THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release December 21, 2000
STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT
Today I am signing into law H.R. 4942, the Departments of Commerce,
Justice, State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act,
2001. I commend the Congress for approving a bill that provides
critical funding for enforcing our Nation's laws, protecting our
precious natural resources, promoting international peace, and
supporting our diplomatic operations.
Many portions of the Act are considerably improved compared to the
previous House and Senate versions. I appreciate and commend the
Congress for the many changes that have been made, including providing
additional funding to finance the Lands Legacy program; to improve the
health of our Nation's ocean fisheries; to help close the digital divide
between our more and less affluent citizens; to improve trade
compliance; to prosecute local firearms violations; to toughen our
Nation's stance against cybercrime and terrorism; to provide additional
law enforcement assistance to Native Americans; to fund peace-keeping
requirements; and to improve worldwide embassy security.
I applaud the Congress for providing over $430 million for the
Department of Commerce's components of the Lands Legacy Initiative.
This funding will help protect marine sanctuaries; support the new
Northwestern Hawaiian Coral Reef Reserve and restore other coral reefs;
expand estuarine research reserves; and promote recovery of Pacific
coastal salmon runs through grants to western States and Tribes. The
Act fully funds activities for the Pacific Salmon Agreement with Canada
at $60 million and for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's (NOAA) work on Columbia River Basin salmon populations.
Acceptable funding is also provided for a new climate observation
initiative, a new education program with Minority Serving Institutions,
and two smaller programs: Global Observations to Benefit the
Environment and the Global Disaster Information Network.
The Act takes an important step toward closing the digital divide
by providing the requested tripling of funding for the Technology
Opportunities Program. This program will provide grants to promote
innovative applications of information technology in under-served
communities.
I am pleased that over $1.0 billion is provided for the COPS
II/21st Century Policing initiative, the successor to the highly
effective Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) program, which
will enable local police departments to begin a five-year plan to hire
up to 50,000 additional community police officers, hire new community
prosecutors, and expand community-based prevention efforts. While the
appropriated funding level is still below my original request, it is
$444 million above the FY 2000 level, and will enable the COPS II
program to fund almost 6,000 new officers in FY 2001.
The Act provides almost $100 million for the Department of
Justice's counterterrorism and cybercrime initiatives. This funding
level will allow for improved efforts to meet the growing challenges of
terrorism and cybercrime, including State and local first-responder
training, staff support for the Joint Terrorism Task Forces and enhanced
technology and intelligence-gathering along the northern border. The
Department of Justice's components of the Gun Enforcement Initiative are
funded at $103 million. This appropriation will support over 600
Federal, State and local gun prosecutors, and increase research on smart
gun technologies. The Indian Country Law Enforcement initiative is
funded at $111 million. This funding, which is $19 million above the FY
2000 level, will allow the Department of Justice to assist tribes in
hiring and equipping law enforcement personnel, constructing detention
and court facilities, and developing alternative sentencing programs for
alcohol and substance abusers.
I am pleased that the Act provides $4.7 billion for the regular
operations of the Department of State, including diplomatic and consular
programs; information technology investments; and, building leases,
maintenance and repair. These funds will pay for support costs critical
to maintaining the Department's network of overseas posts and the
conduct of foreign affairs worldwide. The funded increases include
expanded efforts to promote trade compliance and enhance labor and
environmental monitoring. Funding for embassy security and construction
also includes requested support for projects of the Agency for
International Development. The Act also provides full funding for the
Administration's pilot program to allow unclassified communication and
sharing of information for all U.S. Government agencies operating at an
overseas post, as recommended by the Overseas Presence Advisory Panel.
The Act also provides $846 million for Contributions to
International Peacekeeping Activities. Funding at this level will allow
the United States to continue to support vital UN peacekeeping
operations, including ongoing missions in Kosovo, East Timor,
Ethiopia/Eritrea and Sierra Leone.
I am also pleased that the Act provides $17 million for the
Departments of Commerce and State and the United States Trade
Representative to help ensure U.S. companies and workers receive the
full benefits from the WTO and other bilateral agreements signed by the
United States. This funding will help to put experts overseas to deal
with compliance issues that continue to hinder fair access to markets,
double staff focused on China and Japan, and strengthen
antidumping/countervailing duty investigation capabilities.
I am pleased that H.R. 4577, the Consolidated Appropriations bill,
modifies immigration provisions included in this Act, and that the
modified legislation will ease immigration restric-tions on an estimated
700,000 immigrant families living in the United States. The provisions
will extend section 245(i) until April 30, 2001, as opposed to January
14, 1998, under current law, to allow aliens (and their spouses and
children) who apply for an adjustment of status or a labor certification
to remain in the United States until such petition is approved.
Additionally, the provisions will create a new, temporary non-immigrant
visa for spouses and children of spouses of legal permanent residents
and U.S. citizens seeking to enter the United States to await approval
of legal permanent resident status for themselves (the "V" visa). The
provisions will also allow certain individuals who were not granted
amnesty under the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 who are
currently seeking such relief through the courts to apply for permanent
residency. While I am disappointed that the legislation fails to
eliminate the disparate treatment under our immigration laws sought for
Salvadorans, Guatemalans, Hondurans, Haitians, and Liberians and does
not provide any relief for deserving individuals affected by changes in
the 1996 immigration law, it is the best compromise that could be
reached after several rounds of intense negotiations.
I am also pleased that the Consolidated Appropriations bill, once
signed, will eliminate an objectionable provision in the
Commerce/Justice/State Act that purports to protect citizens from the
unauthorized sale or display of social security numbers but would not,
in fact, provide privacy safeguards that are adequate.
Although the funding levels in this Act are acceptable, I am
troubled that several issues could not be resolved despite my
Administration's best efforts during the final negotiations on the Act.
Notably, the Act does not include new hate crimes protections, and fails
to extend the Violent Crime Reduction Trust Fund. I strongly urge the
next Congress to reconsider these actions in future legislation.
In addition, this bill greatly restricts low-power FM radio
broadcast. Low power radio stations are an important tool in fostering
diversity on the airwaves through community-based programming. I am
deeply disappointed that Congress chose to restrict the voice of our
nation's churches, schools, civic organizations and community groups. I
commend the FCC for giving a voice to the voiceless and I urge the
Commission to go forward in licensing as many stations as possible
consistent with the limitations imposed by Congress.
I also oppose language in the Act related to the Kyoto Protocol.
The language is inappropriate because the Administration has no intent
of implementing the Protocol prior to congressional ratification. The
Act includes an additional number of provisions regarding the conduct of
foreign affairs that raise serious constitutional concerns. My
Administration's objections to these and other language provisions have
been made clear in previous statements of Administration policy. I
direct the agencies to construe these provisions to be consistent with
the President's constitutional prerogatives and responsibilities and
where such a construction is not possible, to treat them as not
interfering with those prerogatives and responsibilities.
Finally, section 629 of the Act amends the Interstate Horseracing
Act of 1978 to include within the definition of the term "interstate
off-track wager," pari-mutuel wagers on horseraces that are placed or
transmitted from individuals in one State via the telephone or other
electronic media and accepted by an off-track betting system in the same
or another State. The Department of Justice, however, does not view
this provision as codifying the legality of common pool wagering and
interstate account wagering even where such wagering is legal in the
various States involved for horseracing, nor does the Department view
the provision as repealing or amending existing criminal statutes that
may be applicable to such activity, in particular, sections 1084, 1952,
and 1955 of Title 18, United States Code.
Several essential modifications to this bill are contained in H.R.
4577, the Consolidated Appropriations bill. I am signing H.R. 4942 into
law today because I believe the Act, as modified by H.R. 4577, will meet
the overall needs and priorities of the American people. I urge the
next Congress and my successor to continue to promote the needs of the
American citizenry by pursuing resolution to the troublesome issues I
have highlighted above.
WILLIAM J. CLINTON
THE WHITE HOUSE,
December 21, 2000.
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