Wednesday, April 13, 2011

I smolder with generic rage.

So let's stop and take a look at the budget for a second, since I'm hardly ever right about things but I really want to take a moment to be sadly correct in my assumptions about Obama and his administration. First, some statistics. From the following two links, we can get good figures on the things that were cut in this budget "deal".

http://thinkprogress.org/2011/04/12/budget-deal-cuts/

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-04-12/epa-budget-cut-will-restrict-enforcement-of-clean-air-rules-activists-say.html


With those statistics, someone on a forum I frequent took the time to look back at the previous budget and show how much was cut as a percentage from these programs. It's important to take a look at both the dollar amount and that percentage, because it really tells where priorities are and what these fine folks in Congress believe aren't worth much. The first line in each category is the overreaching subject, with the breakdown of cuts underneath there to illustrate what portion of the program they're coming from.


But first, some kittens. You will thank me in a few minutes.


Total Cut: ~40 billion (3.67%)
  • -Agriculture Cut: 3 billion (12.9%)
  • ____-Food Safety and Inspection: 10 million (1%)
  • ____-Agricultural Credit Program: 433 million (?%)
  • ____-Agricultural Research Service: 64 million (?%)
  • ____-National Institute for Food and Agriculture: 126 million (?%)
  • -Commerce, Justice, Science Cut: 10.9 billion (17%)
  • ____-Increased funding for National Institute of Standards and Technology $? (?%)
  • ____-Increased funding for FBI and prisons $? (?%)
  • ____-Justice Department Appropriations: 946 million (?%)
  • ____-Commerce Department Appropriations: 6.5 billion (?%)
  • ____-Prohibits funding for Establishment of a Climate Service at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, approval of new fisheries catch-share programs, and for NASA or the Office of Science and Technology Policy to engage in bilateral activities with China.
  • -Defense Funding: Increased by 5 billion (1%). Also includes an additional 157.8 billion as emergency overseas contingency operations. No money is to be used on transferring Guantanamo Bay detainees to the US for any purpose, or to construct or modify US detention facilities for them. The Secretary of Defense must provide a certification to Congress that a transfer to a foreign entity will not jeopardize the safety of the US or it's citizens.
  • ____-Defense Earmark Cut: 4.2 billion (100%)
  • -Energy and Water Cuts: 1.7 billion (5.1%)
  • ____-Increases National Nuclear Security Administration: 697 million (7%)
  • -Financial Services Cut: 2.4 billion (10%)
  • ____-Reduces funding for construction of new federal buildings: 800 million (?%)
  • ____-Eliminates the use of Federal and local funds for abortions in DC: $? (?%)
  • ____-Reauthorizes the DC Opportunity Scholarships, including increase of 2.3 million (?%)
  • ____-Eliminates the "Health Care Czar", "Climate Change Czar", "Car Czar", and the "Urban Affairs Czar"
  • -Homeland Security Cuts:
  • ____-HS Discretionary spending: 784 million (2%)
  • ____-FEMA first responder grants: 786 million (?%)
  • ____-Eliminate earmarks: 264 million (?%)
  • ____-Rescind previous years' unused funds: 557 million ?%)
  • ____-Increases fund for expected and existing 2011 disasters: 1.05 billion (65.6%) This is more than what was removed from first responders, so there are more disaster funds total


  • -Department of the Interior Cuts: 2.62 billion (8.1%)
  • ___-EPA: 1.6 billion (16%)
  • ___-Land and Water Acquisition Fund: 149 million: (33%)
  • ___-National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for Humanity: 25 million (?%)
  • -Labor, HHS, Education: 5.5 billion (3.36%)
  • ___-Title X (Family Planning): 17 million (5.4%)
  • ___-Additionally Students can no longer draw two Pell Grants at the same time, which will provide an expected savings of 35 billion over the next ten years.
  • -LegislativeBranch: 103 million (?%)
  • -Military Construction/Veterans Affairs Cuts: 3.3 billion (4.3%)
  • ___-Includes Increase of 13.8 billion for the Department of Veterans Affairs. (?%)
  • -State and Foreign Operations: 504 million (1%)
  • ___-Prohibits pay raises for foreign service officers.
  • ___-Contributions to UN and other International Organization: 337 million (?%)
  • ___-Contribution to international banks and financial institutions: 130 million (?%)
  • ___-International family planning activities: 73 million (?%)
  • ___-___-US Contribution to the UN Population Fund Cut: 55 million (100%) This was a fun one, the document stated that is was “reduced to the 2008 levels. I looked up the 2008 levels to find that they were 0. Way to be open and honest.
  • ___-The bill also maintains pro-Life policy provisions carried in fiscal year 2010.
  • -Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development: 12.3 billion (18%)
    ___-High Speed Rail: 2.9 billion (116%) No that is not a typo. This completely cuts new High Speed Rail spending, as well as rescinding 400 million from last year, which I’m guessing was available because Republican States repeatedly turned down the money.
    ___-Transit funding total cuts: 991 million (?%)
    ___-TIGER grant cuts: 72 million (12%)
    ___-“Contract authority rescissions” (?): 3.2 billion (?%)
    ___-___-Old earmarks cut: 630 million (?%)
    ___-Department of Housing and Urban Development Cuts: 942 million (21.2%)
    ___-Increases Housing voucher program: 200 million (1.1%)

First, a note from the guy who put this together: "All numbers and percentages are from 2010 fiscal year, which was always provided, not from Obama's budget request. When Obama's request was included it was generally higher than 2010 fiscal year spending, but not always. And yes, you read that right. The $40 billion budget cuts include $140 billion dollars of increased military spending." So thankfully, we've actually cut 180 billion and put 140 of it towards military spending for wars that the majority of Americans aren't really too happy with. Let's go ahead and keep that in mind the next time someone levels a "how dare you fund Planned Parenthood with tax money taken from people who don't agree with it" type charge at some program.

I want to comment on the second to last line (Dept. of HUD) because I think that others might share my viewpoints on several of these budget items - "well what does that mean?" In this particular case, HUD's cuts are going to be felt primarily twofold: Obviously, employees will likely get laid off or have their salaries reduced. Also funding for housing and development programs is going to get hit extremely hard. HUD gives a large deal of funding to NeighborWorks, which institutes training and development programs nationwide for housing preservation (the softer term for foreclosure prevention), community development, and homebuyer education. The funding that doesn't go to NeighborWorks goes to similar, local agencies that help consumers understand the potential pitfalls and benefits of ownership, dealing with their mortgage lender on a fair basis, cope with the financial challenges brought on by ownership, and help owners understand their options when faced with a possible foreclosure.

Without this funding, a lot of these agencies are going to shut their doors, because they're not-for-profit organizations, and funding/granting from other sources has dried up hardcore in the past couple of years. Many of them have already gone through the cutback/salary reduction/layoff cycle to stay afloat. This is just a nail in the coffin for most of those. Without these agencies, there is literally no resource for consumers who need what amounts to a lawyer to help them understand the above topics. No one does it.

As was mentioned above, with budget cuts comes cuts everywhere and everyone believes that their interest is the one that should be exempt. But given the relative proportion of funding lost compared to other categories (21% vs most other areas suffering in the single digits), I am at that now familiar crossroad of enraged and exhausted. It has a particular dark humor to it as well, considering these agencies exist specifically to try and help counter the large abuses that led to many of our current financial woes - and Congress has seen fit to let the abusers stay merrily afloat but cut the lifeline to these not-for-profits "for the greater good".

Monday, April 11, 2011

Got my own thing now.

Just a quick update to write ~ post from my new tablet. I picked up the Asus slate yesterday.  As you   can see from the random tilde, the handwriting recognition and I are not best friends yet.  I hope this will change eventually. Either my penmanship will get better or this thing will eventually learn.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

That is a Very Long Hallway

Monday night, myself, Stephen, and Nikki went to the Alamo on South Lamar to catch the advance screening of Your Highness. It was a triple feature, showing The Sword and the Sorcerer first, then Krull after Your Highness. Alamo had David Green (the director), Danny McBride (the dude), and Justin Theroux (played the evil wizard, and apparently the angry Scot in Charlie's Angels 2) there for questions and whatnot. It was a pretty good event overall, though I made the distinctly stupid decision of sitting through the whole thing on a worknight and getting to bed around 3am. Considering that my sleep time is a precious, rare thing, this is something I'm still paying for today.

Yesterday was a fucking marathon of classes, and I'm gonna bugger off work early today to go home and collapse. Just all around, work has been stressful in good ways these past couple months. We're still not entirely sure how long the company is going to be able to operate due to lacking income from grants and whatnot, but I've been burying myself in classes and writing material for the programs so I've had little energy to spare for the other shit.

That's mostly it for now. I'm just trying to make a goddamned habit of writing in this thing more often. I've put myself back to work writing on my projects and for other people, so I think it's important I get in the practice of this again.

Oh, about the blog title - yesterday I went to the new Travis County Jail building to give a class for the women's group there. I went through some of their airlock-type gates and eventually found myself staring down this hallway that was literally half a mile long. It was featureless beige with little green doors on the sides at regular intervals and I was struck by how completely isolated and buried I felt. I did the class in about an hour and left. After I got back outside, I turned and looked back at the building just to confirm it wasn't miles and miles below the surface; I was in fact simply in a building that whole time.

That night (last night) I had a dream that the world was in such a state that for some reason, the population had to take turns living in these big, multi-level domes underground for a year just so they didn't get too much exposure to radiation that had covered the surface. Everything was well-lit and the accomodations were good (similar to those space station shows like Babylon5 or Star Trek), but everything just felt slightly off. It was obviously unnatural, but it was also just sickeningly wrong in some way, like the rictus grin on a clown.