include that vital information into a repository someplace; I don't idea of what we can do with it without having an think we can do but the present resources, and what is left literally to be done. CHAIRMAN MOSELEY: MR. ZIMMERMAN: Mr. Zimmerman, can you educate this for me? But I think it would be helpful along the Not likely. lines that you mentioned, if we could get a budgetary breakdown of what your money is going for. I mean, you have only so much money, and people are saying, as I said, it is going to take you 15 years at the rate you are going. Now if you are half spending your money to support the 10 lawsuits -- we don't look at, I think in terms of the ORERP, the comparison 11 of a dollar spent on soil sampling versus a buck spent to help in the liti- 12 gation. 13 something 14 particularly, 15 litigant assessments and that sort of stuff. 16 we got a projection of how much? 17 support litigation for the next ten years? 18 any money left to do the functions that at least some of us understood were 19 the primary functions of CIC, which were to gather them so they wouldn't be 20 lost or destroyed and make them available to the public and the ORERP. In other words, the money that funds that litigation is not really I we, think we've thinking been been dealing with although it is recognized that you are spending time doing Maybe we should have some projections on that. 22 CHAIRMAN MOSELEY: Bruce, comments? 23 MR. CHURCH: Maybe it would be helpful if It's going to cost you $3 million to -21 24 we've If so, are you going to have Let me make a comment about what you just said, Mike, with respect to litigation. I fully anticipate restoration of that type of 25 -resource this year, and I fully anticipate that the litigation requirements 26 are going to be dealt with on an agency-need basis and really not a problem 27 for the DAAG to consider. - I think the problem that DAAG needs to consider 28 and be vitally interested in is the fact the resources and the mission of 298

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