States would be spared draconian cuts next year under President Bush’s plan to balance the federal budget by 2012, but health, social and other programs important to states still would be squeezed.
The billion Medicaid program, whose costs are shared by the federal government and states, provides health insurance for 59 million poor and disabled adults and children.
Medicare, the federally run health plan for seniors, would take a much bigger hit under the president’s plan, with the administration eyeing some billion in savings.
- Child care – Child-care assistance for low-income families would be frozen at current levels without accounting for inflation. As a result, the number of children assisted under state-run welfare programs would be cut by 300,000 in the next five years, the Bush administration said.
- Education – While the president included an additional .7 billion for states to implement testing and reporting requirements under the No Child Left Behind Act, states likely will argue that the amount still is not enough. Governors and state legislators are among those who have charged that NCLB has been under-funded, by some estimates to the tune of billion.
- Energy – Nuclear energy is one of the big winners in the president’s .3 billion budget request for energy programs, with an increase of million for Bush’s Nuclear Power 2010 program, which is developing technology for a new generation of nuclear reactors. State aid to help low-income citizens make their homes more energy-efficient, however, would be cut more than million under the president’s budget. Grants to help states promote energy efficiency would be cut million.
- Homeland Security – The administration’s budget calls for .2 billion for state and local preparedness, including grants to train firefighters. An additional 250 law enforcement officers would be trained as part of a million increase in a program designed to educate state and local law enforcement officials in immigration law. And million will be devoted to identifying criminal aliens incarcerated in federal, state and local prisons and then extraditing them from the United States.
- National Guard – Reflecting the administration’s reliance on the National Guard to fight wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the budget calls for increasing the Army National Guard by 1,300 soldiers in fiscal 2008 to 351,300. A year ago, the administration had considered keeping the Army National Guard at 333,000, rather than a full force of 350,000. The president backed off after governors and U.S. senators protested.
- Transportation -A million program to help states and cities reduce traffic congestion is a centerpiece of the president’s proposed billion transportation budget. The initiative includes ideas such as charging drivers more for being on the road at rush hour. Overall, highway funding would get a scheduled million increase, while money for transit projects would be cut by slightly more than that, according to the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.
- S-CHIP – The president wants to refocus funds on children in families making less than twice the poverty level (,300 for a family of four). Currently, 16 states allow kids in families with higher incomes to enroll. Under Bush’s proposal, those states still could cover the children, but they would receive less of a federal match for doing so. His plan also would freeze enrollment of adults in S-CHIP. Of the 6.1 million people covered by the program, 639,000 are adults, often parents of kids in the program.
- Social services – The plan would cut million from the billion Social Services Block Grant (SSBG), which funds flexible state assistance programs for children, seniors and the disabled.
- Environment – The Clean Water State Revolving Fund, which provides funds to states for developing their water infrastructure, would be cut million under the president’s plan. States got .1 billion for the program in 2006.
- Food stamps – The Bush administration wants to make it easier for some low-income working families to qualify for food stamps by allowing states to exclude IRA savings plans when calculating families’ assets. But other changes would make it harder for some welfare recipients to qualify for the food assistance program. Advocates for the poor say the changes are not expected to lower the total number of families served or the average monthly benefit.
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