MINERALS Funds BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT-Continued General and special funds-Continued MANAGEMENT OF LANDS AND RESOURCES -Continued Firefighting and rehabilitation.-Provides for suppression of wildfires on or threatening the public lands; and rehabilitation of public land resources. Mormon cricket and grasshopper control.-Provides for control of insect and pest infestations on Federal rangelands. Technical services.-Provides for enforcement of laws and regulations governing the management, use, and protection of public lands; and for maintenance of buildings, roads, and trails. General administration.-Includes executive management, equal employment opportunity programs, general administrative services, and Bureau-wide fixed costs. Object Classification (in thousands of dollars) Identification code 14-1109-0-1-302 Direct obligations: Personnel compensation: 46.40 Transfer in for retirement contributions (P.L. 36 99-335)... Relation of obligations to outlays: 71.00 Obligations incurred, net. 72.40 Obligated balance, start of year 2,557 4,171 74.40 Obligated balance, end of year... 11.5 78.00 Adjustments in unexpired accounts.. -47 214,805 ment of Transportation: Provided further, That 25 per centum of the aggregate of all receipts during the current fiscal year from the revested Oregon and California Railroad grant lands is hereby made a charge against the Oregon and California land grant fund and shall be transferred to the General Fund in the Treasury in accordance with the provisions of the second paragraph of subsection (b) of title II of the Act of August 28, 1937 (50 Stat. 876). (16 U.S.C. 594; 43 U.S.C. 1181, 1701; 53 Stat. 753; Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1987, as included in Public Laws 99-500 and 99-591, section 101(h).) 1986 actual 1987 est. 1988 est. 10.00 Total obligations. Program by activities: Financing: 10 00 Total obligations.. 21.40 Unobligated balance available, start of year Budget authority (appropriation). 77.00 Adjustments in expired accounts. 161 90.00 Outlays The Oregon and California grant lands appropriation provides for the management, development and protecPublic Law 94-565 (31 U.S.C. 6901), as amended, aution by BLM of 2.1 million acres of revested railroad thorizes payments in lieu of taxes to counties and other and wagon road lands located in western Oregon, priunits of local government for lands within their bound-marily for permanent forest production under the prinaries which are administered by the Bureau of Land ciple of sustained yield. Management, Forest Service, National Park Service, Fish and Wildlife Service and certain other agencies (entitlement land payments). OREGON AND CALIFORNIA GRANT LANDS For expenses necessary for management, protection, and development of resources and for construction, operation, and maintenance of access roads, reforestation, and other improvements on the revested Oregon and California Railroad grant lands, on other Federal lands in the Oregon and California land-grant counties of Oregon, and on adjacent rights-of-way; and acquisition of lands or interests therein including existing connecting roads on or adjacent to such grant lands, [854,524,000] $53,937,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, That the amount appropriated herein for road construction shall be transferred to the Federal Highway Administration, Depart Rattlesnake NRA and Wilderness Area.-Represents the monetary value of bidding rights issued under the authority of Public Law 96-476 and the estimated value of the quarterly adjustments to those rights required by section 7 of the Lee Metcalf Wilderness and Management Act of 1983. The bidding rights may be used as monetary credits against that portion of any coal lease bonus payments, rentals or royalties payable under the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, as amended, and retained by the Federal Government, on any Federal coal lease won or otherwise held by the holder. The value of unused bidding rights increases at a rate set quarterly by the Secretary of the Treasury, pursuant to section 11 of the Debt Collection Act of 1982 (31 U.S.C. 3717). This appropriation provides for the acquisition of lands or interests in lands when necessary for public recreation use and other purposes related to the management of the public lands. Object Classification (in thousands of dollars) [In thousands of dollars) 1986 actual 1987 est 1988 est 2,188 6.184 10 2,490 3,398 3,735 -2,700 -810 -1.890 2,188 3,484 10 2.490 2,588 1.845 Personnel compensation: Full-time permanent.. 28 14 Object Classification (in thousands of dollars) RANGE IMPROVEMENTS For rehabilitation, protection, and acquisition of lands and interests therein, and improvement of Federal rangelands pursuant to section 401 of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (43 U.S.C. 1701), notwithstanding any other Act, sums equal to 50 per centum of all moneys received during the prior fiscal year under sections 3 and 15 of the Taylor Grazing Act (43 U.S.C. 315, et seq.), but not less than [$9,253,000] $8,506,000, [43 U.S.C. 1901] and the amount designated for range improvements from grazing fees and mineral leasing receipts from Bankhead-Jones lands transferred to the Department of the Interior pursuant to law, to remain available until expended: Provided, That not to exceed $600,000 shall be available for administrative expenses. (7 U.S.C. 1010; 30 U.S.C. 355; 43 U.S.C. 1751, and 1901; Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1987, as included in Public Laws 99-500 and 99-591, section 101(h).) Amounts Available for Appropriation (in thousands of dollars) Personnel Summary Collections (offsetting receipts) Transferred to general fund receipts. Transferred to payments to States from grazing receipts, etc., Total compensable workyears: public lands outside grazing districts. Transferred to payments to States from grazing receipts, etc., Full-time equivalent of overtime and holiday hours. 4 4 public lands within grazing districts....... Transferred to payments to counties from grazing and mineral leasing receipts from National Grasslands.. SERVICE CHARGES, DEPOSITS, and forfeituRES For administrative expenses and other costs related to processing application documents and other authorizations for use and disposal of public lands and resources, for costs of providing copies of official public land documents, for monitoring construction, operation, and termination of facilities in conjunction with use authorizations, and for rehabilitation of damaged property, such amounts as may be collected under sections 209(b), 304(a), 304(b), 305(a), and 504(g) of the Act approved October 21, 1976 (43 U.S.C. 1701), and sections 101 and 203 of Public Law 93-153, to be immediately available until expended[]: Provided. That notwithstanding any provision to the contrary of subsection 305(a) of the Act of October 21, 1976 (43 U.S.C. § 1735(a)), any moneys that have been or will be received pursuant to that subsection, whether as a result of forfeiture, compromise, or settlement, if not appropriate for refund pursuant to subsection 305(c) of that Act (43 U.S.C. §1735(c)), shall be available and may be expended under the authority of this or subsequent appropriations acts by the Secretary to improve, protect, or rehabilitate any public lands administered by the action of a resource developer, purchaser, permittee, or any through the Bureau of Land Management which have been damaged unauthorized person, without regard to whether all moneys collected from each such forfeiture, compromise, or settlement are used on the exact lands damage to which led to the forfeiture, compromise, or settlement. (43 USC. 1719, 1734, 1735, and 1764; 30 USC. 185; 87 Stat. 584; Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1987, as included in Public Laws 99-500 and 99-591, section 101(h)) MINERALS Funds This appropriation is derived from: (1) revenues received to offset administrative and other costs incurred to process applications for rights-of-way, and the monitoring of construction, operation, and termination of rights-of-ways; (2) recovery of costs associated with the adopt-a-horse program; (3) revenues received for rehabilitation of damages to lands and facilities; (4) fees for processing specified categories of realty actions under FLPMA; (5) revenues received from contractors for slash burning and timber extension expenses; and (6) fees for costs of production and administrative services involved in providing requested copies of materials. Object Classification (in thousands of dollars) 2,942 Total number of full-time permanent positions. Total compensable workyears: Full-time equivalent employment. 33 3 33 33 |