House Budget Chairman Announces $74 Billion in Cuts for Remainder of FY 2011; Fears of Government Shutdown on the Rise
Friday, February 4, 2011(National Federation of Federal Employees)
Yesterday, Representative Paul Ryan
(R-WI), Chairman of the House Budget Committee,
announced that House Republicans intend to
slash $74 billion dollars from the federal
budget in the remainder of Fiscal Year 2011.
Though a detailed proposal will not be released
until February 14th, sources suggest
$32-$40 billion of these cuts will come from
agency budgets over the next few
months.
Exempting the Departments of Defense,
Homeland Security, and Veterans Affairs, these
cuts will force many other federal agencies to
cut 20 percent of their budgets virtually
overnight, according to the Washington
Post. A document
released yesterday by House Appropriations
Committee Chairman Hal Rogers (R-KY) shows that
some agencies will take more of a hit than
others. Parts of the United States Department
of Agriculture are poised to take 13% percent
in budget reductions, and the Departments of
Housing and Urban Development and
Transportation will take a total of 18%. Other
targeted areas are the Departments of Interior,
Commerce, and Justice, among others.
“If
these cuts are enacted, it will have a
devastating impact on federal agencies,” said
NFFE Legislative Director Randy Erwin.
“Agencies are low on resources as it is, and
such misguided cuts could mean the end of many
important services the American people count
on.”
Democrats immediately positioned
themselves against the GOP proposal, arguing
that debate could lead to a government
shutdown:
“One
thing we can’t do is take extreme steps like
shutting down the government and forcing the
United States government to default on its
obligations,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-NV) in a press conference yesterday. “A
default would mean so many negative things: the
course of Social Security, the security of our
nation, the border, the funding of our troops
all over the world and here at home… Middle
class Americans can’t afford an extreme step
that would send us back into a bigger crisis
than we’ve ever had
before.”
If
Democrats and Republicans cannot reach an
agreement to fund the government for the
remainder of the fiscal year by March
4th, the government will be forced
to shut down. This would be devastating for
federal employees, forcing all civil servants
to remain at home without a paycheck while our
elected officials bicker over poorly conceived
spending reductions.
“We
cannot allow Congress to hold our jobs hostage
while they play politics with the federal
budget,” said NFFE National President William
R. Dougan. “The American people count on us to
be there to provide vital services to our
veterans, our seniors, and our armed forces. We
will do everything we can to ensure that we
will still be there on March
4th.”
