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Sisters of Mercy
National Advocacy Center, Sisters of the Good Shepherd
National Council of Churches
J Herbert NelsonDirector – Office of Public Witness
Deborah WeinsteinExecutive Director – Coalition on Human Needs
Choices:The House Budget;
Impending Deficit Reduction Cuts
Deborah WeinsteinApril 2, 2012
• Cut the food stamp program by $134b over 10 years
• Impose cuts on 1.5 million low-income school kids ($1.13b/yr)
• Reduce or end services for 540,000 special education students ($986m/yr)
• Deprive 75,000 children of Head Start ($621m/yr)
• Reduce or eliminate work-study for 713,000 college students ($76m/yr)
• Reduce or eliminate grants for 1.3m college students ($57m/yr)
OR
Enact the Buffett rule
($171b over 10 yrs)
&$8b left over for deficit reduction
Eliminate Medicaid coverage for 434,000 people ($21 b over 10 years)
ORClose the “carried interest” loophole so hedge fund managers pay same income tax rate as everyone else($21b over 10 years)
Allocate $75 million to buy 3 Trident nuclear missiles
OR
Provide job training for nearly 100,000 dislocated workers
Things to know about the Ryan Budget
Medicaid cut 34% by 2022 ($2.4T counting Medicaid & ACA)
SNAP cut $134bOther mandatory
by $1.9TDomestic/Internat’l approps
down $291b more
On the other hand…Military spending rises
5% above deal set last summer; would rise from 57% of all approps to 61% over 10 years.
There are $10 trillion in tax cuts!!!
By 2050, Medicaid, CHIP cut 75%; most other programs except Social Security, Medicare, defense would disappear.
“My goal is to cut government in half in 25 years, to get it down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub.” --Grover Norquist
Make Believe
• $5.4 trillion from keeping the Bush tax cuts over next 10 years.
• $4.6 trillion from NEW tax cuts that mostly help the rich.
• New cuts supposed to be offset by reducing other tax expenditures.
• What tax breaks would be cut?
Automatic cuts (aka Sequestration)
10 years of deeper cuts:•$110 million a year: •$55b Defense•$55b Not DefenseMany, but not all, low-income mandatory programs are exempt from these cuts
Medicaid, SNAP, TANF, SSI, Pell Grants, UI, some child care, most child welfare…
FY 2013 (starting Jan. 2013):•Automatic across-the-board, 8 – 9%
Non-defense: $38b from appropriations; rest from Medicare (limited) and other non-exempt mandatory
FY2014 and beyond:•Caps lowered by same amounts, but appropriators choose how to make cuts
Who would be hurt?
• 734,000 households: no LIHEAP• 1.5 million low-income children: reduced K-12
education aid• 550,000 poor adults, 20,000 youth don’t get job
training• 75,000 children don’t get Head Start• 25,000 children don’t get child care• 17,000 seniors: no Meals on Wheels• 12,000 patients: no HIV/AIDS drugs
How much less than in FY 2010?
• Adult job training: 22.5 – 23.5 percent• Adult basic education: 19.5 – 20.5 percent• IDEA education: 12.8 – 14.0%• LIHEAP grants to states: 33.3 – 34.2 percent• Public housing capital fund: 35 – 35.9 percent• WIC: 20.9 – 22.0 percent• Substance abuse treatment: 29.9 – 30.8 percent• Maternal and Child Health: 16.4 – 17.5 percent
Please check out CHN’s new report at www.chn.org
For more information,don’t be a stranger:Contact Debbie [email protected]
Indivar Dutta-GuptaPolicy AdvisorCenter on Budget and Policy Priorities
A Narrative About Programs
Vulnerable People Rely On
Indivar Dutta-GuptaPolicy Advisor
Domestic Human NeedsWebinar
April 2, 2012
Outline
Our Narrative
18 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
19 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
SNAP is Projected to Shrink as Percent of Economy
Programs We Care About are Affordable
Public Health Coverage is Better at Cost Control
20 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
Programs We Care About are Affordable
21 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
Spending is Focused on Elderly, Disabled, & Workers90% of Entitlement Benefits Goes to These Households
22 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
Spending is Focused on Elderly, Disabled, & WorkersMiddle Income Households Receive Proportionate Share
23 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
Spending is Focused on Elderly, Disabled, & WorkersTax Expenditures are Highly Regressive
Wednesday, March 23, 2012 24
Spending is Focused on Elderly, Disabled, & WorkersTax Expenditures are Substantial
25
*Federal administration costs as a percent of total federal and state expenditures for Medicaid, SNAP, and housing vouchers are just 0.1%, 0.3%, and 0.3%, respectively.
25 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
Strong Safety Net Programs WorkOverwhelmingly, Program Dollars Go to Beneficiaries
Strong Safety Net Programs WorkSafety Net Dramatically Reduces Poverty
26 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
27 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
Strong Safety Net Programs WorkTANF No Longer Effective at Reducing Deep Poverty
Our Narrative
Conclusion
28 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
• Policy Basics www.cbpp.org/policybasics
• Timely analysis on budget debates Blog: www.offthechartsblog.org
Twitter: @CenteronBudget
• Analysis of state budget and tax debates wwww.statefiscal.org
Our Narrative
Resources & Contact Info
29 Wednesday, March 23, 2012
Indivar Dutta-GuptaPolicy AdvisorFederal Fiscal PolicyCenter on Budget and
Policy Priorities820 First Street NE, Suite
510Washington, DC [email protected]
Emily AlfanoSenior Manager – Government RelationsNational Council of Jewish Women
Speak Out for a Moral Budget:The “Ask”
Maintain current funding levels for domestic anti-poverty programs.
Preserve the current structure of low-income mandatory programs like SNAP (formerly Food Stamps), the EITC, and Medicaid.
Replace the scheduled $1.2 trillion in across-the-board cuts with a balanced deficit reduction package that includes revenues and protects funding for anti-poverty and anti-hunger programs.
Take Action: Speak Out for a Moral Budget
Tell your senators and representative what you think.
Engage in the debate through traditional and new media.
Raise awareness in your community.
Speak Out for a Moral Budget:Tell your senators and representative what you think. Visit your members of Congress.
Tips: Call ahead to scheduleBring materials to leave behindMake it personalFollow up
Attend a town hall.Tips: Arrive early
Sit by the microphoneCome with your questions written downRefuse to take a non-answer for an answer
Make a phone call.Tips: Call the US Capitol Switchboard at (202) 224 3121 and ask to be connected to your
legislator’s office.Give your name and address to make clear you’re a constituentMake a clear statement of your position including an “ask”Ask for the staffer who handles the federal budgetFollow up
Send an email.Tips: Visit look www.senate.gov or www.house.gov to find the correct email address
Clearly state your purpose at the beginning of your letterInclude personal examplesAddress only one issue per letter
Speak Out for a Moral Budget:Engage in the debate through traditional and new media.
Write an Op-Ed.Tips: Focus on one issue
Support with factsInclude a personal storyAvoid jargonMake it timely
Write a letter to the editor.Tips: Read the letters section regularly
Respond quicklyBe briefFollow the rulesSend copies to decision-makers
Start a conversation on Facebook.Tips: “Like” your member of Congress
Post interesting articles on your wall Share information on Twitter.
Tips: Follow budget-related tags: #faithfulbudget; #save4all; etc.Follow allied people/organizations on Fridays: #FF @bread4theWorld
@CoalitiononHN @NCJW Tag members of Congress in tweets. You can find a list of members on Tweet Congress: http://tweetcongress.org/
Speak Out for a Moral Budget:Raise awareness in your community.
Plan an Event.Tips: Be creative
Find a hookAlert the mediaInclude an action
Engage your friends and family in conversation—and action!Tips: Share your story
ListenBe prepared with ideas for action: encourage friends and family to join you in calling members of Congress
Thank you for all your faithful work!
If you have further questions about today’s webinar, contact John Hill – [email protected]