Senate Appropriations Committee Adopts Subcommittee Allocations

Posted by Dusty Weaver on June 22nd, 2006

Thursday, July 22 the Senate Appropriations Committee adopted subcommittee allocations in a meeting of the full committee. This part of the budget and appropriations process is where the Appropirations Committee slices the single budget pie into into allocations for each of the 12 subcommittees each of which has oversees a particular part of the federal government. The subcommittees take their particular slice of the pie and further slice it among the individual agencies within their jurisdiction.

In our case the Appropriations Committee gives a slice of the pie to the Labor-HHS-Education Subcommittee. This subcommittee then divides its slice of the pie among Labor-HHS-Education and related agencies such as the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institutes and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which are of interest to us.

Here is portion related to Labor-HHS-Education:

Comittee Chairman Thad Cochran (R-MS) said,

"The Senate Appropriations Committee was presented with a challenge this year in deeming ourselves a spending cap and then determining the most equitable and responsible way to divide that allocation among the 12 subcommittees. While I recognize the many needs that our committee is asked to meet, I believe we have acted prudently in seeking to restore fiscal responsibility by not increasing discretionary spending for the next fiscal year. I realize that the task before the subcommittee chairman will be difficult as they work to meet many competing interests with a scarce amount of resources, but I am confident that the Committee will present conscientious and fiscally sensible spending bills to the Senate."

I agree with Chairman Cochran that the task of the subcommittee will be difficult. Then again it is their job to make the difficult decisions. Our job as constituents interested in cancer is to keep the pressure on the subcommittee members as well as other Senators to get cancer related appropriations to the level needed to adequately fund the war against cancer.

The members of the Labor-HHS-Education Subcommittee are:

If you are a constituent of one of these Senators you have an excellent opportunity to influence the appropriations process like no one else by telling your Senator you want a high priority given to increased funding for cancer programs. Here are the level recommended by One Voice Against Cancer (OVAC) you can mention to the Senator:

 Members of the full committee are:

If your Senator is not on the Labor-HHS-Education Subcommittee but is a member of the full committee that Senator does not have direct influence on the Labor-HHS-Education bill. However, you can still ask your Senator to use his or her committee membership to influence the amount of cancer funding in the final bill.

 If neither of your Senators is a member of either the subcommittee or the full committee you still need to contact your Senators to tell them you want a high priority given to cancer funding.

Congress is abouit half way through the budget and appropriations process thus there is still time to influence the final appropriations bill by doing things like sending your members of Congress emails, scheduling an in-district meeting during the August recess and writing letters to the editor.

We’ve come a long way towards the goal of eleminating the suffereing and death caused by cancer. Those of us with colon cancer know of the recent advances made in the treatment of the disease. Now is not the time to slow the progress. We want more than the sympathy and support of Congress. We want the dollars needed to adequatly fund federal cancer programs because, like the President said in 2003, "We cannot win the war against cancer unless we fund the war against cancer."

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