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Friday, April 22, 2011

Continuing Resolutions: Latest Action and Brief Overview of Recent Practices


Sandy Streeter
Analyst on Congress and the Legislative Process

Most routine operations of federal departments and agencies are funded each year through the enactment of 12 regular appropriations acts. Because these bills are annual, expiring at the end of the fiscal year (September 30), regular appropriations bills for the subsequent fiscal year must be enacted by October 1. Final action on most regular appropriations bills, however, is frequently delayed beyond the start of the fiscal year. When this occurs, the affected departments and agencies are generally funded under temporary continuing appropriations acts until the final funding decisions become law. Because continuing appropriations acts are generally enacted in the form of joint resolutions, such acts are referred to as continuing resolutions (or CRs).

CRs may be divided into two categories based on duration—those that provide interim (or temporary) funding and those that provide funds through the end of the fiscal year. Interim continuing resolutions provide funding until a specific date or until the enactment of the applicable regular appropriations acts, if earlier. Full-year continuing resolutions provide funding in lieu of one or more regular appropriations bills through the end of the fiscal year.

Over the past 35 years, the nature, scope, and duration of continuing resolutions gradually expanded. From the early 1970s through 1987, CRs gradually expanded from being used to provide interim funding measures of comparatively brief duration and length to measures providing funding through the end of the fiscal year. The full-year measures included, in some cases, the full text of one or more regular appropriations bills and contained substantive legislation (i.e., provisions under the jurisdiction of committees other than the House and Senate Appropriations Committees). Since 1988, continuing resolutions have primarily been interim funding measures, and included major legislation less frequently.

In certain years, delay in the enactment of regular appropriations measures and CRs has led to periods during which appropriations authority has lapsed. Such periods generally are referred to as funding gaps.

Since Congress and the President have not completed action on any of the 12 FY2011 regular appropriations acts, several FY2011 interim CRs have been considered to provide more time to resolve differences within Congress and between Congress and the President. In 2010, Congress enacted four FY2011 interim CRs that sequentially extended funding from October 1, 2010, through March 4, 2011 (P.L. 111-242, P.L. 111-290, P.L. 111-317, and P.L. 111-322). These acts maintained funding at generally FY2010 discretionary spending levels. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates the total annualized discretionary spending level provided in these CRs at $1,247 billion, in budget authority (or BA). In 2011, President Barack H. Obama signed three additional FY2011 interim CRs, P.L. 112-4, P.L. 112-6, and P.L. 112-8, that sequentially extends funding through April 15,2011. These acts, in total, reduced the amount provided in 2010 by $13 billion, in BA.

During the evening of April 8, 2011, President Barack H. Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and House Speaker John A. Boehner proposed a final agreement on funding for all the FY2011 regular appropriations bills. CBO estimates the net reduction in discretionary and mandatory spending would be $39 billion, which includes the $13 billion reductions already enacted plus $26 billion reductions in H.R. 1473 (112
th Congress).


Date of Report: April 13, 2011
Number of Pages: 23
Order Number: RL30343
Price: $29.95

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