Dear Friend,
Thank you to all who have called members of Congress this week.
It's really making a difference! After House Republicans recklessly voted to cut $1 billion local
dollars from DC's budget on Tuesday, the Senate is now our last hope.
Passing a continuing resolution that cuts DC's budget will have real
and devastating impacts:
❌ Police & public safety cut by $240 million ❌ Public
schools cut by $400 million ❌ Cuts to core government services,
including WMATA, totaling $600 million
The Senate vote could be as early
as today – and you can learn more in a video I shared yesterday. Whether it's on your
coffee break or over lunch, I urge you to please call Senators to
tell them not to cut DC's local budget – which
wouldn't save them a dime in federal spending.
Here's where we need your support today:
DMV-Area Senators:
Thank them for
their support of the District and region so far, and especially Sen.
Alsobrooks, who's filed an amendment to protect the District's budget,
and encourage them to stay strong and not cut DC's local budget:
- Chris Van Hollen (MD): 202-224-4654
- Angela Alsobrooks (MD): 202-224-4524
- Mark Warner (VA): 202-224-2023
- Tim Kaine (VA): 202-224-4024
Key players to target:
-
Senate
Appropriations Committee members (both R and D), including:
- Susan Collins (ME), Chair: 202-224-2523
- Patty Murray (WA), Vice Chair: 202- 224-2621
- Bill Hagerty (TN), Chair, Financial Services & General
Government Subcommittee: 202-224-4944
- Jack Reed (RI), Ranking Member, Financial Services & General
Government Subcommittee: 202-224-4642
- Lisa Murkowski (AK): 202-224-6665
- John Thune (SD), Majority Leader: 202-224-2321
- John Barrasso (WY), Majority Whip: 202-224-6441
- Chuck Schumer (NY), Minority Leader: 202-224-6542
- Thom Tillis (NC): 202-224-6342
- Bill Cassidy (LA): 202-224-5824
- Rand Paul (KY): 202-224-4343
If you make your way through that list, move on to other Senators
on both sides – most have little idea what's happening locally given
the huge implications they're wrestling with nationally. Forward this
email to your friends and family in other states, too.
Every voice and every call makes a difference, and I'm seeing this
through conversations with Senate offices.
I'll include some talking points again, in case they're
helpful:
Please don't
vote to cut the District's local budget. Support Sen. Alsobrooks'
amendment to allow DC's FY25 budget to continue without
disruption.
-
The cuts proposed in the Continuing Resolution will
immediately jeopardize public safety and core government
functions. The unprecedented decision to decimate the
District's budget mid-year would result in immediate and far-reaching
cuts to our most critical government services, including police
officers, firefighters, and teachers. Those agencies’ budgets are
mostly salaries, so a reduction of $1.1 billion will require immediate
RIFs, furloughs, and hiring freezes. This will make our streets less
safe, lengthen wait times for fire and EMS calls, keep people on the
street who could move out of homelessness, delay trash collection, and
freeze teacher hiring.
-
These are DC funds, not federal funds – paid by our residents
– and if cut, they would go unspent. Because these funds come
from locally paid tax dollars, they won’t somehow return to the
federal government if they're cut. A 16% cut to the District’s local
spending in this current year – which we're already halfway through –
won't result in "efficiency," and it will mean these local tax dollars
literally sit unused and wasted in a lockbox while city services
deteriorate.
-
Including these cuts would have a devastating and immediate
impact on the District’s economy and undermine our shared goal of
ensuring the nation’s capital remains a place all Americans can be
proud of – especially when combined with the recent economic forecast
indicating we’re moving toward a local recession in our four-year
financial plan due to federal government layoffs. Moody’s
rating agency is now considering downgrading the District’s bond
rating due to the Administration's layoffs, which will make borrowing
more expensive and cost much more to build or repair schools, bridges,
and roads. This will exacerbate the situation further.
Finally, let me dispel any notion that DC receives extra federal
funding or that our budget is mostly made of federal funds. Our budget
is overwhelming funded by local tax dollars, just like every other
state. About 25% of our budget comes from federal funding, mostly
through major entitlement programs like Medicaid and Medicare. That
percentage is right in line with most states.
Again, I'm thankful for the support we've gotten from Senators,
including Mark Warner (VA), who said the unprecedented cuts would
affect our public transportation system for the whole region, and
Senator Angela Alsobrooks (MD), who filed her amendment last night to
allow DC's FY25 budget to continue without disruption.
I don't usually send emails like this, but our city's future
depends on our collective action today.
Thank you,
Charles Allen
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