House Hearing, 110TH Congress - Members' Day
House Hearing, 110TH Congress - Members' Day
House Hearing, 110TH Congress - Members' Day
HEARING
BEFORE THE
(
Available on the Internet:
http://www.gpoaccess.gov/congress/house/budget/index.html
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON
41122 PDF
2008
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PROFESSIONAL STAFF
THOMAS S. KAHN, Staff Director and Chief Counsel
AUSTIN SMYTHE, Minority Staff Director
(II)
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CONTENTS
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Statement ofContinued
Hon. Michael M. Honda, a Representative in Congress from the State
of CaliforniaContinued
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Peter Welch, a Representative in Congress from the State of
Vermont .........................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Bob Filner, a Representative in Congress from the State of California ..............................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Christopher P. Carney, a Representative in Congress from the State
of Pennsylvania .............................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. John Lewis, a Representative in Congress from the State of Georgia ...................................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Ron Klein, a Representative in Congress from the State of Florida ...
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Brian Higgins, a Representative in Congress from the State of
New York .......................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Steve Kagen, a Representative in Congress from the State of Wisconsin .............................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Rick Larsen, a Representative in Congress from the State of Washington .............................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Donna Christensen, a Delegate in Congress from the U.S. Virgin
Islands ............................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Timothy J. Walz, a Representative in Congress from the State
of Minnesota ..................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Frank R. Wolf, a Representative in Congress from the State of
Virginia ..........................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Hon. Vito J. Fossella, a Representative in Congress from the State of
New York .......................................................................................................
Prepared statement of ...............................................................................
Additional Submssions for the Record:
Statement of Hon. Ginny Brown-Waite, a Representative in Congress
from the State of Florida ..............................................................................
Statement of Hon. Madeleine Z. Bordallo, a Delegate from the Territory
of Guam .........................................................................................................
Statement of Hon. J. Randy Forbes, a Representative in Congress from
the State of Virginia .....................................................................................
Statement of Hon. Ruben Hinojosa, a Representative in Congress from
the State of Texas .........................................................................................
Statement of Hon. Paul W. Hodes, a Representative in Congress from
the State of New Hampshire ........................................................................
Testimony of members of the Illinois congressional delegation ...................
Letter and statement of Hon. Hilda L. Solis, a Representative in Congress from the State of California ...............................................................
Statement of Hon. Bart Stupak, a Representative in Congress from the
State of Michigan ..........................................................................................
Statement of Hon. John F. Tierney, a Representative in Congress from
the State of Massachusetts ..........................................................................
Statement of Hon. Edolphus Towns, a Representative in Congress from
the State of New York ..................................................................................
Statement of Hon. Nydia M. Velazquez, a Representative in Congress
from the State of New York .........................................................................
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MEMBERS DAY
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2008
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,
COMMITTEE ON THE BUDGET,
Washington, DC.
The Committee met, pursuant to call, at 10:19 a.m., in room 210,
Cannon House Office Building, Hon. John M. Spratt, Jr. [Chairman
of the Committee] presiding.
Present: Representatives Spratt, Berry, Etheridge, Hooley, and
Moore.
Chairman SPRATT. Welcome to the annual Members Day which
is a chance for members of the House to come before the Budget
Committee to testify about priorities that are of particular interest
to them.
This is always a very informative and very interesting day and
also a very long day as we get to hear testimony from members
that underscores the broad spectrum of concerns that the peoples
representatives bring to D.C.
As we craft our annual budget resolution, and it is in progress
as we talk, as we meet, we welcome the opportunity to get input
from other members of the House.
Just a word about the ground rules. Every member will have five
minutes to present their remarks. Their full printed remarks if
submitted for the record will be incorporated in their totality in the
record. But we would ask you to keep your oral testimony to five
minutes. We will then leave up to five minutes for any questions
from Budget Committee members.
And I was going to say next that I will turn first to the Ranking
Member before proceeding, but it appears that no one on the other
side is here at this point in time. And time is of the essence in light
of the fact we may be getting out at midday today, so let us proceed
with Mr. Chris Murphy.
Mr. Murphy, we are glad to have you. The floor is yours. Your
five minutes of recognition and your printed statement will be
made part of the record.
STATEMENT OF HON. CHRISTOPHER S. MURPHY, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT
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have the chance to share with you just a few thoughts on some of
the priorities that I know you will wrestle with over the coming
weeks and months.
Today I would like to talk about a few programs and I will start
with one very near and dear to our hearts in northwestern Connecticut. And that is programming funding, land and water conservation.
The Land and Water Conservation Fund was created by President Kennedy to provide federal funds to help states leverage local
and municipal resources to ensure that open spaces can be preserved and cared for for generations to come.
The LWCF helps manage our parks and our federal lands while
providing funds to states and individuals who want to leverage
those funds to ensure smart and sensible promotion of the protection of green spaces.
The Presidents budget would trample President Kennedys vision, delivering a near death blow of a 74 percent cut to the LWCF,
a reduction of $110 million and one of the lowest levels of funding
in the programs near 44-year history.
LWCF is authorized by Congress to receive up to $900 million a
year and the President delivered a strong pledge in 2001 to fully
fund it, but his budget this year reflects another reality, a 91 percent cut from 2001 funding levels.
I would also urge the Committee to reconsider the Presidents
proposed $38 million cut to the U.S. Geological Survey which promotes the sound management of water, biological energy, and mineral resources. USGS is the national leader in providing studies
and mapping efforts to assess the environmental impact of pollutants and development on vulnerable waterways and natural ecosystems. In the northwestern portion of Connecticut, we have
greatly relied on the USGS to help us plan and map many of our
efforts to protect our environment.
The $10.9 million proposed cut in the USGSs National Water
Quality Assessment Program would severely impact nonprofits and
municipalities across the country as well in Connecticut working to
extract maximum value from these federal scientific resources.
Equal as important to me is our commitment to a sound federal
juvenile delinquency prevention program. The Presidents budget
for fiscal year 2009 proposes to eliminate many of these funding
sources that have helped municipalities and states cope with the
problems of juvenile delinquency.
The President would create a single new Child Safety Juvenile
Justice Block Grant. This Block Grant would be funded at a level
that is almost 50 percent lower than the total fiscal year 2008
funding for the programs that were eliminated, representing some
$100 million in funding.
The Congress should reject this proposed cut in block granting of
our juvenile justice programming funding and instead strength and
increase funding for federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention programs, including Title V Prevention Grants, the Juvenile Accountability Block Grant, and Title II State Formula Grants
at a minimum, and at a minimum, restoring funding to the fiscal
year 2002 appropriated levels.
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Investing in these proven prevention and intervention programs
will make our communities safer and will inevitably save money
down the road by making sure that children have the access to the
preventative programs that will save our system money in the future.
I would also like to express my strong support for the full and
fair funding of the Section 811 Supportive Housing Program for
low-income persons with disabilities. Section 811 provides affordable supportive housing so that the most disadvantaged members
of our society struggling with severe mental and physical disabilities can lead productive lives.
The programs help people with the basic skills and tasks of daily
living, affording them the dignity and self-respect they are too
often denied.
The Presidents budget again slashes these programs, targeting
811 for a 32 percent cut from $237 million to $160 million, coming
only a year after the President attempted to zero out all new funding for nonprofit developers in the 811 Program.
Section 811 is already straining under the weight of great new
demand for new units and supportive housing. And such deep cuts
would take two steps back even further from the dozen that the
President has already asked the program to endure.
Mr. Chairman, I come from the Connecticut State Legislature in
which I was able to Chair our Appropriations Committee on Juvenile Justice, where I chaired the Public Health Committee for a
number of years, and I can tell you that these cuts not only are
damaging to those nonprofits and those community providers that
try to provide the juvenile justice programming and supportive
mental health housing, but also to state governments that, as you
know, are laboring under the increased burden handed them to
pick up the slack that has been visited upon them by a number of
years of neglect.
I am so grateful that we are able as new members to serve under
your leadership and your guidance. I was proud to vote for the
budget we passed at the end of last year which begins to invest in
many of these very important programs while still maintaining a
sound commitment to fiscal responsibility.
I appreciate the chance to testify and I hope the Committee will
look favorably upon these recommendations.
[The prepared statement of Christopher Murphy follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. CHRISTOPHER S. MURPHY, A REPRESENTATIVE
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT
IN
Mr. Chairman, thank you for allowing me to address this esteemed body today.
The Presidents FY 2009 budget represents a $20 billion reduction in some of our
nations most vital domestic programs, all while relying on some very suspect math;
the budget states a deliberately misleading assessment of the war in Iraqs actual
anticipated costs and incorporates several nonexistent funding streams, including
expected revenue from drilling in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge. Id like to
speak to some of these programs important in my district that have felt some of
the sharpest sting of the Presidents budget pen today.
The Land and Water Conservation Fund was created by President Kennedy to
provide federal funds to help states leverage local and municipal resources to ensure
that open spaces could be preserved and cared for for future generations. LWCF
helps manage our parks and federal lands while providing funds to states and individuals who want to leverage their funds to ensure the smart, sensible protection
of green spaces.
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The Presidents budget would trample President Kennedys vision, delivering a
near-deathblow 74% cut to LWCF, a reduction of $110 million dollars and one of
the lowest funding levels in the programs proud 44-year history. LWCF is authorized by Congress to receive up to $900 million a year, and the President delivered
a strong pledge in 2001 to fully fund LWCF. His budget this year reflects another
reality: a 91% funding cut from 2001 funding levels of $411 million.
I would also urge the committee to reconsider the Presidents proposed $38 million
cut to the U.S. Geological Survey which promotes the sound management of water,
biological, energy, and mineral resources. USGS is the national leader in providing
studies and mapping efforts to assess the environmental impact of pollutants and
development on vulnerable waterways and natural ecosystems. In practice, this
means land trusts, small towns, and conservation groups can employ federal research to assist in development plans, conservation prioritization and pollution remediationscience that would be completely unavailable to them without USGS expertise and counsel. USGS work has been vital to helping communities in my district gather important data about the Pomperaug River and Farmington River watersheds, among other projects. The $10.9 proposed cut in USGSs National WaterQuality Assessment (NAWQA) initiative would severely impact nonprofits and municipalities across the country working to extract maximum value from these federal
scientific resources.
Equally as important to me, federal juvenile delinquency prevention and intervention programs support a variety of state and local efforts help ensure that troubled
kids dont become mired in the vicious cycle of juvenile incarceration. Programs that
connect kids with caring adults and constructive activities during the prime time
for juvenile crime of 3-6 PM are among our most powerful tools for preventing
crime. The youths whose families received assistance from the Functional Family
Therapy (FFT) were half as likely to be re-arrested as the youths whose families
did not receive the family therapy. By reducing recidivism among juvenile offenders,
FFT saves the public roughly $32,000 per youth treated. These programs work, and
they save valuable tax dollars in effected communities.
Unfortunately, the Administrations FY09 budget proposes to eliminate these
funding sources and create a single, new Child Safety and Juvenile Justice block
grant. This block grant would be funded at a level that is almost 50% lower than
the total FY08 funding for the programs eliminated, representing some $100 million. The Congress should reject the proposed cuts and block granting and instead
strengthen and increase funding for federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention programs, including Title V prevention grants, the Juvenile Accountability
Block Grant, and Title II State Formula Grants-at a minimum, restoring funding
to the FY02 appropriated levels. Investing in these proven prevention and intervention programs will make our communities safer and save money down the road.
I also wish to express my strong support for full and fair funding of Section 811
Supportive Housing for low-income persons with disabilities. Section 811 provides
affordable supportive housing so that the most disadvantaged members of our society struggling with severe mental and physical disabilities can lead productive lives.
These programs help people with the basic skills and tasks of daily living, affording
them the dignity and self-respect they are too often denied.
The Presidents budget further slashes this program, targeting Section 811 for a
32% cut from $237 million to $160 million, coming only a year after the President
attempted to zero-out all new funding for nonprofit developers during the FY2008
cycle. Section 811 is already straining under the weight of demand for new units,
and such deep cuts would take two steps back even further from the dozen the
President has already asked the program to endure. I have introduced legislation
to reauthorize and streamline this vital program, and I hope that we here in Congress can make strong stand against the Presidents proposed budget cuts to Section
811 housing. We cannot and should not allow these individuals to fall deeper into
the cracks of the federal bureaucracy when they deserve a fair shot at their part
of the American dream.
While the programs I just spoke about probably wont be the ones you see
splashed across the newspapers and television sets across America, they are vitally
important to the Americans that depend on them to preserve their communities,
keep their kids safe, and find a place to call home. I encourage you to do everything
in your power to ensure that our budget is one that is both fiscally and morally responsible. Thank you, Mr. Chairman for your consideration of these important
issues before the committee today.
Chairman SPRATT. Mr. Murphy, thank you for your excellent tes-
timony and for exposing just a few of the really deep and eviscerating cuts in this budget.
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You have selected a few that are of interest to Connecticut, but
that is only symptomatic of the budget as a whole, cuts that you
would not believe in programs that we have seen work and cannot
be convinced to the contrary. You have seen them in Connecticut.
I have seen them in South Carolina. And I am sure Mr. Berry has
seen them in Arkansas. You have only mentioned a few, but they
represent the whole thrust of this budget.
And one of our first priorities in putting together an alternative
budget resolution, our resolution, will be to restore the cuts the
President made, the crippling cuts in the programs you just mentioned.
Let me now recognize Mr. Berry and see if he has any questions
he would like to put.
Mr. BERRY. No.
Chairman SPRATT. Thank you very much for coming. Your statement will be made part of the record and we really appreciate your
participation.
Mr. MURPHY. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman SPRATT. Thank you.
Ms. Castor, come forward. Oh, you are forward. I beg your pardon. I was putting you in the middle of the table. Welcome and
thank you for coming.
And I am not sure if you were here when I explained the ground
rules, but simply put, you have got five minutes to read and
present your statement. The full statement will be made part of the
record. Then we will save a little time for Q and A afterwards. But
the floor is yours and thank you for coming. We are looking forward to your testimony.
STATEMENT OF HON. KATHY CASTOR, REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF FLORIDA
Ms. CASTOR. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, very much for the opportunity to be here this morning and to testify.
I will not take my full five minutes, but thank you very much
for the opportunity to be here and submit my full statement for the
record along with some other materials.
I am going to focus my remarks on the Medicaid shortfall facing
numerous states across the country, especially the State of Florida.
And what I am also going to submit for the record are the position papers of the National Governors Association that are highlighting the shortfall in federal Medicaid funding as a serious economic problem facing families across this country.
Oftentimes here in Washington, I know folks talk about programs. And when we are talking about Medicaid, I think it is very
important to remind everyone we are talking about pregnant
women, children from poor families, foster children, and really the
folks that are hit the hardest when the economy goes south.
Last year, over 20 states faced a shortfall in the federal Medicaid
match. In the upcoming year, it is projected that about 17 to 20
states also will face a serious downturn in the federal monies coming to match their Medicaid needs for pregnant women and poor
children and seniors in nursing homes.
But I wanted to highlight one problem that is really hitting the
families in Florida very hard and it happened because the federal
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Medicaid formula relies on the per capita income of a few years
ago. So there is a lag.
What happened in Florida in 2004, we were hit by four to five
hurricanes, Charley, Wilma. There were so many, I cannot remember all their famous names. Charley, Francis, Ivan, and Gene in
2004, Katrina, Rita, and Wilma in 2005.
Now, Mr. Chairman, I know South Carolinians, they also understand hurricanes, but never has a state been hit by so many powerful storms.
What that did to our per capita income is that in the subsequent
years, it went up because we had the rebuilding and repair period.
So now we get hit again because our per capita income went up.
We will receive less Medicaid match money from the Federal Government.
So this is a problem facing all the states, but Florida now is getting socked with a double whammy just at the wrong time, at the
time that the State of Florida, it is commonly known, is in a recession where arguments can be made that maybe some other states
are treading water.
I wanted to highlight that to you. The economic hit to the State
of Florida over the two-year period, $500 million, $500 million.
So I encourage you as you build this budget to consider the seniors, the pregnant women, the children from poor families, kids in
foster care. In an economic downturn, we cannot hit them again.
We cannot allow them in the toughest times to be left without a
life line.
So we are counting on the Budget Committee to build in some
allowance for a Medicaid match fix. In the last economic downturn,
$10 billion was provided to the states as a life line. It has been
done for the State of Louisiana as a result of Hurricane Katrina
as well.
So thank you very much for the opportunity to raise this issue
before the Committee today.
[The prepared statement of Kathy Castor follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
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For millions of families, Medicaid is the only form of health coverage available.
In my home state of Florida, Medicaid serves approximately 2.2 million residents,
over half of whom are children.
Struggling and hardworking families depend on this support for health care. An
increase in Medicaid funding will provide families with critically needed medical
care.
Medicaid is a lifeline for many pregnant women, families who are transitioning
from welfare to work, young children and seniors who qualify for Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
My home state of Florida is not alone in severe projected Medicaid shortfalls, but
a unique anomaly is exacerbating our problems in Florida.
Florida was hit by seven hurricanes in two years: Charley, Frances, Ivan and
Jeanne in 2004 and Katrina, Rita and Wilma in 2005.
As a result of these hurricanes, per capita income levels in Florida temporarily
surged upward due to a repair and rebuilding period. The anomaly caused the
FMAP formula in Florida to skew so it does not accurately attend to the states
need.
This anomaly will leave Floridas neediest residents, without vital health services
if Floridas FMAP allocation is not corrected.
Cuts in Medicaid funding from Floridas skewed numbers will adversely impact
my neighbors in the Tampa Bay area, residents in the state of Florida and others
living in states which face similar cuts.
In Florida, we are facing a $500 million hit in Medicaid funding, which will have
a devastating effect on hardworking families.
It is estimated that Florida will suffer a $220 million hit in FY 09 alone.
FMAP must be reformulated to reflect every states most recent data.
Millions of families who depend on Medicaid for health care will be forced to go
without if these cuts occur.
Congress must act to prevent this from happening. We must act to protect our
nations neediest citizensseniors, pregnant women and children.
We must work to provide protection for the folks who need it the most.
We must correct the FMAP allocation and enhance Medicaid funding.
Chairman SPRATT. Thank you very much indeed for your testimony. It follows on the testimony from Mr. Murphy. And I noted
that he was simply selecting from this huge budget a few particular cuts that had particular relevance to Connecticut.
What you will find is that program after program, particularly in
the arena of community and regional development, are being cut
and cut deeply and the intergovernmental programs being cut as
well.
The Medicaid Program under the Bush budget is cut $82 billion
over ten years. The Medicare Program cut is $556 billion over ten
years. With the elderly population in Florida that you have, that
is like another series of hurricanes coming through.
Ms. CASTOR. That is right.
Chairman SPRATT. So it is of great concern to us. A large part
of our effort in putting the budget back together again to a form
acceptable to our party will be to restore those cuts and to bring
the budget back to where it should have been if it had simply been
on a current services basis.
Mr. Berry, do you have any questions you would like to ask her?
Thank you, very much for your testimony. We appreciate you
coming.
Ms. CASTOR. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate your leadership very much.
Thank you, Mr. Berry.
Chairman SPRATT. Now, Mrs. Giffords, you have five minutes to
make a presentation of your statement. The printed statement will
be made part of the record and we will have a little Q and A after-
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wards. But thank you for coming. We look forward to your testimony.
STATEMENT OF HON. GABRIELLE GIFFORDS, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF ARIZONA
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Federal Government. This $98,000 reflects just a portion of the cost
of what they actually go through.
The Pima County Jail, Pima County where Tucson is located, is
used to detain 200 illegal immigrants who have been arrested on
felony charges, including murder, rape, and robbery. According to
Sheriff Dupnik, the Sheriff of Pima County, these illegal immigrants take up about ten percent of the cell space in our counties.
The cost to the Sheriffs Department is $13,000 each day for incarceration alone. This amounts to about $390,000 per month, over
$4.7 million per year. The reimbursement that Sheriff Dupnik reports from current SCAAP funding is less than three percent of the
total cost.
Some of these prisoners also have additional health problems like
tuberculosis, other diseases that are infectious as well. So you can
see just the amount of medical funding that goes into the detention.
This week, Arizonas Governor, Janet Napolitano, came to Capitol Hill to talk about funding for SCAAP and realizing that the
current authorization is at $950 million. In her testimony before
the Senate Finance Committee, she noted that the Federal Government now owes Arizona for lack of prior funding over $419 million.
So I think this is outrageous that we are expecting our state and
local municipalities to do the work of federal law enforcement, but
we are not paying them. And as we know, those local sheriffs, those
local municipalities are the folks that are responding, the first responders to our local citizens when they have problems as well.
On February 8th, I addressed a letter signed by 47 members of
the House to Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan highlighting the Presidents failure to include any funding for SCAAP
in the fiscal year 2009 budget proposal.
Frankly, Mr. Chairman, I think that we can do better. We know
that we are facing an illegal immigration crisis in our country. We
are under-funding SCAAP. The President is overburdening our
state and our local governments.
So I urge the Committee to reject the Presidents cuts to SCAAP
and ask you that you prioritize Americas safety when it comes to
the hundreds of thousands of people that are coming into our borders illegally.
The majority are coming for work and economic reasons. We understand that. But there is a criminal element and we know that
because we run background checks and we know again the murder
rate, the drug trafficking. This is a real, real life scenario for people
in my district in southern Arizona and across the U.S. Mexico border. And, of course, the ramifications continue to flow across the
nation.
So I appreciate this opportunity to come and testify in front of
the Committee today. I ask you to support the SCAAP funding, to
increase the SCAAP funding because it really is the difference between life and death for people in my district and across the country.
[The prepared statement of Gabrielle Giffords follows:]
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PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. GABRIELLE GIFFORDS, A REPRESENTATIVE
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF ARIZONA
IN
Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan, thank you for allowing me to testify
before the Budget Committee today.
I would like to take this opportunity to focus the Committees attention on an
issue vital to Southern Arizonathe impact of our nations immigration crisis on
state, county, and local law enforcement agencies. My district includes 114 miles of
the US-Mexico border.
As you know, Arizona faces unimaginable immigration and border security challenges. Last year, 387 thousand illegal immigrants were apprehended in Arizona.
An average of 1,000 illegal immigrants per day were arrested and deported from
Tucson.
The Tucson Sector, which includes my district, is the most porous section of the
entire U.S.-Mexico Border. More than 48% of the nations drug traffic enters our
country through Southern Arizona.
Securing our nations borders is the Federal Governments exclusive jurisdiction.
Under federal law, the Federal Government has two options for handing that responsibility in relation to undocumented criminals. It can take them into federal
custody OR it can compensate state and local jurisdictions.
Where the Federal Government relies on local law enforcement, it is supposed to
reimburse states and localities for the costs related to the incarceration of illegal
immigrants who commit crimes in our communities. The State Criminal Alien Assistance Program, or SCAAP was created by the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 as the method for those reimbursements. As you know,
SCAAP funding flows through the Justice Departments Office of Justice Programs
to local law enforcement.
However, SCAAP is consistently under-funded. Because of the limited federal contributions to the program, these incarceration costs are borne by our counties. Some
of those counties are among the poorest in the nation. They are already operating
with slim budgets and staffing. As a result, appropriate federal funding is even
more critical.
Communities through Southern Arizona face extraordinary costs from incarcerating undocumented criminals each year. Cochise County in my district submitted
$234,501 in reimbursable expenses last year and only received less than $98,000.
That $98,000 reflects only a fraction of the costs they actually incurred for doing
federal law enforcements job.
Every day the Pima County Jail is used to detain 200 illegal immigrants who
have been arrested on felony charges including murder, rape and robbery. According
to Sheriff Dupnik, these illegal immigrants take up 10% of the cell space in our
county jail there. The cost to the Sheriffs Department is $13,000 per day for incarceration alone. This amounts to approximately $390,000 per month and $4,745,000
per year.
The reimbursement Sheriff Dupnik reports from current SCAAP funding is less
than 3% of the total cost incurred. Some of these prisoners have serious health problems including infectious diseases such as TB. The cost of medical treatment is an
additional burden beyond the cost of detention.
Just this week, Arizonas Governor, Janet Napolitano, testified on Capitol Hill
about the need for fully funding the SCAAP program at the authorized $950 million
level. Our Governor has submitted regular bills to the Justice Department that have
not been fully paid. In her testimony to the Senate Finance Committee, she noted
that the Federal Government now owes Arizona at least $419 million.
There is an outrageously clear under-valuing of the critical contributions of our
state, county and local law enforcement agencies in capturing and detaining criminals who are in our nation illegally. They are performing duties assigned to the Federal Government, which has failed to do its job. To make matters worse, in fiscal
year 2006, over $66 million dollars were rescinded from SCAAP. Like Governor
Napolitano, I was shocked to learn of this rescission and agree that further cuts to
this already-underfunded program are completely unacceptable.
With continued under-funding of this assistance program, states and localities will
be financially overwhelmed by these costs that are the Federal Governments responsibility.
As you know, only February 8, 2008 I addressed a letter signed by 47 of my House
colleagues to Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan. That letter highlighted
the Presidents failure to include ANY funding for SCAAP in his Fiscal Year 2009
Budget proposal.
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We are already facing an immigration crisis in America. By under-funding
SCAAP, the President is over-burdening our state and local governments. He is
hampering our states ability to protect our communities and uphold federal law.
SCAAP funding is particularly important to communities like Bisbee and Douglasthose along the nearly 2,000 miles of southern border. States and local governments along our border incur greater costs than other jurisdictions.
Over the past several years, those communities costs have exceeded SCAAP reimbursements by hundreds of millions of dollars.
I urge you to reject the Presidents cuts to SCAAP and ask that you prioritize the
safety of our American communities in the Budget Resolution you mark up next
week. We must take the appropriate steps to ensure that SCAAP funding, especially
to Border States, remains a federal priority.
Arizona, like many states, is facing budget shortfalls. Every dollar reduction in
SCAAP reimbursement means a dollar less that Arizona can spend on essential public safety services.
I appreciate the opportunity to testify before you today. Please support increased
SCAAP funding for our state and local law enforcement by increasing the total funding level for the Bureau of Justice Assistance in the Houses Fiscal Year 2009 Budget.
Thank you.
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restitution. It is like making the criminals pay the rent on the
courthouse, pay for the system that they have created.
But the Justice Department administers this fund. And right
now it is $1.7 billion that criminals have donated to the fund. Next
year, it is supposed to be $1.9 billion because federal judges are assessing more fines and fees and there are more criminal cases.
So the problem, what is it? The problem is that every year in the
budget, in the Administrations budget, the amount of money available to these organizations keeps getting lower and lower. Even
though there is 1.7 billion in the fund this year, the budget only
authorizes $540 million, excluding the $50 million antiterrorism
emergency reserve. That is a cut from last year of $770 million.
Many of these organizations barely keep the lights on and when
they lose money, a few million dollars, they close down. And not
only is the fund being reduced, but the Presidents budget wants
to take the rest of the fund and distribute it for other pet projects,
thus eliminating the fund entirely.
And the Justice Department who has always administered the
fund this year wants to charge a surcharge for administering the
fund. They have never issued a surcharge before. In fact, I do not
think Congress has even authorized this surcharge.
But they are going to take money out of the fund to pay for the
administration of it because they have a budget cut. So you have
got these different organizations coming in to take money that really does not belong to these organizations. It belongs to crime victims.
So I am simply asking that on behalf of victims of crime throughout the United States that the fund not be decreased, that it actually be raised just to $660 million, and that it stay current every
year, of course, we have to fight this battle every year, and that
other groups do not rob this fund for other projects in the budget.
Once again, this is not taxpayer money. It did not come from taxpayers. It came from criminals. And it is the idea that the money
should be spent on victims of criminal conduct.
So I am just asking this Committee to restore the level of funding to $770 million, not reduce it, not allow other organizations and
departments in our government to take the money and spend it on,
frankly, things that have nothing to do with crime victims.
So that is the testimony and I am asking that the Committee
protect the rights of victims. These are very important programs.
It is a tremendous concept and because Congress or, rather, the
Justice Department administers the fund, so many organizations
and departments want to grab this money and use it on their pet
projects. And they are not entitled to this money. It goes to victims.
[The prepared statement of Ted Poe follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS FROM
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee: Thank you for the opportunity to
speak about the Crime Victims Fund. Congress created this Fund in the bipartisan
Victims of Crime Act or VOCA. President Reagan signed VOCA into law in 1984.
The Crime Victims Fund is a novel idea. Convicted federal criminals pay fees and
fines into the Fund. That money is then saved and reserved for victims of crime.
The Fund helps pay reparations to victims and allows domestic violence shelters,
rape crisis centers, and other organizations to keep their doors open.
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Today, the Fund is about $1.7 billion. This is money contributed by criminals that
goes to crime victims. I want to be clear: this is not taxpayer money. This is criminals paying for the system that theyve created. Criminals are paying rent on the
courthouse.
Although the Fund is $1.7 billion, Congress limits the amount available to crime
victim organizations to ensure that there is money left over for the next year. The
2006 Fund level was $625 million. It stayed at that level in 2007 but state assistance grants were cut. The Fund level was then lowered in 2008 to $590 million,
which means even more cuts to state grants. The cuts may seem small, but they
are forcing victim service centers across the country to close their doors because
they can barely keep their lights on.
The Fund is in even more danger. For the 1st time in its 24 year history, the Justice Department is taking money out of the Fund at a rate of 5.5%. This is to administer the Fund. That surcharge will equal $32.45 million. The Justice Department
claims that it needs the $32.45 million because its management and administrative
costs were under funded in Fiscal Year 2008. The Justice Department does not have
the legal authority to do this and is doing so without Congressional approval. The
Justice Departments budget is being cut so it wants to steal money from victims
of crime to make up for the difference.
A similar surcharge is being assessed to RISS, the Regional Information Sharing
Systems Program. The Justice Department wants to impose a surcharge of 7.5% on
RISS. Thats even higher than what banks charge. RISS is one of the nations most
important law enforcement intelligence sharing networks. RISS gives local, state,
federal, and tribal law enforcement agencies access to intelligence databases and investigative resources to enhance and improve the ability to detect crime, apprehend
offenders, and successfully prosecute criminals. For Fiscal Year 2009, Congress
must appropriate 52.7 million to ensure that RISS provides our law enforcement officers the tools they need to keep us all safe.
Congress must also adequately fund the Justice Departments management and
administrative costs, so that the Justice Department gets out of the business of
charging interest to non-profits.
With the Crime Victims Fund, federal bureaucrats see a Fund with over a billion
dollars in it and instantly want to touch it. But its not their money to touch. The
Crime Victims Fund has $1.7 billion this year. Next year, it will be $1.9 billion.
Every year, the fund grows larger, but every year the government lowers the
amount available for VOCA grants.
The Federal government, particularly the Justice Department, needs to keep their
hands off of the Crime Victims Fund. Criminals pay into the fund to help the victims that they harmed, not to help the Federal government pay for other things.
On top of the almost $81 million cut in victim services for 2008, we fear there
will be even more cuts. Once again the Administration recommends rescinding the
Crime Victims Fund. In other words, abolish a $1.7 billion Fund. This would drain
the Fund, combine offender revenue with taxpayer funds, and allow the Administration to use the funds for other pet projects. Victims should not be forced to wage
an annual fight over a Fund that was created for their sole benefit.
The Administrations 2009 budget proposal also includes another $52 million cut
for state assistance grants. Thats a total cut of $159 million since 2006. But the
money is already in the Fund! The Fund is growing every day. Now Congress needs
to make these funds accessible to crime victim services.
In order to offset these cuts, Congress will have to raise the Fund to $770 million
in Fiscal Year 2009. This would just restore victim state assistance grants to the
2006 level. This would simply get programs back to where they were four years ago.
Mr. Chairman, I urge you to ensure that the 2009 VOCA cap is at least $770 million.
Crime victims do not have high dollar lobbyists here in Washington, DC to advocate on their behalf. Victims expect us, Members of Congress, to advocate on their
behalf. They were victims of crime and we cannot let federal bureaucrats continue
to victimize them. It is important that we do not let the bureaucrats raid the Crime
Victims Fund and use that money for other purposes. Bureaucrats must find that
money somewhere else. This money belongs to crime victims and needs to be left
alone. And thats just the way it is.
Chairman SPRATT. Mr. Poe, you make a very compelling witness.
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14
COPS Program which will be at this rate wiped out by this budget,
Byrne Grants crippled, and I think the State Law Enforcement
Block Grant is under-funded as well and that is just for starters.
So I do not know what your experience is in Texas, but these are
programs that have worked in my part of the world and have demonstrated they work and that is why they have survived this many
years. And your program not only has worked and has the tangible
assets to prove it, but it also makes a lot of equity sense in terms
of equity. Those who are guilty of violating the law should pay for
the consequences of their illegal action.
I cannot quibble with it at all. We will do our best to see that
it is restored to the level you are talking about. It will not be easy
because we have got a very tight budget, but you make a strong
case.
Thank you for coming.
Mr. POE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you very much.
Chairman SPRATT. Mr. Berry, do you have any questions?
Mr. BERRY. I think you are an attorney; is that right?
Mr. POE. I am an attorney, former judge in Texas for 20 years.
Mr. BERRY. Do you think what the Justice Department did was
legal?
Mr. POE. No, sir, I do not. It is not authorized by Congress. Congress set the legislation for the VOCA fund in 1984. The Justice
Department has always administered it without charging a surcharge. And this year, because they want some more money, they
are taking five percent of that fund. And I do not think it is legal.
I certainly do not.
Mr. BERRY. What do you think we ought to do about it?
Mr. POE. Well, first of all, not allow them to take the money out
of it because it is not authorized by Congress. So they continue to
administer the fund just like they have in the past without getting
that kickback or surcharge.
Mr. BERRY. Thank you.
Mr. POE. Thank you, Mr. Berry.
Chairman SPRATT. Mr. Berry, would you come around and take
the gavel.
Mr. Loebsack, welcome. You have heard the rules for the presentation. You will have five minutes and your full statement will be
made part of the record. We very much appreciate you coming.
I have got to go to a meeting with the Blue Dogs at this point
in time. I will be back intermittently.
But we are seeing from the testimony the gaping holes in this
budget that have got to be repaired before it can be brought to a
vote. So we appreciate your participation for those reasons.
Mr. Berry.
STATEMENT OF HON. DAVID LOEBSACK, A REPRESENTATIVE
IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF IOWA
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The needs and priorities of the constituents I represent have not
been reflected in the Administrations fiscal year 2009 budget. For
too long, Washington has left behind hard-working Americans. In
Iowa, this is evident in the good people who are struggling to provide for their families, put food on the table, afford quality
healthcare, send their children to college, fill their gas tanks, and
save for retirement.
The fiscal year 2009 budget request is a continuation of this Administrations failed policies that have left people struggling to
make ends meet.
Today I urge you to reject the Administrations budget proposal
when drafting the budget resolution for fiscal year 2009.
First, I would like you to closely examine the needs of our law
enforcement community because once again the Administrations
budget fails to recognize the importance of the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program to the safety of our communities, schools, and our children.
Byrne JAG is effective because it puts funding directly into the
hands of those who know best how to combat crime and fosters the
cooperation necessary to take drugs off of our street. Yet, the Administration has proposed eliminating all direct grants to states
and local law enforcement and instead to create a single competitive grant program that would pit states, law enforcement, prosecutors, and drug prevention organizations against one another while
under-funding the entire program.
Byrne JAG has proven it is effective and it is critical to public
safety. I call on you to fully fund Byrne JAG and to reject the Administrations proposed changes.
Second, as the budget process moves forward, I respectfully urge
the Committee to look closely at the funding needs for programs
that support Iowas students, indeed the nations students.
I am living proof of how community and education can make a
difference. I grew up in poverty. Times were tough, but I focused
on school. And with the help of academic financial assistance in
combination with hard work, I had the strength and the resources
to overcome personal hardships and achieve the American dream.
For todays children, this dream is quickly slipping away.
For children growing up in poverty today, their first chance at
success is Head Start. Unfortunately, the Administration provided
only a small increase of $149 million for Head Start following a $10
million cut in funding last year.
As a member of the Educational Labor Committee, I along with
my colleagues reauthorized this important program. We worked
hard to produce bipartisan legislation that has been signed into
law. If funded properly, Head Start will help many more children
reach kindergarten ready to succeed.
As children progress through the education system, they encounter crumbling schools, overworked, underpaid teachers, and supply
shortages. As we work to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act this year, I am disappointed by the Administrations proposals for NCLB, No Child Left Behind. The proposed
increase for public schools is not enough even to keep pace with inflation.
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16
Higher education also suffers under this budget which cuts new
student benefits provided by Congress under the College Cost Reduction and Access Act. In addition, the Administration asked for
$4,800 for the Pell Grant scholarship, but I urge the Committee to
support $5,100, bringing us closer to meeting our ultimate goal of
$5,400.
And I would also be remiss if I did not address the need to fully
fund the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Though the
budget includes a $337 million increase for IDEA funding, it provides far less than what is needed to give necessary support to students with disabilities.
The Administrations budget has severely shortchanged our nations students by failing to adequately fund Head Start, No Child
Left Behind, higher education, and IDEA. And I ask that you reject
these budget proposals and fully fund these critical programs to ensure our children receive a first-rate education starting in childhood and continuing through adulthood.
Public safety and education are not partisan issues. They are
critical domestic matters that are suffering under this Administrations misguided policies. However, these are only two of the many
concerns I fear are being ignored.
I want to conclude by thanking you for this opportunity to represent the needs and priorities of Iowas 2nd Congressional District
in front of the House Budget Committee, especially given that I,
too, am a freshman. I am honored to be here today and I urge each
of you to take our country in a new direction when developing the
budget resolution for fiscal year 2009.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of David Loebsack follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Good morning Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Ryan, and members of the House
Budget Committee. It is an honor to testify before you on the issues most important
to the families, students, seniors, and veterans of Iowas Second Congressional District. The needs and priorities of the constituents I represent have not been reflected
in the Administrations Fiscal Year 2009 Budget.
For too long, Washington has left behind hardworking Americans. In Iowa, this
is evident in the good people that are struggling to provide for their families, put
food on the table, afford quality health care, send their children to college, fill their
gas tanks, and save for retirement. The FY 2009 budget request is a continuation
of this Administrations failed policies that have left people struggling to make ends
meet.
Today, I urge you to reject the Administrations budget proposal when drafting
the Budget Resolution for Fiscal Year 2009.
First, I would like you to closely examine the needs of our law enforcement community, because once again, the Administrations budget fails to recognize the importance of the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant program to the
safety of our communities, schools, and children.
Byrne JAG is effective because it puts funding directly into the hands of those
who know best how to combat crime and fosters the cooperation necessary to take
drugs off of our streets.
Yet the Administration has proposed eliminating all direct grants to States and
local law enforcement and instead to create a single competitive grant program that
would pit States, law enforcement, prosecutors, and drug prevention organizations
against one another while under-funding the entire program.
Byrne JAG is proven, effective, and critical to public safety. I call on you to fully
fund Byrne JAG and to reject the Administrations proposed changes.
Second, as the budget process moves forward, I respectfully urge the Committee
to look closely at the funding needs for programs that support Iowas students.
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I am living proof of how community and education can make a difference. I grew
up in poverty. Times were tough, but I focused on school. With the help of academic
financial assistance, in combination with hard work, I had the strength and resources to overcome these personal hardships and achieve the American Dream. For
todays children, this dream is quickly slipping away.
For children growing up in poverty today, their first chance at success is Head
Start. Unfortunately, the Administration provided only a small increase of $149 million for Head Start following a $10 million dollar cut in funding last year.
As a member of the Education and Labor Committee, I along with my colleagues
reauthorized this important program. We worked hard to produce bipartisan legislation that has been signed into law. If funded properly, Head Start will help many
more children reach kindergarten ready to succeed.
As children progress through the education system, they encounter crumbling
schools, overworked, underpaid teachers, and supply shortages. As we work to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act this year, I am disappointed
by the Administrations proposals for NCLB. The proposed increase for public
schools is not enough even to keep pace with inflation.
Higher Education also suffers under this budget which decimates student financial aid programs. The Administration not only refuses to increase maximum Pell
Grant scholarship to $5,100, bringing us closer to meeting our ultimate goal of
$5,400, but it cut new student benefits provided by Congress under the College Cost
Reduction and Access Act.
I would also be remiss if I did not address the need to fully fund the Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act. Though the budget includes a $337 million increase
in IDEA funding, it provides less than half the funding level promised by Congress
33 years ago.
The Administrations budget has severely shortchanged our nations students by
failing to adequately fund Head Start, No Child Left Behind, Higher Education and
IDEA. I ask you to reject these budget proposals and fully fund these critical programs to ensure our children receive a first rate education starting in childhood and
continuing through adulthood.
Public safety and education are not partisan issues; they are critical domestic
matters that are suffering under the Administrations misguided polices. However,
these are only two of many domestic concerns I fear are being ignored.
I want to conclude by thanking you for this opportunity to represent the needs
and priorities of Iowas Second Congressional District in front of the House Budget
Committee, and urge each of you to take our country in a new direction when developing the Budget Resolution for Fiscal Year 2009.
Mr. BERRY [presiding]. Thank you, Mr. Loebsack, and we appre-
Ms. MCCARTHY. I thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate you allowing me to testify today in support of including necessary funding in the fiscal year 2009 budget resolution under the Department
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18
of Justice Community Oriented Policing Services to implement
H.R. 2640, the NICBCS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007,
Public Law 110-180.
H.R. 2640 was signed into law by the President on January 8th,
2008, after having passed both the House and the Senate unanimously.
I know the budget is tight, Mr. Chairman, but fully funding this
program is so important because currently the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System or the NICBCS is deeply
flawed.
NICBCS is a national database system that flags individuals precluded under current law from purchasing and possessing firearms.
Millions of criminal records are currently missing from the database that makes up NICBCS due to funding restrictions and technology issues at the state level.
Many states have not automated individual records concerning
mental illness, restraining orders, or misdemeanor convictions for
domestic violence. Simply put, NICBCS must be updated on the
state level so that it can properly function on the federal level.
This point is underscored by the circumstances unfortunately
surrounding the shootings of Virginia Tech in April of last year.
The shooter in the Virginia Tech massacre was prohibited from legally purchasing a firearm. Unfortunately, flaws in the NICBCS
system allowed his record to slip through the cracks and he was
able to purchase two handguns and use them to brutally murder
32 individuals.
He passed a Brady background check because NICBCS did not
have the necessary information. Sadly, the same scenario happens
every day across this nation.
The NICBCS Improvement Amendments Act requires all states
to provide NICBCS with the relevant records needed to conduct effective background checks. It is the states responsibility to ensure
this information is current and accurate. They must update their
records to ensure violent criminals do not have access to firearms
and then they must share their information with NICBCS.
However, I recognize many state budgets are already overburdened. This law disputes grants and states to update their records
and provide those records to NICBCS. States will receive the funds
they need to make sure relevant records are up to date.
While NICBCS has flaws, the NICBCS Improvement Amendment Act of 2007 corrects the primary flaw and will prevent thousands of individuals precluded from purchasing firearms from
doing so.
Approximately 916,000 individuals were precluded from purchasing a firearm for failing a background check between November 30th, 1998, when NICBCS began operating, and December
31st, 2004.
During this same period, nearly 49 million background checks
were processed through NICBCS. These numbers provide that
NICBCS works and will continue to work. However, since NICBCS
is only as good as the information it contains, we must ensure that
NICBCS has the most up-to-date records to stop criminals, those
adjudicated as mentally ill and those under restraining order from
purchasing firearms.
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It has been estimated that more than 40 million records are still
missing from the various databases that makes up NICBCS. By
providing this funding, we will move one step closer to bringing the
records of millions of barred individuals into NICBCS.
This law imposes no new restrictions on gun owners and does not
infringe on the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens.
It simply makes improvements to a program that saves lives.
The NRA and I worked very hard on this. We actually passed it
in 2002. Unfortunately, the Senate never took it up. But after Virginia Tech, we were able to pass it on both areas.
I respectfully request that you include $187.5 million to the fiscal
year 2009 budget resolution under the Department of Justice Community Oriented Policing Services in order to fully fund the
NICBCS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007.
I thank you for your time and I would be more than willing to
answer any questions.
[The prepared statement of Carolyn McCarthy follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. CAROLYN MCCARTHY, A REPRESENTATIVE
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF NEW YORK
IN
Thank you Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, and Members of the Budget
Committee.
I appreciate your allowing me to testify today in support of including necessary
funding in the Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Resolution under the Department of Justice
Community Oriented Policing Services to implement H.R. 2640, the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007, Public Law Number 110-180.
H.R. 2640 was signed into law on January 8, 2008, after having passed both the
House and Senate unanimously.
I know the budget is tight, Mr. Chairman, but fully funding this program is so
important because currently the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, or NICS, is deeply flawed.
NICS is a national database system that flags individuals precluded under current law from purchasing and possessing firearms.
Millions of criminal records are currently missing from the databases that make
up NICS due to funding restrictions and technology issues at the state level.
Many states have not automated individuals records concerning mental illness,
restraining orders, or misdemeanor convictions for domestic violence.
Simply put, NICS must be updated on the state level so that it can properly function on the federal level.
This point is underscored by the circumstances surrounding the shootings at Virginia Tech in April of last year
The shooter in the Virginia Tech massacre was prohibited from legally purchasing
a firearm.
Unfortunately, flaws in the NICS system allowed his record to slip through the
cracks and he was able to purchase two handguns, and used them to brutally murder 32 individuals.
He passed a Brady background check because NICS did not have the necessary
information.
Sadly, this same scenario happens every day.
The NICS Improvement Amendments Act requires all states to provide NICS with
the relevant records needed to conduct effective background checks.
It is the states responsibility to ensure this information is current and accurate.
They must update their records to ensure violent criminals do not have access to
firearms. And then, they must share the information with NICS.
However, I recognize many state budgets are already overburdened.
This law distributes grants to states to update their records and provide those
records to NICS.
States will receive the funds they need to make sure relevant records are up-todate.
While NICS has flaws, the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 corrects
the primary flaw and will prevent thousands of individuals precluded from purchasing firearms from doing so.
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20
Approximately 960,000 individuals were precluded from purchasing a firearm for
failing a background check between November 30, 1998, when NICS began operating, and December 31, 2004.
During this same period, nearly 49 million Brady background checks were processed through NICS.
These numbers prove that NICS works and will continue to work. However, since
NICS is only as good as the information it contains, we must ensure that NICS has
the most up-to-date records to stop criminals, those adjudicated as mentally ill, and
those under a restraining order from purchasing firearms.
It has been estimated that more than 40 million records are missing from the various databases that make up NICS.
By providing this funding, we will move one step closer to bringing the records
of millions of barred individuals into NICS.
This law imposes no new restrictions on gun owners and does not infringe on the
2nd Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens. It simply makes improvements to a
program that saves lives.
I respectfully request that you include $187.5 million in the Fiscal Year 2009
Budget Resolution under the Department of Justice Community Oriented Policing
Services in order to fully fund the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007.
Thank you for your time and I would be happy to answer any questions you may
have.
Mr. BERRY. Well, the gentle lady speaks to this matter with
knowledge and authority that is not possessed by any other member of Congress. And we appreciate you coming here and raising
these matters with the Budget Committee.
And I think we can say with confidence that they will be certainly considered and noted. As we work through this budget, hopefully we will get some of these problems worked out.
But we thank you very much for being willing to do this and we
appreciate all your efforts.
Ms. MCCARTHY. And I thank you for your time, sir. Thank you.
Ms. HOOLEY [presiding]. The next member to testify is Mr.
Altmire from Pennsylvania. Welcome, and we are pleased to receive
your testimony. You are recognized for five minutes.
STATEMENT OF HON. JASON ALTMIRE, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA
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As you and the Committee prepare the fiscal year 2009 budget
resolution, I urge you to pay tribute to the sacrifices made by our
nations veterans by once again fully funding their medical care
and coverage.
Last year, Congress answered this call by providing a record $13
billion of funding for the VA, meeting for the first time the recommendations put forth by the Independent Budget. I hope that
we can again continue this tradition and pass a budget resolution
that contains a substantial increase in veterans funding.
Unfortunately, the President disagrees and would rather shortchange our nations veterans. When adjusted for inflation, his 2009
budget requests only a .6 percent increase over fiscal year 2008 levels. This is regarded as beyond inadequate by every major veterans
organization, especially considering that over 100,000 new veterans
will seek treatment this year from the VA.
Furthermore, the Presidents budget calls on fee and co-payment
increases of $5.2 billion on veterans medical care. If enacted, these
increases would almost double the cost of prescriptions and impose
an enrollment fee of up to $750 per year. It is predicted that the
fee increases would cause almost 200,000 veterans to leave the VA
healthcare system. Most disappointing is the fact that the Presidents plan would not even reinvest these additional funds in veterans healthcare.
Madam Chair, on behalf of the over 60,000 veterans residing in
my district, many of whom already struggle with access to their
benefits, I again ask that you set aside the Presidents misguided
recommendations and pass a budget that prioritizes the needs of
veterans and ensures they have access to every benefit they deserve.
When it comes time for Congress to make federal funding decisions, there is absolutely no group that should stand ahead of our
nations veterans.
The Bush budget also reneges on Americas promise to care for
its senior citizens and cuts Medicare by $556 billion over ten years.
This proposal is far too severe. It could limit seniors access to their
doctors and make it harder for our hospitals to provide patients
with quality care.
With 124,000 Medicare beneficiaries in my district alone, I take
any change to the program seriously and believe that it is the
wrong path for us to take as the baby boomers begin to retire.
Most of the cuts are to hospitals and other medical providers, but
remarkably $26 billion comes from increased premiums to beneficiaries. Hospitals in my district estimate a total five-year impact
of over $125 million.
Let me just cite a few to give you an idea of what this means.
A $14 million cut to the Alle-Kiski Medical Center in Natrona
Heights; a $15 million cut to Jameson Hospital in New Castle; and
a $29 million cut to the Heritage Valley Medical Center in Beaver,
Pennsylvania.
These are not small, insignificant amounts to local hospitals. We
can do a better job to reform Medicare and ensure its solvency than
by simply slashing reimbursement to hospitals and other providers
and increasing premiums on seniors.
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The Presidents budget also calls for a $570 million cut to
LIHEAP which would reduce LIHEAPs funding to the 2001 level.
In Pennsylvania, LIHEAP provides 285,000 low-income households
with the money necessary to pay their heating bills in the winter.
This money goes primarily to households with young children, senior citizens, or disabled individuals. At a time when home heating
costs are increasing dramatically, by 80 percent since 2001, I find
it unconscionable that the President has proposed these cuts.
Lastly, the Presidents budget nearly eliminates the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, the MEP. The MEP funding is critical to making small and medium size manufacturers more productive and competitive. Those funds are used to connect these manufacturers with cutting-edge technology, trained workers, streamline
the process, and assist with production innovation. In 2006 alone,
MEP helped manufacturers save $1.3 billion and create or retain
53,000 jobs.
Again, I appreciate the opportunity to address the Committee
today to outline my priorities for the fiscal year 2009 budget.
Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the Committee. And I
yield back my time.
[The prepared statement of Jason Altmire follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
IN
CONGRESS
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee. I appreciate the opportunity to testify today on the importance of the fiscal year 2009 budget resolution
and its impact on western Pennsylvania.
Over the past seven years, President Bush has time and again sent budget proposals to Congress that fail to address the needs of our country. These irresponsible
budgets have led to record deficits and an economy that is unstable to say the least.
With one last opportunity to address the fiscal turmoil created during his administration, I hoped the president would submit to Congress a budget that prioritizes
America and finally puts this country on a path to recovery. Unfortunately, this was
not the case.
The Presidents fiscal year 2009 budget proposal once again rejects the will of the
American people, cuts funding for critical domestic programs, and even goes as far
as to attempt to balance the budget on the backs of our nations veterans. Simply
said, I find the Presidents plan unacceptable. I urge the Committee to reject many
of its proposals and instead work in a bipartisan manner to develop a fiscally responsible budget.
As you prepare the fiscal year 2009 budget resolution, I urge you to pay tribute
to the sacrifices made by our nations veterans by once again fully funding their
medical care and coverage. Last year, Congress answered this call by providing a
record $13 billion of funding for the VAmeeting, for the first time, the recommendation put forth by the Independent Budget. I hope that we can continue this
tradition and again pass a budget resolution that contains a substantial increase in
veterans funding.
Unfortunately, the President disagrees and would rather shortchange the nations
veterans. When adjusted for inflation, his 2009 budget requests only a 0.6% increase
over FY08 levels. This is regarded as beyond inadequate by every major veterans
organizationespecially considering that over 100,000 new veterans will seek treatment from the VA in fiscal year 2009.
Furthermore, the Presidents budget calls on fee and co-payment increases of $5.2
billion on veterans medical care. If enacted, these increases would almost double
the cost of prescriptions and impose an enrollment fee of up to $750 per year. It
is predicted that the fee increases would cause almost 200,000 veterans to leave the
VA health care system. Most disappointing is that the Presidents plan would not
even reinvest these additional funds in veterans health care.
Mr. Chairman, on behalf of the over 60,000 veterans residing in my district
many of whom already struggle to access their benefitsI again ask that you set
aside the Presidents misguided recommendations and pass a budget that prioritizes
the needs of veterans and ensures they have access to every benefit they deserve.
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When it comes time for Congress to make federal funding decisions, there is absolutely no group that should stand ahead of our nations veterans.
The Bush budget also reneges on Americas promise to care for its senior citizens
and cuts Medicare by $556 billion over ten years. This proposal is far too severe.
It could limit seniors access to their doctors and make it harder for our hospitals
to provide patients with quality care. With 124,000 Medicare beneficiaries in my district, I take any changes to the program seriously and believe its the wrong path
for us to take as the baby boomers begin to retire. Most of the cuts are to hospitals
and other medical providers, but remarkably $26 billion comes from increased premiums to beneficiaries.
Hospitals in my district estimate a total five-year impact of over $125 million. Let
me just cite a few to give you an idea of what this means: a $14 million cut to AlleKiski Medical Center in Natrona Heights; a $15 million cut to Jameson Hospital
in New Castle; and a $29 million cut to Heritage Valleys Medical Center in Beaver,
Pennsylvania. These are not small, insignificant amounts to local community hospitals.
We can do a better job to reform Medicare and ensure its solvency than by simply
slashing reimbursement to hospitals and other providers and increasing premiums
on seniors.
The Presidents budget also calls for a $570 million cut to LIHEAP, which would
reduce LIHEAP funding to the 2001 level. In Pennsylvania, LIHEAP provides
285,000 low-income households with the money necessary to pay their heating bills
in the winter. This money goes primarily to households with young children, senior
citizens, or disabled individuals. At a time when home heating costs are increasing
dramaticallyby 80% since 2001I find it unconscionable that the President has
proposed these cuts.
In addition, President Bushs budget nearly eliminates the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP). MEP funding is critical to making small and medium size
manufacturers more productive and competitive. MEP funds are used to connect
these manufacturers with cutting edge technology, train workers, streamline processes, and assist with production innovation. In 2006 alone, MEP helped manufactures save $1.3 billion and create or retain 53,219 jobs.
Last year in my district, the MEP assisted 54 companies that account for 5,400
jobs. CMC/Cygnus Manufacturing Company (CMC/Cygnus) from my district is one
of the examples of how the MEP benefits small and medium size manufacturers.
The MEP assisted CMC/Cygnus with the re-design of its assembly areas, which significantly improved its lead times and delivery to its customers. It is apparent that
any cut to this program will significantly weaken the manufacturing industry in my
district and districts like mine throughout the country.
Again, I appreciate the opportunity to address the committee today and outline
my priorities for the fiscal year 2009 budget. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee. I yield back the balance of my time.
Ms. HOOLEY. Thank you so much for taking your time to testify
about these very important issues.
I just have a couple of questions. When you are talking about
veterans and talking about 100,000 new veterans into the system
and the increase in the budget, in the Presidents budget, what
would it take, do you think, or do you have an estimate just to keep
up with medical inflation?
I mean, we have inflation, we have medical inflation, and we
have new people coming into the system. We do not have that
many people, I do not believe, leaving the system.
Do you have any idea what just medical inflation would be?
Mr. ALTMIRE. I thank the Chair for the question.
The Presidents budget has a .6 percent increase. There is nobody
who thinks that medical inflation is going to be .6 percent this
year. It is going to be more along the lines of ten percent. Medical
inflation is often two and three times above the rate of inflation for
consumer goods.
With veterans, they have unique health needs. They often need
greater degrees of healthcare than other members of the population
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24
that are their age. So it affects them even more than the general
population.
So to think that a .6 increase in the Presidents budget is going
to result in better care for veterans is simply not the case.
Ms. HOOLEY. Do you think it also takes into account the amount
of help that a lot of our veterans coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan where they need mental health, do you think this begins
to cover that?
Mr. ALTMIRE. Mental health is a huge portion of the issue. Certainly posttraumatic stress disorder, issues like traumatic brain injury, even mild cases have enormous costs associated with treating
them.
And, of course, unfortunately, we have had 25,000 to 30,000 veterans that have been injured in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Very often these are young people, 19, 20 years old that are going
to need healthcare for the rest of their lives. They are very seriously injured and the cost of care is just incalculable over their lifetime.
So we need to keep up with that. And this Congress did great
work last year with a $13 billion increase in VA healthcare funding
and I am asking the Committee to consider that level of funding
increase again this year.
Ms. HOOLEY. Thank you. Thank you very much for your testimony. Appreciate you taking the time and bringing up these very
important issues. Thank you.
Next we have testifying Representative Bruce Braley from Iowa.
Welcome.
STATEMENT OF HON. BRUCE BRALEY, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF IOWA
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And it was just a year ago that President Bush went to Walter
Reed, apologized to wounded soldiers, and promised to fix the
problem.
The scandal at Walter Reed served as a wake-up call that we as
a country need to be doing much more to provide for our veterans
who have sacrificed so much for us.
Republicans and Democrats alike agreed that we needed to make
significant and new investments in the VA. There was consensus
that we needed to comprehensively change and improve veterans
healthcare and benefit system so that veterans would never again
have to face the mistreatment that so many experienced at Walter
Reed and other VA facilities throughout the country.
I thought that everyone, including President Bush, also understood that fixing the problem would require long-term investments and efforts, especially with the large number of veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with severe mental and physical injuries as my colleague, Mr. Altmire, just referred to.
That is why I was so surprised and disappointed when I learned
that the Presidents fiscal year 2009 budget would inexplicably cut
VA funding by billions of dollars in coming years.
His budget would reduce funding for medical and prosthetic research critical to the large number of veterans returning home with
amputated limbs and mental injuries like posttraumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury by millions of dollars.
And as I have mentioned on multiple occasions, Madam Chairwoman, we are talking about the hidden injuries of this war. People who can walk on the street and people in the public do not perceive that they have had critical and life-threatening injuries simply because of the nature of posttraumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injuries.
The Presidents budget would cut overall veterans funding by an
astounding $20 billion between 2009 and 2013 and would also increase healthcare fees and pharmacy co-pays for veterans.
And, Madam Chairwoman, when we have had repeated oversight
and reform hearings on the problems at Walter Reed and the problems with our DoD and VA healthcare delivery systems, I have frequently referred to the hidden costs of this war which my friend,
Mr. Altmire, just referred to.
If you take a young man, because most of these people are young
men, 19 years of age, and you go to the life expectancy tables for
a 19-year-old, you will find out that they are projected to live 55
years beyond their current age.
And when you amortize the cost of treating amputations,
posttraumatic stress disorder, and traumatic brain injuries over
that life expectancy, we are talking about millions of dollars per
patient.
And at a time when our healthcare system is in crisis and we
are looking at ways of providing funding to people outside the military and VA system, we know that the more we invest in giving
them the best chance at success and getting back to normal function, the less we as a society will pay long term in caring for them
in outside healthcare delivery systems.
And that is why this budget cut is so significant, because it is
a complete disservice to our veterans, our soldiers who are return-
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26
ing from Iraq and Afghanistan, and it will end up in a long-term
burden to the taxpayers of this country.
These proposed deep cuts to veterans services and healthcare
and increases in healthcare fees are irresponsible and unacceptable.
The cuts to prosthetic and mental health research threaten to
deny our veterans the high quality of care they deserve not only
when they first return home but throughout their lifetime.
And I have talked repeatedly about a constituent of mine, Dennis
Clark, who runs a prosthetic company in Waterloo, Iowa and during the first part of the Iraq war came out to Walter Reed on his
own dime every week to provide volunteer prosthetic services.
Those are the types of sacrifices that people are making and we
as a country need to share in that sacrifice.
I see that my time is up and so I will be happy to answer any
questions.
[The prepared statement of Bruce Braley follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Thank you, Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan, for inviting me here to
testify before your Committee today. I appreciate the opportunity to share my concerns about the impact the Presidents proposed Fiscal Year 2009 Budget will have
on our nations veterans, and to express my strong views that we in Congress must
do everything that we can to ensure that we are sufficiently funding the Veterans
Administration and properly caring for our troops, our veterans, and their families,
both now and in the future.
It was just a year ago that I, like most Americans, was shocked and outraged to
learn about the horrific living conditions, neglect, and bureaucratic hurdles that our
veterans were experiencing at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. It was just a year
ago that we learned that these problems were not confined to Walter Reed, but were
widespread and systemic throughout the military and veterans healthcare systems.
And it was just a year ago that President Bush went to Walter Reed, apologized
to wounded soldiers, and promised to fix the problem.
The scandal at Walter Reed served as a wake-up call that we as a country need
to be doing much more to provide for our veterans who have sacrificed so much for
us. Republicans and Democrats alike agreed that we needed to make significant and
new investments in the VA. There was consensus that we needed to comprehensively change and improve the veterans healthcare and benefits system, so that veterans would never again have to face the mistreatment that so many experienced
at Walter Reed and other VA facilities throughout the country. I thought that everyoneincluding President Bushalso understood that fixing the problem would require long-term investments and efforts, especially with the large number of veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with severe mental and
physical injuries.
Thats why I was so surprised and disappointed when I learned that the Presidents proposed Fiscal Year 2009 Budget would inexplicably cut VA funding by billions of dollars in coming years. His budget would reduce funding for medical and
prosthetic research, critical to the large number of veterans returning home with
amputated limbs and mental injuries like Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury, by millions of dollars. His budget would cut overall veterans
funding by an astounding $20 billion between 2009 and 2013, and would also increase healthcare fees and pharmacy co-pays for veterans.
These proposed deep cuts to veterans services and healthcare, and increases in
veterans healthcare fees, are irresponsible and unacceptable. The cuts to prosthetic
and mental health research threaten to deny our veterans the high quality of care
they deserve not only when they first return home, but throughout their lifetime.
In short, the Presidents proposed budget for veterans is a betrayal of American
troops and veterans, and runs counter to the efforts and progress that Congress, the
Defense Department, and the VA have made in the last year.
I am proud that Congress took the shame of Walter Reed and turned it into necessary and long-overdue action for our veterans through the bipartisan passage of
critical bills like the Joshua Omvig Veterans Suicide Prevention Act, and the
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27
Wounded Warrior Assistance Act. I was also proud to vote last year to give the VA
the largest single funding increase in the 77-year history of the Department, an increase which will allow the VA to improve medical and mental health services and
reduce delays in processing benefits.
However, the Joshua Omvig bill and the Wounded Warrior provisions will be
meaningless without adequate resources. Similarly, the historic amount of funding
we provided for the VA for 2008 will not go very far unless it is matched by similar
appropriations in coming years. As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan continue, now
is certainly not the time to cut veterans funding or backpedal on the progress we
have made through these important new initiatives.
Unfortunately, I believe the Presidents budget follows a long trend of the Administration underestimating the true cost of the war in Iraq, and is a reflection of their
failure to appropriately plan for the long-term. It is disturbing that the Administration is likely underestimating the number of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who
will seek care in coming years, and consequently failing to request sufficient funding
for medical care.
It is this very underestimation and the failure to plan for the amount of soldiers
returning home with physical and mental wounds that have directly led to the VAs
recent budget shortfalls. It is this underestimation and lack of planning that has
led to uncertainty about whether the VA is going to close the VA hospital in Knoxville, Iowa, where my brother works, causing the best employees there to leave and
go to other facilities around the country. And it is this refusal to acknowledge the
true long-term costs of the war and the true cost of taking care of our wounded soldiers which threatens to leave thousands of veterans without the long-term and
high-quality care they deserve.
I am hopeful and confident that we have learned from past mistakes, and that
Congress will reject these unconscionable cuts and fee increases. A rejection of the
Presidents proposal is essential to ensuring that we continue to improve care for
our veterans and that we provide them and their families with the best care, benefits, and treatment possible, now and throughout their lifetime.
Thank you again for allowing me to testify today. I look forward to working with
you to ensure that we keep the promises we have made to our veterans, beginning
with a Congressional budget that appropriately reflects the value of their service
and the incredible sacrifices they have made for our country.
Ms. HOOLEY. Do you think we fixed the problem at Walter Reed?
Mr. BRALEY. No. One of the biggest crises at Walter Reed was
not the living conditions at Building 18. When we held the first
hearing immediately in the aftermath of the Building 18 disclosure,
what we learned is that the bigger problem was the complete dysfunction of the VA and DoD disability systems.
And people who were being warehoused at Walter Reed while
waiting for a determination of whether they were going to be
cleared under DoD guidelines to return to active duty and, if not,
whether they would then be kicked into the VA healthcare system.
And one of the great problems that we have had is that if you
have the same injury and are seeking disability benefits under the
VA compensation system, you may get a 70 percent impairment
rating while under the DoD disability system with the exact same
injuries, you may get a 40 percent impairment rating, resulting in
substantially different compensation to the same wounded warrior.
And this has led to an incredible backlog in our disability claims
processing. And one of the purposes of those hearings and the report and the legislation that we have passed is to try to reduce the
backlog.
But all the evidence we are hearing from people who are involved
in processing those claims and from advocates on behalf of those
injured veterans is that none of this has made a significant impact
in addressing the backlog.
We need more ombudspeople who are advocating outside. We
need more advocates who are advocating solely for the disabled veterans and wounded warriors. And until those problems get ad-
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dressed, we will do nothing to seriously impact this backlog of disability claims.
Ms. HOOLEY. How do you think the transition has been between
the DoD and the Veterans Department? Is that a smooth transition? I mean, when somebody comes back from war and all of a
sudden now they are leaving the service and they are a veteran or
they are not on active duty, what kind of transition are they facing?
Mr. BRALEY. It has been a huge obstacle to the orderly transition
of a returning wounded warrior into a VA healthcare system because it is like the problems that were identified in the 9/11 Commission report, a problem called intraoperability, which is the inability of conflicting and sometimes competing agencies to share information with each other.
Sometimes they do not use the same type of software to manage
patient records. Sometimes they do not use the same type of information to communicate back and forth and make sure that those
claims are being transferred in a timely manner.
And I think in the report that Togo Wests group, General Togo
Wests group prepared, that was one of the critical factors they
identified.
There is a lot of work needs to be done and without the funding
to make it happen, none of the concerns that were raised will ever
be sufficiently resolved.
Ms. HOOLEY. Thank you so much for appearing today and your
testimony. And this Committee, I know, will take up that issue and
look at that very closely about what is fair and appropriate for our
veterans. They really have given their all and we need to make
sure that we keep our promises to them. So thank you very much.
At this time, we are in recess. And I believe there is a vote going
on.
[Recess.]
Mr. ETHERIDGE [presiding]. The next member to testify is our
good friend, Mr. Ehlers. Welcome. We are pleased to receive your
testimony. You are recognized for five minutes.
STATEMENT OF HON. VERNON EHLERS, A REPRESENTATIVE
IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF MICHIGAN
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They totally devastated the scientific research budget as well as
the math and science education budget simply because, frankly,
there is not a great number of people supporting these items, and
it was very easy for the appropriators to just take that money and
move it into other things.
So we have a situation this year where the President has tried
to request a reasonable amount. But at the very least, I think we
should make up what we lost in the Omnibus Bill which amounts
to roughly $800 million in Function 250.
And if you also compare that to the America Competes Act,
which the Congress passed last year, which I think is a marvelous
step forward in helping us compete with other countries, and to get
back on track, we actually need an increase of approximately a billion dollars.
In addition to that, in Function 370, we need some make-up as
well.
So my plea really in very simple form is to take the Presidents
request with a grain of salt and say, look, we have to do that plus
we have to make up for what was taken out of those accounts last
year.
I recall several years ago when the appropriators did the same
thing on the previous omnibus bill and we lost a considerable
amount of money in math and science. And that money is gone forever because the following year, it was removed from the base and
we never made it up.
I think this is a case where should set an example and make up
the difference of what we took away last year plus put them back
on the doubling track which we have in America Competes Act.
It is a very modest doubling track compared to what we did with
NIH a few years ago.
And clearly the National Science Foundation, National Institute
of Standards and Technology, and the Department of Energy all
deserve to be made whole once again.
We are in a situation where we literally have broken international agreements by failing to fund some of the elements of the
Department of Energy Office of Science where, for example, the
EDER Project, which is going to be housed in France, but we are
working on it with a combination of nations. We have basically
taken out our commitment to that and we are altering foreign policy through appropriations. I do not think that was ever intended
and we certainly have to correct that.
So rather than take a lot of your time, Mr. Chairman, because
I know you personally are in agreement with this, our plea is to
make up what was taken away last year by the Omnibus as well
as provide the normal increase this year that the President has requested.
I would be happy to answer any questions you have.
[The prepared statement of Vernon J. Ehlers follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for the opportunity to testify as the Committee considers a fiscal year 2009 Budget Resolution.
As you begin the budget process, I strongly urge you to give high priority to scientific research and development and math and science education in the General
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Space, Science and Technology function (250) of the budget. I will focus my comments on two areas covered under this function: the National Science Foundation
and the Department of Energys science programs. I will also address the science
and technology portion of the Commerce account within function (370).
BACKGROUND
America can meet its energy needs only if we make a strong and sustained investment in research in physical science, engineering, and applicable areas of life
science, and if we translate advancing scientific knowledge into practice * * * The
current mix of energy sources is not sustainable in the long run.3
Our country faces a number of challenges related to energy supply, development,
and sustainability. The Department of Energys Office of Science funds 40 percent
of all federal basic research investments in the physical sciences as well as 14 percent of investments in mathematics and computing, environmental sciences, and engineering. Research in these areas has led to many new economic and medical advancements including, among others, new energy sources, the Internet, cell phones
and laser surgery. To overcome our substantial energy challenges, the Federal Government must continue to support research in alternative energy sources,
nanotechnology and supercomputing.
Last years omnibus was particularly harmful to the Office of Science, providing
$500 million below the request when accounting for earmarks, and has led to layoffs
and the delay of many important instruments. The Office of Science is not only important to the future of U.S. science, but also our competitiveness and energy security. I respectfully request that the Committee provide the Office of Science with a
budget that reflects the critical role that it plays in maintaining our economic and
military pre-eminence.
1 Augustine,
Norman R. 2007. Is America Falling off the Flat Earth? Washington, D.C., NAP
2 http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/nsf07319/pdf/nsf07319.pdf
3 Secretary
of Energys Advisory Board, Task Force on the Future of Science Programs at the
Department of Energy. Critical Choices: Science, Energy and Security. Final Report. Washington, DC: US Department of Energy, October 13, 2003. P. 5
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NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
U.S. manufacturing has become more technology-intensive, with the high-technology share of manufacturing industries increasing from 14 percent in 1990 to 24
percent in 2005 amidst rising overall manufacturing revenues. Chinas share of
high-technology manufacturing has more than quadrupled during the past decade.5
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is the nations oldest
federal laboratory, and the only laboratory with the explicitly-stated mission to promote U.S. innovation and industrial competitiveness. NIST provides high-quality,
cutting-edge research in a number of scientific and technical fields, and it plays a
critical role in keeping our nation competitive.
The Presidents FY2009 budget requests $638 million for NIST. This includes
$535 million for NIST scientific and technical research and services activities, which
is $95.4 million (21.7 percent) more than in FY2008. This total also includes $99
million for much-needed infrastructure construction and maintenance, which is
$19.8 million (25 percent) more than in FY2008. The request parallels a doubling
path for NIST research established by the Administration in 2007.
Although I strongly support the Administrations commitment to keep NISTs
funding on this doubling path, I am troubled that the Presidents budget drastically
cuts funding to a number of popular and effective programs at NIST, such as the
Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP), and the Technology Innovation Program (TIP). Both of these programs were included in the COMPETES Act.
The MEP program helps small and medium-sized manufacturers stay competitive
by helping them become more innovative, and the TIP is NISTs only external research grant program, funding high-risk, high-return technology research and development. Both of these programs run on an efficient cost-shared basis with industry.
Without a doubt, these two programs provide invaluable assistance to the sectors
of our economy that are currently fighting to stay competitive in the global economy.
Both the MEP and TIP have historically had strong, bipartisan Congressional supportand I respectfully ask that this support be reflected in the Budget Committees recommendations.
4 Augustine, Norman R. 2007. Is America Falling off the Flat Earth? Washington, D.C., National Academies Press
5 Science and Engineering Indicators 2008 Figures 6-12 and 6-13
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CONCLUSION
Thank you in advance for your efforts to undertake this important job. While the
budget does not spell out exact funding for these programs, I believe that you can
send a strong signal about the importance of fundamental science and education to
the Appropriations Committee by making function 250 and the science and technology portion of function 370 top priorities in the FY 2009 budget.
Thank you again for allowing me to testify.
Mr. ETHERIDGE. I would say no one has any questions, my good
friend, other than to say thank you for your commitment to this because there is no question that for America to compete in this global economy, it is critical that we have additional resources in math
and science.
Mr. EHLERS. Yeah. And I can give all the standard arguments.
Just yesterday, someone was telling me once again that China is
now producing more English speaking engineers than the United
States is. And that is true. And that is just one little item, but
there is just a host of different issues.
And, frankly, we are losing out in international competition because we are not taking account of these things. We are not pushing either our math and science education or our math and science
research efforts and we have to do that if we are going to keep up
this international competition.
We have always assumed we are ahead and we have been. Now
we are falling behind and we have to catch back up. Thank you
very much.
Mr. ETHERIDGE. Thank you, sir.
Our next member to testify is Ms. Carol Shea-Porter. Welcome.
We are pleased to receive your testimony. You are recognized for
five minutes. And without objection, your full statement will be entered into the record.
STATEMENT OF HON. CAROL SHEA-PORTER, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Ms. SHEA-PORTER. Thank you very much. I appreciate this opportunity to speak about some of the essential needs in my own state
and to speak a bit about the Presidents budget and where I believe
we have gone wrong.
The Presidents proposed budget for fiscal year 2009 reflects a
very real difference between the Administrations priorities and the
priorities of this Congress and the American people.
Over the past seven years, we have seen record budget deficits,
problems and cuts in programs, to programs like the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control, a reckless
plan to privatize Social Security, and a War in Iraq that has
caused this country billions of dollars in money, and eventually
could cost more than a trillion dollars, all of this without proper
accountability.
Now the Administration has once again put forth a budget proposal that does not adequately reflect the needs of the country.
There are so many problems with the Presidents budget, so many
important programs that are under-funded, and so many misplaced
priorities.
While I take issue with many of the Presidents cuts, there is one
that I feel is particularly troubling. Mr. Chairman, the LIHEAP
Program is one of the most crucial support structures for millions
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of people throughout this country. Eery winter, tens of thousands
of New Hampshire residents, over 40,000 each of the past two
years, applied to our Fuel Assistance Program for help with their
heating bills.
I do not need to tell you how cold it is in New Hampshire and
for low-income families how critical these programs are.
The committed people who work in these programs are working
day and night to help these families, but they need help. Even as
the price of the oil has skyrocketed, the LIHEAP Program continues to be chronically under-funded, putting a greater burden on
American families.
According to the MG Information Administration, the average
cost to heat a home with heating oil this winter is expected to
climb to over $2,000 per family, more than three times the $627
that it cost six years ago.
Meanwhile, the benefit that LIHEAP provides has not only failed
to keep pace with this dramatic increase in costs, it has actually
dropped.
In the 2006, the New Hampshire Fuel Assistance Program was
able to provide an average benefit of $638 per applicant. In 2007,
it dropped to $533. In 2008, the average benefit might be slightly
higher than last year, thanks to Congress work to increase funding
for this program, but it will in no way make up the difference in
the increase in oil prices.
For fiscal year 2009, the President has proposed a funding level
of $2 billion to LIHEAP, $1.7 billion for the grants to states and
$300 million for the emergency contingency funding. This represents a $570 million reduction in funding from what Congress
provided in 2006.
This irresponsible cut in funding will mean that New Hampshire
would stand to lose over $2.5 million in funding.
Mr. Chairman, we cannot allow this to happen. As you begin
work on the fiscal year 2009 budget resolution, I urge you to include a robust funding level for LIHEAP Program. Too many people in my state and across the country rely on LIHEAP to keep
their heat on.
In this great nation, no family should have to choose between
keeping warm or buying groceries. It is just wrong and Congress
has its chance to correct this.
Again, there are many other areas in the Presidents budget that
concern me. But as a member of the Armed Services Committee,
there is one that I find particularly troubling.
In the Presidents fiscal year 2009 budget proposal, the Administration estimates savings of over $1 billion next year in the
TRICARE Program. I have raised questions with Secretary Gates
on how exactly the Defense Department is projecting savings in
their healthcare programs when the cost of providing this care continues to rise.
I have also questioned their assertions that family members and
servicemembers will opt out of TRICARE and move towards employer-based coverage when the reality is that fewer employers
even offer health insurance.
I am also deeply disturbed by the continuing increases in co-payments, enrollment fees, and deductibles that the Administration is
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recommending be imposed on our military families. There are
many areas in which the government should be trying to reduce
costs, but military healthcare is not a place to cut.
In my capacity as a member of the Armed Services Committee,
I will continue to investigate the Defense Departments projected
savings and I will fight to ensure that our military families are not
saddled with higher costs for their healthcare.
I believe the President and the Administration is playing a shell
game with military healthcare costs, shifting costs to our military
personnel and projecting savings that cannot materialize.
I urge the Committee to also pay close attention to the Administrations projections in this area and to take whatever steps are
necessary to address these inequities.
Again, thank you very much for the opportunity to appear here.
I look forward to working with all of you to pass a strong budget
resolution that reflects the priorities of our Congress and the American people. Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Carol Shea-Porter follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. CAROL SHEA-PORTER, A REPRESENTATIVE
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
IN
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan and Members of the Budget Committee,
thank you for holding this extremely important hearing today and for the opportunity to raise my concerns with the Presidents proposed Fiscal Year 2009 Budget
before you on behalf of the First Congressional District of New Hampshire.
The Presidents proposed budget for Fiscal Year 2009 reflects the very real differences between the Administrations priorities and the priorities of this Congress
and the American people. Over the past seven years, we have seen record budget
deficits, cuts to programs like the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for
Disease Control, a reckless plan to privatize Social Security, and a war in Iraq that
has cost the country hundreds of billions and perhaps will cost trillions of dollars
eventuallymuch of it without proper accountability. Now, the Administration has
once again put forth a budget proposal that does not adequately reflect the needs
of the country.
There are so many problems with the Presidents budget, so many important programs under-funded, and so many misplaced priorities. While I take issue with
many of the Presidents cuts, there is one that I find especially troubling.
Mr. Chairman, the LIHEAP program is one of the most crucial support structures
for millions of families throughout the country. Every winter, tens of thousands of
New Hampshire residentsover 40,000 each of the past two yearsapply to our
Fuel Assistance Program for help with their heating bills. The committed people
who run this program work long hours to deliver assistance to those who need it
most. Even as the price of oil has skyrocketed, the LIHEAP program continues to
be chronically under-fundedplacing a greater burden on American families.
According to the Energy Information Administration, the average cost to heat a
home with heating oil this winter is expected to climb to over $2,000 per family
more than three times the $627 that it cost six years ago. Meanwhile, the benefit
that LIHEAP provides has not only failed to keep pace with this dramatic increase
in cost, it has actually dropped.
In 2006, the New Hampshire Fuel Assistance Program was able to provide an average benefit of $638 per applicant. In 2007, the average benefit fell to $533. In
2008, the average benefit may be slightly higher than last year, thanks to Congress
work to increase funding for the program, but it will in no way make up for the
increase in oil prices.
For Fiscal Year 2009, the President has proposed a funding level of $2 billion for
LIHEAP$1.7 billion for the grants to states and $300 million for the emergency
contingency funding. This represents a $570 million reduction in funding from what
Congress provided for 2008.
This irresponsible cut in funding will mean that New Hampshire would stand to
lose over $2.5 million in funding.
Mr. Chairman, we cannot allow this to happen. As you begin work on the Fiscal
Year 2009 Budget Resolution, I urge you to include a robust funding level for the
LIHEAP program. Too many people in my state and across this country rely on
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LIHEAP to keep their heat on. In our great nation, no family should have to choose
between keeping warm and buying groceries.
Again, there are many areas in the Presidents proposed budget that require this
Committees attention. I would like to take a moment to point to one other area
that, as a Member of the Armed Services Committee, I also find particularly troubling.
In the Presidents Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Proposal, the Administration estimates savings of over $1 billion next year in the TRICARE program. I have raised
questions with Secretary Gates on how exactly the Defense Department is projecting
savings in their health care programs, when the cost of providing this care continues to rise. I have also questioned their assertions that service members will opt
out of TRICARE, and move more towards employer-provided and other forms of
health care coverage, when the reality is that ever fewer employers even offer
health insurance.
I am also deeply disturbed by the continuing increases in co-payments, enrollment
fees, and deductibles that the Administration is recommending be imposed on our
military families. There are many areas in which the government should be trying
to reduce costsbut military health care is not one of them.
In my capacity as a Member of the Armed Services Committee, I will continue
to investigate the Defense Departments projected savings, and I will fight to ensure
that our military families are not saddled with higher costs for their health care.
I believe that the Administration is playing a shell-game with military health care
costsshifting costs to our military personnel and projecting savings that will not
materialize. I urge the Committee to also pay close attention to the Administrations
projections in this area and to take whatever steps necessary to address these inequities.
Again, thank you, Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan, for the opportunity to share just a few of my concerns with the Administrations proposed budget.
I look forward to working with you to pass a strong budget resolution that reflects
the priorities of this Congress and the American people.
Thank you.
Mr. ETHERIDGE. Thank the gentle lady for her testimony and the
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Federal Government and the private sector, but in many cases
even that with lead from the Federal Government have made in
education, in research and development, and in innovation, and investment in these areas ensures that the American people will continue to benefit from the opportunities of a rapidly-growing economy.
These are not just words. This is an alarm. You are hearing
about many important things today, housing, assistance in heating
for homes of people with low means, transportation, environmental
protection, and on and on. But you must take action in this area.
What is the period of projections for this years budget resolution? I suppose it will be based on a ten-year projection. If you
want to be able to fund, if we as a nation or we as a Congress want
to be able to fund the work in housing, in transportation, in environmental protection, in low-income heating assistance, and on and
on, we had better heed to the investment that is long overdue in
research and development.
The Federal Reserve announced at the beginning of February
that they reduced their forecast for growth for 2008 to an anemic
1.3 to two percent, that joblessness is likely to climb, .4 percent to
over five percent.
Science R&D is not just another interest group. If we are going
to do right by our constituents, we must, we must increase dramatically our investment in R&D and, not incidentally, take steps
in the Tax Code and in other ways to encourage R&D in the private sector.
In August of last year, the House passed into law a comprehensive competitiveness package that was known as America Competes and it was motivated by disturbing findings of the Rising
Above the Gathering Storm report that our nation is drastically
under-investing in engineering and physical sciences.
The bill authorized doubling the funding for the Department of
Energy, the Office of Science in the Department, for the National
Science Foundation. This is not asking too much. It would be a
modest response to a large problem.
As I said a few moments ago, we will pass stimulus package
after stimulus package in the future if we do not make these investments now.
Unfortunately, the fiscal year 2008 budget fell far short of this
goal. NSF received a two and a half percent increase, far short of
the eight to ten percent increase that was provided in the earlier
versions of the appropriations bills. And DOEs Office of Science
did not fare much better.
Without taking a drastically different approach in this cycle,
Congress will be delivering a devastating blow to future economic
security and competitiveness.
[The prepared statement of Rush Holt follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS FROM
Thank you Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, and distinguished Members
of the Committee on the Budget. I appreciate the opportunity to provide testimony
on funding levels for science and science education in the FY 2009 Budget.
Norman Augustine, one of the lead authors of the National Academies report Rising above the Gathering Storm recently was quoted as saying While scientists and
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engineers represent only four percent of the U.S. workforce, their productivity creates jobs for 96 percent of the population. We are going to increasingly see the need
for stimulus packages if we dont invest in basic science. Were not rising above the
gathering storm.
There is no denying that America is losing ground in global competitiveness to
countries that are making the necessary investments in education and R&D. We
owe our current economic strength, our national security, and quality standard of
living to the investments of past generations, however the Federal Government has
not been living up to our responsibility to continue this investment and robustly
fund education, research and development and innovation. Investment in these
areas ensures that the American people will continue to benefit from the opportunities of the rapidly growing global economy and its inherent foundation in science
and technology.
These are not just words. This is an alarm. I am asking you for action. We are
feeling the ripples of our lack of investment in a very real and painful way. The
Federal Reserve announced at the beginning of February that they reduced forecast
for growth for 2008 to an anemic pace of 1.3 to 2 percent and that joblessness is
likely to climb 0.4 percent to 5.3 percent. On the same day the Department of Labor
announced that consumer prices jumped 4.3 percent in January, and that inflation
was up to 2.5 percent. Last month, this body passed an economic stimulus package
to help revive our stagnating economy. That bill was only a short term solution, if
we are to ensure our long term economic stability we need to invest in the long
term, and that requires investing in science, education, and R&D. Science R&D is
not just another interest group. If we are to do right by our constituents we must
mustincrease dramatically our investment in R&D, and not incidentally we must
take these steps in the tax code and in other ways to encourage R&D in the private
sector.
DETRIMENTAL PAST FUNDING
President Bushs budget request honors the promise of the American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI), by requesting $12.2 billion in the 2009 budget for the three
ACI agencies; NSF, the DOE Office of Science, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) laboratories, a 15 percent increase over this years funding. The NSF budget of $6.9 billion would be a 14 percent increase, with increases
approaching 20 percent for the Mathematical and Physical Sciences (MPS), engineering and computer science directorates and smaller increases for non-physical
sciences directorates. DOEs Office of Science request for $4.7 billion would be a 19
percent increase restoring funding for the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), physics, and other basic research projects hard hit by the
2008 appropriation. The NIST labs would receive a large increase, though at the
cost of proposed eliminations of NISTs external programs.
Additionally, the 2009 budget request proposes a record investment in R&D of
$145.4 billion, a $4.6 billion or 3.3 percent increase above this years level. Once we
pass the inevitable 2008 and 2009 war supplementals it is likely that this level will
rise even higher. However, despite these increases the Presidents request is devastating to other programs which are essential to promoting the goals of the ACI
and the America COMPETES Act.
MISPLACED PRIORITIES
Despite the proposed increases in physical sciences and related research at NSF,
DOEs Office of Science, and NIST, the Presidents request dramatically reduces the
budget of other essential research programs. The National Institutes of Health pro-
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posed funding is flat at 28.5 billion and R&D funding for essential agriculture and
environmental agencies would be cut drastically. As a result, federal support for
both basic and applied research will fall 0.5 percent or $282 million from last years
budget. In real dollars, the federal research portfolio would be decreased by 9.4 percent from the peak levels in 2004.
EDUCATION
Nearly fifty years ago, Americans were shocked when the Soviets launched the
first man-made satellite into space. A few years later, President Kennedy responded
by challenging the Congressand the countryto put the first man on the moon
by the end of the 1960s. What followed was an unprecedented federal investment
in education, with a focus on math and science, investments in research and development, and the establishment of NASA. And just over a decade later, America
landed the first man on the moon, a feat not yet achieved by the Russians or anyone
else.
Mr. Chairman, the evidence is plentiful that since this Sputnik moment, our
commitment to supporting scientific and technological research and development
has waned. Our economy faces new challenges from emerging powers whose students outperform our own, and who produce vastly more graduates in the science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields. We must do more to support the education of prospective undergraduates and graduate students who are
seeking to enter the STEM fields.
Prospective undergraduates need better access to the promise of a technical college education. Graduate programs must be made more appealing by improved
quantity and quality of fellowship support. Postdoctoral fellowships, which constitute an increasingly long phase of a scientists career, are not competitive with
salaries made by the average college graduate, while requiring an extreme degree
of individual geographic flexibility. With wildly fluctuating federal support of competitive grants and national labs, even the final phase of a government or academic
scientific career is unstable and therefore much less appealing than we need to be
the case. To achieve the best of our national potential, we must do a far better job
of overcoming individuals social and financial barriers to entry to the sciences, and
must provide far more stability and reward at every phase in the process.
EDUCATION AND SCIENCE
Mr. Chairman, last month in time magazine there was an article published in
Time Magazine called Memo to Smart Kids: Do Not Go into Science. In this article
Sharon Begley outlined how last years $300 million cut from the Presidents proposed 2008 budget request for NSF, and the $59 million cut from the proposed
budget to NIST, and the serious blow delivered to the zeroed out ITER and to the
high energy physics budget are causing real job losses. For example, the DOE office
of Physics Lab Fermilab is laying off 125 people after the DOE ceases funding the
PEP-II collider as SLAC this Sunday. Additionally, all employees at the lab will be
required to take 2 to 3 days of unpaid leave a month to keep the lab afloat. One
problem is clear: unless we fund science research students will not enter into a field
where there is a lack of future jobs. America needs scientists to be able to compete
in the global economy. It is critically important that we support education and R&D
more thoroughly and more consistently, and we have the opportunity to do that as
we review the Presidents proposal. Congress can and must meet the challenge presented by the ill-advised cutbacks hiding behind the largely commendable flagship
projects of the proposed FY 2009 budget.
Mr. ETHERIDGE. And I thank the gentleman and thank you for
your commitment to the future of this country because science is
really where it is. Thank you.
Mr. HOLT. I thank the Chairman. I thank the Committee.
Mr. ETHERIDGE. Thank you, sir.
The next member to testify is the gentle lady from Ohio, Ms. Sutton. Welcome. We are pleased to receive your testimony. You are
recognized for five minutes. And without objection, your full statement will be entered into the record.
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STATEMENT OF HON. BETTY SUTTON, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF OHIO
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He also eliminated formula funding for the Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grants which would result in a 122 fewer police officers funded in Ohio.
Our first responders are out in the communities every day and
have made a commitment to protecting our communities from
harm. We in Congress must also make that commitment to our
first responders to ensure that they have the resources they need
to continue their critical work.
Research and development. In order for the United States to continue at the forefront of innovation and technology, we must continue to support research and development. That these investments
generate significant returns is abundantly clear and not only will
they result in advances in our scientific understanding, they generate new jobs and help fuel our local economies.
The University of Akron, for example, is a world leader in polymer research and the effect this research center has had on Akrons economy has been profound.
I encourage the Committee to include robust funding for research
and development in this years budget.
Green jobs. In addition this year, we have the opportunity to
fund a newly-authorized program that will help reinvest in American manufacturing such as at the Avon Lake floor plant in my district and help create green jobs.
This past December, we authorized the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Incentive Program which will be administered by the Department of Energy. This program will provide lowcost loans to automobile manufacturers to make substantial investments in their factories here in the United States.
By funding this program, auto companies will have low-interest
loans available to invest in engineering, component production, and
retooling of existing factories to manufacture new advanced technology vehicles such as hybrids, plug-in hybrids, advanced diesel,
and fuel cell cars.
And, finally, our veterans. We must always remember that the
full measure of what we owe our veterans does not end after they
leave the battlefield. Our responsibility extends to what we provide
for our soldiers once they return home.
The Presidents budget does not provide adequately for the care
of our veterans, providing $20 billion less than what is necessary
to merely maintain its current purchasing power.
It is unacceptable for the President to attempt to impose new
fees on our veterans even though they have been overwhelmingly
rejected many times before.
I am proud to say that I served on this Committee when we
passed the largest increase in VA funding in American history. I
urge the Budget Committee to continue its commitment to helping
those who have fought so bravely and sacrificed in ways that so
many of us can never fully appreciate.
I thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Betty Sutton follows:]
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PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Thank you for the opportunity to testify before you today. I am very proud to have
served on this Committee last year, and Im pleased to join you once again to speak
on budget issues of importance to Ohios 13th District.
The budget is a moral document. It is a statement of the values of our nation.
It is the clearest way to see where a governments true priorities lie.
Thats why Im very concerned about the message that the Presidents Budget
sends to the American people. It does not invest in the most important long-term
priorities in the country; it instead places a premium on investment in the shortterm interests of a few.
At a time when working families are facing skyrocketing energy, health care, and
education costs, the Presidents Budget would cut critical programs that can help
Americans through these tough economic times.
Today I would like to discuss a few of these programs, which are vital to the people I represent in Ohio.
INFRASTRUCTURE
The state of the nations crumbling infrastructure was demonstrated in the most
dramatic fashion possible, when the I-35 bridge in Minneapolis collapsed into the
Mississippi River last August.
In the face of overwhelming evidence of the need for increased investment in our
infrastructure, the Bush Administration continues to pour money into rebuilding
Iraq, while badly shortchanging infrastructure investments at home.
Tackling the repair of our nations infrastructure is not a glamorous task, but it
is absolutely essential for our nations long-term success. The Minnesota bridge collapse and Hurricane Katrina are vivid reminders that these considerations are not
theoretical.
Investments in infrastructure are not just critical for public safety, but they also
bring a significant boost to local economies and provide more Americans with good
paying jobs.
The Presidents proposed funding levels for SAFETEA-LU are a full $800 million
below Congressionally authorized levels. The Budget Committee should reject this
funding level and renew our commitment to improving our national infrastructure.
FIRST RESPONDERS
I would also urge the Budget Committee to reject the cuts the President has made
to grants to local law enforcement and fire departments.
Although the President has repeatedly stressed the importance of homeland security, he has left our first responders without funds that are critically important to
the work they do in our communities every single day.
Firefighters in my district depend on Assistance to Firefighter Grants, which are
used for equipment, training, and other projects to ensure they have everything they
need to keep our families and neighborhoods safe.
The Presidents proposed funding levels would eliminate over $24 million in Fire
Grants for the state of Ohio, which could result in 267 fewer grants awarded.
He also eliminated formula funding for the Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance
Grants, which would result in 122 fewer police officers funded in Ohio.
Our first responders are out in our communities every day and have made a commitment to protecting our communities from harm. We in Congress must also make
a commitment to our first responders, to ensure they have the resources they need
to continue their critical work.
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
In order for the United States to continue at the forefront of innovation and technology, we must continue to support research and development.
That these investments generate significant returns is abundantly clear, and not
only will they result in advances in our scientific understanding, they will generate
new jobs and help fuel our local economies. The University of Akron, for example,
is a world leader in polymer research, and the effect this research center has had
on the Akron economy has been profound.
I would encourage the committee to include robust funding for research and development in this years budget.
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GREEN JOBS
In addition, this year, we have the opportunity to fund a newly authorized program that will help reinvest in American manufacturing, such as at the Avon Lake
Ford Plant in my district, and help create Green jobs.
This past December, we authorized the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Incentive Program, which will be administered by the Department of Energy.
This program will provide low-cost loans to automobile manufacturers to make
substantial investments in their factories here in the United States. By funding this
program, auto companies will have low-interest loans available to invest in engineering, component production and the retooling of existing factories to manufacture
new, advanced technology vehicles such as hybrids, plug-in hybrids, advanced diesel
and fuel cell cars.
VETERANS
We must always remember that the full measure of what we owe our veterans
does not end after they leave the battlefieldour responsibility extends to what we
provide for our soldiers once they return home.
The Presidents Budget does not provide adequately for the care of our veterans,
providing $20 billion less than what is necessary to merely maintain its current purchasing power. It is unacceptable for the President to attempt to impose new fees
on our veterans even though they have been overwhelmingly rejected many times
before.
I am proud to say that I served on this Committee when we passed the largest
increase in VA funding in American history. I urge the Budget Committee to continue its commitment to helping those who have fought so bravely and sacrificed
in ways that many of us can never fully appreciate.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT
Finally, I would strongly urge the Budget Committee to reject the proposed cuts
to the Community Development Block Grant. I cannot overemphasize the positive
impact that CDBG has made on my district.
With the foreclosure crisis driving many of my constituents out of their homes,
and with so many Ohioans losing their jobs in recent years, CDBG provides funds
to state and local organizations to address these difficulties. It has created tens of
thousands of jobs across the country, assisted families in finding affordable housing,
and has been a catalyst for economic development.
A loss of nearly $30 million of these funds would deprive my district of funds that
are critical for helping us move forward. It would be irresponsible to cut these programs that are intended to assist families who currently have the greatest need.
When the Bush Budget arrived in Congress earlier this month, it was characterized as dead on arrival. And thats because we have all recognized that President
Bush is not listening to the American people. He has demonstrated a callous indifference to the needs of working class Americans that we must reject.
I am proud to have served on the Budget Committee last year, when we passed
a budget that made needed investments into our nations highest priorities, with a
long term view toward the future.
I know that it is difficult to balance the many competing priorities before the
Committee. However, I urge you to keep the needs of working families in mind as
you make your decisions. We cannot afford to turn our backs on them during these
difficult economic times.
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today.
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I have written testimony that has been submitted along with the
recommendations for an alternative budget to the Committee and
today would like to speak about two issues that I think reveal a
dysfunctional budget that not only increases the deficit but also
robs Peter to pay Paul.
Indeed, amidst a climate of record decreases in hourly wages, job
loss, prolonged unemployment, foreclosures, and high fuel prices,
the Administrations fiscal year 2009 budget proposal fails to meet
head on socioeconomic trends and foremost the humanitarian needs
of your citizens.
For example, within the Department of Labor, the President proposes to consolidate workforce investment, WIA, adult dislocated
workers and youth employment services programs, work opportunity tax credits, and workforce information electronic tool system
building, into a single funding stream to states for career advancement accounts towards the attainment of self-directed accounts
whereby individuals receive $6,000 over a two-year period.
Under the auspices of streamlining and creating efficiency, there
is a funding reduction of over $300 million compared to fiscal year
2008s combined current program totals.
In todays economic climate, these monies are best served under
current programs and will provide skills and training vital to securing substantial employment and foremost medical coverage.
This pattern continues with the merging of WIAs Prisoner Reentry
Initiative, PRI, and Responsible Reintegration for Young Offenders
funded into WIAs Reintegration of Ex-Offenders, a single consolidated program for adult and juvenile ex-offenders.
However, unlike the aforementioned consolidation, PRI Grant
funds will be completed in fiscal year 2009 and there will be no
RRYO activity in fiscal year 2009.
At the same time, the Administration has reduced WIA Reintegration of Ex-Offenders 2009 funding by 50 percent down to
$39,600,000 from fiscal year 2008s 73,000,493.
Collectively these cuts strike the hearts of communities across
America, particularly faith and community-based service providers
who historically and continue to be on the front line providing
much needed wrap-around service.
Struggling state and local governments will continue to bear the
cost of reducing recidivism and creating safer communities. Moreover, faith and community-based reentry programs ability to provide much needed jobs will be substantially diminished.
In the area of Medicare and Medicaid, I oppose the Administrations $195 billion cut in services over five years because it threatens to endanger 1.6 million Medicare and 1.9 million Medicaid patients in Illinois alone.
And while Congress has placed a one-year moratorium on Rule
2261, redefining Medicaid reimbursement of rehabilitative services
and a rule disallowing Medicaid payments to public hospitals from
graduate and medical education, it is important to note that the
collective outcome of proposed budget cuts and pending moratoriums will be devastating.
If the moratorium is not extended, the public hospital proposed
rule will go into effect on May 25th, 2008, and the GME rule will
go into effect sometime this summer.
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Again, Mr. Chairman, I think that these will have devastating
impacts on the ability of large numbers of individuals to receive
health and medical care throughout America, and I thank you for
the opportunity to testify and look forward to the revamping of this
budget.
[The prepared statement of Danny K. Davis follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Id like to begin by thanking Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan and members of the Subcommittee for holding todays hearing on President Bushs proposed
FY 09 Budget. Since February 4, 2008, Members of the 110th Congress have been
charged with the daunting task of scrutinizing and interpreting the potential affects
of the budget on the country at large and constituents within our respective districts. I yield that this has been no small feat considering the current deficit, as well
as cuts in funding and services to which Americans have been subjected over the
past seven years and counting. Once again weve been summoned to renew a dysfunctional budget that fails to meet head-on socioeconomic trends and foremost the
humanitarian needs of U.S. citizens.
Indeed, amidst a climate of record decreases in hourly wages, job loss, prolonged
unemployment, foreclosures and high fuel prices the Administration is Robbing
Peter to Pay Paul. As evidence by the Joint Economic Committee state-by-state
breakdown of budgetary affects on the State of Illinois:
Critical housing programs are being cut by President Bush again. President
Bushs FY 2009 budget again cuts federal housing programs, despite widespread
recognition that the U.S. economy is facing a housing crisis. Bushs budget cuts to
public housing and rental assistance programs would eliminate critical assistance
for those who have been disproportionately impacted by the subprime housing crisislower income families, the elderly, and minoritiescompounding the deep funding cuts of the previous six years. Under the Presidents budget proposal, the public
housing capital fund would be cut by $415 million from 2008, depriving Illinois of
$29.8 million in necessary funding to keep its public housing stock a viable option
for families that have lost their homes to foreclosure. At the same time, President
Bush has proposed a $740 million cut nationwide in the successful HUD Section 8
voucher program; as a result, 5,400 families could lose their homes in Illinois. These
programs will be critical in alleviating the hardships caused by the housing crisis,
but the Bush administration again appears blithely ignorant to the reality facing
American families. [President Bushs Budget, FY2009; Federal Funds Information
for States Database; National League of Cities; Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.]
Huge cuts will endanger access to quality care for Illinoiss 1.6 million Medicare
and 1.9 million Medicaid beneficiaries. The Administrations budget includes $195
billion in cuts over five years to Medicare and Medicaid that threaten to endanger
Illinoiss 1.6 million Medicare and 1.9 million Medicaid patients access to the care
they need to lead healthy, independent lives. Under the Presidents plan, $178 billion would be cut from Medicare and $17 billion from Medicaid over five years.
These cuts would be achieved by reducing reimbursements to health care providers
and charging higher premiums based on income for Medicare beneficiaries for coverage of prescription drugs and doctors services. [Kaiser Family Foundation, State
Health Facts, March 2006 and December 2006; President Bushs Budget, FY2009;
Department of Health and Human Services.]
Steep cuts to health programs will jeopardize the well-being of Illinois residents.
The Presidents budget would slash discretionary spending for government health
resources and services by $982 million, in addition to $378 million in cuts to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. These cuts would jeopardize the health
of millions nationwide who are suffering from life-threatening diseases and depend
on these programs to fund life saving research projects. They include 60,000 people
living with invasive cancer in Illinois and the 8 percent of Illinois adults who have
been diagnosed with diabetes. [President Bushs Budget, FY2009; Kaiser Family
Foundation, State Health Facts 2003 and 2005.]
Despite dismal job growth in 2007, the Administration still proposes $7.3 million in cuts for adult employment and training services in Illinois. The Presidents
budget proposes cutting funding for adult employment and training services by
nearly $150 million nationwide at a time when the U.S. workforce has experienced
the worst job growth in over 4 years. If these cuts stand, Illinoiss One-Stop Career
System would lose $7.3 million. These cuts would likely force the suspension of
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workforce preparation and talent development services at a time when rapid
changes in the economy make such programs more important than ever for Illinois
workers. Moreover, the Administrations refusal to extend unemployment insurance
means 1.4 million workers nationwide who have already exhausted their 26 weeks
of unemployment insurance will be unable to get additional assistance. [President
Bushs Budget, FY2009; Federal Funds Information for States Database; U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, January Employment Report.]
Administrations budget fails college students in educational grants, even as Illinoiss tuition has risen 24 percent in four years. In 2007, Democrats fought to save
critical college aid programs like the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants
(SEOG) program, but once again the Presidents budget completely eliminates the
program. Illinois would lose $37.9 million in SEOG grants in 2009. As average tuition and fees at 4-year public schools in Illinois increased 24 percent in just four
years, the Administrations cuts in student aid would put college further out of
reach for many Illinois students. [President Bushs Budget, FY2009; U.S. Department of Education; Fiscal Year 2001-2008 State Tables for the U.S. Department of
Education; U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, Digest
of Education Statistics, Average undergraduate tuition and fees and room and
board rates charged for full-time students in degree-granting institutions, by type
and control of institution and state or jurisdiction, 2001-2002 and 2005-2006.]
Illinoiss LIHEAP funding cut by President yet again. The Presidents FY 2009
budget calls for a 22 percent cut in the overall funding for the Low-Income Home
Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) from 2008. LIHEAP helps Americas lowestincome families afford to cool their homes in the summer and heat their homes in
the winter. It is especially important to families with elderly persons and very
young children. This years budget would slash Illinoiss LIHEAP funding, leaving
it up to the Congress once again to ensure that Illinoiss families can afford to cool
and heat their homes. [President Bush FY2009 Budget; Federal Funds Information
for States Database; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families.]
Programs to keep Illinoiss neighborhoods safe zeroed out by Bush. The Presidents budget again assaults two of Illinoiss local crime fighting toolsthe Community Oriented Policing Service (COPS) program and Justice Assistance Grants
(JAG). COPS helps Illinoiss law enforcement agencies hire police officers, enhance
crime fighting technology, and support crime prevention initiatives, while JAG supports state and local drug task forces, community crime prevention programs, and
prosecution initiatives. Last year, Illinois received $4.1 million in JAG funding and
$9.6 million in COPS funding to keep neighborhoods safer for Illinois families in FY
2007. Illinois would receive no funding under President Bushs 2009 budget proposal. [President Bush FY2009 Budget; Federal Funds Information for States Database; U.S. Department of Justice, COPS Office.]
Another round of cuts to community investments could slow economic development in Illinois. Year after year, Democrats have been called on to defend the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program, which is once again on the
Presidents chopping block. The CDBG program is a signature program for Illinoiss
cities, counties and local communities to create jobs, spur economic development and
small business opportunities, and expand homeownership. Illinoiss CDBG funding
in the Presidents budget represents a decrease of $31.5 million from its 2008 funding level of $171.5 million. By cutting CDBG, the Presidents budget would undermine the economic well-being of Illinoiss communities. [President Bushs Budget,
FY2009; Federal Funds Information for States Database; National League of Cities.]
President calls for elimination of grants to fight poverty. President Bushs budget would eliminate the Community Services Block Grant program which provides
critical funding for state, local, and tribal poverty programs. Last year, this grant
provided a total of $654 million in crucial funding for education, employment, housing, and health programs serving Illinoiss 1.4 million residents living in poverty.
Last year, Illinois received $30.9 million in federal funding to combat poverty.
Under the Presidents budget, Illinois would receive no funding for this program. At
the same time, his budget would slash spending on Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families, which provides a wide range of benefits and services to low income families with children, by $340 million nationwide. [President Bushs Budget, FY2009;
Federal Funds Information for States Database; U.S. Department of Commerce,
Census Bureau, Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United
States: 2006 report.]
President Bush shorts Illinois funding for environmental protection programs,
even as dangers become more apparent. It is no secret that President Bush has consistently downplayed, ignored or even scoffed at the scientific consensus that has
emerged with respect to the dangers posed by catastrophic global climate change.
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In keeping with his head-in-the-sand views, the Presidents budget aims to cut vital
funding for the Environmental Protection Agency, including a cut to funding available for Illinois promised under the Clean Air Act. For FY2009, the President aims
to reduce this programs funding levels by $23 million, a potential 7.5 percent decrease in funding for Illinois to combat air pollution and the hazards resulting from
climate change. This marks a consistent trend for the Administration, which has
been slowly whittling away at federal support for environmental protections since
2004. [President Bushs Budget, FY2009.] Cuts federal housings programs, in spite
of current housing crisis;
It goes without saying that the net affects of the Administrations proposed 2009
budget will not only result in utter devastation for the states like Illinois, but also
the country at- large with a current deficit of $410 billion (the second largest in history). Moreover overly optimistic economic assumptions that mask the full fiscal effects of underlying policies underestimates the impact of Alternative Minimum Tax
(AMT) reform, ongoing Ira and Afghanistan war costs and associated services.
Its with this in mind that Im here today to testify on the behalf of the ex-offenders population including approximately 400,000 mothers and fathers (being released
each year) struggling to make a fresh start and at risk of loosing access to reentry
programs with job training and placement services necessary to ensure successful
reentry. Moreover Illinois hospitals, medical centers and Chicago Public School
(CPS) that provide quality healthcare and are at risk of loosing Medicare subsidies
to service low-and moderate-income working families living from paycheck-to-check
trying to make ends meet.
FUNCTION 500: DEPARTMENT OF LABOR TRAINING & EMPLOYMENT
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and replaced by a single program approach with a proposed budget of $39,600 million, a 50% decrease from FY 2008 enacted budget of $73,493. Moreover, collectively,
discontinued programs (funding) and reduction in current funding decreases the
number of adult and youths offenders being serviced in FY 09 by 46%, a 7,949 decrease in participants being serviced in FY 2008.
For the past six years there has been an overall funding cut of over 40% and the
administration is now proposing to eliminate what remains of the federal commitment to a focused and dedicated system of federal funding. The latter is self-evident
by discontinued PRI and RRYO seed monies to faith and community-based organizations that have historically and continues to be on the frontline providing much
needed wraparound services. These cost will be passed on to state/local governments
struggling budgetary economic as well as compromising faith and community-based
reentry programs ability to provide much needed jobs, housing, and substance
abuse/mental health. Significantly, without these vital services, two out of three exoffenders will be rearrested for new crimes within the first three years after their
release and youthful offenders are even more likely to re-offend.
Alternative budgetary recommendations: For a re-entry program to succeed, four
areas identified by the Re-entry Policy Council should be addressed: coordinated
planning, public-safety and restorative activities, supportive health and housing
services, and work-force development and employment opportunities. Proposed FY
2009 reduction in WIAs Reintegration of Ex-offenders undermines work-force development and employment opportunities, a vital component of successful reentry programs. Therefore, I recommend a flat line from FY 2008 enacted $73,493 plus an
inflation increase.
Function 570:
Cook Countys total public healthcare system serves approximately 330,000 patients annually. This includes its Emergency Rooms (ERs), urgent care, ambulatory
care and screening, pediatric and trauma care. Specifically:
The County serves about 640,000 patients in its 13 outpatient clinics;
Cermak (the prison health facility) treats, on average, 100,000 patients requiring health and mental healthcare;
Stroger Hospital has an average daily inpatient census of approximately 325
patients with a total of approximately 190,000 annual visits that include ER and
adult and pediatric urgent care;
Oakforest Hospital sees about 30,000 patients in its ER annually with an average daily inpatient census of about 65 patients;
Provident Hospital sees about 50,000 patients in its ER and has an average
daily inpatient census of about 65-70 patients;
The CORE Center is a state-of-the-art HIV/AIDs outpatient center that see 1
our of every 3 HIV/AIDs patients in Cook County and 1 out of 5 HIV/AIDs patients
in the entire state.
The Presidents budget continues to include major reductions to Medicaid through
regulations without going through Congress to make substantial changes to the program and methods of Medicaid payments to public hospitals to offset their costs of
servicing the uninsured. The cuts that would result from the implementation of
these rules are unprecedented and would likely take down most public health systems across the country.
Significantly, Congress has placed a one-year moratorium on two regulations last
year. First, CMS proposed rule 2261 redefines Medicaid reimbursable rehabilitative
services, among other things, excludes from Medicaid reimbursement the rehabilitative services that are intrinsic elements of programs other than Medicaid, such as
* * * education. The failure to define intrinsic elements, as used in the proposed
rule, provides CMS the discretion (leverage) to eliminate all Medicaid reimbursement for rehabilitative services and administrative activities provide in a school setting. Second a rule disallowing Medicaid payments to public hospitals from Graduate Medical Education (GME). Collectively, these rules will significantly cut Medicaid payments to Cook County by at least $100 million.
By all accounts, CMS proposed changes and cost containments will chop away
Medicaid for low-income Americans as we know it today. More broadly, proposed reductions will create reimbursements disincentives for schools to provide wraparound services, as well as compromise alliances between schools, social service
agencies, hospitals and clinics. Above all, the health of children across America, a
prerequisite to success in school as measured in No Child Left Behind goals.
Under the auspices of cost containment, CMS regulatory actions contradict the
administrations pledge to leave no child behind, put the poor first, and above all,
ensure homeland security. Cited proposed Medicaid regulatory actions and reductions will have devastating effects. Indeed, CMS is calling for new regulatory with
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dramatic limitations in defining activities, which will result in cut backs on federal
matching for a range of health services including:
Administrative activities associated with Medicaid outreach to children; helping
with Medicaid eligibility determination and enrollment of children and referral, coordination and monitoring of medical services to children;
Reimbursements of all transportation, including specialized transportation
with special breathing apparatus or special attendant for a child with seizure disorders;
Funding for hospital outpatient, non-hospital clinic services, mental health; and
Direct and indirect graduate medical education (GME) payments to teaching
hospitals.
In the State of Illinois alone, the rippling effects of proposed regulations will be
catastrophic especially for:
The 52,000 students with disabilities and health related needs being serviced
by the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) 1,000 case managers and counselors, as well
as 1,600 clinical professionals including social workers, psychologists, nurses, speech
pathologists, physical and occupational therapists and hearing/vision technicians to
these students at over 600 school sites;
The 25,000 CPS Medicaid-eligible children with chronic disabilities that impedes them from participation in normal activities of daily living, including education;
The Illinois Medical District, one of the largest concentrations of medical facilities in the world and home of the John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County that
provides services over 110,000 patients annually in Adult ER; 45,000 children and
adolescents each year in Pediatric ER; and boasts one of the most respected emergency rooms in Chicago and a Level 1 Trauma Center; and
The University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Schoolthe largest medical school
in the United Statesthat relies upon Medicaid for reimbursements and federal
matching of funds for costs of Graduate Medical Education (GME) programs as part
of Medicaid reimbursement for inpatient or outpatient hospital services.
This impact will be felt statewide by Medicaid programs throughout Illinois. Importantly the public hospital proposed rule will go into effect on May 25 if the current moratorium is not extended. Significantly, the GME rule goes into effect sometime this summer. While Im encouraged by CMS eagerness to cut cost, Im disturbed by proposed outrageous regulations, especially in light of March 2007 CBO
Medicaid Baseline, which found that:
Elderly and disabled account for 26% of enrollees68% of Medicaid spending;
While children account for 48% of enrollees, but only 19% of spending.
Moreover, currently, Cook Countys budget situation is desperate. President
Stroger has proposed a 2% sales tax to stave off cuts throughout the county, including the Bureau of Health Services, the overall county public health system. But unfortunately, there are not enough votes amongst members of the Cook County Board
of Commissioners for passage. The only other revenue source is property taxes,
which is not a factor considering the current housing market and economy. Under
these circumstances, theres a potential risk of 18% across the board cuts to the
Countys budget. Potential outcomes of this reduction include Oakforest Hospital,
Provident Hospital and 13 County clinics, importantly, Stroger Hospital, our major
public hospital and public health systems.
Recommendations: Im requesting an extension of the aforementioned moratoriumspublic hospital and GME proposed regulations; and proposed rule 2261 redefining Medicaid reimbursable rehabilitative servicesand that moratorium includes
clinic rule as well. Representative Engel has introduced legislation (H.R.3533; Public and Teaching Hospital Preservation Act) to this effect and I am a cosponsor.
In closing, while Ive shared pressing regional issues affecting the state of Illinois,
Ive taken the liberty of including additional FY 2009 budgetary recommendations
for the Committee on the Budget review and consideration.
Again, thank you Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan and members of the
Subcommittee for allowing me the privilege to testify before the Committee and I
welcome and am available to answer any questions you may have.
Congressman Danny K. Davis
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2008 Enacted: $6,877,975,000
2009 POTUS Request: $7,026,571,000
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $623,429,000 million
Rationale for Amount: To level authorized in P.L. 110134.
Priority: The President proposed a mere $150 million increase, but this is insufficient to cover the needs of this growing population. Enrollment has actually increased over the last few years, and research is clearer than ever that investing in
early childhood education will greatly in terms of child progress in the long term.
Dramatic increases in Head Start funding are needed to recoup the lack of inflation
adjustments since FY02, to redress the $10 million FY08 cut, and to invest in improving program quality.
Suggested Offset: $603.5 million from Reading First; $10 million from Adjunct
Teacher Corp; and $10 million from Charter School Facilities;
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function: 500
Program Title: Higher Education Act, PBI program
2008 Enacted: $0
2009 POTUS Request: $0
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $75 million
Rationale for Amount: Authorization amount for program in Section 303 of H.R.
4137, as reported out of the House.
Priority: The PBI provision authorizes for the first time a new category of eligible institutions within part A of Title III called Predominantly Black Institutions
(PBIs), with an authorization amount of $25 million. This program addresses the
current limitation in the law that restricts funds for African-American serving institutions unless they were created prior to 1964, which has been particularly problematic for largely two-year, urban institutions that are serving large groups of African
American students. You request an increase of $75 million in the Function 500 allocation to support the PBI program.
Suggested Offset: $75 million from Pell from Kids;
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function: 500
Program Title: Higher Education Act, Masters Degree Programs at HBCUs and
Other MSIs
2008 Enacted: $0
2009 POTUS Request: $0
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $25 million
Rationale for Amount: Authorization amount for program in Section 705 of H.R.
4137, as reported out of the House.
Priority: There is a great need to develop black professionals in the areas of
science, technology, engineering, and math. To illustrate, African Americans only
make up approximately 6% of STEM occupations, a rate much lower than the African American share of professional specialties as a whole (about 10.7%). There is
a new grant program to institutions to create fellowships for students at HBCUs
and other MSIs who are in masters degree programs in the physical or natural
sciences, mathematics, engineering, computer science, information technology, nursing, and allied health.
Suggested Offset: $25 million from Pell from Kids;
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function: 500
Program Title: Higher Education Act, Honorable Augustus F. Hawkins Centers
for Excellence (Section 262 of H.R. 4137, as reported out of House)
2008 Enacted: $0
2009 POTUS Request: $0
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $10 million
Rationale for Amount: This authorization amount would support approximately
20 grants at $500,000 each.
Priority: Within higher education, the numbers of black men teaching are incredibly low. For example, a report by NCES in 2003 found that only 2.9% of fulltime instructional faculty and staff at degree-granting institutions are black men.
Data on elementary and secondary teachers is not available by gender and race/ethnicity, although experience suggests that a similar lack of minority male teachers
exists in the younger grades. Research indicates that the absence of male role models contributes to the under-representation of minority men in college, and their
lower academic performance in primary and secondary education. This program establishes Centers of Excellence at minority serving institutions to recruit students
to become teachers (e.g., loan forgiveness) and to improve teacher preparation
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courses (e.g., via mentoring programs, professional development, induction programs).
Suggested Offset: $10 million from Pell from Kids
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function: 500
Program Title: Higher Education Act, Minority Male Achievement Study (Section 806 of H.R. 4137, as reported out of the House)
2008 Enacted: $0
2009 POTUS Request: $0
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $1.3 million
Rationale for Amount: Estimated amount of funds to complete study.
Priority: The under-representation of minority males, especially African American and Latino males, is a matter of public record that is reinforced by high dropout rates in urban and rural school districts, and lower participation/enrollment
rates of these groups in colleges and universities. The American Council on Educations Minorities in Higher Education Annual Reports have consistently documented these factors for almost two decades. This study examines the access to and
success of minority males in higher education, including high school graduation
rates and college participation. It is designed to provide important data to lawmakers so that we can develop policies to ensure the success of these students in
higher education.
Suggested Offset: $1.3 million from Public School Choice;
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function: 500
Program Title: Higher Education Act, Teacher Residency Program (Section
201(b)(5) of H.R. 4137, as reported out of the House)
2008 Enacted: $0
2009 POTUS Request: $0
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $50 million
Rationale for Amount: This authorization amount would support approximately
10 grants at $5 million each.
Priority: Research indicates that teacher quality is one of the most significant
factors influencing student achievement. This program is modeled on Chicagos successful teacher residency program. Given that it targets high-need schools (defined
as being in the highest 25% of schools in terms of percentage of students from families with incomes below the poverty line or having a designation as a rural school),
it is designed to increase teachers in urban areas that serve large percentages of
minority children.
Suggested Offset: $50 million from Pell Grants for Kids
ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE (750)
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Priority: This issue is vital, because domestic violence impacts African-American
women with fewer resources or greater perceived vulnerabilitygirls and those experiencing physical or psychiatric disabilities or living below the poverty line. Significantly, domestic violence destroys individuals, ruins families and weakens our
communities.
Suggested Offset: $500 million from Discretionary Offsets
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function Number: 750
Program Title: OJPs Byrne: Weed and Seed Program
2008 Enacted: $32,100
2009 POTUS Request: $0
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $649,361
Rationale for Amount: To restore reductions and Grant Consolidation with a
flat line from 07 ($49,361 over 09s) and an increase funding by $600 million for
grassroots community-based organizations buffering systemic shortfalls and inequities confronting ex-offenders attempting to reintegrate back into the community.
Priority: The Second Chance Act of 2007, a reentry program designed to reduce
recidivism, increase public safety, and help states and communities to better address the growing population of ex-offenders returning to communities by focusing
on four areas: jobs, housing, substance abuse/mental health treatment, and families
passed the house in November. We need to ensure funding to effectively implement
this two year program, as well as the continuance of initiatives aimed at ensuring
safer communities, reducing methamphetamine labs and other reentry programs.
Suggested Offset: $649,361 million Discretionary Offset.
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function Number: 750
Program Title: OJP: Child Safety and Juvenile Justice Program
2008 Enacted: $ 0
2009 POTUS Request: $185,000
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $1 billion
Rationale for Amount: Restore reductions associated with program consolidations towards child safety and juvenile program to ensure access to services that can
help them thrive in a noninsitutional environment.
Priority: For the past six years there has been an overall funding cut of over
40% and the administration is now proposing to eliminate what remains of the federal commitment to a focused and dedicated system of federal funding. When high
quality reentry and aftercare services are available, youth need to spend less time
in confinement, and the overall cost of juvenile corrections can be reduced. Congress
must send a profound message that speaks to a continued need for child safety, juvenile justice and delinquency prevention. This foundation is vital to Americas future.
Suggested Offset: FY 09 $1,000,000 Offset: Grants Consolidation
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function Number: 750
Program Title: OJP: Violent Crime Reduction Partnership Initiative Program
2008 Enacted: $ 0
2009 POTUS Request: $200,000
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $383,513
Rationale for Amount: To create multi-jurisdictional task forces, as well as expand initiatives between to communities experiencing increases and crime towards
the attainment of establishing flexible programs reflective of community needs.
Priority: Congress must take the lead in forging partnerships, as well as initiatives to address intricately interrelated variables (public policies, societal, demographic and neighborhoods) that exacerbate social dislocations (unemployment;
crime; welfare dependency; high school dropout; etc.) and poverty.
Suggested Offset: $383,513 FY 09 Juvenile Justice Programs Grants Consolidation
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function Number: 750
Program Title: OJP: Byrne Public Safety and Protection Program
2008 Enacted: $ 0
2009 POTUS Request: $200,000
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $97,644
Rationale for Amount: To restore reduction in funding stemming from the replacement of Project Safe Neighborhoods, drug courts, the cannabis eradication program, the cleanup of methamphetamine labs, and reentry programs.
Priority: Throughout his tenure, the President has progressively gutted vital
community-oriented programs that are in the trenches of helping ex-offenders over-
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come civil and legal barriers hindering their ability to reunite with family members
and love ones.
Suggested Offset: $2,300 from Research, Evaluation/Demonstration Program;
$5,800 Regional Information Sharing System; $89,544 Grant Consolidations.
Staff/Member: Helen Mitchell, Rep. Danny K. Davis
Function Number: 750
Program Title: OJP: Community Policing Development
2008 Enacted: $ 0
2009 POTUS Request: $4,000
Additional Funding on Top of POTUS Request: $300,000
Rationale for Amount: To restore reductions stemming from consolidation of
COPS into the OJP and streamlining of administrative overhead to ensure adequate
funding for flexible programs that bring various stakeholders together, as well as
communities hit by growing violence and lawlessness towards workable solutions at
the local level.
Priority: With the rise of gangs, drug activities, black-on-black crime, hand guns
and school killings Congress is obligated to petition for continued solid funding towards the creation of initiatives to disruptive activities compromising the safety of
our children, family, and community at large.
Suggested Offset: $100,000 FY 09 OJP-wide rescissions; $100,000 COPS rescissions; and $100,000 Working Capital Fund Rescissions
Mr. COURTNEY. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you for
your interest and particularly your endurance. And I will do my
best to summarize the written statement which we have submitted
for the record.
We have heard a lot already just in the last few witnesses about
the shortcomings of this budget in terms of dealing with domestic
needs. I would like to shift gears for a moment and talk about the
impact of this budget on the continuing decline of Americas United
States Navy.
When George Bush was sworn into office in 2001, the United
States Navy numbered 341 multi-mission battle force ships. Today
the fleet is at a 91-year low of 279 ships, 34 ships below the Navys
own requirements.
I want to repeat that point. Today we have a maritime strategy
in this country to have a Navy of 313 ships and today we are at
279.
The Presidents budget which was submitted earlier in January
once again continues the outrageous decline of the size of our fleet
with a submission of only seven new ships. If you take the average
shelf life of a ship or submarine of 30 years and do the math, the
Presidents budget will continue again the steady decline in terms
of the size of our fleet size.
This is at a time when 95 percent of goods being imported to the
United States come by sea and also it is at the same time in which
there are new maritime forces that are growing.
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The New York Times earlier this week on Monday had a story
about the fact that the Chinese Navy now is in full active programs
to build up its nuclear Navy. By the end of this decade, they will
have more submarines than the United States Navy and the trajectory in terms of what they are doing in terms of the build-up indicates that we really have no clear picture in terms of how large the
build-up will be.
To put this in perspective, Mr. Chairman, when Ronald Reagan
left office, we had a 600 ship Navy in this country. In my district,
Groton, Connecticut, we were building five submarines a year. We
have been limping along at one submarine a year for the last 15
years.
And a chart is attached to my testimony which shows the fact
that the present size of the submarine fleet will continue to exist
only because of the legacy submarines that were built back in the
1980s. We are going to dip below the Navys finding of the minimum that is necessary of 48 ship submarine fleet and it will stay
there for a period of almost 12 to 15 years, again at exactly the
same time when a new maritime force is gathering steam in the
Peoples Republic of China.
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Again, my statement also goes into some of the other key issues
in terms of the State of Connecticut that this budget falls far short.
Just one brief mention is just in the area of education underfunding, the No Child Left Behind Act is $85 billion behind the
curve. School districts that rely on antiquated property taxes are
totally overwhelmed in terms of mandated class coming from
Washington. And, once again, we get another budget which just
continues to add to that burden.
And hopefully a lot of confidence in Mr. Spratt and the Committee is going to again begin the work that we started last year
to redirect the priorities of this country to face challenges that we
face both abroad and at home.
And I thank you for again your patience and interest.
[The prepared statement of Joe Courtney follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt and members of the Committee, I want to thank you for giving
me the opportunity to testify before you today.
While the Presidents budget contains $537 billion for non-war related activities,
I remain concerned that there is not enough emphasis placed on our shipbuilding
needs.
In 2001, the U.S. Navy numbered 341 multi-mission battle force ships. Today,
however, the fleet is at a 91-year low of 279 ships34 below the Navys own requirements. While the Department of Defenses (DOD) overall budget has increased
by nearly 81 percent since 2001 (excluding supplementals), the Navys budget for
new ship construction has increased only 12 percent. Had Navy shipbuilding budgets kept pace with the increases in DOD spending, this years budget request should
have asked for $19.4 billion, rather than the $12 billion asked forjust seven new
naval ships.
As a result of this underfunding of shipbuilding, our Navy fleet will be strained
as it tries to accomplish more with less. Last year, Congress added funding to the
Navys shipbuilding budget to begin construction on five ships that were not requested in the Presidents budget. Specifically, $50 million was added to begin construction on the 10th ship of the LPD-17 class, $300 million was added for advanced
construction of the 12th, 13th, & 14th ships of the T-AKE class and $588 million
was added to accelerate construction of 2 Virginia class submarines per year.
The Presidents FY2009 budget does not provide the follow-on funding needed to
complete construction of the LPD-17 or the 13th and 14th ships of the T-AKE class.
And, while the budget accelerated the Virginia class to 2 per year in 2011 using
last years additional advanced procurement funding, it fails to include sufficient
funding to further accelerate Virginia class to two per year in FY2010. In order to
get to the minimum goal of a 313-ship Navy, we are going to need to invest more
in our shipbuilding programs, both this year and in the years ahead. I would like
to introduce a copy for the Record of an article in the February 28, 2008 edition
of the New York Times .
Like many of you, I was extremely disappointed, but not exactly surprised, to see
a budget from President Bush that continues the country on a path of fiscal irresponsibility. The budget contains the same misguided domestic policy priorities we
have seen over the last seven years that continue to burden the low and middle
class.
I want to thank Chairman Spratt and the Committee for laying the foundation
in the FY 2008 Budget Resolution for the College Cost Reduction and Access Act,
enacted in September 2007. A strong education foundation is the roadmap to a
strong middle class. We need to ensure that our teachers have the resources needed
to provide students the training necessary to gain the skills to compete in the 21
century. Our economy cannot prosper if we do not invest in education. The FY 2009
budget is frozen at last years level even as school districts throughout eastern Connecticut are struggling to balance their budgets while providing a quality education
in a safe environment. Once again, the Administration shortchanges the elementary
and secondary education budget, providing only $125 million above last year for a
cumulative shortfall to the NCLB law of $85.6 billion. At a time when families are
struggling throughout this country, President Bush provides just a pittance of an
increase to Title I funding that doesnt even cover the inflation rate. In FY 2008,
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over $13 million in Title I funding was provided to eastern Connecticut towns. As
towns and cities are squeezed and students and families face rising college costs,
this Administration mistakenly terminates 47 critical education programs, further
reducing its investment in education by $3.2 billion.
Right now, 92 percent of Connecticuts Medicare population are experiencing higher Medicare Part B payments and reduced benefits in order to subsidize increased
benefits for only 8 percent of the population through Medicare Advantage. There resources could be used to improve traditional Medicare.
At the same time, the President proposes drastic cuts to Medicare & Medicaid Reimbursements for hospital services. Already, Connecticuts full-service hospitals are
facing financial hardship due to rising operating costs, new costly technologies, labor
shortages and an increasing number of uninsured Americans that are depending on
them as a health safety net. The Federal Government should be supporting hospitals in their health care mission, not providing further challenges. The Presidents
budget would be devastating for eastern Connecticut, with a projected loss of over
$90 million over the next five years.
The budget is an assault on science and medical advancements as well. The National Institute of Health (NIH) is our nations best hope for curing and treating so
many of the illnesses that families battle on a daily basis. We are dependent on
their research and research grants to provide advancements in curing cancer, heart
disease and diabetes and many other diseases. Yet, President Bush has proposed
flat funding NIH at $29.5 billion for Fiscal Year 2008. Since 2003, funding for NIH
has failed to keep pace with biomedical inflationresulting in fewer research
grants, cancelled clinical trials and a reluctance to start new investigations due to
uncertain funding. My state of Connecticut received 1,200 grants in 2007 for a total
of $469,206,694. Funding went to research projects at the University of Connecticut
Storrs and Yale, both world renowned academic institutions working to make scientific advancements. If the Presidents budget is accepted, these institutions and
others throughout the country will not be able to get the funding necessary to conduct todays research in order to find tomorrows cures.
With the current mortgage market crisis, Low-income Americans have been feeling the greatest impact. The Community Development Block Grant program is an
effective program that helps support homeownership, housing rehabilitation and
economic development programs. This proven HUD program not only helps improve
individual communities, but serves to strengthen the local economy. Yet once again,
President Bush has attempted to dismantle a program serving the housing needs
of low- and middle-income Americans. He has proposed merging the CDBG with
other programs and decreasing the spending by $86 million. Given the turbulence
in the housing market, now is not the time to cut programs that support housing
development.
Connecticut, like much of the Northeast, is vulnerable to fuel oil shortages and
price spikes due to the high demand for heating oil. The Energy Information Administration projected that the cost to heat a home this year increased by $375 to
$1,841. Families in eastern Connecticut are paying approximately $3.40 per gallon
for heating oil, nearly a dollar increase from last year. I have seen no indication
that this trend will reverse itself, so I am perplexed as to why the Administration
cut by $320 million. This cut will mean that Connecticut receives $6.6 million less
which will be troubling to families that avail themselves of LIHEAP funding in eastern Connecticut.
At a time when ensuring our nations security is of paramount importance, President Bush cuts funding for a variety of first responder programs. It outright eliminates the COPS program, which provides grants to communities to hire and train
police officers and improve their telecommunications capacity. The budget cuts $465
million from Fire Grants that help local departments obtain equipment, gear, vehicles and additional training. Connecticut would stand to lose over $5 million from
this budget cut alone.
The President gives little attention to infrastructure investment. The budget cuts
the FederalAid Highways program by $800 million to maintain current services.
This funding is critical to my district and the entire State of Connecticut, which
stands to lose $8.3 million. Eastern Connecticut faces many unique circumstances
and the state itself has 48 percent of roads and 34 percent of bridges are deteriorating. The budget also significantly cuts the Clean Water State Revolving Fund by
$148 million below the level needed to maintain current services. The cost to Connecticut if this federal water quality program is cut stands at nearly $2 million.
I urge you to restore these ill-conceived budget cuts. It is important to the families, schools and businesses in eastern Connecticut. Thank you Mr. Chairman.
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Mr. ETHERIDGE. I thank the gentleman from Connecticut and for
his commitment to not only his people in Connecticut, but the people of America. Thank you for your testimony.
The next member we will recognize for testimony is the gentle
lady from Hawaii, Ms. Hirono, and welcome. We are pleased to receive your testimony. You are recognized for five minutes. And
without objection, your full statement will be entered into the
record.
STATEMENT OF HON. MAZIE HIRONO, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF HAWAII
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Second, surface transportation funding. The Presidents proposed
cuts in transportation funding below the levels authorized by Congress is the wrong move at a time when we need to be investing
in building and repairing our nations vital transportation infrastructure.
These projects would provide jobs during this economic downturn
and ensure our future economic competitiveness. The proposed cuts
would cost my state an estimated 2.5 million in 2009.
Third, Clean Water State Revolving Fund and Drinking Water
State Revolving Funds. The Presidents budget provides the lowest
level of funding ever measured in terms of purchasing power for
the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Drinking Water
State Revolving Fund.
Our states and local communities rely on these programs to upgrade and replace our aging waste water collection and treatment
systems and to ensure safe drinking water for all of our communities. These funds ensure the health and safety of our citizens and
provided needed jobs.
Fourth, job training. We must help our citizens adjust to changing demands in our economy and ensure that we have a welltrained workforce. Please reject the Presidents proposal to cut
funding for job training by 1.1 billion compared with the level provided in 2008.
Fifth, crime prevention. The Presidents budget estimates several
law enforcement programs created by Congress that assist state
and local governments in combating crime, including the Edward
Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Program, the Byrne Discretionary Grants, Drug Courts, and the Community Oriented Policing Services, COPS Program. Please reject these eliminations and
restore funding to these proven programs.
Last, but not least, Social Services Block Grant, SSBG. Please reject the Presidents proposal to cut SSBG funding by almost 30 percent. This grant gives states the discretion to provide social services such as child care, child welfare, home-based services, employment services, services for the disabled, depending on needs in each
state.
Many working families cannot get by without the support these
programs provide. The Presidents proposed cuts would cost Hawaii
some 2.1 million in 2009.
These programs are just a sampling of the many successful programs that Congress has created and supported over the years to
help our communities and to encourage economic development.
I ask the Committee build on the excellent work it accomplished
last year and reject the Presidents proposed cuts.
Finally, I ask that the Committee reject the proposed cuts to educational, health, and housing programs benefitting native Hawaiians. As one of only two members in the House representing Hawaii, I ask that you support continued funding for these authorized
and long-standing programs for our indigenous peoples, the native
Hawaiians.
Mahalo and aloha for listening to my concerns.
[The prepared statement of Mazie Hirono follows:]
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PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, and members of the House Committee
on the Budget, I am very grateful for this opportunity to provide my input as you
work to prepare the Budget Resolution for Fiscal Year 2009. I am deeply concerned
about the many cuts to vital programs proposed in President Bushs budget, including those affecting veterans, Medicare, Medicaid, homeland security, medical research, education, environmental programs, and so much more. In fact, given all of
the problems with the Presidents budget, one hardly knows where to begin or end.
Ive decided to focus my remarks on some of his proposed cuts that, if sustained,
would severely impact the economies of my state and yours. I am deeply concerned
about the effect the current economic downturn will have in my district and want
to be sure that the investment we made by passing the economic stimulus package
is not undermined by under-funding critical federal programs.
I represent Hawaiis second district, which is comprised of seven inhabited islands. Most of my district is rural. Many of the challenges facing my district are
unique because it is spread over many islands and is so remote from the mainland
United States; however, I know that we share many of the concerns of rural communities throughout the country.
I ask that the Committee ensure that vital federal programs that help support
economic development in our communities are maintained at least at FY2008 purchasing levels in FY2009. Since the release of the Presidents budget, I have heard
from many nonprofit groups in Hawaii that rely on these federal funds to leverage
their ability to raise additional funds for economic development, job training, job
creation, and other vital programs to move our economy forward; they are deeply
worried about the proposed cuts. The following are among the most important programs for localities in my district:
Community Development Block Grant Program (CDBG). The Presidents budget
cuts CDBG by almost 20% of what would be needed to maintain 2008 purchasing
power. CDBG funds are highly valued by the counties in my district because these
funds provide flexibility for local governments to respond to local problems, whether
in providing affordable housing, economic development, job creation, or meeting
other critical needs. We should be increasing, not decreasing, this assistance. The
proposed cut would cost my state some $2.8 million at a very difficult time.
Surface Transportation Funding. The Presidents proposed cuts in transportation funding below the levels authorized by Congress is the wrong move at a time
when we need to be investing in building and repairing our nations vital transportation infrastructure. These projects would provide jobs during this economic downturn and ensure our future economic competitiveness. The proposed cuts would cost
my state an estimated $2.5 million in 2009.
Clean Water State Revolving Fund and Drinking Water State Revolving Funds.
The Presidents budget provides the lowest level of funding ever (measured in terms
of purchasing power) for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Drinking
Water State Revolving Fund. Our states and local communities rely on these programs to upgrade and replace our aging wastewater collection and treatment systems and to ensure safe drinking water for all our communities. These funds ensure
the health and safety of our citizens and provide needed jobs.
Job Training. We must help our citizens adjust to changing demands in our
economy and ensure that we have a well-trained workforce. Please reject the Presidents proposal to cut funding for job training by $1.1 billion compared with the
level provided in 2008.
Crime Prevention. The Presidents budget eliminates several law enforcement
programs created by Congress that assist state and local governments in combating
crime, including the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Program, Byrne
Discretionary Grants, Drug Courts, and the Community-Oriented Policing Services
(COPS) program. Please reject these eliminations and restore funding to these proven programs.
Social Services Block Grant (SSBG). Please reject the Presidents proposal to cut
SSBG funding by almost 30 percent. This grant gives states the discretion to provide social services such as child care, child welfare, home-based services, employment services, and services for the disabled, depending on needs in each state. Many
working families cannot get by without the support these programs provide. The
Presidents proposed cuts would cost Hawaii some $2.1 million in 2009.
This list of programs is just a sampling of the many successful and valued programs that Congress has created and supported over the years to help our communities and to encourage economic development. I ask that the Committee build on
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the excellent work it accomplished last year and reject the Presidents proposed
cuts.
Finally, I ask that the Committee reject the proposed cuts to educational, health,
and housing programs benefiting Native Hawaiians. As one of only two members
in the House representing Hawaii, I ask that you support continued funding for
these authorized and longstanding programs.
Mahalo for listening to my concerns.
Mr. ETHERIDGE. I thank the gentle lady for her testimony, for
her great advocacy not only for her state, but for the needs of this
country.
The next member to testify will be the gentleman from Texas,
Mr. Rodriguez. Welcome. We are pleased to receive your testimony.
You are recognized for five minutes. And without objection, your
full statement will be entered into the record.
STATEMENT OF HON. CIRO RODRIGUEZ, A REPRESENTATIVE
IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS
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The President requests the funding levels of ten million for 2009
that would lead to fulfilling only five percent of the programs
needs. This program has received as much as 100 million in annual
appropriations. And to be cut to ten million is a drastic cut.
The President over the last two years has requested only ten million for this program. Many small, rural, and low-income communities rely on the program like this to provide the most basic necessities such as water and waste water infrastructure along the border. I strongly urge the Committees recommendation of 100 million for EPA U.S. Mexico Border Program.
Thirdly, recent routine safety inspections found that four dams
operated and maintained by the IBWC were all found to be unsafe.
The IBWC does not believe that they are an immediate danger, but
continuing to neglect will lead to disrepair and danger in these particular areas.
The IBWC has estimated that the U.S. cost to rehabilitate these
dams infrastructure is 30 million. The largest and most need of repair is the Omistot Dam. The water reservoir created by the dam
is the Omistot national recreation area. This unit of the National
Park System hosts over a million tourists each year.
This dam is located on the Mexican-U.S. border. And this year,
the President requested only one million for the dam rehabilitation
at the IBWC. This one million is barely enough to maintain the
brand new dams and nowhere near the needs for rehabilitating
those that are in danger.
I request that the Committee maintain for this infrastructure
and that we request the Committee recommend $30 million for the
IBWC construction account.
And, fourthly, the Southwest Border Prosecution Initiative and
the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program reimbursement for
states and counties and other jurisdictions for costs incurred for
undertaking a federal responsibility such as prosecuting federal
cases or incarceration of federal crimes with aliens.
The Southwest Border Prosecution Initiative was funded at 30
million in 2008, a ten million cut from the 2007, and is authorized
at 750 million for 2006 and 850 million for 2007 and 950 million
for 2008. But in 2008, it only received 410 million, almost a cut of
a half of its resources.
The reimbursement that is received is also a fraction of the cost
that is needed in order to make this happen. I request the Committee recommend 50 million above the initial request and 950 million in order for us to continue to move forward on the prosecution
initiatives.
And, finally, an issue that I wanted to share with you, the Animal, Plant Health Inspection Services that are important. I respectfully ask or request that the Committee consider 12 million
for the cattle, fever tick eradication program. It is a real serious
program that we have on the border with Mexico and the fever
ticks do domestic damage in our area. So I ask for your support in
that area.
And I want to thank you personally for allowing me this opportunity to testify before your Committee. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Ciro Rodriguez follows:]
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PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. CIRO D. RODRIGUEZ, A REPRESENTATIVE
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS
IN
Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Ryan and Members of the Committee: I would
like to begin by telling you a bit about the district I represent, the 23rd District
of Texas,. My district is very large, spanning 785 miles of border with Mexico. I also
represent South and Northwest San Antonio. My district is both very urban in San
Antonio and very rural in West Texas. We have farming and ranching and we have
state of the art military and biotech research. And just like the district itself, the
needs of the district are very diverse.
As you well know, the President released his budget requests early this month.
That budget does not reflect the many priorities and needs of my constituents and
I hope this committee, under the leadership of Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan, will provide a budget blueprint that better suits the needs of my district.
There are many federal programs that are valuable to my constituents that would
be negatively impacted under the Presidents proposals such as JAG law enforcement grants, EDA grants and others programs, but I am glad to have this opportunity to be before the committee on behalf of my constituents to convey some of
their priorities and I would strongly urge this committee to consider them in their
budget.
BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE (BRAC)
Military installations in San Antonio are expected to bring an unprecedented economic boom to the entire region. San Antonio will provide much of healthcare as
well as the medical training for the entire Department of Defense as a result of
BRAC. Funding to implement BRAC recommendations is widely supported in Congress. Any delay or under funding can increase future construction costs. I respectfully request the committee not only provide for full funding of the BRAC recommendations but also provide legislative language to prioritize any BRAC construction related to Defense Health Programs. I believe this language will assure
our military is prepared to train and provide for adequate healthcare by the BRAC
recommended deadline.
US-MEXICO BORDER PROGRAM
A recent routine safety inspection found that four dams operated and maintained
by IBWC were all found to be unsafe. IBWC does not believe there is immediate
danger, but continued neglect could lead to disrepair and danger. IBWC has estimated the U.S. costs to rehabilitate dam infrastructure to be around $30 million.
The largest and most in need of repair is the Amistad Dam in my district. The
water reservoir created by the dam is the Amistad National Recreation Area. This
unit of the National Parks system hosts over a million tourists a year and is home
to some of the best bass fishing in the world. Despite these extensive infrastructure
challenges, the median appropriation for IBWCs construction account between
FY95 and FY07 is $5.939 million. This year the President requested $1 million for
dam rehabilitation at the IBWC. $1 million is barely enough to maintain a brand
new dam, and no where near enough to rehabilitate those in danger. A significant
commitment to maintaining and rehabilitating our infrastructure is needed. I request this committee recommend $30 million for IBWCs construction account.
LOCAL REIMBURSEMENTS IN DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Southwest Border Prosecutor Initiative (SWBPI) and the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) reimburses State, county, and other jurisdictions for
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costs incurred for undertaking a federal responsibility such as prosecuting federal
cases or incarceration of federal criminal aliens. The Southwest Border Prosecutor
Initiatives was funded at $30 million in FY08 a $10 million cut from FY07. SCAAP
is authorized at $750 million for FY2006, $850 million for FY2007, and $950 million
for FY2008-FY2011. In FY08, SCAAP received $410 million. The reimbursement
that is received is only a fraction of the costs that our local communities are incurring. The Presidents budget has been trimming down the Southwest Border Prosecutors program and has eliminated funding for SCAAP every year. I believe the
Federal Government needs to pay for its responsibilities and should not place their
burden on local governments. I request the committee recommend $50 million for
the Southwest Border Prosecutors Initiative and that SCAAP be funded at its current authorized level.
CATTLE FEVER TICK ERADICATION PROGRAM
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are teachers who do not have access to copy machines anymore because the schools have shut them down.
That is why I am disappointed in the Presidents budget request
for fiscal year 2009 and why I believe we must provide greater resources for education than the President has suggested.
President Bushs budget ignores inflation and increases in student enrollment by proposing to spend about the same amount as
last year for the Department of Education. Providing a mere onehalf of one percent increase in funding for No Child Left Behind
is essentially a cut and leaves funding about $15 billion below the
level authorized for 2009.
In addition, the budget proposed to redirect a greater proportion
of Title I funds to high schools. This redirection will translate into
even less funding to support K-8 education.
The Administration once again proposes a 300 million voucher
program for students in failing schools, this year called Pell Grants
for Kids, to be paid for by eliminating existing programs such as
Vocational Education State Grants, Native American, Native Hawaiian institutions, tribally-controlled, post secondary career and
technical institutions, Education Technology State Grants, and
Even Start, and dramatically cut others such as after school programs and minority-serving institutions.
In addition, the Presidents budget once again fails to fully fund
the Individual With Disabilities Education Act or IDEA. As the
Budget Committee is aware, the Federal Government made a commitment to provide 40 percent of the cost of educating children
with disabilities in 1975. Congress has failed to meet that commitment for over 29 years.
This is simply unacceptable. That is why I am here today to urge
the Committee to make education a top priority by fully funding
IDEA and increasing funding for the No Child Left Behind Act.
Mr. Chairman, I am also here today to oppose the Presidents attempt once again to eliminate the State Criminal Alien Assistance
Program in this budget. SCAAP reimburses state and local governments for the cost of incarcerating criminal aliens and it is vital
to border states such as California, which incarcerated disproportionately high share of undocumented criminal aliens.
In addition, the Presidents budget would eliminate several crucial programs that will affect the health and well-being of my constituents as well as the nation as a whole. For example, he proposes to eliminate the Urban Indian Health Program which provides unique services for those Native Americans living outside of
reservations as a result of federal relocation policies and the unfortunate socioeconomic realities that persist on reservations.
The Presidents budget also proposes to eliminate the Title 7
Health Professions programs. These programs aim to increase the
diversity of our healthcare workforce as well as improve the quality
of healthcare in low-income and racial and ethnic minority populations.
In addition, the budget includes no direct funding for the Drug
Court Program. It woefully under-funds many other important justice programs such as juvenile justice programs and prevention of
violence against women.
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Drug Courts are an effective and popular method for the judicial
system, mental health, social service, and treatment communities
to intervene and break the cycle of substance abuse, addiction, and
crime.
I am somewhat encouraged by the fact that the President has included some important funding increases for scientific research
that will help our nation to maintain its competitive position in the
global marketplace which is critical to my Silicon Valley district.
Unfortunately, he has once again chosen to rob Peter to pay Paul
by proposing to eliminate programs that have a proven track record
of aiding small businesses and creating new jobs.
He has not provided enough for science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics education to prepare the workforce we will need
to remain competitive in the future. He has not provided the funding for NASA that we will need to achieve the challenge and exploration goals he has set for the Agency while still performing its
core science and aeronautics activities.
As Chairman of the Congressional Asian-Pacific American Caucus, I would like to highlight three issues of importance to the
Asian-American Pacific Islander community in this years budget.
First, during World War II, Filipino soldiers fought under the
flag of the United States to help our nation secure victory. These
soldiers were denied veterans benefits that they were promised
and they earned. And it is my hope that this year, the House and
Senate will right that injustice by passing legislation to restore
those benefits. I ask that the Budget Committee make room within
the budget as they did last year within the budget resolution to accommodate this fix should legislation be passed.
Second, the College Cost Reduction Act of 2007 created a new
category of Asian-American Pacific Islander serving institutions of
higher education. We ask that the Budget Committee provide for
up to $25 million in funding for this newly-designated class of institutions.
Finally, in 2006, Congress passed legislation to preserve the interment camps where Japanese Americans were detained during
World War II. The National Park Service has been developing a
plan for the preservation of the sites and $5 million is needed in
the fiscal year 2009 budget to help make this happen.
I understand that the Budget Committee is being asked to make
these funding decisions in the context of a deficit. However, the
Federal Government has an obligation to invest in future growth.
Our nations historical commitment to education, healthcare, and
innovation and competitiveness has served us well and we must reaffirm that commitment in the fiscal year 2009 budget resolution.
I respectfully ask the Committee to fully fund IDEA and provide
substantial increases for the No Child Left Behind Act, allocate
sufficient funding for vital health programs, ensure that we can
maintain our international competitiveness in science and innovation.
I thank you for the opportunity to testify.
[The prepared statement of Mike Honda follows:]
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PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. MICHAEL M. HONDA, A REPRESENTATIVE
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
IN
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, and Members of the House Budget
Committee, thank you for this opportunity to express my views on what I believe
should be key priorities in the Fiscal Year 2009 federal budget. As a former Member
of this distinguished committee, it is a great pleasure to speak before you today.
Mr. Chairman, as a former teacher and principal, promoting quality education
continues to be one of my top priorities here in Congress. I voted in favor of the
No Child Left Behind Act with great trepidation. While I support setting higher
standards for our nations schools, I feared that without the necessary resources, the
legislation would impose unfunded mandates on our schools, our teachers, and our
students. Unfortunately, that fear has come true.
Today, I hear from countless numbers of teachers, principals, and school board
members who are struggling with the mandates set out by the No Child Left Behind
Act while facing severe budgetary cuts. In Santa Clara County, there are teachers
who have only been given one box of paper for their students for the entire year.
There are teachers who do not have access to copy machines anymore because the
schools have shut them down.
That is why I am disappointed in the Presidents Budget Request for Fiscal Year
2009, and why I believe we must provide greater resources for education than the
President has suggested. President Bushs budget ignores inflation and increases in
student enrollment by proposing to spend about the same amount as last year for
the Department of Education. Providing a mere one half of one percent increase in
funding for NCLB is essentially a cut, and leaves funding about $15 billion below
the level authorized for 2009. In addition, the budget proposes to redirect a greater
proportion of Title I funds to high schools. This redirection will translate into even
less funding to support K-8 education.
The Administration once again proposes a $300 million voucher program for students in failing schools, this year called Pell Grants for Kids, to be paid for by
eliminating existing programs such as Vocational Education State Grants, Native
American/Native Hawaiian Institutions, Tribally Controlled Postsecondary Career
and Technical Institutions, Education Technology State Grants and Even Start, and
dramatically cutting others, such as after school programs and minority serving institutions.
In addition, the Presidents budget once again fails to fully fund the Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA. As the Budget Committee is aware, the
Federal government made a commitment to provide 40% of the cost of educating
children with disabilities in 1975. Congress has failed to meet that commitment for
over 29 years. This is simply unacceptable. That is why I am here today to urge
the committee to make education a top priority by fully funding IDEA and increasing funding for the No Child Left Behind Act.
Mr. Chairman, I am also here today to oppose the Presidents attempt, once again,
to eliminate the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program in this budget. SCAAP
reimburses state and local governments for the costs of incarcerating criminal
aliens, and is vital to border states such as California which incarcerate a disproportionately high share of undocumented criminal aliens.
In addition, the Presidents budget would eliminate several crucial programs that
will affect the health and well being of my constituents as well as the nation as a
whole. For example, he proposes to eliminate the Urban Indian Health Program,
which provides unique services for those Native Americans living outside of reservations as a result of federal relocation policies and the unfortunate socio-economic realities that persist on reservations. The Presidents budget also proposes to eliminate the Title VII Health Professions Programs. These programs aim to increase the
diversity of our healthcare workforce as well as improve the quality of health care
in low-income and racial and ethnic minority populations.
In addition, the budget includes no direct funding for the drug court program and
woefully underfunds many other important justice programs such as juvenile justice
programs and prevention of violence against women. Drug courts are an effective
and popular method for the judicial system, mental health, social service, and treatment communities to intervene and break the cycle of substance abuse, addiction,
and crime.
I am somewhat encouraged by the fact that the President has included some important funding increases for scientific research that will help our nation to maintain its competitive position in the global marketplace, which is critical to my Silicon Valley district. Unfortunately, he has once again chosen to rob Peter to pay
Paul by proposing to eliminate programs that have a proven track record of aiding
small businesses and creating new jobs, he has not provided enough for Science,
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Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Education to prepare the workforce we
will need to remain competitive in the future, and he has not provided the funding
NASA will need to achieve the challenging exploration goals he has set for the agency while still performing its core science and aeronautics activities.
As Chairman of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, I would like
to highlight three issues of importance to the AAPI community in this years budget.
First, during World War II, Filipino soldiers fought under the flag of the United
States to help our nation secure victory. These soldiers were denied veterans benefits that they earned, and it is my hope that this year the House and Senate will
right that injustice by passing legislation to restore those benefits. I ask that the
Budget Committee make room within the budget resolution to accommodate this fix
should legislation be passed.
Second, the College Cost Reduction Act of 2007 created a new category of Asian
American and Pacific Islander Serving Institutions of higher education. We ask that
the budget committee provide for up to $25 million in funding for this newly designated class of institutions.
Finally, in 2006, Congress passed legislation to preserve the internment camps
where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II. The National Parks
Service has been developing a plan for the preservation of the sites, and $5 million
is needed in the Fiscal Year 2009 budget to help make this happen.
I understand that the Budget Committee is being asked to make these funding
decisions in the context of a deficit. However, the Federal Government has an obligation to invest in future growth. Our nations historical commitment to education,
health care, and innovation and competitiveness has served us well, and we must
reaffirm that commitment in the FY 2009 budget resolution.
I respectfully ask the committee to fully fund IDEA and provide substantial increases for the No Child Left Behind Act, allocate sufficient funding for vital health
programs, and ensure that we can maintain our international competitiveness in
science and innovation. Thank you for the opportunity to testify.
Mr. ETHERIDGE. I thank the gentleman for his testimony. Thank
you, sir.
The next member to testify will be the gentleman from Vermont,
Mr. Welch. Welcome. We are pleased to receive your testimony.
You are recognized for five minutes. And without objection, your
full statement will be entered into the record.
STATEMENT OF HON. PETER WELCH, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF VERMONT
Mr. WELCH. Mr. Chairman, thank you very much. Rather than
make a traditional presentation dealing with the specifics of the
Presidents budget, I would like to use my time, if I could, to talk
about its real world impact on people that I represent in Vermont.
There are Vermonters who will be directly affected by the decisions
that we make in this budget.
Scott West, Mr. Chairman, is a veteran of the National Guard.
He lives in the town of Albany in the Northeast Kingdom of
Vermont. He used to drive a truck for a living. And when he was
deployed to Kuwait in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, he suffered severe injuries to his shoulder, back, and wrist. In May, the
pain from his injuries got so bad he could not continue his job as
a truck driver.
Nine months ago, he filed his claim for increased disability compensation from the VA. As of today, he continues to wait for the
VA to process paperwork and award him the benefits to which he
is entitled. And his next hearing is not scheduled until April 15,
which will be nearly a full year from when he filed his claim. He
has run out of money and his bills continue to mount.
Last year, this Committee made an unprecedented commitment
to the care of our nations veterans budgeting the largest increase
in the 77-year history of the VA and a larger increase than the
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combined total of the six previous years in Congress. And good
work.
This increase is going to allow the VA to hire an additional 1,800
claim processors to help ensure that veterans like Scott will receive
in a timely way the support they have earned. And I thank the
Committee and the leadership for its commitment there.
Peter and Irma McShane, they live in Pownal, Vermont, senior
citizens, live frugally on $1,452 per month. Yet, on that limited
amount of money, they are $22.00 too much to quality for food
stamps, so they have a tough time trying to make their family
budget with coupons and shopping around for the best deals. But
no amount of their thriftiness can make up for the dramatic increases in the cost of home heating oil.
Purchasing enough heating oil last winter cost the McShanes
over $1,500. That is over a month of what their total income is. As
the cold weather began to hit Vermont last fall, Peter and Irma
needed help or they were not going to be able to afford to heat their
home. They applied for fuel assistance through the state in November and received help through LIHEAP, the Low Income Heating
Assistance Program.
That is an indispensable program to ensuring that Vermonters
like the McShanes do not have to choose between heating and eating. And even as fuel prices have skyrocketed, tripling, as you
know, since 2001, the Bush budget would cut LIHEAP by $367 million below the amount needed to maintain services at the current
level.
Vermont alone would lose $1.87 million when adjusted for inflation and I strongly encourage the Committee to restore and expand
LIHEAP funding so that none of our neighbors already struggling
to get by are put at risk when confronted with heating their homes
next winter.
Meanwhile, I would like to share a letter I received a couple of
weeks ago from Margaret Kenney of Fletcher, Vermont about
healthcare and the rising premiums and the rising deductibles that
raise the question of whether it is even practical to have insurance.
She and her husband ran their own woodworking business for 13
years, often working six and seven days a week. Each year, her
health insurance cost more and provided less. Her deductibles have
increased from $5,000 to $10,000 and now she has got insurance
with a $25,000 deductible.
And what she writes is this. This to me translates to no insurance. We actually avoid going to the doctor because we cannot do
that and afford the monthly premiums. We are seriously thinking
about giving it up and going with no insurance. We are still in our
sixties, still a few years away from Medicare, and it seems to be
the wrong time in our lives to be without insurance.
Now, we cannot fix our nations healthcare crisis through the federal budget alone. It is going to, of course, require a comprehensive
healthcare reform. But, unfortunately, President Bushs proposed
budget takes us exactly in the wrong direction, calling for a half
a trillion dollars in cuts to Medicare and Medicaid.
These cuts will force states to cut back on coverage and will further raise insurance premiums by exacerbating the cost shift. And
I encourage the Committee to reject these reckless cuts and to
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work to ensure that families like the Kenneys can obtain coverage
at an affordable price.
I want to just tell a story about Chief Bossi, Anthony Bossi from
the City of Rutland. They have seen a frightening increase in violent crime and drug abuse over the past year and they have had
multiple drug-related shootings in recent months.
The scope of the problem cannot be addressed by the limited resources available in the Rutland Police Department and Chief
Bossi relies on funding from federal sources to expand Rutlands
law enforcement activities.
And despite the proven record of the Byrne Grant Program in reducing crime in Vermont and across the county, the Bush budget
would cut funding by 174 million below what is needed simply to
maintain services at the current level, something that would translate in Vermont losing $435,000 or 13 police officer positions.
And the City of Rutland is by no means alone in their need for
additional resources to fight the very severe problem of illegal
drugs. Towns in all corners of Vermont, Rutland, Barre, Saint Albans are experiencing similar issues.
And, finally, Mr. Chairman, Gretchen Austin Ward, a mother of
three from Windsor, recently called my office to express her desperation about the rising cost of college education. Already burdened by the debt of sending her first two kids through college, she
simply literally cannot afford to send her third child to college.
When we first began offering Pell Grants in the 1970s, they covered 77 percent, and I know you are extremely familiar with this,
77 percent of the average cost of a four-year public institution.
Today it is 36 percent.
We have taken some positive steps in Congress over the past
year, cutting interest rates on Stafford loans, increasing the size of
the Pell Grant. We made the largest commitment to college affordability since the GI Bill passed in 1944. But we have got to continue the effort and fund these programs.
But at the same time, the Federal Government cannot simply
write a blank check to our countrys institutions. We do have to
make sure that the higher education institutions help us on the
cost side.
Mr. Chairman, thank you again for the opportunity to convey
these Vermont stories to you today. I look forward to working with
you and the Committee over the next several weeks to help craft
a budget that is fiscally responsible, but absolutely reflects the
needs and priorities of Vermonters and all Americans. Thank you,
Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Peter Welch follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Ryan, and Members of the Committee, I would
like to thank you for this opportunity to discuss the federal budget and its impact
on the State of Vermont. The federal budget is not an abstract document confined
to the halls of Washington. Rather, it has a direct impact on citizens across the
country.
Rather than make a traditional presentation detailing the impact of the Presidents budget on programs, I would like to use my time today to illustrate its real
world impact on people, in particular, the people I represent in Vermont. I want to
share with you the voices of Vermonters by highlighting the cases of several
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Vermonters I have talked to over the last year. These are Vermonters for whom the
decisions we make in this budget will make a real difference in their ability to make
ends meet in these difficult economic times.
Scott West is a veteran of the National Guard who lives in the town of Albany
in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont. He used to drive a truck for a living. While
deployed to Kuwait in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Scott suffered injuries
to his shoulder, back, and wrist. In May the pain from his injuries got so bad that
he couldnt continue his job as a truck driver.
Nearly nine months ago Mr. West filed a claim for increased disability compensation from the VA, and as of today, he continues to wait for the VA to process his
paperwork and award him the benefits to which he is entitled. His next hearing
isnt scheduled until April 15, which will be nearly a full year from when he first
filed his claim. Meanwhile, he has virtually run out of money and his bills continue
to mount.
Last year, this Committee made an unprecedented commitment to the care of our
nations veterans, budgeting the largest funding increase in the 77-year history of
the Veterans Administration and a larger increase than the combined total of the
six previous years in Congress. This increase will allow the VA to hire an additional
1,800 claims processors to help ensure that veterans like Scott will receive the support they deserve in a timely manner. I thank you for your leadership and would
respectfully encourage the Committee to continue this commitment to veterans as
it develops a budget for 2009.
Peter and Irma McShane live in Pownal, Vermont. They are senior citizens who
live very frugally on $1452 per month with very little, if any, to spare. Incredibly,
they make $22 too much to qualify for food stamps, so they always use coupons and
shop around to make sure they get the best deals on basic necessities.
But no amount of thriftiness can make up for the dramatic increases in the price
of home heating oil we have seen in the last year. Purchasing enough heating oil
to last the winter would cost the McShanes over $1500. As the cold weather began
to hit Vermont last fall, Peter and Irma needed help, or they were not going to be
able to afford to heat their home. Fortunately, they applied for fuel assistance
through the state in November and received much needed help through the LowIncome Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP).
LIHEAP is indispensable to ensuring that Vermonters like the McShanes dont
have to choose between heating their home or putting a meal on the table. Even
as fuel prices have skyrocketed, tripling since 2001, President Bushs budget would
cut LIHEAP by $367 million below the amount needed to maintain services at the
current level. Vermont alone will lose $1.87 million when adjusted for inflation. I
strongly encourage the Committee to restore and expand LIHEAP funding so that
none of our neighbors already struggling to get by are put at risk when confronted
with heating their homes next winter.
Meanwhile, I would like to share with you a letter I received a couple of weeks
ago from Ms. Margaret Kinne of Fletcher, Vermont about the rising cost of health
care premiums that force her to pay deductibles so large that it calls into the point
of even having insurance. She and her husband ran their own woodworking business for 13 years, often working 6 or 7 days a week. Each year, her health insurance
always cost more, and provided less coverage. Her deductibles have increased from
$5,000 to $10,000 to $25,000. She writes:
This to me translates to no insurance * * * we actually avoid going to the doctor
because we cant do that and afford the monthly premiums. * * *We are seriously
thinking about giving it up and going with no insurance * * * but we are in our
sixties (still a few years from Medicare) and it seems to be the wrong time in our
lives to be without insurance.
While we cannot fix our nations healthcare crisis through the federal budget
alonethis will require comprehensive health care reform, which I supportwe can
help by making investments that lower cost and extend coverage. Unfortunately,
President Bushs proposed budget takes us in exactly the wrong direction, calling
for over half a trillion dollars in cuts to Medicare and Medicaid. These cuts will
force states to cut back on coverage and will further raise insurance premiums by
exacerbating the cost shift. I encourage the Committee to reject these reckless cuts
and to work to ensure that families like the Kinnes can obtain coverage at an affordable price.
I recently had the chance to sit down with Police Chief Anthony Bossi from the
city of Rutland, Vermont. Rutland has seen a frightening increase in violent crime
and drug abuse over the past year and has experienced multiple drug related shootings in recent months. The scope of the problem is beyond what can be addressed
with local and state resources alone. So Chief Bossi relies on funding from the federal sources to expand Rutlands law enforcement and drug prevention capabilities.
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Despite the proven track record of the Byrne grant program in reducing crime in
Vermont and across the country, President Bush would cut funding by $174 million
below what is needed to maintain services at the current level. In Vermont, this will
result in a loss of $435,000, essentially defunding as many as 13 police officer positions. The city of Rutland is not alone in their need for additional resources to fight
the scourge of illegal drugs in their community. Towns in all corners of Vermont,
from Rutland, to Barre, to St. Albans, are experiencing similarly worrisome trends.
For those communities, small and large, that are struggling to prevent violent
crime, I urge the Committee to reverse this cut.
Finally, a mother from Windsor recently called my office to express her frustration about the rising cost of a college education. Already burdened by the debt of
sending her first two children through college, she simply cannot afford to send her
third child to school.
When we first began offering Pell grants in the late 1970s, they covered 77 percent of the average cost of a four-year public institution. Today, they cover just 36
percent. This trend cannot continue.
Congress has taken positive steps over the past year, cutting the interest rates
on Stafford loans and increasing the size of the Pell grant. We made the largest
commitment to college affordability since the GI Bill passed in 1944. We must now
work to fully fund these critical programs.
But at the same time, the Federal Government cannot simply write blank checks
to our countrys institutions of higher education. If every increased dollar in financial aid gets burned by an increased dollar in tuition, students, families, and taxpayers will continue to fall behind. While we must provide financial assistance to
families in need, we must insist that colleges and universities do more to reduce
costs and stem the hikes in tuition rates.
Thank you again for the opportunity to convey these Vermont stories to you today.
I look forward to working with you over the next several weeks to craft a budget
that is fiscally responsible and reflects the needs and priorities of Vermonters and
of all Americans.
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Mr. FILNER. By the way, we think of it as a small war in Iraq.
We are approaching a million veterans from that war alone and
their filing of claims is over 350,000 now out of that number.
Contrast that, Mr. Moore, with the official 25,000 or so casualty
figure that comes out of Iraq, we have got, you know, ten or more
times that people filing claims. So something is disconnected there.
And as the needs are different with mental health and traumatic
brain injuries so prevalent, you have to build a whole staff around
new needs. So we have incredible need amongst both the older veterans and newer veterans.
The Administration in their request did not take that into account. They gave basically a five percent or so increase in the
health budget, in the so-called discretionary part of their budget
which barely covers inflation. And the only way they even got up
to that is that they cut virtually every other account in their budget. Research, for example. And, cutting research is not a good idea.
And we have provided you where they made all those other cuts.
And also they did something they have done every year for the
last seven or eight years, and Congress has never accepted, but had
fees and co-pays raised for both pharmacy and for office visits. Congress has never accepted it. We will not accept it this year. So we
have got to make up for that money that they included in their
budget as revenue.
So what we do is recommend to you a discretionary budget which
is about eight and a half percent above the Administrations request. I am trying to see if I have that figure here. It is about an
eight percent, a real increase, not just the phony, because with the
fees in there.
And if you know what I mean when I say the Independent Budget which is put together by the major veterans groups, they put together every year, and as a Ranking Member, I was waving that
around. It says that is what we ought to fund, that is what we
ought to fund. And we have a percent higher, in fact, of our recommendations above the Independent Budget. So that will put us
in a position with regards to the veterans community in this country very significant.
So, again, our recommendation increases the Administrations request to a real request that takes into account that inflation, but
also adds to all the accounts that they decreased. And we need to
make up on the mandatory side the money that they assume will
come from revenue of increased co-payments.
Our four priorities for the coming year are, one, getting rid of the
current backlog of disability claims, which is over 600,000, and we
will have plans to do that. There have been in past budgets plusups, significant plus-ups of personnel, but we are going to try to
cut it through with a different approach to viewing the claims, not
as an adversary basis, but on the way now the IRS tends to treat
your 1040 when you filed. If you have a refund check, you will get
it in three weeks. Then they will audit it later. That is what we
would like to see of the disability claims system.
We have to modernize the GI Bill for the 21st century. We want
to make sure everybody gets mental healthcare and we will probably present a more controversial proposal to make the healthcare
spending part of the mandatory part of the budget. But that will
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be coming to you separately. It has no budget consequences, you
know, in numbers. It is a way of treating the budget in the future.
We think our recommended views and estimate will put us in a
position where this Congress can say to our veterans both the new
ones and the old ones we value your service, we treat you with respect, and we are going to take care of your healthcare needs.
That is what we hope to do with your help, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Bob Filner follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS FROM
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, thank you for hearing my views regarding the proposed FY 2009 budget for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). On
Monday, February 4, 2008, the Administration submitted its budget for FY 2009
and just three days later, on February 7, 2008, the Committee on Veterans Affairs
held a hearing to examine that budget submission. The Committee is concerned that
the Administrations Budget for FY 2009 contains only modest increases for veterans health care while paying for this increase with cuts in other veterans programs below the historic levels this Congress provided last year. Our Committee
Views and Estimates contain concrete recommendations regarding the points I will
be touching upon briefly today.
Caring for our veterans is an ongoing cost of war, and a continuing cost of our
national defense. As we look toward the end of this Congress, a Congress that has
provided unprecedented increases for veterans programs, we must build upon the
work we have done and provide the VA with the resources it needs to get the job
done for our veterans and to fulfill our national promises.
Although the Administration has requested an increase for Medical Care, this increase has come at the expense of other VA programs. The VAs FY 2009 budget
recommends a 5.5 percent increase for Medical Care, while recommending cuts in
VA major and minor construction of nearly 44 percent; nearly 49 percent for Grants
for Construction of State Extended Care Facilities; nearly 8 percent for VA Medical
and Prosthetic Research; slightly more than 7 percent for the National Cemetery
Administration; 19 percent for Grants for Construction of State Veteran Cemeteries;
and, 5 percent for the Office of Inspector General.
I am pleased the Administration asked for an increase in appropriated dollars this
year for veterans programs. The Administration, for VA discretionary programs, requested $44.8 billion, an increase of $1.7 billion, or 3.8 percent, over the FY 2008
level of $43.1 billion. Funding for the Veterans Health Administration (which includes VA Medical Care and VA Research) comprises 88 percent of the VA discretionary budget. The Administration is requesting $38.7 billion for VA Medical Care
(comprising the Medical Services, Medical Administration,* and Medical Facilities
accounts) an increase of $2 billion, or 5.5 percent, over the FY 2008 level of $36.721
billion. When medical care collections are included, the Administration is recommending a funding level for VA medical care of $41.2 billion (compared to $39.1 billion in FY 2008), an increase of $2.1 billion.
The request for veterans funding for FY 2009 is simply not adequate. An increase
for Medical Services of $361 million will not begin to meet the requirements imposed on the system by workload increases and increases attributable to medical inflation. When the Administrations proposed increase for the three accounts that
comprise medical care of 5.5 percent are compared to a 2007 medical inflation rate
of 5.2 percent, it is clear the Administrations request is not sufficient to continue
providing high-quality health care to our veterans. The VA health care budget request represents a good initial step, but it is only a stepCongress must complete
the journey.
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is considered by many to be the signature injury
of this war. We must ensure the VA has the resources it needs to begin tackling
the issues surrounding TBI, as well as the resources it needs for VA Polytrauma
centers to treat our most critically wounded veterans. The Committee recommends
an additional $32 million for TBI care and treatment, a 15 percent increase above
the FY 2009 estimated levels. The Committee believes the VA must be in the forefront of providing health care to our veterans with TBI.
Homelessness among veterans is an ongoing problem, and a major concern of the
Committee on Veterans Affairs. The Committee recommends an additional $8 million to bring the VAs Grant and Per Diem program up to the levels authorized in
the 109th Congress. The Committee will address changes to the Grant and Per
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Diem program where appropriate in order to begin to effectively address the tragedy
of homeless veterans.
The Administration budget slashes funding for building new health care facilities
and reduces investment in medical and prosthetic research. In the area of Major
Construction for FY 2009, the Administration is requesting $582 million, a decrease
of $488 million, or 46 percent, and in Minor Construction the Administration requested $329 million, a decrease of $301 million, or 48 percent below the level provided in FY 2008. The Committee recommends a funding level for Major Construction of $1.1 billion, $511 million above the Administrations request, and a level of
$674 million, or $344 million above the Administrations request for Minor Construction.
As of February 16, 2008, the inventory of compensation and pension claims pending at the VA was 663,319, an increase of 5,351 from the previous week, and 36,890
above the 626,429 claims pending this time last year. (Source: VA Monday Morning
Workload Report, February 16, 2008). The Committee believes that the VA must
embrace non-traditional ideas to solve the claims backlog issue, and is recommending that $50 million be provided to explore various pilot programs and initiatives that could revolutionize the process by which veterans receive the benefits they
have earned. The Committee also believes that the VA may need to employ a more
radical adjudication process of backlogged claims which may require additional
funding.
Sadly, the Administration has once again presented us with a request that
slashes funding for VA research. The Committee recommends funding to restore the
proposed cuts of $38 million, as well as providing increases for biomedical inflation
and overall research grants, for a total of $555 million, $75 million above the FY
2008 level and $113 million above the Administrations request. VA research is of
direct benefit to veterans, and to all Americans, and it is absolutely essential that
medical researchers understand that funding will be available not only today, but
for the years to come.
Unfortunately, this budget submission also includes legislative proposals that
have consistently been rejected by Congress, including the institution of an enrollment fee and increased pharmaceutical copayments (from $8 to $15) for certain veterans. The Administrations enrollment fee proposal would take effect in FY 2010
and would charge priority 7 and 8 veterans an annual enrollment fee of anywhere
from $0 to $750 dollars based on family income. The revenues received from this
proposal would be deemed mandatory revenues and be deposited in the U.S.
Treasury. Likewise, the amounts attributable to the increased pharmacy copayment
would also be deemed mandatory revenues. These amounts are netted out of the
overall mandatory funding request of the VA. The VA has estimated that as many
as 444,000 veterans would choose not to be enrolled in the VA and as many as
146,000 individual veterans would not seek VA health care if its enrollment fee and
co-payment proposals were adopted. Although these proposals do not affect the Administrations FY 2009 request for discretionary resources, we understand they are
included in the Administrations 5-year mandatory spending projections, and that
this Committee will have to fill the gap. I imagine you share the same frustration
we do that this Administration continues to offer these proposals year-after-year in
the face of concerted, and bipartisan, congressional opposition.
Finally, I am concerned the VAs budget request does not include adequate funding to meet the health care needs of our veterans in the coming year. We are still
faced with the Administrations refusal to lift the enrollment ban of new priority 8
veterans, which has been in place since January 2003. The VA again submitted a
budget that assumes the continuation of this enrollment ban. We face the very real
prospect of more and more of our veterans facing economic hardships and losing access to medical care. There are too many uninsured veterans who need medical care
and cannot afford it.
The Committees Views and Estimates builds upon the Administrations request,
restores proposed cuts, and provides higher recommended levels for VA medical care
and overall discretionary accounts than the Independent Budget.
Ensuring veterans are provided promised benefits and services are issues that we
as a Congress must continue to take seriously. We have to give the VA the resources
needed to care for returning OEF/OIF veterans, and we must ensure resources are
available for veterans from previous conflicts. This wont be cheap, but the service
and sacrifice of these veterans are real, and the VAs budget must provide realistic
funding to meet their needs. Veterans should not have to wait for health care appointments because the VA does not have the resources to care for them. We have
to ensure sufficient funding levels in the FY 2009 budget resolution to meet mental
health needs, the needs of women veterans, the unique needs of returning service
members, and to deal with veterans who are homeless, which is a national tragedy.
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As this Committee is aware, there are many veterans groups who advocate providing VA health care funding from the mandatory side of the ledger, as compared
to the current system of providing discretionary funding. There are also many on
the Veterans Affairs Committee who believe the solution to the budget problems
faced by the VA is mandatory funding. I ask that we work together to fully explore
this option and ways to provide VA health care funding in a sufficient and timely
manner.
The Montgomery GI Bill (MGIB), implemented over 20 years ago, was a landmark
piece of legislation that provides education and training benefits to many veterans.
The time has come to update, modernize, and provide greater flexibility to meet the
needs of todays veterans. The Committee plans to explore a number of options to
improve and modernize the GI Bill and bring equity to our veterans that serve in
the Guard and Reserves.
Lastly Mr. Chairman, I would ask that as we contemplate further spending on
the war in Iraq through the supplemental process; that we also keep in mind the
warriors. Any supplemental we have for the war should also include funds for the
warrior.
Mr. Chairman, this concludes my remarks. We have a lot of work ahead of us if
we are to keep our promises to veterans. Working together, we can make sure our
veterans are not forgotten, and that we meet our obligations to them as a nation.
The Administration is proposing to abolish the Medical Administration account
and subsuming its functions within the Medical Services account.
Mr. MOORE. Congressman Filner, I want to thank you for your
service as Chairman of the Veterans Affairs Committee. And I appreciate your testimony here today.
I tell my folks back home, whatever you think about the situation in Iraq, we all have a special obligation and a moral obligation
to support our people who serve, their families, and our veterans.
And I think most people in this country now appreciate and understand that responsibility unlike back during Vietnam, as you will
recall. So I appreciate your testimony here today and what you are
doing.
I think we have also just seen the tip of the iceberg as far as
traumatic brain injury and PTSD folks returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. And it may take months or sometimes two or three
years for some of those symptoms to start to show up, but we have
got to be prepared to provide the services to our people. So thank
you, sir.
Mr. FILNER. Thank you again.
Mr. MOORE. The Committee stands in recess subject to the call
of the Chair without objection.
[Recess.]
Mr. MOORE. The next member to testify is Congressman Chris
Carney. And welcome to the Budget Committee today. We are
pleased to receive your testimony. You are recognized for five minutes.
STATEMENT OF HON. CHRISTOPHER P. CARNEY, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA
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care; Federal Aid; Highway Program; and Home Heating Assistance.
I urge you to reject President Bushs proposal to cut $555 million
in funding for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund or SRF. This
is $148 million below the level needed to maintain current services.
Our nation faces a difficult budget situation. And as a fiscal conservative, I agree that appropriate budget cuts are necessary, but
cutting the Clean Water State Revolving Fund will hurt our local
communities and cause undue hardship to those communities that
are now losing money in a number of other ways.
I have heard from municipalities all over the district that they
are facing a tremendous burden to upgrade the waste water infrastructure with an increasing pressure to do so that complies with
the Chesapeake Bay resolutions.
As you know, the SRF provides grants to all 50 states to be distributed as low interest or zero interest loans for high-priority
water quality activities with an emphasis on sewage treatment
plant upgrades.
These are the precise needs of our communities in northeast and
central Pennsylvania. In fact, the SRF loans are the primary
source of capital for sewage treatment plant upgrades throughout
the nation.
In Pennsylvania, the Presidents cut to the SRF means a reduction of over $6 million. This is unacceptable. I strongly urge you
to increase the allocation for the SRF so that municipalities in
northeast and central Pennsylvania have the resources to make
these necessary sewage upgrades. We cannot continue to pass the
buck to our local communities.
I urge you to reject President Bushs proposed cut of funding
$556 million for Medicare over ten years. These budget cuts are
bad for our seniors and our taxpayers. These cuts will end up costing the taxpayer more money as patients seek emergency room
care which is more expensive for the minor ailments of which they
suffer.
In addition, these cuts increase the likelihood that such basic
healthcare denials will result in more costly disease in the long
run.
I urge you to reject President Bushs proposed cuts to federal aid
for the Highway Program. Specifically the Presidents budget proposal is $800 million below the level needed to maintain current
services, providing only $39.4 billion for 2009. This budget proposal
jeopardizes a major component of this nations transportation infrastructure. From a practical perspective, our nations highways have
benefitted the American public with less expensive consumer products because they have really reduced the businesses need to build
and maintain costly warehousing facilities.
But even more troubling is the cost in real dollars and real lives
that we witnessed in the past summer with the collapse of the I35 Bridge in Minnesota. We must not allow another tragedy like
that to happen. The safety of motorists is the most serious issue
we face.
Of the 22,327 bridges in Pennsylvania, 5,582 of them or 25 percent are deficient. In our district alone, there are 29 structurally
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deficient bridges according to the U.S. Department of Transportation.
We must and we can rectify these deficiencies. Under the Presidents proposal, Pennsylvania stands to lose nearly $29 million.
And, finally, I urge you to reject the Presidents cut to home
heating oil assistance. Under the Presidents budget proposal,
Pennsylvania will lose nearly $22 million for home heating assistance. This places many working class and elderly families in real
jeopardy of severe injury or death from exposure to extreme cold.
From a practical perspective, providing modest assistance for
home heating oil will reduce costly medical bills and emergency
room care for illnesses that are very easily preventable with a few
dollars of investment in home heating. With the skyrocketing fuel
costs, home heating assistance is extremely vital for our struggling
families and seniors.
I look forward to working with you to ensure that we adopt a
budget that makes the needed investments in important programs
such as clean water, Medicare, federal highways, and low-income
home heating energy.
Thank you for your consideration, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Christopher P. Carney follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. CHRISTOPHER P. CARNEY, A REPRESENTATIVE
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA
IN
Good Afternoon Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan and Members of the
Committee, I appreciate the opportunity to appear before you regarding the Fiscal
Year 2009 budget process.
I have met with people from all over Pennsylvanias 10th district and identified
a number of key issues that are of tremendous importance to families, businesses
and communities in northeast and central Pennsylvania. I respectfully urge you to
take into consideration the following budget priorities: The Clean Water State Revolving Fund, Medicare, Federal-Aid Highway Program and Home Heating Assistance.
1) I urge you to reject President Bushs proposal to cut $555 million in funding
for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (SRF). This is $148 million below the
level needed to maintain current services.
Our nation faces a difficult budget situation. As a fiscal conservative, I agree that
appropriate budget cuts are necessary, but cutting the Clean Water State Revolving
Fund will hurt our local communities. I have heard from municipalities and townships in northeast and central Pennsylvania that they are facing a tremendous burden to upgrade the waste water infrastructurewith increasing pressure to do so
in a way that does not harm or pollute the natural beauty of the Susquehanna
River.
As you know, the SRF provides grants to all 50 states to be distributed as low
interest or zero interest loans for high-priority water quality activitieswith an emphasis on sewage treatment plant upgrades. These are the precise needs our communities in northeast and central Pennsylvania are facing. In fact, SRF loans are
the primary source of capital for sewage treatment plant upgrades throughout the
nation. In Pennsylvania, the Presidents cut to the SRF means a reduction of over
$6 million dollars. This is unacceptable. I strongly urge you to increase the allocation for the SRF so that municipalities in northeastern and central Pennsylvania
have the resources to make these necessary sewage upgrades. We cannot continue
to pass the buck to our local communities.
2) I urge you to reject President Bushs proposal to cut funding $556 for Medicare
over ten years.
These budget cuts are bad for our seniors and our taxpayers. These cuts will end
up costing the tax payer more money as patients seek emergency room care, which
is much more expensive, for minor ailments. In addition, these cuts increase the
likelihood that such basic health care denials will result in more costly disease in
the long run.
3) I urge you to reject President Bushs proposal to cut funding for the FederalAid Highways Program. Specifically, the Presidents budget proposal is $800 million
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below the level needed to maintain current services, providing only $39.4 billion for
2009.
This budget proposal jeopardizes a major component of this nations transportation infrastructure. From a practical perspective, our nations highways have benefited the American public with less expensive consumer products because they have
reduced businesses need to build and maintain costly warehousing facilities. But
even more troubling is the cost in real dollars and real lives that we witnessed this
past summer with the collapse of the I-35 Bridge in Minnesota. We must not allow
another tragedy like that to happen. The safety of motorists is the most serious
issue we face. Of the 22,327 bridges in Pennsylvania, 5,582 or 25% are deficient.
In our district alone there are 29 structurally deficient bridges, according to the U.S.
Department of Transportation. We must and can rectify these deficiencies. Under
the Presidents proposal Pennsylvania stands to lose nearly $29 million.
4) Finally, I urge you to reject the Presidents cut to home heating assistance.
Under the Presidents budget proposal, Pennsylvania will lose nearly $22 million for
home heating assistance. This places many working-class families in real jeopardy
of severe injury or death from exposure to extreme cold. From a practical perspective, providing modest assistance for home heating will reduce costly medical bills
and emergency room care for illnesses that are very easily preventable with a few
dollars of investment in home heating. With skyrocketing fuel costs, home heating
assistance is extremely vital for our struggling families and seniors.
I look forward to working with you to ensure that we adopt a budget that makes
needed investments in important programs such as the Clean Water State Revolving Fund; Medicare; the Federal-Aid Highways Program; and the Low-Income Home
Energy Assistance Program.
Thank you for your consideration.
Mr. MOORE. Thank you for your testimony today.
Mr. LEWIS. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman,
I thank you for the opportunity to share my concern about the 2009
budget.
The Presidents budget proposal does not reflect the values of the
American people and the needs of our states and our communities.
In my estimation, it is immoral and it is unjust.
I ask you to look at the full picture. People are struggling, Mr.
Chairman. They are struggling to pay their mortgages and heating
bills. They are struggling to fill their tanks to drive to work. They
are struggling to feed their families. They are struggling to pay college expenses for their children.
Let me begin with the attack on the federal health program. It
is completely irresponsible. At a time when more and more people
are without health insurance, we should be doing more, not less,
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to preserve access to healthcare. I happen to believe that
healthcare is not a privilege, but a right.
Across this country, we do not have enough health professionals
to serve everyone in need. Nowhere is this more pronounced than
in the minority communities throughout our nation.
Title VII programs have been successful in training health professionals who serve rural and urban under-served communities
and has increased diversity in our health workforce by graduating
five times more minority students than traditional programs.
However, since 2005, the funds have been cut by more than 50
percent, having a devastating impact on good programs like those
at Morehouse School of Medicine in my district. We must increase
the funding of Title VII to $300 million.
Another area of great concern to me and the people that I represent, it is the unbelievable backlog in processing Social Security
Disability appeals. Atlanta has the largest backlog in the country
and it takes an average of 808 days to get an appeal heard.
People are waiting years for disability benefits that they deserve.
Every month, they call our office wondering how they will pay their
electric bill and their rent because they are too disabled to work.
That is just wrong.
I have, Mr. Chairman, 51 disabled citizens in our district who
are waiting for Social Security Disability benefits and have contacted me for help. The oldest case that my office has been involved
in has been pending since August 14, 2004. That is unacceptable.
I am encouraged to hear, Mr. Chairman, that you are working
closely with the Ways and Means Committee to increase funding
for the Social Security Administration. And we appreciate it.
I join my colleagues in recommending funding the Social Security
Administration at $10.327 billion plus $504 million outside of the
discretionary spending cap.
We must not tolerate the kinds of backlogs that force disabled
Americans to live in poverty or to die while waiting for their benefits they are entitled to. This needs to be a priority in our budget
and we must not continue to have business as usual.
Another pressing issue in Atlanta and around our nation is
homelessness. There are some very good and decent people who
have been homeless for years. They come to my office in Georgia.
We give them Cokes and peanuts. One young man comes in every
day, every single day, about 10:15 in the morning, right on time,
to get a Coca-Cola and a package or two of peanuts. We know this
man and so many others by name. We do what we can for them.
Many of the homeless in Atlanta are Vietnam veterans. How did
we draft people and send them to war and when they return leave
them on the street? No matter what reason, no matter who made
choices in life, leaving our war veterans in the cold, dark streets
is wrong. It is wrong. It is just dead wrong.
The Homeless Provider Grant and Per Diem Program is the largest VA program of its kind. You have been called to increase authorizing funds for this program to $200 million. The program is
working, but we need to do more for our homeless. I recommend
funding this program at $200 million for this year and in the future.
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In closing, Mr. Chairman, I would just like to say that I know
that we can present a budget that reflects the values of our country. We can begin by taking a hard look at how the government
spends money.
Are we really saving money by privatizing the most basic service
of the Federal Government through huge contracts to corporations
that do not pay tax and really serve our best interest? These are
questions that must be answered so that we can really help those
who are suffering in this nation.
Mr. Chairman, again, I want to thank you for the opportunity to
appear here today. I look forward to working with you on these
issues and other important issues that affect all of our citizens, not
just in Georgia, but in your state and your district and throughout
our nation. Thank you for hearing me, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of John Lewis follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS FROM
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, Mr. Ranking Member, and Members of the Committee. Thank you for the opportunity to share my concerns about the fiscal year
2009 budget.
The Presidents budget proposal does not reflect the values of the American people. It ignores the needs of our States and our constituents. It is immoral. It is unjust.
I ask you to look at the full picture. People are struggling, Mr. Chairman. They
are struggling to pay their mortgages and heating bills. They are struggling to fill
their tanks to drive to work. They are struggling to feed their families. They are
struggling to pay for college.
In my home state of Georgia, the Presidents budget proposal would mean at least
$150 million in cuts for critical programslike the Clean Water State Revolving
Fund, Social Services Block Grants, Federal-Aid Highway Programs, and Career
and Technical Education.
Mr. Chairman, people are suffering and struggling to stay above water. We need
to increase funding for unemployment insurance, training and education programs.
We need to support and restore faith in the American workforce. We are sacrificing
everything for an unjust, never-ending war. And the Administration will not even
tell the truth about how much more it will cost us.
And the cuts are not just in the budget. On one side, the administration is adopting regulations that will destroy basic State social services. These services help the
disabled, the elderly, the sick, and neglected and abused children.
On the other hand, the administration proposes flat-levels of funding for important agencies like child welfare services and independent living and training programs.
Then he goes one step further by proposing $500 billion in cuts to Medicare and
Medicaid. The attack on federal health programs is completely irresponsible. At a
time when more and more people are without health insurance, we should be doing
more, not less to preserve access to health care. It is a mean spirited attack on the
people of this country.
Across this country we do not have enough health professionals to serve everyone
in need. Nowhere is this more pronounced than in the minority communities. Title
VII programs have been successful in training health professionals, who serve rural
and urban underserved communities, and have increased diversity in our health
workforce by graduating 5 times more minority students than traditional programs.
However, since 2005, the funds have been cut by more than 50 percent, having a
devastating impact on good programs like those at Morehouse School of Medicine,
in my district. We must increase the funding for Title VII to $300 million.
Another area of great concern to me and my constituents is the unbelievable backlog in processing Social Security Disability Appeals. Atlanta has the largest backlog
in the Country and it takes an average of 808 days to get appeals heard. People
are waiting YEARS for disability benefits that they deserve. Every month they call
our office wondering how they will pay their electrical bill and their rent, because
they are too disabled to work. That is just wrong.
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I have 51 disabled constituents who are waiting for Social Security disability benefits and have contacted me for help. The oldest case that my office has been involved in has been pending since August 14, 2004that is unacceptable.
I am encouraged to hear, Mr. Chairman, that you are working closely with the
Ways and Means Committee to increase funding for the Social Security Administration. I join my colleagues in recommending funding the Social Security Administration at $10.327 billion plus $504 million outside of the discretionary spending cap.
We must not tolerate the kinds of backlogs that force disabled Americans to live in
poverty, or to die while waiting for their benefits they are entitled to. This needs
to be a priority in our budget.
Another pressing issue in Atlanta, and around the nation, is homelessness. There
are some very good and decent people who have been homeless for years. They come
to my office. In Georgia, we give them Cokes and peanuts. We know them by name.
We do what we can for them.
Many of the homeless in Atlanta are Vietnam veterans. How do we draft people
and send them to war and when they return, leave them on the streets? No matter
what reason, no matter who makes choices in life, leaving our war veterans on the
cold, dark streets is wrong. It is wrong.
The Homeless Provider Grant and Per Diem Program is the largest VA program
of its kind. There have been calls to increase authorized funding for this program
to $200 million. The program is working, but we need to do more for our homeless.
I recommend funding this program at $200 million for this year and in the future.
I know that we can present a budget that reflects the values of our country.
We can begin by taking a hard look at how the government spends money. Are
we really saving money by privatizing the most basic services of the Federal Government? Do huge contracts to corporations that dont pay taxes really serve our
best interests? These are questions that must be answered, so that we can really
help those who are suffering in this nation.
Mr. Chairman and Members of this Committee, again I thank you for the opportunity to appear here today and I look forward to working with you on these and
other issues that are so important to my constituents.
Mr. MOORE. I thank the gentleman for his testimony, very com-
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ship and the leadership of this Committee, we have PAYGO, which
means Pay-As-You-Go principles. We are not incurring further debt
as has been the case of the Congress and the Administration the
last number of years.
But I would like to use my time this afternoon to address a very
pressing issue in my district in south Florida as well as many districts around the country.
I represent Palm Beach and Broward counties in south Florida
and many of the people in my district honorably served our country
in the United States Armed Forces. In fact, 50 veterans move to
Florida every single day. I am sure you can imagine that the veterans hospitals and those who work with veterans to process disability compensation are very busy.
I was proud last year to vote with this Congress and under your
leadership for the largest increase in veterans funding in the history of the Veterans Administration, long overdue.
Our brave men and women have made significant sacrifices for
our country and they were promised the best quality of healthcare
and government services in return. With this historic investment,
we will begin to fulfill these promises to our nations veterans, both
veterans from World War II, the Korean War through the present
day.
There are more than 500,000 veterans who have claims pending
currently with the Department of Veterans Affairs. And approximately 100,000 of such claims are over one year old without resolution. This is a serious issue. I have heard too many stories from
constituents who are waiting, waiting, waiting for too long for the
benefits that they truly deserve.
One man, a World War II veteran from Palm Beach County,
pleaded with my office for help, saying that his claim had seen no
progress for years. He thought they were waiting for him to die.
That was his quote. And that is obviously outrageous and I know
the Chair and this Committee feels the same way. We cannot tolerate this.
It seems to me that the default answer on benefits is no. Someone comes in for a claim. There seems to be no as an answer. And
that a veteran is expected to write letters over and over and over
again protesting the VAs decision to underwrite disability claims.
Furthermore, soldiers who are returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan with physical and mental disabilities will enter the veterans system and we have to plan for this entirely new generation
of veterans. These veterans will require and deserve a system that
works for them because they sacrificed for us.
The Presidents budget for 2009 includes measures to reduce the
backlog of veterans disability claims and I urge the Committee to
make this a priority. However, the Presidents budget request will
not be enough to keep up with the increased demands on the VA
system. A five and a half percent increase for the healthcare hardly
covers inflation and the greater demand of our senior veterans as
well as those veterans coming home from active duty.
I am disappointed that the President is not fully funding the
needs of our veterans and I know you and the members of this
Committee share that. Instead, the Presidents proposal raises fees
for veterans.
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I am not going to stand by while we balance our budget on the
backs of those who served our country and I appreciate the fact
that this Committee supports that principle as well.
And that is why I have come to you today, to reinforce that point.
You will be making very difficult decisions in crafting our budget.
There are many priorities that deserve and require our attention
and resources and that will be supported by the American people.
As we all know, budgeting is all about priorities, but I can think
of few priorities greater or more urgent than providing what is due
to our brave men and women who serve to protect our country, secure our peace, and safeguard our way of life.
And so, Mr. Chairman, I ask you and the members of this Committee as we craft this budget to consider funding our veterans
budget at a higher level, paying special attention to reducing the
backlog of disability claims. Repaying our debt to our nations veterans is critical and I look forward to telling the veterans back
home that Congress has made this a top priority as we did last
year.
Mr. Chairman, I truly and sincerely thank you for your leadership. I know this Congress will continue to take care of our veterans as we did this past year and will continue that effort this
coming year.
[The prepared statement of Ron Klein follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS FROM
I am honored to be with you here today. Thank you for taking the time to listen
to my concerns, and I look forward to working with you, Chairman Spratt, as we
move forward in this process. Under your leadership, we have restored fiscal discipline to this body and have promoted our nations most crucial priorities.
I would like to use my time this afternoon to address a very pressing issue in my
district. I represent Palm Beach and Broward Counties in South Florida, and many
of the people in my district honorably served our country in the US armed forces.
In fact, fifty veterans move to Florida every day. Im sure you can imagine that the
veterans hospitals and those who work with veterans to process disability compensation are very busy.
I was proud last year to vote for the largest increase in veterans funding in the
history of the VA. Our brave men and women have made significant sacrifices for
our country, and they were promised the best quality of healthcare and government
services in return. With this historic investment, we will begin to fulfill these promises to our nations veterans.
There are more than 500,000 veterans who have claims pending with the Department of Veterans Affairs for benefits, and approximately 100,000 of such claims are
over one year old without resolution.
I have heard too many stories from constituents who are waiting, waiting, waiting
for too long for the benefits that they deserve. One man, a World War II veteran
from Palm Beach County, pleaded with my office for help, saying that his claim had
seen no progress for years. He thought they were waiting for him to die. This is
outrageous. We cannot tolerate this.
It seems to me that the default answer on benefits is no, and that a veteran is
expected to write letters over and over and over again, protesting the VAs decision
to underrate disability claims.
Furthermore, soldiers who are returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan with
physical or mental disabilities will enter the veterans system, and we will have an
entirely new generation of veterans. These veterans will require and will deserve
a system that works for them because they sacrificed for us.
The Presidents budget for 2009 includes measures to reduce the backlog of veterans disability claims, and I urge the committee to make this a priority. However,
the Presidents budget request will not be enough to keep up with the increased demands on the VA system. A 5.5% increase for healthcare hardly covers inflation and
greater demand.
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I am disappointed that the President is not fully funding the needs of our veterans. Instead, the President proposes raising fees on our veterans. I will not stand
by while we balance this budget on the backs of those who served our country, and
that is why I have come to you today.
You all must make very difficult decisions in crafting the Congressional budget.
There are many priorities that deserve and require our attention and resources. As
you well know, budgeting is all about priorities; I can think of few priorities greater
or more urgent than providing what is due to our brave men and women who serve
to protect our country, secure our peace and safeguard our way of life.
And, so I ask you to consider funding our veterans budget at a higher level, paying special attention to reducing the backlog of disability claims. Repaying our debt
to our nations veterans is critical, and I look forward to telling the veterans back
home that Congress has made this a top priority.
Mr. MOORE. Congressman Klein, thank you very, very much for
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Incredible progress is being made today in the area of cancer research. In my own community, we have one of the few comprehensive cancer centers, Rosswell Park Cancer Institute.
What happens is promising research at places like Rosswell is
funded by the National Cancer Institute and those promising research and clinical trials become the standard for tomorrows cancer treatment.
There are more people living with cancer today than are dying
from cancer. Still, about a million new cases, a million five new
cases of cancer will be diagnosed this year and over 500,000 people
will die from cancer. One in every two men will contract invasive
cancer in their lifetime, one in every three women. We obviously
have a lot of work to do.
Cancer is also very expensive to the nation. We spend about $220
billion a year in lost productivity and healthcare costs associated
with cancer.
Mr. Chairman, I am here to say that Congress has a moral obligation to reverse the trend of cancer funding cuts over the past five
years.
The 2015 campaign is advanced by the American Cancer Society
and the National Cancer Institute. It should not only be their goal.
It should be Americas goal. And as a nation, we should insist on
a massive investment in funding cancer research moving forward.
We should not be following the trends. We should be leading the
rest of the world in cancer research.
Another issue is that it is a lot less expensive to the nation to
treat cancer in its early stages and to prevent it than to treat cancer in its advanced stages. So from an economic standpoint, from
a healthcare standpoint, from a moral standpoint, this Congress in
a nonpartisan way has an extraordinary opportunity, Mr. Chairman, this year to reverse the trend and fully fund the National
Cancer Institute and the National Institutes of Health.
Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Brian Higgins follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, distinguished members of the Committee, I come before you today to advocate for increased funding for cancer research at the National Cancer Institute and the National Institutes of Health.
The war on cancer is a non-partisan issue, and it should be treated that way.
In 2005, when I signed a pledge to do everything in my power to eliminate cancer,
I meant it.
The Administrations decision to freeze funding at NIH and NCI in its proposed
budget for fiscal year 2009 is wholly unacceptable and cuts the cancer community
at its knees. If enacted, this would continue a disturbing trend of decreased funding
over the last five years, where funding at NCI has effectively decreased by twelve
percent. Because the war on cancer is too important for Congress to be complacent;
I strongly urge this committee to provide for increased funding for cancer research
in this years Budget resolution.
It is sad, but true that cancer is a disease that touches everyone in this country.
Within almost every neighborhood and town, communities are rallying around family members, friends, and neighbors who have been diagnosed with cancer, helping
in any way they can to help alleviate suffering.
The impact that cancer has on our society is astounding. In its latest report, the
American Cancer Society found that new cases of cancer have increased, reversing
a two year decline. This year, approximately 1.4 million people will be diagnosed
with cancer and five hundred and sixty five thousand people will die from cancer.
Ten million additional Americans continue to struggle with or are survivors of can-
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cer. And the cost of cancer is staggering, estimated to be two hundred and nineteen
billion dollars in 2007 alone.
It should be our duty as Members of Congress to improve the quality of care that
Americans receive when they are diagnosed with cancerthis begins with increasing funding for vital research.
Cancer is truly an individualized disease, manifesting itself uniquely in every patient. Unlike in the past, where one-size-fits-all treatments were used for cancer patients, researchers and practitioners are exploiting discoveries stemming from the
human genome project to begin to carefully tailor treatment to meet the specific
make-up of each individual patient. These groundbreaking discoveries will fundamentally alter and improve how cancer care is delivered. It is in our countrys
best interest to give researchers the resources to hit the ground running on these
discoveries.
My district in Western New York directly benefits from NIH and NCI funding.
Roswell Park Cancer Institute, one of the oldest cancer centers in the country, is
a NCI designated comprehensive cancer center and receives funding from NCI for
its major research activities. Other research institutions, like the University at Buffalo and the Hauptmann Woodward Medical Research Institute rely on federal funding to advance the science of fighting disease.
The results of this research will improve the standard of living for Americans living with cancer, and will prolong life after diagnosis. These research dollars also
have a significant ripple affect on local economies, where research translates into
treatments that can be developed and manufactured by local companies, providing
highly skilled jobs for countless citizens. Our country has long been the cradle of
innovation, a robust and growing federal investment in research can keep that reputation strong.
In conclusion, Congress should be leading the charge in the fight against cancer.
I believe we are at the cusp of dramatic improvements in the quality of care. Congress should do everything in its power to make sure that these dramatic discoveries are transferred into results as soon as possible. This begins with rejecting the
Administrations flat-footed agenda and providing necessary increases in funding for
cancer research initiatives at the National Cancer Institute and the National Institutes of Health. Thank you.
Mr. MOORE. I thank the gentleman for his testimony. You have
made some excellent points, I think, Congressman Higgins. And I
do not know how anybody could really disagree with your points
that you made today.
I think and I agree with you that we have an opportunity with
continued medical research that is well funded to find in the very
near future, make some progress and even find some cures for cancer.
And as you said, that not only would save money, but it is exactly the right thing to do morally for the people in our country and
for the world as well. And so I am hopeful that we will and you
are going to support funding cancer research and the cancer budget.
So I really appreciate your testimony here today.
Mr. HIGGINS. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. MOORE. Thank you, sir.
Mr. HIGGINS. Appreciate it.
Mr. MOORE. The Chair next recognizes Congressman Kagen for
five minutes.
STATEMENT OF HON. STEVE KAGEN, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF WISCONSIN
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the following before the Senate Budget Committee on January 28th
of 2008.
Under any plausible scenario, the federal budget is on an imprudent and unsustainable path. And he continued, Rapidly rising
healthcare costs are not simply a federal budget problem. They are
our nations number one fiscal challenge.
Fortunately, this Budget Committee and Congress have begun to
address this crisis and contrary to the current Administration recognize that our government must live within its means just like
folks do back home in Wisconsin.
The House of Representatives should continue its commitment to
reduce the deficit and to adhere to PAYGO rules. Like everyone
else in Wisconsin, I believe in being fiscally responsible and socially
progressive.
Your Committee has difficult choices to make and I hope that the
decisions you make here will reflect our traditional American values as well as those that we all share.
Kindly allow me now to express to you and thank you for your
ongoing respect for these principles. Our budget must also answer
the question whose side are we on. We must are for people more
than things and people more than corporate wealth.
As we have all seen, our economy is in transition. Manufacturing
jobs are changing and they are moving overseas more and more
rapidly. And our work product now is requiring fewer man hours
to achieve our goals.
I believe both political parties must agree that we need to place
our greater emphasis now on those workers most affected by this
unfortunate process, one that in large part in my opinion is due to
unfair and unbalanced trade deals with China which has targeted
each and every one of our industries for extinction.
Our government must assist working families who have been
damaged by these trade deals for these people represent our rapidly-evaporating middle class. We may have a global marketplace,
but just as all politics is local, likewise all economics is local as
well.
And, fortunately, we have existing programs to provide job training for workers nationwide who may be displaced and out of work.
One of those is the Dislocated Worker State Grants Program. And
as you are aware, the President has requested that these programs
be cut by $271 million below the level needed to maintain current
and necessary services.
I respectfully request the Committee reject these cuts. These
grants provide critical instruction and assistance for displaced
workers and I would encourage the Committee to support these
training programs to their fullest amount possible.
We must represent the best of American traditional values and
make certain that our national defense includes not just our Armed
Forces, but our middle class, and they need support as well.
For these reasons, I would support increased funding for the
TAA Program, the Trade Adjustment Assistance Program. By providing income and support as well as training programs, the TAA
Program allows workers to return to full-time employment at the
most rapid rate possible.
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We must also recognize the real value of Medicare and Medicaid
in peoples lives. People walk straight and without pain only because of Medicare. And as you are aware, the President has requested a cut of $556 billion in Medicare during the next ten years
and $47 billion of cuts in Medicaid. Plainly put, President Bush has
not thought this all the way through.
I strongly urge the Committee to reject his proposed cuts. It is
unnecessary for me to go into greater detail as to the critical need
for these services.
Furthermore, I do not need to elaborate on the demographic realities that we now face as we all begin to age for again, as Controller David Walker has mentioned, Rapidly rising healthcare
costs are not simply a federal budget problem. They are our nations number one fiscal challenge.
It is the responsibility of this Committee and this Congress to determine exactly what the overhead expenses are for providing
medically necessary Medicare services and products to Medicare
enrollees and then, importantly, to cover those overhead expenses
for those necessary services. If you fail to cover the overhead cost
for providing medical services, those services simply will not be
available.
I am today encouraged that in adhering to PAYGO rules and
principles established by the House, the Budget Committee rejected
the temptation to use the Social Security Trust Fund to pay for
other needs. I believe this program is a sacred trust, a trust between workers and their government. And it must always be available.
And, finally, we must be mindful of our future and our national
security. Our national defense does not solely require maintaining
our Armed Forces. It requires intense and active investments in
economic development, in education, and in becoming an energy
independent nation. To do so, to become independent once again
and to maintain our freedom, we must have a viable economy with
as many manufacturing jobs as possible.
Our nation expects great things from all of us and I am certain
that you will not let us down. By working together, I am sure we
will build a better nation for all of us.
And I thank you for your time.
[The prepared statement of Steve Kagen follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
CONGRESS
Mr. Chairman, thank you for the opportunity to discuss the budget in front of the
Committee today.
I would like to begin by aligning myself with the viewpoint expressed by our GAO
Comptroller General, David Walker, who stated the following before the Senate
Budget Committee on January 28, 2008: Under any plausible scenario, the federal
budget is on an imprudent and unsustainable path. And he continued, Rapidly rising health care costs are not simply a federal budget problem; they are our nations
number one fiscal challenge.
Fortunately, this Budget Committee and Congress have begun to address these
crises and contrary to the current Administration, recognize that our government
must live within its means, just like folks do in their own homes throughout Wisconsin.
The House of Representatives should continue its commitment to reduce the deficit and adhere to our PAY-GO rules. Like everyone else in Wisconsin, I believe in
being fiscally responsible and socially progressive.
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Your Committee has difficult choices to make, and I hope that the decisions made
here will reflect our traditional American values we all share. Kindly allow me to
express my thanks to you for your ongoing respect for these principles.
Our Budget must also answer the question: whose side are we on?
We must care for people more than things, and people more than corporate
wealth. As we have seen, our economy is in transition. Manufacturing jobs are
changing and are moving overseas or are requiring fewer man-hours. I believe both
political parties can agree that we need to place greater emphasis on those workers
affected by this unfortunate processone that in large part is due to unfair and unbalanced trade deals wherein China has targeted our industriesone after the
otherfor extinction.
Our government must assist working families who have been damaged by these
trade deals, for they people represent our rapidly evaporating middle-class most in
need of our attention. We may have a global marketplace, but just as all politics
is locallikewise, all economics is local.
Fortunately, we have existing programs to provide job training for workers nationwide. One of those is the Dislocated Worker State Grants. As you are aware, the
Presidents request would cut these programs to $271 million below the level needed
to maintain current necessary services. I respectfully request the Committee reject
these cuts. These grants provide critical instruction and assistance for displaced
workers. I would encourage the Committee to support these training programs,
which are not only an investment in our nations future, but also represent the best
line of national defensea working and successful middle-class.
For these reasons, I support increased funding for Trade Adjustment Assistance
(TAA) Program. By providing income support as well as training programs, TAA allows workers to return to full time employment as rapidly as possible.
We must also recognize the real value of Medicare and Medicaid in peoples lives.
People walk straight and without pain only because of Medicare. As you are aware,
the President has requested $556 billion in Medicare cuts over ten years and $47
billion in Medicaid cuts.
Plainly put, President Bush has not thought this all the way through.
I strongly urge the Committee to reject his proposed cuts. It is unnecessary for
me to discuss in greater detail the critical need for these programs. Furthermore,
I do not need to elaborate on the demographic realities in our nation. For as Comptroller General Walker stated: Rapidly rising health care costs are not simply a federal budget problem; they are our nations number one fiscal challenge.
It is the responsibility of this Committee and this Congress to determine exactly
what the overhead expenses are for providing medically necessary Medicare services
and products to medicare enrolleesand then to cover at least the overhead expenses for said services plus a profit. If you fail to cover the overhead costs for providing a service, it will not be available.
I am today encouraged thatin adhering to the PAY-GO principles established
by the Housethe Budget Committee rejected the temptation to use the Social Security Trust Fund to pay for other needs. I believe this program is a sacred trust
between workers and their government, and it must always be available.
Finally, we must be mindful of our future and to our national security. Our national defense does not solely require maintaining our Armed Forces. It also requires intense and active investments in economic development, education and becoming an energy independent nation once again. To do so, and to maintain our
Freedom, we must have a viable economy with as many manufacturing jobs as possible.
Our nation expects a great deal from us, and I am certain you wont let us down.
By working together, we will build a better nation for all of us, and I thank you
for your time today.
Mr. MOORE. And I thank the gentleman for his testimony. I do
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Mr. MOORE. Absolutely.
The Chair next recognizes Congressman Rick Larsen. And, Congressman, you are recognized for five minutes, sir.
STATEMENT OF HON. RICK LARSEN, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
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Another important law enforcement program within the DOJs
budget is the Community Oriented Policing Services or COPS Program. In his budget for 2009, the President has zeroed out again
this critical program.
Last year, the President proposed cutting the COPS Program by
more than $500 million. Last year, Congress disregarded his request and, rather, increased the funding for COPS by 45 million.
So I ask the Committee again to disregard the Presidents budget
request and fully fund COPS in your budget resolution.
Finally, on law enforcement, before I move to treatment, last
year, I visited the Drug Enforcement Administrations training facilities at Quantico and took part in some of the training the DEA
provides for state and local law enforcement, something I would
recommend that all members of Congress to participate in.
I got a small taste of the dangers faced by men and women on
the front lines in the fight against drugs. They confront dangerous
criminals, hazardous chemicals, and life-threatening explosives
every time they bust a meth lab. Our DEA agents do great work
and the training they provide is useful preparation for local law enforcement. So I encourage the Committee to include enough funding in this budget resolution to fully fund DEA.
But while these efforts keep drugs out of our communities and
out of the hands of children are essential in the fight against meth
and other drugs, we have to be sure we are working to help those
who have become addicted to these drugs.
Investing in drug treatment programs not only saves the lives of
people in treatment, but reduces the prevalence of drug use and
drug-related crime in our communities. As long as there is a market for these illicit drugs, the dealers will find a way to deliver
them.
I recently visited Evergreen Manor, a treatment facility in my
district, and met with people in recovery from meth and opiate addiction. These are people who worked hard every day and must
work hard for the rest of their lives to continuously defeat their addictions.
One of these individuals made a comment that has stuck with
me. His goal he said was not to stay clean, but to get his life back.
Drug addiction can be a death sentence, but even before it kills, it
does rob people of their lives. By funding drug treatment programs,
we not only give these people a chance to beat their addictions, we
can give them an opportunity to get their lives back.
One program I would like to highlight as well is the Drug Court
Program which funds the oversight of the court with therapeutic
capabilities and drug treatment program. Drug Courts are widely
recognized as the most effective solution for reducing crime and recidivism among drug addicted offenders in the Criminal Justice
System.
In my district, the Snohomish County Drug Court has a 94 percent success rate as a for instance.
Funded at 40 million in fiscal year 2005, the Drug Court Program has seen significant cuts in recent years and I am urging the
Committee to include full funding for the Drug Court Program in
this years budget resolution.
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And, finally, two final points. I know the federal program that
is critical to drug treatment throughout the country is the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant. This grant is
the backbone of our nations publicly funded treatment and prevention system and serves our most vulnerable citizens.
And, finally, what would we be without education? I want to emphasize the importance of education and prevention efforts in the
fight against drugs. And both the Safe and Drug Free Schools and
Communities and the Drug Free Communities programs are critical to ensuring safe, healthy, and drug free schools. They also provide funds for programs that teach students about the dangers of
drug abuse, giving them lessons that they take with them for the
rest of their lives.
The reason I wanted to point out these programs, Mr. Chairman,
is to show the continuum of activities that we need to participate
in from the federal level to help those who are on the front line,
not just to law enforcement, but to treatment providers, our teachers in our schools, and, frankly, those people who are addicted who
are trying to get their lives back.
Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Rick Larsen follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
IN
CONGRESS
Thank you, Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, and Members of the Committee. I am pleased to have the opportunity to speak to you today about the federal
programs that make a critical difference in the fight against drug abuse.
As co-chair of the Congressional Caucus to Fight and Control Methamphetamine,
I have seen first-hand the devastating impact of meth and other illegal drugs on
our communities. Illegal drugs arent just a problem for law enforcementbut for
our families, schools and businesses. In the past several years, we have made significant progress in closing down homegrown labs, but rates of methamphetamine
use remain as high as ever.
Meanwhile, law enforcement officers and treatment providers are reporting a
sharp increase in the abuse of Oxycodone and other prescription drugs. The increasing incidence of diversion and abuse of these drugs is a disturbing trend that presents a new set of challenges for the men and women that have devoted their lives
to ridding our communities of the problems of drug abuse.
Research has increasingly shown that drug addiction is not merely a matter of
habit for those addicted but is, in fact, a disease. It is our responsibility as lawmakers to protect our districts and our constituents from the spread of this disease.
Our commitment to combating drug trafficking and abuse must begin with our continued support of the federal programs that give our heroes on the frontlines the
resources they need to effectively do their jobs.
The first program I want to highlight is the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grants Program. This program is the only federal funding awarded to state
and local law enforcement on a formula basis. The funds that it provides have gone
to support a wide variety of programs critical in the fight against drug abuse, including regional drug task forces.
Byrne-JAG funding was cut by two thirds in the Consolidated Appropriations Act
for FY08. As a result of these cuts many regional drug task forces will be forced
to close their doors. Last week, I met with the commander of the Snohomish County
Drug Task Force and some of the law enforcement officers who serve on his team.
If funding for Byrne-JAG is not restored they are in danger of having to cut as
many as six positions from their staff.
These task forces are essential to keeping pressure on drug traffickers and dealers
throughout the country and their absence will lead to an increase in drug trafficking, and abuse. The problem of drug trafficking requires a constant and vigilant
approach. If this funding is not restored it will have a devastating impact on our
ability to combat the spread of meth and other illegal drugs. It would undo much
of the progress we have made, and require an increased future commitment in both
time and resources just to bring us back to where we are today.
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In light of the tremendous cut this year, funding for Byrne-JAG in FY09 is more
important than ever. I urge the Committee to recommend funding for this program
at its full authorized amount to provide the resources that state and local law enforcement needs to do their jobs. Crime isnt just a local issue and we owe it to our
constituents to help protect them.
Another important law enforcement program within DOJs budget is the Community Oriented Policing Services, or COPS, program. In his budget for FY09, the
President has zeroed out this critical program. Last year the President proposed cutting the COPS program by more than $500 million dollars. Congress disregarded
that request and increased its funding by $45 million. I ask the Committee to again
disregard the Presidents budget request and provide full funding for COPS in your
budget resolution.
Last year I visited the Drug Enforcement Administrations training facilities at
Quantico and took part in some of the training DEA provides for state and local
law enforcement. I got a small taste of the dangers faced by the men and women
on the front lines of the fight against drugs. They confront dangerous criminals,
hazardous chemicals and life-threatening explosives every time they bust a meth
lab. Our DEA agents do great work and the training they provide is useful preparation for local law enforcement. I encourage this Committee to include enough funding in its budget resolution to fully fund the DEA.
While efforts to keep drugs out of our communities and out of the hands of our
children are essential in the fight against meth and other drugs, we must also make
sure we are working to help those that have become addicted to these drugs. Investing in drug treatment programs not only saves the lives of the people in treatment,
but reduces the prevalence of drug use and drug related crime in our communities.
As long as there is a market for these illicit drugs, the dealers will find a way to
deliver them.
I recently visited the Evergreen Manor treatment facility in my district and met
with some people in recovery from methamphetamine and opiate addiction. These
are people who have worked hard every day and must work hard for the rest of
their lives to continuously defeat their addictions.
One of these individuals made a comment that stuck with me. His goal, he said,
was not only to stay clean, but to get his life back. Drug addiction can be a death
sentence, but even before it kills, it robs people of their lives. By funding drug treatment programs we not only give these people a chance to beat their addictions, we
give them the opportunity to get their lives back.
One program I would like to highlight is the Drug Court program, which blends
the oversight of a court with the therapeutic capabilities of a drug treatment program. Drug courts are widely recognized as the most effective solution for reducing
crime and recidivism among drug-addicted offenders in the criminal justice system.
They come at a fraction of the cost of standard incarceration, and they are effective.
In my district, the Snohomish County drug court has a 94% success rate. Funded
at $40 million in FY05, the Drug Court program has seen significant cuts in recent
years. I urge the Committee to include full funding for the Drug Court program in
this years budget resolution.
Another federal program that is critical for drug treatment programs throughout
the country is the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant. This
grant is the backbone of our nations publicly funded treatment and prevention system and serves our most vulnerable citizens. Providing adequate funding for treatment efforts is a critical step in combating drug abuse.
Finally, I want to emphasize the importance of education and prevention efforts
in the fight against drugs. Both the Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities
and the Drug-Free Communities programs are critical to ensuring safe, healthy, and
drug-free schools. They also provide funds for programs to teach students about the
dangers of drug abuse, giving them lessons they may take with them for the rest
of their lives.
The programs that I have mentioned here are essential to tackling every angle
of the problem of drug abuse. We must continue to be vigilant in our approach to
the problems of drug trafficking, and abuse, and maintain a consistent and adequate
level of funding for these programs.
I again thank you for the opportunity to address the Committee today. I have additional comments that I will submit for the record.
Thank you and Im happy to answer any questions.
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I appreciate, though, the fact that you did not just concentrate
on the COPS Program, on law enforcement, DEA, as important as
those are and they are very important, but you have also talked
to our Committee and given us testimony about drug treatment
and helping people get their lives back in order which I think all
of us should care about as well.
I very much appreciate, Congressman, your testimony to our
Budget Committee today. I do not see other members here right
now to ask questions, but I am certain they will review your testimony and I am hopeful that we will vote in support of the programs that you have advocated for here today. Thank you, sir.
Mr. LARSEN. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. MOORE. Next the Chair would like to recognize Congresswoman Donna Christensen, if you would, please. And you have five
minutes, maam.
STATEMENT OF HON. DONNA CHRISTENSEN, A
REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE VIRGIN ISLANDS
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on prevention and to bring it on a comparable level with research
and the development of new technologies.
Every day more than 200 people of color die prematurely from
preventable causes. This was noted as early as 1984 by then Surgeon General Margaret Heckler as excess deaths, and she was
speaking in particular at that time about excess deaths in African
Americans. And she defines those as deaths that are in excess of
what would have been predicted for African Americans given that
all of the other factors across the board were equal.
At that time, it was estimated that there were 66,000 excess
deaths in African Americans annually and today it is estimated
somewhere between 86 and 100,000. So preventive care has to be
given more emphasis. It must be made free, affordable, accessible,
comprehensive, and it must be made culturally competent if it is
going to be effective.
Third, by ensuring continuity of care through increasing and
incentivizing primary care as well as linking services and improving care with the use of health information technology.
Four, by establishing or expanding special programs to reach
those who have been left out of the healthcare mainstream who are
again largely people of color, but also those in rural areas and in
remote areas such as in our U.S. territories.
The poor national health indicators are largely due to racial and
ethnic health disparities that result, for example, in more cancer
and AIDS that is in African Americans than all other population
groups, twice the infant mortality in African and Native Americans, lower life expectancy by about six years for African American
males, more diabetes and complications in African Americans,
Latino Americans, and Native Americans.
These are factors that contribute to the premature preventable
death and disability that I mentioned previously, all of which we
pay for and we pay for it in many ways.
To adequately address all of this will require restoring most if
not all of the cuts in the healthcare budget and increasing funding,
the funding for inflation, as well an outright investment. In this
case, this would be an investment that would really pay dividends
in terms of decreased healthcare costs over the long run and improve health quality.
As a matter of fact, I think that making that investment in prevention and closing the gaps in health disparities is the only way
that we are really going to cut healthcare costs. This is an investment which in the name of national security and national competitiveness we cannot afford not to make even it is not immediately
paid for.
The implementation of item four, the elimination of health disparities, is embodied in H.R. 3014, the Healthcare Equity and Accountability Act, which was developed by the Tri Caucus over a
period of years with in put from national advocacy and healthcare
organizations and introduced by Congresswoman Hilda Solis.
This bill which will close most of the existing healthcare gaps,
improve the health and well-being of Americans, and strengthen
the healthcare system is estimated to cost roughly $3.5 billion, not
necessarily in one budget year. However, by making this initial in-
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vestment on the front end, we will ensure positive results and savings in both lives and healthcare dollars on the back end.
The Congressional Black Caucus will be introducing its budget
and these figures will be included in our submission.
The current state of our healthcare system is one of crisis and
heading towards catastrophe unless we have real reform, so I urge
the Committee to give favorable consideration to this request which
will go a long way to bringing a system that cannot really at this
point be called a healthcare system into the healthcare system that
it needs to be.
Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Donna Christensen follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Thank you, Chairman Spratt and members of the committee for the opportunity
to give testimony and input into what I anticipate will be a competitive and difficult
budget process.
I come before you today not only as a colleague and as the only African-American
physician currently serving in Congress, but also as the Chair of the Congressional
Black Caucus Health Braintrust and as one of the three health co-chairs of the Tri
Caucuswhich is made up of the Congressional Black, Hispanic and Asian Pacific
Caucuses.
Across all of these capacities, one of the key issues that hasand willremain
at the top of my legislative priority list is that of health and health care, and the
grave differences in health care access, quality and thus health outcomes that have
a detrimental impact on the health, wellness and life opportunities of millions of innocent Americans every single year.
Mr. Chairman, these differenceswhich are commonly called health disparitieshave been well documented for more than two decades. And, studies increasingly show that health disparities no longer only affect African Americans and other
people of color; they no longer are only issues faced by the uninsured or those in
low-income communities. Health disparities and gaps in our health care system
have gone unaddressed for so long and have become so pervasive that they now affect all Americans. In fact, Mr. Chairman, today, health disparities are no longer
only a minority health issue; today, health disparities are an American issue.
Not only do health disparities cause about 100,000 premature preventable deaths
each year, but they also lower the quality of care that Americans receive from the
health care system and detrimentally affect the health outcomes of millions of
Americans. We also know that the gaps in health care that are caused by health
disparities not only carry grave health repercussions, but also serious economic consequences, too. In fact, health disparities are among the key factors that drive up
the health care costs that weas a nationstruggle to contain each year.
Mr. Chairman and colleagues, I know that what I am about to propose is going
to sound somewhat counterintuitive on the surface, especially given our nations
overall indebtedness, but it is a solution that not only will improve the overall
health and strength of our nation, but also that will strengthen our health care system and save valuable health care dollars.
And, what I propose is the following: not cuts to health care spending, as are
clearly very evident throughout the Presidents FY 09 budget proposal, but instead,
a far greater investment in health care in a manner that will meaningfully close
the health care gaps that cost this nation lives and millions of dollars every year.
Mr. Chairman, this investment must begin with a brave new approach to
healthcare funding that strives to close existing health care gaps as a means to not
only slow down, but to begin to reverse the exorbitant health care costs facing this
nation. And, it must go beyond our current focus on research at the dire expense
of prevention and care.
In many ways, Mr. Chairman, as difficult as this budget process will be, we have
a rare opportunity to develop and champion a budget which reflects a health care
ideology that is as medically and socially responsible as it is fiscally responsive. Mr.
Chairman, we have a rare opportunity to develop a budget that will set this nation
in a much-needed new direction, where we take active steps to expand coverage, increase access, improve quality, and close the health care gaps that leave far too
many millions of Americans in poorer health, suffering worse health outcomes, with-
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out adequate access to quality care, and unable to fulfill their lifes potentials. And,
finally Mr. Chairman, we have a rare opportunity to champion a budget that promotes equity and fairness in health care; principles that resonate with every single
American.
As a starting point, Mr. Chairman, we must repeal the tax breaks in the Presidents budget that give so much to those Americans with the very most at the extreme expense of those Americans with the very least. And, with this revenue, Mr.
Chairman, we have to restore cuts in the presidents budget that not only widen the
existing gaps in the health care system, but that contribute to the skyrocketing
health care costs that plague our nations fiscal strength each year. These cuts will
do nothing to bolster and improve the health and well being of millions of innocent,
hardworking Americans; they will only exacerbate this nations most severe health
disparities that affect millions of Americans throughout the country.
In fact, the list of this budgets cutsmany of which completely eliminate critically important programsreads like an embarrassing dishonor roll and includes:
cuts to the already under-funded National Health Service Corps; extreme cuts to the
health professions programs and include cuts that often eliminate those programs
charged with increasing diversity among health professionals, those which focus on
strengthening the nursing and dental workforce, those which focus on geriatric care
and those that have a community-centric focus; millions of dollars in cuts to HIV/
AIDS Education and Training Centers, maternal and child health programs, chronic
disease prevention and health promotion programs, substance abuse prevention programs, mental health programs, and rural health programs. The Presidents budget
also proposes extraordinary cuts to SCHIP, Medicaid and Medicarethree programs
that are critically important to the nations most vulnerable children, low-income
residents and senior citizens and those with disabilitiesas well as grave cuts to
every office and agency, as well as to every program that is integrally important
to efforts to close health care gaps and achieve equity in health care.
Additionally, Mr. Chairman, I would be remiss if I did not also mention that as
the Congresswoman from the United States Virgin Islands, who practiced medicine
there for more than two decades before coming to Congress, I am very concerned
that under the Presidents budget, the Virgin Islands and other U.S. territories will
continue to not receive state-like treatment under Medicaid and Medicare, despite
having state-size health and health care needs and challenges.
Mr. Chairman, the time has come for us to invest in the health and life opportunities of all Americans, from Maryland to California, from Alaska to the U.S. Virgin
Islands and from Oregon to Guam. The time has come for us to tackle our nations
most pressing health care challenges with a health care budget and spending rationale that not only is congruent with the health care needs and wants of millions of
Americans, but that also strengthens the health care system; improves and protects
the health and well being of Americans, and ultimately strengthens the health and
well being of this nation.
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Ms. HOOLEY [presiding]. Welcome. The next member to testify is
Tim Walz from Minnesota. Welcome, and we are pleased to receive
your testimony. You are recognized for five minutes.
STATEMENT OF HON. TIMOTHY J. WALZ, A REPRESENTATIVE
IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF MINNESOTA
Mr. WALZ. Well, thank you, Madam Chairman, and thank you to
you and the entire Committee for the incredibly important work
that you do. And it is a privilege for me to be here today and testify
on just a couple of areas that I think are critical in this years
budget that I would like to address my testimony to.
And that will be Function 750 on the Administration of Justice
Programs, Function 700 on veterans benefits, and Function 550 on
health programs, specifically rural health programs.
And I wanted to just address first of all on the issue of Function
750 and the Administration of Justice Programs, the issue of border security and import security in the United States is one that
many Americans are deeply concerned about. It is also one that I
believe we can make great strides in and that this Congress can
do things necessary to the great people who are out there delivering that border protection and do it in a very robust way, but
also do it that stays consistent with the principles of this countrys
strongest-held beliefs.
In January, I had the opportunity to travel down to El Paso,
Texas and meet with members of the Customs and Border Protection Agency. On the trip, I was incredibly impressed with the professionalism, the commitment of the people who were serving
there, and watching them use new technologies to do their jobs.
As I was there watching at the border, a K-9 unit detected a carload of narcotics and the smuggler who was attempting to bring it
into the United States.
I met a couple of National Guardsmen who were using good remote cameras and infrared technology to monitor sections of the
U.S. border to direct Border Patrol agents to border violations.
It was clear from my visit that the Border Patrol had more resources than they had a few years ago, but they could use even
more. And I urge this Committee to make sure we support the
funding levels that make it possible to deploy the infrastructure
and the technology to allow these people to do the job and to remove some of the doubts that Americans have that we are able to
do this job. And it is one that I think the people down on the border can do the job if we provide the resources.
In addition, I would like to talk a little bit about veterans benefits under 700, Function 700. It is an incredibly important area to
me, especially medical care, research into traumatic brain injury,
the VA Inspector Generals Office, and then GI Bill benefits in a
changing climate where we are using our Guard and Reserve forces
at a rate never before seen.
I have had the privilege to spend the first year on the Veterans
Affairs Committee from which I have had the opportunity to meet
veterans from across the United States. From my experience, I believe that we must ensure that VA clinics have the resources to
provide the first-class care that these warriors have earned.
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I have met with brave men and women who have returned from
Iraq with debilitating injuries. Research into traumatic brain injury and prosthetics will help these servicemembers lead normal,
happy lives despite the injuries that they received.
As a member of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee
on Veterans Affairs, I believe it is absolutely imperative that we
provide robust funding to the VA Office of Inspector General. The
VAs Office of Inspector General returns, by stopping fraud, waste,
and abuse, returns about $11.00 for every dollar that we invest in
finding fraud, waste, and abuse.
Two weeks ago at a hearing we had, I absolutely was shocked
to hear when the Inspector General for the VA said that about
$300 million in fraud, waste, and abuse charges are going
uninvestigated and unpunished. And the question I asked him, was
it safe to say that during a time of war that we have war profiteering going on on the backs of our most grievously wounded soldiers and the reason that we were not stopping it was is because
the Administrations budget under-funded the Inspector General,
the only independent audit agency. And the Inspector General himself said, yes, that that was the case. So I would hope we would
get there.
And lastly on this issue is modernizing GI Bill benefits, recognizing that the National Guard and Reserve are shouldering the
brunt of this deployment.
In July of 2007, 1,162 soldiers from Minnesota National Guard
returned from a 22-month mobilization and deployment to Iraq, the
longest of any ground combat in Iraq.
When they returned home, they learned they were unable to receive Chapter 30 GI Bill benefits because their orders had said
they were one day short.
I have introduced legislation that would address this problem,
ensure that it never again happens to our National Guard and Reservists and our warriors, and I am hopeful that the funding this
year will make sure that that is there to make it happen.
And, finally, I would urge substantial funding for Function 550
which supports rural healthcare initiatives. One-fourth of Americas population lives in rural areas. However, healthcare resources
to those residents are scarce. Rural communities are served by
fewer doctors, hospitals, and ambulances.
I am very lucky and the people, my constituents are very lucky
that we live in an area that feels the effects of the Mayo Clinic in
southern Minnesota. But even in an area that has some of the access to the best medical care in the world, we still see our rural
areas are suffering from this.
And I urge the Committee to reject President Bushs $150 million
cut in funding for rural healthcare initiatives. It is unacceptable.
It will hurt rural areas and it will hurt our communities that are
at the heart of what America is.
So, Madam Chairwoman, I thank you for the work that you do
and other members of this Committee. I look forward to what I
know will be a document coming out of this Committee that will
reflect this nations priorities and values and I thank you for the
opportunity to share my concerns with you.
[The prepared statement of Timothy J. Walz follows:]
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PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt and members of the committee, I appreciate the chance to testify before you today about funding for important programs within the federal budget.
My testimony will focus on funding for function 750 Administration of Justice Programs that are important to homeland security; function 700 Veterans Benefits and
Services; and function 550 Health Programs.
BORDER SECURITY
To begin, I urge the Committee to provide a robust funding level for function 750
Administration of Justice programs.
In January, I had the opportunity to travel to El Paso, Texas and meet with members of United States Customs and Border Protection. On that trip, I was greatly
impressed with the professionalism and commitment of the men and women who
serve on our borders and with the technology those agents use to safeguard our
country.
In El Paso, I watched as CBP agents used canine units to detect a carload of narcotics that a smuggler was attempting to bring into the United States. I met two
National Guardsmen who use remote cameras to monitor a section of the U.S.-Mexico border and direct Border Patrol agents to respond to suspected incursions.
It was clear from my visit that while the men and women of Customs and Border
Protection have more resources than they had just a few years ago, they could use
even more.
I encourage the Committees support of funding levels that will make it possible
for Customs and Border Protection to deploy additional infrastructure, technology
and personnel along the borders of the United States.
VA BENEFITS AND SERVICES
Additionally, I urge you to provide significant funding for function 700 Veterans
Benefits and Services.
Of particular importance to me is funding for veterans medical care, research into
Traumatic Brain Injury and prosthetics, the VAs Office of the Inspector General,
and GI Bill benefits
I have been privileged to spend my first year in Congress serving on the Veterans
Affairs Committee, from which I have had the opportunity to meet with veterans
from every corner of the United States. From that experience, I believe that must
ensure that our VA clinics have the resources they need to continue providing firstclass care.
I have also met with brave men and women who have returned from Iraq with
debilitating physical injuries and mental trauma. Research into Traumatic Brain Injury and prosthetics will help these servicemembers lead normal, happy lives, despite their injuries.
As a member of the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee of the Veterans
Affairs Committee, it is imperative that we provide robust funding for the VA Office
of the Inspector General (OIG), which provides a return of $11 for every $1 invested
by finding waste in VAs spending and procurement systems.
And I encourage you to provide a funding level sufficient to ensure that returning
soldiers can take advantage of the benefits they have earned.
In July 2007, 1,162 returning soldiers from the Minnesota National Guard returned from a 20-month mobilization to Iraqthe longest of any ground combat unit
in the war in Iraq. When they returned home, they learned they were unable to receive Chapter 30 GI Bill benefits because their orders were one day short of the requirement.
I have introduce legislation which would address this problem and ensure that it
never happens again. I am hopeful that full funding in this years Budget Resolution
will help.
RURAL HEALTH CARE
Finally, I urge your support for substantial funding for function 550, which supports rural health care initiatives.
One-fourth of the American population lives in rural areas, however, health care
resources for those residents are scarce. Rural communities are served by fewer doctors, hospitals, and ambulances.
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I urge the Committee to reject the Presidents proposed $150 million cut in funding for rural health activities. This is an unacceptable level of funding if we are to
continue to provide health care to rural America.
Mr. Chairman, thank you for the work that you and the other members of the
Committee do, and I look forward to working with you to produce a budget that reflects our countrys priorities.
Ms. HOOLEY. Thank you, Representative Walz. I have a couple
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You do not just have the cost of the conflict on the other end.
There is a lifetime of commitment to these people. There is a lifetime of commitment to their families. And we have seen year after
year up until last year when we finally saw adequate funding that
we were exacerbating the situation.
So I would say in Minnesota, we are holding our own, but there
is more to be done. My concern is is that we need to get this nationwide and for a longer extended period of time.
Ms. HOOLEY. Thank you. Thank you very much for your testimony. Appreciate it.
Mr. WALZ. Thank you.
Ms. HOOLEY. The next member to testify is Representative Wolf
from Virginia. Welcome.
STATEMENT OF HON. FRANK WOLF, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF VIRGINIA
Mr. WOLF. Thank you very much. I will be very brief and submit
the statement.
Ms. HOOLEY. Okay.
Mr. WOLF. I will read one line I have in here. It does not take
an expert to realize that this nation is facing a financial crisis like
none in our history. This problem has only worsened since I last
testified before the Committee.
I beg this Committee. This Congress is failing the American people. There is a bill out there that Jim Cooper has called the Cooper
Wolf Bill that sets up a national commission, eight Republicans
and eight Democrats, somewhat set up as the bill that we did for
the Iraq Study Group, that would put everything on the table,
Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and tax policy, and take one
year to go around the country listening to the American people because the American people know that this Congress is failing them,
every one of those gentlemen whose pictures are on the wall.
Mr. Pinetta testified for this bill over on the Senate side. Mr. Kasich is for this bill. If they could come back and vote in this Committee, this would get out. But, unfortunately, they are not here.
And so David Walker sent me a letter two weeks ago, I think a
copy went to every member, saying there is an economic tsunami
off the coast waiting to come in and take us over.
And what the Cooper Bill does is it puts everything on the table.
They take one year, public hearings, every federal reserve district,
come back. And what separates this out from all the other commissions, it is required to have a vote, like the Base Closing Commission.
There is a comparable bill over on the Senate side, Conrad and
Judd Gregg. I think they will report their bill out. I do not expect
that this Congress will deal with it unless there is some change,
dramatic change.
So I beg of you do this for our children and do this for our children because I will tell you. Members of Congress who are here
now who do nothing on this issue, ten years from now when this
thing really gets very different are going to say why did they do
not something when they were here.
Lastly, you may have seen the Financial Times piece that came
in January saying that if we do nothing, we will lose our Triple A
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bond rating within ten years. If we lose our Triple A bond rating,
that would be very bad.
With that, I would just submit the full statement.
[The prepared statement of Frank Wolf follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, this committee has an enormous challenge before it in crafting our nations budget. I appreciate your giving me the opportunity to testify today.
It doesnt take an expert to realize that this nation is facing a financial crisis like
none other in our history. This problem has only worsened since I testified before
the committee at this time last year. A recent letter I received from outgoing U.S.
Comptroller David Walker characterized our countrys fiscal outlook as one that will
result in a tsunami of spending and debt levels that could swamp our ship of
state.
If we dont get our countrys financial house in order and make the sacrifices necessary today, the future for our children and grandchildren will be bleak. Our economic growth will come to a grinding halt, our standard of living and even our national security will be at risk if we dont start actively working to change our current course. We cannot continue to keep borrowing and mortgaging our future to
countries like China and Saudi Arabia that carry obscene amounts of our debt.
This issue is a economic and moral issue that hangs like an ominous cloud over
everything we do as public servants, yet many ignore it. I understand we wont be
able to fix our financial woes overnight, but we must come together across the aisle
if there is ever to be any hope of ensuring that our nations future is strong.
Thats why Jim Cooper and I joined efforts and have been calling for a national
bipartisan commission that will put everythingentitlement spending, other federal
program spending and tax policyon the table and come up with recommendations
to get our fiscal house in order. Nothing would be off limits for discussion by the
commission members.
A critical component of the commissions work will be to engage the American people in a national dialogue about the scope of the countrys financial conditions and
solutions to the problem. After spending six months conducting town hall style
meetings around the country the commission will present a report to Congress describing the long-term fiscal problems, public suggestions and views, and policy options available to get us back on the right track. Modeled after the federal baseclosing process, Congress would be required to vote up or down on the plan in its
entirety. Mandating congressional action is what makes the SAFE Commission
unique.
The Cooper-Wolf SAFE Commission legislation has been endorsed by groups
across a wide political spectrumgroups who usually disagree more than they agree
on policy issuesthe Brooking Institution, the Heritage Foundation, the Concord
Coalition, and the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. The Business
Roundtable and National Federation of Independent Business are also on board. National columnists David Brooks, David Broder, and Robert Samuelson all have written about the entitlement crisis facing our country and the SAFE Commission as
a potential way forward.
We have over 70 bipartisan cosponsors here in the House, and as many of you
may know, Senators Conrad and Gregg have introduced similar legislation in the
Senate.
As you consider the FY 2009 budget, I ask that you take the time to review this
legislation and consider embracing it. If other viable bipartisan solutions are presented, I think we should look at those, too. The financial tsunami is moving closer
to our shores and the longer we wait to act, the harder it will be to stop the tidal
wave of red ink. If our children and grandchildren were on the beach with an actual
tsunami off the coast, we would do everything we could to help them.We must move
beyond politics and come to grips with the fact that the financial future of our country is an American issue and its on our watch to fix.
I want our children and grandchildren to grow up with all the opportunities the
Greatest Generation made possible for you and me. Lets work together to take the
necessary action to secure Americas future economy.
Thank you, again, Chairman Spratt and Mr. Ryan, for this chance to testify
today.
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Ms. HOOLEY. Thank you so much.
I happen to agree with you in that we cannot have the kind of
deficit and debt that we have and continue this. And I mean, I
think one of the reasons this Committee has worked very hard to
actually enforce, which it is done almost a hundred percent of the
time, the Pay As You Go rules and trying to have a balanced budget, but it is going to take a while.
And you are right. All of the things coming at us when you look
at the baby boomers and just Medicare, we are going to be in serious trouble if we do not do something about it.
So I thank you for your testimony and thank you for sponsoring
this bill. And we will bring this up before the Committee.
Mr. WOLF. Thank you very much, Madam Chairwoman.
Ms. HOOLEY. You are welcome.
Without objection, the Committee stands in recess subject to the
call of the Chair.
[Recess.]
Ms. HOOLEY. The next member to testify is Representative
Fossella from New York. Welcome. We are anxious to hear your
testimony.
STATEMENT OF HON. VITO FOSSELLA, A REPRESENTATIVE IN
CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF NEW YORK
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In addition, I am particularly concerned about the way the Presidents budget targets teaching hospitals and its disproportionate
impact upon the hospital system in New York.
New York City is the physician training capitol of the world. The
city trains more physicians in more specialties than any other city
across the globe. More than 16,000 residents are trained annually
in New Yorks 56 major teaching hospitals and 113 medical schools.
In the 13th Congressional District of New York, the White House
budget proposal would reduce payments to teaching hospitals by
more than $145 million over five years.
Statewide reimbursements to teaching hospitals will be reduced
to $4.3 billion and the proposed cuts will significantly impair the
ability of teaching hospitals to adequately train physicians to ensure that patients receive high quality of care.
I believe the proposal is short-sighted, that it fails to acknowledge the pending doctor and nurse shortages throughout the country.
Over time, as hospital and doctor visits have increased, the number of medical school graduates has remained static. Indeed, it is
estimated that physician visits will continue to grow by 53 percent
between 2000 and 2020, resulting in a shortage of 24,000 doctors
and nurses by 2020.
And, similarly, I have concerns about the Administrations proposal to reduce the cost of the Medicaid Program. For instance, the
Presidents budget proposes to eliminate federal Medicaid dollars
for graduate medical education payments to hospitals. The proposal
would cut payments to the public hospital system in New York City
by $400 million in the first year alone.
On 9/11 health, another critical budget item for New York is the
$25 million to provide health monitoring and treatment for first responders and workers suffering from 9/11 related illnesses as a result of their service at Ground Zero after the September 11th attack.
Last year, the Administration included the same amount in the
fiscal year 2008 budget and I was assured that was merely a
placeholder until further data was collected on the cost of monitoring.
Clearly, Madam Chair, the need grows. The Federal Government
has failed to adequately step up and coordinate a federal response,
a comprehensive response to the thousands of people who are currently enrolled and being monitored for illnesses and injuries and
sicknesses that they have developed after volunteering, many of
them volunteering, many working in Ground Zero.
The New York City Mayor Bloomberg revealed that 681,000 individuals are in need of medical monitoring. Four hundred and ten
thousand people heavily exposed to Ground Zero toxins and 30,000
responders are sick, yet 21,000 of them do not have adequate
health insurance.
So, Madam Chair, this and other areas of the budget clearly call
for, I think, a more reasoned approach to ensure that our most vulnerable get the help and care they need to ensure that New York
Citys hospitals and particularly the teaching hospitals remain the
beacon of greatness that they are and that the 9/11 workers and
responders who I think to this day have been too often ignored are
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always remembered, not just in this Congress, but on the other end
of Pennsylvania Avenue.
[The prepared statement of Vito Fossella follows:]
PREPARED STATEMENT
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Thank you, Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan for allowing me to testify before your Committee this afternoon.
My primary area of concern with the Presidents Fiscal Year 2008 budget centers
on reductions in Medicare and Medicaid funding for hospitals and health systems
that could limit access to comprehensive medical care for seniors and low-income individuals. Let me begin by saying that my concern over these reductions does not
blind me to the fact that we need to take steps to curb the spiraling costs of both
Medicare and Medicaid to protect it for generations to come. However, I believe that
efforts to reduce the growth of Medicare should be rooted in meaningful reform,
rather than across the board reductions in reimbursements to certain providers.
The Administrations proposal seeks to reign in Medicare spending by targeting
the bedrock of Medicares care deliveryinpatient hospitals, outpatient hospitals,
hospices, ambulance services, skilled nursing and inpatient rehabilitation hospitals
and home health care. By either reducing the update factor or flat-funding these
programs, the budget proposal has the potential to create widespread instability in
the program.
In my district alone, the proposed reductions in Medicare would slash payments
to our hospitals by nearly $300 million over the next five years alone. Clearly, these
cuts would lead to a reduction in core Medicare services and leave Staten Island
and Brooklyn seniors without access to the quality care they need and deserve.
In addition, Im particularly concerned about the way the Presidents budget targets teaching hospitals and its disproportionate impact upon the hospital system in
New York. New York City is the physician training capital of the world. The City
trains more physicians in more specialties than any other city across the globe
more than 16,000 residents are trained annually in New Yorks 56 major teaching
hospitals and 13 medical schools.
In the 13th Congressional District of New York, the White House budget proposals would reduce payments to teaching hospitals by more than $145 million over
5 years. Statewide, reimbursements to teaching hospitals would be reduced by $4.3
billion. The proposed cuts will significantly impair the ability of teaching hospitals
to adequately train physicians to ensure that patients receive a high quality of care.
This proposal is short-sighted and fails to acknowledge the pending doctor and
nurse shortages throughout the country. Over time, as hospital and doctor visits
have increased, the number of medical school graduates has remained static. Indeed, it is estimated that physician visits will continue to grow by 53% between
2000 and 2020, resulting in a shortage of 24,000 doctors and nurses by 2020.
Similarly, I have concerns about the Administrations proposals to reduce the
costs of the Medicaid program. For instance, the Presidents budget proposes to
eliminate federal Medicaid dollars for graduate medical education (GME) payments
to hospitals. This proposal alone would cut payments to the public hospital system
in New York City by $400 million in the first year alone.
On a smaller scale but of critical concern to New York Citys hospitals, the Presidents budget includes significant cuts to bioterrorism preparedness grants. The Administration proposal reduces funding for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) State and Local Bioterrorism and Emergency Public Health Preparedness by $136.7 million, and the Hospital Preparedness Grants administered by
the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response by $60 million.
In high threat areas like New York City, these dollars are essential to the emergency preparedness efforts of the hospitals and the Department of Health. In conjunction with the massive cuts to reimbursements under Medicare, the hospitals in
my district will be woefully underfunded to adequately coordinate and maintain
plans to respond in the event of a bioterrorism attack or public health emergency.
In fact, a recent report by the National Association of County and City Health Officials found that cuts in these programs that have occurred in recent years have adversely affected the emergency and bioterror preparedness at the local level.
While I have reservations about several of the health care budget proposals, I
would like to commend the President for his dedication to providing high-quality
health care to our nations veterans. Since 2001, the President has increased funding for veterans medical care by 100% overall; the Presidents budget recommends
an almost $5 billion increase over the estimated levels for FY08.
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In addition, I would like to express my support for the inclusion of a $2.7 billion
increase in funding for discretionary Pell grants included in the Presidents budget
for the Department of Education. This investment, in conjunction with funding provided by the College Cost Reduction and Access Act will support a maximum Pell
grant of $4,800 in 2009 and allow the maximum grant to rise to $5400 in 2012. As
the cost of tuition continues to rise, this increase will help to make college more affordable for families throughout my district.
9/11 HEALTH
Another crucial budget item for New York is the inclusion of $25 million to provide health monitoring and treatment for first responders and workers suffering
from 9-11-related illnesses as a result of their service at Ground Zero.
Last year, the Administration included the same amount in the FY08 budget, and
I was assured that it was merely a place holder until further data was collected
on the costs of monitoring and treatment. It was expected and is now evident that
these programs need significantly more funding. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), which administers the World Trade Center program, developed estimates that put the costs for running the current program at
$218 million for FY 2009. With a recent GAO report that shows the federal response
could be improved, and that shows not only that a large number of individuals are
sick but are getting sicker, how possibly could the need for funding remain at $25
million in FY 09?
Many of these sick 9/11 workers are suffering from long-term illnesses as a result
of inhaling Ground Zeros toxic plume. Some have even died from their sickness. A
report released by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg revealed that 681,000
individuals are in need of medical monitoring, 410,000 people were heavily exposed to Ground Zero toxins and 30,000 responders are sick, yet 21,000 of them
do not have adequate health insurance.
As you develop the budget, I urge you to keep in mind the $25 million is a starting point and any budget resolution should include a caveat for adding funding. I
would also like to point out that this isnt just a New York problemits a national
problem. People from all over the country came to Ground Zero to help New York
and our nation get back on its feet again. Many are suffering from the same illnesses New York police and firefighters have. Funding these critical programs will
help those individuals as well.
HOMELAND SECURITY FUNDING
Id also like to express my support for an increase in funding for the Social Security Administration. The Presidents Budget proposes a 6% increase over the FY08
levela number itself that was $451 million higher than 2007. Prior to these increases, the SSA went 10 years without any adjustments in funding levels. As a result, as the number of beneficiary visits and claims increased, staff and funding levels at the social security offices in my district decreased, leading to increasingly long
wait times for appointments or decisions on claims. In fact, in my district, beneficiaries can wait as long as a year to schedule a claims hearing, and can wait
longer than 2 years on appeals of denied claims. I would urge this Committee to
consider greater increases in the SSA budgetboth to reduce wait times for beneficiaries and to better prepare the SSA for its new responsibilities in administering
Medicare Part D.
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COMPETITIVENESS
I would also like to take the opportunity to speak briefly about the Administrations proposal to impose a new tax on futures transactions that are cleared by derivative clearing organizations regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). I am concerned this proposal will reduce liquidity on our futures
exchanges, diverting trades from the regulatory oversight of the CFTC to unregulated or foreign markets. In an increasingly globalized marketplace, I would urge
the Committee not to accept a proposal that will reduce the competitiveness of
American futures markets.
GENERAL
Lastly, I would like to express my support for several discretionary programs that
are of critical importance to Staten Island and Brooklyn.
First, Id like to express support for funding for the Department of Justice to implement the Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne-JAG) program. These
grants provide essential federal support for law enforcement agencies and their efforts to combat against drug and gang activities in our local communities. In addition, I would urge adequate funding for the National Estuary Program that provides
funding to local coastal communities like Staten Island and Brooklyn to protect and
restore estuaries and watersheds. Lastly, I would like to stress the importance of
adequately funding the National Institutes of Health to achieve further progress in
research and treatments for diseases like diabetes, cancer and neurological disorders.
Thank you for the opportunity to testify today before this Committee.
Ms. HOOLEY. Thank you, Representative.
IN
Mr. Chairman, I would like to thank you for giving me the opportunity to submit
a statement to the Committee today. The hearing is a wonderful opportunity for
Representatives from across the country to express their views on the Presidents
budget proposal for the 2009 fiscal year.
As you know, Mr. Chairman, there is no doubt that the state of our nations finances is grim. The budget deficit is undeniable and requires immediate attention.
As Members of Congress, we have an obligation to ensure that this burden is not
passed along to our grandchildren. The Presidents budget takes steps toward
achieving fiscal responsibility by keeping the growth of government programs to a
minimum.
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That having been said, we have an obligation to keep our promises to those who
have defended our freedom. As you may be aware, my district is home to over
100,000 veterans, the most of any Member of the House of Representatives. I have
an extraordinary charge to advocate for policies and legislation that best care for
veterans needs.
As such, I would like to raise my objections to the Presidents budget for the Department of Veteran Affairs. I have consistently opposed charging veterans an enrollment fee or dramatically increasing their prescription drug co-pays. Since I first
came to Congress, I have fought against the Administrations desire to charge higher-income veterans, such as those veterans grouped as category 7 and 8, enrollment
fees and higher co-payments. This change has been requested by the Administration
every year since 2004, and with strong bipartisan support, this policy has been rejected every year. It is in the best interest of our nations veterans for Congress to
work in a bipartisan manor to do the same this year.
Another aspect of the Department of Veterans Affairs budget that concerns me
is funding for the Office of Inspector General (OIG). In FY 2008, Congress provided
the OIG with $80.5 million in funding which enabled the OIG to hire 48 Full Time
Equivalent (FTE) employees and expand its oversight capabilities. For FY 2009, the
President has requested $75.6 million for the OIG. This decrease will require the
OIG to eliminate the 48 newly hired FTE employees and cancel the oversight
projects assigned to those employees.
The OIG is an invaluable resource that forces VA to spend wisely, eliminate
waste, and ensure our veterans receive the best care possible. In fact, the OIG provides a return of $11 for every $1 invested in its services. In light of the historic
increases Congress has made to the VAs budget in recent years, it is crucial that
the OIG has enough funding to monitor how VA uses its resources. As such, I support the Republican Views and Estimates for the Committee on Veterans Affairs
that provides $111.1 million in FY 2009 for the OIG.
The second priority I would like to highlight is extremely important to the people
of Florida.
STARS is a Subtropical Agricultural Research Station near my home in
Brooksville, FL, and is funded under the Agricultural Research Service, which is the
research arm of the Department of Agriculture.
The Agricultural Research Services mission statement quotes that it finds solutions from field to table. The research done at STARS is invaluable, both to the
scientists who devote their lives to it, and to everyone who benefits in return. Because of this 3800-acre beef cattle research facility, American farmers plant high
quality, disease- and pest-resistant crops and protect livestock from bacteria that
could eventually make its way into our food stock.
For Fiscal Year 2009, the Presidents proposed budget contains an $84 million dollar reduction for the Agricultural Research Service. Because of the proposed reduction for next year, the ARS has proposed closure for 11 of its 100 locations. STARS
is one of the sites the Agricultural Research Service plans to close.
The annual operating budget for STARS is $1.4 million dollars, a nominal amount
when we look at the total spending contained in this budget proposal. In addition,
this research site is particularly close to my heart because I bring my staff to this
location for office retreats.
As the committee drafts the budget resolution for the 2009 fiscal year, I hope that
you take my requests into consideration and not include any proposal to increase
fees for veterans health care, or make cuts to the Agriculture Research Service.
Again, thank you for allowing me to submit this statement to the committee.
OF
DELEGATE FROM
THE
Good afternoon Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan. Thank you for the
opportunity to testify before the House Committee on the Budget on the Administrations budget proposal for Fiscal Year 2009 and Guams budget priorities for the upcoming year. I greatly appreciate your attention to and consideration of the priorities that I identify.
First, I respectfully request and appeal to the Committee to include in its proposed budget resolution for Fiscal Year 2009 sufficient budgetary headroom to allow
for Congress to pass legislation to implement the recommendations of the Guam
War Claims Review Commission. Second, I respectfully request that the budget resolution for Fiscal Year 2009 also include budgetary headroom for the Department
of Labor to provide additional workforce development programs and projects on
Guam. I thank this committee for including reference to the Guam war claims legis-
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lation in last years report accompanying the budget resolution. This was critical to
overcoming budgetary hurdles that have hampered this legislation in the past. We
hope that the committee can continue this commitment again this year to help enable Senate passage.
I first introduced H.R. 1595, the Guam World War II Loyalty Recognition Act,
during to 109th Congress and re-introduced the legislation last year. The bill received favorable consideration in the House Committee on Natural Resources and
was reported to the House of Representatives. On May 8, 2007, H.R. 1595 was
passed by an overwhelming vote of 288 to 133 and was sent to the Senate for their
consideration. The legislation has been referred to the Senate Committee on the Judiciary. We believe that the Senate will take action on this legislation during the
2nd session of the 110th Congress so sufficient budget authority is needed to ensure
that funding does not impede the progress of this critical legislation for Guam.
As in previous years, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the
budget should provide for a least $126 million over three fiscal years for legislation
to implement the recommendations of the Guam War Claims Review Commission
as is stipulated in H.R. 1595. This estimate is based on every possible conceivable
claim whose payment would be authorized by the legislation.
The Guam War Claims Commission, which was authorized in the 107th Congress,
conducted hearings on Guam to receive testimony from survivors. In addition to
these hearings, the Commission also received questionnaires from survivors on their
occupational experiences. In total, approximately 8,000 questionnaires were received
by the Commission primarily from survivors on Guam and to a smaller extent, from
throughout the entire United States. Based upon these returned questionnaires, it
is estimated that the amounts of actual claims would be significantly lower than the
Commissions original estimates and the conservative estimate provided by CBO.
Death claims may be as low as 330 based on the self-declarations in the questionnaires. While injury claims may actually number closer to 4,000 to 5,000. It should
also be noted that the final report of the Guam War Claims Review Commission included estimates for the potential death and personal injury claims. The Commission estimated total funding for claims to be $126 million based on 1,000 deaths and
8,551 survivors.
The Congress has a moral obligation to bring closure for the loyal Americans who
experienced the brutality of the occupation on Guam. I respectfully request that the
budget resolution for Fiscal Year 2009 take into account the costs associated with
H.R. 1595 and that would help fulfill our moral obligation to our fellow Americans
and to bring justice to them as has been recommended by the federal commission
authorized by the 107th Congress.
Looking forward, the planned realignment of military forces onto Guam will create substantial budget pressures on the Department of Defense (DOD). The largest
part of this force posture change is the realignment of nearly 8,000 Marines from
the III Marine Expeditionary Force currently stationed in Okinawa, Japan. Additionally, the Air Force is realigning a Red Horse Squadron from Osan, Korea adding
nearly 3,000 more airmen to Andersen Air Force Base along with a planned increase
of Navy personnel on Guam. The realignment of these forces is estimated to cost
$14 billion dollars over the next six years.
Unlike other major personnel movements and base closures, this realignment also
includes funding from the Government of Japan. Nearly $6 billion dollars of the
total $14 billion dollar cost will come from the Government of Japan and related
entities. Although this will relieve some financial pressure on the United States
Government, it will still require the Department of Defense to program nearly $8
billion in resources over the next five to six years. The Department has not identified all the authorities that will be required in order to execute the Japanese funding through special purpose entities. As such, the Department of Defense will likely
need budget room to program the Japanese funding dollars so they can be executed
for projects on Guam.
Planning for the realignment is well under way and under the direction of the
Joint Guam Program Office (JGPO) in coordination with U.S. Naval Facilities Engineering Command. The draft initial master plan is due out next month and will
help guide federal and local planning efforts. Moreover, the Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) is under works and the draft EIS is estimated to be completed in
January, 2009. Also, the Department of Defense is working closely with the Department of the Interior through the Interagency Group on Insular Areas (IGIA) to coordinate further investment by other interested federal agencies that can provide
Guam with funding to improve their medical, educational and physical infrastructure.
In particular, additional budget authority should be provided to the Air Force for
the purposes of increasing their military construction budget. Between fiscal year
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2008 to 2009 the overall construction budget decreased by thirty-two percent. This
drastic decrease is of great concern because of the impact that it will have on the
readiness of the Air Force. Facilities are critical for the maintenance of assets and
for maintaining a high quality of life for airmen across the country. The Air Force
has identified an unfunded requirement of $748 million for military construction in
Fiscal Year 2009. I respectfully request that the Committee include additional budget authority for the Air Force military construction account in order to ensure that
the Air Force has the necessary resources and infrastructure to complete its missions.
This issue is of particular importance to Guam as our community prepares for the
build-up of forces. Unfortunately, there is a decrease in military construction funding of nearly forty percent. The decrease is particularly troubling because it is anticipated that in fiscal years 2010 through 2014 that up to $1 billion of construction
funding will be executed on Guam during that timeframe. However, the on-island
capacity for construction is limited to approximately $500 million per year. Thus,
it was important for military construction funding to be slowly ramped up in years
prior to major construction so that the on-island workforce will be ready for the substantial increases. The significant cuts in Air Force military construction accounts
are a major factor for this decrease in funding. I am concerned that the decrease
in funding this year will be a set-back for local industry as it prepares for the military build-up.
Guams growing importance as a strategic asset to our national security is evidenced by the planned increase in DOD investment in the islands bases. Guam is
proud to serve the United States in this manner. But it is important that the Federal Government begin now to help the island prepare for this enhanced role. The
Committees support by means of providing budgetary headroom for the implementation of the recommendations of the Guam War Claims Review Commission will
go far toward achieving this goal. I appreciate the opportunity to submit this testimony for the record. Thank you for your consideration of my testimony.
OF
MS. CASTOR
I would like to thank Chairman Spratt and members of the Committee for their
leadership and for holding this special Members Day. I appreciate the opportunity
to testify before the Committee and offer my thoughts on an issue that affects states
throughout our nation.
Many states are facing severe funding shortfalls in Medicaid funding. In FY 08,
20 states lost Medicaid funding from 2007 and 17 states are projected to have
FMAP decreases in FY 09.
States like Florida, Texas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Nevada, Louisiana and others
are in danger of losing millions upon millions in federal Medicaid dollars. Yet, Medicaid enrollment is expected to increase.
The current FMAP formula is outdated and does not accurately reflect current income levels.
The inaccuracies in the current FMAP formula for many states increases the difficulty that states are already having providing needed funding for Medicaid as a
result of our nations dire economic state.
In the 2003 economic stimulus package, Congress approved $10 billion to temporarily enhance FMAP percentages for every state.
A similar increase today could both prevent scheduled decreases and temporarily
increase FMAP allocations for every state. We need immediate economic relief that
will alleviate the strain on state Medicaid budgets and ensure that our nations residents with the highest needs do not go without critical health services.
Families and businesses have already been hard hit by the economic downturn
and an increase in Medicaid spent on vital health services is the most beneficial and
effective way to strengthen our economy.
For millions of families, Medicaid is the only form of health coverage available.
In my home state of Florida, Medicaid serves approximately 2.2 million residents,
over half of whom are children.
Struggling and hardworking families depend on this support for health care. An
increase in Medicaid funding will provide families with critically needed medical
care.
Medicaid is a lifeline for many pregnant women, families who are transitioning
from welfare to work, young children and seniors who qualify for Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
My home state of Florida is not alone in severe projected Medicaid shortfalls, but
a unique anomaly is exacerbating our problems in Florida.
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Florida was hit by seven hurricanes in two years: Charley, Frances, Ivan and
Jeanne in 2004 and Katrina, Rita and Wilma in 2005.
As a result of these hurricanes, per capita income levels in Florida temporarily
surged upward due to a repair and rebuilding period. The anomaly caused the
FMAP formula in Florida to skew so it does not accurately attend to the states
need.
This anomaly will leave Floridas neediest residents, without vital health services
if Floridas FMAP allocation is not corrected.
Cuts in Medicaid funding from Floridas skewed numbers will adversely impact
my neighbors in the Tampa Bay area, residents in the state of Florida and others
living in states which face similar cuts.
In Florida, we are facing a $500 million hit in Medicaid funding, which will have
a devastating effect on hardworking families.
It is estimated that Florida will suffer a $220 million hit in FY 09 alone.
FMAP must be reformulated to reflect every states most recent data.
Millions of families who depend on Medicaid for health care will be forced to go
without if these cuts occur.
Congress must act to prevent this from happening. We must act to protect our
nations neediest citizensseniors, pregnant women and children.
We must work to provide protection for the folks who need it the most.
We must correct the FMAP allocation and enhance Medicaid funding.
Again, thank you Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee for this opportunity to testify on behalf of my state and others affected by this issue.
[From the Miami Herald Media Company]
Floridas record spate of hurricanes was great for blue tarp manufacturers and apparently, the states per capita income, which surged in a post-storm construction
boom.
But those years are over and the boom now is taking a bite out of the states
share of federal Medicaid dollars. Because the federal money is doled out according
to a formula based on the states past per capita income, its share of federal dollars
is dropping, even as demand for Medicaid increases and the states fiscal picture
dims.
Those were the boom years for a bunch of states and now, when they need it,
the states are feeling the pinch, said Matt Salo, director of health and human services for the National Governors Association, who joined state officials Wednesday to
plead with Floridas congressional delegation to address what the state estimates
could be a $500 million hit.
This is a significant loss of revenue that could affect the disabled, nursing home
residents, mothers and children, said Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Tampa, who is leading
efforts within the delegation to find a fix.
Castor said House leadership has shown interest in addressing the issue in upcoming legislation. In 2005, she noted, Congress increased the Medicaid payment for
states affected by Hurricane Katrina.
Seven hurricanes in two years [Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne in 2004 and
Katrina, Rita and Wilma in 2005] and subsequent reconstruction activity are skewing the Florida [Medicaid] formula, Castor wrote in a letter to House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi. This anomaly has resulted in significant projected reductions in
health services to Floridas neediest residents.
The portion of Medicaid paid by the federal government is calculated on a threeyear average of state per capita personal income, compared with the national per
capita income.
For the fiscal year that began in October, Floridas federal share dropped nearly
two percentage points, from 59 percent federal match to 57 percent. And it will drop
again in the federal budget that starts in October, from 57 percent to 55 percent,
said Carlton Snipes, acting deputy secretary for Medicaid at the Florida Agency for
Health Care Administration.
ECONOMIC STIMULUS: A STATE PERSPECTIVE
NATIONAL GOVERNORS ASSOCIATION
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needy individuals and help avoid cuts to basic services. Programs falling into this
broad category include:
MEDICAID
The Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) is the share of the state Medicaid benefit costs paid for by the federal government. FMAPs are recalculated each
year and the new FMAP is applied at the start of the federal fiscal year. The current FMAP formula reflects economic conditions from several years ago, thereby creating a lag that could exacerbate problems states have financing Medicaid during
a period of fiscal downturn. In federal FY 2008, 20 states experienced FMAP declines over their federal FY 2007 FMAP. Seventeen states are projected to have
FMAP decreases in federal FY 2009, beginning October 1, 2008. At the same time,
anecdotal evidence is emerging of increasing state Medicaid program enrollments.
During the last economic downturn, Congress approved $10 billion to temporarily
enhance FMAP percentages for every state by 2.95 percent for five quarters. In addition, a hold harmless provision preventing scheduled FMAP decreases was implemented for periods in 2003 and 2004. Both preventing scheduled decreases and temporarily increasing all states FMAPs would provide immediate fiscal relief to states
by alleviating Medicaid obligations and preventing cuts to programs important to
residents during fiscal downturns.
January 28, 2008.
Hon. HARRY REID, Majority Leader; Hon. MITCH MCCONNELL, Minority Leader, U.S.
Senate, Washington, DC.
Hon. NANCY PELOSI, Speaker; Hon. JOHN BOEHNER, Minority Leader, U.S. House of
Representatives, Washington, DC.
DEAR SENATOR REID, SENATOR MCCONNELL, SPEAKER PELOSI, and REPRESENTATIVE BOEHNER: The nations governors urge you to include state countercyclical
funding as part of your legislation to stimulate the economy. This would include $6
billion in Medicaid assistance by freezing scheduled federal FMAP reductions and
increasing all states FMAP as well as providing $6 billion in a flexible block grant.
The revenue reductions and Medicaid increases that accompany all economic
downturns, in combination with state balanced budget requirements, are forcing
states to cut spending as the economy weakens. These actions are procyclical and
will make the current downturn both longer and more severe.
States already are experiencing the effects of the slowing economy. The week of
January 14, the National Governors Association surveyed all states and found that
18 states reported shortfalls totaling $14 billion for fiscal year 2008 and 17 states
projected shortfalls of $31 billion for fiscal year 2009.
During the last two recessions, the state fiscal picture continued to deteriorate for
two years after the recessions ended. For example, in 2001, the year the last recession ended, 16 states were forced to cut budgets. In each of the next two years, 37
states had to make cuts to meet shortfalls. If the current downturn follows the path
of the two previous recessions, 35 to 40 states will face budget cuts in 2009.
In 2003, Congress approved $20 billion in assistance to states, including $10 billion in Medicaid and $10 billion in block grants. The governors current stimulus
proposal is essentially the same, with the exception that it is a total of $12 billion
as opposed to $20 billion. This proposal can be enacted quickly, as there is precedent
and it is timely, temporary and targeted.
Additionally, governors appreciate federal efforts to use tax policy to get additional money into the hands of consumers and businesses to stimulate the economy.
When considering tax changes to spur economic growth, governors urge Congress
and the Administration to follow the maxim of Do no harm by avoiding changes
at the federal level that would diminish state tax revenues or force state actions
that would undermine the effectiveness of federal efforts.
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We look forward to working with you to enact the appropriate stimulus program.
Sincerely,
GOV. TIM PAWLENTY, Minnesota.
GOV. EDWARD G. RENDELL, Pennsylvania.
GOV. JANET NAPOLITANO, Arizona.
GOV. MIKE BEEBE, Arkansas.
GOV. ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, California.
GOV. BILL RITTER JR., Colorado.
GOV. M. JODI RELL, Connecticut.
GOV. RUTH ANN MINNER, Delaware.
GOV. CHARLIE CRIST, Florida.
GOV. ROD BLAGOJEVICH, Illinois.
GOV. CHESTER J. CULVER, Iowa.
GOV. KATHLEEN SEBELIUS, Kansas.
GOV. STEVEN L. BESHEAR, Kentucky.
GOV. JOHN BALDACCI, Maine.
GOV. MARTIN OMALLEY, Maryland.
GOV. DEVAL PATRICK, Massachusetts.
GOV. JENNIFER M. GRANHOLM, Michigan.
GOV. MATT BLUNT, Missouri.
GOV. JIM GIBBONS, Nevada.
GOV. JOHN H. LYNCH, New Hampshire.
GOV. JON S. CORZINE, New Jersey.
GOV. BILL RICHARDSON, New Mexico.
GOV. ELIOT SPITZER, New York.
GOV. MICHAEL F. EASLEY, North Carolina.
GOV. JOHN HOEVEN, North Dakota.
GOV. TED STRICKLAND, Ohio.
GOV. BRAD HENRY, Oklahoma.
GOV. THEODORE R. KULONGOSKI, Oregon.
GOV. ANIBAL ACEVEDO VILA , Puerto Rico.
GOV. DONALD L. CARCIERI, Rhode Island.
GOV. M. MICHAEL ROUNDS, South Dakota.
GOV. JON HUNTSMAN JR., Utah.
GOV. JAMES H. DOUGLAS, Vermont.
GOV. TIMOTHY M. KAINE, Virginia.
GOV. JOHN DEJONGH, JR., Virgin Islands.
GOV. CHRISTINE O. GREGOIRE, Washington.
GOV. JOE MANCHIN III, West Virginia.
GOV. JIM DOYLE, Wisconsin.
GOV. BOB RILEY, Alabama.
Printed from the NGA web site.
January 23, 2008.
Speaker NANCY PELOSI, Office of the Speaker,
H-232, US Capitol, Washington DC.
Chairman CHARLES B. RANGEL, Committee on Ways & Means,
1102 Longworth HOB, Washington, DC.
Chairman JOHN D. DINGELL, Committee on Energy and Commerce,
2125 Rayburn HOB, Washington, DC.
RE: Strengthen Health Care Safety Net (Medicaid) as Economic Stimulus
Dear SPEAKER PELOSI, CHAIRMAN RANGEL, and CHAIRMAN DINGELL: I am very encouraged that enhancements to the health care safety netMedicaidare being
considered as part of the economic stimulus package. Enhanced Medicaid funding
spent on vital health services is the most beneficial and effective way to support
struggling and hardworking families in the State of Florida and directly invigorate
our economy. Medicaid serves approximately 2.2 million in Florida, with over half
of those being children.
Florida families and businesses have already been hard hit by the economic downturn. The mortgage and real estate crisis has caused revenue shortfalls and threatens to trigger state-constitutionally mandated budget reductions that likely will result in cuts to health care for our neediest residents under Medicaid. At the same
time, Floridas Medicaid Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) is set to decrease substantially in future years.
As you know, FMAP is the portion of Medicaid paid by the federal government
and is calculated based on a 3-year average of state per capita personal income com-
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pared to the national income. Seven hurricanes in two years (Charley, Frances,
Ivan, and Jeanne in 2004 and Katrina, Rita and Wilma in 2005) and subsequent
reconstruction activity are skewing the Florida FMAP formula. This anomaly has
resulted in significant projected reductions in health services to Floridas neediest
residents due to the federal match rates for the Florida Medicaid Program in years
2007-2010. Families transitioning from welfare to work, pregnant women, young
children and seniors who qualify for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) may soon
see reductions in vital health services. Florida will take a $220 million hit in its
FY 09 FMAP allocation alone.
Therefore, I respectfully request that you correct Floridas FMAP allocation in the
stimulus package. There is precedent for Congress to address such hardship, help
those that need it, and have an immediate positive affect on the economy. In 2003,
Congress passed a stimulus package that provided $10 billion in temporary relief
to states through hold harmless provisions that blocked FMAP decreases for the last
two quarters of FY 03 and the first three quarters of FY 04, and instead increased
the FMAP by 2.95 percentage points. In 2005, Congress increased the FMAP for
states ravaged by Hurricane Katrina in an effort to bring economic stability to the
devastated region.
Congress must act again to address such hardship and protect the health care
safety net for our neediest citizensseniors, pregnant women, and children. This
timely, targeted, and temporary enhancement will ensure direct stimulus Floridas
economy.
Sincerely,
KATHY CASTOR, U.S. Representative,
FloridaDistrict 11.
National Governors Association
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt and Ranking Member Ryan. Thank you for the opportunity to
furnish my perspective on what is needed to achieve the twin goals of providing adequate funding to improve the readiness of our military and to reduce the strategic
risk faced by our military and our country. As the ranking member of the House
Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness, I closely follow the militarys readiness
reports, frequently listen to testimony of uniformed and civilian leaders in the Pentagon, and talk to our troops serving in the combat theaters. I believe it is critical
that we increase the national defense spending in the baseline budget for Fiscal
Year 2009.
There is widespread political disagreement about the war in Iraq. Yet, all Americans are grateful to the men and women in uniform that serve our country and
want them to be provided the best training and equipment for their service so they
are as ready as possible should they be called upon by our country. Expert testimony I have heard in the House Armed Services Committee describes a military
that is the most professional, experienced, adaptive, and capable force we have ever
seen. Yet, there are readiness issues that must be addressed that I would like to
raise today. Although there are many that blame the current state of readiness
wholly on operations in Iraq, it is clear to me that there are broader factors that
must be addressed if we are to ensure our military is capable and ready for whatever the nation calls it do.
We, as a nation, once viewed our reserve component as a strategic reserve. We
believed that if we needed them for a protracted war, we would have time to equip
and train them before they were needed on the front lines. We have since learned
that the budget process and the industrial base are not agile or flexible enough to
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adequately fill existing shortfalls in equipment and training as quickly as necessary.
This is a hard lesson to learn and the stress and strain placed on our military because of this is unmistakable.
In addition to an ill-equipped reserve component, we are also faced with the fact
that we took a procurement holiday in the 1990s. It takes many years to design
and build things like fighter aircraft, combatant ships, and aerial refueling tankers.
We simply cannot go out and buy these items off the shelves of the local Wal-Mart
or 7-11 if we suddenly realize they are needed. Declining readiness today is a result
of poor investment a decade ago.
We are working aggressively to correct these deficiencies that existed long before
September 11, 2001, but we are doing this while we are also fielding and supporting
troops in combat. Much of this is done with supplemental funding and, because of
that, many mistakenly attribute the cost of rebuilding and modernizing our forces
with the costs of war. Given these facts, I believe it is critical that we increase the
national defense spending in the baseline budget for Fiscal Year 2009.
I make this recommendation with two caveats. First, we do not yet have the Fiscal Year 2009 defense supplemental request, which may provide for a good part of
the reset and restoration funding needed to improve the readiness of our military
forces should Congress act on it quickly. I share the disappointment with the Budget Committee that we have not yet received this request.
Second, this Congress has yet to act on the full Fiscal Year 2008 supplemental
request which has been languishing here for more than a year. There can be no
question that the funding in that spending bill will directly improve the readiness
of our military and minimize the strategic risk that so many in Congress are concerned about.
In light of these factors, I am compelled to testify today because it is critical in
my mind that we separate military readiness from disagreements on the war in
Iraq. I believe it is critical that the Fiscal Year 2008 supplement request, which is
essential for reset and restoration of our military and reduces the level of readiness
and strategic risk we take on as a nation. As your committee has long maintained,
military readiness should not be a budgetary tack-on or an afterthought to the rest
of the federal budget. The funds needed to maintain our military readiness and strategic posturewhether they are needed because the equipment was used in a combat theater or used in trainingought to be funded in the baseline defense budget
request.
There have been several proposals regarding the specific amount of funding that
should be allocated towards defense each year. Some have supported four percent
of GDP, and that number makes sense to me. Others have suggested we fully fund
each of the services unfunded requirements list. These requirements, while not an
official part of the budget, reflect the services prioritized requirements if additional
funds are made available. These unfunded requirements lists are not Christmas
Wish Lists. When you review these documents you find that the services are in
need of basic things that did not make it into the budget. When you review these
documents you get a clear understanding of the strategic risk we are accepting by
not increasing the top line for our nations military.
But I am here first and foremost, to request that we immediately move to increase
the baseline defense budget function in this fiscal year so that our militarys readiness, and by extensionour countryare not put in a position of strategic risk. Mr.
Chairman, thank you for the opportunity to provide testimony today.
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan and Members of the Committee, thank
you for this opportunity to testify before you on the fiscal year 2009 budget. I ask
that my written statement be included in the record. The federal budget is our most
direct and telling statement of the nations values and priorities. Unfortunately,
when the people of my congressional districthard working peoplemany who live
in rural areasmost of whom are Hispaniclook at the federal budget, they do not
see their values reflected in the budget; and they do not see their communitys wellbeing and prosperity treated as a national priority.
I am here today to share with you some areas where the federal budget could better reflect the values and priorities of my congressional district and similar communities across the nation. I will focus my remarks on three critical areas: education,
health, and economic development.
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EDUCATION
Nothing demonstrates our misplaced national priorities more than our failure to
invest in educationparticularly our failure to invest in the key programs that are
making a difference in the Hispanic community.
Our Census figures tell the story. Hispanics are now the largest minority group
in the country. Hispanic children are now second to only non-Hispanic whites in our
nations schools. By 2010, Hispanics will be the largest minority group in our nations workforce. Yet Hispanic children are the least likely to attend preschool, the
most likely to dropout of school before earning a high school diploma, and the least
likely to earn a college degree.
Strengthening educational opportunities for Hispanic Americans from pre-school
through graduate school must become a national priority. Literally, our future depends on it. Unfortunately, the opposite has been true.
We know what we need to do. We have an investment plan. The Congressional
Hispanic Caucus focuses on a group of federal education programs that are critical
to the Hispanic communityTitles I and III of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, migrant education programs, dropout prevention, HEP and CAMP,
TRIO, GEAR UP, Hispanic-Serving Institutions, Even Start, Adult English as a Second Language and Civics Education. We call these programs the Hispanic Education
Action Plan. The Presidents fiscal year 2009 education budget shortchanges every
one of these programs, not even keeping pace with the current level of services.
We know that literacy is the foundation for learning, and we know that parents
are the first teachers for their children. Yet, the President has proposed to eliminate
Even Start and Reading is Fundamentalthe only programs that support family literacy and promote a love of reading by providing books for low-income children. The
No Child Left Behind Act will not be successful unless we support literacy in the
home.
The president proposes $14.3 billion for Title Ia $406 million increase. This is
still well below the authorized amount of $25 billion. Moreover, the President is proposing that school districts be required to distribute a fair share of funding to high
schools based on their share of the school districts low-income students. With out
additional resources, this will result in a shift of dollars from elementary and middle schools to high schools. That is why I have called on the president to support
the Graduation Promise Act to establish a separate funding stream for high school
improvement so that we can tackle our dropout crisis.
With the College Cost Reduction and Access Act, Congress made a historic investment in minority-serving institutions because of their growing importance in producing the college graduates our economy needs to remain competitive. The National Center for Education Statistics reports that since 1984 minority undergraduate student enrollment has surged by 146 percent compared to a growth of 15
percent for the White population. Minority-serving institutions represent less than
one-third of all degree granting institutions but enroll more than half of all minority
students in postsecondary education. The President proposes to reverse our landmark investment by slashing HSIs by $18.8 million, HBCUs by $85 million, Tribal
Colleges by $23.2 million, and Native Alaskan and Native Hawaiian Institutions by
11.6 million. The presidents budget shortchanges minority institutions and the minority students they serve.
We also have a critical need for graduate opportunities in the Hispanic community. In 2004, Hispanics only earned 5 percent of masters and professional degrees
and only 3 percent of doctorates. It is essential that the fiscal year 2009 budget includes resources for graduate programs at Hispanic-serving Institutions.
We must turn this around and significantly increase the investments in all of
these programs. The stakes could not be higher. I urge you to reject the Administrations proposed cuts. I urge you to restore funding that has been cut over the past
several years. And I urge you to put us on a path of increased investment starting
with fiscal year 2009. Without these investments, our nation will no longer be economically competitive in the future.
HEALTH
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My district is plagued by the ever increasing scourge of diabetes which afflicts my
constituents at an ever younger age and in near epidemic numbers. Yet the 2009
budget cuts critical diabetes programs at the Center for Disease Control that bridge
the gap between theoretical research at the National Institutes of Health and real
community based treatment.
The Centers for Disease Control will also lose $182 million in funding for programs like the Preventative Health and Social Services Block Grant, Emergency
Medical Services for children and the Universal Newborn Screening even while we
all know that early prevention can save billions in future health costs.
Provider cuts in Medicare will make it more difficult for my seniors to find a physician to treat them and higher copays will make even Medicaid unavailable to
thousands of my constituents. My returning veterans from Iraq will have difficulty
accessing services because VA funding will be cut by more than $3 billion from 2008
to 2012 while the fees imposed on veterans for their health care will increase by
$2.3 billion over that period. This will severely impact the VAs ability to treat new
veterans.
I urge the committee to reconsider these policies that will undermine the health
of millions of Americans.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
I strongly urge this committee to provide the funds necessary to operate key programs that help bolster economic development in Rural America. Rural America
truly is the heartland of this great country. It is up to all of us here in Congress
to ensure its continued vitality. The Presidents fiscal year 2009 budget seems
geared to do just the opposite.
Lack of decent affordable housing in rural America is well known. According to
the Economic Research Service, some 4 million rural families live in housing poverty, a multidimensional indicator that combines measures of economic need, housing quality and neighborhood quality. What is more, the 2000 Census revealed that
5.5 million people living in small towns and farming communities face cost overburden, and 1.6 million non-metro housing units are either moderately or severely substandard.
What is less known is the incidence and impact of the subprime mortgage crisis
on rural communities across America. Recent research indicates that borrowers in
rural areas are more likely than urban borrowers to have loans with prepayment
penalties, and many rural borrowers had prepayment penalties significantly larger
than urban borrowers.
Rural families are hard pressed to find housing that is decent and affordable. Unless they are able to secure affordable housing assistance, rural borrowers are often
saddled with loans that, in the end, are less affordable and on terms and conditions
that threaten their overall financial situation. In the face of this crisis, the Administrations budget for FY09 decimates existing direct lending programs for rural housing and proposes to increase fees for guaranteed loans.
The Bush Administrations budget for fiscal year 2009 proposes severe and devastating cuts to eliminate important Rural Housing Service (RHS) programs. The
loss of the RHS programs will affect single family loans, which serve borrowers with
very low incomes, and will slash or eliminate funding for a number of Rural Housing Service programs that provide affordable rental housing for low income rural
families.
The budget cuts spending for rural housing loans and grants by some 81% and
eliminates over $1.4 billion in rural housing lending assistance targeted to low income families. If the Administrations budget is approved, it will be the first time
in 41 years that the Agriculture Department has not offered direct lending assistance to help low-income rural families improve their housing conditions.
The budget irresponsibly eliminates funding for the Section 515 rural rental housing program, which provided $70 million in low interest loans in Fiscal Year 2008
for the construction, rehabilitation, and preservation of affordable federally subsidized rental housing units.
Congress also provided $28 million in funding last year for a demonstration program to facilitate the preservation of federally subsidized affordable rental housing
units. The Administrations budget does not provide a penny this year for this purpose, and instead rescinds $20 million in unused funding from previous years. These
are funds that could be used to restructure affordable Rural Housing Service units,
in order to avoid having these units converted to less affordable, market rent housing.
The Administrations 2009 HUD budget also proposes significant cuts to public
housing, the Community Development Block Grants, the Section 202 elderly hous-
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ing program, the Section 811 disabled housing program, Rural Housing Grants, the
Rural Community Development Initiatives and more.
The Presidents budget eliminates funding for farm labor housing in Section 514
Farm Labor Housing Loans and in Section 516 Farm Labor Housing Grants by two
thirds. As you know, there is a tremendous need for assistance for farmworker housing. Migrant and seasonal farm workers are some of the nations most poorly housed
populations. Farmworkers and their families are some of the poorest, yet least assisted, people in the nation. Approximately 61% percent of farmworkers earn incomes below the poverty level. 60% of their households are the ones who are also
more susceptible to live below the poverty threshold, which is six times the national
rate. However, less than 20% of farmworker households receive public assistance in
any form.
At a time when we need additional funding for all sorts of important housing programs, this Administration wants to reduce the overall funding and eliminate important entities such as the Rural Housing and Economic Development program; the
Housing Assistance Council, the La Raza Fund, and more. This is completely unacceptable and shows either the ignorance of or the disdain by the current Administration on the poor living conditions of people across this great land, especially those
residing in Rural Americathe heartland of our country. I invite all of you to come
to my district at some point in time; to visit the colonias and other poor areas of
my district; to see areas of our country with housing conditions that we normally
associate with what we call the third world. I think it would be difficult to return
from those areas, review the Presidents budget and claim that its cuts address the
housing needs of rural America and the rest of the country.
Finally, I want to address two programs that are of critical importance to my Congressional district and that of my border colleagues.
The International Boundary and Water Commission is responsible for maintaining hundreds of miles of levees along the U.S. Mexico border. Unfortunately, because they are based at the State Department, they have not benefitted from the
recent awareness of the need to improve levees throughout this nation that has resulted in increased funding for the Corps of Engineers. Historically, they have received approximately 2 million a year for levee maintenance. As a result, a recent
assessment by the Corps of Engineers has found that the majority of the levees in
the system are substandard and cannot be certified. Millions of Americans along the
U.S./Mexico border and billions of dollars worth of property are at serious risk. In
my largest county alone, it is estimated that $4 billion of economic development will
be lost because of the need to buy flood insurance that would have been unnecessary
had the levees been repaired. $125 million would make all of the necessary repairs
throughout the system. I encourage this committee to provide the IBWC with the
funding it needs to repair these levees as quickly as possible.
The U.S./Mexico program under the Environmental Protection Agencys State and
Tribal Assistance Program was created by the NAFTA to develop adequate water
and wastewater systems to alleviate the exploding migration to the border region
as a result of the treaty. Historically, the program has received $50 million annually
to help small communities, many with no wastewater systems at all, provide this
basic service. Unfortunately, the Presidents budget the past two years has reduced
this funding to $10 million. This substantial decrease has meant that many eligible
community projects must again be put on hold. As the average cycle for completion
of a project is 5 years, this means that many communities will be forced to live for
at least 5 more years without clean water or decent sanitation. This is totally unacceptable in America. I urge you to restore the $50 million that this program has
historically received so that the backlog of projects can be cleared.
Thank you for allowing me to testify here today. I encourage you to maintain and
increase funding for programs that are essential to the education, health and economic development of our country.
IN
CONGRESS
Mr. Chairman and members of the Budget Committee, thank you for the opportunity to speak today about the fiscal year 2009 budget. As you consider this years
budget resolution, I want to stress the need for increased funding for two programs
critical to my home state of New Hampshire: the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, and the Weatherization Assistance Program.
Mr. Chairman, the skyrocketing costs of energy is one of the biggest challenges
facing working families in my district. The price of home heating oil has nearly tripled since 2001. The average cost of heating a home has risen from $627 in the win-
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ter of 2001-2002 to $1,841 per household in 2007-2008. Last October, the U.S. Energy Information Administrations projected record heating oil and propane prices
for the winter 2007-2008. According to the report, just in the last year, the cost to
heat a home with home heating oil increased by $375, propane by $273 and natural
gas by $87. According to the EIA, households will spend an average of 10-22 percent
more on this basic need heating bills this winter than they spent during the 20062007 winter.
LIHEAP and the Weatherization Assistance Program have historically been able
to provide assistance to eligible families for this most basic need of heat for their
homes. LIHEAP and Weatherization Assistance helps American families save
money so they can take care of other basic needs, such as groceries and prescription
drugs.
In New Hampshire, where winter can last for months longer than other parts of
the country, family budgets have been particularly strained by these steady increases. In our state, LIHEAP provides critical assistance to over 30,000 families
each year. However, only about sixteen percent of eligible families receive LIHEAP
funding nationally. The President has asked for only $2 billion for LIHEAP in his
FY09 request, less than half of what Congress has authorized this year for this critical program. This cut would be devastating for New Hampshire families who are
struggling to pay their heating bills during the cold winter months.
The Weatherization Assistance Program represents another effective strategy for
helping families save moneyby assisting them in making their homes more energy
efficient. This one-time assistance creates long-term savings of an average of $327
each year in New Hampshire. New Hampshires weatherization program has served
over 7300 homes since 1997, but still has a waiting list of over 16,000 homes due
to lack of funding. Despite the effectiveness of Weatherization programs, the Presidents FY09 budget request does not include any funding for the Weatherization Assistance Program. Funding this program in FY09 will help bring long-term energy
relief to Granite Staters.
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, I believe the Congressional budget
is a reflection of our priorities as a nations priorities. Slashing funding for programs
that help working families deal with rising energy costs, as the President has proposed, is not in line with our nations values. As the committee considers the fiscal
year 2009 budget, I hope you will support LIHEAP and Weatherization Assistance.
Thank you.
Mr. Chairman, we want to thank you for this opportunity to share our views on
and priorities for Function 250General Science, Space and Technologyin the fiscal year (FY) 2009 federal budget. Function 250 includes the budget for the Department of Energys (DOE) Office of Science, which is the principal source of funding
for Argonne National Laboratory, and the sole source of funding for Fermi National
Accelerator Laboratory.
Both national laboratories are located in Illinois, are critical to American competitiveness, and were adversely impacted by severe underfunding of the DOE Office
of Science in the FY2008 omnibus appropriations bill. Overall, the $4.0 billion budget for the DOE Office of Scienceexcluding $125 million in earmarked funds in the
fiscal year 2008 omnibusincreased at a rate less than inflation. Funding for a
number of programs, facilities, and projects, including High Energy Physics, Basic
Energy Science user facilities, and the U.S. contribution to the international fusion
experiment ITER, declined significantly or were cut altogether.
As a result of these cuts, Fermilab has been forced to furlough all employees, and
may be forced to lay off a total of 200 scientists, engineers, and their support staff
if Congress and the Department of Energy fail to provide additional funds for the
High Energy Physics program in FY2008. In addition to shutting down two years
early a user facility slated for closure and laying off around 30 people as a result,
Argonne has been forced to reduce by 20 to 25 percent the operation of its Advanced
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Photon Sourcethe most powerful X-ray research facility in the Western Hemisphereimpacting hundreds of Americas academic, government, and industry scientists who depend on this unique tool.
President Bushs FY2009 budget proposal includes $4.7 billion for the DOE Office
of Science and the physical sciences research it supports. While the Presidents
budget proposal is not intended to address the problems that resulted from the
FY2008 omnibus bill, it would more than restore funding for the critical research
and facilities at Argonne and Fermilab and throughout the DOE complex. Thats
why we strongly urge the Budget Committee to provide the necessary resources in
Function 250 to enable Congress to appropriate at least $4.7 billion for the DOE
Office of Science.
Budgeting $4.7 billion for the DOE Office of Science is consistent with the priorities of the Democrats Innovation Agenda and the Presidents American Competitiveness Initiative, both of which propose to double federal funding for basic research in the physical sciences over the next five to ten years. Because the DOE
Office of Science supports over 40 percent of total federal funding for basic physical
sciences researchmore than any other federal agencyincreasing its funding is
critical if we are to achieve our shared, bipartisan goal.
But more than a bipartisan priority, increasing funding for the DOE Office of
Science must be a national priority. We face a world in which our economic competitors in Asia and Europe are making significant new investments in their own research capabilities. These investments are beginning to pay off, as Asian and European countries challenge U.S. leadership in the sciences no matter how it is measuredby number of patents won, articles submitted to scientific journals, degrees
awarded, Nobel prizes won, or the percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
dedicated to research and development.
Report after reportfrom the National Academy of Sciences and the Presidents
Council of Advisors on Science and Technology to the Task Force on American Innovation and the Council on Competitivenesscalls on Congress and the President to
invest in U.S. research capabilities. The benefits of such an investment to the U.S.
economy and U.S. competitiveness are well known. Economic experts have concluded that science-driven technology has accounted for more than 50 percent of the
growth of the U.S. economy during the last half-century.
Even as we face greater international competition, these are exciting times for
science in the United States. The Office of Science has developed a balanced investment strategy to ensure the U.S. retains its dominance in such key scientific fields
as biotechnology, nanotechnology, material and chemical sciences, and supercomputing well into the next century. Leadership in these areas will benefit our health,
our environment, our energy security, our economy, and our national security.
U.S. scientists are as bright as any in the world, but they traditionally have had
better tools than everyone else. The DOE Office of Science has led the way in creating a unique system of large-scale, specialized user facilities for scientific discovery. Under the Presidents budget, 21,500 researchers would have access to these
DOE facilities. Nearly half of those users will be university faculty and students,
a significant number will be from U.S. industry, and many will be from other federal agencies. This collection of cutting-edgeoften one-of-a-kindtools makes the
DOE Office of Science a unique and critical component of the federal science portfolio. Other federal science agencies, such as the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
and the National Science Foundation (NSF), greatly depend upon these DOE Office
of Science facilities in carrying out their own research activities.
Because of the importance of the DOE Office of Science to the nations research
efforts and its long-term competitiveness, not to mention laboratories like Argonne
and Fermilab, we urge the committee to provide the necessary resources in Function
250 to enable Congress to appropriate at least $4.7 billion for the DOE Office of
Science. With this funding, the DOE Office of Science will attract the best minds,
educate the next generation of scientists and engineers, support the construction
and operation of modern facilities, and conduct even more of the quality scientific
research that will ensure the U.S. retains its competitive edge for many years to
come.
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I recognize our difficult budget situation. The nation is facing an economic downturn and a housing crisis, complicated by the cost of the war in Iraq and tax cuts
for the nations wealthiest which have strained our resources. However, I believe
that we cannot condone disinvestment in public health care, the environment, education and our nations workforce. We must prioritize investments in these areas if
we are to guarantee a healthy, productive future for our children and families.
I look forward to working with you to craft a budget which places priority on our
nations future.
Sincerely,
HILDA L. SOLIS,
Member of Congress.
HEALTH CARE
Ensuring access to quality, affordable health care is one of the most important
challenges we face as a nation. As the Chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus
Task Force on Health and the Environment, and a member of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health, I am deeply concerned about the impact of the
Presidents proposed budget on communities of color.
More than 47 million Americans are uninsured, including more than one out three
residents in the communities I represent in East Los Angeles and the San Gabriel
Valley in Southern California. More than 15.3 million Latinos nationwide remain
uninsured. Our nations health care expenditures continue to skyrocket, and the Administration continues to promulgate policies that leave vulnerable populations in
poor health status.
The Presidents budget cuts more than $200 billion from Medicare and Medicaid.
Nearly 40 percent of Latino children are covered by Medicaid, yet the Administration proposes drastic cuts to our safety-net hospitals and providers that will impose
additional difficulties for Latino seniors and low-income Latinos who already experience numerous barriers to health care. The proposed budget also fails to responsibly
address the issue of insuring children. Inadequate funding levels and unreasonable
policies mean that current SCHIP beneficiaries will lose their health care and the
un-enrolled but eligible children will continue to lack coverage.
The budget also fails to take into account the number of eligible but un-enrolled
children in SCHIP. Seven in ten uninsured children are eligible for public programs
such as Medi-Cal, Healthy Families, or Healthy Kids, but obstacles such as language and cultural barriers may delay or block enrollment. Federal support is needed to enroll uninsured eligible children, with an emphasis on linguistic and cultural
competence. I urge my colleagues to consider the valuable role community health
workers and patient navigators are playing across our country. Community health
workers and patient navigators improve health status and can reduce the number
of uninsured children.
Communities of color bear the brunt of the impact of the lack of health care,
struggling disproportionately from diseases such as diabetes, obesity, and HIV/
AIDS. Yet this budget fails to place a priority on culturally and linguistically competent care. The Presidents budget reduces funding for the Office of Minority
Health, cuts prevention and health promotion programs at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, inadequately funds the Ryan White CARE Act, and eliminates health professions training programs. These training programs are needed
tools to ensure that our workforce reflects the diversity of our nation. Without minority health professions training, communities struggling with cultural and linguistic barriers will continue to lack service providers. By supporting health professions training programs, we are ensuring that future generations will receive appropriate health care and that health disparities will be reduced.
Given the disproportionate impact of diseases on Latinos, I am concerned about
level funding for the National Institutes of Health, cuts to nutrition programs, and
our safety-net providers. Proper nutrition is essential to an individuals health, yet
the Presidents budget reduces assistance for working families, caps funding for the
Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Program, and eliminates the Commodity Supplemental Food Program, which serves low-income populations. Perhaps some of
most important resources our communities have are our Community Health Centers. Latinos make up 36 percent of the patients who receive care at Community
Health Centers, and we must provide adequate resources to support existing clinics
and to build new clinics.
I urge you to act in the best interest of communities of color around the country
and reject the Presidents misguided budget. I look forward to working together to
improve the health of our communities and achieve health equity.
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SOCIAL SECURITY
The President continues down the wrong path in proposing the creation of Social
Security private accounts and cuts to traditional Social Security benefits. It is appalling that there are almost 750,000 pending disability hearings and that the average wait time for a hearing is 17 months. We must protect Social Security for future
generations and treat seniors and individuals with disabilities with dignity and respect. We can do this through rejecting privatization and addressing the backlog of
pending disabilities hearings.
HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
Approximately two million foreclosures are predicted over the next two years. For
Latinos, the mortgage crisis is far from over. Although Latinos make up 14.8 percent of the total U.S. population, Latinos represent about 21 percent of the subprime
default burden. It is estimated that the subprime mortgage crisis will cost Latinos
between $75.8 billion to $128.9 billion. Yet, the Presidents budget only includes $65
million for housing counseling, a mere $15 million increase from last years budget
request. The budget offers inadequate assistance to families who are at-risk of losing their homes. The budget cuts the Housing Choice Voucher Program, which provides housing assistance to approximately two million low-income families, by $599
million.
The Presidents 2009 budget also repeats harmful cuts in the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program. It provides just $2.9 billion for 2009, which
is $731 million less than is needed to maintain purchasing power at the 2008 level.
The CDBG program is critical in providing funding for local solutions to challenges
such as affordable housing, job creation, and economic development. In California,
the cuts in CDBG funding will affect more than 360 communities in the state. Protecting homeowners and investing in community development is critical to restoring
economic security for our families and neighborhoods.
EDUCATION
Education is the key to opportunity for all who live in America. This is particularly true for Latino and other minority and low income students. Approximately
22 percent of children under the age of five in the U.S. are Latinos, yet the Presidents budget terminates funding for the Even Start and Reading Is Fundamental
programs. The Presidents proposed 2009 funding level for Head Start falls twelve
percent below the 2002 inflation-adjusted level. The President also fails to increase
the investment in GEAR UP and TRIO programs, which help low-income, first generation students prepare for and succeed in college.
As average tuition and fees at four-year public school in California increased 81
percent in four years, the Administrations cuts in student aid would put college further out of reach for many students in low-income students in California. I am concerned that the Presidents budget terminates various key need-based student aid
programs, such as the Leveraging Educational Assistance Program (LEAP) and the
Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (SEOG) program.
For many low income working class students, financial barriers are the determining factor in whether or not they will successfully complete college. The Presidents budget slashes funding for Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs) by $18.8 million. The nations 270 HSIs enroll half of the two million Latino college students
today. Instead of helping allow our students achieve greater college access, this
budget does little to close the college gap.
Finally, we must invest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics
(STEM) education, including increasing access to these areas for students in communities of color. Strong federal investments in these areas will have long term rewards by increasing competitiveness and ensuring our nation will have scientists
and engineers who can continue research and development to ensure long-term economic growth.
HEALTHY COMMUNITY AND ENVIRONMENT
Our federal budget must also invest in infrastructure which sustains a healthy
community. Unfortunately, the Presidents budget continues to significantly underinvest in Function 300 programs.
Several of these cuts will have very real impacts on our nations most vulnerable
communities. Over the past several years the EPA has proposed cuts of approximately 30 percent to environmental justice programs. The Presidents FY 2009
budget proposes an even higher cut of 35 percent. The proposed budget cut comes
despite two reports by the EPAs Inspector General (2004 and 2006) and the Gov-
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ernment Accountability Office (2005) which identified failures in the implementation
of environmental justice programs and which concluded that the EPA cannot determine whether its programs cause disproportionately high and adverse human health
or environmental effects on minority and low-income populations. Each year Congress has recognized the importance of protecting minority and low-income communities, and I hope that, like years past, we can reinstate this funding.
I am also very concerned about the impact leaking underground storage tanks are
having on our groundwater supplies. Underground storage tanks that leak petroleum or other hazardous substances can contaminate nearby soil and groundwater,
which serves as the source of drinking water for nearly half of all Americans. Individuals coming into contact with this contamination, which can contain known carcinogens, could experience health programs ranging from nausea to kidney or liver
damage. Funding for cleanup of these tanks is financed largely by a $.001 per gallon
excise tax on gasoline and other motor fuels. Unlike other funds, the Leaking Underground Storage Tanks Trust Fund has a surplus of $3.2 billion which should be
spent to clean up the 108,766 outstanding cleanups. Unfortunately, the Presidents
budget request is less than one-third of the annual revenues coming into the LUST
Trust Fund, resulting in gasoline taxes paid by consumers not going to cleanup
spills and releases which may be contaminating water supplies.
I continue to be concerned that despite the fact that States and Native American
tribes are important partners and co-regulators with the EPA in implementation of
environmental laws, the State and Tribal Assistance Grants (STAG) account budget,
which took 94 percent and 100 percent of the cuts to EPAs budget in 2005 and
2006, would receive a $315 million cut in total. If President Bushs proposed budget
for the EPA is enacted, it would be the lowest budget for the EPA since fiscal year
1997.
The impact of such cuts is very real. Proposed cuts could result in state and local
agencies being forced to lay off staff or leave vacancies unfilled, shutting down existing monitors or otherwise curtailing monitoring programs. For communities such as
the one I represent, these monitoring programs have been critical to protect the
health of vulnerable communities, such as the health of the students whose elementary school playground is right next to an open gravel pit. The health of our communities is dependent upon a strong federal commitment to clean air.
We must also not ignore the needs of our low-income communities to afford their
heating and cooling bills. According to the Department of Energy, home heating
costs for the average family increased by 80 percent since 2001. The Presidents
budget recommended significant cuts to renewable energy and energy efficiency programs, at the core of which is the proposal to zero fund the weatherization program.
This program is an important tool for increasing self sufficiency and reducing energy use for low-income families, three million of which reside in California.
Finally, the budget must reflect the need to plan for the impacts of climate change
on our nations infrastructure and the health and economic security of low-income
communities. I strongly urge my colleagues to include in the budget a strategy to
address climate change which includes tools to mitigate the impact it will have on
communities of color. I look forward to working with you to achieve that goal.
WORKFORCE TRAINING AND GREEN COLLAR JOBS
I strongly oppose the presidents cuts to Workforce Investment Act job training
funding. The presidents fiscal year 2009 budget reduces the total funding for job
training program by $1.1 billion from the fiscal year 2008 levela cut of 28.5 percent. The reduction of funding would be devastating to workers around the country
who are facing job losses with the rising unemployment and looming recession. Now
is not the time to reduce our commitment to workers who need the federal governments assistance in job training and finding new employment.
Rather than cut workforce investment, the federal government should demonstrate a strong commitment to those sectors which are growing. A major national
investment in renewable energy and energy efficiency could create more than three
million jobs over the next ten years. However, according to a 2006 study by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), the lack of skilled workers is the largest non-technical barrier to the advancement of renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies. The Green Jobs workforce training program, authorized by Title
X of P.L. 110-140, directly responds to the need recognized by NREL. The Green
Jobs training program will fill a critical role in our transition to clean energy by
ensuring that we have the skilled workers needed to support the production, installation, and maintenance of clean energy technologies and has broad support from
renewable energy industry associations, environmental organizations, community
groups, and organized labor.
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The Green Jobs training program created a sustainable, comprehensive public
program to be administered by the Secretary of Labor through funding for the
Workforce Investment Act (WIA) to provide quality training for jobs created through
renewable energy and energy efficiency initiatives. This program would expand our
nations capacity to identify and track the new jobs and skills associated with the
growing clean energy and efficiency industries. Through grants given on a competitive basis, it would fund partnerships between community colleges, labor unions,
private industry and organizations to train between 20,00030,000 new workers
each year for high quality jobs. In addition, it authorizes resources for demonstration projects to provide low-income workers a pathway out of poverty into the
emerging clean energy economy.
The renewable energy and energy efficiency fields are providing increasing employment opportunities during these otherwise troublesome economic times. This investment in our nations workforce is one that will provide long term positive benefits. I urge you to provide the fully-authorized level of funding for the Green Jobs
training program of $125 million.
IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENTCITIZENSHIP BACKLOGS
In July 2007, the Bush Administration raised the naturalization fee application
by 66 percent. This fee increase was meant to improve efficiency at USCIS. Yet, recent reports state that USCIS is months behind schedule in returning receipts for
checks written to cover fees, an early step in the application process. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) estimates that it will take 16 to 18 months to
process applications filed after June 1, 2007. These delays are hindering the naturalization process for an estimated 1.4 million legal permanent residents who have
submitted applications to become U.S. citizens. For many, this unnecessarily delays
their realization of the American dream.
Unfortunately, the Presidents budget neglects to recognize failures at USCIS and
instead recommends providing $3 billion for internal enforcement, including worksite raids conducted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials. It is necessary that Americas immigration system be efficient and effective, especially for
those abiding by the law and eager to participate in civic society. I urge you to provide support and direction in the budget to expeditiously resolve the immigration
backlog issue.
DTV TRANSITION AND COMMUNITIES OF COLOR
The success of the DTV transition will largely depend on the governments oversight and involvement in outreach to those with limited English proficiency and lack
of access to the Internet. According to a recent study by Nielsen, the Latino population is most unprepared for the DTV transition. This study estimates that 17.3
percent of Latino households are completely unprepared for the DTV transition and
26.2 percent of Latino households have one or more analog TV that is not prepared
for the DTV transition. These rates are unfortunately the highest among all of the
racial and ethnic communities.
While I was pleased that the FCC requested increased funding for fiscal year 2009
over its FY2008 budget for DTV education, I am concerned that this amount is not
sufficient for outreach the communities most at risk of losing service. I urge you to
consider concerns about outreach to communities with limited English proficiency
into account as you develop the fiscal year 2009 budget and direct funding toward
the development of outreach plans that will ensure no communities are left behind
in the DTV transition.
WOMENS HEALTH AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
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The second provision I authored will help communities establish specialized domestic violence courts in order to expedite the processing of domestic violence cases.
Specialized domestic violence courts have been proven to cut the processing time of
domestic violence court cases, decrease the backlog of court cases, raise the conviction rate and lower the rate of repeat offenders. My provision will also provide funding for translation and interpretation services in these courts.
Unfortunately, the presidents fiscal year 2009 budget cuts funding for VAWA programs by $120 million, a 30 percent below their fiscal year 2008 enacted levels of
$525.47 million. This drastic cut in funding would be very harmful to the progress
achieved by programs funded through VAWA and damaging progress toward reduction of domestic violence.
OF
IN
CONGRESS
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, thank you for allowing Members of the
House to provide testimony to the House Budget Committee. I appreciate this opportunity to share with you my thoughts on the Presidents Fiscal Year 2009 budget
request.
SOO LOCKS
First, I would like to speak to a critical infrastructure project that the President
has left out of his budget the past seven years. The Soo Locks divide two Great
Lakes: Superior and Huron. The Locks are made up of four locks that play a vital
role in moving freight through the upper Great Lakes. Each year, more than 80 million tons of freight move through the Locks.
A provision was included in the Water Resources Development Act of 2007 that
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers shall build a new lock without further delay in
Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, authorizing $327 million for the project. This bill became public law after Congress overruled the Presidents veto on November 9, 2007.
As lake vessels have grown in carrying capacity and size, the existing large lock,
the Poe, is the only one which can accommodate their massive frames. Two-thirds
of the carrying capacity of the U.S. Great Lakes fleet is now limited to the Poe lock.
If the Poe Lock were rendered unusable for any reason, it would disable industry
in the Great Lakes, halting the shipment of ore, coal, wheat, and other commodities.
The steel industry would be especially hard hit as 70 percent of all raw materials
used in the steel industry travel through the Soo Locks. This would create significant economic and homeland security problems
Despite the economic and homeland security concerns and the obvious Congressional intent to move forward, the President continues to ignore the need to construct a new lock. The Administrations FY 2009 Budget does not contain any funding for this important construction project.
The Corps of Engineers needs at least $15 million in FY 2009 to begin substantive
work on the new lock. Without a significant investment in the Soo Locks by Congress, this important infrastructure project will continue to be delayed.
I am hopeful the Budget Committee and Congress will see the wisdom in funding
this important project, even if the President doesnt. Every year we delay building
a new lock, the situation becomes more dire, and the cost to build a new lock only
increases.
DREDGING POLICY
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Unfortunately, the President continues to under fund our nations harbor maintenance needs. Congress must work to better invest in our harbor infrastructure to
protect the businesses that depend on waterborne commerce.
CLEAN WATER STATE REVOLVING FUND
I would like to turn to another budget item of interest to rural communities: the
Clean Water State Revolving Fund. Across the country, communities are struggling
to replace aging waste water infrastructure. This is a significant problem in Northern Michigan, as aging waste water infrastructure threatens the health of our Great
Lakes.
The Clean Water State Revolving Fund plays an important role in helping communities afford updates to their aging infrastructure. Unfortunately, President
Bush has repeatedly slashed funding for this program in his budgets.
The Presidents FY 2009 budget includes only $555 million for the Clean Water
State Revolving Fund, a $145 million cut compared to FY 2008 appropriated by
Congress and nearly a $533 million cut compared to the $1.08 billion Democrats included in the FY 2007 Continuing Resolution.
In Michigan, the Presidents cuts would mean $10.54 million less for important
waste water infrastructure projects compared to FY2006. If the Presidents proposal
is enacted, Michigan would receive $35.2 million less in FY 2009 than the state received in FY 2001. We need to invest in our waste water infrastructure, to ensure
the health of the Great Lakes, which is the source of drinking water for 45 million
people.
PAYMENTS IN LIEU OF TAXES:
Another program important to my Northern Michigan communities that the President repeatedly under funds is the Payment in Lieu of Taxes, or PILT, program.
National Forests, as well as other federal lands, lead to a reduced tax base in several Northern Michigan counties. The Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILT) program is
important in helping these local communities afford schools, roads, fire fighting, police, and other vital services.
For the past several years, President Bush has neglected this important program,
requesting significantly less than needed. Congress appropriated $232 million in FY
2008 for this critical program. The President is proposing a 16 percent cut to a program that is already drastically under funded, requesting only $195 million for FY
2009. This $37 million cut will significantly limit the ability of local governments
in Northern Michigan to provide the basic services residents depend on.
TAA
The Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) program provides workers negatively impacted by trade with job retraining, job search and relocation allowances, income
support and other re-employment services.
Unfortunately, too often communities in my district have run out of TAA funding.
I have repeatedly contacted the Department of Labor to assist the State of Michigan
in receiving supplemental funds. Despite the shortfalls repeatedly faced by Michigan
and other areas, the President continued his practice of flat funding TAA and provides no new increases for Trade Adjustment Assistance. Despite giving a prominent
mention in his State of the Union address to TAA, the programs budget remains
stagnant at $249 million for 2009.
When more workers in Michigan and throughout the Nation are adversely affected by this countrys trade policy, or lack thereof, the least we can do is provide
adequate job training. The President emphasized the importance of TAA in his State
of the Union, it is regrettable that his budget does not match his rhetoric.
MEP
Similarly, we owe our small businesses who are competing globally a fair shake.
I urge the Committee to adequately fund the Manufacturer Extension Partnership
(MEP) program. It is simply unacceptable that the Presidents budget has targeted
MEP for elimination! While Michigan is struggling to maintain jobs, the President
proposes reducing MEP funding from $89.6 million in FY 2008 to $4 million in FY
2009.
I dont know what Congress needs to do to make the Administration understand
the importance of this program. MEP is vital to helping smaller, domestic manufacturers compete with overseas companies. I hope this is an issue the Budget Committee can address in your budget hearings with the Administration, and I respectfully ask you to continue to fund this critical program.
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I would now like to turn to health and education priorities that deserve Committee consideration.
RURAL HEALTH
Rural hospitals and other health facilities are economic engines for rural communities as they provide hundreds of good paying jobs. Quality health care is also essential to keeping businesses and attracting new businesses to rural America.
The Rural Hospital Flexibility Grants fund quality improvement and emergency
medical service projects for nearly 1,300 Critical Access Hospitals across the country. In essence, this program provides technical assistance to the smallest hospitals
in the country who provide critical care.
This program helps hospitals improve their business operations, focus on quality
improvement and help information privacy. The Presidents budgetonce again
eliminates this vital program. The National Rural Health Association is requesting
$39.2 million, and I am hopeful Congress can see fit this program is adequately
funded in 2009.
I wanted to highlight this program in particular, but I also want to express my
strong support for adequately funding the other health care access programs within
the Department of Health and Human Services for rural services.
FOOD SAFETY
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cation the last seven years. Without an increase for inflation, the number of athletes
receiving scholarships will have to be substantially cut.
EDUCATION
Despite the high priority the Administration has placed on education and the significant needs that remain unmet, the Presidents budget includes no additional appropriations for the Department of Education. Instead, his budget provides $59.2
billion, the same level of funding that Congress appropriated in 2008. The President
also proposes eliminating 47 programs while significantly cutting several other programs. This is unacceptable.
Of the most egregious cuts, funding for Improving Teacher Quality state grants
is $130 million below the level needed to maintain current services, providing only
$2.8 billion for 2009. Michigan alone would lose $4 million to help ensure our
schools have highly qualified teachers in core academic subjects, which is a requirement under the No Child Left Behind Act. Restoring funding for this and other vital
education programs is essential for our schools in order for them to meet the goals
established by No Child Left Behind.
VETERANS
Once again the Administration has presented Congress with a budget that forces
our veterans to pay more in the form of premiums and fees for their health care.
Rather than increasing funding and improving access to veterans care, the Presidents budget includes $5.2 billion in new fees for veterans over the next decade.
Under this proposal, veterans with family incomes above $50,000 would have to
pay yearly enrollment fees of between $250 and $750 and prescription drug co-payments would increase from $8 to $15. These are increases our veterans should not
have to endure.
Congress must provide adequate funding for veterans health care to ensure that
our current veterans and those who will return from Iraq and Afghanistan receive
the care they need and deserve. With my district being home to more veterans than
any other district in Michigan, I ask that the Committee reject the Presidents proposed fees and that Congress fulfill its obligation to take care of our Nations veterans.
HOMELAND SECURITY
Our job in Congress is to promote the health and welfare of our citizens. But we
have no higher job than to keep our citizens safe. Im gravely concerned about the
50 percent cut to first responder, transit, and port security funding at the Department of Homeland Security, providing $2 billion less in first responder grants and
state assistance.
Law enforcement officers, fire fighters, and first responders are on the front lines
in responding to natural disasters and protecting our nation from terrorism and
crime. We need to do our part in supporting them in their efforts. Unfortunately,
the Presidents budget cuts critical programs$750 million from the State Homeland Security Grant, $260 million from the Assistance to Firefighters Grant program, and $100 million from the Emergency Management Performance Grants. All
of these first responder programs are success stories, and all of them are essential
to the ability of local first responders to keep our communities and our nation safe.
Congress should reject these cuts, especially in light of the passage of the 9/11
Commission Implementation bill this summer, which implements the remaining recommendations of the 9/11 Commission and re-affirms the importance of first responders in preventing terrorism.
LAW ENFORCEMENT
As a former law enforcement officer and Co-chair of the Law Enforcement Caucus,
I hear every day from local police and firefighters. This budget is an insult to them!
Grants to help state and local law enforcement fight crime, combat drugs, and
keep our communities safe including the Byrne Justice Assistant Grants, Community Oriented Policing Service, Juvenile Justice, Violence Against Women, and State
Criminal Alien Assistance Program were reduced by 65 percent. The Presidents ill
advised budget cuts $1.5 billion from these vital programs. For Michigan alone, this
means a $5.8 million reduction in the Byrne Justice Assistance Grants for 2009.
These programs are vital to keeping our communities safe. Congress needs to ensure that these important local and state grant programs continue to assist our communities and must begin reversing the Presidents disturbing trend of cutting funding in all law enforcement and first responder areas.
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INTEROPERABILITY TRUST FUND
As part of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Congress mandated that a section
of very valuable spectrum, or public airwaves, be auctioned off, a process underway
now. This spectrum is worth billions of dollars.
During consideration of the Deficit Reduction Act, I offered an amendment in the
Energy and Commerce Committee to create a $5.8 billion interoperability grant program, it was defeated on a tie vote. My amendment would have made a down payment on what is estimated to be an $18 billion problem. Ultimately, a one-time $1
billion grant program was created and it is expected to issue grants to the states
this year.
While the Presidents budget includes $50 million for the Interoperable Emergency Communications Grant Program, we are still have a long way to go to fill this
$18 billion need.
I have introduced legislation to create a permanent grant program at NTIA and
fund that program with a portion of spectrum proceeds. We should solve this problem once and for all. How many more September 11th and Katrinas do we have to
endure before our first responders can effectively communicate and do their jobs?
Now, I know we are in a difficult fiscal situation. But, the cost of under funding
our first responders dwarfs the cost of this national problem. We must adequately
equip our first responders, and do it now.
FOREST PRODUCTS
In Michigan and other Great Lakes states, the Forest Service is not able to meet
their Allowable Sale Quantities (ASQs) because they do not receive enough funding
to offer these timber sales. As a result, forest management plans go unfulfilled, and
timber producers and mills that depend on access to the federal forests face limited
supplies and economic uncertainty.
The Presidents FY 2009 budget provides the same level of funding for Forest
Products that Congress provided in FY 2008. This wont even allow the Forest Service to keep up with inflation!
Michigan has the fifth largest timber industry in the nation, so forestry and timber are vital to the Michigan economy. Michigans forests support 200,000 jobs and
generate $12 billion each year
As the timber markets in the Great Lakes become more volatile due to mill closures, high stumpage prices, and tight wood supplies, the Administrations meager
funding will only make matters worse. Unless Congress increases Forest Products
funding, Michigans timber industry and my states overall economy will be significantly harmed.
FEDERAL COURT HOUSES
I would like to move to another security concern. I also ask that the Committee
consider increasing funding for courthouse construction activities funded through
the Federal Building Fund (FBF).
I have been a strong advocate for investing in courthouse construction because my
districts federal courthouse in Marquette, MI, urgently needs to be replaced. The
Marquette Courthouse is over 70 years old and lacks adequate security, making it
unsafe for Court employees and the public.
In 1997, The Judicial Conference of the United States identified and prioritized
45 courthouse construction projects to be funded by Congress. This plan aimed to
clear the courthouse backlog by 2009. However, under funding has repeatedly
stalled this effort. The Presidents budget only funds the construction of one out of
dozens of courthouse projects currently needing attention. The FY 2009 budget only
provides $110.3 million for the San Diego Courthouse.
I ask that the Committee fund construction of the Courthouse in Marquette,
Michigan. The problem of outdated federal courts has been ignored for too long.
Courthouse modernization is essential to the safety of federal judges and court officers, and should be a high priority of this Congress.
Thank you again for this opportunity to provide testimony before your committee
today. If you have further questions about my testimony, please do not hesitate to
contact me my staff.
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PREPARED STATEMENT
IN
CONGRESS
Mr. Chairman, thank you for allowing me to share some of the concerns of my
constituents regarding the Fiscal Year 2009 (FY09) budget with you and other members of the Committee.
When I visit with the mayors and town administrators in my district, I hear the
frustration of those who are struggling with how to appropriately budget for pressing local needs and who are of the mind that the federal government must do more
on their behalf. One such mayor, Carolyn A. Kirk of Gloucester, Massachusetts,
wrote me recently to express her concerns on this point. In her letter to me, Mayor
Kirk wrote:
I am asking you and your colleagues to support and increase funding for all domestic initiatives that impact the quality of life for each of us. Whether it is education, public safety, homeland security or earmarks which become lifelines for communities like mine, domestic issues need to be the highest priority of the Federal
government.
Fortunately, under your and Speaker Pelosis leadership, I know that the Democratic-led Congress will work to put forward a budget that seeks to make critical
investments in our communities and supports such key federal initiatives as the
Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program, the Community Service
Block Grant (CSBG) program, the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program
(LIHEAP), the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) program, and key Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) water grant programsall of which were either completely eliminated or drastically slashed in the Presidents FY09 budget
proposal.
Your task will not be an easy one, given the many years of fiscal irresponsibility
of the Bush Administration and the GOP Congress that has produced an estimated
over $400 billion deficit. However, I know that, as you work to craft a FY09 budget
resolution, you will be mindful of the foregoing concerns expressed by Mayor Kirk
and presumably shared by local representatives throughout the nation.
Again, I appreciate your consideration of my testimony as well as the opportunity
Members Day provides to communicate the concerns of those I represent.
I look forward to continuing to work with you as the budget process moves forward.
OF
IN
CONGRESS
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revenues over (or above and beyond) the Governors budget that was released last
month. These revenue projections effectively increase the State budget gap from
$4.4 billion to $4.8 billion.
I join New York Governor Eliot Spitzer and my Democratic New York congressional colleagues in their concern that the Administrations FY 2009 budget proposal would slash critical federal resources for health care, housing, education, infrastructure and public safety, among other essential needs, while prioritizing permanent tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.
Specifically, the Administrations list of proposed federal funding cuts to New
York includes:
A) $9,760,000 cut to the Byrne Justice Assistance Grants, which provide funding
to New York state and local law enforcement agencies for crime prevention, law enforcement, prosecution, drug treatment, corrections and more;
B) $31,989,000 cut of Assistance to Firefighter Grants, which helps New Yorks
local fire departments obtain critically needed equipment, protective gear, emergency vehicles, training, and other resources needed to protect the public and emergency personnel from fire and related hazards;
C) $16,791,000 cut to New Yorks allocation for Clean Water State Revolving
Fund, which helps New York by providing capitalization grants to help finance the
construction of municipal wastewater facilities and nonpoint source pollution control
projects;
D) $64,527,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the Community Development
Block Grant, which provides the State of New York and its communities with flexible funding for economic development and job creation, affordable housing, and help
for citizens in need.
According to New York Governor Spitzer: From 2007 to 2009 there could be an
estimated 68,000 foreclosures in New York equaling over $9 billion in estimated
losses to homeowners and neighboring property values. This requires a serious, comprehensive federal response, yet the Presidents budget does nothing even as it
slashes funding for Community Development Block Grants, housing programs for
the elderly, and disabled, and rural housing and economic development programs.
Gov. Spitzers Statement;
E) $11,200,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the Dislocated Worker Program, which provides job training, career guidance, placement, and other services
for dislocated workers, including those who lost their jobs due to trade;
F) $4,571,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the Manufacturing Extension
Partnership, which provides resources and services to U.S. manufacturers to help
them create jobs, leverage private-sector investment, and be more competitive;
G) $10,170,000 cut to New Yorks allocation for Improving Teacher Quality
Grants, which provides New York with flexible funding to help ensure that schools
have highly qualified teachers in core academic subjects, which is a requirement of
the No Child Left Behind Act;
H) $59,947,000 cut to New Yorks funding allocation for career and technical education in high schools and community and technical colleges;
I) $34,948,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the 21st Century Learning
After-School Centers program, which provides a safe place for supervised afterschool activities for students and services that include academic assistance, career
exploration, skills development and internships, and athletic programs;
J) $2,064,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the Child Care Development
Block Grant, which reduces child care costs for low-income children while their parents work, and also monitors and improves quality and safety of care for all children;
K) $39,984,000 cut to New Yorks allocation for LIHEAP;
L) $32,062,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the Social Services Block
Grant, which provides funds for social services such as child care, child welfare,
home-based services, employment services, prevention and intervention programs,
and special services for the disabled;
M) $74,934,000 cut to New Yorks allocation for Public Housing Capital Fund;
N) $9,902,000 cut to New Yorks Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, relative to
2008 level.
O) $28,788,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the Federal-Aid Highways Program, which provides federal assistance to New York to build, rehabilitate, and improve the National Highway System and other roads and bridges.
According to New Yorks Governor Spitzer, Another serious cause for concern for
New Yorkers is the Presidents failure, for the first time, to meet funding levels for
highways and transit funding. The President proposes to shore up the Highway
Trust Fund with monies from the Transit account, placing both funding sources in
a position to be exhausted in the next fiscal year. Recognizing that New Yorkers
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use mass transit more often than any other state5.2 million people a daythis
federal action could negatively counteract our proposed record-settings state aid for
the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA). Gov. Spitzers Statement;
P) $2,721,000 cut to New Yorks allocation under the Essential Air Service, which
preserves passenger air service at New Yorks rural airports;
Q) $200 billion cut nationwide under both Medicaid and Medicare funding.
According to New York Governor Spitzer: The Presidents budget will wreak
havoc on the states health care system, which serves more than 4 million Medicaid
patients. The budget reduces funding by $200 billion for Medicaid and Medicare,
which will have a devastating impact on important programs that serve low income
families, children and seniors. Gov. Spitzers Statement.
According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) on February 5,
2008, the Administration continues to pursue proposed federal rules that would cut
billions from the Medicaid program. These rules would:
Significantly limit federal Medicaid matching funds for case management services;
eliminate federal funds for outreach, enrollment assistance, coordination of health
care services, and related activities by school personnel to enroll more of the eligible
poor children in Medicaid; Significantly limit the types of rehabilitative services that
states can cover with federal funds, including special instruction and therapy for
children and other beneficiaries who have mental illness or developmental disabilities; limit payments to hospitals and other institutions operated by state or local
governments to the cost of providing services to Medicaid beneficiaries, despite the
fact that these hospitals need additional support from Medicaid to help in defraying
the costs of providing care to the uninsured, along with the provision of essential
services such as trauma care, emergency response, and neonatal intensive care;
eliminate federal Medicaid funding for the costs of graduate medical education
(GME) provided by teaching hospitals. [New York has the greatest number of teaching hospitals in the country, which produces doctors that serve in New York and
many states throughout America. The Administration would also continue to pursue
federal regulations that would change the definition of outpatient hospital services
to significantly narrow the types of services states can cover under this benefit category, severely restricting reimbursement rates for such services as hospital-based
physician services, routine vision services, annual check-ups, and vaccinations.
The Presidents FY 2008 request for Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)Childrens Hospital Graduate Medical Education (CHGME) payments was $302 million. The Presidents FY 2009 budget request for CHGME is $0,
which eliminates a $302 million program that trains pediatricians and pediatric specialists at childrens teaching hospitals at a time when pediatric specialties face critical shortages.
In terms of the State Childrens Health Care Insurance Program (SCHIP), the
Administrations FY 2009 budget includes a $19.7 billion increase in funding for
SCHIP. CBPP says that this would not, however, allow states to cover the children
they currently cover, let alone cover more children. If the Administrations proposal
for $19.7 billion over the baseline is perfectly targeted to the states most in need
of such funds, the Administrations budget proposal would, according to CBPP, provide about $1.8 billion less than what is needed to avert SCHIP funding shortfalls.
The budget baseline assumes that annual federal SCHIP funding will drop from
$6.6 billion in FY 2008 to $5.3 billion in 2009 and $5.0 billion in FY 2010, and then
remain frozen at 5.0 billion, and then remain frozen at $5.0 billion in all years
thereafter, without any adjustment for increases in health costs or other factors
(such as child population growth or increases in the number of uninsured children
as employer-based coverage) continues to erode.
About $21.5 billion is needed for SCHIP over the next five years simply to avert
reductions in the number of children insured through the program, according to
CBPP. So, the Administrations proposed funding levels actually fall somewhat short
of what is needed to maintain current SCHIP program operations. While the Administration believes this $19.7 billion would allow enrolling 1.4 million additional children, this falls far short of the 4 million additional children who would be enrolled
under the SCHIP legislation that the President vetoed twice, according to CBPP.
The Administrations FY 2009 budget will cut $570 million from national Medicaid family planning services;
R) $1,022,099,000 New York State total hospital impacts of the Medicare cuts proposed in the Administrations FY 2009 budget: These reductions would be severe
and target Medicare teaching payments, hospital and health system market basket
updates for Federal FYs 2009 through 2013 by $10 billion dollars, hospital disproportionate share (DSH) payments, and reimbursements for Medicare bad debts.
These reductions would cut payments to New York hospitals and hospital-based
skilled nursing facilities, home health agencies, hospices, and inpatient rehabilita-
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tion providers. (This statement is attributable to The Healthcare Association of
New York State on February 4, 2008);
S) $83 million reduction for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:
World Trade Center Treatment and Screening. FY 2008 amount enacted was $108
million. The Administrations FY 2009 proposed budget seeks $25 million, which is
a reduction of $83 million. The terrorist attacks of 9/11 and the subsequent collapse
of the World Trade Center Towers produced the largest acute environmental disaster that ever befell New York City and affected people in New York and from all
over the world.
Thousands of people were exposed to toxins, pulverized building materials, and
other environmental contaminants in the air. Thousands of heroic responders, who
rushed in to help as all others were running the other way, have become sick as
a result of their work at Ground Zero. Many area residents, workers, and students
are sick as well. The number of ailing 9/11 rescue and recovery workers is said to
be increasing, workers illnesses are becoming more severe, the projected costs of
treating these illnesses is surging, and current federal treatment funding levels are
likely inadequate, according to unnamed sources. The National Institute for Occupations Safety and Health (NIOSH) developed estimates put the costs for running the
current programs at $218 million dollars for FY 2008, but the funding level proposed for both FY 2008 and FY 2009 was $25 million. This program has served over
37,000 responders from 2007 through 2007, and was expanded to include residents
and others in 2008;
T) HRSAPoison Control Centers which serves populations on a national basis
has been reduced by $17 million under the Administrations FY 2009 budget. Realistic funding, likely, would be more in the order of $30 million, consistent with the
House Appropriations Committee action for FY 2008 appropriations.
In addition to the cuts specified above, the Administrations budget would severely
cut the Health Equity Fund, The Ryan White Care Act funding, Title VII, Title VIII,
Health Empowerment Zones, Healthy Start, Indian Health Programs, substance
abuse and mental health services and universal newborn screening funding. There
are also cuts to cancer research and environmental programs that should not be sustained.
In summary, this budget is irresponsible and should be rejected. Instead, I call
on my congressional colleagues to advance an alternative budget that takes America
in a more productive direction, so that we can make critical investments to strengthen our economy; help Americans struggling to make ends meet in an economic
downturn; and restore fiscal responsibility. At minimum, I urge that there be no
cuts to Medicare or Medicaid in the House Budget Resolution.
Thank you for allowing me this important opportunity to express my concerns
about New York and national impacts from the Administrations FY 2009 budget
proposal.
IN
Thank you Mr. Chairman. I appreciate you holding this hearing today. As you
consider the budget resolution that will set Congress fiscal priorities for fiscal year
2009, I urge you to provide enough discretionary funding to sustain programs administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Affordable housing programs in HUD as well as other agencies face unprecedented shortfalls in the Presidents FY 2009 budget request. HUDs affordable housing and community development programs help approximately five million low-income families
secure and maintain decent, affordable homes. These programs also provide critical
local investments to redevelop and revitalize communities, many of which are struggling to respond to the burgeoning mortgage crisis.
The Presidents FY 2009 budget request fails to provide adequate funding for critical affordable housing programs. Under the budget request, nominal FY 2008 funding levels would be slashed by $659 million for Community Development Block
Grants, $415 million for public housing capital needs, $272 million for supportive
housing for the elderly or disabled, and $500 million for the Housing Choice Voucher program, which would result in the cutting of vouchers for at least 100,000 lowincome families. In addition, while the Bush Administration has provided a $1 billion increase in funding for the project-based Section 8 program to address the severe funding shortfalls that emerged last year, even this increase is $2.4 billion
short of the amount needed to fully renew all Section 8 contracts in FY 2009. Finally, the Presidents budget request eliminates or provides no funds to many crit-
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ical programs such as Brownfields Redevelopment Grants, Rural Housing Grants,
National Community Development Initiative, and Section 108 CDBG loans.
Moreover, while Congress has in recent years been able to rely on the availability
of large sums of recaptured and rescinded Section 8 balances to offset new HUD
budget authority, such recaptures will no longer be available. This means Congress
will have to add nearly $2 billion in funding in FY 2009 just to maintain programs
at the nominal FY 2008 levels. To adequately fund all HUD programs, I would
strongly encourage you to provide approximately $6.5 billion above the Presidents
request.
Clearly, the Bush Administration failed to recognize the nations pressing housing
needs particularly when our housing market is struggling with the burgeoning mortgage crisis. In setting this nations FY 2009 budget priorities, I strongly urge that
you advocate on behalf of our most critical housing programs. Thank you.
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