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AAC


NEWS FROM NACO


County priorities at play in 2021 White House budget Story by Eryn Hurley


NACo Associate Legislator Director — Finance, Pensions and Intergovernmental Affairs


Each year, the president and his administration are respon- sible for providing Congress with an outline and request for appropriation for each department and agency in the execu- tive branch. Tough the president’s budget is not signed into law, it provides insight on the administration’s policies and priorities for the next fiscal year and is the opening move in the annual appropriations process. Tis year, the budget proposal follows Congress passing and the president signing a $2.7 trillion budget agreement in August 2019, which raised federal spending caps for both FY 2020 and FY 2021 by nearly $320 billion over the next two years. Notably, the president’s budget adheres to the defense spending caps, but proposes spending for non-discretionary programs below the funding levels set in the August budget deal. Te budget outlines FY 2021 discretionary spending at $1.34 trillion and mandatory spending at $3 trillion. Of note for counties, the FY 2021 budget proposes to sig- nificantly reduce federal contribution to the federal-state-local intergovernmental partnership by limiting numerous state and local grant and aid programs. Te budget proposes to move much of the responsibility for many of the programs currently and historically funded by federal grants down to state and local governments including transportation infrastructure, workforce initiatives, economic development and health care. Combined, these changes would increase the fiscal burden carried by state and local governments who may be unable to adequately fill the gap left by a lack of federal resources. Similar to last year’s budget request, to achieve the goal


T


of reducing federal aid to state and local governments, the White House proposes the “Cross-Agency Priority (CAP) Goal: Results-Oriented Accountability for Grants.” Te CAP proposal aims to ensure that federal grants are administered in the most efficient and effective way by using a risk-based


We want your news


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he White House unveiled its $4.8 trillion Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 budget proposal Feb. 10, which includes many provisions that would affect counties, if adopted by Congress.


and data-driven framework for grant awards to target grants to those areas that are most in need. Overall, the proposed budget is a mixed bag for counties.


On the positive side, the budget proposes to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of many federal programs that counties use. Te budget also proposes to increase and direct new funding at key county priorities including:


• $12 billion in formula funding for off-system bridges in FY 2021 and $810 billion over ten years to reautho- rize surface transportation programs


• Regulatory changes that would amend the burdensome Medicaid Inmate Exclusion Policy to prevent termina- tion of federal health benefits for juveniles and pre-trial inmates for six months


• $680 million in grants that expand and improve career and technical education in high schools


• $1 billion for wildland fire management activities •


Increased investments for opioid prevention, treatment and recovery services


However, the budget also targets key federal programs


important to county governments for cuts and even elimina- tions. Some of these include:


• Eliminating the U.S. Department of Housing and Ur- ban Development’s Community Development Block Grant, the HOME Investment Partnerships Program and the Economic Development Administration


• A $1.3 trillion cut to Medicaid, which would shift health care costs to counties


• Eliminating the State Criminal Alien Assistance Pro- gram, currently funded at $244 million





Institute universal work requirements for federal public assistance programs that would increase administrative costs for counties


• A $57 million decrease in rural broadband infrastruc- ture pilot program


NACo’s Government Affairs department is analyzing the bud- get proposal, comparing it to FY2020 congressional funding.


Did an aspect of county government “make news” recently in your county? Did


any of your county officials or staff get an award, appointment or pat on the back? Please let us know about it for the next edition of County Lines magazine. You can write up a couple of paragraphs about it, or if something ran in your local paper, call and ask them to forward the story to us. We encourage you or your newspaper to attach a good quality photo, too: e-mail csmith@arcounties.org.


COUNTY LINES, SUMMER 2020


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