Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 114 Part 3.djvu/100

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114 STAT. 1654A-58 PUBLIC LAW 106-398 —APPENDIX (1) the personnel requirements and organizational structure of the Defense Environmental Security Corporate Information Management Program to carry out the mission statement; and (2) a discussion of— (A) the means by which the Program will ensure program accountability, including accountability for all past, current, and future activities funded under the Program; and (B) the role of the Chief Information Officer of the Department of Defense in ensuring program accountability as required by subsection (a). (e) PROGRAM ACTIVITIES.—The report shall include a discussion of the means by which the Defense Environmental Security Corporate Information Management Program will address or provide— (1) information access procedures that keep pace with current and evolving requirements for information access; (2) data standardization and systems integration; (3) product failures and cost-effective results; (4) user confidence and utilization; and (5) program continuity. SEC. 320. REPORT ON PLASMA ENERGY PYROLYSIS SYSTEM. (a) REPORT REQUIRED.— Not later than February 1, 2001, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the Plasma Energy Pyrolysis System. (b) REPORT ELEMENTS. —The report on the Plasma Energy Pyrolysis System shall include the following: (1) An analysis of available information and data on the fixed-transportable unit demonstration phase of the System and on the mobile unit demonstration phase of the System. (2) Recommendations regarding future applications for each phase of the System described in paragraph (1). (3) A statement of the projected funding for such future applications. SEC. 321. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING ENVIRONMENTAL RES- TORATION OF FORMER DEFENSE MANUFACTURING SITE, SANTA CLARITA, CALIFORNIA. It is the sense of the Congress that— (1) there exists a 1,000-acre former defense manufacturing site in Santa Clarita, California (known as the "Santa Clarita site"), that could be environmentally restored to serve a future role in the community, and every effort should be made to apply all known public and private sector innovative technologies to restore the Santa Clarita site to productive use for the benefit of the community; and (2) the experience gained from environmental restoration at the Santa Clarita site by private and public sector partnerships has the potential to benefit not only the community of Santa Clarita, but all sites in need of environmental restoration.