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Bingaman: Key Military Spending Bill Signed Into Law Print Share

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Jeff Bingaman today reported that President Bush signed into law a spending bill that funds multiple federal agencies, including funding for the state's military installations and a key New Mexico National Guard program that protects the New Mexico border region.

The measure, called the Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing Appropriations Act, includes many initiatives for which Bingaman sought funding, including $3.2 million for the New Mexico National Guard so it can continue to fund counter-drug efforts in the border region and enhance border security.  Bingaman has already secured $8.15 million for this program. 

             "This bill is good for our state is many ways.  It lends strong support to our Air Force Bases and White Sands Missile Range, while setting aside funding for other key initiatives such as helping secure our border," Bingaman said.  "This is a good bill for our state."

            The bill signed today is known as a continuing resolution, or a CR.  Congress has passed CRs in years it has not approved individual spending bills before a fiscal year has begun; a new fiscal year begins at midnight, but Congress has not passed appropriations bills.  The CR signed today funds the military and military construction budgets for the entire fiscal year and most of the remaining federal departments until March. 

            The bill contains funding for New Mexico's military installations. 

For Holloman Air Force Base:

  • $4 million to continue the development and construction of the prototype magnetic levitation test track to support high speed test operations; 
  • $2.907 billion for 20 F-22 aircraft, enough to keep the Air Force on schedule to send 40 Raptors to Holloman Air Force Base by 2011,
  • $14.5 million to construct a Low Observable Composite Repair Facility;
  • $4.6 million to construct an Aerospace Ground Equipment Facility;
  • $3.15 million for the additions and alterations to the Flight Simulator Facility;
  • $2.15 million to construction a Jet Engine Maintenance Shop;
  • $1.05 million for additions and alterations to Aircraft Maintenance Units; and,
  • $495,000 for design of a consolidated munitions handling facility at Holloman.

White Sands Missile Range:

  • $2 million, White Sands Missile Range, Joint Urban Environment Test Capability;
  • $4 million, White Sands Missile Range, DoD High Energy Laser Test Facility;
  • $4 million, White Sands Missile Range, to analyze WSMR road infrastructure and develop an operations and maintenance plan, including funding strategies for the long term sustainment of the range road infrastructure and to repair degraded road sections ensuring safe and capable support of test and training missions.

Cannon Air Force Base would benefit from:

·         $409 million for 6 CV-22 Osprey Tilt Rotor Craft;

·         $18.1 million for the construction of a Special Operations Forces Maintenance Hangar;

·          $8.3 million for a CV-22 simulator training facility. 

·         $306 million for 4 MC-130J transport aircraft to replace aging 30 plus year old Air Force Special Operations Air Craft that perform all weather low terrain operations.

Kirtland Air Force Base:

  • $14.4 million for a fuel storage replacement project.

 

The bill also contains:

$2.8 millionUniversity of New Mexico, to support the Long Wave Length Array.   The Long Wavelength Array will be a very large (400 km) synthetic aperture radio astronomy telescope designed as a new instrument in the poorly explored region of the electromagnetic spectrum.  It will research astrophysics, space physics, space weather, and ionospheric physics.

$3 million – UNM, to develop new U.S. space-based and defense digital processing capability based upon reconfigurable circuits. 

$3.2 million – UNM, University Strategic Partnerships, for research, develop, test and evaluation programs through the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA).

$7 million – New Mexico Tech, Smart Instrument Development for the Magdalena Ridge Observatory (MRO).  The United States Office of Naval Research (ONR) and the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) have joined a consortium of research universities, including the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (New Mexico Tech) and Cambridge University, in a unique teaming arrangement to build a state-of-the-art observatory in the Magdalena Mountains near Socorro, New Mexico.

$4 million – NM Tech, Playas Training and Research Center Joint Training Experiment.  Funding will be used to establish the PTRC as a Joint National Training and Experimentation Site for National Guard Bureau (NGB) active and reserve personnel, as well as for Air National Guard and Army National Guard personnel. Playas is envisioned as becoming an integral portion of the Joint National Training Capability.

$2.4 million – to support Tularosa Basin National Inland Research and Testing facility, Alamogordo.

$10 million – New Mexico State University Institute for Defense and Public Policy Institute for National Security and Public Policy that will prepare national security professionals to serve as managers and policy leaders in an ever-changing global environment.

$800,000 – New Mexico State University, to develop a comprehensive total cost analysis of

munitions production taking into account associated environmental and health risks and

production and reclamation expenses, and 2) evaluate environmental impact associated with

testing and deploying ammunition containing heavy metals.

$3.2 million – Applied Research Associates, Inc., Albuquerque, High Energy Conventional Energetics

 

$500,000 – TruTouch, Albuquerque, to develop a portable autonomous fluid-less near-infrared non-invasive alcohol testing devices.

 

$2.4 million – Goodrich Corp. Space Flight Systems, Albuquerque, to develop new technology to distribute power to Air Force space craft.

 

$5 million – UAV Systems and Operations Validation Program at New Mexico State University to test a wide array of small and medium size UAVs for the DOD.

 

$800,000 – for a center for responsive space systems at the University of New Mexico to study small responsive satellites.

 

$2.4 million – Alaska Structures in Las Cruces to develop a new generation of portable structures that the DOD can deploy in a wide array of conditions overseas.