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American Waterborne Commerce Coalition

Agriculture Transportation Coalition

American Association of Port Authorities

American Great Lakes Ports

American Iron and Steel Institute

American Iron Ore Association
American Maritime Congress
American Pilots' Association
American Steamship Company
American Waterways Operators
Arch Coal Sales International
Bay Shipbuilding Company
Bethlehem Steel Company
Canal Barge Company
Caterpillar Inc.

Cement Transit Company

Central Gulf Lines, Inc.

Chamber of Shipping of America

Cleveland-Cliffs Inc.

Cleveland Tankers Ship Management Inc.

Coal Exporters Association of the United States

Coastwise Trading Company

Council of European and Japanese National Shipowners' Association (CENSA)

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Lake Carriers' Association

Lake Michigan Contractors, Inc.
Lakes Shipping Company, Inc.
Louis Dreyfus Corporation
Luedtke Engineering Company
Maersk Inc.

Maple Creek Mining, Inc.

Marinette Marine Corporation

Maritime Exchange for the Delaware River and Bay Maritime Institute for Research and Industrial Development

Maritime Trades Department, AFL-CIO

Matson Navigation Company

Metro Machine of Pennsylvania

Midwest Energy Resources Company

National Association of Maritime Organizations

National Grain & Feed Association

National Mining Association

National Waterways Conference, Inc.

Nicholson Terminal & Dock Co.

North American Export Grain Association

NPR, Inc./Navieras

Oglebay Norton Company

Passenger Vessel Association

Pea Ridge Iron Ore Company
Rouge Steel Company

Ruhrkohle Trading Corporation

Sea-Land Services, Inc.

Seafarers International Union of North America

SSM Coal North America, Inc.

St. Lawrence Seaway Pilots' Association

Summers Fuel Inc.

The American Coal Sales Company

The Interlake Steamship Company

The Ohio Valley Coal Company

The Ohio Valley Transloading Company

The Port Authority of New York & New Jersey

Toledo Shiprepair Company

Totem Resources Corporation

Transportation Institute

U.S. Steel Group, A Unit of USX Corporation

United Steelworkers of America - District 1, AFL-CIO-CLC

United Steelworkers of America - Local 5000

USS Great Lakes Fleet, Inc.

Western Great Lakes Pilots Association

Waterman Steamship Corporation

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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

U.S. COAST GUARD

STATEMENT OF

ADMIRAL ROBERT E. KRAMEK

ON THE FISCAL YEAR 1999 BUDGET AUTHORIZATION

BEFORE THE

SUBCOMMITTEE ON COAST GUARD AND MARITIME TRANSPORTATION
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Good morning, Mr. Chairman. It is a pleasure to appear before this distinguished Committee today to discuss the Coast Guard's fiscal year 1999 budget request and its impact on the current and future state of the Service. Before I begin, I would like to thank you for your strong bipartisan support of H.R. 2204, the Coast Guard Authorization Act for Fiscal Years 1998 and 1999. This proposal will improve our financial and personnel management, enhance maritime safety and environmental protection, and improve navigation safety, while ensuring the Coast Guard remains at the forefront of public service.

During the past four years, the dedicated men and women of the Coast Guard have fulfilled our role as the world's premier maritime service. They have:

• Saved more than 19,500 lives and nearly $9.3 billion in property.

• Prevented more than 370,000 pounds of cocaine, marijuana and other illegal drugs from reaching America's streets and school yards.

• Responded to more than 64,000 reports of water pollution or hazardous material

releases.

• Boarded more than 59,000 fishing vessels to check for compliance with safety and preservation laws.

The Coast Guard has also accepted the challenge to operate and manage more effectively; to engage in smart business practices; and to employ the tenets of quality centered management, the National Performance Review and the Government Performance and Results Act to achieve the

greatest possible savings and efficiencies. The result is a lean Coast Guard, staffed at a "most efficient organization" level, which stands proudly as a model of better government at less cost.

Operating the Coast Guard

To provide services to the public, in fiscal year 1999 the Coast Guard requests $2,772 million in Operating Expenses (OE) and $67 million in Reserve Training Funds. Included in this request are the necessary funds to restore the Coast Guard workforce, currently under strength largely due to a very strong economy; and funds to provide adequate quality of life for Coast Guard personnel. To continue delivering current services at the requested level, I have identified nearly $58 million in additional internal efficiencies. The Reserve Training Request funds a Selected Reserve strength of 7,600 personnel that are part of Team Coast Guard and are integral to service delivery. I request your full support for both the Operating Expenses and Reserve Training requests as any reductions will impact the Coast Guard's ability to provide the services to the public. Our fiscal year 1999 OE request reflects the Coast Guard's priorities across five

strategic goals – safety, protection of natural resources, mobility, maritime security, and national defense.

Safety

The Coast Guard's goal is to reduce deaths, injuries, and property damage associated with maritime transportation, fishing, and recreational boating. Each year, we respond to more than 50,000 search and rescue calls for assistance alone - from recreational boaters in distress to freighters sinking in gale-force winds. Each year, the Coast Guard saves approximately $2.5 billion dollars in property and 5,000 lives during search and rescue missions. Our marine safety program promotes safety through both our regulatory and inspection roles.

Protection of Natural Resources

We strive to eliminate environmental damage and natural resource degradation on the high seas, within the 200-mile Exclusive Economic Zone, and in our territorial seas, ports and waterways. We protect the nation's valuable natural marine resources from the dangers of overfishing and foreign poaching. Every day, the Coast Guard patrols the closed fishing grounds off New

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