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Congress Passes FY 2023 Omnibus

water resources development act

Christmas came early for Congress, as House and Senate leaders finally passed a much-awaited $1.7 trillion fiscal year (FY) 2023 omnibus spending bill. The bill represents an increase from the $1.5 trillion appropriations package for FY 22. The release of the bill’s text was quickly followed by action in both Chambers to meet the deadline of December 23rd, when government funding was set to expire. The Senate passed the measure December 22nd with a 68-29 vote. The House quickly followed, approving the measure December 23rd with a 225-201 vote.

The omnibus package is comprised of all 12 annual appropriations bills and will fund the government through September 2023. Overall, the bill provides $858 billion in defense spending, representing about a 10 percent increase from the baseline, and $772.5 billion in nondefense discretionary spending, an increase less than the 7.1 percent inflation rate. Also included in the bill is nearly $45 billion in additional Ukraine aid; legislation banning the use of TikTok on government phones; the Electoral Count Act Reform, which clarifies that the vice president cannot overturn election results when Congress counts Electoral College votes; and $40 billion in funding to assist communities across the country recovering from natural disasters. The bill also does waive the statutory Pay-as-You-Go Act of 2010 for both 2023 and 2024, providing certainty for state and local governments and allowing $14 billion in subsidy payments to public entities to move forward.

ASCE urged Congress to pass an appropriations package for FY 23 that maintains a strong commitment to our nation’s infrastructure systems, as well as the investments set by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the CHIPS and Science Act. Congress mostly kept that promise, with agencies like the Department of Transportation receiving more funding in FY 23 than it has ever received in a year, amounting to $144 billion.

ASCE has broken down the programs that the Society has been tracking most closely. Those programs, broken out by agency, are below.

Agriculture and Rural Development. The final bill provides nearly $4 billion for rural development programs, including to build sustainable rural infrastructure. Highlights include:

Commerce-Justice-Science. The bill provides $1.8 billion in new funding to implement the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. This includes $820 million in the CJS Appropriations bill and $980 million in supplemental funding to help jumpstart the initiative. The CHIPS and Science Act sets out an ambitious goal of doubling funding for science and technology programs by 2027 to help drive U.S. economic competitiveness. Among agencies within the Commerce-Justice-Science title are:

Energy and Water. The bill provides $54.65 billion for the Energy & Water division, as well as $650 million in emergency funds.  This includes:

Interior and Environment. The bill provides $38.9 billion for the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Division, an increase of $850 million from FY 2022. This includes $10.1 billion for the Environmental Protection Agency, which is $576 million more than FY 2022.  Additionally, the bill provides $1.6 billion for wildfire preparedness and $4.6 billion in disaster funding related to wildfires, hurricanes and other natural disasters. This overall bill also includes:

Homeland Security. The bill includes $86.5 billion for the Homeland Security division, including $25.7 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which is $1.5 billion above the FY 2022 level.  This includes:

Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies. The 2023 THUD funding bill provides $87.3 billion, an increase of $6.3 billion compared to FY 2022 funding levels. The bill provides a total of $106.3 billion in budgetary resources for the Department of Transportation (DOT), which represents a $3.4 billion hike above FY 2022 enacted levels. Highlights include: