Federal Manager's Daily Report

Governmental Affairs Committee ranking member Joe

Lieberman, D-Conn., is proposing a $14 billion supplement

to the $47 billion requested in President Bush’s fiscal

2005 budget for the Department of Homeland Security,

according to the Senate committee’s website.


Lieberman said that the current request only allows for

a 4 percent increase in discretionary spending, would

not allow for new security initiatives, and would cut

aid to first responders.


In a letter to Budget Committee Chairman Don Nickels,

R-Okla., and Ranking Member Kent Conrad, D-N.D.,

Lieberman said $6.6 billion of the additional funds

should go to first responders for preparedness and

interoperable communications equipment.


He also argued that the administration used an “accounting

anomaly” to make it appear that it is proposing $2.5

billion for Bioshield, a bioterror defense program,

for fiscal 2005, but that the funds are for the next

four years.


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