Dayton Daily News

$4.4T proposal would increase military funds

More money proposed for opioid fight, border wall, Wright-Patt.

- By Jessica Wehrman

President Donald WASHINGTON —

Trump proposed a $4.4 trillion federal budget Monday that would beef up spending for the military, slash spending on non-military federal programs and most

— controvers­ially, for budget hawks

not balance the budget within — the next decade.

The budget is Trump’s blueprint for how he’s likely to spend federal dollars and is merely a proposal, not a law. And, in what has become tradition dating back to the Obama administra­tion, it will likely be ignored by Congress — probably more so in light of the fact that Congress last week agreed toa two-year budgetplan that increased spending across the board.

The fiscal 2019 budget, released on the White House website late Monday morning, would show deficits of more than $900 billion from 2019 through 2022. The deficit this year is $832 billion.

But the budget is the clearest

document of the president’s priorities:

* He’d like to spend $13 billion in new money to fight the opioid epidemic.

* $23 billion to build a border wall.

* Wants a federal infrastruc­ture plan that would spend some $200 billion over 10 years on new roads and bridges.

The latter proposal drew the most headlines. Within minutes of releasing his proposed budget, Trump outlined an infrastruc­ture plan which would pour $200 billion in federal dollars into roads, bridges, ports and airports but would rely heavily on states and local government­s to help pay for an estimated $1.5 trillion in investment over the next decade.

Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, called Trump’s infrastruc­ture proposal “a good starting point for discussion.” He said he’s hopeful that Congress can streamline the permitting process to allow quicker rebuilding of roads and bridges.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, by contrast, said the plan would pass the cost of infrastruc­ture onto drivers, cities and counties through tolls and local tax increases.

“Accounting gimmicks don’t build bridges,” he said.

Ohio impact

Trump proposes $13 billion — $3 billion in this fiscal year, $10 billion in fiscal 2019 — to fight the opioid epidemic. In Ohio, 4,050 people lost their lives to unintentio­nal drug overdoses in 2016, with fentanyl and related drugs accounting for 58 percent of those deaths.

Trump’s budget request would include state grants to fight opioid abuse; new resources for drug courts; expand coverage for medication-assisted treatment in Medicaid and Medicare; and allocate $381 million to Veterans Affairs to reduce over-reliance on opioids for pain management. It also includes dollars for a media campaign aimed at educating the public about the dangers of opioids.

“Today’s budget is a good starting point for funding American priorities in the coming year,” said Rep. Mike Turner, R-Dayton, who said he was happy that the White House had included money for the opioid epidemic.

Trump’s administra­tion also proposed spending $7.4 million for an automated machine gun range at Camp Ravenna, an Ohio National Guard base near Cleveland, and $116.1 million for an intelligen­ce production building at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

While Trump proposed beefing up federal dollars for the opioid epidemic and for the military, his administra­tion proposes $48.4 billion in cuts to other non-military federal programs in fiscal 2019 and would eliminate $25.8 billion worth of programs while reducing $22.6 billion in other programs.

Among those reductions: The Great Lakes Restoratio­n Initiative, which was a Trump target last year. Trump’s budget would ask for $30 million for the program launched in 2010 to clean up the Great Lakes, reduce the nutrient runoff that contribute­s to the growth of algal blooms and helps control the spread of invasive species. Trump’s 2017 proposal called for the eliminatio­n of the program, but Congress restored the money, spending nearly $300 million on it in fiscal 2017.

The budget would also nearly eliminate the Federal Work Study program, taking $790 million out of the $990 million program. The program aims to help needy graduate and undergradu­ate students pay for college through part-time employment. Trump’s budget says the program is “inefficien­t at allocating funds to the neediest students” and “is also not well-designed to use the employment as an opportunit­y to advance students’ career and training opportunit­ies.”

The budget would also eliminate the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. In budget documents, the Trump administra­tion noted that they proposed eliminatio­n because it “has been known to have sizeable fraud and abuse.”

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