POSTPONED Full Committee Markup of FY26 Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Bill, FY26 Financial Services and General Government Bill

Full committee markup has been postponed.

Budget request

Department of the Interior (DOI)
Program Name $ Change from 2025 Enacted (in millions) Brief Description of Program and Recommended Reduction or Increase
Cuts, Reductions, and Consolidations
Bureau of Reclamation and the Central Utah Project -609 The Budget provides $1.2 billion for the Bureau of Reclamation and the Central Utah Project.
Operation of the National Park System -900 The Budget would transfer most properties to State-level management. Achieving a $900 million cut to operations would require eliminating funding for roughly 350 park sites, 75 percent of the total.
NPS Historic Preservation Fund -158 The Budget eliminates almost all funding except for projects in partnership with HBCUs.
NPS Construction -73 This reduction complements the Administration’s goals transferring most parks to State and tribal governments.
NPS National Recreation and Preservation -77
Bureau of Indian Affairs Programs that Support Tribal Self-Governance and Tribal Communities -617 The Budget eliminates the Indian Guaranteed Loan program for tribal business development. The Budget also terminates the Indian Land Consolidation Program. In addition, the Budget also reduces funding for programs that directly fund tribal operations such as roads, housing, and social services.
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Public Safety and Justice -107 The Budget cuts the tribal law enforcement program by 20 percent.
Bureau of Indian Education Construction -187 The Budget eliminates funding for construction of tribal schools.
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Surveys, Investigations, and Research programs -564 USGS provides science information on natural hazards, ecosystems, water, energy and mineral resources, and mapping of Earth’s features. The Budget eliminates programs that provide grants to universities and crucial climate science initiatives and instead focuses on support for minerals and fossil fuel extraction.
Bureau of Land Management Conservation Programs -198 The Budget proposes deep reductions. The Budget also reduces the Wildlife and Aquatic Habitat Management program.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) State, Tribal, and NGO Conservation Grant Programs -170 The Budget eliminates USFWS grant programs that fund conservation of species managed by States, Tribes, and other nations.
Renewable Energy Programs -80 The Budget proposes to eliminate support for renewable energy deployment.
USFWS Ecological Services -37 USFWS’ Ecological Services program and NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service Office of Protected Resources are jointly responsible for administering the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act. The Budget consolidates these two programs into a single program housed within DOI with significantly reduced funding.
Federal Wildland Fire Service (consolidation of USDA and DOI Wildland Fire Management programs under a unified agency within DOI) -- Federal wildfire risk mitigation and suppression responsibilities currently are split across five agencies in two departments: the U.S. Forest Service in USDA and BIA, Bureau of Land Management, USFWS, and NPS in DOI. The Budget consolidates the Federal wildland fire responsibilities into a single new Federal Wildland Fire Service at DOI, including transferring USDA’s current wildland fire management responsibilities.
Department of Agriculture
Forest Service Operations -391 The Budget reduces funding for expenses including salaries and facility leases.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Program Name $ Change Enacted from 2025 (in millions) Brief Description of Program and Recommended Reduction or Increase
Increases
Drinking Water Programs +9 The Budget provides $124 million in funding for the drinking water mission at EPA. The $9 million increase from the 2025 enacted level is to equip EPA with funds to respond to drinking water disasters.
Indian Reservation Drinking Water Program +27 The Budget increases funding for Tribes to retain access to funding for drinking water and wastewater infrastructure on their lands, with a total level of $31 million for the grant program.
Cuts, Reductions, and Consolidations
Clean and Drinking Water State Revolving Loan Funds -2,460 The Budget provides the decreased funding level of $305 million total.
Categorical Grants -1,006 The Budget includes the elimination of 16 categorical grants, and maintains funding at 2025 enacted levels for Tribes.
Hazardous Substance Superfund -254 The IIJA and the Inflation Reduction Act helped finance the Superfund program.
Office of Research and Development -235 The Budget puts an end to research grants, environmental justice work, climate research, and modeling that influences regulations. The Budget provides $281 million.
Environmental Justice -100 EPA’s environmental justice program is eliminated in line with the vision the President set forth in Executive Order 14151, “Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing,” and Executive Order 14173, “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity.”
Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (DERA) Grants -90 This program is eliminated.
Atmospheric Protection Program -100 The Atmospheric Protection Program imposes climate change regulations. This program is eliminated in the 2026 Budget.
Department of the Treasury
Increases
Rural Financial Award Program +100 The Budget creates a new $100 million award program that would require 60 percent of Community Development Financial Institutions’ (CDFIs’) loans and investments to go to rural areas.
Cuts, Reductions, and Consolidations
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) -2,488 The Budget reflects a planned 40% cut in personnel.
CDFI Fund Discretionary Awards -291 The Budget recommends eliminating CDFI Fund discretionary awards.
Small Business Administration (SBA)
Cuts, Reductions, and Consolidations
Entrepreneurial Development Programs (EDP) Consolidation -167 Therefore, the Budget ends 15 programs, leaving only the Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs) program. Eliminated programs include Women’s Business Centers and SCORE.
Salaries and Expenses (S&E) -111 The Budget provides $250 million for SBA’s S&E. The reduced S&E request also reflects a reduction in staffing costs associated with consolidating the Agency’s EDP.
Small Agency Eliminations
Cuts, Reductions, and Consolidations
  • 400 Years of African American History Commission
  • Corporation for National and Community Service (operating as AmeriCorps)
  • Corporation for Public Broadcasting
  • Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service
  • Institute of Museum and Library Sciences
  • Inter-American Foundation
  • Marine Mammal Commission
  • National Endowment for the Arts
  • National Endowment for the Humanities
  • Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation
  • U.S. African Development Foundation
  • U.S. Agency for Global Media
  • U.S. Institute of Peace
  • U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness
  • Woodrow Wilson Center
  • Presidio Trust
-3,586 The Budget includes the elimination of, or the elimination of Federal funding for, the following small agencies. Agencies in bold are in these appropriations bills.
  • Delta Regional Authority
  • Denali Commission
  • Northern Border Regional Commission
  • Southeast Crescent Regional Commission
  • Southwest Border Regional Commission
  • Great Lakes Authority
The Budget eliminates six small regional commissions. The Budget continues funding for Appalachian Regional Commission’s (ARC) operations at $14 million.
Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation (ONHIR) -2 The budget closes this office.
House Appropriations Committee
2359 Rayburn

06/26/2025 at 10:00AM

Full Committee Markup of FY26 Legislative Branch Bill

Full committee markup.

Budget requests:

U.S. House of Representatives budget requests:

House Appropriations Committee
2359 Rayburn

06/26/2025 at 10:00AM

Forest Management Technologies

On Thursday, June 26, 2025, at 10:00 a.m., in room 1324 Longworth House Office Building, the Committee on Natural Resources, Subcommittee on Federal Lands will hold an oversight hearing titled “Fix Our Forests: Advancing Innovative Technologies to Improve Forest Management and Prevent Wildfires.”

Hearing memo

Witnesses:

  • Dr. Karen Howard, Director of Science and Technology Assessment, Government Accountability Office, Washington, D.C. • Dan Munsey, Fire Chief, San Bernardino County Fire Department, San Bernardino, California • Sean Triplett, Data Integration and Operations Lead, Earth Fire Alliance, Boise, Idaho • Allison Wolff, Chief Executive Officer, Vibrant Planet, Truckee, California • Tyson Bertone-Riggs, Founder and Managing Director, Alliance for Wildfire Resilience, Chicago, Illinois [Minority Witness]
House Natural Resources Committee
   Federal Lands Subcommittee
1324 Longworth

06/26/2025 at 10:00AM

Nomination Hearing to consider William Kirkland to be Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs within the Department of the Interior

Nomination hearing.

Nominee:

  • William “Billy” Kirkland III

William “Billy” Kirkland III, citizen of the Navajo Nation, was a part of the White House staff during Trump’s first term, serving as special assistant to the president. Kirkland led Republican Senate campaigns, including David Perdue in 2014 and Kelly Loeffler in 2020. He also served as a senior advisor to Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign in Georgia and later worked on the White House Inauguration Committee before becoming a senior strategist for Vice President Mike Pence.

Senate Indian Affairs Committee
628 Dirksen

06/25/2025 at 02:30PM

U.S. Energy Policy and Climate Litigation

Subcommittee hearing entitled “Enter the Dragon—China and the Left’s Lawfare Against American Energy Dominance.”

Witnesses:

  • David Arkush, director, climate program, Public Citizen
  • Kris Kobach, Attorney General, Kansas
  • Scott Walter, Capital Research Center
Senate Judiciary Committee
   Federal Courts, Oversight, Agency Action, and Federal Rights Subcommittee
226 Dirksen

06/25/2025 at 02:30PM

Review of Military Energy, Installations, and Environment in Support of the FY26 National Defense Authorization Act

Subcommittee hearing.

Witnesses:

  • Dale R. Marks, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment
  • Dr. Jeff L. Waksman, Acting Assistant Secretary of the Army for Installations, Energy and Environment
  • Brenda M. Johnson-Turner, Performing the Duties of Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy, Installations and Environment
  • Michael E. Saunders, Acting Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Energy, Installations and Environment
Senate Armed Services Committee
   Readiness and Management Support Subcommittee
232A Russell

06/25/2025 at 02:30PM

Nominations of Usha-Maria Turner to be EPA Assistant Administrator for the Office of International and Tribal Affairs and David Wright to be a Member of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission

Full committee hearing.

Nominees:

  • Usha-Maria Turner to be Assistant Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency for the Office of International and Tribal Affairs
  • David A. Wright to be renominated as a Member of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission

Usha-Maria Turner is a longtime energy-industry lobbyist, most recently for Chesapeake Energy. She previously worked for OGE Energy and TXU Power.

Senate Environment and Public Works Committee
562 Dirksen

06/25/2025 at 10:00AM

Water, Wildlife, and Fisheries legislation

On Tuesday, June 24, 2025, at 10:15 a.m. in room 1324 Longworth House Office Building, the Committee on Natural Resources, Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife and Fisheries will hold a legislative hearing on the following bills:

  • H.R. 1676 (Rep. Donalds), “Make State Wildlife Action Plans Efficient Act of 2025”, to amend the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act to require the Secretary of the Interior to approve the wildlife conservation and restoration program of a State within 180 days
  • H.R. 3538 (Rep. Garbarino), “Wildlife Confiscations Network Act of 2025”, to direct the Secretary of the Interior to establish a Wildlife Confiscations Network
  • H.R. 3857 (Rep. Hurd), “Snow Water Supply Forecasting Reauthorization Act of 2025”, to use commercially available technologies for integrated snowpack measurement modeling
  • H.R. 3858 (Rep. Dingell), “Sport Fish Restoration, Recreational Boating Safety, and Wildlife Restoration Act of 2025,” to increase funding of Interstate Fisheries Commission activities, support alternative fuel marine facilities and cut the tax on portable, electronically aerated bait containers from 10 percent to 3 percent
House Natural Resources Committee
   Water, Wildlife and Fisheries Subcommittee
1324 Longworth

06/24/2025 at 10:15AM