Vermont Stands To Gain
$492.3 Million In Grants
Under Senate’s Economic Recovery Bill
WASHINGTON (Friday, Jan. 30) –
New official estimates released late Friday by the Senate Appropriations
Committee show that Vermont would garner a two-year minimum of $492.3
million in formula grants under the Senate’s version of the economic
recovery and reinvestment package that will reach the Senate Floor next
week, according to Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the panel’s third
most-senior member.
The new Senate Appropriations
Committee analysis does not include hundreds of millions more to
Vermonters that is included in the package in additional Medicaid funds,
in competitive grant programs, and in individual and business tax
reductions. Leahy released this summary of
Vermont’s formula grant totals in
the Appropriations Committee’s section of the package:
|
|
National School Lunch Program
|
Emergency Food Assistance Program
|
Food Stamps
(SNAP)
|
Emergency Food And Shelter Program
|
Drinking Water State Revolving Fund
|
Clean Water State Revolving Fund
|
Highway Funding
|
|
VT
|
$318,025
|
$186,890
|
$25,652,997
|
$163,399
|
$19,651,000
|
$19,537,800
|
$132,440,000
|
|
|
Transit Formula Funding
|
Public Housing Capital Fund
|
HOME Funding
|
Homelessness Prevention Fund
|
Byrne/JAG
|
Crime Victims Fund
|
Violence Against Women Grants
|
|
VT
|
$7,545,598
|
$3,392,813
|
$4,220,431
|
$3,415,938
|
$3,750,000
|
$348,998
|
$1,143,977
|
|
|
Internet Crimes Against Children Grants
|
State Energy Program
|
Weatherization
|
Child Care Development Block Grant
|
Head Start
|
State Education and Public Safety Budget
Relief
|
No Child Left Behind Title I funding
|
|
VT
|
$403,670
|
$3,540,000
|
$10,198,144
|
$2,823,372
|
$1,203,781
|
$126,390,000
|
$33,750,000
|
|
|
School Construction
|
Education Technology
|
Community Services Block Grant
|
Senior Meals
|
DOL-State Employment Services Grants
|
DOL-Dislocated Workers Grants
|
DOL-Adult State Grants
|
|
VT
|
$77,600,000
|
$4,839,000
|
$977,240
|
$500,000
|
$1,298,750
|
$1,161,110
|
$1,246,875
|
|
|
DOL-Youth State Grants
|
Dept of Ed. Vocational Rehab
|
|
|
Vermont Total Programmatic Formula Funding
|
|
|
VT
|
$2,947,500
|
$1,646,433
|
|
|
$492,316,501
|
|
The Appropriations Committee
approved the Senate’s version of the bill on Tuesday, and the full House
approved its counterpart bill on Wednesday. Leahy calls the
Senate’s bill “a good match” for easing Vermont’s widening state budget
deficit and to bolster Vermont’s economy. “The priorities in this
bill closely track the investment needs we have identified to create
jobs in Vermont today, and to lay the groundwork for the Vermont jobs of
the future,” Leahy said.
The bill parallels Leahy’s priorities for Vermont that
he brought into the Appropriations Committee’s work in drafting the
plan, including consultations with Vermont officials and Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Peter Welch (D-Vt.). Leahy noted that
some of the key benefits to Vermont in the Senate Appropriations
Committee’s bill include:
SCHOOL DISTRICTS: Vermont schools stand to gain nearly
$90 million in education and school repair funds through the No Child
Left Behind Act and special education programs.
STATE EDUCATION AND PUBLIC SAFETY BUDGET RELIEF: The
Governor and Legislature would have up to $125 million to prevent cuts
in education, public safety and other government services.
ANTI-CRIME & LAW ENFORCEMENT: As chairman of the
Judiciary Committee Leahy led in putting together the bill’s provisions
that would bring about $10 million to Vermont’s law enforcement
community.
MEDICAID SHORTFALLS: For Vermont’s Medicaid shortfalls, Vermont would
receive an estimated $250 million over two years.
TRANSPORTATION: Vermont would receive about $135
million for highways, bridges and transit needs.
HOUSING: More than $14 billion nationally for housing
programs that could bring more than $20 million to Vermont for
affordable housing, homeless prevention and Section 8 rental assistance.
CREATING THE JOBS OF THE FUTURE: One of Leahy’s top
priorities in the bill, its broadband provisions include $9 billion for
expanding broadband access, half of that for rural areas. It also
includes $4 billion for Smart Grid electric lines that might fund a
ground-breaking initiative in Vermont.
Combined with the economic recovery tax cuts and
mandatory programs announced by the Senate Finance Committee last week,
the Senate legislation totals $825 billion. The Appropriations
portion totals $365 billion. The package would create or sustain
an estimated 4 million or more jobs nationwide.
VERMONT AND THE SENATE’S STIMULUS PACKAGE
Broadband
Vermont still faces a deep
digital divide in broadband deployment, particularly in rural areas, due
in large part to the failure of broadband providers to offer services to
rural areas and to the lack of a strategic, national plan to make
broadband access a universal service. Though the federal
government has begun making investments in broadband expansion, economic
opportunities in rural areas could be substantially expanded by
accelerating these broadband access programs. The Senate stimulus
bill provides a significant new investment in broadband deployment -- $9
billion for the National Telecommunications and Information
Administration’s Broadband Technology Opportunities Program.
Small Business Assistance
Vermont businesses continue to
struggle with tightening credit conditions that keep them from retaining
their employees or expanding their businesses. Senator Leahy
pushed for funding that will encourage lending to small business and
housing projects across Vermont. As a result, the Senate stimulus
bill contains $250 million to provide capital to qualified community
development financial institutions (CDFIs) to invest in the development
of underserved communities. The following Vermont institutions are
CDFIs that could benefit from the increased funding: Vermont
Community Loan Fund, Community Capital, Opportunities Credit Union
(Vermont Development Credit Union), Northern Community Investment
Corporation, and Neighborworks of Western Vermont (Rutland West
Neighborhood Housing Services, Inc.). The bill also contains $730
million in SBA loans to stimulate lending to small businesses.
Nutrition & Health
With the dramatic rise in both
food prices and unemployment, the current economic situation severely
affects the food security of Vermont families. With more than 10
percent of all households in Vermont considered 'hunger insecure,' the
nutrition funding included the Senate stimulus bill would provide an
effective and immediate economic boost, while helping families put food
on the table. This bill strengthens the national nutrition safety
net and target nutrition assistance to families and communities
struggling to make ends meet.
To attend to the current hunger situation in Vermont,
Senator Leahy pushed for an increase in funding for the Food Stamp
program (now officially called the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program (SNAP)). The Senate bill provides $16.5 billion for
Food Stamp benefits; equaling a 12 percent increase in benefits for
households, plus a one-time bonus payment to families that would have an
instant effect in Vermont. The one-time bonus payment for an
average Vermont Food Stamp household is expected to be $197 and the
one-time bonus payment for an average Vermont senior SNAP recipient
living alone would be $122. Also included in the Senate package is
$500 million for the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program, which
will prevent more than 625,000 low-income women, infants, and children
from losing their WIC benefits. Among Senator Leahy's other
suggestions, the Senate stimulus bill also contains $150 million funding
for Food Banks nationwide, potentially bringing $272,000 in funding to
Vermont.
As the economic crisis deepens, families are
struggling to meet the staggering increases in health care costs.
Long-term cost cutting measures, such as the use of electronic medical
records, can help stimulate the health care economy and create much
needed jobs. Vermont has been a leader in advancing health
information technology, and this bill will help the state implement
Vermont’s plans. One of the largest drains on state budgets across
the country is funding Medicaid. This bill will make it easier for
Vermont to maintain and strengthen the state’s Medicaid program through
a temporary, across-the-board increase of the Federal Medical Assistance
Percentage (FMAP). The Senate package includes approximately $250
million in assistance to Vermont's Medicaid program, over two years.
Environment & Energy
As Senator Leahy requested, the Senate stimulus bill
would promote sustainable energy technologies and create more ‘green
jobs’ in Vermont for today and for tomorrow. The Senate bill would
provide more than $40 billion to the Department of Energy for the
development of clean, efficient American energy. Vermont would
also benefit from the inclusion of $4.5 billion for electric grid
modernization in the Senate bill, and $3.8 billion in loans and grants
for much needed water and waste disposal facilities in rural areas.
Also included are $1.3 billion for grants or loans for those who make
energy and green retrofit investments, and $400 million for rural
businesses initiatives, including the development of renewable energy.
The Senate bill also includes $1.4 billion for the Environmental
Protection Agency’s nationwide environmental cleanup programs, including
Superfund.
Education
In tough economic times,
schools in Vermont have been unable to address costly improvements to
50- or 60-year-old buildings made costlier by the high cost of fuel, and
students and families are having difficulty meeting the rising costs of
tuition. To address Vermont’s education needs, Leahy said the
Senate stimulus package includes $16 billion for school modernization
projects nationwide aimed at renovating, repairing and building public
schools and early learning facilities giving priority to local projects
that meet “green” building standards; a $400 per student increase in
Pell Grants; $39 billion to local school districts and public colleges
and universities, and up to $60 million to Vermont for Title I and IDEA
programs to help disadvantaged youth and fund special education
programs.
Law Enforcement
Crime typically rises during
bad economic times, and Senator Leahy led in drafting provisions in the
stimulus package to support local and state law enforcement agencies
that are on the front lines in combating crime. Leahy held
Judiciary Committee hearings in Rutland and St. Albans last year to seek
solutions to drug crime in rural areas, and his stimulus package
provisions for law enforcement take special aim at these rural needs.
The Leahy provisions also would help crime victims through the crime
victim services providers that also have faced drastic cuts from the
Bush Administration, forcing many to curtail services, lay off staff and
even close their doors.
To address this situation, Senator Leahy pushed for
increased funding for state and local law enforcement and victims
compensation and services in the stimulus package. Good prevention
and treatment programs have been shown to reduce crime. At Senator
Leahy’s request, the Senate stimulus bill includes $3.95 billion to
support state and local law enforcement efforts, including $150 million
for rural drug enforcement, $300 million to combat domestic violence,
$100 million to support state victims’ compensation and assistance
programs, and $1 billion to put new state and local law enforcement
officers on the streets.
Transportation
Vermont’s transportation infrastructure is aging and
needs repair and in some cases replacement. At Senator Leahy’s
request, the Senate stimulus bill would provide Vermont with a major
boost in transportation funding – more than $130 million -- for state
and local officials to make much needed improvements to our highways,
bridges, rail lines, transit systems, and airports. Specifically,
the bill includes $27 billion for formula highway investments; $8.4
billion for formula investments in public transportation; $5.5 billion
for competitive grants to state and local governments for surface
transportation investments; $1.1 billion for investments in intercity
passenger rail service, and $1.3 billion for investments in air
transportation.
Housing
Though Vermont is reported to
have one of the lowest foreclosure rates in the country, more and more
Vermonters are facing foreclosure and are at risk of losing their homes.
In addition, according to last year’s housing and wages report prepared
by the Vermont Housing Awareness Campaign and the Vermont Housing
Council, nearly two thirds of Vermonters cannot afford to pay median
rent or to purchase an average home in the state of Vermont. That
same report claimed that Vermont has the highest rate of homelessness in
New England. Senator Leahy ensured that programs aimed at making
homes more affordable for Vermonters, providing shelter to the
homeless and addressing the foreclosure crisis were included in the
Senate’s version of the stimulus legislation.
Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative
The bill includes $35 million
to build new Department of State passport agencies to expand access for
American citizens to be issued passports promptly, rather than by mail.
Senator Leahy included the funds to build these facilities throughout
the country to generate jobs and to improve the customer service
provided by the State Department, one of many lessons learned from the
passport backlog crisis in 2007.
These funds are part of an effort by Senator Leahy to
prepare the federal government to appropriately implement the Western
Hemisphere Travel Initiative (WHTI) as the deadline of June 1, 2009
looms. Senator Leahy intends to encourage the State Department to
build one of the passport agencies in Vermont to facilitate trade and
tourism in small communities that border Canada.
In addition to $1 million appropriated in fiscal year
2008 for public outreach about WHTI, Senator Leahy continues to ensure
that the public is aware of WHTI requirements, that neighboring
countries know that communities in Vermont and other states are open for
tourism and business, and that federal agencies are prepared to issue
the required documents and border stations are ready to facilitate
border crossings.
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