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Asian Life
Silk Mangos is an Asian American theatre group from
UT Austin that provides an opportunity to entertain
and inform students about Asian American issues
through all aspects of the performing arts.
SM ^Mangos
The BIG Show
Friday, April ZSth
8:00 - 9:30 put
MSC 201
FREE admission
ace.tamu.adu
i -r
Persons with disabilities please
call (979) 845-1515 to inform us of
your special needs.
8A
NATIO
Friday, April 25, 2003
THE BATTALIf
House debates restructurin
health and human service
By Connie Mabin
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUSTIN — Members of the
Texas House began debating
Thursday a bill that would
restructure Texas’ health and
human services system with
heated discussion over proposed
changes to punishments for wel
fare families who do not meet
work requirements.
The proposal was among
several contained in a complex,
omnibus bill by Rep. Arlene
Wohlgemuth that she says
would save the state $1.1 billion
over the next two years by
changing eligibilty rules for var
ious programs, eliminating
duplication and paring down
administration.
She said the bill also would
improve nursing homes by
focusing on patient care rather
than regulation. Some lawmak
ers disagreed with those propos
als, saying they would weaken
nursing home accountability.
GOP House leaders have
already counted on money the
bill would save in the $117.7
billion budget bill passed last
week.
“We are not getting all the
federal funds we could get if we
got organized,” Wohlgemuth
said during debate that was
expected to stretch into Friday.
More than 100 amendments
were filed for the 160-plus page
bill that would consolidate
Texas’ 12 health and human
services departments into three.
The bill would increase
penalties for adults on welfare
who don’t follow required work
rules by cutting off their entire
family’s cash benefits until they
comply.
Several Democrats argued
against an amendment by
Wohlgemuth that would have
extended the penalty to include
stopping Medicaid, child care
and other state services.
“The point is we want com
pliance,” Wohlgemuth said.
“We didn’t come up with this
personal responsibility agree
ment because it was just some
thing to do.”
We didn’t come
up with this person
al responsibility
agreement because
it was just some
thing to do.
-Arlene Wohlgemuth
Rep. Texas House
“We’re trying to get them to
a better life and that includes the
work requirements,” she said.
Rep. Elliot Naishtat, D-
Austin, said the proposed
amendment was too harsh for
very poor families. A family of
three on the Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families
program gets $166 monthly,
he said.
“I see no reason to be
Draconian and harsh,” Naishtat
said. “We don’t have to do that.
If we cut off the financial assis
tance we will get a positive
response, I assure you of that.”
Rep. Vilma Luna, D-Corpus
Christi, said she agreed adults
who get welfare should follow
rules, but said the proposed
amendment would unfairly pun
ish children.
“You are going to leaver
totally unable to get heall
or any other basic servitij
Luna said.
Wohlgemuth said
planned to add exceptions!!)
bill that would prevent
sanctions as well as an apt!
promises.
No vote was immedit
taken on the amendment.
Earlier, Wohlgemuthatid
low supporter Rep. ft
Swinford, R-Amarillo, said
legislation would makettiei
system more manageable.
“This is not a heiky-jt
deal,” Swinford said.
With a $9.9 billion stat
clouding the legislativet|
sion, Wohlgemuth’s bilh
another by Swinford said
save $1 billion have bee;
among the top priorities
GOP House Speaker li
Craddick.
“We need to see these)
out becuase they’re major)
for us revenue wise," s
Craddick, who has pro®
not to raise taxes.
Texas spends $37.8 bi
in state and federal money
the 12 health and human';*:
ices agencies that employ«|
than 50,000 people.
Wohlgemuth’s bill m
consolidate those intro tte
the Department of Apr
Community, Disability i
Long-term Care Servit
Department of Health Servii
and Department of Proteci
and Regulatory Services.
Some 1,400, mostly te
level administrators, wou
their jobs eliminated by
under the bill.
NEWS IN BRIEF
Ashcroft: National security
concerns keep aliens in detention
WASHINGTON (AP) — Most illegal immigrants
can be jailed indefinitely without bond when
national security risks exist, Attorney General John
Ashcroft has declared in a legal opinion.
Immigration advocates are calling that an abuse
of power in the name of fighting terrorism.
The order means such aliens will not be
released on bond while their cases are being
decided by immigration judges if the government
can show national security issues are involved.
"Such national security considerations clearly
constitute a reasonable foundation for the exer
cise of my discretion to deny release on
Ashcroft said in the 19-page opinion,
signed last Friday.
The opinion was requested by the Homelf
Security Department, which now enforces!
immigration laws, after the Board
Immigration Appeals upheld a judge's deci
to release Haitian asylum-seeker David Josi;
on $2,500 bond.
Cheryl Little, executive director of FloiJ
Immigrant Advocacy Center, said Ashcrot
opinion is the latest in a string of governmi
decisions "manipulating our very se«
national security concerns to justify t
nationals of Haiti."
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