Flood Control Act of 1948

The Flood Control Act of 1948 was passed by the United States Congress on June 30, 1948, giving the Chief of Engineers the power to authorize minor flood control projects without having to get Congressional approval. It also authorized several larger flood control projects and amended the budget set forth in the Flood Control Act of 1946.[1]

Budget

The estimated cost of the projects approved in the bill was $110,450,000. The bill also increased the maximum annual expenditure on repair and maintenance from $1,000,000 to $2,000,000 with no more than $100,000 being spent on any one location. $62,000,000 was allotted to the Secretary of the Army to make improvements and $10,000,000 was allotted to the Army and Department of Agriculture to conduct surveys and examinations. Lastly $25,000,000 million was allocated as emergency funding for flood control.[2]

gollark: Great, you can stop now then.
gollark: Tell them when you find some stuff, so they can go deal with it in some way, don't be dodecahedral.
gollark: Which is NOT VERY GOOD.
gollark: Maybe I should run anti-nobody adverts on osmarks internet radioâ„¢ to gather popular support.
gollark: Refusing to provide people the information necessary to make informed choices about privacy or whatever when you gather it so that you can indulge your bizarre habit isn't very good *either*.

References

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