Alaska Digest Email News
August 23-29, 2004

Congressman Young Announces Highlights In FY05 Defense Appropriations Conference Report

Washington, D.C. - Alaska Congressman Don Young announced earmarks from FY05 Defense Appropriations Conference Report. The Conference Report provides $416.2 billion in new discretionary spending authority for the Department of Defense for functions under the House and Senate Defense Subcommittees' jurisdiction. This includes $25 billion in emergency spending requested by the President for early fiscal year 2005 cost associated with operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"I am pleased that we were able to appropriate these funds to our nation's armed services. As our troops continue to fight the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, we must continue to assure them that this country stands behind their efforts. I am also pleased that we were able to keep the missile defense funding in place, this will benefit Alaska's military," said Congressman Young.

More Highlights in the Conference Report:

Additional Appropriations (Non-Defense):

Fiscal Year 2005 Defense Appropriations Conference Agreement -- Summary by Major Account:

Military Personnel
The Conference Report fully funds the 3.5% military pay raise proposed in the President's budget, and increased levels for Basic Allowance for Housing, eliminating service members' average out-of-pocket housing expenses from 3.5% to zero in fiscal year 2005.

The Conference Report provides $14.7 million for 154 Active Guard Personnel to support 7 additional Weapons of Mass Destruction/Civil Support Teams, resulting in a total of 55 teams by the end of FY 2005.

Joint Strike Fighter
The Conference Report recommends $4.4 billion for the Joint Strike Fighter development program, an increase of $97 million from fiscal year 2004 levels.

Missile Defense Programs
The Conference Report provides $10 billion for missile defense programs, an increase of $1 billion from fiscal year 2004 levels, and a decrease of $183 million from the budget request.

This amount includes $4.6 billion for ground-based midcourse missile defense in support of fielding a national missile defense initial operational capability in the fall of 2004.

For theater missile defense, the Conferees provide $937.6 million for production, modification and continued development of Patriot PAC-3 missiles and the next-generation MEADS system.

 

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