Facts and Figures.
NEVADA
The
President’s budget makes drastic cuts in funding for programs that matter to
families in Nevada. These cuts will shift
responsibility for funding these priorities onto the already cash-strapped
state. Since Nevada will not be able to provide the same level of services
with less federal funding, the budget cuts will force the state either to reduce
funding for schools and leave more people hungry, homeless, cold and uninsured,
or to raise state taxes.
EDUCATION: The President’s budget would
reduce funding for education and training programs in Nevada in 2006, with the cuts getting
bigger in later years. No program, including K-12, will be spared.
- Nevada will lose more than $65 million
in total elementary and secondary education spending[1];
- Funding
for special education programs will be cut by more than $44 million in Nevada;
- Nevada school improvement programs
will lose nearly $23 million; and
- Vocational
and adult education programs will be cut by almost $41 million in Nevada.
FAMILY
SERVICES: Programs
providing needed services to low-income families in Nevada face major cuts in 2006, with the
cuts getting bigger over time. Under the President’s budget proposal, the
Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), programs
for abused and neglected children, Head Start, and child care assistance
programs all face steep cuts.
- Nevada will lose $3.7 million in WIC
funding, and 3,800 people will be cut from the program;
- In Nevada, Children and Family services
(including Head Start and programs for abused and neglected children)
would lose almost $13 million;
- More than
75 children in Nevada will lose access to Head Start
in 2006[2],
and 400 will lose access to the program in 2010; and
- In Nevada, 900 children will lose child
care assistance in 2009.
HOUSING
AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: The President’s budget targets housing and community
development programs in Nevada for funding cuts in 2006 and beyond.
- 2,100
families in Nevada will lose rental assistance
vouchers;
- The Low
Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) will be cut by $300,000 in
Nevada; and
- In Nevada, Community Development
programs will be cut by almost $64 million.
HEALTH: The budget would cut funding in Nevada for HIV/AIDS treatment services,
including funding to help those with HIV/AIDS purchase drugs. President Bush
has also proposed major cuts to the Medicaid program in Nevada.
- Nevada will lose $3.7 million in
HIV/AIDS funding;
- Medicaid
funding for Nevada will be cut by more than $166 million[3];
and
- 6,300
children or 2,000 seniors in Nevada could be covered by the Medicaid funding cuts proposed
in 2010.
PENTAGON: While taxpayers in Nevada would lose local services, they
will pay increasingly more for the Pentagon.
- Nevada will spend almost $175 million
for the proposed increase in military spending[4];
and
- $1.2 billion
of what Congress has so far allocated for the Iraq War will come from Nevada.