BREAKING NEWS: 2010 Census Funding at Risk on House Floor
2010 Census Funding at Risk on House Floor: Funding for the Census
Bureau next year could be slashed significantly as the U.S. House of
Representatives begins debating the Fiscal Year 2010 Commerce, Justice,
and Science Appropriations bill (H.R. 2847) today.
Rep. Pete Olson (R-TX) is expected to offer an amendment that would
shift $566.5 million from the Census Bureau to NASA's exploration
account, more than eight percent of the $6.671 billion the
Appropriations Committee allocated for 2010 census operations in the
fiscal year that begins on October 1, 2009.
Numerous additional amendments that would siphon off funds from the
Census Bureau -- always a target for lawmakers seeking to boost funding
for law enforcement, science, and other popular programs in the massive
spending bill -- are expected over the next two days.
According to analyses by the Brookings Institution, almost $400 billion
in federal program funds annually -- $4 trillion over the decade -- is
allocated to states and localities based in whole or in part on census
data. The analyses, broken down by program and by state, are available
on The Census Project web site at
www.thecensusproject.org (under Fact
Sheets).
The Census Bureau's FY2010 budget also took an unexpected hit in the
Appropriations Committee last week, when a misunderstanding between
panel members and the Commerce Department (the Census Bureau's parent
department) led appropriators to reduce the agency's funding by $206
million. Lawmakers had thought the amount, appearing in the President's
detailed budget request as a carry-over from 2009, represented extra
money, when in fact the Census Bureau had committed the funds to a paid
media buy.
The Administration told Congress yesterday that if the $206 million is
not restored before Congress finalizes the Commerce spending measure,
the Census Bureau would reduce a planned $573 million contingency fund
for the 2010 census by that amount. The contingency fund, the
Administration said, would cover unanticipated conditions, such as a
lower-than-projected mail response rate or more vacant units that
increase the non-response follow-up workload, or unforeseen events, such
as a natural disaster or health pandemic. The emergency fund, Census
officials told Congress, "is not a very large reserve for a
once-a-decade program of this size and complexity, which must be
completed by statutory deadlines."
Census News Briefs are prepared by Terri Ann Lowenthal, an independent
legislative and policy consultant specializing in the census and federal
statistics. All views expressed in the News Briefs are solely those of
the author. Please direct questions about the information in this News
Brief to Ms. Lowenthal at TerriAnn2K(a)aol.com. Please feel free to
circulate this document to other interested individuals and organizations.
--
Ed Christopher
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