June 6, 2008
This week, the House and Senate passed a joint budget resolution
(S. Con. Res. 70), officially kicking off the fiscal year 2009
(FY09) appropriations cycle. This is the first time a budget
resolution has passed Congress in an election year since 2000.
The House and Senate Appropriations Committees will debate their
Labor, Health & Human Services, and Education (Labor-HHS-Ed)
subcommittee bills in the near future. Be sure that your
legislators know what you expect from these important funding
bills this year.
Budget Resolution
The joint budget resolution is a document that sets broad
funding limits that Congressional appropriators use to begin
crafting their funding bills. The FY09 joint budget resolution
recommends $84.3 billion for the broad category that includes
education.
Ultimately the House and Senate Appropriations Committees will
allocate the money they’ve been provided among the different
subcommittees, and each subcommittee will assign specific
funding levels to individual federal programs (i.e., Title I and
IDEA). The House subcommittee has scheduled debate of
its Labor-HHS-Education bill during the week of June 16,
marking the importance of the programs under its jurisdiction.
(Often this domestic spending bill is one of the last
appropriations bills debated.) Senate appropriators have
indicated that they hope to debate their own subcommittee bill
that same week.
Only time will tell whether Congress will attempt to complete
all or some of the appropriations bills before recessing late
this summer or early fall. NAESP believes Congress will
complete work on a few high-priority appropriations bills but
probably not Labor-HHS-Ed. Instead, appropriators indicate that
they will pass a Continuing Resolution, or CR, to fund federal
programs before recessing to return home to campaign for
reelection in November.
It’s important to note, however, that work done on the
appropriations bills now (including the Labor-HHS-Ed bill), will
likely serve as the starting point when Congress reconvenes to
finish the funding bills sometime after the elections.
Educators should speak up now to make sure their priorities are
reflected in the appropriations bills being debated this month.
Green School Construction Bill Passes House
NAESP is very pleased that the U.S. House of Representatives
passed H.R. 3021, the 21st Century Green High-Performing Public
School Facilities Act, sponsored by Rep. Ben Chandler (D-KY), on
Wednesday evening. The Senate has not scheduled a vote on this
bill.
H.R. 3021 would provide grants to states for construction,
renovation, modernization, and improvements of high-need
schools. The bill would require construction to meet certain
“green” standards set by the Leadership in Environmentally
Efficient Design (LEED). Additionally, a portion of the funds
provided in this bill would be reserved for high-need schools in
Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi to continue rebuilding and
repairs required as a result of hurricanes Rita and Katrina in
2005.
NAESP sent a letter of support for H.R.
3021 to the Chairman of the House Education & Labor Committee,
Rep. George Miller in April. To read this letter, click
here.
Key Points