This Statement of Administration Policy provides the Administration's views
on S. 1650, the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related
Agencies Appropriations Bill, FY 2000, as reported by the Senate
Appropriations Committee. Your consideration of the Administration's views
would be appreciated.
As the President indicated in his statement yesterday, while the funding
levels in the Senate Committee bill are better than those in the House
bill, he would veto the bill in its current form for the reasons discussed
below.
The President's FY 2000 Budget provides levels of discretionary spending
for FY 2000 that conform to the Bipartisan Budget Agreement by making
savings through user fees and certain mandatory programs to help finance
this spending. The Administration wants to work with the Congress on
mutually-agreeable mandatory and other offsets that could be used to
increase funding for high-priority discretionary programs, including those
funded by this bill.
Department of Education
The Administration strongly opposes the Senate Committee bill's undermining
of our national commitment to improve our schools by not guaranteeing funds
specifically for Class Size Reduction. The President's Budget includes the
second installment of his goal to hire 100,000 new teachers in order to
reduce class size in the early years. Unfortunately, the Senate bill
reneges on the bipartisan commitment last year to reduce class sizes to an
average of 18 in the primary grades by providing no funds specifically for
Class Size Reduction. As a result, it does not guarantee funding for the
29,000 teachers hired last year or the additional 8,000 teachers that would
be hired under the President's proposal. This program has been extremely
popular -- every State applied for and received funding in FY 1999, and
preliminary State reports show that 1.7 million children will benefit from
last year's funds alone. We would support efforts to restore funding to
this critical initiative as the bill moves through the legislative process.
The Senate Committee-reported bill also provides unacceptably low funding
for the following education priorities:
- GEAR UP. The President's budget requests $240 million for
GEAR UP, which helps students in high poverty areas stay in school,
succeed in their classes, and prepare for college. The Committee bill
provides $180 million, denying college preparation services to more than
130,000 fewer low-income middle school students.
- After School. The President's budget request focuses on
raising student achievement and improving accountability in our Nation's
schools. A cornerstone of this effort is the President's $600 million
request for After School programs, which would support State efforts to
end social promotion by providing extra learning time for 1.8 million
students to help them master academic material. The Senate bill
provides only $400 million for After School, denying services to nearly
600,000 students. The Administration strongly opposes the reduction in
a top Presidential priority.
- Hispanic Education Agenda. The President's budget requested
over a $400 million increase to support programs targeted to improve the
educational outcomes of Hispanic Americans. Unfortunately, the Senate
bill cuts $236 million from the request which will deny many of these
indispensable services to this underserved population, seriously
hampering the progress of Hispanic Americans in reaching the high
academic standards expected of all students.
- Adult Education ESL/Civics Initiative. The Senate bill
provides no funding for the President's Adult Education ESL/Civics
Initiative (part of the Hispanic Education Agenda), which would provide
$70 million to help adult English language learners acquire the skills
necessary to become successful participants in American society.
- Reading Excellence. The Committee bill reduces the
President's $286 million request for Reading Excellence to help over one
million children learn to read by the end of the third grade. The bill
provides $260 million for this program, denying 100,000 students the
help they need to read independently, the cornerstone for all learning.
- Education Technology. The Committee's $94 million reduction
from the request would make it increasingly difficult for States to meet
school children's education technology needs, especially in training
teachers to integrate educational technology into their curriculum
effectively. These technological investments are critical in order to
prepare the next generation for the 21st Century.
- Community Based Technology Centers. The Committee's $55
million reduction from the Budget would prevent low-income communities
from gaining access to the technology that they need to prepare for the
21st Century. Recent studies have shown that not only do children and
adults in low-income communities have much less access to computers than
in high-income communities, this "digital divide" is also growing. The
President's request would have helped to shrink this gap by funding
nearly 300 additional community-based technology centers.
- Charter Schools. The Committee bill cuts $30 million from
the request, which would leave over 500 charter schools without funds to
assist in the planning and development of innovative programs that
enhance public school choice.
- Research. The Committee has cut by over $50 million the
President's request for research and dissemination, eliminating funding
for large-scale, joint research with the National Science Foundation and
the National Institutes of Health on early learning in reading and
mathematics, teacher preparation, and technology applications. These
cuts would occur at a time when teachers and policy-makers are demanding
reforms proven by sound research.
In addition to the funding issues identified above, the Administration
strongly urges the Senate to include a key language provision that would
support stronger accountability under the Title I program by requiring
States to reserve 2.5 percent of their LEA Grant allocations to help turn
around the lowest-performing schools.
Furthermore, the Administration objects to the language limitation that
would bring a halt to the President's efforts to help States and parents
raise academic standards through a voluntary national test. The Committee
bill's language would prohibit the pilot testing, field testing,
implementation, administration, and distribution of the tests unless
explicitly authorized. The language prohibition should be deleted.
Congress should be promoting high standards for all students, not
undermining them.
Department of Health and Human Services
The Senate Committee bill underfunds public health priorities, including
preventive health, mental health services, and health care access for the
poor. The Administration is very concerned about the following cuts to key
health and social service programs:
- Social Services Block Grant (SSBG). The Administration is
strongly opposed to the $1.3 billion reduction in the Social Services
Block Grant. The Committee funding level is less than half the level
requested and 45 percent below the FY1999 level. This cut would have a
direct and severe impact on States, local governments and nonprofits
that provide such critical programs as child care, child welfare, and
services for individuals with disabilities.
- National Family Caregiver Support Program. The
Administration urges the Senate to provide the $125 million requested to
establish a new program to assist approximately 250,000 families caring
for an older relative. The need for this program is indicated by the
fact that there are seven million informal caregivers providing primary
assistance to the 95 percent of older persons who need help with their
daily activities.
- Head Start. The Administration commends the Committee for
fully funding the President's request for Head Start. The $507 million
increase above the House mark will enable this important program to
deliver comprehensive education and developmental services to 44,000
additional low-income children. This increase also supports critical
investments in quality improvement activities included in the
President's budget and agreed upon in the bipartisan reauthorization of
the Head Start Act last year. The Administration raises concern,
however, over the possible impact of an advance appropriation at the
level included in the Committee's mark.
- Mental Health Block Grant. The Administration objects to the
$49 million reduction to the request for the Mental Health Block Grant.
This funding is important for assisting States in supporting
comprehensive community systems of care for adults with a serious mental
illness and children with severe emotional disturbances, given that
approximately 10.2 million people, or over five percent of the
population, suffer from a serious mental illness over the course of any
given year.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The
Administration is concerned that the Senate bill would reduce requested
funding for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention by $53
million, impairing CDC's ability to carry out key public health
activities such as childhood immunizations, chronic and environmental
disease prevention, domestic HIV/AIDS prevention, and surveillance and
investigations of outbreaks. Research done in CDC laboratories is used
by community disease prevention programs around the country to address
illnesses such as AIDS, cancer, diabetes, and influenza. The
Administration urges the Senate to fund the requested increases for CDC,
including funding for research, laboratory work, and technical
assistance.
- Health Care Access. The Administration strongly opposes the
Senate bill's failure to fund adequately programs that will improve
health care access for many Americans, including a portion of the 43
million uninsured. No funding is provided for the Health Care Access
for the Uninsured initiative, which would provide funds to enable the
development of integrated systems of care and to address service gaps
within these systems. In addition, the bill does not include the full
$25 million increase requested for Family Planning services. The
President's full request would provide family planning services to an
additional 500,000 clients who are neither Medicaid eligible nor have
insurance.
- Children's Hospitals Graduate Medical Education. The
Administration is concerned about the Senate bill's lack of funding for
Children's Hospitals Graduate Medical Education (GME). Teaching
hospitals that do not treat many Medicare patients, such as the Nation's
free-standing children's hospitals, receive a very small share of
Medicare GME dollars. The Administration urges the Senate to fully fund
this request.
- Bioterrorism. The Senate bill does not include in the Public
Health and Social Services Emergency Fund the requested $13 million for
critical FDA expedited regulatory review and approval of new vaccines
and drugs to combat biological and chemical agents used for terrorist
purposes.
- Minority AIDS Initiative. The Senate Committee reduces
funding by $15 million (-30 percent) for minority AIDS prevention and
treatment from the FY 1999 enacted and FY 2000 requested level. These
important resources allow HHS to direct the necessary funds to the most
critical areas of need to address this epidemic in minority communities
and should be restored.
- HCFA Program Management. The Administration appreciates the
Senate Committee's action to fund the request for HCFA Program
Management. However, we encourage the Senate to enact the full amount
of already-authorized Medicare+Choice user fees, as well as the
President's requested increase in Medicare+Choice user fees. We also
encourage the Senate to enact the President's proposed program
management user fees totaling $194.5 million, which could free up
resources under the discretionary caps for education and other
priorities.
- Medicare+Choice Competitive Pricing Demonstrations. The
Senate bill includes language that would prevent funds from being used
to administer the Medicare+Choice Competitive Pricing Demonstration
Project. These demonstrations were passed by the Congress as part of
the Balanced Budget Act in order to provide valuable information
regarding the use of competitive pricing methodologies in Medicare. The
information that we could learn from these demonstrations is
particularly relevant as we consider the important task of reforming
Medicare. The Administration urges the Senate to remove this provision
and to allow HCFA to implement the demonstrations.
- Abortion. The Administration urges the Senate to strike
sections 508 and 509 of the Committee bill, which would prohibit the use
of funds for abortion. The President believes that abortion should be
safe, legal, and rare. These provisions would continue to limit the
range of conditions under which a woman's health would permit access to
abortion services. Furthermore, section 509 requires a physician to make
a legal determination that these conditions have been met. The
Administration proposes to work with the Congress to address the issue
of abortion funding.
- Delayed Obligations for NIH. In providing the National
Institutes of Health an increase of $2 billion, the Senate bill would
delay the obligation of $3 billion to the end of the fiscal year. The
Administration is concerned that the size of this restriction could
hamper the efficient management of NIH's grant portfolio and potentially
delay the funding of high-quality research on cancer, diabetes,
Parkinson's, and other diseases.
Department of Labor
The Administration appreciates the Senate Committee's mark for the
Department of Labor's employment and training programs and programs
protecting working Americans at their jobs. This supports our initiatives
to help dislocated workers, youth, and others in need of skills or skill
upgrading to prepare for, find, and retain jobs in today's workplace. In
addition, the Committee's mark will help ensure that worker safety and
health and other rights are protected on the job at home as well as help
developing economies establish core labor standards. However, the
Administration urges the Senate to provide the full request for the
Department to work with other agencies to address youth violence among
out-of-school youth and the request for the Bureau of Labor Statistics to
ensure that our statistical programs are maintained and improved.
National Labor Relations Board
The Administration appreciates the Senate Committee's full funding of the
request for the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). Among other things,
this will enable the NLRB to work down its case backlog and improve its
information technology so it can better serve labor and employers in
resolving the charges brought before it for resolution.
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