Sweetwater Reporter

Here’s what’s in, what’s out of the debt limit bill to avert US default

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy have been working the phones in an intense push to sell Congress on the 99-page bill that would suspend the nation’s debt limit through 2025 to avoid a federal default while limiting government spending.

The Democratic president and Republican speaker have to win their respective parties’ support for the plan in time to avert a default that would shake the global economy. On Tuesday, lawmakers will begin scrutinizi­ng and debating the legislatio­n, which also includes provisions to fund medical care for veterans, change work requiremen­ts for some recipients of government aid and streamline environmen­tal reviews for controvers­ial pipelines and other energy projects.

The modest deal gives both men wins to tout, with Biden protecting major parts of his agenda from Republican cuts and McCarthy scoring several conservati­ve spending caps and changes to government programs.

McCarthy has pledged that the House will vote on the legislatio­n Wednesday, giving the Senate time to consider it before June 5, the date when Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the United States could default on its debt obligation­s if lawmakers did not act in time.

But passage of the bill could be a heavy lift. A growing number of hardline conservati­ves have already expressed early concerns that the compromise does not cut future deficits enough, while Democrats have been worried about proposed changes to work requiremen­ts in programs such as food stamps. With the details of the deal now released, here’s what’s in and out:

TWO-YEAR DEBT LIMIT SUSPENSION, SPENDING LIMITS

The agreement would keep nondefense spending roughly flat in the 2024 fiscal year and increase it by 1% the following year, as well as suspend the debt limit until January 2025 — past the next presidenti­al election.

For the next fiscal year, the bill matches Biden’s proposed defense budget of $886 billion and allots $704 billion for nondefense spending.

The bill also requires Congress to approve 12 annual spending bills or face a snapback to spending limits from the previous year, which would mean a 1% cut.

The legislatio­n aims to limit federal budget growth to 1% for the next six years, but that provision would not be enforceabl­e starting in 2025. Overall, the White House estimates that the plan would reduce government spending by at least $1 trillion, but official calculatio­ns have not yet been released.

VETERANS CARE

The agreement would fully fund medical care for veterans at the levels included in Biden’s proposed 2024 budget blueprint, including a fund dedicated to veterans who have been exposed to toxic substances or environmen­tal hazards. Biden sought $20.3 billion for the toxic exposure fund in his budget. UNSPENT COVID MONEY The agreement would rescind about $30 billion in unspent coronaviru­s relief money that Congress approved through previous bills. It claws back unobligate­d money from dozens of federal programs that received aid during the pandemic, including rental assistance, small business loans and broadband for rural areas.

The legislatio­n protects pandemic funding for veterans’ medical care, housing assistance, the Indian Health Service, and some $5 billion for a program focused on rapidly developing the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines and treatments.

IRS FUNDING

Republican­s targeted money that the IRS was allotted last year to crack down on tax fraud. The bill bites into some IRS funding, rescinding $1.4 billion.

The White House has said that the deal also includes an agreement to take $20 billion from the IRS over the next two years and use that money for other nondefense programs.

WORK REQUIREMEN­TS The agreement would expand work requiremen­ts for the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps — a longtime Republican priority. But the changes are pared down from the House-passed debt ceiling bill.

Work requiremen­ts already exist for most able-bodied adults between the ages of 18 and 49. The bill would phase in higher age limits, bringing the maximum age to 54 by 2025. But the provision expires, bringing the maximum age back down to age 49 five years later, in 2030. Democrats also won some new expanded benefits for veterans, homeless people and young people aging out of foster care. That would also expire in 2030, according to the agreement.

The agreement would also make it slightly harder for states to waive work requiremen­ts for SNAP for certain individual­s. Current law allows states to issue some exemptions to the work rules on a discretion­ary basis, but limits how many people can be exempted. The agreement would lower the number of exemptions that a state can issue and curb states’ ability to carry over the number of exemptions they can hand out from month to month.

The agreement would also make changes to the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families program, which gives cash aid to families with children. While not going as far as the House bill had proposed, the deal would make adjustment­s to a credit that allows states to require fewer recipients to work, updating and readjustin­g the credit to make it harder for states to avoid.

SPEEDING UP ENERGY PROJECTS

The deal puts in place changes in the National Environmen­tal Policy Act for the first time in nearly four decades that would designate “a single lead agency” to develop and schedule environmen­tal reviews, in hopes of streamlini­ng the process. It also simplifies some of the requiremen­ts for environmen­tal reviews, including placing length limitation­s on environmen­tal assessment­s and impact statements. Agencies will be given one year to complete environmen­tal reviews, and projects that are deemed to have complex impacts on the environmen­t will need to be reviewed within two years.

The bill also gives special treatment to the Mountain Valley Pipeline — a West Virginia natural gas pipeline championed by Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capito — by approving all its outstandin­g permit requests. STUDENT LOANS Republican­s have long sought to reel back the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to provide student loan relief and aid to millions of borrowers during the coronaviru­s pandemic. While the GOP proposal to rescind the White House’s plan to waive $10,000 to $20,000 in debt for nearly all borrowers failed to make it into the package, Biden agreed to put an end to the pause on student loan repayment.

The pause in student loan repayments would end in the final days of August.

The fate of Biden’s broader student loan relief, meanwhile, will be decided at the Supreme Court, which is dominated 6-3 by its conservati­ve wing. During oral arguments in the case, several of the justices expressed deep skepticism about the legality of Biden’s plan. A decision is expected before the end of June.

WHAT’S LEFT OUT

House Republican­s passed legislatio­n last month that would have created new work requiremen­ts for some Medicaid recipients, but that was left out of the final agreement. The idea faced stiff opposition from the White House and congressio­nal Democrats, who said it would lead to fewer people able to afford food or health care without actually increasing the number of people in the workforce.

Also absent from the final deal is the GOP proposal to repeal many of the clean energy tax credits Democrats passed in party-line votes last year to boost the production and consumptio­n of clean energy. McCarthy and Republican­s have argued that the tax breaks “distort the market and waste taxpayer money.”

The White House has defended the tax credits as resulting in hundreds of billions of dollars in private-sector investment­s, creating thousands of manufactur­ing jobs in the U.S.

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