating habits of the African ant and some of the other studies that we see are undertaken. I think what we are saying to them is that they have to look at their priori- ties and, hopefully, they are not Boling to cut anything as important as research technology, of immediate -applica;don in the energy field. Perhaps they will not go out and get some of these programs that are of such an exotic nature that we have tremendous complaint,,: from our people as to why we do not ,ontrol some of that research in a better way. So I think what we are talking about cutting here in no way will handicap them, and again it gets down ro this thing that if we talk about cutting public works, someone says, "Don't cur, here, cut everywhere else," and if ae tallt about cutting space, I usually feel I am for cutting everything else, but I hate to think about cutting space because that is getting into the interests of the area where I live. We all have to consider the special interests of our constituents. But if we are going to do something about spending overall, we have to do something about cutting overall. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, ;l jutst want to reinforce what the Senator from Florida has said so wisely. The National Science Foundation does not have to take a penny for any of this out of space research. The basic research budget for this year is well above last year's budget, in fact, far above it-by some 20 percent or more. So I think the Agency can achieve a modest cut by reducing increases in such areas as materials research and bio- logical sciences, and eliminating the in- crease in funding for social scienc s. Social science research is particularly suspect, with projects ranging fr>ra In- terpersonal Relations Within ti Fam- ily" to "Ethnographic Atlas of Quadros," and "Conflict, Justice, and Coo,pera- tion"-a study of traffic challenges at intersections. There are many other projects, as we pointed out, costing a quarter of a mil- lion dollars in some cases, several hun- dred thousand dollars in others many of which projects are simply not within the expertise of the National Science Foundation. They have one project, for example, which studies hog farming, which certainly ought to be a project within the jurisdiction of the Depart- ment of Agriculture. Others are clearly within the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration. There are many cuts that could be made without cutting the research which the National Science Foundation should be making In the energy area. Mr. HOLLINGS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. CHILES. I yield to the Senator from South Carolina. Mr. HOLLINGS. Mr. President, as to the National Science Foundation, for the information of my colleague from Ma:ry-- land, about 5 weeks ago we passed a spe- cial research and development aun?opri- Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 197 Approved Folt~1/L06fP75A000700040022-1 S 14323 ations bill, and within that bill, the very rather take your money away from where Budget committee chairman arose and point the Senator from Maryland speaks your mouth is, and cut it back $10 billion." said, "We are going to staff, we are go- to, was an appropriation which amount- But the President asked for only a $5 lug to consult; we are going to get room, ed, overall, to $2.3 billion. We are not billion cut. we do not have all the wisdom, we are being puny or backward or unrealistic We also have been trying to bring out going to study." toward the energy problem. On the con- the flaw in comparisons between the- bill Absolutely, I do not denigrate that. I trary, we have boosted it all up. We said, as reported and the budget request. Be- am on that Budget Committee and I "We have got a crisis, and we have got cause we must get $10 million below know we are not ready yet to act-the to apply the funds to it, particularly in these requests, it is not enough for a bill Republican members, for example, have the field of research and development, to be "below the budget." We in Con- not yet been appointed. But who in this and particularly with respect to the Na- r ess, particularly we in the Senate-the tional Science Foundation." g Under that bil nd tio"ed $101 mil- beer distinguished Presiding Officer, the Sen- , we has to the National Science Foundation, been a from leadeOklahoma (Mr. r er In this particular drive, So we are not, all of a sudden, coming with with a myself and others, oterss, , Including , d the here and, like the Senator says, saying Senator from Florida and the Senator we have an energy crisis but th en exacer- bating the crisis by not providing the funds necessary to solve it. Mr. MATHIAS. But the Senator from South Carolina would agree that those appropriations were for areas not cov- ered by programs in this bill, would he not? These are energy research programs which are independent of the major bill, which, as the Senator very properly says, the Senate has already passed and funded. Mr. HOLLINGS. Mr. President, I would like to agree with that, but, serving as a member of the Technology Assess- ment Board, I have to"demur from that judgment. They keep telling us, on the one hand, that this covers a particular item exclusively, and then we go through , ve e manager of the bill it on another particular program, and suggest the method of reduction, instead we now have, at the request of both the of those of us, who do not have expertise, House and the Senate, within the Tech- trying to do the job. Instead of saying, nology Assessment Board, a coordinated "Do not cut off veterans, do not cut off effort to try to out out exactly this dupli- uncontrollables" or trying to make dis- cation. abling economies, the Senator from Wis- It is fine to put the money to it, but it consin has gone down line for line to see is very wasteful and contributory toward where he can effectuate the so-called 3 the inflation itself, if we are going to percent economy and make a saving continue to duplicate, where it can be taken. If I may say another word, I want to commend the distinguished Senator from Wisconsin on his leadership on this par- ticular score. Every time we turn around, we are asked, "What in the world are you meat axes trying to do here on the floor of the Senate?" Well, in the first instance, we are try- ing to be a meat ax, and yet, at the same time we are trying to keep faith with respect to actually doing something on inflation. This body, in great sobriety and solemnity, met on May 9, when inflation was crashing about us, and we voted some 56 to 33 in favor of the amendment of the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROXMIRE) to cut back the total of the budget from $305 billion to $295 billion. That was' some 3 months before the President of the United States finally recognized the problem on August 1. Again, even before the President gave his economic message, we cut back some $5 billion; we had, on June 13, an- other vote on Mr. PROXMIRE'S amend- ment, and this one was 74 to 12. I will never forget trying to listen to the President's economic message. I said- logical, realistic way, to-come-down .to this $295 billion level. We knew of no way other than across- the-board cuts after the bills get to the floor-not, of course, affecting the un- controllables. So, as these budgets came rolling for- ward, $500 million over last year, $620 million more than last year-you could just see that rather than cutting back to the $295 billion level, that we were really going to be $5 billion to $10 bil- lion above what the President requested. We got the leadership and cooperation of the Senator from West Virginia on his bill, and it is, indeed, a better situa- tion with respect to these appropriations bills to ha th Whether that will completely balance us, and mean a $10 billion cut at the end of the line, we do not know, but if we start now-as on this bill today, and on the Interior bill on Wednesday, as we did on Transportation last week-we will be able to reconcile, at the end of this year, as we did back in 1967, when we put in a joint resolution at the end of the year on the continuing resolution. At the end we can see where we did not make cuts and where we did, and we can put it all in order so we can come back out of chaos, say that the Senate is run- ning the budget once again, with only 14 dissenters in the entire body: on a $295 billion budget. That is what the Senator from Wis- consin is leading toward, and that is what we, as a small group from both sides of the aisle, are trying to apply here today and again on Wednesday. I think that the other leaders in the Senate with respect to the chairmen of the several committees should realize our dilemma when we get to the Budget Committee. I was not going to interject the Budget Committee because we had not met, but the distinguished Senator from Mississippi, on his bill, with a That gentleman Is going to cut us off at grand gesture to get authoritativeness, the pass; he is going to call our hand. He is authenticity, credibility for what he was going to say, "All right, you are over there, doing with the "pork barrel," said, We now, asking for a $10 billion cut; sort of will hear from the chairman of the place your money where your mouth is, or Budget Committee." And, of course, the say, "No, not this year, not at this time." It is at this time, in the month of Au- gust, that we are in this terrible dilem- ma of raging inflation-look, yesterday David Rockefeller said that we could have a panic-can we not have, as the Senator from Wisconsin on his- bill, that posture of saying, "We do mean business. We will cut back now. This year." On that score I commend the Senator from Wisconsin for his leadership. Mr. NUNN. Will the Senator from Florida yield. Mr. CHILES. I am delighted to yield. Mr. NUNN. I would like to commend the Senator from Wisconsin also, and I would like to join the Senator from Florida and the Senator from South Carolina in expressing my sincere hope that the amendment of the Senator from Wisconsin will be agreed to. The Senator from South Carolina, I think, went through the history of this movement by a bipartisan group of Sen- ators consisting of the Senator from Oklahoma, who is now presiding; the Senator from New Mexico, who is not on the floor at the moment the Senator , from Kentucky, and the Senator from Florida, I would say the group started off as a very small group, but it has now grown, it is now growing, thanks in large measure to the leadership of the Senator from Wisconsin who earlier proposed and had passed the overall amendment of trying to hold down Federal expendi- tures to $295 billion this fiscal year. One of the regrets the Senator from Georgia has now is that we have already disposed of 6 appropriation measures in this body totaling $30 billion, and the momentum was not strong enough to carry out significant cuts as those appro- priation bills rolled through, even though we made every effort to do so. . So we have already reached a total of $30 billion in appropriations, which, ac- cording to my calculations, is more than 15 percent of all the appropriations requested. According to my further calculations, the net effect of efforts to cut the budget estimates so far has been minor. The net reduction I come up with is $16.6 million out of a total of $29.9 billion. This is a good deal less than one-half of 1 per- cent in reductions so far. Everyone has his own estimates of controllable expenditures. One can get any kind of definition, and I understand that the current OMB definition is that we can control only about $13 or $14 bil- lion of the entire budget. Well, if that is the case, I think we might as well throw in the towel if we have a $305 billion budget and we can control only about $13.5 billion of it. I believe, as do many others, that we have a good deal more control than this. A Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 Approved For ReOlVC3Rj~,gJ A~.: J,-PB75BWp 0070004002241,tgu. 0, 3 casonable measure of our control is the ;c tal of the appropriations we must con- ;ider. I know the veterans appropria- Lion is not in this case because most of hat program is in fulfillment of a n;cdemn obligation. We all want to do ,vhat we can for those young men who a?e veterans and who have given their nest for this country, as did their fathers ,eel grandfathers. Mr. HOLLINGS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield right at that point? Mr. NUJNN. I am glad to yield to the senator from south Carolina. Mr. HOLLINGS. The distinguished Senator is aware, after working on this veterans' problem, that of the entire $14 billion involved in this appropriation bill, the amount involved in this amendment is $8.8 million. I think the exact dollar amounts in there are very appropriate in this part of the remarks of the Senator from Georgia, because what we are doing is just-in that $8.8 million-really not effectuating a large economy, but letting the veterans themselves share in this he will sup- d i , nce drive which, I am conv will not really De cu-ing -u "u-1- .pert. anybody. We will be cutting inflation, coiiaa itte. because really it was Mr..NUNN. I am glad the Senator from and by cutting inflation we will be re- to come out with a bill that would not South Carolina has pointed out that it storing the budgets that inflation. has get fattened maybe we the flooblishin;; some are es is an important part of the amendment. been eroding away. But But of the total appropriating authority So I might just summarize by s: ying kind of a pattern with that last amend- we have about $195.9 billion out of a to the Senator from Florida, who has ment we had on transportation, and total of $322 billion of new budget au- been so kind to yield--I will state t:zis in with this one, and as we go forth until thority y estimated, and if we had been the form of a question for the purpose of tomorrow, and the other bills that will able to get the momentum, which I be- discussion-if we are able to cut the in- come up, we are establishing a 7a1tern lieve is underway now, if we had been flation rate down from 10 percent, 11 where some of us can get into a habit able to get it going from the very out- percent, to 6 to 7 percent, will not the of voting no, and get into a habi?h of set of this process, instead of scoring the agencies that We are talking about now, getting to cut something. first success on Friday, thanks largely to and the recipients of Federal funds be When we can establish that pattern the Senator from South Carolina, the better off even with a 3 or 4 percent then we have got an ability to to back Senator from Florida, the Senator from budget cut? and look at this $30 billion we have al- CHILES. The Senator is absolutely ready passed, and see what we should Kansas, and the Senator from West Vir- Mr . ginia, on his initiative, we would have correct. We are seeing now every day d a considerable amount of money when we start worktag with the a.ppro- abe if we go back to the very beginning of the appropriation crisis, we would have to impose a 5 percent cut on all the ap- propriation measures. But now that we have passed approximately $30 billion of those appropriation measures with little net reduction, that percentage has al- ready moved past 6 percent. So we are losing ground every day that we do not make these cuts, and this failure is im- posing more and more of a burden on the remaining appropriation bills. I have further remarks I would like i;o make at an appropriate point later, Mr. President. But, at this point, I would like just to express my congratulations to the Senator from Wisconsin. He has been a real leader in this regard. It is not easy to cut the HUD budget; it is not easy to cut the space effort; it is not easy to cut the Department of Defense budget; but I think it is necessary. I would like to point to one argument that has been made here, not today, but previously which I think represents the seriousness of the present situation. I hope that argument has faded away into amendment the other day by the distin- sumer protection. Only ao Scaia':una ., te__ the wind and we will not hear it any guished Senator from West Virginia Who against that measure even though it wa more because, to me, it is absolutely fal- moved to cut his own appropriat'.on, but 29 percent higher than last year and ex lacious. The argument is, and it has been at least we are star Ling a pattern. ceeded the President's estimate for thl.-, made very simply that if we do not spend At least we are getting a habit what year. But I recall that in the next fey- this money now on construction, if we may be a habit, to be able to vote on days the vote swelled to 26 who votes. E do not spend this money now on other this floor once to cut soa~teinmg. ~u~v Government programs, that, my good- many years it been since that habit dr s ness, we going have to spend irore prevailed? next year rbecau etinflat on is going up Carolina gives a us something about 196'?. so high. I was not here then, but maybe it h s To me this is a laughable proposition. been that long since the Senate ever di,d This is something that Art Buchwald anything, and Congress ever did an ??? ought to write an article about, that we thing to decide they could cut some him ?. better go ahead and speed it now because The habit has been over all these we have got such an inflationary rate years that on the floor you only add at id, that if we do not spend it now, next year of course, many times we know----and it is going to cost more. What the argu- I applaud the Committee on Appropnia- ment overlooks is that we are the ones tions-many times for saying, "We had who are causing that inflation, in large better add something in this committee part by the expenditures. I would like because if we turn it loose on the floor the people inHUD and the people in the we know that that addition will be nius'h Space Agency and the people in the De- higher." partment of Defense to understand what So the Committee on .Appropri atica'i we are doing to them every year when has only sort of reflected what ha.;aeeia we see 10 and 12 percent inflation. This the will of the Senate, and I think if is the equivalent not of a 3 percent they think the will of the Senate-- know budget cut, if you have 10 or 12 percent the distinguished chairman of tha: corn- inflation: This is the equivalent of a 10 mittee, the Senator from Arkansas, if he or 12 percent budget cut. So if we can get knows the will of the Senate is to hold a grip on excessive Federal spending, if down, you watch and see what he wilt we can indeed cut $10 billion out of the do with that committee. He will be a budget this year on an equitable basis, we cutter as fast as anyone. He has been ing to fight a. battle of delay in that .. .. . -1 tr t y Then I think we also have the ability of having the real experts, and the junior Senator from Georgia and the junior Senator from Florida readily ac- and we know it is different for different knowledge, I think, we are not experts. areas. If it is the military we know that We do not know much about fiscal mat- we have got to add the salary factor for reaction that inflation, the weapons cost factor .or in- terswe. We think is coming a from gut our reactio e that flation, the installation cost factor for in- we ought to do something about this flation; and that is different depending spending. upon whether you are talking about con- We do not know the best way to do it, struction or you are talking about wages. so we come up here and stumble and So if we reduce that automaticaly, the blunder with a meat ax or whatever Senator is right. The same with a cut of else you want to call it, just crying out dollars, they would 'oe getting the same to get the experts' attention so that they thing they are paying for. I think the will do it in the proper way. Senator is so right, it is kind of like Pogo, But I think if there has to ke a pat who said, "We have discovered the enemy tern, and if the Senate does in a couple and they are us." That is kind of where of these amendments, then the expert=s we are now. will be patterned to see what we need to Thank goodness vre are at that stage, do and what the will of the Senate is. I or I hope we are, and I want to asso- think they will come up with a better ciate myself with the Senator's remarks. way of doing it than we are doing at I think he has given us a very good present. scorecard of where we are today, and Mr. NUNN. I would agree wiithh the how many budgets we passed, and cer- Senator from Florida, if the Senator will tainly we cannot really pat ourselves on yield for a minute. Talking a'xut thi the back and say we have done anything pattern, I think it isinteresting to note with, hopefully, tae success of this what happened last week when we started Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 1974 Approved FQ,i-"RJ/O*EBDP7RQR000700040022-1 S 14325 against the bill when it came back from ToN) and the Junior Senator from Okla- from Florida for giving me the oppor- conference. homa (Mr. BARTLETT) may be added as tunity to express these remarks. I know the Senator from Florida, the cosponsors to this amendment. . Mr. CHILES. I thank the distin- Senator from South Carolina, and I, The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without guished Senator from Wyoming. I would could not be more involved in any bill objection, it is so ordered. like to associate myself with his remarks than with agriculture. Mr. HANSEN. Mr. President, I am the and I think he has always been one who Mr. CHILES. It was not easy to vote ranking Republican on the Committee has tried to practice what he preaches against that measure. on Veterans' Affairs and I am certain and not only vote for a cut in spending Mr. NUNN. No; although I would say many veterans will be wanting to know and a ceiling of $295 billion, the bill that the farmers are getting a good deal less why it is I shall be supporting an amend- was first introduced by the distinguished money out of that bill now-I think they ment which, among other things, cuts Senator from Wisconsin who is now the get about $2 out of every $10 spent in that certain items in this budget by 3 %2 per- proposer of this amendment, but has appropriations package-but I could not cent. also been willing to back up that vote look my farmers in the eye in Georgia It has already been pointed out that with voting for specific cuts. and say that I have done anything for there is appropriated by the committee, I think for too long too many of us, them by increasing this bill if at the of recommendations reported, in excess including the junior Senator from Flor- same time we are taking 10, 12, and 13 of $14 billion to the Veterans' Adminis- ida, sometimes voted against the debt percent, out of their pockets with infla- tration. I call attention to the fact that ceiling or voted for some kind of spend- tion. only $8.4 million is being cut by this ing ceiling as a public relations gesture, Nobody, except possibly the consumer, amendment which means that the cut but never really seriously thinking that has been hurt more than the agricultural will be about one-twentieth of 1 percent. we had to come up and pay off that vote community by inflation because fertilizer I say that because we are all concerned by voting to cut some kind of project prices have gone up 100 percent and the about the veterans, for those young men that might influence or affect us at all, gasoline prices and the propane prices and women who have served our country like a vote on an agricultural appropri- that they have to pay for have gone up gallantly and who deserve the very best ations bill, or a public works bill, or even at a staggering amount. we can give them. this bill, because certainly this affects us Tracing this history again, as I said But I think the fact remains that by all. We are all concerned with housing, as we voted on the agriculture and en- taking the action which I hope the Sen- Many of us are specifically concerned vironment and consumer protection ap- ate will take here today in approving this with space and the National Science propriation, there were 26 negative votes. 3-percent cut it will not hurt the veteran Foundation and other portions of this We next had the Treasury and postal or any other person in America, but bill. appropriations, and. 42 Senators voted rather will be of help to him. But if we are going to talk about com- unsuccessfully to cut the amount of the I say that because I am convinced that ing down to a balanced budget, if we are bill. Then, on the next vote, 41 Senators if there is one thing that concerns the willing to vote and be one of those that voted for a 5-percent cut in the public typical American today, it is runaway voted $295 billion, then that takes more works appropriation knowing it would inflation. The only way, Mr. President, than that vote. affect all of us. It affects Georgia; it af- that we can get a handle on that is to It takes being willing to, in some way,- fects me. I have been to the chairman do precisely what we propose here this scale that down. of the Committee on Public Works and afternoon to do, and that is, to take each As the distinguished junior Senator other people and asked for projects in and every one of these budgets and to from Georgia has recited, regardless of Georgia and I intend to go back, but I cut them back so as to bring down the whose kind of figure of controllables you do not think there is anything in Georgia excess of expenditures over receipts to come up with, that means that you have in that bill that would survive the 5- a reasonable, workable amount. to make some serious cuts in a number percent cut. Unless we do that, despite the fact of places if you are going to be able to Nevertheless, 41 Senators voted against that we may propose to pay more to get down to that figure. that, knowing it would affect us. everyone in true purchasing power, they Mr. HANSEN. If the Senator from And our ranks rose to 44 on the next know as most Americans already know Florida will yield for a further observa- vote to cut that measure by 3 percent. that it is a sham and a charade and tion-and I know the Senator from So the handwriting was on the wall at money does not buy as much as it did Utah is anxious to speak-let me say point. last year. this: There is not a single item in this I think the Senator from West Vir- The concern of Americans today is whole budget that does not have a con- ginia made a very notable achievement that we stop this erosion of their pur- stituency. By that I mean there is not in leadership here on the floor of the chasing power. Unless we do that, there any place you can cut where a cut would Senate by next offering to cut his own is serious concern in the minds of many be popular. bill, the transportation appropriation, leaders in America today, including those Mr. CHILES. It is over here because by 3 %2 percent. in the Finance Committee as well as in it had a constituency that put it here to At that stage, 58 Senators joined in. government and in business, that there start with. I believe this demonstrates the build-up is grave danger for this Republic. Mr. HANSEN. Precisely. Every dollar of a significant momentum. I believe the The alternatives that we have to ex- in here had someone interested in that Senator from Wisconsin today is going amine as we reflect upon ways of doing dollar. I know of no fairer way to try to to add to that. otherwise, or what would the effects be reduce total expenditures than to pro- I commend the Senator from Florida if we do not make the cut that has been ceed in the fashion indicated here this and the Senator from South Carolina as proposed now, are frightening indeed. afternoon. members of the Committee on Appro- I am very proud that there is the I thank my colleague. priations and, I believe, the Budget Corn- support that is evident here today to Mr. CHILES. I yield to the Senator mittee, for the leadership they have dis- take this step. I wish that it might have from Utah. played in this regard. started sooner. It has been recounted on Mr. MOSS. I thank the Senator. Mr. MOSS. Will the Senator yield? the floor earlier that efforts were made, I commend him and the others who Mr. NUNN. The Senator from Florida at first unsuccessful efforts, but I think have spoken on this floor about fiscal has the floor. that instead of people trying to impute restraint and the attempt to cut the Mr. CHILES. I promised to yield to the any other one motive to what manifests budget. I, too, would like to be in that Senator from Wyoming, and then I would itself here today, I must say in all candor group. I voted to cut the Transportation be delighted to yield to the Senator from that I believe that a majority of the budget. I was one who voted to have a Utah. Senate of the United States has become ceiling on expenditures when that came Mr. HANSEN. I thank my colleague for aware of the fact that this in the No. up. But I am a little fearful of the way his courtesy. 1 problem, and unless we meet this in which we are going about it. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- problem, unless we overcome this def- In the first place, in listening to the sent that the name of the junior Sena- icit spending, then every other problem debate, the ideas conveyed to we were tor from Wyoming (Mr. HANSEN) , the cannot be handled. that cutting the budget just automati- senator from Kentucky (Mr. HUDDLES- I thank my distinguished colleague cally cuts out inflation, that that is the Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000700040022-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 1 426 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE August D? 1 v ,f solution; that if we should cut the budg- selves on the back, because it is our au- crease is about 3 percent, and the R ,SA et, if we bring it into balance, there thorization bills and the increase that increase is 6 percent. It is true t.aat the would be no more inflation. we pass in those over the years which veterans budget is so much larger that 1 wish that were so. If so, I would be have added to these budget requests. it is a very, very large sum. When you are clad to cut very deeply into all of the Mr. MOSS. I agree that any app:ropri- dealing with $14 billion, of course, an budgets across the board. But as a prat- ation that is made is made in response to increase of $400 million is relatively a tical matter, it will not out inflation any an authorization bill that is passed. The modest amount. appreciable amount. It will cut it some; bill has to be passed in Congress, but it Mr. MOSS. Whether you put it in Aer- ie will have some effect on it. But there also has to be signed into law by the centages or in dollars, over fiscal 1974 ::.re so many other factors which enter President. He has to ask for the size it is a $662.8 million increase, and ie,to our inflation now that the size of budget that he needs in order to carry $461.8 million of that is for veterans. the Federal Budget is only one small. out the terms of that legislation, or what Of course, In dealing with the total figure factor. he thinks he needs. to be paid out to veterans, I am riot ar? u- tra fact, in a meeting which we held I do not want the impression to be ing that right at the present time. with some of the top economists during given that the Congress never cuts. I ap- What I would like to return t) is the the latter part of last week, their esti- preciate the explanation of the Senator discussion of NASA. NASA has been cut idiate was that if we cut $10 billion from from Florida. well below half of its peak perioc. There the budget, it would only affect the in- Most amendments that come on the is no program in the Federal Govern- hation rate by about one-half of 1 per-- floor are budget increasing amendments. ment that has been cut more in the Last cent. At the rate it is galloping along now It is the Appropriations Committee that few years than has NASA. in two digit figures, that is not a very has had the brunt of holding the budget Two years ago, as the Senator will iicep cut in the inflation. There are many, down, which they have done in this in- recall, we passed the constant level budg- many other things that have to be done. stance. In this particular bill, which is et for NASA, and we have not lived up The other thing that concerned me a rather a conglomerate of several agen- to that in one year since. We are far 'be- little is that the Senator from Florida cies, the big increase comes In the vet- low that now. Consequently, we h;ive- w,vas saying, in effect, that the Congress erans section of the bill. That is because abandoned that position alread:i. or the Senate always added on to the of changing the formula as to what a Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator knows budget, that we always loaded it on, that veteran is entitled to by reason of has why the NASA program has been re- we never did cut. military service. duced. We were spending an overwhelrn- As a practical matter, Congress has cut Judgments have been made that that Ong amount of the NASA budget on the President's budget request every sin.. is what is needed and that is what is fair. the Moon shots. We were going to the "le year during the term of this Presi- Mr. PROXMIRE. If the Senator will Moon, in a project that President Ken- dent, and every year since I have been yield, the biggest percentage increase in nedy set for this country many years in the Congress; save possibly one. the bill is in NASA, not veterans. It is a ago. It was given top priority. This en- I give great credit to the Appropria- $207 Million increase for NASA. compassed a very large proportion of Lions Committee, on which the Senator Mr. MOSS. No, that is not correct. the NASA budget. That is over now. To serves, for doing that. As a matter of Mr. PROXMIRE. I am talking about say that the NASA budget has laeen cut fact, this budget we are considering to- the $207 million Increase over last year. is to say that we are no longer trying day is $139.9 million below the budget Mr. MOSS. That is right. It is an to go to the Moon. request, if we should pass this without increase over last year of about 34 per- Mr. MOSS. We are no longer going to ry change at all. cent, which Is less than the inflationary the Moon, but we are doing a number Mr. CHILES. I think the Senator is factor that has been plowed in this year of things that are carrying It cn. alter correct. If I gave him some false feeling over last year. the Apollo project was out of the way? we of my attitude on that in my statement, Mr. PROXMIRE. It Is an Increase of set this constant level budget as to what I want to correct that. What I was say- about 6 percent over last year, an In- we would do in NASA. We went; from -ng is generally the Appropriations Com- crease of $200 million over $3 billion last 35,000 to 25,000 employees in NASA. roittee was fighting a holding battle be- year. This cut would probably result in 2,500 cause any cuts that they were trying to Mr. MOSS. No, it Ras $96.7 million over more being dropped. make in the budget they had to be care- last year. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, will ful about because it was on the floor that Mr. PROXMIRE. I refer the Senator the Senator yield? we added to their budget. What I was to page 50 of the report. The first column Mr. MOSS. I yield. crying was in my experience, in just the shows the obligationael authority for 1974. Mr. GOLDWATER. To keep the record Lew years that I have been here, it is that The fifth column shows the app:..opria- straight, the hardware and the material f have never seen, before this year, any tions increase, and Is $207 million on a for the Moon shots have beer. bought cut on the floor, on the floor of the Sen- $3 billion base. That calculates out to and paid for many budgets ago. We still ;ate, that was successful. It was always more than 6 percent. have vehicles that can go to the Moon, an addition on the floor of the Senate to Mr. MOSS. But the Senator has Ig- and the costs are not reflected in this the appropriations bill. pored entirely that $111 million of that budget. The Appropriations Committee has, I is carryover from Isst year, which re- I still maintain along with the chair- think, cut the budget request. duces the increase to $97.7 million. which man, under whom I serve, that NASA There is one other thing that I want is 3.1 percent. has taken as big cuts as any agency in to add because I think it is something Mr. PROXMIRE. I am informed by this Government. When we cut an or- that Congress really fails to talk about. Lite staff that there is no carryover here. ganization such as this, which is not We like to talk about how we cut the Mr. MOSS. It is $111 million. only on the verge but also in the procese President's budget request, and how we Mr. PROXMIRE. That Is not included of making greater material advances for :cave done that over all these years. And in the figures I gat^e_It~was $3 billion our population than any other agency, For us to say that and not take any kind coati. fS a responsibility for the authorization Mr. MOSS. But the Appropriations bills that we pass, which are the bases in Committee had to add $96.7 million or most instances for the budget request. 3.1 percent, which In not even the infla- So where we continue to pass higher tionary figure. Therefore, it is less in real and higher authorization bills, whether purchasing power. A is this President, the past one, or the The point I was going to make, is that :resident before that, the President must this particular budget has been increased submit a budget message to us based on largely by the veterans amount, which the authorization bills, in most instances, is $586 million over last year. This Is that we pass. about 70 percent of the amount it has 'Then if we say we cut that back, we been increased over last year's budget. cannot exactly automatically pat our- Mr. PROXMIRE The veterans in- Chamber, I imploredthe chairman of the committee, the Senator from NVisconsin. to vote on each one of these items. For example, I could cut the daylights out of HUD, not just by 3 percent; and there are others in which we really could snake cuts. Instead of taking 3 percent from an agency that has been doing an excep- tionally fine job, I suggest that we take these one at a time, and I will have a shotgun out for HUD. Three percent of. that is sort of laughable. Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 1 J71Approved Fo 8 Of .E9M9P7gENA, 8000700040022-1 S14327 Mr. CHILES. Mr. President, I would lead to increased productivity and to in- sociations, banks, commercial issues, and like to comment on that. Therein is the creased spending, and that would stop we will reduce that much competition problem, the pattern that seems to have inflation. for the American dollar. Liquidity will developed, since we started with Agri- Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will be up and the cost of credit will be down. culture and went to Treasury and Public the Senator yield? Much of the reduction in the civilian Works and Transportation, and now this. Mr. CHILES. I yield, budget, in DOD, or space, can be handled There is some constituency for each Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I ask by attrition. That cannot be done with project, and each one feels as the distin- for the yeas and nays. small businesses, homebuilders, con- guished Senator from Arizona does: I The yeas and nays were ordered. tractors going broke each day, because will cut the daylights out of everything, Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, I share the they simply cannot get the money they but do not cut mine. concern of the Senator from Florida need to carry on. The only problem with that is that so about whether there may be a feeling I do not think we ought to forget when long as everyone is honored in that re- approaching panic in the country. I do we are talking about which is the greater quest, that is how we got to $311 billion. not think we are that close yet, but we problem, unemployment or inflation, that That is how we get to the $10 billion to may be. I ask the Senator If he does not the two go hand in hand. If we do not $12 billion over the amount of money we think we are more likely to get that kind do something about inflation, we are have. Each one of us is willing to do of panic out of a spurt in our unemploy- going to have massive and growing un- everything-except. The junior Senator ment rolls than from continuing infla- employment. By the same token, if we from Florida has been one of the excep- tion. They are both bad, but if we are do not do something about the liquidity tions in that. going to have a panic, I think it is going crisis that is perhaps our most immediate I think the only way we are going to to come when unemployment goes over problem-and I do not know any way get to this thing now is that there cannot 6 percent and keeps climbing. of measuring the seriousness of these two be any exceptions. We will have to face Mr. CHILES. Unemployment is very things, as they are all serious. If we do up to the fact that if we are going to do bad, and I am not one of those who want not do something about it, we are not something about it, we have to do it now, to ring out inflation by just letting un- going to be able to come to grips with I want to comment on the distin- employment skyrocket. I think unem- inflation or unemployment. guished Senator from Utah's observa- ployment is skyrocketing now and is Mr. CHILES. Mr. President, the dis- tions that many of the economists now going up now, while inflation is con- tinguished Senator from New Mexico say that when we make a $10 billion cut, tinuing. It is doing so in my State, be- had requested that I yield to him. we are not going to affect inflation too cause much of my State is geared to con- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- much. I believe that we can get all kinds struction, and that has come to a halt. ator from Utah is recognized. of experts to give us all kinds of answers I had 20 or 30 calls last week from Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, just by way on that. I do not know what it will do contractors or building suppliers or peo- of comment, it is very unusual to have with respect to the percentage of ple in the building business who told me unemployment and inflation going up at inflation, they are stopping, that they have to lay the same time. That does not fit the We are dealing with two things; We off people. They said, "You are going to classic pattern. But I think that if we are dealing with inflation on one hand see the largest form of unemployment In cut back too hard and too quickly on and with a recession that possibly can your State." That is occurring today, and Federal expenditures, we will find un- be the start of a depression on the other I think that kind of employment is going employment spurting. hand, to continue. - Mr. CHILES. I yield to the distin- I have a strong feeling that whether Perhaps there would be some kind of guished Senator from New Mexico (Mr. that happens or not, in large part, is go- employment with what we are talking DOMENICI). ing to depend upon the people panic. about in this cut, but I think it is small Mr. DOMENICI. I thank my distin- Right now, I think there is sort of a near compared to what it is going to be in guished friend from Florida. panic occurring, and part of the reason the present path we are traveling. At the outset I wish to state that it for it is the feeling people have as to how Mr. NUNN. Mr. President, will the is with reluctance that I support this in the world we can be running this kind Senator yield? amendment. My reluctance is not based of deficit budget. They see that over the Mr. CHILES. I yield. upon my firm commitment to cut the years it has affected inflation. All the ex- Mr. NUNN. I say to the Senator from budget this year, but, rather, stems from perts will agree to that, regardless of how Utah that one thing that appears to be the only way that I see that I can have they say a cut will affect Inflation now. happening-although I am not an eco- any impact. That is to do precisely what Congress is continuing to allow that to nomic. expert-is that the liquidity prob- we have been doing for the last 10 days happen, and the Executive is continuing lem we have in this country has perhaps to 2 weeks; that is, come to the floor of to allow that to happen. With interest become even more severe than either the the Senate with as many people as we rates what they are, with the recession inflation problem or unemployment, al- can gather around us, either in support gaining, with productivity coming down, though they are all interrelated and are of our own motion to recommit, or to still no one is doing anything about it. all part of the same vicious circle. cut, or to support amendments proposed I think the feeling people have that no What is happening with respect to the by others. one is minding the store is leading to the liquidity problem? One thing is that As my distinguished friend from near panic. My feeling is that if we every day people-those who still have Florida said, and as my distinguished could show that we are going to do money-are refusing to put their money friend who is presiding, the Senator from something about the one thing we can do in higher yield securities, because they Oklahoma (Mr. BARTLETT), has said a something about, Government spending, are beginning to feel that these securi- number of times, if we do not do it this it would help. We cannot pass a bill that ties are not safe. Banks are having dif- way, what we have is just more and more will stop inflation. We cannot stop in- ficulty in issuing certificates of deposit. of what we have had for the last 10 or flation throughout the world. We cannot Bond issues are not being funded. Each 15 years. Everybody votes against pro- do something immediately about the day, they have to come off the bond grams that he does not want, and there food shortages or the energy crisis and market. What is the reason? People are are only a few programs that 15 or 20 the like. But we can do something about putting their money in Government Senators do not want. Then everybody Government spending. bonds. Where do those bonds come from? votes for those that he wants. As a re- I feel that if we were to give evidence They come from the necessity of having suit, we have 20 Senators on every side to the people that we were going to do to finance the deficits that we pass here, of every issue, and the American people something about that, then we could do that the President proposes each year. sit back there confused, because they something psychologically for the peo- Does it mean that we -should not issue think their Senator has voted the right ple that would stop this near panic and Government bonds? I do not think it way. But all of a sudden, as we add it perhaps reverse the whole situation. means that. But its does mean that if we up, nobody has voted for a budget cut That could be more important than any can get the Government's $7 billion, $8 because never are there enough Sen- two-tenths of 1 percent or any other billion, or $10 billion deficit out of the ators all on one side. figure in regard to the stopping of Infla- market, there will be that much more Therefore, I have no alternative de- tion. It could be the stimulus that could money to go into savings and loan as- spite the fact that I agree with many of Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 1.* 2 Approved For R l ~~? r~L? 9& 5B( $ 440700040022 ttgtts `, . 3 14 the statements that the distinguished if that is true or not. We are being told our authority to handle the fiscal affairs `ienator from Arizona (Mr. UoLDWATBR) by some experts that the uncontrollables of this Government through the proc- ca.vc3e this morning about the tremendous are in such preponderance that we could esses I have described and which Sena- c evaney of the space program., about only cut a few million dollars, realists- tors far more eloquent and experienced 1,5 tremendous technological advances, tally, out of a budget. than I, have described in the past 2 '.bout what it offers for the future of I say, here and now, that if that Is weeks. le. aer_icans in education, in health, in where we are, then we ought to tell the To repeat, it is with reluctance that cc ray. Because I have been part of the American people that. If, in fact, this I vote for a cut in the space proirosn. :,u,c program, I am aware that in the whole process we are going through is and for some of HUD's programs, but 1. a,t Yew years they have been the victim meaningless because we are going to can commit that I will consistently do it if cuts. spend $30 billion because we cannot con- in programs oven more firmly tied to my in another way, because their budget trol the budget, then I think we ought to state, to its economy, to its scientific almost always an annual budget, they say, all in unison, we deplore it, we are community. I have done that. I do hope suller each year a cut and this year they going to change it, but it is a fact of life. that in the long run, the message will c ave suffered another. I am not yet convinced that it is. get across that we want, in a bipar1 lean omit to those who want to listen I am not yet convinced that we cannot manner, once again to take con;rol of a at one can get up and talk about all cut 2.5 percent, 3 percent or 3.5 percent this monstrous process which feR? of us, rods of economic aspects of the infla- on every budget that hits the floor, let can understand but which the American tionary period that we are in. They can the conference iron out the inconsisten- people, in their own way, understand hear the pros and cons of high interest: ties, and give a clear, resounding signal tremendously today. they can talk about unemployment and to the American people that we are will- In fact, I am convinced that they blame underemployment and all the others. But ing to bite the bullet on special projects Congress more for inflation than they almost all economists now agree that an for our States, for our constituents, for blame business or labor, and I sc y they, excessive r'ederal budget, excessive Fed- our kind of thinking about the country's are right. I say that we ought to do some- eral deficit spending is the one ingredient future, so long as everyone is willing to thing about it, even if it is only to speak that is common to all of their thinking. bite the bullet to some: extent, across the up loud and clear for some kind oof con- ?''or that reason, today I am going to be board, in an equitable manner. gressional control. e. onsistent. I know none of us is expert enough to So I state with reluctance onco again f want everyone to know that I am not have the capacity that the Of ce of that I will support the reduction on this picking on the Shuttle. I support it. I am Management and Budget has and that measure. trot picking on NASA. I support it. other entities have that can be very Mr. DOLE. Mr. President-- On the other hand, I started, 2 weeks precise on what we can and cannot do, The PRESIDING OFFICER. Does the ago, voting with 17 other Senators on what would be prudent under these Senator from Florida yield to the Senator ac;_+,inst the budget for agriculture and circumstances or under that. I arc left from Kansas? are im- in the posture that I am convinced that Mr. CHILES. Mr. President, I ,told to environmental protection 'Those portant matters to me, to nay State, and inflation is the most serious problem the Senator from Kansas, and then yield to my committee. But it was $2.9 billionn, facing our land. It is creating anger, the floor. 1nore than last year, and I wondered, frustration; people are now giving up in Mr. DOLT:'. Mr. President, there are a when we add them all up, where will we small businesses. We wonder why pro- number of approaches to cutt:ng the i::e this year? ductivity is down. It is because there is a budget, as I pointed out the other day. So that those who wonder why I voted fear about the future. I commend, as previously, the Apl,ropria- gainst NASA will know that I am not I want to do my share as a Senator to tions Committee and its leadership for ,:sicking on it, I voted for a 5-percent and let the signal Out that that aspect of their efforts to hold down spending. then for a 3.5-percent cut in Public this inflationary spiral is out for the There is probably no other group of more Works and AEC. To those who wonder budget of the United States, that I am fiscally responsible men in this Congress whether I have some special interest that willing, to the extent possible, to do what than the Appropriations Committee.. 7. pick on, I would like them to know that I can. But it must be recognized tilt since 'no budget that we vote for in the Senate I am also aware, with regard to this the Appropriations Committee hearings t'as more impact on my state than the budget, that perhaps HUD Is not getting started in January, there has been a sig- ,AEC. indeed, the AFC budget had $43 the benefit of the act, that they have nificant change In the rate of i:mflati.on, iailifon for my State. i nevertheless voted been cut back for a few years, that their Therefore a great number of us Derno- 1o cut it 5 percent; that tailed. I voted impoundments have been held legal, that crate and Republicans, are involved In cut it 3.5 percent, and it failed. they are now expected to use any initia- trying to catch up with the American supported the cut in the transporta- tives and thus need new personnel. I am people. We feel it is necessary to provide t. .en budget. Yes, I know that it was aware of that problem with reference to leadership in the Senate to make a mod- ather meager when compared to others, this budget. But I ask what budget is crate cutback in each appropriat=ion 'bill. ird yes, I know that the budget com- going to come before us-military, HEW, I believe that in this case 3 p'r ent is aaittees are now trying to shave therh and the rest-that does not have that a responsible cut and that it is rep:pon- before they come to the moor. kind of situation where, if we look at it sive to holding down Inflation. Certainly s, I also know that the chairman of minutely, we can justify everything in it? there may be other ways to approach it. Lie Committee on Appropriations has a I have items in this budget that I Cutting the Federal budget is not the only 1, a:rrrrment when he says we will not have asked for that have been put in by cure for inflation, but it is one Thing we ,?t them down. in fact, we shall add to the committee. Ye.s, indeed. I expect can do. It is about the best thin:t we can uteri and let the Senators take them of them to be cut 3 percent or 3.5 percent. do as Members of Congress, and it is ,n the floor. I respect his advice, and I And I do not say that I relish that. But something that can be done on a clay- ia erstand the problem that he has, but I say I relish the opportunity ,o say, by-day basis. said the other day, it appears to rue loud and clear, that we must get this So, as I Indicated earlier, if the 3 per- +i.i,t the American people are looking fc'r budget somewhere between $255 and cent cut ofered by the distinguis;ted Sen- ;nal, a signal that we are committed $300 billion, and if it cannot be done ator from Wisconsin is not ace eptable, the proposition of coning up with a because of the past 20 years of back- maybe there is some other way 4o give idget that is as close to Being balamed door and uncontrollable budget items, us a total Spending cut. We have p sse,_l scsss ale. i:aen I think we ought to call it what it some bills without cuts. But there Is a have just a few more comraments. As is. We ought to commit to the American strong momentum now in the Senate, clamber of us-Senator BARTLETT, den- people that we are going to take it back which started a little over a week ago, t;-2 (HTLES, Senator NUNN, Senator within our control. I believe there is a majority new in the ,e;. and myself-acs we get together For those in this Congress who speak Senate, of Democrats and Republican EI try to talk about how we can cut the of giving away our authority to Press- all concerned about inflation and fscal + let, we are told by experts that we dents-there has been much tall: about responsibility, so that these cuts will be -iLI t be at a point in history where we that in the past. I do not .think there is sustained in this appropriation bill. canel i"'?snot control the budget. I do not knew any question that we have given away any future appropriation bills. Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 19 74pproved FoCONGRE2005/06/06 IOCORD P7 SENATE 8OR000700040022-1 S 14329 To the junior Senator from Kansas, Ing in the Senate today Is support that Nonetheless, it occurs to me there is all that indicates a responsible attitude on will help bring about fiscal restraint and the more reason why we should look for- the part of the Senate. help bring about a reduction in the rate ward to adopting some changes in the Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I sug- of inflation. future that would make it easier to ad- gest the absence of a quorum. Also, I think that here today we are just the outflow of money to the Inflow, The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Do- also actually helping bring about control and we have passed a very important bill MENICI). The clerk will call the roll, of spending on various budget items. Cer- earlier this year toward that end. The assistant legislative clerk pro- tainly this can improve efficiency as well Nonetheless, there are other changes ceeded to call the roll. as show the American people that there that need to be made, changes in the Mr. BARTLETT. Mr. President, I ask are a number of Senators who are will- structure of our bills and in the manner unanimous consent that the order for ing to cut back. I might stress, as I look in which we approach spending in Con- the quorum call be rescinded. across the Chamber at my friend from gress. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without Georgia, my friend from Florida, and my It was my pleasure several weeks ago to objection, it is so ordered. friend from New Mexico now in the chair, join with the Senators from Georgia, Mr. BARTLETT. Mr. President, I wish that they have expressed willingness to Florida, Kentucky, and New Mexico, and to join with others in support of the cut back programs that benefited their Senators from South Carolina, Nebraska, amendment by the Senator from Wiscon- States, and programs of which they have Kansas, and many others, on a bipartisan sin. It has been brought out in the de- a particular knowledge and interest, pro- basis echoing the feeling of the Senator amendment, and certainly cutting back expenditures Is not without problems. But if the basic problem were under- spending, we have solved that prob- lem many, many times down through the years, because we have been over- spending for a long time. Nonetheless, there is a problem, and we realize that we are on the horns of a dilemma; that we have, on the one hand, rising unemployment, and on the other runaway inflation. But certainly the economists, almost unanimously, are agreeing that inflation must be brought under control if we are going to have a strong, reasonable economy and one which will provide for the needs of the people of this Nation. The momentum on the floor of the Senate has been mentioned as growing in favor of fiscal restraint, in favor of balancing the budget and cutting back the deficit spending. I believe that this momentum cannot help taking the mo- mentum out of inflation. In fact, I cannot think of anything that would have greater psychological impact, because I do not believe that the people of this country believe that the U.S. Senate will vote for reductions in the budget, or vote for significant cutbacks. But I think this apparently is being done, and there is a growing number of Senators who are expressing themselves with votes to cut back on spending. So I think this can have a tremendous psychological Impact, and the American people are going to be saying, "If the Members of the Senate can do this, then certainly the bankers, the businessmen, and the union leaders can take the steps that they must take in order to strengthen the economy and bring it un- der control that will provide opportuni- ties for the citizens of our country." We are all concerned about the high interest rates. Certainly I do not think we can expect, on any kind of quid pro quo basis, that if we reduce expenditures there automatically will be a reduction of interest rates; but I do believe there is ample evidence from economists to in- dicate that control by the Senate would be a big step toward the possibility of an easing of interest rates. Certainly at this time the chairman of the Federal Re- serve Board is pretty much fighting the battle singlehandedly. He has been get- ting little support from Congress and lit- tle support from the administration; and I think -that this support that is grow- grams which they know are good pro- from Virginia, the Senator from Wis- grams and sound programs. consin, and their concern about spend- I am a member of the Committee on ing. Aeronautics and Space Sciences, and am I am glad that there has been a mo- a strong supporter of the space effort and mentum created, a real concern. I com- the various programs that have hereto- pliment the Senator from Wisconsin for fore been financed. I am aware' that his leadership not only today, btlt par- NASA has been reduced rather sharply ticularly today, when he Is the floor man- In the appropriations coming its way, ager of the bill and sponsoring an amend- and it has been stretching the dollar for ment to not make an across-the-board several years. But nonetheless, I think it cut but to make a specific cut of the vari- is only proper that if we make adjust- ous items. Certainly this is a preferable ments in spending downward, that they way of operating. be made on a basis that covers as many I know that in the steps that have been of the various areas of spending as Is taken they have not always been the possible, prudent manner in which to operate, To do this, and do it by just tightening sometimes because of time, sometimes someone else's belt, I found a long time because of lack of ability and knowledge ago, is impossible. We must agree that on my part, perhaps that of others, but we are going to tighten our own belts. In certainly there has been a desire to ac- voting to cut the budget of the Depart- complish a goal and, I believe, that it is ment of Agriculture, for example, it was possible today to see that we are making a vote in my case and I know in the case some progress, and I am hoping that this of many other Senators against programs momentum will increase, and more and that are strongly desired and popular in more people will join, particularly those our States. But If we are going to get the who have the ability to really do the job job done, we are going to have to be will- properly, so that in our eagerness to ing to tighten our belts as well as see accomplish a goal we will do it in the them tightened on the other 49 States' proper way, in the best way, In a respon- When I was Governor I had the con- sible way. stitutionaI duty to present a budget, and On many occasions this year the mem- It was sort of an interesting exercise in bers of this body have expressed their dividing up a piece of pie and, as this was concern about spending, concern about finally divided, presenting that to the inflation, and concern about the econ- members of the legislature for their con- omy. sideration and their approval. I was re- Today they have an opportunity of ex- quired to divide up the pie. pressing themselves again on an appro- . Unfortunately, the Members of Con- priation bill, a very important one and, gress in the past have not been required as I said, one which I strongly support. to divide up the pie but merely to create So, in my vote I will be voting to reduce the pieces, and then look around for a expenditures in areas that I strongly be- pie pan big enough to put it all in, and lieve in, in areas that I know are deserv- then raise the debt ceiling limit, exercis- ing of an ample appropriation. But I be- ing little restraint and exercising poor lieve that if we are to accomplish the economic judgment in many years. But purpose of reducing the deficit, we must with people today who know banking, be willing to cut out a number of areas, who are familiar with economic trends, a number of programs that are valid, a international and national, saying 'that number of programs that are desired by we may be looking toward a panic, this the American people, a number of pro- could have the consequences that we grams that are good but to do this in the could be in real trouble, that we may not overall interest of ridding ourselves of be able to control the economy and then, runaway inflation that could just eat up I think, it is time for us to take steps this country, doing it with a recognition to put the brakes on and look around that inflation hits hardest at those of for many other areas that can be Im- modest means, those of fixed incomes, the proved. poor, and that It destroys the real Certainly as we have looked at the strength and fabric of a nation. budgets recently, I, as a neophyte, as an We seem to have gotten away from a economist-I am not one at all-but I saving economy to one of a borrowing or have learned a lot, and I have learned a spending economy, and I cannot help but lot about the difficulties of reducing the believe-not that I am opposed to bor- expenditures of the Federal Government. rowing, which I have done on many oc- Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 14330 Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE August 5, 116-141 (')sions-that savings should be accen- because they involve store of a long- Mr. President, I yield the floor. biated, and that the old idea that a penny range projection, because the question Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President? s'sved is a penny earned is still a good of national security is an intangible ques- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen?- 6 4n and something we should support. tion, and we cannot clearly say what ator from Arkansas. V(r. CHILES. Mr. President, will the good the military budget has done, as Mr. McCLELLAN. I would ask uaan- =cnator yield? long as we prevent war, except it is a imous consent that I may request and ,Tr. BARTLETT. I yield to the distin- deterrent and it is essential. suggest the absence of a quorum without ; uisfaed Senator from Florida. I would just like to ask the Senator if losing my right to the floor. Mn CHILES. I want to compliment he does not think the way we are going The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without Senator from Oklahoma on his re- about this now in terms of trying to take objection, it is so ordered. The clerk will irks and also on his actions which, I something out of every budget, will mean call the roll. ink, indicate our desire to try to do that when we get to the later budgets, The assistant legislative clerk pro- >;mething about the fiscal situation of and when we get to the Department of ceeded to call the roll. ire country. Defense budget, that we will have set a Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, I ask I had the pleasure of being a cospon- standard that we can apply equitably unanimous consent that the orde.: for +n', along with the Presiding officer, the across the board, and we will not be jeop- the quorum call be rescinded. aunior Senator from Georgia, and the ardizing the national security, by pisc- The PRESIDING OFFICER iMr. limior Senator from Kentucky, of a ing the burden of a balanced budget BARTLETT). Without objection, it is so resolution that was trying to call atten- solely on our defense effort. Instead we ordered. tion to the plight, trying to get a domes- will be in a consistent posture of trying Mr. PERCY. Mr. President- tic summit meeting which would bring to save across the board so that every- Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President, 1, together all the parties as sort of parts body who is a beneficiary of Federal pro- believe I have the floor. to this puzzle, labor, management, the grams sacrifices to some extent, but The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- President, the Chairman of the Federal equitably, with the exception, of course, ator from Arkansas is correct. Reserve Board, together with a biparti- of completely uncontrollable items. I be- Mr. McCLELLAN. How much time r.an membership of the leadership of lieve this is a lot more sensible than get- does the Senator want? +i'ongress from both sides of the aisle and ting down to the DOD budget and Space Mr. PERCY. Five minutes. both ends of the capitol, and to try to budget and saying, "Look, here is a great Mr. McCLELLAN. I yield 5 minuses to 3,et something working toward a plan of big hunk, let us take it all out of that." the Senator from Illinois. doing something about the economy. I would just like to ask the Senator's Mr. PERCY. I thank my distinguished I am delighted with the response that reaction to that proposition. colleague. w-,e received in this body by the over- Mr. BARTLETT. Yet, I concur With Mr. President, I would like to express whelming passage of that resolution, and the Senator. my deep appreciation for the work of the is know that it is working in the House, Mr. NUNN. I know the Senator who is Appropriations Committee, particularly and it has a number of different resolu- Chairman of the Armed Services Com- as it has dealt with a very difficult bill ;Ions, similar or identical, which have mittee would be interested in this as he before us. I speak with particular ref?- oeen introduced in the House, but to date faces this situation every year, I would erence to the Housing and Urban Devel- it has not come up for a vote there, and suggest that the Senator from Mississip- opment appropriations. t know the Senator from Oklahoma pi listen to the colloquy here, and give Mr. President, on pages 6, 7, and 8 of wishes that we could initiate that kind the Senator's response. the report that is before us, the com- iA meeting. Mr. BARTLETT. I agree with the Sen- mittee deals with title I, the Depar';nient But I agree with him that, barring ator from Georgia. of Housing and Urban Development ap- that, we have got to try to do something I know there are those who would look propriations. Particularly reference is here to signal to the American people to the defense and space budgets, and made to sections 235 and 236, programs that we are going to be willing to do our others, for cuts, also those who look to which were enacted in the Housing Act part and that that cannot happen by the social programs for cuts and retain of 1968. At that time we set out a housing just voting for a spending cut or even the items in the President's budget, on goal of 2.6 million housing units ?, year are provision of $295 billion unless we the military, but it is obviously going to for 10 years, of which 600,000 were to be are willing to make cuts that hurt and, affect us and it must be done on a very for low- and moderate-income families. of course, across all of the areas. broad-based method as much as -pos- A portion of that program add-:-essed We are not going to be successful-and sible, cutting everywhere we possibly can, itself to offering housing opportunities d want to associate myself with his re- recognizing, unfortuncAely, that t:-sere to families who, instead of moving into marks and his leadership which he has are many uncontrollables that cannot public housing or rental housing, would displayed in this regard. be cut. be given the opportunity to own their Mr. BARTLETT. I thank the junior So I think the proposed cuts which own home. This is an opportunity that Senator from Florida. I am very happy have been advanced by the floor man- the Federal Government has offered to to work with him and the junior Sena- ager and the chairman of the Appropria- GI's and has offered to families of rnid- for from Georgia and the Senator from tions Subcommittee are cuts that make die income America for many, many New Mexico and the Senator from Ken- sense, that are spread around, and as I years through VA-guaranteed and FELA- tucky in trying to expand this nonofficial said earlier, are cutting out good items. insured mortgages. 0 group. But the more we can cut the spending The program that was developed in ALA. NUNN. Will the Senator yield? which leads to more and greater deficits, the Housing Act of 1968 was a direct re- Mr. BARTLETT: Yes. if we can reduce that spending a .ittle suit of a bill entitled "The National ,ttr, NUNN. I know the Senator from here and there, then it is better than Homeownership Foundation Act" that I Oklahoma has done a great deal of work when the deficit Is :financed by new introduced on April 20, 1967. on the overall problem of the economy money, when thereis a rapid growth in That bill was sponsored by the follow- today. I know he has had a lot of dis- the money supply, as there has been, ing Senators: cussions on the problem-I have had a which produces serious inflation. Mr. Aiken, Mr. Allott, Mr. Baker, W. Bert lot with him. I know he is concerned with So if we can reduce that need for nett, Mr. Boggs, lytr. Brooke, Mr. Carlson? the overall situation. I also heard him rapid growth in new money supply by Mr. Case, Mr. Cooper, Mr. Cotton, Mr. Curtis, m eld Mr. ention that he serves on the Aeronau- the actions taken here, this will certain- FoDiMsen, i Dominick, Mr, Fannin, Fong, Mr. Griffin , Mr. Hansen, Mr. Hatfield, , tics and Space Committee- The junior ly be a big step in the right direction. Mr. Hickenlooper, Mr. Hruska, Mr. Javrts, Mr. Senator from Georgia serves on the I heartily concur with the Senator from Jordan of Idaho, Mr. Kuchel, Mr. Magnuson, Armed Services Committee. One of the Georgia that the more it can be spread Mr. Miner, Mr. Morton, Mr. Mundt, Mr. Mwr- rr,hings that has happened here in the around, the smaller the decrease will phy, Mr. Pearson, Mr. Prouty, Mr. Scott of oast, I think, is that when it gets around haveto be, but I do believe that there is Pennsylvania, Mrs. Smith, Mr. Thurmond, =,o the Space budget and when it gets the opportunity of bringing about some Mr. Tower, Mr. h Dakota. of of Delawaae, artct Around to the Armed Services budget, restraint in spending, bringing about' Young of Nor tth Da nearly everybody wants to get the bulk some reduction in deficits and bringing Identical legislation was introduced in A the savings out of those two budgets about some stability in our economy. the House of Representatives by Con-' Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 1974 Approved F(oFiFdqpLsIS?W&6/f&~M15Wg? WPOR000700040022-1 S 14331 gressman WILLIAM B. WIDNALL, the rank- ing minority member of the Banking and Currency Committee, and was cospon- sored by 111 Members of that body, 66 of whom are still in the House. I ask unanimous consent that the names of the 66 House Members who are in the House of Representatives today, and who introduced legislation to pro- vide homeownership opportunities for low-income people, be inserted in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the listing of Members was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: *H.R. 8822. Mr. Anderson; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. "H.R. 8823. Mr. Arends; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8824. Mr. Bell; April 30, 1967 (Bank- ing and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8825. Mr. Betts; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8826. Mr. Biester; April 20, 1967, (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8829. Mr. Broomfield; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *HR. 8830. Mr. Brotzman.; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8831. Mr. Brown of Michigan; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. "H.R. 8832. Mr. Brown of Ohio; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. -H.R. 8833. Mr. Broyhill of North Carolina; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8838. Mr. Carter; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8839. Mr. Cederberg; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. *H.R. 8840. Mr. Chamberlain; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. *H.R. 8841. Mr. Don H. Clausen; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8842. Mr. Conable; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8443. Mr. Conte; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *HR. 8847. Mr. Dellenback; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8848. Mr. Derwinski; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *HR. 8849. Mr. Duncan; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8851. Mr. Erlenborn; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8852. Mr. Esch; April 20, 1967 (Bank- Ing and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8853. Mr. Eshleman; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8854. Mr. Findley; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8855. Mr. Frelinghuysen; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8859. Mr. Hammerschmidt; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8860. Mr. Hansen of Idaho; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8862. Mrs. Heckler of Massachusetts; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8863. Mr. Horton; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8864. Mr. Hunt; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. *H.R. 8866. Mr. King of New York; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *HR. 8868. Mr. Laird; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *FI.R. 8869. Mr. Latta; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8871. Mr. McClory; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8873. Mr. McDade; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8876. Mr. Mathias of California; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency).. See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8878. Mr. Mayne; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8880. Mr. Michel; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. *HR. 8881. Mr. Minshall; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8884. Mr. Nelsen; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of HR, 8820. *H.R. 8885. Mr. Pelly; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8888. Mr. Quie; April 20, 1967 (Bank- Ing and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 8889. Mr. Quillen; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. *H.R. 8890. Mr. Railsback; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8891. Mr. Reid of New York; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8893. Mr. Riegle; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8895. Mr. Rhodes of Arizona; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. * H.R. 8896. Mr. Robison; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8897. Mr. Ruppe; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8898. Mr. Sandman; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8900. Mr. Smith of New York; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8901. Mr. Snyder; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8904. Mr. Steiger of Wisconsin; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. * H.R. 8906. Mr. Vander Jagt; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8907. Mr. Wampler; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8908. Mr. Whalen; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8909. Mr. Williams of Pennsylvania; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. * H.R. 8910. Mr. Wyatt; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 8911. Mr. Wydler; April 20, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 9134. Mr. Andrews of North Da- kota; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 9135. Mr. Blackburn; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. * H.R. 9136. Mr. Cleveland; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 9139. Mr. Gude; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. *HR. 9140. Mr. Johnson of Pennsylvania; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. *H.R. 9124, Mr. Mosher; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 9144. Mr. Schneebeli; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R. 8820. *HR. 9145. Mr. Stanton; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency), See Digest of H.R. 8820. *H.R. 9147. Mr. Wylie; April 25, 1967 (Banking and Currency). See Digest of H.R.8820. Mr. PERCY. As I have noted with regret on previous occasions, section 107 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968, authorizing a National Homeownership Foundation, was never implemented. In retrospect I think it can be said that a great deal of the misman- agement which has plagued the 235 pro- gram could have been avoided if the Board of the Foundation had been ap- pointed in timely fashion and if the Foundation's oversight function, as specified in the law, had been fully implemented. I think it would not be inappropriate at this point, Mr. President, to indicate that the Senator from Illinois Inquired of the White House a few years back why this particular portion of the law had not been implemented, why the board had not been appointed after a number of calls had been made by the then Vice President of the United States to people to get them to accept membership and after the Senator from Illinois had been asked to approach certain people who had indicated a reluctance to take on added responsibilities, and was urged to get them to accept membership on the board. Mr. Ehrlichman advised me, first through my own staff and then directly notified me, that the reason this board was not being appointed and that that particular provision of law was not being implemented was because of the vote of the Senator from Illinois on the ABM. The Senator from Illinois was stunned at this kind of a response, so much so that I not only wrote a letter confirming this action to Mr. Ehrlichman, but also asked for an immediate meeting with him. I went to the White House and asked why any appointee of the President would fail to implement a law of Congress and Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 Approved For Release 2005 5BOQ 0700040022- - ffl t ztg test F ,~ L4 CONGRES L .5 acm to appoint a board for oversight of homeownership opportunities for low- income people because of a totally un- related vote on an ABM system that the Senator from Illinois felt ill-advised, and which subsequent events have cer- tainly indicated to be ill-advised. 11. was said to the Senator from Illinois that this was the way the ballgame was played. I was left with only one conclu- sion: that no matter how you phrased it, that it was the vote on an ABM system that was being taken out of the hide of the ooor. e PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr, PERCY. May I have 2 additional minutes? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- a-,or is recognized for 2 more minutes. Mr. PERCY. As we know, there have been scores and scores of indictments growing out of grand jury investigations of FHA programs. As the Appropriations Committee aptly points out in its report, a great deal of the fraud that was involved in this program was not as a result of the type of program that was designed by Congress. but by the mismanagement of the program, the lack of oversight, the lack of responsibility, and the lack of administrative care taken in implement- ing a program which has otherwise proven highly successful. Mr. President, my further remarks will support fully the success the program has had despite the fact that its imple- mentation has been dreadful and its management has been chaotic in many respects. Despite those facts, the pro- gram and the quality of the program was such that, as is pointed out on pages 6, 7. and 8 in the report before us, better than 350,000 families, incorporating well over 1 million people, are today regularly paying monthly payments to own their own home. Some 50,000 families originally sub- sidized under section 235 so that they could become homeowners, have actually gone off the subsidy altogether. ?t'hat was the intent and purpose of it, to give people incentive to say that, "Here is a start in life so that you can own something, be a somebody and have something. But our whole purpose is to use this as a carrot so that you can be weaned away from the subsidies, so that you can upgrade yourself, and have the incentive to do so." Oven in the face of this conspicuous failure in implementing the law, the 235 program has been highly successful. Be- cause the future of this program now is a matter for decision in a conference be- tween the Senate and the House on the terms of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, I think it would be helpful to my colleagues-espe- cially to the 27 present Members of the Senate and the 66 present Members of the House who cosponsored the National forneownership Foundation Act-to provide them at this time with an up-to- date report on the benefits of this pro- gram. The program provided homeowner- ship opportunities to 434,000 families to ,June 1973 since its inception in 1968. With a median income of about $(,500, few of these families could otherwise have enjoyed the benefits of homeovmer- ship. According to HUD's statistics for 1971, the average monthly income of 235 families was $432; the family's share of the monthly mortgage payment was $95 while the average monthly subsidy was $79. Initial experience with the program indicates, as I noted a moment ago, that a significant percentage of households which start receiving these subsidies earn their way out of them through higher incomes. In one recertification of income for 235 families, 8 percent stopped receiving any subsidy, 65.8 per- cent received a reduced subsidy, 13.4 percent had no change, and 20.8 percent received a larger subsidy. "Housing in the Seventies," the com- prehensive study commissioned by the Department of Housing and Urban De- velopment attempting to justify the sus- pension of several housing programs, in- cluding section 235, reached the follow- ing conclusions about that program: First. The program enabled a num- ber of low-to-moderate income families who desired to own homes to achieve that objective; Second. Only a third of all home- owners nationally have incomes below $7,000, but close to two-thirds of all 235 beneficiaries had incomes below that level; Third. The 235 program provided sub- stantial benefits to recipients. Housing quality, the study estimated, improved by 35 percent and nonhousing expendi- tures increased by 8 percent. Fourth. The study did not demonstrate that section 235 housing cost more than comparable privately built units. The 235 program has also received high marks in other studies. Dr. An- thony Downs, vice-president of the real Estate Research Corp., came to the fol- lowing conclusion: On balance, we believe that both the Sec- tion 235 and Section 236 programs are effec- tive instruments for meeting the key ob- jectives of housing subsidies. . We be- lieve their basic design are sound, although some modifications car. Improve they i. The major inadequacies so far encountered in the execution of these programs stemmed mainly from either pox administration by HUD or the inherently higher risks of in- vesting capital in housing for relatively low- income households in relatively deteriorat- ing areas. During the last 2 or 3 years newspapers and magazines have from time to time given prominent coverage to the real but nonetheless limited cases of fraud and other abuses which have been associated with the 235 program. Seldom did stories of the program's successes find their way into print. I want to tell you about one successful effort from the city of Chicago. The Bickerdike Redevelopment Corp. is a nonprofit community housing cor- poration on the near-northwest side of the city. The corpora;ion was responsible for the building of new single family homes and their sale to the community. These were the first new single :family Homes built in the community in over 60 years. Most homes were sold to families who qualified for interest subsidies under the 235 program. From 1970 to 1973, Bickerdike, along with two general contractors, b lilt fry single family homes. Sixty-three of these were sold under section 235 and is o were sold under the 203(b) program. Seventy percent of the buyer; were Latin American. The majority of the families were in the $7,000 to $9,900 in- come range and most of them had two, three, or four children. Three ftrailies have now lived in their homes for over 3 years; 24 families 2 to 3 years, 32 fam- ilies 1 to 2 years, and 5 families fo about a year. As of February 1974, two of the homes had been turned back to HUD. One was owned by a single woman with adopted children who simply walked away from the property. The other was turned back because the divorced mother of fi='e chil- dren died. Two families in danger of foreclosure survived the crisis because of counseling from Bickerdike. Beside coordinating the development. of the homes, arranging financing, and selling them, Bickerdike worked with the buyers so as to help them become knowl- edgeable homeowners. Meetings were held on insurance, maintenance, and budgeting for home improvements. A homeowners' association was formed to work on common problems, such. as high taxes. I submit, Mr. President, that success stories like this one exist in every part of the Nation. We should not allow our- selves to be swept away by a few reports of failures. I believe the bill we passed here in the Senate in March, S. 3066, amended the program so that we can be confident of even more and greater suc- cesses in the future. I believe the homeownership program for low- and moderate-income families must be retained in the bill currently being worked out in conference.. Mr. President, I ask unanimo Is con- sent that a table indicating the distrib- ution of 235 units by States be included in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the table was ordered to be printed in the 7ZECORD, as follows: State and number insured: Alabama --------------._ 12? 994 Alaska ---------------------------- 688 Arizona -------------------------- 7, 521 Arkansas ------------------ ---_.,.. 6,1398 California --------- ..------------ _- 31,439 Colorado ------------------- ...---- .- 6,719 Connecticut --_-----------.----_----- 1,019 Delaware ------------------------- 434 District of Columbia-------------- 759 Florida -------------------------- 31,361 Georgia -------------------------- 20.397 Hawaii ---------------------------- 1, 746 Idaho -- --------------------------- 2, 210 Illinois ---------------------------- 16,911 Indiana -------------------------- 9, 340 Iowa ----------------------------- 7,232 Kansas 3,309 Kentucky ------------------------- 9, 2,58 Louisiana ------------------------ 23. 010 Maine ------------------------------ 9'27 Maryland ---------------- --------- 1, 655 Massachusetts -------------------- 4, 360 Michigan --- ---------.-------------- 20. 082 Minnesota ------------------------- 3, 220 Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, .1974 Approved F@C pS /g&A&DP?P ROR000700040022-1 S14333 Mississippi ----------------------- 11,026 Missouri -------------------------- 6, 096 Montana ------------------------- 1, 652 Nebraska ------------------------- 4, 543 Nevada --------------------------- 5, 980 New Hampshire____________________ 1,098 Now Jersey________________________ 3, 293 New Mexico_______________________ 5, 176 New York_________________________ 4,364 North Carolina-------------------- 7,244 North Dakota______________________ 811 Ohio ___________________________ - 16, 676 Oklahoma ------------------------ 11,465 Oregon __________________________ 6, 6,326 Pennsylvania --------------------- 5, 880 Rhode Island_____________________ 744 South Carolina____________________ 16, 571 South Dakota_____________________ 1,498 Tennessee ------------------------ 17, 227 Texas _-_ 37, 37,755 Utah ----------------------------- 6,689 Vermont -------------------------- 340 Virginia -------------------------- 3, 777 Washington ---------------------- 13, 751 West Virginia______________________ 711 Wisconsin ------------------------ 10, 440 Wyoming ------------------------- 921 RICO ______________________ 9, 661 Virgin Islands _________________ 0 Guam ---------------------------- 129 the cuts that would r su e lt , th e amount -- in housing fraud cases of reduction that would occur, if _ this U.S. Total____________ ______ 434, 814 Over 10 percent of the total defaults in the Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD the section of the Appropria- tions Committee's report to which I have referred, because I concur with every statement made in that section. There being no objection, the excerpt from the report was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: TITLE I, DEPARTMENT OF HOIIBING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT The Committee is distressed and deeply concerned by the Administration's action to abandon our nation's historic housing pro- gram. In 1949, the Congress declared our pol- icy to provide a decent home in a suitable living environment for every American family. In 1968, Congress set a housing goal of 2.6 million housing units a year for 10 years of which 600,000 were to be for low and moder- ate income families. In January 1973, the Administration froze virtually all new starts for low and moderate income families. Some 17 housing programs or programs closely associated with housing were stopped. Except for units already in the pipelines, programs for low income housing were abandoned, and programs for moderate income housing were abandoned as well. This has resulted in additional families in the lower 40 to 50 percent of American income groups being denied access to public housing or the ability to buy a new home. Exacerbating this situation, due to exceed- ingly high interest rates, approximately 70 percent of the American people under private enterprise and conventional housing pro- grams have been unable to purchase new homes. Instead of a total of 2.6 million housing units a year, the annual rate for the first half of 1974 was about 1.5 million units, or over a million units below the national hous- ing goals promulgated by the Congress. Homebuyers, builders, thrift institutions, and those associated with the housing indus- try-furniture, durable goods, heating and cooling, among others-have felt the housing moratorium pinch. The Committee feels that the Administra- tion has justified its actions for a variety of by no stretch of the imagination is that cor- For all these reasons, we should not accept rect. the abandonment of the traditional programs Public housing, for all its particular difii- as the price for Section 23. The traditional culties, is highly popular and a badly needed programs and Section 23 should be imple- program. The waiting lists are exceedingly mented concurrently. long. The vacancy rates are exceedingly low. Hopefully this will be the result of the Thus, it may be concluded that public hous- legislative conference now taking place be- ing provides better housing to millions of tween the House and the Senate concern- Americans, than they could otherwise afford ing future housing policy and programs. or are now getting. When the pending-legislation is finally agreed The Sections 235 and 236 programs suf- to, this Committee will examine the Ad- fered from both HUD management, and ac- ministration's funding request to carry out tual corruption, rather than from any in- the will of the Congress. herent defects in the programs. In cities with Mr. MCCLELLAN. Mr. President, I rise good HUD management, and actual corrup- tion, rather than inherent defects in the to discuss briefly the pending anlend- programs. In cities with good HUD manage- rent, which I understand is the amend- ment, such as Milwaukee, the program was ment of the distinguished Senator from a great success. In cities with rampant cor- Wisconsin. Is my understanding correct? ruption among housing officials, it, along The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- with other HUD programs, failed. But the ator is correct. failures in certain cities were not peculiar Mr. MCCLELLAN. It is an amendment to Section 235 and 236 and, in fact, these pro- that contains, I believe, some 23 separate grams were not the main ones affected or which failed, contrary to the opinion of the and distinct proposals with respect to Department and some judicial mistakes of cuts in the pending bill. fact. The Department blamed the programs Mr. President, I may state at the be- instead of its own mismanagement. As a ginning of my remarks that I am not consequence of this mismanagement, over primarily concerned about the amount of 400 indictments have been handed down Section 235 program were in two cities, Seat- amendment were adopted. I think I have tle and Dallas where there was serious un- been fairly consistent throughout the employment stemming from cutbacks in the years in advocating economy in Govern- air and space industries. In the State of Wis- ment. I - have repeatedly stood on the consin, 97 percent of those assisted have been floor of the Senate and pointed out that successful. one of the causes-the prime cause, real- In the country as a whole, HUD studies ly-for deficit budgets and for increased show that the Section 235 program is actu- spending originates and stems from au- arially sound. There are now 350,000 Section thorization legislation. Appro rf'ati 235 homeowners making their monthly pay- p ments. The actual number of defaults has cannot be made unless Congress has au- au- not exceeded the number anticipated and thorized the expenditure. the insurance reserves have covered antici- One of our problems-it is a problem pated claims. By any measurement, the pro- to all of us-in trying to meet our re- gram has been a major success in attaining sponsibilities here is that once a program the objective of assisting those with incomes is authorized, once Congress says this is well below the national median, something that should be done and we More than two-thirds of those receiving authorize it to be done and we author assistance receive lower subsidies each year because their incomes are rising, which was a ize the expenditure of such moneys as major aim of the program. Some 50,000 Sec- may be necessary to carry out the pro- tion 235 homebuyers have gone off subsidy gram, or we authorize so many million altogether and, in the Committee's opinion, dollars or billion dollars to get the pro- these are distinct measures of program suc- gram carried out, then Congress, itself, cess. has put in motion the expenditure when The Department has argued that if not it makes the appropriation. everyone could be subsidized under the pro- gram, no one should be subsidized. Evidently, The issue that comes before the Appro- they halted the program out of policy dis- priations Committee, notwithstanding taste rather than from factual evidence, that Congress has directed that this be We are now awaiting action for new and done, is, shall we refuse to make the ap- substitute programs. These were delayed by propriation? That is what it often HUD's failure to finish its studies in a timely- amounts to. Especially is that true if a fashion and to recommend any program at budget request comes down for it. all until September, 1973. I know that we are all concerned, and The Department now wishes to rely en- rightly so. The country is concerned. We tirely on what is called the new Section 23 program, a program of leased housing to re- are distressed about the fiscal situation place the conventional public housing pro- that pertains in our Government. We gram, and Sections 236 and 236. agonize about the economic situation The Committee feels that it would be a that prevails in this country. Therefore, tragic error to take this course. First, Section it does behoove this Congress, as it did 23 may not work. Second, if it does work, it the last and the one before, to try to could take a very long time to go into effect. Third, even if it works, it may not do two im- bring down expenditures, certainly portant things, namely, service the kind of within the amount of revenue our Gov- low income families that public housing ernment will - take in. In other words, it helped, and build in the regions or areas is our duty to try to achieve a balanced where housing is most needed, budget; and as to that objective and on Under Section 23, the builders become the that score, I yield to no Senator and to no housing managers. It would seem that since Representative. I will continue to strive they must rent out the units, they will seek to do that. the elderly, those without children, and the upper reaches of low and moderate Income As chairman of the Appropriations families. Committee, I have set in motion and The large poor families and the very poor have made an effort to bring.about a families -for whom public housin h reduction in expenditures last was su d , g c year an , It has claimed. that the programs were not a great program, may well be left out in the this year, achieving the goals set by the Congress, but cold. Last year, particularly-we can speak Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 133 Approved For Release F 0IQEQ700040022-1 August 5, 1974 about that, because we got a response- tee on recommendation of the subcom- that the only way I could be ce-tairi of I suggested that each subcommittee ttee. that was to make provision in the bill., weigh the budget, analyze it, particularlI supported the recommendations of which the subcommittee approved, arid the part that that subcommittee hacf the committee. In fact, there is one item which I regret was not called to the jurisdiction over, and suggest a target, in the bill that I would not have sup- specific attention of the chairman.. But, a cceiling, within which it would submit ported that has been called to my atten- as I say, it appears at two different places its appropriation request or make ap- tion. But again, I as chairman of the full in the report, and appears also in the bill proval of the appropriations. In other committee, and the members of that itself. words, we undertook to set a target in committee are undertaking to cooperate Mr. McCt.,ELLAN. It is not !ust the the beginning, each subcommittee, and with our leadership to the end that we chaiman; it is the committee. I just rep- t h-,.ii we tried to meet that target. We may, if we can-and we are makingg every resent a committee as its chairr_ian and diet that, with some measure of success. effort to do it-get these appropriations its agent. It Is nothing personal. Kith': me the greatest success achieved in that bills finished before the Senate becomes and it is nothing personal again,; me. ort was by the defense appropriation preoccupied with another problem, Mr. PROXMIRE. I realize that, i eominittee. The greatest cuts were another issue that will command its con- Mr. McCLELLAN. I am talkir;a about uie there. Some of those savings were tinuing attention and occupy Its full proper procedures in the Senate the in- lust because other functions of govern- time until that matter shall have been tegrity of the corn fttee system. If there meat were appropriated far in excess of disposed of. Is no money in the bill and the Senator Use budget, and thus we lost that advan- When we do these things hastily, we feels that, notwithstanding t.ha.1, fact. gage to some extent. We were not able to do not do as efficient a job as we would provision ought to be made, I am per- -.duce.as much as we targeted because like to, with the Government as big as feetly willing for the committee to pass some appropriations exceeded the it is and these appropriations as large on it, to decide whether it should be in l.,tidget. as they are, with as many items in them or not. I am not arguing about t7.iat. Had t:nu a way, we are trying again this year, as there are. In fact, as I recall, there are i known that it was in the bill I would Mr. President. Just what measure of suc- some 16 or 18 thousand items in research certainly have sought to have it c'=iscuused ++ess we will have ultimately, I do not and development alone-each one of and considered-and I apologizo for not !-now. them could stand some examination. All knowing, but I make no explana'Ion fur-- , we have a committee system in Con- of the items for which we make appro- ther than the fact that we are so sus, and press. Perhaps it is failing. Perhaps the priations run into the hundreds of so occupied with these bills--trying to committee system should be abolished. thousands. It is absolutely impossible process them, trying to get them out. I; Perhaps we do not need it any more. to give attention to each one of them. would assume that when a chair nan of a p ,':A: hops the way to handle these matters In the limited time that we have, and subcommittee presents his bill, if there is just on the floor of the Senate. fn an effort to expedite this matter, one is anything in there that he can conceive I want to say for the record that I section of the bill was overlooked. It did might be controversial, we would take regard myself as a servant, an agent of not come to our attention and was not it up in the full committee and c iscuss it, the Senate, as I serve on the Appropri- called to our attention when the matter Maybe that is my responsi>i itv to u,i,ions Committee, particularly because I carne to the full committee. Notice only have these bills checked and scrutinised ;;erne as chairman of that committee. If came that morning, when the committee most carefully before we ever bring them I- can ascertain what the policy of the met that afternoon, That is the item to to the full committee for consi.ic.ration Senate is, how it wants to proceed on prohibit funds for the CIA. If that is correct, I must do the t. I shalt these appropriation bills, if I can get in- I mention at this time, Mr. President, do my best to do it. But I do fe?l that bi .truction along that line, I will try to that there are no funds in the appropria- a circumstance where we are f iperatinc conform. If it were the policy of the tion bill for the CIA. Only one sill has under such stress of pressure and haste t+> senate to proceed in a way that I simply funds for the CIA. That is the defense try to meet the conditions that we have could not follow, then I would yield my appropriations bill. daily here, it would have been well. for position on that matter-at least ter- I do not know if people want to dis- the Senator to mention this to he ful porarily-to someone else, who could de- continue the CIA. If we want to east as- committee so that we might cell, icier i? feud and undertake to sustain whatever persions on it, we can do it in a bill like At any rate, those things happen, tom=., ,ir9 policy is. this. That is our right, if that is .he way i am not laying to cast any asps sion o; ./[r. President, the Appropriations we want to do it. But I do not think that the Senator. I am talking now i oaai th ('r,ramittee this year, as in the past, is necessarily to our credit. integrity of the committee s y s+9 nr aitc s functioned in good faith. The sub- Mr. PROXMIRE, Mr. President, will what we reed to do. That is the purpose_ committees have held long hearings. the Senator yield at that point? primarily, of my concern at the moment hey have marked up the bills and have Mr. McCLELLA.. I am glad to yield. although thought I would mention, a hi-ought them to the full committee. Mr. PROXMIRE. This was put into the Mr. President, before we went into thi Almost without exception, I have de- committee report, on page 6, and, of other aspect. i s reed to the judgment and recommends- course, it is included in the bill. The rea- Mr. Pre ~ ident, I wish to talk t.ow coo lions of the subcommittees. Perhaps son why it was included is that there was the pending amendment. There is al- there have been one or two exceptions, information which this Senator received amendment pending that has been ee lNtit I do not recall one at the moment. I that a number of appropraiticns bills fered by the distinguished Sen at or f.ro: have generally supported the Appropria- might have funds for the CIA. Wisconsin. who is chairman of the ui. I funs Committee on the door of the Sen- As chairman of the subcommittee, I committee which handles the Dull, an tit.e. Perhaps in one or two exceptions I thought I had a duty to make sure of who is also the manager of Lila biii U!, did not. what was in the appropriations bill on the floor. I have a copy of this a:rtenc I do that not because necessarily I which I.was acting. Furthermore, I asked ment. I believe this is a correoi: cols. always fully agree with what the Appro- the agency heads under HUD, Space, and contains :,ome 23 separate an-, iidnien'. -lotions Committee has recommended. Science, when they appeared before the to items iti the bill, striking the all glut again I point out that unless it is subcommittee, whether they would mind reducing the amount. so adverse and so greatly violates my con- if I put in this prevision, and they said I am advised by the dirt is u.li : aiction that I simply cannot compromise, they would not. Senator from Wisconsin that the tots , 1, still try to go along, in the interest of I have a letter from Mr. Ash of the the aggregate of these amount:, is aboi rderly procedure, because we do have Office of Management and Budget, in $160 million in round numbers. the committee system, and I do it in an which he states that there are no CIA Mr. President, I do not quarrel with -sort to make this system work. funds in the bill. It was my very strong further reduction in this bill of th~a t: We have a bill before us today. We went feeling that I had a responsibility to the amount, if we are given the ol^portunit; through the due process. the procedures Senate and to the :full committee to find in committee to examine these propose ! that are established by the rules of the out what was in the bill and to make cuts and take committee action. on theit Senate. which were followed and adhered sure that if there were funds for the CIA, If the committee then does n A recess-- This bill came before the full commit- those funds would be identified. I felt mend the cuts, when the bill cones to till' Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August 5, 197 pproved For ?Y /P6 fd P7_ A 000700040022-1 S 14335 floor, of course, the Senate can work its tion, and often without having any evi- cutting process, by more than 31/''2 per- will. But if there are amendments that dence presented, with offers to increase cent. We did a pretty good job last year the committee feels are meritorious, the by a large amount. of cutting beyond that. I think we can committee should not be bypassed. It Every Senator has the right, on this do it again: We are going to try, and I should have an opportunity to consider floor, to offer any amendment he wants think we will succeed. them. to. I concede that right. I defend that But I might say, if this practice is go- Mr. President, I ask the distinguished right. I would do it myself if I felt a ing to be established, to do away with the Senator from Wisconsin if these amend- strong enough conviction. But I think I committee consideration of these things ments which are offered here today were would undertake, especially before the on their merits and let the bill come to presented by him to his subcommittee. Appropriations Commitee-and I am the the floor, as they work it, and take items Mr. PROXMIRE. I say to the chair- chairman of that committee-to have that seem to be too much and reduce man that the amendments I offered to the issue clearly.presented to the com- them, or items that seem to be not the subcommittee were far deeper than mittee, and give them an opportunity enough and increase them, I hope we do the amendments here. I offered amend- to reject it on its merits, or for some not establish a precedent where every ments in total of $1.4 billion, other reason, if there was reason for re- time a bill comes up here, we are going to I offered a number of other amend- jecting it, or to approve it, as the case cut it 31/2 percent, because anyone who ments. We had considerable discussion may be. wanted to be sure he got about what he in the subcommittee meeting. Mr. President, I compliment the Sen- wanted could increase his appropriation, Mr. McCLELLAN. Were they accepted? ator to this extent: This amendment is and then come to the floor, receive the Mr. PROXMIRE. Some of the recom- a marked improvement, in my judgment, cut, and he would have lost practically mendations of the chairman and the over the one offered, I believe last Fri- nothing; whereas another subcommittee, ranking member were accepted and day, to the Department of Transporta- working faithfully and diligently, and some were rejected. Some of these tion bill, with a 3.5 percent cut across examining the items and making reduc- amendments were offered in the sub- the board. This, is my judgment, is the tions on the basis of merit and on the committee. Many of them were not of- way to do it. basis of priorities as they see them, fered in the subcommittee. And I might say, Mr. President, that would be terribly penalized. So would the Mr. McCLELLAN. If they were ac- I have no doubt that upon these amend- function of the department or agency, cepted in the subcommittee, why did ments being presented and discussed, I and so would the service to be performed, they not appear in the Senator's report will find some of them that I shall want and those who benefit from it, if we are on the bill? to support; because I want to cut, if to follow that procedure. Mr. PROXMIRE. I say to the Senator we can, this budget and appropriation I do not think the emergency is such that some of the amendments that I in every way we can do so consistently today that we cannot make reductions to brought up in the subcommittee were and where it represents the best inter- bring these appropriations within the rejected, and those amendments that ests of our country. revenues, and thus avoid a deficit. I do were rejected, in some cases, are offered I do not like, as I said the other day, not believe there is a situation where we here. I am not saying that any of the the meat=ax approach which is pre- cannot function responsibly in that amendments that were accepted are sented across the board. Someone sug- fashion. Maybe we have lost that ability. here. - gested a while ago that maybe we ought Maybe we will not face our responsibili- Mr. McCLELLAN. Will the Senator to establish that precedent here, so we ties, but I believe we will. I do not believe identify them for the record when he will all know that we are going to cut the process of a 3-percent cut, as such, is has the floor directly? I would like to them percentagewise across the board. really facing up to the issue. know which ones were considered there. But what would that do to the com- I hope that we will get some order and I ask the Senator, were any of these mittee system, Mr. President? If that is some orderly process est will knowe e, what particular amendments presented to the what we are establishing here, we need full committee? to know it; but what does it do to the to do when we try to work on appropria- Mr. PROXMIRE. The NSF, HUD, committee system? tion bills, and we will be able to feel that NASA-we are going to identify the ones If I were handling a committee and i the efforts of the subcommittees and the that were presented to the subcommittee. did not want my projects cut much, I full committees are going to be respected, and then weighed and examined, rather In the full committee, we had some would not do any cutting on them in the than just, in effect, discarding the ~om- eight or nine specific amendments that committee; I would wait and let them get mittee's just, work and saying, "W are going were offered. I think the Senator will re- their 3-percent cut up here, if they were m cut across the board. r" member that. They were voted on en going to get it. And some could well in- Mr. President, the aiew of the situation, bloc. We had two or three series of two crease their amounts, Mr. President, an- I want re find out, and I think this will or three amendments each referring to ticipating that they would get a 3-per- give us t find pretty good idea, about how the NASA voted en bloc; some of them are cent cut. Senate wants to proceed. I intend to included here. We had one referring to I do not think a 3-percent cut, as such, move-others may have discussed it-to the National Science Foundation, and as a firm and fixed formula, is neces- recommit the bill to the Appropriations then three, I think, referring to HUD. sarily the best way to do it. But if we are Committee so that we will have the op- We will be happy to identify those at a going to do that, let us take, for exam- portunity to discuss these proposed later time. ple, the Defense bill. It is yet to come up, amendments, weigh them, and again re- Mr. McCLELLAN. Were they pre- My distinguished friend here is a mem- port the bill out with the recommenda- sented just as they are presented here? ber of the Armed Services Committee. tions of the committee. Mr. PROXMIRE. No, they were pre- We hear demands here on the floor I yield to the distinguished Senator. sented in somewhat different form. sometimes, "Cut it $10 billion." Maybe Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator from Mr. McCLELLAN. They were presented it can stand that; maybe it cannot. But Nevada. in different form. whatever percentage it would be-81/2 Mr. BIBLE. I want to make a brief Mr. President, this is the point i want percent would cut it $10 billion, or 12 statement. to make, and I do not want to belabor percent, or whatever it is that would Mr. McCLELLAN. I yield. Lt. If the committee system is to function make a cut of $10 billion-I think it Mr. BIBLE. I just wanted to make a with integrity and efficiency, it must ought to be considered before we slash brief observation. I want to associate have the opportunity-and the Senate, I that way. I do not know what it would myself with what the distinguished think, should want it to have the oppor- come out of. chairman of our committee is saying, tunity-to screen proposed cuts or pro- I do not think that is the way to do it. and I shall support him right down the posed amendments-not only cuts, but Let me point this out: I think I can say line. amendments that offer to increase the without any qualification-though I can- I hope the motion to recommit it to amount of the bill. We have that ex- not absolutely guarantee it, as everyone the committee is agreed to so that we can perience, too, Mr. President; we come knows-speaking of what I think the at- study these new amendments. They are to the floor sometimes, without the evi- titude and disposition of the subcommit- new to me, and they may be well taken. dence having been presented to the Ap- tee handling the defense bill is, I think it I have not had the opportunity of look- propriations Committee for considera- will be cut, if we are left to the selective Ing at them. Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 14336 Approved For 75B; 000700040022~l -1 ugust 5, 1974 I am privileged to handle the Interior of our committees then, of course, the ing power with the House because, first, appropriation bill, and that is supposed only alternative is to d3 it here on the either we have to Persuade them to ac- -o be calendared for action on the floor loor. I know that the great masses of cept our percentage cut or else subject on Wednesday afternoon, the American people want this budget ourselves to other cuts, mostly imposed We heard from I do not know how cut, and they want a balanced budget, by the House, many Senators, but they had 182 amend- and I am willing to work with my col- It is difficult to explain this cc>cafer- rnents. Every one of them was an amend- leagues to that end, and if we do not get ence procedure unless a Senator has rnent to add dollars. There was not a it the first round-that is where we have served on a conference committee with .ingle amendment to take any dollars this Budget Committee, and I hopes it the House at one time or another. -;way. works; I have some doubt about it--we I know there are many of these pro- w hope the proponents and leaders in will make some further cuts until we do grams that can be cut, but it would be this effort to cut back-and I am sure get it. We can pass a resolution after a serious mistake if we followed this per- they are going to make an attack on the these bills are all in, weigh it, and make centage cut route. On Defense Appro- Interior bill as well, I do not know why certain then that we treat everything priations we will probably cut over $4 but I think they might do it-will be alike, treat them all fairly, and let them billion this year. If another 5 or 10 per- pecific and designate whose projects we take their reductions where they may, if cent were made on the floor of the Sen?- take the money out of. That is what I we do not achieve it by the due process ate it would cripple the Defense Depart- ,,-would like to have them do, whether long established and lorg practiced and ment. For those who have not listened they come from Florida or Georgia or now followed, undertaken to be followed to the hearings-and most of the Sen_ wherever, Wisconsin or Kansas, wher- by those to whom we have entrusted the ators have not listened to the hearing,,., over they might come from, and I would responsibility as our representatives and we could do serious harm not only it, the hope they would specify which projects as our agents. Defense Department but most other, de.- we should take It out of, whichever State I yield to the distinguished Senator partments of Government, they want to take it out of, and I will from North Dakota (Mr. Youx(;). The committee chairman and the re happy to oblige. But I hope they are Mr. YOUNG. I am in favor of this new ranking member, oftentimes many of the specific when we come to consider this economy move In the Senate. For years other committee members, sit for months problem on Wednesday, I believe. I think now for every amendment offered to cut listening to the testimony of the various an is the day the leader is attempting an appropriation bill on the Senate floor departments. 1,a calendar it. that have been 10 offered to increase it. We know better where cuts can be S thank the Senator for yielding. I have 1'his is with the exception of Defense made and where they cannot be n: Me. very important appointment this after appropriation bills. I have seen amend- If more amendments had been offered noon and I must keep it. relent after amendment offered on the in the full committee to cut this budget Labor HEW bill that raised the bill by or this bill further I would have voted Mr. McCLELLAN. I wish to observe, as much as one-half billion dollars. This for it. As I said before, I am willing to as chairman of the Appropriations Corn- increasing appropriation bill has been cut $160 million or more, but it should mittee, nearly all of the letters-it is un- going on for years, so I welcome this be by the Appropriations Committee usual when we get one wanting us to cut new economy move. item one, although we do get some of them I am willing to cut .8160 million or want to by do item it , it to em if there are tthhe e who Senators of them are to increase, and the by item on t Sen- rrrSenators who write and ask us to in- more if the subcommittee chairman roe- ate floor there is nothing wrong a'3eut ommends it. In fact, I voted in the corn- that. But this percentage cut business c:aease sometimes are the ones who are mittee to-there was only one motion Is just not the right way of doing things. voting for these across-the-board cuts, offered, as I recall to cut $43.3 million. It reduces respectability, and even the a ad so forth. It is difficult for us to op- I would like to have ,his Inserted in effectiveness, of the Senate A crate, as I say, intelligently, efficiently, bills inpthis r,xrd conscientiously where we do not the RECORD, Mr. President. tions Committee to handle bills in this and and ie are not privileged w to know There being no objection, the state- way. At least Members supporting this what the rules are going it be and how, ment was ordered to be printed in the kind of move ought to tell the Senate what the are are going to to be and and how, RECORD, as follows: Appropriations Committee how much wh n, they RECOMMENDED CUTS BY SENATOR PROx eipE they want to cut, and offer some sug,;es- I want to say this before I conclude: IN SUBCOMMITTEE tion as to where to cut. I said in the beginning this is not per- NASA Mr. MCC7.>;:r LAN. Will the Senator ss=r,bjection, it is so ordered. t)RDER FOR TRANSACTION OF ROU- TINE MORNING BUSINESS TO- MORROW Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD_ Mr. President. ask unanimous consent that following llie recognition of Senators on tomor- ?ow, under the order previously entered, here be a period for the transaction of 'nutine morning business of not to ex- ,ieed 15 minutes, with statements therein ,rnited to 5 minutes each. U ORUM CALL Q Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD, Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The second assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without r)biection, it is so ordered. ORDER FOR TRANSACTION OF ROUTINE MORNING BUSINESS Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that there be a period for the transaction of routine morning business with statements lim- :aed to 15 minutes therein. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. .,ray a silalor pare in the strictly ecnrlomiie side of inflation, but it also has 1; tre- mendous impact on the thinking c f the people-what has been called "inflation - ary psychology." Put it this way: It is not realistic to ask the peooic to pinch pennies while the Government plays Diamond Jim Brady. And the Government must act soon. The principal reason why this is so es- sential is that inflation has rooted itself -:4, deeply. inflation has come to feed on itself : the expectation that prices will continue to rise artificially spurs demand, strains ce- iaacity and forces prices still higher. Every American knows prices are ';oar- ing. But not everyone understands how widespread are the ravages of inflation. Let us look at what is happening ill the looney market. To do that, we ha',e to look first at the national debt. The huge deficits which the Govern.. 'neat has been running have Pushec the fNFLATION: THE BURDEN AND "l'HE ('HALLFNGE Mr. HARRY F. BYRD, Jr. Mr. Presi- dent, the United States has had its first ,'ear of double-digit inflation, and no re- lief is in sight. Consumer prices are rising at an an- nual rate of 10 percent. Personal income rose $97 billion In paper dollars during the year ending April 30, but in real income, the Ameri- can worker is 4.8 percent worse off than a year ago. These are staggering figures, but in- ]During the 8-mor thh period from No- flation is not a new concern for the Sen- vember 1, 1973, to June 30, 1974, for ex- ator from Virginia. ample, the Treasury issued securities tca- On January 8. 1970. in a speech before tiling $42 billion. Government agencies national debt up to $475 billion. It wi) pass the half-trillion-dollar mark in less than a year. The interest on the debt durinr, Cllr= fiscal year that ended June 30 was $21i billion. It took 1.7 cents of every 'indvid- ual and corporate income tax dollar.iusl to pay the interest Ce the Public deb`. In this situation, the Government t lus go into the money, market-mar svely and frequently. In fact, 82 percen of all funds available ,for lending is :or- Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 S 14334 Approved For RGVY U1 R5~ kI; ~1~5_R kW0700040022August about that, because we got a response- I suggested that each subcommittee weigh the budget, analyze it, particularly the part that that subcommittee had jurisdiction over, and suggest a target, a ceiling, within which it would submit its appropriation request or make ap- proval of the appropriations. In other words, we undertook to set a target in the beginning, each subcommittee, and then we tried to meet that target. We did that, with some measure of success. The greatest success achieved in that effort was by the defense appropriation subcommittee. The greatest cuts were made there. Some of those savings were lost because other functions of govern- ment were appropriated far in excess of the budget, and thus we lost that advan- tage to some extent. We were not able to reduce as much as we targeted because some appropriations exceeded the budget. In a way, we are trying again this year, Mr. President. Just what measure of suc- cess we will have ultimately, I do not know. We have a committee system in Con- gress. Perhaps it is failing. Perhaps the committee system should be abolished. Perhaps we do not need it any more. Perhaps the way to handle these matters is just on the floor of the Senate. I want to say for the record that I regard myself as a servant, an agent of the Senate, as I serve on the Appropri- ations Committee, particularly because I serve as chairman of that committee. If I can ascertain what the policy of the Senate is, how it wants to proceed on these appropriation bills, if I can get in- struction along that line, I will try to conform. If it were the policy of the Senate to proceed in a way that I simply could not follow, then I vstould yield my position on that matter-at least tem- porarily-to someone else, who could de- fend and undertake to sustain whatever the policy is. Mr. President, the Appropriations Committee this year, as in the past, has functioned in good faith. The sub- committees have held long hearings. They have marked up the bills and have brought them to the full committee. Almost without exception, I have de- ferred to the judgment and recommenda- mittee. ~1R C C 1. .L14M : ported that has been called to my atten- tion. But again, I as chairman of the full committee, and the members of that committee are undertaking to cooperate with our leadership to the end that we may, if we can-and we are making every effort to do it-get these appropriations bills finished before the Senate becomes preoccupied with another problem, another issue that will command its con- tinuing attention and occupy its full time until that matter shall have been When we do these things hastily. we do noE?'do as as we would e vern e s g s as ere are. In fact, as I recall, there are some 16 or 18 thousand items in research and development alone-each one of them could stand some examination. All of the items for which we make appro- priations run into the hundreds of thousands. It is absolutely impossible to give attention to each one of them. In the lied time that we hav d ~'4fdL n rtrm~et ~~= an was 5, 1974 c 'attention of_the chairman. Butte gay, it app~ ears al wo i eren aces e report. a -a-18ZLIn trip-bill chaiman; it is the committee. I just rep- resent a committee as its chairman and its agent. It is nothing personal with me r.~R_OXMIRE. I ealize that. r. McCLELLANI am talking about proms he Senate, the in- tegrity of the committee system. a reis no money in the bii and _the Seem of F Hawn a was the 11 ou certainly avid sou hi have discussed and cum~ e1 -a-nc ap9 n process them, trying to get them out. ld assume that when a chairman o a su comm ee Dill, Ir"MM up In Me JW1 comma tee IT. aliecL to our attention when Me l1latLer aye a Is my respons y, to have these bills checked and scrutinized most carefully before we ever bring them me a Item - o to the full committee for consideration: proFii it ands or e A? If that is correct, I must do that. I shall T mention aT, Tnis me, Mr. President, do my best to do it. But I do feel that in ti- a circumstance where we are operating bill for under such stress of pressure and haste to funds for the CIA. That Is the try to meet the conditions that we have daily here, it would have been well for jaw if neopl want to is the Senator to mention this to the full con roue t . I ' as committee so that we might consider it. rnmns on it, we can d it in At any rate, those things happen, and is. a is our ri '1 a the wa I am not trying to cast any aspersion on we want to doIT, u do the Senator. I am talking now about the naecessari_ o our C_r ,t. integrity of the committee system and r, Mr. President, will what we need to do. That is the purpose, the Senator yield at that point" primarily, of my concern at the moment, am glad to yield. although I thought I would mention it, /T ROX c comma ee report, on page 6, and, of other aspect. course, it is included in the bill. The rea- Mr. President, I wish to talk now about son why it was included is that thereS the pending amendment. There is an information which this Senator received amendment pending that has been of- MET, -a ffU?T=1 UT fered by the distinguished Senator from might have funds for a Wisconsin, who is chairman of the sub- s chairman nittee, I committee which handles the bill, and thought I had a duty to make sure of who is also the manager of the bill on what was in the appropriations bill on the floor. I have a copy of this amend- which I was acting. Pd urthermore. I asked ment. I believe this is a correct copy. It thg en h er H S ace an contains some 23 separate amendments Scien e. w en they appeare a ore a to items in the bill, striking the items and tions of the subcommittees. Perhaps there have been one or two exceptions, but I do not recall one at the moment. I have generally supported the Appropria- tions Committee on the floor of the Sen- ate. Perhaps in one or two exceptions I did not. I do that not because necessarily I always fully agree with what the Appro- priations Committee has recommended. But again I point out that unless it is so adverse and so greatly violates my con- viction that I simply cannot compromise, I still try to go along, in the interest of orderly procedure, because we do have the committee system, and I do it in an effort to make this system work. We have a bill before us today. We went through the due process, the procedures that are established by the rules of the Senate, which were followed and adhered to. This bill came before the full commit- they would not. Senator from Wisconsin that the total, of Management and u ge , n $160 million in round numbers. Mr. President, I do not quarrel with a I'M f t t th feeling that I had -a responsibility to the Senate and to the full committee to find out what was in the bill and to make sure that if there were funds for the CIA, those funds would be identified. I felt is o ba further reduction in amount, if we are given the opportunity in committee to examine these proposed cuts and take committee action on them. if the committee then does not recom- mend the cuts, when the bill comes to the Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 l~tt,g~~.st, 5~ Ig;~4pproved Fob l ~~~2 1 ~/~06 ~CI8 P7WRI 8000700040022-1 yelp, ~ri,sisslppi ________ _________..__-_-. 11, 026 by no stretch of the imagination is that cor., For all these reasons, we should pot accept; Mtuouri ____ _________ _____.. -_.__ 6, 096 rect. the abandonment of the traditional program'; Montana ____ -_. _- __-_ --- --- 1, 652 Fublic housing, for all its particular diffi.. as the price for Section 23. The traditiot:si. Nebraska _--____________ 4. 543 cnlties, is highly popular and a badly needec. programs and Section 23 should be imp. e.. Nevada ______________________._._-__ 5.980 program. The waiting lists are exceedingly mented concurrently. New Hampshire---__._______________ 1.098 long, The vacancy rates are exceedingly low. Hopefully this will be the result of the flea Jersey_____...._________________ 3, 293 Thus, it may be concluded th.it public hoes- legislative conference ow taking place be.. \1ew Mexico.__________________-_____ 5, 176 trig provides better housing to millions of tween the House a d the Senate concern- New York_____.._ _ _ _____________.. 4, 364 Americans, than they could otherwise afford ing future hou policy and programs. Nor~h Carolina__. -___ 7, 244 or are now getting. When the pendin legislation is finally agreed. horr;h DDakota__ _ -_---\. -_-_ 811 The Sections 235 and 236 programs suf- to. this Comm tee will examine the A~3- ihio __ _ ____ ___ __-_ 16, 676 fered from both HUD management, and a-c- ministration's, unding request to carry out. 3~l;thoma __ _ ___ _ _ 11.,455 tua'_ corruption, rather than from any in- the will of date Congress, t egon __._____ __ __. 6, 326 her2nt defects in the program::, In cities with nnsylvania _ ._____ 5, 880 good HUD management, and actual corrup- Mr. M LELLAN. Mr. President, I rise i rnde Island - __ _-_ ___ 744 tior., rather than inherent defects in the to disc>j s briefly the pending amend- t,~ou'aI Carolina________________. `4_ 16, 571 programs. In cities with good HUD manage- ment, Which I understand is the amenli- ionrh Dakota___-____--_-__--.______ 1,498 meat, such as Milwaukee, the program was ment of the distinguished Senator from T .:naessee 17, 227 a great success. In cities with rampant cor- Wisconsin. Is my understanding correc''? i ,xlls ___-_-_--_- 87, 755 ruption among housing officials, it, along ` he PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sell- ai 'alt . -- --___-___--_ --_ 6,689 With other HUD programs. failed. But the V rinont _-._ `340 failures in certain cities wer-e not peculiar clod is correct. --__ Mr, MC ins, I b N. It is an amendment r;inia _-__ __ . ___ ___ ___ 3, T77 to Section 235 and 236 and, in :'act, these pro- Washington _- 13, 751 grams were not the main ones affected or that contains, I believe, some 23 separate West Virginia______________________ 711 which failed, contrary to the opinion of t_he and distinct proposals with respect `:a Wsconsin ._________ _,_. ____----.____ 1.0, 440 'Department and some judicial mistakes of cuts in the pending bill. Wyoming ____ --_._ __-_ __-.- 921 fact. The Department blamed the programs Mr. President, I may state at the be- 'uerto Rica__ ____ _____ ___-- 9,661 instead of its own mismanagement,'As a ginning of my remarks that I am not Virgin Islands--------______-__-__ 0 consequence of this mismanagemei$, over primarily concerned about the amount of t~uaan --------------.--_-----____.___ 129 400 indictments have been handed down the cuts that would result, the amount - in housing fraud cases of reduction that would occur, if this U-d. Total--___-_____________ _ 4,34, 814 Over 10 percent of the total deflults in the Section 235 program were in two cities, Seat:- amendment were adopted. I think I have Alr. PERCY. Mr. President, I ask tie and Dallas where there was serious un- been fairly consistent throughout tie unanimous consent to have printed In employment stemming from cutbacks in the Years in advocating economy in Goverr.- the RECORD the section of the Appropria- air and space industries. In the State of Wis- meat. I have repeatedly stood on tk. e l~iolis Committee's report to which I have cousin, 97 percent of thoseassi;3ted have been floor of the Senate and pointed out thf:t referred, because I concur with every successful. one of the causes-the prime cause, real- statement made in that section. In the country as a whole, HUD studies ly-for deficit budgets and for increased I":sere being no objection, the excerpt show that the SectIo i 235 program Is actu- spending originates and stems from au - a35 h sound. rs ma in the 3 5ont Section thorization legislation. Appropriatior..s from the report was ordered to be printed 235 homeowners making their monthly pay- in the RECORD, as follows: ments. The actual number of defaults has cannot be made unless Congress has au- '1~r`rt.;i: 1. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN not exceeded the number anticipated and. thorized the expenditure. 11R.VELOPMENT the insurance reserves have cavered antici- One of our problems-it is a, problem 'fhe Committee is distressed and deeply pated claims. $y any measurement, the pro- to all Of Us-in trying to meet Our re- oncerned by the Administration's action to gram has been a major success in attaining sponsibilities here is that once a prograri abandon our nation's historic housing nrto the objective of assisting those with incomes iS authorized, once Congress says this is well below. the national media:a: ;;ram. In 1949, the Congress declared our pol- something that shduld be done and w- iacy to provide a decent home in a suitable kista ere. two-thirds of those reh year authorize it to be done and we authcr- living environment for ever American becaus tee receive lower subsidies each year r,in;,y Y because their incomes are resin;;, whl~h was a ize the expenditure of such moneys a ar Ises, Con ress set a housin majol' aim of tihe program. Some 50,000 See- may be necessary to carry out the pro- g g goal of 2.6 tion '235 homebuyers have gone off sW sidy gram, or we authorize so many million mi lion housing units a year for 10 years of altogether and, in the Committee's opinion, dollars or billion dollars to get the pro- ; ~tiicZ 600,000 were to be far low and mooed- these are distinct measures of program she- gram carried out, then Congress, itsell ate income families. cess. has put in motion the expenditure when i'u January 1973, the Administration froze The Department has argued that if note, it makes the appropriation. virtually all new starts for low and moderate everyone could be subsidized under the pro- income families. Some 17 housing programs gram, no one should be subsidised. Evidently. The issue that comes before the ApprO - or programs closely associated with ltouslug they halted the program out of policy die- priations Committee, notwithstanding were stooped. Except for units already In the taste rather than from factual evidence. that Congress has directed that this bo pipelines, programs for low income housi',ng We are now awaiting action for new and done, is, shall we refuse to make the ap- were abandoned, and programs for moderate substitute programs. These were delayed by propriation? That is what it often income housing were abandoned as well. This HUD's failure to finish its studies in a timely amounts to. Especially is that true if a bas resulted in additional families in the fashion and to recommend any program at budget request comes down for it. lower 40 to 50 percent of American income all until September 197x , . I know that we are all concerned, anti groups being denied access to public housing The Department now wishes to rely en- or. the ability to buy a new home. tirely on what is called the new Section 23 rightly so, The country is concerned. We Exacerbating this situation, due to exceed- program, a program of leased housing to re- are distressed about the fiscal situation itlglp high interest rates, approximately 70 place the conventional public housing pro- that pertaibs in our Government. Wi' ercent of the American people`under private grain, and Sections 235 and 286. agonize about the economic situation ;atterpriso and conventional'' housing pro- The Committee feels that i would be a that prevails n this country. Therefore: .....,. _.__ ''____ `__._ _ __ _ tragilc error t'/, fn ke fhis coursn .... .... ...... .. _ _ ,~.,< '.0 CPIs was about 1.U million units, or low income families that public housing ernment will take f. In other words, Il. over a million units below the national hous- helped, and build in the regions or areas is our duty to try to hieve a balances ix,#!' goals promulgated by the Congress h h i . w ere ous ng is most needed.. budget' and as to. tha objective and or .?oniebuyers, builders, thrift institutions, Under Section 23, the builders become the that score, I yield to no nator and to no iui. those associated with the housing indus- housing managers. It would seem that since Representative. I will cd tinue to strive irk-'ttrniture, durable goods, heating and they must. rant out the ,,,,try .,.A....,,,, ..,,_,_ :ncaratorium pinch. upper- reaches of low and moderate income As chairman Of the Appropriations t he Committee feels that the Administra- families. Committee, I have set in motion and ;:tort has justified Sts actions for a variety of The large poor families and the very poor have made an effort to bring about a ;5-1t?.upported reasons. Among other things, families, for whom public housing was such reduction in expenditures, last year and it has claimed that the programs were not a great program, may well be left out in the this year. lcle jing the goals set by the Congress, but cold. Last year, particular) y-we ca.n speak Approved For Release 2005/06/06 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000700040022-1 August ?5, Y9~proved For ggt~g~/q~ :~~~z5.00700040022-1 S 14335 floor, _of cS~rse, the Senate can work its wi11M But if there are amendments that the committee feels- are meritorious, the committee should not be bypassed. It should have an opportunity to consider them. Mr. President, I ask the distinguished Senator from Wisconsin ff these amend- ments which are offered here today were presented by him to his subcommittee. Mr. PROXMIRE. I say to the chair- man that the amendments I offered to the subcommittee were far deeper than the amendments here. I offered amend- ments in total of $1.4 billion. I offered a number of other amend- ments. We had considerable discussion in the subcommittee meeting. Mr. McCLELLAN. Were they accepted? Mr. PROXMIRE: Some of the recom- mendations of the chairman and the ranking member were accepted and some were rejected. Some of these amendments were offered in the sub- committee. Many of them were not of- fered in the subcommittee. Mr. McCLELLAN. If they were ac- cepted in the subcommittee, why did they not appear in the Senator's report on 'the bill? Mr. PRO,XMIRE. I say to the Senator that some of the amendments that I brought up in the subcommittee were rejected, and those amendments that were rejected, in some cases, are offered here. I am not saying that any of the amendments that were accepted are here. Mr. McCLELLAN. Will the Senator identify them for the record when he has the floor" directly? I would like to know which ones were considered there. I ask the Senator, were any of these particular amendments presented to the full committee? Mr. PROXMIRE. The NSF, HUD, NASA-we are going to identify the ones that were presented to the subcommittee. In the full committee, we had some eight or nine specific amendments that were offered. I think the Senator will re- member -that. They were voted an en bloc. We had two or three series of two or three amendments each referring to NASA voted en bloc; some of them are included here. We had one referring to the National Science Foundation, and then three, I think, referring to HUD. We will be happy to identify those at a later time. Mr. McCLELLAN. Were they pre- sented just as they are presented here? Mr. PROXMIRE. No, they were pre- sented in somewhat different form. Mr, McCLELLAN. They were presented in different form. Mr. President, this is the point I want to make, and I do not want to belabor it. If the committee system is to function with integrity and efficiency, it must have the opportunity-and the Senate, I think, should want it to have the oppor- tunity-to screen proposed cuts or pro- posed amendments-not only cuts, but amendments that offer to increase the amount of the bill. We have that ex- perience, too, Mr. President; we come to the floor sometimes, without the evi- dence having been presented to the Ap- propriations Committee for cansidera- tion, amd often without having any evi- dence presented, with offers to increase by a large amount. Every Senator has the right, on this floor, to offer any amendment he wants to. I concede that right. I defend that right. I would do it myself if I felt a strong enough conviction. But I think I would undertake, especially before the Appropriations Commitee-and I am the chairman of that committee-to have the issue clearly presented to the com- mittee, and give them an opportunity to reject it o~n its merits, or for some other reason, if there was reason for re- jecting~ it, or to approve it, as the case may be. Mr. President, I compliment the Sen- ator to this extent: This amendment is a marked improvement, in my judgment, over the one offered, I believe last Fri- day, to the Department of Transporta- tion bill, with a 3.5 percent cut across the board. This, is my judgment, is the way to do it. And I might say, Mr. President, that I have no doubt that upon these amend- ments being presented and discussed, I -will find some of them that I shall want to support; because I want to cut, if we can, this budget and appropriation in every way we can do so consistently and where it represents the best ixxter- ests of our country. I do not like, as I said the other day, the meat-ax approach wlxich is pre- sented across the board. Someone sug- gested awhile ago that maybe we ought to establish that precedent here, so we will all know that we are going to cut them percentagewise across the board. But what would that do to the cam- mittee system, Mr. President? If that is what we are establishing herB, we need to know it; but what does it do to the committee system? If I were handling a committee and I did not want my projects cut muc7x, I would not do any cutting on them in the committee ; I would wait and let them get their 3-pex?cent cut up here, if they were going to get it. And same could well in- crease their amounts, Mr. President, an- ticipating that they would get a 3-per- cent cut. I do not think a 3-percent cut, as such, as a firm and fixed formula, is neces- sarily the best way to do it. But if we are going to do that, let us take, for exam- ple, the Defense bill. It is yet to come up. My distinguished friend here is a mem- ber of the Armed Services Committee. We hear demands here on the floor sometimes, "Cut it $10 billion." Maybe it can stand that; maybe it cannot. But whatever percentage it would be-8x/z percent would cut it $10 'billion, or 12 percent, or whatever it is that would make a cut of $10 billion-I think it ought to be considered before we slash that way. I do not know what it would come out of. I do not think that is the way to do it. Let me point this out: I think I can say without any qualification-though I can- not absolutely guarantee it, as everyone knows-speaking of what I think the at- titude and disposition of the subcommit- tee handling the defense bill is, I think it will be cut, if we are left to the selective cutting process, by more than 3'/z per- cent. We did a pretty good job last year of cutting beyond that. I think we can do it again. We are going to try, and I think we will succeed. But I might say, if this practice is go- ing to be established, to do away with the committee consideration of these things on their merits and. let the bill come to the floor, as they work it, and take items that seem to be too much and x?educe them, or items that seem to be not enough and increase them, I hope we do not establish a precedent where every time a bill comes up here, we are going to cut it 31/z percent, because anyone who wanted to be sure he got about what he wanted could increase his appropriation, and then come to the floor, receive the cut, and he would have lost practically nothing; whereas another subcommittee, working faithfully and diligently, and examining the items and making reduc- tions on the basis of .merit and on the basis of priorities as they see them, would be terribly penalized. So would the function of the department or agency, and so would the service to be performed, and those who benefit from it, if we are to follow that procedure. I do not think the emergency is such today that we cannot make reductions to bring these appropriations within the revenues, and thus avoid a deficit. I do not believe there is a situation where we cannot function responsibly in that fashion. Maybe we have lost that ability. Maybe we will not face our responsibili- ties, but I believe we will. I do not believe the process of a 3-percent cut, as such, is really facing up to the issue. I hope that we will get some order and some orderly process established here, or reestablished, so that we will know what to do when we try to work on appropria- tion bills, and we will be able to feel that the efforts of the subcommittees and the full committees are going to be respected, and then weighed and examined, rather than just, in effect, discarding the com- mittee's work and saying, "We are going to cut across the board." Mr. President, in view of the situation, I want to find out, and I think this will give us a pretty good idea, about how the Senate wants to proceed. I intend to move-others may have discussed it-to recommit the bill to the Appropriations Committee so that we will have the op- portunity to discuss these proposed amendments, weigh them, and again re- port the bill out with the recommenda- tions of the committee. I yield to the distinguished Senator. Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator from Nevada. Mr. BIBLE. I want to make a brief statement. , Mr. MaCLELLAN. I yield. Mr. BIBLE. I just wanted to make a brief observation. I want to associate myself with what the distinguished chairman of our committee is saying, and I shall support him right down the line. I hope the motion to recommit it to the committee is agreed to so that we can study these new amendments. They are new to me, and they may be well taken. i have not had the opportunity of look- ing at them. Approved For Release 2005/06/06 :CIA-RDP75B00380R000700040022-1 ~43~6 Approved For~l~~~~~~6 R~~75~~300070004002~:~~~,ust r5, 1' 9 i 1~ I am privrleged to handle the Interior =~?zprapriation bill, and that is supposed ,o be calendared for action on the floor osl Wednesday afternoon. ~~e heard from I do not know how rzlany Senators, but they had iti2 am.end- ?uents. Every one of them was an amend- e~Ient t;o add dollars. There was not a -'i.-isle amendment to take any dollars ~+.vay. I hope the proponents and leaders in iiiris effort to cut back-and I am sure ]rt3ey are going to make an attack on the 1 t,eriar bill as weIi, I do not know why but I think they might do it-wfll be ~?;ecific and designate whose projects we ]sake the money out of. That is what I would like to have them do, whether they come from Florida or Georgia or ~aherever, Wisconsin or Kansas, wher- e=aer they might come from, and I would iic~pe they would specify which projects ~: a should take it out of, whichever State i;iley want to take it out of, and I will be happy to oblige. But I hope theg are +; leciii.c when we come to consider this ?abiem an Wednesday, I believe. I think d~~lat is the day the leader is attempting i.+l calendar it. 1 thank the Senator for gieldirlg. I :have veryy important appointment this after- s~~,on and I must keep it. ?iZr. McCLELLAN. I wish to observe, ;; chairman of the Appropriations Com- rlit?tee, nearly all of the letters-it is un- 11=ua1 when we get one wanting us t,~ cut ;~13e, although we do get some of them- ftzast of them are to increase, and the '-=~natars who write and ask us to in- =~~?ease sometimes are the ones who are i~c-tiny for these across-the-board cuts, .>rid so forth. It is difficult for us to op- ?~?aae, as I say, intelligently, efficiently, ;;.f,d conscientiously where we do not _~ow and we are not privileged to know i~'lllit the rules are going to be and how, 3vhen, they are going to change and be i::ans;ed. 1 vs=ant to say this before I conclude: i :;aid in the beginning this is not per- alanal, and it is not, that every Senator ~: entitled to vote his conscience and his ,,>nviction, and I am not pleading today "err myself as chairman of the Al>propri- ;;t:.cns Committee; I am pleading for each r3.~nator here, for the people he repre- _~?lts, to maintain and to make operate :r, :ys=:~~m that has been tried and tested ?,i:_d proven over 190 years that we :have ~,.~~i tt~i~s Government. Sure, it is not per- `~ ~~t. l~~?t'amend the rules if chanties must ma,~ae? h:ol~e we will understand that it ..::-::dies no personal difi'erence to me if ;,r rut this bill 3 percent or 30 percent -,: Sept insofar as what is best for our ~~~> entry. l will feel the same way when ~+ have the defense appropriation bill at bore. Do what is best for the country, ~.r:~d if it takes a 3-percent cut or a 5-per- a cut, if the Senators will single out >~ items where they ought to be cut, ';~~~>p those that have a priority. that de- :~,?ve the full financing and reduce the +ri.hers, I will be satisfied. 't am n.ot insisting on budget appropri- :a ,ions. I am not only willing to cut, but I ai,l~~i cutting. Taut we need cooperation, we ~u;tid the Senate's.. understandintr. and i ~: ve a.re not going to recognize the work of our committees then, of course, the only alternative is to do it here on the floor. I know that the great masses ~~f the American people want this budget cut, and they want a balanced budget, and I am willing to worle with my col- eagues to that end, and if we do not get it the first round-that is where we ha~~e this Budget Committee, and I hope it works; I have some doubt about it-vae will make some further cuts until we do get it. We can pass a resolution after tYlese bills are all in, weigh it, and make certain then that we treat everything alike, treat them all fain:~, and let them take their reductions where they may, it we do not achieve it by the due process long established and long practiced and now followed, undertaken. to be followed by those to whom we have entrusted the responsibility as our representatives and as our agents. I yield to the distinguished Senator from North Dakota (Mr. Yotrxc). Mr. YOUNG. I am ixl favor of this new economy move in the Senate. For years now for every amendment offered to cut an appropriation bill on the Senate flag That have been 10 offered to increase '.t. This is with the exception of Deferl;>e alpropriation bills. I have seen amend- ment after amendment offered on the T a.bor HF.W bill that raised the bill by as much as one-half billion dollars. This increasing appropriation bill has been fining on for years, so 1: welcome this new-economy move. i am willing to cut $160 million or more if the subcommittee chairman rec- ommends it,.7n fact, I voted in the coni- mittee to-there was only one motion offered, as I recall to cur; $43.3 millio~l. I would like to have this inserted in the Rscoxn, Mr. President. There being no objection, the stati;- ment was ordered to be printed in tyre Recoan, as follows: i~,IiCOMMENDED (,UTS SY SE::TATOR PROXMIILB'i TN .SUBCOMMITTEE Npsa (:n millions) lte~search and Development. ________ $12. 8 t;t~astruction of Facilities___ ________ 5. 0 Research and Program Mant~gement_ 1.0 _ Total --------------- -------- ...~ _ __ 18. 8 x.;F ------------------------------ a.a IIUD t~t>.mprehensive Planning Grants___- 10.0 Research and Technology___________ 5.0 Salaries--Research and Technology_ 1.35,0 . Tonal -----??------------------ -_.~~ 16. 3:0 >_ 4~rand total------------------ - _--- 43.3 Mr. YOUNG. Mr. President, I am fc~r this bigger cut. I am willing to make a bigger cut, $200 million, if necessary. Bl:.t I believe it, should be on an item-by-item basis. This business of going to conference with the House with a "rr.eat-ax" cut of 3 percent or 5 percent causes the Sen.- ate to lase all of its bargaining ~owcr with the House. The Senely and frequently. In fact, 62 per+~ent. of all funds available for lending is hull?- rowed by the Federal Government. During fire 8-month period front 1va- vember 1, 1973, to June 30, 1974, for ex:- ample, the Tl?easw?y issued securities t;o- t~ling $42 billion. Government agel~~~~ic~s Approved For Release 2005/06/06 :CIA-RDP75B00380R000700040022-1