LIO leji K n« ici ivei Cl(, -is ATION HE BATTALION 5A Thursday, January 22, 2004 Congress’ 4-month budget delay eaves several bills at a standstill wa By Jim Abrams THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I WASHINGTON (AP) — This winter’s harsh flu outbreak is pass- iilg without the $50 million lawmakers promised for expanding fiture vaccine production. Millions of federal workers are seeing slimmer than expected paychecks. Initiatives for fighting global BlDS, wildfires and terrorism have been threatened. I The reason: Congress is nearly four months late in finishing the government’s budget. I Most federal agencies are still operating at 2003 spending lev els, depriving them of about $6 billion in increases slated under the 2004 spending plan. That's not a lot when $373 billion js at stake, bi : it has put some projects on hold or in doubt. I On the first day of the new congressional session Tuesday, the St nate again failed to overcome Democratic-led resistance to the pi :kage combining seven still-unfinished spending bills — out of tie 13 Congress must pass for the fiscal year starting last Oct. 1. I But at the same time, they said they would not try to delay it ahy more beyond next week after Republicans and the White Bouse threatened to hold the 2003 spending levels in effect through September. I “The consequences of delay on this bill are real and the dan gers are great,” Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Ted Si wens, R-Alaska, said last month in a futile attempt to end Bemocratic opposition. I Repercussions are already hitting close to home. Without a new budget, civil servants have received only a 2 percent pay raise this year rather than the 4.1 percent in the legislation. Since Jan. 1, members of Congress have received a 1.5 percent increase over their $154,700 salaries of 2003, rather than the 2.2 percent N ost they’ll get once the Senate sends the last piece of the budg et to the White House and President Bush signs it. I As for the flu. the spending bill would set aside $50 million to di versify the manufacturing base for vaccines — too late for the clrrent flu season when vaccines were sometimes scarce but a ■issible help for fighting future outbreaks. 1 Veterans Affairs Secretary Anthony Principi said it "would be at solutely disastrous” if VA health care programs don’t get their m.\ billion increase, to $28.6 billion, under the 2004 bill. I He said doctors at VA hospitals already are leaving at a rate of ■ percent a month and his department is having a hard time ■placing them. Until the increase comes, veterans already wait ing months for an appointment are at risk of facing longer delays as well as slower responses to their disability claims. I It will even be harder to find space in VA cemeteries at a time w ten 1,800 veterans are dying every day. he said. I Many agencies manage to make do by shifting money and pri- oi ities. Stevens warned that the Centers for Disease Control and Ptevention could be deprived of money needed to combat emerg- ilg infectious diseases such as SARS and monkeypox, but CDC officials gave assurances that their work in these areas is not Bing impeded because of the budget fights. ■ In some instances exceptions are made to the 2003 budget ceil- ilgs. Labor Secretary Elaine Chao said $50 million promised to Impasse stalls seven spending bills Senate Democrats have stopped a measure on seven spending bills that finance most federal agencies. Five continuing resolutions have extended the bills beyond the start of the budget year, effectively blocking civil servant pay raises and new programs. Status of spending bills through Dec. 9, 2003 B Signed by President Bush g Continuing I Adopted by House resolution Septj Silllill Octiimilllllll I Nov | DBC.Ijl I Homeland Interior jk ^ security Military Ado I construction ■ Defense and Energy and water— legislative branch development Agriculture: Commerce. Justice and State; District- of Columbia; Foreign operations; Labor, Health and Human Services, Education; Transportation and Treasury; Veterans, Housing, NASA, ERA SOURCE: Congressional Quarterly AP the states in 2004 to retrain workers displaced by foreign trade competition would go out as scheduled. C. Todd Jones, associate deputy secretary for the budget in the Education Department, said money for special education and dis advantaged students typically doesn’t go out until July 1, so there has been little impact so far from Congress’ inaction even though both programs will get big increas.es once the last budget piece is in place. Among other consequences should the stalemate continue: —The Food and Drug Administration says it would lose $30 mil lion from a proposed $250 million prescription drug user fee pro gram, requiring it to delay new hiring and other initiatives. A new fee program for renewing animal drugs would be postponed, and $42 million for a new FDA building would not be available. —Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said the Agriculture Department’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service would miss out on $80 million in new funding to address food safety concerns such as mad cow disease. The department had no comment. —The FBI could lose out on hundreds of millions of dollars directed to hiring new agents and fighting terrorism. —An extra $1 billion to help states modernize voting equip ment before the 2004 elections wouldn’t be available. —The first year of President Bush’s five-year, $15 billion plan to combat global AIDS would be underfunded by about $1 billion. —$1 billion for the new Millennium Challenge Account, the president’s initiative to direct aid to those countries promoting democracy and economic reforms, would be put on hold. —AmeriCorps would have to delay enrolling tens of thousands of new volunteers, thwarting Bush’s goal of reaching 75,000. —Poorer families might have to wait longer for Section 8 rent subsidy vouchers. . and*] "hePs nerc rdrx •edcr Former governor faces 11-year prison sentence IsiOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — Former FT p. Bill Janklow faces sentencing on Banslaughter charges Thursday for an ajito wreck that ended his 30-year politi cal career and could send him to prison fo more than 11 years. Blanklow, 64, a four-term Republican governor whose resignation from Congress took effect Tuesday, was found glilty Dec. 8 of speeding, running a stop sign, reckless driving and second- NEWS IN BRIEF degree manslaughter in the Aug. 16 death of 55-year-old motorcyclist Randy Scott at a rural intersection near the con gressman’s hometown of Flandreau. Judge Rodney Steele can impose a sentence of anything from no jail time and no fines to a total of 11 years and two months behind bars and $11,400 in fines. An Associated Press review of South Dakota court records shows that most people convicted of second-degree manslaughter get at least some time behind bars. The review found that 40 people have been found guilty of second-degree manslaughter since 1989, and 32 of them were sent to prison or jail. The average jail term was six months; the average prison term nearly seven years. About half of the convictions involved traffic accidents. Janklow was state attorney general and, later, governor on and off beginning in the 1970s, before being elected in 2002 to South Dakota’s lone House seat. The seat will remain open until a June 1 election. The motorcyclist’s family is suing the former politician for unspecified damages. 313 S. COLLEGE 846-3343 i THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY .75 Mixed Drinks $ 1.50 Longnecks 1.50 You Call - It Drinks Ladies FREE till 11 pm GUYS 21 & up FREE till 9pm Doors open at 8pm LIVE Roger Creager Live Recording! Doors open at 8pm inksl d ks f 2 J on 1.50 Mixed Drinks 1.50 Longnecks Advance tickets available at Cavenders Boot City & Traditions Bookstore, next to Harry’s! .75 Mixed Drinks 1.50 You Call It Drinks' 1.50 Longnecks 00 All Ladies FREE till 11pm Guys 21 & up FREE till 9pm Doors open at 8pm i COMING SOOl: 1 ' SAT, JAN. 31": GROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED! 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