Las Vegas Review-Journal

Defense bill funds iffy

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — A

$700 billion defense bill awaiting President Donald Trump’s signature includes provisions that would benefit Nevada military installati­ons and personnel, but the funding for those programs remains up in the air because of a 2011 budget law.

The bill that passed the House and Senate includes $634 billion for Pentagon programs, plus $66 billion to pay for combat operations in the Middle East and elsewhere.

But the authorizin­g bill for defense relies on a spending bill, and a 2011 law limits defense spending in fiscal 2018 to $549 billion.

Trump urged Congress to increase military spending and called for additional funds

■ Adds $10 million to Department of Defense Cyber Scholarshi­p Program to attract personnel to cyber missions like those at Creech AFB.

■ Adds $50 million in impact aid to be distribute­d to schools with large numbers of military connected students.

■ Creates a public-private partnershi­p between the

Air Force and the Nevada National Guard to cut costs in modernizin­g C-130H aircraft for guard use. for weapons and programs in his initial budget blueprint. Sen. John Mccain, R-ariz., BILL

the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the lower 2011 spending cap is “insufficie­nt and unacceptab­le.” He urged Trump to sign the $700 billion bill as a signal to Congress that more needs to be spent to upgrade military operations.

While Republican­s have called for an increase on budget caps to defense, Democrats want to lift the budget caps on other government department­s to increase spending for domestic programs.

If Congress fails to reach agreement on budget caps soon, lawmakers could be forced to pass another temporary spending bill in December that would fund the government at current levels until the end of the year or early 2018.

The defense bill, as passed, would include measures with an impact in Nevada. Several of those measures were co-sponsored by Rep. Jacky Rosen, D-nev., a member of the House Armed Services Committee.

Rosen said she was committed to working through the House Armed Services Committee “to keep Nevadans safe by modernizin­g our military, supporting our servicemem­bers and strengthen­ing our national security.”

The freshman House member said the bipartisan defense bill gives service members “a well-deserved pay If Congress fails to reach agreement on budget caps, lawmakers could be forced to pass another temporary spending bill in December.

raise that I fought for earlier this year.”

The bill authorizes a 2.4 percent pay hike.

Nevada is home to four military installati­ons: Creech AFB, Nellis AFB, Naval Air Station Fallon and Hawthorne Army Depot. There were 10,295 active-duty personnel stationed in Nevada in May 2016, including 9,129 airmen. Reservists at that time in the state totaled 7,713, and there were 1,472 civilian workers at Nevada military installati­ons, according to Defense Department records.

In addition to local items included in the bill, Rosen co-sponsored the Defend Israel Act, which was incorporat­ed in the bill and authorizes $706 million for Israeli anti-missile defense systems. She also sponsored language that requires secretarie­s of Defense, Energy, Homeland Security and the Director of National Intelligen­ce to report to Congress on any significan­t threat to the energy grid that could affect military readiness.

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

 ??  ?? Shoppers receive ads Thursday as they enter the J.C. Penney at the Galleria at Sunset in Henderson.
Shoppers receive ads Thursday as they enter the J.C. Penney at the Galleria at Sunset in Henderson.

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