Fy 2016 Proposed Budget Fact Sheet PDF
Fy 2016 Proposed Budget Fact Sheet PDF
Fy 2016 Proposed Budget Fact Sheet PDF
These proposals will help working families feel more secure with paychecks that go further, help
American workers upgrade their skills so they can compete for higher-paying jobs, and help create
the conditions for our businesses to keep generating good new jobs for our workers to fill, while
also fulfilling our most basic responsibility to keep Americans safe. We will make these
investments, and end the harmful spending cuts known as sequestration, by cutting inefficient
spending and reforming our broken tax code to make sure everyone pays their fair share. We can
do all this while also putting our Nation on a more sustainable fiscal path. The Budget achieves
about $1.8 trillion in deficit reduction, primarily from reforms to health programs, our tax code,
and immigration.
The Environmental Protection Agencys (EPAs) mission is to protect human health and the
environment. EPA was formed in 1970 in order to implement major pollution control programs
that were carried out primarily by EPA employees at the Federal level. In the decades that
followed, new environmental statutes were enacted that expanded EPAs mandate and workload.
Congress designed Federal environmental programs to support strong collaboration with state,
tribal, and local partners wherever possible, and most major environmental statutes have since
been delegated to, and are largely administered by, states and tribes. Because of the successful
efforts of these collaborations, environmental quality has improved substantially during this time.
In recognition of evolving responsibilities, EPA has strategically evaluated its workforce and
facility needs and will continue the comprehensive effort to modernize its workforce begun in
2014. By implementing creative, flexible, cost-effective, and sustainable strategies to protect
public health and safeguard the environment, EPA will target resources toward development of a
workforce and structure that can address current challenges and priorities.
The Presidents FY 2016 Budget for the EPA provides funding to further key work in addressing
climate change and improving air quality, protecting our water, safeguarding the health and safety
of the public from toxic chemicals, supporting the environmental health of communities, and
working toward a sustainable environmental future for all Americans. Central to this work is
supporting our state, local, and tribal partners, working with them to deliver on our environmental
and health improvements, and doing this while focusing on a strong workforce at EPA with the
tools necessary to ensure effective use of the public resources entrusted to us.
Funding Highlights:
The Presidents FY 2016 Budget provides $8.6 billion for the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency to protect peoples health and the environment in which we live. This
includes:
o Supporting the Presidents Climate Action Plan to reduce carbon pollution from
power plants, vehicles and other sources by using cleaner energy sources and
cutting wastes;
o Improving the safety and security of chemical facilities by expanding support to local
communities to improve communication, coordination, and capacity, delivering on
the White House Executive Order on Improving Chemical Facility Safety and
Security; and
The Presidents FY 2016 Budget also includes a $4 billion Clean Power State Incentive
Fund to support states that choose to go beyond the Clean Power Plan, which will be
finalized in the summer of 2015.
Reforms:
The Presidents FY 2016 Budget ensures that the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency maintains its commitment to effective and efficient government. This includes:
o Consolidating EPAs physical and carbon footprint to save taxpayer dollars through
laboratory consolidation, co-location, and essential renovations for the important
buildings across the country where critical science research is conducted on behalf
of the American public.
In addition to EPAs discretionary budget, the President also proposes an incentive fund,
administered by the EPA, for states choosing to go beyond the Clean Power Plan. The Clean Power
State Incentive Fund would provide $4 billion to support states exceeding the minimum
requirements established in the Clean Power Plan for the pace and extent of carbon pollution
reductions from the power sector. To be finalized this summer, the Fund would enable states to
invest in a range of activities that complement and advance the Clean Power Plan, including efforts
to address disproportionate impacts from environmental pollution in low-income communities and
support for businesses to expand efforts in energy efficiency, renewable energy, and combined
heat and power through, for example, grants and investments in much-needed infrastructure.
Working with the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration, the EPA will continue
to address climate change by targeting the transportation sectors largest contributors to
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. These efforts will include implementing GHG standards for
light-duty and heavy duty vehicles, creating significant savings at the pump, further reducing
carbon pollution, and cutting down on businesses fuel costs. Recognizing the strength and value
of an integrated approach, the EPA will also leverage the efforts of the National Estuary and other
water programs, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Waste Minimization and
Recycling, and Pollution Prevention programs to achieve greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions and
climate change mitigation in FY 2016.