![]() ![]() The Nation's #1 Independent Veterans Web Site Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage VA NEWS FLASH from Larry Scott at VA Watchdog dot Org -- 06-17-2008 |
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this highlights is how dysfunctional the budget system has become and I don't blame them for looking for alternative ways."
For a previous story about "advance
appropriations," click here... Story here...
http://www.govexec.com/ Story below: ------------------------- Veterans groups seek funding in advanceBy Sydney J. Freedberg
Jr.
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To veterans groups, this work-around is
legislative genius. To budget hawks, it's brazen gimmickry. "That is not
how we should do budgeting," fumed Maya MacGuineas, president of the New
America Foundation's Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. "The
whole point about doing budgeting on a regular basis is to keep
reassessing priorities," she said. "But you have a very large constituency
for not coming to terms with the real cost of the budget, and there has
been huge growth in advance appropriations."
Advance appropriations began in 1967 as a way to insulate the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting from congressional criticism of its programming.
Congress slowly added other appropriations in ensuing years; as late as
1996, however, the total sum was less than $3 billion. Then appropriators
seized on the mechanism as a way to bypass budget caps. Over the next five
years, advances increased 800 percent. For fiscal 2001, budgeteers stepped
in to limit advances being slipped into the budget to $23.5 billion. That
figure is expected to hit $28.9 billion in fiscal 2009. If the veterans
groups manage to move most VA health care accounts into the
advance-appropriations process, the total would more than double, to
approximately $70 billion a year.
Such a large sum speaks to the central irony of the whole debate.
Activists are generally happy with the amounts that Congress is voting for
VA health care. The problem is with how long it takes Congress to vote.
Congress last managed to enact veterans funding on time in 1996, when it
passed the 1997 appropriation just four days before the beginning of the
fiscal year, which begins on October 1. It has been late every year since,
never by less than 19 days and, on average, by more than two months. The
appropriation for fiscal 2008 was passed the day after Christmas, 86 days
late.
To keep federal agencies operating in the no-man's months after one year's
funding has expired and before the next year's is appropriated--and to
avoid a politically costly government shutdown such as 1995's--Congress
passes "continuing resolutions" that keep programs at last year's spending
levels. (In an unprecedented departure, a fall 2007 continuing resolution
did give the VA an increase.) This stopgap is awkward for any department
or agency. It is especially problematic for the VA, which has to keep 153
hospitals and 732 clinics running day in, day out, for a patient
population that continues to grow rapidly--from 4.2 million in 2001 to 5.7
million today.
The VA has come up with a host of stopgaps to keep the lights on and the
patients cared for. "It's not like delaying the building of a highway,"
said Art Klein, former chief budgeteer for the VA's health care arm, the
Veterans Health Administration. "Normally the federal budget is giving
grants for something to happen; but in this case, it's a direct provision
of health care: thousands of patients in beds, millions of outpatient
visits."
To keep paychecks coming for nurses and doctors, VA administrators
routinely put off buying equipment, doing maintenance, restocking
inventories, and even hiring staff until later in the year. When
appropriations finally do arrive, they often trigger a scramble to cover
backed-up needs and to spend money that, thanks to congressional
generosity, is well in excess of what the VA had planned for. Such a cycle
of famine and feast encourages inefficiency, hampers planning, and can
make hiring in certain medical specialties almost impossible.
Advocates have long argued that making veterans health care funding
automatic--as veterans disability payments already are--would guarantee
the VA the funds it needs, when it needs them. Veterans groups are still
backing mandatory-funding bills by Democrats Tim Johnson of South Dakota
in the Senate and Phil Hare of Illinois in the House. "We have to suck it
up and keep the promise that we made," Hare told National Journal. "I put
it up on par with Social Security and Medicare."
Most legislators, however, are loath to move any more programs from the
discretionary side of the budget, where they can vote funding levels every
year, to the entitlement side, where spending is set by statutory formulas
and increasingly runs out of control. And veterans groups are giving up
hope that Democratic control of Congress might soften this resistance.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., "herself has said positively that she
wants mandatory spending for VA health care, but we can't get any
traction," said Bradley of the Disabled American Veterans. "So our
thinking for the past year has been directed to looking at an alternative
approach, and we stumbled upon this advance-appropriations technique."
The idea originated with a June 2007 memo from a consultant to the
Disabled American Veterans, Marsha Simon, who was a clerk on the Senate
Appropriations subcommittee covering the departments of Labor and Health
and Human Services when they dramatically expanded advance appropriations
back in the 1990s. It took some effort to explain the arcana of advance
appropriations to the veterans advocates, but as the prospects for
mandatory funding grew increasingly dim, veterans groups seized on Simon's
proposal. The Disabled American Veterans are now working with sympathetic
lawmakers with an eye toward introducing legislation sometime this summer.
"We will [still] take mandatory spending in a heartbeat if they enact it,"
Bradley said, "but we're trying to spread the word that this is the new
direction."
The House and Senate Budget committees are likely to be the first line of
resistance. "We appropriate annually for a reason," a staffer said. "We
set priorities, and we make programs compete against each other annually.
They would like not to have to compete."
Appropriators are skeptical as well. "There's 100 percent agreement with
the veterans organizations that we must pass VA appropriations on a more
timely basis," said Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Texas, chairman of the House
Appropriations Committee panel that covers the Veterans Affairs
Department. "There may be honest differences on the means of getting
there. The easiest, simplest, cleanest way to solve the problem is for us
to start passing VA appropriations bills on time. If that proves to be an
impossible task, we'll just have to look at the other options."
Democrats like to blame tardy appropriations on President Bush's
intransigence--but the delays began during the Clinton years. It is hard
to ask veterans, or any constituency for that matter, to sit tight and
have faith that Congress will get its act together soon.
"What this highlights is how dysfunctional the budget system has become,"
said Robert Bixby, executive director of the Concord Coalition, "and I
don't blame them for looking for alternative ways." But the more that
programs sidestep the annual logjam by getting mandatory or advance
funding, the worse the problem becomes overall--which only increases the
pressure on Congress to create more special cases for special interests.
"Because there's a lot of attention on veterans these days, if anybody can
do it, they might have the strongest case," Bixby said. "But I think you'd
find a lot of other folks coming out of the woodwork saying, 'Hey, what
about us?' "
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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