The C-17 is a popular jobs program in at least a dozen states, so the House voted to spend $1.2 billion to buy three more planes and the Senate voted to spend $2.5 billion for 10 more.Senate last hurdle for appropriations billBy William Matthews - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Dec 16, 2009 17:38:09 EST
The House and Senate appropriators agreed to a $636.3 billion defense budget for 2010 on Tuesday, defying the Obama administration by buying more C-17s, an alternate engine for the Joint Strike Fighter and by refusing to kill the presidential helicopter.
The House passed the bill on Wednesday; the Senate may take awhile longer.
The sharpest jab at Defense Secretary Robert Gates and President Barack Obama came in the form of a $2.5 billion add-on for buying 10 more C-17 cargo planes.
Gates wanted to end the program, contending that the Air Force has plenty of C-17s and other airlift planes.
But the C-17 is a popular jobs program in at least a dozen states, so the House voted to spend $1.2 billion to buy three more planes and the Senate voted to spend $2.5 billion for 10 more. The lawmakers decided to compromise by accepting the Senate’s plan.
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http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/12/def_appropriations_conference_121609/