m: Presbyterian Washington Office of Public Witness <ga_washington_office@pcusa.org>
Reply-To: Presbyterian Washington Office of Public Witness <ga_washington_office@pcusa.org>
Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2013 09:01:14 -0500
To: Ruth Farrell <ruth.farrell@pcusa.org>
Subject: Action Alert: One Week Left Until the Sequester
Reply-To: Presbyterian Washington Office of Public Witness <ga_washington_office@pcusa.org>
Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2013 09:01:14 -0500
To: Ruth Farrell <ruth.farrell@pcusa.org>
Subject: Action Alert: One Week Left Until the Sequester
Action Alert: One Week Left Until the Sequester
One week left…
On March 1st,
new federal budget cuts will begin to take effect. If Congress does
nothing, many hundreds of thousands of people will be hurt by
across-the-board cuts (sequestration) to education, nutrition, job
training, home heating assistance, public health, mental health, and
social services, to name only a few areas. In the absence of a
resolution, there will be $31.4 billion in spending cuts to domestic
programs like WIC, Head Start, child care, housing, home energy,
homeless aid, education and training, and much more. Medicare alone will
be cut by $11.2 billion.
Congress
should replace the sequester with a balanced approach that reflects our
collective responsibility to our human community. There are core
challenges facing our nation: rising income inequality, persistent
unemployment, historically high rates of poverty and anemic economic
growth. These challenges must be addressed with justice, but the
sequester will only exacerbate them.
Sequestration
was developed as a backstop – a last resort if Congress failed to
reduce the deficit in a more thoughtful and balanced way. As Christians,
we believe that our economic system must be rooted in fairness,
justice, and equal opportunity. Without these values, our economy is,
quite literally, demoralized. Thus it is our responsibility, both
individually and collectively, to respond to those who are in need.
Therefore, the first rule should be that deficit reduction should not increase poverty.
Congress must not replace the current sequester with policy that will
be even worse for those who are already struggling to make ends meet. We
must explore responsible alternatives to sequestration that will be
more consistent with our faith and sense of compassion. The nation’s deficit problem cannot be solved through spending cuts alone – new revenues must be part of the solution.
To
raise revenue, the tax code should be made more progressive (that is,
tax liability increases as income increases), system-wide health care
costs should be controlled, and unnecessary tax expenditures should be
eliminated. Further, Congress should seriously scrutinize the Defense
budget, which has doubled in size in the last fifteen years. Outdated
weapons systems and an over-reliance on the apparatus of war are no way
to build peace and true security in a troubled world.
Our partners at the Coalition on Human Needs have recently released new national and state-specific fact sheets
that highlight (or lowlight) the effects of these devastating cuts.
Just a sampling of the impacts in fact sheets for every state and for the U.S
are startling: Up to 125,000 families and 100,000 formerly homeless
people losing their housing (or having to pay much more), 600,000 young
children and moms losing WIC nutrition aid, 70,000 children denied
Head Start, nearly 76,000 people with disabilities losing Voc.
Rehabilitation services, 373,000 adults and children with serious mental
illness losing treatment.
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