Budget
Introduction You will need Adobe Reader to view some of the files on this page. See EPA's PDF page to learn more. For each fiscal year (which runs from October through September), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) develops a proposed budget. The budget defines the goals and objectives towards which the Agency intends to work within the fiscal year and the funding the Agency believes is necessary to accomplish these goals and objectives. This budget is combined with the budgets of the rest of the Executive Branch and is then sent by the President to the Congress (this occurs in the first quarter of the calendar year). The Congress then acts on the various budgets by developing, amending, and, ultimately, passing bills which enact the budgets into law (normally prior to the start of the fiscal year covered by the budget). At this point the enacted budget becomes the blueprint for the Agencys activities during the next fiscal year.
The Summary of the EPAs Budget (also
known as the Budget in Brief) provides an overview
of the Agencys budget and of the Agency activities as a
whole. The Annual Performance Plan defines the
budgets goals and objectives in greater detail. It also
ties the annual budget to the five year Strategic Plan of the
Agency. The Congressional Justification (sometimes
known as the CJ) is the formal title for the actual
budget document which is submitted to Congress. Analysis Books |
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