House Passes Funding Measure with $61 Billion in Cuts; Amendments to Freeze Federal Step Increases, Ban Union Official Time, Fail
Monday, February 21, 2011(National Federation of Federal Employees)
In the
early hours of Saturday morning, the House of
Representatives passed H.R. 1, the FY 2011
Continuing Resolution, a bill to fund the
federal government for the remainder of the
fiscal year, ending September 30th. The highly
contentious legislation slashes the federal
budget by a whopping $61 billion this year,
impacting nearly every government agency.
The
Departments of Agriculture, Housing & Urban
Development, Interior, and State are each
slated to see budget cuts totaling in the
billions. Individual agencies such as the
Forest Service, General Services
Administration, Army Corps of Engineers,
National Park Service, and dozens more may take
cuts ranging from the tens to hundreds of
millions under the House
bill.
Senate
Democratic leadership, who hold the majority in
Congress’ upper chamber, have pledged to oppose
the bill in its current form, but have yet to
offer alternative legislation as of this
writing. In addition, President Obama last week
issued a strongly worded Statement of
Administration Policy, found here,
opposing the cuts outlined in the Continuing
Resolution.
In spite of the massive cuts included in the bill, several harmful amendments targeting the federal workforce were either defeated or removed from consideration. The House voted down one such amendment from Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) which would have frozen merit-based step increases for the remainder of 2011. Legislators were also anticipated to consider an amendment from Rep. Todd Rokita (R-IN) to ban official time for union business, but the amendment never came to a vote.
