CONGRESSMAN HENRY CUELLAR HAILS PASSAGE OF LABOR, HEALTH and HUMAN SERVICES, and EDUCATION APPROPRIATIONS BILL
Washington,
July 19, 2007
Today, Rep. Henry Cuellar voted in favor of the House passage of H.R. 3043, the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Bill, which makes key investments to strengthen America’s families – from education to health care to job training. “Providing a good and solid education to our students, making health care accessible to my constituents, and having a qualified and trained work force have always been priorities of mine, and this bill addresses all three issues,” said Congressman Cuellar. “I applaud my colleagues in the House for taking a stand and doing what is right for our fellow Americans.” Some of the key provisions of the bill include: • Making college more affordable for students This bill calls for increasing college financial aid by $2 million over the 2007 budget and $3.2 million over the President’s request. In addition, it also provides an increase of $2 billion dollars over last year’s budget – and $1 million over the President’s request – for No Child Left Behind Programs. This includes an increase of $1.9 billion over 2007 for Title I programs, giving an additional 161,000 low-income children extra help with reading and math. The bill also takes important steps in funding several initiatives that will provide access to healthcare for more than 2 million uninsured Americans, including more funding for community health centers and state health access grants. Employment and training initiatives also benefit under this bill; it provides funding for vital programs such as Job Corps, dislocated worker training, and job placement assistance for at-risk youth. Funding for life-saving medical research into diseases such as cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s is also included in the bill. The bill is still pending Senate action, full Congressional approval, and the President’s signature. President Bush has threatened to veto this appropriations measure.
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