Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 106 Part 3.djvu/573

 PUBLIC LAW 102-484—OCT. 23, 1992 106 STAT. 2367 activities under the pilot program are conducted expeditiously, with particular emphasis on activities that may be conducted in advance of any final plan for environmental restoration. (d) PROGRAM PRINCIPLES. —The Secretary shall carry out the pilot program consistent with the following principles: (1) Activities of the pilot program shall be carried out subject to and in accordance with all applicable Federal and State laws and regulations. (2) Competitive procedures shall be used to select the contractors. (3) The experience and ability of the contractors shall be considered, in addition to cost, as a factor to be evaluated in the selection of the contractors. (e) PROGRAM RESTRICTIONS. — The pilot program established in this section shall not result in the delay of environmental restoration activities at other military installations and former sites of the Department of Defense. SEC. 324. OVERSEAS ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION. 10 USC 2701 (a) SENSE OF CONGRESS.— It is the sense of the Congress that in carrying out environmental restoration activities at military installations outside the United States, the President should seek to obtain an equitable division of the costs of environmental restoration with the nation in which the installation is located. (b) REPORT.—The Secretary of Defense shall include in each Report on Allied Contributions to the Common Defense prepared under section 1003 of Public Law 98-525 (22 U.S.C. 1928) information, in classified and unclassified form, describing the efforts undertaken and the progress made by the President in carrying out subsection (a) during the period covered by the report. SEC. 325. EVALUATION OF USE OF OZONE-DEPLETING SUBSTANCES 10 USC 2701 BY THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE. note. (a) EVALUATION OF USE OF CLASS I SUBSTANCES. —The Director of the Defense Logistics Agency shall evaluate the use of class I substances by the military departments and Defense Agencies. In carrying out the evaluation, the Director shall— (1) determine the quantity of each class I substance that— (A) is held in the inventory of each military department and Defense Agency on December 31, 1992; (B) will be used by each military department and Defense Agency during 1992; and (C) will be used by each military department and Defense Agency in each of 1993, 1994, and 1995; (2) determine the quantity of each class I substance in the inventory of the military departments and Defense Agencies in each of 1993, 1994, and 1995 that can be reclaimed or recycled and reused by the military departments and Defense Agencies; (3) determine the type and quantity of class I substances whose use will be critical to the missions of the military departments and Defense Agencies after 1995; (4) determine the type and quantity of class I substances that must be stockpiled after 1995 in order to ensure the availability of such substances, including the availability of used, reclaimed, or recvcled class I substances for the missions referred to in paragraph (3);

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