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Congress Completes Appropriations Work with Passage of “Megabus” Bill

On December 16, the House approved, 296-121, the conference report for the FY2012 omnibus appropriations bill (H.R. 3671). The Senate approved the legislation on December 17, by a vote of 67-32. The measure combines the nine outstanding FY2012 spending bills: Defense; Energy and Water Development, and Related Agencies; Financial Services and General Government; Homeland Security; Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies; Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies; Legislative Branch; Military Construction, Veterans’ Affairs, and Related Agencies; and State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs. The legislation complies with the provisions of the Budget Control Act (P.L. 112-25), which capped discretionary spending at $1.043 trillion. The president is expected to sign the legislation into law.

On December 16, Congress passed a short-term continuing resolution to fund the government through December 23, which would allow time for the enactment of the “megabus” bill.

In November, Congress approved a “minibus” spending bill (P.L. 112-55) that included the FY2012 Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies; Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies; and the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies spending bills and contained the current CR (see The Source, 11/18/11).

According to the House Appropriations Committee summary of the conference report, the legislation would provide $915 billion in discretionary funding for FY2012. This amount is $6 billion below FY2011 and more than $70 billion below President Obama’s request.

The charts below recap funding levels for various programs important to women and their families.

Defense

The conference report would provide $518.1 billion in discretionary funds in FY2012 for programs at the Department of Defense. This amount is $5.1 billion over FY2011, but $20.8 billion below the president’s request. The House approved its version of H.R. 2219 on July 8 (see The Source, 7/11/11). The Senate Appropriations Committee approved its version on September 15 (see The Source, 9/16/11).

School districts that educate significant numbers of military-dependent children would receive $45 million in FY2012.

Program/Agency

FY2011

President’s Request

House Report

Senate Report

Conference Report

Department of Defense

Military Personnel $126.74 billion $132.097 billion $132.092 billion $131.001 billion $131.091 billion
Defense Health Program $31.382 billion $32.199 billion $32.317 billion $32.536 billion $32.483 billion

Financial Services and General Government

The measure would provide $21.5 billion in discretionary funding for FY2012. This amount is $222 million below FY2011 and $4.2 billion below the administration’s request. The House Appropriations Committee approved its version of the bill (H.R. 2434) on June 23 (see The Source, 6/24/11); the Senate Appropriations Committee approved its bill (S. 1573) on September 15 (see The Source, 9/16/11).

Program/Agency

FY2011

President’s Request

House Report

Senate Report

Conference Report

District of Columbia

Federal Payment for Resident Tuition $35.03 million $35.1 million $30 million $30 million $30 million
Federal Payment for Courts $242.933 million $229.068 million $224.394 million $230.319 million $232.841 million
Federal Payment for Defender Services $54.89 million $55 million $54.89 million $55 million $55 million
Small Business Administration $729.738 million $985.439 million $978.306 million $955.387 million $918.771 million
Women’s Business Centers $13.972 million $14 million $14 million $13.972 million $14 million
National Women’s Business Council $998,000 $1.9 million $920,000 $998,000 $998,000
Microloan Technical Assistance $21.956 million $10 million $14.48 million $21.956 million $20 million
Small Business Development Centers $112.774 million $103 million $112 million $112.774 million $112.5 million

The report maintains the ban against the use of federal and local funds for abortions in the District of Columbia, as well as the ban against the use of federal funds for abortions within the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program.

The legislation would provide $5 million for HIV/AIDS prevention in the District of Columbia.

Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies

The conference report provides $156.3 billion in discretionary funds for FY2012. The total is $1.1 billion below FY2011 and $24.5 billion below the administration’s request. The amount includes $14.5 billion for the Department of Labor, $69.7 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services, and $71.3 billion for the Department of Education.

The Senate Appropriations Committee approved its bill (S. 1599) on September 21 (see The Source 9/23/11). The House Appropriations Committee did not consider its version of the legislation (H.R. 3070).

The report provides $5 million for abstinence education. The program was not funded in FY2011 and it was not included in the president’s FY2012 budget request.

Program/Agency

FY2011

President’s Request

Senate Report

Conference Report

Department of Labor

Dislocated Worker’s Assistance $1.288 billion $1.31 billion $1.288 billion $1.233 billion
Women in Apprenticeships $998,000 $1 million $998,000 $998,000
Reintegration of Ex-Offenders $85.39 million $90 million $75.39 million $80.39 million
Women’s Bureau $11.581 million $11.620 million $11.581 million $11.581 million
International Labor Affairs Bureau $92.484 million $101.504 million $92.484 million $92.484 million

Department of Health and Human Services

Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) $6.517 billion $7.323 billion $6.5 billion $6.47 billion
Community Health Centers $1.581 billion $2.118 billion $1.581 billion $1.581 billion
Maternal and Child Health Bureau $873.192 million $879.828 million $823.192 million $863.607 million
Maternal and Child Health Block Grant $656.319 million $654.489 million $606.319 million $646.319 million
Heritable Disorders $9.952 million $9.992 million $9.952 million $9.952 million
Universal Newborn Hearing Screening $18.884 million $18.96 million $18.884 million $18.884 million
Healthy Start $104.361 million $104.776 million $104.361 million $104.776 million
Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act $2.312 billion $2.375 billion $2.327 billion $2.327 billion
Ryan White Part D – Children, Youth, Women, and Families Programs $77.313 million $77.787 million $77.313 million $77.313 million
National Cord Blood Inventory $11.91 million $13.883 million $11.91 million $11.91 million
Family Planning $299.4 million $327.356 million $299.4 million $297.4 million
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention $6.282 billion $6.393 billion $6.219 billion $6.124 billion
Global Health $340.265 million $381.245 million $350.265 million $349.547 million
HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention $1.076 billion $1.157 billion $1.116 billion $1.106 billion
National Institutes of Health (NIH) $30.399 billion $31.456 billion $30.207 billion $30.698 billion
National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities $209.714 million $214.608 million $272.65 million $276.963 million
Administration for Children and Families $30.089 billion $28.908 billion $29.249 billion $29.229 billion
Child Support Enforcement $4.03 billion $3.471 billion $3.471 billion $3.471 billion
Refugee and Entrant Assistance (aid to victims of trafficking) $9.794 million $9.814 million $9.794 million $9.794 million
Refugee and Entrant Assistance (unaccompanied minors) $149.052 million $177.225 million $173.225 million $169 million
Child Care Development Block Grant $2.223 billion $2.927 billion $2.223 billion $2.283 billion
Children and Families Services Programs $9.525 billion $9.8 billion $9.851 billion $9.932 billion
Head Start $7.56 billion $8.1 billion $7.9 billion $7.984 billion
Consolidated Runaway and Homeless Youth Programs $97.539 million $102.734 million $97.539 million $97.539 million
Child Abuse and Neglect Prevention and Treatment Activities $93.881 million $97.244 million $93.881 million $93.881 million
Abandoned Infants Assistance $11.605 million $11.575 million $11.575 million $11.575 million
Child Welfare Training and Services $308.334 million $308.951 million $308.334 million $307.322 million
Adoption $78.674 million $89.107 million $78.674 million $78.674 million
Family Violence/Battered Women’s Shelters $129.792 million $135.052 million $129.792 million $129.792 million
National Domestic Violence Hotline $3.203 million $4.5 million $3.203 million $3.203 million
Mentoring Children of Prisoners $0 $25 million $0 $0
Promoting Safe and Stable Families $63.184 million $63.311 million $63.184 million $63.184 million
Administration on Aging $1.497 billion $1.741 billion $1.483 billion $1.474 billion
National Family Caregiver Support $153.912 million $192.22 million $153.912 million $153.912 million
Office of the Secretary $544.981 million $490.346 million $549.032 million $544.432 million
Teen Pregnancy Prevention Community Grants $109.245 million $118.455 million $113.245 million $113.245 million
Office for Civil Rights $41.016 million $46.717 million $41.016 million $41.016 million
Office of Minority Health $55.888 million $57.98 million $55.888 million $55.888 million
Office on Women’s Health $33.746 million $33.746 million $33.746 million $33.746 million
Minority HIV/AIDS $53.783 million $53.891 million $53.783 million $53.783 million

Department of Education

Title I grants to LEAs $14.463 billion $14.792 billion $14.463 billion $14.5 billion
Special Education Grants for Infants and Families $438.548 million $489.427 million $443.548 million $443.548 million
21st Century Community Learning Centers $1.154 billion $1.266 billion $1.154 billion $1.154 billion
Education for Homeless Children and Youth $65.296 million $65.427 million $65.296 million $65.296 million
Vocational Education $1.132 billion $1.008 billion $1.132 billion $1.132 billion
Adult Education $607.443 million $658.346 million $607.443 million $607.443 million
Pell Grants (discretionary) $22.956 billion $28.6 billion $22.956 billion $22.824 billion
maximum student award $4,860 $4,860 $4,860 $4,860
Child Care Access Means Students in School (CCAMPIS) $16.002 million $16.034 million $16.002 million $16 million
Office for Civil Rights $102.818 million $107.772 million $102.818 million $102.818 million
Women’s Educational Equity $2.423 million $0 $0 $0

Legislative Branch

The measure would provide $4.3 billion in FY2012. This amount is $237 million below FY2011 and $550 million below the agencies’ requests. The House passed its version of the legislation on July 31, while the Senate Appropriations Committee passed its bill on September 15 (see The Source, 7/22/11, 9/16/11).

The conference report does not specify funding levels for the House and Senate child care facilities.

Military Construction, Veterans’ Affairs, and Related Agencies

The conference report provides $71.7 billion in discretionary funds for military construction projects and the Department of Veterans’ Affairs in FY2012. This amount is $1.4 billion below FY2011 and $2.1 billion below the administration’s request. The House approved its version of H.R 2055 on June 14 (see The Source, 6/17/11), while the Senate passed its version on July 20 (see The Source, 7/22/11).

Program/Agency

FY2011

President’s Request

House Report

Senate Report

Conference Report

Military Construction $11.908 billion $12.141 billion $11.489 billion $11.093 billion $11.4 billion
Family housing $1.82 billion $1.694 billion $1.694 billion $1.694 billion $1.683 billion
Department of Veterans’ Affairs $123.165 billion $130.203 billion $129.727 billion $130.021 billion $124.156 billion
Veterans Health Administration $51.142 billion $53.05 billion $53.071 billion $53.05 billion $53.122 billion

State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs

The conference report would provide $42.1 billion in discretionary funds for programs at the State Department, USAID, and other international organizations. According to the summary, this amount is more than $6 billion below FY2011 and $8.7 billion below the president’s request.

The Senate Appropriations Committee approved its version of the measure (S. 1601) on September 21 (see The Source, 9/23/11). The House Appropriations Committee did not draft a spending bill.

The overall amount provided for bilateral economic assistance is $21.3 billion, which the summary notes is $2.2 billion below FY2011 and $4.9 billion below the president’s request.

The measure continues the prohibition on funding for abortions (Helms Amendment); funding to international organizations that support coercive or involuntary abortions (Kemp-Kasten Amendment); and ensures that all family planning programs are voluntary (Tiahrt Amendment). The conference report does not reinstate the Mexico City policy that bans funding to international organizations that perform abortions.

Program/Agency

FY2011

President’s Request

Senate Report

Conference Report

Department of State

Diplomatic and Consular Affairs $8.772 billion $7.57 billion $6.878 billion $6.551 billion
International Peacekeeping $1.884 billion $1.92 billion $1.918 billion $1.828 billion
Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons $12 million $6.764 million $6.764 million $36 million*
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) $1.526 billion $1.503 billion $1.251 billion* $1.347 billion

Bilateral Economic Assistance

Migration and Refugee Assistance $1.687 billion $1.613 billion $1.7 billion $1.639 billion
Global Health and Child Survival (State and USAID) $7.829 billion $8.716 billion $7.908 billion $8.168 billion
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) $5.334 billion $5.642 billion $5.25 billion $5.543 billion
Child Survival and Maternal Health $474 million $846 million $595 million $605.55 million
Vulnerable Children $15 million $15 million $15 million $17.5 million
Family Planning/Reproductive Health $528.6 million $625.6 million $660 million $523.95 million
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria $1.05 billion $1.045 billion $750 million $1.05 billion
HIV/AIDS – USAID $350 million $350 million $350 million $350 million
Microbicides $45 million $45 million $45 million $45 million
Millennium Challenge Corporation $898.2 million $1.125 billion $898.2 million $898.2 million

International Organizations and Programs

U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF) $132.25 million** $126.6 million $129.5 million $131.755 million
U.N. Women (UNIFEM) $6 million** $8 million $7.5 million $7.5 million
UNIFEM Trust Fund $3 million** $0 $0 $0
U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA) $55 million** $47.5 million $40 million $35 million

*The measure would provide $36 million in overall funding to combat trafficking in persons. It does not specify an amount for the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons.

**Reflects FY2010 funding levels, as programs within International Organizations and Programs continued to operate under continuing resolution P.L. 111-242.