The House narrowly approved a $2.4 trillion budget resolution on Thursday that
an Arizona Congressman says shortchanges Indian Country.
Rep. Rick Renzi (R-Ariz.) was one of 10 Republicans who
joined Democrats in rejecting the measure but it passed by a vote of
215 to 212. The first-term Congressman said the budget does not provide
adequate funds for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Indian Health Service and
veterans' care.
"My district is home to the largest concentration of Native Americans
in the nation, I could not bring myself to vote for a budget that did not
fully address their uniquely severe situation," Renzi said.
Renzi represents a large part of the Navajo Nation and the White Mountain Apache
and San Carlos reservations. In December, he visited a BIA school on the
Navajo Nation that is in line for replacement construction funds.
"Students enrolled in BIA schools deserve to learn in better classrooms at
modern facilities. We need to give these students the tools and the
technical training to compete and succeed within today's modern workforce,"
Renzi said. "BIA education funding in the current budget needs to be
raised."
The resolution approved yesterday sets the federal government's spending
levels for the coming fiscal year and the four years following. It closely follows
the request President Bush submitted in February.
Under the proposal, the BIA takes a 2.5 percent cut in fiscal year
2005. Education programs will see an overall reduction of $79 million,
$65 million of which impacts the account used to repair and replace
ailing Indian schools.
In contrast, the IHS is seeing an overall increase of 1.6 percent,
although one item -- construction of new hospitals, clinics and other
facilities -- will be reduced by $52 million due to completion of certain
projects. Renzi said this cut jeopardizes American Indians and Alaska Natives.
"With tribal health care costs increasing at rates faster
than that of inflation, under-funding future construction of IHS hospitals
reduces the ability for Native Americans to receive urgent-care and
emergency medical services," he said.
Democrats in the House offered three alternatives to the budget resolution
that would revoke some of Bush's tax cuts and use the money to reduce the
federal deficit and increase spending for domestic programs, including
health and education. These were defeated along with a proposal by
some Republicans to rein in spending.
In recent weeks, tribal leaders have blasted the Bush administration's spending plans
as reckless. Officials plan to slash the
BIA budget by six percent over the next two years, the largest since the Reagan era.
"I don't know what it will take to get through to this administration,"
said Joe Shirley Jr., president of the Navajo Nation, in Washington, D.C.,
on Wednesday. Shirley and nearly two dozen tribal leaders
have written a letter to President
Bush, seeking face-to-face consultation on the upcoming budgets.
"There's a war going on in the United States," Shirley added. "Our
war is against poverty, against greed, against impoverishment, against
unemployment."
The Senate earlier this month passed a $2.4 trillion budget resolution after
Republicans rejected a $3.44 billion boost to the IHS. The chamber
approved a $292 million increase instead.
The Senate resolution differs from the House one in a key respect.
Any new tax cuts in the next five years
must be approved by at least 60 out of 100 senators. House Republicans
oppose this provision.
Fiscal year 2005 begins October 1. Funding for the BIA and IHS
will be contained in the Interior Appropriations bill. Members of
the Senate Indian Affairs Committee who also site on the Appropriations
Committee say they will work to increase spending for Indian programs.
"We have a lot to say about what is increased and what is decreased," d Sen.
Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colo.) said last month.
Get the Resolution:
Congressional Budget for the U.S. Government for FY 2005
(H. Con. Res. 393)
Roll Call:
On Agreeing to the Resolution
(March 25, 2004)
Relevant Documents:
DOI Budget Memo (March 12, 2004) | Tribal Leaders Letter to Bush (March 23, 2004)
Relevant Links:
Rep. Rick Renzi -
http://www.house.gov/renzi
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