TOPICS
TOPICS
Appropriators, Obama agree on program terminations
House and Senate appropriators plan to ax 11 of the 48 discretionary, nonmilitary programs targeted for termination earlier this year by President Obama, according to an analysis of fiscal 2010 budget documents and appropriations bills.
Appropriators' relatively low degree of compliance with Obama's requests, which amounts to ending about 23 percent of the programs he sought to kill, highlights the tension between the president's desire to cut federal spending and Congress' penchant to consistently fund programs they deem a priority.
In the case of the remaining 37 nondefense discretionary programs, House or Senate appropriators, or both, recommended maintaining funding. To date, the House has cleared all 12 annual spending bills and the Senate has completed four.
Once both houses adopt their respective versions of the bills, they will reconcile any differences in conference. That would provide another opportunity to cut additional programs.
"The game isn't over until the bills are written," said Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan interest group. "It's up to the administration to keep [Congress'] feet to the fire."
In May Obama released a hit list of 121 programs, mandatory and discretionary, that he recommended be terminated or cut, with a total savings of $17 billion. About half of the savings would come from defense programs and almost $12 billion would come from discretionary spending.
Proposed cuts in the defense budget include terminating the F-22 fighter program, which received $2.9 billion in fiscal 2009. The House has agreed to the cut, but the Senate Appropriations Committee has not taken up its Defense Appropriations bill.
Of the 11 programs on the chopping block, the most money would be saved by cutting the Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities State Grant program, which received $295 million in fiscal 2009. It is administered by the Education Department.
The program provides formula funds intended to help create and maintain drug-free, safe, and orderly environments for learning in and around schools. But the administration -- citing a 2001 Rand Drug Policy Research Center study and a 2007 assessment by the program's advisory committee - contends the program is poorly designed.
"The program does not focus on the schools most in need and the thin distribution of funding prevents many local administrators from designing and implementing meaningful interventions," the White House said in its budget.
Schools would be better served if the federal government instead provided competitive grants to concentrate a greater amount of funding to school districts with a demonstrated need, the White House said. The House and Senate Appropriations committees agreed with the White House's assessment and provided no funding for it.
Cancellation of another Education Department program, the Student Mentoring Program, would save $47 million, the amount it received in fiscal 2009.
"In March 2009, the Department's Institute of Education Sciences completed a rigorous multi-year evaluation, which found this program to be ineffective," the House Appropriations Committee said in its fiscal 2010 Labor-HHS spending bill, which was approved by the full House last month.
Cutting the Labor Department's Work Incentive Grants would save $17 million, which was what Congress provided in fiscal 2009.
Obama also sought to cut the Energy Department's Reliable Replacement Warhead program. Congress did not fund the program in fiscal 2009 and plans to agree to Obama's request for fiscal 2010.
COMMENTS
- It is absolutely laughable as to how minute these cuts are. Our nation is now in a position where we are adding in excess of $1 trillion every year to our existing debt which currently totals over $10 trillion dollars. We now depend on Communist China to buy our debt and even they are balking. My family and I sit around the kitchen table and decide what we can afford and what we can't afford and we live our lives in that mode. Why can't our congress do that? Because they're so busy creating new spending bills that benefit special interest groups in the belief that they need to do that to get reelected. I want Congress to create a moratorium on new spending and then spend the next ten years killing all these assinine bills that were created over the last seventy years (since the Great Depression). For starters, we can eliminate the Davis-Bacon Act and the Service Contract Act. Then eliminate all the special interest "Small Business" programs which divvy out money and contracts to a long list of special interest groups based on either their race, gender, or Veteran's status. As a matter of fact, the original purpose of the Small Business Administration was to assist and train people in starting new businesses. Now we have a huge bureaucracy that spends its time making sure various socio-economic groups get this work or that work while these socio-economic groups fight amongst each other for work. I say disband the SBA and its socio-economic programs and give whatever remains to another agency to handle. There are many other programs in many other agencies that were created to subsidize various special interest groups. STOP IT!!! Senators and Representatives: Most of you are corrupt and prostitute yourselves for your own personal gain. Why don't you sit around the Congress table for the next ten years and figure out what you (as representatives) can do to put together a national budget that is affordable. We cannot take care of all people everywhere. Our nation will crumble if you cannot make good decisions based on sound financial assumptions. DOD Employee - Navy Posted August 24, 2009 5:05 PM
- Cut Failed Programs/Agencys Start with the DEA.. As UCLA Chancellor and former arms negotiator Al Carnesale once stated: The likely delivery vehicle of a weapon made from leaked Russian nuclear material is not an intercontinental missile, but a bail of marijuana smuggled by drug lords across the Mexican border. That pretty much sums up the effectiveness of the DEA. 30yrHRspecialist Posted August 19, 2009 2:11 PM
- Dan Ketter says, "That's all that congress and bark are willing to cut??? I could cut $50 billion tomorrow are agencies that don't work HHS, NIH, Community outreach, attorneys for free etc." Dan - Governments have always had programs in place to "support the underprivileged/underclasses"; re, in Charles Dickens' time the government funded debtors prisons. Is that what you'd like to return to? Michelle Posted August 19, 2009 10:46 AM
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