Energy and Water Development Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1987: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, Ninety-ninth Congress, Second SessionU.S. Government Printing Office, 1986 |
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Page 28
... equipment and materials to Federal , state , and local entities in response to flood problems on the Mississippi River mainstream and tributaries ( February and March 1985 ) and across the midwest from the Lower Great Lakes to the Ohio ...
... equipment and materials to Federal , state , and local entities in response to flood problems on the Mississippi River mainstream and tributaries ( February and March 1985 ) and across the midwest from the Lower Great Lakes to the Ohio ...
Page 52
... equipment . From this source we have programmed $ 8,315,000 for four major new items , including : $ 940,000 for construction of an erosion protection system for the Savannah District Engineer Depot ; $ 125,000 for design and to ...
... equipment . From this source we have programmed $ 8,315,000 for four major new items , including : $ 940,000 for construction of an erosion protection system for the Savannah District Engineer Depot ; $ 125,000 for design and to ...
Page 53
... equipment and equipment maintenance . Travel costs will be funded at the current level . PERMANENT APPROPRIATIONS The FY 1987 request for Permanent Appropriations is $ 9,000,000 , the same amount as the FY 1986 allocation , and is the ...
... equipment and equipment maintenance . Travel costs will be funded at the current level . PERMANENT APPROPRIATIONS The FY 1987 request for Permanent Appropriations is $ 9,000,000 , the same amount as the FY 1986 allocation , and is the ...
Page 114
... equipment upgrades , training and testing will remain and will continue to be critical to a viable response capability . Chairman HATFIELD . Have you explored ways to reduce the funding requirement for mobilization and continuity of ...
... equipment upgrades , training and testing will remain and will continue to be critical to a viable response capability . Chairman HATFIELD . Have you explored ways to reduce the funding requirement for mobilization and continuity of ...
Page 118
... equipment would be much different for vertical construction such as a building , which would be more labor intensive , as opposed to a dam , which would require more equipment and thus be a fuel intensive operation . For the variety of ...
... equipment would be much different for vertical construction such as a building , which would be more labor intensive , as opposed to a dam , which would require more equipment and thus be a fuel intensive operation . For the variety of ...
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1987 budget request activities additional Administration agencies agreement analysis Answer applications appropriation assessment budget authority Chairman HATFIELD Commission completed Congress construction continue contract cooperative Corps cost sharing Creek DAWSON efforts electric engineering environmental estimated evaluation facilities Federal fees FERC Fermilab fiscal year 1987 flood control fuel funding fusion FY 1987 budget HARBOR hydropower impact implementation improved increase industry initiated issues Laboratory legislation licensing maintenance million National natural gas non-Federal nuclear power Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office operation percent plant PLASMA PHYSICS Power Marketing Administrations priority problems proposed Question reactor Reclamation reduced regulation regulatory renewable energy research and development research program response result River Basin safety schedule Secretary solar specific storage studies SUB-TOTAL technical Tennessee Valley Authority testing Tevatron thermal-hydraulic TVA's utilities Waddell Dam waste
Fréquemment cités
Page 571 - It is the sense of the Congress that any work, service, publication, report, document, benefit, privilege, authority, use, franchise, license, permit, certificate, registration, or similar thing of value or utility performed, furnished, provided, granted, prepared, or issued...
Page 956 - A Notice of Proposed Rulemaking was published in the Federal Register on January 29, 1986. The proposed Criteria modification addresses: (1) items that were questioned in the miners...
Page 572 - Where a service (or privilege) provides special benefits to an identifiable recipient above and beyond those which accrue to the public at large, a charge should be imposed to recover the full cost to the Federal Government of rendering that service.
Page 964 - The purposes of this part are— (1) to establish a schedule for the siting, construction, and operation of repositories that will provide a reasonable assurance that the public and the environment will be adequately protected from the hazards posed by high-level radioactive waste and such spent nuclear fuel as may be disposed of in a repository...
Page 927 - RTG development, DOE is continuing its efforts to improve thermoelectric conversion efficiencies, including silicon germanium optimization, electrical contacting, evaluation of materials properties, degradation mechanisms, and material interactions.
Page 571 - ... taking into consideration direct and indirect cost to the Government, value to the recipient, public policy or interest served, and other pertinent facts.
Page 572 - ... (c) Is performed at the request of the recipient and is above and beyond the services regularly received by other members of the same industry or group, or of the general public (eg, receiving a passport, visa, airman's certificate, or an inspection after regular duty hours).
Page 739 - A part of the recent progress in high energy physics has been the conceptual unification of the weak nuclear and electromagnetic forces into a single "electroweak
Page 782 - BER program is $196.6 million. Within this request, $184.6 million is for Operating Expenses; $8.5 million is for Capital Equipment, and $3.5 million is for Construction (Table 9).
Page 197 - Law 91-575) among the States of Maryland and New York, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the Federal Government. The purpose of the Compact is to enable the signatory parties to participate jointly in the conservation, utilization, development, and control of water and related resources in the region of the Susquehanna River Basin.