Civil Functions, Department of the Army Appropriations, 1953: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, Eighty-second Congress, Second Session, on H.R. 7268, Making Appropriations for Civil Functions Administered by the Department of the Army for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1953 |
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Page 39
... loss to the Nation . Those levees which are set back in that section cost about $ 385,000 per mile , so that was an economic loss to the Federal Government as well as to the local interests . So that the revetment program has got to go ...
... loss to the Nation . Those levees which are set back in that section cost about $ 385,000 per mile , so that was an economic loss to the Federal Government as well as to the local interests . So that the revetment program has got to go ...
Page 48
... loss to the farmers who till this soil is tremendous . The proposal to let them claim flood loss as a deductible item on tax returns is unavailing . They will have no taxable income if this condition is permitted to continue . The flood ...
... loss to the farmers who till this soil is tremendous . The proposal to let them claim flood loss as a deductible item on tax returns is unavailing . They will have no taxable income if this condition is permitted to continue . The flood ...
Page 54
... loss of life , the loss of properties - valuable lands , and get nothing for it except an expense . I will not attempt to go into the details of the flood control , because , that infor- mation is a matter of record and has been very ...
... loss of life , the loss of properties - valuable lands , and get nothing for it except an expense . I will not attempt to go into the details of the flood control , because , that infor- mation is a matter of record and has been very ...
Page 59
... loss due to floods at $ 5,660,000 , and other flood losses at $ 185,000 annually ( current prices February 1947 , pp . 14 and 35 ) . Prices have advanced at least 25 percent since that date ; we now estimate that our average annual loss ...
... loss due to floods at $ 5,660,000 , and other flood losses at $ 185,000 annually ( current prices February 1947 , pp . 14 and 35 ) . Prices have advanced at least 25 percent since that date ; we now estimate that our average annual loss ...
Page 63
... LOSSES We now In preparing this plan the Corps of Engineers estimated that our average annual loss at the time of 1947 ... loss in this valley of more than $ 7 million . We are only asking for $ 3 million to help us get rid of some of it ...
... LOSSES We now In preparing this plan the Corps of Engineers estimated that our average annual loss at the time of 1947 ... loss in this valley of more than $ 7 million . We are only asking for $ 3 million to help us get rid of some of it ...
Common terms and phrases
acres additional amount appropriation Arkansas River Army engineers authorized bank stabilization Basin bridge budget estimate Bureau California Canal Celilo Falls Chairman MCKELLAR channel Chief of Engineers CHORPENING Civil Functions Colonel PAULES Columbia River committee completed Congress construction Corps of Engineers cost County Creek cut-off Dalles Dam damage delay drainage dredging economic ERDAHL Federal Government feet FERINGA fiscal year 1953 fish fishery flood control Francis River funds going Hartwell Hartwell Dam House increase Indians industrial KENNETH MCKELLAR kilowatts land located lock and dam miles million Mississippi River Missouri navigation Northwest operation percent planning plant present record reduction Representative requested Reservoir river and harbor Sacramento San Joaquin River schedule Senator CAIN Senator CORDON Senator ELLENDER Senator KNOWLAND Senator MCCLELLAN Senator ROBERTSON Senator STENNIS statement tion treaty tribes United United States Senate Valley Washington Yakima
Popular passages
Page 53 - We will place the whole statement in the record at this point and we will be glad to hear your summary of items you think should be highlighted for the committee.
Page 243 - Providing that the penalties and procedure applicable to violations of the laws for the protection and preservation of the navigable waters of the United States...
Page 442 - Are there any further questions? If not, thank you very much, gentlemen, for all of your appearances here today.
Page 597 - The exclusive right of taking fish in all the streams, where running through or bordering said reservation, is further secured to said confederated tribes and bands of Indians, as also the right of taking fish at all usual and accustomed places, in common with citizens of the Territory...
Page 216 - Resolved (two-thirds of the Senators present concurring'), That the Senate advise and consent to the...
Page 215 - ... before the agent, the property taken shall be returned, or in default thereof, or if injured or destroyed, compensation may be made by the Government out of their annuities. Nor will they make war on any other tribe except in...
Page 215 - This treaty shall be obligatory upon the contracting parties as soon as the same shall be ratified by the President and Senate of the United States.
Page 776 - Governor of the Canal Zone and President of the Panama Canal Company.
Page 588 - That the exclusive right of taking fish in the streams running through and bordering said reservation is hereby secured to said Indians, and at all other usual and accustomed stations in common with citizens of the United States...
Page 381 - Because of the diversion features and the close inter-relation of the areas subject to flooding from this group of streams, all project features are Integrated and full benefits cannot be realized from individual structures until the project is completed as a whole. For instance, Bear Creek affords the greatest threat to the city of Merced and environs, and that threat will not be removed until Bear Creek Reservoir is completed and in operation.