Oregon senators: Spending bill aids education, nursing
Oregon Sens. Jeff Merkley, who serves on the Senate Appropriations Committee, and Ron Wyden today announced Friday key provisions in education and health care in the Labor, Health and Human Services and Education 2019 spending bill that will help Oregon communities.
Here’s the senators’ news release listing elements of the bill, which passed the full Senate on Thursday.
“This bill is all about creating opportunity and giving working families the foundations they need to thrive — good health care, good jobs, and good education,” Merkley said. “The bill preserves and grows investments in nurses and teachers; provides opportunity to our most vulnerable students; and bolsters Community Development Block Grants that support rural communities’ efforts to alleviate poverty.”
“Investing in quality education, health care and community service builds opportunities and strong bridges to the future for all Oregonians,” Wyden said. “This legislation achieves those goals by providing essential resources for women’s health care, career training, community-minded volunteers and much more.”
Merkley is the only Oregon member of Congress from either chamber since Senator Mark Hatfield to serve on the Appropriations Committee, considered to be one of the most powerful on Capitol Hill. He joined the committee in 2013 so that Oregon would have a strong voice in decisions about the investments our nation should be making.
Key elements of the legislation that will impact Oregon include:
Health Care
Nursing: The bill includes $249.5 million to support nurses in Oregon and across the country. For the third year in a row, Merkley led 32 senators in a letter to the committee to push for an increase in federal funding for nursing workforce development. Oregon benefited from nearly $2 million in program funding in 2015.
Women’s Health: The bill protects over $20 million for the WISEWOMAN program to help low-income women reduce their risk of heart disease and stroke. Heart disease is currently the leading cause of death for women in the United States. Oregon is one of 20 states funded by the program, which was eliminated in President Trump’s proposed budget.
Medical Research: The bill includes a $2 billion increase in funding for the NIH, totaling more than $39 billion in the fight against cancer, Alzheimer’s, and other devastating diseases.
Education
Migrant Students: The bill includes $44.6 million for education programs for migrant students. Through this program, higher education and non-profit organizations can receive funding to give migrant and seasonal farmworkers and their children the opportunity to attend higher education or earn their GED. Oregon State University, Chemeketa Community College, Portland Community College, and Treasure Valley Community College receive funds through this program.
Special Education Research: The bill preserves $56 million for research and innovation in special education. The University of Oregon — a leading university on special education research — and other institutions use these funds to ensure public education benefits students with disabilities.
Teachers: The bill restores billions in funding for teacher training and student academic achievement that the Trump budget eliminated. The bill also includes $1 billion for TRIO, an educational program that supports students from disadvantaged backgrounds.
Career Training: The bill maintains $1.2 billion for Career and Technical Education, which supports our workforce and economy by training young people to fill in-demand, twenty-first century jobs.
Community Service
Community Services Block Grants: Merkley led the fight to restore the program–which was eliminated in President Trump’s budget proposal–that provides critical support for rural Oregon communities. The bill preserves $725 million in grant funding to help alleviate the causes and conditions of poverty.
Community Service: The bill rejects Trump’s elimination of national community service programs that place talented Americans in vulnerable communities. Instead, the bill funds AmeriCorps VISTA volunteers at $92 million; Senior Corps programs at $202 million; and State AmeriCorps grants at $415 million.
The next step for the bill is to be merged with a counterpart bill from the House, in order to be passed by both houses and signed into law.