Back to search
S 2248 - 97

Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983

Became Public Law No: 97-252.

Bill Text Stats

Bill text analysis is not available for this record yet.

Affected Sectors

How to read this

Sectors are deterministic matches from official Congress.gov data and cached bill text. They are source-derived signals, not conclusions about intent or economic effect.

Evidence matches count official fields, normalized subjects, cached text snippets, or extracted entities that matched the sector rules.

Impact is a bill-level rollup used for sorting and filtering. It is not an economic impact estimate.

Confidence is the strongest individual match score behind that sector.

Evidence snippets show why a sector matched and can repeat when Congress.gov repeats the same phrase across official fields.

Defense
5 evidence matches
Impact 100% Confidence 92%

Armed Forces and National Security

Armed Forces and National Security

Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983 Became Public Law No: 97-252. Armed Forces and National Security

CBO Cost Estimates

Official Congressional Budget Office cost estimate links associated with this bill through Congress.gov records.

How to read this

CBO estimates are official source documents with their own assumptions, scope, and publication dates. They can score a bill, a version of a bill, or a broader legislative package.

LawLinter stores the source link from Congress.gov and does not replace the CBO document. Use these cards as pointers for source review, not as independent fiscal advice.

CBO context shows source-attributed Congressional Budget Office cost estimates linked from official Congress.gov bill records. It is research context only; read the official CBO source document for assumptions, scope, and dates.

No CBO cost estimate is currently linked for this bill.

Campaign Finance Context

Related FEC/OpenFEC campaign-finance records for lawmakers and candidates tied to this bill through source-attributed legislative relationships. These are not donations to the bill itself.

How to read this

Amounts shown here are campaign-finance totals for sponsor or cosponsor-linked candidates and their committees in the displayed FEC cycle.

They are not donations to this bill, spending on this bill, or proof that money influenced or caused sponsorship, cosponsorship, votes, or legislative outcomes.

If multiple linked lawmakers have FEC records, this section can show multiple candidate cards and separate sponsor/cosponsor rollups.

Campaign-finance context uses source-attributed FEC/OpenFEC records that are related or relevant to the displayed bill, lawmaker, candidate, committee, or legislative relationship through deterministic links. It is research context only, not proof of influence, causation, endorsement, or that money caused a sponsorship, vote, or legislative outcome.

No FEC/OpenFEC campaign-finance context is currently linked for this bill.

Lobbying Context

Related LDA.gov filings where public lobbying activity descriptions reference this bill. These records are source-attributed research context, not evidence of influence or causation.

How to read this

LDA filings are public lobbying disclosure records. LawLinter links them here only when the filing activity text contains an exact-looking reference to this bill.

A filing can mention many issues, clients, agencies, or bills. A match should be treated as a pointer for review, not as a conclusion about why legislation changed or how any lawmaker acted.

Lobbying context uses source-attributed LDA.gov records that appear related to this bill through bill references in public lobbying activity descriptions. It is research context only, not proof of influence, causation, endorsement, lobbying effectiveness, or legislative intent.

No LDA.gov lobbying disclosure context is currently linked for this bill.

Summary

35 Passed Senate amended May 16, 2007

(Measure passed Senate, amended, roll call #120 (84-8)) Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983 - Title I: Procurement - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for FY 1983 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, tracked combat vehicles, torpedoes, and other weapons. Prohibits a Secretary of a military department from entering into multiyear contracts for the procurement of specified aircraft, weapons, and other equipment until the Armed Services Committees have been given 30 days notice of such intentions. Makes permanent the authority of the Secretary of Defense, in carrying out the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Ministers of Defense concerning the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) Program, to waive reimbursement for the cost of specified functions performed by other than AWACS personnel and to assume contingent liability for program losses and specified charges.. Prohibits the Air Force from procuring A-10 aircraft beyond the amount authorized in the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1982. Prohibits the Army from procuring any AH-64 (Apache) helicopters unless such procurement is specifically authorized. Prohibits the procurement of any airborne very low frequency equipment for the TACAMO EC-130Q until the Armed Services Committees have been given 30 days notice of such intention with a written report. Prohibits the procurement of the CBU-90 antiarmor cluster munition until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the Armed Services Committees that such procurement is essential. Title II: Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for research, development, test, and evaluation for FY 1983. Prohibits the expenditure of limited funds for the development of the LANTIRN System until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the Armed Services and Appropriations Committees that the LANTIRN program has been restructured and a competitive demonstration between the System and a modified version of the Navy's F/A-18 aircraft FLIR System has been carried out. Prohibits the expenditure of limited funds on the Submarine Advanced Combat System research and development program until the Secretary of the Navy explains to the Armed Services Committees how the Department plans to proceed with the phased array radar portion (phase III) of the MK-92 Fire Control System upgrade. Limits the authorizations for the Low Altitude Defense (LOAD) System and for the development of a low exoatmospheric/high endoatmospheric ballistic missile defense system to complement the LOAD system. Requires the Secretary to give Congress 30 days notice before expending funds. Title III: Operation and Maintenance - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the armed forces other than the Coast Guard and for other activities and agencies of the Department of Defense. Authorizes additional sums for increases in benefits for civilian employees of the Department of Defense. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the stationing of the E-4 National Emergency Airborne Command Post aircraft or associated support at Andrews Air Force Base unless the President certifies to Congress that the continued deployment of such aircraft is essential to the national security. Permits the use of appropriated funds for such deployment and support if an alternative deployment site more than 500 miles inland is selected and the Armed Services Committees are given 30 days notice of the selected site. Limits the amount of authorizations available for ship overhauls for the Navy. Title IV: Active Forces - Establishes end strength levels for FY 1983 for active duty personnel for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and the Air Force. Permits the Secretary of Defense to increase such end strength levels by 0.5 percent if necessary to maintain a stable personnel force. Extends through FY 1983 the limitation on the enlistment and induction into the armed services of persons whose score on the Armed Forces Qualification Test falls below a prescribed level. Restores leave lost by specified members of the armed forces during FY 1981. Title V: Reserve Forces - Establishes average strength for FY 1983 for: (1) the Army National Guard; (2) the Army Reserve; (3) the Naval Reserve; (4) the Marine Corps Reserve; (5) the Air National Guard; (6) the Air Force Reserve; and (7) the Coast Guard Reserve. Sets forth the number of Reserves serving on full-time active duty to administer, recruit, or train the Reserve components. Provides for the adjustment of average strength levels in the national interest and as specified. Increases the number of enlisted personnel who may be on active duty in support of the Reserve components. Title VI: Civilian Personnel - Establishes an end strength level for civilian personnel for the Department of Defense for FY 1983. Requires the apportionment of such personnel among the various military branches and departments. Specifies the types of civilian employees to be included in such end levels. Permits the Secretary to increase the number of civilian personnel beyond the authorized end strength. Requires the Secretary to inform Congress of any increase. Title VII: Military Training Student Loads - Establishes average military training student loads for FY 1983. Title VIII: Attack-Related Civil Defense - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for activities and for contribution for State personnel and administrative expenses under the Federal Civil Defense Act of 1950. Title IX: Supplemental Authorizations for FY 1982 - Authorizes additional appropriations for procurement for FY 1982 for: (1) naval vessels; (2) aircraft; (3) Air Force research and development; and (4) the operation and maintenance of all the armed and reserve forces and Defense agencies. Increases the end strength authorization for the Army for FY 1982. Title X: Additional Authorizations for Fiscal Year 1982 - Authorizes additional appropriations for procurement for FY 1982 for: (1) naval vessels; (2) aircraft; and (3) Navy and Air Force research and development. Title XI: General Provisions - Expands the authorization limitation on the Special Defense Acquisition Fund for FY 1984. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976 to increase the amount of funds involved in a transfer of defense articles necessitating a report to Congress. Sets forth a reporting system on the unit costs of major defense systems, including reports from the program manager designated for each system to the respective Secretary as part of a quarterly selected acquisitions report which is then submitted to Congress. Requires that reports: (1) break down cost information both as to the total cost of the system thus far and the procurement unit cost at the time of the report; and (2) detail any changes of schedule or system performances. Requires the Secretary concerned to determine within seven days of the quarterly report when the total program acquisition costs or the unit costs in a fiscal year without procurement authorizations exceed 15 percent of the original projections. Requires the Secretary to then notify Congress within ten days of the initial receipt of the report of such increases. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 30 days after the determination of overrun. Permits the expenditure of additional funds if the Secretary concerned reports to Congress within that 30 day period on the reasons for such increases, including the identities of the program managers and contractors and future actions to be taken to control cost growth. Sets forth a similar reporting system whenever a quarterly report indicates the current procurement unit cost or total program acquisition cost in a FY with procurement authorizations exceeds the original projections by more than 25 percent. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 60 days after a determination of overrun unless the Secretary of Defense submits to Congress a certification that such system is essential, no alternatives exist, and future estimates and management will control costs. Restricts the authority of the head of a defense agency to award a sole-source contract. Permits the Secretary of Defense to waive specified requirements in the interests of national security. Excludes from such restrictions classified procurements and the procurement of utility services, perishable commodities, emergency and other specified procurement situations. Requires the Secretary of Defense to report annually to the appropriate committees of Congress on specified sole-source contracts. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 1982 to: (1) repeal the prohibition against purchasing administrative use vehicles from foreign sources; and (2) permit the procurement of specialty metals or chemical warfare protective clothing produced outside the United States if necessary to comply with agreements with foreign governments so long as such agreements comply with the requirements of the Arms Export Control Act and the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976. Prohibits the use of funds for the consolidation of functions performed by the Military Traffic Management Command of the Army, the Military Sealift Command of the Navy, or the Military Airlift Command of the Air Force. Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to the Armed Services Committees on the possibility and effect of changes in the management or contracting authority of such Commands. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should seek a greater acceptance of international security responsibilities from North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) signatories and from Japan and Canada commensurate with the economic resources of each country. Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to Congress on a comparison of the fair and equitable shares of the mutual defense burdens of these alliances based upon economic strength and other factors and efforts being made to eliminate existing disparities. Requires the Secretary to include the Administration's plan if our allies do not increase their defense efforts, including an explanation if repositioning of troops is not part of the options planned. Directs the Secretary of Defense, in conjunction with the Secretary of Labor, to conduct a study to determine and report to the Armed Services Committees on the level of skilled labor available and needed for defense programs for FY 1983-1987 and during a mobilization period. Directs the Secretary to conduct a study of and report to Congress on the effectiveness of the technology transfer control policy formulation activities of the Department, including whether or not such activities should be guided by a separate office. Requires the Secretary to report to Congress annually on the amount of funds needed to carry out such policy in the coming fiscal year. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1975 to require the Secretary to include in a report on the standardization of weapons and systems as they affect the combat effectiveness of NATO a description of existing Department programs that support the development or procurement of systems developed or procured by other members of NATO and the funds requested and appropriated for such systems. Provides for a temporary increase in the number of naval officers who may serve in the grades of admiral and vice admiral. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to limit to functions performed by 50 or more personnel the application of the requirement that the Secretary report to Congress on the conversion of performance of commercial and industrial type functions from Department personnel to private contractors. Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to collect and compile directory information on each 17 year old or 11th grade student in the United States for military recruiting and related national security purposes. Limits to three years the time such information may be retained. Requires such information to be kept confidential. Requires each State and local government to make available to the Secretary on request any criminal history information on any person who has applied for enlistment or participation in the armed forces. Permits the Secretary of Defense to enter into cooperative military airlift agreements with allies and nonreciprocal military airlift agreements with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) subsidiary bodies. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the production of binary chemical weapons unless the President certifies to Congress that the United States abjures testing on human beings and that it is undertaking negotiations with the Soviet Union to bar production of such weapons. Prohibits the contracting out of firefighting or security functions at any military installation or facility, except the renewal of existing contracts. Returns to the Department of Defense from the Department of Education, responsibility for administering the education of military dependents. Eliminates from the Department of Education the Administrator and Office for Education for Overseas Dependents and the Advisory Council on Dependents' Education. Establishes such Council in the Department of Defense, chaired by the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Manpower, Reserve Affairs, and Logistics. Declares that the full Social Security cost-of-living adjustment of 7.4 percent be paid in full on July 1, 1982, as scheduled. Renews the Senate's commitment to the Social Security System. Limits corrective action to that required to preserve the financial integrity of the System. Declares that Congress will await the recommendation of the National Commission on Social Security reform prior to ultimately deciding on binding, statutory changes. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should be commended for his expressed desire to meet with the President of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. States that this meeting should be an essential step in achieving reductions in the respective strategic arsenals. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics should respond favorably to the President's invitation and any subsequent invitations to attend a summit meeting. Amends the Military Selective Service Act to render ineligible for assistance on benefits assistance or under the Higher Education Act of 1965 any person who is required to but does not register for military service. Inspector General Amendments of 1982 - Amends the Inspector General Act of 1978 to establish in the Department of Defense the Office of Inspector General. Transfers to the Office the Defense Audit Service, the Defense Investigative Service and portions of the Defense Contract Audit Agency. Prohibits the appointment of any member of the armed forces to the position of Inspector General. Places the Inspector General under the authority, direction, and control of the Secretary of Defense. Directs the Inspector to: (1) be the principal adviser to the Secretary for matters relating to the prevention and detection of fraud, waste, and abuse in the programs and operations of the Department; (2) initiate, and conduct audits and investigations in the Department; (3) provide policy direction for audits investigations, and program performance evaluation; and (4) monitor adherence to audit procedures. Directs the Inspector to expeditiously report suspected or alleged violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice to the Secretary of the military department concerned or the Secretary of Defense. Authorizes the Inspector to make necessary rules and investigations and reports as are necessary to administer this program. Prohibits the Inspector General from revealing the identity of an employee of the Department or member of the armed forces making a complaint or giving information. Requires each semiannual report from the Inspector General to Congress by way of the Secretary of Defense to include a listing of each contract audit conducted during that reporting period. Requires reports concerning flagrant problems to be submitted within seven days to the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee and the House Government Operations Committee. Requires the Secretary and the Inspector to each give the appropriate committees of Congress 30 days notice of any prohibition against the Inspector General's conducting any audit or investigation or issuing any subpoena which the Secretary determines to be against the national security interests of the United States. Revises the training requirements for persons enlisting in the armed forces reserves, both as to amount and timing of training. Allows less than 12 weeks initial active duty, so long as it includes basic military training. Extends from 180 days to 270 days the lapse of time permitted between enlistment and the beginning of such initial active duty period. Creates an open enrollment period of 12 months for specified members of the National Guard and the Reserves to elect to participate in the Survivor Benefit Plan. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to extend the student loan repayment program to specified officers. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President, at the Bonn summit meeting, should propose that the United States and its allies pool defense efforts and establish a cooperative defense-industrial effort. Expresses the sense of Congress that the members of the National Guard and the Reserves should be recognized for the role they play in our national security. Directs the Secretaries of the Army and Navy to report to the Committees on Armed Services by January 1, 1983, on the extent to which maneuver warfare concepts are being or have been incorporated into the policies and training of the Army and Marine Corps, respectively. Prohibits the expenditure of authorizations for the manufacture or procurement of additional C-5 aircraft. Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for: (1) the acquisition of AWACS by NATO; and (2) the procurement of the most cost-effective commercial wide-body cargo aircraft. Directs the Secretary to produce an on-orbit laser weapons system and to restructure the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) Triad technology programs. Directs the Secretary of each military department to conduct a survey of each school and training program under his jurisdiction to determine the degree to which military history is taught. Requires the Secretaries to report to the Armed Services Committees on such survey by January 1, 1983. Directs the Secretary of Defense to conduct a test program in FY 1983 to determine the effect of exempting certain Department contracts from the provision prohibiting the use of funds to pay a price differential to relieve economic dislocations. Directs the President to report to Congress on the results of such test. Prohibits the construction of naval vessels in a foreign shipyard except as authorized by the President in the national interest. Directs the President to give Congress 30 days notice of any exceptions. Expresses the sense of Congress that the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, and Stockpiling of Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on Their Destruction should be amended to establish procedures for investigating suspected violations. Directs the Secretary of Defense to conduct a study on the report entitled "Vista 1999", a longrange look at the future of the Army and the Air National Guard." Requires the Secretary to report to the Armed Services Committees by February 1, 1983. Directs the Secretary to study and evaluate initiatives for improving the control and containment of use of nuclear weapons, particularly in crises, including the establishment of multi-national military crises control centers and the development of a forum for joint U.S./U.S.S.R. sharing of information. Requires reports on unit costs of major weapons systems already being transmitted to Congress to also be transmitted to the Comptroller General. Directs the Comptroller General to review and analyze such reports and report to Congress within 45 days on his findings, including accuracy of cost estimates, completeness of reasons submitted for program cost growth, and the likelihood of future increases. Directs the Secretary to report to the Armed Services Committees by January 1, 1983, concerning unit cohesion initiatives that have been taken in each of the armed forces and any initiatives planned for the next five years. Expresses the sense of Congress that the Secretary of the Army should place a plaque in Arlington National Cemetery honoring the servicemen who died attempting to rescue the American hostages in Iran. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should continue to promote actively negotiations among member countries of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Chemical Warfare of the Committee on Disarmament established by the United Nations General Assembly to negotiate a treaty for the complete, effective and verifiable prohibition of the development, production, and stockpiling of all chemical weapons and for their destruction. Requests the President to press for an explanation of allegations concerning the Soviet and Soviet-proxy use of chemical weapons in violation of international law.

03 Reported to Senate amended, 2nd committee reporting Oct 24, 2006

(Reported to Senate from the Committee on Armed Services with amendment (without written report)) Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983 - Title I: Procurement - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for FY 1983 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, tracked combat vehicles, torpedoes, and other weapons. Prohibits a Secretary of a military department from entering into multiyear contracts for the procurement of specified aircraft, weapons, and other equipment until the Armed Services Committees have been given 30 days notice of such intentions. Makes permanent the authority of the Secretary of Defense, in carrying out the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Ministers of Defense concerning the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) Program, to waive reimbursement for the cost of specified functions performed by other than AWACS personnel and to assume contingent liability for program losses and specified charges. Prohibits the Air Force from procuring A-10 aircraft beyond the amount authorized in the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1982. Prohibits the Army from procuring any AH-64 (Apache) helicopters unless such procurement is specifically authorized. Prohibits the procurement of any airborne very low frequency equipment for the TACAMO EC-130Q aircraft until the Armed Services Committees have been given 30 days notice of such intention with a written report. Prohibits the procurement of the CBU-90 antiarmor cluster munition until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the Armed Services Committees that such procurement is essential. Title II: Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for research, development, test, and evaluation for FY 1983. Prohibits the expenditure of limited funds for the development of the LANTIRN System until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the Armed Services and Appropriations Committees that the LANTIRN program has been restructured and a competitive demonstration between the System and a modified version of the Navy's F/A-18 aircraft FLIR System has been carried out. Prohibits the expenditure of limited funds on the Submarine Advanced Combat System research and development program until the Secretary of the Navy explains to the Armed Services Committees how the Department plans to proceed with the phased array radar portion (phase III) of the MK-92 Fire Control System upgrade. Title III: Operation and Maintenance - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the armed forces other than the Coast Guard and for other activities and agencies of the Department of Defense. Authorizes additional sums for increases in benefits for civilian employees of the Department of Defense. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the stationing of the E-4 National Emergency Airborne Command Post aircraft or associated support at Andrews Air Force Base unless the President certifies to Congress that the continued deployment of such aircraft is essential to the national security. Permits the use of appropriated funds for such deployment and support if an alternative deployment site more than 500 miles inland is selected and the Armed Services Committees are given 30 days notice of the selected site. Limits the amount of authorizations available for ship overhauls for the Navy. Title IV: Active Forces - Establishes end strength levels for FY 1983 for active duty personnel for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and the Air Force. Permits the Secretary of Defense to increase such end strength levels by 0.5 percent if necessary to maintain a stable personnel force. Extends through FY 1983 the limitation on the enlistment and induction into the armed services of persons whose score on the Armed Forces Qualification Test falls below a prescribed level. Restores leave lost by specified members of the armed forces during FY 1981. Title V: Reserve Forces - Establishes average strengths for FY 1983 for: (1) the Army National Guard; (2) the Army Reserve; (3) the Naval Reserve; (4) the Marine Corps Reserve; (5) the Air National Guard; (6) the Air Force Reserve; and (7) the Coast Guard Reserve. Sets forth the number of Reserves serving on full-time active duty to administer, recruit, or train the Reserve components. Provides for the adjustment of average strength levels in the national interest and as specified. Increases the number of enlisted personnel who may be on active duty in support of the Reserve components. Title VI: Civilian Personnel: - Establishes an end strength level for civilian personnel for the Department of Defense for FY 1983. Requires the apportionment of such personnel among the various military branches and departments. Specifies the types of civilian employees to be included in such end levels. Permits the Secretary to increase the number of civilian personnel beyond the authorized end strength. Requires the Secretary to notify Congress of any increase. Title VII: Military Training Student Loads - Establishes average military training student loads for FY 1983. Title VIII: Attack-Related Civil Defense - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for activities and for contribution for State personnel and administrative expenses under the Federal Civil Defense Act of 1950. Title IX: Supplemental Authorizations for FY 1982 - Authorizes supplemental appropriations for procurement for FY 1982 for: (1) naval vessels; (2) aircraft; (3) Air Force research and development; and (4) the operation and maintenance of all the armed and reserve forces and Defense agencies. Increases the end strength authorization for the Army for FY 1982. Title X: Additional Authorization for Fiscal Year 1982 - Authorizes additional appropriations for procurement for FY 1982 for (1) naval vessels; (2) aircraft; and (3) Navy and Air Force research and development. Title XI: General Provisions - Expands the authorization limitation on the Special Defense Acquisition Fund for FY 1984. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976, to increase the amount of funds involved in a transfer of defense articles necessitating a report to Congress. Sets forth a reporting system on the unit costs of major defense systems, including reports from the program manager designated for each system to the respective Secretary as part of a quarterly selected acquisitions report which is then submitted to Congress. Requires that reports: (1) break down cost information both as to the total cost of the system thus far and the procurement unit cost at the time of the report; and (2) detail any changes of schedule or system performances. Requires the Secretary concerned to determine within seven days of the quarterly report when the total program acquisition costs or the unit costs in a fiscal year without procurement authorizations exceed 15 percent of the original projections. Requires the Secretary to then notify Congress within ten days of the initial receipt of the report of such increases. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 30 days after the determination of overrun. Permits the expenditure of additional funds if the Secretary concerned reports to Congress within that 30 day period on the reasons for such increases, including the identities of the program managers and contractors and future actions to be taken to control cost growth. Sets forth a similar reporting system whenever a quarterly report indicates the current procurement unit cost or total program acquisition cost in a fiscal year with procurement authorizations exceeds the original projections by more than 25 percent. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 60 days after a determination of overrun unless the Secretary of Defense submits to Congress a certification that such system is essential, no alternatives exist, and future estimates and management will control costs. Restricts the authority of the head of a defense agency to award a sole-source contract. Permits the Secretary of Defense to waive specified requirements in the interests of national security. Excludes from such restrictions classified procurements and the procurement of utility services, perishable commodities, emergency and other specified procurement situations. Requires the Secretary of Defense to report annually to the appropriate committees of Congress on specified sole-source contracts. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 1982 to: (1) repeal the prohibition against purchasing administrative use vehicles from foreign sources; and (2) permit the procurement of specialty metals or chemical warfare protective clothing produced outside the United States if necessary to comply with agreements with foreign governments so long as such agreements comply with the requirements of the Arms Export Control Act and the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976. Prohibits the use of funds for the consolidation of functions performed by the Military Traffic Management Command of the Army, the Military Sealift Command of the Navy, or the Military Airlift Command of the Air Force. Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to the Armed Services Committees on the possibility and effect of changes in the management or contracting authority of such Commands. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should seek a greater acceptance of international security responsibilities from North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) signatories and from Japan and Canada commensurate with the economic resources of each country. Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to Congress on a comparison of the fair and equitable shares of the mutual defense burdens of these alliances based upon economic strength and other factors and efforts being made to eliminate existing disparities. Directs the Secretary of Defense, in conjunction with the Secretary of Labor, to conduct a study to determine and report to the Armed Services Committees on the level of skilled labor available and needed for defense programs for FY 1983-1987 and during a mobilization period. Directs the Secretary to conduct a study of and report to Congress on the effectiveness of the technology transfer control policy formulation activities of the Department, including whether or not such activities should be guided by a separate office. Requires the Secretary to report to Congress annually on the amount of funds needed to carry out such policy in the coming fiscal year. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1975, to require the Secretary to include in a report on the standardization of weapons and systems as they affect the combat effectiveness of NATO a description of existing Department programs that support the development or procurement of systems developed or procured by other members of NATO and the funds requested and appropriated for such systems. Requires the Secretary of Defense to administer and not delegate responsibility for schools on military installations. Provides for a temporary increase in the number of naval officers who may serve in the grades of admiral and vice admiral. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to limit to functions performed by 50 or more personnel the application of the requirement that the Secretary report to Congress on the conversion of performance of commercial and industrial type functions from Department personnel to private contractors. Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to collect and compile directory information on each 17 year old or 11th grade student in the United States for military recruiting and related national security purposes. Limits to three years the time such information may be retained. Requires such information to be kept confidential. Requests each State and local government to make available to the Secretary on request any criminal history information on any person who has applied for enlistment or participation in the armed forces. Permits the Secretary of Defense to enter into cooperative military airlift agreements with allies and nonreciprocal military airlift agreements with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) subsidiary bodies. Prohibits the contracting out of firefighting or security functions at any military installation or facility. Returns to the Department of Defense from the Department of Education responsibility for administering the education of overseas military dependents. Eliminates from the Department of Education the Administrator and Office for Education for Overseas Dependents and the Advisory Council on Dependents' Education. Establishes such Council in the Department of Defense, chaired by the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Manpower, Reserve Affairs, and Logistics.

02 Reported to Senate amended, 1st committee reporting Oct 24, 2006

(Reported to Senate from the Committee on Armed Services with amendment, S. Rept. 97-330) Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983 - Title I: Procurement - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for FY 1983 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, tracked combat vehicles, torpedoes, and other weapons. Prohibits a Secretary of a military department from entering into multiyear contracts for the procurement of specified aircraft, weapons, and other equipment until the Armed Services Committee have been given 30 days notice of such intentions. Makes permanent the authority of the Secretary of Defense, in carrying out the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Ministers of Defense concerning the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) Program, to waive reimbursement for the cost of specified functions performed by other than AWACS personnel and to assume contingent liability for program losses and specified charges. Prohibits the Air Force from procuring A-10 aircraft beyond the amount authorized in the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1982. Prohibits the Army from procuring any AH-64 (Apache) helicopters unless such procurement is specifically authorized. Prohibits the procurement of any airborne very low frequency equipment for the TACAMO EC-130Q aircraft until the Armed Services Committees have been given 30 days notice of such intention with a written report. Prohibits the procurement of the CBU-90 antiarmor cluster munition until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the Armed Services committees that such procurement is essential. Title II: Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for research, development, test, and evaluation for FY 1983. Prohibits the expenditure of limited funds for the development of the LANTIRN System until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the Armed Services and Appropriations Committees that the LANTIRN program has been restructured and a competitive demonstration between the System and a modified version of the Navy's F/A-18 aircraft FLIR System has been carried out. Prohibits the expenditure of limited funds on the Submarine Advanced Combat System research and development program until the Secretary of the Navy explains to the Armed Services Committees how the Department plans to proceed with the phased array radar portion (phase III) of the MK-92 Fire Control System upgrade. Title III: Operation and Maintenance - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the armed forces other than the Coast Guard and for other activities and agencies of the Department of Defense. Authorizes additional sums for increases in benefits for civilian employees of the Department of Defense. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the stationing of the E-4 National Emergency Airborne Command Post aircraft or associated support at Andrews Air Force Base unless the President certifies to Congress that the continued deployment of such aircraft is essential to the national security. Permits the use of appropriated funds for such deployment and support if an alternative deployment site more than 500 miles inland is selected and the Armed Services Committees are given 30 days notice of the selected site. Limits the amount of authorization available for ship overhauls for the Navy. Title IV: Active Forces - Establishes end strength levels for FY 1983 for active duty personnel for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and the Air Force. Permits the Secretary of Defense to increase such end strength levels by 0.5 percent if necessary to maintain a stable personnel force. Extends through FY 1983 the limitation on the enlistment and induction into the armed services of persons whose score on the Armed Forces Qualification Test falls below a prescribed level. Restores leave lost by specified members of the armed forces during FY 1981. Title V: Reserve Forces - Establishes average strengths for FY 1983 for: (1) the Army National Guard; (2) the Army Reserve; (3) the Naval Reserve; (4) the Marine Corps Reserve; (5) the Air National Guard; (6) the Air Force Reserve; and (7) the Coast Guard Reserve. Sets forth the number of Reserves serving on full-time active duty to administer, recruit, or train the Reserve components. Provides for the adjustment of average strength levels in the national interest and as specified. Increases the number of enlisted personnel who may be on active duty in support of the Reserve components. Title VI: Civilian Personnel: - Establishes an end strength level for civilian personnel for the Department of Defense for FY 1983. Requires the apportionment of such personnel among the various military branches and departments. Specifies the types of civilian employees to be included in such end levels. Permits the Secretary to increase the number of civilian personnel beyond the authorized end strength. Requires the Secretary to notify Congress of any increase. Title VII: Military Training Student Loads - Establishes average military training student loads for FY 1983. Title VIII: Attack-Related Civil Defense - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for activities and for contribution for State personnel and administrative expenses under the Federal Civil Defense Act of 1950. Title IX: Supplemental Authorizations for FY 1982 - Authorizes supplemental appropriations for procurement for FY 1982 for: (1) naval vessels; (2) aircraft; (3) Air Force research and development; and (4) the operation and maintenance of all the armed and reserve forces and Defense agencies. Increases the end strength authorization for the Army for FY 1982. Title X: Additional Authorization for Fiscal Year 1982 - Authorizes additional appropriations for procurement for FY 1982 for (1) naval vessels; (2) aircraft; and (3) Navy and Air Force research and development. Title XI: General Provisions - Expands the authorization limitation on the Special Defense Acquisition Fund for FY 1984. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976, to increase the amount of funds involved in a transfer of defense articles necessitating a report to Congress. Sets forth a reporting system on the unit costs of major defense systems, including reports from the program manager designated for each system to the respective Secretary as part of a quarterly selected acquisitions report which is then submitted to Congress. Requires that reports: (1) break down cost information both as to the total cost of the system thus far and the procurement unit cost at the time of the report; and (2) detail any changes of schedule or system performances. Requires the Secretary concerned to determine within seven days of the quarterly report when the total program acquisition costs or the unit costs in a fiscal year without procurement authorizations exceed 15 percent of the original projections. Requires the Secretary to then notify Congress within ten days of the initial receipt of the report of such increases. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 30 days after the determination of overrun. Permits the expenditure of additional funds if the Secretary concerned reports to Congress within that 30 day period on the reasons for such increases, including the identities of the program managers and contractors and future actions to be taken to control cost growth. Sets forth a similar reporting system whenever a quarterly report indicates the current procurement unit cost or total program acquisition cost in a fiscal year with procurement authorizations exceeds the original projections by more than 25 percent. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 60 days after a determination of overrun unless the Secretary of Defense submits to Congress a certification that such system is essential, no alternatives exist, and future estimates and management will control costs. Restricts the authority of the head of a defense agency to award a sole-source contract. Permits the Secretary of Defense to waive specified requirements in the interests of national security. Excludes from such restrictions classified procurements and the procurement of utility services, perishable commodities, emergency and other specified procurement situations. Requires the Secretary of Defense to report annually to the appropriate committees of Congress on specified sole-source contracts. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 1982 to: (1) repeal the prohibition against purchasing administrative use vehicles from foreign sources; and (2) permit the procurement of specialty metals or chemical warfare protective clothing produced outside the United States if necessary to comply with agreements with foreign governments so long as such agreements comply with the requirements of the Arms Export Control Act and the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976. Prohibits the use of funds for the consolidation of functions performed by the Military Traffic Management Command of the Army, the Military Sealift Command of the Navy, or the Military Airlift Command of the Air Force. Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to the Armed Services Committees on the possibility and effect of changes in the management or contracting authority of such Commands. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should seek a greater acceptance of international security responsibilities from North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) signatories and from Japan and Canada commensurate with the economic resources of each country. Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to Congress on a comparison of the fair and equitable shares of the mutual defense burdens of these alliances based upon economic strength and other factors and efforts being made to eliminate existing disparities. Directs the Secretary of Defense, in conjunction with the Secretary of Labor, to conduct a study to determine and report to the Armed Services Committees on the level of skilled labor available and needed for defense programs for FY 1983-1987 and during a mobilization period. Directs the Secretary to conduct a study of and report to Congress on the effectiveness of the technology transfer control policy formulation activities of the Department, including whether or not such activities should be guided by a separate office. Requires the Secretary to report to Congress annually on the amount of funds needed to carry out such policy in the coming fiscal year. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1975, to require the Secretary to include in a report on the standardization of weapons and systems as they affect the combat effectiveness of NATO a description of existing Department programs that support the development or procurement of systems developed or procured by other members of NATO and the funds requested and appropriated for such systems. Requires the Secretary of Defense to administer and not delegate responsibility for schools on military installations. Provides for a temporary increase in the number of naval officers who may serve in the grades of admiral and vice admiral. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to limit to functions performed by 50 or more personnel the application of the requirement that the Secretary report to Congress on the conversion of performance of commercial and industrial type functions from Department personnel to private contractors. Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to collect and compile directory information on each 17 year old or 11th grade student in the United States for military recruiting and related national security purposes. Limits to three years the time such information may be retained. Requires such information to be kept confidential. Requests each State and local government to make available to the Secretary on request any criminal history information on any person who has applied for enlistment or participation in the armed forces. Permits the Secretary of Defense to enter into cooperative military airlift agreements with allies and nonreciprocal military airlift agreements with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) subsidiary bodies.

48 Conference report filed in House May 1, 2004

(Conference report filed in House, H. Rept. 97-749) Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983 - Title I: Procurement - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the armed forces and Defense agencies for procurement of aircraft, missiles, weapons, tracked combat vehicles, ammunition, torpedoes, other procurement, and shipbuilding and conversion. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the basing and deployment of the MX missile until the President gives Congress 30 days notice of the basing mode selected. Earmarks a portion of the Air Force funds for the United States FY 1983 share of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizations's (NATO's) cost of acquiring the Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS). Permits the Secretary of Defense, in carrying out the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Ministers of Defense concerning the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) Program, to waive reimbursement for the cost of specified functions performed by other than AWACS personnel and to assume contingent liability for program losses and specified charges during FY 1983. Prohibits a Secretary of a military department from entering into multiyear contracts for the procurement of specified aircraft, weapons, and other equipment until the Armed Services Committees have been given 30 days notice of such intentions. Permits the Secretary of the Air Force to acquire a tethered aero-stat radar set for deployment at Kennedy Air Force Station, Florida. Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to procure secure telephone communication systems in support of a national program to provide such a service. Prohibits the use of authorizations for the 9-millimeter handgun. Title II: Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for research, development, test, and evaluation for FY 1983. Prohibits the obligation of funds for the MX missile basing mode until the President gives Congress 30 days notice of the basing mode selected. Earmarks funds for the C-17 cargo transport aircraft. Prohibits the Navy from obligating funds for the DDGX (DDG-51) until the Secretary of the Navy notifies the Armed Services Committees of Congress of a plan for the deployment of the 5-inch semi-active laser guided projectile and seafire electro-optical fire control system concurrently with the deployment of the DDG-51 lead ship. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the development of the LANTIRN System until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the Armed Services and Appropriations Committees that the LANTIRN program has been restructured and a competitive demonstration between the System and a modified version of the Navy's F/A-18 aircraft FLIR System has been carried out. Title III: Operation and Maintenance - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the armed and reserve forces, including the national guard, and for other activities and agencies of the Department of Defense. Authorizes additional sums for increases in benefits for civilian employees of the Department of Defense. Limits the amount of funds which may be used for ship overhauls. Prohibits long-term leasing of a naval vessel with a substantial termination liability unless the Secretary of the Navy gives the Armed Services and Appropriations Committees 30 days notice with a description and justification for leasing rather than acquiring such vessel. Prohibits the use of funds for the leasing of any vessel associated with the T-5 Replacement Tanker Program which has a major component not made in the United States. Prohibits the use of funds for any study begun after FY 1982 on the benefits or feasibility of contracting-out commercial or industrial type functions of the Department performed by Department personnel. Title IV: Active Forces - Establishes end strength levels for FY 1983 for active duty personnel for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and the Air Force. Permits the Secretary of Defense to increase such end strength levels by 0.5 percent if necessary to maintain a stable personnel force. Extends through FY 1983 the limitation on the enlistment and induction into the armed services of persons whose score on the Armed Forces Qualification Test falls below a prescribed level. Restores leave lost by specified members of the armed forces during FY 1981. Title V: Reserve Forces - Establishes average strength for FY 1983 for: (1) the Army National Guard; (2) the Army Reserve; (3) the Naval Reserve; (4) the Marine Corps Reserve; (5) the Air National Guard; (6) the Air Force Reserve; and (7) the Coast Guard Reserve. Sets forth the number of Reserves serving on full-time active duty to administer, recruit, or train the Reserve components. Provides for the adjustment of average strength levels in the national interest and as specified. Increases the number of enlisted personnel who may be on active duty in support of the Reserve components. Title VI: Civilian Personnel - Establishes an end strength level for civilian personnel for the Department of Defense for FY 1983. Requires the apportionment of such personnel among the various military branches and departments. Requires the Secretary of Defense to report to Congress on such allocation within 60 days. Specifies the types of civilian employees to be included in such end levels. Permits the Secretary to increase the number of civilian personnel beyond the authorized end strength. Title VII: Military Training Student Loads - Establishes average military training student loads for FY 1983. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to extend through August 31, 1983, the reduction in the number of students required to be in a unit of the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps. Title VIII: Civil Defense - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 to carry out the provisions of the Federal Civil Defense Act of 1950, including amounts for State personnel and administrative expenses. Title IX: Supplemental Authorizations for FY 1982 Procurement - Authorizes additional appropriations for procurement for FY 1982 for: (1) naval vessels; (2) aircraft; (3) Air Force research and development; and (4) the operation and maintenance of all the armed and reserve forces and Defense agencies. Increases the end strength authorization for the Army for FY 1982. Title X: Former Spouse's Protection - Uniformed Services Former Spouses Protection Act - Requires the Secretary of the military department concerned to pay from the military pension of the member or former member of a uniformed service to a spouse or former spouse the amount specified in a court's final decree of divorce, dissolution, annulment, or legal separation, or a court ordered, ratified, or approved property settlement. Limits the total amount of pension subject to court order to 50 percent. States that orders for payments to more than one spouse shall be satisfied on a first-come-first-served basis. Sets forth procedures for the Secretary to follow in the event of conflicting orders regarding one spouse. States that orders for payments in a particular month from a decree of divorce or separation and from service of legal process for enforcement of child support or alimony payments shall be paid on a first-come-first-served basis, up to 65 percent of the disposable pension. Entitles members or former members with a former spouse to participate in the Survivor Benefit Plan. Entitles former spouses married 20 years or more during the member's service to coverage under the Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS) if such spouse does not have other medical coverage. Grants former spouses married 20 years or more during the member's service commissary and post exchange privileges on the same basis as surviving spouses of retired members. Limits the treatment of military pensions as marital property to payments due on or after June 21, 1981, the date of the McCarty decision. Title XI: General Provisions - Permits the Secretary of Defense to transfer up to $1,500,000,000 of the funds authorized among categories as specified. Requires the Secretary to notify Congress immediately of any transfers. Permits the obligation of appropriated but not previously authorized funds in FY 1982 for the procurement of: (1) aircraft for the Army; (2) aircraft for the Air Force; (3) missiles for the Air Force; and (4) operations and maintenance for Defense-wide activities. Expands the authorization limitation on the Special Defense Acquisition Fund for FY 1984. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976 to increase the amount of funds involved in a transfer of defense articles necessitating a report to Congress. Directs the Secretary to report to Congress annually on the funding needs of technology transfer control policy formulation and activities. Prohibits the Secretary from transferring funds to the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to defray costs of placing Department payloads into orbit by means of the space shuttle. Directs the Secretary of Defense to submit quarterly reports to Congress on current major defense acquisition programs, to be known as Selected Acquisition Reports. Requires such reports to include current program acquisition unit costs and the history of such costs. Differentiates the requirements for such reports, requiring a comprehensive report in only the first quarter of a fiscal year and requiring no report in the other quarters, if the cost, performance, or schedule of a program has not changed. Permits waivers of such reports with the approval of the Armed Services Committees. Includes reports from the program manager designated for each program to the respective Secretary as part of the quarterly selected acquisitions report. Requires that reports: (1) break down cost information both as to the total cost of the system thus far and the procurement unit cost at the time of the report; and (2) detail any changes of schedule or system performances. Requires the Secretary concerned to determine within seven days of the quarterly report when the total program acquisition costs or the unit costs in a fiscal year without procurement authorizations exceed 15 percent of the original projections. Requires the Secretary to then notify Congress within ten days of the initial receipt of the report of such increases. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 30 days after the determination of overrun. Permits the expenditure of additional funds if the Secretary concerned reports to Congress within that 30 day period on the reasons for such increases, including the identities of the program managers and contractors and future actions to be taken to control cost growth. Sets forth a similar reporting system whenever a quarterly report indicates the current procurement unit cost or total program acquisition cost in a FY with procurement authorizations exceeds the original projections by more than 25 percent. Prohibits the expenditure of additional funds 60 days after a determination of overrun unless the Secretary of Defense submits to Congress a certification that such system is essential, no alternatives exist, and future estimates and management will control costs. Directs the Secretary to submit to such committees a report concerning the sufficiency of civilian personnel for the Defense Contract Audit Agency, Defense Audit Service, and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, including current and projected numbers and the amount of cost savings such agencies have achieved. Directs the Secretary of Defense to conduct a test program in FY 1983 to determine the effect of exempting certain Department contracts from the provision prohibiting the use of funds to pay a price differential to relieve economic dislocations. Directs the President to report to Congress on the results of such test. Prohibits the use of funds for the consolidation of functions performed by the Military Traffic Management Command of the Army, the Military Sealift Command of the Navy, or the Military Airlift Command of the Air Force. Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to the Armed Services Committees on the possibility and effect of changes in the management or contracting authority of such Commands. Prohibits the contracting out of firefighting or security functions at any military installation or facility, except the renewal of existing contracts. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to limit to functions performed by 10 or more personnel the application of the requirement that the Secretary report to Congress on the conversion of performance of commercial and industrial type functions from Department personnel to private contractors. Amends the Military Selective Service Act to render ineligible for assistance or benefits under the Higher Education Act of 1965 any person who is required to but does not register for military service. Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to collect and compile directory information on each 17 year old or 11th grade student in the United States for military recruiting and related national security purposes. Limits to three years the time such information may be retained. Requires such information to be kept confidential. Requires each State and local government to make available to the Secretary on request any criminal history information on any person who has applied for enlistment or participation in the armed forces. Revises the training requirements for persons enlisting in the armed forces reserves to extend from 180 days to 270 days the lapse of time permitted between enlistment and the beginning of such initial active duty period. Provides for a temporary increase in the number of naval officers who may serve in the grades of admiral and vice admiral. Amends the Inspector General Act of 1978 to establish in the Department of Defense the Office of Inspector General. Transfers to the Office the Defense Audit Service and the Defense Investigative Service. Prohibits the appointment of any member of the armed forces to the position of Inspector General. Places the Inspector General under the authority, direction, and control of the Secretary of Defense. Directs the Inspector to: (1) be the principal adviser to the Secretary for matters relating to the prevention and detection of fraud, waste, and abuse in the programs and operations of the Department; (2) initiate, and conduct audits and investigations in the Department; (3) provide policy direction for audits, investigations, and program performance evaluation; and (4) monitor adherence to audit procedures. Directs the Inspector to expeditiously report suspected or alleged violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice to the Secretary of the military department concerned or the Secretary of Defense. Authorizes the Inspector to make rules, investigations, and reports necessary to administer this program. Requires the Secretary and the Inspector to each give the appropriate committees of Congress 30 days notice of any prohibition against the Inspector General's conducting any audit or investigation or issuing any subpoena which the Secretary determines to be against the national security interests of the United States. Requires each semiannual report from the Inspector General to Congress by way of the Secretary of Defense to include a listing of each contract audit conducted during that reporting period. Requires reports concerning flagrant problems to be submitted within seven days to the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee and the House Government Operations Committee. Creates an open enrollment period of 12 months for specified members of the National Guard and the Reserves to elect to participate in the Survivor Benefit Plan. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to extend for another year the deadline for the Secretary of Defense's report to Congress on allied contributions to the command defense. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1975 to require the Secretary to include in a report on the standardization of weapons and systems as they affect the combat effectiveness of NATO a description of existing Department programs that support the development or procurement of systems developed or procured by other members of NATO and the funds requested and appropriated for such systems. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President, should propose that the United States and its allies pool defense efforts and establish a cooperative defense-industrial effort. Directs the Secretary to study and evaluate initiatives for improving the control and containment of use of nuclear weapons, particularly in crises, including the establishment of multi-national military crises control centers and the development of a forum for joint U.S./Soviet Union sharing of information. Requires the President and the Secretary to report to the appropriate congressional committees on such evaluation and on the merits and status of the arms control process. Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should: (1) continue to promote negotiations through the United Nations' Ad Hoc Working Group on Chemical Warfare of the Committee on Disarmament to draft a treaty for the effective and verifiable prohibition on the development, production, and stockpiling of all chemical weapons; and (2) press for an inquiry into the Soviet use of such weapons and express to the Soviets a desire for a comprehensive, verifiable ban on such weapons. Permits the Secretary of Defense to enter into cooperative military airlift agreements with allies and nonreciprocal military airlift agreements with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) subsidiary bodies. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the production of binary chemical weapons unless the President certifies to Congress that the United States abjures testing on human beings and that it is undertaking negotiations with the Soviet Union to bar production of such weapons. Permits the Secretary of a military department to purchase administrative motor vehicles to be used outside the United States only from the lowest bidder from the United States or the host nation. Prohibits the construction of naval vessels in a foreign shipyard except as authorized by the President in the national interest. Directs the President to give Congress 30 days notice of any exceptions. Prohibits the use of funds to purchase major equipment essential to national defense from non-U.S. manufacturers that would make the United States dependent on such manufacturers as a sole source unless the Secretary gives the Armed Services and Appropriations committees 30 days notice. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 1982 to permit the procurement of special metals or chemical warfare protective clothing produced outside the United States. Expresses the sense of Congress that the members of the National Guard and the Reserves should be recognized for the role they play in our national security. Directs the Secretary of Defense to conduct a study on the report entitled "Vista 1999", a long range look at the future of the Army and the Air National Guard. Requires the Secretary to report to the Armed Services Committees by February 1, 1983. Authorizes the payment of claims by members of the uniformed services held hostage in Iran during the Iranian crisis. Permits the Superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy to use gifts made to the United States for the benefit of such Academy. Prohibits the use of funds to purchase or produce any map of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics that does not specifically designate Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania as separate and Soviet occupied.

36 Passed House amended May 1, 2004

(Measure passed House, amended, in lieu of H. R. 6030) Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983 - Title I: Procurement - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force and Defense agencies for procurement of aircraft, missiles, weapons, tracked combat vehicles, ammunition, torpedoes, other procurement, and shipbuilding and conversion. Prohibits the expenditure of funds for the basing and deployment of the MX missile until the President gives Congress 30 days notice of the basing mode selected. Earmarks a portion of the Air Force funds for the United States FY 1983 share of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) cost of acquiring the Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS). Permits the Secretary of Defense, in carrying out the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Ministers of Defense concerning the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) Program, to waive reimbursement for the cost of specified functions performed by other than AWACS personnel and to assume contingent liability for program losses and specified charges during FY 1983. Prohibits the construction of naval vessels in foreign shipyards. Requires that the T-AH hospital ship authorized by this Act be constructed or converted in a U.S. shipyard. Prohibits the use of authorizations for the 9-millimeter handgun. Permits the Secretary of the Air Force to acquire a tethered aerostat radar set for deployment at Kennedy Air Force Station, Florida. Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to procure secure telephone communication systems in support of a national program to provide such a service. Prohibits the obligation of funds for the procurement or production of binary chemical munitions Expresses the sense of Congress that the President should: (1) combine to promote negotiations through the United Nations' Ad Hoc Working Group on Chemical Warfare of the Committee on Disarmament to draft a treaty for the effective and verifiable prohibition on the development, production, and stockpiling of all chemical weapons; and (2) press for an inquiry into the Soviet use of such weapons and express to the Soviets a desire for a comprehensive, verifiable ban on such weapons. Title II: Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for research, development, test, and evaluation for FY 1983. Prohibits the obligation of funds for the MX missile basing mode until the President gives Congress 30 days notice of the basing mode selected. Earmarks funds for the C-17 cargo transport aircraft. Limits the amount of funds available for the Ballistic Missile Defense Systems Technology Program and other programs. Prohibits the Navy from obligating funds for the DDGX (DDG-51) until the Secretary of the Navy notifies the Armed Services Committees of Congress of a plan for the deployment of the 5-inch semi-active laser guided projectile and seafire electro-optical fire control system concurrently with the deployment of the DDG-51 lead ship. Prohibits the use of Defense agency funds for the High Energy Laser Technology, Alpha, and Large Optics Demonstration Experiment (LODE) programs of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Limits funding for short wave length laser technology research and development. Title III: Operation and Maintenance - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the armed and reserved forces, including the national guard, and for other activities and agencies of the Department of Defense. Authorizes additional sums for increases in benefits for civilian employees of the Department of Defense. Authorizes appropriations: (1) to promote rifle practice; (2) for payment of Department claims; and (3) for expenses of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals. Prohibits long-term leasing of a naval vessel with a substantial termination liability unless the Secretary of the Navy gives the Armed Services and Appropriations Committees 30 days notice with a description and justification for leasing rather than acquiring such vessel. Prohibits the use of funds for the leasing of any vessel associated with the T-5 Replacement Tanker Program which has a major component not made in the United States. Prohibits the use of funds for purchasing non-U.S. coal or coke for use at U.S. military installations in Europe. Prohibits the use of funds for any study begun after FY 1982 on the benefits or feasibility of contracting-out commercial or industrial type functions of the Department performed by Department personnel. Title IV: Active Forces - Establishes end strength levels for FY 1983 for active duty personnel for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and the Air Force. Extends through FY 1983 the limitation on enlistment and induction of persons into the armed forces whose score on the Armed Forces Qualification Test is below a prescribed level. Title V: Reserve Forces - Establishes average strengths for FY 1983 for: (1) the Army National Guard; (2) the Army Reserve; (3) the Naval Reserve; (4) the Marine Corps Reserve; (5) the Air National Guard; (6) the Air Force Reserve; and (7) the Coast Guard Reserve. Sets forth the number of Reserves serving on full-time active duty to administer, recruit, or train the Reserve components. Provides for the adjustment of average strength levels as specified. Increases the number of enlisted personnel who may be on active duty in support of the Reserve components. Title VI: Civilian Personnel: - Establishes an end strength level for civilian personnel for the Department of Defense for FY 1983. Requires the apportionment of such personnel among the various military branches and departments. Requires the Secretary of Defense to report to Congress on such allocation within 60 days. Specifies the types of civilian employees to be included in such end levels. Permits the Secretary to increase the number of civilian personnel beyond the authorized end strength. Title VII: Military Training Student Loads - Establishes average military training student loads for FY 1983. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to extend through August 31, 1983, the reduction in the number of students required to be in a unit of the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps. Title VIII: Civil Defense - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 to carry out the provisions of the Federal Civil Defense Act of 1950, including amounts for State personnel and administrative expenses. Redesignates the Federal Emergency Management Agency as the Civil Disaster Agency. Title IX: Former Spouse's Protection - Uniformed Services Former Spouses Protection Act - Limits the treatment of military pensions as marital property to: (1) marriages of ten years or longer duration during the member's service; and (2) to payments due on or after June 21, 1981, the date of the McCarty decision. Requires the Secretary of the military department concerned to pay from the military pension of a member or former member of a uniformed service to a spouse or former spouse the amount specified in a court's final decree of divorce, dissolution, annulment, or legal separation or a court ordered, ratified, or approved property settlement. Limits the total amount of pension subject to court order to 50 percent. States that orders for payments to more than one spouse shall be satisfied on a first-come-first-served basis. Sets forth procedures for the Secretary to follow in the event of conflicting orders regarding one spouse. States that orders for payments in a particular month from a decree of divorce or separation and from service of legal process for enforcement of child support or alimony payments shall be paid on a first-come-first-served basis, up to 65 percent of the disposable pension. Entitles members or former members with a former spouse to participate in the Survivor Benefit Pan. Entitles former spouses married 20 years or more during the member's service to coverage under the Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS) if such spouse does not have other medical coverage. Grants former spouses married 20 years or more during the member's service commissary and post exchange privileges on the same basis as surviving spouses of retired members. States that this Act shall not pre-empt State law concerning community property. Title X: General Provisions - Permits the Secretary of Defense to transfer up to $1,500,000,000 of the funds authorized among categories as specified. Requires the Secretary to notify Congress immediately of any transfers. Directs the Secretary of Defense to conduct a test program in FY 1983 to determine the effect of exempting certain Department contracts from the provision prohibiting the use of funds to pay a price differential to relieve economic dislocations. Directs the President to report to Congress on the results of such test. Directs the Secretary of Defense to submit quarterly reports to Congress on current major defense acquisition programs, to be known as Selected Acquisition Reports. Requires such reports to include current program acquisition unit costs and the history of such costs. Differentiates the requirements for such reports, requiring a comprehensive report in only one quarter, and requiring no report if the cost, performance, or schedule of a program has not changed. Requires program managers to report cost increases of 15 percent or more to the Secretary concerned, whereupon the Secretary will report the same within 30 days to Congress. Permits waivers of such reports with the approval of the Armed Services Committees. Directs the Secretary to submit to such committees a report concerning the sufficiency of civilian personnel for the Defense Contract Audit Agency, Defense Audit Service, and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, including current and projected numbers and the amount of cost savings such agencies have achieved. Permits the obligation of appropriated but unauthorized funds in FY 1982 for the procurement of: (1) aircraft for the Army; (2) aircraft for the Air Force; (3) missiles for the Air Force; and (4) operations and maintenance for Defense-wide activities. Prohibits the Secretary from transferring funds to the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to defray costs of placing Department payloads into orbit by means of the space shuttle. Prohibits the use of funds to purchase major equipment essential to national defense from non-U.S. manufacturers that would make the United States dependent on such manufacturer as a sole source unless the Secretary gives the Armed Services and Appropriations Committees 30 days notice. Requires a person who must register for the draft, who applies for student aid under title IV of the Higher Education Act, to file a statement of compliance with the school. Amends the Inspector General Act of 1978 to establish an Office of Inspector General in the Department of Defense. Transfers the Defense Audit Service, Office of Inspector General, Defense Logistics Agency, and portions of the Defense Investigative Service to such Office. Directs the Inspector General to report to the Secretary and Congress within one year on the advisability of transferring the Defense Contract Audit Agency to such office. Permits the Secretary of a military department to purchase administrative motor vehicles to be used outside the United States only from the lowest bidder from the United States or the host nation. Prohibits the transfer of naval vessels to foreign countries for one year. Prohibits the contracting out of security and firefighting functions at military installations. Directs the Secretary of Defense to conduct a study on the report entitled "Vista 1999", a long range look at the future of the Army and Air National Guard. Requires the Secretary to report to the Armed Services Committees by February 1, 1983. Directs the Secretary to study and report to Congress within a year on the feasibility of increasing the foreign language requirements at the service academies and in the Senior Reserve Officer's Training Corps Program (ROTC). Prohibits the construction of naval vessels in a foreign shipyard except as authorized by the President in the national interest. Directs the President to give Congress 30 days notice of any exceptions. Permits the Superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy to use gifts made to the United States for the benefit of such Academy. Limits the amount of total defense authorizations which may be obligated or expended in FY 1983.

00 Introduced in Senate May 1, 2004

Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1983 - Title I: Procurement - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for FY 1983 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, tracked combat vehicles, torpedoes, and other weapons. Makes permanent the authority of the Secretary of Defense, in carrying out the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Ministers of Defense concerning the NATO Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) Program, to waive reimbursement for the cost of specified functions performed by other than AWACS personnel and to assume contingent liability for program losses and specified charges. Title II: Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation - Authorizes appropriations for the armed forces for research, development, test, and evaluation for FY 1983. Title III: Operation and Maintenance - Authorizes appropriations for FY 1983 for the armed forces other than the Coast Guard and for other activities and agencies of the Department of Defense. Authorizes additional sums for increases in benefits for civilian employees of the Department of Defense. Title IV: Active Forces - Establishes end strength levels for FY 1983 for active duty personnel for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and the Air Force. Title V: Reserve Forces - Establishes average strengths for FY 1983 for: (1) the Army National Guard; (2) the Army Reserve; (3) the Naval Reserve; (4) the Marine Corps Reserve; (5) the Air National Guard; (6) the Air Force Reserve; and (7) the Coast Guard Reserve. Sets forth the number of Reserves serving on full-time active duty to administer, recruit, or train the Reserve components. Provides for the adjustment of average strength levels in the national interest and as specified. Increases the number of enlisted personnel who may be on active duty in support of the Reserve components. Title VI: Civilian Personnel: - Establishes an end strength level for civilian personnel for the Department of Defense for FY 1983. Requires the apportionment of such personnel among the various military branches and departments. Requires the Secretary of Defense to report to Congress on such allocation within 60 days. Specifies the types of civilian employees to be included in such end levels. Permits the Secretary to increase the number of civilian personnel beyond the authorized end strength. Title VII: Military Training Student Loads - Establishes average military training student loads for FY 1983. Title VIII: General Provisions - Requires the Secretary of Defense to administer and not delegate responsibility for schools on military installations. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1978, to repeal the requirement for a reduction in the number of senior-grade military employees of the Department of Defense. Amends the Department of Defense Appropriation Authorization Act, 1976, to increase the dollar amount activating the requirement that the Secretary report to Congress on the sale or transfer of defense articles valued at a specified amount. Amends the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1981 to limit to functions performed by 50 or more personnel the application of the requirement that the Secretary report to Congress on the conversion of performance of commercial and industrial type functions from Department personnel to private contractors.

Sponsors

Timeline

Sep 8, 1982

Signed by President.

Sep 8, 1982

Signed by President.

Sep 8, 1982

Became Public Law No: 97-252.

Sep 8, 1982

Became Public Law No: 97-252.

Aug 27, 1982

Presented to President.

Aug 27, 1982

Presented to President.

Aug 25, 1982

Measure Signed in Senate.

Aug 18, 1982

Conference report agreed to in House: House Agreed to Conference Report by Yea-Nay Vote: 251 - 148 (Record Vote No: 297).

Aug 18, 1982

House Agreed to Conference Report by Yea-Nay Vote: 251 - 148 (Record Vote No: 297).

Aug 17, 1982

Conference report considered in Senate.

Aug 17, 1982

Conference report agreed to in Senate: Senate agreed to conference report by Yea-Nay Vote. 77-21. Record Vote No: 331.

Aug 17, 1982

Senate agreed to conference report by Yea-Nay Vote. 77-21. Record Vote No: 331.

Aug 16, 1982

Conference report filed: Conference Report 97-749 Filed in House.

Aug 16, 1982

Conference Report 97-749 Filed in House.

Aug 16, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conferees agreed to file conference report.

Aug 16, 1982

Conferees agreed to file conference report.

Aug 13, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conference held.

Aug 13, 1982

Conference held.

Aug 12, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conference held.

Aug 12, 1982

Conference held.

Aug 11, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conference held.

Aug 11, 1982

Conference held.

Aug 10, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conference held.

Aug 10, 1982

Conference held.

Aug 6, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conference held.

Aug 6, 1982

Conference held.

Aug 5, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conference held.

Aug 5, 1982

Conference held.

Aug 3, 1982

Considered by House Motion to close Conference by a Yea-Nay Vote: 372-0 Record Vote No. 234.

Aug 3, 1982

Resolving differences -- Senate actions: Senate disagreed to the House amendments. By Unanimous Consent.

Aug 3, 1982

Senate disagreed to the House amendments. By Unanimous Consent.

Aug 3, 1982

Senate agreed to request for conference. Appointed conferees. Tower; Thurmond; Goldwater; Warner; Humphrey; Cohen; Jepsen; Quayle; Denton; Brady; Stennis; Jackson; Cannon; Byrd, of VA; Nunn; Hart; Exon; Levin; Roth; Eagleton. (For the consideration of Section 1122 pertaining to the Inspector General section of the bill: Senators Roth and Eagleton).

Aug 3, 1982

Conference committee actions: Conference held.

Aug 3, 1982

Conference held.

Jul 29, 1982

Called up by House by Rule.

Jul 29, 1982

Passed/agreed to in House: Passed House (Amended) by Voice Vote.

Jul 29, 1982

Passed House (Amended) by Voice Vote.

Jul 29, 1982

Resolving differences -- House actions: House Insisted on its Amendments by Unanimous Consent.

Jul 29, 1982

House Insisted on its Amendments by Unanimous Consent.

Jul 29, 1982

House Requested a Conference and Speaker Appointed Conferees: Price, Bennett, Stratton, White, Nichols, Brinkley, Mollohan, Dan Daniel, Dickinson, Whitehurst, Spence, Beard, Mitchell (NY), Holt, Boland, Mineta, Robinson, Brooks, Horton, Fountain, Fascell, Erlenborn.

May 14, 1982

Passed/agreed to in Senate: Passed Senate with amendments and an amendment to the Title by Yea-Nay Vote. 84-8. Record Vote No: 120.

May 14, 1982

Passed Senate with amendments and an amendment to the Title by Yea-Nay Vote. 84-8. Record Vote No: 120.

May 13, 1982

Considered by Senate.

May 12, 1982

Considered by Senate.

May 12, 1982

Motion to recommit to Senate Committee on Armed Services made in Senate.

May 12, 1982

Recommitted to Senate Committee on Armed Services by Yea-Nay Vote. 99-0. Instructions included that require the Committee to report back forthwith with a new Committee substitute. Record Vote No: 99.

May 12, 1982

Removed from the Legislative Calendar as a result of the recommittal action.

May 12, 1982

Committee on Armed Services. Reported to Senate by Senator Tower with an amendment in the nature of a substitute and an amendment to the title. Without written report.

May 12, 1982

Committee on Armed Services. Reported to Senate by Senator Tower with an amendment in the nature of a substitute and an amendment to the title. Without written report.

May 12, 1982

Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under Regular Orders. Calendar No. 551.

May 12, 1982

Senate rejected the motion to table the motion to reconsider the vote by which SU925 was not tabled by Yea-Nay Vote. 42-51. Record Vote No: 104.

May 12, 1982

Motion to reconsider the vote by which SU925 was not tabled agreed to in Senate by Voice.

May 11, 1982

Considered by Senate.

May 6, 1982

Considered by Senate.

May 5, 1982

Considered by Senate.

May 5, 1982

SP1398 was rendered moot when its language was accepted as part of a modification to SP1397.

May 4, 1982

Considered by Senate.

May 3, 1982

Considered by Senate.

Apr 13, 1982

Committee on Armed Services. Reported to Senate by Senator Tower with an amendment in the nature of a substitute and an amendment to the title. With written report No. 97-330.

Apr 13, 1982

Committee on Armed Services. Reported to Senate by Senator Tower with an amendment in the nature of a substitute and an amendment to the title. With written report No. 97-330.

Apr 13, 1982

Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under Regular Orders. Calendar No. 475.

Mar 31, 1982

Committee on Armed Services. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.

Mar 31, 1982

Committee on Armed Services incorporated provisions of related measures S. 2249 in reported measure.

Mar 30, 1982

Committee on Armed Services. Committee consideration and Mark Up Session held.

Mar 29, 1982

Committee on Armed Services. Committee consideration and Mark Up Session held.

Mar 26, 1982

Subcommittee on Tactical Warfare. Approved for full committee consideration with amendments favorably.

Mar 26, 1982

Subcommittee on Tactical Warfare. Hearings held.

Mar 25, 1982

Subcommittee on Manpower and Personnel (Arm Serv). Approved for full committee consideration with amendments favorably.

Mar 25, 1982

Subcommittee on Preparedness. Approved for full committee consideration without amendment favorably.

Mar 25, 1982

Subcommittee on Sea Power and Force Projection. Approved for full committee consideration with amendments favorably.

Mar 24, 1982

Subcommittee on Manpower and Personnel (Arm Serv). Hearings held.

Mar 24, 1982

Subcommittee on Strategic & Theater Nuclear Forces. Approved for full committee consideration with amendments favorably.

Mar 24, 1982

Considered by Subcommittee on Sea Power and Force Projection.

Mar 23, 1982

Subcommittee on Tactical Warfare. Approved for full committee consideration with amendments favorably.

Mar 23, 1982

Considered by Subcommittee on Strategic & Theater Nuclear Forces.

Mar 23, 1982

Subcommittee on Sea Power and Force Projection. Hearings held.

Mar 22, 1982

Introduced in Senate

Mar 22, 1982

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.

House Votes

No House roll call votes have been linked to this bill yet.

Amendments

No amendment records are currently available for this bill.
Compiled bill record. Bill pages combine Congress.gov source payloads, normalized relationships, cached text analysis, vote links, and deterministic sector/signal extraction. This is not an official government record or legal advice; use the official source link when accuracy matters.