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ances, to perform our legislative mission, and to oversee the vast activities and expenditures of the entire Federal government.

There are those who do not believe that the legislature should have the resources to do its job or to oversee the activities of the other branches of government. Some people have taken exception to funding a number of agencies that play that critical role. But that is exactly what our duty is under the Constitution. We can't buckle under the imposition of an artificially severe constraint over our ability to govern and to legislate. We cannot let that happen. I hope other members of the committee share my concerns. These hearings are designed to ferret out the necessary from the desirable or even the frivolous. I believe our record shows we do that, and I don't think I need to point out to most of you that there isn't an OMB between the agencies and the Legislative Branch and this Subcommittee. The fact that we are having our hearings today based on what is a draft or unofficial version of the budget is simply indicative of the fact that the budget submitted by the Legislative Branch agencies are, by law, passed directly to this Committee and not altered by the Executive Branch.

COMMENTS IN RESPONSE TO RALPH NADER ATTACK ON CONGRESS

Before we begin, there is one more subject I want to mention just briefly. Last year, Ralph Nader and one of his research groups attacked the Congress for not imposing environmentally sound practices, indicating we were not environmentally conscious, that we do not use recycled paper are not energy efficient, and so forth in our own operations.

Because our record is so good in that regard-because his report was so faulty-because it was just the typical kind of Congressbashing we usually get from Mr. Nader-we did try to set the record straight with him. We sent him a long, wellresearched paper outlining our activities over the years in this area, including the efforts of John Porter and myself to get the GPO to use recycled paper. Now, over 96 percent of printing and writing papers meet or exceed the EPA standards, and recycled newsprint, GPO just awarded a large contract for the Congressional Record and the Federal Register. We cited our directive to the Architect of the Capitol to study the use of energy-efficient lighting using criteria reported in a recent study by the Office of Technology Assessment. We are testing actual energy-efficient lighting in this hearing room and other places in the Capitol complex. We pointed out to Mr. Nader:

-our installation of solar collectors at the Ford House Office Building,

-our use of recycled products provided to Members' offices by the House stationery room now over 50 percent of letter paper, envelopes, etc.,

-our water and sewage metering program which has enabled us to save on our reimbursements to the District government, -the installation of a baghouse and filters at the power plant to control air contaminants,

the budget resolutions free of the pressures that sometimes come into the authorizing-appropriations trade-offs.

Every one of those transactions is also printed in the Clerk's report. This isn't hiding anything, or obfuscating, and it is not fair to describe it that way. If we wanted to hide it would be a lot easier for us to just bury everything into one massive account that would probably be impenetrable to anybody who wished to find out any fundamental information. To those who feel we are being arcane or obscure I suggest they compare this Committee's process to the Defense bill accounts or the large departmental administrative accounts in other Executive Branch agencies with our account structure.

Ours is easily the more detailed, more easily documented, more widely disclosed and our transactions are reported in much more detail. Where do you find comparable data on travel expenditures, individual contracts, salaries paid and consultant fees? Not one other large agency in government is as open or reveals as much of its operations and expenses as the Congress does.

So some observers just carp or accuse the Congress of being "obscure", but the facts are otherwise. I am pleased that we have press here today, particularly the type of members of the press corps who do spend a good deal of time on the agencies of this branch of government, and who do write extensively about it. They never seem to be short of material to include in their stories.

HISTORY OF LEGISLATIVE BRANCH BUDGET RESTRAINT

It is also important to note the history of restraint we have imposed on the Legislative budget over the years. We have kept our budget well below the growth in the Executive budget. Fiscal year 1982 was my first year as Chairman of this subcommittee. Since then, the annual compound rate of growth in the legislative appropriation has been 6.4 percent. The comparable growth rate in overall Federal funds outlays during this same time period has been 6.9 percent. The general government function of the Federal budget, which is dominated by executive direction and management in the Executive Branch, and which requires personnel intensive resources more comparable to those in the Legislative Branch, has grown at 8 percent per year on average. That is a 25-percent higher annual rate of growth than the Legislative budget. As we go through these hearings, we will review each request carefully and ask whether or not it is essential to the workings of the Legislative Branch, or can be cut back.

The fiscal year 1993 budget does represent an increase over 1992 appropriations. However, the Committee will undoubtedly make reductions when we mark the bill up just as we do every year. We should remember that the Legislative budget is much behind the growth in the other areas of the Federal budget. It is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain this type of restraint on the Legislative budget year after year. After all, we are one-third of the government under the Constitution, a key component of the checks and balances concept that is fundamental to our democratic proc

ances, to perform our legislative mission, and to oversee the vast activities and expenditures of the entire Federal government.

There are those who do not believe that the legislature should have the resources to do its job or to oversee the activities of the other branches of government. Some people have taken exception to funding a number of agencies that play that critical role. But that is exactly what our duty is under the Constitution. We can't buckle under the imposition of an artificially severe constraint over our ability to govern and to legislate. We cannot let that happen. I hope other members of the committee share my concerns. These hearings are designed to ferret out the necessary from the desirable or even the frivolous. I believe our record shows we do that, and I don't think I need to point out to most of you that there isn't an OMB between the agencies and the Legislative Branch and this Subcommittee. The fact that we are having our hearings today based on what is a draft or unofficial version of the budget is simply indicative of the fact that the budget submitted by the Legislative Branch agencies are, by law, passed directly to this Committee and not altered by the Executive Branch.

COMMENTS IN RESPONSE TO RALPH NADER ATTACK ON CONGRESS

Before we begin, there is one more subject I want to mention just briefly. Last year, Ralph Nader and one of his research groups attacked the Congress for not imposing environmentally sound practices, indicating we were not environmentally conscious, that we do not use recycled paper are not energy efficient, and so forth in our own operations.

Because our record is so good in that regard-because his report was so faulty-because it was just the typical kind of Congressbashing we usually get from Mr. Nader-we did try to set the record straight with him. We sent him a long, wellresearched paper outlining our activities over the years in this area, including the efforts of John Porter and myself to get the GPO to use recycled paper. Now, over 96 percent of printing and writing papers meet or exceed the EPA standards, and recycled newsprint, GPO just awarded a large contract for the Congressional Record and the Federal Register. We cited our directive to the Architect of the Capitol to study the use of energy-efficient lighting using criteria reported in a recent study by the Office of Technology Assessment.

We are testing actual energy-efficient lighting in this hearing room and other places in the Capitol complex. We pointed out to Mr. Nader:

-our installation of solar collectors at the Ford House Office Building,

-our use of recycled products provided to Members' offices by the House stationery room now over 50 percent of letter paper, envelopes, etc.,

-our water and sewage metering program which has enabled us to save on our reimbursements to the District government, -the installation of a baghouse and filters at the power plant to control air contaminants,

—our $10 million program to remove PCB's from building transformers,

-our direction to the Architect to inaugurate an office waste recycling program, and

-our asbestos removal project at the General Accounting Office headquarters building.

I am going to insert this lengthy response to Mr. Nader in the record. I commend it to all who are concerned about our environment and are interested in what the Congress is doing in its own precincts to set an example. I have gone into this because we tend to hear a lot more about the charges, and absolutely nothing about the refutation of them, which ought to be on the record.

[The information follows:]

MAJORITY MEMBERS

JAMIE L WHITTEN, MISSISSIPPI, CHAIRMAN

WILLIAM H NATCHER KENTUCKY, VICE CHAIRMAN

NEAL SMITH IOWA

SIDNEY R YATES ILLINOIS

DAVID ROBEY WISCONSIN

EDWARD R ROYBAL CALIFORNIA

LOUIS STOKES OHIO

TOM BEVILL ALABAMA

BILL ALEXANDER ARKANSAS

JOHN P MURTHA, PENNSYLVANIA

808 TRAXLER MICHIGAN

JOSEPH D EARLY MASSACHUSETTS

CHARLES WILSON, TEXAS

NORMAN D DICKS WASHINGTON

MATTHEW MCHUGH NEW YORK

WILLIAM LEHMAN FLORIDA

MARTIN OLAV SABO MINNESOTA
ARIAN C DIXON CALIFORNIA

VIC FAZIO CALIFORNIA

WG (BILL) HEFNER, NORTH CAROLINA

LES AUCOIN OREGON

WILLIAM H GRAY PENNSYLVANIA
BERNARD J DWYER, NEW JERSEY

STENY N HOYER MARYLAND

808 CARR MICHIGAN

ROBERT J MRAZEK, NEW YORK

RICHARD J DURBIN ILLINOIS

RONALD D COLEMAN TEXAS

ALAN 8 MOLLOHAN WEST VIRGINIA

LINDSAY THOMAS, GEORGIA

CHESTER G ATKINS MASSACHUSETTS

JIM CHAPMAN, TEXAS

MARCY KAPTUR OHIO

LAWRENCE J SMITH, FLORIDA

DAVID E SKAGGS COLORADO

DAVIDE PRICE, NORTH CAROLINA

NANCY PELOSI, CALIFORNIA

Congress of the United States
House of Representatives
Committee on Appropriations
Washington, DC 20515

October 16, 1991

MINORITY MEMBERS

JOSEPH M. MCDADE, PENNSYLVANIA

JOHN T MYERS, INDIANA

CLARENCE E MILLER OHIO

LAWRENCE COUGHLIN PENNSYLVANIA

CW BILL YOUNG FLORIDA
RALPH REGULA OHIO

CARL D PURSELL, MICHIGAN
MICKEY EDWARDS OKLAHOMA
808 LIVINGSTON LOUISIANA
BILL GREEN NEW YORK
JERRY LEWIS, CALIFORNIA
JOHN EDWARD PORTER ILLINOIS
HAROLD ROGERS, KENTUCKY
JOE SKEEN NEW MEXICO
FRANK A WOLF, VIRGINIA
BILL LOWERY, CALIFORNIA
VIN WEBER MINNESOTA
TOM DELAY TEXAS

JIM KOLBE ARIZONA

DEAN A GALLO, NEW JERSEY

BARBARA VUCANOVICH, NEVADA

JIM LIGHTFOOT, IOWA

CLERK AND STAFF DIRECTOR
FREDERICK G. MOHRMAN

TELEPHONE
(202) 225-2771

Mr. Ralph Nader

Government Procurement Project

P.O. Box 19367

Washington, DC 20036

Dear Mr. Nader:

From its very first sentence, your September 3, 1991, press
release, "Congress Is Not A Green Consumer Charges Ralph Nader,"
is misleading, distorted, and reflects flagrantly poor research.
Your September 11 cover letter sending this non-information to me
suggests that I take an "action-interest" in the so-called
"findings." Since those findings and real facts are a
contradiction in terms, I want to shed some light on your dark
analysis; call it an "information-interest" contribution to your
research efforts.

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You contend that Congress is "not being environmentally
conscious in the management of its office buildings" and go on to
say we ". .should lead the country. by buying recycled
paper, conserving water, and being energy efficient." That we are
not environmentally conscious is patently false. The allegations
that we do not buy recycled paper, conserve water, and are not
trying to be energy efficient is so easily refutable that even a
cursory research effort should have no difficulty in discerning
the truth.

During the past ten years that I have been the chairman of the
appropriations subcommittee that provides funds for the entire
legislative branch, including those for the operations of
Congress' office buildings, all of our agencies have been
encouraged to become environmentally prudent. Over that period,
and even before that, our subcommittee and those who operate our
infrastructure have repeatedly taken positive and proactive stands

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