Title: USACE GEEZER BRIEF 2001
1What's Up in Washington?
FY06 Execution FY07 Budget Future Changes
Presentation to PPM Community of Practice
Conference 9-12 May 2006
2Outline
- FY 2006 Execution Issues
- FY 2007 Budget
- Possible Future Changes
3FY06 Appropriations Execution
- FY 06 E WD Act (PL 109-103) Directions
- Execute the appropriated program
- Retain funds on projects appropriated
- Continuing Contracts
- Reprogramming
- Funds Use Trends
4FY06Continuing Contracts
- Issue Obligating Congress to future year
appropriations. - Currently 266 continuing contracts with a total
contract amount of 2 bil - FY 0607 amount is 1.5 bil therefore most
contract obligations occur in first 2 FYs - FY 07-11 total future year obligation
commitment is 1.1 bil - Only 26 contracts gt 20 mil account for 92 of
all future year obligations - Futuremaybe fully fund contracts lt10/20 mil?
- FY06 to date 37 approved 3 disapproved
5FY 06 Reprogramming
- Issue Too much reprogramming funding projects
through reprogramming contrary to Congressional
intent in the Act/Conference Report - Act Language Limits
- Sections 101(a)(1)-(a)(4) (cannot create,
eliminate, increase, or change the purpose of a
project, program or activity) - Approval Limits-50 of project base amount or 2
mil. - ProcessDistrict/DivHQs/ASA/OMB/Congress
- Emerging Rules
- Approval process is problematical at this point
6FY 06 Reprogramming Trends
- Substantial Reductions Achieved
- Issue Too much reprogramming funding projects
contrary to Congressional Intent - FY03-04 GAO Report. 7,000 reprogrammings valued
at 2.1 bil on 60 of CW projects - FY05 1,476 projects impacted by reprogrammings
- FY06 to date 54 reprogrammings valued at
37.8 mil on 122 projects
7FY 06 Reprogramming Trends
- The FY06 Issue Sources
- FY06 projected reprogramming gt2 mil/50 85
projects need 178 mil - 62 of 85 projects for 135 mil are restoration
commitments - We are making one last attempt to improve FY06
reprogramming process - The problem is approval of sources
- Will seek a process change
- There are indications of flexibility during
this transition period
8One Outcome of FY06 DirectionFunds Utilization
Trends FY06 -FY 06 Scheduled Carryover ( 000)
- GI CG OM Total
- Total Available 208,082 3,025,810 2,628,384 5,862
,276 - Total Obligated 12,195 387,241 78,210 477,646
- Act Language 3,232 94,434 8,562 106,228
- Congressional Adds 9,806 165,170 9,869 184,844
- To Fully Fund Contracts 209 16,894 1,256 18,359
- To Complete Projects 1,328 21,854 551 23,733
- Insufficient Cost-Shared Funds 785 19,899 13,366 3
4,050 - Other 2,853 27,392 22,297 52,542
- Total Unobligated 18,212 345,643 55,902 419,757
- Total Carryover 30,407 732,884 134,112 897,402
9FY 06 Execution
- Clear Issue of Executing What We Schedule
- --At end of May 2006--
- GI917 projects, 50 with no obligations, 486
underobligated, 80 off schedule - CG1286 projects, 88 no obligations, 726
underobligated, 81 off schedule - OM1052 projects, 85 no obligations, 608
underobligated, 80 off schedule - Contract Awards63 or 84 scheduled awarded 240
remain to award May-Sep - Military Projects also behind schedule
- Many PMs individually planning to recover
schedule many wont
10FY07 Civil Works Budget
11FY07 Civil Works Budget
- Supports the Presidents overall budget
priorities to - Continue long-term economic growth
- Rebuild and recover the Gulf Coast
- Win the Global War on Terrorism
- Secure the Homeland
12FY 2007 Budget
- Emphasizes 3 activities
- Construction/completion of projects in commercial
navigation, flood/storm damage reduction, and
aquatic ecosystem restoration - Regulatory program
- Emergency preparedness and response mission
- Corps focus
- Maintenance of critical infrastructure
- Funding high return studies and construction
projects - Continuing best ongoing planning and construction
within available funds
13Civil Works Budget Appropriations History (
Millions)
- FY05 FY05 Total FY06 FY06 Total FY07
- Budget Approp. Budget Approp. Budget
- Construction, Gen. 1,437 1,796 1,637 2,348 1,555
- Oper. Maint., Gen. 1,934 1,959 1,979 1,969 2,258
- Gen. Investigations 90 145 95 162 94
- Mississippi R. Tribs. 270 325 270 396 278
- Regulatory 150 145 160 158 173
- Flood Coast Emerg. 50 0 70 0 81
- FUSRAP 140 165 140 139 130
- Gen. Expenses 167 167 162 152 164
- OASA(CW) 0 4 0 4 0
- Total 4,238 4,705 4,513 5,329 4,733
- Does not include 4.3 billion in two
Emergency Supplementals for 4 storms - Administration has requested additional 1.5
billion in Emergency Supplemental to strengthen
New Orleans Levees - Does not include 4.4 billion (FY0506) FEMA
reimbursable hurricane recovery work.
14Performance Based Budgeting Which Projects Make
the Cut?
- Priorities
- High Risk Dam Safety
- High Performing, Completing
- Very High Performing
- RBRCRgt4
- National Priorities
- High Performing
- RBRCR 3-4
- Cost Effective Restoration of National or
Regional Significant Species
15FY 07 Budget National Priority Projects
Columbia River Fish Mitigation
Missouri River Fish Wildlife Mitigation
- New York-New Jersey Harbor
Upper Miss.R. Side Channel Restoration
Olmsted Lock Dam
Sims Bayou
Navigation
Flood Damage Reduction
- Comprehensive
- Everglades
- Restoration
Environmental
16Performance Based Budgeting Modifications for
FY07Other Metrics and Considerations
- Construction
- Flood Damage Reduction
- People in 100-year flood plain
- Average annual damages prevented
- Property at risk in 100-year floodplain
- Navigation
- Tonnage
- Average Annual Benefits
- Remedy impacts from existing Civil Works projects
- Environmental Restoration
- Loss prevention for significant natural resources
- Endangered Species Act other environmental
compliance needs - Unique Expertise in modifying Aquatic Regimes
- Planning/Design
- High Likelihood of Sponsor Support
- RBRCRs gt4
17What is not in the FY07 Budget?
- 532 Studies and Projects funded in the FY06
Appropriation
18Questions?
19FY07 and BeyondChanges Made and to Come
- Washington Focus
- DEVELOP THE BUDGET
- DEFEND THE BUDGET
- Execute the Appropriation
- Delegate more authorities to field
- Contracting authorities
- Reprogramming
- Stabilize Funds
- Fully fund more contracts
- Budget contracts to completion
- Reprogram only as appropriate
20FY07 and BeyondMore Changes
- Understand consequences of Performance Based
Budgeting - Seek a better balance between budgeting by
business line and budgeting by project - Reassess Commanders role in establishing
watershed and project priorities - Pilot budget presentation by system/watershed
- Ohio River System?
- Execution handoff to field with more delegation
and flexibility - Seek to reduce gap between Administration Budget
and Congressional Appropriation
21FY07 and BeyondChange Overview
- LINK AND DECONFLICT
- Presidents Management Agenda
- PMA Initiatives
- PARTs
- USACE Campaign Plan
- Civil Works Strategic Plan
- Performance Standards
- Civil Works Budget
- Program/project budget
- Performance-based budget
- Systems (watershed) budget
- Five Year Development Plan (FYDP)
- Appropriation
- Metrics
- Performance Standards
- Execution
- Performance Review
22Five-Year Development Plan
- Provides an overview of the Civil Works program
and budget for FY 2007-2011 - A collaborative effort between the Corps, OMB and
the Committees. - Presents projections of discretionary funding for
the Civil Works program - Focus on projects and activities that provide the
highest net economic/environmental returns on the
Nations investment - Approved and submitted to the Congress on 1 Mar 06
23Five-Year Development Plan
- The funding is distributed among eight accounts
over the five-years Investigations,
Construction, Operations and Maintenance, MRT,
the Regulatory Program, FUSRAP, Flood Control and
Coastal Emergencies (FCCE) and Expenses - The plan includes three scenarios
- High scenario Based on the total FY 2006
enacted funding level (5.446 billion) as the
base and adjusted over time for GDP price index - Middle scenario Based on the Presidents budget
(4.733 billion) and are formula driven funding
levels through the out-years - Low scenario Based on funding levels below
those in the Middle scenario - The budget projections are formula-driven/policy
neutral and do not represent budget
decisions/policy beyond FY 2007
24Five-Year Development Plan
- Each scenario presents out-year budget
allocations based on FY07 Administration
assumptions and construction guidelines - A funding wedge is accounted on each scenario to
fund those studies, PEDs and construction
projects not listed - Under the High scenario
- The performs substantially more critical
maintenance, repair and rehabilitation (445
million increase in OM and 13 million for MRT) - More studies, PEDs and projects are completed
faster than the other two scenarios - The Corps executes more critical and high
priority items
25Five-Year Development Plan
26What Else Should Change?
- This nation must reassess the budget priority it
gives to infrastructure investments
27Communication
- Communicate that funding infrastructure is an
investmentreturns exceed costs - Communicate that infrastructure is important
- To the National Defense
- To the Economy
- To the Quality of All Life
- Communicate that infrastructure is integrated
28Questions?