MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATION, FISCAL YEAR 1975

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December 12, 1974
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Approved For Releas_e _ oll 11690 cONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- HOUSE The result of the vote was announced and must meet our needs for energy, The Chair recognizes the gentleman as above recorded. evnd in ways that minimize damage to the from New York (Mr. PIKE). A motion to reconsider the votes by environment. (Mr. PIKE asked and was given Per- which action was taken on the several The conservation of energy provides mission to revise and extend his re- motions was laid on the table, an essential common ground between marks.) ' our need for energy and our desire to Mr. PIKE. Mr. Speaker, on August 9, protect the environment By eliminating 1974, the House of Representatives waste in the use of energy, and by in- passed H.R. 16136, which is the fiscal creasing the efficiency of the energy we year 1975 military construction author- use, we can move toward both goaLs ization for the Department of Defense simultaneously. Our experience this year and Reserve components. has shown that there are major oppor- On September 11, 1974, the Senate tunities to conserve energy. And we are considered the legislation, amended it coming to understand that actions by striking out all language after the which temper our growing use of energy enacting clause, and wrote a new bill. contribute to self-sufficiency as well as H.R. 16136, as passed by the House actions. which increase our domestic of Representatives, provided new con- supply. struction authorization to the military We must also recognize that, even with departments and the Department of De- e strong conservation program, we will fense for fiscal year 1975 in the total still have to mine more coal, drill for amount of $2,935,801,000, more oil and gas, and build more power- The bill, as passed by the Senate, pro- plants and refineries. Each of these vided new construction authorization in . ANNUAL REPORT ON THE COUNCIL measures will have an impact on the en- the total amount of $3,027,925,060. ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY? vironment. Yet this can be minimized, As a result of the conference between MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT and the last five years have shown that the House and the Senate on the differ- OF THE UNITED STATES we have the capacity and the willingness ences in H.R. 16136, the confereto es a,greed , ION 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000760050003-1 December 12, 1974 GENERAL LEAVE Mr. WHITTEN. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members may have 5 legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks on the conference report just agreed to, and that I may revise and extend my own re- marks and insert certain extraneous material on the conference report just agreed to. The SPEAKER. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman from Mis- sissippi? There was no objection. The SPEAKER laid before the House e roilowing message from the Pres- ident of the United States; which was read and, together with the accompany- ing papers, referred to the Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries: To the Congress of the United States: I am pleased to transmit to the Con- gress the Fifth Annual Report of the Council on Environmental Quality. When future historians look back on the pursuit of environmental quality in our era, they will recognize it as a posi- tive turning point. As I stated in an Earth Day speech in 1970, "the day is gone when concern for the land, the air and the water was sole proVince of the conservationist, the wilderness enthusiast, the bird watcher, -and the environmental scientist." Instead, today, millions of our citi- zens share a new vision of the future in which natural systems can be protected, pollution can be controlled, a natural heritage will be preserv crusade to improve the quality human environment has begun sade which has already led to complishment over the past fly Another valuable lesson was during the energy Crisis last when, in trying circumstances, it clear that we cannot achieve environmental and all our ene economic goals at the same ti f our cru- t ac- years. arned Inter ecame 1 our y and e. Had our commitment to the environnient not been ingrained, we might have reacted to this situation by discarding our en- vironmental goals. Had our commitment to the environment not been mature, we might not have recognized the need for balance to accommodate other social and economic goals as well. By rejecting the extremes--by accepting the need for balance--we held fast to the accomplish- ments of the past and looked with new perspective towards the imperatives of the future. This, in my judgment, is the course we must continue to follow. The need to move toward greater self- sufficiency in energy is one of the major challenges of the decade ahead. We can do so. Science and technology, in which America excels, provides one means of limiting environmental dam- age; careful analysis and planning, with broad public participation, offers an- other. Let us also be guided by our increased recognition of the interdependence of all nations of our globe and the fundamen- tal relationship between population, re- sources, economic development world stability, and the environment. No longer is concern for the environ- ment the dream of a few. Instead, it is reflected in cilmtless actions by many citizens, by industry, and by government at all levels every day. The environmen- tal movement has matured, and the nation and its environment have bene- fitted in the process. Looking to the fu- ture, we can expect further accomplish- ment in enhancing our environment and, along with it, further improvement in our quality of life. GERALD R.. FORD. RITE House, December 12, 1974,. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AU- THORIZATION, FISCAL YEAR 1975 Mr. PIKE, Mr. Speaker, I move to sus- Pend the rules and agree to the confer- ence report on the bill (H.R. 16136) to authorize certain construction at mili- tary installations, and for other purposes. The Clerk read the title of the confer- ence report. The SPEAK. Is a second de- manded? Mr. KING. Mr. Speaker, I demand a second. The SPEAKER. Without objection, a second will be considered as ordered. There was no objection. (For conference report and statement, see proceedings of the House of Decem- ber 10, 1974.) to a new adjusted authorization for mili- tary construction for fiscal year 1975 in the amount of $2,994,878,000. The amount authorized for appropriation, however, is only $2,984,378,000. The dif- ference results from the fact that two projects authorized, totaling $10.5 mil- lion, do not require appropriations. The amount of new authority approved is $294,002,000 below the amount re- quested by the Department of Defense. The total authority granted is approxi- mately $59 million above that granted by the House and approximately $33 million below the Senate figure. There were over 150 differences in the House and the Senate versions. How- ever, we were able to arrive at an agree- ment on each one of these differences. I will not go into a lot of detail because the joint statement of the managers explains the actions of the conferees. The most difficult problem encountered in the conference with the Senate was the Department of Defense proposal for an expansion of facilities on the island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. The original Department request, under the Navy portion of the bill, was for $29 mil- lion to upgrade the present facilities on the island of Diego Garcia. Among the projects envisioned was the extension of the runway by approximately 2,000 feet, additional POL storage capacity, and the dredging of the harbor so that larger ships could anchor there. The House ap- proved ?the Department's request with- out change. However, the Senate reduced the amount requested and authorized $14,802,000. Further, the Senate inserted language which would require the Presi- dent to certify to the Congress that the need for the expansion of facilities had been evaluated by him, and that such projects were essential to the security of the United States, and this certification must be approved by a joint resolution of the House and the Senate. The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gen- The House conferees argued that the tleman from New York (Mr. PIKE) will Senate language, in effect, would allow be recognized for 20 minutes, and the a legislative veto by inaction and offered gentleman from New York (Mr. Kam) compromise language which would per- will be recognized for 20 minutes, mit either the House or the Senate to Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 -.ApproVZ-d For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December ix, 1974 CMCNRESVONAL RECOR D ? HOUSE The vote was 8ken by .elez.tronic de- vice, and there were?yeas , 90, mit voting 62, as follows: Mr. ROUSSEL011% Mr. Speaker, will the gentleman yield? Mr. WHITTEN. I yield to the, gentle- man from California. [Roll No. 6761 Mr. RCVUSSELOT. Mr. key, I ap- preciate the gentleman yie Mr. Speaker, as I underst resulted as a compromise with ate, and also to provide for ju view, which is a highly important in which to decide this issue in vie this indecision that now relates to t matter; is that correct? Mr. WHITTEN. Mr. Speaker, in reply to the gentleman from California, let me sa.y that insofar as my recollection is ng. to me. Gettys Pettis this has AArder?sron, Ill. Qinri Pe yser Pinkie Pcage Pc well, Ohio Pr eyer Price, Ill. Price, Tex. Pi itchard Quie Quillen Hanrahan Rallsback R amdall d Hankie R &rick proved by all members of the conference Henri HHeeckinz Roberts ler, Mass. RRhegouldeas concerned this was unanimously ap- Bei .? Hastings i,:gdi and, not only that, but while the tang- Be lieade rE?11 Robinson, Va. uage provides for judicial review, as I want Hicks Robison, N.Y. said, the lawsuits or judicial review are Blackburn Hinshaw Roe now going on. It was the cletertnination Blatnik Hogan Holifield Roncallo, Wyo. BoggRose of all of the conferees that while these Boiansa olt Rostenkowski lawsuits are pending that this agency Bolling ? ton housselot should not be financed to stifle the de- Bowen er Roy Bray HU luutir velopment and growth of our country, Breaux Hu t Ryan while the courts are deciding the issue. Brinkley Hung Hunt Again while we touched on only one Brooks it Germain ?Sandman part of the legislative provision, having Broomfieldoan Ejlutchin Earasin touched one part of it in the House, then Brown, Mich. Johnson, r, Satterfield I respectfully suggest all parts of the Brown, Ohio Johnson, pa, Elcherle Schneebell legislative provision would cote before Broyhill. 1,,Tio. Jones, tts. ebelius hibit or permanently prevent EPA, but Burgeannaern a. the conference. As I say, we do not pro- Buchanan JJoornnta, Tenn. oup Burke, Fla. __Kasen ver until the courts decide on this issue, we Bik ,3 Burke. Mass. isral) Sisk recommend that financing not be made available to EPA, but that the matter Burleson, Tex, Ketchum Burlison, MO. King 13kUbi be left to the cities and States. Butler Kluczynski Slack Mr. ROGERS. Mr. Speaker, if the iarronney, Onto Lagomarsino Smith, Landgrebe Snyder gentleman will yield further, May I just Carter Latta Spence Leggett Staggers Stanton, J. William Steed Steiger, Ariz. Steiger, Wis. Stephens Stubblefield Stuckey Studds Sullivan Symington Symms Talcqtt Taylor, Mo. Taylor, N.C. Teague House provision, and is not germane Daniels, Mallary Thone Thomson. Wis. Danielson Thornton thereto. The Chair, therefore, sustains Dominick V. Mann the point of order. Davis, S.C. Martin, Nebr. Towell, Nev. MOTION OFFERED BY MB. WICITEN Davis, Wis. Martin, N,C, Traxler Matsunaga Treen Mr. WHITTEN. Mr. Speaker, I offer dpeellaanGoyarZa Mayne Mauston Van Deerlin Ullman Metcalfe Vander Veen Veysey Dellenback Melcher Mezvinsky Vigorito Milford Waggonner Walsh Michel Miller Wampler Mizell WiArnariete Mink Mollohan Whitehurst Whitten e Sen- Andrews, N.C. Oonzalez re_ Andrews, Goodling N. Dak. Gross ace Annunzio Oubser , Of Archer Gunter Mends Guyer Armstrong HHalameyiner. Ashbrook I rale itst Hanley schmidt man say that these regulations insofar as the Casey, ' contracts for airports, highways, shop- Chamberlain Lehman ping centers and sporting arenas are not Clausen, Long, La. even effective until next year, the park- Don H. Long, ma. Ing which the House acted on was coy- gaewsoann. Del Lott ered, so that they are not germane. Cohen McClory The SPEAKER. The Chair is ready to Collins, 111, McCollister Collins, Tex. McCormack rule. Conlan McEwen There is only one issue involved here Cotter McFall McKay Corman and that is whether the amendment in- Crane McKinney eluded in the motion of the gentleman Culver Macdonald from Mississippi is germane. It obviously Daniel, Dan Madden is far more comprehensive than the Daniel, Robert r. riaaglogir a motion. The Clerk read as follows: Mr. Warn= moves that the -House insist on its disagreement to the amendment of the Senate. Devine Dickinson The SPEAKER. The question is on Donohue the motion offered by the gentleman Dorn from Mississippi (Mr. WHITTEN) . Downing Moorhead, Dulski Calif. Widnall The question was taken. Dunn Mosher Wiggins Mr. STARK. Mr. Speaker, on that I du Pont Murphy, in. Williams Mr. Kuykendall with Mr. Hillis. Edwards, Ala. Murphy, N.Y. Wilson, Bob Mr. Mathias of California with demand the yeas and nays. Erlenborn Murtha Wilson, fiths. The yeas and nays were not ordered. Esch Myers Charles, Ten. Mr. STARK. Mr. Speaker I object to rvans,coio. N In that tecehe r Mr. Mathis of Georgia with Mr. J F inespnn. Nelsen the vote on the ground at a quorum is Nichols O'Brien O'Neill Owens Passman Patraan Patten Pepper Perkins Denholm Dennis Dent Derwinski bung Anderson, Calif. Aspin Badillo Biester Bingham Brademas Breckinridge Holtman Seiberling Brown, Calif. Karth Smith, N.Y. Burke, Calif. Kastermeier Stark Burton, John Koch Steele Burton, Phillip Kyros Steelman Chisholm McCloskey Stokes Clay McDade Stratton Conte Maraziti Thompson, NJ. Tiernan Udall Vanik Waidie Whalen Wilson, Charles H., Calif. Wolff Wydier Yates Yatron Young, Ga. H 116895a ? NAYS-90 Gaydos Riegle Gibbons Rinaldo Gilman Rodin? Greek Pa. Rogers Gude Romney, Pa. Hamilton RoaNithal Harrington RoUth Hawkins Roybal Hechler, W. Va. Sarbanes Helstoski Schroeder Conyers Coughlin Cronin Dingell Drinan Morgan Eckhardt Moss Edwards. Calif. Nedzi Eilberg Fish Ford Forsythe Fraser Frenzel Meeds Minish Mitchell, Md. Mitchell, N.Y. Alexander Ashley Baker 1317LSCO Camp Carey, N.Y. Cederberg Clancy Clark Cleveland Collier Comible Davis, Ga. Dellums Diggs Eshleman Fisher Kuykendall James V. Flowers Landrum Vander Jagt Frelinghuysen Litton Wyman Frey Luken Young, Alasks. Giaimo 1VIcSpadden, Zion So the motion was agreed to. The Clerk announced the following rs: Hays with Mr. Baker. Hebert with Mr. Cederberg. oorhead of Pennsylvania with Mr Nix Obey Pike Rangel Rees Reuss NOT VOTING-85 Mathias, Calif. Mathis, Ga. Mills Minshall, Ohio Moakley Montgomery Metorhead, Pa. O'Hara Penis Podell Goldwater Grasso Gray Green, Oreg. Griffiths Grover Hanna Hansen, Idaho Hansen, Wash. Hays Hebert Reid Hillis Roncallo, N.Y. Howard Rooney. N.Y. Ichord Runnels Johnson, Colo. Shipley Jones N.C. Stanton, Mr. Grove Mr. Mr. Al Mr. Dell Mr. Flow Mr. Giaim Mr. Diggs Mr. Howard Mr. 'chord wi Mr. Moakley w Mr. Montgorne Washington. Mr. O'Hara with M Mr. Carey of New Y Mr. Boone)' of New Mr. Jones of North Collier. Mr. Landrum with Mrs. Mr. Litton with Mr. Miele Mr. Runnels with Mr. Hans Mr. Ashley with Mr. Conabl Mr. Mills with Mrs. Green of ey with Mr. Clark. der with Mr. Camp. with Mr. Gray. with Mr. Davis of Georgia. with Mr. Frey. Mr. McSpaddeffl. th Mr. Goldwater. Mr. Clancy. Mr. Frelinghuysen. with Mrs. Hansen Cleveland. with_Mr. Eshleman. rk with Mr. Hatiria. arolina with Mr. of ae50. of Idaho. gon. not present and make the point of order Findley that a quorum is not present. Flood Flynt The SPEAKER. Evidently a quorum Foley Is not present. Fountain The Sergeant at Arms will notify ab- Fr uCgablniell sent Members. Fuqua Winn Wright Wyatt Wylie Young, Fla. Young, Ill. Young, S.C. Young, Tex. Zablocki Zwach of Colorado. Mr. Minshall of Ohio with Mr. Luken. Mr. Reid with Mr. Parris. Mr. Roncallo of New York with Mr. Vander Jagt. Mr. James V. Stanton with Mr. Young of Alaska. Mr. Wyman with Mr. Zion. . Gri:f- nson Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 'Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 De*mber 12, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD HOUSE vetp the proposed construction by pass- int a resolution of disapproval within 60 days of continuous session of Congress after the President's certification. After many hours of discussion and many meetings of the conferees, the Senate reluctantly receded to the com- promise language, but insisted that additional language be added to the con- ference rport which provides in sub- stance that parliamentary tactics aimed at delaying action on the Senate floor regarding a Resolution of Disapproval will be precluded. Therefore, after giving a little here and taking a little there, our conferees have done the best they could and be- lieve they have brought to the House a good bill that will provide asiequately for the construction needs of the military during this fiscal year. Further, I want to assure the House that all amendments adopted in conference are germane to the bill. I want to thank the gentleman from New York (Mr. KING) for his dedication and assistance during our hearings, and more especially, in the conference. Also, I want this House to know that all mem- bers of our conference committee worked long and hard to bring this conference report before you and I urge its adoption. Mr. KING. Mr. Speaker, I want to say that this is perhaps one of the most difficult subcommittees that we have because it entails hours of work and of hearings, and if it had not been for my colleague from New York, the chairman of the subcommittee, and his work, and the other Members of the committee and Mr. Shumate's efforts, we would not have reached the bill that we have to every- one's satisfaction. Mr. Speaker, my colleague, the distin- guished chairman of the Military Con- struction Subcommittee, has explained the details of our conference with the Senate and, therefore, I will not go into the matters already discussed by him and fully explained in the joint statement of the managers. This bill is not exactly as I would have had it, but then what bill of this magni- tude ever is after it has gone through intensive hearings of both the House and the Senate and then the differences are resolved in conference? I recognize that many Members might have desired certain line items which were omitted or conversely, some line items which are in- cluded, they might have desired that they be omitted. But, on balance, we are very satisfied with the conference report. I want to congratulate my colleagues In the conference committee for their dedication arid efforts to bring this con- ference report to the House. Also, I espe- cially want to point out to the Members of the House the excellent leadership provided by the gentleman from New York (Mr. Pna). Mr. Speaker, I urge the adoption of the conference report. Mr. PIKE. Mr. Speaker, I move the previous question on the conference re- port. The previous question was ordered. The SPEAKER. The question is on the motion offered by the gentleman from New York (Mr. Phu), that the House suspend the rules and agree to the con- ference report on the bill H.R. 16136. The question was taken; and (two- thirds having voted in favor thereof) the rules were suspended and the confer- ence report was agreed to. A motion to reconsider was laid on the table. GENERAL LEAVE Mr. PIKE. Mr. Speaker, I ask unani- mous consent that all Members may have 5 legislative days in which to re- vise and extend their remarks on the conference report just agreed to. The SPEAKER. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman from New York? There was no objection. EMERGENCY UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION ACT OF 1974 Mr. 'ULLMAN. Mr. Speaker, I move to suspend the rules and pass the bill (H.R. 17597) to provide a program of emer- gency unemployment compensation. The Clerk read as follows: HR. 17597 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, SHORT TITLE SEC. 101. This Act may be cited as the "Emergency Unemployment Compensation Act of 1974". FEDERAL-STATE AGREEMENTS SEC. 102. (a) Any State, the State unem- ployment compensation lam of which is ap- proved by the Secretary of Labor (herein- after in this Act referred to as the "Secre- tary") under section 3304 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 which desires to do so, may enter into and participate in an agree- ment with the Secretary under this Act, if such State law contains (as of the date such agreement is entered into) a requirement that extended compensation be payable thereunder as provided by the Federal-State Extended Unemployment Compensation Act of 1970. Any State which is a party to an agreement under this Act may, upon pro- viding thirty days' written notice to the Secretary, terminate such agreement. (b) Any such agreement shall provide that the State agency of the State will make pay- ments of emergency compensation? (1) to individuals who? (A) (1) have exhausted all rights to regular compensation under the State law; (ii) have exhausted all rights to extended compensation, or are not entitled thereto, because of the ending of their eligibility period for extended compensation, in such State; (B) have no rights to compentation (in- cluding both regular compensation and ex- tended compensation) with respect to a week under such law or any other State unem- ployment compensation law or to compen- sation under any other Federal law; and (C) are not receiving compensation with respect to such week under the unemploy- ment compensation law of the Virginia Is- lands or Canada, (2) for any week of unemployment which begins in? (A) an emergency benefit period (as de- fined in subsection (c) (5)); and H 11691 (B) the individual's period of eligibility (as defined in section 106(b)), (c) (1) For purposes of subsection (b) (1) (A), an individual shall be deemed to have exhausted his rights to regular compensation under a State law when? (A) no payments of regular compensation can be made under such law because such Individual has received all regular compen- sation available to him based on employment or wages during his base period; or (B) his rights to such compensation have been terminated by reason of the expiration of the benefit year with respect to which such rights existed. (2) For purposes of subsection (b) (1) (B), an Individual shall be deemed to have ex- hausted his rights to extended compensation under a State law when no payments of ex- tended 'compensation under a State law can be made under such law because such in- dividual has received all the extended com- pensation available to him from his extended compensation account (as established under State law in accordance with section 202(b) (1) of the Federal-State Extended Unem- ployment Compensation Act of 1970). (3) (A) (I) For purposes of subsection (b) (2) (A), in the case of any State, an emer- gency benefit period? (I) shall begin with the third week after a week for which there is a State "emer- gency on" indicator; and (II) shall end with the third week after the first week for which there is a State "emergency off" indicator. (it) In the case of any State, no emergency benefit period shall last for a period of less than 28 consecutive weeks. (iii) When a determination has been made that an emergency benefit period Is begin- ning or ending with respect to any State, the Secretary shall cause notice of such deter- mination to be published in the Federal Register. .(B) (i) For purposes of subparagraph (A), there is a State "emergency on" indicator for a week if there is a State or National "on" indicator for such week (as determined under subsections (d) and (e) of section 203 of the Federal-State Extended Unemployed Com- pensation Act of 1970). (ii) For purposes of subparagraph (A), there is a State "emergency off" indicator for a week if there is both a State and a Na- tional "off" indicator for such week (as deter- mined under subsections (d) and (e) of the Federal-State Extended Unemployment Com- pensation Act of 1970). (d) For purposes of any agreement under this Act? (1) the amount of the emergency com- pensation which shall be payable to any in- dividual for any week of total unemploy- ment shall be equal to the amount of the regular compensation (including dependents' allowances) payable to him during his bene- fit year under the State law;" and (2) the terms and conditions of the State law which apply to claims for regular com- pensation and to the payment thereof shall (except where inconsistent with the pro- visions of this Act or regulations of the Sec- retary promulgated to carry out this Act) apply to claims for emergency compensation and the payment thereof. (e) (1) Any agreement under this Act with a State shall provide that the State will establish, for each eligible individual who files an application for emergency compen- sation, an emergency compensation account. (2) The amount established in such ac- count for any individual shall be equal to the lesser of? (A) 50 per centum of the total ambunt of regular compensation (including depend- ents' allowances) payable to him with re- spect to the benefit year (as determined under the State law) on the basis of which Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300-38:5R000700050003-1 ?"%-- H 11692 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD HOUSE December iti .174 he most recently received regular compen- sation: or (B) thirteen times his average weekly benefit amount (as determinfki for purposes of section 202(b) (1) (C) of the Federal-State Extended Unemployment Compensation Act of 1970) for his benefit year. (1) (1) No emergency compensation shall be payable to any individual under an agree- ment entered into under this Act for any week beginning before whichever of the fol- lowing is the latest: (A) the first week which begins after De- cember 31, 1974, (B) the week following the week In which such agreement is entered into, or (C) the first week which begins after the date of the enactment of this-Act. (2) No emergency compeneation shall be payable to any individual under an agree- ment entered into under this Act for any week ending after? (A) December 81, 1976, or (B) March 31, 1977, in the case of an in- dividual who (for a week enchng before Jan- uary 1, 1977) had a week With respect to which emergency compensation was payable under such agreement. PAYMENTS TO STATES HAVING hARICEMIENVI3 FOR THE PAYMENT OF EMERGENCY -COMPENSATION SEC. 103. (a) There shall be paid to each State which has entered into an agreement under this Act an amount equal to 100 per centum of the emergency compensation paid to individuals by the State pursuant to such agreement. (b) No payment shall be made to any State under this section in respect of compensa- tion for which the State is entitled to reim- bursement under the provisions of any Fed- eral law other than this Act. (c) Sums payable to any State by reason of such State's having an agree/dent under this Act shall be payable, either in advance or oy way of reimbursement (as may be deter- mined by the Secretary), in such amounts as the Secretary estimates the State will be entitled to receive under this Act for each calendar month, reduced or increased, as the case may be, by any amount by which the Secretary finds that his estintates for any prior calendar month were greater or leas than the amounts which would have been paid to the State. Such estimates may be made on the basis of such statistical, sam- pling, or other method as may be agreed upon by the Secretary and the State agen- cy of the State involved. FINANCING PROVISIONS SEC. 104. (a) (1) Funds in the extended unemployment compensation account (as established by section 905 of the Social Se- curity Act) of the Unemployment Trust Fund shall be used for the making of payments to States having agreements entered into under this Act. (2) The Secretary shall from time to time certify to the Secretary of the Treasury for payment to each State the sums payable to such State under this Act. The Secretary of the Treasury prior to audit or settlement by the General Accounting Office, shall make payments to the State in accordance with stich certification, by transfers from the ex- tended unemployment compensation account (as established by section 905 of the Social Security Act) to the account of such State In the Unemployment Trust Fund. (b) There are hereby authorized to be appropriated, without fiscal year limitation, to the extended unemployment compensa- tion account, as repayable advances (Withont Interest), such sums as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this Act. Amounts appropriated as repayable advances and paid to the States under section 108 shall be re- paid, without interest, as provided in section 905(d) of the Social Security Act. DWINITIONS SEC. 105. For purposes of this Act? (1) the terms "compensation", "reVlar compensation", "extended compensation". "base period", "benefit year", "State", "State agency", "State law", and "week" shall have the meanings assigned to them under sec- tion 206 of the Federal-13'Wte Extended Un- employment Compensation Act of 1970; (2) the term "period of eligibility" means, in the case of any indiivcival, the weeks in his benefit year which begin in an extended benefit period or an emergency benefit period and, if his benefit year ends within such ex- tended benefit period, any weeks thereafter which begin in such extended benefit period or in such emergency benefit period; and (3) the term "extended benefit period" shall have the meaning assigned to such term under section 203 of the Federal-State Extended Unemployment Compensation Act of 1970. Por purposes of any State law which refers to an extension under Federal law of the duration of benefits under the Federal-State Extended Unemployment Compensation Act of 1970, this Act shall be treated as amenda- tory of such Act. EXTENSION or wsrvica OF IRO-PERCENT RE- QUIREMENT FOR PURPOSES OF EXTENDED COM- PENSATION PROGRAM SEC. 106. The last sentence of section 203 (e) (2) of the Federal-State Extended Unem- ployment Compensation Act of 1970, as amended, is amended by striking out "April 30, 1975" and inserting in lieu thereof "De- cember 31, 1976". ressroassr REDUCTION IN NATIONAL TRICWAR SEC. 107. Section 208(4) of the Federal- State Extended Unemployment Compensa- tion Act of 1970 is amended by adding at the end thereof the following new sentence: "Effective with respect to compensation for weeks of unemployment beginning Wore December 31, 1976, and beginning after De- cember 31, 1974 (or, if later, the date estab- lished pursuant to State law), the State may by law provide that the determination of whether there has been a national 'on or 'off' indicator beginning or ending any ex- tended benefit period shall be made under this subsection as if the phrase '4.5 per cen- tum', contained in paragraphs (I) and (2), read '4 per centum'.' PROVISION FOR FINANCING TEMPORARY REZUC- TION /N NATIONAL TRIGGER SEC. 108. Section 204(a) of the Federal- State Extended Unemployment Compensa- tion Act of 1970 is amended by adding-et the end thereof the following new paragraph: "(3) In the case of compensation which is sharable extended compensation or shar- able regular compensation by reason of the provision contained in the last sentence of section 208(d), the first paragraph of this subsection shall be applied as if the words 'one-half of' read '100 per centum of'." The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Mc- FALL) , Is a second demanded? Mr. SCHNEEBELI. Mr. Speaker, I demand a second. The SPEAKER pro tempore. Without objection, a second will be considered, as ordered. There was no objection. The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gen- tleman from Oregon (Mr. ULLMAN) Will be recognized for 20 minutes, and the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. SCHNEEBELD Will be recognized for 20 minutes. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Oregon (Mr. tfuseuv) Mr. TILLMAN. Mr. Speaker, I. myself myself such time as I may consume. Mr. Speaker, it is quitaTobvicits at this point that this Congresa must act on temporary unemployment compensation to take the edge off the burden of in- creased unemployment add to relieve the suffering that is resulting from long- standing unemployment in certain areas. The Committee on Education and La- bor and the Ccrmmittee on Ways and Means have, after consultation, worked out an understanding whereby our com- mittee will move in the areas of uric- diction of the Committee on Ways and Means, and Insofar as roncovered em- ployment is not presently covered. mittee will take care of that problem in its bill. However, this agreement in no way indicates that the Committee on 'Ways and Means is relinquishing jurisdiction over the subject matter at extending ap- plication of the unemployment compen- sation program to persons whose em- ployment is not presently covered. Mr. DOMINICK V. DANIELS. Mr. Speaker, will the gentleman yield? Mr. ULLMAN I am happy to yield to my friend, the chairman of the Select Subcommittee on Labor. Mr. DOMINICK V. DANIELS. Mr. Speaker, as chairman of the Select Sub- committee on Labor, I with to concur in the statement the gentleman just made to the House. It is the understanding of our committee, the Committee on Edu- cation and Labor, that their yielding jurisdiction on this point is done for the Purpose of consideration of the next bill which is coming up. Mr. ULLBLAN, Mr. Speaker, I appreci- ate the remarks of the gentleman. We are in perfect accord, and we have a fine working arrangement. There is no mis- understanding here. Mr. Speaker, this bill is in lieu of and replacement for a bill reported last week to establish a temporary special unem- ployment compensation program. The bill presently under consideration differs in several respects from the bill that the committee reported last week .H.R. 17570). The principal differences be- tween the two bills are as follows. First, the earlier bill would have es- tablished a program to pay special un- employment compensation both to per- sons exhausting regular and extended unemployment compensation benefits and to unemployed persons who had worked in noncovered employment The bill under consideration is limited to pro- viding benefits to persons who were en- titled to benefits under the unemploy- ment compensation programs. Second, the special unemployment compensation program established by the earlier bill would have triggered into operation on an area-by-area basis. The bill under consideration provides that emergency benefits under the new pro- gram will be payable whenever extended benefits are payable in a State or in the entire country under the State and Na- tional trigger procedures of the Federal- State extended unemployment com- pensation program. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 II 11566. 14i4 (C(' Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?HOUSE December 10, 1974 There was only one arrest of an American for cocaine importation from late August to Nov. 1 of this year. The Mexicans have also arrested a small number of other foreigners at the airport for cocaine importation, including six Ca- nadians. According to the U.S. Embassy, no Mexican has been arrested at the airport for this offense. The airport campaign hal revealed some details about the involvement of American DEA agents in the work of Mexico's anti- narcotics program. The US. DEA has 36 em- ployes in Mexico City, Guadalajara, Monter- rey, Hermosillo, and Mazatlan. Of these, 26 are classified as agents. In addition, DEA agents in U.S. border towns have responsibil- ity for working with Mexican agents in the Mexican border towns. U.S. officials have seemed reluctant to re- veal exactly what these DEA: agents do. In a confrontation with American prisoners at Lecumberri prison last July, U.S. Consul General Peter J. Peterson told them, "There are no American police officers attached to the embassy operating in Mexico." Technically, this is correct, for the U.S. DEA agents do not have the power of arrest In Mexico. But they do perform certain police functions, like taking part in the interroga- tion of arrested persons and supplying tips to Mexican police officials about suspected offenders. Even this role might not have been known if it were not for the evident carelessness of one agent. Several American prisoners have said that Americans were present during their interrogations at the airport, but the prisoners did not know who they were. In one case, however, an American identified himself to a prisoner as Arthur Sedillo; a DEA agent attached to the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City. Paced with this evidence, U.S. Consul Gen- eral Peterson has confirmed that DEA agent Sedillo, who is no longer in Mexico, was present during that iniferrogation. But Peterson said he knew of no other case. Regional director Eyman, however, has con- firmed that DEA agents have been present in other interrogations. "There are occasions," Eyman said, "when the government of Mexico will request co- operation or assistance in the interrogation of English-speaking offenders." Eyman said U.S. agents are called in because there is a language problem or the Mexicans need the DEA's "knowledge of what goes on in the United States" or "if we alerted them" to the offender in the first place. Eyman said "we maintain liaison with the Mexico airport operation" but "there really is no dire need for our presence" in the interrogations. This involvement of the DEA in the inter- rogations raises the question of whether the U.S. government has been zealous in pro- tecting the rights of the U.S. citizens ar- rested in Mexico. Contrary to international convention, Mex- ican federal police officials, in almost every case, have refused to allow the American prisoners at the airport to phone the U.S. Embassy for assistance. This has meant that by the time a representative of the office of the consul general, which handles the prob- lems of arrested Americans, has reached a prisoner, he has already signed a confession in Spanish. With the DEA so closely involved in the airport operation, it would seem a simple matter for the DEA in one part of the em- bassy building to phone the consul general in another part whenever the DEA knew an American was arrested. Both Peterson and Eyman insist that this is done as a matter of routine. But, in the one case in March, 1974, the consul general confirms that DEA agent Sedillo was present, embassy records show that the DEA did not notify the consul general. The consul gen- eral's office found out about the case by read- ing about It in the Mexican newspapers. In a frank moment, a U.S. Embassy official shed some light on this. "It's an educational thing," he said. "At first, the DEA thought that we were trying to get these kids out of Jail. Now they understand the need to coop- erate with us." .A number of Americans have accused Mex- ican officials of beating and torturing them during their interrogations. The U.S. Em- bassy has passed on 11 such complaints to the Mexican government. The Mexicans have denied the accusations. Eyman said he does not believe such abuse is taking place. "I would take these allega- tions with a grain of salt," he said. But, according to informed sources, Eyman recently sent a letter to all DEA agents order- ing them to leave an interrogation if beating or torture took place. Asked about this, Eyman replied, "If our agents are present when any activity violates the civil rights of any person, we would leave. Our people do not participate or ... them to post bond and then leave the country. The sentences of 61/2 to 13 years received by 50 of the Americans are considered too severe by the Mexican courts to allow bond. Many prisoners insist that they have paid large fees to lawyers and bribes to court offi- cials to gain freedom, only to be informed later that this was impossible because of U.S. government pressure. The accusation has troubled the U.S. Em- bassy enough to solicit a disclaimer from the Mexican Bar Assn. In a letter to the embassy, Andres Melo Abarrategui, president of the association, said, "We have no knowledge, either official or unofficial, of any intervention by this diplomatic mission on Mexican judicial au- thorities to prejudice the cases of American citizens on trial in this country on charges." This issue is clouded. On one hand, possible that Mexican court officials, kn the U.S. government is watching them, be reluctant to deal softly with these pr ers. On the other hand, it is convenie Mexicans who have accepted large Le bribes to blame the 'U.S. government they fail to do what they have promise (Mr. MILLER asked and was permission to extend his remarks a point in the RECORD and to includ traneous matter.) t is ing ay n- for or en yen his ex- [Mr. MILLER's remarks will a pear hereafter in the Extensions of Remarks.] (Mr. MILLER asked and was given permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to Maude ex- traneous matter.) [Mr. MIT ,T,FR's remarks will appear hereafter in the Extensions of Remarks.] STATEMENT OF ACTING CHAIR- MAN AL ULLA/AN, COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS, CONCERNING REQUEST FOR A MODIFIED CLOSED RULE ON THE BILL H.R. 16994, RELATIVE TO THE TAX TREATMENT OF INTEREST ON SAVINGS (Mr. ULLMAN asked and was given permission to extend his remarks at this point in the REcoaD.) Mr. ULLMAN. Mr. Speaker, I am.tak- ing this means of addressing my Demo- cratic colleagues in the House to inform, them that the Committee on Ways and Means has directed me to request a hear- ing before the Rules Committee for a modified closed rule for consideration of H.R. 16994 on the floor of the House. The rule which the committee is requesting would provide for four amendments to be offered on the floor, but otherwise would be the usual type closed rule. These four amendments which might be offered are as follows: First, the exclusion for interest would expire after 1 year's duration; Second, the dollar amount of the ex- clusion could be reduced to some lower dollar figure; Third, the tax treatment of interest on savings would be made similar to the present tax treatment of series E bonds. Thus, taxation would be deferred until the interest on savings Was withdrawn from the account; and Fourth, the exclusion for interest would be limited to special accounts whose funds are designated specifically for residential mortgages or residential construction loans. The committee further directed me to request that the rule provide for 2 hours of general debate to be equally divided, waiving points of order, for committee amendments only except for the above, and for the usual motion to recommit. I am making this announcement in order to comply with rule 17 of the Dem- ocratic caucus concerning requests for closed rules or modified closed rules. I was directed to request the Rules to hold a hearing on this mat- ter next Tuesday, December 17, 1974, and I have so written to the chairman of the Committee on Rules. CONFERENCE REPORT ON H.R. 16136 Mr. PIKE submitted the following con- ference report and statement on the bill (H.R. 16136) to authorize certain con- struction at military installations, and for other purposes: CONFERENCE REPORT (H. REPT. No. 93-1545) The committee of conference on the dis- agreeing votes of the two Houses on the amendment of the Senate to the bill (H.R. 16136) to authorize certain construction at military installations, and for other purposes, having met, after full and free conference, have agreed to recommend and do recom- mend to their respective Houses as follows: That the House recede from its disagree- ment to the amendment of the Senate and agree to the same with an amendment as follows: In lieu of the matter proposed to be inserted by the Senate amendment insert the following: TITLE I SEC. 101. The Secretary of the Army may establish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing, con- verting, rehabilitating, or installing perma- nent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site preparation, appurte- nances, utilities, and equipment for the fol- lowing acquisition and construction: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES "UNITED STATES ARMY FORCES COMMAND Fort Bragg, North Carolina, $26,170,000. Fort Campbell, Kentucky, $9,742,000. Fort Carson, Colorado, $2/7,701,000. Fort Hood, Texas, $42,754,000. Fort Sam Houston., Texas, $4,286,000. Fort Lewis, Washington, $10,270,000. Fort Riley, Kansas, $25,933,000. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December 10, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? HOUSE H 1150 (in South America) to put the finger on them in the Malted States as it Jean Mexico," an American ? cotics official said. But he added that U.S. o ials prefer toodert Mexi- can authorities b use of that nation's tougher enforcemen ws. The DEA is so pl with the enforce- ment and conviction in Mexico that the United States and Me aclording to a DEA official, plan to utilize ? ifid extradi- tion treaty which is based o xican law "that allows for prosecution of ?ericans in Mexico for crimes committed in United States." Interviewed in Washington, Trim to E. Moreno, an official who has coo4inat ef- forts of DEA agents in Mexico, said that e extradition treaty, signed in 180, has dom been used. It was used in 1917, he sat when a Mexican citizen who hid violated narcotics laws in San Diego was arrested, tried and convicted in Tijuana Mex. The Mexican was senteneed to five yehrs, Moreno said. Moreno, praising the Mexican prosecution record, said: "If we were to put a chart with our prose- cution figures on it and the Mesthan figures on it, it would show that the Mexicans do much better than our courts omponvictions and penalties. "Mexico has much stiffer nathotics laws and a much stiffer attitude towagli enforcing them. The Mexicans are giving 'defendants six years in cases that we are losiMs in Amer- ican courts." (While the U.S. maximum pen.sIty for pos- session of narcotics with intent he distribute is 15 years in prison, the average sentence for offenders is 3 to 5 years with the possi- bility of parole.) Many of those imprisoned are from Cali- fornia. A large number are ecifficated and articulate people who insist they hate been unfairly treated and who have enlisted the aid of relatives and friends to 'bring their plight to the attention of raembers of Con- gress. With DEA planning to greatly expand Its joint enforcement efforts with the Mexican Federal Police, the Los Angeles-Times has undertaken an extensive investion into how that enforcement program has worked so far and how Americans =speed of drug smuggling have fared. In Mexico City, California and Washing- ton, reporters have sought the hiets behind allegations that American suspects have been: Beaten during interrogation sessions and forced to sign confessions in Spanish by Mexican agents trained by the DEA. In some instances questioned by Mexican agents accompanied by DEA agents whose presence at such sessions is unauthorized. Largely ignored by U.S. Embassy officials charged with the responsibility of protect- ing the rights of American citizens arrested in Mexico City. Exploited by Mexican attorneys and at least one Los Angeles attorney who have preyed on the suspects' friends and relatives, bilking them of many thousands of dollars. Beaten in prisons that are knoWn for their cruelty, including the notorious Lecumberri prison, where extortion is the rule. In its investigation, The Times had access to the files of Rep. Fortney H. (Sete) Stark (D-Calif.), who has been working with rela- tives of many of the prisoners in investigat- ing the situation. Stark, a member of the House's special subcommittee on interna- tional narcotics traffic, said in Mi interview he plans to call for a congressional investi- gation of the matter. Stark and his staff have compiled a large file documenting approximately 100 cases, including the treatment of Americans by Mexican police, courts and prisOna allega- tions about the failure of the t113. Embassy to assist them, and the role of the U.S. rev- ernment in the Mexican narcotics enforce- ment program. Much of the documentation consists of written statements by prisocters and their relatives. The arrests at the Mexico City airport have been a special sore point among the Amer lean suspects because in their view they have been tried and punished in Mexico for a (same that, in essence, was against the United States.' Robert J. Eyman, the regional director of . . DEA in Mexico City, said in an interview: -'Mexico's Ithility to interdict this cocaine iS a significant step forward as far as the United StOtes is concerned." An official of the U.S. Embassy here put it In more colorful terms; "It's just like some- one was inside your neighbor's house with bomb that he was going to throw at your use. Wouldn't you be happy if your neigh.. b. topped him?" there is disquiet about the program -else re., Numerous doneressmen have Writte the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City -request more information about the plight of ? e Americans in Mexican -jails. Accordi ? the U.S. Embassy here, 525 Americans imprisoned La Mexican jails as of Nov. 1. these, 441 were jailed on narcotics char This is more than one- third of all the ? leans imprisoned on such charges in foreign s throughout the world. The U.S. Embassy h says that about 126 were arrested while i nsis at the Mexico City airport and ch with importing cocaine into Mexico. Fifty of the 125 have sentenced 6%: to 13 years in prison; the them expect a, similar fate. The other 316 ericans are serving or will serve, prison - ? of 1 or 2 years. - A strong case can be made tha t were _caught because they were offendi a Mexi- can government genuinely concern about the problem of drugs within its own ntry. But the arrests at the airport ? the amateur smugglers?known as "mule or "burroe"?differs in that cocaine is no a major Mexican problem. Dr. Guido Belasso, the director general o the Mexican center for the Study of Drug Addiction, a government agency, said of cocaine in a recent interview: -There are a few users here. But it is by no means a social problem." The cocaine arrests represent only part of the results of recent joint American-Mext- can efforts to stem the drug traffic. American narcotics agents long believed that part of the- American problem would be eased if the Mexican government moved against its drug producers, traffickers and smugglers since Mexico is the source .g most of the marijuana and a large part of the herion 'Samd in the United States. In September, 1969, the Nixon Administra- tion set up "Operation Intercept" at the frontier, in part to bring pressure on the Mexican government. For 10 days, U.S. Bor- der Patrol and Customs agents thoroughly searched every person and car crossing the border from Mexico. The interminable de- lays disrupted border commerce and held up Mexican workers with jobs in the United States. And it dissuaded U.S. tourists from making trips into Mexico. Mexico,: with the economy heavily depen- dent upon American tourism, got the mess- age. As a U.S. embassy official said recently, "The United States mechanised its leverage in. Operation Intercept, and this sensitized the Mexicans to the problem." The Mexi- can government agreed to join the 'U.S. gov- ernment in "Operation Cooperation"?a pro- gram to crack down on the drug traffic from Mexico to the United States. Under Operation Cooperation, the U.S. government, according to embassy officiate, has given Mexico $14 million in aid for drug-law eisfortement, including $8 million in the current fiscal year. Most of the money has been spent on 28 helicopters, used by Mexico to hunt for opium poppy fields. In addition, the U.S. government has trained 276 Mexican federal police and 152 customs agents either in the United States or Mex- too in drug enforcement and inspection. This means that the vast majority of Mexican federal and customs agents have had such training. During this period, Mexico has significantly increased its destruction, of poppy fields and heroin laboratories and its arrest of tan. fickers and smugglers, both Mexican and foreign. The U.S. Embassy does not have statistics prior to Operation Intercept, but one em- bassy official estimated that the total num- ber of Americans in jail was about 100--most of them for failing to pay their hotel bins. By July, 1970, there were 187 Americans in Mexican jails on drug charges alone. By July, 1971, the figure was 234. Now it is 411. Despite the Mexican" cooperation, there still is a feeling in some U.S. circles that Mexico is not doing enough. During Opera- tion Cooperation, the amount of heroin cart- lug from Mexico increased from 15% to 60%. In March, 1973, two congressmen, Reps. Morgan P. Murphy (D-111.) and Robert H. Steele (R-Conn.), issued a report insisting that "the battle to stop narcotics from en- tering the United States from Mexico is be- ing lost." They said that "the VS. Embassy In Mexico must be more forceful in impress- ing upon Mexican officials that vigorous ac- tion is necessary at all levels of government." In a recent interview, an important Mexi- can government official said, "There still is considerable pressure: by that I mean nor- mal diplomatic pressure. In fact, a substa n' tial part of the recent talks on the border between the two presidents was on this sub- ject" He was referring to the meetings in late October between President Ford and President Luis Echeverria of Mexico. There is a difference of opinion sine ng U.S. officials about whether the United States specifically asked for the program to slop cocaine "mules" at the Mexico City airport,. "At no point to my knowledge did we go to e Mexicans and ask for this," a State De- ent official said in an interview. Mortal Director Eyroan of the DEA said, " United States has encouraged this goy- ' ern nt and all other governments to im- prov their enforcement, including airport surve4 ,ce. In that sense, we are glad to see it. t did we go out and specifically ask for it? answer is no. Howe Moreno, the project coordinasair of the Me ? program, told The Times. "we motivated Moreno the program was a gentle- men's agreera t between the attorney gen- erals of the tw tries. The Mexican mpaign coincided with a training program y the U.S. Customs ice. As part of worldwide project, U.S. Customs trained wo Mexican customs supervisors in the tted States in April, 1973, and then sent tructore to Mexico to train 50 customs tors in Novemter, 1973. According to U.S. stoma, its training was "oriented towards th practical aspects of :seizure, searches, narcot identification, cargo control, passenger and baggage con- tut, and all other phases of border control enforcement." In addition, U.S. Customs -provided the Mexico City airport in September, 1973,- vrith an American dog handler and a dog trained to sniff narcotics. The arrests of the Americans at the air- port began in late summer of 1973, alter the Mexican supervisors returned from training in the United States, and reached Its high point in the spring of 1974, after the Ma- Jean customs inspectors had completed their classes. The campaign has since petered out. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December 10, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?HOUSE H 11567 Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield, Geor- gia, $42,197,000. UNITED STATES ARMY TRAINING AND DOCTRINE COMMAND Fort Belvoir, Virginia, $9,625,000. Fort Benning, Georgia, $36,827,000. Fort Bliss, Texas, $12,296,000. Fort Eustis, Virginia, $8,124,000. Fort Gordon, Georgia, $9,858,000. Hunter-Liggett Military Reservation, Cali- fornia, $1,108,000. Fort Jackson, South Carolina, $19,078,000. Fort Knox, Kentucky, $2,264,000. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, $9,911,000. Fort Lee, Virginia, $11,473,000. Fort McClellan, Alabama, $17,344,000. Presidio of Monterey, California, $3,107,000. Fort Ord, California, $3,660,000. Fort Polk, Louisiana, $7,304,000. Fort Rucker, Alabama, $4,928,000. Fort Sill, Oklahoma, $15,587,000. Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, $3,360,000. UNITED STATES ARMY MILITARY DISTRICT OF. WASHINGTON Fort Myer, Virginia, $2,497,000. 'UNITED STATES ARMY MATERIEL COMMAND Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, 01,- 030,000. Aeronautical Maintenance Center, Texas, $ ? Anniston Army Depot, Alabama, $7,648,000. Letterkenny Army Depot, Pennsylvania, $4,726,000. Lexington/Blue Grass Army Depot, Ken- tucky, $616,000. Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey, $2,820,000. Red River Army Depot, Texas, $269,000. Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, $10,322,000. Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, $2,731,000. Sacramento Army Depot, California, $2,- 599,000. Seneca Army Depot, New York, $815,000. Sierra Army Depot, California, $717,000. Watervliet Arsenal, New York, $3,256,000. White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, $1,808,000. Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona, $1,859,000. UNITED STATES ARMY COMMUNICATION COMMAND Fort Huachuca, Arizona, $556,000. Fort Ritchie, Maryland, $2,023,000. I7NTTED STATES M/LTTARY ACADEMY United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, $8,720,000. HEALTH SERVICES COMMAND Fort Detrick, Maryland, $486,000. Various Locations, $19,773,000. CORPS OP ENGINEERS Cold Regions Laboratories, New Hampshire, $2,515,000. 'UNITED STATES ARMY, ALASKA Fort Greely, Alaska, $251,000. Fort Richardson, Alaska, $1,732,000. Fort Wainwright, Alaska, $1,512,000, 'UNITED STATES ARMY, HAWAII POLLUTION ABATEMENT Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, $15,324,000. Tripler General Hospital, Hawaii, $1,205,- 000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $1,356,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $16,358,000. DINING FACILITIES MODERNIZATION Various Locations, $10,723,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES 'UNITED STATES ARMY FORCES, SOUTHERN COMMAND Canal Zone, Various Locations, $557,000. UNITED STATES ARMY, PACIFIC Korea, Various Locations, $2,034,000. UNTIED STATES ARMY SEC17RTTY AGENCY Various Locations, $148,000. UNITED STATES ARMY COMMUNICATION COMMAND Fort Buckner, Okinawa, $532,000. UNITED STATES ARMY, EUROPE Germany, Various Locations, $27,482,000. Camp Darby, Italy, $4,159,000. Various Locations: For the United States share of the cost of multilateral programs for the acquisition or construction of mili- tary facilities and installations, including international military headquarters for the collective defense of the North Atlantic Treaty Area, $84,000,000: Provided, That within thirty days after the end of each quarter, the Secretary of the Army shall furnish to the Committees on Armed Serv- ices and Appropriations of the Senate and the House of Representatives a description of obligations incurred as the United States share of such multilateral programs. SEC. 102. The Secretary of the Army may establish or develop Army installations and facilities by proceeding with construction made necessary by changes in Army mis- sions and responsibilities which have been occasioned by (1) unforeseen security con- siderations, (2) new weapons developments, (3) new and unforeseen research and devel- opment requirements, or (4) improved pro- duction schedules if the Secretary of Defense determines that deferral of such construc- tion for inclusion in the next Military Con- struction Authorization Act would be in- consistent with interests of national security, and in connection therewith to acquire, con- struct, convert, rehabilitate, or install per- manent or temporary public works, includ- ing land acquisition, site preparation, appur- tenances, utilities, and equipment; in the total amount of $10,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of the Army, or his designee, Shall notify the Committees on Armed Serv- ices of the Senate and House of Representa- tives, immediately upon reaching a final decision to implement, of the cost of con- struction of any public work undertaken under this section, including those real es- tate actions pertaining thereto. This au- thorization will expire upon enactment of the fiscal year 1976 Military Construction Authorization Act except for those public works projects concerning which the Com-. mittee on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives have been noti- fied pursuant to this section prior to that date. SEC. 103. (a) Public Law 93-166, is amended under the heading "Oursfaz THE UNITED STATES-UNITED STATES ARMY, El7ROPE", in sec- tion 101 as follows: With respect to "Germany, Various Loca- tions" strike out "$12,517,000" and insert in place thereof "$16,360,000". (b) Public Lam 93-166 is amended by striking out in clause (1) of section 602 "$107,257,000" and "$596,084,000" and insert- ing in place thereof "$111,100,000" and "$599,927,000", respectively. SEC. 104. (a) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended under the heading "INSIDE TUE UNITED STATES'", in section 101 as follows: With respect to "Fort Myer, Virginia," strike out "$1,815,000" and insert in place thereof "$3,615,000." With respect to "Fort Sill, Oklahoma," strike out "$14,958,000" and insert in place thereof "16,159,000". (b) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended under the heading "Oursma THE UNITED STATES?UNITED STATES ARMY FORCES, SOUTHERN COMMAND" in section 101 as fol- lows: With respect to "Canal Zone, Various Loca- tions" strike out "$8429,000" and insert in place thereof "$9,238,000". section 702 "444,767,000;" "$117,311,000; " and "$562,078,000" and inserting in place thereof "$447,768,000;" "$118,420,000;" and "$566,188,000", respectively. SEC. 105. (a) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended under the heading "IN- SIDE THE UNITED STATES", section 101 BS follows: With respect to "Rock Island Arsenal, Il- linois," strike out "$2,750,000" and insert in place -thereof "$3,650,000". (b) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (1) of section 602 "$181,834,000" and "$267,031,- 000" and inserting in place thereof "$182,- 734,000" and "$267,931,000", respectively. SEC. 106. Public Law 93-166 is amended in section 105 as follows: Clause (1) of section 702 of Public Law 92-145, as amended by section 105 (b ) of Public Law 93-166, is amended by striking out "$404,500,000" and "$405,107,000" and Inserting in place thereof "$405,000,000" and "$405,607,000" respectively. TITLE II SEC. 201. The Secretary of the Navy may establish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing, converting, rehabilitating, or installing per- manent or temporary public works, includ- ing land acquisition, site preparation, ap- purtenances, utilities and equipment for the following a,cquistion and construction: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES FIRST NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Air Station, Brunswick, Maine, $261,000. Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine, $7,232,000. Naval Security Group Activity, Winter Harbor, Maine, $255,000. Naval Education and Training Center, Newport, Rhode Island, $3,553,000. Naval Underwater Systems Center, New- port, Rhode Island, $9,249,000. THIRD NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Submarine Base, New London, Con- necticut, $971,000. ' FOURTH NAVAL DISTRICT- Naval Air Test Facility, Lakehurst, New Jersey, $7,350,000. Navy Ships Parts Control Center, Me- chanicsburg, Pennsylvania, $2,336,000. Naval Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, $296,000. NAVAL DISTRICT, WASHINGTON Naval District Commandant, Washington, District of Columbia, $2,883,000. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, District of Columbia, $205,000. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, $7,706,000. National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, $14,943,000. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland, $15,000,000. FIFTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Regional Medical Center, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, $290,000. Naval Air Rework Facility, Cherry Point, North Carolina, $252,000. Fleet Combat Direction Systems Training Center, Atlantic, Dam Neck, Virginia, $2,034,000. Naval Amphibious Base, Little Creek, Vir- ginia, $896,000. Atlantic Command Operations Control Center, Norfolk, Virginia, $633,000. Naval Air Station, Norfolk, Virginia, $3,471,000. Naval Station, Norfolk, Virginia, $8,364,000. Naval Supply Center, Norfolk, Virginia, $4,990,000. KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE (c) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is Naval Air Station, Oceana, Virginia, National Missile Range, $1,272,000. amended by striking out in clause (1) of $1,047,000. ? Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 11115 A.? ? Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 ONGRESSIONAL RECORD --HOUSE December 10, 197.4 Norfolk Naval Regional Medical Center Portsmouth, Virginia, 315,801,000.? Norfolk Naval Shipyard, -Portsmouth, Vir ginia, $5,602,000. Naval Weapons Station, Yorktown, Vir- ginia, $1,595,000. SIXTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Air Station, Cecil Field, Florida, $6,893,000. Naval Air Station, Jackflonville, Florida, $446,000. Naval Regional Medical Center, Jackson vine, Florida, $12,413,000. Naval Station, Mayport, Florida, $3,239,000. Naval Training Center, Orlando, Florida, $8,709,000. Naval Coastal Systems Laboratory, Panama City, Florida, $795,000. Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida, $20. 948,000. Naval Technical Training Center, Pensa cola, Florida, $4,478,000. Naval Air Station, Whiting Field, Florida, $1,561,000. FOURTEENTH NAVAL =IMAMS Naval Ammunition Depot, Oahu, Hawaii. $795,000. Naval Station, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, $1,- 505,000. Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, $3,856,000. MARINE CORPS Marine Barracks, Washington, District of Colambia, $1,874,000. Marine Corps Development and Education Command, Quantico, Virginia, $2,803,000. Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, 1113,864,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, North Carolina, $1,260,000. Marine Corps Air Station, New River, North _ Carcaina, $499,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Yuma, Arizona, _ $3,203,000. Marine Corps Supply Center, Barstow. California, $1,463,000. Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendleton, California, $7,271,000. Marine Corps Base, Twentynine Palms, California, $397,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, $5,497,000. POLLUTION MIATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $9,849,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $44,281,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES TENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Telecommunications Center, Roose- velt Roads, Puerto Rico, $3,186,000. Naval Station, Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico, $947,000. Naval Security Group Activity, Sabana Seca, Puerto Rico, $1,026,000. FIFTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Support Activity, Canal Zone, $800.- 000. Naval Air Station, Meridian, Mississippi, $1,485,000. Naval Hospital, Beaufort: South Carolina, $7,112,000. Charleston Naval Shipyard, Charlestan, South Carolina, $200,000. Naval Station, Charleston, South Carolina, $15,352,000. Naval Supply Center, Charleston, South Carolina, $3,750,000. Naval Weapons Station, Charleston, South Carolina, $2,564,000. Naval Air Station, Memphis, Tennessee, $4,- 284,000. EIGHTH NAVAL narrama Naval Support Activity, New Orleans, Louisiana, $3,080,000. Naval Air Station, Carpi= Christi, Texas. $1,830,000. Naval Air Station, Kingsville, Texas, $1,- 428,000. NINTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Training Center, Ckreat Lakes, Illi- nois, $1,953,000. ELEVENTH NAVAL DTR/C'1' Naval Regional Medical Center, Camp Pendleton, California, $7,619,000. Naval Weapons Center, China Lake, Cali- fornia, $8,371,000. Long Beach Naval Shipyard, Long Beach, California, $6,011,000. Naval Air Station, Miramar, California. $11,772,000. Naval Air Station, North Ind, California, a12,943,000. Naval Construction Battalion Center, Port Hueneme, .Cralifornia, $1,048,000. Naval Electronics Laboratory Center, San Diego, California, $3,238,000. Naval Regional Medical Canter, San Diego, California, $13,493,000. Naval Training Center, San Diego, Cali- fornia., $8,657,000. Navy Submarine Support Facility, San Diego, California, $4,231,000. Naval Weapons Station, Seal Beach, Cali- fornia, $2,147,000. TWELFTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Aix Rework Facility, Alameda, Cali- fornia, $1,638,000. Naval Hospital, Lemoore, California. $333,000. Naval Air Station, Moffett Field, California., $77,000. Naval Communications Station, Stockton, California, $1,102,000. THIRTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Station, Adak, Alaska. $7,697,000. Trident Support Site, Bangor, Wastallgtan, $100,000,000. Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, BremertOn, Washington, $393,000. Naval Air Station, Whidbey Island, Wash- ?),$2,603,000. ATLANTIC OCEAN AREA Naval Air Station, Bermuda., $1,868,000. Naval Station, Keflavik, Iceland, $2,317,- 000. EUROPEAN AREA Naval Security Group Activity, Edzeta Scotland, $571,000. Naval Activities Detachment, Holy Loch, Scotland, $1,188,000. INDIAN OCEAN AREA Naval Communications Facility, :Diego Garica, Chagos Archipelago, $14,802,000. PACIFIC OCEAN AREA Naval Communication Station, Fineman, Guam, Mariana Islands, $355,000. Naval Ship Repair Facility, Guam, Mariana Islands, $1,782,000. Navy Public Works Center, Guam, Mariana Islands, $907,000. Naval Air Station, Cub' Point, Republic of the Philippines, $2,873,000. Naval Station, Subic Bay, Republic of the Philippines, $3,741,000. pow:arms AMTEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $1,059,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $4,038,000. Sac. 202. The Secretary of the Navy may establish or develop Navy Installations and facilities by proceeding with construction made necessary by changes in Navy mansions and responsibilities which have been occa- sioned by (1) unforeseen security considera- tions, (2) new weapons developments, (3) new and unforeseen research and develop- ment requirements, or 14) improved pro- duction schecrules, if the Secretary of De- fense determines Mat deferral of such con- struction for inclusion in the next Military Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP7ASAORMIW68050003-1 Construction Authorization Act inconsistent with interests of national se- curity, and In connection therevrith to ac- quire, construct, convert, rehabilitate, or in- stall permanent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities, and equipment, in the total amount of $10,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of the Navy, or lila desig- nee, shall notify the Committee& on Armed Services of the Senate and House or Repre- sentatives, immediately upon reaching a de- cision to implement, of the cost of construc- tion of any public work undertaken under this section, including those real estate ac- tions pertaining thereto. This authorization will expire upon enactment of the fiscal year 1976 Military Construction Authoriza- tion Act, except for those public wcaks proj- ects concerning vehich the Commatees an Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives have been notified pursuant to this section prior to that date. SEC. 203. (a) Public Law 90-408, as amended, is amended under the heading "INSIDE THE thsrrreo sTATEs-, in section 201 as follows: With respect to "Naval Academy, Annapo- lis, Maryland," strike out "$2,000,0)0" and insert in place thereof "$4,391,000". (b) Public Law 90-408, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of section 802 "$211,668,000" and "$248,533,000" and inserting in place thereof "$244,359,000" and "$250,924,000", respectively. SEC. 204. (a) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended under the heading "IN- SIDE THE UNITED STATES", in section 201 as follows: With respect to "Naval Air Rework 'Facility, Jacksonville, Florida," strike out "$8,369,000" and insert in place thereof "$4,534,0)0". (b) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of sec- tion 602 "$247,204,000" and "$247,:142,000" and inserting in place thereof "$247,869,000" and "$275,007,000", respectively. Sec. 205. (a) Public Law 92-515, as amended, is amended under the :heading "INSIDE THE UNITED STATES", in section 201 as follows: With respect to "Navy Public Works Cen- ter, Norfolk, Virginia," strike out "$3,819,000" and insert in place thereof "$7,019,000". With respect to "Naval Hospital, New Or- leans, Louisiana," strike out "$11,880,000" and insert in place thereof "$14,609,000". With respect to "Naval Ammunition De- pot, Hawthorne, Nevada," strike out '$6.- 003,000" and insert in place thereoi "$10,- 203,000". (b) Public Law 92-545 is amended under the heading "Otastaz THE UNITED STATES"In section 201 as follows: With respect to "Naval Air Facility, Sigo- nella, Sicily, Italy", strike out "$8,632,000" and insert in place thereat "$12,832,000", (c) Public Law 92-545, as amended, Is amended by striking out in clause (2) of section 702 "$477,664,000", "$41,217,00)", and "$518,881,000" and inserting in place thereof "$488.493,000", "$44,917,000", and "$533,410,- 000", respectively. SEC. 206. (a) Public Law 93-166 is amended under the beading "Imam THE UNITEIA STATES", In section 201 as follows: With respect to "Naval- Home, Gulfport, Mississippi," strike out $9,444,000" and insert in place thereof "$11,802,000". With respect to "Naval Air Station Merid- ian, Mississippi," strike out "$4,532,000" and insert in place thereof "$5,408,000.'? With respect to "Naval Hospital, Now Or- leans, Louisiana," strike out "$3,386,000" and Insert in place thereof "$4,157,000*. With respect to "Naval Air Station, Ala- meda, California," strike out "a3,827,000" and insert in place thereof "$7,758,000". With respect to "Maxine Corps Supply Center, Banistow, California," strike out "$3.802,000" and insert in place thereof Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December 10, 197.4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?HOUSE (b) Public Law 93-166 is amended by strik- ing out in clause (2) of section 602 "$511,- 606,000" and "$570,439,000" and inserting in place thereof "$522,006,000" and "$580,839,- 000", respectively. TITLE III SEc. 301. The Secretary of the Air Force may establish or develop military installa- tions and facilities by acquiring, construct- ing, converting, rehabilitating or installing permanent or temporary public works, in- cluding land acquisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities, and equipment, for the following acquisition and construction: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES AEROSPACE DEFENSE COMMAND Peterson Field, Colorado Springs, Colorado, $6,885,000. Tyndall Air Force Base, Panama City, Florida, $2,775,000. AIR FORCE COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE Richards-Gebaur Air Force Base, Grand- view, Missouri, $805,000. AIR roper LOGISTICS COMMAND Hill Air Force Base, Ogden, Utah, $11,- 894,000. Kelly Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $11,150,000. McClellan Air Force Base, Sacramento, California, $15,873,000. Newark Air Force Station, Newark, Ohio, $1,977,000. Robins Mr Force Base, Warner Robins, Georgia, $792,000. Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $9,839,000. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio, $13,871,000. AIR FORCE SYSTEMS COMMAND Arnold Engineering Development Center, Tullahoma Tennessee, $4,240,000. Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $3,100,000. Edwards Air Force Base, Muroc, California, $1,198,000. Eglin Air Force Base, Valparaiso, Florida, $13,512,000. Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, New Mexico, $232,000. Patrick Air Force Base, Cocoa, Florida, $642,000. Satellite Tracking Facilities, $832,000. AIR TRAINING COMMAND Chanute Air Force Base, Rantoul, Illinois, $6,267,000. Columbus Air Force Base, Columbus, Mis- sissippi, $169,000. Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, MissiselPloi, $7,297,000. Laughlin Air Force Base, Del Rio, Texas, $298,000. Lowry Air Force Base, Denver, Colorado, $7,886,000. Mather Air Force Base, Sacramento, Cali- fornia, $2,143,000. Randolph Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $790,000. Reese Air Form Base, Lubbock, Texas, $836,000. Sheppard Air Force Base, Wichita Falls, Texas, $8,631,000. Vance Air Force Base, Enid, Oklahoma, $6,798,000. Webb Air Force Base, Big Spring, Texas, $776,000. Williams Air Force Base, Chandler, Ari- zona, $5,849,000. . AIR UNIVERS/TY Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama, $2,500,000. ALASKAN A/R COMMAND Eielson Air Force Base, Fairbanks, Alaska, $310,000. Various Locations, $15,242,000. HEADQUARTERS COMMAND Andrews Air Force Base, Camp Springs, Maryland, $14,699,000. Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, Dis- trict of Columbia, $3,155,000. MILITARY AIRL/FT COMMAND Dover Air Force Base, Dover, Delaware, $1,373,000. McGuire Air Force Base, Wrightstown, New Jersey, $108,000. Scott Air Force Base, Belleville, Illinois, $5,451,000. Travis Air Force Base, Fairchild, California, $8,800,000. PACIFIC AIR roams Ilickam Air Force Base, Honolulu, Hawaii, $11,878,000, STRATEGIC A/R COMMAND Barksdale Air Force Base, Shreveport, Louisiana, $641,000. Blytheville Air Force Base, Blytheville, Arkansas, $675,000. Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Tucson, Arizona, $3,009,000. Ellsworth Air Force Base, Rapid City, South Dakota, $2,109,000. (3rifliss Air Force Base, Rome, New York, $1,774,000. Grissom Air Force Base, Peru, Indiana, $323,000. K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base, Marquette, Michigan, $7,050,000. Kincheloe Air Force Base, Kinross, Mich- igan, $835,000. Malmstrom Air Force Base, Great Falls, Montana, $3,740,000. McConnell Air Force Base, Wichita, Kansas, $3,038,000. Minot Air Force Base, Minot, North Da- kota, $238,000. Offutt Air Force Base, Omaha, Nebraska, $5,595,000. Pease Air Force Base, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, $115,000. Plattsburgh Air Force Base, Plattsburgh, New York, $882,000. Whiteman Air Force Base, Knob Nosier, Missouri, $6,692,000. TACTICAL AIR COMMAND Cannon Air Force Haze, Clovis, New Mexico, $1,715,000. George Air Force Base, Victorville, $3,846,000. Holloman Air Force Base, Alamogordo, New Mexico, $1,565,000. Langley Air Force Base, Hampton, Vir- ginia, $3,056,000. Little Rock Air Force Base, Little Rock, Arkansas, $5,141,000. Myrtle Beach Air Force Base, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, $300,000. Nellis Air Force Base, Las Vegas, Nevada, $6,495,000. Pope Air Force Base, Fayetteville, North Carolina, $730,000. Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, Golds- boro, North Carolina, $3,948,000. Various Locations, $5,194,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $2,056,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $13,700,000. SPECIAL FACILITIES Various Locations, $12,152,000. AEROSPACE CORPORATION Los Angeles, California, $9,000,000. OUTSIDE TELE UNITED STATES AEROSPACE DEFENSE COMMAND Various Locations, $138,000. PACIFIC AIR FORCES Various Locations, $3,775,000. UNITED STATES AIR FORCES IN EUROPE Germany, $280,000. United Kingdom, $884,000. Various Locations, $63,081,000. UNITED STATES AIR FORCE SECURITY SERVICE Various Locations, $4,135,000. II 11569 POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $595,000. SPECIAL FACILITIES Various Locations, $1,999,000. SEC. 302. The Secretary of the Air Force may establish or develop classified military Installations and facilities by acquiring, con- structing, converting, rehabilitating, or in- stalling permanent or temporray public works, including land acquisition, site prep- aration, appurtenances, utilities and equip- ment, in the total amount of $8,100,000. SEC. 303. The Secretary of the Air Force may establish or develop Air Force installa- tions and facilities by proceeding with con- struction made necessary by changes in Air Force missions and responsibilities which have been occasioned by (1) unforeseen security considerations, (2) new weapons developments, (3) new and unforeseen re- search and development requirements, or (4) Improved production sc,hedules, if the Secretary of Defense determines that deferral of such construction for InclUsion in the next Military Construction Authorization Act would be inconsistent with interests of na- tional security and in connection therewith to acquire, construct, convert, rehabilitate, or install permanent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site prep- aration, appurtenances, utilities, and equip- ment in the total amount of $10,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of the Air Force, or his designee, shall notify the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives, immediately upon reach- ing a final decision to implement, of the ,cost of construction of any public work under- taken under this section, Including those real estate actions pertaining thereto. This authorization will expire upon enactment of the fiscal year 1976 Military Construction Authorization Act, except for those public works projects concerning which the Com- mittees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives have been notified pursuant to this section prior to that date. Sac. 304. (a) Section 301 of Public Law 93-166 is amended under the heading "IN- SIDE TiE UNTIED STATES" US follows: (1) Under the subheading "AEROSPACE DE- FENSE COMMAND" with respect to "Peterson Field, Colorado Springs, Colorado", strike out "$7,843,000" and insert in place thereof "$9,- 733,000". (2) Under the subheading "AEROSPACE DE- FENSE COMMAND" with respect to "Tyndall Air Force Base, Panama City, Florida", strike, out "$1,020,000" and insert in place thereof "$1,284,000". (3) Under the subheading "AIR FORCE COM- MUNICATIONS SERVICE" with respect to "Rich- ards-Gebaur Air Force Base, Grandview, Mis- souri", strike out "$8,983,000" and insert in place thereof "06,130,000". (4) Under the subheading "arn FORCE LO- GISTICS COMMAND" with respect to "Robins Air Force Base, Warner Robins, Georgia", strike out "$4,628,000" and insert in place thereof "$7,324,000". (5) Under the subheading "AIR FORCE SYS- TEMS COMMAND" with respect to "Eglin Air Force Base, Valparaiso, Florida", strike out "07,039,000" and insert in place thereof "$8,- 882,000". (6) Under the subheading "MR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Kessler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Mississippi", strike out "$8,786,- 000" and insert in place thereof "$10,733,- 000". (7) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas", strike out "$6,509,000" and insert in place thereof "$9,- 186,000". (8) Under the subheading "MR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Reese Air Force Base, Lubbock, Texas", strike out "$4,211.- 000" ad insert In place thereof "$895,000". Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 H 11570 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --HOUSE December 10, 1974 TITLE V? MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING AND HOME'OWNERS ASSISTANCE PRO- GRAM Sze. 501. The Secretnry of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to construct, at tho locations hereinafter named, Newly housing units and mobile home facilities in th num- bers hereinafter listed, but no ramn y hous- ing -construction shall be commenced at any such locations in the united States, until the Secretary shall have consulted with the Sec- retary of the Department of Housing and _ Urban Development, as to the availability of adequate private housing at such locations. If agreement cannot be reached with respect to the availability of adequate private hous- ing at any location, the Secretary of Defense shall immediately notify the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representa- tives and the Senate, in writing, of such dif- ference of opinion, and no contract far con- struction at such location shall be entered Into for a period of thirty days after such notification has been given. This autacirity shall include the authority to acquire land, and interests in land, by gift, purchase, ex- change of Government-owned land, or otherwise. (a) Family Housing units? (1) The Department of the Army, two thousand nine hundred units, $98,477,91)0. Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia, four hundred units. United States Army Tustallations, Oahu, Hawaii, one thousand units. Fort Riley, Kansas, one hundred unies. Fort Campbell, Kentucky, one thousand units, Fort Eustis, Virginia, Dias hundred units. United States Army Instanations, Atlantic Side, Canal Zone, one hundred units. United States Army Installations, Pen de, Canal Zone, two hundred units. (2) The Department of the Navy, two the nd six hundred and fifty units, $93,781,9 Naval Complex, San Diego, California, fi ndred units. Naval Complex, Jacksonville, Florida., t nclred units. Naval Complex, Oahu, Hawaii, six hundr its. Naval Complex, New Orleans, Louisia o hundred units. a.rine Corps Air Station, Cherry Pain rth Carolina, three hundred units. Naval Complex, Charleston, South Car a, three hundred and fifty units. aval Complex, Bremerton, Washingto ee hundred units. avid Complex, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, hundred units. 3) The Department of the Air Force, on usand and fifty unite, $35,236,120. rated States Air Force Installations, u, Hawaii, two hundred units. ease Air Force Base, New Hernpshire, on dred units. ltus Air Force Base, Oklahoma, one lem cl units. isawa Air Base, Japan., two hundred S. adena Air Base, Okinawa, two hundre ts. ark Air Base, Philippines, two hundred fifty unite. ) Mobile Home Facilites? ) The Department of the Army, two hen- and forty spaces, $960,000. ) The Department of the Air Force, two dred spaces, $888,000. ) Demolition of existing structures on reposed sites for family housing: val Complex, Bremerton, Washington, 000. . 502. (a) Authorization for the con- tion of family housing provided in see- 501 of this Act shall be subjects under regulations as the Secretary of Defense su eadeng ant TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Vance Air Force Base, Enid, Oklahoma", out "Min 000" and insert in place thereof "$895,000". (10) Under the subheading "ant euxernan COMMAND" with respect to "Webb Air Force Base, Big Spring, Texas", strike out "$3,154,- 000" and insert in place thereof "$4.307,000". (11) Under the subheading "armaraar AIR- LIFT COMMAND" With TeSpECt to "Altus Air Force Base, Altus, Oklahoma", strike out "$1,078,000" and insert in place thereof "$1,440,000". (12) Under the subheading "STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND" with respect to S'Francis E. War- ren Air Force Base, Cheyanne, Wyoming", strike out "$5,834,000" and insert in place thereof "$8,265,000". (13) Under the subheading "earierean AlL COMMAND" with respect to "lattle Rock Air Force Base, Little Rock, Arkansas", strike out "$1,165,000" and insert in place thereof "$2,200,000". (14) Under the subheading "TACTICAL AIR COMMAND" with respect to "Nellie Air Fence Base, Las Vegas, Nevada", strike out "$2,- 588,000" and insert in place thereof "$3,- 637,000". (b) Public Law 93-166 is Anther emended by striking out in clause (3) of section 602 "$238,439,000" and "$260,741,000" and insert- ing in place thereof "$280,727,000" and "$283,029,000", respectively. TITLE IV Sze. 401. The Secretary of Defense may es- tablish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing, convert- ing, rehabilitating, or installing permanent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities and equipment, for defense agencies for the following acquisition' and construc- tion: Si INSIDE THE UN/TED STAIRS DEFENSE MAPPING AGENCY sa Defense Mapping Agency Aerospace Ce- hu tar (St. Louis AFS), St. Louis, Missouri, $2,573,000. Port Belvoir, Virginia, $670,000. hu DEFENSE SUPPLY AGENCY un Defense Construction Supply Center, Co- lumbus, Ohio, $1,862,000. Defense Depot, Mechanicsburg, Pennsyl- M yenta, $394,000. No Defense Depot, Memphis, Tennessee, $1,- 399,000. lin Defense Depot, Ogden, Utah, $527,000. Defense Electronics Simply- Center, Day- N thr ton, Ohio, $572,000. Defense Industrial Plant liSquipment Fa- two cility, Atchison, Kansas, $616,000. tho Defense Personnel Support Center, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, $936,000. Oah NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, $2,363,000. hun A OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES dre DEFENSE NUCLEAR AGENCY Johnston Atoll, $1,458,000. unit SEC. 402. The Secretary of Defense may _.K establish or develop installations and facili- ties which he determines to be vital to the security of the United Statea, and in con- and of Defense or his designee shall notify the P may prescribe, to the following /imitations on coat, whiolit shall include shades, sizeens, ranges, refrigerators, and all other installed equipment and fixtures, the cost of the fam- ily unit, and the proportionate cost; of land acquisition, site preparation (excluding dem- olition authorized in section 501(m)), and installation of utilities. (b) The average unit cost for all units of family housing constructed in this United States (other than Alaska and Hawaii) shall not exceed $30,000.- and in no event shall the cost of any unit exceed $46,000. (e) When family housing units are con- tructed in areas other than that specified n subsection (b) the average cost of all such units shall not exceed $40,000, and in no vent shall the cent of any unit exceed $46,000. SEC. 503. The Secretary of Defense, or his esignee, Ls authorized touccomplist alters.- ions, additions, expansions, or extensions ot otherwise authorized by law, to existing ublic quarters at s, cost not to exceed-- (1) for the Department of the Army, $20,- 00,000. (2) for the Department of the Navy, $20,- 0,000. (3) for the Department of the Air Force, 20,000,000. Sze. 504. Notwithstanding the limitations oatained in prior Military Construction Au- orization Acts on cost of construction of amily housing, the limitations on such cost ntained in section 502 of this Act shall ply to all prior authorizations ice con. ruction of family housing not heretofore pealed and for which construction con. acts have not been executed prior to the, te of enactment of this Act. Sec. 505. The Secretary of Defense, or his signee, is authorized to construct or other- se acquire at the locations hereinaftee med, family housing units not subject to e limitations on such cost contained in ction 502 of this Act. This authority shall elude the authority to acquire land, and terests in land, by gift, purchase, exchange Government-owned land, or otherwise. tel costs shall include shades, screens, nges, refrigeratore, and other installed uipment and fixtures, the cost of the family t, and the costs of land acquisition, site paration, and installation of utilities. a) Naval Station, Kefla.vilc, Iceland, two dred Units, at a t,otal cost not to exceed 600,000. b) Two family housing Units in Warsaw, and, at a total cost not to exceed $120.000. is authority shall be funded. by use of ess foreign currency when zoo provided in artment of Defense Appropriation Acts. EC. 506, The Secretary of Defense, or his ignee, Ur authorized to accomplish repairs improvemente to existing public quarters amounts in-excess of the $15,000 limitation cribed in section 610(a) of Public Law 110, as amended (81 Stat. 279, 30t,), as ows: 0 00 th CO ap St re tr da mc de wi na, u-- th ss? se ye in in wo of To ed ra eq na? uni pre hun o- $9, ? Pol Th exc Dep des and a in pres foils Fort McNair, Washington, District of CoI umbia, five units, $176,500. cl Fort Sam Houston, Teem, one hundred and forty units, $2,352,800. SRC. 507. (a) Section 515 of Public Law 84-161 (69 Stat. 324, 852), as amended, is further amended by (1) striking out ' 1974 and 1975" and inserting in lieu thereof "1975 and 1976", and (2) revising the third sen- tence to read as follows: "Expenditures for the rental of such housing facilities, includ- ing the cost of utilities and maintenance and operation, may not exceed; For the Dented States (other than Alaska and Hawaii), Puerto Rico, and Guam an average of 4235 per month for each military department or the amount of $310 per month for any one unit: and for Alaska and Hawaii, an avonge at $295 per month for each military depart- neetion therewith to acquire, construct, i(b, convert, rehabilitate, or install permanent 1' or temporary public works, including land sired acquisition, site preparation, appurtenancesa u (2 utilities, and equipment in the-total amount "un of $15,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary (c Committees on Armed Services of the Senate Na and House of Representatives immediately $540,.. upon reaching a final decision to implement, SEC of the cost of construction of any pubile struc work undertaken under this section, incltul- tion ing real estate actions pertaining thereto. such Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 December 10, 1P74 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -HOUSE ment, or the amount of $355 per month for any one unit." (b) Section 507(b) of Public Law 93-166 (87 Stat. 661, 676), is amended by striking out "$325" and "seven thousand five hun- dred" in the first sentence, and inserting in lieu thereof "$355", and "twelve thousand", respectively; and in the second sentence by striking out "three hundred units", and in- serting in lieu thereof "one hundred fifty units". SEC. 508. There is authorized to be appro- priated for use by the Secretary of Defense, or his designee, for military family housing and homeowners assistance as authorized by law for the following purposes; (1) for construction and acquisition of family housing, including demolition, au- thorized improvements to public quarters, minor construction, relocation of family housing, rental guarantee payments, con- struction and acquisition of mobile home fa- cilities, and planning, an amount not to ex- ceed $304,088,000. (2) for support of military family housing, including operating expenses, leasing, main- tenance of real property, payments of princi- pal and interest on mortgage debts incurred, payment to the Commodity Credit Corpora- tion, and mortgage insurance premiums au- thorized under section 222 of the National Housing Act, as amended (12 1715m), an amount. not to exceed $935,515,000; and (3) for homeowners assistance under sec- tion 1013 of Public Law 89-754 (80 Stat. 1255, 1290), including acquisition of prop- erties, an amount not to exceed $5,000,000. SEC. 509. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be used for the purpose of installing air- conditioning equipment in any new or exist- ing military family housing unit in the State of Hawaii. TITLE VI GENERAL PROVISIONS SEC. 601. The Secretary of each military department may proceed to establish or de- velop installations and facilities under this Act without regard to section 3648 of the Re- vised Statutes, as amended (31 U.S.C. 529), and sections 4774 and 9774 of title 10, United States Code. The authority to place perma- nent or temporary improvements on land !includes authority for surveys, administra- tion, overhead, planning, and supervision in- cident to construction. That authority may be exercised before title to the land is ap- proved under section 355 of the Revised Statutes, as amended (40 U.S.C. 256), and even though the land is held temporarily. The authority to acquire real estate or land includes authority to make surveys and to acquire land, and interests in land (includ- ing temporary use), by gift, purchase, ex- change of Government-owned land, or otherwise. SEC. 602. There are authorized to be ap- propriated such stuns as may be necessary for the purposes of this Act, but appropria- tions for public works projects authorized by titles I, II, III, IV, and V. shall not exceed- (1) for title I: Inside the United States $491,695,000; outside the United States $120,184,000; or a total of $611,879,000. (2) for title II: Inside the United States, $509,498,000; outside the United States, $41,458,000; or a total of $550,956,000. (3) for title III: Inside the United States, $307,786,000; outside the United States, $74,887,000; section 302, $8,100,000; or a total of $390,773,000. (4) for title IV: A total of $28,400,000. (5) for title V: Military family housing and homeowners assistance, $1,244,603,000. SEC. 603. (a) Except as provided in subsec- tions (b) and (e), any of the amounts spec- ified in titles I, II, m, and W of this Act, may, In the discretion of the Secretary con- cerned, be increased by 5 per centum when inside the United States (other than Hawaii and Alaska), and by 10 per Cent= Approved when outside the United States or in Hawaii and Alaska, if he determines that such in- crease (1) is required for the sole purpose of meeting unusual variations in cost, and (2) could not have been reasonably antic- ipated at the time such estimate was sub- mitted to the Congress. However, the total cost of all construction and acquisition in each such title may not exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated in that title. (h) When the amount named for any con- structton or acquisition in title I, II, III, or IV of this Act involves only one project at any military installation and the Secre- tary of Defense, or his designee, determines that the amount authorized must be in- creased by more than the applicable per- centage prescribed in subsection (a), the Secretary concerned may proceed with such construction or acquisition if the amount of the increase does not exceed by more than 25 per centum of the amount named for such project by the Congress. (c) Subject to the limitations contained In subsection (a), no individual project authorized under title 1,11, III, or IV of this Act for any specifically listed military in- stallation may be placed under contract if- (1) the estimated cost of such project is $250,000 or more, and (2) the current working estimates of the Department of Defense, based upon bids received, for the construction of such proj- ect exceeds by more than 25 per centum the amount authorized for such project by the Congress, until after the expiration of thirty days from the date on which a writ- ten report of the facts relating to the in- creased cost of such project, including a statement of the reasons for such increase has been submitted to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representa- tives and the Senate. (d) The Secretary of Defense shall submit an annual report to the Congress identify- ing each individual project which has been placed under contract in the preceding twelve-month period and with respect to which the then current working estimate of the Department of Defense based upon bids received for such project exceeded the amount authorized by the Congress for that project by more than 25 per centum. The Secretary shall also include in such report each individual project with respect to which the scope was reduced in order to permit con- tract award within the available authoriza- tion for such project. Such report shall in- clude all pertinent cost information for each individual project, including the amount in dollars and percentage by which the current working estimate based on the contract price for the project exceeded the amount authorized for such project by the Congress. (e) In addition to other cost variation limitations contained in this section or In similar sections of prior year military con- struction authorization Acts, any of the amounts specified in titles I, II, III, and IV of this and prior military construction au- thorization Acts may be varied upward by an additional 10 per centum when the Sec- retary, of the military department concerned determines that such increase is required to meet unusual variations in cost directly at- tributable to difficulties arising out of the current energy crisis. However, the total cost of all construction and acquisition in each such title may not exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated in that title. Sm. 604. Contracts for construction made by the United States for performance within the United States and its possessions under this Act shall be executed under the juris- diction and supervision of the Corps of Engi- neers. Department of the Army, or the Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Depart- ment of the Navy, or such other department or Government agency as the Secretaries of H 11571 the military departments recommend and the Secretary of Defense approves to assure the most efficient, expeditious, and cost- effective accomplishment of the construction herein authorized. The Secretaries of the military departments shall report annually to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives a breakdown of the dollar value of construc- tion contracts completed by each of the' several construction agencies selected to- gether with the design, construction super- vision, and overhead fees charged by each of the several agents in the execution of the assigned construction. Further, such con- tracts (except architect and engineering con- tracts which, unless specifically authorized by the Congress shall continue to be award- ed in accordance with presently established procedures, customs, and practice) shall be awarded, insofar as practicable, on a com- petitive basis to the lowest responsible bid- der, if the national security will not be im- paired and the award is consistent with chap- ter 137 of title 10, United States Code. The Secretaries of the military departments shall report annually to the President of the Sen- ate and the Speaker of the House of Repre- sentatives with respect to all contracts awarded on other than a competitive basis to the lowest responsible bidder. SEC. 605. As of October 1, 1975, an authori- zations for military public works including family housing, to be accomplished by the Secretary of a military department in con- nection with the establishment or develop- ment of installations and facilities, and all authorizations for appropriations therefor, that are contained in titles I, II, III, IV, and V of the Act of November 29, 1973, Public Law 93-166 (87 Stat. 661), and all such authori- zations contained in Acts approved before November 30, 1973, and not superseded or otherwise modified by a later authorization are repealed except- (1) authorizations for public works and for appropriations therefor that are set forth in those Acts in the titles that contain the gen- eral provisions; (2) authorizations for public works proj- ects as to which appropriated funds have been obligated for construction contracts, land acquisition, or payments to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, in whole or in part before October 1, 1975, and authoriza- tions for appropriations therefor; (3) notwithstanding the repeat provisions of section 605 of the Act of November 29, 1973, Public Law 93-166 (87 Stat. 661, 681), authorizations for the following items which shall remain in effect until October 1, 1976: (A) Sanitary sewer connection in the amount of $2,200,000 at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 26, 1970 (84 Stat. 1204), as amended and extended in section 705(a) (3) (A) of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1153). (B) Cold storage warehouse construction in the amount of $1,215,000 at Fort DIX, New Jersey, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135), as amended. (C) Enlisted men's barracks complex con- struction in the amount of $12,160,000 at Fort Knox, Kentucky, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135), as amended. (D) Enlisted 'women's barracks construc- tion in the amount of $245,000 and bachelor officer's quarters construction in the amount of $803,000 at Fort Lee, Virginia, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135), as amended. (E) Chapel center construction in the amount of $1,088,000 at Fort Benjamin Har- rison, Indiana, that is contained in title I, section 101, of the Act of October 26, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135), as amended. (F) Enlisted men's barracks construction in the amount of $7,996,000 at Fort Ord, j For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 H 11572 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD HOUSE California, that is contained:sin title I, sea- tion 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135), as amended. (G) Enlisted men's barrack a and mess con- struction in the amount of $09,000 at Sierra Army Depot, California, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1136), as amended. (H) Test facilities Solid State Radar in the amount of $7,600,000 at Kw4alein National Missile Range, Kwajalein, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1137), as amended. (I) Land acquisition in the amount of $10,000,000 for the Naval Ammunition Depot, Oahu, Hawaii, that is contarned in title xr, section 201 of the Act of Cttober 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1140), as amended. (J) Message Center Addition, Aircraft Fire and Crash Station, Aircraft Maintenance Hangar Shops, Bachelor Enlisted Quarters, Mess Hall, Bachelor Officers! Quarters, Ex- change and Recreation Building, and Utili- ties construction in the amount of $110,000: $199,000; $837,000; $1,745,000; $377,000; $829,- 000; $419,000; and $792,000, respectively, for the Naval Detachment, Solids Bay, Crete, Greece, that is contained in title H, section 201 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1141), as amended. (K) Authorization for exchange of lands in support of the Air Installation Compatible Use Zones at Various Locations in the amount of $12,000,000 that is contained in title in, section 301 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1145), as amended. (4) Notwithstanding the repeal provisions of section 705(b) of the Act of October 25, 1972, Public Law 92-545 (86 Kist 1135, 1153), as modified by section 605(3) of the Act of November 29, 1973, Public Law 93-166 (87 Stat. 661, 681), the authorization to construct six hundred family housing units at Naval Complex, Norfolk, Virginia, contained in title V. section 501(a) (2) of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1148), shall remain in effect until October 1, 1975. Sze. 606. None of the authority contained in titles I, II, III, and IV of this Act shall be deemed to authorize any building construc- tion projects inside the 'United States in ex- cess of a unit cost to be determined in pro- Portion to the appropriate area construc- tion cost index, based on the following unit cost limitations where the area construction index is 1.0: (1) $31 per square foot for permanent barracks; (2) $33 per square foot for bachelor officer quarters; unless the Secretary of Defense, or his des- ignee, determines that bedause of' special circumstances, application to such project of the limitations on unit costs contained in this section is impracticable: Provided, That, notwithstanding the limitations contained in prior military construction authorization Acts on unit costs, the limitations on such costs contained in this section shall apply to all prior authorizations for such con- struction not heretofore repealed and for which construction contracts have not been awarded by the date of enactment of this Act. SEc. 607. Section 612 of Public Law 89-868 (80 Stat. '756, '757), is amended by deleting the figure "$150,000" wherever it appears and inserting in lieu thereof "$225,000". SEC. 608. (a) The Secretary of Defense is authorized to assist communities located near the TRIDENT Support Site Bangor, Washington, in meeting the costs of pro- viding increased municipal services and fa- cilities to the residents of sueh communities, if the Secretary determines that there is an immediate and substantial Increase in the need for such services and facilities in such communities as a direct result of work being carried out in connection with the construe- the TRIDENT Weapon System and that tin unfair and excessive financial burden will be incurred by such communities as a result of the increased need for such services and facilities. (b) The Secretary of Defense shall carry out the provisions of this section through existing Federal programs. The Secretary is authorized to supplement funds made avail- able under such Federal programs to the ex- tent necessary to carry out the provisions of this section, and is authorized to provide fi- nancial assistance to communities descxibed in subsection (a) of this section to help such communities pay their :hare of the costs under euch programs. The heads of all de- partments and agencies concerned shall co- operate fully with the Secretary of Defense in carrying out the provisions of this section on a priority basis. (c) In determining the amount of finan- cial assistance to be made available under this section to any local community for any community service or facility, the Sec- retary of Defense shall consult with the head of the department or agency of the Federal Government concerned with the type of service or facility for which financial assist- ance is being made available and shall take into consideration (1) the time lag betlereen the initial impact of increased population in any such community and any increase in the local tax base which will result from such increased population, (2) the possible tem- porary nature of the increased population and the long-range cost Impact on the per- manent residents of any such community, and (3) such other pertinent factors as the Secretary of Defense dee:ns appropriate. (d) Ifny funds approprlated to the Depart- ment of Defense for the fiscal year begin- ning July 1, 1974, for carrying out the TRI- DENT Weapon System shall be utilized by the Secretary of Defense in carrying out the provisions of this section. to the extent that funds are unavailable under other Federal programs. Funds appropriated to the De- partment of Defense for any fiscal year be- ginning after June 30, 1975, for carrying out the TRIDENT Weapon System may, to the extent specifically authorized in an annual Military Construction Authorization Act, be utilized by the Secretary of Defense in car- rying out the provision of this section to the extent that funds arc unavailable under other Federal programs. (e) The Secretary shall transmit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives semian- nual reports indicating the total amount expended in the case of each local commu- nity which was provided assistance under the authority of this section during the pre- ceding six-month period, the specific proj- ects for which assistance was provided dur- ing such period, and the total amount provided for each such project during such period. SEC. 609. (a) Public Law 93-346 (88 Stat. 340), designating the premises occupied by the Chief of Naval Operations as the official resident of the Vice President, is amended to read as follows: "That effective July 1, 1974, the Government-owned house to- gether with furnishings, associated grounds (consisting of twelve acres, more or less), and related facilities which have here- tofore been used as the residence of the Chief of Naval Operations, Department of the Navy, shall, on and after such date be available for, and are hereby designated as, the temporary official residence of the Vice President of the United States. "SEc. 2. The temporary official residence of the Vice President shall be adequately staffed and provided with such appropriate equip- ment, furnishings, dining facilities, services, and other provisions as may be required, un- der the supervision and direction of the Vice President, to enable him to perform and dis- December 10, .1974 and obligations associated with his high office. "SEC. 3. The Secretary of the Nast shall. subject to the supervision and control of the Vice President, provide for the minters, staff- ing and the care and maintenance of the grounds of the temporary official residence of the Vice President and, subject to reimburse- ment therefor out of funds appropriated for such purposes, provide for the civilian staffing, care, maintenance, repair, improve- ment, alteration, and furnishing o-' such residence. "SEC. 4. There is hereby authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary from time to time to carry out the foregoing provisions of this joint resolution. During any interim period until and before any such funds are so appropriated, the Secretary of the Navy shall make provision for staffing and other appropriate services in connection with the temporary official residence of the Vice President from fur:ids available to the Department of the Navy, subject to reim- bursement therefor from funds subsequent- ly appropriated to carry out the purposes of this joint resolution. "Sec. 6. After the date on which the Vice President moves into the temporary official residence provided for in this joint resolu- tion no funds may be expended for the main- tenance, care, repair, furnishing, or security of any residence for the Vice President other than the temporary official residence pro- vided for in this joint resolution unless the expenditure of such funds is specifically ast- thorized by law enacted after such date. "SEC. 6. The Secretary of the Navy is au- thorized and directed, with the approval of the Vice President, to accept donat.ons of money or property for the furnishing of or making improvements in or about the tern- porary official residence of the Vice President, all such donations to berame the property of the United States and to be accounted for as such. "SEC. 7. (a) Section 202 of title 3, United States Code, Is amended by striking out 'and (5) ' in the first sentence and inserting in lieu thereof the following: '(5) the tempo- rary official residence of the Vice President and grounds in the District of Columbia; (6) the Vice President and members of :ails im- mediately family; and (7)'. "SEC. 8. The first sentence of section 3056 (a) of title 18, United States Code, is amend- ed by- "(1) inserting 'protect the members of the immediate family of the Vice President, un- less such protection is declined' immediately after 'Vice President-elect',', and "(2) inserting 'pay expenses for unfore- seen emergencies of a confidential nature under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury and accounted for solely on his certificate:' immediately after 'apprehen- sion of criminals;'. "SEc. 91t is the sense of Congress that liv- ing accommodations, generally equivalent to those available to the highest remising of- ficer on active duty in each of the other mili- tary services, should be provided for the Chief of Naval Operations.". (b) Except as otherwise provided therein, the amendment made by subsection (a) of this section shall become effective ;nay 12, 1974. SEC. 610. Section 2662 of title 10. United States Code, is amended by adding at the end of subsection (a) a new paragraph as follows: "(6) Any termination or modification by either the grantor or grantee of an exist- ing license or permit of real property owned by the United States to a military depart- ment, under which substantial investments have been or are proposed to be made in con- nection with the use of the property by the military department". SEC. 611. Chapter 159 of title 10. United tion, installation, testing, and operation of charge appropriately the duties functions States Code Is amended by adding at the Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December 10, 1.974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?HOUSE H 11573 end thereof the following new section and a corresponding item in the analysis: "? 2685. Adjustment of or surcharge on sell- ing prices in commissary stores to provide funds for construction and improvement at commissary store facilities "(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary of a military depart- ment, under regulations established by him and approved by the Secretary of Defense, may, for the purposes of this section, pro- vide for an adjustment of, or surcharge on, sales prices of goods and services sold in commissary store facilities. "(b) The Secretary of a military depart- ment, under regulations established by him and approved by the Secretary of Defense, may use the proceeds from the adjustments or surcharges authorized by subsection (a) to acquire, construct, convert, expand, in- stall, or otherwise improve commissary store facilities at defense installations within the United States and for related environmental evaluation and construction costs, including surveys, administration, overhead, planning, and design.". SEC. 612. Notwithstanding any other pro- visions of law, proceeds from the sale of recycleable material shall be credited first, to the cost of collection, handling, and sale of the material including purchasing of equip- ment to be used for recycling purposes and second, to projects for environmental im- provement and energy conservation at mili- tary camps, posts, and bases establishing re- cycling programs in accordance with regula- tions approved by the Secretary of Defense. The amount expended for environmental im- provement and energy conservation projects shalt not exceed $50,000 per installation per annum. Any balance shall be returned to the Treasury as miscellaneous receipts. The Sec- retary of each military department shan make an annual report to Congress on the operation of the program. Sze. 613. (a) None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act with respect to any construction project at Diego Garcia may be obligated unless? (1) the President has (A) advised the Congress in writing that all military and foreign policy implications regarding the need for United States facilities at Diego Garcia have been evaluated by him, and (B) certified to the Congress in writing that the construction of any such project is essential to the national interest of the 'United States; (2) 60 days of continuous session of the Congress have expired following the date on which certification with respect to such proj- ect is received by the Congress, and (3) neither House of Congress has adopted, within such 60-day period, a resolution dis- approving such project. (b) (1) For purposes of this section, the continuity of a session of Congress is broken only by an adjournment of the Congress sine die, and the days on which either House is not in session because of an adjournment of more than three days to a day certain are excluded in_the computation of such 60-day period. (2) For purposes of this section, "resolu- tion" means a resolution of either House of Congress, the matter after the resolving clause of which is as follows: "That the does not approve the proposed construction project on the island of Diego Garcia, the need for which was certified to by the President and the certification with respect to which was received by the on .", the first and sec- ond blanks being filled with the name of the resolving House and the third blank being filled with the appropriate date. (c) Subsections (d), (e), and (f) of this section are enacted by Congress? (1) as an exercise of the rule-making power of the Senate and as such they are deemed a part of the rules of the Senate, but appli- cable only with respect to the procedure to be followed in the Senate in the case of resolutions described by subsection (b) (2) of this section; and they supersede other rules of the Senate only to the extent that they are inconsistent therewith; and (2) with full recognition of the constitu- tional right of the Senate to change such rules at any time, in the same manner and to the same extent as in the case of any other rule of the Senate. (d) A resolution with respect to a pro- posed construction project of the island of Diego Garcia shall be referred to the Com- mittee on Armed Services of the Senate. (e) (1) If the Committee on Armed Serv- ices of the Senate to which a resolution with respect to a proposed construction project on the island of Diego Garcia has been re- ferred has not reported such resolution at the end of 20 calendar days after its intro- duction, not counting any day which is ex- cluded under subsection (b) (1) of this sec- tion, it Is in ordey to move either to dis- charge the committee from further consid- eration of the resolution or to discharge the committee from further consideration of any other resolution introduced with respect to the same proposed construction project which has been referred to the committee, except that no motion to discharge shall be in order after the committee has reported a resolu- tion of disapproval with respect to the same proposed construction project. (2) A motion to discharge under para- graph (1) of this subsection may be made only by a Senator favoring the resolution, Is privileged, and debate thereon shall be lim- ited to not more than 1 hour, to be divided equally between those favoring and those op- posing the resolution, the time to be divided in the Senate equally between, and controlled by, the majority leader and the minority leader or their designees. An amendment to the motion is not in order, and it Is not in order to move to reconsider the vote by which the motion is agreed to or disagreed to. (f) (1) A motion in the Senate to proceed to the consideratiofl of a resolution shall be privileged. An amendment to the motion shall not be in order, nor shall it be in order to move to reconsider the vote by which the motion is agreed to or disagreed to. (2) Debate in the Senate on a resolution, and all debatable motions and appeals in connection therewith, shall be limited to not more than 10 hours, to be equally divided between, and controlled by, the majority leader and the minority leader or their designees. (3) Debate in the Senate on any debatable motion or appeal in connection with a reso- lution shall be limited to not more than 1 hour, to be equally divided between, and controlled by, the mover and the manager of the resolution, except that in the event the manager of the resolution is in favor of any such motion or appeal, the time in opposition thereto, shall be controlled by the minority leader or his designee. Such leaders, or either of them, may, from time under their control on the passage of a resolution, allot additional time to any Senator during the consideration of any debatable motion or appeal. (4) A motion in the Senate to further lim- it debate on a resolution, debatable mo- tion, or appeal is not debatable. No amend- ment to, or motion to recommit, a resolution is in order in the Senate. SEC. 614. (a) The Secretary of the Army is authorized to convey, without monetary consideration, to the Ozark Public Building Authority, an agency of the city of Ozark, Alabama, all right, title, and interest of the United States in and to the land described in subsection (b) for use as a permanent site for the museum referred to in subsection (c), and subject to the conditions described therein. (b) The land authorized to be conveyed to the Ozark Public Building Authority as provided in subsection (a) is described as follows: All that tract or parcel of land ly- ing and being in sections 13 and 24, range 23 east, township 6 north, Saint Stephens Merid- ian, Dale County, Alabama, more partic- ularly described as follows: Beginning at a point which is 216.0 feet north 89 degrees 57 minutes west of the northeast corner of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of said section 24, on the western right-of-way line of Alabama State Highway Numbered 249, and on the boundary of a tract of land owned by the United States of America at Fort Rucker Military Reservation; thence north 25 degrees 07 minutes east along the western right-of-way line of said highway, which is along the boundary of said United States tract, 1,395 feet; thence north 64 degrees 53 minutes west 700 feet; thence south 25 degrees 07 minutes west 2,800 feet; thence south 64 degrees 53 minutes east 700 feet, more or less, to a point (which is on the western right-of-way line of said highway and on the boundary of said United States tract; thence north 25 degrees 07 minutes east along the western right-of-way line a said highway, which is along the boundary of said United States tract, 1,405 feet, more or less, to the point of beginning, containing 46.00 acres, more or less. (c) The conveyance provided for by the Isubsection (a) shall be subject to the con- dition that the real property so conveyed shall be used as a permanent site for a mu- seum to display suitable public exhibits of the United States Army aviation equipment land allied subjects and aviation-oriented ex- hibits of other United States Government departments, agencies, and instrumentalities, land of foreign origin, and if such property is not used for such purpose, all right, title, and interest in and to such real property shall revert to the United States, which shall have the right of immediate entry thereon, and to such other conditions as the Secretary of the Army may prescribe to protect the interest of the United States. SEC. 615. (a) The Secretary of the Navy, or his designee, is authorized to convey to the Gulf Coast Council, Boy Scouts of America, If or fair market value and subject to such terms and conditions as shall be determined by the Secretary of the Navy, or his designee, to be necessary to protect the interests of the United States, all right, title, and interest of the United States of America, other than mineral rights including gas and oil which shall be reserved to the United States, in and to a certain parcel of land containing 12.46 acres, more or less, situated in Escambia County, Florida, being a part of the Naval Education and Training Program Develop- ment Center, Ellyson, Florida, more partic- ularly described as follows: Commence at the southeast property cor- ner of Naval Education and Training Pro- gram Development Center (NETPDC), for- merly Naval Air Station, Ellyson, thence north 3 degrees 55 minutes west along the-east boundary of NETPDC a distance of '725.8 feet more or less to the point of beginning; from said point of be- ginning, continue north 3 degrees 55 minutes west along the east boundary of NETPDC distance of 829.1 feet more or less to a point, thence north 0 degrees 27 minutes west along the east boundary of NETPDC a dis- tance of 623.3 feet more or less to a point, thence south 45 degrees 25 minutes east a distance of 304.8 feet more or less to a point, thence south 87 degrees 48 minutes east a distance of 40.5 feet more or less to a point, thence south 0 degree 25 minutes west a distance of 38.1 feet more or less to a point, Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 H 11574 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? HOUSE thence south 45 degrees 25 minutes east a distance of 189.8 feet more or leas to a point, thence south 87 degrees 00 minutes east a distance of 24.6 feet more or less to a point, thence south 24 degrees 12 minutes west a distance of 17.4 feet more or less to a point, thence Muth 45 degrees 25 minutes east a distance of 536.6 feet more or less to a point, thence south 44 degrees 35 minutes west a distance of 990.1 feet more or leas to the point of beginning; containing 12.48 steles more or less. (b) All expenses for surveys and the prep- aration and execution of legal documents necessary or appropriate carry out the fore- going provisions shall be borne by the Gulf Coast Council, Boy Scouts of America. SEC. 616. (a) The Secretary of the Army (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Secretary"), or his designee is author- ized and directed to convey by quitclaim deed to the State of Louisiana all right, title, and interest of the United States In and to that certain real property located in Saint Tammany Parish, Louisiana, containing one thousand seven hundred and ten acres, more or less, known as Camp Villere, being the same property presently under license to the State for National Guard use, and known as Audited installation Numbered 22975 in the files of the Office of the District Engineer, Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth District. (b) The conveyance required to be made pursuant to subsection (a) shall be made without monetary compensation but shall be in consideration of, and subject to, the following terms and conditions: (1) The conveyed property shall be used primarily for the training of the Louisiana National Guard and for other military pur- poses of the Louisiana National Guard. (2) Any revenue derived by the State from any other uses of the property shall be used Tor the maintenance and improvement of the property or be shared with the United States as prescribed by the Secretary. The State shall maintain such records and fur- nish such reports with respect to such rev- enue as are prescribed by the Secretary. (3) The State shall protect the timber, water resources, gravel, sand, soil, mineral deposits, and other natural resources of the conveyed property in accordance with sound conservation practices and to the satisfac- tion of the Secretary. (4) In time of war or national emergency declared by the Congress, or national emer- gency hereafter proclaimed by the President, and upon a determination by the Secretary of Defense that the conveyed property, or any part thereof, is useful or necessary for national defense and security, the Secretary, on behalf of the United Stat, shall have the right to enter upon and use such property, or any part thereof (including any and all im- provements made thereon by the State), for a period not to exceed the duration of such war or emergency plus six months. Upon termination of such use, the property shall revert to the State, together with all im- provements placed thereon by the United States, and be subject to the terms, con- ditions, and limitations on its use and dis- position which apply without regard to this paragraph. The use of the property by the United States pursuant to this paragraph shall be without obligation or payment on the part of the United States, except that the United States, if required by the State, shall pay the fair market rental value for the use of any improvements on the property which are constructed with State funds and, upon completion of such use, will restore any such improvements to the same condi- tion as that existing at the time of initial occupancy by the United States under this paragraph. At the option of the Secretary, cash payment may be made by the United States in lieu of such restoration; except that the value of any improvements erected by the United States during its occupancy Approved and left on the property shell be offset against the obligation of the United :States to restore improvements constructed with State funds. (5) There shall be reserved from the con- veyance such easements and right-of-way for roads, water flowage, soil disposal, water- lines, sewerlines, communications wires, powerlines, and other purposes, as the Sec- retary considers necessary or convenie:at for the operations, activities, and functions of the United States. (6) All mineral rights with respect to the conveyed property, including gas and oil, shall be reserved to the United States, to- gether with the right to permit such reason- able exploration and mining operations as will not interfere with the primary use of the property. ('7) Such other terms and conditions as the Secretary may deem necessary tc pro- tect the interests of the United States. (c) Upon a finding be the Secretary that the State is violating or failing to comply with any term or condition imposed by paragraph (1), (2), or (3)tof subsection (b) of this section, the Secretary is authorized immediately to reenter and take possession of the property described in subsection (a), whereupon title to such property shall re- vert to the United State; and contml there- over may be asserted by the Secretary with- out any further act or legal proceeding whatsoever. Any improvements, fixtures, and buildings placed on the property by the State during its period of use shall become the property of the United :atates without pay- ment of compensation therefor. (d) (1) Any surveying and related costs Incurred Incident to the carrying out of this section shall be borne by the State. (2) Appropriate provi ;ions to implement the terms and conditions of this Act shall be included In the instrument of conveyance. SEC. 617. Titles I, II, III, 117, 7, and VI of this Act may be cited as the "Military Con- struction Authorization Act, 1975". TITLE VII RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES SEC. '701. Subject to chapter 193 of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of Defense may establish or develop additional facilities for the Reserve Forces, including the acquisi- tion of land therefor, but the cost of such facilities shall not exceed? (1) For the Department of the Army: (a) Army National Gaard of the United States, $58,800,000. (b) Army Reserve, $38,600,000. (2) For the Department of the Navy: Naval and Marine Corps Reserves, $19,867,000. (3) For the Department of the Air Force: (a) Air National Guard of the United States, $31,500,000. (b) Air Force Reserve, $14,000,000. SEC. 702. The Secretary of Defense may es- tablish or develop installations and facilities under this title without regard to section 3648 of the Revised Statutes, as amended (31 U.S.C. 529), and sections 4774 and 9774 of title 10, United States Code. The authority to place permanent or temporary improvements on lands includes authority for surveys, ad- ministration, overhead, planning, and super- vision incident to construction. That au- thority may be exercised before title to the land is approved under section 355 cei the Revised Statutes, as amended (40 U.S.C. 255) , and even though the land is held temporarily. The authority to acquire real estate or land includes authority to make surveys and to acquire land, and interests in land (includ- ing temporary use), by gift, purchase, ex- change of Government-owned land, or other- wise. Sec. 703. Paragraph (1.) of section 2233e of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking out "$50,000" and inserting in lieu thereof "$100,000". See. 704. This title may be cited as the December 10, 1974 "Reserve Forces Facilities Authorization !act1 1975." And the Senate agree to the same. F. Enw. HEBERT, Oris G. PIKE, CHARLES E. BENNETT, SAMUEL STRATTON, WILLIAM G. BRAY, CARLETON J. KING, 0. WILLIAM WHITICHURST, Managers an the Part of the Haase. Srusaa SYMINGTON, JOHN C. Spews's, HENRY M. JAMISON, SAM J. ERVIN, HOWARD W. CANNON, HARRY F. BYRD, Jr., Jona" TOWER, STROM THURMOND, PETER H. DOMENICE, Managers on the Part of the Senate. JOINT STATEMENT OF THE COMMITTEE ON CONFEREZWE The managers on the part of the House and the Senate at the Conference on the dis- agreeing votes of the two houses on the amendment of the Senate to the bill (H.R. 16136) to authorize certain construction ai military installations, and for other perposea submit the following joint statement in ex- planation of the effect of the action agreed upon by the Conferees and recommended in the accompanying report: LEGISLATION IN CONFERENCE On August 9, 1974, the House of Represent- atives passed H.R. 10136 :ethic& Is the Fiscal Year 1975 Military Construction Authoriza- tion for the Department of Defense and Reserve Components. On September 11, 1974._ the &awe con- sidered the legislation, amended it by strik- ing out all language after the enacting clause and wrote a new bill. COMPARISON OF HOUSE AND SENATE BILLS H.R. 16136, as passed by the House of Representatives, provided new construction authorization to the military depeutraenta and the Department of Defense for Fiscal Year 1975 in the total amount of $2,935,s 801,000. The bill as passed by the Senate provided new authorization in the amount of 93,027,- 925,060. SUMMARY OF RESOLUTION OF DIFFERENCES As a result of the Conference between the House and Senate on the differences In H.R. 16130, the Conferees agreed to a new adjusted authorization for military construction for Fiscal Tear 1975 in the amen nt of $2,984,378,000. The Department of Defense and the respec- tive military departments had requested a. total of $3,278,380,000 for new construction authorization for Fiscal Year 1975. The action of the Conferees therefore reduces the De- partmental request by $294,002,000. CHART?Total Authorization for Appropria- tion Granted fiscal year 1975 Title I?Army: Inside the United States___ $491, 693, 000 Outside the United States__ 120, ..84. 000 Subtotal 611, 879, 000 Title II?Navy: fnside the United States..., 2509,998, 000 Outside the United States__ 41, a58, 000 Subtotal 550, 956, 000 Title III?Air Force: Inside the United States__ 2307, 86, 000 Outside the United States__ 74, 387, 000 Sec. 302 8, 100, 000 Subtotal '390, 773, 000 Title IV?Defense agencies__ 28,900, 000 For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December 10, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --HOUSE Title V?Military family hous- ing and homeowners aBSiSt- SECO $1, 244, 603, 000 Total, titles I, U, III, IV and V 2, 826, 611, 000 Title VII?Reserve components: Army National Guard 53, 800,000 Army Reserve 38, 600, 000 Naval and Marine Corps Re- serves 19, 867, 000 Air National Guard 31, 500, 000 Air Force Reserve 14, 000, 000 Total " 157, 767, 000 Grand total granted by titles T, 11, 111, IV, V and VII - 2,984, 378, 000 Excludes $1,500,000 for land at NAS Pensa- cola, Florida. a Excludes $9,000,000 for Aerospace Corpora- tion, Los Angeles, California. TITLE I?ARMT The House had approved new construction authorization in the amount of $611,653,000 for the Department of the Army. The Senate approved new construction authorization for the Army in the amount of $644,211,000. The Conferees agreed t,o a new total for Title I in the amount of $611,879,000 which is $32,- 332,000 below the Senate figure and $226,000 above the House figure. Among the major items considered in Conference and acted on by the Conferees were the following: Fort Carson, Colorado?Land acquisition $7,292,000 The Army requested a land acquisition project to expand the maneuver area at Fort Carson. Army witnesses testified that this project was Phase I of a multi-phase plan for acquisititon of 75,420 acres which the Army said was necessary to obviate the ex- penditure of over $3 million per occurrence to transport a division to the nearest instal- lation having sufficient land area to accom- modate realistic training by a full divisioh force. The House deleted the authorization request in view of local Opposition to further expansion of Fort Carson and the testimony of the Army at the last request for land ac- quisition in 1965 to the effect that the 1965 acquisition would be all the land ever needed at Fort Carson. , The Senate included the requested amount after special hearings but as a compromise, Insisted that the funds be used to acquire only the Phase III portion of the multi- phase Army plan, In Conference, after a very lengthy discus- sion, the Conferees agreed that the author- ization request would be deleted without prejudice and that the Committee Members and or Committee Staff would make an in- spection trip to Fart Carson to determine the priority of the Army's request and the necessity for further expansion of Fort Car- son. Conferees believe they would thereby be in a position to better judge the merits of this request in next year's program. The Senate receded. Fort Riley, Ransas--Suppon $2,793,000 The House version of the bill deleted these support facilities on the basis they could safely be deferred for at least a year. In the Conference the Senate Conferees pointed out that this project has a direct impact on the Army's program to provide adequate housing for bachelor enlisted personnel at Fort Riley. They argued that since a sufficient number of administrative facilities were not provided with the original barracks construction a number of barracks spaces had been dieerted for administrative use thui resulting in an overcrowding in the barracks. This project will alleviate the overcrowding condition in the barracks as the unit headquarters are Moved out. The House receded. Fort Hood, Texas?Entrance roads, $2,540,000 This project was deleted by the House be- cause information received by the Commit- tee was to the effect that this project was not time phased with the four-lane super- highway being constructed. The Senate ver- sion of the bill included this project. In Conference it was pointed out that this two division post has the most severe traffic congestion problems of any Army installa- tion. Further, Senate Conferees stated that the Army had deferred this project in pre- vious years until it was time phased with the superhighway which is now 75% com- plete. Therefore, to derive full benefit of the new state highway in alleviating traffic con- gestion the Senate was adamant in their po- sition that this project be approved. The House receded. Anniston Army Depot, Alabama?Depot headquarters and administrative build- ing?$2,260,000 The Senate deleted this Army request for , reasons of economy. The House bill included this project. In Conference the House Conferees pointed out that the headquarters activities are now disbursed in several widely separated build- ings. They further pointed out that the in- clusion of this project in the bill would as- sist in increased productivity, reduction in personnel travel time, waiting time, trans- portation and overhead costs for an estimated annual savings of $135,000. House Conferees also pointed out that by consolidating all the separate activities into this new facility it would negate approximately $1,050,000 in future construction requirements. The Senate receded. Fort Huachuca, Arizona?Academic building, phase I, $6,951,000 The Senate version of the bill included the authorization request for the academic facility. The House version of the bill did not contain the request. In Conference, the House Conferees argued that the Defense Depart- ment witnesses had testified in 1970 that one of the reasons for moving the Intelli- gence Center from Fort Holabird, Maryland to Fort Huachuca was because the facilities already in being at Fort Huachuca could ac- commodate the move with only a minimum expenditure for military construction of ap- proximately $4 million total. Senate Confer- ees argued that since the school was already in being and the facilities were inadequate and steadily deteriorating the Conferees should approve this project. House Conferees, however, were adamant in their position and convinced the Senate Conferees that this project should be reevaluated. The Conferees agreed that Committee Members and or Com- mittee Staff should visit this installation and make an evaluation of the total future needs for the intelligence center now at Fort Hua- chuca. The Senate receded. Fort Jackson, South Carolina?Electrical- mechanical upgrade, $3,173,000 The House deleted this project in its con- sideration of the bill because it was felt that this amount of money should not be requested for a hospital that had not been completed until 1972. The Senate included this project in their bill. In Conference the Senate Conferees argued that although the hospital was relatively new, the original design did not include fire safety code criteria current at the time. They further argued that this amount was necessary to correct the fire safety deficien- cies and from a health and safety standpoint was urgent. The House reluctantly receded. H 11575 Fort Wainwright, Alaska?Barracks modernization, $9,961,000 The House had included this project pri- marily to Improve the unsatisfactory living conditions of the existing facilities and thereby generally enhance the attractive- ness of military service to the individual. The Senate version had deleted this project. The Senate conferees pointed out that for reasons of economy and its relatively low priority to the Army, this project could be deferred. In addition, the future manning levels at Fort Wainwright were sufficiently uncertain to justify a delay in this project. The House receded, NATO infrastructure?$4 million The Department of the Army had re- quested a total of $88 million for the U.S. share of the NATO Infrastructure for the coming fiscal year. The House version ap- proved the requested amount; however, the Senate version contained a general reduc- tion in the amount of $4 million. In Conference, Senate Conferees pointed out that this general reduction was possible because of certain carry over authorization from prior fiscal years. The House receded. TITLE II?NAVY The House approved $517,373,000 in new construction authorization for the Depart- ment of the Navy. The Senate approved $557,054,000. The Conferees agreed to a new total in the amount of $552,456,000. This amount is $4,598,000 below the Senate figure and $5,083,000 above the House figure. Among the major items originally deleted by either the House or the Senate and re- stored in the Conference were the following: Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland?Luce Hall addition and modernization, $6,450,000 The House deleted this particular project believing that it was of a relatively low priority in this year's Navy program. The Senate approved the project. In Conference, the Senate Conferees pointed out that Luce Hall was built in 1920 and that the mechanical and electrical sys- tems are antiquated and worn out and must be replaced. Further, there (s no fire protec- tion system, open stairwells, wooden floors, and interior partitions. They further stated that the antiquated building is environ- mentally unsatisfactory for academic use. The House receded. Naval Air Station, Cecil Field, Florida,- Aircraft maintenance hangar, $5,359,000 The Senate deleted this project believing It can be safely deferred for at least a year. The House approved the project. In Conference the House Conferees pointed out that Cecil Field is now the master jet base of the Jacksonville-Mayport complex. It is the home part of all Atlantic Fleet light attack squadrons (A-7) and 5 ASW squad- rons. There are now two 33-year-old obso- lete hangars temporarily serving the needs of many of these squadrons. The House Con- ferees further pointed out that if the Hang- ar is not provided the readiness and profi- ciency training of Fleet operational squad- rons equipped with modern ASW weapons systems will be impaired. The Senate receded. Naval Training Center, Orlando, Florida? Bachelor enlisted quarters, $4,140,000 This project was deferred by the House without prejudice to a future year's program. The Senate approved the project. In Conference, the Senate Conferees point- ed out that these enlisted quarters were orig- inally required to provide adequate billeting in support of Nuclear Power Training. This training function, which is moving to Or- lando from Bainbridge and Mare Island, will comprise approximately 80% of enlisted stu- dent billeting requirement at the base. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 H 11576 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- HOUSE After a thorough discustdon of this proj- ect, the House receded. Naval Training Center, Sen Diego, Cali- fornia?Rachelor enlisted quarters, $18,- 657,000 The House Committee deferred this proj- ect without prejudice believing that assets in the area of the Naval Training Center were adequate. The Senate approved the project. In Conference the Senate Conferees pointed out that the space which le avail- able was constructed between 1922 and 1943 as open bay barracks and leave served long beyond their useful life. Many of the inade- quate barracks are located directly under the flight path of the commercial airport and practically all are in high noise zone without any acoustic attenuation. The House receded. Naval Underwater Systems Center, New- port, Rhode Island?Weapons development building, $4,742,000 The Senate Committee added this project during their Committee review of the bill. The House Committee did bot review this project. In Conference, the Senate Conferees pointed out that this Center is the principal RDT&E Center for underwater combat sys- tems. Current and planned weapons pro- grams require the capability to develop and test under controlled conditions, models which can simulate, at low oest, the system or subsystem. They further pointed out that if this facility is not provided, the optimum development of new weapons and compo- nents will be precluded through a lack of a coordinated facility capable Of full system assembly, Integration and analysis. The House receded. Diego Garcia?Support facilities, $14,802,000 The House Committee added the expan- sion of facilities project in the amount of $29,000,000 for the Naval Communications Facility on Diego Garcia. The House Com- mittee believes it is important in carrying out our national policy and Ih the interest of the United States for the I1S3. Navy, from time to time, to have a greatsr presence in the Indian Ocean. The proposed support facilities will shorten the logistic tail for various task groups that periodically deploy to the Indian Ocean, and reduce the logistic support cost. The Senate Committee authorized $14,- 802,000 for the expansion of the present facilities. Since the Navy did not reclama the Senate money reduction, the House Con- ferees did not object to the reduction. Diego Garcia?Compromise Language Re- garding Further Congressional Action The Senate inserted language (Section 612; Section 613 of the Conference Report) which requires the President to certify in writing that the need for new expansion facilities had been evaluated by him and that such projects are es,senthel to the na- tional interest of the United States and this certification must be approved by a joint resolution of both Houses. The House Conferees argued that the Sen- ate language, in effect, would allow legisla- tion by Inaction and insisted that some lan- guage should be used that would permit either House of Congress to prohibit the ob- ligation of funds for Diego Garcia by a reso- lution of disapproval of that Houee. The House Conferees offered a compro- mise that none of the funds authorized to be apprppriated under this Ala foe the construction At Diego Garcia catild be obli- gated until certain specified conditions are met. These require that the Present certify to the Congress in writing an evaluation by him of the need for, and the essentiality of, these facilities. Further, 60 days e)f continu- ous session of Congress must lalive expired following the certification wits the fur- thee condition that within that 60 day period either the House or the Senate may pass a resolution of disapproval for the project, thereby precluding obligation of any funds authorized pursuant to this Act fer the project. At the insistence of the Senate Conferees, additional language was added to the con- ference report which provides in substance that parliamentary tactics aimed at delaying a vote on the Senate floor regarding a reso- lution of disapproval will be precluded. Under the circumstances the Senate re- luctantly receded and agreed to the com- promise language. TITLE III?A1R FORCE The House approved $410,227,000 in new construction authorization for the DEpart- ment of the Air Force. The Senate approved $387,908,000. , The Conferences agreed to a new total In the amount of $399,773,000 which is $10,454,- 000 below the House figure and $11,867,000 above the Senate figure. Among the major items in Confeeence Which were resolved after much deliberation are: ' , Kelly APB, Texas?Logistical, Materiels storage facility $7,071,000 The Senate approved but the House denied this project. The House was informed that the facility could be safely deferred for at least a year. The Air Force, prior to the pro- gram being submitted to (longess, had sched- uled this particular project in the FY-77 pro- gram but moved it up two years. The Senate Conferees insisted that this project would reduce the Air Force budget for personnel by 28; fork lift trucks by 10; tugs by 2; trucks and trailers by 2; locomotives by one; and operations and maintenance ex- penditures on over 1,000 square feet of tem- porary ww?n storage buildings. Senate Con- ferees argued that tangible benefits would allow for proposed capital investment to amortize in 3 to 4 years. The House receded. McClellan AFB, California?Logistical mate- riels processing facili,:y, $8,856,000 The House deleted this project in its original consideration of the bill because only 2 to 3 years ago some $400,000 was ex- pended for the rehabilitation of a warehouse for the installation of equipment to handle the workload then at McClellan. House Con- ferees felt that this building could be uti- lized for the materiels processing for several more years. Senate Conferees argued that this project would not be completed for at least one and a haff to two years and that upon comple- tion the direct savings that would be ob- tained from this construction would amor- tize the capital investment in 24 years. They further argue that the present high bay facility which is badly needed for storage purposes is not functionally configured for efficient receipt and issue processing. Mech- anized materiel handling systems cannot he properly arranged causing excessive se- handling of materiel with resultant delays, Increased costs, arid damage. After a thorough discussion, the House reluctantly receded. Williams APB, Arizona?Flight simulator training facility, $5,313,000 The House Committee deleted this project without prejudice believing that the simu- lator equipment would not be delivered until after the completion of the facility. House Conferees argued that the construction ef- fort could safely be deferred at least one yes,r without jeopardizing the simulator program Which House Conferees agree is essential. Senate Conferees argue thee; the simulator equipment would be delivered on approxi- mately the completion date of the facility. They further insisted that the present simu- lator technology permits the duplication of December 10, 1974 all the airborne pilot experiences and that a reduction of 40 hours of flying time per student would be realized through the use of the simulator. Air Force figures Indicate that this change equals to a total reduction of approximately 50,000 flying hours in FY-76 and an annual reduction of almost 150,000 hours when the entire program is imple- mented at all eight graduate training bases in FY-1982. Senate Conferees were adamant that the simulator program go forward immediately with no delay, therefore the House reluctant- ly receded. Andrews APR, Maryland?Special aircraft support facility, $8,770,000 The House deleted this project in view of the fact that the FY-74 program as passed by the Congress authorized $13.5 million for these airborne support command facilities at Andrews APB and this authorization was not funded. The Senate bill contained the $8,770,- 000. Senate Conferees argued that the Deletion- ary spiral would make it impossible to pro- ceed with the necessary support facil,ties at Andrews Without the authorization recolested by the Air Force. Senate Conferees iediher argued that by awarding one contract for these facilities instead of separate cm tracts, the original facilities envisioned could he completed within the money authorized even with today's inflation. They insisted that denial of the FY-75 request would eliminate the proposed maintenance and logistics sup- port facilities. Further, the Air Force's ability to support the airborne command post would be severely impaired and the aircraft down time would increase considerably. After much discussion the House receded. Arnold Engineering Development Center, Tennessee?HIRT facility, $44,000,090 The House Committee included $44 ntillion for the HIRT Facility at the AEDC. Howevtr, prior to the final Senate action the Air Fore e revised their estimate from $44 million to $94 million. This revised estimate is a res.tlt of rapidly escalating construction costs, coupled with extensive increases In lead time fer delivery of materials and equipment such as structural steel, electric motors and electric Compressors. Although the need for this facility is Still valid, according to the Air Force, it was deemed advisable to delete this project at this time for reexamination of its cost ..fiee- tiveness. The House receded, TTTLE IV- -DEFENSE AGENCIES The Senate bill provided $4 million for the first phase of the radiological clean up of Eniwetok Atoll; the souse had deleted the funds. House Conferees insisted that testi- mony before them failed to reveal any defini- tive plans or cost estimates, The testimony was to the effect that the $4 million would establish a base camp and allow a "modest beginning of the cleanup effort." The House Conferees maintained that it would be pre- mature to fund the clean up project until the Defense Department had a coherent and comprehensive rehabilitation plan. However, all conferees wish to emphasize that the U.S. Government should fulfill its commitments to the people of Micronesia, and the Defense -Department in particular must devise a posi- tive program for cleaning up the Atol) as soon as possible. The Senate receded without prejudice TITLE. V-- FAMILY HOUSING The Department of Defense presented an authorization request for appropriations for military family housing and a homeow'r ere !assistance program for totalling $1,347,283,- 000. This was for 10,462 units of new con- struction, improvements to existing housing, operations and maintenance, debt paymeets, etc. Also included in the family housing re- quest was an increase in the statutory aver- Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December iage unit cost limitation on the construction Senator Roth which would prohibit the use of military family housing from $27,500 to of any money authorized to be appropriated $30,000 average cost for the United States by this or any other act for the purpose of and from $37,000 average unit cost outside installing air conditioning equipment in any the United States and Alaska and Hawaii to new or existing military family housing unit 1$40,000. The Department's new construction in the state of Hawaii. request reflected cost increases due primarily The House receded. to continued cost escalation. TITLE VI?GENERAL PROVISIONS The House authorized 5,552 units which is Section 603 grants authority to the sec- 4,910 below the Department request and the retary concerned to increase line item au- Senate authorized construction of 7,120 units thorization by 5% inside the United States, a redwtion of 3,342 below the Department's other than Alaska and Hawaii, and by 10% request. The House approved increases in in the latter states when he deems it fleece- average unit cost limitation from $27,500 to sary to meet unusual cost variations. The $30,000 for the United States (except Alaska Department request for FY 1975 asked for and Hawaii); and from $37,000 to $40,000 an additional 10% to be added for the pur- average cost in other areas. The Senate ap- pose of (1) including design and construe- proved aterage unit cost increases from tion modifications estimated to yield sig- $27 500 to 529.500 for the United States (ex- niflcant reductions in energy consumption, Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 10, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?HOUSE H 11577 use of the property. This amendment would avoid the capricious cancellation or modifi- cation of licenses or permits of public lands tq, the military when large amounts of public monies had already been expended or were programed in support of essential military activities on such lands unless the Armed Services Comrizittees of the Senate and House of Representatives were notified 30 days prior to such action. The Senate bill contained no such provision. The Senate recedes. Section 610 of the Senate bill (Section 611 of Conference bill) was added by the Senate. It is designed to amend existing law to per- mit the adjustment of and the use of the surcharges an commissary sales for the con- struction, acquisition and improvements to commissary stores, which are now paid for out of appropriated funds. The surcharge is currently 3% for the Army and Air Force within the U.S. and 3% to 5% for the Navy and Marines worldwide. Commissary prices were alleged to be on an average 20% to 25% (this is believed to be low?the Army testified to 30%) below the private sector, and commissary patrons do not pay local sales taxes, which makes the overall savings quite substantial. In the Army alone an increase of .5 of 1% in the surcharge would provide one new commissary per year. After a thorough discussion of this pro- vision, the House receded. In section 608 of the House passed bill (Section 612 of Conference bill), authority was added for the use of proceeds from the sale of recycleable materials at military installations. First, the cost of collection, handling and sale, including purchases of equipment necessary for the recycling, could be financed from these proceeds, and then the remaining funds, up to a maximum of 650,000 per year at any one installation, could be used for environmental improvements and energy conservation projects. The balance, if any after such expenditures, would be re- turned to the U.S. Treasury as miscellaneous receipts. There was no such provision in the Senate bill. After a thorough explanation by the sponsors from the House Committee the Senate receded. Section 612 of the Senate bill (Section 613 of the Conference bill), the compromise language regarding the support facilities on Diego Garcia, is discussed under the Navy Section of the Joint Statement of Managers. Section 613 of the Senate bill (Section 614 of Conference bill) was added to authorize the Secretary of the Army to convey, without monetary consideration, to the Ozark Public Building Authority, an agency of the City of Ozark, Alabama, all right, title, and in- terest of the United States in and to the - land described in subsection (b) for use as a permanent site for the U.S. Army Aviation Museum. An identical bill has been approved by Subcommittee No. 5 of the House Armed Services Committee, therefore the House re- ceded. Section 609 of the House bill (Section 615 of Conference bill) was a provision added to provide for the conveyance by the Secretary of the Navy to the Boy Scouts of America of approximately 12.46 acres of the Navy Education and Training Program Develop- ment Center at Ellyson, Florida. This con- veyance would be at fair market value and would require the Boy Scouts of America to pay for the necessary surveys and pay for the necessary legal documents. The Navy posed no objection to this transfer and House Conferees pointed out that the property would substantially benefit the training and camping programs in the Gulf Coast Council. The Senate receded. Section 612 of the House bill (Section 616 of Conference bill) would authorize the con- cept Alaska and Hawaii); and from $37,000 to $40,000 average cost in other areas. Both the House and the Senate approved $5 mil- lion for homeowners assistance. Of special significance was the Depart- ment's request this year for 3,000 units of housing for jyrzior enlisted personnel not heretofore considered eligible for housing. The House denied all 3,000 units but the Senate approved 1,458. In Conference the Conferees agreed to au- thorize 6,800 family housing units at an average cost of $30,000 per unit as originally requested by the Department for inside the United States (other than Alaska and Ha- waii) and at $40,000 for Alaska, Hawaii and overseas locations. Further, after a thorough discussion the Conferees agreed that it was not necessary for the government to invest in constructing housing units for personnel who may have enlisted for a minimum period of time on a trial basis or for those personnel who may not have seriously considered a career in the military service. The Conferees agreed to a new total for the family housing program in the amount of $1,244,603,000. The amount approved in- cludes $5 million for homeowners assistance 'arid is $3,819,000 below the Senate figure and $58,722,000 above the House figure. The Defense Department proposed an in- crease in the unit cost of leased housing for the United States (other than Alaska and Hawaii), Puerto Rico and Guam in increase from an average of $210 per month to $235 per month and from $290 per month to $310 per month maximum for any one unit. Fur- ther, they requested an increase for Hawaii from $255 per month to $335 per month aver- and (2) to meet unusual variations in cost arising out of the current energy crisis. This provision was denied by the House in its entirety. The Senate approved the 10% variation only as it relates to meeting un- usual cost variations -directly related to the energy crisis. After a thorough discussion the House receded: In Section 607 the Defense Department re- quested that the floor figure of $150,000 be raised to $300,000 for architect/engineer projects wherein contracts in excess of that amount must be reported to the Congres- sional committees with a waiting period of 30 days prior to execution of the contract. The House approved a revision upward to $225,000. The Senate approved the requested $300,000 figure. The Senate receded. Section 610 of the House bill (Section 608 of Conference bill) compares to Section 608 of the Senate bill and authorizes the Sec- retary of Defense to take certain actions to lessen any adverse community impact resulting from the TRIDENT installation at Bangor, Washington. The Senate version is identical to that previously approved by the Congress for the SAFEGUARD sites in Montana and North Dakota. The Senate Conferees pointed out that their version was preferable to the House version because the Senate version required specific authorization in each an- nual Military Construction Authorization Act and it required a semi-annual report to the Armed Services Committees as to the use of the funds. After a thorough discussion the House age and from $300 per month to $430 per receded. month maximum for any one unit. The Section 609 of the Senate bill (Section 609 House approved the requested Increase a in of Conference bill), amends recently passed the statutory average costs and maximum P.L. 93-346, which provides for a temporary cost limitation for domestic leases except official residence for the Vice President. The that in the case of Alaska and Hawaii the bill as it passed the Congress contained sev- average cost would be increased to only $295 eral deficiencies and the purpose of this and the maximum to $365. The Senate ap- provision is to clarify the original legisla- proved the requested increases for the-United tion. In effect it is a rewrite,of P.L. 93-346. States (other than Alaska and Hawaii) but This provision was not in the House bill. limited Alaska and Hawaii to an average cost Particular attention was called to section of $315 per month and the maximum of 5 of this provision which precludes the ex- $375. penditure of funds for the maintenance, care, In Conference the House argued that the repair, furnishing or security of any residence increases requested for Alaska and Hawaii for the Vice President other than the tern- were too extreme and that a lesser increase porary official residence provided for in Pub- would satisfy the needs of the Department lie Law 93-346. It is not the intent of the of Defense. - Congress to preclude the provision for tern- After a thorough discussion the Senate porary security measures necessary for the receded. protection of the Vice President and his Section 507(b) places limitations on over- family for short periods of time at residences seas leasing and had heretofore exempted other than the temporary official residence 300 units of representational quarters from of the Vice President, such as through the the $625 maximum limitation. The House use of security Trip packages. went along with this exemption as requested, The House receded. but the Senate reduced the number of units..Section 611 of the House bill (Section 611 exempted by 150. Senate Conferees argued of Conference bill) amends Section 2662 of that they had evidence of many abuses in this Title 10 USC to prohibit the termination of program with exorbitant rents being paid an existing license or permit held by a mill- unnecessarily. Senate Conferees were very tarp department for real property owned by persuasive and the House receded. the U.S. Government if the military depart- Section 509 is a new Section added on the ment has made or proposed to make sub- Senate Floor by an amendment proposed by stantial investments in connection with its Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 11 11578 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --HOUSE December Vi. 1974 veyance by the Secretary at the Army to the State of Louisiana of approximately 1,710 acres of U.S. land in Saint Tammany Parish now known as Camp Villere. This property has for many years been under license to. the State for Louisiana National Guard use and will continue to be used for these pur- poses under the proposed conveyance. This conveyance would facilitate planned im- provements to this property for National Guard purposes by the State and would re- serve to the United States the right to reoc- cupy and use the property in time of was or emergency. This provision Is similar to a number of other like conveyances hi past years where the U.S. Government has passed title to such National Guard camps to the States in order to facilitate militarily essen- tial improvements by the States which in a, great number of instances are prohibited by State law unless title to the property is vested in the State. This was added by the House and is not in the Senate bill. The Senate recedes. Section 606 places statutory cost liraita- tions on square foot costs of permanent bar- racks and bachelor enlisted quarters. The Department proposed an inarese to the square foot cost of barracks from $28.50 to $31.00 and officer quarters from $30.50 to $33.00. The House denied the requested increase but the Senate approved the increase which is approximately 8% and is consistent with building cost increases. The House receded. Section 614 of the Senate bill wse added by a floor amendment which inserted the provision that any funds authorized in this and future acts may be Used to provide ap- propriate facilities in the event women are admitted into the various service academies. House Conferees pointed out that the an- nual Military Construction Authorization request is submitted to the Congress by line item. The amendment would have given blanket authorization to use funds specifi- cally authorized and funded for other pur- poses to be applied to construction of other facilities not approved by the Administration nor authorized in a Military Construction Act. After a thorough discussion the Senate receded. Section 611 of the Senate Bill was added by the Senate and would aMend Chapter 37 U.S.C. in regard to the change in status of members of the Uniformed Services who are in a missing in action status. No change could be made unless: (1) the President of the United States had determined and noti- fied the Congress in writing that an rea- sonable actions have been taken into ac- count for such members and that all rea- sonable effort has been made to enforce the provisions of article 8(b) of the Paris Peace Accord of January 27, 1973; and (2) the Sec- retary concerned notified the next-of-kin of such person in writing of the proposed change in status, and the next-of-kin of such person has not filed with the Secretary con- cerned, within sixty days after receipt of notification of the proposed change in status, Ian objection to such proposed change. This section was discussed at length and in view of the fact that the Rouse Commit- tee has announced hearings on this matter in a separate bill previously introduced, the Senate reluctantly receded. TITLE VH?RESERVE FORCES FACILIT/ES The House bill contained a total of $152,267,000 to support the facilities pm- grams of the Guard and Reserve Components of the military departments. The Naval and Marine Corps total of $19,867,000 reflects an added $1,335.000 which the House Committee approved to facilitate the Naval Reserve ex- pansion of an: existing excessi Air Force fa- cility concurrent with a similar action by the Army Reserve. The Senate version of the bill contained no such addition. After explaining the need for this facillt and the necessity of concurrent construction the Senate receded. The Senate version of Title VII contained an added $7 million to the amount requested for the Air National Guard. The House ver- sion contained no such addition. Senate Con- ferees argued that aircraft conversions within the Air Guard since the bill was sub- mitted, to the Congress generated additional construction requirements which e.stually total around $11 million. These conversions particularly relate to the F-106, A7, 334 and 0-1305 aircraft. After a thorough discussion of new re- quirements because of aircraft conversions, the Conferees agreed to add $5.5 mil: ion to the requested $26 mf lion giving the Air Guard a total of $31.5 million. The House receded with an Amendment. F. EDW. HF,BERT, OTIS G. Plats, CHARLES E. BENNETT, SAMUEL STRATTON, WILLIAM G BRAY, CARLETON J. RING, G. WIL-LIAM WHITE/MAST, Managers on the Part of the Hcntse. STUART SYMINGTON, JOHN C. STSNNIS, HENRY M. JACKSON, SAM J. ERVIN, HOWARD W. CANNON, HARRY F. Essen Jr., JOHN G. TOWER, STROM THURMOND, PETER H. DOMINICK, Managers on the Part of tit, Senate. LEAVE OF ABSENCE By unanimous consent, leave or ab- sence was granted as follows to: Mr. HOWARD (at the request of Mr. O'NErrt.), from December 9 until Da- cember 21, on account of illness. Mr. Dwartas (at the request of Mr. O'NEILL), for today, or account of it ness. Mr. PATMAN (at the request of Mr. O'NEILL), from 1:30 p.m. for the remain- der of today, on account of official busi- ness. SPECIAL ORDERS GRANTED By unanimous consent, permission to address the House, following the legis- lative program and any special o:ders heretofore entered, was granted to: Mr. ROGERS to address the House, to-' day, for 60 minutes, and to revise and extend his remarks, and include extra- neous matter. Mr. MictiEL, for 60 .ninutes, on Mon- day, December 16, 1974, Mr. LEGGETT, for 60 minutes. today. (The following Members (at the re- quest of Mr. VEYSEY) to revise and ex'- tend their remarks and include extra- neous material;) Mr. MILLER, for 5 minutes, today. Mr. HOSSLER, for 25 minutes, today. Mr, STEELMAN, for 5 minutes, today. (The following Members (at the re. quest of Mr. MEZVINSF.:Y) to revise and extend their remarks and include extra- neous material:) Mr. DE LUGO, for 5 minutes, today. Mr. GONZALEZ, for 5 minutes, today. Mr. STARK, for 5 minutes, today. Mr. BINGHAM, for 30 minutes, on De- cember 17, 1974. EXTENSION OF REMARKS By unanimous consent, permission to -revise and extend remarks was granted to: Mr. STUBBLEFIELD, and to include extraneout matter notwithstanding the fact that it exceeds two pages of the REcoaa-and is estimated by the Public Printer to cost $695. Mr. STARK and to include extraneous matter notwithstanding the fact that it exceeds two Pages of the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD and is estimated by the Public Printer to cost $695. Mr. LEGGETT and to include extraneous matter notwithstanding the fact that it exceeds two pages of the REcotte and is estimated by the Public Printer to cost $1,737.50. Mr. STRATTON to include at the end of his remarks in connection with Hebert amendment on Surface Transportation Act, two letters: (a) from Deputy Secretary of Defense William Clements to OMB. (b) from Deputy Comptroller General of the United States to Mr. &AGGERS. (The following Members (at the re- quest of Mr. VEYSEY) and to include extraneous matter:). Mr. FISH. Mr. MCCLOSKEY in three instances. Mr. GUYER. Mr. RHODES. Mr. Escrt. Mr. ARENDS. Mr. SNYDER. Mr. KETCHUM. Mr. MICHEL in four instance. Mr. CRANE in two instances. Mr. Wnvia. Mr. now. Mr. SHUSTER. Mr. HURGENER. Mr. PARRIS in two instances. Mr. QUIE. Mr. CRONIN. (The following Members (at the re- quest of Mr. MEEVINSKY) and to include extraneous matter:) Mr. RANGEL. Mr. PATTEN. Mr. ANDERSON a California in three instances. Mr. RARICK in three instances. Mr. GONZALEZ in three instances. Mr. Asent. Mr. Vsavnt in three instances. Mr. STARK in two instances. Mr. Wor-Er in eight instances. Mr. TEAGUE. Mrs. Cutsnorar. Mr. HAMILTON in two Instances, Mr. FRASER. Mr. LONG of Maryland. Mr. LITTON. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. DEantorm. Mr. FIARR1NGTON in two instances Mr. MADDEN. Mr. STUBBLEFIELD. SENATE BILLS AND JOLLT- RESOLUTION REFERRED A bill and a ojint resolution of the Sen- ate of the following titles were taken froth the Speaker's table and, under the rule, referred as follows: Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 r ,S 20740 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA7RDP75B00380R0007000500031l' (41.\-f4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE December 5, 1974 not e)peCting any agreement at this time that would cause any appreciable reduction in expenditures. There is, though, a sound hope that the agreement, if carried out as an- nounced, will result in preventing an in- crease. We have to do that first, and then take the next step, if possible. Because this agreement is an arms limitation rather than an arms reduc- tion, we can expect no actual reduction in defense expenditures now because of this agreement. It might work out a little better than that, but this is not a disarmament. I would not favor a dis- armament in world affairs as conditions are now. It would be a dangerous thing. We could not afford to take such a chance. This has been, all the time, an arms reduction effort, and an arms limitation effort. This agreement is not a reduction, necessarily, but a limitation, to define some limits. That is what this agreement has done. I am a fact man. I like to know the facts. We could develop some surprise facts. I would like to count those for others. I have learned most of what I know here in the Senate, and I have learned from other Senators. But man is born with some common sense, and has teachings from his parents or someone in their place, before he ever goes to the Senate. I think that common sense and logic, and the down-to-earth qualities about this agreement, are what sell it. You do not have to be a scientist or a technician to measure this one. This is the approach that, I have been looking for that we could take because it has something to stand on. The American people should also re- member that our present arsenal of nu- clear weapons and delivery systems, ca- pable of placing nuclear weapons on tar- get, are the most advanced in the world, and are now capable of destroying any given number of targets that we may choose. We do not want to choose to destroy any, but if driven to it we have the capability. This capability is not confined either to any one particular kind of weapon or delivery system, but is based on a wise mixture of what we call the TRIAD of land-based and sea-based missiles and heavy bombers. Under the present plans, we, of course, expect to keep it that way?the TRIAD of land-based and sea-based missiles, as well as the heavy bombers. For well over two decades the United States strategic policy has been one of nuclear deterrence, which means the ca- pability to mount an effective nuclear counterattack against Russia or any country in the event the United States should be attacked first. This agreement will not affect this capability. Also, we shall be free to continue to develop our research and technology in this field of weapons. This agreement, as now outlined, has been discussed with the Chairman of our Joint Chiefs of Staff. He assures me that he and the Chiefs of Staff of all the serv- ices approve the agreement as outlined. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I am happy to yield. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that my request not interrupt the continuity of the Sen- ator's statement. I ask unanimous consent that during the rest of the day Senators may speak out of order for not to exceed 30 minutes, and the limitation on time not apply to the distinguished Senator from Missis- sippi (Mr. STENNIS) who has already begun his remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the leader very much, advising me, too, in such a smooth way that maybe I am out of order. I did not mean to be. I received permission from such of the leadership as could be here at that time, and also the Presiding Officer. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair, by virtue of the order, has officially recognized that the Senator is not out of order. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Chair. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. It was not my intent to object. Mr. STENNIS. I want to back our assistant floor leader as much as I can in his efforts over the years?bringing some order out of chaos here. He has given long and patient effort, and has greatly improved conditions on the floor. Mr, ROBERT C. BYRD. I am sorry for the interruption. Mr, STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. What is the will of the Senate? Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. CASCADE HEAD SCENIC-RE AREA, OREG. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. Preside I ask the Chair to lay before the .S ate a message from the House of Rep senta- tiVes on H.R. 8352. The PRESIDING OlveaCE (Mr. CLARK) laid before the Sena the amendment of the House of Rep enta- tives to the amendment of the Se te to the bill (H.R. 8352). to establi the Cascade Head Scenic-Research A ea in the State of Oregon, and for othe pur- poses, as follows: Page 3, line 24 of the Senate en ossed amendment, strike out all after "a,cti ties." over to and including "occurrences." o page 4, line 3, and insert: "Timber harvesti g ac- tivity may occur in these subareas onl when the Secretary determines that such h vest- ing is to be conducted in connectio with research activities or that the pr#Rerva- tion of the timber resource is imminently threatened by fire, old age, infestation, or similar natural occurrences." Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, H.R. 8352 is a bill which was passed by the House of Representatives earlier in this session and was passed by the Senate on August 16, 1974, with an amendment in the nature of a substitute. The House has concurred in the amendment of the Sen- ate with an amendment which is tech- nical in nature and does alter the sub- stance of the Senate version. My colleagues are aware of the need for this protection, and Senator PACK- WOOD and Congressman WENDALL WYATT have played key roles in securing passage of this important legislation. The amendment of the House is ac- ceptable to Senator PAcrtwooe and my- self as well as to the other Members of , the Commitee on Interior and Insular Affairs. Therefore, Mr. President, I move that the Senate concur in the amend- ment of the House to H.R. 8352. Mr. PACK WOOD. Mr. President, I simply want to echo the sentiments of the senior Senator from Oregon, to thank him for the work he has done on this matter, and to thank Representative WENDELL WYATT, who is retiring this year, in whose district this area exists. This is one of the last unspoiled estuary areas on the Pacific coast, and under the provisions of this bill, that section will be set aside as a scenic research area. It was principally U.S. Forest Serv- ice land, but this bill will guarantee its protection forever. I thank my colleague for getting this measure through the Committee on In- terior and Insular Affairs, and I am de- lighted to share in the passage of it. The PRESIDING 010.F10ER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the motion of the Senator from Oregon (Mr, HATFIELD). The motion was agreed to. QUORUM CALL Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OttleiCER. The clerk? will call the roll. The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous ? eat that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. DIEGO GARCIA Mr. MANSiviELD. Mr. President, I feel compelled to speak out on the issue of Diego Garcia, the projected naval oper- ating facility in the Indian Ocean. As we move toward the final days of this sec- ond session of the 93d Congress, Senators are receiving a great deal of pressure from both the Department of Defense and the Department of the Navy to ap- prove $14,802,000 as a downpayment on naval facilities that will enable the Navy to operate carrier task forces from the island of Diego Garcia. In addition, the Air Force is requesting Air Force facili- ties on Diego Garcia that will enable KC-135 tankers to refuel B-52's operating out of Thailand over the Indian Ocean. First of all, I would like to briefly give Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December 5, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE Mr. GRIFFIN. Mr. PreSicient, 1 ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered, The Senator from Miss pi is recog- nized. SUPPORT OF THE VLADTVSTOIC AGREEMENT ON El TEGIC WEAPONS Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I not detain the Senate for but a few utes. I do think I ought to say sorneth with reference to the informal agree ment that has been had with Soviet Rus- sia by President Ford regarding nuclear weapons. There is a great deal being said about it, and all the detail acts are not In, and the formalization of this proposed treaty has not been had, but I base my remarks on the assumption that the mat- ter, as announced by President Ford, the agreement, preliminary in nature, will develop formally along the same substan- tial lines that be has outlined. Mr. President, in the coming weeks and months this agreement between President Ford and the Soviet Union will be the subject of extensive discussions, even though a congressional decision will not be required until the compre- hensive agreement is submitted to Con- gress, hopefully in 1975, for ratification. Mr. President, I fully support this pre- liminary agreement as announced, and I hope that President Ford will receive growing public support in this historic effort to limit the strategic arms. Naturally, I would have preferred lower ceilings on the strategic weapons for both countries, and I continue to hope that the vast arsenal at strategic weapons in both the United States and Soviet Russia can be mutually reduced in the future on an equality basis. This agreement, in establishing an overall ceiling on two vital elements in our strategic arsenal, will be a frame- work within which more exterifive arms limitations can be achieved. This announcement, therefore, is a critical step. Mr. President, I felt for a loxig time, until some boundary lines could be es- tablished, or we may call it a ceiling or a top, until those would be established we would not be making substantial headway. Of course, this agreement had to be preceded by a more preliminary one. WHAT DOES THE AGREEMENT CONTROL-TWO ELEMENTS This agreement places a limitation or ceiling on two elements of the strategic systems of the United States and the Soviet Union. The first is the limitation of 2,400 strategic delivery vehicles which Include land-based and sea-based inter- continental ballistic missiles and stra- tegic bombers. Expressed in a more down-to-earth way, they include our land-based ICBSs and our sea-roving missiles like the Poseidon, as carried by the Poseidon submarine, and strategic bombers. The second element is the limitation of 1,320 on strategic missiles which may be armed with multiple independently tar- geted warheads, that is, MIRVed Spelling that out just a little more, it just means that 1,320 of these missiles, from whatver source propelled, may have Independently targeted smaller bombs or weapons on them?targeted toward many places all in the same firing. Sev- eral different cities, say within a reason- able range could be targeted from the same rocket. NEW PRINCIPLE OF EQUALITY IN NUMBER Mr. President, as we well know, the in- terim agreement of SALT proyided for greater Russian numbers of certain Strategic weapons in compensation for tile U.S. qualitative advantage in these sy ms. F?he first time, this agreement establighes identical numerical ceilings for bo sides with respect to strategic delivery vehicles and the number of MIRV th1iles. This equality in numbers is an Ian vement from the interim agreement a. is a sound basis on which to build furth limitations in the future. OTHER rayons* ASPECTS OF AGREEMENT In addition, theagreement has the ad- vantage of being sitgple in covering those systems which arePa the heart of tlse strategic arms race. Inovercomes a num- ber of hurdles that balk complicated ne- gotiations up to now. Included In these hurdles have been arguments over whether recognition should, be given to the side which has the greater techno- logical advantage, possible geographical advantages which affect strategic sys- tems, whether the capability V allies should be taken into accomit and whether. the so-called forward-based nuclear systeMs should be taken nito account. All these issues were set ast4e. This agreement, therefore, represent; great progress from the standpoint oik, negotiations. NO JEOPARDY TO U.S. sEcnares The strategic security of the United States is based on the TRIAD, consisting of our heavy bombers, land-based mis- siles, and nuclear submarines. The TRIAD will remain intact and undimin- ished by this agreement. The United States will not have to reduce its strate- gic force by one single bomber, Or one missile?land-based or sea-eased. Under the agreeinent, the United'. States will have the flexibility to improve the quality and alter the mixture of its strategic fbrces. Moreover, it will permit the com- pletion of every new strategic weapon system the United States now plans to build. This is due to the fact that the 'United States long-range planning does not contemplate more than 2,400 stra- tegic delivery vehicles. Now, this delivery vehicle, as used here, refers to carrying vehicles that can de- liver the weapon on target. The Russians, on the other hand, have already reached the allowable level of 2,400 strategic delivery vehicles and will therefore be compelled to reduce slightly their number in order to come within the terms of the agreement. The issue can be raised as to why this agreement has any value if no signifi- s 2o739 - cant reduction is to result. The great vir- tue is that this is a numerical ceiling, the absence of which could compel both sides to engage in an accelerated arms race and exceed the overall ceiling of 2,400, at enormous national cost to both sides. Someone has said that this will create an arms race. It will not Create an arms race. We are already in an arms race, and we have been in it for a long time without any agreed ceiling, of boundary lines of any kind, and this agreement does take that necessary, highly import- does take that necessary, highly impor- tant step forward. Mr. President, without this agreement the additional cost to the U.S. defense budget could be as much as $4 billion per year. I refer that to the additianal cost. This result is due to the fact that the Russians both could, and probably would, build up their strategic systems in excess of the 2,400 ceiling which would necessitate an additional buildup by the United States to compensate for the added Russian numbers. I would emphasize that President Ford has stated that as a result of this agree- ment no major increases In 'U.S. stra- tegic spending, other than for inflatson, will be necessary in the future. Well, we cannot guarantee a da lar 'figure of anything like that, of castrae, but it is a committal here that nothing except ordinary increases because of in- flation and related matters, or rex Ily purely research, is contemplated. CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS Mr. President, this agreement is a start and of course does not cover all of the elements with which strategic war- fare can be conducted. Recognizing that there are many details and negotiating problems to be resolved, the agreement is nonetheless an important start. I feel that both nations do want an agreement, and this being the case. I am optimistic that one can be reached. ow, we could all be mistaken, of c0rse, in that surmise or in that fact. Ifathese negotiations succeed, it is my hopeaand belief that there will be a good chance- that further negotiations cou:d be undertaken which would lead to a mutual 'reduction in all elements of strategic eanabilitY. Another One of my chief concerns, Mr. President, is?the growing and spreading capability of kgany foreign nations, large and small, for 'developing nuclear wear - oils capability. this growing prolifera- tion poses a most eri ous threat to world civilization. If we can somehow stabilize United States and Soviet strategic weaponry by concluding a comprehensive arms limita- tion agreement, it willkshopefully be a basis for controlling and reducing this capability among other nations. Along with many other citizens I had hoped, too, that the new afteement in Itself would cause a reductionln defense expenditures. I was disappointed that the first agree- ment did not carry this possibility of a reduction in the defense expenditures, but I am not surprised that this one does not. I understand the problem better and have be-en into it deeper. I really was Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 December 5, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE you some background, both historical and legislative, which bear directly upon the Navy's efforts to make the island of Diego Garcia an operating base. Diego Garcia is an atoll located within the Chagos Archipelago in the middle of the Indian Ocean approximately 1,000 miles due south of the tip of India. The heavily vegetated island consists of 6,700 acres with average elevations of 3 to 7 feet. It is horseshoe shaped with a 40-mile perimeter. The enclosed lagoon is 51/2 miles wide by 13 miles long with average depths of 30 to 100 feet. The annual rain- fall is approximately 100 inches. The US. Government became interested in Diego Garcia in the early sixties, particularly when the British Government announced that it was withdrawing its naval forces from Singapore and indications were made public that Her Majesty's Govern- ment intended to greatly reduce its In- dian Ocean naval squadron. At about the same time, the Russian navy began op- erations in the Indian Ocean and making port calls to nations bordering on the Indian Ocean. It must be pointed out that for years the U.S. Navy has been traversing the Indian Ocean with car- riers and other auxiliary combatants when the transfer of aircraft carriers was made to the Pacific Fleet. Beginning in the early sixties, as afore- mentioned, with the announcement that the British were greatly reducing their naval activity in the Indian Ocean, the United States has in a more frequent manner stepped up its operations in the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf, which is a part of the Indian Ocean. At the present time, naval presence is main- tained at Bahrein consisting of a supply ship and two destroyers. The Russians have not matched this naval strength. However, since 1968 the Russians have greatly increased their presence in the Indian Ocean, sometimes having as many as 30 combatant ships, which include a large number of minesweepers. The United States some time in calen- dar year 1966 began negotiating.with the British Government for a lease to estab- lish a communications station and an operational base on Diego Garcia. This base was to be an austere logistic support activity which was mainly a refueling stop for naval units operating in the In- dian Ocean. In 1965, the British formed the British Indian Ocean territory which comprises the Chagos Archipelago which, of course, includes Diego Garcia. The U.S. Navy stated that the selection of these islands was predicated on unques- tioned United Kingdom sovereignty in the absence of a population. A bilateral agreement was signed in December 1966 between the British Government and the United States, which granted base rights for a period of 50 years to the U.S. Gov- ernment to the Indian Ocean territory. The Navy came to Congress in the fiscal year 1970 military construction program with a submission for the first construction increment of a proposed logistic facility on the island of Diego Garcia. The logistic facility was approved by the House and Senate Armed Services Committees and the House Appropria- tions Military Construction Subcommit- tee. When presented to the Senate. there was strong opposition from within the Senate Appropriations Committee to the United States becoming committed to another naval operation base within the Indian Ocean. Senator Richard Russell, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee at that time, was very much opposed to the United States committing the Navy to sustained operations within the Indian Ocean and so stated in com- mittee meetings on a number of occa- sions. The Military Construction Sub- committee also strenuously opposed the appropriation of money to construct the opertaing facility, and the military con- struction fiscal year 1970 conference committee debated this matter through a number of meetings lasting over a 2- week period. Finally, an oral agreement was reached wherein the Navy was to be instructed to come back in fiscal year 1971 for a new appropriation which would support only a communications station, and all of the logistic support facilities were to be de- leted from the fiscal year 1971 program. The rationale at that time for the com- munications station was that, in time, the United States would have to withdraw from the main continent of Africa the large communications facility that the U.S. Government had at Asmara, Ethio- pia. Kagnew Station Communications Center, Asmara, Ethiopia, is now being phased out and the Navy will centralize its African communications facilities at 'Diego Garcia. In support of the fiscal year 1971 ap- propriations for the communications fa- cilities on Diego Garcia, the Navy stated the following: The requirement to close the gap in reli- able communication coverage which exists to- day in the central Indian Ocean/Bay of Ben- gal area was a major consideration in develop- ing the initial concept for a support facility on Diego Garcia. Establishment of a com- munications support capability in this area is an immediate requirement and is a require- ment which exists independent of the modest logistics support facility which was rejected by the Congress. The purely passive role and Image of a communications facility should not raise the same concern of active commit- ment which had apparently been associated with the logistics suppOrt aspects of the orig- inal concept. As previously mentioned, the Navy was instructed to come back in the 1971 mili- tary construction program with a com- munications package only and to all in- tents and purposes the logistic support facility was not to be a part of the pack- age. In fact, it was specifically agreed that there would be no items which could In any way support a carrier task force. In all of the communications and oral conversations that the subcommittee had with the Navy, it was indicated that the Navy would not use Diego Garcia as an operational base. Members of the sub- committee were reassured, when the fis- cal year 1971 construction budget for Diego Garcia was approved, that the Navy did not intend to operate fleet surface units from Diego Garcia. To bring Senators up to date concern- ing the fiscal year 1975 military con- struction authorization bill, H.R. 16136, which is still in conference, I will explain section 612 in the bill. This section pre- S 20741 eluded the obligation of any funds until the President of the United State has advised the Congress in writing that he has evaluated all military and foreign policy implications regarding the need for these facilities and has certified that this construction is essential to the na- tional interest Such certification must be submitted to Congress and approved by both Houses of Congress. This will as- sure the opportunity for full debate on the policy question of Diego Garcia. I might say, parenthetically, that I consider this most prudent and realistic action for Congress to take. I wish to point out further that section 612 of the authorization bill was adopted by a rec- ord vote of 83 to 0 in the Senate. The position of the House Armed Serv- ices Committee is that the administra- tion should be given the authority to build the facilities in Diego Garcia but that, prior to the exercise of that author- ity, the President shall notify Congress of his intention and that Congress shall have 60 days to reject the blanket au- thority it had previously given to him. This procedure has heretofore been used too often by the Executive and ac- quiesced in by Congress. The negative power of Congress?the power to deny a change in the status quo?is turned on Congress itself. The burden of persua- sion shifts away from those who desire action to prove the rightness of their cause. Congress must insist that the jus- tification for a policy must be made prior to the grant of authority. It is exactly that insistence that was included in the military construction authorization. It is my contention, as stated earlier, that the Senate position in the authori- zation bill is realistic and prudent and Diego Garcia, as a policy question, should first of all be thoroughly investi- gated by the Committee on Foreign Re- lations, then the question should be taken to the floor and the two Houses of Congress should be allowed to work their will. On November 17, at a meeting in New Delhi of the 30 nations surrounding the Indian Ocean, a policy statement was is- sued unanimously that America and the Soviet Union should not escalate the arms race in the Indian Ocean and the area should be left in peace; particularly, all 30 nations opposed the United States building a facility on Diego Garcia. The cost of this naval base for both con- struction and equipment will amount to approximately $173 million; thus, as you can see, this $14 million plus $3.3 million is only a downpayment. Within the Department of Defense we do have a difference of opinion as to how important the building of this base is to our national interest. The Navy says that it is imperative for the defense of the United States, particularly in keeping the oil routes open in the Indian Ocean. The CIA has stated that the buildup of the Russians, particularly in Somaliland, is certainly not as extensive as outlined by admirals testifying for this project. Mr. President, is this Southeast Asia and Vietnam all over again? It appears to me that our Government must have learned something about trying to be policemen for the World during our ex- Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 20742 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?-- SENATE December 5, 19711, perience in Vietnam: 55,000 dead and 303,000 wounded men must certainly mean something to _us. I respectfully submit that the United States cannot go on attempting to be a policeman for the world. And most certainly in my opin- ion, the construction of this operating base in the Indian Ocean is only a fur- ther effort by the Department of De- fense to play the role of policeman in the Indian Ocean and to actively involve our military forces in the politics of an area that now wants to be left at peace. Yet in the face of all the nations in the littoral area requesting that we not build up Diego Garcia as a naval base, there are those individuals in high places that contend we should go abead in our own national interest with the building of this naval base. I ask the question?what really are our vital interests in the Indian Ocean besides gunboat diplomacy and "showing the flag"? Our presence in the Indian Ocean had no effect on the oil situation during the Yom Kippur war in October 1973; in fact, our naval vessels were completely cut off from Arab oil and the United States could do nothing about the Arab action. In closing, there are a few points that I wish to make that I think have a direct bearing in my opinion upon whether or not Diego Garcia funding should be approved to build a naval base on Diego Garcia. In allowing this naval base to be built, I think Senators should be aware that they are actualy voting for a three- ocean Navy. It is my contention that this base on Diego Garcia could cost hun- dreds of millions of dollars. We already have an admission from the Navy of a eost of $173 million. Oh yes, the Navy will contend that the base will only cost $35 million but they are not telling the Amer- ican people of the cost for salaries of the Seabees that are building the base, nor are they advising the Congress of the complete costs for the communications equipment and other machinery that will go into the making of this base. I submit that all of the information I have in hand shows that the aircraft carrier is now obsolete with the technics/ advancement of the new cruise missiles and I might say, by way of explanation, that in the Mediterranean Sea, the So- viets always know exactly where our car- riers are. I state that for just this one time can- not the U.S. Government wait and really find out what the intentions of the So- viet Union are in regard to the. Indian Ocean. All the reports I have indicate that the Soviet Union's naval activity is of a low order. In summary, I would like to say that It appears to me that our Department of Defense is advocating a three-ocean Navy to station sailors 10,500 miles from home and putting obsolete carriers in the In- dian Ocean, which are vulnerable and practically defenseless against new weap- onry. Are we building a naval base, a new Wake Island, that is completely, in time of crisis, indefensible? Mr. President, in closing I am remind- ed of a very impor Ant incident that oc- curred on the floor of the Senate. Some years back when the defense appropria- tion bill was on the floor and the Senate was considering appropriating money for the Navy for naval landing craft? FDL'a--the late great chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committaa Sen- ator Richard Brevaad Russell, said and I quote: If we make it east for the Navy to go places and to do things, we will find our- selves always going places and doing things. I remind the Senate in approving the building of a naval 'base on Diego Garcia that we will be making it easy for the United States to"go ki the Indian Ocean and more than likely that we will do things. Mr. President, I kuggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OreaCER. The clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSriELD. Mr. President. I ask unanimous consent t1-..at the order forthe quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OrivICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. H.R. 17505?ORDER FOR BILL TO BE HELD AT DESK Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that H.R. 17505, to rescind certain budget authority recom- mended in messages of the President, which has been passed in the House, I believe, and is now at the desk, be held at the desk pending further disposition. The PRESIDING 0 laraCER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I sug- gest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The 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 objection, it is so ordered. ORDER FOR CONSIDERATION OF THE TRADE REFORM ACT OF 1974 (H.R. 10710) Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, It will be necessary, during the remain- ing days of this session, for the Senate to operate on a multiple-track system. The unfinished business until dis- posed of will be H.R. 10710, the trade re- form bill. Having discussed this request with the distinguished majority leader, the dis- tinguished minority leader, and the dis- tinguished assistant minority leader, and also with the distinguished Senator from. Alabama, who is in the Chamber, I ask unanimous consent that on each day un- til the trade bill is disposed of, with the exception of Monday, for which an or- der has already been entered, that the trade bill become the order of business at no later than 1 o'clock p.m. unless, in the discretion of the assistant majority leader, after consultation with the mi- nority leader or his designee, the assist- ant majority leader then acts tl take the trade bill up earlier. - The PRESIDING OrwiCER Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. This will al- low the Senate to transact other busi- ness up until 1 o'clock every day. The call for regular order cannot displace pending business prier to 1 o'clock. At 1 o'clock the trade bill would automati- cally come up. Under the rules, it would be called up at any time after the morning Your by a call for the regular order. This would allow the assistant majority leader who, in the absence of the majority leader, will be working in an attempt to move the legislative process- along, after con- sultation with the leadership on the other side, to set aside pending ausiness before the hour of 1 o'clock, if necessary, on any day, and proceed immediately to the trade bill. Do I have a correct understar ding of what I have requested? The PRESIDING OFFICER. That it the understanding of the Chair. ORDER FOR CONSIDERATION OF ATOMIC ENERGY AUTHORIZA- TION BILL (S. 4033) Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Now, Mr. President, I am going- to propcund a unanimous-consent request which I have not cleared with anyone. There is an agreement on the Atomic Energy authorization bffl I do not know what our situation will be on Monday next after the debate on Mr. Rockefeller's nomination has played out. There is no question but that under the rules, once Senators have stopped dis- cussing .the Rockefeller-nominatim, if they do so prior to the expiratior of 5 hours of debate on Monday, the trade bill would automatically be brought up by a call for the regular order. Or at least it could be brought up. Am I correct? The PRESIDING ?FACER. After we go into the legislative session, that is cor- rect. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. That is the reason why I said a call for the regular order. A call for the regular order in ex- ecutive session would not bring ug the trade bill. The PRESIDING-OreaCER. That is correct. Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. I ask unani- mous consent, Mr. President, that after the debate on the Rockefeller nomina- tion on Monday next, if sueli debate does not consume 5 hours on Monday, it may be in order for the assistant leada- to return to legislative session, and that it be in order at that time to call up either the Atomic Energy authorization bill or the trade bill, and that if the Atomic En- Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 1,14, 161 3 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 ? Serifeirber 12, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?SENATE year, the commercial apple crop is up 4 percent and the peach crop is down 31 per- cent from last year. The forecast also says crop conditions could have been even worse if there had not been a surplus of moisture in most of the state at the end of June, when the drought began. LOCKING UP A CROP REPORT (By Jack Egan) When the United States Department of Agriculture releases one of its crop reports, the reverberations can quickly be felt around the world. This was true in the wake of last Monday's forecast that put the corn harvest below 5 billion bushels?far less than even pessimis- tic analysts had predicted?and which also significantly reduced expected harvests for other feed grains, wheat and soybeans. In a_ year when U.S. grain stocks are at the lowest point in more than a quarter of a century, the message from the drought- reduced crop report was clear: higher food prices and more inflation both here rind abroad. Because Agriculture Department officials from Secretary Earl Butz down as well as other administration economists had earlier held out hopes for bumper crops large enough to tame the rate of inflation, the disappointment was all the more acute. The next day, the reaction was dramatic, Corn hit a record $4 a bushel on some cash markets. Commodity prices shot up in a phalanx on world futures exchanges. Though led by corn, the activity was not limited to domestic agricultural commodities but spread to metals, sugar, cocoa and coffee. In Europe, grain prices had record daily advances. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks dropped another 10.88 points after a 10.01-point decline on Monday. Stock market analysts said a major factor was the crop report and what it said about future infla- tion. In the highest circles of this government, there was consideration of export controls on agricultural commodities, no matter how un- palatable the prospect. Large export sales of corn were rumored in Chicago grain markets. And livestock: feeders, poultry raisers and dairy farmers?already squeezed by soaring feed costs?predicted widespread liquidation in the short term with smaller supplies and much higher prices to follow if corn, the major feed ingredient, stayed at $4 a bushel. The effect of the crop report was immedi ate and obvious. Because of the high stakes and poten impact of the news?good or bad?con in one of the crop reports, the Agric re Department has established careful e- dures to protect the integrity of the reporting process and the inform Con- tained in the final document. Though the information ga ring had begun laboriously some wee advance, the final assembly by the Reporting Board took place in the bo of the main Agriculture Department b ing in Wash- ington in a final 12-ho purt called the lock-up. A uniformed guard s ds outside. No one who enters after the . start of the lock- up may leave until i ds at 3 p.m. All tele- phones have been nnected. The reason for strict security is two- /old. First the Ulf ation contained in the report can be ed for personal speculative gain if reIease3prematurely. There is a popular tale?though most say it is apocryphal?of a breach in look-up se- curity that involved use of venetian blinds. A predetermined signal was given, the story goes, by a lock-up participant who closed the blinds at a window and tipped a wait- ing accomplice outside on whether a crucial crop estimate was high or low. The accom- plice then invested in the market. No one seems to be able to verify whether the incident actually occurred. But there are no windows in the basement lock-up quarters today to either peer into or signal from. When the crop report is complete and the lock-up period is ended, the head of the re- porting board goes into an adjacent room where waiting wire service reporters have already dialed their telephones. The reporters move away from their phones and stand behind a white line in a procedure as old as the Crop Reporting Board, which was established in 1905. The head of the board places a copy of the report, face down, next to each reporter's phone. At precisely 3 p.m., the signal is given and the newsmen rush across the line and start reading the report summary to their head- quarters. This is quickly translated into story and appears on wire service ticke around the world within minutes. The reason for the haste is more c petitive than because of the imm'to value of the information, although rest is intense. The commodity markets, ever, have all closed once the report is t and speculators and hedgers have ov ght to absorb the information before ding re- sumes the next morning. Another reason for the Ins ion of the Crop Reporting Board is to tact it from undue political pressures ing prepara- tion of the report. The temptation is per too irresistable to nudge a number one y or another and thus convince people t things are bet- ter than they really To eliminate this possibility, the rep ng board is out of touch with the culture Department's brass until the dee ent has been assembled. Approximately a half hour before the lock-up ends, Agriculture Secretary or one of the as ant secretaries enters, re- ceives a brie I on the report and certifies it with his Si'ure. He also leaves only at 3 p.m. The re t released on Monday was for crop co tions as of Aug. 1. It contained the fir lard production forecasts for corn, sorg , and other feed grains, soybeans, and ton that were based on actual grow- in nditions in the fields. 'her estimates had been educated sacs?some critically say wishful think- g?that were based on surveys of how many acres farmers intended to plant of a certain crop, multiplied by historic yields. The 6.7-billion-bushel corn crop projected by the USDA in March before planting had even begun was precisely this kind of guess. An expected harvest of 69 million acres was multiplied by a 97-bushel-per-acre yield and the result was 6.7 billion bushels. The tool was mainly arithmetic. Subsequently, the USDA revised the num- ber downward as the situation unfolded pre- cariously. First, spring mine delayed plant- ing of many acres. When the season finally began, the nation's grain belt was subjected to the worst drought in at least 20 years. But although the number was dropped first to 6.4 billion and then to a range of 5.95 billion to 6.25 billion bushels, the USDA was still estimating rather than forecasting on any hard evidence. When the hard evidence came in, as reveal in the August crop report, the news of th drought's effect was brutal. Average yield fo corn was 77.8 bushels per acre, down fro last year's 91.4 bushels and nowhere nea 97 bushels. Four million acres of corn had been los entirely in the July weather. Walter Goeppinger, chairman of the Na- tional Corn Growers Association, estimated S 16577 last week that farmers had t $320 million because of the USDA's in al 6.7-billion- bushel harvest projection. Testifying before a San agriculture sub- committee, Goeppinger s farmers sold 800 million bushels early b .ause of the bearish price forecast and co have gained an extra 40 cents a bushel if ey had a more accurate view of the situati Crop Reporti Board chairman Bruce Graham worn- aloud last week that the public viewe 1 estimates from the USDA the same, made no distinction between the early jections put out by the depart- ment a the August crop report forecast based field evidence. The result, he felt, might a strain on the board's credibility. T Crop Reporting Board has two sources of ormation for its forecasts. There are surveys of farmers asking the condition heir crops as compared to a normal year. e average response for these surveys is ap- roximately 35 per cent. In addition, department employees called enumerators are sent out into specific plots of farm land statistically chosen to take various measures of the crops. These specific plots are staked out, for the enumerators must return to them during the growing season and 'refine their assessments of how the crops are doing. This is how the so-called objective yield is determined. For example, for corn, initially, the num- ber of ears on a stalk is counted. Later, the length of the ear over the husk is measured. Then, at a late stage, the enumerator will determine the length of the average kernel TOW. Sample ears are then sent to a laboratory to check their shelling percentage, their average weight and their moistUre content. Al! of these things have a bearing on the ultimate yield. After the harvest, enumerators will return to the plots to find out how much of the crop has been lost on the ground. Pieces of corn ears, kernels and other fragments are counted and measured so that a number can be subtracted from the projected yield to ac- count for this loss. For the August crop report, enumerators actually entered the fields on July 22. The reports were then gathered in each of the state offices, along with the mail surveys. These reports are sent on to the Agricul- ture Department in distinctive envelopes that receive special handling. When they arrive in Washington, they are placed in a special steel box secured by two different locks. One key is kept in the office of the Secretary of Agriculture, and the other is kept by the head of the Crop Reporting Board. The final assembly take place in the lock- up with a six-member board for each crop. Three of the members work for the USDA An Washington, and the other three are from the state offices. Each board member makes an independ- ent estimate of the projected average yield for that particular crop in each state. The chairman of that board then winnows the separate estimates which are said not to vary much from each other?and deter- mines a final figure. This is the objective yield figure which is multiplied against the already determined acreage expected to be harvested for a supply number. 010.110111M14 ORDER FOR THE PRINTING OF H.R. 16136, THE MILITARY CONSTRUC- TION BILL, AS PASSED BY THE SENATE Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that H.R. 16136 ? Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16578 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?SENATE September 14 1.9 ;%:, be printed as amended by the Senate and passed yesterday. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. H.R. 16136 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Mated States of America in Congress assembled. TITLE I SEC. 101. The Secretary of the Army may establish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing, converting, rehabilitating, or installing per- manent or temporary public works, includ- ing land acquisition, site preparation, ap- purtenances, utilities, and enuipment for the following acquisition and Construction: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES UNITED STATES ARMY FORCES COMMAND Fort Bragg, North Carolina, $26,170,000. Fort Campbell, Kentucky, $9,742,000. Fort Carson, Colorado, $34,993,000. Fort Hood, Texas, $46,376,000. Port Sam Houston, Texas, $4,286,000. Fort Lewis, Washington, *10,270,000. Fort Riley, Kansas, $273)74,000. Fort Stewart/Hunter Arany Airfield, Geor- gia, $42,197,000. UNITED STATES ARMY TRAINING AND DOCTRINE COMMAND Fort Belvoir, Virginia, $9,625,000. Fort Benning, Georgia, $36,827.000. Fort Bliss, Texas, $12,296,000. Port Eustis, Virginia, $8,124,000. Fort Gordon, Georgia, $9,868,000. Hunter-Liggett Military Reservation, Cali- fornia, $1,108,000. Fort Jackson, South Carolina, $19,078,000 Fort Knox, Kentucky, $2,264,000. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, $9,911,000. Fort Lee, Virginia, $11,986,000. Fort McClellan, Alabama, $17,344,000. Presidio of Monterey, California, $3,107,000. Fort Ord, California, $3,660,000. Fort Polk, Louisiana, $7,804,000. Fort Rucker, Alabama, $3,906,000. Fort Sill, Oklahoma, $16,265,000. Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, $3,360,000 UNITED STATES ARMY MILITARY DISTRICT OF ? WASHINGTON Fort Myer, Virginia, $2,491,000. -UNITED STATES ARMY MATERIEL COMMAND Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, $1,- 030,000. Aeronautical Maintenance Center, Texas, $541,000. Anniston Army Depot, Alabama, $5,388,000. Army Materiel and Mechanics Research Center, Massachusetts, $558.000. Letterkenny Army Depot, Pennsylvania, $4,726,000. Lexington/Blue Grass Army Depot, Ken- tucky, $616,000. Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey, $2,820,000. Red River Army Depot, Texas, $1,160,000. Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, $10,322,000. Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, $2,731,000. Sacramento Army Depot, California, $2,- 599,000. Seneca Army Depot, New York, $815,000. Sierra Army Depot, California, $717,000. Watervliet Arsenal, New York, $3,256,000. White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, $3,574,000. Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona, $1,859,000. UNITED STATES ARMY COMMUNICATION COMMAND Fort Huachuca, Arizona, $7,507,000. Fort Ritchie, Maryland, $2,023,000. UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, $8,862,000. HEALTH SERVICES COMMAND Port Detrick, Maryland, $486,000. Various Locations, $19,7/8,000. CORPS OP ENGINEERE Cold Regions Laboratories, New Hamp- shire, $2,515,000. UNITED STATES ARMY, ALASKA Fort Greely, Alaska, $251,000. Fort Richardson, Alaska, $4,002,000, Fort Wainwright, Alaska, $1,512,000. UNITED STATES ARMY, HAWAII Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, $15,324,000, Tripler General Hospital, Hawaii, /1,205,- 000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, iiir Pollution Abate- ment, $1,356,000. Various Locations, Witer. Pollution Abate- ment, $16,358,000. DINING FACILITIES MODERNIZATION Various Locations, $10,723,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES UNITED STATES ARMY FORCES, SOUTHERN COMM AND Canal Zone, Various Locations, $557,300. UNITED STATES ARMY, PACIFIC Korea, Various Locations, $5,139,000. PUERTO RICO Fort Buchanan, Puerto Rico, $1,862,000. KWAJALEIN MI SSILE RANGE National Missile Range, $1,272,000. UNITED STATES ARMY SECURITY AGENCY Various Locations, $148,000. UNITED STATES ARM' r COMMIT N ICATI ON COMM AND Fort Buckner, Okinawa, $532,000. nieris.0 STATES ARMY, EUROPE Germany, Various Locations, $32,355 000. Camp Darby, Italy, $4,159,000. Various Locations: For the 'United States share of the cost of multilateral programs for the acquisition or construction of mili- tary facilities and installations, including international military aeadquarters, for the collective defense of the North Atlantic Treaty Area, $84,000,000: Provided, That within thirty days afser the end of each quarter, the Secretary of the Army shall furnish to the Committees on Armed Serv- ices and on Appropriations of the Senate and the House of Representatives a descrip- tion of obligations incurred as the United States share of such multilateral programs. She. 102. The Secretary of the Army may establish or develop Army installations and facilities by proceeding with construction made necessary by changes in Army no lesions and responsibilities which have been occa- sioned by: (1) unforeseen security consid- erations, (2) new weapons developments, (3) new and unforeseen research and develop- ment requirements, or (4) improved produc- tion schedules if the Secretary of Defense determines that deferral of such construc- tion for inclusion in the next Military Con- struction Authorization Act would be in- consistent with interests of national secu- rity, and in connection therewith to acquire, construct, convert, rehabilitate, or install permanent or temporary public works, in- cluding land acquisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities, and equipment; in the total amount of $10,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of the Army, or his designee, shall notify the Committees on Arnled Services of the Senate and House of Representatives, immediately upon reach- ing a final decision to implement, of the cost of construction of any public work undertaken. under this Beaten, including those real estate actions pertaining thereto. This authorization will expire upon enact- ment of the fiscal year 1976 Military Con-. struction Authorization Act except for those public works projects concerning winch the Committees on Armed Services of the Sen- ate and Rouse of Representatives have been notified pursuant to this section oior to that date. Sec. 103. (a) Public Law 93-106, is amended under the heading "OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES?UNITED STATES ARMY_ ZUROPE", in section 101 as follows: iWth respect to "Germany, Various Loca- tions" strike out "$12,517,000" and hisert :n place thereof "$16,360,000". (b) Public Law 93-166 is amended by striking out in clause (1) of seesion 602 "$107,257,000" and "$596,1184,000" and insert- ing in place thereof "$111,100.000" and "$500,027,000", respectively. SEC. 104. (a) Public Law 92- 546, as amended, is amended under the heading "INSIDE THE UNITED STATES", in section 101 as follows: With respect t& "Port Myer, Virginia," strike out "$1,815,000" and insert in place thereof "$3,615,000". With respect to "Fort Sill, Oklahoma," strike out "$11,958.000" and insert in place thereof "$16,159,000". (b) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended under the heading "Oursme THE UNITED STATES-13E11'ED STATES ARMY POE CES, SOUTHERN COMMAND" in section 10: as fol- lows: With respect to "Canal Zone, Various Loca- tions" strike out "$8,129,000" and nisert in place thereof "$9,288,600". (c) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (1) of section 702 "$414,767,006;" "$117,311,000;" and "$562,078,000" and inserting in place thereof "$447,768,000;" "$118,420,000;" and "$566,188,000", restiectively. SEC. 105. (a) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended under the heading "INSIDE THE UNITED STATES", in sec tion 101 as follows: With respect to "Rock Island Arsenal, 11: i- nois," strike out "$2,756,000" and ,insert in place thereof "$3,650,000". (b) Public Lave' 91-511, as amended, is amended by striking out in clams (1) of section 602 "$181,834,000" and "4207,031,- 000" and 'inserting in place thereof "$182.- 734,000" and "$267,931,000", respectively. SEC. 106. Public Law 93-166 is amended in section 105 as follows: Public Law 93-166, section 105(b) , amend- ing Public Law g2-145, section 702, clause (1) as amended, having inserted erroneous figures, is amended by striking out "$404.- 500,000" and "$405,107,000" and inssircing In place thereof "$405,000,000" and '0405.607. 000", respectively: TITLE II SEC. 201. The Secretary of the Navy may establish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing. converting, rehabilitating, or installing per- manent or temporary public works, includ- ing land acquisition, site prepareciion, ap- purtenances, utilities and equipment for the following acquisition and construct un: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES FIRST NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Air Station, Brunswick, Maine, $261,000. Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine, $7,232,000. Naval Security Group Activity, Winter Harbor, Maine, $255,000. Naval Education and Training Center, Newport, Rhode Island, $4,153,000. Naval Underwater Systems Centsr New- port, Rhode Island, $10,274,000. THIRD NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Submarine Base, New London, Con- necticut, $4,971,000. FOURTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Air Test Facility, Lakehussn New Jersey, $7,350,000. Navy Ships Parts Control Center, Mechan- icsburg, Pennsylvania, $2,336,000. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 ;>. lemoved FoztleslmEs2s0an.e9Rt ? F6ekity7gETOMR000700050003-1 Sen*nber 12, S 16579 Naval Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, $296,000. NAVAL DISTRICT, WASHINGTON Naval District Commandant, Washington, District of Columbia, $2,885,000. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, District of 0o1umlaia, $3,377,000. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, $7,706,000. National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, $14,943,000. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda? Maryland, $15,000,000. turnt NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Regional Medical Center, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, $290,000. Naval Air Rework Facility, Cherry Point, North Carolina, $252,000. Fleet Combat Direction Systems Training Center, Atlantic, Dam Neck, Virginia, $2,034,000. Naval Amphibious Base, Little Creek, Vir- ginia, $896,000. Atlantic Command Operations Control Center, Norfolk, Virginia, $633,000. Naval Air Station, Norfolk, Virginia, $3,471,000. Naval Station, Norfolk, Virginia, $5,080,000. Naval Supply Center, Norfolk, Virginia, $4,990,000 Naval Air Station, Oceana, Virginia, $1,047,000. Norfolk Naval Regional Medical Center, Portsmouth, Virginia, $15,801,000. Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Portsmouth, Vir- ginia, $5,602,000. Naval Weapons Station, Yorktown, Vir- ginia, $1,595,000. SIXTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Air .Station, Cecil Field, Florida, $1,- 534,000. Naval Air Station, Jacksonville, Florida, $446,000. Naval Regional Medical Center, Jackson- ville, Florida, $7,417,000. Naval Station, Mayport, Florida, $3,239,000. Naval Training Center, Orlando, Florida, $8,709,000. Naval Coastal Systems Laboratory, Panama City, Florida, $795,000. Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida, $19,- 418,000. Naval Technical Training Center, Pensa- cola, Florida, $1,478,000. Naval Air Station, Whiting Field, Florida, $1,561,000. Naval Air Station, -Meridian, Mississippi, $1,485,000. Naval Hospital, Beaufort, South Carolina, $7,112,000. Charleston Naval Shipyard, Charleston, South Carolina, $200,000. Naval Station, Charleston, South Carolina,. $15,352,000. Naval Supply Center, Charleston, South Carolina, $3,750,000. Naval Weapons Station, Charleston, South Carolina, $2,564,000. Naval Air Station, Memphis, Tennessee, $4,- 284,000. Naval Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, $1,- 888,000. EIGHTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Support Activity, New Orleans, Lou- isiana, $3,080,000. Naval Air Station, Kingsville, Texas, $1,- 428,000. - TTINTII NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, Illi- nois, $1,953,000. ELEM./TR -NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Regional Medical Center, Camp Pen- dleton, California, $7,619,000. Naval Weapons Center, China Lake, Cali- fornia, 371,000. Long Beach Naval Shipyard, Long Beach, California, $6,011,000. Naval Air Station, Miramar, California, $11,772,000. Naval Air Station, North Island, California, $12,943,000. Naval Construction Battalion Center, Port Hueneme, California, $1,048,000. Naval Electronics Laboratory Center, San Diego, California, $3,238,000. Naval Regional Medical Center, San Diego, California, $13,493,000. Naval Training Center, San Diego, Cali- fornia, $8,657,000. Navy Submarine Support Facility, San Diego, California, $4,234,000. Naval Weapons Station, Seal. Beach, Cali- fornia, $2,147,000. TWELFTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Air Rework Facility, Alameda, Cali- fornia, $1,638,000. Naval Hospital, Lemoore, California, $333,- 000. Naval Air Station, Moffett Field, California, $77,000. Naval Communications Station, Stockton, California, $1,102,000. Mare Island Naval Shipyard Vallejo, Cali- fornia, $2,301,000. THIRTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Station, Adak, Alaska, $7,697,000. Trident Support Site, Bangor, Washington, $103,808,000. Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Washington, $393,000. 'Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Wash- ington, $2,603,000. FOURTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Commander in Chief Pacific, Oahu, Hawaii, $2,700,000. Naval Ammunition Depot, Oahu, Hawaii, $795,000. Naval Station, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, $1,505,000. Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, $3,356,000. Naval Communication Station, Honolulu, Wahiawa, Hawaii, $971,000. MARINE CORPS Marine Corps Development and Education Command, Quantico, Virginia, $2,803,000. Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune North Carolina, $f3,864,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, North Carolina, $1,260,000. Marine Corps Air Station, New River, North Carolina, $499,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Yuma, Arizona, $3,203,000. Marine Corps Supply Center, Barstow, Cali- fornia, $1,463,000. Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendleton, Cali- fornia, $7,271,000. Marine Corps Base, Twenty-nine Palms, California, $397,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, $5,497,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $9,849,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $44,251,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES TENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Telecommunications Center, Roose- velt Roads, Puerto Rico, $3,186,009. Naval Station, Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico, $947,000. Naval Security Group Activity, Sabana Seca, Puerto Rico, $1,026,000. FIFTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Support Activity, Canal Zone, $800,000. ATLANTIC OCEAN AREA Naval Air Station, Bermuda, $1,866,000. Naval Station, Keflavik, Iceland, $4,193,000. EUROPEAN AREA Naval Air Facility, Sigonella, Sicily, Italy, $311,000. Naval Security Group Activity, Edzell, Scotland, $571,000. Naval Activities Detachment, Holy Loch, Scotland, $1,188,000. INDIAN OCEAN Naval Communications Facility, Diego Garcia, Chagos Archipelago, $14,802,000. PACIFIC OCEAN AREA Naval Air Station, Agana, Guam, Mariana Islands, $728,000. Naval Communication Station, Finegayan, Guam, Mariana Islands, $1,305,000. Naval Ship Repair Facility, Guam, Mariana Islands, $1,782,000. Navy Public Works Center, Guam, Mariana Islands, $907,000. Naval Hospital, Yokosuka, Japan, $360,000. Naval Air Station, Cubi Point, Republic of the Philippines, $1,624,000. Naval Station, Subic Bay, Republic of the Philippines, $3,741,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $1,059,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $4,038,1100. SEC. 202. The Secretary of the Navy may establish or develop Navy installations and facilities by proceeding with construction made necessary by changes in Navy missions and responsibilities which have been occa- sioned by (1) unforeseen security considera- tions, (2) new weapons developments, (3) new and unforeseen research and develop- ment requirements, or (4) improved produc- tion schedules, if the Secretary of Defense determines that deferral of such construc- tion for inclusion in the next Military Con- struction Authorization Act would be incon- sistent with interests of national security, and in connection therewith to acquire, con- struct, convert, rehabilitate, or install per- manent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site preparation, appurte- nances, utilities, and equipment, in the total amount of $10,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of the Navy, or his designee, shall notify the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives, immediately upon reaching a decision to Implement, of the cost of Construction of any public work undertaken under this sec- tion, including those real estate actions pertaining thereto. This authorization will expire upon enactment of the fiscal year 1970 Military Construction Authorization Act, except for those public works projects concerning which the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Repre- sentatives have been notified pursuant to this section prior to that date. SEC. 203. (a) Public Law 90-408, as amended, is amended under the heading "Inside the United States", in seCtion 201 as follows: With respect to "Naval Academy, Annapo- lis, Maryland," strike out "$2,000,000" and insert in place thereof "$4,391,000". (b) Public Law 90-408, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of section 802 "$241,668,000",and "$248,533,000" and inserting in place thereof "$244,059,000" and "$250,924,000", respectively. SEC. 204. (a) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended under the heading "INS/DE THE UNITED STATES", in section 201 as follows: With respect to "Naval Air Rework Facility, Jacksonville, Florida," strike out "$3,869,000" and insert in place thereof "$4,531,000". (b) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of section 602 "$247,204,000" and "$274,342,000" and inserting in place thereof "$247,869,000" and "$275,007,000", respectively. SEC. 205, (a) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended under the heading "INSIDE THE UNITED STATES'", in section 201 as follows: Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R(1007000500,03-1 S 16580 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ?SENATE ,Neptember 12,019 ? With respect to "Navy Public Works Cen- ter, Norfolk, Virginia," strike out "$3,319,900" and insert in place thereof "$7,019,000". With respect to "Naval Ammunition Depot, Hawthorne, Nevada," strike out "$6,003,000" and insert in place thereof '110,203,000". Under the heading "OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES" with respect- to "Naval Air Facility, Sigonella, Sicily, Italy," strike out "$8,942,- 000" and insert in place thereof "$12,632,000". (b) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of section 702 "$477,644,000", "$41,217,000", and "$518,881,000" and inserting in place thereof "$485,564,000", "$44,917,000", and "$530,481,- 000", respectively. SEc. 206. (a) Public Law 93-166 is amended under the heading "INSIDE TIIE -UNITED STATES", in section 201 BS fdlOWS: With respect to "Naval Borne, Gulfport, Mississippi," strike out "$0144,000" and In- sert in place thereof "$11,804,000". With respect to "Naval Aix Station, Merid- iansMississippi," strike out "$4,e32,000" and insert in place thereof "$5,466,000". With respect to "Naval Air Station, Ala- meda, California," strike out "$3,827,000" and Inert in place thereof "$7,156,000". With respect to "Marine Corps Supply Cen- ter, Barstow, California," strike out "$3,802,- 000" and insert in place thereof "86,210.000", (b) Public Law 93-166 is amended by strik- ing out in clause (2) of section 602 "$511,- 606,000" and "$570,439,000" and inserting in place thereof "$521,235,000" and "$580,068,- 000", respectively. TITLE III SEC. 301. The Secretary of the Air Force may establish or develop military installa- tions and facilities by acquiring, construct- ing, converting, rehabilitating, or installing permanent or temporary public works, in- cluding land acquisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities, and equipment, for the following acquisition and construction: INSIDE THE Unman STATES AEROSPACE DEFENSE COMMAND Peterson Field, Colorado Springs, Colorado, $6,885,000. Tyndall Air Force Base, Panama City, Flor- ida, $2,775,000. AIR !FORCE COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE Richards-Gebaur Air Force Base, Grand- view, Missouri, $805,000. AIR FORCE LOGISTICS_ COMMAND Hill Air Force Base, Ogden, Utah, $11,894,- 000. Kelly Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $11,588,000. McClellan Air Force Base, Sacramento, Cal- ifornia, $15,873,000. Newark Air Force Station, Newark, Ohio, $1,977.000. Robins Air Force Base, Warner Robins, Georgia, $792,000. Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $9,839,000. Wright-Paatterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio, $16,271,000. AIR FORCE SYSTEIVIS COMMAND Arnold Engineering Development Center, Tullahoma, Tennessee, $0.40,000. Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $3,100,000. Edwards Air Force Base, Muroc, California, $1,617,000. Eglin Air Force Base, Valparaiso, Florida, $13,512,000. Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque New Mexico, $232,000. Patrick Air Force Base, Cocoa, Florida, $642,000. Satellite Tracking Facilities, $832,000, AIR TRAINING COMMAND Columbus Air Force Sage, Columbus, Mis- sissippi, $169,000. Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Mississippi, $7,297,000. Laughlin Air Force Base, Del Rio, Texas, $298,000. Lowry Air Force Base, Denver, Colorado, $7,885,000. Mather Air Force Bas, Sacramento, Cali- fornia, $2,143,000. Randolph Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $790,000. Reese Air Force Base, Lubbock, Texas, $838,000. Sheppard Air Force Base, Wichita Falls, Texas, $8,631,000. Vance Air Force Base, Enid, Oklahoma, $6,798,000. Webb Air Force Base, Big Spring, Texas, $776000. Williams Air Force Base, Chandler, Arizona, $5,849,000. AIR IINIVIMITY Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgo Pry, Ala- bama, $2,500,000. ALASKAN AIR COMAIAND Eielson Air Force Base, Fairbanks, Alaska. $310,000. Various Locations, $1,5,242,000. 1YEADQUARTERE COMMAND Andrews Air Force Hese, Camp S;srings. Maryland, $14,699,000. Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, Dis- trict of Columbia, $3,155,000. MILITARY aniarer COMMAND Dover Air Force Base, Dover, Delaware, $1,- 373,000. McGuire Air Force Base, Wrightstown, New Jersey, $408,000. Scott Air Force Bass, Belleville, Illinois, $341,000. Travis Air Force Base Fairchild, California, $8,800,000. PACIFIC AIR FORCES Hickam Air Force Base, Honolulu, Hawaii, $11,878,000. STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND Barksdale Air Force Else, Shreveport, Loui- siana, $641,000. Blytheville Air Force Base, Blytheville, Ar- kansas, $675,000. Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Tucson, Arizona, $3,009,000. Ellsworth Air Force Base, Rapid City, South Dakota, $2,109,000. Griffis Air Force Base, Rome, New York, $1,774,000. Griasom Air Force Base, Peru, Indiana, $323,000. K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base, Marquette, Michigan, $7,050,000. leincheloe Air Force Base, Kinross, Michi- gan, $835,000. Malmstrom Air For se Base, Great Falls, Montana, $3,740,000. McConnell Air Force Base, Wichita, Kan- sas, $3,038,000. Minot Air Force Base, Minot, North Dakota, $239,000. Offutt Air Force Base, Omaha, Nebraska, $5,695,000. Pease Air Force Base, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, $115,000. Plattsburgh Air Fence Base, Plattsburgh, New York, $882,000. Whiteman Air Force Base, Knob Noster, Missouri, $6,692,000. TACTICAL MB COMMAND Cannon Air Force Base, Clovis, New Mexico, $1,715,000. George Air Force Ease, Victorville, Cali- fornia, $4,794,000. Piollornan Air Force Base, Alamogordo, New Mexico, $1,565.000. Langley Air Peirce Base, Hampton, Vir- ginia, $3,056,000. . Little Rock Air Farce Bat*, Little Rock, Arkansas, $5,141,000. MacDill Air Force Base, Tampa, Florida, $265,000. Myrtle Beaeh Air Force Base, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, 6309,000, Nellis Air Force Base, Las Vegas, 'Neeada, $6,495,000. Pope Air Force Base, Fayetteville, North Carolina, $730,000. Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, Golds- boro, North Carolina, $3,948,000. Various Locatione. $5,194,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $2,056,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $13,700,000. SPECIAL FACILITIES Various Locations, $13,962,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES AEROSPACE DEFENSE COMMAND Various Locatione, $138,000. PACIFIC AIR FORCES Various Locations, $5,985,000. UNITED STATES AIR FORCES IN EU1IOPE Germany, $280,000. United Kingdom, $884,000. Various Locations, $63,081,000. UNITED STATES 5111 FORCE SECURITY ',I?RVB E Various Locatione. $4,135,000. siossurloN ABATEMENT Various Locatione, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $595,000. SPECIAL FACILITIES Various Locations, $1,999,000. SEC. 302. The Secretary of the A ir Force may establish or develop classified military installations and facilities by acquiring, con- structing, converting, rebabilitatins, or in- stalling permanent or temporary public works, Tncindlng Mild acaruisition, s te prep- aration, appurtenances, utilities and, equip- ment, in the total amount of 68,100,300. SEC. 903. The Secretary of the Air Force may establish or develop Air Force installa- tions and facilities by proceeding with con- struction made necessary by cheng _is in Air Force missions and responsibilities which have been occasioned by: (1) unforeseen security considerations, (2) new weepons de- velopments, (3) new and unforeseen research and development requirements, or (4) un- proved production schedules, if the secretary of Defense determines that deferral of such construction for inclusion in the next Mili- tary Construction Authorization Act would incensffitent with interests of national security, and in connection therewith to ac- quire, construct, convert, rehabilitate, or install permanent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site prep- aration, appurtenances, utilities, and equip- ment in the total amount of $I)000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of the Air Force, or his designee, shall notify the Coal- mittees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives, immedia ,,ely upon reaching a final SeCIS1011 to Implement, ox the cost of' construction of any public work undertaken under this section, including those real estate actions pertaining thereto Z 305. SEC. This authorization will expire upon enact- ment of the fiscal year 1976 Military Con- struction Authorization Act, except for those public works projects concerning which the Committees on Armed Services of tae Senate and House of Representatives have been no- tified pursuant to this section prior to that date. SEC. 304. Section 609 Of Public Law 89--1 88, is amended by changing the period at the end thereof to a comma and adding the fol- lowing: "or if no appropriated funds are involved, has first been reported ky the Air Force to the Congress in the na An,ner set forth in section 2662, title 10, Uni State:: Code.". (a) Section. 301 of Public Law 93-166 is emended under the heading "INSIDE THE UNITED STATES" SS follows: Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 September 12, (1) Under the subheading "AEROSPACE DE. FENSE COMMAND" with respect to "Peterson Field, Colorado Springs, Colorado", strike out "37,843,000" and insert in place thereof "$9,733,000'. (2) Under the subheading "AEROSPACE DE- FENSE COMMAND" with respect to "Tyndall Air Force Base, Panama City, Florida", strike out "$1,020,000" and insert in place thereof "$1,284,000". (3) Under the subheading "AIR FORCE COM- MUNICATIONS SERVICE" With respect to "Rich- ards-Gebaur Air Force Base, Grandview, Missouri", strike out "$3,963,000" and insert in place thereof "$6,130,000". (4) Under the subheading "AIR FORCE LOGISTICS COMMAND" with respect to "Robins Air Force Base, Warner Robins, Georgia", strike out "$4,628,000" and insert in place thereof "$7,324,000". (5) Under the subheading "AIR FORCE SYS- TEMS COMMAND" with respect to "Eglin Air Force, Base, Valparaiso, Florida", strike out "$7,039,000" and insert in place thereof "$8,882,000". (6) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Mississippi", strike out "$8,786,- 000" and insert in place thereof "$10,733,000". (7) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas", strike out "$6,509,000" and insert in place thereof "$9,186,000". (8) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Reese Air Force Base, Lubbock, Texas", strike out "4,211,- 000" and insert in place thereof "$6,461,000". (9) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Vance Air Force Base, Enid, Oklahoma", strike out "$371,000" and insert in place thereof "$895,000". (10) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Webb Air Force Base, Big Spring, Texas", strike out "$3,- 154,000" and insert in place thereof "$4,307,- 000". (11) Under the subheading "mn,rrAar AIR- LIFT COMMAND" with respect to "Altus Air Force Base, Altus, Oklahoma", strike out "$1,078,000" and insert in place thereof "$1,- 440,000". (12) Under the subheading "STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND" With respect to "Francis E. War- ren Air Force Base, Cheyenne, Wyoming", strike out "$5,834,000" and insert in place thereof "$8,265,000". (13) Under the subheading "TACTICAL AIR COMMAND" with respect to "Little Rock Air Force Base, Little Rock, Arkansas", strike out "31,165,000" and insert in place thereof "$2,- 200,000". (14) Under the subheading "TACTICAL AIR COMMAND" with respect to "Nellis Air Farce Base, Las Vegas, Nevada", strike out "$2,- 588,000" and insert in place thereof "$3,- 637,000". (b) Public Law 93-166 is further amended by striking out in clause (3) of section 602 "$238,439,000" and "$260,741,000" and in- serting in place thereof "$260,727,000" and "$283,029,000", respectively. Amved For&eilmetigNieitagBp_mogyppoo0700050003-1 TITLE IV SEC. 401. The Secretary of Defense may establish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing, con- verting, rehabilitating, or installing perma- nent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site preparation, appur- tenances, utilities and equipment, for de- fense agencies for the following acquisition and construction: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES DEFENSE MAPPING AGENCY Defense Mapping Agency Aerospace Center (St. Louis AFS), St. Louis, Missouri, $2,573,- 000, Fort Belvoir, Virginia, $670,000. DEFENSE SUPPLY AGENCY Defense Construction Supply Center, Co- lumbus, Ohio, $1,862,000. Defense Depot, Mechanicsburg, Pennsyl- vania, $394,000. Defense Depot, Memphis, Tennessee, $1,- 399,000. Defense Depot, Ogden, Utah, $527,000. Defense Electronics Supply Center, Dayton, Ohio, $572,000. Defense Industrial Plant Equipment Facil- ity, Atchison, Kansas, $646,000. Defense Personnel Support Center, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, $936,000. NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, $2,363,- 000 OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES DEFENSE NUCLEAR AGENCY Johnston Atoll, $1,458,000. Eniwetok Auxiliary Airfield, $4,000,000. SEC. 402. The Secretary of Defense may es- tablish or develop installations and facili- ties which he determines to be vital to the security of the United States, and in con- nection therewith to acquire, construct, con- vert, rehabilitate, or install permanent or temporary public works, including land ac- quisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities, and equipment in the total amount of $15,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of Defense or his designee shall notify the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives immediately upon reaching a final decision to implement, of the cost of construction of any public work undertaken under this section, including real estate actions pertaining thereto. TITLE V?MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING AND HOMEOWNERS ASSISTANCE PRO- GRAM SEC. 501. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to construct, at the locations hereinafter named, family housing units and mobile home facilities in the num- bers hereinafter listed, but no family housing construction shall be commenced at any such locations in the United States until the Secretary shall have consulted with the Sec- retary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, as to the availability of adequate private housing at such loca- tions. If agreement cannot be reached with respect to the availability of adequate private housing at any location, the Secretary of Defense shall immediately notify the Com- mittees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate, in writing, of such difference of opinion, and no contract for construction at such location shall be entered into for a period of thirty days after such notification has been given. This au- thority shall include the authority to ac- quire land, and interests in land, by gift, purchase, exchange of Government-owned land, or otherwise. (a) Family Housing units? ? (1) The Department of the Army, two thousand four hundred and sixty units, $82,- 396,000. Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield, Geor- gia, four hundred units. United States Army Installations, Oahu, Hawaii, one thousand units. Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, sixty units. Fort Riley, Kansas, five hundred units. ? Fort Jackson, South Carolina, one hun- dred units. Fort Eustis, Virginia, one hundred units. United States Army- Installations, Atlantic Side, Canal Zone, one hundred units. United States Army Installations, Pacific (2) The Department of the Navy, three Side, Canal Zone, two hundred units. (2) The Department of the Navy, three thousand one hundred and fifty-eight units, $108,778,960. Naval Complex, San Diego, California, five hundred units. S 16581 Naval Complex, Jacksonville, Florida, two hundred units. - Naval Complex, Oahu, Hawaii, seven hun- dred units. Naval Complex, New Orleans, Louisiana, two hundred units. Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejune, North Carolina, two hundred units. Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point. North Carolina, three hundred units. Naval Complex, Charleston, South Caro- lina, five hundred and twenty-six units. Naval Complex, Bremerton, Washington, three hundred and thirty-two units. Naval Complex, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, two hundred units. (3) The Department of the Air Force, one thousand three hundred units, $40,143,500. United States Air Force Installations, Oahu, Hawaii, two hundred units. Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana, one hundred and fifty units. Pease Air Force Base, New Hampshire, two hundred units. Grand Forks Air Force Base, North Dakota, one hundred units. Altus Air Force Base, Oklahoma, two hun- dred units. Misawa Air Base, Japan, two hundred units. Clark Air Base, Philippines, two hundred and fifty units. (b) Mobile Home Facilities? (1) The Department of the Army, two hundred and forty spaces, $960,000. (2) The Department of the Air Force, two ? hundred spaces, $888,000. (c) Demolition of existing structures on proposed sites for family housing: Naval Complex, Bremerton, Washington $540,00. ? SEC. 502. (a) Authorization for the con- struction of family housing provided in sec- tion 601 of this Act shall be subject, under such regulations as the Secretary of Defense may prescribe, to the following limitations on cost, which shall include shades, screens, ranges, refrigerators, and all other installed equipment and fixtures, the cost of the fam- ily unit, and the proportionate costs of land acquisition, site preparation (excluding dem- olition authorized in section 501(c) ), and in- stallation of utilities. (b) The average unit cost for all units of family housing constructed in the United States (other than Alaska and Hawaii) shall not exceed $29,500 and in no event shall the cost of any unit exceed $46,000. (c) When family housing units are con- structed in areas other than that speci- fied in subsection (b) the average cost of all such units shall not exceed $40,000, and in no event shall the cost of any unit exceed $46,000. SEC. 503. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to accomplish al- terations, additions, expansions, or extensions not otherwise authorized by law, to existing public quarters at a cost not to exceed? (1) for the Department of the Army, $20,- 000,000. (2) for the Department of the Navy, $20,- 000,000. (3) for the Department of the Air Force. $20,000,000. Sze. 504. Notwithstanding the limitations contained in prior Military Construction Au- thorization Acts on cost of construction of family housing, the limitations on such cost contained in section 502 of this Act shall apply to all prior authorizations for construc- tion of family housing not heretofore re- pealed and for which construction contracts have not been executed prior to the date of enactment of this Act. SEC. 505. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to construct or other- wise acquire at the locations hereinafter named, family housing units not subject to the limitations on such cost contained in section 502 of this Act. This authority shall Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16582 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE September 12, 11)74 Include the authority to acquire land, and ipterests in land, by gift, purchase, exchange ef Government-owned land, or otherwise. Total costs shall include shades, screens, ranges, refrigerators, and ether installed equipment and fixtures, the coat of the fam- ily unit, and the costs of land acquisition. site preparation, and instaLlaticin of utilities. (a) Naval Station, Keflavik, Iceland, two hundred units, at a total cost not to exceed $9,600,000. (b) Two family housing units in Warsaw, Poland, at a total cost not to exceed $120,000. This authority shall be funded-by use of ex- cess foreign currency when so provided in Department of Defense Appropriation Acts. Sec. 506. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to accomplish repairs and improvements to existing public quarters In amounts in excess of the $15,000 limitation prescribed in section 610(a) of Public Law 90-110, as amended (81 Stat. 279, 305), asl fellows: Fort McNair, Washington, District of Co- lumbia, five units, $176,500. Fort Sam Houston, Texas, one hundred and forty units, $2,352,800. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, one unit, $24,000. Sec. 507. (a) Section 515 of Public Law 84-161 (69 Stat. 324, 352), as amended, is fur- ther amended by (1) striking olit "1974 and 1975" and inserting in lieu thereof "1975 and 1976", and (2) revising the third sen- tence to read as follows: "Expenditures for the rental of such housing facilities, includ- ing the cost of utilities and maintenance and operation, may not exceed: For the United States (other than Alaska and Ha- waii), Puerto Rico, and Guam an average of $235 per month for each military depart- ment or the amount of $310 per month for any one unit; and for Alaska and Hawaii, an average of $315 per month for each militaxy department, or the amount of $$75 per month for any one unit." (b) Section 507(b) of Public Law 113-166 (87 Stat. 661, 676), is amended by striking out "$325" and "seven thousand five hun- dred" in the lirst sentence, and inserting in lieu thereof "$355", and "twelve thousand", respectively; and in the second sentence by striking out "three hundred units", and in- serting in lieu thereof "one hundred fifty units". Sze. 508. There is authorized to be appro- priated for use by the Secretary of Defense, or his designee, for military family housing and homeowners assistance as authorized by law for the following purposes: (1) for construction and acquisition of family housing, including demolition au- thorized, improvements to public quarters, minor construction, relocation of family housing, rental guarantee payments, con- struction and acquisition of mobile home facilities, and planning, an amount not to exceed $307,907,060. (2) for support of military family housing, Including operating expenses, leasing, main- tenance of real property, payments of prin- cipal and interest on mortgage debts incur- red, payment to the Commodity Credit Cor- poration, and mortgage insurance premiums authorized under section '222 of National Housing Act, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1715m), an amount not to exceed $935,515,000; and (3) for homeowners assistance under sec- tion 1013 of Public Law 89-754 (BO Stat. 1255. 1290), including acquisition of properties, an amount not to exceed $5,000,000. Sac. 509. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be used for the purpose of installing air- conditioning equipment in any new or exist- ing military family housing unit in the State of Hawaii. TITLE VI GENERAL PROVISIONS SEC. 601. The Secretary of each military department may proceed to establish or de-, velop installations and facilities tinder this Act without regard to section 3648 of the Re- vised Statutes, as amended (31 U.S.C. 52ii), and sections 4774 and 9774 to title 10, United States Code. The authorty to place per- manent or temporary improvements on land Includes authority for surveys, administra- tion, overhead, planning, and supervision lia- cinent to construction. That authority may be exercised before title tc the land is ap- proved under section 355 of the Revised Statutes, as amended (40 U.S.C. 255), and even though the land is :aeld temporarily. The authority to acquire real estate or land includes{ authority to make surveys and to acquire land, and interests in land (includ- ing temporary use), by gift, purchase, ex- change of Government-owned land, or otherwise. SEC. 602. There are authorized to be appro- priated such sums as may be *necessary for the purposes Of this Act, but appropriations for public works projects authorized by titles I, II, Ili, IV, and 'SI, shall not exceed? (1) for title I: Inside the United States $514,187,000; outside the United States $130,024,000; or a total of $644,211,000. (2) for title II: Inside the United States, $512,620,000; outside the United States, $44,434,000; or a total of $157,054,000. (3) for title III: Inside tne United States, $302,709,000; outside the United States, $77,097,000; section 302, $8,100,000; or a Meal of $887,906,000. (4) for title IV: A total of $22,400,000. (5) for title V; Military family housing and homeowners assistance. $1,248,422,060, SEC. 603. (a) Except as prsvided in subsec- tions (b) and (e), any of the amounts sped- fled in titles I, II, III, and IV of this Act, may, in the discretion of the Secretary con- cerned be increased by 5 per centum when inside the United States (o ;her than Hawaii and Alaska), and by 10 per centum when outside the United States or in Hawaii a:ad Alaska, If he determines ti at such increase (1) is required for the sole purpose of meet- ing unusual variations in cost, and (2) could not have been reasonably anticipated at the time such estimate was submitted to the Congress. However, the total cost of all con- struction and acquisition ill each such tile may not exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated in that title. (b) When the amount named for any construction or acquisition in title I, II, or IV of this Act involves only one project at any military installation and the Secre- tary of Defense, or his designee, determines that the amount authorized must be in- creased by more than the applicable per- centage prescribed in subsection (a), the Secretary concerned may proceed with such construction Or acquisition if the amount of the increase does not exceed by more than 25 per centum of the amount named for such project by the Congress. (c) Subject to the limitations contained in subsection (a), no individual project au- thorized under title I, II, Ill, or IV of this Act for any specifically le ted military in- stallation may be placed under contract if? (1) the estimated cost of such project is $250,000 or more, and (2) the current working estimate of the Department of Defense, based upon bids se- ceived, for the construction of such project exceeds by more than 25 per centum the amount authorized for such project by the Congress, until after the expiration of thirty days from the date on Which a written report oe the facts relating to the increased cost of such project, including a statement of the reasons for such increase has been submitted to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate. (d) The Secretary of Defense shall submit an annual report to the Congress identifying each individual project which has been placed under contract in the preceding twelve-month period and With respect to which the then current working estimate of the Department of Defense based upon blebs received foe such project exceeded the the amount authorized by the Congres.s for that project by more than 25 per centum. The Secretary shall also include in such re- port each individual project with respect to which the scope was reduced in order to permit contract award within the available authorization for such project. Such report shall include all pertinent cost information for each individual project. including the amount in dollars and percentage by which the current working estimafa based on the contract price for the project exceeded the amount authortned for such project by the Congress. (e) In _addition to- other cost vane:non limitations contained in this section Cr in similar sections of prior year military con- struction authorization Acts, any of the amounts specified in titles I, II, III, and IV of this and prior military construction au- thorization Acta may be varied upward by an additional 10 per centum when the Secre- tary of the military service CI oncerned deter- mines that such Increase is required to meet unusual variations in cost directly attribut- able to difficulties arising out of the cturent energy oriels. However, the total cost of all construction and acquisition in each such title may not exceed the total amount au- thorized to be appropriated in that title SEC. 604. Contracts for construction reside by the United States for performance with- in the United States and its possessions un- der this Act when be executed under the jurisdiction and supervision of the Corps of Engineers, Department of the Army, or the Naval Facilities Engineering Command, De- partment of the Navy, or such other depart- ment or Government agency as the Secre- taries of the military departments recom- mend and the Secretary of Defense apenoves to assure the most efficient, expeditious, and cost-effective accomplishment of the con- struction herein authorized. The Secreteriee of the military departments shall report an- nually to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives a breakdown of the dollar value of construc- tion contracts completed by each of the several construction Agencies selected to- gether with the design, construction stper- vision, and overhead fees charged by each of the several agents in the execution of the assigned construction. Further, such con- tracts (except architect and engineering con- tracts which, unless specifically authorized by the Congress shall continue to be Awarded in accordance with presently established procedures, customs, and practice) shall be awarded, insofar as practicable, on a com- petitive basis to the lowest responsible bid- der, if the national security will not be im- paired and the award is consistent with amp- ter 137 of title 10, United States Code. The Secretaries of the military dinsartments shall report annetilly to the President of the Sen- ate and the Speaker Of the Rouse of Rep- resentatives with respect to all contracts awarded on other than a cempetitive basis M the lowest responsible bidder, Sac. 605. As of October 1, 1975, all au- thorizations for military public works in- cluding family housing, to be accomplished by the Secretary of a military department in connection with the establbliment or de- velopment of installations and facilities, and all authorizations for appropriations there- for, that are contained in title I, II, III IV, and V of the Act of NoVember 29, 1973, Pub- lic Law 93-166 (137 Stat. 661y, and all seech authorizations contained in Acts approved before November 30, 1973, and not superseded or otherwise modified by a later authoriza- tion are repealed except? (1) authorizations for public works and for appropriations therefor that are set forth Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Septe;,ber 12, 414, roved Fo Ult.A99/?/frefit&ild3DRYTIMMR000700050003-1 S 16583 D. D r_Releass in those Acts in the titles that contain the SEC. 606. None of the authority contained beginning after June 30, 1975, for carrying general previsions; ) in titles I, II, III, and IV of this Act shall out the TRIDENT Weapon System may, to of (2) authorizations for public works proj- be deemed to authorize any building con- the extent specifically authorized in an an- ects as to which appropriated funds have struction projects inside the United States nual Military Construction Authorization been obligated for construction contracts, in excess of a unit cost to be determined in Act, be utilized by the Secretary of Defense land acquisition, or payments to the North proportion to the appropriate area construe- in carrying out the provision of this section to Atlantic Treaty Organization, in whole or tion cost index, based on the following unit the extent that funds are unavailable under in part before October 1, 1975, and author- cost limitations where the area construction other Federal programs. izations for appropriations therefor; index is 1.0: (e) The Secretary shall transmit to the (3) notwithstanding the repeal provisions (1) $31 per square foot for permanent Committee on Armed Services of the Senate of section 605 of the Act of November 29, 1973, barracks; and the House of Representatives semiannual Public Law 93-166 (87 Stat. 661, 6131), author- (2) $33 per square foot for bachelor officer reports indicating the total amount expended izations for the following items which shall quarters; in the case of each local community which remain in effect until October 1, 1976: unless the Secretary of Defense, or his de- was provided assistance under the authority (a) Sanitary sewer connection in the signee, determines that because of special of this section during the preceding six- amount of `$2,200,000 at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, circumstances, application to such project of month period, the specific projects for which that is contained in title I, section 101 of the the limitations on unit costs contained in assistance was provided during such period, Act of October 26, 1970 (84 Stat. 1204), as this section is impracticable: Provided, That, and the total amount provided for each such amended and extended in section 705(a) (3) notwithstanding the limitations contained Project during such period. (A) of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat, in rior military construction authorization SEC. 609. (a) Public Law 93-346 (88 Stat. 1153). 340 desi nating th,e premises occupied by (b) Cold storage warehouse construction In the amount of $1,215,000 at Fort Dix, New Jersey, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135), as amended. (c) Enlisted men's barracks complex con- struction in the amount of $12,160,000 at Fort Knox, Kentucky, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135) , as amended. ? (d) Enlisted women's barracks construc- tion in the amount of $245,000 and bachelor officer's quarters construction in the amount of $803,000 at Fort Lee, Virginia, that is con- tained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135), as amended. (e) Chapel center construction in the amount of $1,088,000 at Fort Benjamin Har- rison, Indiana, that is contained in title I, section 101, of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135) , as amended. (f) Enlisted men's barracks construction in the amount of $7,996,000 at Fort Ord, Cali- fornia, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1135) , as amended. (g) Enlisted men's barracks and mess con- struction in the amount of $699,000 at Sierra Army Depot, California, that is contained in title 1, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1136), as amended. t f ilities Solid State Radar in the amount of $7,600,000 at Kwajalein National Missile Range, Kwajalein, that is contained in title I, section 101 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1137), as amended. (i) Land acquisition in the amount of $10,- 000,000 for the Naval Ammuntion Depot, Oahu, Hawaii, that is contained in title II, section 201 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat 1140), as amended. (j) Message Center Addition, Aircraft Fire and Crash Station, Aircraft Maintenance Hangar Shops Bachelor Enlisted Quarters, Mess Hall, Bachelor Officers' Quarters, Ex- change and Recreation Building, and Utilities construction in the amount of $110,000; $199,000; $837,000; $1,745,000; $377,000; $829,- 000; $119,000; and $792,000, respectively, for the Naval Detachment, Souda Bay, Crete, Greece, that is contained in title II, section 201 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1141), as amended. (k) Authorization for exchange of lands in support of the Air Installation Compatible Use Zones at Various Locations in the amount of $12,000,000 that is contained in title III, section 301 of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1145) ,az amended. (4) Notwithstanding the repeal provisions of section 705(b) of the Act of October 25, 1972, Public Law 92-545 (86 Stat. 1135, 1153), as modified by section 605(3) of the Act of November 29, 1973, Public Law 93-166 (87 Stat. 661, 681) ,the authorization to construct six hundred family housing units at Naval Complex, Norfolk, Virginia, contained in title V, section 501(a) (2) of the Act of October 25, 1972 (86 Stat. 1148), shall remain in effect until October 1, 1975. Acts on unit costs, the limitations on such , the Chief of Naval Operations as the official costs contained in this section shall apply to all prior authorizations for such construe- residence of the Vice President, is amended tion not heretofore repealed and for which to read as follows: "That effective July 1, construction contracts have not been award- 1974, the Government-owned house together ed by the date of enactment of this Act, with furnishings, associated grounds (con- SEC. 607. Section 612 of Public Law 89-568 sisting of twelve acres, more or less), and (80 Stat. 756, 757) , is amended by deleting the related facilities which have heretofore been figure "$150,000" wherever it appears and used as the residence of the Chief of Naval inserting in lieu thereof "$300,000". Operations, Department of the Navy, shall, on SEC. 608. (a) The Secretary of Defense is and after such date be available for, and are authorized to assist communities located hereby designated as, the temporary official near the TRIDENT Support Site Bangor, residence of the Vice President of the United Washington, in meeting the costs of provid- States. ing increased municipal services and facili- !!SEC. 2. The temporary official residence of ties to the residents of such communities, if the Vice President shall be adequately staffed the Secretary determines that there is an and provided with such appropriate equip- immediate and substantial increase in the ment, furnishings, dining facilities, services, need for such services and facilities in such and other provisions as may be required, communities as a direct result of work being under the supervision and direction of the carried out in connection with the construe- Vice President, to enable him to perform and tion, installation, testing, and operation of discharge appropriately the duties, functions, the TRIDENT Weapon System and that an and obligations associated with his high unfair and excessive financial burden will office. be incurred by such communities as a re- "SEC. 3. The Secretary of the Navy shall, suit of the increased need for such services subject to the supervision and control of the and facilities. Vice President, provide for the military (b) The Secretary of Defense shall carry staffing and the care and maintenance of the grounds of the temporary official residence of out the provisions of this section through existing Federal programs. The Secretary is the Vice President and, subject to reimburse- authorized to supplement funds made avail- ment therefore out of funds appropriated for able under such Federal programs to the ex- such purposes, provide for the civilian tent necessary to carry out the provisions of staffing, care, maintenance, repair, improve- ment, alteration, and furnishing of such residence. "SEo. 4. There is hereby authorized 'to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary from time to time to carry out the foregoing provisions of this joint resolution. During any interim period until and before any such funds are so appropriated, the Secretary of the Navy shall make provision for staffing and other appropriate services in connection with the temporary official residence of the Vice President from funds available to the Department of the Navy, subject to reim- bursement therefor from funds subsequently this section, and is authorized to prov financial assistance to communities de- scribed in subsection (a) of this section to help such communities pay their share of the costs under such programs. The heads of all departments and agencies concerned shall cooperate fully with the Secretary of Defense in carrying out the provisions of this section on a priority basis. (c) In determining the amount of fi- nancial assistance to be made available un- der this section to any local community for any community service or facility, Sec- retary of Defense shall consult with the appropriated to carry out the purposes of head of the department or agency of the this joint resolution. Federal Government concerned with the .SEC. 5. After the date on which the Vice type of service or facility for which financial President moves into the temporary official assistance is being made available and shall residence provided for in this joint resolution take into consideration (1) the time lag be- no funds may be expended for the main- tween the initial impact of increased popu- ?tenance, care, repair, furnishing, or security lation in any such community and any in- of any residence for the Vice President other crease in the local tax base which will result than the temporary official residence pro- from such increased population, (2) the pos- vided for in this joint resolution unless the sible temporary nature of the increased expenditure of such funds is specifically au- population and the long-range cost impact thorized by law enacted after such date. on the permanent residents of any such .SEC. 6. The Secretary of the Navy is au- community and (3) such other pertinent thorized and directed, with the approval of factors as the Secretary of Defense deems the Vice President, to accept donations of appropriate, money or property for the furnishing of or (d) Any funds appropriated to the De- making improvements in or about the tern- partment of Defense for the fiscal year be- pantry official residence of the Vice President, ginning July 1, 1974, for carrying out the all such donations to become the property of TRIDENT Weapon System shall be utilized the United States and to be accounted for as by the Secretary of Defense in carrying out such. the provisions of this section to the extent "sc. 7. (a) Section 202 of title 3, United that funds are unavailable under other Fed- States Code, is amended by striking out `and eral programs. Funds appropriated to the (5) ' in the first sentence and inserting in lieu Department of Defense for any fiscal year thereof the following: `(5) the temporary Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16584 Approved For RidentagMlikat q6d9E5-13-WA? Hp0700050ggiigmber ir,' 19 74 ofnelal residence of the Vice President and grounds in the District of Colunibia; (6) the Vice President and members of his Imme- diate family; and (7)'. "See. 8. The first sentence of section 3056 of title 18, United States Code, is amended by-- "(1) inserting 'protect the -Members of tne immediate family of the Vico President, un- less such protection is declined;' 1,13113313,- diately after 'Vice President-elect;', and "(2) Inserting 'pay expenses for unfore- seen emergencies of a confidential nature under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury and accounted for solely on his car- te:Innen immediately after 'apprehension of criminals;'. "Sec. 9. It is the sense of Congress that living accommodations, generally equivalent to those available to the highest tanking officer on active duty in each of the other military services, should be provided for the Chief of Naval Operations.". (b) Except as otherwise provided therein, the amendment made by subsection (a) Of this section shall become effective July 12, 1974. Sze. 610. Chapter 159 of title 10, United States Code, Is amended by adding at the end thereof the following new section and a corresponding item in the analysis: "i 2685. Adjustment of or surcharge on sell- ing prices in commissary stores to provide funds for construction and improvement of commissary store facilities "(a) Notwithstanding any other law the Secretary on, a military department, under regulations established by him and approved by the Secretary of Defense- may, for the. purposes of this section, provide for an ad- justment of, or surcharge on, sales prices of goods and services sold in commissary store facilities. - "(b) The Secretary of a military depart- ment, under regulations established by hine, and approved by the Secretary of Defense, may use the proceeds from the adjustments or surcharges authorized by imbsection (e) to acquire, construct, convert, expand, in- stall, or otherwise improve commissary store facilities at defense installaticeas within the United States and for related environmental evaluation and construction costs Including surveys, administration, averhead, planning; and design.". SEC. 611. (a) Notwithstanding the provi- sions of section 555 or 556 of tette 87, United States Code, on and after the date of enact- ment of this section no change in the status of any member of the uniformed services who is in a missing status may be made un- less and until the following two provisions have been compiled with: (1) the President of the United States hag; determined, and notified the Congress in writing, that all reasonable actions have been taken to account for such members and. that all reasonable effort has been made to enforce the provisions of article 8(b) of the Paris Peace Accord of January 27, 1973; and ( ) the Secretary concerned notifies the next-of-kin of such person in writing of the proposed change in status, and the next-of- kin of such person has not filed 'with the Secretary concerned, within sixty days After receipt of notification of the proposed change in status, an objection to each proposed change. (b) As used in subsection (a) of this sec- tion, the terms "uniformed services," "miss- ing status," and "Secretary concerned" shall have the same meaning ascribed to such terms in chapter 10 of title 37, tinned States Code. Sze. 612. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act with respect to any construction project at Diego Garcia may be obligated unless and until-- (1) the President has ( A) advised the Con- gress in writing that at. military and _for- eign policy implications regarding the need for United States facilites at Diego Garda have been evaluated by itira; and (B) certi- fied to the Congress in writing that the con- struction on Any such project inessential to the national interest of the United states; and (2) such certification an required by clause (1) (B) of this section is submitted tc the Congress and approved by joint resolution of both Rouses. SEC, 613. (a) The Secretary of the Array Is authorized to convey, without monetary con- sideration, to the Ozark Public Building Au- thority, an agency of the city of Ozark, Ala- bama, all right, title, and interest of the United States in and to the land descilbed in subsection (b) for use as a permanent site for the museum referred to in subsection (c), and subject to the conditions described therein. (b) The land authorized to' be convey/4i to the Ozark Public Building Authority as pro- vided in subsection (a) is described as fol- lows: All that tract or parcel of land lying and being in sections 13 and 24, range 23 east, township 5 north., Saint Step tens Meridian, Dale County, Alabama, more par- ticularly described as for.ows: Beginning at a point which is 216.0 feet north 89 degrees 57 minutes west of the northeast corner of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of said section 24, on the western right-of-way line of Alabama State lilghway Ntunbereci 249, and on the boundary of a tract of 1 ind owned by the United States of America at Fort Rucker Mili- tary Reservation.; thence north 25 degrees 07 minutes east along the western right-clnway line of said highway, which is along tl- e boundary of said United States tract, 1,395 feet; thence north 64 degrees 53 minutes west 700 feet; thence south 25 degrees 07 minutes west 2,800 feet; thence ninth 64 degrees 53 minutes east 700 feet, more or less, to a point which Is on the western right-of-way line of said high- way and on the boundary of said United States tract; thence north 25 degree.; 07 minutes east along the western right-of-way line of Raid highway, which is along the boundary of said United States tract, 1,405 feet, more or less, to the point of beginning, containing 45.00 acres, more or less. (c) The conveyance provided for by the subsection (a) shall be subject to the condi- tion that the real property so conveyed snail be used as a permanent site for a museum to display suitable public exhibits of the United States Army aviation equ:pment and allied subjects and aviation-oriented exhibits of other United States Government depart- ments, agencies, and instrumentalities, and of foreign origin, and if such property is not used for such purpose, an right, title, and Interest In arid to such real property shall revert to the 'United States, which shall have the right of immediate entry thereon, and to such other conditions as the Secretary of the Army may prescribe to protect the inter- est of the United States. SEC. 614. (a) Notwithstnnding any other provision of law, any funds made available pinsuant to this or any other Act for the construction or maintenance of facilities at the service academy of any military depart- ment may be expended by the Secretary of the military department concerned for the construction and maintenance of such facili- ties as may be necessary r appropriate to provide for the admission of females as cadets or midshipmen (midshipwomen), as appns- priate, at such academy. (b) As used in subsection (a) the teem "service academy Of any military dep:IPt- meat" means (1) the United States Military Academy in the cue of tie Army, (2) the- United States Naval Academy in the case oi the Navy, and (3) the United States Air Force .Acaderay in the case of the Air Force. Sao. 615. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be used for site acquisition or construc- tion of the CONUS Over-The-Horizort racier system receiver antenna during the penod after the date of enactment of this Act and prior to May 31, 1975. SEC. 616. Titles I, II, 1,11? IV, V, anc VI of this Act may be cited as the "Military Con- struction Authorization Act, 1975", TITLE VII RESNEVER FORCES F5CITA=5 SEC. 701. Stet:nett to chapter 183 of titee 0. United StatecCode, the Secretary of Defense may establislinor develop additional fan/Mies for the Reserve Forces, including the ac- quisition of land therefor, but the tont in such facilities shall not enticed? (1) For the Department of the Army. (a) Army national Guard of the lJnit,,d States, $53,800,000. (b) Army Reserve, $28,600,000. (2) For the Deriertment of the Navy: Naval and Marine Corps Reserves, 813.532.- 000. (3) For the Department of the Air Force' (a) Air Nietional _ Guard of the belted States, $33,000.000. (b) Air Inane Reserve, $14,000,000. SEC. 702. The Secretary of Defense niss establish or develop installations and facLli- ties under that titel without regard ts sec- tion 3648 of the Revised Statutes, as amens- ed (31 U.S.C. 529), und sections 4771 and 9774 of title 10, United States Code. The at- t- thority to place permanent or temporary improvements_ on lands includes anti-writ 3' for surveys, administration, overhead, plait- ming, and supervision incident to construc- tion. That authority may be exercised before title to the land is approved under sectior 355 of the Revised Statutes, as amended (i0 U.S.C. 255), and even though the land is held temporarily. The authority to acquire real estate OT land includes authority Ito make surveys and to acquire land, and in in land (including temporary use by gift, purchase, exenange of Government - owned land, cc otherwise. SEC. 703. Chapter_ 133, title 10, tinntd States Code, ea amended, Is further art-tend- ed by striking out the figure $50,000" in paragraph (1) of section 2283a, Limitation, and inserting the figure "$100,000" in Place thereof. SEC. 704. This title may be cited as the "Reserve Forces Facilities Authorization Ac?. 1975". S. 355?OUBSIITUTION OF -CONFEREE Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD. Mr. Presitleri,. I ask unanimous consentt and I Undel - stand this ha been elearld on the other side of the aisle, that the name of MI. STEVENS be substituted for Mr. COOK as a conferee on 8:355. The PRESIDING -01eriCER . Witnth fl objection, it is so ordered. ORDER FOR ROLLCALL VOTES TO ?Mutt AFTER 3:30 P.M. ON MON- DAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1974 Mr. ROBERT C. BYRD, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that there be no rollcall votes before the hour of 3:30 p.m. on Monday next. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 /9* Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 niber 11, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE Productivity: One long range effort has to be to improve productivity to partially offset-wage increases that are needed and inevitable. Productivity is a difficult thing to get at through Government pro- grams, but perhaps better funding and more vigorous effort by the Productivity Council would be a good place to begin. In summary, Mr. President I see a need for several actions. We should work im- mediately to reduce Government spend- ing. At the same time we must take ac- tions to reduce hardship created by cur- rent ecOnomic conditions?unemploy- ment or the housing industry. Finally we must more carefully take other steps to slow inflation without prolonging un- necessarily our present soft economy or plunging it to further depths. CZECHOSLOVAKIAN CONSULAR CONVENTION Mr. Fri Mr. President, I am de- lighted with the series of constructive developments recently in our relations with Czechoslovakia. They should con- tribute to the establishment of the realis- tic kind of detente we are seeking in the relations between the closed societies of the East and the open societies of the West. Presently the Foreign Relations Com- mittee is considering the new Consular Convention with Czechoslovakia as a step that I hope will bring the convention into early effect. In a separate statement, I have praised the recent exoneration by the Czech courts of Mr. John Hvasta, accused of espionage in the cold war period. I cited this encouraging indicator as a bright spot in the lowering clouds of suspicion that still envelop East-West relations. If both our countries implement the new convention with the objectivity and sense of justice exhibited by the Czech action in the Hvasta case, we can look forward to continuing improvement in the relations between the United States and Czechoslakia. Good consular relations foster in- creased business and cultural contacts between the citizens of the countries con- cerned. They provide mutual protection and reasonable freedom of movement for the tourist, the student, the ethnic visi- tor, the businessman. The multiplication of these contacts becomes the warp and woof of the fabric of genuine d?nte. That is why the Consular Convention can prove a real breakthrough in creating improved relations with Czechoslovakia and offsetting the crippling effects that the very nature of a closed society impose upon its external relations. Good results of the successful negotia- tion of the convention are already discernable. ? The growing trade between the United States and Czechoslovakia has received a new impetus, so that the United States is presently the largest Western exporter to Czechoslovakia after West Germany. In July of this year, preliminary agree- ment was reached between our two coun- trk,s on property compensation for American citizens, an issue that had plagued our relations with Czechoslo- vakia since the coup d'etat in 1948. The Implementation of this agreement will be greatly facilitated by the Convention and thus in finally eliminating a thorn in the side of cordial relations. And finally, the Convention is result- ing in the reopening of our consulate in Bratislava and the Czech con- sular office in Chicago. Our building in Bratislava is being readied for occupancy within a few months by the designated Consul General, Mr. John Dennis, an experienced career Foreign Service of- ficer. For me, these developments have an important personal meaning as well. Over 25 years ago, as a young For- eign Service officer, I had the oppor- tunity to open the American consulate at Bratislava just days before the 1948 Communist putsch. Throughout the years since, I have sought to visit Czecho- slovakia as often as possible, and to re- main abreast of conditions there. I hap- pened to be there again immediately prior to and after the Soviet military intervention of 1968 which crushed the liberal dreams of the "Prague Spring." In this regard, I was particularly struck by the fact that while no Soviet soldiers and scarcely any deaths resulted from the initial Communist putsch of 1948, 20 years of first-hand exposure to communism necessitated the use of more than half a million Warsaw Pact troops, and a good many deaths resulted from the effort to maintain communism. Today, I can only say. that I am en- couraged by these announcements of Improved economic and diplomatic re- lations between the 'Governments of the United States and Czechoslovakia. I hope that they are but the prelude to a time of increased contact between Americans and Czechs and Slovaks, a development which is certain to produce much more cordial ties and benefits to the two coun- ties. Prompt Senate action in ratifying the consular convention will be most helpful in realizing this objective. CONCLUSION OF MORNING BUSINESS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, is there further morning business? The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further morning business? If not, morn- ing business is concluded. UNFINISHED BUSINESS (S. 707) TEMPORARILY LAID ASIDE The PRESIDING 010.1010ER. The un- finished business, S. 707, will be tem- porarily laid aside and remain in a tem- porarily laid aside status until the close of business today. AUTHORIZATION OF CONSTRUC- TION AT MILITARY INSTALLA- TIONS The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will now proceed to the consideration of H.R. 16136, which the clerk will state. The second assistant legislative clerk read as follows: Calendar 1084, H.R. 16136, an act to au- thorize certain construction at military in- stallations, and for other purposes. S 16379 The Senate proceeded to consider the bill, H.R. 16136, which had been re- ported from the Committee on Armed Services with an amendment to strike out all after the enacting clause and insert: TITLE I SEC. 101. The Secretary of the Army may establish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing, converting, rehabilitating, or installing per- manent or temporray public works, includ- ing land acquisition, site preparation, appur- tenances, utilities, and equipment for the following acquisition and construction: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES UNITED STATES /MALY FORCES COMMAND Fort Bragg, North Carolina, $26,170,000. Fort Campbell, Kentucky, $9,742,000. Fort Carson, Colorado, $34,993,000. Fort Hood, Texas, $46,376,000. Fort Sam Houston, Texas, $4,286,000. Fort Lewis, Washington, $10,270,000. Fort Riley, Kansas, $27,074,000. Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield, Geor- gia, $42,197,000. UNITED STATES ARMY TRAINING AND DOCTRINE COMMAND Fort Belvoir, Virginia, $9,625,000. Fort Benning, Georgia, $36,827,000. Fort Bliss, Texas, $12,296,000. Fort Eustis, Virginia, $8,124,000. Fort Gordon, Georgia, $9,858,000. Hunter-Liggett Military Reservation, Cal- ifornia, $1,108,000. Fort Jackson, South Carolina, $19,078,000. Fort Knox, Kentucky, $2,264,000. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, $9,911,000. Fort Lee, Virginia, $11,936,000. Fort McClellan, Alabama, $17,344,000. Presidio of Monterey, California, $3,107,000. Fort Ord, California, $3,660,000. Fort Polk, Louisana, $7,304,000. Fort Rucker, Alabama, $3,906,000. Fort Sill, Oklahoma, $16,265,000. Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, $3,360,000. UNITED STATES ARMY MILLTARY DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON Fort Myer, Virginia, $2,497,000. UNITED STATES ARMY MATERIEL COMMAND Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, $1,- 030,000. Aeronautical Maintenance Center, Texas, $541,000. Anniston Army Depot, Alabama, $5,888,000. Army Materiel and Mechanics Research Center, Massachusetts, $558,000. Letterkenny Army Deport, Pennsylvania, $4,726,000. Lexington/Blue Grass Army Depot, Ken- tucky; $616,000. Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey? $2,820,000. Red River Army Depot, Texas, $1,160,000. Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, $10,322,000. Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, $2,731,000. Sacramento Army Depot, California, $2,- 599,000. Seneca Army Depot, New York, $815,000. Sierra Army Depot, California, $717,000. Watervliet Arensal, New York, $3,256,000. White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, $3,574,000. Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona, $1,859,000. UNITED STATES ARMY COMMUNICATION COMMAND Fort Huachuca, Arizona, $7,507,000. Fort Ritchie, Maryland, $2,023,000. UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, $8,862,000. HEALTH SERVICES COMMAND Fort Detrick, Maryland, $486,000. Various Locations, $19,773,000. CORPS OF ENGINEERS Cold Regions Laboratories, New Hamp- shire, $2,515,000. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Appv roed For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700g5903-4 S 16380 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE ep m1 e er 11 , 1, 9 UNITED STATES ARMY, ALASKA With respect to "Germany, Various Loos,- Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, tions" strike out "$12,517,000" and insert Si District of Columbia, $3,377,000. 1 Academy, Annapolis Maryland, 07.- Fort Greely, Alaska, $251,000. Fort Richardson, Alaska, $4,002,000. Fort Wainwright, Alaska, $1,512,000. place thereof "$18,360,000". (b) Public Law 93-166 is amended by arils- 706,000. in out in clause (1) of section 602 "$107,- National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, UNITED STATES ARMY, HAWAII 257,000" and "$596,084,000" Ind inserting in Maryland, $14,943,000. Schofield Barracks, Hawaii $15,324,000. place thereof "$111,100,000" and "$599,927,- Uniformed Services University of the Tripler General Hospital, Hawaii, $1,205,000. 000", respectively.. Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland, $15,- POLLUTION ABATEMENT SEC. 104. (a) Public Law 92-545, as 000,000. Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- amended, is amended under the heading FIFTH NAVAL DISTRICT ment, $1,356,000. "INsmE THE UN/TED STATES", in section 101 as Naval Regional Medical Center, Camp Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate-follows: Lejeune, North Carolina, $290,000. With respect to "Fort Myer Virginia," Naval Air Rework Facility, Cherry Pcint, strike out "$1,815,000" and insert in plaoe North Carolina, $252,000. thereof "$3,615,000". Fleet Combat Direction Systems Training With respect to "Fort Bill, Oklahoma," Center, Atlantic, Dam Neck, Virginia, strike out "$14,958,000" and insert in place $2,034,000. thereof "$16 159 000" Naval Amphibious Base, Little Creek, Vir- COMMAND (b) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is ginia, $896,000. amended Canal Ti 5700 under the heading "OnT NE sros T Atlantic Command Operations Control Zone, Various ons, $5, ment, $16,358,000. DINING FACILITIES MODERNMATION Various Locations, $10,723,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES UNITED STATES ARMY FORCES, SOUTHERN 0. UNITED STATES?UNITED STATES ARMy FORCES, Center, Norfolk, Virginia, $633,000. UNITED STATES ARMY, PMIFIC screrrnEnis COMMAND" in section 101 as fol- Naval Air Station, Norfolk, Virgnia, lows: $3471000. With respect to "Canal Zone, Various Lo- Naval Station, Norfolk, Virginia, $5,080,000. cations" strike out "$8,129,000" and insert Naval Supply Center, Norfolk, Virginia, in place thereof "$9,238,000". $4,990,000. (c) Public Law 92-545, as amended.E is Naval Air Station, Oceana, Virginia, amended by striking out in clause (1) of $1,017,000. section 702 "$444,767,000;" "$117,311,000;" Norfolk Naval Regional Medical Ceater, and "$562,078,000" and inserting in place Portsmouth, Virginia,' $15,801,000. thereof "$447,768,000;" "$118,420,000;" and Norfolk Naval Shipyard, POrtsmouth, Vir- "$566,188,000", respectively, = ginia, $5,602,000. SEC. 105. (a) Public Law 91-511, as Naval Weapons Station, Yorktown, Vir- amended is amended uncle/ the heading "IN- ginia, $1,595,000. SIDE THE UNITED STATES", in section 101 as UNITED STATES ARMY, EUROPE SIXTH NAVAL DISTRICT Germany, Various LOCat1011S, $32,355,000. With follows: respect to "Rock ISand Arsenal, Illi- Naval Air Station, Cecil Field, Ficride., Camp Darby, Italy, $4,159,000. nois," strike out "$2,750,000" and insert in $1,534,000. Various LOCations: For the 'United States place thereof"$3,650,000". $44N6s0v0a01. Air Station, Jacksonville, Florida, share of the cost of multilateral programs for (b) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is the acquisition or constructiOn of military amended by striking out in clause (1) of Eee- Naval Regional Medical Center, Tacitson- facilities and installations, including inter- tion 602 "$181,834,000" and "$267,031,000" ville, Florida, $7,417,000. national military headquarterS, for the col- and inserting in place thereof "$182,734,000., Naval Station, Mayport, Florida, $3 239,- lective defense of the North Atlantic Treaty and "$267,931,000", respecttvely. 000. SEC. 106. Public Law 93-166 is amended in Naval Training Center, Orlando, Florida, $8 709 000 Public Law 93-166, section 105 (b) , amend- Naval Coastal Systems Laboratory, Panama section 105 as follows: mg Public Law 92-145, section 702, cls use City, Florida, $795,000. Nl Ai St P Fl (1) as amended, having inserted erroneous ava r ation, ensacola, ori da, $19,418,000. Ii es is amended by striking out "$404,- Naval Technical Training Center, Pensa- reof " 500,000" and "$405,107,000" and inserting in place the$405,600,00)" and "$405 cola, Florida, $4,478,000. ,607,- Naval -Air Station, Whiting Field, Florida, 000", respectively. $1,561,000. TITLE IL Naval Air Station, Meridian, Miss': sippi, SEC. 241. The Secretary of the Navy may $1,485,000. . establish or develop military installations Naval Hospital, Beaufort, South Carolina, and facilities by acquiring, constructing, eon- $7,112,000. verting, rehabilitating, or installing perrna- Charleston Naval Shipyard, Charleston, nent or temporary publis works, including South Carolina, $200,000. land acquisition, site preparation, appurten- Naval Station, Charleston, South Carolina, ances, utilities and equipment for the fol.- $15,352,000. lowing acquisition and construction: Naval Supply Center, Charleston, South INSIDE THE UNITED STATES Carolina, $3,750,000. Naval Weapons Station, Charleston, South FIRST NAVAL DISTRICT Carolina, $2,504,000. Naval Air Station, Brun >wick, Maine, $261,- Naval Air Station, Memphis, Tennessee, GOO. $4,284,000. Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine, Naval Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, ten $7,232,000. quisition, site preparation, appurances, utilities, and equipment; in the total amount Naval Security Group Activi $1,888,000. bor, Maine, $255,000. ty, Winter Har- EIGHTH NAVAL DISTRICT of $10,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary Naval Support Activity; New Orleans, of the Army, or his designee, shall notify the Naval Education and Training Center, New- Louisiana, $3,080,000. Committees on Armed Services of the Sen- port, Rhode Island, $4,153,000. Naval Air Station, Kingsville, Texas, ate and House of Representatives, immedi- Naval Underwater Systems Center, New- $1428,000. ately upon reaching a final decision to ira- port, Rhode Island, $10,274,000. NINTH NAVAL DISTRICT plement, of the cost of construction of any THIRD NAVAL DISTRICT publth work undertaken under this section, Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, Illt- Korea, Various Locations, $5,139,000. PUERTO RICO Fort Buchanan, Puerto Rico, $1,862,000. KWAIALEIN MISSILE RANGE National Missile Range, $1,272:000. UNITED STATES ARMY SECURITY AGENCY Various Locations, $148,000. "UNITED STATES ARMY COMMUNICATIONS COMMAND Fort Buckner, Okinawa, $532,000. Area, $84,000,000: Provided, That w thirty days after the end of each quarter, the Secretary of the Army shall turnish to the Committees on Armed Serviceis and on Ap- propriations of the Senate and the House of Representatives a description of obligations incurred as'the United States share of such multilateral programs. Sm. 102. The Secretary of the Army may establish or develop Army installations and facilities by, proceeding with construction made necessary by changes in-Arnay missions and responsibilities which have been occa- sioned by: (1) unforeseen sectuity consider- ations, (2) new weapons doselopments, (3) new and unforeseen research and develop- ment requirements, or (4) ingoroved produc- tion schedules if the Secretary of Defense de- termines that deferral of such construction for inclusion in the next Military Construc- tion Authorization Act would be inconsistent with interests of national Security, and in connection therewith to acernire, construct, convert, rehabilitate, or install permanent or temporary public works, including land ac- including those real estate actions pertain- necNaval Submarine Base New London. Con- nois, $1,953,000.ticut, $4,971,000. Ing thereto. This authorization will expire ELEVENTH NAVAL DISTRICT upon enactment of the fiscal year 1976 Mill- FOURTH NAVAI DISTRICT val Regional Medical Center, Camp Na tary Construction Authorization Act except Naval Air Test Facility, Lakehurst, New _ _ for those public works projects concerning Jersey, $7,350,000. Pendleton, California, $7,619,000. which the Committees on Armed Services of Navy Ships Parts Control Center, Meehan- Naval Weapons Center, China Lake, Cali- the Senate and House of Representatives icsburg, Pennsylvania, $3,336,000. fornia, $8,371,000. have been notified pursuant to this section Long Beach Naval Shipyard, Long Beach, Naval Hospital, Phi adelphia, Pennsyl- California, $6,011,000. prior to that date. vania, $296,000. Naval Air Staticin, Miramar, California, SEC. 103. (a) Public Law 93-166, is amended $11,772,000. under the heading "OUTSIDE THE UNTrEn NAVAL DISTRICT, WASHINGTON section 101 as follows: District of Columbia, $2,883,000. nia, $12,943,000. STATES?UNLVW STATES ARMY, EUROPE", in Naval District Commendant, Washington, Naval A , Air Station North Island, Califors Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 RDP75600380R000700050003-1 September 11 ,AqO nved For Mee.2005/06/09 : CIA- .K.LSSIONAL RECORD? SENATE S 16381 Naval Construction Battalion Center, Port Hueneme, California, $1,048,000. Naval Electronics Laboratory Center, San Diego, California, $3,238,000. Naval Region Medical Center, San Diego, California, $13,493,000. Naval Training Center, San Diego, Califor- nia, $8,657,000. Navy Submarine Support Facility, San Diego, California, $4,234,000. Naval Weapons Station, Seal Beach, Cali- fornia, $2,147,000. TWELFTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Air Rework Facility, Alameda, Cali- fornia, $1,638,000. Naval Hospital, Lemoore, California, $333,- 000. Naval Air Station, Moffett Field, California, $77,000. Naval Communications Station, Stockton, California, $1,102,000. Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, Cali- fornia, $2,301,000. THIRTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Station, Adak, Alaska, $7,697,000. Trident Support Site, Bangor, Washington, $103,808,000. Puget Sound Naval_ Shipyard, -Bremerton, Washington, $393,000. Naval Air Station, Whidbey Island, Wash- ington, $2,603,000. FOURTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Commander in Chief Pacific, Oahu, Hawaii, $2,700,000. Naval Ammunition Depot, Oahu, Hawaii, $795,000. Naval Station, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, $1,- 505,000. Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, $3,356,000. Naval Communication Station, Honolulu Wahiawa, Hawaii, $971,000. MARINE CORPS Marine Corps Development and Education Command, Quantico, Virginia, $2,803,000. Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, $13,864,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, North Carolina, $1,260,000. Marine Corps Air Station, New River, North Carolina, $499,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Yuma, Arizona, $3,203,000. Marine Corps Supply Center, Barstow, Cali- fornia, $1,463,000. Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendleton, Cali- fornia, $7,271,000. Marine Corps Base, Twenty-nine Palms, California, $397,000. Marine Corps Air Station, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, $5,497,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment $9 849 000 Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $44,251,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES TENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Telecommunications Center, Roose- velt Roads, Puerto Rico, $3,186,000. Naval Station, Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico, $947,000. Naval Security Group Activity, Sabana Seca, Puerto Rico, $1,026,000. FIFTEENTH NAVAL DISTRICT Naval Support Activity, Canal Zone, $800,000. ATLANTIC OCEAN AREA Naval Air Station, Bermuda, $1,866,000. Naval Station, Keflavik, Iceland, $4,193,000. EUROPEAN AREA Naval Air Facility, Sigonella, Sicily, Italy, $311,000. Naval Security Group Activity, Edzell, Scot- land, $571,000. Naval Activities Detachment, Holy Loch, Scotland, $1,188,000. INDIAN OCEAN AREA Naval Communications Facility, Diego Gar- cia, Chagos Archipelago, $14,802,000. PACIFIC OCEAN AREA Naval Air Station, Agana, Guam, Mariana Islands, $728,000. Naval Communications Station, Finegayan; Guam, Mariana Islands, $1,305,000. .Naval Ship Repair Facility, Guam, Mariana Islands, $1,782,000. Navy Public Works Center, Guam, Mariana Islands, $907,000. Naval Hospital, Yokosuka, Japan, $360,000. Naval Air Station, Cubi Point, Republic of the Philippines, $1,624,000. Naval Station, Subic Bay, Republic of the Philippines, $3,741,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- ment, $1,059,000. Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $4,038,000. SEC. 202. The Secretary of the Navy may establish or develop Navy installations and facilities by proceeding with construction made necessary by changes in Navy missions and responsibilities which have been occa- sioned by (1) unforeseen security considera- tions, (2) new weapons developments, (3) new and unforeseen research and develop- ment requirements, or (4) improved produc- tion schedules, if the Secretary of Defense determines that deferral of such construc- tion for inclusion in the next Military Con- struction Authorization Act would be in- consistent with interests of national secur- ity, and in connection therewith to acquire, construct, convert, rehabilitate, or install permanent or temporary public works, in- cluding land acquisition, site preparation appurtenances, utilities, and equipment, in the total amount of $10,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary of the Navy, or his des- ignee, shall notify the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives, immediately upon reach- ing a decision to implement, of the cost of construction of any public work undertaken under this section, including those real estate actions pertaining thereto. This au- thorization will expire upon enactment of the fiscal year 197G Military Construction Authorization Act, except for those public works projects concerning which the Com- mittees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives have been no- tified pursuant to this section prior to that date. SEC. 203. (a) Public Law 90-408, as amend- ed, is amended under the heading "IN-SIDE THE UNITED STATES", in section 201 as fol- lows: ? With respect td "Naval Academy, Annap- olis, Maryland," strike out "$2,000,000" and Insert in place thereof "$4,391,000". (b) Public Law 90-408, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of sec- tion 802 "$241,668,000" and "$248,533,000" and inserting in place thereof "$244,059,000" and "$250,924,000", respectively. SEC. 204. (a) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended under the heading "INSIDE THE UNITED STATES", in section 201 as follows: With respect to "Naval Air Rework Fa- cility, Jacksonville, Florida, strike out "$3,869,000" and insert in place thereof "$4,534,000". (b) Public Law 91-511, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of sec- tion 602 "$217,204,000" and "$274,342,000" and inserting in place thereof "$247,869,000" and "$275,007,000", respectively. SEC. 205. (a) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended under the heading 'INSIDE THE UNITED STATES", In section 201 as follows: With respect to "Navy Public Works Cen- ter, Norfolk, Virginia," strike out "$3,319,000" and insert in place thereof "$7,019,000". With respect to "Naval Ammunition De- pot, Hawthorne, Nevada," strike out "$6,- 003,000" and insert in place thereof "$10.- 203,000". (b) Public Law 92-545, as amended, is amended by striking out in clause (2) of section 702 "$477,664,000" and "$518,881,000" and inserting in place thereof "$485,564,000" and "$526,781,000", respectively. SEC. 206. (a) Public Law 93-166 is amended under the heading "INSIDE THE Urar-ta STATES", in section 201 as followS: With respect to "Naval Home, Gulfport, Mississippi," strike out "$9,444,000" and in- sert in place thereof "$11,802,000". With respect to "Naval Air Station, Merid- ian, Mississippi," strike out "$4,532,000" and insert in place thereof "$5,466,000". With respect to "Naval Air Station, Ala- meda, California," "strike out "$3,827,000" and insert in place thereof "$7,756,000". With respect to "Marine Corps Supply Cen- ter, Barstow, California," strike out "$3,- 802,000" and insert in place thereof -$6,- 210,000". (b) Public Law 93-166 is amended by strik- ing out in clause (2) of section 602 "$511,- 606,000 and "$570,439,000" and inserting in place thereof "$521,235,000" and "$580,068,- 000", respectively. TITLE III SEC. 301. The Secretary of the Air Force may establish or develop military installa- tions and facilities by acquiring, construct- ing, converting, rehabilitating, or installing permanent or temporary public works, in- cluding land acquisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities, and equipment, for the following acquisition and construction: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES AEROSPACE DEFENSE COMMAND Peterson Field, Colorado Springs, Colorado, $6,885,000. Tyndall Air Force Base, Panama City, Flor- ida, $2,775,000. AIR FORCE COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE Richards-Gebaur Air Force Base Grand- view, Missouri, $805,000. AIR FORCE LOG/ST/CS COMMAND Hill Air Force Base, Ogden, Utah, $11,- 894,000. Kelly Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $11,588,000. McClellan Air Force Base, Sacramento, California, $15,873,000. Newark Air Force Station, Newark, Ohio, $1,977,000. Robins Air Force Base, Warner Robins, Georgia, $792,000. Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, $9,839,000. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio, $16,271,000. AIR FORCE SYSTEMS COMMAND Arnold Engineering Development Center, Tullahoma, Tennessee, $4,240,000. Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, $3,100,000. Edwards Air Force Base, Muroc, California, $1,647,000. Eglin Air Force Base, Valparaiso, Florida, $13,512,000. Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, New Mexico, $232,000. Patrick Air Force Base, Cocoa, Florida, $642,000. Satellite Tracking Facilities, $832,000. AIR TRAINING COMMAND Columbus Air Force Base, Columbus, Miss- issippi, $169,000. Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Mississippi, $7,297,000. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 ? CIA-RDP75EMPLOR0007001p003-1, S 16382 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? Shrq A I t pePynner 11, .1974 Laughlin Air Force Base, Del Rio, Texas, Nellie Air Force Base, La a Vegas, Nevada, $298,000. $6,495,000. Lowry Air Force Base, Denver, Colorado, Pope Air Force Base, Fayetteville, North $7.885,000. Carolina, $730,000. Mather Air Force Base, Sacramento, Cali- Seymour Johnson Air Force Baste, Golds- f arnia, $2,143,000. bore, North Carolina, $8,918,000. Randolph Air Force Base, San Antonio, Various Locations, $5,194,000. Texas, $790,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Reese Air Force Base, Lubbock, Texas, a:16 Various Locations, Air Pollution Abate- 000 :e,. Sheppard Air Force Base, Wichita Falls, ment, $2,056,000. Texas, $8,631,000. Various Locations, Vance Air Force Base, Enid, Oklahoma, ment, $13,740,000. $6,798,000. Webb Air Force Base, Big Spring, Texas, $76,000. Williams Air Force Base, Chandler, Ari- zona, $5,849,000. AIR UNIVERSITY Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Ala- bama, $2,500,000. ALASHAN AIR COMMAND Eielson Air Force Base, Fairbanks, Alaska, $310,000. Various Locations, $15,242,000, HEADQUARTERS COMMAND UNITED STATES AIR FORCE SECURITY SERV CCE Andrews Air Force Base, Camp Springs, Various Locations, $1,135,300. Maryland, $14,699,000. POLLUTION ABATEMENT Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, Dis- Various Locations, Water Pollution Abate- ment, $595,000. MILITARY AIRLIFT COMMAND Dover S. Force Base, Dover, Delaware, $1,- Water Pollution Abate- SPEC/AL FACILT1TES Various Locations, $13,952,000. OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES AEROSPACE DEFENSE COMMAND Various Locations, $138,000. PACIFIC AIR FORCES Various Locations, $5,985,000. UNITED STATES AIR FORCES IN EUROPE Germany, $280,000. United Kingdom, $884,000. Various Locations, $63,081,000. SPECIAL FACILITIES Various Locations, $1,999,000. 373,000. Sec. 302. The Secretary of the Air Force McGuire Air Force Base, Wrightstown, New Jersey, $408,000. may establish or develop rlassified military Scott Air Force Base, Belleville, Illinois, installations and facilities by acquiring, con- structing, converting, rehabilitating, or in. $341,000. Travis Air Force Base, Fairchild, California, stalling permanent or temporary public $8,800,000. works, including land acquisition, site prep- PACIFIC AIR FORCES oration, appurtenances, utilities and equ ip. merit, in the total amount of $8,100,000. Hickam Air Force Base, Honolulu, Hawaii, $11,878,000. SEC. 303. The Secretary of the Air Force may establish or develop Air Force installa- STRATEGIC A/R COMMAND Dons and facilities by proreeding with con- Barksdale Air Force Base, Shreveport, struction made necessary by changes in Air Louisiana, $641,000. Force missions and responsibilities which Blythe,ville Air Force Base, Blytheville, Ar- have been occasioned by: (1) unforeseen se- kansas, $675,000. curity considerations, (2) new weapons de- Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Tucson. velopments, (3) new and unforeseen research Arizona, $3,009,000. and development requirements, or (4) im- Ellsworth Air Force Base, Rapid City, South proved production schedules, if the Secre ;erg Dakota, $2,109,000. of Defense determines ths,t deferral of such Griffiss Air Force Base, Rome, New York, construction for inclusion in the next Mill- :31,774,000. tary Construction Authorization Act would be Grissom Air Force Base, pent, Indiana, inconsistent with intereses of national se- $323,000. a curity, and in connection therewith to ac- K. I. Sawyer Air Force Base, Marquette, quire, construct, convert, rehabilitate, or in- Michigan, $7,050,000. stall permanent or temporary public works, Kincheloe Air Force Base, Kinross, Micln- including land acquisitior, site preparation, gan, $835,000. appurtenances, utilities, and equipment in Malmstrom Air Force Base, Great Falls, the total amount of $10,000,000: Provided, Montana, $3,740,000. That the Secretary of the Air Force, or his McConnell Air Force Base, Wichita, Kan- designee, shall notify the Committees on sa.s, $3,038,000. Armed Services of the Senate and House of Minot Air Force Base, Minot., North Dakota, Representatives, immediaeely upon reacning $238,000. a final decision to implerr ant, of the cost of Offutt Air Force Base, Omaha, Nebraska, construction of any public work undertaken $5,595,000. under this section, including those rea', es- Pease Air Force Base, Portsmouth, New tate actions pertaining thereto. This authori- Hampshire, $115,000. zation will expire upon enactment of the fis- Plattsburgh ----------------------. cal year 1976 Military Constructicm Authori- Field, Colorado Springs, Colorado", strike out "$7,843,000" and insert in phew thereof "$9,- 733,000". (2) Under the subheeding "AEROSPACE DE- FENSE COMMAND" witin-respect to "Tyedall Air Force, Base, Panama City, Florida", strike out "$1,020,000" and insert in place thereof "$1,284,000". (3) Under the subheading "AIR FORCE COM- MUNICATIONS SERVICE" with respect to "Rich- ards-Gebaur Air Force Sam Grandview, Mis- souri", strike out "$3,963,000, and insert in place thereof "$6,130.000". (4) Under the subheading "AIR IRCII Air Force Base, Warner Robins, Geo ria", er LOGISTICS COIVINIAND" with respect to "Robins strike out "$4,628,000" and insert in place thereof "$7,324,000". (5) Under the subheading "AIR roller: SYSTEMS COMMAND" With respect to "Eglin Air Force Base, Valparaiso, Florida", strike out "$7,039,000" in insert in place thereof "$8,882,000". (6) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Kessler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Mississippi", strike out "$8,786.- 000" and insert in place thereof "$10,733,00". (7) Under the subheading "Ant TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to "Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas", strike out "$6,509,000" and insert in place thereof "$9,186,000", (8) Under the subheading "AIR TRArrerreci COMMAND" with respect to "Reese Air Force Base, Lubbock, Texas", strike out "$4,211,000" and insert in place thereof "$6,461,000". (9) Under the subheading "AIR IRAINTNG COMMAND" with respect to "Vance Air :Force Base, Enid, Oklahoma", strike out $371,000" and insert in place thereof "$895,000". (10) Under the subheading "AIR TRAINING COMMAND" with respect to `Webb Air Force Base, Big Spring, Texas", strike out "$3,154,- 000" and insert in place thereof "$1,307,000". (11) Under the subheading "nerirrArer AIR- LIFT cODAMaND" with respe to "Altus Air Force Base, Altus, Oklahoma", strike out "$1,078,000" and insert in place thereof "$1,440,000". (12) Under the subheading "STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND" with respect to "Francis E. War- ren Air Force Base, Cheyenne, Wyoming", strike out "$5,834,000" and insert in place thereof "$8,265,000". (13) Under the subheading "TACTICAL /07t COMMAND" With respect to "Little Rock Air Force Base, Little Rock, Arkansas", strike out "$1,165,000" and insert In place thereof "$2,200,000". (14) Under the subheading "TACTICIL Ant COMMAND"- WWI respect to "Nellie Air Force Base, Las Vegas, Nevada", strike out "$2.588.- 000" and 'insert in place thereof "3,637,We". (b) Public Law 93-166 Is-further amended by striking out in clause (3) of section 602 "$238,439,000" and "$260,741,000" and insert- ing in place thereof "$260,727,000" and "$283,029,000", respectively. TITLE IV SEC. 401. The Secretary of Defense may establish or develop military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructin a con. New York, $882,000. mitten Act, except for those public works verting, rehabilitating, or installing perma- Whiteham Air Force Base, Knob Nester, projects concerning which the Committees on nent or temporary public works, including Missouri, $6,692,000. Armed Services of the Ssnate and House of land acquisition, site preparation, appur- TACTICAL AIR COMMAND Representatives have been notified pursuant tenances, utilities and equipment, for de- Cannon Air Force Base, Clovis, New Mex. to this section prior to that date fense agencies for the following acqu is Mon ico, $1,715,000.? SEC. 304. Section 609 of Public Law 89-188, and construction: George Air Force Base, Victorville, Call- is amended by changing the period at the INSIDE THE UNITED STATES fornia, $4,794,000. end thereof to a comma and adding the fol. DEFENSE MAPPING AGENCY Holleman Air Force Bea, Alamogordo, lowing: "or if no appropriated funds are New Mexico, $1,565,000. involved, has first been reported by the Air ter (St. Louis AFS), St. Louis, Missouri $2,- Defense Mapping Agency Aerospace Cen- Langley Air Force Base, Hampton, Virginia, Force to the Congress :.n the manner set a?., .,?,?., $3.056,000. forth in section 2662, title 10, United States " '''''"' Little Rock Air Force MSS, Little Rock, Code.". Fort Belvoir, Virginia, $670,000. Arkansas, $5,141,000. Sec. 305. (a) Section 301 of Public Law 93-- DEFENSE SIMPLY AGENCY MacDill Air Force Base, Tampa, Florida. i66 is amended under the heading "INSIDE Defense Construction Supply ()enter, Co- $265,000. THE tiler= STATES" as follows: lumbus, Ohio, $1,862,000. Myrtle Beach Air Force Balse, Myrtle Beach, (1) 'Under the subheading "AEROSPACE DE- Defense Depot, Mechanicsburg, Pennsyl- South Carolina, $300,000. Verrsz COMMAND" with respect to "Peterson vania, $394,000. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 September 11, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 16383 Defense Depot, Memphis, Tennessee, $1,- 899,000. Defense Depot, Ogden, Utah, $527,000. Defense Electronics Supply Center, Day- ton, Ohio, $572,000. Defense Industrial Plant Equipment Fa- cility, Atchison, Kansas, $646,000. Defense Personnel Support Center, Phil- adelphia, Pennsylvania, $936,000. NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, $2,363,- 000. OUTSIDE THE 'UNITED STATES _ DEFENSE NUCLEAR AGENCY Johnston Atoll, $1,458,000. Eniwetok Auxiliary Airfield, $4,000,000. SEC. 402. The Secretary of Defense may establish or develop installations and facil- ities which he determines to be vital to the security of the United States, and in con- nection therewith to acquire, construct, con- vert, rehabilitate, or install permanent or temporary public works, including land acquisition, site preparation, appurtenances, utilities, and equipment in the total amount of $15,000,000: Provided, That the Secre- tary of Defense or his designee shall notify the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives immedi- ately upon reaching a final decision to im- plement, of the cost of construction of any public work undertaken under this section, including real estate actions pertaining thereto. TITLE V?MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING AND HOMEOWNERS ASSISTANCE PRO- GRAM Sac, 501. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to construct, at the locations hereinafter named, family housing units and mobile home facilities in the num- bers hereinafter listed, but no family hous- ing construction shall be commenced at any such locations in the United States, until the Secretary shall have consulted with the Sec- retary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, as to the availability of adequate private housing at such locations, If agreement cannot be reached with respect to the availability of adequate private hous- ing at any location, the Secretary of Defense shall immediately notify the Committee on Armed Services of the House of Representa- tives and the Senate, in writing, of such dif- ference of opinion, and no contract for con- struction at such location shall be entered into for a period of thirty days after such notification has been given. This authority shall include the authority to acquire land, and interests in land, by gift, purchase, ex- change of Government-owned land, or other- wise. (a) Family Housing units? . (1) The Department of the Army, two thousand four hundred and sixty units, $82,- 396,600. ' Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield, Geor- gia, four hundred units. United States Army Installations, Oahu, Hawaii, one thousand units. Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, sixty units. Fort Riley, Kansas, five hundred units. Fort Jackson, South Carolina, one hundred units. Fort Eustis, Virginia, one hundred units. United States Army Installations, Atlantic Side, Canal Zone, one hundred units. United States Army Installations, Pacific Bide, Canal Zone, two hundred units. (2) The Department of the Navy, three thousand one hundred and fifty-eight units, $108,778,960. Naval Complex, San Diego, California, five hundred units. Naval Complex, Jacksonville, Florida, two hundred units. Naval Complex, Oahu, Hawaii, seven hun- dred units. Naval Complex, New Orleans, Louisiana, two hundred units. Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, two hundred units. Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, North Carolina, three hundred units. Naval Complex, Charleston, South Caro- lina, five hundred and twenty-six units. Naval Complex, Bremerton, Washington, three hundred and thirty-two units. Naval Complex, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, two hundred units. (3) The Department of the Air Force, one thousand three hundred units, $40,143,500. United States Air Force Installations, Oahu, Hawaii, two hundred units. Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana, one hundred and fifty units. Pease Air Force Base, New Hampshire, two hundred units. Grand Forks Air Force Base, North Dakota, one hundred units. Altus Air Force Base, Oklahoma, two hun- dred units. Misawa Air Base, Japan, two hundred units. Clark Air Base, Philippines, two hundred and fifty units. (b) Mobile Home Facilities? (1) The Department of the Army, two hun- dred and forty spaces, $960,000. (2) The Department of the Air Force, two hundred spaces, $888,000. (c) Demolition of existing structures on proposed sites for family housing: Naval Complex, Bremerton, Washington, $540,000. Src. 502. (a) Authorization for the con- struction of family housing provided in sec- tion 501 of this Act shall be subject, under such regulations as the Secretary of Defense may prescribe, to the following limitations on cost, which shall include shades, screens, ranges, refrigerators, and all other installed equipment and fixtures, the cost of the fam- ily unit, and the proportionate costs of land acquisition, site preparation (excluding demolition authorized in section 501(c) ), and installation of utilities. (b) The average unit cost for all units of family housing constructed in the United States (other than Alaska and Hawaii) shall not exceed $29,500 and in no event shall the cost of any unit exceed $46,000. (0) When family housing units are con- structed in areas other than that specified in subsection (b) the average cost of all such units shall not exceed $40,000, and in no event shall the cost of any unit exceed $46,000. SEC. 503. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to accomplish altera- tions, additions, expansions, or extensions not otherwise authorized by law, to existing pub- lic quarters at a cost not to exceed? (1) for the Department of the Army, $20,- 000,000. (2) for the Department of the Navy, $20,- 000,000. (3) for the Department of the Air Force, $20,000,000. SEC. 504. Notwithstanding the limitations contained in prior Military Construction Au- thorization Acts on cost a construction of family housing, the limitations on such cost contained in section 502 of this Act shall apply to all prior authorizations for con- struction of family housing not heretofore repealed and for which construction con- tracts have not been executed prior to the date of enactment of this Act. SEC. 505. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to construct or other- wise acquire at the locations hereinafter named, family housing units not subject to the limitations on such cost contained in section 502 of this Act. This authority shall include the authority to acquire land, and interests in land, by gift, purchase, ex- change of Government-owned land, or other- wise. Total costs shall include shades, screens, ranges, refrigerators, and other in- stalled equipment and fixtures, the cost of the family unit, and the costs of land acqui- sition, site preparation, and installation of utilities. (a) Naval Station, Keflavik, Iceland, two hundred units, at a total cost not to exceed $9,600,000. (b) Two family housing units in Warsaw, Poland, at a total cost not to exceed $120,- 000. This authority shall be funded by use of excess foreign currency when so provided in Department of Defense Appropriation Acts. SEC. 506. The Secretary of Defense, or his designee, is authorized to accomplish re- pairs and improvements to existing public quarters in amounts in excess of the $15,000, limitation prescribed in section 610(a) of Public Law 90-110, as amended (81 Stat. 279, 305), as follows: Fort McNair, Washington, District of Co- lumbia, five units, $175,500. Fort Sam Houston, Texas, one hundred and forty units, $2,352,800. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, one unit, $24,000. SEC. 607. (a) Section 515 of Public Law 84-161 (69 Stat. 324, 352), as amended, is fur- ther amended by (1) striking out "1974 and 1976" and inserting in lieu thereof "1975 and 1976", and (2) revising the third sentence to read as follows: "Expenditures for the rental of such housing facilities, including the cost of utilities and maintenance and operation, may not exceed: For the United States (other than Alaska and Hawaii), Puerto Rico, and Guam an average of $235 per month for each military department or the amount of $310 per month for any one unit; and for Alaska and Hawaii, an average of $3/5 per month for each military department, or the amount of $375 per month for any one unit." (b) Section 507(b) of Public Law 93-166 (87 Stat. 661, 676), is amended by striking out "$325" and "seven thousand five hun- dred" in the first sentence, and inserting in lieu thereof "$355", and "twelve thousand", respectively; and in the second sentence by striking out "three hundred units", and in- serting in lieu thereof "one hundred fifty units". SEC. 508. There is authorized to be appro- priated for use by the Secretary of Defense, or his designee, for military family housing and homeowners assistance as authorized by law for the following purposes: (1) for construction and acquisition of family housing, including demolition auth- orized, improvements to public quarters, minor construction, relocation of family housing, rental guarantee payments, con- struction and acquisition of mobile home facilities, and planning, an amount not to exceed $307,907,060. (2) for support of military family housing, including operating expenses, leasing, main- tenance of real property, payments of prin- cipal and interest on mortgage debts in- curred, payment to the Commodity Credit Corporation, and mortgage insurance pre- miums authorized under section 222 of the National Housing Act, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1715m), an amount not to exceed $935,515,- 000; and (3) for homeowners assistance under sec- tion 1013 of Public Law 89-754 (80 Stat. 1255, 1290), including acquisition of prop- erties, an amount not to exceed $5,000,000. TITLE VI GENERAL PROVISIONS SEC. 601. The Secretary of each military department may proceed to establish or de- velop installations and facilities under this Act without regard to section 3648 of the Re- vised Statutes, as amended (31 U.S.C. 529), and sections 4774 and 9774 to title 10, United States Code. The authority to place perm- anent or temporary improvements on land Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16384 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE September 11, 1974 includes authority for surveys, administra- tion, overhead, planning, and supervision in- cident to construction. That authority may be exercised before title to the land is ap- proved under section 355 of the Revised Statutes, as amended (40 U.S.C. 255), and even though the land is held temporarily. The authority to acquire real estate or land includes authority to make surveys and, to acquire land, and interests in land (includ- ing temporary use), by gift, prirchase, ex- change of Government-owned land, or otherwise. SEC. 602. There are authorized to be ap- propriated such sums as may be necessary for the purposes of this Act, but appropria- tions for public works projects authorized by titles I, II, III, IV, and V, shall not ex- ceed- (1) for title I: Inside the United States $514,187,000; outside the United States $130,- 024,000; or a total of $644,211,000. (2) for title II: Inside the United States, $512,620,000; outside the United States, $44,- 434,000; or a total of $557,054,000. (3) for title II: Inside the United States, $302,709,000; outside the United States, $77,- 097,000; section 302, $8,100,000; or a total of $387,906,000. (4) for title IV: A total of $4400,000. (5) for title V: Military family housing and homeowners assistance, $1,248,422,060. See. 603. (a) Except as provided in subsec- tions (b) and (e), any of the amounts spec- ified in titles I, rr, in, and IV of this Act may, in the discretion of the Secretary con- cerned, be increased by 5 per centum when inside the United States (other than Hawaii and Alaska), and by 10 per centum when outside the United States or in Hawaii and Alaska, if he determines that such increase (1) is required for the sole purpose of meet- ing unusual variations in cost, and (2) could not have been reasonably anticipated at the time such estimate was stibmitted to the Congress. However, the total cost of all con- struction and acquisition in &act). such title may' not exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated in that title. (b) When the amount named for any con- struction or actjuisition in title I, II, III, or /V of this Act involves only one project at any military installation and the Secretary of Defense, or his designee, determines that the amount authorized must be increased by more than the applicable percentage pre- scribed in subsection (a), the Secretary con- cerned may proceed with such construction or acquisition if the amount pf the in- crease does not exceed by more than 25 per centuin of the amount named for such proj- ect by the Congress. (c) Subject to the limitations contained in subsection (a), no individual project au- thorized under title 1, II, III, or IV of this Act for any specifically listed military instal- lation may be placed under contract if- (1) the estithated cost of such project Is $250,000 or more, and (2) the current working estimate of the Department of Defense, based upon bids re- ceived, for the construction, of such project exceeds by more than 25 per centum the amount authorized for such project by the Congress, until after the expiration of thirty days from the date on which a written report of the facts relating to the increased cost of such project, including a statement of the reasons for such increase has been sub- mitted to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate. (d) The Secretary of Defense shall sub- mit an annual report to the Congress identi- fying each individual project which has been placed under contract in the preceding twelve-month period and with respect to which the then current working estimate of the Department of Defense based upon bids received for such project exceeded the amount authorized by the Congress for that project by more than 25 per centum. The Secretary shall also include in such re- port each individual project with respect -;ro which the scope was reduced in order to per- mit contract award within the available au- thorization for such projez.t. Such report shall include all pertinent cost informa- tion for each individual project, including the amount in dollars and percentage by which the current working estimate based en the contract price for the project exceeded the amount authorized for such project by the Congress. (e) DX addition to other coat variation limitations contained in this section or in similar sections of prior year military con- struction authorization Acts, any of the amounts specified in titles I, rr, In, and IV of this and prior military construction au- thorization Acts may be varied upward by an additional 10 per centum when the Secre- tary of the military service concerned deter- mines that such increase is required to meet unusual variations in cost directly attributa- ble to difficulties arising on; of the current energy crisis. However, the total cost of all construction and acquisition in each such, title may not exceed the tatal mount au- thorized to be appropriated in that title. SEC. 604. Contracts for construction made by the United States for performance within the United States and its possessions under this Act shall be executed under the juris- diction and supervision of the Corps of En- gineers, Department of the Army, or the Naval Facilities Engineering Command, De- partment of the Navy, or such other depart- ment or Government agency as the Secre- taries of the military departments recom- mend and the Secretary of Defense approves to assure the most efficient, expeditious, and cost-effective accomplistime at of the con- struction herein authorized. The Secretaries of the military departments shall report an- nually to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives a breakdown of the dollar value of construc- tion contracts completed by each of the several construction agencies selected to- gether with the design, construction super- vision, and overhead fees charged by each of the several agents in the execution of the assigned construction. Further, such con- tracts (except architect and engineering con- tracts which, unless specifically authorized by the Congress shall continue to be award,- ad in accordance with presently established procedures, customs, and practice), shall be awarded, insofar as practicable, on a com- petitive basis to the lowest responsible bid- der, if the national security will not be im- paired ;and the award is :.:onsistint with chapter 137 of title 10, United States Code. The Secretaries of the military departments shall report annually to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Rev - resentatives with respect to all contracts awarded on other than a competitive basis to the lowest responsible bidder. Sue. 605. AS of October 1, 1975, authoriza- tions for military public works including family housing, to be accomplished by the Secretary of a military department in connec- tion with the establishment or development of installations and facilities, and all at for appropriations therefor, that are contained in titles I, II, III, IV, and Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 'September 11, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 16385 in proportion to the appropriate area con- struction cost index, based on the following unit cost limitations where the area con- struction index is 1.0: (1) $31 per square foot for permanent barracks; (2) $33 per square foot for bachelor officer quarters; unless the Secretary of Defense, or his des- ignee, determines that because of special circumstances, application to such project of the limitations on unit costs contained in this section is impracticable: Provided, That, notwithstanding the limitations con- tained in prior military construction au- thorization Acts on unit costs, the limita- tions on such costs contained in this sec- tion shall apply to all prior authorizations for such construction not heretofore re- pealed and for which construction contracts have not been awarded by the date of enact- ment of this Act. SEc. 607. Section 612 of Public Law 89-568 (80 Stat. 756, 757), is amended by deleting the figure "$150,000" wherever it appears Act, be utilized by -the Secretary of Defense 'Sr. 8. The first sentence of section 3056 in carrying out the provision of this sec- of title 18, United States Code, is amended tion to the extent that funds are unavailable by? under other Federal programs. "(1) inserting 'protect the members of the (e) The Secretary shall transmit to the immediate family of the Vice President, un- Committee on Armed Services of the Senate less such protection is declined,' immediately and the House of Representatives semiannual after `Vice President-elect;', and reports indicating the total amount expended "(2) inserting 'pay expenses for unfore- in the case of each local community which seen emergencies of a confidential nature un- was provided assistance under the author- der the direction of the Secretary of the ity of this section during the preceding six- Treasury and accounted for solely on his month period, the specific projects for which certificate;' immediately after 'apprehension assistance was provided during such period, of criminals;% and the total amount provided for each such "SEC. 9. It is the sense of Congress that project during such period, living accommodations, generally equivalent SEc. 609. (a) Public Law 93-346 (88 Stat. to those available to the highest ranking 340), designating the premises occupied by officer on active duty in each of the other the Chief of Naval Operations as the official military services, should be provided for the resident of the Vice President, is amended Chief of Naval Operations.". to read as follows: "That effective July 1, (b) Except as otherwise provided therein, 1974, the Government-owned house together the amendment made by subsection (a) of with furnishings, associated grounds (con- this section shall become effective July 12, sisting of twelve acres, more or less) , and 1974. related facilities which have heretofore been SEc. 610. Chapter 159 of title 10, United used as the residence of the Chief of Naval States Code, is amended by adding at the end D rtment of the Navy, shall, thereof the following new section and a cor- and inserting in lieu thereof "$300,000". SEC. 608. (a) The Secretary of Defense is on. and after such date be available for, and responding item in the analysis. authorized to assist communities located are hereby designated, as the temporary offl- .1 2685. Adjustment of or surcharge on sell- near the Trident Support Site Bangor, cial residence of the Vice President of the ing prices in commissary stores to Washington, in meeting the costs of pro- United States. provide funds for construction and "SEc. 2. The temporary official residence of improvement of commissary store viding increased municipal services and f a- the Vice President shall be adequately staffed facilities cilities to the residents of such communi- and provided with such appropriate equip- (a) Notwithstanding any other law the ties, if the Secretary determines that there Is an immediate and substantial increase in ment, furnishings, dining facilities, services, " Secretary of a military department, under the need for such services and facilities in and other provisions as may -be required, regulations established by him and approved such communities as a direct result of work under the supervision and direction of the by the Secretary of Defense may, for the Vice President, to enable him to perform and purposes of this section, provide for an ad- being carried out in connection with the construction, installation, testing, and oper- discharge appropriately the duties, functions, justment of, or surcharge on, sales prices ation of the Trident Weapon System and and obligations associated with his high office, of goods and services sold in commissary that an unfair and excessive financial bur- "SEc. 3. The Secretary of the Navy shall, store facilities. den will be incurred by such communities subject to the supervision and control of the "(b) The Secretary of a military depart- as a result of the increased need for such Vice President, provide for the military staff- ment, under regulations established by him services and facilities. ing and the care and maintenance of the and approved by the Secretary of Defense, grounds of the temporary official residence of may use the proceeds from the adjustments the Vice President and, subject to reimburse- or surcharges authorized by subsection (a) ment therefor out of funds appropriated for to acquire, construct, convert, expand, install, such purposes, provide for the civilian staff- or otherwise improve commissary store f a- ing, care, maintenance, repair, improvement, cilities at defense installations within the alteration, and furnishing of such residence. United States and for related environmental "SEc. 4. There is hereby authorized to be evaluation and construction costs including appropriated such sums as may be necessary surveys, administration, overhead, planning, from time to time to carry out the foregoing and design.". provisions of this joint resolution. During SEC. 611. (a) Notwithstanding the pro- any interim period until and before any visions of section 555 or 556 of title 37, United such funds are so appropriated, the Secretary States Code, on and after the date of enact- of the Navy shall make provision for staffing ment of this section no change in the status and other appropriate services in connection of any member of the uniformed services who (b) The Secretary of Defense shall carry out the provisions of this section through existing Federal programs. The Secretary is authorized to supplement funds made avail- able under such Federal programs to the extent necessary to carry out the provisions of this section, and is authorized to provide financial assistance to communities de- scribed in subsection (a) of this section to help such communities pay their share of the costs under such programs. The heads of all departments and agencies concerned shall cooperate fully with the Secretary of De- fense in carrying out the provisions of this -- section on a priority basis, with the temporary official residence of the is in a missing status may be made unless (c) In determining the amount of financial Vice President from funds available to the and until the following two provisions have assistance to be made available under this Department of the Navy, subject to reim- been complied with: section to any local community for any corn- bursement therefor from funds subsequently (1) the President of the United States has munity service or facility, the Secretary of appropriated to carry out the purposes of determined, and notified the Congress in Defense shall consult with the head of the this joint resolution, writing, that all reasonable actions have been department or agency of the Federal Govern- "SEc. 5. After the date on which the Vice taken to account for such members and that ment concerned with the type of service or President moves into the temporary official all reasonable effort has been made to en- facility for which financial assistance is be- residence provided for in this joint resolu- force the provisions of article 8(b) of the ing made available and shall take into con- tion no funds may be expended for the main- Paris Peace Accord of January 27, 1973; and sideration (1) the time lag between the mi- tenance, care, repair, furnishing, or security (2) the Secretary concerned notifies the tial impact of increased population in any of any residence for the Vice President other next-of-kin of such person in writing of the such community and any increase in the than the temporary official residence pro- proposed change in status, and the next-of- local tax base which will result from such in- vided for in this joint resolution unless the kin of such person has not filed with the creased population, (2) the possible tern- expenditure of such funds is specifically au- Secretary concerned, within sixty days after porary nature of the increased population thorized by law enacted after such date, receipt of notification of the proposed change and the long-range cost impact on fhe perma- "SEc. 6. The Secretary of the Navy is au- in status, an objection to such proposed nent residents of any such community and thorized and directed, with the approval of change. (3) such other pertinent factors as the Sec- the Vice President, to accept donations of (b) As used in subsection (a) of this sec- retary of Defense deems appropriate, money or property for the furnishing of or tion, the terms "uniformed services," "miss- (d) Any funds appropriated to the De- making improvements in or about the tern- ing status," and "Secretary concerned" shall -partment of Defense for the fiscal year be- porary official residence of the Vice Presi- have the same meaning ascribed to such ginning July 1, 1974, for carrying out the dent, all such donations to become the prop- terms in chapter 10 of title 37, United States Txident Weapon 'System shall be utilized erty of the United States and to be accounted Code. by the Secretary of Defense in carrying out for as such. SEC. 612. None of the funds authorized to the provisions of this section to the extent "SEc. 7. (a) Section 202 of title 3, United be appropriated by this Act with respect to that funds are unavailable under other Fed- States Code, is amended by striking out 'and any construction project at Diego Garcia may eral programs. Funds appropriated to the (5) ' in the first sentence and inserting in be obligated unless and until? Department of Defense for any fiscal year lieu thereof the following: '(5) the tempo- (1) the President has (A) advised the Con- beginning after June 30, 1975, for carrying rary official residence of the Vice President gress in writing that all military and foreign out the Trident Weapon System may, to and grounds in the District of Columbia; policy implications regarding the need for the extent specifically authorized in an an- (6) the Vice President and members of his United States facilities at Diego Garcia have nnal Military Construction Authorization immediately family; and (7)'. been evaluated by him; and (B) certified to Approved For Releasev2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16386 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE September 11, 1974 (b) Air Force Reserve, $14,000,000. million for the Uniformed Services Uni- SEC. 702. The Secretary of Defense may versity of Health Sciences, to be located establish or develop inetallations and facil- near the National NaVal Medical Center ities under this title without nitge.rd to sec- tion 3648 of the Revised Statutes, as amend- at Bethesda, Md. An additional $15 Mil- ed (31 U.S.C. 529), and sections 4771 and lion is included for the beginning of the 9774 of title 10, United States Code. The reconstruction of this renowned medical authority to place permanent or temporary center, vvhieh is long past due. improvements on lands includes authority Substantial sums are also provided in for surveys, administration, overhead, the bill for construction for the Reserve planning, and supervision incident to con- struction. That authority may be exercised components, NATO infrastructure, pol- before title to the land is approved under lution abatement, and the Trident sub- section 355 of the Revised Statutes, as marine support site at Bangor, Wash. amended (40 U.S.C. 265), and even though NOW, Mr. President, I wish to cell par- the land is held temporarily. The authority ticular attention to certain matters that the Congress in writing that the construction of any such project is essential to the na- tional interest of the United States; and (2) such certification as required by clause (1) (B) of ;this section is submitted to the Congress and approved by joint resolution of both Houses. SEC. 613. (a) The Secretaq of the Army is authorized to convey, without monetary con- sideration, to the Ozark Pultlic Building Au- thority, an agency of the city of Ozark, Ala- bama, all right, title, and interest of the United States in and to the land described in subsection (b) for use as k permanent Ate for the museum referred tp in subsection (c), and subject to the conditions described therein. (b) The land authorized to be conveyed to the Ozark Public Building teuthority as pro- vided in subsection (a) is described as fol- lows: All that tract or parcel of land lying and being in sections 13 and 24, range 23 east, township 5 north, Saint Stephens Meridian, Dale County, Alabama, more particularly de- scribed as follows: Beginning at a point wh*h is 216.0 feet north 89 degrees 57 minutes west of the northeast corner of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of said section 24, on the western right-of-way line of Alabama State Highway Numbered 2$9, and on the boundary of a tract of land owned by the United States of America at Fort Rucker Military Reservation; thence north 25 degrees 0'7 minutes east along the western right-of-way line of said highway, winch is along the boundary of said United States tract, 1,395 feet; thence north 64 degrees 513 minutes west 700 feet; thence sbuth 25 degrees 07 minutes west 2,800 feet; . 2_ thence south 64 degrees Se minutes east 700 feet, more or less, to a point which is On the western right-of-way line of said highway and on the boundary of said United States tract; thence north 25 degrees 07 minutes east along the western right-of-way line of said highway, which is along the boundary of said United States tract, 1,405 feet more or less, to the point of beginning, containing 45.00 acres, more or less. (c) The conveyance provided for by the subsection (a) shall be subjed to the condi- tion that the real property scvonveyed shall be used as a permanent site for a museum to display suitable public exhibits of the United States Array aviation equipment and allied subjects and aviation-orientpd exhibits of other United States Goverment depart- ments, agencies, and instrumentalities, and of foreign origin, and if sucliproperty is not used for such purpose, all rtght, title, and interest in and to such real_property shall revert to the United States, which shall have the right of immediate entry thereon, and to such other conditions as the, Secretary of the Army may prescribe to protect the Interegt of the United States. SEC. 614. Titles I, II, III, IV, V. and VI of this Act may be cited as the ?I'Military Con- struction Authorization Act, 1-975". TITLE VII RESERVE FORCES FACTE,ITIES SEC. 707. Subject to chapter 133 of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of Defense may establish or develop additional facilities for the Reserve Forces, including the acquisi- tion of land therefor, but the cost of such facilities shall not exceed? (1) For the Department of the Army: (a) Army National Guard of the United States, $53,800,000. (b) Army Reserve, $38,600,000. (2) For the Department pf the Navy: Naval and Marine Corps Reserves, $18,532,000. (3) For the Department of the Air Force: (a) Air National Guard of the United States, $33,000,000. to acquire real estate or land Includes au- thority to make surveys and to acquire land, we believe to be of special interest, and interests in land (including temporary First is the question of commissaries. use), by gift, purchase, exchange of Govern- The interested committees of Congress ment-owned land, or otherwise, have long felt that some provision should SEC. 703. Chapter 133, title 10, United be made to provide for the construction States Code, as amended, is further amended and maintenance of these facilities out by striking out the figure "650,000" in pars- of nonappropriated funds. Commissaries graph (1) of section 2213a, Limitation, and inserting the figure "$100,000" in place there- enjoy numerous advantages which al of. low them to reduce costs well below Soc. 704. This title may be cited as the "Re- those of commercial counterparts. Fur- s1e9r7v5e,, Force Facilities Authorization Act, thermore, the patrons of commissaries Mr. MANSFIELD, Mr. President, I suggest the absence oi a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER, The clerk will call the roll. The second assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, the bill before the Senate today provides construction and other related author- ity for the military departments and de- fense agencies within and outside the United States, includi og authority for all costs of military family housing and the construction of facnities for the He.. serve components. The total new authority granted by the bill is 63,027,925,060. In addition thereto; approval is granted for an in- crease in prior years authority of $51,- 726,000 for a total authority of approxi- mately $3,080, million. After careful consideration of some 601 individual construction projects at 263 major installations within the United States and overseas the commit- tee approved an amount totaling ap- proximately $226,668,000 below the budg- et request. This is a decrease of about 8 percent in new authority. Considering the composition of the bill, the committee considers this to be a substantial reduction, but is of the opinion the amount granted is fully ade- quate to provide for the construction needs of the Department, of Defense dur- ing fiscal year 1975. The committee is not in full accord Again, this year, the Department with this program to construct housing Placed emphasis on providing new and units for use by these one-tour young upgrading existing personnel facilities married couples. Accordingly the corn - which they consider highly important in mittee reduced the number of such -Inns achieving an all-volunteer force. For ex- to 1,458 distributed among installations ample, $392 million was requested for the Department deems to have the high- bachelor housing. It would provide 23,400 est priority. However, in approving a re- new spaces and the upgrading of many duced effort in this regard the committee existing spaces; $210 million __Was des- will expect the Department of Defense ignated for upgrading existing and pro- to clearly state its policy on assignment, viding for some new medical facilit:les. that these units, or any others that might This included a first increment of $15 be available, will not be made available pay no local sales taxes for the most part which further increases their benefits, At the insistence of Congress the Depart- ment has made a study of the matter and estimates that a small increase of 1 to 2 percent in the surcharge rate will be ample to provide for commissary reeds. With the increase in military salaries and other benefits the committee be- lieves the time is at hand when the com- missary system should become self-sus- taining. Accordingly, section 610 has been Included in the bill to authorize the serv- ice secretaries to adjust the surcharge rate accordingly. Three commissaries, at a cost of about $10 million, were deleted from the bill, Now I should like to discuss briefly the military family housing program. Con- siderable emphasis has been given dur- ? Ing the past several years to providing needed on-base housing for those eligible for the assignment of such quarters. The Congress has annually approved sub- stantial increments of new construction to eliminate the existing deficit. I am pleased to state that the Department has now turned the cornor and the deficit Is at a manageable level for those in grade E-4 and above who have hereto- fore been considered eligible for hous- ing. The programable deficit, prior to any new authority granted in this bill, was about 12,000 units. Of the 10,462 units comprising the De- partment request for new construction in fiscal year 1975, 3,000 units are for Junior enlisted personnel in grades E-1 through E-3, and E-4's with less than 2 years experience who have not hereto- fore been considered eligible for hous- ing. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 September 11, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?. SENATE S 16387 to junior enlisted personnel who are no career oriented and have not committe themselves to an active duty career o at least 3 years. Overall, the committe reduced the requested authority for th family housing program by about $98. million. Now, finally, I want to discuss briefl the Navy's proposal to provide a suppor facility for a carrier task force on th Island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. Let me review the situation briefly. For a number of years the Navy has been anxious to establish a support fa- cility in the Indian Ocean?more par- ticularly on the British-owned island of Diego Garcia. In fiscal year 1970 the proposal was made to the Congress for authority and funding for the first increment for such a facility on Diego Garcia. It was to be a communications station and a support facility for a carrier task force. This proposal was denied by the Con- gress. The following year the Navy came in with a greatly reduced program to provide only an austere communications facility, which was approved by the Con- gress, and through fiscal year 1973 $20,- 450,000 in military construction funds has been approved for this purpose. Con- struction work has been performed by the Seabees. The last funding was in fiscal year 1973 when $6.1 million Was granted for dredg- ing an entrance channel and a small turning basin for supply ships within the lagoon. In the fiscal year 1974 supplemental authorization bill the Navy attempted to pursue their original idea further and requested $29 million to expand the com- munications facility into a support fa- cility for a carrier task force of six ships. This would require further dredging of the lagoon, the building of a general purpose and petroleum pier, additional POL storage, additional personnel facili- ties, and extending the runway from 8,- 000 to 12,000 feet. They would expect to request another $5 million in a subse- quent year. Logistically, Diego Garcia would serve as an Outpost support facility where ships could perform limited inpoit upkeep, take on fuel and receive critical supplies by military airlift. In addition to the Navy construction, the Air Force included in Its fiscal year 1975 budget request $3.3 million for additional airlift improve- ments and storage space for petroleum products and munitions. The Air Force requirements are contingency related; no permanent Air Force presence is planned on Diego Garcia. The 1972 agreement between the Uni- ted States and the United Kingdom spe- cifically authorizes a limited communica- tions station on Diego Garcia. Technical level negotiations for a new agreement between the United States and the United Kingdom relating to expanded use of Diego Garcia by the United States were held in London February 25-28, 1974, resulting in agreed ad referendum texts of an exchange of notes that would supersede the Diego Garcia agreement of 1972. However, shortly after the ad ref- erendum agreement was reached the Labor Party formed a new government in t the United Kingdom. As of this date th d new government has not made a minis f terial-level decision on the agreement. e The defense and foreign policy impli e cations of the construction projects a 9 Diego Garcia are, of course, broader tha the $32.2 million request would suggest It is true that the construction of sup t port facilities at Diego Garcia does no e necessarily mean an expanded U.S. mill tary presence in the Indian Ocean. Bu by increasing logistic flexibility and ca- pability, expansion of the Diego Garcia base is a distinct step in facilitating U.S operations in the Indian Ocean, and thus is directly related to the broader policy questions associated with a U.S. military presence in the Indian Ocean. It has been suggested that the Soviet presence in the Indian Ocean area will increase with the opening of the Suez Canal. This, of course, is conjecture and remains to be seen. The date of the re- opening of the canal is of course not known, but clearance operations will be completed by January of the coming year. After careful consideration of the many factors involved and thorough de- bate, the committee approved $14,802,000 as a first increment of the Navy's re- quirements, and the $3.3 million re- quested by the Air Force. At the same time, thg_kujunittee in- d ection 612 in tHeThill-to preclude a on o any o ese S e PresIdent Of e Utilted States as asivised the Congress In writing that he has evaluated all mummy WncI foreign policy Implications reg.arding the nee r t ese acilities, and has certifica that t s cons ruc tionacat. However, such certifica- tion us sti?mi - ? ? - ? ? - Ina Rio,: troy.' both kiousesof ? - in- gress. Thus, Congress will have an oppor- r to focus on the expansion at Diego at?triT a as a ? olio m o e m n c rcums ances. M. President, this concludes my state- ment. I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OirviCER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I yield to the able and distinguished senior Senator from South Carolina. Mr. THURMOND. I thank the distin- guished senior Senator from Missouri. Mr. President, I rise in support of H.R. 16136, the fiscal year 1975 military con- struction authorization bill, as reported from the Senate Committee on Armed Services. This bill provides authoriza- tion for $3.079 billion for construction of facilities for active and Reserve military services. This authorization includes work to be performed at 263 major bases and also 661 separate construction projects. The total amount approved is $226 million less than that requested by the Depart- ment of Defense. Mr. president, one of the key items in e the bill concerns Diego Garcia, a tiny is- - land in the Indian Ocean, on which the Navy wishes to expand its support facili- - ties. t The Navy originally requested $29 mil- n lion in the fiscal year 1974 supplemental . bill to expand the Diego Garcia base. - This request was approved by the House t but our committee rejected it, feeling a - matter of such importance should be t more fully considered during the regu- lar authorization process. As a result, the Diego Garcia request . became a part of the military construe- tion authorization for fiscal year 1975. Once again the House approved the full amount but in the pending bill the Senate Armed Services Committee has reduced the request for $29 to $14.8 mil- lion for the Navy and $3.3 million for the Air Force. This sum of $18.1 million rep- resents only a portion of the require- ments to increase the support facilities at Diego Garcia. In recommending authorization for the $18.1 million, the Senate Armed Services Committee has taken the un- usual step of making these expenditures contingent upon subsequent action by the President of the United States, with the approval of the Congress. This has been done by precluding the obligation of the funds authorized until the Presi- dent has adviSed Congress, in writing, that these projects are essential to the national interest. Further, the commit- tee has provided that such certification by the President to the? Congress must be approved by both Houses. This step will assure the opportunity for full de- bate on the expansion at Diego Garcia, as a foreign policy and defense matter. Mr. President, the funds authorized in this bill for Diego Garcia represents a compromise position by the committee. While the Navy requested $29 million._ the committee has approved this lesser sum of $18.1 million in order to aviaLd the impression of an escalation in the neval balance of power in the Indian Ocean. The committee is, in effect, merely providing for greater capability at Diego Garcia in the event the con- tinued Soviet presence in that area requires greater U.S. naval activity there. The Senate may recall that last year during the Arab-Israeli war and the accompanying oil crisis the President felt it necessary to place a small task force in the Indian Ocean. Because of our lack of facilities there, these forces had to be supplied by a logistic tail going all the way to Subic Bay in the Philippines. In recent years the Soviets have been expanding their naval presence in the Indian Ocean. While we have limited support capabilities in this area, the Soviets have been active in a number of countries surrounding the Indian Ocean and they have naval facilities in Somali, Iraq, and southern Yeman. Although Diego Garcia would not be a naval base as such, it would provide a means to support U.S. naval forces should it become necessary that they be deployed in the Indian Ocean at some future time. Mr. President, I fully support the Navy's request and I believe that the compromise position taken by the Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16388 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R0007001,093-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE ep ember 11, 19 74 Senate Armed Services Committee by tion because of the spread-out nature appreciate the remarks of the able senior an almost Unanimous vote will meet of the existing facilities. Clearly, in order Senator from Texas. As always, it is a most of the objections heretofore raised to have adequate space, the proper privilege to work with him and for him about this facility. In any event, the teaching facilities, and a cohesive siu- on problems of our national security. Senate will have an onnortunitY to dent body, new construction must be Would the Senator like to bring LIP debate this issue if Preiddent Ford authorized. This is the frst step in that his amendment at this time? decides to go forward and meetthe program. Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, I have an In addition to the above items which amendment at the desk and I ask for its should have an impact on retention of immediate consideration. requirements laid down by the com- mittee. Mr. President, in closing, let me say' that this is an important bill and deserves careful consideration by this body. The Military Construction Sub- committee, chaired by the distinguished senior Senator from Missouri (Mr. SYMINGTON) , conducted extensive hear- ings on all elements of this bill. He was particularly thorough in placing on the public record as many fade as possible reference the Diego Garcia facility. In this committee effort, he was ably assisted by the distinguished senior Senator from Texas (Mr. TOWER), who is the ranking minority inember of the Military Construction :Subcommittee and who contributed so greatly to its work. Also, I think we should recognize our able staff. Mr. Gordon Nease, majority counsel for the subcommittee, and his competent secretary, Ms. Joyce Topham- servicemen, the bill contains 7,120 new The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk units of family housing, a reduction of will state the amendment. 3,342 units from the administration re- The assistant legislative clerk pro - quest, and several other projects relating ceeded to read the amendment. to recreation. Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, I ask The committee does, however, feel that unanimous consent that further reading the Department of Defense should me s- of the amendment be dispensed with. tigate the possibility of constructing fu- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without ture commissaries from nonappropriated objection, it is so ordered, and the funds. It is my understanding that the amendment will be printed in the Department is sympathetic to this ap- RECORD. proach, for it would take only a small The amendment is as follows: surcharge in the amount of 1 to 2 per- On page 73, insert between lines 19 and 20 cent. Since this is considerably smaller the following: than most local taxes whichare not Under the heading "Outside the United ates" with respect to "Naval Air Facility, paid by commissary customers, this St Sigonella, Sicily, - Italy," strike out "$ane.- ' should not prove to be a burden. 000" and insert in place thereof "$12,632.000". Of other interest to my colleagues is on page 73, line 21, after "4477,664,000" add the provision of $14,80,000 to the Navy a $41,217,000" and in line 23, strike out as the first increment for construction of "$526,781,000" and insert in place thereof expanded support facilities at Diego "$44,917,000, and $530,481,000". Garcia. This is a reduction to about half Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, I shall not ' . this bill in a proper form to the floor. guage was included making obligation I am offering an amendment today to Mr. President, this is an excellent bill of these funds contingent upon written title II, of H.R. 16136, the military' con- and while I would have prelerred a more notification of Congress by the President struction authorization bill. The amend- aggressive plan to meet 'the needs at that this construction is essential to the ment would add $3.7 million to the Naval Diego Garcia, I believe the proposal in national interest. Clearly, President Ford Air Facility, Sigonella, Sicily. This is in this bill is a fair solution. Therefore, I should have the opportimity to study this reality an amendment to the fiscal year would urge the Senate to M.ve this legis- 1973 Military Construction Authorize- lation prompt attention and approval. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I Yield to the able and distinguished senior Senator iron'i Texas, who Is the ranking member of the Subcommittee on Military Construction. T ,illkESTDING trFFICER. Without ection, it is so ordered. _Mr. TOWER. I thank tire distinguished leriator from Missouri an. SymigoTort). Campbell, have worked hard in bringing the original request. In addition, tan- detain the Senate on Mr. President, this bill authorizes the appropriation of $3.1 billion for the con- struction of military facilities, a reduc- tion of 000 million, in rough figures, from the administration request. It also authorizes 7,120 new units of family housing. There are obviously quite a few projects in the bill but I would like to highlight just a few. Of considerable concern to us all is the progress being made on the all-volunteer force. This is going to be an expensive proposition,but I think most of us real- ized when we embarked on this course that this would happen. The administra- fighter aircraft in Europe?and I speak Fifteen projects at Sigonella were au- tion requested $392 million for the addi- only in terms of numbers, not in terms thorized for a total amount of $8,932,000 tion and Upgrading of about 23,400 spaces of quality?it becomes even more essen- in the fiscal year 1973 Military Construe- in the bachelor housing program. The tial that we protect those aircraft we tion Authorization Act. Three of these budget request also contained $210 mil- have, from surprise attack. The Mideast projects in the amount of $684.000 are lion for the improvement and addition of wars provide a clear example of what being built by Seabees and there will be medical facilities. In most instances these can happen to aircraft caught unpro- no problem with their completion. One projects were approved. tected on the ground. fixed priced contract for a tactical sup- Beyond our immediate efforts to im- Mr. President, I should like finally to port center in the amount of $121,000 has prove the medical care being received by extend my thanks to -the chairman of our already been completed. Of the remain- our servicemen, the corionittee included subcommittee, Mr. SyranecroN, for the ing 11 projects, one was awarded by a $15 million for the construction at the fine job he has done in getting oue, what fixed priced contract, and the other 10 new Uniformed Services University of I believe to be a reasonable bill. His were awarded to two contractors with the Health Sciences. Current plans are statesmanship in the conduct of hear- cost escalation provisions. The inflation to utilize existing facilities for the urn- Ings and particularly the markup on the in Italy has been enormous?to the point versity; however, this will seriously frag- bill is deeply appreciated. that it is increasing by as much as 6 per- ment the student and instructor popula- Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I cent in a month. One course open to the Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 matter, but I believe from my review of the problem that such an expansion is well iustified. Some might argue that increasing American involvement in the Indian Ocean will only increase the temeo of Soviet activities in the area. But, the Soviets continue to increase their ship days anyway. Shall we sit by and do nothing? Shall we not even have the capability to respond to events in the area? Some have remarked that South Asia should remain free of the specter of nuclear arms. But the testing of a nuclear device by India recently should have removed all doubt about whether nonuclear status of the area would continue. A final project of considerable interest is the authorization of $62 million as the first increment of an airbase hardening tion Act, Public Law 92-545. I recognize that it is unusual for a member of the committee that reported the act to be seeking an -amendment to the act, but this is an unusual case. I learned of the need for this amendment on my Lrip to Europe over the Labor Day recess. At the outset, I wish to emphasize that these fiscal year 1973 construction pro)- ects form the keystone of the Navy's program to upgrade the Sigonella base so that vital logistic support operations can be carried out in support of our Sixth Fleet. Sigonella is strategically located in the central Mediterranean?its upgrade is essential in view of the trends in recant years to a predominance of Sixth Fleet operations in the central and eastern Mediterranean. The inetallation at Sigo- nella will have the capability to rapidly airlift supplies and personnel to SiEth program in Europe. On a recent trip to Fleet task forces. In addition, our ASW Europe it was made clear to me that this patrol aircraft will receive support for is an absolutely vital construction pro- their vital missions over the wide ex- gram With the Soaiet advantage in panse of the Mediterranean. Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 September 11, 197,4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE Navy and the Army Corps of Engineers, the Contracting Agency, was to termi- nate 8 to 10 projects in order to recoup sufficient funds to complete 1 or 2 high priority projects, and then to seek fund- ing of the remaining projects at a signifi- cantly escalated cost in the fiscal year 1976 request. However, there are problems with this course of action beyond those of just de- laying some construction by a year. The contracts have been proceeding from 4 to 10 months and are at various stages of completion and with many items of equipment in various stages of fabrica- tion in plants throughout Italy. It is a very undesirable situation to leave these projects in a partial state of completion on an Italian military ? base for a year until an amendment can be included in the fiscal year 1976 Military Construction Authorization Act. Further should the contracts be ter- minated and restarted, the cost is ex- pected to be increased by another $5 mil- lion over the amount in my amendment. Therefore, because of the urgency of the projects and the increased cost should we delay them, I believe it is in our best Interests to amend the fiscal year 1973 Military Construction Act this year. I urge my colleagues to join me in support- ing this amendment. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, as chairman of the Subcommittee on Mil- itary Construction, I have discussed this with the chairman of the full commit- tee, and we shall be glad to accept the proposed amendment of the distin- guished Senator from Texas and take it into conference. Mr. TOWER. I thank the able and dis- tinguished Senator from Missouri. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the amendment. The amendment was agreed to. Mr. STENNIS. Will the Senator yield to me? Mr. SYMINGTON. I am glad to yield to the distinguished chairman of the committee. Mr. STENNIS. I have a more complete statement on the bill as a whole, focus- ing on one particular item, that I should like to use later. For the time being, I want especially to thank the Senator from Missouri (Mr. SYMINGTON) for the long, hard hours, days, and weeks of work that he did on this bill, and also to thank the Senator from Texas (Mr. TowEa) for the work that he did on it as the ranking minority member. This is a working subcommittee, and I am sure that someone will mention or has mentioned already the very valuable services, to the full committee and this subcommittee of our staff member, Gor- don Nease, a long-time, highly valued member of our staff. He happens to be ill right now, a situation which is tempo- rary, but I should not like to let any chance pass without complimenting him on his fine work. Mr. SYMINGTON. Will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. Yes, I yield to the Sen- ator from Missouri. I was not taking his sentiments away from him, but I did not know if I would get another chance. Mr. SYMINGTON. I deeply appreci- ate the kind remarks made by the able and distinguished chairman of the full committee. I associate myself with the remarks he has made. I have already done so with those of the senior Sen- ator from Texas, but I should like now to express my regret at the illness of Mr. Nease, who has been the authority in this field for many years. I, therefore, associate myself with the remarks of the able and distinguished Senator from Mississippi. Mr. TOWER. Will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. Yes, I am glad to yield. Mr. TOWER. Again, I should like to ex- tend my thanks to the distinguished Sen- ator from Mississippi for his kind re- marks about me, and certainly about Gordon Nease. We certainly miss Mr. Nease's presence today. He has been helpful throughout the years, and we wish him a speedy recovery. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the distin- guished Senator. These are not pro forma remarks which I made about my two col- leagues and about Mr. Nease. We believe he will be back soon. Mr. President, I support this bill. I have been through it. We had it up before the full committee and had a real dis- cussion of the major parts of it. I am glad that I can and I do actively support the entire bill. Let me say just one word about the item concerning Diego Garcia. This con- cerns a naval installation represented by provisions in the bill for piers, stor- age facilities, and related facilities. I support that item, Mr. President, on the basis of our Nation's need and not on the basis of being anti-Soviet Russia or anything of that kind. I was con- vinced, not by the Navy nor by anyone else, but just by the commonsense and logic of it, that we ought to do some- thing about this naval fueling and dock- ing facility, with places to use as piers. We do have a policy question involved. So the bill provides that the money is authorized, but shall not be spent until relations are more formally established with Great Britain under terms that we approve of. I shall have something fur- ther to say about that part of the bill, especially should it come under attack. I thank the Senator for yielding to me. He wants to get to these amendments, I know, and I think he is right about it. So I thank the Senator for yielding. Mr. SYMINGTON. I thank my able chairman. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of the quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I yield to the distinguished Senator from Massachusetts (Mr. KENNEDY). Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I send an amendment to the desk on behalf of myself, the distinguished Senator from Maine (Mr. HATHAWAY) , and other Sen- ators, and ask for its immediate consid- eration. S 16389 The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to read the amendment. Mr. KENNEDY. I ask unanimous con- sent that further reading of the amend- ment be dispensed with. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. KENNEDY'S amendment is as follows: On page 113, between lines 10 and 11, in- sert a new section as follows: SEC. 614. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any-funds made available pursuant to this or any other Act for the construction or maintenance of facilities at the service academy of any military depart- ment may be expended by the Secretary of the military department concerned for the construction and maintenance of such fa- cilities as may be necessary or appropriate to provide for the admission of females as ca- dets or midshipmen (midshipwomen), as ap- propriate, at such academy. (b) As used in subsection (a), the term "service academy of any military depart- ment" means (1) the United States Military Academy in the case of the Army, (2) the United States Naval Academy in the case of the Navy, and (3) the United States Air Force Academy in the case of the Air Force. On page 113, line 11, strike out "SEC. 614" and insert in lieu thereof "SEc. 015". Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, this amendment tracks very closely an amendment offered by the distinguished Senator from Maine (Mr. HATHAWAY) and accepted by the Senate earlier this year. Of course, it has some important revisions in it, but it is an amendment which I think is justified and entirely appropriate for this particular legisla- tion. After it was accepted by the Senate earlier in the year, it was dropped in conference, because the House conferees did not feel at that time that it was rele- vant to the particular measure to which it was attached. The amendment would permit the use of funds which are authorized for the various service academies in a way which would -be consistent with estab- lishing a policy permitting women to at- tend the service academies. Therefore, it is an entirely relevant amendment to the military construction program, which is concerned with authorizing and even- tually appropriating money that will be used for military construction. Mr. President, we know that women today are enrolled in a number of ROTC programs. That is so because the military forces recognize the importance of hav- ing women in the ROTC. Therefore, they take training which is similar and com- parable to the training that young men take in being trained as officers. They also take such training in the OCS. They are also involved in taking courses in the service War College, which are the most important educational institutions with- in the Military Establishment; and there seems to be no real or convincing reason why women should not also be permitted to be enrolled in the service academies. One point that has been raised over a period of time is, how can we expect to enroll women in the service academies when the service academies are to train people for combat forces? Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16390 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE September 11, 1974 The Armed Services Committee has recognized, through compilation of fig- ures, that actually only a relatively small number of military officer position are combat related. It varies in the different services from approximately 15 percent in the Army who are actually involved in combat-related training to approxi- mately 30 or 35 percent In the other services, the Navy and the Air Force. There are a variety of different special- ties at the service academies that women could be superbly trained and equipped for. This would also free men to serve in the combat area, particularly considering the shortfall in the combat arms area we have seen over a period of recent months. Women could be very well suited for such other responsibilities. I am hopeful that the amendment will be accepted by the managers of the bill and taken to conference. It seems to me that during the period of recent years, we have been attempting to establish the basic and fundamental rights of women in our society. I think there are many who can play a vital role in the defense of this country and in the military forces of this Nation. This amendment would provide them the kind of excellence in training at the service academies which Is being provided to the young men of this country, and I think our whole de- fense posture and establishment would be basically better served If that were the case. This amendment does not mandate the admission of females to the acad- emies. However, it does put the Depart- ment of Defense on notice that the Congress expects the Department of De- fense to use its authority to make that decision. It does point out to the De- partment of Defense that the Congress would look favorably upon such a de- cision. And, most importantly, it does facilitate such a decision by authorizing the construction of whatever facilities may be necessary at the respective acad- emies, in the view of the Services, in order to prepare for the admission of women. Mr. President, last December the Sen- ate passed the Hathaway amendment to the military, pay bonus bill, an amend- ment which mandated the admission of women to the Service academies. That amendment was objected to by the House on two grounds: Firsts it was non- germane to the bill it was attached to; second, similar legislation in the House would receive prompt hearings. There are in fact some six bills in the House related to the admission of women in the Service academies. However, hear- ings have not yet been concluded on them, nor will they apparently be con- cluded before an appeal has been heard in the U.S. District Court of Appeals concerning a suit that has been filed to allow two women into the Air Force and Naval academies. That appeal hearing could take several months. In the meantime, wide bipartisan sup- port has arisen in both the Senate and the House in favor of the admission of women to the Service acacbmies. Some 25 Senators have publicly supported this, including the majority and minority leaders, and the chairman and ranking minority member of the Armed Services Committee. The Department of Defense has recog- nized that the power to appoint is totally discretionary: The power to appoint persons to the acad- emies of the Army, Navy and Air Force :s a discretionary function cf the President alone. Since it is entirely within the discre- tion of the President to determine who will be appointed to a service academy, women could be appointed by him without the need for any new legislation. None of the statutes relating to any of the three service academies requires a person to be male in order to be eligible for nomination or appointment to the academies. (May 1973 letter from Defense Department to House Armed Services Com- mittee) The U.S. District Court also held re- cently that nothing in the admission statutes indicates that males only must be considered. The primary reason for the nonadmis- sion of women to the Service academies at the present time is that it currently happens to be Department of Defense policy. It is also a tradition which is very reluctant to cede to modern realities. There are two strings which academy traditionalists are holding on to in the hope of maintaining the all-male policy: First, that two laws prohibiting women from assignment to combat vessels and planes in the Navy and Air Force can somehow continue to be interpreted as also excluding women from the Service academies, since the academies train offi- cers for combat. However, the Defense Department admits that those laws ex- clude women from only 30 percent of Navy officer positions, from only 38 per- cent of Air Force officer positions, and from no Army officer positions?since the laws aply only to Air Force and Navy combat positions, although only 15 per- cent of Army officer positions fall in the combat category. Thus, women Academy graduates could serve in 70 percent of Navy Officer positions, 62 percent of Air Force officer positions, a:nd all Army offi- cer positions without any change what- soever in current law. The second hope of academy tradi- tionalists is that the Congress may get so bottled up in its deliberative legislative processes that it may not be able to soon pass a law which will require the Serv- ices to admit women to the academies. Mr. President, this amendment dries not require the Department of Defense to admit women to our Nation's service academies. But it does provide the full authority to do so and it does strongly urge Department Defense to change its For the Department of Defense has already done much to provide equal op- portunities for American men and women in the services. The Air Force opened its Reserve Officers Training Corps program to women in 1968, and the Army and Navy did likewise in 1973. Since initiation of the Volunteer Army last year, the Defense Department has undertaken to bring more women into the services, in a concerted effort to im- prove the quality, numbers, and repre- sentativeness of the Volunteer Army. Experimental programs were begun this summer, and will be greatly expanded next year, to have men and women un- dergoing joint basic training. Of 430 job classifications in the Army, 400 are now open to women. Women are now being assigned to command mixed units, and women are making outstanding contri- butions as pilots, chaplains, technicians, mechanics, deck hands, truck dn,vers, and drill sergeants. Yet, much more can be done so that our Nation can better benefit from the dedication and talent of qualified and willing women who wish to serve in our Armed Forces. A very small percentage of our Armed Forces are women, and only about 4 percent of officers are women. Women officers should not only be trained in ROTC, which provides a great- er percentage of military officers than the academies, but also in the specialized academy environments which will give them superior job and career advance- ment opportunities. Service statistics show that academy graduates, as op- posed to OCS and ROTC graduates, rise higher in the rank and pay scales. If women officers attend all of the service war colleges, the, highest level of service education, preparing oficers for general and admiral rank, aliere is no legitimate reason why they cannot begin their careers at the military acad- emies. The situation becomes all the more re- grettable when one recalls that a recent bill was passed in Congress allowing a Laotian general's son to attend West Point, along with other foreigners at all the academies, while American women are refused attendance. In the case of these foreigners, American taassa yen' money is being spent to tin people who will not even -serve in the American. mili- tary, whether in a combat status or not. Mr. President, it Is time that Congress and the Department of Defense cooper- ated in doing the right thing for Amer- ican women and our Armed Forces. After all, American women have as vital an interest in our national defense as Amer- ican men do. The military academies should be open to qualified women candidates. Tht; can be done by a change in Department of Defense policy. The Merchant Marine Academy, under the Secretary of Com- merce, has already set a precedent in receiving women applicants. This amendment will emphasize congres- sional intent in encouraging the Depart- ment of Defense to do likewise. I hope my colleagues will support this modest but important amendment. I ask unanimous consent that the fol- lowing related items be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the items were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Norfolk Virginia-Pilot, July 23, 19741 TiE LADY IS A MIDSHIPIVIAN It isn't attracting much notice, but the armed forces are fighting a bitter rear-guard action to keep women out of the service academies. There are bilis before Congress to au.hor- ize the admission of the women to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, the Naval Academy at Annapolis, and the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, and a change Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 September 11, 1974 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 16391 in the men only policies of the services is just a matter of time. (The U.S. Merchant Marine Academy has dropped its prohibition of women.) The military could have opened the acad- emies to women "at any time in the last 10 years or any time this year, but they have never done it and will not do it," says Rep- resentative Otis G. Pike (D-N.Y.), a member of the House Armed Services Committee. Since thousands of women are serving in the military, since the Air Force opened its Reserve Officers Training Corps program to women in 1968 and the Army and Navy did likewise in 1973, and since the Defense De- partment has undertaken "a concerted ef- fort to bring more women into the services" (as its general counsel testified last month to the Military Personnel Subcommittee), it is impossible to justify the exclusion of wom- en from the academies on any grounds other than tradition. (And even such traditional- ists as Senators John Stennis and Strom Thurmond are among the cosponsors of measures to open the academies to women.) The argument that the brass makes for keeping women out is that the academies are meant to train combat leaders and women' are barred from combat by law. "The issue Is not whether women should become cadets at West Point; the basic question is wheth- er Americans are prepared to commit their daughters to combat," General Frederick C. Weyand, Army Vice Chief of Staff, testified on June 19. "I am not prepared to do that. And I believe that is the sentiment of the major- ity of Americans." That is the sort of talk that causes people to say war is too important to be left to generals. No one proposes to send women into the trenches. But the United States is not at war and there are important noncombat- ant roles for women even in wartime. That much is obvious from the part women have taken in past wars. And, as Senator Marlow Cook (R-Ky.) observed when the question was debated earlier in the Senate, "combat today may be a lady sitting at a computer at a missile site in North Dakota." There is no good reason why women ought not to be admitted to the service academies, which is not to say that Annapolis is sud- denly to become a finishing school. The mid- shipmen and cadets would adjust to the change a lot more quickly than the old salts and old soldiers. The military ought to ac- cede gracefully to the inevitable. [From the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal, July 23, 1974] ARMY TRAINING PROGRAM FOR WOMEN Is CHECKED (By John Filiatreau) Pr. KNox, KY.?Alongside more than 1,600 men taking ROTC basic training at Ft. Knox this summer are two WAC career officers. The Women's Army Corps members, Maj. Nancy E. Bird, 33, and Capt. Marla J. Stripling, 31, hold desk jobs in the 2nd Region headquarters of the Army's Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) at Ft. Knox. But at various times they're also marching with the men, throwing hand grenades, do- ing calisthenics and trying most other basic training staples. How well they fare, and what they recom- mend when the training is over, will help determine what training is given next sum- mer to the first women ROTC cadets attend- ing boot camp with men at Pt, Knox. The presence of Major Bird and Captain Stripling is a mark of the changing role of women in the U.S. Army?a role that is shift- ing from their traditional clerical and sup- port function in the direction of a possible combat role. Unlike many other nations, the U.S. is not well disposed toward the idea of women in combat. At the moment, the law says women may not be employed as fighting soldiers. However, many Viet Cong guerrilla fighters were women, and American veterans will at- test to the fact that they fought well. A re- cent Miss World titleholder served in the Israeli Army as a tank driver. Women outside the military are objecting to the roles they've been forced to play in such male-dominated areas as business and politics. Few organizations have been as male-dominated as the military, and now the WACs have begun sending up smoke signals, too. They say the new all-volunteer military is in need of qualified people and cannot af- ford to lose capable women by clinging to cherish stereotypes. As one WAC officer re- cently said, "They need the labor force . . . There's been a general awakening." Talented women just don't want to be 'Army career secretaries. Major Bird, a 13-year Army veteran and Captain Stripling, who has nine years' serv- ice, may be the first women to take the U.S. Army's basic combat training with a group of men. Women have been members of college ROTC units for several years, but the esti- mated 300 to 400 coming next year for boot camp along with thousands of men will be a new experience for the Army and for Ft. Knox. "This is a far more strenuous course than ours would be," Major Bird said recently of the training which she and Captain Stripling are taking at times of their own arranging. "It's weighted in the direction of endur- ance . . . and the hardest parts of the train- ing are those that have to do with actual strength, in the arms and shoulders, like the horizontal bar exercise. The bars were made for a guy's hands, they were just too big . . . "The biggest problem was simply being out of shape. And there are problems having to do with our phyiscal stature. We're built differently, in the pelvic area and the bust, and that makes a difference in some of these physical exercises. And there are a couple of exercises that were actually easier for me." Major Bird, a native -of Rochester, N.Y., is more concerned about what women ought to do than what they can do. "There's a fine line between what you can do and what you should do," she said. "For example, the grenade assault course looks like a lot of fun to me. I want to do it because it's fun and it's a challenge, but this kind of training is expensive and women are still prohibited by law from taking part in com- bat. There is a cost factor. So the parts of training directly related to combat are still a question mark . . . This training is still up for grabs." Major Bird does see some value in train- ing women in combat tactics. "It does help you to understand what the military is all about," she said. "I think it might make a woman have a little more in- terest in the piece of paper she's processing . . . There's no way you can lose. Even if you stayed just 24 hours you'd learn something." According to Capt. Charles Crowley, under Whose supervision the women have been training they're getting "no particular spe- cial attention . . . We do talk to the WACs every day, and this has been an educational process for us . . .The cadets have a posi- tive attitude about it. They've more or less left them alone." Major Bird's most firm conviction is that the women ought to train together with the men, "with some modifications of the train- ing process." Captain Stripling, a native of Fort Valley, Ga., and an instructor at Eastern Kentucky University, feels differently about the matter. "If you have the women training with the men, you're going to have them competing with the men," she said. "And I think SO/Yle of the women would surpass the men, and that would be a demoralizing factor . . . I don't think they should train together. "I think we need to develop a training program that takes in the best parts of both sides of the house . . . After all, basic training isn't all there is, combat isn't all there is. We've been training volunteers (in the WAC) for 30 years for supportive roles, and women are still not going into combat arms. Yet everything here is geared to the combat role . . . I don't even think this training here applies." . Captain Stripling, whose father was a 30- year Army career man, thinks the presence of women in training camps can have a bene- ficial effect. "I think when women get on the job there won't be all this role playing," she said. "There's a real difference in the way a man approaches training women. In a training mission there just can't be any difference." The WAC branch of the Army is on the move. Since July 1, the Army has been as- signing WAC officers to other Army career officer branches. This has led to suggestions that the WAC branch may be merged soon with the Regular Army. WAC Director Brig, Gen. Mildred C. Bail- ey, insists the WAC branch is alive and well and will continue to play an important role in WAC officer assignments and military school selection. She recently said the WAC branch in the officer personnel directorate of the Military Personnel Center in Washington will con- tinue to coordinate WAC assignments with the other officer branches "until we have concrete proof that women are being prop- erly used." She added, "I can assure you the corps will be around for a good long time." NEW TJNIFORMS BEING PLANNED One of the current questions facing the WAC's is what their new uniforms will look like. Several are now in the testing stage. A summer pants suit which will be part of the training uniform is undergoing testing now. General Bailey said she is "sorry to find my women required to wear fatigues unless per- forming a job that justifies them. Putting a woman into uniform shouldn't rob her of her identity as a woman. I hope com- manders will come to realize that it is just as important for a woman to retain her identity as it is for a man." She added that the Army is making good progress assigning women to instructor and headquarters staffs at male training centers; but she noted that more than half the trainer personnel at the WAC Center at Ft. McClellan, Ala. are men. [From the Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution, August 25, 19711 THEY WOULDN'T HAVE MADE Fr (By Karen Peterson) "It's fair to say that they wouldn't have made it without us," says Women's Army Corps Director Mildred Bailey. The soft-spoken, white-haired WAC brig- adier general freely acknowledges that in order to make the "all-volunteer" concept Work, the Army has had to dramatically in- crease its number of female recruits. In fact, if the WACs hadn't recruited 15,- 200 new women by June, 1974, the "new" Army itself wouldn't have met its first-year quota. The fledging volunteer program tech- nically would have flopped. It has been a year since the draft expired in July, 1973. In spite of dire predictions of falling 20,000 short, the volunteer Army has just made its over-all goal of approximately 781,000. But that's in part because the WACs have steadily increased their recruitment goals to meet the need for more bodies. "There's no doubt about it. We are help- ing to make the concept viable," says Gen. Bailey. At the end of 1972, total WAC strength was set at 16,500 women. By 1979, it is slotted to be 50,400. (Current WACs num- ber 24,800 as of April.) Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16392 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE September 11, 1974 Here's another way to view the numbers game. At the end of 1971, WACs were less than one percent of the total Army's strength. At the end of '73, they were three percent. If things go as they're now project- d by 1979 they'll be eix percent of the Army. In addition, the WACs are getting a better educated recruit than the regular Army. To be a WAC, you have to be a high school graduate, or its equivalent in Army tests. The male Army recruits high school drop- outs. It has lowered its standards to meet quotas, and in some months is taking more than 50 percent non-graduaten Gen. Bailey comments, "Our goal now is to improve the quality of men to meet our WAC standards. If the regular Army could get high school graduates entirely, it would. Our mar- ket is different. We CAN get the graduates, and don't feel it would be in our national interest to drop our standards to meet theirs." There are several reasons Why the WACs are more than making their recruitment goals. (In Jinn, they made 106 percent of their quota. Gen. Bailey says, "Everything is coming together now. We have an increased need for Army personnel at the same time 'Social attitudes are changing. . . . "When the Women's Army Corps was founded in the World War II era, serving in the Armed Forces Was the patriotic thing to do. No one worried whether it was `feminine'. Then later we saw a Complete change in viewpoint, and women withdrew from 'in- appropriate' fields. If they didn't, their moti- vations and morals were Suspect." She continues, "Now we've seen another complete reversal, and women want total participation in public life ...Now we WACs are seeing 30 years of our hard work pay off. We're getting our share of the advertising and recruiting dollar again. The Army is pay- ing serious attention to recruiting women" To get young women, the WACs are doing a lot of very practical things, such as offering them money and jobs on a par with men. Fer example, now 250 ME's are military police- women, a number expected to double in a year. Says Gen. Bailey, "We've got women welders, plumbers, heavy equipment opera- tors, and the like." Of 430 job classifications, only 30 are still closed to women, and they are directly re- lated to combat assignments, such as rifle- men. Both men and women are being urged to sign up for exotic jobs brhiging a $1,500 to $2,500 cash bonus when training is finished. An example is missile repairman?perhaps more properly called a missile repairperson. Opening jobs to women is one thing. Fill- ing them with women is another. Approxi- mately 81 percent of today's WACs are still in some form of clerical or medical work. Com- ments Gen. Bailey, "If we're going to have 50,000 WACs in 1979, we've nitst got to move them out of traditional fielth, the ones they already know. We're pushing these other fields fields heavily now." There are other reasons today's Women's Army Corps is able to attract increasing numbers of women. Court and Congressional decisions have smashed paet inequities, so that the women now get Mere of an equal break with men. Recent Supreme Court deci- sions prohibited discrimination in housing and medical benefits for the families of fe- male Armed Forces personnel. And pregnant military women are no longer summarily dis- charged, regardless of whether or not they're married. In 1972 Congress brought a female veteran's educational benefits under the GI bill up to those of a man. Finally, in 1973 the WACs decided you could be married before enlisting, as well as after. Gen Bailey says, "We're just trying harder now to adjust our regulations to a woman's family needs. Before, they weren't often considered. But there are other inequities. The Army does not admit women to West Point, saying that doesn't jibe with the academy's primary mission of training combat leaders. And it still doesn't give combat assignments to women?or the $2,500 case bonus that goes with accepting a combat slot. [From the Christian Science Monitor, August 27, 10741 WOMEN IN THE MILITARY: OPPORTONITM IMPROVE (NOTE?The progress ot U.S. women to- ward true job equality is getting a close look during this National Women's Week, mark- ing the 54th anniversary of the constitu- tional amendment giving women the right to vote. And nowhere ars the paradoxical problems of the working woman clearer than in the military services. Uniformed women, about 3 percent of the armed forces now, have made great strides--and still face a formidable barrier in fedei al law. Why wom- en join and what awaits them in the service is discussed below; at right, three senior women officers talk about their careers.) (By John D. Moorhead) More young U.S. women now are flicking a job-seeking glance at military service. Perhaps their eyes are caught by the pro- motional campaigns telling of expanded op- portunities for training and travel. Or they may want to pay off some bills when jobs are scarce, as did one woman marine interviewed recently. In any ease, the minter it services are look- ing for a few good women. Now that the draft no longer conscripts or pressures ycluag men into the military, the volunteer Army? and the other services?need women so that they will not need so many men. And they are getting them. The number of women in the U.S. Army has doubled since 1972 and may double again by 1977. The Air Force has boosted its fewer of women 20 percent in a year, and the Navy's increase over 1973 is about 40 percent. JOB SPECIALTIES OPEN The Coast Guard has begun to enlist wom- en in its regular ranks. Previously they had been confined to the reserves. Most military job specialties now are apen to women, except for dunes that would ex- pose them to combat, service spokesmen say. There are some stickirg points, however: Women at present are barred from scene advanced training schools directly rented to combat jobs. (Federal law still bars women from combat.) The possibility of a woman's commanding a mixed unit remains limited, although some women recently have been assigned to minor commands. Partially this is a carryover from the time when women clearly were second- Class citizens In the military, officers sae, be- cause few women have had the opportmity to build the kinds of experience and diver- sity of training that would prepare them to hold a major command. TURTHER LEGISLATION NEEDED military police, as well as other fields a hack previously were male domains. Military women now serve as pilots (on a very lim- ited basis), tugboat technicians, deck hands, truck drivers, end auto mechanics. The pay equals that of military men: an enlisted woman will make $5,829 yearly when she enters the service but can expect tc pull In over $8,000 yearly by the end of her first enlistment. Officers start at $9,74116 and after four years of service and normal promotion will be mak- ing around $16,000 yearly. -(The figures for both officers and enlisted persons include basic pay, living allowances, and tax advan- tages.) The security, amenities, and adventure of military life are quite attractive to many young women, but some discrimination re- mains. "There are some lingering thought proc- esses that have to be overceine, with women as well as with men," says Navy Capt. Alice Marshall. "Women have to adjust then own attitudes. "Some of tile men have never worked with women before, and if they tend to thiek not, too highly of women in the military then it is harder," she continues. RESTR/CT/ONS CHARGED Says a spokesperson for the Massachusetts Governor's Commission on the Status of Women. "It is very difficult for women to get truly professional training in the military. For women going into the service as a career, most areas are a closed door?' Married women in the military facs spe- cial problems, (The A.rmy arid Air Force esti- mate that about 30 percent of their women are married, whereas the Navy says 14.8 per- cent of its women officers and 12.8 percent of its enlisted women are. A very small percent- age of these have children, tile services say.) If both husband and wife are in the armed forces, the military generally makes an effort to assign them to the same duty elation. This is easiest if both belong tosthe same service. "If you fall in loves try to make it as. Army man," Brig. Gen. Mildred C. Bailey, director of the Women's Army Corns, tells her troops. ON ACTIVE DITTY "We guarantee that women will not be separated from the family any more than the man," General Bailey says. Military women who become pregnant may in most cases remain. on active duty, as long as their performance is good and remains so, military officers say. This includes unwed mothers. The Marine Corps, however, reserves the right to discharge military mothers. But even here a woman can remain on active duty if her special petition approved by Headquar- ters Marine Corps. The lot of a woman in uniform is better than it has ever been, most observers agree, but she still does not stand toes-on-the-line equal with the man under arms. [From the Christian Science Monitor, Au- gust 27, 1914] THREE WHO CAME UP _FROM PERSCH4 NEL A pioneering experience, a daily struggle to prove personal wenn, and a deeply ean isfying challenge. This is the picture drawn by three senior women officers in the MB military about their careers, spanning a time when service- women have moved rapidly toward real equality with their male counterparts. "During World War II women did any- thing that would free men for combat roles, but when the war ended, almost overnight a curtain was drawn before us," says Brig Gen. Mildred C. Bailey, a 32-year Army veteran. "Women vino were willing out of patriotism to come into the armed tOrces became sus- pect. We've spent 30 years trying to reverse this," she said in a recent interview. For Navy Capt. Alice Marshall, who en- In the past, women in the military have specialized in fields such as personnel or public relations. Ratification of the equal rights amend- ment would clear the way for full partnipa- tion by women in all military duties, al- though further legislation would still be needed, Officers say. All the services say they are doing much to eliminate old restrictions. As late as 1967, there were statutory limits on the number of women in the armed services, and women could rise no higher than the rank of lieuten- ant colonel or Navy commander. Now these curbs are gone. Privileges and benefits generally have been equalized for men and women. And opportunities for women are opening up. Training is available in electronics, air- craft maintenance, avionics engineering, Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP751300380R000700050003-1 September 11, 1974, CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 16393 tered the service in 1952, the struggle has not been so visible: "I have always felt my opportunities in the Navy were significantly greater than for most of my college counter- parts in civilian occupations." "You really didn't think in terms of dis- crimination," says Air Force Col. Billie M. Bobbitt of her 23-year career. "Most of us accepted it as a way of life." General Bailey, trained as a teacher, came Into the Army during World War II and stayed on. 'Though she has found her work satisfying, she speaks of the "humiliation, the constant proving of oneself, trying to be better than the man." Most of her career was spent in public relations, she says, although she also did personnel work and served 13 years in in- telligence. General Bailey now is the director of the Women's Army Corps. She is the second WAC officer to reach the rank of brigadier general. After working in radio and television as a civilian, Captain Marshall received a di- rect appointment as a Navy ensign in 1952. Her first duty station was as a communica- tions watch officer in San Francisco during the Korean war. "That was a busy time and I enjoyed it," she recalls. Most of the rest of her career has been Spent in the public relations or personnel fields. In the late 1950's, she attended the general line officers' school then operated in Mon- terey, Calif. "The men helped us with damage control, and we coached them on personnel proced- ures," she says of the experience. In the middle 1960's, she served as flag secretary to the U.S. fleet air commander in the Mediterranean. "I also served as in- spector general and traveled all over Europe and the Middle East," she says. She now is head' of the services and bene- fits branch at the Bureau of Naval Person- nel in Washington. In 1961, Colonel Bobbitt received a direct oommission in the Air Force based on her civilian experience in education and school counseling. Her work since has been primarily in per- sonnel. "I've worked for good people and always had challenging jobs," she says. "I came in at a time when a military career was really not an acceptable alterna- tive for a woman. Now it offers a much more normal life for women," she says. Two of the more unusual tasks she has been given during her career were the as- signment to activate a maintenance and supply group in 1955-86 and a five-year stint' as a special agent for the office of special investigations. [From Time magazine, Aug. 26, 19741 SKIRTS AND STRIPES With her short hair, decisive manner, and well-pressed Army greens festooned with rib- bons, Colonel Nancy Hopfenspirger, 43, is every inch an officer. As she strides across the U.S. Army base at Wiirzburg, West Germany, each day, G.I.'s snap to attention and the lo- cal employees murmur a respectful "Guten Morgen." As the new deputy commander of Wiirz- burg and of various support units in an area covering nearly one-third of southern West Germany, Hopfenspirger is one of a growing 'number of women to step into important command assignments. Colonel Frances Weir, 47, issues orders to a mostly male outfit at the support battalion in Fort Jackson, S.C. Colonel Georgia Hill, 49, is head of the sprawling supply depot at Cameron Station, Va. Until a year ago, female officers could com- mand only other members of the Women's Army Corps (the WAC). The Army, however, is now reassigning women permanently to previously all-male branches. Brigadier Gen- eral Mildred C. Bailey, chief of the WAC, last month finished turning over all its person- nel files to the women's new units. At the same time, the Army has reclassified 136,000 jobs, opening them to women. Thus there have recently been a myriad of female firsts on various bases: the first female parachute rigger, the first turbine-engine maintenance woman, the first female drill sergeant. Actual combat is still barred to women, though that too may change if the Equal Rights Amend- ment is passed. Female integration into formerly male units is not easy. As a former battalion com- mander at Fort Carson, Colo., explains: "A soldier's day doesn't end at 5 p.m. There are assignments like guard duty with a rifle, charge of quarters, and special police hand- ling of burly drunks." Women formerly rose through the ranks only within the WAC. Now they are competing directly with men for promotions. The seeding into various Army branches of senior WAC officers, some of whom have been lieutenant colonels for more than a decade, is especially difficult. Many fear a hostile reception in the regular Army; a few are even retiring rather than make the switch. Younger women, however, seem to welcome the new challenges. This quiet revolution came about chiefly by necessity. With only volunteers to choose from, the Army needs all the recruits it can get, female as well as male. The response has been excellent: 14,000 women have joined the Army this year up from 5,200 in 1971. In the other armed services, too, women have been given a broader spectrum of jobs. The Air Force now has 17,800 women, compared wth 12,265 five years ago. There are 16,500 women in the Navy, up from 8,636 in 1969. Only in the Marines which needs fewer volunteers, has the number of women re- mained relatively constant (about 2,700). Few of the new female recruits are sign- ing on to become commanders. Military life is often the best deal they can get in a tight job market. A high school graduate who enlists as an Army private can get a salary of $326.10 a month, on-the-job training, free room and board and security. Re-enlistment rates are very high, partly because every servicewoman earns the same pay as a male of the same rank?an equality rare in the civilian world. [From NBC Sunday Night News, Sept. 1, 6:30 p.m.] U.S. ARMY COED BARRACKS ROWAN. Women in the United States Army are nothing new as we all know. But women living in the same barracks as men in that same United States Army, well that is some- thing new as we learn in this report from Pet Thompson. PAT THOMPSON. The military life has al- ways been thought of as the ultimate strong- hold of the male. This is part of the new military which the Pentagon is trying to sell to volunteers. This is D Company at Fort Benjamin Har- rison. It's different not only because it's made up of personnel from all services attending the Defense Information School, but it also has both men and women. Even more un- usual is the fact that both the men and women live in the same barracks. They're not the same kind of barracks most veterans re- member, they're made up of individual rooms like those found in a college dormitory. Men share rooms right next to women. PFC LANETTE FISCHER. Well my mother's first reaction to?when I told her we were going coed she was under the impression it was one floor has females, one floor has males and this sort of thing. And in a phone call a little while later I had said, well the ser- geant next door, the male sergeant next door. And she said, the what, in the phone call and it really threw her for a loop THOMPSON. The men and women spend a lot of time together. They eat most of their meals close together, then classes together and they relax together. This togetherness has had some predictable results. This couple Navy Seaman James REATHL and Army Private Lee LONG met in the bar- racks and now they're going to get married next week. Some old Army types don't like to see this, uniformed personnel holding hands while on duty. But it's all part of the new military. Seaman REATHL. I think it's a much more realistic way to live. I think it's definitely a good step for the military to take, it shows that they're keeping up with changes, that are taking place in America, I think, today. THOMPSON. Airman James LEWIS has mixed emotions about the coed life style. He likes it but it also presents a special problem for him. MAN. Now you are married, how does your wife feel about it? Airman JAMES LEWIS. Well my wife doesn't really know that this is a coed dorm. THOMPSON. The Army feels that the experi- mental program at Fort Benjamin Harrison has worked so well that it will mix the sec- tions' in most of the units at the Indiana base in October. One of the women who will be affected by this says she wants good substantial locks on her door. But she's definitely in the minority. Psi: THOMPSON. NBC News. [From the Philadelphia Bulletin, Sept. 1, 1974] ARMY APPLAUDS ITS WOMEN AS "DAMNED GOOD SOLDIERS" (By Claude Lewis) A couple of years ago it clearly would have been a matter for laughter. But no more. Today's Army?or at least a part of it?has gone soft. Over at Ft. Dix in N.J. nearly two dozen women soldiers moved in with the men, last week, filling the air with an odd mixture of after-shaving lotion and hairspray. Once Army barracks were filled with cheesecake pin-ups of Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell. That was the real Army, man! But now the pin-ups are liable to be cen- terfolds of actor Jim Brown or Burt Reynolds, as women begin fixing up their rooms in the same barracks with the male soldiers. Rules require that men and women stay on sep- arate levels. But if soldiers are trained to crack the iron curtain what's to stop them from infiltrating a back stairwell and doing what comes nat- urally?, "We're all adults and everyone knows right from wrong," a sergeant said at Ft. Dix the other day. He didn't even crack a smile. "Yeah," beamed a GI, eyeing a pretty sol- dier. With girls as attractive as some of those joining the Army, it's no wonder the military reaches its quotas so often. Actually, women in the Army are no joke. In many cases they are proving to be su- perior to men, in education, and in basic training. Department of Defense policy dictates that all females in the military must be high school graduates. As for men, they merely have to be able to chew gum and walk at the same time. If women still suffer from discrimination in civilian life, the all-voluntary army prom- ises them equal opportunity. They are joining the army in unprece- dented numbers and, according to army offi- cials, are proving to be "damned good sol- diers." In addition, said Maj. Gen. Charles Hixon, "women have had a tremendous effect on the Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 S 16394 Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE September 11, .7 9 7 4 male population." The men are said to be i trying to keep up with their female counter- f parts. "The women . . ? in the first week of training, they're all in step," Maj. Gen. Hixon insists. "They're easier to train, oh yes. When we say jump, the question they ask is: 'Is that high enough?" There is even a bit of healthy rivalry and snobbishness between male and female re- cruits, especially since all females must In4c1 high school diplomas and since tests given women who are generally more stringent than those taken my men. A female soldier explained recently: "The women do better than the men, def- initely. For one thing we have to be smarter. We have to be in better physical health ... we're just more intelligent. With the new all-volunteer army and no U.S. involvement in a hot engagement, to- day's war stories will probably read like something out of Romance Magazine. Now that the sergeant may be a female, who's going to bother about Signing up for over- seas duty? Army Private Jill Whisker, 22 of Savanna, Ill., said she liked the coed living arrange- ments. "It's natural," she smiled. Pvt. Whis- ker, who attended Illinois State University, said the arrangement at the school was pretty much the same as the army's. "It worked out fine," she said, "It's a brother and sister kind of thing. We look out for each other." The whole thing sort of makes me yearn for the military life. I understand they've even raised the pay. What a way to go to war! [From the Baltimore News American, Sept. 3, 19741 SHE FLIES INTO HURRICANE JACKSONVILLE, Fr.a.?Judy_ rZeuffer looks at herself as a woman who has been in the right place at the right time, twIce. The first was when the Navy opened flight training to women. The second came on Sunday when she was In the pilot's seat of a Navy P3 weather re- connaissance plane which penetrated the eye of Hurricant Carmen, with its winds of 1'75 miles per hour. The 25-year-old lieutenant from Wooster, Ohio thus became the first women pilot in naval history to fly into a hurricane's eye. "I didn't know what to elpect, but I think I can honestly say I didn't feel fear," she said. "I have lots of confidence in the aircraft and in the crew. They knew their job and they know it well." She also was helped by the commanding of- ficer of the four-engine turboprop jet. Cmdr. Dick Birch, an experienced hurricane hunter who supported her and briefed her on what to expect. Birch said she compares will with other new pilots. "Basically, she did a super job," he said. "When I found out I was getting a woman pilot, I expected a tomboy or a woman'slib- ber. This is just a young lady who seriously wants to be a pilot. She knows she's being observed as a new breed, so she makes an ex- tra effort to do as well as she can." Lt. Neuffer has been in the Navy for four years since graduation from Ohio State 'Uni- versity. Her first assignment was at a Com- puter center in San Diego. When the Navy opened its flight program to women, Lt. Neuffer, the daughter of a World War IT fighter pilot, rushed to apply. "I had spent most of my life around air- ports because my father has worked at or managed airports since the war. Flying'S in my blood," she said. "I was surprised when I got this assign- ment. But I wanted weather work, so I took the chance, and I made it." The Navy's five other female pilots are all in the cargo transport division. She says she didn't begin her flight train- ng "to prove a point, advance women or fight or my rights. I'm in it because I enjoy fly- ing. I looked at myself as a pilot trying to do what I've been trained to do. "I don't consider myself a women's libber, but I do believe in equal opportunity. I know many people are watching me to see how I do. I won't get up on a soap box and meek out, but I hope my performance as a pilot Can speak out for me." Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I hope that this amendment, which was, as 1 say, initially submitted by the distinguished Senator from Maine and is now offered by myself and him, will be accepted by the managers of the bill. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. KENNEDY. I yield. Mr. MANSFIELD. Will the Senator include my name as a cosponsor? Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the name of the Senator from Montana (Mr. MANSFIELD) be included as a cosponsor of the amend- ment, as well as the names of the Sena- tor from Maine (Mr. HATHAWAY) the Senator from Ohio (Mr. METZENBAUM), the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Wn.- LiAms) , the Senator from Delaware (Mr. Brom), and the Senator from New York (Mr. Jams). The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. HATHAWAY. Mr. President, today I am joining with Senator KENNEDY in introducing an amendment to the mili- tary construction bill This amendment would authorize the construction funds for the service academies to be used for whatever construction might be neces- sary to admit women to the academies. I have already introduced a bill in the Senate that would allow women to be admitted to the service academies. This bill was introduced last summer and passed the Senate without opposition in December as an amendment to S. 2771, the enlistment bonus bill. The other co- sponsors of the amendment to S. 2771 were Senators THURMOND, JANTITS, and MANSFIELD, and the amendment had the active support of Senator JOHN armor's, the chairman of the Senate Armed Serv- ices Committee. Thus, the amendment had the support of both the chaarman and the ranking Republican of that com- mittee. That amendment was deleted from S. 2771 in the House Armed Services Committee by a margin of one vote under circumstances which gave rise to exas- peration on the part of some of the-mem- bers of that committee. I have more recently introduced a substitute amendment to my original bill which contains some technical changes. This amendment has the support of a large number of Senators, including Senators DomINICK , JACKSON, GOLD- WATER, NUNN, and HUGHES, all of whom are on the Senate Armed Services Com- mittee, as well as the original cosponsors of the amendment to S. 2771. Mr. President, the best military train- ing in the world takes place at the Amer- ican Service Academies. This training is available for men, some of whom are not even American citizens. It is not available for American women, no matter how well qualified they may be. The service academies have never satisfactorily explained the reason for this discriminatory policy. They say it is because the mission a the academies is combat training, but most of the train- ing which takes place at the academies is not combat related, and no reason has ever been advanced as to why women are not allowed to receive academy train- ing for the noncombat roles they have been filling in the services for many years. The Department of Defense made the following statement in its report on S. 2351 my bill in the Senate to allow women to be admitted to the academies: There are numerOus officer billets in the armed services, other than in combat roles which are necessary to the effective:less of the military services. Competence in these positions is no less important than in ,orriliat roles, Surely the best training for these non- combat roles is also to be found at the service academies. For the good of mo- rale of the services, as well as because of our own beliefs, that training shculd be equally available to all. The second reason most often given for excluding women la the expense of remodeling the facilities to accommo- date them, but Women have been ac- commodated in the Regular Army with- out any particularly burdensome ex- pense. Furthermore, any remodeling ex- pense would be trifling compared to the overall cost of operating the academies. The purpose of the amendment I am offering today with Senator KENNEDY, however, isato make it Clear that there is no longer any economic excuse whatso- ever for excluding women from the serv- ice academies. We feel -it is time to act. We have removed discrimination in many other areas. It is time to remove it in this area as well. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in the RECORD an article which was published in Newsweek on September 9, 1974. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: THE ARMY: FALL IN! It's enough to make an old topkick tear his hair. The Army basic-training center at Fort Dix, N.J., has succuinbed to the sexual revolution. Specifically, Building 5406, a three-story, cinderblock structure designed as a 160-man barracks, now houses fifteen men and eighteen women, making it the Army's first permanent coed barracks. So successful has the experiment been, says the brass at Fort Dix, that by the end of October, all 3M3 WAC personnel will be reassigned to previously all-male barracks on the post. The cost of converting Building 5406 was "minimal," requiring only strong locks on the doore to the third floor, where the women are billeted, and a 24-hoar guard at the stairway to the second-floor, where the men sleep. Mingling of the sexes is con- fined to the first-floor day room (pool tables, Ping Pong, TV). So far, all personnel seem to be pleased with the arrangements. "You get more of a feeling of belonging to a unit," says Pvt. Betty Ruiz. The men, predictably, would like expanded visiting rights, but there seems to be little Clanger of their tsking too many liberties. The eighteen tradition-shat- tering women in Building 5406 belong to the post's military-police battalion. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I have discussed the amendment. of the Approved For Release 2005/06/09 : CIA-RDP75600380R000700050003-1 Arroved For Release 2005/06/09 ? CIA-RDP7TERROR000700050003-1 September 11, 19 4 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? S S 16395 distinguished senior Senator from Mas- sachusetts and the distinguished junior Senator from Maine with the distin- guished senior Senator from South Car- olina, the ranking Republican member of the Armed Services Commitee, and we will be glad to take the amendment to conference. May I say, speaking for myself, that I think it is a constructive amendment, and would look forward to being able to sustain it with the House of Representa- tives. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, I ap- preciate that sentiment. When we have a statement of support by the floor manager, we probably should remain quiet, but I wish to underline one point: that there is nothing compulsory in this amendment whatsoever. It is a reaffirma- tion by the Members of the Senate of our own belief in the importance of pro- viding this kind of training for young women. There is absolutely nothing com- pulsory; it is completely discretionary to the military forces, but it is a clear indication of the sentiment and feeling of the Members of Congress on this par- ticular issue. I appreciate the expression of support on the part of the floor manager, and I yield the floor. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me merely for a ques- tion? Mr. KENNEDY. Yes. Mr. STENNIS. I have already gone on record as supporting an amendment of this type. But I do want to point out to him that the manager of the bill in the conference, who would be the Senator from Missouri (Mr. SYMINGTON) Could well be up against a stone wall in the conference on this matter because the House has heretofore said that it vio- lated their own rules, and maybe these rules of germaneness?I say maybe?and then maybe somebody someday will add up the number of Senate amendments adopted by conference and open a score against the whole committee. I am not against the amendment of the Senator from Massachusetts. He has been very cooperative and understand- ing. He has had some good amendments, and we brought back all of them we could. Ido think this presents a problem and I thought it just ought to be frankly mentioned here. These military bills that have to pass in one form or another? and this is one of them?are pretty handy things to hang an amendment on. It leads to delay and trouble. So I thank the Senator for his re- marks, and I would support his amend- ment on its merits. Mr. KENNEDY. I appreciate the ex- pression of the Senator from Mississippi. I do think there is a difference in this legislation from an amendment that went on the military pay bonus bill last year. Even though that was a clear ex- pression of the Members of the Senate in support of the purposes of that amend- ment, we are now dealing with military constructiont and I think this amend- ment is entirely appropriate to be at- tached to this particular proposal. Hope- fully, with that distinction which, I think, Is an extremely powerful one, and with the clear and persuasive voice of the Senator from Mississippi and the Sena- tor from Missouri in defending the Sen- ate's position, perhaps we will be able to achieve the purposes of this amendment. I appreciate the comments of the Sen- ator from Mississippi. The PRESIDING OrriCER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the amendment of the Senator from Massachusetts. The amendment was agreed to. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that during the con- sideration of H.R. 16136 it be in order that a separate vote occur on section 612 of the committee substitute prior to the vote on the entire committee substitute. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Mr. MANSFIELD. I do this, Mr. Pres- ident, because I think this is a good bill, and I think the committee has been as- siduous and exacting in its study of the needs of the Nation in the field of mili- tary construction, and I want to show my support?and I am sure the entire Senate will?in the way in which this committee has worked under the chairmanship of the distinguished Senator from Missis- sippi (Mr. STENNIS) the chairmanship of the distinguished Senator from Mis- souri (Mr. SYMINGTON) as well as the ranking Republican members, the dis- tinguished Senator from South Carolina