New York state would lose at least $1 billion annually in federal funding if changes to the government's health programs for the poor proposed by President Bush are enacted, opponents said Monday.
The newly released budget plan also calls for about $2 billion in new tax incentives to build a rail link between lower Manhattan and John F. Kennedy International Airport by "trading in" unused Sept. 11 aid.
Both the cuts and new rail spending would still have to be approved by Congress, where opposition is already mounting to Bush's lean spending package for the fiscal year beginning in October.
"This is my 25th budget ... and I have never seen a worse budget for New York," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.
Under the new proposal, New York stands to lose the most in Medicaid, the federal-state program that provides health care to the poor. The White House has proposed changing how the federal government distributes money to make it more effective, saying some states have mismanaged their share.
In New York, an estimated 3.7 million people are enrolled in Medicaid, plus an additional 550,000 residents under an expanded Medicaid program, according to state figures. That means more than 1 in 5 New Yorkers is enrolled in some type of Medicaid program.
The COPS program, aimed to help cities hire more police officers, would be slashed from $378 million to $117 million, representing a cut of about 70 percent.The congressman said such programs have been caught in a financial tug-of-war between President Bush and Congress in previous years, but the 2006 budget takes a harder position."The starting line for this fight is much further back than it has been in a long time," said Weiner.
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