[House Hearing, 114 Congress] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] INTERIOR, ENVIRONMENT, AND RELATED AGENCIES APPROPRIATIONS FOR 2017 _______________________________________________________________________ HEARINGS BEFORE A SUBCOMMITTEE OF THE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED FOURTEENTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION ______________ SUBCOMMITTEE ON INTERIOR, ENVIRONMENT, AND RELATED AGENCIES KEN CALVERT, California, Chairman MICHAEL K. SIMPSON, Idaho BETTY McCOLLUM, Minnesota TOM COLE, Oklahoma CHELLIE PINGREE, Maine DAVID P. JOYCE, Ohio DEREK KILMER, Washington CHRIS STEWART, Utah STEVE ISRAEL, New York MARK E. AMODEI, Nevada EVAN H. JENKINS, West Virginia NOTE: Under Committee Rules, Mr. Rogers, as Chairman of the Full Committee, and Mrs. Lowey, as Ranking Minority Member of the Full Committee, are authorized to sit as Members of all Subcommittees. Dave LesStrang, Darren Benjamin, Jason Gray, Betsy Bina, Jaclyn Kilroy, and Kristin Richmond, Staff Assistants _________________ PART 6 Page U.S. Forest Service Budget Oversight Hearing................................. 1 Indian Health Service Budget Oversight Hearing................................. 59 Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation Budget Oversight Hearing..... 125 Department of the Interior Budget Oversight Hearing....................... 149 Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Budget Oversight Hearing 289 Bureau of Land Management............. 331 ______________________ Printed for the use of the Committee on Appropriations ________________________ U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE 20-042 WASHINGTON: 2016 COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS ---------- HAROLD ROGERS, Kentucky, Chairman RODNEY P. FRELINGHUYSEN, New Jersey NITA M. LOWEY, New York ROBERT B. ADERHOLT, Alabama MARCY KAPTUR, Ohio KAY GRANGER, Texas PETER J. VISCLOSKY, Indiana MICHAEL K. SIMPSON, Idaho JOSE E. SERRANO, New York JOHN ABNEY CULBERSON, Texas ROSA L. DeLAURO, Connecticut ANDER CRENSHAW, Florida DAVID E. PRICE, North Carolina JOHN R. CARTER, Texas LUCILLE ROYBAL-ALLARD, California KEN CALVERT, California SAM FARR, California TOM COLE, Oklahoma CHAKA FATTAH, Pennsylvania MARIO DIAZ-BALART, Florida SANFORD D. BISHOP, Jr., Georgia CHARLES W. DENT, Pennsylvania BARBARA LEE, California TOM GRAVES, Georgia MICHAEL M. HONDA, California KEVIN YODER, Kansas BETTY McCOLLUM, Minnesota STEVE WOMACK, Arkansas STEVE ISRAEL, New York JEFF FORTENBERRY, Nebraska TIM RYAN, Ohio THOMAS J. ROONEY, Florida C. A. DUTCH RUPPERSBERGER, Maryland CHARLES J. FLEISCHMANN, Tennessee DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ, Florida JAIME HERRERA BEUTLER, Washington HENRY CUELLAR, Texas DAVID P. JOYCE, Ohio CHELLIE PINGREE, Maine DAVID G. VALADAO, California MIKE QUIGLEY, Illinois ANDY HARRIS, Maryland DEREK KILMER, Washington MARTHA ROBY, Alabama MARK E. AMODEI, Nevada CHRIS STEWART, Utah E. SCOTT RIGELL, Virginia DAVID W. JOLLY, Florida DAVID YOUNG, Iowa EVAN H. JENKINS, West Virginia STEVEN M. PALAZZO, Mississippi William E. Smith, Clerk and Staff Director (ii) DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, ENVIRONMENT, AND RELATED AGENCIES APPROPRIATIONS FOR 2017 ---------- Wednesday, February 24, 2016. UNITED STATES FOREST SERVICE WITNESSES TOM TIDWELL, CHIEF, UNITED STATES FOREST SERVICE TONY DIXON, BUDGET DIRECTOR, UNITED STATES FOREST SERVICE Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert Mr. Calvert. Good morning. The subcommittee will come to order. I would like to extend a warm welcome to my colleagues, our witness, and the audience as we begin the Fiscal Year 2017 appropriations process. Today is the Interior and Environment Subcommittee's first oversight hearing of the year. Chief Tidwell and Mr. Dixon, I would like to welcome you back to the subcommittee. We are pleased to be able to hear from you regarding the Fiscal Year 2017 budget request for the United States Forest Service. Similar to last year, the President requests a total of $4.9 billion in discretionary funding for the Forest Service for Fiscal Year 2017. This is $150 million less than Fiscal Year 2016 enacted. A total of $2.5 billion was requested for wildland fire management. This represents nearly 50 percent of the entire Forest Service budget. In addition, a budget cap adjustment of $864 million is requested. This subcommittee continues to be concerned about the cost of fighting wildfires and the effects it has on the Forest Service's budgets, programs, and management. Technically, the 2015 fire season is considered below normal at 93 percent of the 10-year average for the number of wildfires reported. However, the statistic belies a devastating reality. In 2015, more than 68,000 fires burned more than 10 million acres, causing an agonizing loss of life, destroying more than 4,600 homes and other properties, and devastating local and regional landscapes and communities. The toll on our firefighters and supporting staff was also severe. According to the National Interagency Coordination Center, the request for firefighting resources were right at or exceeded the 10-year average, and the requests for air support were fulfilled or exceeded their averages. So I would like to thank you, Chief Tidwell, for the Administration's efforts to change the way we budget for wildfires. I would also like to thank Congressman Simpson with his dramatic entrance---- [Laughter.] Mr. Calvert [continuing]. For keeping the pressure on Congress to address the issue. As of yesterday, I understand Mr. Simpson has convinced 145 of our colleagues to co-sponsor his bill, including every member of this subcommittee. While the issue of how to fund firefighting costs seems to dominate most discussions about the Forest Service, there are numerous other issues, including air asset management, law enforcement, land acquisition, and basic budgeting and program management, among others, that need to be attended to. The Forest Service must demonstrate that it is accountable, transparent, and able to improve the condition of its forests while managing unpredictable fire seasons. This is a difficult challenge. I realize it is not entirely in your hands. Congress must provide the financial resources and address policy matters that limit the Agency's ability to manage the Nation's forests. But some parts are in your hands, especially accounting, budgeting, and program management. I look forward to talking to you more about them today as we prepare the House bill for Fiscal Year 2017. Chief, you and the entire Forest Service staff deserve our appreciation for your work on behalf of the American people and our Nation's forests. We know you all care deeply for our forests and the communities that depend on them. So I thank you. And now, I am happy to yield to the gentlelady from Minnesota, Ms. McCollum, for any opening remarks she might make. Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and good morning, Chief Tidwell and Mr. Dixon. Thank you for being with us. The U.S. Forest Service is charged with sustaining the health, diversity, and productivity of our Nation's forests and grasslands, and that is no small deed. The responsibilities associated with managing 193 million acres of national Forest Service lands are significant. The Forest Service has established itself as a leader in natural resource conservation and recreation management. With these responsibilities in mind, the Fiscal Year 2017 budget request is very conservative. The costs associated with fighting wildland fires continues to rise, and, frankly, I am concerned that those costs are being met at the expense of other important programs. For example, the budget proposes to cut the Invasive Species Research Program. Invasive species are a major threat to our lands. I will just give one example. We are watching emerald ash borer decimate American forests, killing 99 percent of the trees it affects. That infestation is a wake-up call to the devastation invasive species can reap. We need to be investing more and not less in such programs. And how do we do more? President Obama's budget gives us a way forward in reforming the way we fund wildfire costs, and I support that proposal. We need a more reliable way of funding wildfires that does not continually threaten other important Forest Service programs. Last year, as the Chairman has pointed out, wildland fire costs made up more than 50 percent of the Forest Service budget--50 percent of the Forest Service budget. Experts predict that if we do not take action to address these problems, it will exceed 67 percent by the year 2025. This imbalance would translate to nearly a $700 million reduction to non-fire programs. Every member of this subcommittee is a co-sponsor of our colleague, Chairman Simpson's, wildfire disaster funding bill, and the last Senate appropriations mark included reforms that are called for in the Simpson bill. I have to say that I am particularly disappointed that the final omnibus did not include emergency or disaster cap adjustments. I hope we can work together, through the authorizers or on this committee, to solve this problem. If we continue down the path of underfunding programs to manage wildfires, we jeopardize the health and the long history that we have had of having great American national forests. Chief Tidwell, at the Forest Service, you face difficult challenges to fulfill your mission in this time of limited budgets. I look forward to your testimony and discussing how the Agency is going to cope with these challenges, and I thank you once again for being here today. Thank you for the courtesy of the remarks, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. And, Chief, you are recognized for your statement. Opening Remarks of Chief Tidwell Mr. Tidwell. Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member McCollum, members of the subcommittee, thank you again for the opportunity to discuss our Fiscal Year 2017 budget request. As you both mentioned, this is basically a similar request to last year's budget request, which forces us to make some very hard choices about where to spend the limited resources. It does allow us to continue to increase our pace and scale of restoring the Nation's forests. This budget request will allow us to treat 2.9 million acres to restore forest health and watershed conditions. It allows us to decommission 2,000 roads that are no longer needed and are just contributing soil into our streams. It also allows us to restore 3,450 miles of stream to address those aquatic needs and to improve the fisheries, and also will produce $3.2 billion board feet of timber. We do this by maintaining our 23 collaborative forest landscape restoration projects, and then being able to expand our work through the stewardship contracting authority that you provided a few years ago, and also with the farm bill authorities when it comes to insects and disease. We are making good progress with the States around the Good Neighbor Authority. These are the things that are allowing us to be able to continue to move forward and be able to get more work done every year, even though today we have 30 percent fewer employees than we did the last time we ever harvested board feet. It also allows us to treat 1.6 million acres of the highest-priority areas in our wildland urban interface, plus another 400,000 acres of areas outside that we need to address hazardous fuels. Our State and private programs are taking an approach to use more of a landscape-scale restoration approach where we can do a better job to work with our State foresters to be able to address issues on private forested lands, but across much larger landscapes. With our research, which is just essential that we be able to maintain our Research and Development (R&D) operations, but we are focusing on insects and disease, invasives, fire behavior, and then also to be able to expand and develop new and more markets for wood. If we do not find markets for the biomass that needs to be removed off our national forests, it is going to be more and more expensive for us to be able to restore these forests. We are also asking for an increase in law enforcement, and this is focused on helping us to reduce and clean up the marijuana growths. The data that we have shows that if you just get in there and stop the growth, there is a high likelihood you are going to be back in there in a few years, versus if you can get in there and clean out everything and take away all the infrastructure, et cetera, that there is less likelihood they are going to come back. So our request would allow us to be able to do a better job to clean up those sites. This budget provides the suppression resources that we need. It provides the air tankers. It provides the helicopters. We have 21 large air tankers on contract. We have over 300 helicopters, over a thousand engines, and our Type 1 crews that are necessary to respond not only to our fires, but to fires across the landscape in other Federal jurisdictions and also with our State and local partners. I appreciate the support from this subcommittee and from Mr. Simpson when it comes to finding a way to reform how we pay for fire suppression. I appreciate the additional funding you provided in the Fiscal Year 2016 budget into the FLAME account, but I think we are all aware of the history that FLAME is not the answer. We have to find a way to be able to move past this. You understand the issues. We have got to find an alternative to the 10-year average costs. We need to find a way so that we never have to deal with transferring funds, shutting down operations, putting people out of work every year. This takes away your discretion, for you to be able to meet the public's needs with the limited resources we have today. It takes away your discretion, that all you can do is really, pay for fire. One statistic that I want you to be thinking about from Fiscal Year 2015 to Fiscal Year 2017 with our 10-year average. That 10-year average calculation will go up $237 million. And we still have 2 more years in the 10-year average that are the less expensive years, less than a billion dollars. So there are going to be 2 more years that are still going to hit that 10- year average mark. So I just point that out to first of all reinforce the good work you are doing, and also to thank you. I tell you, we are committed to do everything we can to work with you to be able to find a way to be able to reform this so that it really provides, I think, the answer to a lot of the other problems that we are dealing with. So, Mr. Chairman, I appreciate the time you have given us this morning to be able to address the subcommittee, and I look forward to answering your questions. [The statement of Chief Tidwell follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Mr. Calvert. Thank you, we are going to start with Mr. Stewart out of courtesy. He has a hearing he needs to attend, so I am going to recognize him first. Thank you. Mr. Stewart. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. You are very generous. And to the other members, thank you for your consideration. Chief, thank you. We have had many conversations. We appreciate what you do. I recognize you have got a tough job, but I hope that we can, through this conversation and through these hearings, come to a meeting of the minds on some issues that are incredibly important to me and to my district. I represent the 2nd District in Utah. Nearly 80 percent of my district is Federal land, 4 million acres of Forest Service lands. To say that tension is simmering in my district would be a gracious understatement, as I know you know. Some of the things that have made those tensions rise are things that I think we could have avoided and should have avoided. They deal with three things, and I want to talk about them very quickly. The first one would really be just kind of yes/no, and that is this issue with the labor rule and overtime for outfitters and guides. The second, more deeply felt, are the grazing and the water rights. LABOR RULE AND OVERTIME FOR OUTFITTERS AND GUIDES So let me ask specifically the first one, and that is, and I know you know the background on this, so I will just be very quick. Do you agree that the intention of Congress on that was very clear and that the Forest Service would not proceed with implementation of the labor rule? Mr. Tidwell. I understand the intent. For me it is clear. We are having discussions with our attorneys on that, but I definitely understand your intention. Mr. Stewart. Okay. And I appreciate you saying that for you it is clear, that we agree on that, and I think that we do agree. Hopefully we can get others to recognize that as well. GRAZING The more prickly issues, and I will not be the first one who talks about this I am sure. But I could give you examples of people sitting in this room who are here today who have had firsthand experiences. For example: a family operation that had been accused by really a very aggressive environmental group of over-grazing. They voluntarily gave up half of their allotment. They requested a hearing with the Forest Service. They were given 15 minutes to present their case. The Forest Service then spent an hour and a half behind closed doors with this environmental group and left them in a very, very precarious situation. This is not a huge corporate farm. This is a family farm, as I grew up, ranching. Help me understand what I can go back and tell my constituents to assure them that the Forest Service is not out and tipping the scales in favor of radical environmental groups against family farms and ranches. Mr. Tidwell. Well, my response is simply that grazing is part of multiple use. And we believe it is not only a legitimate use, but it helps to maintain our communities, and it also helps to maintain the wildlife habitat and to maintain open space. When we lose the ranching community, we lose a lot of benefits that the public takes for granted. So what I would like you to share is that we are the strongest supporters that they have when it comes to grazing. If we need to do a better job to make sure that we are very transparent in being able to deal with these issues, then we want to take that on. Mr. Stewart. And, Chief, I have to say, not you perhaps individually, but your organization does need to do a better job at that because there is a very broad perception that the scales are tilted against them. And, again, if you want to come talk to people who are very, very angry right now, come to my district. We have got to find a way to defuse that. We have already seen the outcome of that, and it is not going to get better as long as they feel like the Federal government has a boot on the throat of these family ranches. Mr. Tidwell. Well, also the governor's office has extended his staff to be able to work with us, to be able to sit down and actually have the governor's office be able to kind of bring people together, to maybe tamp down some of the tension and have the dialogues and discussions we really need. So I appreciate the governor's staff, the governor being able to step up and help in this situation. So I am looking forward to that so we can move forward. I did meet with several of your county commissioners this past weekend, and we had similar discussions about some ideas about, okay, how can we just change this so that it is very clear that we, of course, need to listen to everyone, but at the same time we need to do this in a transparent process. And our intent without any question is to maintain livestock grazing. Mr. Stewart. We appreciate that, and you are right, the governor has been active. We actually held hearings down there about a month ago through Chairman Bishop and the Resources Committee, and those things make a difference. It gives the people that are impacted by this the feeling that at least they are being heard and that they are not being ignored, and they are not given 15 minutes, and then an environmental group is given an hour and a half, again, behind closed doors. The third thing if I could, and I do not see a clock. I am not sure how much time we have. Mr. Calvert. I am the clock. [Laughter.] GRAZING AND WATER RIGHTS Mr. Stewart. I will go quickly. The same perception not only about grazing rights, but about water rights as well, and individuals being told that in order to renew their grazing, they have got to give up some of their water allocations. And my heavens, you do that in the West, and that is like giving up your lifeblood. You cannot survive without those water allocations. I know some individuals, some sitting here in this room, tell me firsthand knowledge of them being told we will reallocate your grazing, but you have got to work with us on your water rights. Please tell me that that is not a policy that the Forest Service would defend. Mr. Tidwell. We have had a policy. This policy has been around for decades. It is there as kind of a security if there is a potential threat of the water being taken away from the land so we could not continue grazing. So this is an issue that we want to work with folks to find a better solution because our intent is one thing. That is to be able to keep the water with the land because when you take the water, we are no longer grazing. So that is our sole intent. We ought to be able to keep the water there so we can continue grazing. So I think this is an opportunity, we have to be able to move forward together because when I talk to ranchers they agree with me. They've got to keep the water there because if you take the water they cannot use the land. I think this is one of those issues where I think there is agreement on it. We just need to get to work to be able to make some changes so that we are together like this. I think in your State we may have even some additional benefit because of some of the State laws that are in place. It actually may be very helpful. Mr. Stewart. Well, Chief, thank you. And, Chairman, again, thank you for letting me kind of jump ahead of the line. And I will just conclude by saying I grew up ranching, and this is not like most other jobs in the country. There is a deep, deep culture that means more. This is not just a job. And if we do not make some progress in helping these folks feel like they are not being ignored and, in fact, being abused by the Federal government, then we are going to have situations out there that just become worse. So thank you for working with us on those, Chief. Mr. Chairman, thank you. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Thank you. Ms. McCollum. ABANDONED MINE LANDS Ms. McCollum. Thank you. Before I begin my questions, I want to revisit quickly a topic that we discussed last year. This is controversial mining proposals that the Forest Service are dealing with across the country. In northern Minnesota, copper-nickel sulfide mining poses a threat to the water quality of Voyageurs National Park, and the Boundary Waters Canoes Wilderness Area. I understand the Forest Service is working closely with the Bureau of Land Management on these issues, and I appreciate the work that you and your staff at the Forest Service are doing to protect these treasures in our park system that all of America enjoys, and the Boundary Waters and Voyageurs National Park. It is imperative that we find a way to better balance the cost of fire suppression with the resources needed for other programs that also help you protect, as I said earlier, what we expect you to be able to do in the Forest Service. However, your budget warns that the shift is eroding our ability to serve Americans in a myriad of ways, such as delivering clean air and clean water. I am troubled by this statement because 180 million Americans depend on drinking water that flows through our national forests, and that accounts for 20 percent of the Nation's clean water supply. It is an estimated value of $7.2 billion a year. Your budget request states that currently 48 percent of the watersheds in the national forest and grasslands are not functioning properly, and that goes to the discussion that you were having with my colleague, Mr. Stewart. Along that line, our country has a legacy of abandoned mine lands that pose safety risks to public health, with pollutants that contaminate water--39,000 abandoned mine sites on our national forest lands. Over a third of them produce minerals like arsenic and lead that could have significant impacts on human health and the environment. The budget proposes to increase the funding to mitigate safety risks of abandoned mines by $4 million. Additionally, the budget requests another $4 million to increase managing environmental restoration of these abandoned mines. I am pleased that the Administration is requesting these increases, but as you know, we need to do more. The timeline for your environmental restoration is even more disarming. According to the budget request, with what you have been able to request, only 150 sites have been cleaned up since 1998. This rate is just unacceptable, Chief. What steps are the Forest Service taking to create a path forward that will accelerate the mitigation and restoration so that we do not leave abandoned mines to be a burden for the next generations to pay for, quite frankly, with their tax dollars and which will put their drinking water at risk? Mr. Tidwell. Well, you stated the inventory. That was our first step is for us to have an accurate inventory about just how many that we have. Then also what is the risk so that we can actually prioritize where is the top place we need to spend our limited resources to address this problem. Yes, we need to be doing more. We are also working with partners. We are working with the States on these issues because they too share the concern of the contamination of both surface water and ground water from these. The other thing that we have done is we put in place a direction that from now on we are going to make sure that we require enough funding to make sure we can clean up these properties after the mining has been done. That has been one of the problems that created this backlog. In the past, we never fully understood the complications of some of these mining operations, and so we did not have the funds in place. We did not have the bond, an adequate bond, in place so that when these mines were abandoned, there was never enough money to clean it up. From now into the future, we are going to require that there is enough funding available to be able to take care of these problems, even if it is over the next hundred years, so we should not be adding more to it. So that is the first thing. But then going back, this is just another example of the things that the public is demanding. We need to be able to do this, and we have to find a way to be able to expand getting more of this work done. I feel good about what we are doing. I feel good about the inventory, but there is no question we need to be doing more. So it is just another example, but I wish I could be here next year and be able to talk to you about how we fixed the fire reform issue, and the fire suppression funding. We are on a different track there. We have some flexibility now that we can talk about where we need to make some strategic investments, and to be able to address these issues. Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Chief Tidwell. Thank you, Mr. Chair. FIRE TRANSFER Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Chief, I have a couple of questions on the wildland first and the budget cap adjustment. Your Fiscal Year 2017 budget again proposes to establish a new budget framework for the Wildland Fire Management Program. A total of $874 million in discretionary fund is the request for fire suppression, and an additional $864 million is requested through a budget cap adjustment. On that, can you share for us any lessons you learned from this last fire season in 2015? Mr. Tidwell. Well, the number one lesson is the burden that was put on the agency to have to transfer the amount of money we did in such a short period of time; it is just really something that I am so impressed that our folks were able to be able to do it. They were working often 24 hours a day trying to shift money to be able to keep us from always having the funds available to pay the bill. And I think about the millions of dollars that were wasted from having to deal with that transfer, and all the potential for accounting mistakes to be made with moving money around so quickly, et cetera. So that is one of the concerns, definitely a lesson that I learned. The second part of it is that to predict the fire season is very difficult. Our scientists are telling us what it is for this coming year. We are here talking about Fiscal Year 2017. So for Fiscal Year 2016 right now I can tell you with 90 percent confidence that this coming fire season is going to cost somewhere between $604 million and $1.7 billion. I am 90 percent confident it is going to be there. [Laughter.] That is for 2016, and we are talking 2017 here. The other reality is that you just cannot budget for wildland fires. So that is the other thing that just hit home. Then the other part of it, even last year's fire season, it started off a little less active than what we predicted, but then all those drought maps showed where we had extensive drought. Part of it was in your State. It all came true. We had the big fires in California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and a lot of other places in the country. It played out just like it was predicted, but then when people saw how much it cost, it is like, what? How can you spend that much money? Well, 27,000 people are responding to our fires, and at the same time supporting the State and the county with their fires. So I will tell you, those are some of the lessons that I learned. The numbers that we put forward in our budget are numbers that would prevent any need to ever transfer funding, so we would eliminate that wasteful practice. We are not going to spend the money if we do not need it, and we want to be able to show you without any question this is what it cost for each fire. We manage those costs. We also are making very good decisions that when we cannot be effective, we are not going to put people in harm's way. I do not care how much people are talking to us or directing us. We are not going to do that because it is just wasteful. We made some really good decisions last year, and a couple of them--yes, we had large fires. But I trust our folks on the ground when they say I am not going down into that canyon. We are not going to ask them to go into that canyon. Those professionals know when we cannot be effective because of the drought conditions. But we just have to have a different approach because we will come in here with our best science, but in reality I just cannot predict exactly how much money we need for Fiscal Year 2017. It is going to be a big range. Then the worst part of it, if we have millions of dollars that are just sitting there when we have a lot of other pressing needs, as a taxpayer I am not okay with that. So those are some of the lessons that I learned. BUDGET CAP ADJUSTMENT Mr. Calvert. Okay. Do you believe that a budget cap adjustment will help improve the Nation's forests, and have you laid that out in your budget request? Mr. Tidwell. Yes, and it does it through a couple ways. It stops the transfer, so that is off the table. We do not have to worry about that anymore. We can plan on getting our work done. It slows down the growth of the 10-year average. Also, it does free up some constraints for the Appropriations Committee to make a decision about how that could be used. So that is the other way that it would also help us potentially to be proactive to be able to make the investments. We will be glad to provide you with a long list of all the success that we have every year for where we get in there and do the thinning before the fire starts. We are effective with our suppression. We reduce the risk to our firefighters. We have less homes that get burned and watersheds recover so fast because we just do not have the severity. The solution is simple. It is just large. We have to continue to increase the number of acres. I feel good today that between our restoration efforts and the work that we are doing on hazardous fuels, we are treating over four and a half million acres every year. A decade ago we were treating about 400,000. So we have made significant advances in the work that we are doing, and we just need to be able to continue to maintain that and increase it. Mr. Calvert. All right, thank you. Mr. Kilmer. COLLABORATIVE FOREST LANDSCAPE RESTORATION (CFLRP) Mr. Kilmer. Thanks, Mr. Chairman, and thanks, Chief, for being with us. It is helpful to get an understanding of your priorities and I look forward to seeing you later today at the celebration of the removal and restoration of the one thousandth culvert---- Mr. Tidwell. Yeah. Mr. Kilmer [continuing]. Which is certainly a big deal in our neck of the woods. I grew up on the Olympic Peninsula, and that is the district that I now represent. People from other parts of the country often say I represent more trees than people when you add up the Park Service and the Forest Service. And certainly the presence of those forests are important both from a recreational standpoint and really important to our economy. And so, I guess that is the nature of the questions I want to ask about. The Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program I think is a good example of how government can be a partner with rural communities. Since 2010 you have seen the coming together of groups that have occasionally been butting heads from the conservation community and from industry. The result of that is nearly 1 and a half million acres that have been treated to reduce the risk of fire, and over 84,000 acres of new timber sales. We have just started one of these on the Olympic Peninsula, and it is cool to see groups that have traditionally been arguing with each other trying to work through some of these issues. I guess my question is, if the Forest Service continues to see support from the House, because I like the idea of trying to reward good behavior, is there an opportunity to increase investments in new collaboratives rather than just supporting the ones that have already been launched? Mr. Tidwell. Yes, we do have a legislative proposal to be able to expand the CFLRP authority to be able to increase the funding from $40 million to $80 million for future years. Without any question, it has been hugely successful for the points that you brought out. Then the other thing that members that work on these collaboratives, what they also share with me is that the other key difference is they are able to agree on large projects. Instead of working on a 500-acre or a thousand-acre project, they are able to reach an agreement on treating. We need to be looking at 10,000, 20,000, 30,000 or more acres at one time. That is the real difference, and it is just simply, it comes down to trust. You provide the opportunity for people to come together to be able to share their concerns, express their values where people then hear that, and they can build trust. Then we are able to move forward. When I look at the amount of acres that we are treating today versus what we were a few years ago, one of the biggest changes is that we have been able to build trust across the board from all the different diverse interests to the point that they recognize this is what the land needs, and yes it creates a lot of economic benefits, jobs, and biomass that is produced, but it is driven simply by what the land needs. When you are focused on that, a lot of the controversy goes away. Mr. Kilmer. Yeah, that is certainly. We are still early going, so we are trying to work through a lot of these things, and it is a bunch of people taking time out to help, so I appreciate that. FOREST ROADS I also wanted to ask about forest roads. This past winter we just had some very large storm events that, again, blew out culverts and washed out roads. The concern is not just in terms of public access for recreational purposes. We also have folks who live in these areas, and this just makes it hard for them to get to and from their homes. We have seen preliminary damage estimates submitted to the Emergency Relief for Federally Owned Roads Program, over $6 million. In an era where we are seeing more intense storms, how does the Agency think about proactively addressing this issue so that we are investing in infrastructure to deal with these severe weather events on the front end, rather than seeing a bunch of people cut off both in terms of recreational access and in terms of being able to get to their home? Mr. Tidwell. On each of our forests, we have done a vulnerability assessment to understand with the changing climate, what do we need to expect especially with large rain events, especially rain on snow events, which we get in your country quite often now. So that allows us to be able to identify that we need in some places to increase the size of these culverts, other places be able to remove the culvert and use a crossing or something like that. So those are the things where we have been proactive. I appreciate you being a co-sponsor of the event this evening to be able to celebrate that level of success, but those are things that we can point to where we are making a difference. We are reducing the amount of erosion. We are improving fisheries. More important or as important, we are maintaining public access by being out in front of this. Mr. Kilmer. Thanks. I've got plenty more questions, but I want to defer to the rest of the committee. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Cole. FEDERAL LANDS Mr. Cole. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, and thank you, Chief. I appreciate the testimony. I have exactly the opposite problem of Mr. Kilmer. I have more people than trees. [Laughter.] And probably more cows than people, so it is a very different kind of landscape. We see 5 trees together, and we define that as a forest in Oklahoma. [Laughter.] But we have very little Federal lands. We have got Indian trust land, and it is, frankly, well managed by the tribes that hold it. We have got some military installations that are obviously Federal and well managed, and a couple of wildlife preserves and one national park, so. But most of our land is in private hands. And I am just curious because I hear these problems like Mr. Stewart addressed, and I hear my colleagues from States in which 80, 85 percent of the land is federally owned. You manage over 193 million acres, and I think you do it with the resources that you have. But what is the merit of considering should we be offloading some of this land? Do you see it in perpetuity staying as it is? I am interested in your long-term view of what we do with the assets. Do we hold it as the Federal government or is there merit, as some of my colleagues are saying, to returning this one way or another in a managed way into private ownership? Mr. Tidwell. Well, I will start with a quote from Gifford Pinchot, the first Chief of this agency when this agency was created. The quote is simply that ``National forests exist for one reason and one reason only: the public wants them.'' The National forests were reserved from the public domain, the majority of them when Congress was petitioned or the Administration at that time, the President was petitioned to be able to withdraw these areas from the public domain because they were not okay with the amount of devastation and flooding that was occurring. This lack of any management, this was back in the 1800s, so that is what created this system of lands. Then there is a system of laws that Congress just passed, Presidents have signed, and agencies have implemented on the ground to represent how the public wants these lands managed. Multiple-Use Sustained-Yield Act, wonderful to read it, sounds perfect, then I will tell you it is really difficult to implement it on the ground. It is one of the things that is different than while the States manage a lot of their lands and, of course, private landowners is that we have to find the balance of all these different uses versus being able to manage it for any single one use. So for me, I like the way that we have our system of ownership in this country. I think it provides all the benefits to the public. Mr. Cole. Let me posture it again, and it is not meant to be adversarial in any way. It just is something I struggle with. We actually do have a lot of timberland in southeast Oklahoma. Most of that is privately held, and it was set up that way. When the State was opened up, frankly, a lot of the Indian tribes were sort of looted out of the land. We just had a big settlement on that which we appreciate, but the land remains in private hands, and it is productive. It is a beautiful area. So what I am wondering is, you know, we clearly have systems that have come into being at different times, and it is one thing for me to think about what I want to do in my State. I just love having 80 percent of Nevada in Federal hands, you know. I am not sure people in Nevada want to do that. And, again, I am not suggesting the elimination of these, but is there a time or a way to rethink whether or not we have the right portion because those questions, as Mr. Stewart suggested, are coming up, and they are coming up in a not very productive way, in my view. We have a lot of people caught in difficult circumstances, and they feel adversarial with their own government when they do not want to feel that way. So how would we rethink some of these things, or should we, again, because while it is true we have created this system, it is an accident in the way we create it. We did not think about it that way from the beginning of the republic. We did not apply that set of standards to every State in the country, let alone every region in the country. So, given that, is there some merit to think in some ways of divesting it, or would you argue we should essentially take the assets we have and continue to manage them, get better at it, and provide the resources. I am just wondering if there is ever any thought inside the Federal government about the first principle, if you will. How much of this land should we own? How much should be in private hands and managed differently? Mr. Tidwell. Well, I am a strong advocate for our system of land ownership, and I think these lands should remain in public ownership. They are public lands. I am concerned that when I hear proposals from States, I am concerned how you would pay for the management. What would prevent you from selling it off? Mr. Cole. Selling off is precisely what I am suggesting. Not all of it. Well, I just think it is worth thinking about, and I am just curious if the Administration or anybody ever at least explores this as, you know, a realistic option. If it is like it is now and we are going to think about managing things better, and putting in resources, that is one thing. Do we ever go back and think, geez, how much do we need to hold, where do we need to hold it, or is it just we are going to hold what we have in perpetuity? Mr. Tidwell. Well, that is my position. Based on what I hear from the public across the country, and I understand there are pockets, and I want to focus on what we can do to address those issues so that we can do a better job to address those concerns. We are very fortunate in this country to have this conservation legacy. I will tell you, in the future when you think about close to 14 percent of the CO2 that is emitted every year in this country is sequestered in our forests, we need to be looking at how we can expand those forests. So the idea that we would want to do anything to lose some of these lands to some form of development, we have got to understand those consequences because as I look forward into the future, I will tell you, it is going to be so important for us to be able to maintain and actually expand our forests if for no other reason just for air quality. They do an incredible job with sequestered carbon, then when we can have sustainable harvests, and we can also sequester it into these wood products. It is going to be something that is going to become even more important for this country and actually for the world. Mr. Cole. I will make this last point. You have been generous, Mr. Chairman. And my intent is not to question you or to express sympathy with some of the types of actions that we have had and that you have to deal with it. I do not think that is ever an acceptable thing. But I do think you have very articulately outlined your position. But I would like some study because, again, we do not hold the same balance of lands regionally across this country. And I am not in an area that is directly affected by this for the most part. But I do think, you know, when we know 1 out of 5 acres in the country is federally owned, that, to me, is worth thinking about, particularly when it is concentrated in a relatively small area. 50, 60, 70 percent of the State being owned by the Federal government is pretty difficult on the people that live there. And whether or not we should redistribute that would be a fair question, too. But, again, you have been very generous, Mr. Chairman. Thank you very much. And thank you, Chief. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Ms. Pingree. WHITE-NOSE SYNDROME Ms. Pingree. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Thank you, Chief, for your testimony today, it is certainly interesting to see the breadth of issues that we have in all the diverse States. As you know, I represent Maine which is in New England, and we have very little presence of public lands. We are fortunate that we have more water than drought, so we are not one of the States that are so deeply affected by the fires. But I do appreciate the challenges that you are dealing with, and I hope that one of the things that we can tackle on this committee is to have that funding be more stabilized so the rest of the funding that many of us care about is better available to us and certainly more predictable. Sorry I have to go to another hearing, and I will give you a few questions for the record. But I will just quickly ask you about a very different kind of issue that I think the Forest Service has been handling well in terms of the back and forth, and that is the northern long-eared bat. We have a lot of forest in our State, and we have a lot of timber harvesting, but it is, of course, all private land. This has been a big concern for the Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife, as well as our timber harvesters. We are particularly concerned that you are able to maintain the balance of dealing with the private landowners, the small landowners, the loggers themselves. As you know, this is an issue where the bat has been troubled by White-nose syndrome, the fungal disease, so there was some question about whether they would be listed as endangered. And the Wildlife Service has listed them as threatened, which gives a little bit more wiggle room. I know some of that was controversial as there were those who wanted it to be endangered, but this gives us a little bit of a middle ground in that you are now working on a tag and release program that is currently level funded. I just want to talk a little bit about that because what is critically important in my State is that we continue to ensure this coordination with the local wood lot owners. If you could briefly tell us about how you are doing as a result of that 2015 study that you did, how you worked with other agencies, particularly Fish and Wildlife. Will you be able to continue to fund this work under the budget request for forest and rangeland research at last year's level? And just how will you continue that cooperation since white-nose syndrome is one of the things that we certainly hear about from our landowners? Mr. Tidwell. Well, first, we will continue that level of funding. We have a great partnership with several universities that is helping to find solutions to the white-nose syndrome, and we are actually making some progress on it. When it comes to managing our forests, there are certain spruce trees that are important to be able to maintain those and not impact the bats. We have been able to work with Fish and Wildlife Service to be able to say, we can adjust some operations here and still be able to get in there and be able to manage our forests and not impact those bats. So I feel really good about the work we have done together with the Fish and Wildlife Service. What really helps us is that they understand the benefit of the forests, and they understand that if we are not managing these forests, and we are going to lose the bat habitat, or in your case with private land, it gets developed. You are fortunate that you have not had as much pressure as the rest of this country, but it is starting in your State, too. I will tell you, it is so essential that we find ways to be able to maintain our private forested lands. It is the majority of forests in this country. Over 50 percent of our forests are private. It is essential that we maintain those. Ms. Pingree. Absolutely, and I appreciate your saying that because you are right. In our case, it is not the pressure from the Federal government or the publicly owned land, but it is very important to people in our State and in the region that much of this land continues to be able to be harvested, or timber, or pulpwood, or a variety of uses. And development pressure is certainly growing in our area. I think when you look at a map of the East Coast, you see all the bright lights and you finally get to northern Maine and you see a little bit of darkness. And that means that we have some of the last preserved forests, but that will only stay there if people are able to make it economically viable for those communities. We appreciate your moderation in this and the ability to work with you, so thank you. I yield back. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Jenkins. FOREST SERVICE STEWARDSHIP PROGRAM Mr. Jenkins. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Chief, welcome. As we have talked before, I think West Virginia has a good relationship with the Forest Service, and we appreciate you. We have 125,000 private landowners and about 80 percent of our forests are privately owned. I want to ask you about the Forest Service's Stewardship Program. Under the proposed Fiscal Year budget that we are talking about, there is over a half a million-dollar cut suggested in that program. We think this program provides a lot of technical support. It is an important tool. It has been successful. Can you give me a rationale for why the proposed cut to what we see as an important program that provides much-needed services? Mr. Tidwell. Our request does not result in a reduction, but what it does do, it moves some of those funds into our landscape scale restoration budget line item. Once again, this is where we have taken funds from stewardship for forest health on State lands, urban community forest funding, and we put that together in one account to sort of create a better way for the State foresters to be able to compete for that funding and be able then to address all these issues across the board versus we have this pot of money to be able to address urban community. We have this pot of money for forest stewardship. We have this pot of money for forest health. It is an area we are actually, based on the success that we had last year, we are increasing our request in Fiscal Year 2017 to be able to expand this. We have good support from our State foresters because they are seeing that this is actually helping them to be competitive, and they also see that it is actually helping to get more work done on the ground. STATE ACTION PLANS Mr. Jenkins. The farm bill directed State foresters to take a comprehensive look at forests. Can you help me understand how the Forest Service and the national forests are working with State foresters to accomplish the objectives and priorities detailed in the State Action Plans, and what has been asked for under the farm bill? Mr. Tidwell. Well once again the States have done a great job to put together their action plans that we work with them starting a few years ago to help them. I mean, it shows where their priority is, where they need to really focus their work. Because of those action plans, it allows them to be more competitive for these limited funds. It also has allowed them to work across State lines. So we have several State foresters now that are working with their adjacent States, and they are putting together these large- scale projects that compete very well for these limited funds, and be able to get more work done. MONONGAHELA NATIONAL FOREST Mr. Jenkins. My last question is that as one of the few eastern members here that have substantial national forestlands in their district, I have been monitoring how the Agency's agenda applies to our forests. Last year, one of the questions for the record that I submitted was asking about the most recent forest plan monitoring update for the Monongahela National Forest. When we talked last year, I saw that that update was last done back in 2011, which is on the Web. And in response to my questions for the record, I was advised that the update would be done by May of 2015. But I have just checked and it appears as though, again, for the Monongahela National Forest we still do not have any forest plan monitoring update. Can you tell me why we cannot get that updated, and why we missed the May 2015 promise, and where we stand on that? Mr. Tidwell. Well, I appreciate our folks being optimistic about how much work they can get done, but it is another area that we lack the funding, the capacity to be able to maintain the monitoring. One of the things we are doing under the new forest plan rule, it allows us or gives the direction for us to be able to do these monitoring plans in a more collaborative effort so that we can use others to help us to be able to get that work done, and expand it. As to why they did not get your forest done, I will get back with you and find out if they made the commitment, they should have followed through with it. It is an area that in the past we have not done the job to monitor, and so it is so important for us to really understand what is going on. If our decisions and our forest plan are proving out, that is great. If they are not producing what we expected, we need to know that so that we can make changes. So it is important that we do it, and I will get back to you on the status of that. Mr. Jenkins. The Monongahela is very important in my district and throughout the entire region, so we welcome the feedback, and we continue to look forward to working with you. Thank you, Chief. Mr. Tidwell. Thank you. Mr. Jenkins. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back. Mr. Calvert. Mr. Simpson. FEDERAL LANDS Mr. Simpson. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you for being here today, Chief. And before I ask some questions, I have got a few that I would like to address. I do want to respond to something that Mr. Cole brought up, legitimate questions he asked about the amount of ownership of Federal land in western States. And I guess Mr. Amodei and I could probably have a discussion for some time and often do on the floor about this. But let me tell you why people live in Idaho. They live in Idaho because they love their public lands. They like access to them for recreation, for hunting, for fishing, for all the activities that they do on public lands. And there is always this movement to turn them over to the States and to let the States manage them. Well, you could do some cooperative management between the feds and the States, but like any landlord relationship, you are always P.O.'d at the landlord, you know? I mean, that is a reality of what happens. If we turn them over to the State, we would be P.O.'d at the State. And the reality is, like I said, you could do some cooperative management between the States and the feds, and we have been working on some of those cooperative types of arrangements. But let me tell you what happens when you sell those public lands. We just sold 30,000 acres in Idaho to a couple of Texans. That was a lot of fun. And they all of a sudden denied access. So all of a sudden people cannot access their favorite fishing hole or their hunting grounds, and in Idaho that does not mean you just go around the 30,000 acres. It means you get a helicopter and have to go over it or come in from the other side from Montana. And that is a problem, and that is why we like our public lands. Like I say, we are always P.O.'d at the land managers, and we always will be even if we manage them ourselves because, it is like a quarterback in a football game: we can always do better than the guy out there on the field. So that is my answer to that question. Mr. Cole. It was a friendly question. [Laughter.] BUDGET CAP ADJUSTMENT Mr. Simpson. It is a legitimate question, and it is a legitimate debate that is going on in Idaho, it really is, Idaho and all of the West. But let me ask you now a couple of questions. First, the wildfire funding, thank you for your support on the bill and trying to get this through. I am sorry that we did not get the cap adjustment bill through in the omnibus, but we did, thanks to Chairman Calvert and the members of this committee, get a billion extra dollars in additional funding. Let me make one recommendation. Do not do any transfers this year for wildfire fighting because what I always hear from people as I go up and talk to them they [the Forest Service] has to transfer funds, but they seem to handle it okay. So where is the urgency? Well, this billion dollars will run out eventually, and while this does solve the transfer problem probably for a year, maybe 2 years, maybe 3 years---- Mr. Tidwell. One year. Mr. Simpson. 1 year, okay. It will solve the problem for this year. It does not solve the long-term problem that we need to fix, and if you do transfers this year, that will be a problem in trying to convince other people there is a fix- borrowing issue. But in your budget request, you asked for, what was that amount? You asked for $874 million in discretionary funds and requested $864 million requested through a budget cap adjustment. Why do you put an amount in there? Mr. Tidwell. Well, because instead of asking for just, I mean, we feel we need to have an amount, and that is our prediction based on what we see as kind of like the highest need so that there is some assurance so it is just like there is not an endless fund. We do not want to be asking for more authority than we need. Mr. Simpson. Well, the assumption is you are not going to ask for more funds in a cap adjustment than what you are going to need to fight the fires. But what if it goes to a billion dollars and you only ask for $864 million? Then you are going to be back into transfers, and that is what you are trying to avoid is transfers. Mr. Tidwell. You are correct, but it is our effort to put this in a way so that it actually builds some support because we have heard some criticism from others. But that is based on kind of our high projection, kind of like this would be the max. You take last year, the $1.7 billion. Well, that is what it was. That was at our high end. So, we are pretty good on the extremes. We can tell you the maximum, what it will probably be, and that is what kind of drives that. But you raise a legitimate question about what if things do not work out, what if things really shift, El Nino shuts down. In 2017 we could be faced with circumstances that were like last year. AIR TANKERS Mr. Simpson. Well, my whole goal in this is to try to stop the transfers. And people keep saying that we want to spend more money on wildfires, and it is hard to convince some people that, no, what we want to do in the long run is spend less money on wildfires. And we do that through proper management and by not transferring all the funds. Could you tell me a little bit about where we stand with the air tankers that we authorized at one point in time because the Forest Service is down to, you mentioned the number of contract planes you are going to have. But how many C-130s do we have out there, and where are we with that? Mr. Tidwell. With the transfer of the planes from the Air Force, to the Forest Service, we flew one of those C-130s last year. We will have one this year. We will not have all of them operational until 2019. We do have our next generation planes that are on exclusive use contracts. We also still have our legacies. So this coming year we will have 21 large air tankers under contract. There are probably another four or five that we could call up when we needed, plus we have our Modular Airborne Fire Fighting System (MAFFS) planes with the Air Force and Air National Guard to be able to provide. So we are in good shape. We are also moving forward with the acquisition of an aircraft. We have completed our aviation business case. It is my understanding that OMB has indicated they are going to sign off on it, so we plan to move forward with the acquisition of that aircraft this year. BIG HORN SHEEP Mr. Simpson. One quick question if I could, Mr. Chairman. Last year the committee added language that directed the Forest Service and the BLM to conduct risk contact analysis, engage ARS, and convene a meeting among interested stakeholders to discuss solutions among other things on the domestic and wild sheep issue. Could you provide me an update on how that is going? Mr. Tidwell. Well, we are working with ARS, and the BLM, and others to be able to understand what is the real risk. More importantly, to then sit with the States to be able to identify where is the highest risk. Where are the places we need to make sure that we maintain big horn sheep? What are some of the other areas where there is less risk and there may be a greater need for the domestic sheep, and to be able to reach agreement? So this is how we are going to work with the States. They manage the big horn sheep. We want to be able to carry out our responsibility to ensure viability of big horn sheep populations, but at the same time do this in a way we are working together and prevent big horn sheep introductions into places it creates more problems in the future. If we can come to an agreement and have a plan, a State plan so that we are all together on this and we know that these areas we are going to maintain separation of big horn sheep. In this area over here, we may have some flexibility, and the State may not be the best big horn habitat anyway. So, that is an area domestic sheep should have priority on. But this is something we are going to work through with the States, and we are making, I think, some good progress in your State. Mr. Simpson. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Mr. Amodei. STATE AND VOLUNTEER FIRE ASSISTANCE FUNDING Mr. Amodei. Thanks, Mr. Chairman. Chief, good to see you. I do not want to pick sides between Simpson and Cole. [Laughter.] But since you are supposed to lead, follow, or get out of the way. The House passed last year a bill that proposed to get rid of lands that were in-holdings, small parcels, not manageable as part of the forests generally. The Forest Service supported it. The Administration supports it. Can you talk to somebody in the Senate about getting off their ass and moving that? [Laughter.] You do not need to answer, but anyhow something to think about. I was in the Carson Ranger District last week, and I know your history goes through a ranger district in central Nevada, so I want to talk with you about the firefighting stuff. I am looking at the budget request this year, and I see that the line items which have been held kind of actually at flat funding for the last few years for local cooperation, State and Federal work, we got forest stewardship, and we have also got State fire assistance, and volunteer fire assistance has been at level funding. And while in this environment there are some days where level funding is a victory, I look at what has happened in the Service's budget over the last few years, and level funding is sometimes a precursor to getting zero'd out. I hear your statements about, hey, we ought to use the closest resource regardless of what it is. We do not need to have the discussion here in terms of the importance of initial attack and cooperation with local and State authorities and all that other sort of stuff. And so, as I sit here and look at fuels and fire and all that other sort of stuff, and it is just another moving part of the puzzle, but you are going, hey, why are we level funding these folks while we are proposing to increase suppression. And you get into that whole argument in terms of do we put it in suppression, do we put it in prevention, do we put it in thinning, although you said today, hey, thinning is a good thing, and I agree with you. But I am sitting here looking at this going, State assistance, by the way, in a State that you are not the BLM, and I know you are thankful for that every day, and I think you are right. But it is like, hey, for the communities that the Humboldt-Toiyabe plays a large part in, this volunteer and through the state forester stuff is pretty important stuff. So my question is, can I get together with Tom Hubbard and the folks in your office who develop that to have a better understanding of why that is level as we go forward in the discussion of this committee for that line item, because it is not sex and violence. Nobody is going to be able to make a commercial out of it. But in terms of operational, I think it is an important thing to take a look at? Can we get together offline? Mr. Tidwell. Yes, and also I agree with you. You will also notice that our preparedness request, that is not going up either because the need to put any discretion we have into paying the bill for fire suppression, it limits our ability to be able to be proactive and be preventive. Your point depends on our volunteer fire agencies throughout the country, not only in your State, but in Mr. Cole's State. That is our first defense. This statewide fire assistance is so important for us to be able to maintain, help those folks maintain their qualifications, and also have the equipment so that they can safely be able to carry out the initial attack. They do the majority of the initial attack in this country. When you look at that, the number of fires we had last year, the majority of them were on private ground. We work together, but your points are well made. We will make sure we set up some time with you to be able to share the information with you. Ms. McCollum. Would the gentleman yield for a second? Mr. Amodei. Sure. FIRE FIGHTING TECHNOLOGY Ms. McCollum. You are talking about having funding available for prevention. Technology is now playing a role with the possibility of reducing suppression costs. There was a pilot project last year using drones out there so that we hit the fire right. We save lives. We can react in real time. Do you have money in the budget for more robust work with that? It is amazing. They are amazing, what they can do, because it is real time information. Mr. Tidwell. We are looking at how we can effectively use that technology. We have had some success in the past when we have used the military's craft in Mr. Calvert's State to be able to use that. So we are having to work that through also with FAA so that it can be part of the technology that we are using. One of the challenges that we have is that technology provides so much information that we have got to find a way to be able to manage that because we are looking at stuff. We need information instantaneously. We do not have the ability to look at a lot of different data. So that is one of the things we are also working on is to be able to use the information we really need to collect. I mean, it is incredible what is out there, and especially with the technology that the military has provided a few times. We had a large fire in California a couple of years ago where we were using an unmanned aircraft that was able to look through the smoke and identify. We actually had some hot spots that were outside the line. Our infrared flights would not have picked him up until that night, but we were able to actually pick it up right then and during the day. So it is definitely a tool that we are going to be using, but we are going to be working together, and also make sure the public is okay with it because then it raises those questions. At the same time, we cannot have the public flying theirs because we have had operations where we have had to shut down our air tanker operations and our helicopters because it is unsafe. So it is going to take a little while for us to work through this so that we can use the tool to help us, but at the same time the public can be reassured we are not doing it for anything but checking on the fire. Mr. Amodei. We have plenty of drones in Nevada. We fly them over Area 51 all the time. [Laughter.] Mr. Simpson. No, we do not, Mr. Chair. [Laughter.] Mr. Amodei. And actually I would kind of like at some point in time just an update because there was report language saying, hey, helicopter test in 2014, blah, blah, blah, how is that going. So what we will do when we set that up for whenever you do, we will make sure that all committee members are aware so that they can either attend or send staff. Mr. Tidwell. Thank you. AIR TANKERS Mr. Amodei. Finally, I want to talk to you a little bit about the large air tanker program because I have looked at the 2002 report after we had some bad stuff, and then your modernization stuff. And I am looking at the thing where you are getting Coast Guard C-130s and got to do all that stuff. And I have kind of a concern because the 2002 report says, hey, military long haul aircraft are under different load and stresses than basically close air support in a firefighting role, especially when the fire is big and not an initial attack trying to paint a line around a smaller area, and all the weather that goes with the fire. And I look at the C-130 stuff and I am going, do we have the initial records with this from the Coast Guard, or is it Groundhog's Day? And so, I have a concern about that with the FAA certification in terms of public use specified, and so I want to go over that more extensively offline. But, I mean, help me with is this not what we were doing in 2002 that that Blue Ribbon panel said you've got to quit doing this,you've got to instrument them, and you've got to maintain them for the role that firefighting represents, not takeoffs and landings hauling cargo, and stuff like that? Mr. Tidwell. Yeah. So FAA certifies it for the original purpose of aircraft, which was cargo from point A to point B. Our mission is different, and we have learned the hard way that it is additional stresses on aircraft, so we put together additional certification. A lot of it is just additional maintenance to be able to do the inspections on the wings to make sure we are not having any stress fractures or mental fatigue in those planes. So the C-130s that are provided by the private contractors, they are able to meet those. All of our new aircraft are meeting these. Our aircraft are going to meet these qualifications. It just provides that additional assurance, and it is airworthy to go from point A to point B, but that is a very different mission from what we do. Mr. Amodei. Okay. So I will look forward to talking with you more about that later. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Joyce. Mr. Joyce. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Good morning, Chief. Mr. Tidwell. Good morning. EMERALD ASH BORER Mr. Joyce. I have to tell you that one of the most stunning things to me being from Ohio when I got on this committee was the amount of money we spend on fire suppression. In Ohio obviously we have a different problem, and I noticed we were talking about flat funding and the Forest Health Management and Cooperative Lands account being flat funded. In Ohio, we have an aggressive problem with the emerald ash borer. Mr. Tidwell. Yes. Mr. Joyce. We have now found that the emerald ash borer is moving to other types of trees---- Mr. Tidwell. Yes. Mr. Joyce [continuing]. Including in Ohio, they found it on the white fringe tree? I was wondering what, if anything, you plan to do with the flat budget to help local communities fight the emerald ash borer scourge. Mr. Tidwell. Well, we continue to work with APHIS--they are probably our key partner on this to be able to identify a solution. Right now with emerald ash borer, is about the only thing we are having some success, if we can get out in front of it and basically reduce the host trees, we can slow down the spread. That is very difficult when it is going through a community. People do not want to lose their ash trees, but the reality right now is you are going to lose them one way or another. So this is an area that our scientists have been working on. We just have not been able to come up with a solution. We are having some success to be able to do spraying in certain areas if there are certain places to be able to make that investment. The insecticide that we are using seems to be having some good success, but it is a very expensive approach. So we need to continue our research. It is just one of the realities. We had emerald ash borer around for quite a few years in this country, and then we stopped having cold winters, and all of a sudden they have spread all the way up into Canada now. It just indicates what we are up against, and I think we will be able to find a solution to it. And then the other thing we are working on is through genetics to be able to actually develop a species of ash that can resist the emerald ash borer, too. So, that may also be helpful if we can come back in and replant ash. They are a fast-growing tree. But those are the things we continue to work on. I would like to be able to have more funding, and I would like to be able to increase that, but I can say that about everything that we are doing. I understand the realities of where we are today with our budget concerns, and so we are doing our best to prioritize our requests. Mr. Joyce. Level funding, in some instances, is a victory. Mr. Tidwell. Yeah, well, it is. At times it is, right. SPREADING OF INVASIVE SPECIES Mr. Joyce. Have you noticed it spreading to other trees as well, in your research? Mr. Tidwell. Yeah. Our scientists have, and I will be glad to get back with you and just provide you a full list of it. We are seeing with some of the other invasives, too, that we are predominantly on one species. They, too, adapt, and especially when they start losing their host tree. They are there, and especially if they are in the numbers. They start moving into different species. So we are seeing with a variety of species, it is one of the things the Canadians are very concerned about, especially if some of our invasives start moving into sugar maple. They are very concerned about the impact not only here in this country, but also to our neighbor to the north. Those are the things we are up against, to be able to slow down these infestations, and then also to stay in front of it so that if in this case we come up with a fix with ash at the same time that borer has already moved on to a different species, then we are just in the chase, and we need to get out in front of it. Mr. Joyce. You hit on a good point with the sugar maples because that is a big industry in our area. Mr. Tidwell. It is, yeah. URBAN AND COMMUNITY FORESTRY Mr. Joyce. The source of fires in our neighborhood is mostly fireplaces. Over the years it has been hardwoods, but it seems that ash is what everybody is burning now because it is going down at a tremendous speed. In the Urban and Community Forestry Program budget proposal, there is a decrease of $4.354 million. While I understand that cuts have to be made, can you explain to me what the importance of urban forests is to our growing urban populations and why that fund would take a 15 percent cut? Mr. Tidwell. Well, once again, there is not a reduction in our request. It is just to move that amount of money into this landscape scale restoration account that allows the State foresters to have more flexibility. What we found last year with the funds that were available in that account, about 30 percent of the funding was actually spent on urban community forests. So the State foresters are recognizing the need there, and so it gives them more flexibility. So we have not reduced our request. We just moved some of the money into this other account. But based on what we saw last year, it probably will actually increase the amount of funding that is going into urban and community forests. Eighty- three percent of Americans now live in an urban setting, and we have I think over 130 million acres of urban forests in this country. That is a huge asset if you think about the carbons being sequestered, the water that is being filtered, and the quality of life. All our research shows you plant trees, your property value goes up, crime goes down, and you save energy. It is an incredible resource that we have, but we've got to stay on top of these invasives. Otherwise, it could become so expensive to maintain. Mr. Joyce. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Ms. McCollum, any further questions? GOOD NEIGHBOR AUTHORITY Ms. McCollum. First, I would like to point out the funding that is in the budget for the Office of International Forestry Programs because doing the detection right helps us get ahead or stop invasive species from coming in. So that is very, very important. Tying things together, I have to agree with Mr. Simpson. If you look at Minnesota, we are right on the cutting edge where the forests start building up again. The one thing that we have lost in the metropolitan area, and we are fighting very hard to keep, is public access for swimming, sailing, fishing and other recreation. So we are very protective of our public lands. I would like you to talk more about this Good Neighbor Authority Master Agreement. You have one with Chippewa and Superior International Forest and the Minnesota Department of DNR. When you mentioned marijuana eradication, one of the things our National Guard was doing, before it was so heavily redeployed over and over again both in Iraq and Afghanistan, was to get some of the flying time in looking over the forests. They would work with the Minnesota DNR as well as our national forests on some of the things that were going on with marijuana eradication. Can you talk about some of these State-to-State agreements that you have going on with the Forest Service and how effective that is in saving money and heading off tensions in the future? Mr. Tidwell. So the Good Neighbor Authority is something we have had for a couple of States for quite a few years, and then with the last Farm Bill it was expanded across the country. We now have, I think, 10 or 11 States where we have an agreement in place. What it does is it allows us to be able to work with the State to be able to look at projects that maybe go beyond the National forest, or, in some cases, just on the National forest, and be able to use State resources to help us get more work done. Then the receipts that come off of that are then available for us to then do additional work. It is one of the areas that I think when we talk about some of the tension between State management or for the Forest Service you manage the public lands. These are the sort of things that I want to spend our time on, because initially we are having good success to be able to increase the capacity, actually get more work done, and by working with our States. It is like everything, we are in a learning process. Not every project is going to probably work out as well as we hope initially. But over time, I think it is going to be another way for us just to get some additional work done. It is also helping, I think, to address this question about is there a better way for us to work together, and this is one of the authorities that I think is going to really prove out to be really helpful, and I want to be able to go beyond just forest restoration. I think there are a lot of things that we can be doing working together with the States under this authority besides just forest restoration. That is our primary goal right now. MARIJUANA ERADICATION As far as with the marijuana eradication, we use the Air National Guard units in a lot of places to be able to fly people in, and in the past have been able to clean up. In some States, a lot of their Guards have been deployed and do not have the capacity they used to have. This additional request allows us to be able to rely on a better partner so that we are not just always asking, but we can also be there as a partner and do these cleanup operations. Ms. McCollum. Thank you. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE: WILDLAND FIRE SUPPORT Mr. Calvert. Thank you. One quick thing. You mentioned technology, and our staff was out in California, and they witnessed that your employees are kind of jerry rigging their own technologies at some point. They are using their iPads, their iPhones. There is no real policy or guidelines that are set to utilize new technology more effectively. We did use Predator for the Rim Fire. If you remember, we had a hell of a time getting permission to unleash that technology. I had to call the Secretary of Defense---- Mr. Tidwell. Thank you. Mr. Calvert [continuing]. At that time was Chuck Hagel, and he was on the airplane, and tell him to please sign a memo that is floating around that airplane someplace to allow us to use the Predator on site. Since then, have there been any conversations with the Department of Defense to have more efficient, effective coordination when the fire first starts. I have been told if you can get that resource above the fire immediately, it helps direct the other aircraft, find the hot spots, and maybe put out the fire faster. The other aircraft cannot see that through the smoke, and using advanced technology to interface with firefighters that are on the ground with their iPads and iPhones where they can immediately know where they need to be, and where to go. Mr. Tidwell. Mr. Chairman, it is one of the things we do need to sit down with the folks in Defense to be able to get something in place when we need that. Ideally we will be able to develop different unmanned flying aircraft that we can use. Predators are very expensive, and it goes way beyond anything we need there. Right now it is one of the tools. So your point is well taken. I will ask the staff to be able to look at what we can have in place until we can get our program established because when the State requests it and it is being flown at the direction from the Governor, then we need people like yourself, your support, and then we are able to do it. We need to be able to have that so that when there is a situation, it is just like here it is, it is available. MILITARY AIRCRAFT Mr. Calvert. In San Diego when we had fires, we could not get the Marine Corps to use their helicopters and do spotting. I remember it took us 2 days to get permission to use the Marine Corps helicopters. And the Marines wanted to help, but they had to get a sign-off from here in Washington. Sometimes 2 days is a critical period of time where we could not use those spotters to bring in the air resources to put that fire out. Mr. Tidwell. We are doing a better job now to be able to quickly justify using the military aircraft so that we are not violating the Economy Act that requires us to use the contracted aircraft first. We have all those committed. We are learning how to be a little bit more nimble on that so that we can provide the insurance and we are not violating the Economy Act. There is an urgent need, and, yes, it may only be for a day, but we need it now. All of our other aircraft are committed in other places in the country. So I think in the future we will be able to have those resources available much faster than what we have had in the past. Mr. Calvert. Good. Okay. Are there any other questions? GRAZING FEE PROPOSAL Mr. Simpson. If you do not mind, I would just like to ask one question if I could. Your grazing fee proposal, tell me about it. Mr. Tidwell. Well, it is a proposal to have an additional charge above the grazing fee of $2.50 per head out there. Mr. Simpson. What is the grazing fee? What is the AUM now? Mr. Tidwell. It was $1.65 last year, and I think it is going up to, actually it goes up to the maximum of 25 percent. So somebody can do the math here. Mr. Simpson. So this would be more than double? Mr. Tidwell. Yes. And the money would then be used for us to be able to address the backlog of administration and then also to be able to move forward on implementing the Rescission Act to get the Allotment Management Plan NEPA done. It is a proposal to find a way to be able to move forward to be able to assure that we are doing our job to make sure we can continue to graze, and at the same time to deal with the budget complications. I mean, ideally I wish we could be just asking for an increase in grazing. It is one of the issues that had been brought up with Mr. Stewart. We have so few folks out there. Where we used to be able to sit down and have the discussions with permitees and county commissioners, and basically a lot of one-on-one discussions. We just do not have the folks there anymore. So, that is one of the things that is added to some of the complications that we are seeing. So it is a proposal to be able to collect some additional fees. When I look at what most States charge, we still are going to be less than what States charge for grazing. Mr. Simpson. Would this provide for full cost recovery for the administration of the program? Mr. Tidwell. I would have to get back to you on that. Mr. Simpson. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Kilmer. STEWARDSHIP CONTRACTING Mr. Kilmer. Thanks, Chairman. I have one question. You mentioned in your opening remarks the value of stewardship contracting in terms of taking revenue from timber sales and plowing it back into that forest. Unfortunately that doesn't work on other timber sales. It is my understanding that the Forest Service actually has authority that was expanded in 2005, the K-V authority, Knutson-Vandenberg authority, but the Service does not really use it. That does not make sense to me. Can you tell me why? Mr. Tidwell. We are using our authority under the K-V, Knutson-Vandenberg. We have been using that for years. The problem that we are running up against is today we have 50 percent fewer foresters than what we used to. We have these different authorities, but we need to have people that can first understand and be able to implement it. We are getting to the point now where we have a lot of NEPA-ready projects. They are ready to go forward and to be able to restore forests. We do not have the staff to be able to get out on the ground because of the reductions that have occurred over the last decade. So it is one of the things through the Good Neighbor Authority that would allow us to be able to make full use of our authorities and be able to increase the capacity. But through our authorities under the K- V plan, it is one of the things that we do implement. The difference, though, with our stewardship contracting, and we are doing about 30 percent of our forest management work now under stewardship, there is a great level of trust. I can get the same result on the ground whether I use a timber sale or a stewardship contract, and you would get the same result on the ground. I use the stewardship contract. There is a higher level of trust with folks that sometimes are concerned with what we are doing, and so it requires a collaborative effort. The other key difference is that with the stewardship contract, we address all the needs of that landscape together at one time versus a timber sale, we would cut the trees, use K-V funds to come in there and do some restoration work. A stewardship contract provides that certainty, that guarantee that we are going to address all the needs on the landscape under one contract versus, yes, we will do the timber sale, and, trust us, we will get around to doing the work that you are really interested in. So those are the two differences, and so we want to use all of our authorities, but that is the key benefit with the stewardship contract. We can do some of the same things under the K-V, but we just have not been able to build that level of trust that we need to be able to continue to move forward. Mr. Kilmer. Thanks. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. I know there are a number of other questions. We will submit them for the record. And I discussed before some groundwater issues that I would like to get on the record also. So any questions, please submit them and we will get them answered in a timely fashion by the chief. Mr. Calvert. I appreciate your being here today. Mr. Dixon, I appreciate your being here today. And we are adjourned. Mr. Tidwell. Thank you. [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Thursday, February 25, 2016. INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE WITNESSES ROBERT McSWAIN, PRINCIPAL DEPUTY DIRECTOR, INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE MARY SMITH, DEPUTY DIRECTOR, INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE ELIZABETH A. FOWLER, DEPUTY DIRECTOR FOR MANAGEMENT OPERATIONS, INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE GARY J. HARTZ, DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND ENGINEERING, INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert Mr. Calvert. Good morning, and welcome to this oversight hearing for the Fiscal Year 2017 budget for the Indian Health Service. Funding for Indian Country has been a nonpartisan priority of the subcommittee for many years now. Working together, we have grown funding for American Indian and Alaska Native programs at a greater amount and at a faster rate than any other programs in the appropriations bill. As a result, contract support costs are now fully funded, freeing up operation funds, and affording tribes the capacity to run additional programs rather than relying on the Federal government to do it for them. Funds to meet extraordinary medical costs to victims of disasters or catastrophic illness which used to run out in the middle of the year, and, thus, spawn the common refrain in Indian Country, ``Do not get sick after June,'' are now finally in Fiscal Year 2017 estimated to last the entire year. More children are receiving proper dental care. More teens are receiving the help and support they need to battle substance abuse and suicide. More providers are being recruited because we have been helping to pay their student loans. More new care facilities are opening their doors each year. The list of accomplishments go on and on, and we are deeply proud of our work. But we also recognize that we still have a long way to go before health disparities in the American Indian and Alaska Native population compared to the Nation as a whole become a thing of the past. I hope that today's hearing will help highlight the measurable differences that reflect funding increases that have been made. As a subcommittee we need to be able to communicate to our colleagues in Congress that the sacrifice we make elsewhere in this appropriations bill in order to increase funding for Indian Country is actually saving lives. Saving more lives, however, is not simply a function of more money. The Indian Health Service is battling a management crisis in the Great Plains area, for example. The crisis reached a new low point recently when the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, CMS, terminated its agreement with Obama-Winnebago Indian---- Ms. McCollum. Omaha. Mr. Calvert. Omaha, excuse me. Omaha. After Denver's win, I should know that. Omaha. [Laughter.] Omaha-Winnebago Indian Hospital because the conditions at the hospital posed an immediate jeopardy to the health and safety of patients. Just a few months later, CMS threatened to do the same at two additional Indian Health Service hospitals in the Great Plains area. All three hospitals are directly run by the Indian Health Service rather than by the tribes, and all three remain open for business under intense management scrutiny. That said, it is not my wish to focus today on a hearing on the crisis in the Great Plains. The Senate Committee on Indian Affairs has already held a hearing on the matter, and I doubt it will be the last. Also I do not wish to imply that funding and management are unrelated. We all know that it takes money to hire and retain good people. My point is this. When the Indian Health Service struggles with management and accountability, the subcommittee struggles even more to find the money, the offsets, and the votes to fund increases for the Indian Health Service. The President's Fiscal Year 2017 budget is particularly challenging. The bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 increases Fiscal Year 2017 discretionary budget authority by less than one-tenth of 1 percent. And yet the President is proposing an 8 percent, $377 million increase for IHS without any realistic offsets elsewhere in the budget. Of the proposed increase, $241 million is just to keep pace with tribal and Federal pay costs, contract support cost, medical inflation, and population growth in order just to maintain current levels of service. Program increases developed in close consultation with tribal leaders, which are necessary to staff newly constructed facilities, and to make any real progress to decrease the health disparities of American Indians and Alaska Natives compared to the Nation as a whole, are an additional $136 million. With us today from the Indian Health Service to get into the details and answer questions are principal director and current acting director, Mr. Robert McSwain--it is good timing--and his second in command, Deputy Director Mary Smith. Welcome, Mr. McSwain, and welcome aboard, Ms. Smith, I look forward to your testimony today. But before opening statement, I would like to ask our distinguished ranking member, Ms. McCollum, for any opening remarks. OPENING REMARKS OF MS. MCCOLLUM Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would also like to join you in welcoming our witnesses here today, and I look forward to hearing their testimony. Funding for the Indian Health Service has been an area of broad nonpartisan support--I think even stronger than bipartisan--and cooperation in the past several years. However, last year's events in the Great Plains region, as the Chairman pointed out, make it clear there is more to be done and that there are still obstacles to us doing more. We have a moral and legal responsibility to provide healthcare for Native Americans. When we fall short, it is not just a violation of treaty agreements that we hold with Native Americans, but it is a violation of a trust that we share. The failings at Omaha-Winnebago and Rosebud are alarming. Just alarming. Despite the increase in resources this Subcommittee has provided, it is clear that resources alone will not solve all these problems. We also need permanent employees that have the skills needed to serve the region in a culture that fosters excellence in patient care. I am hopeful that the top to bottom audits that the Service is undertaking in the region will provide the assurances that these incidents will not happen again, and the guidance necessary to improve the entire Indian Health Service. In Fiscal Year 2017, the Indian Health budget includes $1.5 billion in discretionary funding, a $377 million increase over Fiscal Year 2015 enacted level. Much of that increase, $159 million, would be used to cover increases in the cost of providing the same level of service. $82 million would go towards increased contract support costs, and $103 million would expand and strengthen the Service's programs. I am pleased to see the budget request includes a $12 million increase in the Indian facilities line for construction of new quarters for Indian Health Service staff. The problems of the Great Plans region have made it clear that recruiting and retaining permanent staff must be a priority for the Service. The quarters budget increase will help the Service bring more permanent staff on board in these very isolated locations. It is clear that there is a mental health crisis in Indian Country. Pine Ridge Indian Health Service documented 18 cases of suicide and 308 cases of attempted suicide last year. That is nearly 1 case per day. Suicide is the second leading cause of death for Native American youth age 10--age 10--to 34. I am pleased that the budget request includes more than $40 million in new resources to tackle this problem. However, the solution in the mental health crisis does not come from healthcare alone. So I am interested to hear how the Indian Health Service, working with other agencies, will ensure that Native Americans have the access to quality education and housing, as well as economic opportunity. The Administration's Generation Indigenous Initiative seeks to coordinate its efforts in Indian Country, and I am interested in learning more about Indian Health Service's role in these efforts, and how tribal members can participate in the process. Finally, I am concerned about the lack of dedicated resources in the budget to combat opiate addiction. In addition to treating addiction, we must develop the tools and pain management to ensure that patients in chronic pain do not abuse their medication later. I want to stress again, I think it is wonderful what the President has put in for drug intervention for youth. But in talking to youth recently in my office over the past 3 weeks, they are talking about parents and people over the age of 34 that they are in contact with that are either abusers or trying to quit the problem. So we need to look at this as a family issue, as a whole Nation problem. Mr. Chairman, I want to thank you for holding this hearing today, and I look forward to working with you, and Chairman Cole, and everyone on this committee on these important issues, and doing our part to build healthy tribal communities, making the whole United States healthier. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I yield back. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. McSwain, you are recognized for your opening statement. Opening Remarks of Mr. McSwain Mr. McSwain. Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, first of all, let me just apologize deeply for being late. It is not like me to do this, and I know I did not start off on a good foot. And I just want to, on behalf of the Agency, beg your indulgence. As pointed out, I am the Principal Deputy Director of the Indian Health Service, and accompanying me today is Mary Smith, the Deputy Director, and also Elizabeth Fowler, Deputy Director for Management Operations, and Mr. Gary Hart is Director of the Office of Environmental Health. I think we have got the team here to be able to answer any and all questions that the committee has about our budget request. I am pleased to provide testimony on the President's proposed 2017 budget for the Indian Health Service, which will allow us to continue to make a difference in addressing our Agency's mission to raise the physical, mental, social, and spiritual health of American Indians and Alaska Natives to the highest level. The 2017 President's budget proposes to increase the total IHS program to $6.6 billion, which will add $402 million to the Fiscal Year 2016 enacted level. And if appropriated, this funding level would represent a 53 percent increase in funding for the IHS since 2008. And I want to thank the committee and the Congress for that support over the last few years. The overall funding increases proposed in the President's budget are consistent with tribal priorities. We consult with the tribes on what we want to ask, and so this represents their ask as well as the Administration. And these will continue to address longstanding health disparities among American Indians/ Alaska Natives compared to other Americans, specific investments including expanding behavioral health and mental health services, improving healthcare quality, capacity, and workforce, supporting self-determination by fully funding contracts or costs of tribes who manage their own programs, and ensuring increased healthcare access through addressing critical healthcare facilities' infrastructure needs. As you will see, I mean, we have had a great series of increases that have enabled us to replace facilities that are on average 33 years old per facility. The President's budget includes funding for full, what we refer to as current, services. Full Pay Act. It is pay costs, inflation, and pop growth because a population does grow and we respect that, and we must maintain pace. And these are critical for just simply maintaining the budgets of IHS and tribal hospitals, clinics, and other programs to current levels. That gives us a starting point. The budget also includes increases of $49 million, of which $46 million will be focused on critical behavioral health services, including GEN-I certainly and suicide prevention projects, and also the integration of medical and behavioral health into our system so that there is a behavioral health/ primary care integration. It has also continued the whole of behavioral health in tribal communities between medical and behavioral health and tribal community organizations. We have found that there are several programs out there are granted by other agencies. It is a matter of us working together and to integrate those into a complete program for those tribal communities. The budget is to help implement Zero Suicide Initiative. And the Zero Suicide Initiative is, simply put, we run a healthcare system, and the healthcare system means that our staff are trained, not only our staff, but the tribal programs that are operated, that we are aware of high-risk people coming through the system, so that they are not just behavioral health people in the facility, but all the providers are trained to be aware of those indicators that would show that people are at risk. So we do not just simply have them come in for their usual medical checkup, but we are also observing so that we are training for purposes of zero suicide. A youth pilot project, something that the tribes have been asking for for years, and that is after care. So we have these nice youth regional treatment centers. They go and they get treated, then they return. What about after care? So we are making an investment for after care. Domestic violence prevention to expand the numbers of grants to 30 additional Indian tribal organizations, and certainly funding to expand the Catastrophic Health Emergency Fund, and a bit for urban programs as well because Indian people do find themselves in urban programs, and that is a major priority for us. Improving the quality of healthcare in the Indian health system is a primary objective of this budget, and it builds in to the point of investing in health information. Data drives our decisions, and we want a better data system that will help us do that. We have the electronic health record, and we can talk more about that as we go on, as well as we are moving towards all 27 hospitals under a hospital consortium that is based in quality measures. The whole notion of the infrastructure for new facilities, and we have got things for addressing five newly-constructed facilities for tribal clinical leases and maintenance costs specific to where tribal space is ineligible for maintenance and repair, and some additional money to begin to address the backlog. As you all know, our backlog and basic maintenance repairs are around $473 million, so we have made an investment to reduce that as well. In addition, this budget will enable us to complete the Phoenix Indian Medical Center Ambulatory Care Center, and begin a design of the White River Hospital, continue construction of the Rapid City Health Center, and to begin the construction of Dilkon Alternative Rural Health Center on the Navajo, and to fund replacement, additional, and then, of course, as mentioned by Member McCollum, that we have a new venture in addressing the need for quarters. Staffing quarters is critical in some of our remote locations, and we put investment there to begin the process. We are still looking at where do we need to go with this, and we will do that. Supporting self-determination. Again, full payment, and I want to just simply thank the committee for urging us in that direction. And we are there, and I think we have got a lot of good things to report on that front. We have got a couple of legislative proposals that I want. One of them is to address the very definitions of ``Indian'' in the Affordable Care Act. We have got several definitions, and so depending on how it is defined is how the law gets implemented. We would like to see that addressed in our proposal. And finally, on our legislative proposals, another one is the special diabetes program. Very successful program for us in terms of a chronic care model, and we have got some data that we can share with you that certainly shows where we are beginning to slow the progress of diabetes in Indian Country, particularly amongst the youth. And I know that you have mentioned it and we can talk about, but we are looking very closely at the Great Plains hospital. In this regard, a real focus on recruitment and retention of providers, certainly the housing issue, working more closely with our sister agency, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. And what their findings are, I can tell you on the record, what they have found is unacceptable to us, and certainly has drawn the attention of Secretary Burwell. And she has put in place an ability to respond not only to the Department, but assist the Indian Health Service in addressing these issues. I want to close by emphasizing that the challenges we face, I know that working together in partnership with Indian Country and the Congress, we can improve our Agency to better service tribal communities. And I appreciate all your efforts to provide us the best possible healthcare services to the people we serve, and in helping to ensure a healthier future for American Indians and Alaska Natives. With that, I close, and the team will answer any questions that you might have. [The statement of Mr. McSwain follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Mr. Calvert. Thank you, Mr. McSwain. Mr. Cole will start off the questioning. Mr. Cole. Thank you very, Mr. Chairman, and let me just say publicly, I want to thank you and our ranking member for all you have done over the last few years in this area in your respective positions now, but just even before that when you were simply members of the committee. It has made a big difference in a lot of lives. And I want to congratulate the Administration, too, in this regard. This has been a great area of bipartisan cooperation and where I think the resources that have been placed there have broadly, you know, made things better, have saved lives, so there is a lot to be proud of here. But as you pointed out in your opening remarks, there are always things to be concerned about. I am going to have to leave literally after my question and your answer, Director, because I have got to chair a hearing with Secretary Burwell at 10:00. So I have got to go do that, and I am sure we will discuss this issue in that hearing. GREAT PLAINS So I do want to give you an opportunity to talk at length on this Great Plains CMS issue. I am very concerned and troubled when you have three difficult facilities. It suggests something systemic is a problem. And so, one, I would like to know specifically what are the findings and what has been done to correct them for those three facilities. And then, you know, what you are doing system wide to make sure this is not three needles in a haystack that suggest there are more needles. JOINT VENTURE Last point if you would touch on it, would we find the same thing in tribally operated facilities as we are finding in these? Is there any disparity in ratio? And, again, if so, why, or do you think these issues that we found in these three facilities we would find if tribal facilities were looked at? Is this random? Again, I want your thoughts, and I will say I tend to have a bias in favor of tribes basically, you know, joint venturing and operating their own facilities. Nobody holds you accountable like your own people do. And I know in our tribe, when we took over the operation of our facilities, or began to, in the 1970s, it made an enormous difference. You know, almost immediately we saw wait times come down very dramatically because if somebody is sitting there waiting too long, they would simply call a tribal legislative official, and you could get your fingers around their neck pretty fast. So they were just responsive. On top of that, we developed people in our own tribe, gave them opportunities to acquire professional skills, and manage big budgets. And, frankly, they have moved on into other directions now. It gave us a cadre of really trained and talented people. I just want to get your thoughts on that, on the contrast between, again, IHS facilities and tribally operated facilities. Mr. McSwain. Thank you for that question, Congressman Cole. There are very important distinctions, and one of those is on the Federal side we are governed by rules, regulations, pay systems, and tribes have the ability to be flexible. They are not bound by the pay schedules, so they can be very competitive in doing so, as well as the regulations that govern. But they are also governed by certainly the same rules we are when it comes to certification by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. We have not had any citations for tribal facilities, and clearly I think a lot of it has to do with when the tribes operate, they take pride in managing it very literally. I mean, of course, as you mentioned, when there is a complaint by a tribal member, they know where to go. They are running it. They go to their council. And when we are running it as we do with 27 hospitals and some 200-plus health centers across the country, they are staffed, and we run according to Federal regulations and Federal requirements. And the biggest challenge, and this segues into the challenges I am seeing in the Great Plains area. We are addressing currently the current findings by CMS in those three facilities, and they center around having trained, qualified providers. And we are trying to carry out the mission with a combination of contractors, a heavy contract load. So if we can hire permanent staff, and I think it was mentioned earlier that the biggest solution is to have permanent staff there. STAFFING AND HOUSING But it is a challenge. Many of these locations are very remote, very isolated, and not only is it a housing issue, which we are struggling with and we put forward the notion. And let us face it. I have talked to many of the tribal leaders, and they have a housing program. They do not have enough housing just for their own members. You know, they have 20 people in a house. As I talked to one tribal leader, he says I cannot give you a house to provide for staff. I need those homes for my own members. I will certainly work with you on space and so forth if you can build them, ergo a request for additional housing. Housing is a real challenge, and we found that out when we were beginning to address the issue with Pine Ridge suicides. We could send healthcare workers up there, but they had to drive 60 to 70 miles. Mr. Cole. Yeah. Mr. McSwain. And they were not going to stay there. And so we immediately began putting in place some temporary facilities on the short run and then some modular. So those are the challenges in the Great Plains area which are probably not shared other places in the system. Mr. Cole. Yeah, and let me just make this point, and then I will yield back my time that the chairman has been generous with. I think that is true. I have been to the Rosebud. Ms. McCollum and I were on the same trip there and seeing the facilities, and seeing the challenges in terms of the housing. And I want to commend you for doing it. While I am very concerned about this, I want you to know I see a lot of these things as functions of a system that has been historically underfunded. I do not blame this on the Indian Health Service or what have you. I have some idea of the scope of what you have to deal with literally for generations. And it is only the last few years, honestly, that we have begun to give you the resources to make the difference that you are making. But I would commend you to keep really looking at this because, as the chairman suggests, this is the sort of thing that does make it difficult for us to convince our colleagues to continue the fund the Service, which I think is indispensable. And while I have a bias towards tribes operating on their own, that is a tribal choice. I mean, I respect tribes that choose to do it in a different manner, and they are best situated to make decisions for themselves as to which would work better for them. And it should not be imposed on them from up here. So just thank you for your good work, and look forward to working with you, look forward to working with my friend, the chairman, and the ranking member, and the other members of this committee to see if we can continue to build on the progress of the last few years. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Ms. McCollum. Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would just like to follow up on that. It is not just housing in the Great Plains area. It is housing throughout Indian Country. It is a school for the employees to send their children to. The Chairman, and I, and the members of the committee are working on improving the situation in schools, being able to recruit and retain teachers through alternate housing. If you are a person who comes to work at one of these IHS facilities, or even an educational facility, we should ensure that high-quality daycare is available. This is a whole-of-Nation challenge. President Obama has made it a priority to have all the agencies sit down and work together on these problems. You do not address a whole problem by siloing it, and checking off a box, and saying we took care of it. So I appreciate that, and I think the committee is going to ask at some point what we are doing throughout the agencies to help you address this problem and other problems. MENTAL HEALTH This also goes to a whole-of-family issue. As I mentioned in my statement, and you also touched on, there is a mental health crisis in Indian Country, and Native youth have been particularly hard hit. The budget request does have additional funding for tribal youth around mental and behavioral issues. We could talk about this for hours, but I am just going to lay out a few questions. If you could, give us a general observation and then get back more fully to the staff. Please describe your request and how these initiatives are going to improve mental health outcomes for youth. Nationally, not only in tribal areas, there is a huge shortage for capacity for youth with psychiatric issues, mental health issues. So I want to know how the Service is going to work to help youth in this way. Let me just describe what I have seen in Indian Country. Should a youth and their family reach out, they are sent to a regional treatment facility which can be hours and hours away from the family. When a youth is having a challenge, that usually means quite often that the family is having a challenge, or if the family is not having the challenge, the family needs the supports put in place for when that youth comes home. Usually that means family counseling, or addressing other issues and maybe substance abuse problems in the family so the whole family is being treated. SUBSTANCE ABUSE I hear that directly from youth in my office. I was in Red Lake, and they are seeing their out of home placement go through the roof, in part because of substance abuse in the family, which affects a child, or a child is living with a grandparent who needs more tools in their toolbox when the child comes home from treatment. I want to know what you are doing to bring this assistance closer to home. Building a new regional treatment facility is a good step, but it is not the only step. If that is our only focus, we will have failed these children, and we will have another generation suffering from post-traumatic stress. Could you kind of give us an overbroad description of what you are doing to address the whole issue? I am pleased that you are asking for a new regional treatment facility, but that is not the full solution. Then please follow up with the staff in greater detail. Mr. McSwain. Thank you for that question, Congresswoman McCollum. This is a real challenge obviously in many of our communities. And the biggest challenge is the available resources and available access points for behavioral health and mental health in the communities. What we are learning is as we work hand-in-hand with the tribes and we are doing that, and I have to go back to Pine Ridge as a prime example because we focused on Pine Ridge. A year ago when they had 18 suicides. I am happy to continue to hold my breath because we have made it through the winter months now with no suicide since November. I think a lot of it has to do with attention. And I think your other comment about the Indian Health Service cannot do it alone, we recognize that. And I want to thank Secretary Burwell and Deputy Secretary Wakefield for literally getting us all together and saying, okay, all the agencies in the Department have a role to play. And then they are reaching out beyond that. Clearly the Secretary is reaching out to other departments that could help. So we have got to work all together to begin to address this issue. SAMHSA is a good partner. They are providing resources to the communities, the tribes, and their programs. Our goal is to ensure that we link them with our provision of care to their community action groups. The agreement we have, and you mentioned the schools. We have entered into an agreement with the BIA to have mental health workers in the schools if they give us just a little bit of space. I know space is hard. Ms. McCollum. Yeah. Mr. McSwain. But we can have someone there that can begin to counsel the youth in the schools, and make them available to the communities, and we are building a model. And if what we are doing is, in fact, working, then we will need to do more of that in other places, because as I have traveled around the country with listening sessions in 12 areas last year, it is not just the Great Plains area. It is the Navajo, it is the Northwest, it is Alaska, it is California, it is the Arizona folks. I mean, everyone is very concerned about their youth and what is available. And you are right about we can build as many YRTCs, or youth regional treatment centers, but, again, someone has to get them there, and then return them, which is what we are finding out, and we have proposed that in the budget. We want to do something about after care, and so that there is more watching of the kids when they return and for providing those safe zones. I think there was a hearing that was held last year about the cost of suicides. And one witness said schools are a safe zone. So this is because of families and the struggles at home. So all of this comes together, and I just want to say that what we are learning in Pine Ridge as a model, we can replicate. But you are right. There is a big debate going on presently about trying to build another facility in a far location, and whether or not that is the best thing to do because the families want to be local. And so, then the challenge is where do we put it locally? And I know that with the Great Plains area, we are testing with a strategic plan, and I will ask Mary Smith to respond to that because I think it is an important thing we are doing. We are doing a lot of immediate response, but then the long-term, how do we sustain it and keep it going? If you do not mind, I would like to have Ms. Smith respond to the strategic plan layout, if you would, please. Ms. McCollum. Okay. STRATEGIC PLAN Ms. Smith. Well, thank you. Hi, I am Mary Smith. I am Deputy Director of the Indian Health Service. With respect to, I know it was mentioned the challenges in the Great Plains, so we are certainly addressing immediate things that were cited by CMS, and trying to work to solve the immediate problems. But one of the other things that has kind of been mentioned at this hearing is some of the systemic challenges that we have with staffing, housing, and lack of access to, you know, schools and job opportunities for spouses and things like that. So we are actually engaging in kind of a strategic framework effort to look at some of these core issues, like staffing, housing, and expanding the use of telemedicine to try to strategically think about these things. We are looking at both short term, intermediate term, and long term, you know, proposals. Of course we cannot do this without our tribal partners and you all, so we are gathering data. We hope that this will be a data-driven process. And in the very near term we will be reaching out to our tribal partners and you all to start to think through these problems on how we can address them both short term and longer term. MEASURING PROGRESS Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Let me ask a question regarding your testimony. As you mentioned, our appropriations have increased approximately 43 percent since 2008, and substantial investments to impact the quantity, of course, but also the quality of healthcare provided to American Indians and Alaskans. What do you consider to be some of the most significant improvements? You mentioned measuring. How do you measure that progress? Mr. McSwain. I think our most significant has been in the areas certainly and our ability to purchase care. We have had a rather significant increase in the purchaser/referred care account, contract health service. In some areas, and not in all areas, we are struggling with some areas, and some of them are still on priority one, life and limb. But a number of the areas have begun to see where they can get down into level 3, and 4, 5. Not 5, but 4. 5 is not allowed certainly because it is cosmetic surgery certainly is one where, well, if you can get down into 3 and 4 and you get preventive health, you are past the life and limb. I think our biggest success has been in purchased/referred care, and our ability, because we--as you know, over the years we have converted a number of hospitals to health centers. And by converting them to health centers means we buy the care. We buy the secondary care that we need to provide the full comprehensive care that we provide to our American Indian and Alaska Native patients. So there has been a shift in that regard and will continue to be so. But that is one major piece. And the other one is facilities. I mean, I recall 15 years ago we had not much support for facilities, and we have actually been moving down that road in terms of finishing a lot of facilities on that priority list, and joint ventures. The Joint Venture Program has been real robust. And so, if we partner with a tribe, the tribe will build the facility, and we will staff it. And that is another way to provide more quality access to care with some of these facilities that are being built. So those are two examples in addition to behavioral health. I mean, as you know, the old days, and I have been around the system for a few years, and our experience in the older days was we could take care of by just providing safe water and sanitation. We could have an impact, a positive impact on infant mortality. Today we are challenged by behavioral issues, and behavioral issues are in the community which requires us to work closely with tribes. But the investments we are making in behavioral now are, as you can see in our budget proposal for this year, the President's budget proposal for 2017 is really beginning to focus on behavioral issues. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH Mr. Calvert. On the behavioral health issue, we have some of these Native institutions. For instance, I have one near my district in California, the old Sherman Indian Institute. And it seems in the past, many folks sent their children out to these schools for education. But it seems lately, that they are sending young people to these outer areas to get away from their homes primarily to fix a behavioral issue or some family issue that they cannot deal with on their own reservation. Are these facilities, or is it better to have, as you say, these centers closer to home, closer to their families? How do you look at that? Mr. McSwain. To the extent we can, and I think you are referring the Southern California Youth Regional Treatment Center, that is being constructed near Hemet. Mr. Calvert. Right. Mr. McSwain. That facility, we chose the site based on the tribes getting together where they would they like to see that site, where is it most accessible, and where can it be. And they selected that site. The same went for Northern California. The tribes got together and they selected a site. And the idea behind that is, in fact, I think Mr. Hart has just given me some examples. As soon as we are done with these---- Mr. Calvert. Sure. Mr. McSwain [continuing]. We will invite you to, I think we have had a conversation about inviting you to. This is one at Hemet in Southern California. But it is where we put them, and I think in every case recently it has been the tribes participating. And there was a lot of testimony at the groundbreaking with some kinds that been shipped away. One of them came back to say that the program was great. It is just she was not sitting in Salt Lake City, would prefer to be closer to home. And so, those are the testimonies that we are getting for having those sites closer in. And so, I think that plus other options, I mean, it is not just YRTCs, but we partnered with Boys and Girls Clubs that would work on the reservations and help us put together meaningful activities for kids on the reservations. And so, those are things that we are doing on this front. Mr. Calvert. I look forward to attending the ribbon cutting. Mr. McSwain. Yes. Yes. Mr. Calvert. Ms. Pingree. Ms. Pingree. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you for your work and for your presentation here today. SUBSTANCE ABUSE: OPIOID I want to just talk briefly, too, about the opioid epidemic. It seems like virtually every committee I sit on has had to have a hearing on opioid issues, and it is certainly a challenge that all of us face in our States across the country. And people see it really at a crisis level. But it is certainly a big challenge within the tribes as well. I come from the State of Maine, and the Penobscot Nation is one of the eight tribes throughout Indian Country to receive funding for a grant. It was the Department of Justice Coordinated Tribal Assistance Program, and they were able to have a healing-wellness court. That CTAS grant will end, and that will be too bad because that has been a real asset in terms of getting people through the court system and right into treatment. The lack of the grants is going to be exacerbated by the fact that there are insufficient facilities to treat people with the opioid crisis. In our State, often to find an in-patient bed, people have to travel as far away as North Carolina, and so many of these issues we have been talking about, the importance of being close to your community, to your family. So I know that the substance abuse budget, the request is for an increase from $114 million to $140, and I know that would be very helpful. But I guess I would like to hear you talk a little bit about will any of those funds that you are requesting support increase access to in-patient treatment for adults? And can you talk a little bit about the current status for in-patient care for substance abuse treatment, and how budget increases to contract health services might help in this area. Mr. McSwain. Excellent question. The whole opioid area, as a healthcare delivery system, it is one that I would certainly wish Dr. Susan Karol was here, the chief medical officer, because she has been providing leadership for the whole of medication, controls, and pain management. And we tend to have it in pain management occurring in our facilities. We tend to palliate someone who is in pain, and then wind up having a prescription drug problem, namely with opioids. And so, as part of a larger issue from certainly the President and the Secretary is a major push on opioid abuse. And we are as a system addressing it that way. Now, your question about hospitalization, it does not necessarily arise unless they are in real deep trouble. Then they will be referred to the PRC program to a facility for purposes of either detox or certainly for attention. So as a system, we are very, very conscious of our pain management program. In fact, we have published a policy and provided ongoing training with our providers about how to approximately administer pain management medications certainly in the area of opioids. I know that what we are doing, you know, and I am having conversations with tribal leaders about not only the quick step between opioids coming out of our healthcare system to heroin abuse. It is the transition because if they cannot get their opioids, OxyContins and such, from our healthcare delivery system, and that is an area for us to really begin working on very carefully. And we have some campaigns of teaching, and certainly of our providers, but also of communicating with the tribes about the need for that. There is not a tribal meeting I have had where a tribal leader has said I have got a real problem in my area, and you help by addressing this. As a system, we are responding, and I know on the tribal side, on the tribal programs, they are also responding, the ones that are totally run by tribes, such as Alaska and California, for example. Ms. Pingree. I appreciate that you are taking a comprehensive look because I think you are right. In most communities people have been concerned about the over prescribing of pain medication. Then certainly in many of the areas of the country like we have in New England, as physicians tighten up on pain medications, you have a lot of people who are previously addicted, less expensive heroin moves right in. That has really become a challenging issue, and it certainly is in my State and I know in a lot of other places. So having a physician involved in that role, but then figuring out what to do. And as we all know, these are very powerful addictions. So for many people, the only option that will be helpful is going to be an inpatient recovery program. It is good that doctors are better at dealing with the issue or that there is some medication assisted treatment. But in the end, I know we will continue to ask you that question about how in a State like mine that does not have sufficient facilities, do we manage that, and if there is an increase in your budget, is there a way to have more in-patient treatment. So in our State people do not have to travel so far away or wait so long for beds because, as you know, there is sometimes a moment that you can get someone into treatment, and if they have to wait a long time then it is not a possibility a month later, or sometimes they are not with us a month later. We certainly hear from our tribal leaders that that is a huge challenge. Hopefully there will be an increase in your budget, and hopefully we will see and others will see that there is better access. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. McSwain. I just want to add one other thing as you were mentioning, Congresswoman Pingree. It was the fact that we have also partnered with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, particularly their law enforcement individuals. We have actually entered into an MOA that is going to address not only training for the use of naloxone because of opioid overdose. For them to be able to use the naloxone to, in fact, ensure that they do not expire from an overdose. And so, that training is going on across all the reservations and have law enforcement individuals, not only the BIA law enforcement, but those tribes that have their own law enforcement, like Cherokee. Ms. Pingree. That is great. That is very important, too. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Simpson. SUBSTANCE ABUSE Mr. Simpson. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. It is an interesting discussion that we have on that because it is a real problem with prescription drug overdoses. The challenge is, having been a medical professional in the dental field, as a doctor it is hard when someone comes in to see you in what appears to be severe pain, to say, no, you are not in pain, and how do you deal with that? And trying to establish whether someone is there because they just want access to drugs or if they really do have pain is a challenging thing for doctors to try to deal with. But it is a real problem, and something that we have got to find a way to fix this, and have people more conscious of the issue. We have a tendency to just want to say do not over prescribe, and that will solve the problem. It is not nearly as easy, and I am not suggesting that you are saying that. Ms. Pingree. No. Mr. Simpson. But it is not as easy as some people sometimes think it is. JOINT VENTURE You mentioned joint ventures where the tribes will build facilities and we will staff them. Do we have any facilities that have been built that we have not staffed that are planned to be staffed because of a lack of funding? Mr. McSwain. None whatsoever because part of, as you know, with the Joint Venture Program is that when we go through the process, and Mr. Hart can provide some lengthy experience about the Joint Venture Program. What basically happens is it is a competitive process, very competitive. And the idea behind it is the tribe will build a facility. They will have a conversation with us so that we can match up our requirements for staffing in terms of their population, et cetera. But they will build a facility, and they will find the resources necessary to build that facility. And we commit in an agreement that at some point that they are going to open, we will ask for staffing funds for staffing and operating that facility. And so, that agreement means that we have not built any joint ventures or we have not committed to providing staff. Mr. Simpson. So we have not had instances where the tribes get out of ahead of our ability to staff them, because several years ago when we were looking at this issue, we found that there were facilities that were built, particularly tribes that had successful casinos and had the extra money. These tribes went out and built them, and then came to us saying, hey, we need to get this staffed. And apparently the Department does not have the resources not only in the health area, but also in the law enforcement area to staff those facilities. But we have addressed that problem? Mr. McSwain. On the Indian Health Service side, I know where you are going with, for example, there were several detention centers that were built with no program in mind. Mr. Simpson. Right. Mr. McSwain. And they have come to us and said, oh, can you put your behavioral health program in that detention center. But for purposes of healthcare delivery, like a health center or a hospital, if it is a joint venture, we have a conversation with them, they apply for it, and they are approved it. We go through a two-step process. They give us their ideas. We review them. We move to the second level which they have a business plan. But at the end, we will reach agreement with them. And currently the last go-round, we had 13 that actually qualified for consideration. We started out with three at the top that we have agreed, and they are on schedule, and they will be reflected in upcoming budgets. And because the other ones were small in terms of staffing requirements, we went ahead and did all seven. We added four. And the idea behind it, so it is a combination. Now, in terms of facilities meaning access to care. And the tribes have elected to build if they have got the wherewithal, and you mentioned casinos. The tribes can build them, and we will partner with them and staff it with staff. And, of course, this new one where we have done this for a while is that we have a proposal for a small ambulatory because, and, again, in the interest of providing access to care, that was a very successful program. They can leverage the funds that we give them with other agencies and matching. But the idea is they can have a facility that they can then have available for access to care on their reservations or in their communities. It is usually a health station, and you will see that in our budget. But to answer your question, no, I mean, there have been some of those, but they know the Joint Venture Program. In fact, they know the rules. Do not turn the dirt because you have not been approved. And we have to have an agreement that has been finalized. In fact, just yesterday we finalized a major one with the Cherokee Nation about they are doing a complete redo of the Hastings Hospital and expanding it rather significantly, again, for the people in that part of the country. CONTRACT SUPPORT COSTS Mr. Simpson. Okay. 2 years ago, Congress drafted IHS to fully fund Contract Supports Costs. In order to do that, IHS took money from the direct operations. Direct operations funded some dental positions at headquarters. They need positions filled, but the funding would now come out of the dental program. It is kind of a rob Peter to pay Paul situation. DENTAL This year direct operations received a $2 million decrease. I am aware that there are several dental positions at headquarters that are vacant. Are there still vacancies, and how many and how long have they been vacant? Will the salaries come out of the dental program line? Are any of these vacancies because of funding changes due to Contract Support obligations? And did meeting the Contract Support costs requirement affect leadership hiring? CONTRACT SUPPORT COST Mr. McSwain. Okay. On the Contract Support Cost area, 2014 was a watershed year, as you pointed out. That year we projected and we wound up having to find some discretionary side of the house to be able to meet our full obligation. And then in 2015, we were able to kind of right the ship a bit, and in 2016 the President's budget had proposed a mandatory account or at least full funding. And I think that you all responded by a law that said we would have a third account with indefinite funding. And so, for all intents and purposes, we have moved the contract support costs into a third account. And even though our proposal for 2017 is saying we still would like it over in mandatory because the Supreme Court has made it real clear we are to pay a hundred percent. And so, we are paying a hundred percent of all our obligations under contract support costs so that it will not now be a matter of finding the money on the discretionary side or taking it away from direct service programs. So I feel confident in the future. That is in a good place. In fact, I know that Deputy Director Smith has been working and providing leadership to the Contract Support Costs Workgroup. So we are going to actually have a policy in place that has been revised since 2001, updated in 2006, and now because of the court case we need to reissue that policy, and then put everything in a place where there is an agreed-upon policy. And I think we are real close to a final version, in fact. It was a hard lift. I think we have had a contract support cost workgroup working on this since 2010, and we are beginning to see where it is going to put that in a proper location, and the fact that we will continue to meet our obligations at a hundred percent without adversely affecting the rest of the budget. DENTAL Mr. Simpson. What about the dental aspect to it? Mr. McSwain. The dental aspect of it, we have some vacancies, but the director of the Oral Health Division who is filling those positions is not being told otherwise. He is not constrained because we went into a freeze in order to meet our obligations, and that included dental. But now he has been given the green light to go ahead and fill these positions. Mr. Simpson. Okay. Mr. McSwain. And it is going to be a challenge around the country. It is a challenge similar to other healthcare professionals. Dental is a challenge in many of our locations. We do have some dental vacancies. And, again, with your support, we have increased the numbers of loan repayment programs that would help us fill those positions. Mr. Simpson. Okay. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Kilmer. Mr. Kilmer. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thanks for being with us. I guess the good part of going last is a lot of stuff I wanted to ask about has been talked about, including mental health to opioids. TELEMEDICINE I do want to talk about something that has not been discussed. I represent an area that has a lot of rural coastal tribes, and they face some unique challenges. The conversation around telemedicine I think is valuable when you are geographically isolated, but is less helpful if you do not have access to high-speed internet. Being able to provide care in your community is a challenge if your care facility, which is the case for one of the tribes I represent also serves as your emergency response center and is right in the path of the tsunami zone. So I guess my question is, does IHS look at those sorts of challenges? What do we do for those remote, geographically isolated tribes in terms of being able to provide healthcare in those communities? How can we as members of Congress help? Mr. McSwain. That is an excellent question, Congressman Kilmer. It is interesting. I was sort of reflecting on where your question was going. How did we discover penicillin? And the notion is that we were faced with a challenge. And I think in the case of telemedicine, we are facing right now a real challenge of ensuring that we can provide quality access to very remote locations. We have got some great models, and Alaska is a great model insofar as telemedicine. For them to travel to any one is between a $10,000 and $15,000 one-way trip. So there is the need to have it certainly available. A recent, and certainly going back to Great Plains area, is that we are looking at stationing telemedicine staff in some of the remote locations, and how do we go about doing that. Bandwidth is a big issue clearly, I mean, because if you are talking about simply having communication and access is one thing. But if you are going to move large files, X-ray files and such across that, now you are going to really be challenged on bandwidth. And some of our isolated locations in the country become a real issue. But we are working with our fellow agencies about how to begin to address the bandwidth, if you will. And, of course, the other part of it, too, telemedicine, you have got to have both ends. You have got to have the folks at the other end that is available to manage the patients coming into the center, whether it is behavioral health, which is even more so, or whether it is medical. We do a really great retinopathy program that we are doing by telemedicine. We are able to do reds. I was in Elko, Nevada and had my eye checked, and I was being told it was being read in Phoenix. And so, that is those kinds of abilities. And I think as a system, it is my view that we need the tool that we can use in the absence of having a full staff out there. In some places you do not merit having, let us say, for example, an optometrist in the community because it is too small. But you can certainly have telehealth available for that community. And that is where we are going to go. So I think from an agency stance, we are doing that across the country. First it was by urgency, and now we have a design to move ahead. Mr. Kilmer. I would certainly love to follow up with you and your team on how you work with those other agencies on making telemedicine a reality. I also think we have got to figure out how to make sure care facilities do not end up in the path of tsunami. If you are a coastal tribe, I think that is a real problem. SUBSTANCE ABUSE: OPIOID I also wanted to just follow up on one of the issues that Ms. Pingree mentioned with opioid abuse, and you touched on naloxone kind of availability. Just can you give us a sense of whether there are adequate resources available to have that deployed and to have law enforcement trained? I know that that is looked at as a potential resource to at least avoid fatalities associated with overdose. So I am just curious whether the IHS had adequate funding to roll that out. Mr. McSwain. We have not been adversely affected to move ahead, and we have been using certainly our prime vendor, which is a special agreement we have with VA on making available naloxone for purposes of deploying it. And our relationship with BIA, with the Bureau and law enforcement, for example, and tribal law enforcement people is such that I think that if we start to project that we are going to be adversely affected by that, but otherwise we are making it available. Mr. Kilmer. Are the communities that ask for it getting it? Mr. McSwain. Right. Right. Mr. Kilmer. No one is being told no? Mr. McSwain. No one is being told no at this point. And, again, it is a supply that is available. If it grows, I guess, in demand, we will have to address that as well. Mr. Kilmer. Okay. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. MEDICARE AND MEDICAID Mr. Calvert. Thank you. I will just ask another question here. The Federal government funds many of the healthcare programs for which American Indians and Alaska Natives are eligible to receive services free of charge. Full enrollment in these programs can stretch limited appropriations to the Indian Health Service much further. Could you update the committee on Indian Health Service's efforts to achieve full enrollment for the eligible service population? Mr. McSwain. I am not so certain I quite understand your question, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. What are you doing to encourage people to enroll in Medicare and Medicaid programs. Mr. McSwain. Oh, okay. Coming through our system, we have the benefits offices certainly as a patient comes into a given center. The first place they are going to go is patient registration, which then begins to tease out what are they eligible for. Are they eligible for Medicare or are they eligible for Medicaid? Do they have private insurance? And if they are eligible for Medicaid, we enroll, get them enrolled. It is interesting. It is a voluntary system for us. We translate the importance of the ability to bill Medicaid and Medicare for them because we can turn that into additional services provided by that given facility because, as you know, the law that was authorized in 2010 said all collections will return to the facility which generated them. And so, there is certainly an incentive to have them get enrolled. I mean, there was a time that tribal people would push back and say, wait a minute, do not you have a trust responsibility to us? Why do you make me sign up for this other, and when we explain to them how important it is, then we have seen the numbers go up. Have we maximized? I do not believe we have maximized, and clearly, of course, it gets into whether the State has expanded Medicaid. But I think in any case, we want to make sure we maximize availability. And if they are veterans, then we will sign them up, and we will bill VA for their services. Mr. Calvert. Well, it certainly helps us on our appropriations process if we are able to move that across. I certainly would encourage you to do that because we have challenges just to increase the appropriations this year, just to stay even with the increased cost in healthcare in Indian country. So anything that we can do to offset some of this is certainly important. Do you have a thought? Ms. Smith. Yes, Mr. Chairman. I think we have been working a lot more closely with CMS to try to see if we can think of some creative thing to have like easier eligibility for both programs and working more collaboratively with CMS. So I think we are making strides in that area, and we are going to continue doing that. Mr. Calvert. Okay, good. Mr. McSwain. Yeah, let me just add to that. That is an important point, Mary. And that was that we have added another person to our senior staff. Her job is Deputy Director, Quality Care, but she had a vast experience with CMS, and she brings up these new ideas. For example, the new idea was just recently I had not heard of this, but auto enrollment. Ms. Smith. Yeah. Mr. McSwain. Actually when patients come in, we can get them enrolled automatically. So, I mean, that will expedite and expand our ability to ensure that as many people as possible are covered, and, therefore, we will be able to generate some additional resources for those clinics. And that will maybe take a little load off you. SUBSTANCE ABUSE Mr. Calvert. Right. Thank you. Ms. Pingree. Ms. Pingree. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Again, I appreciate your being here today, and just one brief question here. Maybe you have talked a little bit about this, but I do not think so, about the coordination with SAMHSA. As I understand, in 2014 they created an Office of Tribal Affairs. I am just curious about how you work with them. We have talked a lot about behavioral health issues, how the collaboration with them works. Are they informed by the Indian Health Service? Are you informed by them? Just what that relationship is like and how you benefit from it. Ms. Smith. That is an excellent question, and the reason I am sort of happy about the question is that we have had a consolidation, if you will, in Rockville. So SAMHSA now, and we have moved into the 5600 Fishers Lane, and so has SAMHSA. So they are just in the building. Ms. Pingree. Great. Mr. McSwain. And so, it has made our coordination a whole lot easier. But even before that, we have been working together with SAMHSA on their community, and we have traded many efforts, if you will. We have got a grant going out, we let them know. They have got a grant going out, they let us know. And if there is an outbreak somewhere, Kana Enomoto over at SAMHSA is quick to call us. If there is a tribe out there that reaches up through SAMHSA, we get a call. I mean, just recently a tribe out in California had a series of suicides. So, I mean, there is a more growing collaboration between SAMHSA and Indian Health Service as it pertains to what SAMHSA can do versus what we can do, and then we collaborate. And I think going back to the example of, I think there was a question raised about coordination. I thought we were coordinating well, but it turned out that we had a couple of sites out on one of the reservations that were not coordinating at all. They funded a clinic, a program, and we are funding a clinic, and the two folks across town, a small community, had not talked. And so, we corrected that. You talk to your grantee, and I will talk to our folks, and we will get that coordination. So we are having more of that coordination on the ground, which is so easy for us to say, well, they are in the same building. But, no, to answer your question on point is it has increased and will continue to increase as we begin to look at what they are being funded for versus what we are funded for. And the major distinction is we are a healthcare system, and so we are delivering care, whereas they are delivering funds to the community to develop the community capacity. And so, for us still to work together as we bring about a maximizing of our efforts. Ms. Pingree. That is good to hear. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Simpson. DENTAL Mr. Simpson. More than 5 years ago, HHS decided to take approach to early childhood caries, a childhood epidemic in Indian Country. They recruited and trained healthcare workers beyond the dental program to work with kids and families on how to recognize and prevent disease. Working with 1- to 5-year- olds was the first step in addressing oral disease. Now the program has launched and they are ready to move onto other oral disease categories. Early childhood caries was the dental program's first 5-year initiative. What will follow that? Mr. McSwain. I think on point, the--oh, I am sorry. I thought it was on. Thank you. Certainly Dr. Lozon and company at IHS headquarters is, in fact, continuing the initiative through the next 2 years and clearly, is conducting the ECC sites again. So we have not lost track of the fact that early childhood caries is still a very light program. I mean, we have not stopped that. Just yesterday, Dr. Lozon, I asked him where is our program, and he said, no, we are expanding. So we are going to continue. CONTRACT SUPPORT COSTS Mr. Simpson. Okay. I want to ask a question that I probably should not ask because somebody will say what are you thinking. There used to be a saying around here 5, or 6, 7 or 8 years ago in Indian Country, ``Do not get sick after June because all the money ran out.'' That is something that this committee concentrated on, trying to provide the funding that is needed for Contract Support Costs at a level where healthcare was available. Now, the saying is ``Do not get sick after September.'' We are moving along in the right direction. What is your authority to transfer funds within accounts to meet issues that come up, like if you run out of money for Contract Support Costs? Can you move money between accounts? And the reason I ask this is the Forest Service has the ability that when they have catastrophic wildfires going on, they can take funds out of different accounts to make sure that they fight those wildfires. Now, we do not like that in this committee. Can you do that, or do you have to go through reprogramming process? Mr. McSwain. We have certainly authority up to--let me check. Is it up to a million? Up to a million to move between budget activities. Anything more than that, then we come in for your clearance. REPROGRAMMING Mr. Simpson. On the reprogramming? Mr. McSwain. Yeah, on the reprogramming. Now---- Mr. Simpson. Is that an appropriate level, or should it be more? Mr. McSwain. Well, we can get back to you on that I think. So far, it has not affected us. [The information follows:] At present, IHS has the authority to reprogram up to $1 million dollars between activities within one appropriation account. In the case of contract support costs, IHS no longer requires reprogramming of funds due to the separate, indefinite appropriation provided in the FY 2016 Omnibus. Furthermore, IHS does not have the authority to move money between appropriation accounts. At the current time, IHS does not anticipate a need to increase the existing reprogramming authority. Mr. McSwain. But getting to your other question that you raised, Congressman---- Mr. Simpson. Before you answer that, the challenge obviously is that when you look at healthcare services, when you look at less important programs versus trying to transfer money out of those, there are no less important programs often times. If you look at the Forest Service, they can say, we are not going do trail maintenance this day and nobody dies from it. So it is a different challenge that you face, but if you could move money between less, and I hate to say less important, but less critical programs to more critical accounts when they run out of funds, would a million dollars be sufficient, or would increased authority in that arena be advantageous? Mr. McSwain. Yeah, I think increased authority would not hurt. But I think there are two ways to answer this question. One is 60 percent of our program is contracted by tribes. Tribes have the legal authority to redesign. They can move money around. On the direct side because we are running the direct certainly on our side, then we are looking at the accounts. And I think the one-year raise at the outset is that, no, it is no longer June and it is no longer September. We got through. And what you are most likely talking about is a catastrophic emergency health fund, and that is the one that was running out of money because of the numbers of large cases. We are going to have to look a little bit because we are getting ready to publish, and I think we have not published it yet. The reauthorization enabled us to reduce the threshold to $19,000 instead of $25,000. And that may have an effect on the numbers of high-cost cases coming in, which means that we will have to take another look at it. And because of that, we have asked for a $3 million increase in our CHEF account for 2017. Just if we implement that change in threshold, then you may hear that again, but I do not think so. I think we are okay. But I think the authority to move money around in a health system is always an item, but I think on our side certainly we can talk with folks as to whether or not that is something we would want to propose. Mr. Simpson. Thank you for being here today, and thanks for the work you do. It is, as you can tell from this committee's support, vitally important that we address not only the healthcare needs, but the other needs in Indian Country. And we do have a trust responsibility this committee takes very seriously. So thank you for what you do. Mr. Calvert. Just to clarify on Mr. Simpson's question, when we are talking about moving funds, we are not just talking about moving funds within the Health Service. Can you move funds from outside of the Health Service within the Bureau's accounts? I think maybe that is what he is also asking. Have you ever moved money outside of your particular line, out of the Indian Health Service account? Mr. McSwain. We clearly have always had two accounts, and then, of course, with the addition of contract support costs. And the whole distinction is we would not move any money from the Service's budget into the facilities budget or conversely. I mean, those are walled off, and we do not do it. We would reprogram within, for example, a subset of activities like dental to agency and conversely, but, again, very limited. Folks are pretty jealous about, you know, let us talk if you are talking about trying to move money from this category to this category. Mr. Calvert. Okay. I just wanted to clarify that. Mr. McSwain. Okay. Mr. Calvert. Well, I certainly want to thank you for your attendance today. We appreciate your coming to our hearing. We wish you well. You have a big challenge ahead of you. We will try to work with you the best we can to help you meet those challenges. With that, if there are no further questions, we are adjourned. Mr. McSwain. Thank you. [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Thursday, February 25, 2016. OFFICE OF NAVAJO AND HOPI INDIAN RELOCATION WITNESS CHRIS BAVASI, OFFICE OF NAVAJO AND HOPI INDIAN RELOCATION Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert Mr. Calvert. Good afternoon, and welcome to this oversight hearing on the Fiscal Year 2017 budget of the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation. The Relocation Program in Arizona impacts relatively few Americans, but to those it does impact, it does so deeply and in personal ways. Being told to relocate from one's home and pull up one's own roots can be devastating to a family and to any community no matter what incentives are offered to try and make the process easier. Perhaps that is why the Navajo and Hopi land dispute has been called the greatest land title problem in the West, and perhaps that is why the Relocation Program, which was created to solve the problem, was expected to take 5 years and cost $41 million. Well, it continues today 40 years later and $568 million after its inception. We are here today because this subcommittee has redoubled its efforts to succeed where so many good people before us have fallen short. In December of 2014 at the subcommittee's request, the inspector general of the Department of the Interior published a report concluding that the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation cannot complete its work and cease operations in the near future without legislative changes and/or an increase in annual appropriations. The inspector general further pointed out that the increasing appropriations in the short term is a more cost effective strategy than continuing with the status quo. The report recommended that this subcommittee consider alternatives and determine an approach that will best control costs and complete the relocation mission in an acceptable, judicious, and timely manner. In January 2015, members of this subcommittee visited the Hopi Tribe and the Navajo Nation to see the challenge firsthand and to hear from those most directly affected about what has gone right, and what has gone wrong, and where we should go from here. The message we heard was clear: do not leave until you finish the job. In December 2015, the subcommittee more than doubled the Relocation Program's budget to $15 million in Fiscal Year 2016 in order to reduce the backlog of 96 certified applicants awaiting relocation and to work through 200 additional known appeals. Just this week, the Office of Inspector General released its second subcommittee commissioned report which looked into the allegations made by relocated families that homes and infrastructure are incomplete or in need of repair. The law says that the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation shall cease to exist when the President determines that its functions have been fully discharged. In consultation with this subcommittee, the Agency has set a goal to complete its work so that the next President can be in a position to make such a determination by September 30th, 2018, about 2 and half years from now. The Fiscal Year 2017 budget proposes a modest 3 percent increase to work with the Navajo Nation, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the other Federal departments and agencies to ensure that this program can be brought to a fair end, and to ensure that any responsibilities remaining after the closure will be transferred to the appropriate Federal or Navajo entities. Cleary there is much to be done, and the devil is always in the details. Hopefully today's hearing will flush out some of those details and begin to put us on a path to completion as quickly as possible, but not a day faster than is needed to ensure that those affected by the program have been treated fairly, honorably, and with dignity. This is not a partisan issue. It is a human issue. It is a nation-to-nation issue. It is an opportunity to make good on a commitment to shake hands and let deep wounds begin to heal. My former boss, the late President Ronald Reagan, once said, ``No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size, so government programs once launched never disappear.'' Actually a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we will ever see on this earth. If he were alive today, he may have to make at least one exception. I am pleased to be joined today by my subcommittee colleagues as well as the senior leadership team of the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation, executive director, Chris Bavasi, chief financial officer, Nancy Thomas, chief counsel, Larry Ruzow. Welcome. It is nice to see you all again. Thank you once again for your hospitality last year during the subcommittee's visit. Before turning to you for your opening statement, allow me to ask my friend and colleague, the subcommittee's ranking member, Betty McCollum, for her opening remarks that she might wish to make. Ms. McCollum. Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum Ms. McCollum. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Good afternoon, Mr. Bavasi, and for those of you who are joining us here today for this hearing. When Congress created the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation in 1988, it did not envision that the office would be still be operating 28 years later, and that families would still be awaiting relocation. America has a responsibility to meet its commitments to the Navajo and Hopi people. We are here today to better understand the status of the relocation effort, and whether or not the office is prepared to start closeout of the relocation process and the office. Throughout its history, as the Chairman pointed out, the relocation process has been very controversial, and there have been significant delays. The emotional toll on the families that we met with is one that will be with me forever. The issue has been going on for too long, and now it is time to just resolve it. In January of last year when the Chairman, and I, and others traveled to Arizona, we were able to meet with the families, both Navajo and Hopi tribal members, as well as the staff from the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation. We listened carefully as they explained some of the challenges that were still out there that they were facing, and some of the opportunities and possibilities they saw in bringing this to closure. In recognition of what we learned on that trip, this committee, as the Chairman pointed out, doubled the appropriation Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation to $15 million. This year, the budget request for the office maintains that higher level. I am hopeful today that we will learn how that increase has been used to ensure that the relocations are done in a more expeditious manner, that they will continue to be done in an expeditious manner, and that the proper mechanisms are in place to address any responsibilities that may exist into the future. Clearly, Congress owes the Navajo and Hopi people the opportunity to bring closure to this issue so that they can start moving forward on working on their future. But we must do so in a proper fashion. I look forward to your testimony. Mr. Chairman, I thank you for the time, but I also thank you for the trip that you arranged with the staff to go out there to work on this problem. With that, I yield back. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. And, Mr. Bavasi, you are recognized. Opening Remarks of Mr. Bavasi Mr. Bavasi. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Chairman Calvert---- Voice. Microphone. Mr. Bavasi. Chairman Calvert, Ranking Member McCollum, members of the subcommittee, and subcommittee staff, you have our detailed statement, but I would like to just say how pleased I am to have the opportunity to appear before the subcommittee today and discuss the Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation's Fiscal Year 2017 budget request with you, and answer any questions you may have. Before discussing our 2017 budget request, I would like to express our gratitude to Chairman Calvert and the subcommittee for increasing our Fiscal Year 2016 appropriation so that we could begin to eliminate the backlog of Navajo households who have been certified as eligible for relocation benefits, but were awaiting appropriated funds so that the promise of a new home could become a reality. I also express the gratitude of some 60 Navajo households and families who will sign contracts this year for a new home, about 44 of whom would otherwise have been required to wait several years more before they could sign the contract for their new home. As set forth in the President's budget, most of the money we are seeking in Fiscal Year 2017 is to provide housing and housing infrastructure for Navajos who have been certified as eligible for relocation homes. So, again, I would like to thank you for allowing me to come before you today. [The statement of Mr. Bavasi follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] CLOSE-OUT DATE FOR THE RELOCATION PROGRAM Mr. Calvert. Thank you. We will get right into it. The Department of the Interior's inspector general recommends that Congress legislate a sunset date for the Relocation Program, and provide the requisite level of appropriations to meet the Agency's statutory obligations by that date. You testified that the Agency is focused on completing its work so that the next President can make a determination on whether to close at the end of Fiscal Year 2018. The question is, since current law puts the decision in the President's hands, is there a reason why it still may be necessary for Congress to legislate a sunset date? Mr. Bavasi. Well, I think by doing that you set a sense of urgency that perhaps is not there today. Mr. Calvert. Does a determination that the Agency's functions have been fully discharged mean that the Federal government's work is done? Mr. Bavasi. Not necessarily. It means that work of the office is done. However, there may be other areas the Federal government might have to take on. Mr. Calvert. Much of the appeal and relocation process is out of the Agency's hands. Can a determination be made that the Agency's functions have been fully discharged if a case is pending before the court or not everyone has been relocated? Mr. Bavasi. We think that it can. Those responsibilities can be handled by others. Mr. Calvert. Okay. We all know that failing to plan is the same as planning to fail. My sense is that you are still very early in the closeout and transition planning process, and that in order to meet your target date you will have to pick up that pace considerably and immediately. Is that a fair assessment? Mr. Bavasi. I think it is fair, but I would also like to remind you that this is not new to us, meaning that this whole notion of transition has been in play for a very long time. We thought actually prior to the Noller Herbert case that we would be going out of business a number of years ago. So we were working a number of years ago now with BIA, with the Navajo Nation, and the chapter, to develop a transition plan. That did not occur, as you know, and so this, again, is not new to us. We have a lot of experience in this, and so we have already started meeting with the stakeholders to reinstitute that transition plan. QUARTERLY STATUS REPORTS Mr. Calvert. Yeah. Will you commit to providing the committee with a quarterly status report from this point forward to see where we are at and where we are going? Mr. Bavasi. Sure. Absolutely. Mr. Calvert. The law says that your Agency may call upon any other Federal agency for assistance, and that any failure to provide reasonable assistance must be reported to Congress. So that would be helpful if going forward we continue to communicate and find out how we are doing. Our intent is to close this out in Fiscal Year 2018, so we want to make sure that there is no reason for that not to happen. Mr. Bavasi. We agree. Mr. Calvert. Okay. Ms. McCollum, you are recognized. Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I concur with the request that the chair is making. I think a quarterly report will be very helpful. TRANSFERS TO OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES I want to raise something that happened in my office yesterday. Yesterday I was sitting down with some tribal leaders from the Navajo Nation, and we were discussing the water settlement and all the great potential and everything that they have moving forward on their community development. I was surprised to hear that as they are moving forward with their business to serve those families, that ONHIR has been working with them on the role of business capacity leases. In your testimony, which is not numbered, but it is the last page that I have, you have a statement to continue this fine program with the livestock that you are working on. ``When we are gone it will present challenges for us, the Navajo Nation, and for the local community.'' You go on to add to that the Bureau of Indian Affairs. But you are confident that you can collaboratively come up with a solution. Are you taking on some new responsibilities with the understanding or discussions with other agencies that responsibilities are going to be transferred to them, and that they are part of the discussion? Can you explain to me, besides the housing, how you are prepared to close out other things? We just do not want the housing closed out. We need to have everything closed and transferred. Mr. Bavasi. Absolutely. The only other thing that we are, I think what you are referring to, are the new lands---- Ms. McCollum. Yes. Mr. Bavasi [continuing]. And some of the programs on the new lands, like the demonstration ranch and the Range Maintenance and Management Program. These subjects are not foreign to the Navajo Nation, or the chapter, or BIA. And so, we have been in discussions with all of them about how to transition these programs to them, and we will be coming forward with that transition plan. Ms. McCollum. Well, Mr. Chair, I think we are going to need to know how much that costs because those are going to be costs incurred by BIA now. We have been very successful working together in a nonpartisan fashion to meet some of the needs of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Education and health we just discussed earlier today. I do not know how significant the amount is or what the expectation is going to be for BIA, and for this committee, to have a new line item. I do not know if there is going to be authorization authority that is going to be required to transfer those funds or not. Explain to us how this is going to work and how you are going to account for the dollars in the transfer. Mr. Bavasi. Not all of the things I just mentioned have costs associated with them. For instance, the demonstration ranch is self-supporting, and we believe that it has the potential to be a revenue generator for the area. And so, that should not have any costs associated with it when it transfers. And we are not certain where that would transfer to, whether it be the Navajo Nation, the chapter, or they have developed a separate corporation out there made up of what they call the 14 Rs, the 14 range units. And so, that is a possibility. The maintenance program and the Well Maintenance, Fencing Maintenance Program and the Range Management Program will have a cost associated with it, which I can give you the exact numbers. Not today, but I can certainly get to you what it costs on an annual basis. And the question is whether or not the chapter and/or, BIA, or the Nation, whoever ends up doing those things, wants to continue it at the same level that we do. But I can certainly get you those numbers. Mr. Calvert. That would be helpful if you could submit that for the record. [The information follows:] Annual Range Management Costs The yearly costs to carry out range management activities on the New Lands area held in trust by ONHIR area about $810,000--$610,000 in salaries for 10 employees, and $200,000 in materials and supplies. Ms. McCollum. Mr. Chairman, I think we need to have those numbers. We need to understand if there were leases, contracts, memorandums of understanding--whatever was incurred with your office--that are going to be transferring over. If those are considered legal instruments, what the responsibility is, and whether or not it changes with the resettlement moving forward. As you described to us and the committee, in the past when you thought you had noticed everybody to the very best of your intentions, you ended up in court, and then you had to re- notice folks again for the relocation. We need to head off any potential misunderstandings, any potential miscommunication, and clearly know what these costs are and what responsibilities are being transferred over to other agencies. That is very important for this committee to have, because, in essence, we are closing out the housing relocation, but we are still continuing some of the other issues. You said that the Navajo Nation might want to continue the ranch. It is self-sufficient, and it is done. But we need to know that that is a mutual understanding, and there has been consultation with the Navajo Nation on that, and that it is clearly spelled out. Mr. Bavasi. I am not sure I could agree with you more on all of those things. That would be part of the transition plan that we will be getting to you hopefully on more than a quarterly basis. Ms. McCollum. Well, Mr. Chairman, I think it could have been some of the discussion earlier with us on the transfer. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. I thank the gentlelady. Mr. Cole. Mr. Cole. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. And, again, I want to thank you, and the Ranking Member, and your predecessor, Mr. Simpson, for really working hard to try and bring this program to an appropriate and successful conclusion. It has not been an easy task obviously, and you are to be commended. And I want to tell our friends, we appreciate your help and your hospitality when we were out there. It was an eye-opening experience, and I felt like we got a lot of candid advice and a lot of history. I was very pleased with the level of cooperation we received. I am going to have a series of questions, but I am going to posit something. My big fear, and I suspect this committee's big fear, is if we get to the end of 2018, and we have doubled the budget essentially, that just means we are going to have another 40 years with a higher budget. That is how I would describe failure, and there is some danger of that. I do not point fingers at anybody here, but given the history of the program, there is every reason to believe that could happen. It cannot be an ``in-perpetuity housing program.'' We have housing programs. STATUS UPDATE So if you will, give me an idea of where we are in the process, the number of families that are eligible, if you will, the scale of the task in front of you, and how fast are we proceeding in getting people appropriately taken care of and relocated. Mr. Bavasi. We have at the moment 92 families that need relocation benefits. There are at this moment about 185, 190 appeals. And in the past, the success rate ratio for an appeal has been about 10 percent. So we are thinking another 20 families perhaps, so we are talking a little over hundred families that will need benefits. And so, we should be done. We will have 60 this year. We will have 60 contracts signed this year, and should be able to finish the rest by 9/30/18. HOUSING PROGRAM Mr. Cole. That is good. Now, when we had the genuine pleasure of visiting the area, we visited Navajo Community East Mill and Hopi Spider Mound. In those areas there were houses that had been built that were deficient. So it is one thing to take care of people that have been on a waiting list and moving along there. Tell me about where we are with folks that were given houses in good faith, and those houses were not appropriately built. Where are we in resolving that? Are we going to have to go back and rebuild? Can things be repaired, and how big a problem is that going to be? Mr. Bavasi. Well, that is a difficult question. Mr. Cole. It was meant to be. [Laughter.] Mr. Bavasi. Yeah, meaning that I do not know how difficult it is going to be for you, but our program is not a perpetual housing program. Our program was intended to be over much more quickly than it is, and I think we all know the variety of reasons why it has not been completed. But one is that this is not a forced relocation program, so people frequently take their time to get through it, number one. Number two, probably more importantly, when this was first discussed in Congress, it was planned to be about 1,000 families. This turned out to be over 3,800 families that have been certified, so that is one reason it has taken longer than it needs to. But we have the mechanism in place to build the houses and build them quickly as long as we have the appropriations, and thank you for that. And so, we should be able to have this done without any problem at all in the time frame we said. Mr. Cole. Well, is there any provision or concern, again, you know, we certainly heard complaints about this house was appropriately built, that sort of thing. Number one, is that true. There is a big difference between something that has not been cared for appropriately and something that was built defectively. So I know you have to sort through that. I am interested in how big a problem that is, and how we resolve that portion so that insofar as we can, people that think they were given homes that were poorly built or poorly sided, whether there is legitimacy to that complaint, and that they are resolved. Mr. Bavasi. Any complaint we get, regardless of what it is or how old the home is, we will go out and inspect without question. If it is a latent defect, meaning a defect we did not spot when we were building the home, we will fix it immediately. If it is under warranty we will fix it immediately. Generally that is not the case. Generally for an older home, it is what we refer to as homeowner maintenance issues. And, you know, folks are expected to maintain their homes like anyone else would. And so, all the houses that we have built in my tenure there have met all international codes. So there has not been, at least in the evidence that I am aware of, of faulty construction. Mr. Cole. Yeah, and I do not think there has been in terms of during your tenure and the people that were there. There were certainly some concerns that pre-date you. It is a problem you inherited, so I do not want you to think this was directed at you or any of your current employees. But we did see some instances. ELIGIBILITY APPEALS PROCESS I am curious as to how those cases get resolved. Is there an appeal process for that, you know, so that there is some adjudication of this, if you will? Mr. Bavasi. Well, when they come to us, that is what I was saying. I was not trying to be flip. I am not sure what problem you may have because when they come to us, you come to us with a problem, we immediately inspect it. Mr. Cole. Okay. Mr. Bavasi. If we are responsible, we will fix it immediately. If not, well then, we will tell you exactly what has caused the problem, what you need to fix the problem, and that is the end of our responsibility. Mr. Cole. Okay. You have been generous with your time, and I will finish with this question about the appeals process. As I understand it, it will last beyond your tenure, assuming we reach the guidelines or the target dates that we are collectively shooting for here. Tell me how that works, how anything, for which there is a legitimate appeal gets resolved once the office itself goes out of existence. Who would be responsible for, if a judgment is rendered, paying that judgment? I think that is one of Ms. McCollum's concerns, too. We do not want to just end the office. We do want to discharge the functions fairly and appropriately, and we want to make sure if there is some after math, that it gets taken care of and we do indeed end the effort. Mr. Bavasi. Our plan is to have all of the homes built by the time we are out of business, to have everyone have gone through the appeals process by the time we are finished. However, you are correct, there will be a 6-month--excuse me-- 6-year time that they can appeal to the Federal courts that determination. And as we have discussed in the past, that is going to be some kind of responsibility, and we have not quite figured that one out yet, but it is going to be Justice Department and the Department of the Interior. I am not sure how that is going to work. And we have also talked about the possibility of having some kind of a trust fund set up to accommodate if there were to be---- JUDGMENT FUND Mr. Cole. Well, just out of curiosity, and I will direct this to the staff to my colleagues, is this something like the judgment fund or something would be in a position, because that is a very substantial fund, and it is a pretty well-established method as to how we handle those. And what you do not want to leave are people hanging out there, or forcing BIA or somebody else to pick up some obligation that they had not anticipated which diverts funds from someplace else. Mr. Calvert. If the gentleman would yield, I am hopeful that as we go through this process over the next 2\1/2\ years, and the questions are legitimate questions that are being asked, are addressed early, one, get that out there. And I am sure even after this offices closes that we probably will have to move some money over to the BIA to carry on some of these legacy responsibilities. You know, we were out there at Spider Mill, and it seemed to me just looking at it from my old job as a builder that there were some subsidence issues around there, and there may be some legitimate concern over and above, you know, immediate construction remedies that you do as a normal course of business. But that may or may not be the case, I am not sure. We will leave that to the experts to decide. Voice. East Mill, sir. Mr. Calvert. What is that? Voice. East Mill, not Spider Mill. Mr. Calvert. Excuse me, East Mill. I think we need to make sure we have a budget when we conclude this where we do not delay concluding your job, but move that responsibility to someone else where we can make sure that happens. We need to work with you to make sure we have sufficient funds to move over to the BIA, to make sure whether the judgment fund is involved, and all the rest of it so we can answer those questions when we move along. Mr. Cole. I yield back my time. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Ms. McCollum. Mr. Chair, I am not an attorney, but it has been my experience here in Congress that if things are clearly settled in a court, then it goes to the judgment fund. That is why I think we need to know what all these legal documents are going to look like and what they are. We need to have the Administration's attorneys look at it, and the congressional staff review and look at it, so we know exactly what we are getting into. HOUSING CONDITIONS: FOUNDATION ISSUES And I concur with both gentlemen that some of the things that we saw appear to be the fault of contractors. Then you get into the issue of warranties. I warranty this or I warranty that, or it is an act of God. But one of the things that I found really troubling was that we were in this area where all the foundations were cracking because there was a helium deposit underneath that. What has been the resolution on that? People were asking for that to be checked out. What was the final resolution on that area? Mr. Bavasi. Well, that is East Mill, and I do not believe that it is a helium deposit issue, but I am not an expert on that. But it is an expansive soil issue. And what we have done there is we have gone into any house that shows any problems, we have gone in and fixed the home or replaced it. We have replaced four homes, and as they come along, if there were to be another home that needs to be replaced, we would certainly do that. Mr. Calvert. If the gentlelady would yield, are you still building homes in that area? Mr. Bavasi. No. No, we are not. Mr. Calvert. Okay. Ms. McCollum. Thank you for clarifying that. We are done building homes there. But any time you have a soil condition, soil conditions can, change at the bat of an eyelash. If you already know you have a poor soil condition there, that goes back to people inspecting, and you said everything was state- of-the-art. Who is overseeing the inspection process, the soil siting process, all those kinds of things? What code are you using? Are you using Federal code, State code? Mr. Bavasi. It is international residential codes (IRCs), and we do all of the inspection, and we bring in outside contractors if we need to. In the case of East Mill, we had some helical piers put in, and so we had outside contractors do that. CONTRACTING AND INSPECTION PROCEDURES Ms. McCollum. Well, I just hope that we are not being too naive in who we are having do the contracting. I know it goes out to bidding, and bidding is important. All of us want to respect the taxpayers' dollars. But some of the things that we have seen in schools and elsewhere have not given us confidence, and this is not to you personally. Mr. Bavasi. Sure. Ms. McCollum. It has not given us great confidence that inspection procedures have been carried out to their full benefit. Sometimes the lowest bid is the best, but we really need make sure that the inspection process is done properly. Soil siting at the school that we saw, which has nothing to do with the project that we are talking about today, but some of the contract work that we saw at that school was troubling. When I can see things, and Mr. Calvert, who has a lot more experience, and Mr. Cole are even seeing more things--things that were avoidable that the taxpayers are having to go back and do again. If there is any help you need in making sure that, even if we have to double inspect, we need to get this right. I know that is what you want to do, and I have every confidence you will do that. But if you need any further help from us on that because you feel your hands are tied in some way, please do not hesitate to ask us for our help. Mr. Bavasi. Thank you. I appreciate that. RELOCATION PROCESS Mr. Calvert. Just a couple of other questions on this relocation process. Does your Agency have the legal authority to choose an eligible recipient home site for them? Mr. Bavasi. We do. Mr. Calvert. How many times has your Agency exercised that authority? Mr. Bavasi. None that I am aware of. Mr. Calvert. With your increased workload and target closeout date, does your Agency intend to exercise that authority, if necessary, to meet your deadlines? If not, what are your alternatives? Mr. Bavasi. Well, I suppose we will if we need to. We are hoping that is not the case. Of all of the folks who are certified eligible at the moment, as I mentioned earlier, there are only 11 that have not been forthcoming and worked cooperatively with us. And they have all been notified that they needed to respond to us more quickly or we would administratively close the case. Mr. Calvert. This is important because we do want to come back here in a year or 2 years and find out that there is a person that stops this whole process. That is what happened before. So that is something that is important because, again, I want to see this close out at the end of 2018. Any other questions? Voice. Mr. Joyce. Mr. Calvert. Mr. Joyce. Mr. Joyce. No, sir. Mr. Calvert. Ms. McCollum. Ms. McCollum. No. Mr. Calvert. Okay, fine. I appreciate your coming out from Arizona. We appreciate your being here. Thank you so much. And this hearing is adjourned. Mr. Bavasi. Thank you for your help. [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Wednesday, March 2, 2016. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR WITNESSES HON. SALLY JEWELL, SECRETARY, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, MIKE CONNOR, DEPUTY SECRETARY KRISTEN SARRI, PRINCIPAL DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARY, POLICY MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert Mr. Calvert. Okay. I think we will get started here. Some good news. There are not going to be any votes until 5:00, so we will have no interruptions during this hearing. So the committee will come to order. Secretary Jewell, I would like to welcome you to today's hearing along with Deputy Secretary Mike Connor, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and Budget, Kris Sarri. Our hearing today will address the Fiscal Year 2017 budget priorities for the Department of Interior. Madam Secretary, let me begin by wishing you a belated happy birthday. Secretary Jewell. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. I heard you climbed a mountain on a wall, whatever that is. Female Voice. Which mountain. Mr. Calvert. Yeah, well, it is one of these mountains you put on---- Secretary Jewell. There is a rock gym in Arlington. Mr. Calvert. There you go. [Laughter.] Secretary Jewell. It was a great party. Mr. Calvert. Close enough. With the November elections just around the corner, this may be your last budget hearing before our subcommittee as Secretary. On behalf of the subcommittee, I want to thank you for your service and willingness to have frank discussions regarding the challenges we face. In particular, I want to thank you for your tireless personal efforts to reform the Bureau of Indian Education. Working together, we have made real progress improving the quality of life and education throughout Indian Country. This is further evidence that we can work together to find common ground, even if we do not agree on every issue. In that spirit, I would like to mention a few things before we receive your testimony. Overall the President's Fiscal Year 2017 budget request provides $11.9 billion in discretionary funding for Department of the Interior programs under the subcommittee's jurisdiction, 1 percent below the Fiscal Year 2016 level. The budget request assumes a reduction of $169 million in discretionary funding for wildfire programs while providing $290 million for fire programs through a budget cap adjustment. The challenge of providing adequate wildfire funding remains one of the greatest challenges facing our subcommittee. I want to applaud my friend, former subcommittee chairman, Mike Simpson, for his continuing efforts to address this issue through his bipartisan legislation, which by the way has now 145 co-sponsors. The budget request proposes funding PILT, which is very critical to our rural communities in the West, on the mandatory side of the ledger, but without providing an offset. This budget gimmick will only add to our challenge of addressing many legitimate needs in this bill. The centennial of the National Park Service is one of the highlights of this year's budget request. Last year the subcommittee made a substantial investment in our national parks, providing additional funds for Park operations, addressing longstanding deferred maintenance issues. We will endeavor to make similar investments this year within the confines of our 302(b) allocation, which I am sure the chairman will let us know about pretty soon. Like many from the West, I am concerned about the President using authority under the Antiquities Act for designating large national monuments. President Obama has used this authority 22 times since 2009 to designate nearly 4 million acres as new national monuments. This is more than every other President, except Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. These large designations often disregard the views and concerns of affected communities, local stakeholders, and their representatives in Congress. Another challenge facing the Department and the subcommittee is the Endangered Species Act. ESA is a well- intentioned statute that has saved numerous species from extinction, but the authorization has long expired. We can and must have an open and realistic discussion in Congress about what is working and what is not. It is increasingly clear that the Administration's priority goal is to make several forms of energy uneconomical, even obsolete. The latest example is the White House using the Department to double down on its anti-coal agenda by proposing a 3-year review of the Federal Coal Leasing Program and a moratorium on new coal leasing on public lands. Many perceive this as yet another attack on a key industry that supports energy production and energy jobs in the United States. I suspect the Department will face a number of lawsuits on the decision to halt coal leasing on Federal lands. I also expect you all to encounter significant challenges from the States should you attempt to increase the cost of coal via higher bonding requirements. The committee fully expects the Department to follow the clear congressional direction from the Fiscal Year 2016 omnibus working with the States as partners on the stream buffer rule rather than ignoring States as has been the case since 2010. This is an issue of great interest and concern to members of this committee. I am also concerned that the Administration is taking a page from the war on coal playbook and applying it to oil production. It appears that the Department is attempting to make it as costly as possible to operate offshore facilities so investors will simply walk away from prospective sites. Onerous requirements under the well control rule, for example, will likely lead job producers to opt not to drill in areas currently producing oil. The result is the Obama Administration de facto moratorium on oil production without engagement with Congress. Lastly, even with the El Nino rains, my home State of California remains in the midst of a devastating drought affecting families, businesses, and landscapes across the West. While this subcommittee is limited in what we can do to address the drought itself, I implore you and the Department to apply common sense and take full advantage of opportunities under the law to store and pump these El Nino rains. So far, even with the increased rainfall, we have not pumped as much water as we did last year in the midst of a drought. We have had 3 times as much as rain, and we have pumped less water. As of mid-February, more than 192,000-acre feet, enough water to serve over 2 million people for 1 year, has been lost because of lack of adequate pumping. That is pumping within the biological opinion. That is enough water to serve San Diego and San Francisco combined for a year. I ask you to use your remaining time as Secretary to provide some desperately needed relief to the people of my State. In closing, I once again want to express my appreciation to the professional staff. Our subcommittee could not do its work without your budget shop, the various bureaus, and the folks sitting behind you. Thanks to each of you for everything you do. And with that, I am happy to yield to the gentlelady from Minnesota, Ms. McCollum, for any opening remarks she would like to make. Opening Remarks of Congresswoman McCollum Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Secretary Jewell, I join with the chairman to welcome you to the subcommittee today. Ms. Sarria, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of policy, management, and budget, and, Deputy Secretary O'Connor, I welcome you, too. Last year, we were able to make great gains in repairing the damage caused by sequestration, increasing the Department's funding by $1.3 billion. I am so pleased to see that your Fiscal Year 2017 budget request builds on that progress. The Department of Interior budget continues its dedication to conservation and the protection of America's cultural and natural resources in so many ways. The subcommittee is united in its commitment to the social and economic well-being of Native Americans, so I am pleased that the budget request advances Indian education by investing in elementary and secondary education, and by continuing the more robust Education Construction funding that was enacted last year. These investments are a good start, but so much more still needs to be done. The centennial of the National Park Service is underway, and the budget takes a forward-looking approach to a second century of stewardship. It proposes investments necessary to begin tackling the backlog of maintenance needs across the National Park system, so that these treasures are preserved for the enjoyment of current and future visitors. And while I support these increases, I do have to express my sincere disappointment with the Department's failure to fund the Save America's Treasures grant program. The Department also maintains a commitment to engaging the next generation to be stewards of the land by dedicating $1.3 million for youth programs. These programs build a strong foundation for preservation for our natural and historic heritage through initiatives like Every Kid in a Park and the Urban Wildlife Conservation Program. I also appreciate the budget's strong emphasis on strategic science investments. This work provides data and tools to inform sound decision making to address complex challenges such as drought, response to natural hazards, and climate change. Once again, the Administration is proposing to reform the way we fund wildfire costs. This proposal will provide a more reliable way of funding wildfires. Additionally, the budget does not include funding for payment in lieu of taxes, the PILT program. Instead, it calls on Congress to do its duty and to reauthorize the program as mandatory spending. I support this approach. Counties rely on the Payment in Lieu of Taxes Program, and discretionary funding does not provide the certainty that these local units of government deserve. The rising cost of firefighting and PILT are consuming a growing portion of the interior bill, and I encourage the authorizers to address these issues. Finally, I would be remiss if I did not call attention to the Department's workforce. The Department of Interior is 70,000 employees strong. These civil servants dedicate their lives to managing and sustaining our national treasures. They work relentlessly to ensure that public lands are there for the collective use and for the appreciation of all of the American people. They deserve to do their jobs safely and free from intimidation or abuse. And so, to these men and women, I want to say thank you to all of you. You are very appreciated. Madam Secretary, I look forward to your testimony this afternoon, and I thank the Chairman for the time. I yield back. Mr. Calvert. I thank the gentlelady, and we are joined today by our distinguished chairman of the full Appropriations Committee, Chairman Rogers, and I thank him for taking the time to contribute to this important conversation. Chairman Rogers, would you like to make any opening remarks? Opening Remarks of Chairman Rogers Mr. Rogers. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Madam Secretary, welcome to the subcommittee. Your Department plays a central role in the stewardship of our natural resources and the preservation of our national heritage. From operating fisheries to running our national parks, even processing permits for coal mining--a few---- [Laughter.] Your Department touches almost every aspect of life in my district as well as those across the country. Not so long ago, we called on your Department to join an interagency task force, an effort to raise the water level at Lake Cumberland back up to its historic pool level while saving the endangered dusky tailed darter, who, by the way, I learned last week, is doing just fine in his new habitat. I appreciate your participation in this important effort, and I am pleased to report that my constituents are enjoying boating and fishing on Lake Cumberland once again. That said, other communities in my district in Kentucky cannot tell a success story quite like that. In a few short years, I have seen 10,000 of my miners lose their jobs, struggling to find work in communities that are experiencing staggering unemployment. And let me be clear about one thing. Working in the coalfields was a good job for these miners. This industry provided high wages and reliable work in my part of the country for decades, and watching these miners grapple with starting over again is heartbreaking. Going from a job in a mine that paid $80,000 to trying to find a job at a McDonalds unsuccessfully, and trying to pay those bills and raise those small children. Not to mention for every one mining job we lose in my area, we lose three to four more in other industries associated with it, leaving us with 12 and even 15 percent official unemployment in some of my counties. We have a real crisis in Appalachia, and some of the policies championed by your Department only exacerbate the very real challenges that they face every day. Every department in this Administration has bought into the ``keep it in the ground'' strategy with respect to our country's most abundant resource, each one handing down their own set of anti-coal edicts aimed at shuttering power plants and coal companies nationwide. Coal is a plentiful and an inexpensive commodity, and your Department should be seizing every opportunity to unlock this resource and maintain its sizable footprint in our energy economy. Instead, this Department is perpetuating an unaccountable regulatory scheme that leaves businesses waiting on permitting and leasing decisions for months and years even at a time, and levies unworkable compliance costs on already overburdened job creators. A particularly concerning piece of this wrongheaded regulatory agenda is the Department's proposed stream protection rule. For over 4 long years now, you have been spending millions of dollars rewriting the stream buffer zone rule finalized in 2008. Your Department has led an entirely mismanaged and insular rulemaking process from the start, seeking input from no one other than your politically minded colleagues bent on destroying the coal industry through regulation. This committee has heard time and again from your so-called State partners that you have left them completely out of the rulemaking process. There is no doubt that this rule will have a tremendous impact on determining on what coal can and cannot be mined, and will result in the bulk of it being left in the ground. One independent analysis of the proposed rule indicates that it threatens up to 280,000 jobs, most of which are in Appalachia. That is the equivalent of dozens of small towns in my region, and a high price to pay for what will be imperceptible environmental gains. All the same, your Department doubled down on its anti-coal stance earlier this year when it issued a moratorium on all Federal coal lease sales. This decision halts proposed coal lease sales in nine States, including my home State of Kentucky, while you engage in an unnecessary study of the Federal coal leasing process. Even pending lease decisions will be shelved during this exercise. And you know as well as I that this moratorium is just another excuse to keep coal off the market so it cannot compete with other resources. This approach is not a winning strategy for energy independence or economic growth in the country. We have an unemployment crisis in Eastern Kentucky, a disaster, and despite our efforts to retool and encourage economic development, these regulations are proving too much to overcome in some areas. Efforts such as the AML Pilot Program that this committee began last year and the President's Power Plus proposal for economic development on abandoned mine lands represent just a small portion of what it is going to take to get Appalachia back on its feet. The job creators in this region need relief from these onerous regulations in order to keep jobs in the coalfields online and to turn their good ideas for economic diversification into employment opportunities. These issues mean everything to the communities that are struggling to make ends meet in rural Appalachia. We need to set the right priorities here in Washington so that they can resurrect their economies and put their people back to work. Having said that, I look forward to hearing your testimony today. Mr. Calvert. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am also pleased to see our ranking member of the full committee, Ms. Lowey, is here today. I am happy to yield to the gentlelady for any opening remarks she would like to make. Opening Remarks of Congresswoman Lowey Ms. Lowey. Well, thank you very much, Mr. Chairman and Ranking Member McCollum. Secretary Jewell, thank you for joining us this afternoon and for your service to our country. I hope you had a happy birthday. Many of America's natural wonders are a testament to our national heritage and symbols of the values upon which this great Nation was built. From the Statue of Liberty, to the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail, and All-American Roads, these sites represent significant moments in American history and mark the incredible progress our Nation has made since its inception. The Department of Interior is charged with the significant task of conserving and protecting these sites, but the Department of Interior does so much more. It is responsible for the wellbeing of Native Americans, protecting wildlife, managing energy production, and providing for the public use and enjoyment of nearly 618 million acres of Federal land. To support this critical mission, the Administration is requesting $12.3 billion in discretionary funding. If enacted, this request would reverse some of the steep declines these programs have suffered as a result of sequestration. These declines led to a reduction in routine maintenance, aging, and understaffed park facilities and public lands at greater risk of fire because they have not been properly managed. The President's Fiscal Year 2017 request also continues our commitment to our national parks and their centennial anniversary. These historic sites contribute billions of dollars to the U.S. economy every year, so it is critical that we maintain these parks and keep them safe and accessible for visitors. I am also pleased the President's budget seeks to increase investment for Native Americans. The all of government approach to addressing Federal responsibilities and tribal needs in Indian Country is necessary to improve the quality of life for those who living on tribal lands. Finally, I am especially pleased by the President's focus on advancing clean energy and taking much needed action on climate change. Through the President's Climate Action Plan, the Department of Interior will have funding to increase renewable energy resources and build community resiliency to help communities cope with the impacts of climate change we have already seen today. In short, your budget invests in public safety and economic prosperity that will improve the wellbeing of all Americans today and in the future. And I hope this subcommittee works support these crucial initiatives. I appreciate the commitment and the passion you bring to the job. I look forward to your testimony. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. I thank the gentlelady. And with that, Madam Secretary, I am happy to yield to you for your opening statement. Opening Remarks of Secretary Jewell Secretary Jewell. Thank you very much. Chairman Calvert, Ranking Member McCollum, Chairman Rogers, and Ranking Member Lowey, and members of the subcommittee, thank you so much for the opportunity to discuss the Fiscal Year 2017 budget request. This is, as you point out, the Administration's final budget, and I want to take the opportunity to thank all of you for working with me and my team over the last 3 years to help the Department meet its mission for the American people. And special thanks for the support we received in this current Fiscal Year. I would like to also take a moment to mention the incident we just had at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Harney County, Oregon. Through tremendous patience and professionalism, the FBI, with support from State and local law enforcement, ended the occupation on February 11th as quickly and safely as possible after more than 40 days. This was an incredibly disruptive and distressing time for our employees, their families, and the Harney County community. I am proud of the Department of Interior law enforcement personnel who supported the response and helped keep our employees safe. We continue to cooperate with DOJ, the FBI, and others as the investigations move forward, and we remain committed to working with local communities on the management of public lands. BUDGET REQUEST Our overall Fiscal Year 2017 budget request is $13.4 billion. Specifically for programs within this subcommittee's jurisdiction the request is $12.3 billion. It builds on successes we're achieving through partnerships, the application of science and innovation, and balanced stewardship. It gives us the tools to help communities strengthen resilience in the face of climate change, conserve natural and cultural resources, secure clean and sustainable water, engage the next generation with the great outdoors, promote a balanced approach to safe and responsible energy development, and expand opportunities for Native American communities. These areas are core to our mission, and they play a vital role in job creation and economic growth. The budget invests in our public lands, providing $5 billion to support operation of our national parks, historic and cultural sites, wildlife refuges and habitat, and managing multiple use and sustained yield on our Nation's public lands. It focuses investment on important working landscapes like the western sage steppe, and the Arctic, and proposes a 10-year $2 billion coastal resilience program to support at risk coastal States and local governments, including funding for communities in Alaska, to prepare for and adapt to climate change. As the National Park Service begins its second century, the budget provides $3 billion and includes a proposal to dedicate significant funding to reduce the deferred maintenance backlog. I want to have a special call out to this committee for your support of the National Park Centennial this year and your words in that regard. The budget calls for full and permanent funding of the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and it extends the expired authority for the Historic Preservation Fund. It reflects the Administration's strategy to move effectively to budget for catastrophic wildfires. Again, I want to thank you for your leadership in this committee and Congressman Simpson in particular for his leadership on bringing attention and constructive solutions on wildland fire. In response to drought challenges across the West, it continues to safeguard sustainable and secure water supplies. I know there will be a robust conversation, on that, Chairman Calvert. We continue to engage the next generation of Americans to play, learn, serve, and work outdoors with $103 million for youth engagement. This includes mentoring and research opportunities at the U.S. Geological Survey, urban community partnerships, scholarships, and job corps training for tribal, rural, and urban youth, and work opportunities in our bureaus. There is $20 million for the Every Kid in a Park initiative, which introduces all of America's 4th graders to their public lands, providing education programs across the country, and transportation support for low-income students. We continue to promote a balanced approach to safe and responsible energy development that maximizes a fair return to taxpayers with $800 million for renewable and conventional energy development, a $41 million increase. We're on track to meet the President's goals of permitting 20,000 megawatts of renewable energy capacity on public lands by 2020 with nearly $100 million for renewable energy development and infrastructure. Offshore, this budget supports the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement with funding to reform and strengthen responsiveness, oversight, and safety for oil and gas development, and onshore, $20 million supports BLM's efforts to develop a landscape level approach to oil and gas development, modernize and streamline permitting, and strengthen inspection capacity. We are expanding educational and job opportunities for Native American communities with $3 billion for Indian Affairs, a 5 percent increase, to support Native youth education, as was mentioned, American Indian and Alaska Native families, public safety, and building resilience to climate change. The President's budget calls for a $1 billion investment specifically in Indian education and $278 million to fully fund contract support costs, a cornerstone of tribal self- determination. The budget supports our commitment to resolve Indian water rights settlements and supports sustainable water management in Indian Country with $215 million, a $5 million increase. It also includes funding to strengthen cybersecurity controls across all bureaus. It invests in science and innovation with $150 million for USGS' National Hazards, an $11 million increase. And funding will continue development of Landsat 9, a critical new satellite expected to launch in 2021. We believe this is a smart budget that builds on our previous successes and strengthens partnerships to ensure we balance the needs of today with opportunity for future generations. So thank you, and I'm happy to respond to any questions you have. And I can tell there's going to be a number of robust questions coming my way. Thank you. [Laughter.] [The information follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Mr. Calvert. And with that, we are going to start with our chairman, Mr. Rogers. STREAM PROTECTION RULE Mr. Rogers. Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman. Madam Secretary, the stream protection rule that I referred to has been a boondoggle wrought with controversy from day one. Congress and the courts have both weighed in with concerns about the substance and the process of this rulemaking. Most recently in the 2016 omnibus bill we told OSM to consult the statute and consult with their State partners. OSMRE has supposedly been rewriting the stream protection rule in coordination with several States, including Kentucky. But I have heard from several of these States that their input has not been solicited or incorporated by OSMRE throughout the process. As you know, under SMCRA, you are required by law to work with the States on this rule and to incorporate their input before finalizing that rule. That rule is expected to destroy over 280,000 jobs in Appalachia and elsewhere, and I am extremely concerned about how the Department managed the development of this rule, ensuring that States have a role in the process. Can you tell me how much we have spent so far on this rule to date? Secretary Jewell. Kris, do you have a number in terms of what we spent? Ms. Sarri. We do not have that number. Secretary Jewell. No, we do not. We will have to get back to you with that. Would you like me to comment, though, on the process? Mr. Rogers. Please, but surely we have some idea of the cost. Ms. Sarri. I just do not have that number with me, so I want to make sure I give you an accurate number. I will try to get that right now. Mr. Rogers. What is your estimate? Ms. Sarri. I think the director at one point had put an estimate of $6 million. Secretary Jewell. Our team is scrambling in the notebooks behind, so before I finish answering this question, hopefully we will have some sense. It sounds like we will have to get back to you for the record. Mr. Rogers. All right. [The information follows:] Stream Protection Rule OSMRE has spent approximately $10.5 million to develop the rule. This includes $6.5 million in obligations for contract support to develop portions of a draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) and the regulatory impact analysis (RIMA); and $4.0 million for staff, travel, facilitator for hearings and other items. Secretary Jewell. Let me just say that it has been an incredibly long process. I appreciate that. The Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement did engage with States early on and took that input. They published the draft Environmental Impact Statement on July 17th with a proposed rule 10 days later. They conducted six public hearings, one of them in Lexington, Kentucky, most of them in coal country throughout the Nation. And they are analyzing just shy of 100,000 comments received during the comment period. We have also had 15 meetings with 13 different States. I understand the State of Kentucky declined to meet with us, but we would welcome their participation. We are taking that State input, and we will use that certainly to advise the final rule based on this process. At this point, we would welcome participation from your State. We do believe this rule is essential. The stream buffer zone rule put in place in 2008 was vacated, so we feel we need to address very real water quality issues and the impact to the watersheds of the mining practices. And that is what this rule intends to do. Mr. Rogers. Specifically, in the omnibus bill, OSM is required to provide the States with all technical reports, data, analyses, comments received, and drafts relating to the environmental reviews, draft environmental statements, the final EIS. They are also required to meet with any primacy State at the request of that State. Those congressional directives are in direct response to OSMRE's failure to work with the States in a collaborative manner as partners, if you will, in the development of the proposed rule and draft EIS. It is absolutely essential that this failure be corrected so that States will be more involved in the rulemaking process as the law requires. In response to the language in the omnibus bill, how have the Department and the Agency taken steps to begin working collaboratively with the States on the stream protection rule? Secretary Jewell. Two comments. Certainly we fully intend to comply with the language in the omnibus, and the reference documents that were specified in the language should be available very soon, and will be provided to States as well as posted on our public Website soon thereafter. They are being compiled as we speak and will be released relatively soon. Mr. Rogers. How soon will it be? Secretary Jewell. My language says shortly after February 29th. This is now March 2nd, so I do not know an exact date, but soon. We also have held, as I mentioned, 15 meetings already with 13 different States. There are several States that have chosen not to meet with us including Kentucky, but we would welcome their participation and value their input. Mr. Rogers. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Ms. Lowey. Ms. Lowey. Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you again for your important work. WILDLIFE TRAPS I am extremely concerned about the use of body gripping traps within the national wildlife refuge system. One of the key problems with these traps is that they are non-selective, meaning they do not only catch the animals they are intended for and pose a great danger to individuals who may also be harmed by these traps. More than half of our Nation's 550 refuges allow trapping and the use of steel jaw leg hold traps despite the fact that this inhumane trap has been banned by more than 85 countries and 8 States. Body gripping traps are not necessary for the maintenance of wildlife refuges, especially since there are alternative and more humane ways to remove or relocate animals. Two questions, because I have been hearing about this issue for a very, very long time. To what extent do you keep records of the types of traps set and what those traps catch within the National Wildlife Refuge System? Do you believe that the continued use of body gripping traps is conducive to the original purpose of the National Wildlife Refuge System? Secretary Jewell. Congresswoman, thank you for the question. I will take this one for the record because I do not have information on this. I do not know if we keep these records. I do know that we allow hunting and fishing, but the methodologies used, you know, must be consistent with our authorizing statute. But I do not know, so I am going to have to get back to you on that. [The information follows:] Trapping The Fish and Wildlife Service, which manages the National Wildlife Refuge System, does not collect information on a System-wide basis concerning the types of traps used on wildlife refuges nor the associated take of wildlife. The National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997 (Improvement Act), which amended the National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966, established an overall mission for the Refuge System; to ``administer a national network of lands and waters for the conservation, management, and where appropriate, restoration of the fish, wildlife, and plant resources and their habitats for the benefit of present and future generations of Americans.'' The Improvement Act's accompanying Committee Report specifically addresses trapping as a management tool to conserve and manage healthy populations of fish, wildlife, and plants. One of the listed methods and procedures, ``regulated taking'' encompasses management tools such as hunting, trapping, and fishing. (H.R. 1420 Committee Report [105- 106], page 7). The majority of trapping programs on Service lands are implemented to accomplish wildlife management objectives in order to contribute towards the purpose and mission of the individual refuge, as well as the mission of the Refuge System. Trapping is an important management tool the Service uses to protect endangered and threatened species, migratory birds, and control certain wildlife populations. Ms. Lowey. I appreciate it. And by the way, I have had legislation on this issue, I think, for the last 20 years. So I would really appreciate your getting back to me, giving me an up-to-date report. NATIONAL HERITAGE AREAS On the National Heritage Area, your budget request proposes a number of important investments. However, there is one program in which the request falls flat, the National Heritage Areas. Once again, the Administration proposes to slash the program by $10 million. This is a significant cut that would have real impacts on the heritage areas. For example, in my region, the Hudson Valley National Heritage Area received $491,000 last year. If the proposed cut were enacted, the Hudson Valley would only receive $180,000 in Fiscal Year 2017. This is debilitating, and if you could explain why the budget is proposing to cut this program to such a degree. Secretary Jewell. Yes. Thank you, and I appreciate your support for the heritage areas, and as we have talked about before, I support them as well. Specific to the Hudson River Valley which was authorized in 1996, we funded it in 2015 and 2016 at $491,000. I know the National Park Service is collaborating closely with the National Heritage Areas to develop a methodology to allocate program dollars. We really want to try and work with them toward self-sufficiency to the extent we can. I know it takes time to do that. We are happy to continue working with you through this budget process. But, you know, it is one of those challenging tradeoffs we made in terms of staying within the top line. GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK Ms. Lowey. And just lastly, I do not know if my time is up, so we can continue this discussion. But I have been extremely disturbed by a report that found evidence of a long-term pattern of sexual harassment and hostile environment for at least 19 employees at the Grand Canyon National Park. Some of these women reported boatmen on their team would refuse to take them to their worksites if they rejected their sexual advances. One employee even said that one boatman withheld food from employees who refused, and this is shocking. Do you want to make a comment on it? Secretary Jewell. I will say that I am equally shocked. The Park Service is on this. It is conducting a full investigation. It will absolutely take appropriate action. This is not acceptable behavior within the National Park Service, and if proven to be true, there will be consequences. Ms. Lowey. I really appreciate that, Mr. Chairman, because I was shocked to hear it. In fact, one of my daughters was deputy director of a Park Service. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. CALIFORNIA DROUGHT Mr. Calvert. Thank you for your questions. Well, Madam Secretary, I think you know what I am going to be talking about. We have a little drought in California. You may have heard about it. I have a chart up here behind Mr. Israel showing what is going on in the California Bay delta. Our reservoirs continue to be dangerously low. The winter's rain was a chance to fill these reservoirs. The first 2 months of this year produced double the amount of water that we received all of last year. All of last year. These rains should have provided needed relief to drought-stricken communities in California, yet you are pumping less water than you did last year in a historic drought, and this is significantly more rain and we are pumping less water than we did last year. This just defies common sense. You know, the Endangered Species Act gives the Department some amount of flexibility. You know, we have gone through this very carefully. If you had simply chosen to pump as much water as is allowed under the biological opinion, you would have provided enough water for 2 million people for an entire year. Instead, the Department sent the extra water out to sea, and that is not coming back. And it may be that we are not going to see significant rain for the balance of the year. But if we do, I would hope that you could help the people of the State of California. What do you say to the millions of people who could have been helped by these El Nino rains? Secretary Jewell. I am going to turn the lion's share of the question over to my colleague, Mike Connor, who is far more expert in these areas. But I will say that everything is stressed. The people are stressed. The farms are stressed. The landscapes are stressed. And that has factored into the decisions that have been made. I will also say that fortunately this year you have a better snow pack, so there is some precipitation and storage that will come out later in the year. But Mike has been working very, very closely with everyone in the Bureau of Reclamation and in the State on this, so I am going to ask Mike to answer the specifics. Mr. Connor. Mr. Chairman, I agree it has been a frustrating year from the standpoint you referenced given that we at least had a 2- to 3-week period where there was lots of precipitation. It has since, as you well know, substantially reduced over time. Mr. Calvert. There were some days where we were getting 50 to 60 thousand cubic feet per second moving through the delta. Mr. Connor. Yeah, I do not remember seeing it that high. There probably was a couple of days. I know we were definitely in the 25 to 35, even 40,000 CFS outflow range, which is very significant. I think under the water quality permits, you have to maintain at least 15,000. Having said that, as the Secretary noted, the drought has had a devastating impact on people as well as overall environmental conditions. And that is the reason why operations for a period of time this year have been fairly conservative, and it is because the monitoring and the assessment of the delta smelt have been, the basis upon which they developed their incidental take statement, indicated they were at their lowest levels than they had ever sampled. And so, the Service has been very concerned that any entrainment event that could occur from pumping might have such an impact it might endanger the existence of the species. They are concerned about extinction of the delta smelt. Mr. Calvert. Well, as you know, over 95 percent of the water on some days was going through underneath the Golden Gate Bridge. How much water does it take to satisfy that environmental requirement? 100 percent? 99 percent? Mr. Connor. The issue is really what are the pumping levels, how much can you pump while not bringing the delta smelt towards---- Mr. Calvert. And that is a great point. When you have that much water moving, how can you reverse flow that? As you know, the pumps are capable of pumping up to 11,000 cubic feet per second. Most of those days that we are talking about in January, you were pumping less than 2,5000 cubic feet per second. Less than 2,500 cubic feet per second. As I understand from the people that are up there, the old timers, the fish were not anywhere near the pumps. Matter of fact, there was just one day I think they took an incidental take of one fish. And they had to drop their pumping immediately. One fish. Mr. Connor. There are a couple of responses. When there is outflow coming from the San Joaquin, from the southern side where the pumps are located, you have the possibility of pumping a lot more. There is a lot more outflow going out through that system. Here we have had most of it come out of the Sacramento system, so it is at the top of the system. And so, you still have smelt south of the delta that you are concerned about. There has been take, which is obviously a strong concern at that point in time, but also in the sampling they have done, they have sampled and detected smelt in the southern delta area. They have been very sensitive to any potential entrainment events, and it has been, from that standpoint, that we have not pumped to the maximum limits under the biological opinions. Mr. Calvert. Are we ever going to pump? Are we ever going to see any water going to these reservoirs? Mr. Connor. Well, I looked at the records, and that gets to the 192,000-acre feet. I mean, I think we should compare notes because just on the back of envelope I have looked at it, and we are estimating about 70,000 acre-feet that have been lost under the biological opinions. The biological opinions started to control pumping around January 7th when we met actually. I think that was right at the transition period. Since that time, there has been, I think, 27 days where we have not pumped the maximum under the biological opinions. For the last couple of weeks, we have been at about 5,800 CFS, which is the maximum under the biological opinions. And that approach and the concern about the species is probably going to continue. I am hoping we can get at least a couple more precipitation events, particularly in the south side of the system, and maybe we can go above the 5,800 CFS level like we did last year. Mr. Calvert. Well, all we can do now is hope, hope that it rains because we cannot pump water that is already gone. Mr. Connor. It has been a frustrating year from the water user's perspective. I absolutely understand that. We will look and continue to try and maximize flexibility. There have been times when the Smelt Working Group has proposed even more stringent pumping limitations. Water users, other stakeholders, have gotten together and decided to operate a little bit more-- -- Mr. Calvert. Just a last comment. I know the Secretary mentioned stress. We have got farmers that are pretty stressed out in the Central Valley. Just last week it was announced that a major farmer is pulling out 10,000 acres of trees. 10,000 acres of trees. And the people that attend to those trees are out of work. So just as much of a crisis what is going in coal country right now is happening in my State of California, and, by the way, people forget we are the largest farming State in the United States, but we have 1 million acres out of cultivation this year. 1 million acres. I know we have a historic drought. I know the problems that you are operating under. But when you see more rain by multiples this year, and we are pumping less water than we did last year, most people look at that and say what the heck is going on. How do you explain that? Mr. Connor. Mr. Chairman, may I make just one more comment? This is a very frustrating situation, and the way we operate now, it is going to continue to be frustrating. Hopefully we will rebuild storage, and we will get back to water allocations next year, because we are rebuilding at least some storage this year. I do think this year is indicative of the need for new approaches and solutions. And as you know, and you and I have discussed, Cal Water fixed and provides the opportunity for new conveyances, one of those options. I think this year in particular is indicative of a year where there would have been a lot more water supply had we had conveyance and diversions in the ---- Mr. Calvert. Well, you know, I wrote the Bay Delta Agreement 15 years ago. Mr. Connor. Yes, sir. Mr. Calvert. And we have still not yet gone through the environmental procedures to get to construction on these projects. And we have gone through two additional biological opinions since that was done, and each biological opinion has become more and more restrictive. And the irony of this is the smelt population, for whatever reason, has continued to go south since 1992. Obviously there has been significant restrictions on how we operate the delta. So I think anecdotally there is other information that we are not applying. I wish we should use good science to look at this problem and how we are operating up there because this clearly is not working. Ms. McCollum, you are recognized. INVASIVE SPECIES Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Madam Secretary, last week I attended Governor Dayton's water summit back home in Minnesota, and I heard firsthand the concerns related to our waterways. They included invasive species such as Asian carp, nitrates in our water from agricultural runoff, aging water infrastructure, the effects of climate change, and a whole host of other concerns. These conversations highlighted the importance of the work that you and the employees at the Department of Interior do who are there to listen and take in concerns. I want you to know that we value the research that USGS has done to better understand our water quality and use. In my own State of Minnesota, we see the importance of the conservation work being done by Interior in our national forests, the refuges, and the parks. I just want to pass along how much Minnesotans appreciate the work that the Department of Interior is doing to protect our waters. We hope out of that summit there will be some more innovative and creative ideas on which more collaboration can happen. INDIAN SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION However, there was another issue that I heard about while I was back home. Even at the water summit, folks were talking about it. That was the Bug School, Bug-O-Nay-Ge-Shig School on Leech Lake Reservation. Secretary Jewell, you know, we have talked about it. You visited that school. You saw the deplorable conditions that the students and faculty have to put up with every day. I know you have visited other schools in Indian Country, and you are hearing the alarm bells go off loud and clear. That is why last year working together in a very nonpartisan way, we increased funding for replacement school construction by $25 million, and funding for replacement facility construction by $12 million. Now, I understand the Bureau of Indian Education is close to finalizing its new replacement school construction list, and has been making progress on developing these replacement facilities priorities. I would like you to update the committee on status on these lists. Also, you did send, I will call it, a white paper over with some ideas that you had on how we might be able to speed up school construction. With high suicide rates, with the Generation Indigenous initiative, with what we are hearing about the stress that many of these communities are facing with drugs, alcohol, and now the current heroin epidemic, the youth that were here from Indian Country the last 2 weeks are looking to us for leadership. They see education as an opportunity for more progress and more success for them in their lives ahead. Can you update us and the committee on how you see us progressing on school construction for the Bureau of Indian Education? As we are getting ready to hand over to the next Administration, what do you think the President will encourage the next President of the United States to be doing on these issues in Indian Country? Secretary Jewell. Thank you for the question, and I would say, more importantly, thank you to this committee in particular for your personal interest, your engagement, your CODELs out to Indian Country to see firsthand what is going on. First on school construction. We had over 50 schools that submitted applications for whole campus replacement construction. We narrowed that down to 10. We had them do additional presentations. The input from those presentations is being analyzed to come out with a list, and it is weeks away I think, so very, very soon. On the Bug-O-Nay-Ge-Shig school specifically, certainly the language that you put in the appropriations report helps shine a spotlight on that particular property. That is something that is also in process and evaluation. As we talked about on the phone, we have to make sure the scope of the work is appropriate and it is prioritized well relative to other replacement facilities. That is in process, but you can expect there will be resolution to that relatively quickly. How do we speed up school construction, this whole process? We had a list that dated back to the 2004. With the support of this committee, the final two schools on that list are being done. We have a whole process dictated by the No Child Left Behind Act that we have been following so that we have a more of a living effective list going forward. That is what has taken awhile, frankly, in coming up with the next few schools we are going to prioritize. But it will be a robust process so we can keep that list up to date, and recognize that things change. I mean, population demographics change. If we can make investments that can extend the life of one particular facility, that may raise something else on the priority list. Those are all, I would say, nearing completion in terms of the process. BUREAU OF INDIAN EDUCATION REPROGRAMMING On the reprogramming, thank you for the support of the BIE reprogramming. We have posted the new jobs. Some of them are existing jobs that will continue. Some are new jobs people are applying for. The period of time to apply for those closes on March 11th, and we expect to have them beginning to be filled by the middle of April. We have already started a robust training program for teachers so students will begin to see changes in the classroom. We are working with school boards on training for school board members as part of the program. Then, of course, we have the sovereignty in education awards for tribes that want to take over control of the schools. TIWAHE INITIATIVE So I think students will begin to see a difference in the classroom probably already this year, but next year. But more importantly, you mentioned Generation Indigenous. You mentioned high suicide rates. The fact is we need to work across government and with tribal communities to address some of these really challenging issues. School facilities can be an ideal spot, gathering place for parenting classes, for counseling, a safe place for kids to go after school. This is part of what we are encompassing in the Tiwahe initiative, so there is an increase in the budget for the Tiwahe initiative which looks at whole families and communities. We have through the President's action, formed the White House Council on Native American Affairs, which I chair. We have hired a full-time staff member for that, which is a career staff position. So that will continue beyond this Administration. INDIAN EDUCATION And, of course, the people that are leading Indian education, the BIE career staff, will also continue into the next Administration. And they are being trained for the new positions and are supportive of the changes. I mean, change is hard. You do not do it all in a year. Larry Roberts, our acting assistant secretary, was just in Albuquerque meeting with our leaders in the BIE going through all of this, all-employee meetings and so on. I was there a little bit before that meeting with leadership. I feel like we are in a good spot, but we cannot do it without everybody working together. I will just mention quickly one more thing. It is hard without a clock, so I am sorry. But Pine Ridge is a Promise Zone community. The Ag Department picks those, but we have got a strike team in place to really understand what is happening with suicides. We'll look at what we can learn from an effort on Pine Ridge with SAMHSA, which is a unit of HHS, the Indian Health Service, the BIA, and the BIE, to see if we work collaboratively together and with Ag and some of their rural programs, can we make a difference. There is a lot going on. Continuity is really important, so it is about our career staff and, you know, mechanisms put in place for this cooperation so it will continue to live well after we are gone. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Simpson. STEENS WILDERNESS Mr. Simpson. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you, Secretary, for being here today. A couple of statements first with regards to the Steens Wilderness in Oregon. I know my colleague, Congressman Walden, has been very frustrated with obligations that the BLM has to build and pay for a fence to keep cows out of the wilderness as per the legislation that was passed. In order for wilderness bills to succeed and be accepted, they must keep the promises that were made. I am pleased that Director Kornze spoke with my staff this morning, and it sounds like we may be headed toward a positive solution with this problem, and I will speak to him further tomorrow. But that is something that needs to get done. WILDLAND FIRE I appreciate your support for the wildfire fighting bill that I think every member on this subcommittee is a co-sponsor of. Unfortunately we did not see it get across the finish line last year. We keep pushing it a little further each year. But what Chairman Calvert was able to do is get an extra billion dollars in an outside account for wildfire fighting. While we do not think that is the permanent solution we need, hopefully it will stop the fire borrowing for at least a year or 2 years, or until we have an extremely bad year. My advice, as I told the chief of the Forest Service is, do not do any fire borrowing this year. Take the money out of the account that was set aside to do this. One of the challenges we have is trying to explain to our colleagues that do not understand what we are doing, why we want to do what we want to do in regards to fixing fire-borrowing. They say, well, it all worked out. They do not see what was not done because you borrowed money from the accounts that we appropriated money for. So it would be my suggestion that you do not pursue any fire borrowing this year, so we can show people the consequences. SAGE GROUSE Now, a couple of things I would ask you about. One would be sage grouse, but I suspect other people are going to talk about sage grouse a little bit. You have proposed a $79.2 million for sage grouse conservation, huge increase. We used to ask for about $15 million for sage grouse. Last year it was $45 million increase. One of the things this committee wanted to make sure is that we did not list sage grouse. And one of the potential excuses was that we did not fund what was requested. So we made sure we put those resources into sage grouse conservation. This year it is a $14.2 million increase over last year. What are we going to do with the $79.2 million sage grouse money? Secretary Jewell. Largely that is $66 million in the BLM to implement the resource management plans, about a $14 million increase. It is for on the ground vegetative treatments to protect, improve, and restore the sage steppe, in Boise. The best smelling trip I took last year was to the seed warehouse. Part of what we need to do is actually find the right ---- Mr. Simpson. You could have just said Idaho in general. [Laughter.] Secretary Jewell. Some parts of Idaho I have not had the same experience. But that is the cattle business. Yeah, that is good, too, right. So it is largely implementation of the resource management plans. There is money for the National Seed Strategy. You have done some innovative stuff in Idaho. You have used volunteer groups, youth groups to collect seed, to plant sage brush. All of that kind of work maintains a healthy sage brush ecosystem and restores it when there have been fires and that is all wrapped into the BLM request. We have juniper removal, particularly true in Oregon, that is critical to the stage steppe. It is actually following through on the resource management plans that got us to a not warranted listing. WOLVES Mr. Simpson. Okay. And one quick question because I have got to go to another hearing, if I could ask it, Mr. Chairman? I would hope that the Department would support what this committee has been trying to do, and that is implement the Fish and Wildlife's decision on wolves in the Great Lakes and Wyoming. The decision to delist that was made by science. They went through all the studies and everything else to make the determination. I will tell you that no matter what happens, somebody is going to sue until the cows come home or do not come home. We are trying to get away from the lawsuits, and it is what we did in Idaho and Montana, which was supported then by Secretary Salazar. We would hope that the Department would support this committee's efforts in trying to make sure we do not spend the next 10 years in court trying to defend the decisions the Fish and Wildlife Service made on delisting of wolves in Wyoming and the Great Lakes because they are clearly recovered. Secretary Jewell. Well, we agree they are recovered, and we are frustrated by the lawsuits. I would hope the Endangered Species Act does not have to get administered by the halls of Congress. I think that is the only objection we have is that, you know, we are frustrated we lost that lawsuit. Mr. Simpson. We are not trying to change the Endangered Species Act or anything else in this case. What we are trying to say is listen, it has worked for wolves. It has done its job. Fish and Wildlife has made a decision. They have the hearings, they have had the comment periods, and so let us move on, and that is all we are saying. We are not trying to delist them. We never delisted wolves in Idaho and Montana. All we did is implemented the Fish and Wildlife decision. So that is where we are coming from. I appreciate it. Thanks for the work you do. Secretary Jewell. Thank you. Mr. Connor. Congressman, can I just add one thing? I just want to say thank you in your role as chairman of the Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee for the additional drought funding for the Bureau of Reclamation. I think we have good investments that will not alleviate all the concern, but I very much appreciate it. It is much needed, from infrastructure, restoration, conservation across the board. I appreciate it. Mr. Simpson. Thank you. Mr. Rogers. Mr. Chairman, can I ask unanimous consent to proceed for 1 minute? Mr. Calvert. Yes, sir. STREAM PROTECTION RULE Mr. Rogers. I will be real brief. Madam Secretary, you earlier said Kentucky did not want to meet with you. I have a letter here that the governor wrote on February 8th in essence saying as soon as we get the documents that the omnibus bill says we are to receive from you, which they never did, which you never sent them. He says as soon as they get those documents and review them, they want a meeting. Secretary Jewell. That is great. Mr. Rogers. And I want to file this letter with the record of the hearing. Mr. Calvert. No objection. Part of the record. [The information follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Mr. Rogers. Is that correct? Secretary Jewell. I have not seen that letter, but if that is what it says, we will get them the documents. We would be delighted to meet with them. Mr. Rogers. They want to meet. They want input. But they cannot do it until you send them the documents that back up your claim. Secretary Jewell. Okay. Mr. Rogers. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. WOLVES Mr. Calvert. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Next, Ms. Pingree, but before I turn to Ms. Pingree, on the wolf issue, as time keeps going on, you may want to take a look at Oregon and Washington also because it looks to me from reports I have been getting that the wolf population in Oregon and Washington is clearly beginning to recover quite handsomely based upon the number of dead sheep I have been hearing about. So with that, Ms. Pingree. CLIMATE CHANGE Ms. Pingree. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Secretary Jewell, thank you for your work. Thank you for everyone who is with you here today, and we certainly do appreciate the big challenges that come before your Department and the great work you have been doing with them. I am just going to take up one issue right now, and it is not as big as drought and wildfires and some of the economic challenges that people have been addressing. But I want to say in the context of the fact that we really appreciate the parts of your budget that are calling attention to and asking for funding around climate change. I just think many of us hearing back from our States about the impacts of climate change, and certainly in mine with so many lobstermen and fishermen. They are worried about ocean acidification and rising sea levels, and movement of the some of the species of our fish because of the warming of the water. So we have to deal with a lot of those issues as well as our wood lots and small farmers worrying about extreme weather. So I really appreciate the focus that you give to us and helping us to think ahead about how to deal with those challenges. TICK BORNE DISEASES And one of them that we have seen an increasing problem with is the incidence of Lyme disease. My understanding is that there are 30,000 cases a year. Lyme is the sixth most common disease reported to the CDC even though we do not talk about or hear about it much, and it is the most common vector-borne disease. The CDC has said in 2013 it is probably getting reports only for about 10 percent of infections, so in reality that number is probably higher. Now, my State, it could have a huge economic impact. We call it our vacation land, and we are proud of many of the other activities that go on in our State. Tourism is a big issue, and the more people hear about tick-borne diseases, the more they are affected by it, and the more challenging some of the vector-borne diseases become, less easy to cure, more long lasting. We want to know everything we can and do everything that we can about protecting the outdoors in Maine. Your budget calls for $2 billion in mandatory spending for a coastal climate resilience program, which I am very eager to see. I think in your discretionary budget there are also various areas where work by the National Park Service and USGS are trying to address this need. But just going beyond signage and public awareness campaigns, I think we really need to work to know more on tick eradication. I am very excited about the work that is being done by the National Wildlife Help Center at USGS. So just if you want to discuss that a little. I do not know how familiar you are with this, but the budget does include $4 million, an increase from 2016, to $39 for the National Wildlife Service Center and climate science centers. Can you tell me a little bit about how that increase will be used to further the work being done around how wildlife and their habitats are being affected by ticks and tick-borne pathogens? That is also an issue for many regions besides mine. When the ticks become devastating to wildlife population, sometimes eradicating them all together, sometimes having a huge impact on hunting opportunities in those States. And how does this work fit into some of the overall missions and goals with Interior on understanding climate change and its impact? Secretary Jewell. I can talk at a higher level. I cannot talk into super detail. We have about $63 million in the budget for climate science, and that includes about $31 million for the National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Centers that you mentioned. That is up about $4 million. Every time I visit the USGS science labs, it is clear we are just scratching the surface, whether it is eDNA for Asian carp, which is an aquatic invasive tick-borne disease, or white-nosed syndrome in bats. Whatever the causes, we are not exactly sure, but how do we deal with this? We are a bit overwhelmed by the demand on the services relative to our capacity to provide support. I would also say USGS works in partnership with universities throughout the country, and those grants oftentimes are also really critical. This will help us to continue the work we are doing, but certainly if we could find additional ways to support these programs, we could support more university research in conjunction with the USGS, Fish and Wildlife Service, and so on to address even more. That is about as much detail as I have on this, and if you would like me to follow up specifically on the tick issues with the USGS, I would happy to do that. [The information follows:] Tick Borne Illnesses and Wildlife The USGS is investigating the effects of environmental factors on tick populations. As the range of Lyme disease expands, the USGS is collaborating with the Public Health Agency of Canada and university partners to determine how climate, wildlife dynamics, and tick genetic factors influence Lyme disease distribution. To predict the effects of climate change, field and laboratory study results are being integrated into models of tick population and tick-borne disease dynamics. In regards to wildlife health, the USGS's National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center partners with the Wildlife Conservation Society to understand the effects of climate change on moose populations in the Northeastern United States. Winter ticks have been associated with moose die-offs across North America. This study is emphasizing the use of scenario planning to assist States with moose management decisions in response to high tick abundance and other climate-related factors. Ms. Pingree. I think that would be helpful, because, we have to address it when we are back in our home State, and people are always asking us, how is the Federal government helping? We do not have enough resources in our own State. So, to be able to provide a few more details would be useful. Also, just to reinforce that your request for additional funding is something I certainly support, and I hope that we can continue to enhance this because I think, I am talking about one tiny little problem like a tick. But it could have a huge impact on a lot of States like mine, and it is just one of many things I think we are going to continue to see as we deal with some of these climate change issues. So thank you. Thanks for your time. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Cole. Mr. Cole. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Madam Secretary, always a pleasure to see you. VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT An issue that I wanted to ask you about is after a number of years in working across the aisle, and with the Administration, we changed the Violence Against Women Act to extend more authority to tribes to deal with what is an epidemic of domestic violence and violence against women in general. Obviously authority is not capacity, and we have a number of tribes. I actually met earlier today with the Pascua Yaquis, who are invested in this, and I think are taking it very seriously. Can you, number one, tell us how the pilot projects are proceeding, where you are pleased, and any concerns you have. And second, can you give us some sort of long-range vision on what our responsibility would be, in your view, to provide capacity? Again, some tribes are going to have the ability to finance these kind of efforts, and it is everything from good law enforcement to appropriate judicial systems and detention facilities. Some tribes simply will not. And so, I would like to get your views on this going forward. Secretary Jewell. Well, let me start by saying thank you for your advocacy for this, and I appreciate former Attorney General Holder for his commitment and the Department of Justice's work to actually get tribes included in the VAWA reauthorization. How that pilot project is going, I would say it is frustratingly slow. I will follow up with Larry Roberts and get more information to you specifically, but there are still just a few locations where we are piloting this. There are still many examples of violence against women that are not being prosecuted by local tribal courts that are not part of this pilot. I think we have work to do in terms of educating local law enforcement on the very real risks women and children, frankly, are facing in Indian Country from non-Indian predators that really are not being held to account. I think we have a long way to go. I think in terms of the long-range vision, we need greater capacity in tribal courts than we have. They have a significant backlog. We need greater capacity in law enforcement. We have, as you know, run pilots for law enforcement, actually leading into a number of different law enforcement agencies--the U.S. Park Police, National Park Service, Fish and Wildlife, other law enforcement entities--to beef up enforcement on reservations across the whole spectrum of criminal justice. And it has had a profound impact on reducing crime. But we do have a challenge filling the jobs in Indian Country and covering the landscape frankly so that when a woman does call 9-1-1, they may or not get a response. It may be a long time before somebody is able to respond just because of the large territories, few people, and lack of resources. I think we have a lot of work to do still. LAND BUY-BACK PROGRAM Mr. Cole. Thank you. One additional question if I may, not related, but in Indian Country, and you may want to get back to us for the record on this. A number of years ago we made a very significant financial commitment in the Cobell settlement, and we have had a couple of hearings on this, Mr. Chairman, but that is a multiyear project, a lot of money involved frankly. And I least want to get your assessment of where we are both in terms of sort of reuniting fragmented land, getting that back into use by tribes, and then the individual compensation awards. Secretary Jewell. We are making great progress, and I am going to ask Mike to answer with the details. Mr. Connor. Yes, Congressman. This is one of the areas that if you had asked me what I was going to spend most of my time on when I first got confirmed it wouldn't have been the Land Buy-Back Program. Fortunately it is really taken off, and let me give you some quick metrics. We are about 33 percent of the way through the 10-year time frame for implementing the settlement, and we have expended about $736,000,000, or 47 percent of the funds already, in restoring fractionated interests back to tribal trust ownership. That is the equivalent of about 1.5 million acres of land. We were allotted $285 million for administrative costs. Even though we have expended 47 percent of the funds, we have only expended 15 percent of the administrative costs. Our goal is, at the end to be able to take some of the administrative money and put it back into restoring even more lands over time. We have made offers at about 33 percent of the 40 most fractionated locations. We have selected 42 locations for implementation through 2017. The reason I have to get out of here at 3:30 is we are having a listening session in Albuquerque tomorrow to take input. In a couple of weeks tribes are going to finalize their input on how we plan out the balance of the program through the remainder of the 10 years. Hopefully through that we will have a plan, not just for the 42, but how we will either move forward to the 140 total locations out there, or move forward to a percentage, and think about how we might go back to other lands we have already made offers on. Overall, it has just been a very successful program I think because of the great work our team has done, the great leadership in Indian Country, and the great bipartisan support there has been. Mr. Cole. Well, I really want to thank you on these efforts. I think it makes a big difference in terms of dealing with past grievances, and, frankly, putting land back to productive use for tribes. So the Administration is to be commended here, and I would like to continue to work with you. Mr. Chairman, I yield back. Mr. Calvert. Thank you, Mr. Cole. Next, Mr. Kilmer. Mr. Kilmer. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thanks, Madam Secretary, for being here. PUGET SOUND As you may have heard, we had more than 50 folks from Washington State here this week for the 2nd Annual Puget Sound Day on the Hill. They came all the way from the other Washington to advocate for what is not just an incredible icon of our region, but a body of water that is in deep trouble and that requires attention from the Federal government. They have been talking to Federal agencies, Members of congress, and staff about both strong investments and better coordination with partners at Federal agencies so that we can take those recovery efforts to the next level. You have been a great champion for Puget Sound and its recovery, and I am grateful for that. I was hoping you could just talk for a moment about steps your Department is taking to try to streamline Puget Sound Recovery efforts, and the planning that can be done with other Federal agencies to try to move these efforts to the next level. Secretary Jewell. Derek, it is great to see you, and I am surprised I did not know until you told me that all the Washingtonians were in town. I figured they might be asking for tickets to the Washington Monument. So you can send them our way. [Laughter.] I do not have a depth of knowledge on the specifics of the programs. I do know that we have $18.8 million in the budget which will help move projects forward. About half of that is for the Fish and Wildlife Service for work in the marine estuaries, the health of those ecosystems on the tributaries, and working with tribes. There is $5.2 million in the budget for the BIA specifically to work on largely, fisheries management issues. And then there is another $4.3 million with the USGS to continue their research. But beyond that, in terms of how we dig into that, I do not have the details, but I am very happy to provide that to you if you would like more. Mr. Kilmer. Thanks. It is a high priority, as you know. Secretary Jewell. Understand. [The information follows:] Puget Sound The health of Puget Sound is vital to the region's economy, tourism, quality of life and recreational, commercial, and subsistence fisheries. We continue to make improvements to our processes and abilities to develop the best scientific data, restore habitat, recover imperiled species, and provide consultations for Federal, State and local governments, and industry. For example, in cooperation with the Federal Highway Administration, the Washington Department of Transportation, and the National Marine Fisheries Service, the Fish and Wildlife Service developed technical guidance on evaluating the effects of stormwater on Chinook salmon and other listed species to support transportation projects in the region. The Bureau of Indian Affairs cooperates with area tribes to coordinate continuing treaty harvest management, population assessment, habitat protection, stock enhancement, and data gathering programs involving fish, wildlife, and shellfish resources. And the U.S. Geological Survey recently completed research that found that protection and restoration of floodplains along the 17 major rivers in the Puget Sound Basin could increase the health of rivers and their ecological value, while protecting people from future flooding. These findings will help inform the design of projects that are in concert with Puget Sound recovery goals. COSTAL CLIMATE RESILIENCE FUND Mr. Kilmer. I know that Ms. Pingree mentioned the Coastal Climate Resilience Fund. So the district I represent includes a whole bunch of rural communities that lie in the tsunami zone. Coastal communities like Westport and Ocean Shores are seeing much more severe storm events and flooding and there are four coastal tribes in the district that I represent that are in the process of trying to move to higher ground. I was hoping you could provide a roadmap for what this program is going to look like if it is funded, and how the program is going to address the specific needs of the communities I represent and others along the coast. Secretary Jewell. The short answer is we recognize there are big issues. When I was in Alaska about a year ago, and then the President was in Alaska as I was also in early September, he saw up close the Village of Kivalina that is washing away, the same issue around the Makah and Quileute tribes. Just take Kivalina as an example, when I was up in there February of last year, they estimated the cost to relocate that village, which will wash away potentially in a storm that could happen really at any time. The cost to relocate by the Corps of Engineers, they said was roughly between $200 and $400 million. I mean, that is one tiny village in Alaska. The $2 billion Coastal Climate Resilience Program needs a source of funding. We have proposed a source of funding. It is going to be difficult obviously congressionally to get that done. It is redirecting the GOMESA money in the offshore oil and gas revenue share that really ramps up in 2018, and saying we need that for coastal climate resilience to protect communities from climate change. I would say if that is funded, there will likely be a competitive process to determine, what are the areas of greatest need. Similar to what we learned after Hurricane Sandy. The $60 billion that you as a body approved after that devastating storm, a good chunk of it was both through HUD and our own programs. It was done through a competitive process where communities step up, put creative solutions on the table, and those are ranked and funded accordingly. So I think you could expect that kind of a situation. You did not mention ocean acidification, but that is also a big factor along the Washington coast. It is impacting oyster growers and shellfish farmers, just as Congresswoman Pingree mentioned, big issues with lobster and with the disease affecting lobster, like the sea stars that we have had in the Pacific coast. These are very real, and I think you can expect a kind of competitive process by which we allocate if we are able to get those monies. But that is one of the congressional mandatory program recommendations that would require legislative action. We would appreciate you bringing your stories to the table so it has a better shot at getting done. Mr. Kilmer. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Mr. Stewart. Mr. Stewart. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And, Madam Secretary, it is good to see you. We appreciate you taking the time. I think it is clear that you and I might see the world differently in many important respects, but I appreciate your sincerity. I think in many ways you have a difficult job. But I would like to express some frustration to you if I could, and it is not directed at you. I am expressing this frustration to you on behalf of the people that I represent back home. FEDERAL IMPACT ON COAL And if I could, I would like to tell you about some of those people. I would like to tell you that I know a coal miner back in a very rural, very poor district. There are two coal mines in Utah, well, in my district, very high-quality coal, clean coal. And we have been working as hard as we can for years now to keep those coal mines open. It looks like we will fail in one instance and maybe in both of them. And I do not want to say to this miner and his family because nearly a third of the jobs in this county will be lost if that coal mine closes. I know a teacher in my district, and I come from a family of educators. And one county has actually had to declare an education emergency. Now, I did not know there was such a thing, but apparently there is, because they have lost over the course of a few years two-thirds of their students. And now they are looking at busing the remaining students well over an hour to go to high school. The reason they have lost these students is because families have left the county because there are no jobs. There used to be jobs in mining, in ranching, in forestry, and in timber, and there just simply is not any longer. I know a rancher in my district, and he came to me. This is a humble man. He is not a radical. He is not one of those who are joining with some of these other organizations, and he has tears in his eyes, and he shows me a letter he gets from BLM that they are cutting his grazing rights in half. And the thing that I see in him is fear, and it is not only fear about his family and their future. It is a genuine fear of the Federal government. And I do not know what to say to him in those circumstances. One more if I could, and then I will ask a question. I know a business owner who used to have a thriving business. Now, they were not, you know, making millions, but he was supporting his family. But in that area they transitioned to an economy based on tourism, so instead of being open 12 months a year, he is open 3 and a half months a year. And he is struggling for the other 8 and a half months to find ways to feed his family. Now, that is the impact of Federal decisions on families and on people. And when you have to deal with them, as I know you do, and as the rest of us around this table do on a very regular basis, there are many times when I simply do not know what to say to them. MONUMENT DESIGNATION Now, in this instance a lot of that was because of a Federal decision to create a monument. And by the way, when the President at the time, Bill Clinton, created that monument, nearly 2 million acres, he did not come to Utah to do it. He stood on the Arizona side and pointed to Utah, and said I am creating a monument over there because he honestly did not have the courage to come face the people that were going to be most impacted by it. There are many of us in Utah and particularly my district who are scared to death the Administration is considering of another national monument in Utah in my district. Are you working on a monument proposal in Utah? I will just ask that question first and get your response, and then follow up if I could. FEDERAL IMPACTS Secretary Jewell. Okay. As you did in Arizona, I will give you a little bit of background. First, I understand the transitions that go on in communities. Congressman Kilmer and I are from the same home State. Commodity-based businesses like oil, gas, coal, timber, which have impacts on the environment, which is not a static thing, do impact lives in a very real and profound way, and they impact communities, and that is very difficult. On a micro level, we must work together to help support those families. In grazing and ranching, the BLM is managing a mandate of multiple use and sustained yield, and we have seen changes on the landscape where the sustainable yield may lower in terms of how many cattle a given area can support compared to what it was in the past. That is real difficult if you are that rancher, but that is part of the job of the BLM. So those are really, really difficult. And our employees are your constituents. They live in your communities. They are in schools with people that are affected. I am fully supportive of working together on programs that help people retool as the commodities are changing around them. It is easy to blame the Federal government and regulations for issues on things like coal, but it is also a commodity that has been impacted by natural gas, switching to natural gas pricing, worldwide demand for coal. It is not all about regulation. Mr. Stewart. But if I could just clarify. In my instance, it really was about a Federal decision. These were not taking place because of market conditions in any of them. They were all a result of a single Federal decision, in this case creating a monument. Secretary Jewell. Okay. Mr. Stewart. And I understand what you are saying. There are other things at play, but just to clarify my set up---- Secretary Jewell. You are talking about the Grand Staircase-Escalante. Mr. Stewart [continuing]. I am talking about the Grand Staircase and the fear of another repeat of that. MONUMENT DESIGNATION Secretary Jewell. Yes. To your question specifically, both Congress Members Bishop and Chaffetz were in my office earlier this week on Monday. I had met with them previously I think in June or July about the public lands initiative they have been working hard on. I know there have been a tremendous number of community meetings they have held with a variety of stakeholders. I think there were pretty high hopes that that effort would result in a successful, balanced approach. There is a group called the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition, I believe. They have met with me. I sent them over to Congressman Bishop to meet with him to talk about the public lands initiative, which they did. Since the early language has come out on that document, there is a tremendous amount of frustration about the language largely dealing with what they call wilderness has a number of exceptions that are not consistent with typical wilderness designations. In that context, yes, the Bears Ears Coalition has come in. They have advocated for a monument. This is not a secret. It is something that we have suggested they come and talk to the delegation about. There have been a number of people that have come in since the public lands initiative was ruled out saying what we negotiated hard for in these thousands of meetings, we do not feel was honored in the language that came out. And you do have in that region some pretty incredible assets that do warrant protection. As I said to Congress Members Bishop and Chaffetz, we have not done any monument designations without engaging with local communities. We would certainly do that should there be any efforts to move forward in that region. But I think, I would hope, both of us would agree that Utah, in specific the Cedar Mesa area, is spectacular with clear antiquities that warrant protection. We would welcome your support and engagement in looking at what appropriate protections for those landscapes would be. Mr. Stewart. Well, thank you, and I would respond I guess with maybe three points quickly, and then I want to ask one more very quick question. PUBLIC LANDS INITIATIVE You know, the key players on the PLI, Congressman Bishop's initiative, are still involved with that. They are still hopeful that they come to a local solution. The second thing I would ask is that you dive into some of those organizations that pretend to represent local interests because the vast majority of them are not local individuals. And, in fact, including the local tribes have expressed dismay that they may go forward, and dismay that those who are pretending to represent them, and I am talking about the tribal entities, these individuals claim to represent their interests when they do not. Then if I could very quickly, so that is on the eastern side of the State. Are you looking at creating a monument in my district on the western side of the State? Secretary Jewell. Can you help me understand what is in your district? Is that part of the public lands initiative or not? Mr. Stewart. No, it is not. We are on the other side. We are more towards the Zions National Park, the Bryce National Park, in that area, kind of on the central and eastern side of the State. Secretary Jewell. I am not aware of folks that have come into our office suggesting a monument or anything on that side. Mike, are you aware of anything? Mr. Stewart. Well, thank you for that. I guess I will count my blessings and knock on wood. And I would conclude just saying we love this land. I mean, that is the reason I live in Utah. I was writing books. I could have lived anywhere in the world. I chose to live in Utah because we love this land. We want to work with you to protect it, but we just beg you, you know, to use those of us who live there and love it as a resource as we try to find some ways to do both. So thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Stewart is the most read author in Congress, we are very proud of him. Mr. Stewart. I do not know what that means actually. Mr. Calvert. I do not know either. [Laughter.] Mr. Israel. Mr. Israel. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I hope to be one day one of the most read authors in Washington. WILDLIFE TRAFFICKING Madam Secretary, welcome. I wanted to shift to an issue that generally has bipartisan support on this subcommittee, committee, and in Congress, and that is wildlife trafficking. You and I attended an Ivory Crush in Times Square, New York City, over the summer. I have been working on a bipartisan basis with Jeff Fortenberry from Nebraska on this issue. Many of us support additional resources for wildlife trafficking not only because it is a humanitarian thing to do, but because we are learning that wildlife trafficking is providing revenue streams to terrorist organizations around the world. And I just want to ask you this one very simple question: Tell us what your budget does with respect to wildlife trafficking. Do you have the resources that you need? Secretary Jewell. Thank you for your interest, and thank you for that really effective public awareness session when we crushed the ton of ivory. That is on top of 6 tons we crushed in the wildlife repository. There are a few more people in Times Square than there are in the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge. We had a total budget of $56 million 2016, including funding from the State Department. In 2017, we have about a half a million-dollar increase. It covers a multitude of areas. There is $33 million in the Fish and Wildlife Service for international affairs. That includes law enforcement dedicated to wildlife trafficking of $7.5 million, then the Multinational Species Conservation Fund at $11 million. I have been to two demand countries, Vietnam and China, on this issue. Vietnam in particular is also a source country for pangolin in particular and turtles. I went to an area where they are trying to rehabilitate pangolin and turtles, a conservation area. But the demand for rhino horn, for elephant ivory, for pangolin, for exotic meats that are not sustainably harvested throughout Asia is extreme. We are just scratching the surface frankly with the efforts that we have. The State Department has been helpful. I went to Gabon, Kenya, and South Africa in January. I saw what I would say is the best of mankind and the worst of mankind. I went to a rhino poaching crime scene. The bad news is there were three dead rhinos to choose from within an easy drive that had been poached within a few days of my visit to Kruger National Park just within that northern tier of Kruger, which is just horrifying. That is the worst of mankind. I went out with veterinarians and rangers to tag a rhino and put microchips in the horns so that they could be traced, take blood samples and so on, but unfortunately the chance of that rhino actually being poached is quite high. I went to the Port of Mombasa, which is one of the bad actor areas that wildlife products move through. I was happy to see that the Kenyan government actually had removed a number of people very recently, some that I had met with, because of corruption at the port that was allowing illegal wildlife products to go through. We have six attaches around the world from the Fish and Wildlife Service. Sometimes, and I learned this when I was there, they are the trust place that people from different countries will go to when they are not sure if they can trust people in the other countries, and with good reason, because corruption is rampant. It is like drug trafficking or human trafficking. There is so much money involved relative to what people can make otherwise that the temptation is very high. We are just beginning to scratch the surface. I would say our investments are driving a return on investment. I would love to have more capacity in these law enforcement attaches overseas, and they are doing a job that is very, very helpful. They are also cooperating on technologies that help, for example, trace the kingpins, not just the poachers on the ground who sometimes are just trying to feed their families. We are committed to this effort. I think raising awareness and visibility so that we kill demand is really important, and that is why the Times Square Ivory Crush was so important. It is raising visibility with designer brands that are using these products that is really important. Brand is critical, and shaming a brand is a very effective way to impact this. So thank you for your advocacy, and I would say we are continuing to chip away, but we have got a long, long way to go. Mr. Israel. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Amodei. Mr. Amodei. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Good afternoon, Madam Secretary. I think to the extent that the chairman is going to manage my time, I may try to manage your answer time a little bit, not as an affront, but just so that we can cover as much ground as possible. And I am going to endeavor to be crisp so that that works. LAND TITLES The first thing I got to tell you is I need your help. I have been in this outfit for 53 months and 16 days, but who is counting, trying to work through the chain of command in the Bureau of Indian Affairs on title matters. This is not complicated with lots of moving parts stuff. It is people who have paid off their homes on reservations and colonies, and have waited between 5 and 10 years for a simple title plan type of conveyance. And in my neck of the woods, that is through Phoenix or Albuquerque, depending on what it is. And I will just tell you quickly, please give us some help. We are going to talk with the BIA a little bit later, but it is like, I mean, in any other sense paying off your home and waiting for years to have a conveyance is--so I do not know. I am told it is, well, we are not funded in real estate stuff or whatever. I am not saying they are or they are not. I am just saying, come on, there is a problem there. And maybe from your end it will be more successful than from mine. Secretary Jewell. I will answer it very quickly. We do have a challenge in providing titles and responding on things like that. I have visited those offices. They are very frustrated because they are not automated. It costs money to automate. I think there is some money in the budget to continue to support automation efforts, but we are not going to address this overnight. But it is an ongoing problem, and we could get back to you with more detail on the record, or you can ask in the BIA session, and will make sure that they know of your question. Mr. Amodei. Or the other thing is to simply do, like you did in some other instances, to go, hey, if you want us to fix this, here is what we need. And if the committee says no, then the committee says no. But right now it just feels like, oh, that is kind of the way it has always been, and so there we go. So anyhow, thank you for your attention to that. I appreciate it. SCIENCE COORDINATION I want to next move to science coordination because I notice there was language in your opening statement, and you have got kind of a new effort in house, and you are talking about coordinating with each other. I would like to meet with those folks and just have a briefing for what they are doing. And let me tell you the reason for the request. I am concerned through the processes of some things recently, sage hen for one of them, where we speak with Director Ashe and say, hey, have you used any of the local folks. I am not telling you that they are in the tank one way or the other, but have you considered, for instance, the work of the College of Agriculture at the University Nevada, which has a quite long track history of Great Basin, sage brush steppe ecosystem, desert research, excellent outfit, USGS, even some of the Federal stuff. And I get back from these people, no, we have not been consulted. And so, I am not saying, therefore. I am just saying when you talk about collaboration on the science front and you have got this, no, I would really like to talk to those folks, say, okay, they are going to talk in house. But what is the company policy, if you will, for, hey, can you at least talk to folks who have been doing this stuff for decades, by the way, not for one team or another, but in terms of real resource-centric people with credibility as part of the makeup of what you decide is the appropriate thing? Secretary Jewell. Well, specifically the sage grouse it is probably the most relevant recent example of that. We very much did take into account State programs, State science, WAFWA, the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies. I think that is correct. And that is very, very important to us. USGS took over largely the science side of the biological sciences when Bruce Babbitt had my job in the late 1990s. The USGS is joining very closely with the Fish and Wildlife Service, doing a lot of scientific research, and they do engage with local communities. We are happy to get you a briefing if you would like to dig into that a little more deeply. Mr. Amodei. I would appreciate that because I will just say that that has not been my experience to the extent that we have checked. So we would like to make sure we are fully briefed before we come to any final conclusions. SAGE GROUSE Next, what I would like to do is we have been going back through some of the stuff forensically in the whole sage grouse process. And one of the things that we are trying to check, for instance, is, okay, you have a sagebrush focal area. How were those boundaries set? And so, we asked the agencies. And so, one of the folks who did mapping, how were the boundaries set in USGS. We got some curious non-responses. So we asked BLM and Dan Ashe's folks, hey. We asked those questions in January in preparation for this meeting, and we do not have a response. So I do not have anything specific to say other than I find that curious. I will tell you that the Forest Service responded, and they said the sagebrush focal area boundaries were given to us by U.S. Fish and Wildlife. So because none of this is national security, border security, hooping and snooping, we do not have to have these briefings and SCIFs, if it is like why not just tell us how we drew those lines where we drew them for those 3 million acres across four States. I mean, the bottom line is how did we get there? And so, we have got some frustration on that. So, I mean, forewarned is forearmed. It is like, listen, I am not saying you did a bad thing or a good thing. Somebody put a line somewhere on a map. We would just kind of like to know where that is. So if you could be of assistance to getting us some response to that, that would be great. And one final thing, and actually you are going to get a talk in this one, so I do want you to think I am---- [Laughter.] Secretary Jewell. No question, you just want me to listen? Is that the---- Mr. Amodei. You know, people that have listened said it was not that great, so you do not try to break the mold. [Laughter.] I was in Las Vegas in December for a western caucus policy forum at the same time you were in there talking to the western governors. And so, we had an opening, and I had a chance to come. I said, well, let us go see what the Secretary has to say to western governors. And I noticed that you made several references to drinking beers with them, and I do not know if anybody on this committee has ever had an invite to drink beer with you, but I know I have not, so I feel a little bit picked on. Secretary Jewell. When all our budget hearings are over. Mr. Amodei. There you go. [Laughter.] You are buying, right? Secretary Jewell. I had a couple left over from my party. [Laughter.] We did not drink much. Mr. Amodei. I will bring a big cup. But anyhow, when you are talking about sage grouse, you said I am a little skeptical about things that go through in Congress right at the present time for perhaps the obvious reason. Can you give me the basis of your skepticism? ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT Secretary Jewell. Yes. This was around the Endangered Species Act, and I would say that at the time that I met with the Western Governors Association, there were a tremendous number of Endangered Species Act riders going on any kind of piece of legislation. I know you are shocked. Any piece of legislation going through. The main issue that Governor Mead from Wyoming wanted to take on for his term as head of the Western Governors Association was the Endangered Species Act. I think we would agree there are ways it could be implemented that work more effectively and perhaps where all of us could spend less time in court, which is certainly in my interest. But with all of the riders that were being put up around the Endangered Species Act from, well, any number of them, it is clear that there is a risk of a gutting of the Endangered Species Act, and I do not want that to happen either. My comments were related to that and saying how can we work together within the bounds of the existing law to interpret it more effectively for States and do a better job ourselves so we spend less time in court and more time actually taking care of these landscapes. Mr. Amodei. So great. One of the byproducts of that is you are working with Governor Sandoval directly on sage initiatives. Are you doing that under general secretarial authority, or is there something in the act? I mean, what is the basis for saying, hey, if they need a right-of-way for something in Baker, or we need to speed up adoption of new maps, and the governor says he is working with the Secretary of Interior, what is the authority for that framework so that we can help the governor with things that maybe he would like to work with you on? Secretary Jewell. Well, there is a clear willingness we have indicated to all States in the sagebrush range that if there are concerns they have with the plan, they are welcome to bring them to our attention, and we will operate within the flexibilities we have. For example, in Nevada, the maps that we used were the best maps we had at the time but Nevada has purchased new maps. And so, part of the discussion was Governor Sandoval said will you use our new maps, and we said yes, okay. So that is not the Secretary's authority working with the governor. It is the governor as a conduit for his folks saying these are some ways we would like to shape this. So if it is a water tank leaking in Baker. I cannot remember specifically whether it was a map issue. There is also a cemetery in one of the other counties. Mr. Amodei. Those were all identified as being habitat, therefore---- Secretary Jewell. Correct. And so, the BLM has flexibilities to work in specific situations on the ground to address those circumstances, and that is what was being done. It is not secretarial authority working with the governor. It just the Secretary communicating with the governor the flexibilities that the BLM has. We are doing that whenever asked in other States, and we will continue to do that whether or not the States are suing us. Mr. Amodei. Thank you. Secretary Jewell. Thank you. Mr. Amodei. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Mr. Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Madam Secretary, thank you for being here. PENSION FOR COAL MINERS I notice in your budget you have got funding to try to help our coal pension fund for our coal miners. I appreciate the investment. I look forward to working with you because we want to make sure that our miners are protected, have a solid pension, health benefits that they can rely upon. STREAM PROTECTION RULE What I would like to spend time on is what the Chair of the subcommittee, and in particular, the Chair of the full committee brought up, and that is, of course, stream buffer zone, stream protection rule, whichever way you want to characterize it. My biggest concern, Madam Secretary, and I listened to your testimony carefully. I have read your submitted testimony. I have read the testimony of the OSM director. And I am almost at the belief that you all are tone deaf to the lack of engagement and lack of opportunity for cooperation and input at the State level. Earlier you described the idea that you did engage with States and took into account their input. OSM published a rule, then held public hearings. When we look back at reality, you had 10 States enter into an MOU to be cooperating agencies in late 2010. And then in February of 2011, you have Alabama, New Mexico, Utah say you were not cooperating and they withdrew. In March, Texas withdrew. OSM was not cooperating. OSM was not sharing information. In May, Kentucky, West Virginia, with a Democratic governor and Democratic legislature withdrew. You know, this is not a partisan issue. You were not cooperating. You were not sharing information. They withdrew from cooperating agency statutes. Indiana, Montana in July. Then we have to come in with this rider on the omnibus directing that you share information. OSM has systematically denied, refused FOIAs. The States that historically you had great working relationships with have simply said things have changed dramatically in the last 5, 6 years. So to simply say to the Chairman earlier we engaged, we took their input, and we published the rule, I challenge that. I think you are tone deaf to the reality of what is going on out there for the lack of cooperation. So number one, are you aware of the frustration that exists amongst the States on a lack of cooperation at OSM in your capacity as the Secretary of Interior? Are you aware of this? Secretary Jewell. Yes, sir. Mr. Jenkins. Are you doing something about it to try to reengage these people, because I continue to hear as of yesterday, no, you have not changed your modus operandi. And, in fact, you suggested to the Chair just a minute ago that one of your representatives has reached out to their State. You referenced that I think 10 or 13 States have been contacted and visited. Well, guess what? Your person came to West Virginia. I know about that meeting. And our folks at DEP specifically said that OSM represented they are not coming here because of this new mandate. You are really just talking about things in the past. So my questions are on a couple of things. Number one, of the language that is contained in the omnibus that talks about the stream buffer zone rule and the mandate, I heard you say earlier that you intend to fully comply. My question is, do you believe this is legally mandated on you to do this? Secretary Jewell. I believe if it passed in the legislation, which it did, then we are legally mandated to comply, yes. Mr. Jenkins. Secondly, the issue of all technical reports and data as the chairman ran through, are you going to be reviewing and releasing some, or are you truly going to the 5, 6, 7 years, which this, I believe, requires all reports, data, analysis, comments. You are going to turn this over to all of the States, plus I heard you say you are going to make it available on the Web. So is everything going to be put out there? Secretary Jewell. I will have to rely on my people at the Office of Surface Mining on what is in compliance with the order. I do not know exactly what the order says. I know what material that responds to, but they will be responsive to the requests, and they will do it in accordance with the omni. Mr. Jenkins. Well, it is not an order. You have to understand it is legally binding. This is the law. Secretary Jewell. Right. Mr. Jenkins. It was signed by the President. So it is not an order. It is the law. And I will just read it. ``OSM is directed to provide the States with all technical reports, data, analysis, comments received, and drafts relative to the environmental reviews, draft and final environmental impact statements.'' Will you provide all of that information? Secretary Jewell. We will comply with the law. Mr. Jenkins. Okay. Mr. Connor. Could I just note, Congressman, I believe that was report language. It is not statutory language. But nonetheless, our intent is to comply with that report language. Mr. Jenkins. Well, I asked the Secretary if it was legally binding, and she just said it is the law. So are you trying to correct her and say, well---- Secretary Jewell. He is trying to correct me, and I stand corrected. Thank you, Mike. Mr. Jenkins. So now what I am hearing and sensing is that you do not think it is a requirement of law, and, therefore, you may not have to comply fully. Mr. Connor. I was just being technically correct as to what the language is, and there is a distinction between statutory language and report language. Mr. Calvert. Let me ask this question for the gentleman. Your intent is to comply to the reporting language in the bill. Secretary Jewell. Yes. Mr. Calvert. And there is no reason not to be transparent and to provide the information to the States that have asked for this. Secretary Jewell. That is correct. Mr. Calvert. And by the way, just to the point of Mr. Jenkins, these are governors both Democratic and Republican that have asked for this information. This is, as it was pointed out, not a partisan issue. Secretary Jewell. I understand that. I also know there was a tremendous amount of work collaborating with the States up front, and also a desire to get something done. I know you will have an opportunity to meet with Joe Pizarchik, who runs the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement. He is deeply involved in this, understands it, was a state regulator. And I think that we will be much more effective in being able to answer the detailed nature of your questions as opposed to me---- Mr. Calvert. We will be meeting with him tomorrow. Mr. Joyce. Mr. Joyce. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Madam Secretary, I would really like to investigate where exactly this keg is right now. [Laughter.] GREAT LAKES Mr. Joyce. I know you know how important the Great Lakes are. As a matter of fact, to quote you, you once wrote, ``The Great Lakes are a monumentally unique national treasure containing nearly 95 percent of the United States fresh surface water. Formed by receding glaciers, the Great Lakes support a thriving and resilient ecosystem rich with fish and abundant natural resources.'' I would add rich cultural historic, commercial, and industrial resources as well, we certainly agree on that point. Given all this, I find it disturbing that the President again proposed to cut a program that is producing such terrific results. If there is any program that we should hold up as a model of intra- and intergovernmental and non-governmental cooperation that produces results, it is GLRI, the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. Do you have any explanation for why we continue to see these proposed cuts to GLRI? Ms. Sarri. As you know, that is in the---- Mr. Joyce. Do you know where the keg is? [Laughter.] Ms. Sarri. She has not told me yet. That is actually an EPA program, and so I would just encourage you to talk to EPA about why the cut was taken. My understanding is that there are some carryover balances remaining. That is part of the reason for a reduced funding level. But I think EPA is in a better position to discuss their budget. Mr. Joyce. Thank you. That brings me to my next question. The actual cuts proposed by the EPA include $2.1 million for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, $400,00 for the National Park Service, $11.1 million for the Fish and Wildlife Service, and $8.2 million for the USGS. Can you describe for me the consequences your agencies face if we were to fund the GLRI at the President's proposed levels? Ms. Sarri. So just let me talk specifically to the Department of Interior's budget because we actually have $69.9 million. We are very supportive of the work the bureaus are doing in the Great Lakes. Obviously the additional money we get from the Great Lakes Initiative is incredibly important to our bureaus and that kind of cross agency effort. So there will be some impacts on it. But as you know, it is kind of a competitive allocation among the different bureaus that participate or the departments that participate. It is not clear what the cuts would be in a future budget year since we would have to work on what the program would be like in 2017. Secretary Jewell. Let me just say, though, that the EPA money has been used to address invasive species, water quality, and ecosystem health. Without the resources that we have had in 2016, those are the areas that would be directly impacted if we did not get funding from the EPA at an equivalent level. ASIAN CARP Mr. Joyce. Beautiful, because that brings me to my next question. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has a critical role to play in working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to help it understand the urgency relating to the movement of Asian carp toward Lake Michigan. In 2015, juvenile Asian carp advanced 66 miles closer to Lake Michigan. It is my understanding that the Army Corps is developing what was once called an emergency response plan, but is now being referred to as a contingency plan. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service should play a critical role in developing this plan because its fishery biologists understand fish population dynamics, and can inform the Army Corps to help ensure the fish do not advance beyond Brandon Road Lock and Dam. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service can alert the Corps and other Federal and State agencies to the urgency of new data that may be collected in 2016. Madam Secretary, what role is the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service playing in developing this contingency plan? Secretary Jewell. I am not sure. I will have to double check and get back to you for the record because I know they have been working closely with the Army Corps and the USGS on everything from e-DNA to, you know, various hazing methods to stop the fish from going further. But I am not sure specifically as it relates to that program, unless one of my colleagues knows. So we will get back to you on that. [The information follows:] Asian Carp The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and partner agencies of the Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee (ACRCC) are developing contingency response plans to address the potential upstream movement of all life stages of Asian carp in the upper Illinois River and Chicago Area Waterway System (CAWS), with the goal of increased protection for the Great Lakes. FWS serves as co-chair of the ACRCC along with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and is a member of the ACRCC's Monitoring and Response Work Group. The Work Group is leading development of the contingency plans as part of the broader effort to complete the ACRCC's 2016 Monitoring and Response Plan. The contingency plans will include recommendations on detection and control tools and deployment strategies for management agencies in the event Asian carp are detected in the upper Illinois River or CAWS. Mr. Joyce. I really believe this is one of the most bipartisan, as I said before, intra-governmental, non- governmental programs, and we are all working together. We urge you to get on top of this issue because we only have once chance to do this right, and we have got to stop talking about the Great Lakes as a series of lakes and start talking about it as a natural treasure because we cannot afford to screw this up. With that, I yield. Secretary Jewell. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Ms. McCollum. Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. To Mr. Joyce, we will figure out what is going on. We had legislation, and the Army Corps might have been assigned some responsibility because it had something to do with navigable waters. We will get to the bottom of it. LAW ENFORCEMENT Without getting into the specifics of what happened in Oregon, because I know that is an ongoing investigation, I want to follow up with a few questions in the most general sense. I would like to know what the Department of Interior is doing to enhance employee safety. I had a discussion with the Bureau of Land Management, on this topic, and I had a similar discussion with the Forest Service. First responders are quite often what the National Parks folks are. Fish and Wildlife employees sometimes are responding to an accident. Sometimes Interior employees are first on scene to investigate damage to a property on Park Service land, or they are checking something out that has been reported to them by a hiker in a refuge, or they are looking at a flood plain after something has gone through our public lands. I point this out because we have had fewer employees out there working on a lot of these projects, and protecting our lands, and making sure that visitors have a safe and good experience. They are out there more increasingly alone, farther away from help should they need it--whether they become injured, or they stumble upon something, or feel that they are in an unsafe situation. If you could, please tell us what the Department is looking at doing to enhance employee protection and personal safety, whether it is out checking on a hiker or whatever. Do you have the tools that you need? Is this something the committee should be requesting you to kind of put together a report on what needs to happen? We also know damage is done by some individuals in our public lands. I was at Voyageurs National Park, and saw where somebody decided they get a better view looking at what they wanted to by breaking a chain on a picnic table and sawing down a tree. The park superintendent thought she was maybe going to be able to figure out which camper did that. That is damage to public property. Are you seeing an increase in damage to public property, whether it is things that are clearly unlawful or just people just not using common sense? What should we be doing to work with you to make sure that damage is not starting to impact your budget in a negative way? Your budget dollars are so tight. We are trying to work on backlog. The climate has changed out there for some of the responsibilities and some of the things that the Department of Interior is starting to experience now, and the Forest Service, and BLM. What do you need? Secretary Jewell. I am going to answer at a higher level, and then I going to turn it to Kris who oversees our Office of Law Enforcement and Security. Let me say this, you are right about the kinds of jobs they do. They are first responders. I did a hike in Shenandoah up Old Rag, and as I was coming down they were launching a rescue. They were actually physically going to have to carry somebody down a mountain that had slipped and had a bad dislocated shoulder. They needed 20 people to be able to do that evacuation. They were calling them in from all over, volunteers, search and rescue, and so on. That is quite common. In fact, on that particular hike it happens multiple times every week. The Fish and Wildlife Service has relatively few folks, and a lot of times what they are doing is ensuring people are abiding by the hunting and fishing laws, so really more like game wardens. In the case of the Malhuer Refuge, there was one person assigned to that refuge, and clearly lots and lots of reinforcements had to be called. In BLM, we have roughly one law enforcement person per million acres in the BLM. Most of the people that are out enjoying BLM lands in parts of the West are armed. So when you are by yourself patrolling, it is risky. We are deploying GPS devices for all of our BLM rangers out in the field so that they know we know where they are. In some cases, we are patrolling with two together, which means we are patrolling half the area we were before, but their safety is obviously of paramount importance to us as is public safety. I think the situation at Malheur and some of the increasing risk we see on public lands is something we need to be very aware of, and our people are very vulnerable. We have had threats, guns fired in the air where people were doing surveys to chase them off the land. We have obviously left. We have had situations where armed militias have been called in when we have tried to enforce mining laws. That is in the State of Oregon also. So there is increased heat, I would say. Part of the answer to that is going to be working with communities as we have done in Harney County before, which I think was very helpful, and as we are doing in communities across the West. But our law enforcement people could use improved devices like the GPS. I would not want to militarize them. That is not what they are for. As we have more visitation, we have a greater need for law enforcement. We are not necessarily able to respond, but we do try and have cooperative relationships with local law enforcement that helps. But, Kris, do you want to talk more specifically? Ms. Sarri. Sure, I would be happy to. Thank you very much for the question. Within the Office of Policy Management and Budget, we have the Office of Law Enforcement and Security. It is the office that sets national policy across all our land management bureaus, and we look very closely at safety of our employees, also working with all the bureaus to do security assessments of their facilities. We have some increases in the 2017 budget across all of our law enforcement bureaus. A couple of other initiatives that we are pursuing is along the southwest border obviously working closely with CBP, we have a lot of lands where drugs are smuggled across the border. We have worked on a southwest radio interoperability initiative there so we, working with other Federal agencies--Forest Service is part of that--make sure we have really good radios in place, and they are interoperable. We are looking into how we can expand that as a pilot across the Nation. We have some increased money in the BLM budget for that purpose because they are kind of the governance structure for that to support all of the other bureaus. Efforts like that where we can improve our technology, get better interoperability are also things that both help keep the public safe and keep our employees safe as well. Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. A point to Ms. McCollum, we have this growth in marijuana groves, not just on the Forest Service property, but on BLM property, all kinds of property. I have been told by law enforcement it is primarily two major drug cartels coming out of Mexico. Every once in a while they shoot each other, and people get caught in the crossfire. So it is something we need to keep an eye on and to deal with. Secretary Jewell. Sometimes they set up booby traps for our people, too, including at national parks, like Sequoia and Kings Canyon. So it is a high risk. Mr. Calvert. Right. And I am hearing a lot about it lately. It seems like it is a growing problem, not one that is going away. ANTIQUITIES ACT I want to talk a little bit about the Antiquities Act. On Friday, February 12th, President Obama used his authority under the Antiquities Act to establish three new national monuments totaling nearly 1.8 million acres in my region of southern California. I was driving down the freeway and heard about it on the news. Unfortunately I was not provided the courtesy of being notified of the President's action by your Department or the White House in advance of the announcement. Neither was Congressman Cook. By the way, over 70 percent of his district was impacted by that decision. He represents the Mojave Desert. And I do not care, which Administration it is. Members of Congress deserve to be notified when something like that is happening where we could at least be prepared for the onslaught that comes, and I know that Paul Cook certainly got some, so we do not have to read about it in the Washington Post. Secretary Jewell. I apologized on the phone. I will do it in front of the cameras as well. I am sorry that you did not receive a call and neither did Congressman Cook, from the Administration. Mr. Calvert. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, the President has used authority under the Antiquities Act 22 times since 2009 to bypass Congress and designate 40 million acres as national monuments. So obviously this is going to have some fiscal impact, budget impact. How are we going to pay for all this? Secretary Jewell. In a budget like the BLM budget, we have increases for national conservation lands in general. The national monuments that are on BLM lands are typically within the national conservation lands. The monument designation in and of itself does not immediately increase the cost to maintain these landscapes, but over time as there is increased visitation, there is an expectation we will likely have an increased cost. We are doing private philanthropy in some cases in some of the monuments that have been designated. In fact, in some cases the monuments themselves have been a donation to us with endowment or support to continue to support what they need as they welcome additional visitors. But like national parks and monuments that are created by Congress, to the extent that they increase costs, those will be reflected in future year operating budgets once we have done an assessment of the needs and have an operating plan. So to the extent that goes up, we would ask for that in a future budget. Mr. Calvert. I am going to discuss now the Owyhee National Monument in Oregon. A number of groups have been urging the Administration to create this 2.5 million acre national monument in southeastern Oregon, an area that is larger than Rhode Island and Connecticut combined, and even Yellowstone National Park. These efforts included high-level meetings with the White House Council on Environmental Quality and other agencies. The proposal and campaign has generated strong opposition from the area local residents, local governments, certainly the local congressman, and I have heard from him, with Malheur and other surrounding counties strongly opposed to this designation. Potential restrictions for access and grazing use on these lands is a strong concern that was mentioned earlier, where multigenerational family ranching make up the backbone of the local economy. I understand that there are conversations taking place now between the BLM and some of the interested parties. There are also certainly requests for the Administration to make public its position and plans for the Owyhee Canyon lands. I guess nobody is hearing anything, you know, the biggest creator of fear is silence. Are there any Department of Interior personnel assisting anyone in the White House, the Council on Environmental Quality, or elsewhere in the Administration with technical or other support related to the designation of a national monument around the Owyhee River in southeastern Oregon? Secretary Jewell. As I said to Judge Grasty from Harney County and also to Congressman Walden, I am not aware of, you know, any efforts that are going on right now with regard to Owyhee Canyon lands in our Department. There has been an interest expressed by Congressman Blumenauer from the Portland area, from Keene Footwear, as part of a live monumental campaign. But I have not seen any information, nor have we held any community meetings or discussions with people around Owyhee Canyon lands to my knowledge. Mike, do you know of any? No? Mr. Calvert. Would you please confirm whether any such assistance is being given and provide a written response back to the committee based upon that conversation so we can have that and I can share that with Mr. Walden? Secretary Jewell. Yes, I did share it with him yesterday at the hearing as well. [The information follows:] National Monument Designations Designation of monuments under the Antiquities Act is a Presidential, not Departmental, action. When examining whether to recommend particular monuments for Presidential action, the Department engages in consultation with national, state, local, and tribal stakeholders, in keeping with the President's commitment. Mr. Calvert. Okay, great. Well, thank you. Any other questions? Ms. Pingree. INVASIVE SPECIES Ms. Pingree. Thank you again, Mr. Chair. Thank you for your time in front of the committee and answering such a wide diversity of questions. I just want to talk a little bit plants in the Park Service. As you know, I know you have been to Maine, and I think you visited Acadia National Park. This is our centennial as well as the Parks, so it is a very exciting year. And we appreciated Ranking Member McCollum has been able to visit us. We are hoping maybe the chair and other committee members can come to one of the most spectacular, most visited parks in the country and enjoy our lobster dinner, which is coincident with visiting the park. They pretty much just walk up to you when visiting. It is the simple things. I just want to talk briefly. We talk about so many important parts of our spectacularly beautiful national parks, but one thing we do concern ourselves with are native plants and flowers. I know you are increasingly concerned about invasive species and the questioned presence of the emerald ash borer and the variety of other things that can interfere with keeping our native plants strong and present. About a quarter of Acadia's flora is non-native, and 25 species in the park are listed as rare. So if you would just talk briefly about the National Park Service program for native plant restoration in our National Research Stewardship Budget. Can you tell us a little bit about how you work on this effort, where you have had success stories in reversing some of the challenges of species lost, and the importance of species in our ecosystem overall. Secretary Jewell. I will talk at a higher level, and, Kris, I do not know if you can come up with numbers specifically on this while I am saying a few words. This is a huge challenge across the national parks. Emerald ash borer, woolly adelgid, which wiped out the hemlocks largely in the Smokies. The pine park beetle, which is a native species, but because of climate change and a few degrees higher temperature, it is wiping out a lot of the pine forests in the Rocky Mountains in particular and other parts. This is a huge issue, and we cannot keep up. We can do damage control. Early detection and rapid response on an invasive species is part of our budget here which will be across the landscape not specific to the National Park Service. The use of Youth Conservation Corps crews and local volunteers to actually do some of the hard work on invasive species removal is continuing. I would say that invasive species in general are winning, so it becomes a triage effort. Where can we protect a growth of trees and treat those trees or treat in the immediate area when we cannot treat the whole landscape, so we are not losing the species entirely, but we cannot stop the onslaught, especially for some of these insects that are taking advantage of slight changes in climate, which would include the tick population you mentioned also, just slight increases. Kris, do you have any numbers you want to share? Ms. Sarri. So the one thing I would also just mention is last week we did a framework on early detection and rapid response, which is actually very critical in terms of trying to have a national framework to look at addressing invasive species. But what the Park Service is requesting is $18.3 million overall for control and management, but I will get back to you on the record for specifically what is happening in Acadia. [The information follows:] Invasive Species In FY 2015, the NPS spent $18.3 million in on-the-ground education, outreach, detection, and control and monitoring work to combat invasive plants and animal species. The NPS plans to continue this level of effort in FY 2016 and FY 2017. The National Park Service is working to manage invasive species on park lands through a suite of national and local programs, each based upon the following strategies: cooperation and collaboration, inventory and monitoring, prevention, early detection and rapid response, treatment and control, and restoration. At the national level, NPS has fostered a successful invasive plant management program with the creation of the Exotic Plant Management Teams (EPMT). These 15 teams provide highly trained mobile assistance in invasive plant management to parks throughout the National Park System. The EPMTs serve more than 282 parks over a broad geographic area and work to identify, develop, conduct, and evaluate invasive exotic species removal projects. The NPS is using various approaches to control invasive exotic species populations in parks and to protect sensitive resources from destruction by invasive exotic species, including integrated pest management supported by current scientific information and best management practices. In FY 2015, EPMTs worked with 1,331 young people who contributed 100,470 hours to invasive plant management control and restoration efforts across the country. In addition, EPMTs treated 3,559 acres and inventoried and monitored 24,150 acres. At Acadia National Park almost 25 percent of the park's flora is non-native and about 25 species are state-listed as rare plants. As is the case for many parks, Acadia has been able to control a number of invasive plant species and they have seen a recovery of native plant communities. For example, the park began its invasive plant control effort 30 years ago by targeting purple loosestrife. At the time, purple loosestrife was recognized as one of the most threatening of the known invasive species because of the high-value, ecologically- important wetlands where it was a rapid colonizer. Today, the species has been controlled within the boundaries of the park, allowing native plants to rebound. Park staff continues to survey and treat new occurrences that move into the park from adjacent property. The park also has expanded its invasive plant management program through partnerships with governmental and non-governmental agencies and has been very successful in controlling other high priority invasive species, including giant hogweed, spotted knapweed, Japanese knotweed, and glossy buckthorn. However, new invasive plant species appear on the horizon all of the time so acres under control are a moving target. Additionally, any of the acres infested are infested with multiple species, and thus are not considered controlled if some of the priority species have not yet been addressed. For example, purple loosestrife and glossy buckthorn have been controlled, but Norway maple has not yet been managed. Ms. Pingree. Great, thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Mr. Calvert. I will just point out before I go onto Mr. Amodei better management would go farther to stop the pine beetle. We have tremendous overgrowth in some of the forests in the West, and there are just too many trees per acre. That is causing distress with the lack of water, which is helping increase the problems. Mr. Amodei. ANTIQUITIES ACT Mr. Amodei. Thanks, Mr. Chairman. Madam Secretary, since you are kind of checking into that monument stuff, I would appreciate it you could check and see what your folks did, if anything, in support of the designation of the Basin Range National Monument before the actual designation. So if there was any sort of workups or anything else like that, just a general description of what you did pre-designation. [The information follows:] Basin Range National Monument The President designated Basin Range National Monument, located on public lands in southeastern Nevada, as a national monument on July 10, 2015. This national monument--located in one of the most remote and undeveloped areas of the state--exemplifies the rich cultural history, varied wildlife and vast open spaces with stunning views for which the state is known. The designation also preserves current uses of the land, including traditional ranching practices and ongoing military training operations, while ensuring that the land remains unspoiled for future generations. Prior to this designation, the Administration engaged in consultation with national, state, local, and tribal stakeholders. For example, in February 2015, Interior Deputy Secretary Mike Connor and Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Director Neil Kornze visited Las Vegas at the request of Senator Harry Reid and Congresswoman Dina Titus to hear from the community about its vision for conservation in southern Nevada. The BLM will prepare a management plan for the monument in formal cooperation with the State of Nevada, local governments, and tribes. The plan will be developed in an open process with maximum public involvement. Mr. Amodei. And the final point is this. I know you have made a point of saying, hey, we work with communities and stuff like that. There actually was a meeting before the Basin and Range designation, but I would represent to you that the attendance at that meeting was highly selective, and did not include some of the folks you would assume, counties affected, county commissioners, blah, blah, blah, blah. And so, while there may have been an indication to you, like, listen, we met with folks in the community, that is probably a true statement, but it might help to say what is the cross-section as opposed to like where do they live. Do they actually live in the community, and do they represent, because I know you guys are pro-diversity, diverse interests in the community. So with that, I yield back. Thanks, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Just one quick little comment on this pumping issue, Mike, so you will know this issue. [Laughter.] DELTA WATER Thirty-four days out of 80 from December 1 when the season started, the flows through the delta ranged from 20,000 CFS to 50,000 CFS. You had days where literally 98 percent of the water was flowing underneath the Golden Gate Bridge. It begs the question, how much water is necessary for a smelt population. And, you know, how long is this season where we have not been able to pump water. I hope that is over by now. I hope that this season is over with the smelt so we can start pumping this water. You do have the authority once you are convinced, that the smelt are no longer near the pumps, where you can pump in excess of 5,000 cubic feet per second. In case we do have significant storms, we have to take advantage of this. I am following this every single day. Mr. Connor. I never doubted that for a moment. [Laughter.] Mr. Calvert. Okay. All right. Thank you very much. We appreciate your coming, Madam Secretary, and have a wonderful day. Secretary Jewell. Thanks for the hard work of the committee and the staff. You guys do a really, really good job. Thanks. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. We are adjourned. [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] [ Thursday, March 3, 2016. BUDGET HEARING--OFFICE OF SURFACE MINING RECLAMATION AND ENFORCEMENT WITNESSES JOSEPH PIZARCHIK, DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF SURFACE MINING RECLAMATION AND ENFORCEMENT GLENDA OWENS, DEPUTY DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF SURFACE MINING RECLAMATION AND ENFORCEMENT RUTH STOKES, BUDGET OFFICER, OFFICE OF SURFACE MINING RECLAMATION AND ENFORCEMENT Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert Mr. Calvert. The hearing will come to order. Good morning. Director Pizarchik, at yesterday's hearing, the Secretary committed to everyone at this table--sorry. Hold on here. Excuse me. All right. I have got to start off with my first opening statement. Yes. I haven't had my coffee yet. The committee will come to order. Good morning, and welcome, Director. Thank you for joining us to discuss the 2017 budget request for the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement. I believe fiscal year 2012 was the last time we had a budget hearing with you. So thank you for coming back. We have seen many similar budget proposals from your office since then, and you have seen many similar responses from the committee in return. Last year, however, the budget proposed the POWER Plus initiative to accelerate Federal funding for the reclamation of abandoned mine land areas and to promote economic development in those local economies. Chairman Rogers, Congressman Jenkins, and I took a look and supported the overall concept. Several administrative components generated concerns, which prompted a retooled, streamlined approach that we thought should be tested in a few States before making changes to the underlying law. The Subcommittee has high expectations for the success of the pilot, including in the fiscal year 2016 Omnibus, and we will want to discuss our vision for successful implementation today. STATEMENT OF CHAIRMAN ROGERS I know that Chairman Rogers would like to be here today, but unfortunately, he has some other pressing commitments at this time. We ask that his testimony be entered into the record. [The statement of Chairman Rogers follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Mr. Calvert. As you know, his district in Kentucky is experiencing an unemployment crisis, and he asked me to convey his thanks for your partnership in implementing this AML pilot project. Despite these good faith efforts and recognition by the administration of the dire straits in coal country, I share in the chairman's disappointment that the Administration continues to pursue a ``keep it in the ground'' policy when it comes to coal. While innovative economic development initiatives are part of the solution, the Chairman knows we will not be able to turn this situation around or provide meaningful support to the 10,000 coal miners in his district who are out of work without regulatory relief. The Stream Protection Rule is a prime example of this overreach, and I trust you have seen the letter that Chairman Rogers and I sent to Secretary Jewell on February 4th, regarding the directives in the fiscal year 2016 Omnibus related to this rule. As we discussed with the Secretary yesterday, these directives reflect an agreement between Congress and the Administration that OSM has not been working with the States as partners. We would like to discuss how that will change this year. It is also timely that we have this hearing today so as we may recognize the Budget Officer, Ruth Stokes. Today is her last day, and it is only fitting that we offer her our gratitude for her many years of service to our country. I understand there is some room for interpretation regarding whether you are saying good-bye after 38 years versus 39 years. We will just round it up, just say 39 years, and I hope you have some good, independent trips outside of the budget cycle ahead of you, and we wish you the best in your retirement. With that, I would like to yield now to our ranking member from Minnesota, Ms. McCollum, if you would like to offer any opening remarks? OPENING REMARKS OF MS. MCCOLLUM Ms. McCollum. Thank you. I would like to welcome the Director to the Subcommittee, and I would like to thank you for being here. And congratulations to Ms. Stokes, and I wish you all the best in your new phase of life. Let us put it that way. I don't think women ever totally retire. The Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement is one of the smaller bureaus that the Department of Interior has, but it plays a vital role protecting society and our environment from the adverse effects of surface coal mining. Last year, we provided $90 million for reclamation and economic development grants that will all go to three Appalachian States. This was a significant funding infusion, increasing the budget by 60 percent. These funds will support important necessary environmental restoration and economic development in some of the Nation's most disadvantaged areas. These lands had been ravaged by the damaging effects of mountaintop mining. The legacy of poor environmental practices and lack of restoration has devastated communities, forcing them to contend with polluted drinking water, flooding, and the threat of leaky sludge dams. Now I agree that the Federal Government should step in and help these people who have been failed by mining companies that spoil the land and abandon their responsibilities. However, I do not think the Interior Bill is the appropriate place to fund this grant program. And Mr. Chairman, Minnesota has a history of mining taconite ore and logging. And in the 1930s, after we had almost clear cut from northeastern Minnesota all the way to the Canadian border and dug open pit mines and devastated our rivers, lakes, and streams, we realized we needed to come up with another plan. Part of it was to figure out a way to mine in a sustainable way. Part of it was to heal back the scars that we had created on the surface of Minnesota. And so the IRRRB was formed, which is funded very differently than how we are talking about funding today. But I say this, Mr. Chairman, because I know firsthand the devastation that continues from the loss of mining jobs up in northern Minnesota, the amount of money the State of Minnesota and the Federal Government has had to come in and spend in doing land reclamation sometimes when the timber companies and mining companies walked away from it. So I offer that in the spirit of wanting this to work, but I do want to be clear that I think there is another revenue stream or other ways in which we can move forward in the work that needs to be done in these Appalachian counties. And with that, I yield back. Mr. Calvert. I thank the gentlelady. Director? Oh, excuse me, Director, you are recognized for your opening statement. Opening Remarks of Director Pizarchik Mr. Pizarchik. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member McCollum, and Congressman Jenkins. I appreciate the invitation to testify here today on behalf of the Administration's fiscal year 2017 budget request for the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement. The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 established OSMRE for two basic purposes. Our primary obligation is to ensure coal mines are operated in accordance with the law to protect citizens and the environment during mining, and to restore the land and water after mining. The second basic purpose is to implement an abandoned mine land program to address the hazards and environmental damage caused from historic coal mining. SMCRA strikes a balance between protecting people and the environment while enough coal is mined to meet our energy needs, but prohibits the issuance of permits to mine coal where the land and water cannot be restored. Nearly 39 years have passed since SMCRA came into play, and coal remains an important fuel. It is used to generate about 34 percent of our nation's electricity. OSMRE is committed to proper implementation of the SMCRA, together with the States and Tribes. SMCRA has been a success at improving land reclamation, but when it comes to protecting our water and streams, we have significant opportunities to do better. We know more today than was known 40 years ago, and we continue to strive to completely implement the law to protect the people and the environment. The States, Tribes, and OSMRE have been successful restoring abandoned mine lands. For example, over 380,000 acres of high priority abandoned coal mines have been reclaimed. To put that in perspective, if all of those abandoned mine lands were in one place, it would cover an area about 10 times larger than Washington, D.C. Similarly, there were 3,443,188 feet of dangerous high walls, basically manmade cliffs, that were created by coal mining and abandoned mine lands that have been eliminated. If all of those high walls were lined up end to end, they would stretch clear from Washington, D.C. to Detroit, Michigan. We can take great pride in what has been accomplished, but it will take several billion dollars more to complete the job of reclaiming the abandoned coal mines. Please remember every community that has polluted waters or rivers or dangerous pits has been waiting at least 4 years to have their environment restored. In fiscal year 2016, we gave the States and Tribes $224.6 million of abandoned mine reclamation funds, but we were required to withhold more than $13 million of their money because of sequestration. The people of coal country should not be shortchanged by sequestration when we have their money. In this case, the Budget Control Act imposes impacts on some of our most needy people, and it does so in a way that actually, in my opinion, counteracts the goals of the Budget Control Act. I urge you to end this penalty on coal communities because since that law came into effect, we have been forced to withhold almost $71 million of money that we collected from the industry to provide to coal country, and there is, in my mind, no good reason why we should continue to do so. We ought to get that money on the ground where it can be used. Standing in stark contrast to the sequester is the $90 million, Mr. Chairman, that you referenced regarding the AML economic development funds provided in the Omnibus Bill. I commend Chairman Rogers and Congress for their efforts to help coal country communities. I commend each of you who voted for this appropriation. Your actions in this regard truly give meaning to the phrase of ``Government of the people, by the people, for the people.'' Working together, we can pass a budget that supports responsible coal mining and reclamation, and which protects coal miners and their families who have been abandoned by the mining companies. The 2017 budget request totals $157.9 million in discretionary spending, a decrease of $82.6 million from the 2016 enacted, and that is because of the one-time $90 million pilot project for grants to three Appalachian states for the reclamation of AML sites in conjunction with economic and community development. We believe our 2017 proposal more than offsets that with the $1 billion legislative proposal to promote reclamation of abandoned mine lands, to accelerate the disbursement of that money out of the AML fund. I again, commend Chairman Rogers and everyone who has joined him in sponsoring the RECLAIM Act. I think that is a very good step in the direction to help these communities that need assistance. And more importantly, we have their money. The discretionary budget provides full funding for the State and Tribal regulatory grants. It enables OSMRE to address existing legal obligations and demands, such as technical assistance to the States and tribes to help them do their jobs, to meet increased NEPA workload requirements for environmental assessments and environmental impact statements for mine plans and that area of evolving law, and to process State program amendments. It also invests in technology for the future. It proposes to expand the coal mine geographic information system and to enhance digitization of underground mine maps in order to protect miners and the public from the dangers of the abandoned underground coal mines. We propose to expand reforestation of our former mine lands to create job opportunities for our youth. We know that we have well in excess of 1 million acres of ground across the country that had been formerly forested, but it is basically grassland since mining and reclamation. On the abandoned mines, we propose $914.4 million in permanent appropriations. Of that is the $200 million a year that we propose to accelerate from the disbursement of the AML fund for power & projects. We propose funding the United Mine Workers of America Health and Benefit Trust Funds and for the 1974 pension plans for a total of $540.1 million, which includes the $375.4 million for the new proposal. That will provide healthcare for people who are losing their healthcare because of various bankruptcies in the coal industry. It will provide funding to OSMRE to provide to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Trust Corporation to shore up the 1974 pension plan, which is on the verge of insolvency and where the median retirement benefit is $270 a month. On this proposal and the legislative proposal to revitalize our communities for accelerating that disbursal, again I look forward to working with Chairman Rogers and every Member of Congress to accelerate the disbursement of that money out of the fund. There are also three other proposed changes to the current law. One would eliminate the payments to certified States and Tribes. Those are States and Tribes that have certified they have completed the reclamation of all of their abandoned coal mines. That is projected to save about $520 million over the next 10 years. There is a legislative proposal to restore the reclamation fee to the original levels from 1977, and that would generate about $49 million additional in 2017 that would go to the States in 2018 to reclaim high-priority abandoned coal mine sites. And there is a proposal to establish a hard rock AML program with a fee so the industry's problems that were created prior to the regulation of mining can be addressed, as the coal industry is planning to clean up the legacy that it had created. Finally, on February 4th, Chairman Rogers, Chairman Calvert, and others sent a letter to the Secretary raising some questions regarding the Stream Protection Rule, and in regards to those questions, the number one was ``What is OSMRE's plan and schedule for providing the information to the States?'' We have been collecting the reference documents from the proposed rule, and beginning on Monday, we started to upload those to regulations.gov to make them available to the States who have requested information and anybody else, for that matter. Earlier this week, we sent a letter to 16 different States providing those details. We are not uploading the copyrighted material because, by law, if we were to make that available or copy it, we would be violating the copyright law. What we have provided are explanations and guidance to the States on how they can access those copyrighted materials, as well as working with them to provide those copyrighted materials in a way we can. We have offered the services of our librarian in that regard. On the second question, it was ``What is the manner we plan to accommodate State requests for meeting?'' As I indicated, to date we have had, I think, 16 requests from the States to meet. In my response to the States that went out earlier this week, we have proposed to schedule time at the upcoming Interstate Mining Compact Commission in mid April for the States and OSMRE to meet. We believe it is the most efficient way for everybody to get together. It will allow all the States who are planning on being there to have the benefit of having that meeting with us without any additional cost or expense. And the third question was ``How will the results of the meeting be incorporated into the administrative record?'' Our plan is to prepare a summary or summaries of that and have it included in the administrative record that we are producing for that rule. With that, Mr. Chairman, the last point is I thank you again for the opportunity to be here today. My full statement has been provided for the record, and at this point, I am available for questions. [The statement of Director Pizarchik follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] STREAM PROTECTION RULE Mr. Calvert. Thank you for your testimony. Yesterday, we had the Secretary testify, as you know, and she committed at this table that the department would fully comply with the stream buffer directives in the fiscal year 2016 Omnibus Appropriations Bill. There were multiple opportunities for the Secretary to inform Chairman Rogers and this Committee that you sent letters to the States this week outlining what information is publicly available and where the States may find it if they look in the right places. Unfortunately, we were not told until after the hearing, and it is not clear as to whether that decision was strategic or circumstantial. Regardless, it casts a cloud on what would have been a good faith effort to begin to repair a 5-year dysfunctional relationship with the States and finally work with them as partners. Instead, it appears to be business as usual for those who have been working on this issue day in and day out. Further, as my good friend Ms. McCollum can attest, there are times when the laws enacted by Congress may require some clarification, especially when there is give and take on both sides to reach an agreement. That happens, and we are always happy to provide clarification of the offices under our jurisdiction so we are all on the same page. To quickly review how fiscal year 2016 transpired, the Committee directive to OSM started as a directive to stand down on the Stream Buffer Rule because OSM failed to work with the States as cooperating agencies. For years, OSM has broken its word to the States. Where Chairman Rogers and I come from, you are only as good as your word. And that means something. We are kind of old school in that regard. OSM had broken the trust of its State partners, and States with both Democratic and Republican leadership withdrew from the process as their voices were repeatedly ignored. The common denominator was OSM. In order to put a final appropriations package together for fiscal year 2016, the Congress, the White House, the House, the Senate, and the Committee as a whole had to agree on how to resolve this issue. While there may have been some disagreement on the initial approach, the Committee as a whole agreed that OSM needed to reengage with the States as partners in this process. So, Director, in order to avoid any confusion, any ambiguity, or any alternate interpretation of the Committee's direction or intent, Chairman Rogers and I and my fellow Committee members fully expect you to work with the States as cooperating agencies, as you have collectively agreed in 2010. The source documents you have, they will now have, not Web links and not an address of a library where they may obtain the information. The analysis you have, they will have. The conclusions you reach, they need to agree with. Equally, the conclusions they reach, you need to agree with. Otherwise, there isn't going to be a rule. For 5 years, OSM's work on this rulemaking has been proven to be a one-way street. That is over. The Congress and the Administration have agreed that you collectively need to work together. I trust that your letters to the States this week serve as the first step in the process of information sharing, and April 18th will be the first of many meetings with the States in order to foster a substantial dialogue and exchange of ideas. But I need to verify that. Can you please do so for the committee? Can you please verify for us that the letters this week are the first step to reengage in a meaningful partnership with the States, including the first exchange of data and the first of many meetings? I don't want our first exchange at this table to be one where I find you in violation of a directive of this committee. Mr. Pizarchik. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. We have provided documents and made them available beginning last summer when we published the proposed rule. In October, we have also extended an invitation for the States to reengage on the preparation of the EIS, and we have had at least 15 meetings with various States on comments that they have provided during the comment period to get more clarification on that. Assistant Secretary Schneider has visited Alaska and is planning on visiting North Dakota as well. The letter that I sent out yesterday is another step in our process to reengage the States. The States were involved in the beginning of the process. They provided many substantive comments. Their comments were very helpful in fashioning the final EIS, and we again extended the offer to meet with them. We did it in October. We did it again yesterday. We will continue to attempt to engage with the States and to work with them to get their input. Mr. Calvert. And they want to work with you. They have made it very clear that they want a meaningful partnership, and so are you committing that you are going to work with the States and have a number of meetings and exchange information with them? Mr. Pizarchik. We have already extended that invitation back in October, and again, the one I sent out yesterday is to the 16 States that have requested. But we are willing to meet with any of those States because of that special relationship that we have between my Agency and the States as the primary regulators. We will meet with them. If they want to meet before then, fine. But we are attempting to get their input and to reengage them in it. Right now, I have made the offer, and yesterday I spoke with Greg Conrad, the Executive Director of the Interstate Mining Compact Commission, and he indicated to me that he would be talking with his members to see what their response would be. We have made the offer. We made the offer in October. We made the offer again, and they will have to accept for us to have a meaningful exchange. You know, I can only keep offering, but I can't have a meaningful exchange if they choose not to meet with me. Mr. Calvert. Well, I am sure we will be hearing from the States to determine what they think. Ms. McCollum. Ms. McCollum. Not at this time, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Mr. Jenkins. SPENDING ON THE STREAM PROTECTION RULE Mr. Jenkins. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Director, thanks for being here. The question came up yesterday. The Secretary was asked how much money had been spent on the Stream Protection Rule. I assume over the last 24 hours you all have had a chance to nail down that number, and hopefully, you are prepared to tell us how much has been spent on the Stream Protection Rule over these last 5, 6, 7, years? Mr. Pizarchik. Thank you, Congressman Jenkins. Yes, we have been tracking that. There has been interest in it. And we have spent approximately $6.5 million for contract support on preparing the rule with the draft environmental impact statement and the regulatory impact analysis, and then we also have spent $4.1 million for our staff time working on documents, attending public hearings, responding to comments, meeting with the States, et cetera. Mr. Jenkins. So, the total amount spent in its entirety from its initiation many years ago, OSM has spent $10.5 million? Mr. Pizarchik. Actually, I think it is about $10.6 million. STREAM PROTECTION RULE--INFORMATION TO THE STATES Mr. Jenkins. Now, back to the issue that the Chairman raised. I want to point out the operative words in the language that, again, the Secretary yesterday said the Department would fully comply with. Those are, as the Chair said reengage, meaningful manner, before finalization. Reengage, meaningful, and before finalization. I really want there to be emphasis on each of those as we move forward. The States received this March 1st letter from your office, and I have listened to your testimony carefully, and I have listened to your answers to the Chairman's questions. I think, clearly, you are not satisfying the first two and, hopefully, not the third piece of this. Number one, the idea that you would send just a letter and then simply include over 100 pages of bibliography. Then putting it in the laps of the States to say here is a conference or here is a document or here is a book or here is a study, and if you want to go out and check it out, fine. What we said is OSM is directed to provide the States with all technical reports, et cetera. So my question to you is do you believe, based on this letter, based on what has already been uploaded, and based on what you say will continue to be uploaded, do you think you have complied with the directives of providing all of the data and reports? Is all you are going to do is post things, or are you going to be packaging up the items that we have asked for, and actually send them to the States? Mr. Pizarchik. Congressman Jenkins, we had a number of requests that came in from the States. And I believe, if I remember correctly, a number of them asked for us to provide a list first, and then they would decide which ones they wanted copies of. We have gone beyond that by uploading things to the regulations.gov site so they have access to it. We had heard some concerns that perhaps some of the Web sites or links that were referenced in the published documents were not working. We have taken steps to make sure they have access available to all of those. I am not sure that the States would have appreciated having huge volumes of written materials submitted to them. We are giving them the opportunity, pursuant to a request, to look at what it is they want, and we are working with them to try to give them access in a reasonable manner so that they have the opportunity to look at these. Mr. Jenkins. Well, I will be satisfied if what you are describing is that you are allowing the States to decide how best they would like to review everything. I think I just heard you say if West Virginia, for example, my State, requested all of the material pursuant to this in writing, in document form, you would provide that? AVAILABILITY OF COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL Mr. Pizarchik. We have it already provided and up on the Web site or on the plate where every document that is not subject to copyright is available for them. Mr. Calvert. If the gentleman would yield on that point? When you say something that is not subject to copyright, if the United States Government enters into an agreement with a contractor to provide a technical report, who is it owned by? The author of that report or by the United States, who paid for that report? Mr. Pizarchik. I believe if you are talking about the report itself that was prepared by the contractor, I think that would be owned by the Government. Mr. Calvert. I just want to clarify that. Then a report that is done on behalf of the United States Government is owned by the Government, and I don't believe that would be subject to any copyright rule. Mr. Pizarchik. I am not a copyright expert on that. I will defer to your judgment on that. But my understanding is that is not what we are talking about. Some of the report that we prepared references a variety of studies and reports. Some of those documents were subject to copyright. Mr. Calvert. If those reports are being used to create a conclusion in order--which we are talking about, then those reports should be made public and made part of the information to provide it to the States. Mr. Pizarchik. Mr. Chairman, all I can say is in discussing this with our lawyers, my understanding is if we were to take copyrighted material and make copies of it and distribute it to folks, that we would be violating copyright laws. Mr. Calvert. I find that---- Mr. Pizarchik. And I don't think anybody wants us to do that. I know I certainly don't want to be doing that. Ms. McCollum. Mr. Chairman, maybe we should ask CRS, which has a Copyright Division, to get back to this Committee on that? Would that be helpful to all of us? Mr. Calvert. Yes. I would like to find that out specifically. Ms. McCollum. Let us direct the committee staff to find that out then for us. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. If it is information that potentially is being withheld, we need to know that. Yes, thank you. Mr. Jenkins. In your testimony, you said one of the reasons you were pursuing this course is that you didn't think the States ``would appreciate'' just sending a lot of material. What that tells me is that you would be willing, if they did appreciate you sending all of the materials, that you would do so. So don't suggest you thought what they would appreciate and then turn around and say but even if they do want it, we are not going to do it. STREAM PROTECTION RULE--MEETING WITH STATES My next question is the issue of SPR meetings. Part of the fundamental operation of this directive is the fact that each State is unique, when you go back 30 years and look at why this process was formed in the first place. I hear you talking about a process, and I want to try to be very clear. With regard to your offer of having a group meeting, once the States have had a chance over these next weeks and months to view 100 pages of bibliography in whatever form they can ultimately get the documents in, each State is going to want to sit with you and have a discussion and talk about the implications for their State. Can you reassure me that it is not the position of OSM that the meeting on this particular date that you have suggested in April satisfies the meeting request requirement of the congressional directive? And then if my State of West Virginia wants to reengage-- which they have already sent you a letter that they do--and wants to meet after looking at this in April or May or June, that you will afford them the individual opportunity and that you will not just check the box for the meeting requirement at the April meeting? Mr. Pizarchik. Thank you for that question. We received your State's request I believe yesterday and responded to it. And at this point, we have the invitation out to the States to meet. We are waiting for them to respond. I am still waiting for the States like your State and other States to respond to the invitation I sent in October to reengage. None of them have responded to that. And at this point, you know, we are making our effort to do that, and I apologize for making an assumption on what maybe the States were thinking. We have made all the documents or are making all the documents available that are not subject to copyright so they have access to those and they have the opportunity to look at those documents themselves and to evaluate which ones they want to review. Mr. Jenkins. Let us go back to the meeting. I hear that we have addressed the document. If, after a thorough examination of these documents, our State wants to sit down with OSM at an appropriate time, one on one, reengage with our State, whether that be in April or May or June, to have a substantive discussion, are you willing to do that? And I just want to make sure that you do not think that you can check the meeting requirement box based on this proposed April meeting. Mr. Pizarchik. Mr. Congressman, in regards to meeting with folks from your State, we had the invitation back in October. We met with them. My Deputy Director and Assistant Secretary met with them. I believe it was in February. Mr. Jenkins. But the states didn't have these documents back then. We didn't have all the things that you are still loading. I understand this needs to be a process. We put it in the requirement in the law. You are still uploading it. Even by your own admission, the documents are not all up yet. You have over 100 pages of bibliographical references. If you are really sincere about reengaging and working together, give us time to work through the documents, analyze, study them, and then sit down with you and talk about the implications to our State. Would you do that? Mr. Pizarchik. Congressman, many of those documents have been available to the States since July. Mr. Jenkins. But not all. Have all of them? Mr. Pizarchik. Not all, and they will be. Mr. Jenkins. Not all of them. Then give us time. Give us time. Mr. Pizarchik. And we are doing that. We have--they are being uploaded. They might even already be done today. I haven't checked this morning with the staff on that, but those ones that are being uploaded---- Mr. Jenkins. I have got one more question, Mr. Chair. Clearly, you can't bring yourself to say we are going to give you a chance to look at all the documents, and give the states a chance to sit down with you individually and talk about it. You keep talking about what is already up or what OSM is still putting up. So I will follow up with you, but my clear belief is the requirement in the law that Secretary Jewell says you will comply with is to reengage, provide all the material, and meet with the States individually before finalization. I was very concerned during your testimony when I heard that you would provide a summary of the engagement from the States. What I expect is that the product where States work with you--in whatever form or fashion--that the individual State's comments are submitted for the administrative rulemaking record. Further, you should give substantive responses just like a normal comment period. Can you assure me that all the States' input, each and every State, will be conveyed individually and not in summary format? I am reacting to when you said ``prepare summaries and put it in the administrative record.'' That clearly does not meet with our expectations. Will you assure us that it will not be just simply summaries, and that you will allow for specific input of the comments and then the feedback from each and every State into the administrative record? TIMING OF THE STREAM PROTECTION RULE Mr. Pizarchik. Congressman Jenkins, as I understand your request, basically, you are asking us to reopen the comment period, and unfortunately, no, we are not going to reopen the comment period. The comment period was open back last summer. We extended it. We had the documents available for the States. Beginning earlier this year, we got some of the requests in. So we are making all those documents available, and the links may not have worked on that. We will meet with the States. We will obtain their input. But we are not going to reopen the comment period, and we are going to get this rule done. Mr. Jenkins. Well, when will the rule be done? Mr. Pizarchik. Our hope is to have it done this summer. Mr. Jenkins. Do you know what the date is? Mr. Pizarchik. I do not. I have learned many times in this process that it is not possible for me to predict when a rule will be proposed or finalized on that. There are too many steps in the process outside of my control. Mr. Jenkins. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Mr. Joyce. ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF THE STREAM PROTECTION RULE Mr. Joyce. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Director Pizarchik, certainly you recognize that the imposition of the proposed Stream Protection Rule has the potential impact and regulatory cost that will force thousands of miners in Ohio to lose their jobs and companies to go bankrupt. What are your plans to cope with the significant reclamation liability that will be realized as a result of excessive mine defaults? Mr. Pizarchik. Mr. Congressman, I would have to disagree with your assessment. The Stream Protection Rule is only proposed. It has not caused any bankruptcies. It has not caused any job losses. It is not in effect yet. We are still working on consideration of the comments that we have received on the proposed rule, and we will be making changes as appropriate in response to the comments that have come in on that. Mr. Joyce. None of these companies are going to come back into existence. Mr. Pizarchik. I believe that if they have gone out of business, there are other forces that are at play. There are market forces, cheap shale gas. Cheap, plentiful shale gas is taking market share away from coal. You have the economic downturn around the world. You have the Chinese economy slowing down. Their imports are dropping on that. They have been overproducing coal. This rule has not had any impacts on the industry. This rule isn't even final yet. So from the standpoint of any impacts or job losses on that, that is not here. And then with the analysis that we have completed that was peer reviewed by outside experts, our calculations are that what was proposed, at most, would be about a wash. It would be about 270-some jobs that would be lost over a 21-year period, with about 250 or 260 new jobs created over that same 21-year period. This rule does not have and will not have significant adverse impacts on employment. Mr. Joyce. That is interesting. Mr. Calvert. Will the gentleman yield for a second? Are you saying that this regulation, as you interpret it, has no impact on employment in coal country? Mr. Pizarchik. No. Mr. Calvert. Just for the record, we would like to have that. Mr. Pizarchik. What I have said is that based on the assessments that have been performed. Mr. Calvert. And you agree with those assessments? Mr. Pizarchik. We hired outside experts to perform that analysis because we believe that it would be more credible with the public and everybody else if those assessments were performed by outside experts. Mr. Calvert. But you agree with those assessments? Mr. Pizarchik. Those assessments are in the draft regulatory impact analysis, et cetera. And from the standpoint that was proposed and the whole purpose of the rulemaking and the proposed process is to get comments on that, that will be factored into it. We will see what changes are appropriate to be made based on public input. Mr. Calvert. I will take that you agree with those assessments, and obviously---- Mr. Pizarchik. I do not disavow them. Mr. Calvert [continuing]. The industry, when they anticipate a regulatory cost, they must be wrong about that because, based upon your assessment, there is no cost. Mr. Joyce. BASELINE DATA REQUIREMENTS Mr. Joyce. How will the primacy State regulatory agencies be able to cope with the added responsibilities and authorities being proposed in the Stream Protection Rule? It seems obvious that the cost in time and money to the States and the miners will be increased as a result of the SPR. How would this not be the case? Mr. Pizarchik. The way the States can adjust to that is they have an option under the rules. They can either gather the baseline data to determine what types of resources are in the streams out there prior to mining, do the monitoring, et cetera, and then ensure that the streams are restored after the mining. A mining company has the option to choose whether they want to mine through the stream or the States can give literal interpretation to their existing rules and not allow the streams to be eliminated through mining or being buried. And if they do that, that is a less effort on their part. They won't have to gather as much baseline data. They won't have to get into some of the other new standards that are designed to protect streams. And let us face it, the law has always had a provision in it that prohibits permits from being issued where it is not possible to restore the land to its original conditions and productivity. And land without water or land with polluted water does not meet those requirements. What we are proposing is to gather the appropriate information so that we know what is in these streams before mining, the water quality, the critters that are living in it, and so we can measure whether the mining reclamation is successful or not. And in some areas I am sure that mining will be able to be restored, and other areas I am sure that they cannot get a permit and should never have gotten a permit to do that mining because it does not comply with the Federal legal requirements. Mr. Joyce. That is why you feel it is necessary to be involved in stream biology? Mr. Pizarchik. The stream biology is a good indicator of what is happening in the stream. If the critters can live in the stream prior to mining and during mining and after the mining, then we have been successful in the mining reclamation. If the critters living in the stream were there before mining, but during mining they get wiped out, and after mining, they are wiped out, then obviously there was a failure to comply with the regulatory and the statutory legal requirements governing coal mining reclamation. Mr. Joyce. I have exceeded my time, I know, Mr. Chairman. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Ms. McCollum. PROTECTION OF WATER RESOURCES Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I have been part of this discussion for a while now, and there is a lot of tension and conflict surrounding the Stream Protection Rule. But the basic part of this rule is to protect water resources. And as we sit around the table, we don't place a value on water until it is gone or we can't drink it--Flint, the drought in California, some of the other places where water crises have happened around the country. Then all of a sudden, water has a value. Water has a value then because, whether it is for agriculture sustaining us through food or whether it is sustaining us through drinking water, then we start talking about water as a right. And I believe access to clean drinking water is a human right. Therefore, we have a responsibility to make sure that we work with industry, that we work with States, that we work with local units of government to protect the ability for all of us in this country to have the right to clean drinking water, the right to have water available for agriculture, the right to have water available for recreation and for fishing, or for the health of the fishing industry. I believe that right to clean water is at the heart of this rule, and I know that there is tension on how we get there. But if we don't assess that water does have a value to begin with, it is very easy to discount this gift that has been given us that is life sustaining. I know all of us around the table want to get to the point where we find that balance, and it is hard to find it sometimes. We must find that balance where industry can move forward, agriculture can move forward, recreation can move forward. But the bottom line is, future generations will judge us on how we protected this basic life source of water. The tension is natural, but we have to remember when we start this equation we don't have a dollar value on water when we talk about it. It is only when it is gone or it is so polluted that we can't use it that all of a sudden we say, ``What happened to the water?'' Could you tell me a little bit more about the goals and the objectives just for public health--forget the recreation for now--that you are trying to accomplish? Mr. Pizarchik. One of the primary purposes of the rule and the standards is to establish what kind of water is out there to begin with. And our law has always prohibited causing material damage to the hydrologic balance outside the permit area. That is a mouthful. But we have never defined that. We are proposing to define that based on the existing conditions that are out there and to gather the baseline data to prevent those water resources from being polluted, and protect people's health. We know that in some areas selenium can be mobilized by mining. It bioacculumates. It causes reproductive problems in the aquatic community, and it can cause health problems at too high levels in people. And if people are drinking that water or eating those fish that have high levels of selenium, it can have adverse impacts. There are also any number of studies that purport to show that there are adverse health effects near where there is extensive coal mining going on. We need to get answers to these questions in order to make sure that the people there are not being accidentally poisoned or to assure people that there is no danger. Whichever the case is, we have to get to the bottom of that. But protecting the water, taking the measures and requiring identification of what is there and to prevent the mining from causing pollution that causes those kind of water problems is the first step. And we feel that if you protect the most sensitive critters that are living in those streams, that you are going to be protecting the water so that the people who live in those communities are protected as well. Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chair. And Mr. Chair, we found out taconite tailings in our State, from mining, caused cancer, and we had to go through a very extensive process. So I am actually glad we are being proactive in studying these impacts. We have to find a balance, Mr. Jenkins. But we have to be proactive because some of the things that are lurking out there are potential carcinogens. Thank you. UNBIASED SCIENCE Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Quick comment, and I am going to recognize Mr. Jenkins. I used to chair the Environment Committee on Science, and one thing we need to make sure of, no matter what your position may be in some of the various issues that we have before us, that the science is untainted. Because I have seen a lot of science on both sides that have a political ramification to it. So science is science. It should be unbiased and not for a particular purpose. Mr. Jenkins. COMPLIANCE WITH OMNIBUS LANGUAGE Mr. Jenkins. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I just want to summarize real briefly. I think this hearing and having you here is a real opportunity to let us air out and have an open discussion about expectations. I just wanted, for the record, to make it very clear that I think a Web site, a two-page letter with 100 pages of bibliography, a meeting in April, and then a summary of comments is not meaningful. So, I look forward to working with the Chair of this Subcommittee and the full Committee to try to reengage OSM so we can reiterate what truly would be a meaningful process to satisfy what everybody agrees is mandatory. So I think we have cleared up here that, in my opinion, what you are proposing does not satisfy the meaningful requirement. So we look forward to working with you to try to work towards an understanding of what would be meaningful. AML ECONOMIC AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT Secondly, relating to AML, the $90 million pilot program. One of the questions that has risen is are those projects that that money will be able to be used for, are they restricted to just those, those pre-1967 sites, or can it be sites post-1967? So the $30 million for West Virginia, are the properties that a project that has an AML nexus, can the funding be used even if it was an abandoned mine from 5 years ago, not 50 years ago? Mr. Pizarchik. Congressman Jenkins, that is a very good point to make. The Surface Mining Act drew the line at August 3, 1977, when it became effective. Mr. Jenkins. '77? Mr. Pizarchik. Yes. Mr. Jenkins. Are you applying that '77 line for this special $90 million project? I am hoping you don't. Mr. Pizarchik. I am going to follow the law, and the way the Surface Mining Act is written, there are two distinct categories. There is Title 5, which deals with active mining. That is all mining that has occurred since August 3, 1977, and AML money, this $90 million, cannot be used on those types of sites. The law only allows us to use it for sites that were mined and abandoned prior to August 3, 1977. So that is where the nexus is, and that is the standard. You know, we have to carry out the law, and that is how it is provided. Mr. Jenkins. From the follow-up discussion with Chairman Rogers and myself, have you all come up with ways in which to expedite and facilitate getting projects approved, getting this money out there? Mr. Pizarchik. We are working on that. And as one of the follow-ups, we are drafting guidance to help with that, and we are putting together some meetings with the State AML folks, with EDA and ARC and the State economic development folks, to get everybody together to help identify those projects so they can move forward more quickly. The process that we use for funding the grants is the expedited grant process, and we continue to do that. We will do it in a manner that will allow those projects to go as quickly forward as possible in light of the various other legal requirements that come into play. But, yes. Mr. Calvert. If the gentleman would yield for a moment? Mr. Jenkins. Yes. Mr. Calvert. The pilot made no distinction on the pre-1977 sites or sites after 1977. So I want to make that clear. So I want to make sure that there is a difference between the pilot program that has passed in law versus the AML. Mr. Pizarchik. Mr. Chairman, we will go back and I will ask the lawyer to take a look at it. But my understanding from the previous analysis that was performed where the addition was made is that it is pre-1977. Mr. Calvert. Well, certainly if you want the intent of this Committee, the Committee's intent is that the pilot program language is what is in law. IMPORTANCE OF SCIENCE Mr. Pizarchik. Thank you for sharing that. If I may, on your comment about the science, about needing to have a good basis. Secretary Huffman from West Virginia several months ago had asked for help on assessing some of the science that is out there, as whether or not health problems are being caused by coal mining in West Virginia. And we have reached out to the National Academy of Sciences, and we are working with them to try to bring them onboard to bring in the appropriate experts to look at the science that has been done and evaluate that for the purposes of making a determination is that good science or not? AML PILOT PROGRAM Mr. Calvert. Mr. Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins. Mr. Chairman, thank you for bringing that up, and I appreciate your sensitivity. I know you have been fully engaged. I share your feelings. We have sat with OSM directly to raise our concerns that they are imposing additional criteria, standards, and requirements for this pilot project that are applicable under traditional AML funds. I know that was not the intent. It was not the letter of the law. We are trying to politely encourage and prod OSM to not treat it in the traditional way, but in the manner in which we intended. And we are trying to make progress. But thank you for that comment. This was not intended to be restricted to pre- 1977. ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF THE STREAM PROTECTION RULE My last comment, Mr. Chairman. You raised your attention to the jobs issue. This is why this whole issue is so important, relating to the stream protection rule, stream buffer zone. By their own analysis or by their supposed independent analysis, they think that there will be 260 lost jobs nationally, 260, and there would be 250 jobs created by compliance and that the entire net impact is 10 jobs. We have independent studies that suggest that the jobs impact just in Appalachia will be 50,000 and 60,000 jobs. So when you are talking about a net 10 jobs nationally versus just in my neck of the woods, 40,000 and 50,000 jobs, there is a gulf of disagreement. That is why we need true reengagement, and getting these documents that OSM hasn't been willing to share before despite repeated FOIAs. We have got to get to the bottom of this. And this idea that we are rushing to September of 2016 after 6, 7 years of effort, we know why they are rushing. It is obvious. But we put directives in the law and Secretary Jewell says it is a requirement. OSA needs to reengage. It needs to be meaningful before you finalize the rule. So, once again, do not finalize until you satisfy what the Secretary agrees is a requirement that you must reengage in a meaningful manner. I have said it clearly from my perspective here, what you are outlining, what you have clearly stated is--in my opinion, is not meaningful. Mr. Calvert. I thank the gentleman. Any additional questions, Ms. McCollum? APPLICATION OF AML PROJECT REQUIREMENTS IN PILOT PROGRAM Ms. McCollum. Well, not a question, just a comment: I understand the discussion about the pilot program, and I get the difference between post-1977 and legacy mining. But, for the record, I want to reiterate again that this $90 million coming out of the Interior budget is concerning to me because we have so many unmet needs. And I would point out that Minnesota figured out quickly that the taconite companies had to be part and parcel of the future, of moving forward and being part of the reclamation. Appalachia is feeling a lot of pain right now, and I agree that we want to see this issue be resolved. But I also want to be very clear that funding going forward to do this can't be literally at the expense of other communities. Other mining communities have figured out other ways to reclaim some of this money. So I look forward to working with you, Mr. Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins. Thank you. Can I very politely--would you yield for one moment? Ms. McCollum. Yes. Mr. Jenkins. Thank you very much. The distinction is, in my opinion, this money--and you are very appropriate if we were taking money from AML that would be potentially used for other projects. The $90 million is not coming from AML. While it is going through Interior, this came from the Treasury. So this is not AML money. It is not taking from Peter for Paul. So that is our issue is it is the source of this money. While the mechanism involves OSM, it is not traditional AML money. Ms. McCollum. And I understand that, Mr. Jenkins. But as things change and as budget discussions happen, I just want to lay a marker that it not come out of Interior. Thank you very much. And thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. I thank everybody. I apologize. I know that this is a very important subject, but we have a BLM hearing that is starting right after this, and so I must adjourn this hearing. Thank you for your attendance. I appreciate it. [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] Thursday, March 3, 2016. BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT WITNESS NEIL KORNZE, DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert Mr. Calvert. The committee will come to order. We are going to have some votes here shortly, so what I want to attempt to do is to get through the opening statements, and then we will be able to come back for our Q&A after votes. I want to say good morning to Director Neil Kornze, and I want to welcome him and his wife, Beckett, and their new 3- year, or 3-month-old baby, I should say. [Laughter.] Okay, 3-month-old baby. Ms. McCollum. Super cute, you can add that. Mr. Calvert. And super cute, as amended. Mr. Kornze. Mara and Beckett are right over there. Mr. Calvert. Okay. Well, again, good morning. Today we have our hearing on the President's budget request for the Bureau of Land Management for Fiscal Year 2017. I would like to welcome Neil Kornze, the director of Bureau of Land Management, to the subcommittee. Thank you for being here. As the manager of more than 245 million acres of the Nation's land and 700 million acres of its subsurface mineral state, BLM is on the forefront of every land management issue facing the Nation today. BLMs programs, policies, and decisions, especially affect Americans in the West and certainly in my own home State of California. The President's budget proposes $1.3 billion for BLM for Fiscal Year 2017. Overall this is a $7.1 million increase over Fiscal Year 2016. However, this seemingly moderate increase actually is much larger because of the fee proposals in the request. We have many topics to discuss today regarding BLM's management of public lands and its funding request. I am certain we will cover the fee proposals, funding increases for hydraulic fracturing, and other oil and gas regulations, and the status of the Sage-grouse conservation effort. We will also cover the proposed improvement to the Wild Horse and Burro Program, and BLM's plans for newly designated national monuments in California. Once again, I have to express my disappointment with the proposals to collect $16.5 million from a new fee for grazing permits and $48 million for a new fee for oil and gas inspection. We all know that Congress has rejected these proposals in the past. I expect that we will reject them in the Fiscal Year 2017 budget. The appropriations process is not the appropriate forum to debate these issues. They are best left to our colleagues in the authorizing committees. BLM is proposing a $15.2 million increase to implement new rules and regulations for its onshore Oil and Gas Program. Well, not all of this is for the new rules. I do find it somewhat presumptuous to ask for an increase when the hydraulic fracturing rule is stayed and may be for some time, and the methane and waste reduction rule is in the early stages of its comment period. When these two regulations are considered along with the proposed changes to the planning process, BLM sure seems to be focused on a lot of new regulations these days. Although we did not expect to be able to make significant investments in BLM's programs when we first started the Fiscal Year 2016 process, I am pleased that we were able to do so in a few places. Most significant was the $45 million increase for Sage- grouse conservation. The budget requests an additional $19 million, including $5 million to implement the National Seed Strategy for Fiscal Year 2017. The funding provided last year was primarily intended to put into place on-the-ground conservation measures to help restore Sage-grouse habitat and the sagebrush ecosystem. We will need to know whether progress is being made with the existing funding as we wait for the request for additional funds. Some States continue to have concerns with the resource management plans for Sage-grouse and proposed mineral withdrawal. Thank you for your letter responding to the subcommittee's report language and explaining how BLM worked with the States. I encourage you to continue these efforts and develop additional guidance, which would help clarify the implementation process and provide certainty to the States and other partners. Before I close, I would like to mention the proposal to establish a BLM foundation. This subcommittee is interested in this concept. It has proven to be a successful model for the Department of Interior and Department of Agriculture agencies. It also has the potential to supplement and complement BLM's work. However, Congress needs a legislative proposal in order to move forward, and I hope that is coming soon. Again, I want to thank you for being here today. I look forward to your testimony, and I yield to my good friend, Ms. McCollum, for her opening remarks. Opening Remarks of Ranking Member McCollum Ms. McCollum. Thank you, and I would like to welcome Director Kornze to the subcommittee. Thank you for being here this morning, and for bringing a delightful treat along with you, your new child. The BLM has one of the most challenging missions within the Department of Interior. BLM is responsible for 247 million acres of public land and a broad spectrum of natural resources that those lands provide. For Fiscal Year 2017, the Agency is proposing a modest budget that is $7 million more than Fiscal Year 2016 level, while strategically directing funding to the high priorities and proposing reasonable user fees to cover the cost of oversight. The proposed budget continues BLM's commitment to Sage- grouse conservation, requesting additional funds to restore the stage steppe ecosystem. Additionally, the budget requests $5 million for the National Seed Strategy to support collection and research activities for seeds that are critical to BLM's ability to restore lands damaged by drought, invasive species, and catastrophic wildfires. I am also pleased to see that the budget includes an increase for cultural resource protection in the Natural Conservation Lands. These heritage resources and ecological treasures are part of America's history and should be cared for and preserved for future generations. BLM's budget builds upon the robust investments we made last year to the Land and Water Conservation Fund to promote protection and conservation of natural landscapes and resources. The LWCF also supports access by hunters and anglers, which is something Chairman Simpson and I agree is a key priority for public lands. The budget includes investments for the Oil and Gas Program. The Administration once again has proposed new authority for BLM to collect onshore oil and gas inspection fees. Resulting revenue would cover the cost of BLM's onshore inspections and activities to help ensure that the extraction operations are safe, environmentally responsible, and ensure a fair return to the taxpayer. This new fee authority would also bring parity to how the Federal government treats offshore and onshore oil and gas inspections. Appropriately managing American people's lands and ensuring that these precious resources are available for both current and future generations is a solemn responsibility you carry out, sir. We depend on our public lands for a variety of uses, including ranching, energy development, recreation, hunting, and conservation. The way we use our public lands have grown and changed over the years, and will continue to evolve in the future. And it is understandable that there will sometimes be competing and often conflicting ideas on how we should prioritize and use our lands, but these disagreements should be discussed and debated peacefully and lawfully. There should be no tolerance for threats of violence or intimidation against public servants who are truly the caretakers of our lands. No one is above the law. So, Director, I appreciate the work that you and all the employees of the Bureau of Land Management do, and I look forward to your testimony. And I thank you for the courtesy of an opening statement, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Ms. McCollum, with your concurrence, I think we should just recess for a few minutes, go and vote, and we will come back for your opening statement. So we will be in recess. [Recess.] Opening Remarks of Director Kornze Mr. Calvert. Reconvene. Director, you may begin your opening statement. Mr. Kornze. Thank you very much, Chairman, Ranking Member, members of the Committee. I think as you know, the Bureau of Land Management manages 13 percent of the Nation's lands and about a third of its minerals and soils. We manage these lands under the dual framework of multiple use and sustainable yield, which is a mandate from Congress, which hits its 40th anniversary this year. Our professionals throughout the country, but particularly in the West, have very hard choices to make every day, and they work diligently to make sure that the public has a serious role and voice in the work that we do. We are proud to play a major role in the Nation's economy supporting oil and gas development, all kinds of recreation, ranching, hunting and fishing, helium production, forest management, wildland firefighting. We even have weather stations, and we work with reindeer herders in Alaska. We do a little bit of everything. The Agency in total helped support more than 450,000 jobs last year. Additionally, we are one of only a handful of agencies in the entire government that brings back more revenue than we receive in appropriations. In fact, for every dollar that you provide to us, we return about five. Now, I want to highlight a few areas from our budget, and I will move quickly through these, but I will start with greater Sage-grouse. This one is for you, Mark. [Laughter.] Mr. Amodei. Thank you, Neil. Mr. Kornze. The BLM has made great strides in the past year helping to lead a West-wide effort with governors from 11 States to strengthen management of Sage-grouse habitat and avoid the need for listing by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. But our work is far from done. The President's budget asks for a $14 million increase over the $60 million that you were very kind and gracious to support us with last year. We very much appreciate it. We are expanding our BLM conservation efforts partially through the work on a national seed strategy. And the basic idea there is, getting the right seed to the right place at the right time. Too often we have situations where maybe in Burley, Idaho they need to restore some lands, but they're sourcing seed from eastern Montana or northern Washington State. We need to have more seed growers, more diversity than what we're offering so that we can come back and come back stronger. Collectively, with these requests, the BLM's resources dedicated to Sage-grouse conservation will total $79 million in Fiscal Year 2017, and represent a critical investment in Western communities and Western values. Now, on the energy front, the Oil and Gas Program at the BLM is performing very well. Industry currently has nearly 4 years' worth of permits in their hands that they could use today. Many people will tell you that there's efforts afoot to slow down oil and gas development in this country on behalf of agencies like the one that I have the privilege to lead. But we have 4 years of permits that we've been working very hard on. The backlog is coming down. The front log is growing. We put 4 million acres of lands available out for lease last year. Industry picked upon only 15 percent of those lands. Now, at the same time we have a great responsibility to ensure that these oil and gas operations are carried out responsibly. There's a proposal this year as it was last year in the budget ask for permanent support for an inspection program. We have about 160 inspectors in this Nation. We need, about 220. Having the type of support for a permanent program would be essential to achieving many of the goals, not just in inspection, but around our larger oil and gas program. I was in front of the authorizers yesterday and had a good discussion about this issue, and I appreciate your support and hope that we can get this done this year. National Conservation Lands are another highlight of our budget, and I do want to thank you for the $5 million increase that you put into last year's budget. These are lands in the Nation that people are very excited about. So over the last 20 years or so, the BLM has been the face of conservation in terms of action that Congress has taken and action that the President has taken. We have nearly 900 conservation units across the country. These are places where visitation is heavy. People are excited to go there. They are excited to have them near their communities, and it's we think part of the best of what we have as a Nation, so we appreciate your support for that program. And this year we're asking for $50 million in support, which really is for the basics. We want to have an assigned manager, a full-time staff for each of the major units, National Conservation Areas and National Monuments. That's step one in addition to all the other responsibilities we have in these areas. Wild Horses and Burros is another hot topic for us and very important for us to figure out the right next steps. In short, we have the recommended total population around the West which should be just under 30,000 horses. We have about 60,000 horses on the range today, and we have another 50,000 horses that we have removed and are in pastures or corrals. Now, when those horses get removed, we spend up to $50,000 on that horse over the course of its lifetime. I think there are some opportunities for us to be creative, potentially looking at tax credits or other programs to incentivize adoption. But a specific proposal we have in this year's budget is in relation to our productive relationship with the Border Patrol. I've actually been to the border, had two or three rangers come up on formerly wild horses and burros, and visited with those folks. And you can see the freeze brand. And we send about 30 horses to the Border Patrol each year. But they cannot accept them as an Agency. The individual rangers have to adopt them in their personal capacity. And also, we are still, because of the way the Wild Horse and Burro Act is written, we have to go back and check on them. We have to second-guess the Border Patrol's management and care for those horses. We'd like to change that, so we have a proposal that we're looking for your concurrence in allowing us to convey directly horses to other Federal, State, and local agencies that have a need for workhorses, and would use them, you know, for those purposes. So we're trying to take a small step forward, but look for other conversations. You know, we're also heavily engaged in research, looking at spay and neuter, looking at long-term birth control efforts. Lastly, I'll mention two other legislative pieces. One is the BLM Foundation. Congressman Lowenthal and the ranking member were leaders in putting in legislation just a few days ago to make that a reality. And we appreciate that support very much, and we hope that we can gather some more support and get some momentum behind that legislation. I think we can make some important differences in some of the bigger programs that people care about within the Bureau of Land Management. And I will tell you, yesterday at my hearing with the authorizers, I got a number of questions about land disposal. And we have had a proposal in the budget for a few years for a very poorly named act, the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act, or FLTFA. Basically what this does is allows us to take lands that are sold, capture that revenue partially for conservation inside the State where it's sold, but also to have a source of revenue to work on future land sales. So it's a win-win for all parties, and we would be very excited to see that reenacted and stood up within this year's Congress. I appreciate your time. This committee has been wonderful to work with, and I look forward to your questions. [The statement of Director Kornze follows:] [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] SAGE-GROUSE Mr. Calvert. I thank you for coming out today, Mr. Kornze, and let us just start off, since you brought it up first, I will bring it up, too, Sage-grouse. In the omnibus, Congress directed BLM to issue guidance to its State offices on how it will update Sage-grouse habitat maps, adopt new scientific information, and engage partners. I believe guidance would allay much of the unnecessary or uncertainty regarding how BLM will implement their resource management plans. So the first question is, how or has BLM issued any guidance. Mr. Kornze. We are working on a range of guidance. I believe we have 12 different guidance documents that you will see in the coming months. We are working closely with the Western Governors Association Sage-Grouse Task Force and others to make sure that we are getting the right eyes on and thoughts into those documents. So we will be moving aggressively over the next 3 months or so to make sure that those are all issued. Mr. Calvert. How about these maps, the Sage-grouse habitat maps? Have you updated those maps? Are you working with the States, too? Mr. Kornze. We are absolutely working with the States. So in the case of the State of Nevada, the Congressman from my hometown is sitting to my left. The State of Nevada is working with the USGS to update their map. Mr. Coats, I think, is leading that effort. And so, we have received a sort of high- level version of that map, but we do not have the GIS layers yet. So we are using it to the degree that we can, but looking forward to the formal updated version. Mr. Calvert. Well, as you know, we put a significant increase in dollars in your budget because for the reason we do not want this species listed. We do not want to have you coming to us later on and say there is some reason we have to do this. We want to do everything we can to make sure that that does not happen. With that, Ms. McCollum. CHALLENGE COST SHARE Ms. McCollum. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you for the recognition of Mr. Lowenthal and I having a bill to authorize the Foundation for the BLM. But I have to say I was disappointed that the budget proposes to eliminate the Challenge Cost Share Program. This program is in place right now to allow BLM to partner with local organizations, to do on-the-ground habitat, recreation, and cultural resources work. Can you tell us why this program is scheduled to be eliminated? The leverage of private funds to help engage the public and the work that you do is very important. VENTING AND FLARING The other question I have is on the oil and gas rule. The Administration on January 22nd proposed a rule that would limit the rate of flaring at oil wells on public and tribal lands. In addition, the proposed rule would modify the existing royalty rate and provisions to better align BLM's authority and to enhance flexibility, but the rule would not raise royalty rates. So I think of it as a commonsense regulation. I did share with this committee a year ago, maybe some of you remember, a satellite photo that showed lights flaring from the Bakken fields that were almost as bright or brighter than the entire Twin Cities metropolitan area. So I think these regulations are needed. Could you talk about the Challenge Cost Share Program, what you are hearing from industry, and what you expect this rule on the flaring to be able to accomplish for us? Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Kornze. You bet. So the Challenge Cost Share, that really comes down to hard choices. Over the last 5 years or so, we have lost about 12 percent of our full-time equivalent positions in the Agency, so we are stretched. And part of that is because the Wild Horse and Burro budget has doubled in size, right? It is literally being eaten. We are spending more than $50 million a year on housing the horses that have been taken off the range, so that is why that is such an important issue to get our arms around. CHALLENGE COST-SHARE In terms of Challenge Cost Share, it is very productive. When we can put money into that, it pays dividends. But at this point we have so many needs in terms of Sage-grouse, and improving our energy programs, and modernizing, really trying to take a leap forward with the Agency and bring it forward. And even, you know, sort of eclipse perhaps some of our partner agencies in getting information out there and emphasizing the ability to access the public lands. So that's on that one. VENTING AND FLARING On venting and flaring, the core issue there is that, you know, we have more than hundred thousand oil and gas wells on public lands. Nearly 400 million dollars' worth of gas is wasted each year through venting, through flaring. So some States like North Dakota, Colorado, and Wyoming have started to step in to this space, and we have been working to have regulations that work with theirs and build on their strengths, and to make sure that we are sending this energy into a productive pathway. It is enough energy if harnessed to power 5 million different homes, so it is pretty significant, and we feel like it needs action. There is a royalty provision in that regulation which would essentially take off the handcuffs of future secretaries, so it is unlikely that this Secretary would be able to use it. But currently we are locked at 12 and half percent as a ceiling by regulation, and so this would allow future Secretaries to look at current economic conditions and figure out if there is a reason to adjust up or down. Prior to 1988, the Secretary had the ability to do that, and there were often royalties on a sliding scale based on production. Ms. McCollum. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Simpson. Mr. Simpson. Thank you. I understand that. I mean, wild horses and burros, that has been a problem forever. I was under the impression that when Jefferson did the Louisiana Purchase, he wanted to include Nevada because he said that is a place we are going to need to put wild horses and burros eventually, but maybe I was wrong on that. [Laughter.] I am just kidding. Voice. You are mistaken. STEENS MOUNTAIN COOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT AND PROTECTION AREA FENCE Mr. Simpson. Yeah, I am mistaken. First of all, I understand there is an issue that deals with the Steens wilderness and fencing that you have been looking at, and are going to address Congressman Walden's issue dealing with the ranchers and the fencing out there. Is that correct? Mr. Kornze. We have been in touch with Congressman Walden just this morning, and are working on the NEPA process to complete that action and set aside the money to work on the fence project. SAGE-GROUSE Mr. Simpson. Good. Thank you. Let me talk for just a minute about Sage-grouse and focal areas because as I talked to governors, at least my governor, and people who worked on the Sage-grouse plans and other things for the States, you always come to the focal areas, that these were thrown in on top of these State plans that they have been working on and that they knew nothing about them, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. I have heard a different take on it. The original plans that Fish and Wildlife came up with had no disturbance areas, and they were pretty large areas, and BLM said we are going to have a problem with this. And Fish and Wildlife went back and reduced those areas down to the high priority areas that they call focal areas. So they are a portion of what would have been a much larger no disturbance area. Is that an accurate statement? Mr. Kornze. That is roughly accurate, yes. The Fish and Wildlife Service, we sat down with them and they had very broad visions of potentially withdrawing all lands from Sage-grouse. And we knew that probably was not a viable path forward, so we encouraged them to think on a refined basis. And they came forward with the focal areas that we have now. Mr. Simpson. How do focal areas impact grazing? Mr. Kornze. Focal areas, they do not impact grazing in terms of changed standards. What we are doing is in our grazing program we have a great need for support there because we have 18,000 permits nationwide. 6,000 of those are in backlog status, right? So what we have to do is we have to prioritize, and what our sage-grouse plans say is that the focal areas will get priority. That is essentially what it is. Mr. Simpson. How do the priority habitat management areas impact grazing, and also the general management areas? Mr. Kornze. So similarly, we are looking at them as a tiered process, so you start in the focal areas. You head to the broader priority habitat, and then you go to the general. So a lot of what comes out of the Sage-grouse plans is that rather than looking at the landscape all the same, we now have a way to delineate priorities based on landscape. Mr. Simpson. I have got county commissioners and so forth and some ranchers that have said that they are going to lose 40 or 50 percent of their grazing lands, with this sage-grouse proposal. Is that accurate? Mr. Kornze. I do not think it will be. We have heard some concern from the cattle industry, and so one of the things you are going to see from us in a few months is we are going to have workshops in the western States where we are going to sit down with the grazing community and talk through exactly how this works. I think it is very workable and, frankly, we spent a great deal of time in the finalization steps of the plan making sure that the grazing piece in particular was going to work for western communities. GRAZING ADMINISTRATION FEE Mr. Simpson. As far as the proposed increase that both you and the Forest Service have, the $2.50 administration fee for AUM, and the potential fee to go up the maximum of 25 percent, that has been proposed before, and the committee has rejected it. You know, as I talk to cattlemen, they understand that the AUM price needs to go up, that there ought to be an increase in that. What they would like to see and have repeatedly stated is they would like see is, you know, a 5-year, 10-year plan of how we are going to increase so it is a gradual sort of increase instead of a potential doubling overnight of the fee. So far, nobody has ever come back to us with a gradual sort of increase in fees, and I would encourage the Administration to give us something along those lines that we could look at with Resources Committee. So there is a gradual, predictable increase in AUM fees because most ranchers understand that it has been where it currently is, and that naturally it needs to go up. And I think the cattle industry agrees with that. EASTERN SNAKE PLAN AQUIFER One last issue. Have you been in contact at all with the State of Idaho relative to recharging the Snake River aquifer? Mr. Kornze. I am not aware of that issue. Mr. Simpson. They are just starting, and I did not know if they got to the BLM yet. They have been talking to the BOR, and they are going to put forth a recharge plan. And it is not fully settled yet, so I would not expect them to have anything that you could actually look at yet. But recharge areas are going to cross BLM grounds. There are issues of rights-of-ways on canals that are going to go through BLM property, and that go through there now. But they are used for irrigation purposes and those types of activities. But I told them that they need to get in touch with the BLM and with BOR and start working so that they can have a plan that we can look at because I would like to recharge the aquifer that is going down substantially. And there are periods of time when we have excess water that we just flush down the river now because it is just there, and it would be nice to recharge that aquifer. But I would encourage you and your office to work with the State of Idaho and with our office in developing some plans that might work. Mr. Kornze. I will be happy to look into that. Mr. Simpson. Thank you. GRAZING ADMINISTRATION FEE Mr. Kornze. And one note on the grazing issue. I appreciate the invitation for a broader conversation. I think part of what we struggle with is that, with the system having so many strains on it with a third of the permits being in backlog status. Part of that comes from the fact that the grazing fee goes 50 percent back to the county where it was raised, and 50 percent is range improvements. Zero dollars go to supporting the grazing program. Mr. Simpson. Right. Mr. Kornze. So I think there are a lot of pieces that need to be examined. Mr. Simpson. Well, we ought to look at that whole program. Mr. Kornze. Absolutely. Mr. Simpson. Yeah, thank you. Mr. Kornze. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Israel. WILD HORSES AND BURROS Mr. Israel. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you, Director. Director, the President's budget includes a proposal to make it easier for the Department of Interior to transfer wild horses to local, and State, and other Federal agencies to be used as work animals. I am concerned that if the proposal is not effectively implemented, it will simply make it easier for those horses to ultimately be sent to slaughter. And I would appreciate it if you would tell us what safeguards will be instituted so that we know that these horses will remain safe. Mr. Kornze. So when folks adopt horses right now, they have to sign a contract with us that indicates their intention and commitment to not send that horse to be slaughtered or go into products related to that. So we could work out something similar with these agencies, or if Congress wanted to insert language that would make that a requirement, we would welcome it. Mr. Israel. The proposal as it is currently constructed does not have that requirement? Mr. Kornze. Well, the proposal says that essentially if you are working with a trusted public agency and they are looking for a work animal, that we should be able to title that animal over. Mr. Israel. I want to make sure I understand this. So when somebody adopts a wild horse, as I understand what you just said, there is a requirement that they commit not to send that horse to slaughter. Are you saying that there is a distinction if the animal is transferred to a public agency, that requirement is not currently---- Mr. Kornze. It is not in the current language, and we would be open to seeing that language. Mr. Israel. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate it. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Stewart. COLLABORATIVE EFFORTS Mr. Stewart. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and, Director, thank you for many years of service I think the relationship that we have developed, we have had opportunities to work together on some things, and I thank you for that. As we discussed yesterday, I think the prairie dog in southern Utah is a good example of some collaborative efforts, although we have had some hiccups along the way as a result of the lawsuit. We still expect to be able to work with you regardless of how that lawsuit may turn out on appeal. And as we discussed yesterday as well, we look forward to working with you on some of these issues in Washington County with the Resource Management Plan. We met with Mr. Ashe after our meeting, and I believe there is a pathway for us to have some success in addressing concerns of the local officials there as well. So having said that, I am going to kind of shotgun this if we could because there are so many issues that we would like to discuss with you, and I will address them very quickly maybe, but some of them in a little more detail. WILD HORSES AND BURROS I appreciate you bringing up the horses and the burros which is, you know, an enormous concern in my district. And if you care about horses, you cannot look at these herds and feel good about the outcome for these animals. If you care about the range, you cannot look at this and feel good about the outcome- unhealthy herds and some of these horses are starving to death as you know, and it is destroying much of the range. So we appreciate your concern there, and I know you are sincere in that. Now, I have a bill, it is several years old now, appropriately called the WHOA bill, Wild Horse Oversight Act, which deals with allowing some of the States to accept some control over these animals, maybe even transferring control of these animals to the States. States manage our deer populations. They manage elk. They manage turkey, you know. Why is the Federal government only and exclusively responsible for managing these wild horses and burros? Would you support that act? And I know you do not have it before you, but I mean just in general principle, would you support the idea of the States having more control over these animals? Mr. Kornze. Well, I think it is an interesting issue, and I often explain to people there are three types of animals in this country. There is wildlife, which are regulated by governors. There are endangered and threatened species, which are regulated by the Fish and Wildlife Service. And then there are lot of horses and burros. Mr. Stewart. And heaven knows these are not endangered, no. Mr. Kornze. Yeah. And then there are wild horses and burros, which land with the Bureau of Land Management. So I think it is an oddity that deserves to be looked at. Part of our effort with the language that we put forward this year is to see if we can eliminate the sense that working on wild horse and burro issues is a third rail of politics. Mr. Stewart. Yeah. Mr. Kornze. I think there is a lot of commonality to be had between both sides of the aisle on this. So we welcome a conversation about the road ahead. I do not have that bill in front of me, so I cannot comment specifically. Mr. Stewart. Yeah, but in general principle it is not something you would oppose. Mr. Kornze. We need more partners, States, other organizations, because we are overwhelmed at this point. NATIONAL MONUMENT DESIGNATIONS Mr. Stewart. Okay. Switching subjects quickly if I could, and that is, and I am going to repeat myself from yesterday a little bit, although I will do it more briefly. And I am not doing this because I do not have something to say. I am doing this because what I said is what I really believe. And that is, you know, if you go to my district, as you and I have talked about many times, we talk to miners who are losing their jobs. We talk to teachers who are losing their jobs because their schools are dying, and the reason their schools are dying is because the families are leaving. It is not like people suddenly quit having kids. They are still having children, but the families are leaving because timber, mining, ranching, all of these, you know, these lifestyles, not just jobs, but actual lifestyles just do not exist any longer. You talk to ranchers I have to elaborate on this just a little bit because I always remember this, meeting with a rancher. He is an older gentleman, you know, a humble man with a humble family. Shows us this piece of paper, as Mr. Simpson, I am losing 50 percent of my BLM grazing permits, and he is scared to death of the Federal government. You know, he is not a rebel. He is not going to go out and join some militia. But he is scared of the Federal government and does not know how to respond to that. And finally a businessman who had a thriving business, and now their economy transitioned over to a tourist industry economy or tourist based. And now his business is only open 3 and half months a year. All of that, and this is the key, all of that because of one Federal decision to create a monument, and those are the impacts because of that. So, you know, as we have discussed, we are fearful of another monument being created in Utah without the input of those people who will be most affected by it. I wonder if you would respond to that, if you could, your intentions on monuments in Utah. We know what Ms. Jewell said yesterday. I would be interested in what you think. Mr. Kornze. Well, I think monuments have an important place on the landscape. They have been hugely productive for a lot of communities, but it is important that those are done through a public conversation. Mr. Stewart. And I appreciate that because that really is a key to this, having that, you know, local input. And it concerns me a little bit when we see outside groups who come in and claim to be local groups when they are not. And we have seen that with some of the tribal interests in this case as well as others. And I will not describe to you why I am asking this question. It would take a little bit too long, so I will just ask the question and let you respond to it. And that is, we have heard some, I do not want to say rumors, but some thought among some of how this potential monument would be managed. And my question to you is, would it be lawful to transfer management of a monument to an entity outside of the BLM, or would the BLM always have to claim management for that monument? Mr. Kornze. I do not know. Absent direction from Congress, I am not sure what authority we would have in that space, so I would have to look into the details of what you are putting forward here. Mr. Stewart. I tell you what. Maybe I will follow up with you individually. But can we agree on this, that if the BLM were to designate or the Federal government were to designate a monument, the default position would be that BLM or some other government entity, Federal government entity, would manage that monument? Mr. Kornze. I am not aware of any situation in which it has been done otherwise. Mr. Stewart. Otherwise, okay. Would you support in theory a situation where someone might, other than the Federal government, manage that monument? Mr. Kornze. We would need to be talking about something specific. ALTON COAL MINE Mr. Stewart. Okay, all right. We do not have a clock, Mr. Chairman. I am sorry. I will hit one very quickly, and then, Neil, ask you to respond, and that is we talked about this yesterday as well. We have this one mine who did a very good job in restoration and, you know, mitigating some of the impacts. And as a result of that, the Sage-grouse moved into an area where they did not exist before. And now because of the presence of Sage-grouse and because they did the responsible thing with restoration, you know, they are probably going to be shut down because Sage-grouse now exists. It is as we said, the most southern lek that we know. What do I say to those guys? I mean, the perverse incentive there is ironic beyond my ability to say, well, congratulations you did a great job, and now you are going to reap the benefits of that. Help me understand what I should say to those folks. Mr. Kornze. Well, I think you are referring to the Alton Coal Mine. Mr. Stewart. Yeah. Yeah. Mr. Kornze. And, yeah, this is a tough situation we have, you know. There are two serious hurdles to that project. One is the pause in the coal program for any project that does not currently have a record of decision unless you can fit it into various emergency categories. So that is one thing that we have discussed that can be looked at. The other is the fact that---- Mr. Stewart. And by the way as we discussed, we think we are okay on that. We think they would fit within the criteria of the emergency exception, which is good. But now we come to the second one. Mr. Kornze. The second one, which is as we work West-wide on Sage-grouse issues, you know, one of the key parts of the responsibility of the Bureau of Land Management is we have multiple use and sustained yield. Those are the two core tenets that this Congress asked us to manage on. And part of the sustained yield is related to renewable resources, which include wildlife habitat. And so, you know, during the course of my lifetime, greater Sage-grouse populations have dropped 40 percent. And so, somewhere that suggests that the BLM and others have perhaps not maintained that renewable resource of wildlife habitat to the degree it should be. And so, as we went through our planning process and worked with States to identify the best habitat, one of the places that Utah said was the best habitat is this site. And it does, in fact, have the southernmost lek in the United States. And so, as you identified, you know, I think this presents a very hard situation for us to work through. Mr. Stewart. And I appreciate what you are saying. I would just say in conclusion that this probably is not the only example or potential example where someone looks at this going, if we restore, if we create habitat, if we help to protect the species, well, there may be a negative outcome for us in doing that. And if that is the case, I hope we could consider that. So thank you. And, Mr. Chairman, I yield back. Mr. Calvert. Thank you. Mr. Amodei. Mr. Amodei. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Voice. Microphone. SILVER PEAK Mr. Amodei. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Neil, thanks for your continued willingness to meet with us. I am going to start out with a couple of things. I am not going to take the committee's time up, but I want to kind of highlight them for you because they will be coming to your staff. We have got a situation in Nevada with the lithium property in Silver Peak that has got a little protest going on in terms of ownership and transfer. And there are some issues with respect to when that can happen and how that can happen that emanate through your solicitor's office in Sacramento that I am going to be asking you for a briefing for offline---- Mr. Kornze. Okay. PLANNING 2.0 Mr. Amodei [continuing]. There is some stuff that we need some more facts on. Also your Planning 2.0 effort is one that sends a lot of information out in terms of stuff that we learn from going through the resource management plan updates for the 11 States. We want to see where you are going on that. I have read what NACO puts out on it, and there are two sides to every story. So I would kind of like the other side on that if I could. SAGE GROUSE The final one briefing wise is the Secretary laid out a deal about science yesterday, and more money in Interior for science and stuff like that. And so, I want to pass that on to you that we are concerned that a lot of the science about the Great Basin, as you well know, Sage hen crossroads of the West, the majority of the Great Basin, sagebrush steppe ecosystem. And every time I talk to the Desert Research Institute folks and the folks in the College of Agriculture at the University, and even sometimes NRCS, and even USGS, has anybody been talking about these chicken issues from Nevada. And while the director has said I am happy to work with them, I have not seen much of that. So I want to revisit that and go I am not telling you to do what the Nevada science says, but I think they ought to have a seat at the table when we are talking about this. So we would kind of like a briefing on that, and thank you guys for your willingness to do that. I want to follow up on the focal area stuff real quick. In preparation for the hearing, we asked Fish, and the Forest Service, and you guys, where do the boundaries come from. And we did that about 60 days ago, and the only response we got was from the Forest Service, and I am quoting them, ``Sagebrush focal boundaries were given to us by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.'' Were they given to you by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service? Mr. Kornze. All right. So a range of questions. I will work through them quickly. Mr. Amodei. No, no, the other ones I want briefings on. Mr. Kornze. Okay. Mr. Amodei. I do not want you to work on. Your first question is, the Forest Service said they got their sagebrush focal area boundaries over their real estate from Fish and Wildlife Service. Is that true for BLM? Mr. Kornze. Yes. Mr. Amodei. Okay. Mr. Kornze. So we asked the same question, and the Fish and Wildlife Service said we got our experts in the room, and this is the map that we came out with. Mr. Amodei. So it is fair to me, if I want to talk about how that got created and where the boundaries are, I need to talk to Dan Ashe about it. Mr. Kornze. That is right. Mr. Amodei. Okay, great. Thank you. I also want to touch on Secretary Jewell said, hey, I am talking with Governor Sandoval, which is a great thing, and I said, okay, so what is the framework for that. Do you have like secretarial discretion or whatever? And her answer, I think I heard her say is, well, he is kind of highlighting things for me, and I am passing them down to Neil, and they are going to John Ruhs, and there you go. And that Neil has specific authority under that stuff. All well and good in my mind. But when we talk about things like maps that were brought up earlier, and it is like, okay, we got a new map that has a PJ and an urban overlay to it, and the RMP amendment process is not nimble. And I am not saying that critically. I am just saying it is as a historical observation. We do not amend those things every couple of years. And when I first go out to the field and I am in three district offices, it is like so how do we account for the fact that the White Pine Public LandsManagement Act has 15,000 acres--I believe you had a hand in that--for economic development between Ely and McGill. And now we have got one of the iterations of map that says that is now chicken habitat. It is like before we even get to well, this one was signed by the President and this one was signed by the Secretary, you know, it is like how do we react to those things because I got to pass a new law, lands law, which a lot of us are too old to probably see that come to fruition, go amend the RMPs, or one of them said, hey, I have got some discretion in that if I find it. What is the guidance in terms of how these people react to things, and not that maps should get smaller because we know from instances over the summer that there are areas of habitat that were not marked that should be marked. And so, my concern is when you talk about real-time stuff, whether it is grazing, whether it is whatever, to amend those is not an easy process if we look historically. Anything new in the making for amending those? Mr. Kornze. So very quickly, and part of the mapping I think comes down to best available science. Mr. Amodei. Right. Mr. Kornze. So we wanted the best available information. We are excited to be working with the State and USGS on getting I think the now third iteration of the Nevada maps. Mr. Amodei. Right. Mr. Kornze. So and we are waiting for that to be peer reviewed, I understand is where it is at with the State of Nevada, which is why we only have a high level concept of what that map looks like right now. The plans themselves are designed to have some flexibility in them, you know. So we have priority habitat. We have general habitat. But beyond that, there are pathways to development based on different criteria in the maps, including disturbance calculations. When it comes to, for instance, some of the issues that have been litigated in Nevada in White Plain County, you know, we have been able to work through the allowance in the plan to make certain steps possible. PLANNING 2.0 And in terms of speed on amending the plans, Planning 2.0 is, you know, going to feel very obscure. We are looking to update our planning regulations. But BLM does not do anything without a plan underneath it, and those are taking way too long, and way too slow, and they are way too expensive. So the concept here is we asked our team, we took some of our brightest people and put them in a room and said, figure out how to make this work better. And what they came back with was counterintuitive, but I think somewhat brilliant, which is they said, let us add a couple of extra steps into the process. They said, let us start by raising our hand and saying please bring your best information and your best science to the table so that we do not get surprised by somebody with information two-thirds of the way down the road and we have to start over, which happens a lot. And the other piece is, you would have that information call. You would have your scoping meetings to talk about the big issues. Then before we get to a draft plan, usually we go away. People do not hear much from us between the scoping meetings and a draft. We would have a halfway step where we would put out a simple, let us say, a 20-page document with some meetings where we would describe what we are thinking about doing. Mr. Amodei. If I might, I will get the rest of that offline, but I appreciate that. Mr. Kornze. You bet. MINERALS EXAMINATION Mr. Amodei. Focal areas are going to require quite a bit of minerals examination I understand. The minerals examiner population in BLM is not impressive, and it is older than me, which there is ``R'' word ``retirement.'' I would like to talk to you about that offline in terms of if we got 5,000 of these things to do and we have not got a lot of examiners and minerals examinations, I just kind of want to get a feeling for how that is going to go. And with that, I think in view of how much fun we are having this morning, I will yield back and look forward to talking to you and your folks offline about that. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. WILD HORSES AND BURROS Mr. Calvert. Thank you. I would just like to get back to wild horses and burros real quick. [Laughter.] We spent a lot of time on this issue. We spay and neuter cats and dogs, and we certainly should be doing that with the horses and burros. Where are you at on that? Tell us where you are at. Mr. Kornze. Some of the research projects that we have stood up in the last few years are looking specifically at this. Spay and neuter is going to be very important. We do not have a drug right now that lasts more than 1 year, and we cannot touch all---- Mr. Calvert. Well, there are things that you can do that permanent. [Laughter.] Mr. Kornze. Yeah, and that is why we have to look at that, right? So at some point maybe we have a drug that lasts for 5 years or is permanent. But right now we are going to have to look at spay and neuter in the short to medium term because it is really one of the only tools we have. Mr. Calvert. Well, I think that we ought to, I mean, not just look at it. I mean, have a broad approach to apply it in the field. Do you intend to do that? Mr. Kornze. It looks like we may be headed in that direction, you know, out of force of necessity. Ms. McCollum. Mr. Chair, on this point, between the spaying and neutering, is one less expensive and is one quicker? You talk about both, so if one is quicker and less expensive to make a bigger dent in the population, should you just go with one of the forms of permanent birth control for a while? Mr. Kornze. That is a great question, and I want to come back to you with an answer in terms of speed and cost. [The information follows:] Wild Horse and Burros Neutering stallions is a quicker and less expensive procedure compared to spaying mares. Unfortunately, neutering alone would not be an effective means of controlling herd population growth unless most of the stallions in a herd were neutered. This would be hard to accomplish considering the difficulty of capturing an entire herd in expansive and often rugged terrain. The BLM believes that for effective population management of wild horse and burro herds, the BLM will need to use multiple population growth suppression tools on males and females as the conditions on the ground warrant. Ms. McCollum. I think I might have an idea, but I will not be indelicate at the hearing. Thank you. Mr. Calvert. Yeah. Well, obviously we have an over population on the range, and Mr. Stewart brought out that this is not good for the horses, and it is certainly not good for the ranchers, and it is certainly not good for the environment. So I would think that is more of a permanent solution. If we can start moving in that direction, I think that we should get support for that. Mr. Kornze. And let me mention quickly that, you know, as I look at the $50,000 per horse cost, I think there is room for creativity there, right? This is not the Ways and Means Committee, but I would imagine that someday I would hope Ways and Means or others would look at that and say maybe part of that $50,000 could be used to incentivize adoptions. And a fair amount of money, whatever is left over after you pay that incentive would be savings to the U.S. government. It would be good for the rangeland. It would be good for the folks that are adopting the horses. So I think there is a-- -- Mr. Calvert. I think that is part of the solution. I think that is certainly worth looking into. But right now we need to stop, you know, the number of horses that are being born out on the range. Any other comments or any other questions? I know we have a series of votes. And so, we appreciate your being here, and I am sure you will be hearing more from members individually. With that, we are adjourned. Mr. Kornze. Thank you very much. [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] W I T N E S S E S ---------- Bavasi, Chris.................................................... 125 Connor, Mike..................................................... 149 Dixon, Tony...................................................... 1 Fowler, E. A..................................................... 59 Hartz, G. J...................................................... 59 Jewell, Hon. Sally............................................... 149 Kornze, Neil..................................................... 331 McSwain, Robert.................................................. 59 Owens, Glenda.................................................... 289 Pizarchik, Joseph................................................ 289 Sarri, Kristen................................................... 149 Smith, Mary...................................................... 59 Stokes, Ruth..................................................... 289 Tidwell, Tom..................................................... 1 I N D E X ---------- U.S. Forest Service 2017 Budget Request February 24, 2016, Rayburn B-308 Page Abandoned Mine Lands............................................. 15 Airtankers ....................................................27,30,44 Big Horn Sheep................................................... 27 Biography--Antoine ``Tony'' Dixon................................ 12 Biography--Chief Tom Tidwell..................................... 11 Budget Cap Adjustment ........................................... 18,26 Climate Change................................................... 56 Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration (CFLRP)............... 18 Convertible and Non-Convertible Forest Products.................. 39 Data Centers..................................................... 40 Data Quality Act................................................. 43 Department of Defense: Wildland Fire Support..................... 34 Emerald Ash Borer................................................ 31 Endangered Species Cooperation................................... 57 Every Kid in a Park Initiative................................... 56 Federal Lands ................................................... 20,25 Fire Fighting Technology ........................................ 29,41 Fire Transfer.................................................... 17 Forest Roads..................................................... 19 Forest Service Stewardship Program .............................. 24,42 Good Neighbor Authority.......................................... 33 Grazing ......................................................... 13,43 Grazing and Water Rights......................................... 14 Grazing Fee Proposal............................................. 35 Hazardous Fuels.................................................. 38 Knutson-Vandenburg (K-V) Authority............................... 54 Labor Rule and Overtime for Outfitters and Guides................ 13 Land Acquisition................................................. 42 Landscape Scale Restoration Funding.............................. 48 Marijuana Eradication............................................ 34 Military Aircraft................................................ 35 Monongahela National Forest...................................... 25 Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert.............................. 1 Opening Remarks of Chief Tidwell................................. 3 Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum.................................. 2 Questions for the Record from Chairman Calvert................... 38 Questions for the Record from Mr. Amodei......................... 44 Questions for the Record from Mr. Israel......................... 56 Questions for the Record from Mr. Jenkins........................ 48 Questions for the Record from Mr. Kilmer......................... 54 Questions for the Record from Mr. Stewart........................ 43 Questions for the Record from Ms. McCollum....................... 49 Questions for the Record from Ms. Pingree........................ 52 Recreation....................................................... 49 Spreading of Invasive Species.................................... 32 State Action Plans............................................... 24 State and Volunteer Fire Assistance Funding...................... 28 Statement of Chief Tidwell....................................... 5 Stewardship Contracting.......................................... 36 Terrestrial Condition Assessment (TCA)........................... 38 Tree Farm System................................................. 52 Unmanned Vehicle Fire Suppression................................ 47 Urban and Community Forestry..................................... 32 Watershed Health................................................. 50 White-Nose Syndrome.............................................. 22 Wildfire Suppression and State Stewardship....................... 45 Indian Health Service 2017 Budget Request February 25, 2016, Rayburn B-308 Access to Quality Medical Providers.............................. 102 Accurate Data for American Indian/Alaska Native Health........... 115 Advanced Appropriations.......................................... 99 Behavioral Health................................................ 80 Biography--Elizabeth A. Fowler................................... 73 Biography--Gary J. Hartz......................................... 74 Biography--Mary L. Smith......................................... 72 Biography--Robert G. McSwain..................................... 71 Catastrophic Health Emergency Fund (CHEF)........................ 101 Contract Support Costs ..................................... 85,86,110 Current Services................................................. 97 Dental ...................................................... 85,86,90 Emergency Rooms.................................................. 119 Enrollment in Other Federal Health Programs...................... 99 Great Plains Area .............................................. 75,110 IHS Employee Settlement.......................................... 116 Joint Venture ................................................... 75,83 Measuring Progress ............................................. 79,86 Medical Inflation................................................ 98 Medicare and Medicaid .......................................... 87,119 Mental Health .................................................. 77,113 Offsetting Collections........................................... 101 Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert.............................. 59 Opening Remarks of Mr. McSwain................................... 62 Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum.................................. 60 Operations and Maintenance....................................... 104 Population Growth................................................ 98 Purchase/Referred Care .................................... 105,118,119 Questions for the Record from Chairman Calvert................... 93 Questions for the Record from Ms. McCollum....................... 118 Reprogramming.................................................... 90 Special Diabetes Program for Indians .......................... 117,120 Staffing and Housing ........................................... 76,108 Staffing of New Facilities....................................... 104 Statement of Mr. McSwain......................................... 65 Strategic Plan................................................... 79 Substance Abuse .............................................. 78,83,89 Substance Abuse: Opioid ..................................... 81,87,122 Telemedicine..................................................... 86 Unobligated Balances............................................. 97 Urban Health..................................................... 114 Youth Initiatives................................................ 121 Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation 2017 Budget Request February 25, 2016, Rayburn B-308 Annual Range Management Costs.................................... 135 Biography--Christopher J. Bavasi................................. 132 Close-out Date ................................................ 133,141 Contracting and Inspection Procedures............................ 139 Eligibility Appeals Process ................................... 137,142 Housing Conditions............................................... 139 Housing Program.................................................. 136 Judgement Fund................................................... 138 New Lands........................................................ 145 Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert.............................. 125 Opening Remarks of Executive Director Bavasi..................... 127 Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum.................................. 126 Planning......................................................... 142 Quarterly Status Reports......................................... 133 Questions for the Record from Chairman Calvert................... 141 Questions for the Record from Mr. Simpson........................ 147 Relocation Process ........................................... 140,143 Relocation Report................................................ 147 Spider Mound and East Mill Communities........................... 144 Statement of Executive Director Bavasi........................... 128 Status Update.................................................... 136 Transfers to Other Federal Agencies.............................. 134 Department of the Interior 2017 Budget Request March 2, 2016, Rayburn B-308 Antiquities Act ............................................... 221,225 Arctic Council--U.S. Chairmanship 2015-2017...................... 283 Asian Carp .................................................... 218,219 Basin Range National Monument.................................... 225 Biography--Kristen Sarri......................................... 186 Biography--Mike Connor........................................... 185 Biography--Secretary Sally Jewell................................ 184 BSEE Well Control Rule........................................... 227 Budget Request................................................... 155 Bureau of Indian Education....................................... 195 Bureau of Indian Education: Construction ...................... 193-232 Bureau of Indian Education: Reprogramming........................ 195 Bureau of Land Management: Changes to Resource Management........ 280 California Drought............................................... 190 Climate Change ................................................ 201,282 Coastal Climate Resilience Fund.................................. 206 Delta Water...................................................... 226 Endangered Species Act ........................................ 214-230 Federal Coal Leasing Program .......................... 231,268,269,278 Federal Impacts ............................................... 207-208 Grand Canyon National Park....................................... 190 Great Lakes...................................................... 217 Great Lakes Science Center....................................... 276 Increasing Visitation............................................ 272 Invasive Species .......................................... 193,223,224 Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) ........................239,240 Land Buy-Back Program............................................ 204 Land Titles...................................................... 212 Landsat 9........................................................ 257 Law Enforcement................................................ 219-262 National Heritage Areas.......................................... 189 National Monument Designations .................................208-223 National Park Service: Centennial................................ 244 National Park Service: Director, Jon Jarvis...................... 254 Online Systems for Department of Interior........................ 271 Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert.............................. 149 Opening Remarks of Chairman Rogers............................... 152 Opening Remarks of Mrs. Lowey.................................... 154 Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum.................................. 151 Opening Remarks of Secretary Jewell.............................. 155 Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PILT)................................. 234 Pensions for Coal Miners......................................... 215 Public Lands Initiative.......................................... 209 Public Lands: Management and Planning Authority.................. 278 Puget Sound...................................................... 205 Questions for the Record from Chairman Calvert................... 227 Questions for the Record from Mr. Joyce.......................... 274 Questions for the Record from Mr. Kilmer......................... 286 Questions for the Record from Mr. Rogers......................... 268 Questions for the Record from Mr. Simpson........................ 270 Questions for the Record from Mr. Stewart........................ 278 Questions for the Record from Ms. McCollum....................... 282 Sage Grouse ............................................196,213,236,270 Salton Sea....................................................... 258 Science Coordination............................................. 212 Statement of Secretary Sally Jewell.............................. 158 Steens Wilderness................................................ 196 Stream Protection Rule ................................ 187,198,215,238 Tick-Borne Diseases.............................................. 201 Tiwahe Initiative................................................ 195 Tribal Broadband Access.......................................... 286 USGS Earthquake Early Warning System .......................... 256,279 Violence Against Women Act....................................... 203 Water Quality Monitoring......................................... 274 Wildfire Funding .............................................. 235,270 Wildland Fire.................................................... 196 Wildlife Trafficking............................................. 210 Wildlife Traps ................................................ 188,189 Wolves .................................................... 197,201,202 Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE) 2017 Budget Request March 3, 2016, Rayburn B-308 AML Pilot Program ......................................... 316,320,328 AML Pilot Program: Application of Project Requirements........... 317 AML Pilot Program: Economic and Community Development............ 315 Availability of Copyrighted Material............................. 308 Baseline Data Requirements....................................... 312 Biography--Director Joseph Pizarchik............................. 302 Biography--Glenda H. Owens....................................... 303 Biography--Ruth E. Stokes........................................ 304 Compliance with Omnibus Language................................. 314 Duplicative Oversight............................................ 327 Importance of Science............................................ 316 New Budget Initiatives........................................... 320 Offsite Impacts.................................................. 327 Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert.............................. 289 Opening Remarks of Director Pizarchik............................ 293 Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum.................................. 292 President's Request to Hire More Federal Inspectors.............. 318 Protection of Water Resources.................................... 313 Questions for the Record from Chairman Calvert................... 318 Questions for the Record from Mr. Jenkins........................ 327 Questions for the Record from Mr. Joyce.......................... 324 State Bonding Requirements....................................... 321 Statement of Chairman Rogers..................................... 290 Statement of Director Pizarchik.................................. 297 Stream Protection Rule .................................... 305,322,324 Stream Protection Rule: Economic Impacts ...................... 311-316 Stream Protection Rule: Information to States.................... 307 Stream Protection Rule: Meeting with States...................... 309 Stream Protection Rule: Spending................................. 307 Stream Protection Rule: Timing................................... 310 Unbiased Science................................................. 314 Bureau of Land Management 2017 Budget Request March 3, 2016, Rayburn B-308 Alton Coal Mine.................................................. 352 Aquifer Recharge in Idaho........................................ 372 Biography--Director Neil Kornze.................................. 344 Challenge Cost-Share ......................................... 345,346 Collaborative Efforts............................................ 350 Cost of Litigation............................................... 368 Data Center Consolidation........................................ 369 Eastern Snake Plan Aquifer....................................... 348 Grazing Administration Fee .................................... 348,349 Land Acquisition................................................. 370 Law Enforcement.................................................. 369 Minerals Examination............................................. 356 National Monument Designations ................................ 351,369 Native Plants/National Seed Strategy............................. 362 Opening Remarks of Chairman Calvert.............................. 331 Opening Remarks of Director Kornze............................... 333 Opening Remarks of Ms. McCollum.................................. 332 Planning 2.0 ...................................................353,355 Questions for the Record from Chairman Calvert................... 358 Questions for the Record from Mr. Simpson........................ 372 Questions for the Record from Mr. Stewart........................ 374 Resource Management Plan Changes................................. 374 Sage Grouse ....................................... 345,347,353,358,373 Silver Peak...................................................... 353 Statement of Director Kornze..................................... 337 Steens Mountain CMPA Fence....................................... 347 Venting and Flaring ......................................... . 345,346 Wild Horses and Burros ................................ 349,350,356,364