Statements and Releases

Statement from President Joe Biden on Secretary Marcia L. Fudge

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:15

A fair housing market and access to quality and affordable housing are critical to the fulfillment of the American dream, and no one understands that better than Secretary Marcia L. Fudge. When I took office, we inherited a broken housing system, with fair housing and civil rights protections badly dismantled under the prior administration. On Day One, Marcia got to work rebuilding the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and over the past three years she has been a strong voice for expanding efforts to build generational wealth through homeownership and lowering costs and promoting fairness for America’s renters. 
 
Under Marcia’s transformational leadership, we have worked hard to lower housing costs and increase supply. We’ve proposed the largest investment in affordable housing in U.S. history. We’ve taken steps to aggressively combat racial discrimination in housing by ensuring home appraisals are more fair and by strengthening programs to redress the negative impacts of redlining. Thanks to Secretary Fudge, we’ve helped first-time homebuyers, and we are working to cut the cost of renting. And there are more housing units under construction right now than at any time in the last 50 years.
 
From her time as a mayor, to her years as a fierce advocate in the U.S. House of Representatives, Marcia’s vision, passion, and focus on increasing economic opportunity have been assets to our country. I’m grateful for all of her contributions toward a housing system that works for all Americans, and I wish her well in her next chapter. 
 

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When Secretary Fudge departs, Deputy Secretary Adrianne Todman will serve as Acting Secretary. 

The post Statement from President Joe Biden on Secretary Marcia L. Fudge appeared first on The White House.

FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Creates Good-Paying Clean Jobs, Cuts Energy Costs, and Delivers on the President’s Ambitious Climate Agenda

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

Since taking office, President Biden has delivered on the most ambitious climate, conservation, and environmental justice agenda in history—taking bold action to reduce climate pollution across every sector of the economy, protecting more than 26 million acres of lands and waters, and restoring the vital role of science in guiding federal decision-making. The Administration continues to implement the President’s historic Investing in America agenda—including the Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law—the largest investment by any country in history in in clean energy, energy security, clean air and water, environmental justice, combatting climate change, and to enhance our climate resilience.

As a result of the President’s economic and climate leadership, clean energy jobs are on the rise across the country, American manufacturing is booming, companies have announced hundreds of billions of dollars in clean energy investments, and the country is on a path toward cutting climate pollution in half from 2005 levels by 2030 and achieving economy-wide, net zero emissions by no later than 2050. The President also launched the Justice40 Initiative to embed environmental justice into clean energy and climate programs; this goal ensures that communities that are on the frontlines of climate change benefit from this historic investment in climate solutions.

The Budget protects and builds on this monumental progress, making pro-growth investments in clean energy across the Nation, cutting energy bills for families, creating good-paying jobs, advancing environmental justice, ensuring critical technologies are made in America, supporting locally led conservation of our lands and waters, and building climate resilience for American communities and infrastructure. The President’s Budget:

Reduces Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Advances Clean Energy While Creating Jobs and Cutting Energy Costs

Creates Jobs by Building Clean Energy Infrastructure. The Budget invests $1.6 billion through the Department of Energy (DOE), more than double from when President Biden took office, to support clean energy workforce and infrastructure projects across the Nation, including $385 million to weatherize and retrofit homes of low-income Americans, $113 million to create good jobs and ensure reliable supply chains by manufacturing clean energy components here at home, $95 million to electrify Tribal homes and transition Tribal colleges and universities to renewable energy, and $102 million to support utilities and State and local governments in building a grid that is more secure, reliable, resilient, and able to integrate electricity from clean energy sources. These investments, which complement and bolster the historic funding in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act, will create good-paying jobs and help revitalize American manufacturing—all while driving progress toward the Administration’s climate goals, including 100% carbon pollution-free electricity by 2035. 

Lowers Energy Costs and Catalyzes Clean Energy and Economic Growth in Rural Communities. The Budget builds on the $13 billion provided in the President’s historic Inflation Reduction Act for rural development programs at the Department of Agriculture (USDA) to reduce energy bills for families, expand clean energy, transform rural power production, and create tens of thousands of good-paying jobs for people across rural America. The Budget provides $1 billion for loan guarantees for renewable energy systems and energy efficiency improvements for farmers and rural small businesses, and $6.5 billion in authority for rural electric loans to support additional clean energy, energy storage, and transmission projects that would create good-paying jobs. In addition, the Budget includes $60 million in zero-interest loans for the Rural Energy Savings Program, which would help rural Americans implement durable cost-effective energy efficiency measures in their homes, lowering energy costs and contributing to the President’s clean energy goals. Additionally, the Budget includes over $5 billion, an increase of nearly $900 million from the FY 2023 enacted level without earmarks, for efforts across the Federal Government that support economic revitalization, job creation, and other priority needs in hard-hit coal, oil and gas, and legacy power plant communities.

Reduces Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Tackles the Climate Crisis. The Budget builds on the historic climate investments made in the Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, and includes over $2.9 billion in Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) climate-related programs to address the climate crisis by reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, expanding upon the GHG Reporting Program and Sinks Inventory, implementing provisions in the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act to continue phasing out the production and import of hydrofluorocarbons, advancing equitable implementation of EPA authorities and directives in Indian Country, and engaging with the global community to respond to the shared challenge of building resilience in the face of climate impacts. The Budget includes $10.6 billion in the DOE climate and clean energy research, development, demonstration, and deployment programs, which advances efforts crucial for achieving the goal of a 50- to 52-percent reduction from 2005 levels of economy wide net greenhouse gas pollution in 2030 and economy wide net-zero emissions no later than 2050, while also cutting energy bills for American families and building U.S. leadership in the global clean energy economy.

Reduces Home Energy and Water Costs. Reducing household energy and water costs continues to be a priority for the Administration. The Budget provides $4.1 billion for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)—building on the $7 billion in additional funding the Administration has secured for LIHEAP since 2021—to help families access home energy and weatherization assistance, which are vital tools for protecting vulnerable families’ health in response to extreme weather and climate change. In addition, since the Low-Income Household Water Assistance Program (LIHWAP) expired at the end of 2023, the Budget proposes to allow States the option to use a portion of their LIHEAP funds to provide water bill assistance to low-income households.

Continues to Advance Clean Energy Development on Public Lands. The Budget includes $142 million to continue the Administration’s progress in deploying clean energy on public lands and waters, spurring economic development and creating thousands of good-paying jobs. This funding supports the leasing, planning, and permitting of solar, wind, and geothermal energy projects, and associated transmission infrastructure that would help mitigate the impacts of climate change.

Strengthens and Accelerates Permitting Activities. The Budget invests in environmental permitting capacity to ensure the effective and efficient delivery of modernized infrastructure across the Nation while promoting positive environmental and community outcomes. The Budget includes over $1 billion to support environmental review and permitting processes that are effective, efficient, and transparent, guided by science and shaped by early and meaningful public engagement and input.

Invests in Climate Science and Innovation

Builds the Clean Energy Innovation Pipeline. The Budget includes $10.7 billion, an increase of $2.7 billion over FY 2021 Enacted levels, across DOE, NASA, the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Department of Defense (DOD), and other agencies to support researchers and entrepreneurs transforming innovations into commercial clean energy products, including in areas such as offshore wind, industrial heat, sustainable aviation fuel, and grid infrastructure. Since the start of the Administration, the President has requested and Congress has enacted year-over-year increases in the total government-wide funding for clean energy innovation. Across DOE, the Budget provides over $325 million to support the research, development, and demonstration of technologies and processes to increase the domestic supply of sustainable critical minerals and materials essential for several clean energy technologies. The Budget provides more than $500 million for green aviation at NASA, over $500 million for clean energy research at the NSF, and $845 million for DOE efforts to accelerate the viability of commercial fusion energy. The Budget also funds eight crosscutting DOE Earthshots initiatives which could substantially reduce the cost of energy for the American consumer through innovations in clean energy generation, energy efficiency, and storage.

Advances Climate Science. The Budget includes $4.5 billion for climate research across NASA, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), NSF, and other agencies. This includes $150 million at NASA to develop the next-generation land-imaging mission (Landsat Next) and more than $600 million for NASA in research grants to enhance understanding of Earth systems, including climate and natural hazards. It includes $900 million for NSF, which supports a broad portfolio of research that includes atmospheric composition, water and carbon cycles, climate resilience technologies including for communities heavily affected by climate change, social, behavioral, and economic research on human responses to climate change, among other topics. The Budget also invests $275 million at the Department of the Interior (DOI) to continue to leverage science to better understand the impacts of climate change, and to inform and improve land management practices from the Federal to the local level. The Budget invests $407 million at DOE to support fundamental research, including modeling and scientific user facilities to enable enhanced predictability of dynamically changing climate, environmental, and Earth systems, which includes predictability of climate trends and extremes that influence the design and deployment of next generation energy systems.

Maintains World Leading Research through the CHIPS and Science Act Investments. The Budget invests $20 billion across major research agencies to boost American innovation and re-establish American leadership in research and scientific discovery. At the National Science Foundation, these investments include support for regional innovation programs, investments in emerging technologies (such as artificial intelligence and quantum information science), and STEM workforce programs. Funding for the Department of Commerce’s (DOC) National Institute for Standards and Technology will support activities responsive to the President’s Executive Order on the Safe, Secure and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence and fund construction and maintenance of research and development facilities. In the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, the Budget supports artificial intelligence, high performance computing to improve climate modeling, clean energy technologies including fusion, and positions the United States to meet the demand for isotopes.

Strengthens Resilience

Strengthens Climate Resilience in Communities and Ecosystems. Across America, communities are enduring historic and catastrophic flooding, wildfires, extreme heat, drought, and more, while longer-term changes in temperature affect ecosystems and the economies that depend on them. The intensifying impacts of climate change are costing lives, disrupting livelihoods, and causing billions of dollars in damages. The Biden-Harris Administration has made historic investments in climate adaptation and resilience, including more than $50 billion from the President’s Investing in America agenda. Building on the National Climate Resilience Framework, the Budget invests $23 billion in climate adaptation and resilience across the Department of Commerce (DOC), DOI, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), USDA, Army Corps of Engineers, EPA, and DOD to address the increasing severity of extreme weather events fueled by climate change. This includes resources for flood hazard mapping, including the development of new data to support future flood conditions so that communities and Americans have the most up-to-date information regarding their flood risk; investments to mitigate the impacts of extreme heat in low-income and disadvantaged communities; and $105 million for DOE to plan, design and demonstrate community-scale energy solutions to support grid resilience. The Budget also provides funding to ensure farmers, ranchers, and forestland owners meet production goals in the face of a changing climate while conserving, maintaining, and restoring natural resources on their lands.

Invests in America’s Brave Wildland Firefighters. The Budget builds on the Administration’s historic investments in the wildland firefighting workforce at USDA and DOI by supporting the implementation of permanent and comprehensive pay reform, the enhancement of health services, the hiring of additional permanent and temporary wildland firefighters to increase capacity, and the improvement of Government housing. These investments would help address long-standing recruitment and retention challenges, increase the departments’ capacity to complete critical risk mitigation work, and further the Administration’s commitment to build a more robust and resilient wildland firefighting workforce as the frequency and intensity of catastrophic wildfires continue to increase due to climate change.

Increases Drought Resilience. The Budget helps ensure communities across the West have access to a resilient and reliable water supply by investing in rural water projects, water conservation, development of desalination technologies, and water recycling and reuse projects. The Budget complements the nearly $1.7 billion provided in 2025 for western water infrastructure through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, as well as the nearly $4.6 billion that was provided by the Inflation Reduction Act for drought mitigation and domestic water supply projects through the Bureau of Reclamation. 

Strengthens Climate Resilience and Reduces Housing Insecurity in Rural Communities. A lack of adequate affordable housing has been a long-standing problem in rural communities—one that is exacerbated by low energy efficiency of the aging housing stock, meaning higher costs for families. To help address this, the Budget proposes additional funding for USDA multifamily and single-family housing, and again proposes to eliminate the gap that penalizes low-income rural borrowers by inequitably requiring repayment for certain USDA Direct loans.  The Budget provides strong support for USDA’s multifamily housing and housing preservation programs. Through these investments, the Administration advances equity by reducing rent burdens for low-income borrowers and preserving low-income tenant-based housing in rural America. The Budget again proposes to reduce operating costs and increase the resilience of rural housing to the impacts of climate change through a proposal to require energy and water efficiency improvements and green features in USDA’s rural housing programs that include construction, such as housing repair loans and grants.

Advances Environmental Justice

Delivers for Communities Often Left Behind. The Administration continues to take bold steps and prioritize efforts to deliver environmental justice in communities across the United States, including implementing the President’s Justice40 Initiative and keeping up the momentum of the historic Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act environmental justice investments. The Budget bolsters these efforts by supporting several key initiatives to accelerate energy equity and justice for all Americans, including communities overburdened by pollution, investing nearly $1.5 billion across EPA in support of environmental justice efforts, including investments that will support cleaner air and cleaner water in frontline communities. This includes a new $25 million grant to develop Direct Implementation Tribal Cooperative Agreements to carry out crucial EPA programs in Indian Country with an emphasis on addressing the impacts of climate change.

Reduces Health and Environmental Hazards for At-Risk Communities. The Budget provides $8.2 billion to address DOE legacy waste and contamination in communities used during the Manhattan Project and the Cold War for nuclear weapons production. The Budget includes other key investments in programs that reduce environmental hazards like EPA’s Superfund program, Brownfields program, and Toxic Substances Control Act implementation. The Administration will ensure the investments for the management of toxic chemicals, including per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances, cleanup of legacy pollution, and long-term stewardship of these sites align with the Justice40 Initiative to benefit disadvantaged communities.

Invests in Clean Air. The Administration continues to support investment in EPA’s work of limiting emissions of harmful air pollutants and tackling the climate crisis. The Budget provides a total of $1.5 billion for EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, an increase of $690 million since the beginning of the Administration, to continue the development of national programs, policies, and regulations that control air pollution and radiation exposure. This funding includes a historic $187 million for the Atmospheric Protection Program to support implementation and compliance with greenhouse gas emission standards and to tackle the climate crisis at home and abroad. Also included is $100 million for the Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (DERA) grant program, which funds grants and rebates to reduce harmful emissions from diesel engines, and $70 million for the Targeted Airshed Grants (TAG), which helps reduce air pollution in the most polluted nonattainment areas.

Advances Climate Justice and Ensures Compliance with the Nation’s Environmental Laws. At DOJ, the Budget renews its investment in the Office of Environmental Justice to protect overburdened and disadvantaged communities from the harms caused by environmental crimes, pollution, and climate change. The Administration continues investments at EPA to ensure compliance with environmental laws, including $172 million for compliance monitoring efforts including funds to conduct inspections in underserved, disadvantaged, and overburdened communities, and funds to rebuild the inspector corps.

Trains the Next Generation of Leaders in Emerging Fields

Supports and Expands the American Climate Corps. Last year, the Administration announced the launch of the American Climate Corps (ACC) to mobilize a new, diverse generation of more than 20,000 clean energy, conservation, and climate resilience workers and leaders, and this year, the first cohort of ACC members will begin their service. The ACC will provide job training and service opportunities on a wide range of projects that tackle climate change in communities around the country. The Budget provides $15 million to support and expand AmeriCorps’ ACC hub and $23 million to support over 1,700 additional ACC members, as well as $8 billion in mandatory funding to support an additional 50,000 ACC members annually by 2031. This builds on additional investments to support climate-related workforce development and service initiatives across all seven ACC agencies.

Promotes Equity in STEM Education and Workforce Training. In support of the CHIPS and Science Act’s priority of building a diverse, STEM-capable workforce, the Budget provides $1.4 billion for STEM education and workforce development programs at NSF that have an emphasis on diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility. The Budget also includes funding for programs focused on increasing the participation of groups historically underrepresented in science and engineering fields by supporting curriculum program design, research on successful recruitment and retention methods, development of outreach or mentorship programs, fellowships, and $256 million in funding to build capacity for advancing energy research and developing a new energy workforce, as well as an additional $100 million for enhancing general research capacity at HCBUs, TCCUs, and MSIs through the Department of Education. The Budget also provides $46 million to NASA’s Minority University Research and Education Project, to increase competitive awards to minority-serving institutions to recruit and retain underrepresented and underserved students in STEM fields.

Broadens Access to Registered Apprenticeships in Clean Energy and the Industries of the Future. The Budget increases support for Registered Apprenticeships, an evidence-based earn-as-you-learn model that is a critical tool for training future workforces for good jobs that don’t require a college degree in the clean energy, construction, semiconductor, transportation and logistics, education, health, and other growing and in-demand industries. The Budget invests $335 million, a $50 million increase above the 2023 enacted level, and supports expanding existing Registered Apprenticeship programs in clean energy-related occupations.  This investment would also be used to reduce barriers and expand access, training, and opportunities that can increase the number of workers from historically underrepresented groups, including people of color, women, and people with disabilities, who participate in Registered Apprenticeships.

Doubles Down on America’s Global Climate Leadership

Achieves the Administration’s Historic Climate Finance Pledge. The Budget provides a path to achieving the President’s $11 billion commitment for international climate finance, including $3 billion for the President’s Emergency Plan for Adaptation and Resilience (PREPARE). A signature initiative, PREPARE supports more than half a billion people in developing countries to adapt to and manage the impacts of climate change, including through private sector mobilization. In 2023, PREPARE brought 21 new companies and partners on board, with commitments to accelerate adaptation action in vulnerable developing countries that have mobilized more than $2 billion. The Budget also supports a $500 million FY 2025 contribution through mandatory funding to finance the Green Climate Fund (GCF), as part of the $3 billion multi-year pledge to expand climate adaptation and mitigation projects in developing countries, and $100 million for the Amazon Fund to combat deforestation and preserve the world’s largest tropical rainforest. The Budget builds on historic international climate finance progress made over the course of this Administration, in which estimated 2023 levels of $9.5 billion represent a near-sixfold increase from 2021.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Improves Customer Experience to Better Serve the American People

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

To build on the historic progress made under President Biden’s leadership, the American people need a modern and effective government. A high-performing Federal government—staffed by expert civil servants—plays a critical role in ensuring Americans can easily access reliable services and resources, from helping the American people file taxes and apply for benefits, to confronting the risks and opportunities presented by Artificial Intelligence (AI). The Budget funds the expertise and tools necessary to ensure excellent service delivery and customer experience across the Federal government. The President’s Budget:

Modernizes Service Delivery

Provides More Passport Services Online. The Budget increases investments for the Department of State to improve on and expand online passport renewal, delivering on the commitment outlined in the Customer Experience Executive Order to enable Americans to renew their passport without having to go in-person and mail original documents.

Improves Social Security Administration (SSA) Services. The Budget builds the capacity of SSA’s Customer Experience team to fulfill commitments outlined in the Customer Experience Executive Order. The Budget also supports SSA’s efforts to take a customer-focused approach to service delivery, such as by improving how people access SSA services online, on mobile devices, by phone, and in-person. SSA will also work with states to enable online replacement of social security cards and name changes due to marriage nationwide.

Modernizes Taxpayer Services. By protecting annual funding for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and restoring and extending Inflation Reduction Act investments, the Budget continues initiatives that are already expanding digital, phone, and in-person taxpayer assistance options. Improved data analytics are helping the IRS work smarter by staffing customer service functions to meet projected demand. With ongoing investment, taxpayers can expect easier, secure access to their data, as well as the tools to help them use it, to meet their tax obligations and receive the incentives for which they are eligible.

Improves Traveler Experience. The Budget includes $3 million for the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to continue piloting the Customer Experience Manager model at four airports focused on streamlining passenger screening, easy-to-understand signage, and better collection and analysis of customer feedback to take improvement actions.

Modernizes Federal Retirement Services. The Budget invests in the Office of Personnel Management to reduce processing times for Federal retirement and improve customer satisfaction, including hiring additional employees to process cases and $3 million to continue to develop a digital file system and online retirement application.

Brings America’s Great Outdoors Online. The Budget makes investments to better connect Americans with public lands through updates, added features, and performance improvements to the National Park Service app, NPS.gov, Recreation.gov, and Volunteer.gov. Funds will also support the expanded use of digital activity passes to access the more than 560 national wildlife refuges managed by the Fish and Wildlife Service and digital special use permits issued by the Forest Service.

Improves Service Access for Rural Communities. The Budget includes $3 million for the Farm Service Agency to modernize its information technology systems and pilot a technical assistance program to better support farmers and ranchers applying for farm loans. The Budget also includes $1 million for the development of digital tools and customer feedback activities at Rural Development within the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Supports Services for Senior Homeowners and Low-Income Renters. The Budget for the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) supports an expansion of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) digital self-service portal that would streamline customer support for seniors with FHA-held reverse mortgages. HUD will also pilot a customer-centered approach for individuals and families seeking affordable housing that aims to increase their understanding of available housing options and reduce the time spent on waiting lists for HUD-assisted rental housing.

Builds Shared Products and Platforms to Enable Simple, Seamless, and Secure Services Across the Federal Government. The Budget provides funding for continued maintenance of the Federal Website Standards, U.S. Web Design System, Digital Analytics Program, Site Scanning Program, Digital.gov, Search.gov, Touchpoints, and Feedback Analytics. The Budget also supports design exploration for creating government-wide web content standards and search engine optimization practices, including the potential of using Search.gov to better structure and connect information across agency websites.

Builds On Lessons from Life Experience Pilot Projects

Supports Parents Following the Birth of a Child. The Budget increases funding for the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Healthy Start program to improve health outcomes for parents and infants, including by building on lessons learned through the Benefits Bundle pilot to connect families welcoming a baby to a bundle of supportive services. The Budget additionally directs the Veterans Health Administration to develop a maternal supply kit pilot for veteran mothers.

Improves Efficiency, Program Integrity, and Accessibility of Safety Net Benefits. The Budget provides $11 million for HHS to work with cross-agency partners to improve benefits-related income verification services and determinations for benefits programs. In doing so, multiple agencies will simplify access to supports for families facing a financial shock and improve administrative efficiency.

Supports Underserved Seniors Making Retirement Decisions. The Budget continues efforts by the Administration for Community Living to develop a new model of community outreach to connect older adults with resources to inform their retirement and healthcare decisions, building on lessons learned from a community stakeholder-centered design process pilot.

Invests In Customer Experience Capacity Across Government

Increases Customer Experience Teams, Digital Service Capabilities. The Budget invests in the retention and hiring of more than 170 full-time employees with customer experience and digital service delivery experience across Federal agencies. These customer experience strategists and digital service experts will conduct customer research, analyze quantitative and qualitative feedback, and lead iterative design sprints to power the Federal government’s service improvements.The Budget also makes investments to support more than fifteen customer experience teams across government.

Helps Improves Service Accessibility for Tribal Communities. In keeping with Executive Order 14112 on Reforming Federal Funding and Support for Tribal Nations, the Budget makes investments in dedicated and coordinated work, in partnership with the General Services Administration’s Technology Transformation Services, that will make it easier for Tribal Nations and members to navigate federal services provided by the Bureaus of Indian Affairs and Trust Funds Administration. Additionally, the designation of the Indian Health Service (IHS) as a High Impact Service Provider supports IHS collecting feedback and implementing targeted reforms that will improve the quality and accessibility of health services for Native communities.

Builds Digital Service Capacity, Helps Agencies Listen to Their Customers. The Budget addresses long-standing challenges in accessing digital service expertise across the Federal government by investing $55 million across 11 eleven agencies to more effectively deliver critical government services through priority projects with the U.S. Digital Service (USDS). The Budget also includes $30 million for USDS to further integrated, efficient, secure, and effective uses of information technology in the Federal government, as well as an additional $30 million in agency contribution to USDS for digital service expertise and assistance to attract and hire top technical talent.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Cuts the Deficit by $3 Trillion Over 10 Years

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

President Biden believes that investing in America, growing the economy from the middle out and bottom up, lowering costs for families, and reforming our tax code to reward work and not wealth are economic and fiscal imperatives. Strong and shared growth that benefits all Americans isn’t just good for working families and the economy; it will also lead to better fiscal outcomes. At the same time, President Biden believes that long-term investments in our Nation and its people should be paid for. And his Budgets have consistently paid for all of his investments and improved the Nation’s fiscal outlook.

The President took office after his predecessor signed into law a reckless and unpaid for tax cut that was skewed to the wealthy and large corporations, adding nearly $2 trillion to the deficit. Compared to when the President took office, the deficit is over $1 trillion lower, thanks in large part to a strong economic recovery and a historic vaccination program that allowed the responsible wind-down of emergency measures. In addition, the President has enacted another roughly $1 trillion in savings over the next decade through the Fiscal Responsibility Act, and through the Inflation Reduction Act provisions that empower Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices, cap insulin at $35 per month for seniors and people with disabilities, and make the wealthy and large corporations pay more of their fair share.

President Biden will fight to stop Republican plans to add trillions to the deficit with tax cuts skewed to big corporations and the wealthy—doubling down on their failed trickle-down tax cuts that already increased the nation’s debt by trillions of dollars. Republicans have proposed making all of President Trump’s tax cuts permanent, while refusing to pay for them by increasing taxes on big corporations or the wealthy. Instead, they would rather add trillions to the national debt than take back even one dollar of the $150 billion annual rate cut corporations received under President Trump. Their plan would add more than $3 trillion to deficits over 10 years, while providing tax cuts worth $175,000 per year to the top 0.1 percent of Americans that have incomes over $4.5 million.

In contrast to Republicans’ plans to increase the deficit, the President’s Budget improves the fiscal outlook by reducing the deficit by roughly $3 trillion over the next 10 years by making the wealthy and large corporations pay their fair share, closing tax loopholes, cutting wasteful spending on Big Pharma, Big Oil, and other special interests, and following the Fiscal Responsibility Act. The President’s Budget:

Improves the Nation’s Fiscal Outlook

The President’s Budget improves the Nation’s fiscal outlook and reduces long-term fiscal risks by reducing the deficit, stabilizing deficits and debt as a share of the economy over the long-run, and keeping the economic burden of debt within historical norms. Specifically, the Budget reduces the deficit by around $3 trillion over the next decade, compared to deficits without the President’s policies. The deficit reduction in the Budget increases over time, with over $500 billion of deficit reduction in 2034.

The Budget also reduces the deficit, as a share of the economy, from current levels. Under the Budget policies, the deficit would decline over the next several years, stabilizing below five percent of the economy throughout the remainder of the 10-year window. And the Budget stabilizes debt as a share of the economy over the long-run as well.

Finally, under the President’s Budget, the economic burden of debt would remain in line with historical norms over the next decade. Real net interest as a share of the economy directly measures the cost of servicing the debt: resources that must go towards paying off old debt rather than investing in the future or providing services to Americans now. The Budget forecast takes into account recent increases in interest rates and projects future interest rates in line with private-sector forecasters. Nonetheless, the Budget keeps real net interest payments as a share of the economy at or below the average for the last several decades, around 1 percent of GDP, and well below the 2 percent level of the 1990s.

Reduces the Deficit by Making the Tax System Fairer and Ending Special Interest Giveaways

The President believes that the best way to reduce the deficit is to reform our tax code to reward work and not wealth, ensure that the largest corporations pay their fair share, and end giveaways to special interests. For example, the Inflation Reduction Act he signed into law cracked down on wealthy tax cheats and took critical steps forward in ensuring that large corporations pay their fair share, including a 15% minimum tax on billion-dollar corporations and a surcharge on large, publicly-traded corporations that buy back their own stock.

The Budget builds on this progress and reflects the President’s ironclad belief that the wealthy and big corporations should pay their fair share—and that they shouldn’t pay lower tax rates than teachers or firefighters.

To date, Republicans in Congress have put forward a much different approach, calling for more than $3 trillion in tax giveaways skewed to the rich and large corporations and handouts to special interests. The budget proposed by the Republican Study Committee (RSC), representing nearly 80 percent of House Republicans, shows how they would pay for those tax cuts: by slashing Social Security, Medicare, the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid, and other programs that drive economic growth and that seniors, people with disabilities, and families count on. The RSC budget would raise the Social Security retirement age, restrict eligibility for Social Security Disability Insurance, slash disability benefits for low-income adults and children with disabilities, and increase healthcare costs for millions of seniors. It also makes drastic cuts to Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act, and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which could result in tens of millions of children and families losing their health insurance.

Instead of making reckless cuts to programs that millions of Americans count on, the President’s Budget takes the following steps to reduce the deficit. The President’s Budget:

Makes the Wealthy Pay Their Fair Share

Requires Billionaires to Pay at Least 25 Percent of Income in Taxes. Billionaires make their money in ways that are often taxed at lower rates than ordinary wage income, or sometimes not taxed at all, thanks to giant loopholes and tax preferences that disproportionately benefit the wealthiest taxpayers. As a result, many of these wealthy Americans are able pay an average income tax rate of just 8 percent on their full incomes — a lower rate than many firefighters or teachers. To finally address this glaring inequity, the President’s Budget includes a 25 percent minimum tax on the wealthiest 0.01 percent, those with wealth of more than $100 million.

Requires Wealthy People to Pay their Fair Share Toward Medicare to Extend Medicare Solvency Indefinitely. The President’s Budget extends the solvency of the Medicare Hospital Insurance (HI) trust fund indefinitely by modestly increasing the Medicare tax rate on incomes above $400,000, closing loopholes in existing Medicare taxes, and directing revenue from the Net Investment Income Tax into the HI trust fund as was originally intended, along with savings from Medicare prescription drug reforms. Current law lets certain wealthy business owners avoid Medicare taxes on some of the profits they get from passthrough businesses. The President’s Budget closes this loophole and raises Medicare tax rates on earned and unearned income from 3.8 percent to 5 percent for those with incomes over $400,000.

Repeals Trump Tax Cuts for the Wealthy and Reforms Capital Gains Tax to Ensure the Wealthy Pay Their Fair Share. The 2017 tax law lowered tax rates for the wealthiest Americans, delivering an average total tax cut of more than $50,000 for the top 1% and more than $190,000 for the top 0.1% in 2018. The Budget repeals tax cuts for the highest-income Americans, restoring the top tax rate of 39.6 percent for those making more than $400,000 a year. It also proposes taxing capital gains at the same rate as wage income for those with more than $1 million in income, closing the capital gains loophole that allows the wealthy to avoid ever paying tax on their appreciated investments, and finally closing the carried interest loophole that allows some wealthy investment fund managers to pay tax at lower rates than their secretaries.

Ensures That the IRS Can Continue to Collect Taxes Owed by Wealthy Tax Cheats. The Inflation Reduction Act addressed long-standing IRS funding deficiencies by providing stable, multi-year funding to improve tax compliance by finally cracking down on high-income individuals and corporations who too often avoided paying their lawfully owed taxes, and to improve service for the millions of Americans that do pay their taxes. Already, the IRS is using these resources to crack down on tax evasion by the wealthy and big businesses. It has collected more than $500 million in unpaid taxes from fewer than 2,000 delinquent millionaires, is recouping taxes from thousands of millionaires who did not fulfill their basic civic duty by filing a tax return, and is cracking down on high-end tax evasion like deducting personal use of corporate jets as a business expense. At the same time, it is improving customer service and modernizing IT infrastructure. The President’s Budget would restore the full Inflation Reduction Act investment and provide new funding over the long-term to continue cutting the deficit by making sure that wealthy Americans and big corporations pay the taxes they owe through tax compliance initiatives and to continue improving service for taxpayers who are just trying to pay what they owe.

Makes Large Corporations Pay Their Fair Share

Raises Tax Rates for Large Corporations. Corporations received an enormous tax break in 2017. While their profits soared, their investment in their workers and the economy did not. Their shareholders and top executives reaped the benefits, without the promised trickle down to workers, consumers, or communities. The President’s Budget would set the corporate tax rate at 28 percent, still well below the 35 percent rate that prevailed prior to the 2017 tax law. In addition, the Budget would raise the Inflation Reduction Act’s corporate minimum tax rate on billion-dollar corporations that the President signed into law from 15 percent to 21 percent, ensuring the biggest corporations pay more of their fair share. These policies are complemented by other proposals to incentivize job creation and investment in the United States to help ensure broadly shared prosperity.

Cracks Down on Tax Avoidance by Large Multinationals, including Big Pharma. For decades, countries have competed for multinational business by slashing tax rates, at the expense of having adequate revenues to finance core services. Thanks in part to the Administration’s leadership, more than 130 nations signed on to a global tax framework to finally address this race to the bottom in 2021. Many of our international partners, including many of the world’s largest economies, have implemented or will soon implement this transformational agreement. The President’s Budget proposes to do the same by reforming the international tax system to reduce the incentives to book profits in low-tax jurisdictions, stopping corporate inversions to tax havens, and raising the tax rate on U.S. multinationals’ foreign earnings from 10.5 percent to 21 percent. These reforms would ensure that profitable multinational corporations, including Big Pharma, pay their fair share.

Denies Corporate Tax Breaks for Million Dollar Executive Compensation. Executive pay has skyrocketed in recent decades, with CEO pay averaging more than 300 times that of a typical worker in 2022. The 2017 tax law’s corporate tax cuts only made this problem worse, producing massive boosts to executive compensation while doing nothing for low- and middle-income workers. While corporations can choose to give huge pay packages to their executives, President Biden believes that they don’t deserve a tax break when they do. His Budget proposes new policy to deny deductions for all compensation over $1 million paid to any employee of a C corporation, which would discourage companies from giving their executives massive pay packages and help level the playing field across C corporations.

Ends Wasteful Spending to Special Interests

Negotiates Lower Drug Prices and Expands Access to Prescription Drugs. Thanks to action taken by this Administration, millions of seniors and people with disabilities are saving money on their drug costs – including $35 insulin, free vaccines, and out-of-pocket costs capped at about $3,500 starting in 2024. Medicare is also negotiating lower drug prices for the first time ever, starting with ten of the costliest, most widely used drugs used to treat blood clots, cancers, arthritis, diabetes, and more. The Budget builds on this success by significantly increasing the pace of negotiation, bringing more drugs into negotiation sooner after they launch, expanding the Inflation Reduction Act’s inflation rebates and $2,000 out-of-pocket prescription drug cost cap beyond Medicare and into the commercial market, and by taking other steps to build on the Inflation Reduction Act drug provisions. In addition, the Budget extends the $35 cost-sharing cap for a month’s supply of a covered insulin product to the commercial market. For Medicaid, the Budget includes proposals to ensure Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) are prudent purchasers of prescription drugs, such as authorizing HHS to negotiate supplemental drug rebates on behalf of interested States in order to pool purchasing power. The Budget also limits Medicare Part D cost-sharing for high-value generic drugs, such as those used to treat hypertension and high-blood pressure, to no more than $2 for Medicare beneficiaries. These reforms will not only cut costs for the Federal government by $200 billion; they will also save billions of dollars for seniors and people with disabilities.

Eliminates Tax Subsidies for Oil and Gas. The President is committed to ending tens of billions of dollars of federal tax subsidies for oil and gas companies. Even as they benefit from billions of dollars in special tax breaks, oil companies have failed to invest in production. For the last two years, they have realized record profits, but instead of lowering prices for consumers or investing these funds, they have undertaken record stock buybacks, mergers, and acquisitions that benefited executives and wealthy shareholders. The Budget eliminates special tax treatment for oil and gas company investments, as well as other fossil fuel tax preferences.

Lowers Medicaid Spending by Addressing Excessive Payments to Medicaid Managed Care Organizations. The Budget will lower Medicaid costs by over $10 billion by requiring that insurance companies pay Medicaid back when they charge it far more than they actually spend on patient care. Currently, only about half of states require private insurance companies that provide Medicaid coverage to pay money back when they realize outsize profits. Without this requirement, insurance companies are keeping  millions of dollars each year in excessive payments. The Budget would apply this requirement nationwide, consistent with similar requirements in Medicare Advantage and Affordable Care Act plans. With it, insurance companies will no longer be able to charge for unnecessary administrative expenses or sacrifice quality patient care to increase their profit margins, and if they charge too much, they will have to pay it back to the Medicaid program rather than keeping the profits and, in some cases, making larger payments to shareholders.

Eliminates Tax Subsidies for Real Estate. The Budget closes the “like-kind exchange” loophole, a special tax subsidy for real estate. This loophole lets real estate investors – but not investors in any other asset – put off paying tax on profits from deals indefinitely as long as they keep investing in real estate. This amounts to an indefinite interest free loan from the government. Real estate is the only asset that gets this sweetheart deal.

Eliminates Tax Subsidies for Cryptocurrency Transactions. The Budget eliminates a special tax subsidy for crypto currency and certain other transactions. Right now, crypto investors aren’t subject to the same rules of the road that investors in stocks or other securities have to follow, allowing them to report excessive losses. For example, a crypto investor – unlike an investor in stocks or bonds – can sell a cryptocurrency at a loss, take a substantial tax loss to reduce their tax burden, and then buy back that same cryptocurrency the very next day. The Budget eliminates this tax subsidy for crypto currencies by modernizing the tax code’s anti-abuse rules to apply to crypto assets just like they apply to stocks and other securities.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Secures Our Border, Combats Fentanyl Trafficking, and Calls on Congress to Enact Critical Immigration Reform

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

From his first day in office, President Biden has called on Congress to act to address our broken immigration system. Over the past three years, while waiting for Congress to act, the Administration has taken important steps to secure our border. The President has secured more resources for border security than any President before him, and in October he requested even more funding to secure the border, build capacity to enforce immigration law, and counter illicit fentanyl. The Administration has deployed the most agents and officers ever to address the situation at the southwest border, seized record levels of illicit fentanyl at our ports of entry, and brought together world leaders on a framework to deal with changing migration patterns that are impacting the entire Western Hemisphere.

Just recently, the President led the way on achieving a bipartisan agreement for the toughest, fairest border reform legislation in decades. The President and his team reached a historic bipartisan agreement with Senate Democrats and Republicans on border policy reforms and funding in February that would provide a fairer and more efficient process for asylum claims. The agreement also provides for emergency authority for the President to shut down the border when the system is overwhelmed, additional immigrant visas for families and workers, expedited work permits for those already here, and significant funding for more immigration judges, asylum officers, and Border Patrol agents and officers to secure the border and combat illicit fentanyl. Congressional Republicans should stop stonewalling this historic deal and work to send the legislation to the President’s desk.

The President’s Budget builds on these measures by ensuring adequate base resources for border enforcement, while continuing to reiterate the need for Congress to pass legislation and provide meaningful reforms and supplemental funding to secure the border. The Budget includes a $1.9 billion (7 percent) base budget increase for U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), as well as funds to expand and improve the immigration courts, address the root causes of migration, and combat illicit fentanyl trafficking. The President’s FY25 Budget:

Reiterates the Administration’s Request for Immediate Funding to Secure the Border, Build Capacity to Enforce Immigration Law, and Counter Illicit Fentanyl. In October 2023, the Administration transmitted an emergency supplemental request to Congress for the southwest border and migration issues totaling $13.6 billion. The Budget includes, and therefore reiterates the need for, the unmet needs from the October supplemental request. In addition to urgent requirements, the request includes investments to build longer-term capacity in the areas of border security, immigration enforcement, and countering illicit fentanyl, totaling $4.3 billion for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Justice (DOJ). This amount includes $405 million to hire 1,300 additional Border Patrol Agents to secure the border, $239 million to hire 1,000 additional CBP Officers to stop illicit fentanyl and other contraband from entering the U.S., $755 million to hire an additional 1,600 Asylum Officers and support staff to facilitate timely immigration dispositions, $100 million for Homeland Security Investigations to investigate and disrupt transnational criminal organizations and drug traffickers, $1.3 billion for the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) to fund the hiring of 375 new immigration judge teams to help reduce the immigration case backlog, and $849 million for cutting-edge detection technology at ports of entry. Taken together, these long-term capacity building investments equip the Nation’s border security and immigration system to more effectively respond to challenges present along the border. In addition, the Administration appreciates the Senate’s bipartisan border legislation that would make additional investments in DHS and provide authorities to bolster the Department’s efforts to secure and manage the border.

Continues to Invest in Critical Capabilities Needed for Border and Immigration Enforcement.  Strengthening border security and providing safe, lawful pathways for migration remain top priorities for the Administration. The Budget builds on the Administration’s October supplemental request to include an additional $25.9 billion for CBP and ICE, an increase of $1.9 billion over the 2023 enacted level when controlling for border management amounts. The Budget includes funds for CBP to hire an additional 350 Border Patrol Agents and 310 processing coordinators, $127 million for border security technology between ports of entry, and $86 million in air and maritime operational support that is central to efforts to secure the border. The Budget also includes funds to support 34,000 ICE immigration detention beds; $225 million to address increased transportation and removal costs; and $34 million to combat child exploitation, forced labor, and human trafficking.

Enables Access to Resources to Scale Border Enforcement Capacity for Conditions on the Southwest Border. Given the uncertainty surrounding border conditions in any given year, the Budget proposes a $4.7 billion contingency fund to aid the Department and its components when responding to migration surges along the Southwest border. Modeled on a contingency fund provided for unaccompanied children, each fiscal year, the fund would receive appropriations incrementally and above the base appropriation as Southwest border encounters reach pre-identified levels. DHS could use these funds for surge-related functions only, and would transfer funds to CBP, ICE, and FEMA accounts when appropriate conditions are met.

Supports America’s Promise to Resettle Refugees and Care for Unaccompanied Children. The Budget builds on the Administration’s October supplemental request and provides an additional $9.3 billion for the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) to help rebuild the Nation’s refugee resettlement infrastructure and support the resettling of up to 125,000 refugees in 2025. The Budget also helps ensure that unaccompanied immigrant children receive appropriate support and services while they are in ORR’s care and are unified with relatives and sponsors as safely and quickly as possible. This funding would allow ORR to continue the programmatic improvements the Administration has made, including expanding access to counsel to help children navigate complex immigration court proceedings and enhancing case management and post-release services. In addition, the Budget includes an emergency contingency fund that would provide additional resources, beyond the $9.3 billion, when there are unanticipated increases in the number of unaccompanied children.

Improves Immigration Courts. The Budget builds on the Administration’s October supplemental request and invests $981 million, an increase of $121 million above the 2023 enacted level, in the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) to enhance America’s immigration courts and help address the backlog of over 2.4 million currently pending cases. This funding supports 25 new immigration judge teams, which includes the support personnel necessary to ensure efficient case processing. The Budget also invests $30 million for EOIR to partner to with the U.S. Digital Service to develop and implement digital court operations strategies that will maximize each judge’s adjudicatory capacity and help reduce the case backlog.

Addresses the Root Causes of Migration. The Budget provides approximately $1 billion for Central American programming to meet the President’s commitment to invest $4 billion in Central America over four years to address the root causes of migration. The Budget also supports hemispheric programs to advance economic prosperity and regional security through key initiatives such as the America’s Partnership for Economic Prosperity, including $75 million for a capital increase to the Inter-American Development Bank’s (IDB Invest) to advance clean energy projects, modernize agriculture, strengthen transportation systems, and expand access to financing. The Budget further reserves $35 million in additional targeted funding for regional migration management, including $25 million for the IDB’s Migration Grant Facility to support integration efforts for migrants and host communities and address the root causes of irregular migration.

Combats Narcotics Trafficking Networks and Secures the Border and Our Communities. The Budget allocates $6.6 billion for DHS to invest in its counternarcotics efforts, including $4.5 billion for drug-related resources associated with border security, immigration enforcement, and countering illicit fentanyl. Additionally, the Administration remains committed to providing law enforcement with the resources and necessary personnel to defend our borders from illicit drug trade by reiterating the October 2023 emergency supplemental request for an additional $849 million for cutting edge drug detection technology at the border, $239 million for 1,000 additional CBP officers, $100 million to expand Homeland Security Investigations’ capacity for counter-fentanyl investigations and enforcement, and $14 million for additional research and development of narcotics detection and forensics, for a total supplemental request for DHS of $1.2 billion. These resources are critical to the fight against illicit opioids.

The Budget also provides $2.3 billion to the Department of Justice to combat opioid trafficking and reduce the supply and demand of deadly illicit fentanyl in American communities, including $1.2 billion for the Drug Enforcement Administration, $367 million for the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces, and $61 million for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. This also includes an additional $18 million in Counter-Fentanyl Threat Targeting Teams at the DEA to enhance America’s fight against the transnational criminal networks pushing deadly illicit fentanyl. These interdisciplinary teams of special agents, intelligence analysts, and data experts will map criminal organizations and build cases that lead to the dismantlement of entire drug trafficking networks and the deprivation of hundreds of millions of dollars to the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels. This also includes $494 million in grants supporting efforts to address opioid use and trafficking, including $190 million for the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Use Program, $95 million to support Drug Courts, and $51 million for anti-drug task forces.The Budget further invests $290 million in the High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program to provide state and local law enforcement with resources to combat the most dangerous illicit drug threats in their communities. The Budget further includes $1.1 billion for the Department of Defense to support security cooperation efforts with partner nations; counterdrug operations, detection and monitoring efforts in support of drug interdiction operations; and treatment, recovery, and education efforts.

Disrupts the International Synthetic Drug Trade. The Budget includes $169 million across State and USAID to counter illicit fentanyl and other synthetic drug production and trafficking, 58 percent above 2023 estimated levels. These resources would counter the worldwide flow of fentanyl and other synthetics that endanger public safety and health, and contribute to tens of thousands of drug-overdose deaths in the United States annually.

Combats Corruption and Increases Corporate Transparency. Treasury plays a leading role in monitoring and disrupting corruption, money laundering, terrorist financing, the use of the financial system by malicious actors domestically and abroad, and combatting the trafficking of illicit substances such as fentanyl in American communities. The Budget provides $216 million for the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, $26 million above the 2023 level, to support Beneficial Ownership Information reporting which will be required for existing covered companies beginning in 2025. This reporting will provide investigative tools making it harder for bad actors—including major narcotics traffickers—to hide or benefit from their ill-gotten gains through shell companies or other opaque ownership structures.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Creates Opportunity, Advances Equity

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

Since taking office, the President has fought to create opportunity and advance equity—not as a one-year project, but as part of a sustained commitment to make the promise of America real for every American, including communities of color, rural communities, women and girls, Tribal communities, LGBTQI+ individuals, people with disabilities, and communities impacted by persistent poverty.

Over the last three years, the Administration made significant progress advancing equity across the Federal government, including by reinvigorating Federal civil rights enforcements, increasing procurement opportunities for small disadvantaged businesses, prioritizing the advancement of gender equity and equality, expanding access to economic opportunities in underserved communities, expanding community engagement, increasing food security, advancing efforts to end homelessness, improving children’s education, robustly supporting Tribal sovereignty, and honoring the Nation’s sacred obligation to America’s veterans and servicemembers.

The President’s Budget builds on this progress by making historic investments to support the advancement of all Americans—especially in underserved communities—and combat racial and gender disparities across the Nation. The President’s Budget:

Addresses Inequity in Health Care

Expands Access to Quality, Affordable Health Care. The Budget allows states to extend continuous eligibility for children in the Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) from 12 to 36 months and provide continuous eligibility for children from birth until they turn age 6. The Budget also prohibits enrollment fees and waiting periods in CHIP. The Budget also provides Medicaid-like coverage to individuals in States that have not adopted Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act to expand coverage and advance health equity.

Advances Maternal Health and Health Equity. The United States has the highest maternal mortality rate among developed nations, and rates are disproportionately high for Black and American Indian and Alaska Native women. The Budget includes $376 million to support maternal mortality initiatives across the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The Budget provides $172 million to the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) for the Healthy Start Initiative, a program designed to improve health outcomes before, during, and after pregnancy and reduce disparities in rates of infant death and adverse perinatal outcomes. The Budget expands Medicaid maternal health support services during the pregnancy and postpartum period by incentivizing States to reimburse a broad range of providers including doulas, community health workers, peer support initiatives, and nurse home visiting programs. In addition, the Budget builds on the success of the more than 40 States, Washington D.C., and the U.S. British Virgin Islands, that extended Medicaid postpartum coverage by requiring all States to provide continuous Medicaid coverage for 12 months postpartum, eliminating gaps in health insurance at a critical time for all women. In addition, the Budget includes resources for HHS to launch a new initiative focused on maternal health and hypertension and directs the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to develop a pilot to provide maternal health care kits for veteran mothers.

Promotes Mental and Behavioral Health Equity. The Budget proposes investments to expand access to mental health and substance use care, including for underserved communities. The Budget provides resources for behavioral health, including a nearly $200 million increase for the Substance use And Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to reduce suicide, improve women’s and children’s mental health, and support the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics that serve anyone who needs care, regardless of ability to pay. Further, the Budget provides $17.1 billion to the VA for mental health, which includes resources for treatment and healthcare costs, in addition to initiatives that improve suicide prevention and address post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for the Nation’s veterans.

Invests in the Treatment and Prevention of Infectious Diseases. A critical component of the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to addressing health equity is addressing the disproportionate impact of infectious diseases, including HIV, on racial and ethnic minorities and LGBTQI+ communities. The Budget invests in the treatment and prevention of infectious diseases, including Hepatitis C, HIV, and vaccine-preventable diseases. The Budget proposes a national program to significantly expand screening, testing, treatment, prevention, and monitoring of Hepatitis C infections in the United States, with a specific focus on populations with high infection levels. The Budget also includes proposals to expand access to Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) to end the HIV epidemic and to vaccines for adults and children.

Closes Research Gaps in Women’s Health. The President and the First Lady launched the first-ever White House Initiative on Women’s Health Research, recognizing that women have been understudied and underrepresented in health research for far too long. The Initiative is working across government to better integrate women’s health within the Federal research portfolio and catalyze significant private and philanthropic commitments to increase funding for women’s health research. The Administration proposes to transform the way the government funds women’s health research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including by creating a new nationwide network of centers of excellence and innovation in women’s health—and the Budget would double current funding for the Office of Research on Women’s Health at NIH.

Expands Housing Access, Builds Thriving Communities

Increases Access to Safe and Affordable Housing. The Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) program at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) currently provides 2.3 million low-income families with rental assistance to obtain housing in the private market. The Budget includes $32.8 billion, and assumes Public Housing Agencies will draw from HCV program reserves to maintain services for all currently assisted families. The Budget also expands assistance to an additional 20,000 households, particularly those who are experiencing homelessness or fleeing domestic violence. Additionally, the Budget provides up to $100 million through HUD for Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing (PRO Housing), a competitive program that rewards State, local, and regional jurisdictions that make progress in removing barriers to affordable housing developments, such as restrictive zoning. Finally, the Budget provides $18 million for the Tribal Housing program at the Department of the Interior (DOI) to support critical housing needs in Tribal communities.

Bolsters Efforts to End Homelessness. The Budget provides more than $4 billion, an increase of $427 million over 2023 levels, for HUD Homeless Assistance Grants. This funding level enables HUD to continue supporting approximately 1.2 million people experiencing homelessness each year and includes $134 million to expand assistance to 25,000 additional households, specifically homeless youth and survivors of domestic violence. The Budget also provides $8 billion for competitive grants to rapidly expand temporary and permanent housing strategies for people experiences or at risk of homelessness. It also provides $505 million for Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) Program, serving a population with a disproportionately high rate of homelessness and providing a critical link to services.  In addition, the Administration plans to use approximately $100 million in program recaptures to fund coordinated interventions to support nearly 11,000 additional homeless individuals and families. These new resources support the Administration’s commitment to the goals laid out in the All In: Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness and build on efforts that have expanded assistance to roughly 140,000 additional households experiencing homelessness since the President took office.

Prevents and Redresses Housing Discrimination. The Budget provides $86 million to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to support State and local fair housing enforcement organizations and to further education, outreach, and training on rights and responsibilities under Federal fair housing laws. This investment continues the Administration’s efforts to fight discrimination in housing and real estate related transactions. The Budget also preserves robust funding for HUD staffing and technical assistance to affirmatively further fair housing and improve access to affordable housing.

Prevents Evictions. The Administration stood up a historic national eviction prevention infrastructure during the pandemic, helping keep eviction filings 20% below historical averages in 2021. The Budget provides $3 billion in mandatory funding for competitive grants to promote and solidify State and local efforts to reform eviction policies by providing access to legal counsel, emergency rental assistance, and other forms of rent relief. The Budget also includes $10 million for HUD’s Eviction Protection Grant program, which provides legal assistance at no cost to low-income renters at risk of or subject to eviction.

Increases National and Global Food Security. The Budget includes $7.7 billion to support nearly seven million individuals expected to participate in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). The Budget also includes funding to increase food security among children in low-income households during the summer through the new Summer Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) program and the rural non-congregate Summer Food Service Program. In addition, the Budget provides $1.1 billion, an increase of $83 million above the 2023 enacted level, for senior nutrition programs that work to reduce food insecurity, hunger, and malnutrition among older Americans. Lastly, the Budget provides more than $1 billion to support the President’s pledge to alleviate global food insecurity, including $100 million for the Vision for Adapted Crops and Soils (VACS) initiative to foster more resilient food systems and nutritious food crops in underserved regions.

Helps Underserved Communities Navigate Infrastructure Funding. The Budget includes $25 million for the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Thriving Communities Program, which provides planning, technical assistance, and capacity building support to underserved and under-resourced communities, enabling them to successfully compete for Federal funding and deliver transformative infrastructure projects that support community-driven economic development, health, environment, mobility, and access goals.

Advances Education, Access to Opportunity

Invests in High-Poverty Schools. To help ensure that every student receives a high-quality education, the Budget includes $8 billion in mandatory funding to provide Academic Acceleration and Achievement Grants to close opportunity and achievement gaps and speed the pace of learning recovery. These grants to school districts would support evidence-based strategies to increase school attendance, provide high-quality tutoring, and expand learning time, including both in the summer and in extended day or afterschool programs. The Budget also provides $18.6 billion for Title I, which would continue historic progress for a program that has increased by over $2 billion since the start of the Administration. Title I delivers critical funding to 90 percent of school districts across the Nation, helping them to provide students in low-income communities the academic opportunities and support they need to succeed. This funding works to narrow the chronic funding gaps between high-poverty schools—which disproportionately serve students of color—and their wealthier counterparts. In addition, the Budget includes $200 million, to support Full-Service Community Schools (FSCS) that provide comprehensive academic, social, and health services for students, students’ family members, and community members that will result in improved educational outcomes for children.

Bolsters Support for Children with Disabilities. Every child with a disability should have access to the high-quality early intervention, special education services, and personnel needed to thrive in school and graduate ready for college or a career. The Budget invests over $14 billion, $1.5 billion higher than when the President took office, in Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) grants through the Department of Education (ED) to support special education and related services for more than seven million students with disabilities in grades Pre-K through 12. The Budget also invests $545 million in IDEA Grants for Infants and Families to support early intervention services for infants and toddlers with disabilities.

Builds a Strong Foundation for Families with Universal Pre-K and Head Start. The Budget funds voluntary, universal, free preschool for all four million of the Nation’s four-year-olds and charts a path to expand preschool to three-year-olds. High-quality preschool would be offered in the setting of the parent’s choice—from public schools to child care providers to Head Start. In addition, the Budget increases Head Start funding by $544 million to support the Administration’s goal to reach pay parity between Head Start staff and public elementary school teachers with similar qualifications over time. Together these proposals would support healthy child development, help children enter kindergarten ready to learn, and support families by reducing their costs prior to school entry and allowing parents to work.

Improves Postsecondary Access and Success and Increases Equitable Funding for Low-Resourced Institutions. The Budget proposes to increase the discretionary maximum Pell Grant by $100—helping more than seven million students pay for college, building on successful bipartisan efforts to increase the maximum Pell Grant award, and maintaining a path to double the maximum award by 2029. In addition, the Budget expands free community college across the Nation through a new Federal-State partnership and provides two years of subsidized tuition for students from families earning less than $125,000 enrolled in a four-year Historically Black College and University (HBCU), Tribally Controlled College and University (TCCU), or Minority-Serving Institution (MSI). The Budget also increases institutional capacity at HCBUs, TCCUs, MSIs—including HSIs—and under-resourced institutions, including community colleges and provides $100 million to expand research infrastructure at four-year HBCUs, TCCUs, and MSIs. The Budget also invests $100 million to increase completion and retention rates among underserved students.

Expands Pathways for Economic Mobility

Increases Workforce Training and Career-Connected Learning that Provide Pathways to Good Jobs. The Budget proposes investments to help ensure all students and workers—including women, workers of color, and workers in rural areas—have the skills they need for the good jobs being created by the President’s historic legislative accomplishments. The Budget doubles funding for Career and Technical Education National Programs to better connect high schools to employers and community colleges through dual enrollment, work-based learning, and career advising. Further, the Budget proposes a new $8 billion Career Training Fund that would provide approximately 750,000 workers with training and wrap-around supports to ensure that workers from all backgrounds have access to high-quality training that leads to good jobs. The Budget also provides $50 million for the Sectoral Employment through Career Training for Occupational Readiness program, which supports the development and expansion of public-private partnerships to equitably deliver high-quality training in growing industries, and invests $70 million to help community colleges partner with industry to develop and expand high-quality training programs in communities across the Nation.

Supports Minority-Owned Business to Narrow Racial Wealth Gaps. The Budget increases the capacity of the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA) by providing $80 million to bolster services provided to minority-owned, including women of color-owned, enterprises by expanding the Business Center program, funding Rural Business Centers, and supporting innovative initiatives to foster economic resiliency.

Helps Historically Marginalized Communities Catalyze Economic Development. The Budget builds on a more than 40 percent increase for the Economic Development Administration (EDA) since the start of the Biden-Harris Administration and proposes $41 million for the Good Jobs Challenge to make equity-driven investments in high-quality, locally led workforce systems that provide good job opportunities for American workers and promote economic mobility and security. Further, the Budget proposes $41 million for the Distressed Area Recompete Pilot Program, which provides flexible investments that reduce prime-age (25-54 years) employment gaps in communities experiencing significant disinvestment and neglect. The Budget also provides $5 million for the Assistance to Indigenous Communities program, with a focus on increasing outreach and support for Indigenous communities, particularly through technical assistance.

Promotes Access to Credit. The Budget provides $325 million for the Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund, a 20 percent increase since the President took office. This provides underserved and often low-income communities access to credit, capital, and financial support to grow businesses, increase affordable housing, and reinforce healthy neighborhood development. Research continually demonstrates that low-income communities, communities of color, and women have a harder time accessing capital from traditional financial institutions overall. Nearly 70% of CDFI customers are low-income persons, 59% are racial minorities, and 52% are women. To better address the shortage of long-term affordable credit for development projects in disadvantaged communities, the Budget also includes a $10 million subsidy for the CDFI Fund’s Bond Guarantee Program. 

Supports Economic Opportunity in Rural and Tribal Communities. The Budget provides resources for the Rural Partners Network (RPN), an all-of-government program led by the U.S. Department of Agriculture that partners with rural and Tribal communities to access resources and funding to create and preserve good jobs, build infrastructure, and support long-term economic stability on their own terms.

Delivers Environmental Justice

Advances Equity and Environmental Justice. The Administration continues to prioritize efforts to deliver environmental justice in communities across the United States, such as by meeting the President’s Justice40 commitment to ensure at least 40 percent of the overall benefits of certain Federal investments – including in climate and clean energy – flow to disadvantaged communities, including rural, urban, and Tribal communities. A total of 518 programs across 19 Federal agencies are being reimagined and transformed through the Justice40 Initiative to maximize benefits to disadvantaged communities such as cleaner air, good-paying jobs, and affordable clean energy. The Budget bolsters these efforts by investing nearly $1.5 billion through the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to support creating high-quality jobs, cleaning up pollution, and securing environmental justice for communities that bear the brunt of toxic pollution and impacts of climate change, including increased health risks.

Accelerates the Replacement of All Lead Pipes and Upgrades the Nation’s Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure. The Budget includes $101 million to remediate lead contamination in water, nearly doubling previous levels of funding. The Budget also provides EPA with $2.6 billion for the water infrastructure State Revolving Funds that upgrade drinking water and wastewater infrastructure nationwide, with a focus on decreasing health disparities in disadvantaged and rural communities that have historically been overlooked.

Reduces Health and Environmental Hazards for At-Risk Communities. The Budget provides $661 million for EPA’s Superfund program to continue cleaning up some of the Nation’s most contaminated land and respond to environmental emergencies and natural disasters. This is in addition to an estimated $2.2 billion in Superfund tax revenue estimated to be available in FY 2025 by the Department of the Treasury. Further, the Budget includes investments for the Department of Energy (DOE) to address legacy waste and contamination in communities used during the Manhattan Project and the Cold War for nuclear weapons production, and resources for grants to reduce emissions in the most polluted areas of the country. The Budget continues to build on core capacity under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) and modernize Information Technology and data software for the Chemical Risk Review and Reduction program with an investment of $132 million.

Supports Tribal Conservation Through Co-Stewardship of Public Lands and Waters. The Administration is committed to improving Federal stewardship of public lands, waters, and wildlife by strengthening the role of Tribal governments in Federal land management. The Budget provides resources to facilitate and support agreements with Tribes to collaborate in the co-stewardship of Federal lands and water across the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and U.S. Forest Service. The Budget also proposes a new $25 million grant to facilitate direct implementation of EPA programs in Indian Country.

Bolsters Climate Resilience. Building on the National Climate Resilience Framework, the Budget makes significant investments in climate adaptation and resilience across the Federal government to address the increasing severity of flood, wildfire, drought, and other extreme weather events fueled by climate change. This includes expanding conservation and ecosystem management, strengthening America’s natural disaster response capabilities, increasing the resilience of rural housing to the impacts of climate change, and ensuring the resilience of our nation’s defense to climate change. The Budget provides $4.1 billion for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) to help vulnerable families access home energy and weatherization assistance, and proposes to allow States the option to use a portion of their LIHEAP funds to provide water bill assistance to low-income households. The Budget also includes specific investments to mitigate the impacts of extreme heat in low-income and disadvantaged communities, including $105 million for DOE to plan, design and demonstrate community-scale energy solutions.

Strengthens Working Families and the Economy by Investing in Care Infrastructure

Advances Equitable Access to Home and Community-Based Care. The President recognizes thatmore than three-quarters of home and community-based care service providers are not accepting new clients, leaving hundreds of thousands of older Americans and Americans with disabilities on waiting lists for home and community-based services or struggling to afford the care they need.The Administration invested $25 billion in American Rescue Plan funds to help states strengthen their Medicaid home and community-based care programs, including over $9 billion in spending to boost wages for home care workers as well as improve overall job quality.The President’s Budget invests $150 billion over 10 years to improve and expand Medicaid home and community-based services, which would allow older Americans and individuals with disabilities to remain in their homes and stay active in their communities as well as improve the quality of jobs for home care workers.

Provides National, Comprehensive Paid Family and Medical Leave. The vast majority of America’s workers do not have access to employer-provided paid family leave, including 73 percent of private sector workers. Among the lowest-paid workers, who are disproportionately women and workers of color, 94 percent lack access to paid family leave through their employers. The Budget proposes to establish a national, comprehensive paid family and medical leave program administered by the Social Security Administration (SSA) to ensure that all workers can take the time they need to bond with a new child; care for a seriously ill loved one; heal from their own serious illness; address circumstances arising from a loved one’s military deployment; find safety from domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking; or grieve the death of a loved one. The Budget also provides funding to the Department of Labor (DOL) for grants and technical assistance to support the development, improvement, and implementation of paid family and medical leave programs in States and localities.

Advances Equity in the Child Welfare System. Improving the child welfare system will benefit all Americans, including the Black and Native American families who are overrepresented in, and too often failed by, the current system. The Budget includes $4.9 billion over ten years for the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) to expand access to evidence-based and culturally appropriate foster care prevention services while also improving child and family well-being in the child welfare system. The Budget also doubles flexible funding through the Promoting Safe and Stable Families program. Together, these reforms are aimed at achieving better outcomes for children, enabling children to remain safely with their families, and ensuring permanency for children in foster care. In addition, the Budget provides States with resources to reduce the number of children entering foster care, decrease the over-representation of children of color in the system, ensure that more children in foster care are placed with family members or other kin caregivers and not in group homes, and increase supports to youth aging out of foster care. At DOI, the Budget provides $26 million, a nearly 50 percent increase over 2023 enacted levels, for implementation of the Indian Child Welfare Act.

Lowers Child Care Costs for Hard-Working Families. The President is committed to providing relief to hard-working families. His Budget creates a historic new program under which working families with incomes up to $200,000 per year would be guaranteed affordable, high-quality child care from birth until kindergarten, with most families paying no more than $10 a day, and the lowest-income families paying nothing—providing a lifeline to the parents of more than 16 million children. The Budget also includes $8.5 billion for the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) which will help states expand child care assistance to serve over 2 million low-income children.

Invests in Caregiving for Military Families and Veterans. Caregivers play an important role in supporting the health and wellness of servicemembers, veterans, and their families. The Budget invests nearly $3 billion in stipend payments and support services to help empower family caregivers of eligible veterans. The Budget also includes resources for the Department of Defense’s (DOD) Exceptional Family Member Program, which provides a comprehensive, coordinated, multi-agency approach for community support, housing, medical, educational, and personnel services to military families with disabilities.

Makes Communities Safer, Invests in Civil Rights

Invests in Federal Law Enforcement, Public Safety, Community Violence Interventions, and Prevention to Combat Gun Violence and Other Violent Crime. The Budget makes robust investments to bolster Federal law enforcement capacity and reduce gun violence. The Budget includes $17.7 billion for Department of Justice (DOJ) law enforcement, including a total of nearly $2 billion for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives to increase regulation of the firearms industry, an increase of over 30 percent since the start of the Administration, and $100 million for DOJ community violence intervention and prevention initiatives. And the Budget provides $51 million to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to support the continued implementation of enhanced background checks required by the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act. The Budget also includes $100 million for CDC to fund evidence-informed, community-based programs that reduce gun violence. Lastly, the Budget proposes $60 million for CDC and the NIH to fund research into the causes of and solutions for gun violence. In addition to these amounts, the Budget requests $1.5 billion over 10 years in mandatory funding at both DOJ and CDC to supplement funding for community violence intervention programs.

Reinvigorates Federal Civil Rights Enforcement. In order to address longstanding inequities and strengthen civil rights protections, the Budget invests $201 million in the DOJ Civil Rights Division. These resources would continue supporting vigorous prosecution of hate crimes, enforcement of voting rights laws, and ending gender-based violence and discrimination. Additionally, the Budget proposes a new $10 million DOJ grant program supporting the modernization of HIV criminal statutes.

Promotes Equity Across Government Services

Improves Language Access. The Budget includes funding for multiple agencies, including DOL, USDA, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and DOE to strengthen language access services to promote meaningful access to government programs, services, and benefits for individuals with limited English proficiency.

Enables Policymakers to Understand the Needs of the American People and Economy. The Budget provides resources at the Census Bureau to support a Puerto Rico economic statistics program and to bolster the Survey of Income and Program Participation, which is a leading source of information on the economic wellbeing of Americans, including low income and historically disadvantaged populations.

Supports Public Participation and Community Engagement in Government Decision Making. The Administration is committed to ensuring that the voices of all Americans, including underserved communities, inform and shape the design and delivery of Federal programs, policies, and services. The Budget includes resources for multiple agencies, including DOE, DHS, SSA, HHS, and the VA, to strengthen their public participation and community engagement activities across the country, with a focus on hard-to-reach populations.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Protects and Increases Access to Quality, Affordable Healthcare

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

The President and the Vice President believe that healthcare is a right, not a privilege. The Administration’s actions to protect and expand Americans’ access to quality, affordable healthcare have made a positive difference for Americans’ well-being and wallets. The Administration continues to build on, strengthen, and protect Medicare, Medicaid, and the Affordable Care Act (ACA)—and now more Americans have health insurance than under any other President.

Since taking office, the President has delivered the resources necessary to end the COVID emergency; built on the success of the ACA to further close the uninsured gap; reduced Americans’ healthcare premiums and prescription drug costs; finally allowed Medicare to negotiate for lower prescription drug prices and taken on Big Pharma; acted to protect millions of consumers from surprise medical bills and junk fees; made progress on bold new goals as part of the Biden Cancer Moonshot; released a national strategy to tackle the mental health crisis; and created new efforts dedicated to closing gaps in women’s health research and preventing, detecting, and treating devastating diseases like cancer and Alzheimer’s disease. The President signed into law the historic Inflation Reduction Act, which is helping millions of Americans save an average $800 per year on health insurance by extending the ACA enhanced premium tax credit. The historic legislation reduced the burden of high upfront out-of-pocket prescription drug costs for seniors and people with disabilities with Medicare—including by capping the cost of a month’s supply of insulin at $35 per insulin prescription—made certain recommended vaccines free, and is requiring drug companies to pay rebates to Medicare if they raise prices faster than inflation.

But Congressional Republicans have a different vision. Despite this progress and the overwhelming popularity of these advancements, extreme Republicans in Congress have blocked efforts to lower health care costs, and they’re still trying to end the Affordable Care Act. If the extreme Republicans in Congress get their way, millions of families would face skyrocketing healthcare and prescriptions costs, and potentially lose their health care altogether. And in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn nearly 50 years of precedent in Roe v. Wade, Republican elected officials are advancing and enforcing dangerous, extreme abortion bans that eliminate women’s ability to make their own decisions about their health, force women to travel hundreds of miles for care, and deny access to vital, evidence-based medical care. And Congressional Republicans have proposed three national abortion bans that would limit access to reproductive health care in every state in the country.

The Administration recognizes that by investing in the health and well-being of the American people, we can create healthier, safer, and more productive communities. The Budget protects the progress this Administration has made while proposing additional investments to address the challenges that remain, including further expanding access to high-quality healthcare and lowering costs, responding to mental health needs, advancing health equity, honoring our sacred commitment to our veterans, and strengthening America’s public health infrastructure. The President’s Budget:

Expands Access to High-Quality Healthcare and Lowers Costs

Lowers Drug Prices and Expands Access to Prescription Drugs. Thanks to action taken by the Administration, millions of seniors and people with disabilities are saving money on their drug costs, and the Administration announced the first ten drugs for which prices will be negotiated as it continues implementation of the Inflation Reduction Act. The Budget builds on this success by significantly increasing the pace of negotiation, bringing more drugs into negotiation sooner after they launch, expanding the Inflation Reduction Act’s inflation rebates and $2,000 out-of-pocket prescription drug cost cap beyond Medicare and into the commercial market, and by taking other steps to build on the Inflation Reduction Act drug provisions. In addition, the Budget extends the $35 cost-sharing cap for a month’s supply of a covered insulin product to the commercial market. The Budget also includes proposals to ensure Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) are prudent purchasers of prescription drugs and limits Medicare Part D cost-sharing for high-value generic drugs, such as those used to treat hypertension and hyperlipidemia, to no more than $2 per month for Medicare beneficiaries. These reforms will not only cut costs for the Federal government by $200 billion; they will also save billions of dollars for seniors and people with disabilities.

Expands Access to Quality, Affordable Healthcare. With enrollment in Marketplace coverage at an all-time high, the Budget builds on the incredible success of the ACA by making permanent the expanded premium tax credits that the Inflation Reduction Act extended and providing Medicaid-like coverage to individuals in States that have not adopted Medicaid expansion, paired with financial incentives to ensure States maintain their existing expansions. For Medicaid and CHIP, the Budget allows States to extend the existing 12-month continuous eligibility for all children to 36 months, and allows States to provide continuous eligibility for children from birth until they turn age 6. Further, the Budget prohibits enrollment fees and premiums in CHIP. The President also supports eliminating Medicaid funding caps for Puerto Rico and other Territories while aligning their matching rate with States—and moving toward parity for other critical Federal programs including Supplemental Security Income and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. The Budget is also including an allowance to ban unwarranted “facility fees” for telehealth and certain other outpatient services in commercial insurance. In addition, the Budget includes funding for continued implementation of the No Surprises Act, which protects Americans across the Nation from surprise medical bills.

Protects and Strengthens Medicare and Medicaid. The Budget extends HI trust fund solvency indefinitely by modestly increasing the Medicare tax rate on incomes above $400,000, closing loopholes in existing Medicare taxes, and directing revenue from the Net Investment Income Tax into the HI Trust Fund as was originally intended. Current law lets certain wealthy business owners avoid Medicare taxes on some of the profits they get from passthrough businesses. The Budget closes this loophole and raises Medicare tax rates on earned and unearned income from 3.8 percent to 5 percent for those with incomes over $400,000. In addition, the Budget directs an amount equivalent to the savings from its proposed Medicare drug reforms into the HI trust fund. The Budget also proposes to limit the portion of Medicaid and CHIP managed care dollars spent on administration and incentivize more investments in quality healthcare services by requiring managed care plans to pay Medicaid back when they charge the program far more than they actually spend on patient care.

Advances Equitable Access to Home and Community-Based Care. The President recognizes thatmore than three-quarters of home and community-based care service providers are not accepting new clients, leaving hundreds of thousands of older Americans and Americans with disabilities on waiting lists for home and community-based services or struggling to afford the care they need.The Administration invested $25 billion in American Rescue Plan funds to help states strengthen their Medicaid home and community-based care programs, including over $9 billion in spending to boost wages for home care workers as well as improve overall job quality.The President’s Budget invests $150 billion over 10 years to improve and expand Medicaid home and community-based services, which would allow older Americans and people with disabilities to remain in their homes and stay active in their communities as well as improve the quality of jobs for home care workers.

Protects Seniors’ Health and Dignity. The Budget increases funding for senior nutrition services to ensure seniors continue to receive healthy meals by 8 percent above 2023 level, and 21 percent over 2021 levels. In addition, the Budget proposes to shift funding for nursing home surveys from discretionary to mandatory beginning in 2026, and increase funding to cover 100 percent of statutorily-mandated surveys, which will guard against negligent care and ensure that Americans receive high quality, safe services within these facilities. The Budget also continues to build on the President’s commitment to protect the Nation’s seniors and people with disabilities through a comprehensive agenda that improves the safety and quality of nursing home care, addresses the backlog of complaint surveys from nursing home residents, expands financial penalties for underperforming facilities, requires greater transparency of nursing facility ownership, and increases the inspection of facilities with serious safety deficiencies.

Transforms Behavioral Healthcare

Expands Coverage and Invests in Behavioral Healthcare Services. In 2022, almost a quarter of adults suffered from mental illness, 13 percent of adolescents had serious thoughts of suicide, and overdose deaths continued near record highs. As a core pillar of his Unity Agenda, the President released a national strategy to transform how we understand and address mental health in America—and the Budget makes progress on this agenda by improving access to care for individuals and communities. The Budget makes significant investments in expanding the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline that is projected to respond to 7.5 million contacts from individuals in distress in 2025 alone. The Budget expands mental health care and support services in schools; expands CDC’s suicide prevention program to additional States, as well as Tribal and territorial jurisdictions; and invests in strengthening the behavioral health workforce – including through the integration of behavioral health services into primary care settings. The Budget also expands access to behavioral health services through significant investments in Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics and Community Mental Health Centers. In addition, the Budget provides $1 billion to advance Health IT adoption and engagement in interoperability for certain behavioral health providers.

Strengthens Mental Health Parity Protections. The Budget requires all commercial market health plans to cover mental health and substance use disorder benefits, ensures that plans have an adequate network of behavioral health providers, and improves the Department of Labor’s (DOL) ability to enforce the law. In addition, the Budget includes $275 million over 10 years to increase the Department’s capacity to ensure that large group market health plans and issuers comply with mental health and substance use disorder requirements, and to take action against plans and issuers that do not comply.

Bolsters Mental Health Supports for All Students. The mental health of students, teachers, and school staff is essential to their overall well-being and continued academic recovery, and continues to be a high priority of the Administration, which has delivered an additional $2.1 billion to mental health programs for students since 2021. Research shows that students who receive social, emotional, and mental and behavioral supports have better outcomes, including faring better academically. The Budget provides a combined total of $216 million for mental health programs, including $200 million from the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA), a 900 percent increase in program funding since 2021. The funds will help to increase the number of school-based counselors, psychologists, social workers, and other mental health professionals in K-12 schools.

Expands Access to Treatment for Substance Use Disorder and Invests in Overdose Prevention. The Administration has made historic advances in expanding access to treatment for opioid use disorder, including signing into law a bipartisan provision to expand the number of medical providers who can initiate treatment for opioid use disorder from 129,000 to nearly 2 million. The Budget increases funding for the State Opioid Response grant program, which has provided treatment services to over 1.2 million people and enabled States to reverse more than 500,000 overdoses with over 9 million purchased overdose reversal medication kits. The Budget also invests $713 million toward opioid use disorder prevention and treatment programs for veterans, as well as funding for a new technical assistance center to strengthen health providers’ understanding and treatment of women’s mental health and substance use.

Advances Health Equity

Closes Research Gaps in Women’s Health. The President and the First Lady launched the first-ever White House Initiative on Women’s Health Research, recognizing that women have been understudied and underrepresented in health research for far too long. The Initiative is working across Government to better integrate women’s health within the Federal research portfolio and catalyze significant private and philanthropic commitments to increase funding for women’s health research. The Budget would also double existing funding for the Office of Research on Women’s Health at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). These additional funds will allow NIH to support new and existing initiatives that emphasize women’s health research, such as research in menopause, heart health, and brain health. The Administration proposes to transform the way the Government funds women’s health research at NIH, including by creating a new nationwide network of centers of excellence and innovation in women’s health.

Supports Family Planning Services, Maternal Health, and Health Equity. Americans deserve access to the healthcare they need, including maternal healthcare, contraception, and family planning services, which are essential to ensuring control over personal decisions about their own health, lives, and families. The Budget includes $390 million, a 36 percent increase, for the Title X Family Planning program to increase the number of patients served to 3.6 million. The Budget builds on success securing a nearly 200 percent funding increase for key maternal health programs across HHS over the course of the Administration by including $376 million to support the ongoing implementation of the White House Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity rates, and address the highest rates of perinatal health disparities.

Provides National, Comprehensive Paid Family and Medical Leave and Calls for Paid Sick Days. The vast majority of America’s workers do not have access to employer-provided paid family leave, including 73 percent of private sector workers. Among the lowest-paid workers, who are disproportionately women and people of color, 94 percent lack access to paid family leave through their employers. The Budget proposes to establish a national, comprehensive paid family and medical leave program administered by the Social Security Administration to ensure that all eligible workers can take up to 12 weeks to bond with a new child, care for a seriously ill loved one, heal from their own serious illness, address circumstances arising from a loved one’s military deployment, find safety from domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking—otherwise known as safe leave, or up to three days to grieve the death of a loved one. Further, the President continues to call on the Congress to require employers to provide seven job-protected paid sick days each year to all workers, and ensure that employers cannot penalize workers for taking time off to address their health needs, or the health needs of their families, or for safe leave.

Guarantees Adequate and Stable Funding for the Indian Health Service (IHS). The Administration is committed to upholding the United States’ trust and treaty responsibilities to Tribal Nations, including by addressing the historic chronic underfunding of IHS and fighting for IHS to be funded like the essential service that it is. The enactment of an advance appropriation for 2024 for IHS was a historic and welcome step toward the goal of eventually securing adequate and stable funding for IHS. This funding will provide needed improvements in access to care and the overall health status of American Indians and Alaska Natives. The Administration continues to prioritize this fight for adequate and stable funding at IHS by including in this Budget an $8 billion request in discretionary resources in 2025, an almost 28-percent increase over the 2021 enacted level. This funding would improve clinical services, expand preventative health, support constructing or updating facilities, cover contract support costs, and support Tribal leases. Beginning in 2026, the Budget proposes all resources as mandatory. Mandatory funding would close longstanding service and facility shortfalls over time; improve access to high-quality healthcare; and fund key Administration priorities, such as the Biden Cancer Moonshot.

Advances Rural Health. With over 60 million Americans living in rural areas, the Budget invests in direct primary care and mental healthcare services, expanded infrastructure, and assistance for rural hospitals to remain open and provide high-quality services in rural communities.

Honors Our Sacred Commitment to American Veterans and Their Health

Expands Healthcare, Benefits, and Services for Environmental Exposures. The PACT Act represented the most significant expansion of VA healthcare and disability compensation benefits for veterans exposed to military related environmental exposures, including burn pits and Agent Orange, in 30 years. As part of the PACT Act, the Congress authorized the Cost of War Toxic Exposures Fund (TEF) to fund increased costs above 2021 funding levels for healthcare and benefits delivery for veterans exposed to certain environmental hazards—and ensure there is sufficient funding available to cover these costs without shortchanging other elements of veteran medical care and benefits delivery. The Budget continues this commitment and includes $24.5 billion for the TEF in 2025, through funds appropriated by the Fiscal Responsibility Act, which is $19.5 billion above the 2023 enacted level.

Strengthens VA Medical Care. The Budget provides a total of $112.6 billion in discretionary medical care funding in 2025, equal to the 2025 advance appropriation request. In addition, the Budget, through funds appropriated by the Fiscal Responsibility Act, includes $21.5 billion in the TEF for medical care, bringing the medical care total to $134.0 billion in 2025, an $11.5 billion increase over the 2023 enacted level. In addition to fully funding inpatient, outpatient, mental health, and long-term care services, the Budget supports programs that enhance VA healthcare quality and delivery, including a $2.0 billion investment for non-recurring maintenance to improve medical facility infrastructure, and continued efforts to address the opioid and drug overdose epidemic.

Prioritizes Veterans’ Mental Health Services and Suicide Prevention for Military Servicemembers and Veterans. The Budget invests $135 million within VA research programs, together with $17.1 billion within the VA Medical Care program, to increase access to quality mental healthcare, with the goal of helping veterans take charge of their treatment and live full, meaningful lives. In addition, the Budget provides funding to further advance the Administration’s veteran suicide prevention initiatives and to support the Department of Defense’s efforts on Suicide Prevention and Response.

Supports Women Veterans’ Healthcare. The Budget invests $13.7 billion for women veterans’ healthcare, including $1.1 billion toward women’s gender-specific care. More women are choosing VA healthcare than ever before, with women accounting for over 30 percent of the increase in enrolled veterans over the past five years. Investments support comprehensive specialty medical and surgical services for women veterans, improve maternal health outcomes, increase access to infertility counseling and assisted reproductive technology, and eliminate copayments for contraceptive coverage. The Budget also improves the safety of women veterans seeking healthcare at VA facilities by supporting implementation of the zero-tolerance policy for sexual harassment and assault.

Protects and Strengthens Public Health and Health Infrastructure

Advances Progress toward Biden Cancer Moonshot Goals. The President and First Lady reignited the Biden Cancer Moonshot to mobilize a national effort to end cancer as we know it—spurring tremendous action across the Federal Government and from the public and private sectors, securing billions in new funding for the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) to support transformative research, and building a strong foundation for the work ahead. The Budget makes significant investments to work toward the President and First Lady’s signature Cancer Moonshot goal of reducing the cancer death rate by at least 50 percent over the next 25 years and improving the experience of people who are living with or who have survived cancer. These investments include an increase of more than $2 billion across the National Cancer Institute, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), cancer projects at ARPA-H, and mandatory funds for the Indian Health Service beginning in 2026.

Enhances Biodefense and Public Health Infrastructure. Over the past three years, substantial progress has been made toward developing and implementing transformational capabilities to increase the Nation’s ability to respond to and prepare for emerging health threats. Building upon this progress, the Budget invests $9.8 billion in discretionary and Prevention and Public Health Fund funding, an increase of $499 million over the 2023 enacted level, to bolster public health capacity that will enable the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to better serve and protect the American public. In addition, the Budget includes $20 billion in mandatory funding for HHS public health agencies in support of the Administration’s biodefense priorities as outlined in the 2022 National Biodefense Strategy and Implementation Plan for Countering Biological Threats, Enhancing Pandemic Preparedness, and Achieving Global Health Security.

Invests in the Treatment and Prevention of Infectious Diseases. The Budget invests in the treatment and prevention of infectious diseases, including Hepatitis C, HIV, and vaccine-preventable diseases, like HPV which causes some cancers. The Budget proposes a national program to significantly expand screening, testing, treatment, prevention, and monitoring of Hepatitis C infections in the United States, with a specific focus on populations with high infection levels. To help end the HIV epidemic, the Budget eliminates barriers to accessing PrEP for Medicaid beneficiaries and proposes a new mandatory program to guarantee PrEP at no cost for all uninsured and underinsured individuals and provide essential wrap-around services. In addition, the Budget proposes a new Vaccines for Adults program to provide uninsured adults with access to routine and outbreak vaccines at no cost. The Budget also expands the Vaccines for Children program to include all children under age 19 enrolled in CHIP and covers the vaccine administration fee for all VFC-eligible uninsured children.

Strengthens Health Systems Globally. The Budget provides nearly $10 billion for Global Health Programs through the Department of State and United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which will increase support for global health programs, strengthening health systems, and pandemic preparedness. The Budget fulfills the President’s commitment to the Seventh Replenishment of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria by providing $1.2 billion to match $1 for every $2 contributed by other donors. The Budget also provides more than $900 million for global health security, including $250 million for the Pandemic Fund. The Budget invests $30 million in new resources for the World Bank’s Global Financing Facility for Women, Children, and Adolescents, a contribution anticipated to leverage at least $210 million to strengthen health systems, and $20 million for the Administration’s Global Health Worker Initiative to better train, equip, and protect the health workforce. The Budget also provides $594 million, an increase of $37 million above 2023 levels, for USAID-directed high-impact and lifesaving voluntary family planning and reproductive health programs and America’s voluntary contribution to the United Nations Population Fund. Additionally, the Budget includes loan guarantees to the World Bank’s International Bank for Reconstruction and Development to support investments in global challenges, including pandemic preparedness, which will bolster the impact of these global health activities.

Accelerates Innovation through ARPA-H. The Budget provides $1.5 billion for ARPA-H to supercharge high-impact research and development to improve American health outcomes and deliver health breakthroughs. ARPA-H, an agency created under the Biden-Harris Administration, conducts health research that cannot be readily accomplished through traditional research or commercial activity.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Cuts Housing Costs, Boosts Supply, and Expands Access to Affordable Housing

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

President Biden and Vice President Harris believe everyone deserves to live in a safe and affordable home. Whether you rent or own, having a place to live that you can afford in a neighborhood with opportunities is the foundation for so much else in life. The Administration has made progress toward delivering this reality for the American people. The homeownership rate is higher now than before the pandemic, and there are more housing units under construction right now than at any time in the last 50 years, thanks in part to actions taken under this Administration. This increase in construction is contributing to a flattening rental market after years of increases.

But President Biden believes that housing costs are still too high for too many families and bold investments are needed to address the large deficit in accessible and affordable homes this Administration inherited. In his State of the Union Address, President Biden called on Congressional Republicans to end years of inaction and pass legislation to lower costs by providing a $10,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers and people who sell their starter homes. The Budget includes that proposal as part of a historic investment of more than $258 billion that would build or preserve over 2 million housing units, support millions of first-time homebuyers, guarantee affordable housing for hundreds of thousands of extremely low-income veterans and youth aging out of foster care, and advance efforts to end homelessness.

Together, the Budget proposes investments and actions that will lower costs for renters and homebuyers, address the shortage of housing, make our economy stronger and more resilient, and advance equity, economic opportunity, and fair housing principles that are central to the President’s economic agenda.

Builds and Preserves More Than Two Million Housing Units

America faces a longstanding and nationwide shortfall in affordable housing that has been growing for decades. In May 2022, the Administration released a Housing Supply Action Plan that included administrative and legislative actions to close the housing supply shortfall in five years. The Administration has already delivered on many of those commitments, added new areas of focus including commercial-to-residential conversions, and will continue to build on the historic number of multifamily units under construction through additional administrative actions that: make it easier to build and preserve affordable, multifamily housing; advance the production and preservation of homes like accessory dwelling units and manufactured housing; and incentivize state and local governments to reduce barriers to affordable housing development. The President’s Budget:

Expands the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC). LIHTC is the largest Federal incentive for affordable housing construction and rehabilitation. The Budget invests $37 billion in expanding this tax credit in order to boost the supply of housing that is affordable for low-income renters. Specifically, the Budget permanently increases the allocation of tax credit states receive. It also reduces the private activity bond financing requirement from 50 percent to 25 percent in order to leverage more private capital into LIHTC deals and build more units of affordable housing. And it repeals the qualified contract provision and right of first refusal provision – both of which allowed some owners of LIHTC units to exit requirements to keep rents at affordable levels. These proposals would build or preserve 1.2 million affordable rental units.

Creates a New Neighborhood Homes Tax Credit. The Budget proposes a new Neighborhood Homes Tax Credit, which would be the first tax provision to directly support building or renovating affordable homes for homeownership. At a cost of $19 billion over ten years, the credit would cover the gap between the cost of construction and the sale price for rehabilitated or newly constructed single-family homes in low-income communities, encouraging investment in homes that would otherwise be too costly or difficult to develop or rehabilitate – and spurring investment and economic activity in communities that have long suffered from disinvestment. The tax credit would be provided on the condition that the home is occupied by low- or middle-income homeowners. This proposal would lead to the construction or preservation of over 400,000 starter homes in communities throughout the country. 

Incentivizes More Housing Supply through Housing Innovation. The Budget includes $20 billion for competitive grants to incentivize State and local jurisdictions and tribes to expand supply. The grants will fund multifamily developments, including commercial-to-residential conversions and projects near transit and other community amenities; support planning and implementation grants to help jurisdictions identify and remove barriers to building more housing; launch or expand innovative housing models that increase the stock of permanently affordable rental and for-sale housing, including community land trusts, mixed-income public development, and accessory dwelling units; and construct and rehabilitate starter homes. This Budget also requests up to $100 million—$15 million over the FY23 enacted level—to continue the Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing program, which helps local governments to remove barriers to building more affordable housing.

Increases Banks’ Contributions Towards Building Affordable Housing. The President is proposing that each Federal Home Loan Bank double its annual contribution to the Affordable Housing Program, which will raise an additional $3.79 billion for affordable housing over the next decade and assist nearly 380,0000 households. These funds will support the financing, acquisition, construction, and rehabilitation of affordable rental and for-sale homes, as well as help low- and moderate-income homeowners to purchase or rehabilitate homes.

Preserves Public Housing through Rehabilitation and Redevelopment. Over 1.7 million Americans live in public housing, and over half of those households are led by seniors or people with disabilities. The Budget proposes a one-time a one-time $7.5 billion investment to address the capital needs of more than a hundred thousand distressed public housing properties nationwide, which is on top of the recurring annual investments of $8.5 billion to enable public housing agencies to operate, maintain, and make capital improvements to the approximately 900,000 public housing units. Providing additional funds for public housing rehabilitation and modernization is critical to providing safe and sustainable living conditions for all – and to ensuring housing shortages aren’t exacerbated.

Provides New Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) for Extremely Low-Income households. Eleven million of the 44 million renter households in the U.S. have extremely low incomes—incomes at or below the Federal poverty level or 30% of the area median income. Producing and preserving housing that is affordable for those households—and ensuring rents remain affordable for those households—is a critical component of tackling the Nation’s housing challenges that often requires additional subsidy. The Budget includes $7.5 billion in funding for new HUD Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) contracts, which are long-term contracts with private for-profit or non-profit owners to rent new affordable housing units. These new contracts, in combination with other low-income housing programs and incentives, will attract development capital for the creation of new affordable homes for America’s most vulnerable families.

Increases the Supply of Affordable Housing Financed by Existing HUD programs. During the Biden-Harris Administration, HUD has allocated $4.35 billion in funding to build and preserve affordable rental homes and make homeownership a reality for thousands of families. In collaboration with states, cities, local elected officials, stakeholder organizations, and local community development partners, HOME has assisted over 45,000 households since 2021. The Budget provides $1.25 billion for the HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME) to construct and rehabilitate affordable rental housing and provide homeownership opportunities. This investment would help create or preserve 12,000 units of housing and provide more than 6,000 households with tenant based rental assistance. In addition, the Budget provides $931 million to support housing for older adults and $257 million to support housing for persons with disabilities.

Supports Affordable Housing in Rural Areas. The Budget provides $2.1 billion for USDA’s housing programs, an increase of $191 million over the 2023 enacted level, and continues the proposal to eliminate the low-income borrower penalty that requires individuals to repay subsidy costs for Single-Family Direct loans. Housing funding reflects the Administration’s priority to preserve low-income multifamily (MF) housing in rural areas by increasing the MF Housing Preservation and Revitalization program to $90 million, $54 million over the 2023 enacted level, while maintaining the rest of the MF loan portfolio at the 2023 levels. The Budget also continues the proposal, known as decoupling, that incentivizes property owners to maintain property for low-income tenants in exchange for the continued federal rental assistance after the USDA loan is paid off.

The Administration also plans to explore updating the statutory definition of manufactured housing—for example, through amending the chassis requirement—with the goal of identifying options that could provide manufactured homebuilders with more design flexibility and consumers with more options beyond local site-built homes for single-family homes and accessory dwelling units.

Makes Homeownership a Reality for Millions of First-Time and First-Generation Homebuyers

Achieving and maintaining homeownership is the primary way that American families build wealth and create economic security. That’s why the Administration implemented a series of measures that protected homeowners from foreclosure during the pandemic, including enhanced loan modifications to resolve delinquencies. In addition, the American Rescue Plan’s Homeowner Assistance Fund has helped over 400,000 homeowners catch up on their mortgage payments and utility costs and avoid foreclosures. These actions have not just helped keep foreclosures below pre-pandemic levels, but have led there to be fewer foreclosures under President Biden than any President in recent history. In 2023, the Administration also lowered Federal Housing Administration annual mortgage insurance premiums by about one-third, saving more than 680,000 Americans—including many first-time homebuyers—an average of nearly $900 over the first year of their mortgages with continued savings in subsequent years.

But limited inventory and high interest rates continue to make it difficult to become a homeowner for the first time and prevent existing homeowners from right-sizing their house to fit their households’ evolving needs. That’s why the Budget calls on Congress to:  

Provide Mortgage Payment Relief for First-time Homeowners. President Biden is calling on Congress to pass a Mortgage Relief Credit that would provide middle-class first-time homebuyers with a tax credit of up to $10,000, paid over two years. This is the equivalent of reducing the mortgage rate by 1.5 percentage points for two years on the median home, to help more than 3.5 million middle-class families purchase their first home over the next two years.

Provide Incentives to Unlock Starter Home Supply. Many existing homeowners have lower rates on their mortgages than current rates, making homeowners more reluctant to sell, even in circumstances where their current homes no longer fit their household needs. To unlock starter home inventory and allow middle-class families to move up the housing ladder and empty nesters to right size, the President is calling on Congress to provide a one-year tax credit of up to $10,000 to middle-class families who sell their starter home, defined as homes below the area median home price in the county, to another owner-occupant. This proposal is estimated to help nearly 3 million families.

Launch a First-Generation Down Payment Assistance Program. The Budget provides $10 billion for a program to target down payment assistance to first-time homebuyers whose parents do not own a home and are at or below 120% of the area median income or 140% of the area median income in high-cost areas. This would help an estimated 400,000 homebuyers. Eligible activities would include costs in connection with acquisition such as down payment costs, closing costs, and costs to reduce the rates of interest on eligible mortgage payments. The Budget also includes up to $50 million for a HOME Down Payment Assistance Pilot that would reduce mortgage down payments for first-generation as well as low-wealth first-time homebuyers.

Promotes Rental Affordability and Fairness, and Makes Progress Toward Universal Housing Vouchers for Extremely Low-Income Households

While around 2.3 million low-income households receive rental assistance through the HUD Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) program, another roughly 10 million are eligible and do not receive assistance due to funding limitations and wait lists. The Administration has secured rental assistance for more than 100,000 additional households through the American Rescue Plan and the 2022 and 2023 appropriations bills. And in January 2023, the Administration announced a Blueprint for a Renters Bill of Rights, which enumerated principles to shape Federal, state, and local action, and announced agency commitments to strengthen tenant protections and encourage rental affordability.

But there is more work to do. The Budget includes a voucher guarantee for two population groups that are acutely vulnerable to homelessness: youth aging out of foster care and extremely low-income veterans. Between discretionary funding, program reserves, and these mandatory proposals, these vouchers would serve hundreds of thousands of additional households. The President’s Budget:

Creates a Housing Voucher Guarantee for Extremely Low-Income Veterans. An estimated 398,000 veteran renter households with extremely low incomes currently do not receive rental assistance and have what HUD terms “worst-case housing needs.” These veterans: 1) have incomes that do not exceed the higher of the Federal Poverty Line or 30 percent of the Area Median Income; 2) either pay more than half of their income for rental costs or live in housing with severe problems such as faulty heating or plumbing; and 3) receive no housing assistance. Over a ten-year period, HUD would expand rental assistance to extremely low-income veteran families, starting with an allocation of 50,000 targeted vouchers in 2026 and paving a path to guaranteed assistance for all veterans in need by 2034.

Creates a Housing Voucher Guarantee for Youth Aging out of Foster Care. Approximately 20,000 youth exit foster care annually, typically between the ages of 18 and 21, and these young people face greater obstacles to maintaining housing and experience higher rates of homelessness and housing instability compared to the general population. To ensure these young people are stably housed and better able to focus on their education or building a career during this difficult transition, HUD would provide guaranteed housing voucher assistance for all youth aging out of foster care beginning in 2026.

Supports the HCV Program. The Budget provides $32.8 billion, an increase of $2.5 billion (including emergency funding) over the 2023 enacted level, and an increase of $7.0 billion, or 27 percent, since the start of the Administration.

Continues to Invest in Fair Housing Programs. The Budget includes $86 million for targeted and coordinated fair housing enforcement, education, and outreach to prevent and redress housing-related discrimination.

Advances Efforts to Prevent Evictions and End Homelessness

During the pandemic, the Administration stood up a first-of-its-kind national eviction prevention infrastructure, which helped 8 million renter households at risk of eviction and kept evictions below pre-pandemic levels. In late 2022, President Biden released All In: The Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness. The Administration’s roadmap is not only about getting people into housing, but also ensuring that they have access to the support, services, and income that allow them to thrive. The plan focuses attention on homelessness prevention and actions to ensure an adequate and diverse stock of affordable housing, renter protections, and social service supports. The plan also seeks to promote and expand eviction-prevention reforms, including those advocated as part of the Biden Administration’s implementation of the Emergency Rental Assistance program. The Budget seeks to continue the policies that are most effective in preventing avoidable evictions and help hard pressed American families stay in their homes, even during hard times. The President’s Budget:

Bolsters Efforts to Prevent and End Homelessness. To prevent and reduce homelessness, the Budget provides $8 billion for a grant program to rapidly expand temporary and permanent housing strategies for people experiencing or at risk of homelessness. Funds from this proposal would support non-congregate emergency shelter solutions, interim housing, rapid rehousing, permanent supportive housing, and rental housing for extremely low-income households experiencing housing instability or homelessness. The budget also provides over $4 billion in Homeless Assistance Grants, a $427 million increase from the 2023 enacted level and $1.1 billion, or 35 percent, above the 2021 enacted level. In addition, the Administration plans to use approximately $100 million in program recaptures to fund coordinated interventions to support nearly 11,000 additional homeless individuals and families. The Budget also provides $505 million for Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS, serving a population with a disproportionately high rate of homelessness and providing a critical link to services.

Supports, Solidifies, and Encourages State and Local Reforms to Avoid Evictions. The Administration stood up a historic national eviction prevention infrastructure during the pandemic, helping keep eviction filings 20% below historical averages, even after the eviction moratorium ended. The Budget provides $3 billion to build on these efforts, with a focus on upstream prevention and eviction diversion, improving renters’ access to resources, and making the legal process for renters fairer. This funding can be used to develop or implement policy reforms and program improvements such as providing emergency rental assistance or other forms and new models of rent relief, and expanding access to legal counsel, housing counselors, and court navigators. The Budget also includes an additional $10 million for HUD’s Eviction Protection Grant Program, which provides legal assistance to low-income tenants at risk of or subject to eviction and has served over 25,000 households.

Creates More Housing Stability for Older Adults. To counteract the growing numbers of older adults who are experiencing homelessness or at risk of homelessness, the Budget includes a $3 billion grant program to help communities provide targeted support for older adults in unstable housing situations and support those currently experiencing homelessness. Eligible uses include short- or longer-term cash assistance to cover rental arrears or other housing costs to prevent eviction, emergency home modification or emergency relocations, provide resources to help cover unexpected financial shocks (e.g., medical/health costs), and other legitimate needs determined by the grantee.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Tackles Crime, Keeps Americans Safe at Home

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

From the day he was sworn in, President Biden has taken bold action to reduce crime and make America’s communities safer. He has worked to fund effective, accountable policing; invest in intervention and prevention strategies; and keep especially dangerous guns off our streets and out of dangerous hands. From combatting hate in America’s communities to tackling gun violence, the Biden-Harris Administration has worked tirelessly to keep Americans safe. The President’s American Rescue Plan—which every Republican in Congress opposed—helped states and over one thousand cities, towns, and counties across the country invest over $15 billion in public safety and violence prevention. Communities have invested those funds to support additional police officers, expand community violence intervention, add crisis responders, and more. The President signed and is continuing to implement a historic Executive Order to advance police reform. The President took on the gun lobby and signed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act into law, the first significant gun violence legislation in nearly 30 years, which includes enhanced background checks for buyers under 21 who pose a danger to themselves and others, expanded mental health programs, and support for implementation of red flag laws that keep guns away from dangerous people. The President also created the first-ever White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention in American history, overseen by the Vice President, and has announced nearly 40 executive actions to keep guns out of dangerous hands. Working with Congress, the Administration secured the greatest increase in funding in the Nation’s history for the physical security of non-profits—including churches, gurdwaras, mosques, synagogues, temples, and other places of worship. The Administration has also delivered the most funding ever for the bipartisan Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) to combat gender-based violence, in addition to issuing our nation’s first-ever National Plan to End Gender-Based Violence.

The President and Vice President continue to take other action to combat hate which undermines democracy, including by releasing the first-ever National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism, announcing the development of a National Strategy to Counter Islamophobia and Related Forms of Bias and Discrimination, signing legislation to enhance State and local law enforcement’s ability to respond to hate crimes, and signing legislation to make lynching a federal crime. The President and Vice President have continued to speak out against discrimination, racism, sexism, anti-LGBTQI+ hate, and more—so that all Americans can live freely and without fear of attack or harassment. 

The President and Vice President continue to call on Republicans in Congress to listen to the majority of Americans—and the majority of gunowners—who want to see more commonsense gun safety measures, such as universal background checks, a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, an end to the gun industry’s immunity from liability, and the passing of a national red flag law, and to support additional lifesaving law enforcement actions, rather than standing in the way. In order to keep Americans safe, the President’s Budget

Tackles Crime, Protects Victims

Pursues New Mandatory Investments to Combat Violent Crime and Support Victims. The Budget builds upon the Safer America Plan by investing an additional $1.2 billion over five years to launch a new Violent Crime Reduction and Prevention Fund to give federal, state, local, Tribal, and territorial law enforcement the dedicated, seasoned support they need to focus on violent crime. This includes hiring new Federal law enforcement agents, prosecutors, and forensic specialists to address violent crime; expand Federal operations to combat fentanyl and apprehend dangerous fugitives; and support the hiring of 4,700 detectives at the State and local level to drive down the high rate of unsolved homicides, non-fatal shootings, and other violent crimes and the lengthy delays that undermine public trust and public safety. The Budget also includes $1.9 billion for the U.S. Marshals Service to support efforts to reduce violent crime, including through fugitive apprehension and enforcement operations, as well as $7.3 billion to replenish the Crime Victims Fund and ensure a stable and predictable source of funding is available to support critical victim service and compensation programs over the next decade.

Supports Effective and Accountable State, Local, and Tribal Law Enforcement and Public Safety. The Budget supports the President’s Safer America Plan which aims to protect U.S. communities and promote public safety with evidence-informed strategies that promote effective and accountable crime prevention. Specifically, the Budget provides $3.7 billion in discretionary resources at the Department of Justice (DOJ) for State and local grants to enhance public safety, as well as $31.8 billion in mandatory resources to support programs associated with the President’s Safer America Plan. This includes $1.5 billion in mandatory funding to support Community Violence Intervention (CVI) programs at DOJ over the next 10 years and $10.9 billion in support of the President’s goal to recruit, train, support, and hire 100,000 additional police officers for effective, accountable community policing consistent with the standards of the President’s Executive Order on Advancing Effective, Accountable Policing and Criminal Justice Practices to Enhance Public Trust and Public Safety. The Budget, through the Safer America Plan, further supports the evidence-informed training and technical assistance of law enforcement on topics including crime control and deterrence tactics, community engagement, use of force, interacting with people with disabilities, and responding to persons in mental health crisis and to domestic violence calls, while providing funds to support the purchase and operation of body-worn cameras, modernize police academies and training, comprehensively reform public safety systems, and combat crime to keep the Nation’s streets safe. Through FEMA, the Budget invests $385 million for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, an increase of $80 million above the 2023 enacted level, to support the physical security of community institutions and non-profits—including churches, gurdwaras, mosques, synagogues, temples, and other places of worship, as well as minority-serving institutions and Historically Black Colleges and Universities. At the Department of the Interior, the Budget invests $703 million in Tribal Public Safety and Justice programs and related construction, supporting critical law enforcement needs in Indian Country and the vital work of Tribal courts.

Prioritizes Efforts to End Gender-Based Violence. The Administration has prioritized funding for programs under VAWA, which was reauthorized and strengthened in 2022. Since 2021, DOJ’s funding for VAWA programs has increased by over 36 percent, and the President’s Budget proposes further expanding this funding to $800 million. This increase includes key investments in sexual assault services, transitional housing, and legal assistance for survivors. Moreover, the Budget strongly supports underserved and Tribal communities by providing $15 million for culturally-specific services, $5 million for underserved populations, $25 million to assist enforcement of Tribal special domestic violence jurisdiction, $3 million to support Tribal Special Assistant U.S. Attorneys, and $10 million for a new special initiative to address Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP).  The Budget also provides $10 million in innovative funding to address technology-facilitated abuse through VAWA programs that address cybercrimes against individuals, including the non-consensual distribution of intimate images. In addition, the Budget provides $55 million to the Office of Justice Programs for the Sexual Assault Kit Initiative to address the rape kit backlog.

Addresses the Gun Violence Epidemic

Invests in Federal Law Enforcement to Combat Gun Violence. The Budget makes significant investments to bolster Federal law enforcement capacity to strengthen public safety. The Budget includes $17.7 billion for DOJ law enforcement, including $2.0 billion, an increase of over 30 percent since 2021, for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) to implement the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act. This increase reflects the President’s commitment to reducing gun violence by arresting and prosecuting illegal firearm traffickers and preventing guns from falling into dangerous hands. These investments support the full implementation of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act in closing legal loopholes that allowed illegal firearms traffickers to evade justice. The Budget also includes an additional $51 million for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to support the continued implementation of enhanced background checks, a key provision of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act. 

Helps Communities Respond to and Recover from Gun Violence. Gun violence is a significant public health problem in the United States and is the leading cause of death for children and teens. The effects of gun violence extend beyond victims and their families. Gun violence can overwhelm communities and leads to short- and long-term needs. The Budget invests a total of $2.5 billion in discretionary and mandatory funds over 10 years in the Center for Disease Control (CDC) to support an evidence-informed community violence initiative, and an additional $2.5 billion in discretionary and mandatory funds over 10 years for DOJ grants to support state and local community violence intervention programs to support the President’s commitment to provide $5 billion over 10 years for CVI programs. The initiative would address the causes of violence in communities and help reduce the health inequities that characterize such violence across the United States. The Budget also includes $60 million for gun violence research across CDC and National Institute of Health (NIH).

Makes Communities Safer

Combats Narcotics Trafficking Networks. The Budget provides $3.3 billion to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to combat drug trafficking, including $1.2 billion to combat opioid trafficking, save lives, and make our communities safer. The Budget invests an additional $18 million in Domestic Counter-Fentanyl Threat Targeting Teams at the DEA to enhance America’s fight against the transnational criminal networks pushing deadly illicit fentanyl in America’s communities. These interdisciplinary teams of special agents, intelligence analysts, and data experts will map criminal organizations and build cases that lead to the dismantlement of entire drug trafficking networks and the deprivation of hundreds of millions of dollars to the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels. In addition, the Budget provides $494 million in grants supporting efforts to address substance use, including $190 million for the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Use Program, $95 million to support Drug Courts, and $51 million for anti-drug task forces.

Disrupts the International Synthetic Drug Trade.The Budget includes $169 million to State for countering fentanyl and other synthetic drug production and trafficking. These resources would counter the worldwide flow of fentanyl and other synthetics that endanger public safety and health, and contribute to tens of thousands of drug-overdose deaths in the United States annually. The Budget also reiterates the Administration’s October 2023 request for $1.2 billion at DHS and DOJ to counter fentanyl trafficking and prevent the movement of dangerous drugs into the United States.

Counters Cyber Threats. In line with the National Cybersecurity Strategy that emphasizes a whole-of-Nation approach to addressing ongoing cyber threats, the Budget makes critical investments across the Federal government to protect and defend sensitive agency systems and information, including those designated as high-value assets, and to safeguard the American public’s sensitive data housed within these systems against future attacks. This includes investments to expand DHS and DOJ’s ability to pursue threats through investments in FBI’s cyber and counterintelligence investigative capabilities, and in CISA’s internal cybersecurity and analytical capabilities. Cyber attacks on the healthcare system disrupt patient care and put patient safety at risk, and the healthcare system continues to be a target for cyber criminals. Through proposed changes to Medicare, funding is available to bolster HHS’s cybersecurity efforts, including $800 million to help high-need, low-resourced hospitals cover the upfront costs associated with implementing essential cybersecurity practices, and $500 million for an incentive program to encourage all hospitals to invest in advanced cybersecurity practices.  The Budget also provides $141 million to continue strengthening HHS’s ability to protect and defend HHS systems and information while supporting the Healthcare and Public Health Sector.

Improves the Fairness and Effectiveness of the Criminal Justice System

Promotes Equity Across the Justice System. The Budget invests over $10 million in the Office of the Access to Justice to support its work to increase the availability of legal assistance and eliminate barriers to legal access based on economic, demographic, and geographic factors. In addition, the Budget renews its investment in the Office of Environmental Justice to protect overburdened and disadvantaged communities from the harms caused by environmental crimes, pollution, and climate change. The Budget further invests in State and local efforts to promote equity and protect civil rights, including $10 million for a new initiative to modernize outdated criminal statutes with a discriminatory impact on HIV-positive individuals, $50 million in VAWA programs specifically focused on delivering equitable services, and $50 million for programs to combat hate crimes.

Combats Hate Crimes and Reinvigorates Federal Civil Rights Enforcement. In order to address longstanding inequities and strengthen civil rights protections, the Budget invests $201 million in the DOJ Civil Rights Division. These resources would support police reform via pattern-or-practice investigations, prosecuting hate crimes, enforcing voting rights, and ensuring access to justice. In addition, the Budget provides a total of $2.8 billion for the U.S. Attorneys, which includes funding for 50 new attorneys to prosecute violent crimes. The Budget also requests $15 million for the Khalid Jabara-Heather Heyer NO HATE Acts, to provide grants for states and local governments to improve data collection and hate crime prevention methods.

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FACT SHEET: The President’s Budget Protects and Strengthens Social Security and Medicare

Mon, 03/11/2024 - 12:00

President Biden’s Fiscal Year 2025 Budget lays out his plan to invest in America and the American people, lower costs for families, protect and strengthen Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, and reduce the deficit.

Millions of Americans have been working their whole lives, paying into Social Security and Medicare with every working day, and want to know that they can count on these programs to be there when they need them. The President’s Budget extends the life of the Medicare Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund permanently and reinforces the President’s commitment to protect Social Security and work with Congress to strengthen the program for the long haul, including by asking the highest-income Americans to pay their fair share—while rejecting all proposals to cut benefits.

The President’s Budget Protects and Strengthens Social Security

Social Security is the bedrock of financial security for American seniors and for millions of Americans with disabilities. As detailed in the President’s Budget, President Biden looks forward to working with Congress to protect and strengthen Social Security, based on these key principles:

  • No benefit cuts. The President opposes any proposal to cut benefits, as well as proposals to privatize Social Security.
  • Extending solvency by asking the highest-income Americans to pay their fair share. Currently, middle-class and lower-income Americans pay Social Security taxes on all of their earnings, but higher-income Americans do not. That’s not fair. The President believes that protecting Social Security should start with asking the highest-income Americans to pay their fair share.
  • Improving financial security for seniors and people with disabilities. The President supports efforts to improve Social Security benefits, as well as Supplemental Security Income benefits, for seniors and people with disabilities, especially for those who face the greatest challenges making ends meet.
  • Ensuring that Americans can access the benefits they’ve earned. The President supports investments in Social Security Administration (SSA) services so that seniors and people with disabilities can access the benefits they’ve earned.

Consistent with the final principle, the Budget invests in staff, information technology, and other improvements at SSA. The Budget would increase SSA’s funding by 9 percent from the 2023 enacted level, which would improve customer service at SSA’s field offices, State disability determination services, and teleservice centers for retirees, and for individuals with disabilities, and their families.

The President’s Budget Protects and Strengthens Medicare

The President’s Budget extends the life of the Medicare HI trust fund indefinitely, the Medicare Office of the Chief Actuary estimates. It achieves these gains without any benefit cuts—while, in fact, lowering costs for Medicare beneficiaries—by:

Extending Medicare HI trust fund solvency permanently by requiring wealthy people to pay their fair share toward Medicare and reducing prescription drug costs. The Budget extends HI trust fund solvency indefinitely by modestly increasing the Medicare tax rate on incomes above $400,000, closing loopholes in existing Medicare taxes, and directing revenue from the Net Investment Income Tax into the HI Trust Fund as was originally intended. Current law lets certain wealthy business owners avoid Medicare taxes on some of the profits they get from passthrough businesses. The Budget closes this loophole and raises Medicare tax rates on earned and unearned income from 3.8 percent to 5 percent for those with incomes over $400,000. In addition, the Budget directs an amount equivalent to the savings from its proposed Medicare drug reforms into the HI trust fund.

Lowering out-of-pocket costs and payments to Big Pharma. The Inflation Reduction Act gave Medicare the authority for the first time to negotiate prices for high-cost drugs in order to lower costs for seniors and people with disabilities. Medicare has already begun negotiating for lower prices on drugs to treat everything from diabetes, Crohn’s disease, arthritis, heart disease, cancer, and more. The President’s Budget would build on this progress by giving Medicare additional authority to negotiate down prices for more drugs and start negotiating prices sooner after drugs launch—which would not only save billions of dollars annually for the federal government, but would also save billions of dollars in out-of-pocket costs for consumers each year. It would also cap Medicare Part D cost-sharing on certain generic drugs, such as those used to treat chronic conditions like hypertension and high cholesterol, to $2 per monthly prescription. The President’s Budget would also lower behavioral health costs by eliminating cost-sharing for three mental health or other behavioral health visits per year and requiring parity between physical and mental health coverage in Medicare.

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Statement from President Joseph R. Biden on the Occasion of Ramadan

Sun, 03/10/2024 - 20:18

Tonight—as the new crescent moon marks the beginning of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan—Jill and I extend our best wishes and prayers to Muslims across our country and around the world.

The sacred month is a time for reflection and renewal. This year, it comes at a moment of immense pain. The war in Gaza has inflicted terrible suffering on the Palestinian people. More than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed, most of them civilians, including thousands of children. Some are family members of American Muslims, who are deeply grieving their lost loved ones today. Nearly two million Palestinians have been displaced by the war; many are in urgent need of food, water, medicine, and shelter. As Muslims gather around the world over the coming days and weeks to break their fast, the suffering of the Palestinian people will be front of mind for many. It is front of mind for me.

The United States will continue to lead international efforts to get more humanitarian assistance into Gaza by land, air, and sea. Earlier this week, I directed our military to lead an emergency mission to establish a temporary pier on the coast of Gaza that can receive large shipments of aid. We are carrying out airdrops of aid, in coordination with our international partners, including Jordan. And we’ll continue to work with Israel to expand deliveries by land, insisting that it facilitate more routes and open more crossings to get more aid to more people.

While we get more life-saving aid to Gaza, the United States will continue working non-stop to establish an immediate and sustained ceasefire for at least six weeks as part of a deal that releases hostages. And we will continue building toward a long-term future of stability, security, and peace. That includes a two-state solution to ensure Palestinians and Israelis share equal measures of freedom, dignity, security, and prosperity. That is the only path toward an enduring peace.

Here at home, we have seen an appalling resurgence of hate and violence toward Muslim Americans. Islamophobia has absolutely no place in the United States, a country founded on freedom of worship and built on the contributions of immigrants, including Muslim immigrants. My Administration is developing the first-ever National Strategy to Counter Islamophobia and Related Forms of Bias and Discrimination, to take on hate against Muslim, Sikh, South Asian, and Arab American communities, wherever it occurs. No one should ever fear being targeted at school, at work, on the street, or in their community because of their background or beliefs.

To Muslims across our country, please know that you are deeply valued members of our American family. To those who are grieving during this time of war, I hear you, I see you, and I pray you find solace in your faith, family, and community. And to all who are marking the beginning of Ramadan tonight, I wish you a safe, healthy, and blessed month. Ramadan kareem.  

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Statement from President Joe Biden on the Helicopter Crash in Texas

Sat, 03/09/2024 - 13:30

Yesterday, Jill and I learned of the tragic deaths of two National Guardsmen and one U.S. Border Patrol agent whose helicopter crashed while they were conducting routine operations near Rio Grande City, Texas. A third Guardsman was badly injured in the crash and is hospitalized. 
 
These brave Americans dedicated their lives to protecting our nation. They signed up knowing the risks and believing in the mission of serving their fellow Americans by keeping our nation safe. Our gratitude is profound, and their sacrifice will never be forgotten. 
 
We extend our deepest condolences to their families and loved ones, as well as their colleagues in the National Guard and U.S. Border Patrol. We pray for the injured Guardsman’s swift recovery.
 
As we investigate the circumstances of this crash, we continue to stand with our service members, border agents, and their families, whose contributions to our nation are vital to our security.  

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Readout of White House Meeting with RSV Immunization Manufacturers

Fri, 03/08/2024 - 19:12

This week, senior Biden-Harris Administration officials again met with manufacturers of RSV immunizations including Sanofi and AstraZeneca and their partners. During the meeting, manufacturers discussed recent studies showing significant decreases in hospitalization rates among infants who received Nirsevimab. Senior administration officials and manufacturers also discussed the processes for continuing to update data on the safety and effectiveness of this immunization, as well as efforts to ensure continued availability of infant RSV immunizations in the US for the remainder of this season. At the urging of the Administration and in response to unprecedented requests for these immunizations, RSV manufacturers made 307,000 additional doses available to families, increasing supply and expediting availability. Manufacturers also described their work to ensure availability of RSV doses for infants ahead of the 2024-2025 respiratory season.

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President Biden Announces Key Appointments to Boards and Commissions

Fri, 03/08/2024 - 15:00

WASHINGTON – Today, President Biden announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to serve in key roles:

  • Denise Grant, Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board 
  • Lynn Tincher-Ladner, Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board 
  • Marsha Borin, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • David Cicilline, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • Paul R. Fine, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • Susan E. Lowenberg, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • Judith Schocken, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • Cynthia Simon Skjodt, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • Samantha Vinograd, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council
  • Mark Wilf, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board

The J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board supervises the Fulbright Program and certain programs authorized by the Fulbright-Hays Act and for the purpose of selecting students, scholars, teachers, trainees, and other persons to participate in the educational exchange programs. Appointed by the President, the 12-member Board meets quarterly in Washington, D.C. The Board establishes worldwide policies and procedures for the Program and issues an annual report on the state of the Program.

Denise Grant, Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board 

Denise Grant, founder and CEO of Overlook Strategies, is a highly regarded counsel to executives and Boards of Directors on complex issues across a range of business, leadership, organizational, governance, and policy matters. She has decades of experience developing strategies and implementing solutions for some of the most high-profile entities in the corporate and nonprofit sectors. She also serves as a Senior Advisor to Heidrick & Struggles, a global leadership and organizational consulting firm.

Her expertise is grounded in an extensive career spanning the global business, legal, and public policy arenas. Grant was Managing Director at Russell Reynolds where she led the Washington office and held other leadership positions. Prior to 2005, Grant was a senior executive at Fannie Mae where she served in a variety of roles including as head of the multi-billion-dollar mortgage-backed securities issuance business. She also was a practicing attorney for a decade, including at Morgan Lewis and on Capitol Hill. In private practice, she provided strategic representation on regulatory, litigation, compliance, and policy matters.

Grant has been active with many nonprofit organizations that promote opportunity, international diplomacy, culture, and education. She has served on numerous boards, including the Wolf Trap Foundation for the Performing Arts and Transylvania University. Grant has a B.A. from Transylvania University and a law degree from the University of Kentucky. A native of Kentucky, her home base is now Maryland and the District of Columbia.

Lynn Tincher-Ladner, Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board 

Dr. Lynn Tincher-Ladner serves as President and CEO of Phi Theta Kappa, the nation’s oldest and largest honor society for students seeking associate degrees and credentials from community colleges. With over 30 years in higher education, she has been a community college math, chemistry, and physics instructor; computer programmer; database administrator; institutional researcher; and university faculty member. She has served on national boards for the College Promise Campaign, the Center for Community College Student Engagement, Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, the Rural Community College Alliance, and the American Association of Community Colleges.

As an advocate for community colleges and community college students, Tincher-Ladner uses data to tell their stories and to advocate for the support of America’s community colleges and their students. Her passion and position have established her as a speaker with engagements crisscrossing the country: she frequently presents her state-of-the-art statistics on student success at national conferences and regularly speaks at college convocations and commencements.

Tincher-Ladner holds a Ph.D. in Community College Leadership from Mississippi State University and bachelor’s and master’s degrees in mathematics from the University of Southern Mississippi.

United States Holocaust Memorial Council

The United States Holocaust Memorial Council was established by Congress in 1980 to lead the nation in commemorating the Holocaust and to raise private funds for and build the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Once the Museum opened in 1993, the Council became the governing board of trustees of the Museum, an independent establishment of the United States government operating as a public-private partnership that receives some federal funding to support operations of the Museum building.

Marsha Borin, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

Marsha Borin practiced law in Delaware before directing a professional ballet company composed of Russian dancers trained in renowned ballet schools across the world who were stranded in the United States. She then served as President of a pop ballet company that toured Europe with works set to popular music, and as Executive Director for a celebrity series presenting renowned guests.

In 2000, Borin worked with Celeste Maier of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and The News Journal to develop Why Remember, a year-long program in Delaware that cast light on the hatred of the Holocaust as well as on those who did not turn their backs on humanity. Why Remember presented survivor talks to high school students, a film about the Kindertransport in colleges, extensive histories and interviews of survivors printed in the News Journal, and a book and author luncheon featuring the work of a Holocaust survivor.

Borin has served on many boards, including Delaware Sterling Bank which was acquired by PNC, The United States International Ballet Competition in Jackson, Mississippi, The Boston Foundation for Sight in Boston, Massachusetts, and The Irish American University in Dublin, Ireland. In 2021, Borin was the recipient of the Community Service Award presented by the Delaware Bar Association.

Borin is married to beloved Pediatrician, Howard Borin, M.D. They are parents of a daughter, Lisa, who served in then-Senator Biden’s office and the Obama-Biden Administration, parents to their late son, Joshua, and grandparents to Jack, a college sophomore. Borin enjoys teaching ballet, walking, travel, politics, and improving quality of life.

David Cicilline, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

David Cicilline currently serves as President & CEO of the Rhode Island Foundation, one of America’s oldest and largest community Foundations. Prior to this position, Cicilline served for 12 years as a member of the United States Congress representing Rhode Island’s First Congressional District and served on the House Foreign Affairs and Judiciary Committees. While in Congress, Cicilline chaired the LGBTQ Equality Caucus, was vice-chair of the Progressive Caucus, and chaired the Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law.

Prior to his Congressional service, Cicilline served as Mayor of Providence and in the state legislature in Rhode Island. Cicilline also served on the Board of the Sandra Bornstein Holocaust Education Center in Rhode Island. He is a Senior Fellow at the Brown University Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, a member of the United Nations Foundation Global Leadership Council, the United States Global Leadership National Advisory Council, and the Council on Foreign Relations. Cicilline attended Brown University and Georgetown University Law Center.

Paul R. Fine, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

Paul R. Fine is a longtime Delaware businessman, public servant, and philanthropist. He began his career as a second-generation automobile dealer. From 1989-1997, he was President of Delaware’s State Board of Education, working closely with the Governor’s office and the General Assembly to steer Delaware’s public school system through major education reform.

Fine also served as Chairman of the Board and Campaign Chair of United Way of Delaware. As one of the founding members of the Delaware Community Foundation, Fine also served as its Chairman of the Board. He also served as President of the Jewish Federation of Delaware and later chaired the Annual Campaign for the Jewish Federation of Palm Beach in 2017 and 2018.

Along with his wife, Gloria, he established a “Vision of Hope” scholarship trust for 30 students at Conrad Middle School in Wilmington. These scholarships provided mentorship and full tuition for post-secondary degrees. In 1989, both were recipients of the National Conference of Community and Justice annual award for bringing together diverse groups through education and were awarded the University of Delaware’s Medal of Distinction in 2005: the University’s highest non-academic award bestowed by the Board of Trustees. In 1998, then-Governor Tom Carper presented Fine with Delaware’s highest honor, The Order of the First State.

Susan E. Lowenberg, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

Susan E. Lowenberg is President of the Lowenberg Corporation. A graduate of the University of Oregon with a degree in Finance and Real Estate, Lowenberg is an active member of the real estate industry in Northern California.

Currently, Lowenberg serves as a Gubernatorial Appointee to the California Coastal Commission, Board Member of The Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, Board Member of American Jewish World Service, and Board Member of the Jewish Family and Children’s Services Holocaust Center. Lowenberg previously served as a Presidential Appointee to the United States Holocaust Memorial Council from 2012-2020.

Lowenberg lives in San Francisco, California with her spouse Joyce Newstat.


Judith Schocken, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

Judith Schocken is a daughter of survivors of the Holocaust. A member of the Speakers Bureau of the Holocaust Center of Humanity in Seattle, Schocken talks to schoolchildren about the escape from Europe just before World War II. Schocken tells the story of her family in Czechoslovakia as antisemitism increased and their harrowing immigration to the United States.

Schocken and her husband Joe support various philanthropies, nationally and in the Seattle area. They raised four children and have eight grandchildren. They strongly believe in keeping Jewish traditions and religion alive. Schocken, who formerly served as the owner and manager of a restaurant in Seattle, spends time skiing, snowshoeing, and hiking in the Cascades.

Cynthia Simon Skjodt, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

Cindy Simon Skjodt has spent most of her adult life serving the Marion and Hamilton County, Indiana communities. She graduated from Carmel High School in 1976, earned her bachelor’s degree from Indiana University in 1980, and earned her master’s degree in Family & Marriage Therapy from Butler University in 1996. Simon Skjodt continues to dedicate her time, attention, leadership, and financial resources to Central Indiana nonprofit charity boards as well as a few national and international charities. She was a founding director of the Pacer Foundation in 1981 and remains actively involved today. Simon Skjodt also meets the demands of her beloved Samerian Foundation, of which she is Chairman.

Within the last 25 years, Simon Skjodt has served on many local Boards of Directors, Action Committees, and Advisory Councils. Most recently, she was appointed to the United States Holocaust Memorial Council by President Obama. Twice she has been awarded the highest honor in the State of Indiana, the Sagamore of the Wabash, by the Governor. She has also been bestowed with the honor of “Cindy Simon Skjodt Day” by three separate Indianapolis Mayors. Her additional honors include the Herman B Wells Visionary, Profiles in Leadership, Woman of the Year, Anne Frank Award, Living Legacy, and Major Benefactors Award.

Simon Skjodt remains active in civic and cultural organizations, in addition to overseeing the perpetuity of her private family foundation. She continues to lead the philanthropic legacy engrained within her as a child by her parents, for whom she credits her work around the globe. Simon Skjodt and her husband Paul Skjodt live in the Indianapolis area, where they raised their children Erik, Samantha, and Ian.

Samantha Vinograd, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

Samantha Vinograd is the daughter of a Holocaust survivor and has long been an advocate for Holocaust education and confronting antisemitism. Vinograd has dedicated much of her career to public service, working in critical security roles under three presidents.

She most recently served in the Biden-Harris Administration as the Assistant Secretary for Counterterrorism, Threat Prevention, and Law Enforcement Policy at the Department of Homeland Security. In that role, she led efforts to address antisemitism and other forms of hate-fueled violence. In the Obama-Biden Administration, she served on the National Security Council as the Senior Advisor to the National Security Advisor, the Director for International Economics and Energy, and the Director for Iraq. She also worked at the Department of the Treasury in the Bush Administration as Deputy U.S. Treasury Attaché to Iraq and as an International Economist.

Currently, Vinograd is a Partner at Brunswick Group where she leads the firm’s U.S. geopolitical practice. She is also a Senior Advisor at the University of Delaware’s Biden Institute, a Trustee at Save the Children U.S., and a contributor at CBS News. Previously, Vinograd led global public policy at Stripe and worked for Goldman Sachs where she focused on building public-private sector partnerships on key policy issues.

Mark Wilf, Member, United States Holocaust Memorial Council

Mark Wilf is President of Garden Homes, his family-owned real estate development firm. He is also Owner/President of the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings and Owner/Chairman of the MLS’ Orlando City Soccer Club and NWSL’s Orlando Pride. He graduated from Princeton University and then received his law degree from NYU School of Law.

As the son of Holocaust survivors, Elizabeth Wilf and Joseph Wilf, z”l, he has drawn upon his parents’ experiences to become an unwavering advocate for the needs of the Jewish people and promote Holocaust education. The Wilf family, through the Wilf Family Foundations, is a longtime supporter of Yad Vashem in Jerusalem.

Wilf serves as the Chair of the Board of Governors of the Jewish Agency for Israel. He previously served as Chair of the Board of Trustees of The Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA). Wilf also chaired JFNA’s national initiative that addresses the needs of impoverished Holocaust survivors living in the United States. He serves on a variety of other educational, philanthropic, and educational boards including the Jewish Federation of Greater MetroWest, Hillel International, NYU School of Law, Princeton University President’s Advisory Council, Yeshiva University, and Vanderbilt University. Wilf and his wife Jane reside in Livingston, New Jersey and have four children, Steven, Daniel, Rachel, and Andrew.

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Readout of White House Meeting with the UN Special Representative of the Secretary General on Sexual Violence in Conflict

Fri, 03/08/2024 - 12:43

Yesterday, Principal Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer, Assistant to the President and Director of the Gender Policy Council Jennifer Klein, and Principal Deputy National Security Advisor to the Vice President Dr. Rebecca Lissner, and other senior National Security Council and Gender Policy Council officials met with the UN Special Representative of the Secretary General (SRSG) on Sexual Violence in Conflict Pramila Patten.  During the meeting, SRSG Patten detailed the scope and methodology of her team’s January 29 – February 14 mission to Israel and the West Bank and her report on the findings of this travel.  White House officials conveyed President Biden and Vice President Harris’s deep concern about the horrific reports of sexual violence committed by Hamas terrorists on October 7 and reports of ongoing acts of gender-based violence against those in captivity.  Attendees also discussed the need for all credible allegations to be investigated and steps taken, as appropriate, to hold accountable those responsible.

White House officials underscored the importance of preventing harm to Israeli and Palestinian civilians, and shared deep concern about the loss of innocent life in this conflict and about the disturbing reports of sexual violence. They emphasized steps the Biden-Harris Administration has taken to promote accountability for conflict-related sexual violence around the world, including President Biden’s November 2022 Memorandum on Promoting Accountability for Conflict-Related Sexual Violence.

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FACT SHEET: President Biden’s Unity Agenda for the Nation

Fri, 03/08/2024 - 11:13

The day he took office, President Biden pledged to be a president for all Americans. Since then, he has worked tirelessly to keep that promise by advancing a Unity Agenda for the Nation.  The Unity Agenda calls for solving big challenges that unite all Americans—beating the opioid epidemic, tackling the mental health crisis, holding Big Tech accountable, meeting our sacred obligation to veterans, and ending cancer as we know it.

So far, President Biden has signed into law more than 400 bipartisan bills to support his Unity Agenda. That includes the bipartisan MAT Act, which has allowed over 1.8 million more medical practitioners across America to provide life-saving treatment for opioid use disorder; the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which is revolutionizing mental health services in American schools; the PACT Act, the most significant expansion of benefits and services for veterans in more than 30 years; and bipartisan legislation to launch ARPA-H and drive breakthroughs against deadly diseases such as cancer.

In his State of the Union Address, President Biden called on Congress to come together, unite the country, and work with him to build on this progress.

Beating the Opioid Epidemic

America is facing the deadliest drug threat in our history. More Americans between the ages of 18 and 49 die from opioid overdoses than any other cause. In tonight’s State of the Union Address, President Biden will discuss his commitment to beating the opioid epidemic – a key priority in his Unity Agenda for the Nation – and renew his call for Republicans and Democrats to work together to stop fentanyl from flowing into our communities, to bring to justice those who put it there, and to deliver life-saving medication and care across America.

  • Seizing Deadly Drugs to Save American Lives. President Biden believes that ending the opioid epidemic starts with stopping fentanyl at our border.  Under his leadership,federal law enforcement agents are keeping more deadly drugs out of our communities than ever before.  Officials have stopped more fentanyl at ports of entry over the last two years than in the previous five years combined.  Last year, federal agents seized enough fentanyl powder and fentanyl-laced pills to kill every American.  The President has prioritized deploying cutting-edge drug detection technology across our southwest border.  And tonight, he will call on Congress to strengthen penalties on fentanyl trafficking and pass the bipartisan border security bill, which would deliver 100 more high-tech drug detection machines to stop fentanyl from entering through ports of entry and give the United States additional tools to crack down on the global criminal networks fueling American overdose deaths.
  • Cracking Down on the Global Criminal Networks that Fuel American Overdose Deaths.  President Biden has cracked down on the global criminal networks fueling American overdose deaths.  That means attacking the epidemic where it often begins: with China-based companies that manufacture and distribute chemicals for making the fentanyl that fuels American overdose deaths.  After years of refusing to cooperate with the United States on counternarcotics, President Biden convinced Beijing to deliver on concrete steps that will save American lives: they are shutting down companies that produce deadly drugs, placing controls on dangerous chemicals, and sharing information with U.S. authorities.  The United States has also criminally charged leaders of the world’s largest and most powerful drug cartel – including Ovidio Guzman Lopez, the son of “El Chapo” – and thousands of drug traffickers distributing fentanyl on our streets and on social media.  The Treasury Department also sanctioned more than 250 people and organizations involved in the global illicit drug trade.  And the United States stepped up counternarcotics cooperation with other key governments – including India, Mexico, and Canada – and launched the Global Coalition to Address Synthetic Drug Threats, which unites more than 140 countries in the fight against drug trafficking cartels and illicit finance.
  • Delivering Life-Saving Medication and Care Across America.  President Biden has taken bold action to treat addiction and save American lives – including by expanding access to life-saving medications like naloxone – and to prevent drug use, delivering a 15-fold increase in the number of health care providers who can prescribe medications for opioid use disorder.  Under the Biden Administration, historic investments in the State Opioid Response (SOR) program have delivered free, life-saving medications across America, preventing more than 600,000 overdose deaths and delivering nearly 10 million naloxone kits.  The Biden Administration has also acted to make naloxone available over-the-counter at grocery stores and pharmacies, to increase naloxone at all federal facilities across America, and, through opioid treatment programs, to allow Americans with opioid use disorder to access the medications they need at home and through telehealth visits.  Building on this progress, this week the Administration will announce the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose – a nationwide call to increase training on and access to life-saving opioid overdose reversal medications.  To continue this progress, the President calls on Congress to approve his budget, which includes more than $22 billion for substance use treatment to help more Americans achieve recovery.

Tackling the Mental Health Crisis

President Biden believesthat health care is a right, not a privilege, and that mental health care is health care – period.  But for millions of Americans, mental health care is out of reach.  In 2020, less than half of all adults with mental illness received treatment.  For children, the numbers are even worse: nearly 70 percent of our kids who seek care for mental health or substance use cannot get it.  We can and must do better.  To advance his Unity Agenda, President Biden has taken bold steps to transform how mental health is understood, accessed, treated, and integrated in and out of health care settings aiming to make mental health care more affordable and accessible for all Americans.

  • Taking on Health Insurers to Expand Access to Mental Health Care for All Americans.  Today, too many Americans struggle to access and afford the mental health care they need.  Health insurers make accessing it far too difficult, often forcing people to find mental health care from out-of-network providers – even though bipartisan legislation requires insurers to cover care for mental health and substance use at the same levels as physical health care.  The promise of mental health parity for all has united Republicans and Democrats for decades, and the President is committed to taking on health insurers and making it a reality.  To that end, the Administration is working to advance mental health parity rules, which would close loopholes by requiring insurers to evaluate access to mental health care in their networks and make changes to ensure equivalent access.  The President is also calling on Congress to enact strong bipartisan legislation to expand coverage in Medicare and private insurance, apply the same mental health parity protections to Medicare beneficiaries, strengthen the Administration’s parity enforcement capabilities, and extend workforce development and incentive programs to address shortages in mental health providers.
  • Delivering the Largest Investment in School-Based Mental Health Ever.  Thanks to the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, the Biden Administration is delivering the largest investment in school-based mental health services in American history, providing more than $280 million to help schools across America.  These investments will help bring 14,000 mental health professionals into America’s schools – a 35% increase nationwide.  In the coming weeks, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will award $50 million in grant funding for Medicaid school-based health services, while issuing guidance to help ensure children receive the behavioral health care they are entitled to under Medicaid.  HHS and the Department of Education (ED) will continue to provide technical assistance to states and schools seeking to deliver critical mental health care services. And, later this year, ED will award $38 million to help increase the pipeline of school based mental health professionals.
  • Expanding Mental Health Services for Veterans.  President Biden is working to protect America’s veterans and believes that every American veteran deserves access to timely, high quality mental health services.  Military service raises the risk of mental health problems while causing other adjustment challenges, and the President has worked to expand peer mental health counseling programs to help veterans live safe and healthy lives after their service.  Under his Administration, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has hired – and will continue to hire – new Veteran Peer Specialists to serve in VA medical centers and in critical outreach roles nationwide.  These Specialists are trained and certified mental health professionals whose lived experiences help them connect fellow veterans to services. 
  • Expanding America’s Mental Health Workforce and Clinics.  America’s shortage of qualified mental health professionals and facilities makes it harder for people to get the care they need.  More than 122 million Americans live in communities with severe shortages of mental health providers.  President Biden has taken bold steps to address these shortages.  He has delivered tens of billions to expand federal and state mental health and substance use services across America and called for permanent funding for Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics, which provide 24/7 crisis care and treatment for mental health and substance use disorders, regardless of individuals’ ability to pay. And, the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act will help expand these clinics to all states across the United States.  The Biden Administration also launched 988, the National Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, which has connected millions of Americans in crisis to immediate, confidential, and free care from trained counselors, as well as the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline, which helps mothers navigate mental health issues by dialing 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262).  And this summer, the Administration will release a roadmap for growing and diversifying the workforce trained to address mental health and substance use issues.  This work builds on recent actions to advance mental health careers, including AmeriCorps’s first-of-its-kind partnership launched last month to support service-to-career pathways into behavioral health.

Holding Big Tech Accountable

President Biden believes that the American tech industry is the most innovative in the world.  Although tech platforms can help share ideas, stay connected, and access new products and services, they can also divide us and wreak serious real-world harms.  Like most Americans, the President has long been concerned about how some in the tech industry collect, share, and exploit sensitive personal data, tilt our economy’s playing field, violate the civil rights of women and minorities, and even put our children at risk.  The President also recognizes that recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), while carrying enormous promise, also exacerbate these risks, introduce new ones, and threaten to increase the influence that some tech companies wield over our lives.  Since his first State of the Union Address, President Biden has called on Congress to pass strong bipartisan legislation holding tech companies accountable for the harms they cause, and he renewed these calls. 

  • Protecting Americans’ Privacy and Safety Online, Especially Our Kids.  Consistent with his commitment to tackle the mental health crisis, President Biden has acted to address the compelling and growing evidence that social media and other tech platforms harm mental health and wellbeing of all Americans especially our kids.  In each of his State of the Union Addresses, President Biden has called for strong federal protections for Americans’ privacy, including clear limits on how companies collect, use and share highly personal data – your internet history, your personal communications, your location, and your health, genetic and biometric data.  Disclosure is not enough – President Biden believes much of that data should not be collected in the first place and that young people, who are especially vulnerable online, need even stronger protections.  Last month, President Biden took the most significant federal action any President has ever taken to protect Americans’ data security.  His Executive Order begins a process that will stop the large-scale transfer of this data—which includes intimate insights into Americans’ health, location, and finances—to countries like China and Russia.  But Congress must act.  Strong bipartisan legislation is necessary to regulate the types of data that is collected, protect kids online, and ensure the privacy of all Americans, including legislation that limits targeted advertising and bans it altogether for children. 
  • Holding Companies Accountable for the Harms They Cause.  President Biden believes that all companies – including technology companies – should be held accountable for the harms they cause, including the content they spread and the algorithms they use.  For this reason, President Biden has long called on Congress for fundamental reform to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which absolves tech companies from legal responsibility for content posted on their sites.  The President has also called on Congress to stop tech platforms from being used for criminal conduct, including sales of dangerous drugs like fentanyl.  The Biden Administration has also used all its authorities to crack down on algorithmic discrimination and algorithmic collusion and to bring more competition back to the tech sector.  The President’s vision for our economy is one in which everyone – small and midsized businesses, mom-and-pop shops, entrepreneurs – can compete on a level playing field with the biggest companies, including and perhaps especially in the tech sector. That’s why he has also worked with Congress to pass bipartisan legislation to boost funding for federal antitrust enforcers.
  • Making Sure AI is Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy.  Since taking office, President Biden has moved swiftly to seize the promise and manage the risks of AI.  Last year, he issued a landmark Executive Order on AI to ensure that America leads the way toward responsible AI innovation.  The Order directed federal agencies to establish new high standards for AI safety and security, protect Americans’ privacy, advance equity and civil rights, stand up for workers and consumers, and much more.  In January, the White House announced that agencies had completed on schedule all of the 90-day actions tasked by the Order.  These actions included using the Defense Production Act to compel developers of the most powerful AI systems to report vital safety information, assessing the risks from AI’s use in every critical infrastructure sector, and launching a pilot of the National AI Research Resource to catalyze innovation and competition. Since then, agencies have completed other vital work.  For example, the Federal Trade Commission proposed a new rule to provide for penalties and redress when AI is used to impersonate an individual for commercial purposes. Meanwhile, the National Science Foundation and Department of Energy announced funding to support a research network that will enable the development of more secure and privacy-safeguarding approaches in AI.  And the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office published guidance clarifying questions at the intersection of AI and intellectual property law—encouraging the use of AI to keep America at the frontlines of innovation while ensuring AI will not be used to create a minefield of patents to stifle competition.

Delivering on our Sacred Obligation to America’s Veterans and their Families

President Biden believes there is no more sacred obligation than taking care of our nation’s military service members, veterans, and their families, caregivers, and survivors.  Simply put, we owe them a debt we can never fully repay.  Delivering on our sacred obligation to those who have worn the uniform is a commitment that unites all Americans and that is why the President has made supporting our veterans a core pillar in his Unity Agenda for the nation.  President Biden has signed into law more than 30 bipartisan bills addressing critical issues facing veterans today, including the PACT Act, which is most significant expansion of benefits and services for toxic exposed veterans in more than 30 years.  And the President and Congress have worked together to address veteran homelessness, improve access to child and long-term care, and support education and workforce opportunity for veterans and their families. 

  • Delivering Historic Expansion of Veterans’ Health Care under the PACT Act.  President Biden believes that every veteran deserves access to quality health care.  This week, in one of the largest expansions of veterans’ health care in American history, President Biden delivered on the promise that any veteran exposed to toxins can enroll directly in VA health care—nearly a decade ahead of schedule.  Millions of veterans — including all veterans who served in the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, Iraq, Afghanistan, and any combat zone after 9/11 — can enroll directly in VA health.  President Biden encourages all eligible veterans to visit VA.gov/PACT or call 1-800-MYVA411 to learn more and apply.  This week’s historic expansion builds on the other Administration work to deliver more benefits and health care more quickly to more veterans than ever before.  Since its 2022 enactment, VA has screened more than 5.25 million veterans for toxic exposure, received more than 1.43 million PACT Act claims, and granted toxic exposure benefits to more than 720,000 veterans and survivors.  Over 114,000 veterans eligible under the PACT Act also have newly enrolled in VA health care.  In addition, just last year, VA delivered $163 billion in earned benefits to 6.3 million veterans and survivors, and processed a record 1.98 million disability claims.  VA delivered more than 116 million health care appointments, over 5.5 million dental procedures, and provided services and assistance to more than 74,000 family caregivers. 
  • Expanding Cancer Care for Veterans.  Under the PACT Act, the Biden Administration is making care and benefits available to veterans battling over 300 medical conditions, including more than 100 cancers.  With President Biden’s leadership, VA is expanding the types of cancers for which veterans can get disability benefits if exposed to radiation, burn pits, or water contamination.  In addition, this year VA will offer genetic testing to every veteran who may need it and make lung cancer screenings available in every VA facility nationwide, which will help save the lives of the nearly 5,000 veterans who die from lung cancer every year.  VA is also taking action to expand at-home screenings for colorectal cancer, the second leading cause of cancer death in America.
  • Ensuring Access to Affordable, Stable Housing.  President Biden believes that every veteran should have a roof over their head.  But housing costs are too high, and significant investments are needed to address the large shortage of affordable homes that has been growing for more than a decade.  Tonight, President Biden will discuss his plan to lower housing costs, including by building and preserving over 2 million new homes to lower rents and the cost of buying a home.  At the same time, the Biden Administration is taking steps to ensure access to affordable and stable housing for all veterans.  Last year alone, VA helped more than 145,000 Veterans and their families retain their homes or otherwise avoid foreclosure and permanently housed more than 46,000 Veterans.  The Biden Administration awarded more than $1 billion in grant funding to help homeless veterans.  The Administration also launched first-of-its-kind funding for legal services for veterans experiencing or at risk of homelessness. 
  • Lowering Costs for Veterans and Cracking Down on Fraud.  President Biden is doing everything in his power to lower costs for all Americans, including America’s veterans, and to combat fraud and scams that target veterans, service members, and their families.  Fraud against veterans and service members is widespread. From 2015-2019, the Federal Trade Commission received 163,000 fraud reports from veterans and nearly 13,000 from active-duty service members.  Veterans face particularly high risks of fraud with the median loss for veterans from fraud 44% higher than for other civilians.  President Biden launched the Veteran Scam and Fraud Evasion (VSAFE) Task Force to crack down on these fraud and scams.  And today, VA is launching a new National Veterans Financial Resource Center to promote financial stability, literacy, and debt management for veterans.
  • Reducing Veteran Suicide.  President Biden is working to protect America’s veterans and released a comprehensive strategy for reducing military and veteran suicide that directs bold and comprehensive action.  Alongside the Administration’s expansion of peer mental health counseling programs for Veterans, VA has expanded its Veteran Justice Outreach Specialist workforce by over 20 percent and will launch a new $10 million program to support states and territories in their efforts to prevent veteran suicide this spring.  In addition, building on the success of KeepItSecure.net, VA will launch a nationwide lethal means safety campaign which will include toolkits, technical assistance and training, and public service assets for veterans, providers, caregivers, and community organizations.
  • Supporting Military and Veteran Families, Caregivers, and Survivors.  As a military family, President Biden and the First Lady recognize the commitment and resilience of military-connected families as essential to the recruitment, retention, and readiness of our Armed Forces.  In June 2023, the President, alongside Dr. Biden, signed an Executive Order on Advancing Economic Security for Military and Veteran Spouses, Military Caregivers, and Survivors.  This Executive Order is the most comprehensive set of administrative actions any President has directed to support military spouses, and it included nearly 20 new actions aimed at enhancing career stability, expanding employment resources, and improving transition assistance support for military-connected spouses.  Last month, the Biden Administration launched new tools designed to ensure the Federal government is a leader among employers, modeling approaches to hiring and retaining military spouse talent.

Ending Cancer as We Know It

Cancer has touched nearly every American family.  It is the second leading cause of death in the United States.  Each year, more than 600,000 Americans die from cancer and nearly 1.8 million Americans are diagnosed.  Beating cancer brings Americans together no matter where they are, and President Biden made ending cancer as we know it a central part of the Unity Agenda. 

Two years ago, the President and First Lady reignited the Cancer Moonshot with the goals of reducing the cancer death rate in the United States by at least half – preventing more than 4 million cancer deaths by 2047 – and improving the experience of people who are touched by cancer.  The President also established a Cancer Cabinet to mobilize action in advancing these goals.  In the time since, the Cancer Moonshot has announced more than 60 new programs, policies, and resources, and more than 120 private companies, non-profit organizations, patient groups, and academic institutions have stepped up with new actions in support of these goals.  In his State of the Union Address, President Biden will announce a new advance in the fight to end cancer as we know it:

  • A New Revolutionary Treatment Program to Transform Outcomes for Americans Facing Cancer.  Two years ago, President Biden and Congress worked together on a bipartisan basis to launch ARPA-H, the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, with an initial investment of $2.5 billion to drive breakthroughs in cancer, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, and other diseases.  Today, ARPA-H launched of a revolutionary treatment program that will improve outcomes for people facing cancers that lead to a vast majority of cancer deaths in the United States each year.  Far too often, doctors lack the tools to determine when a tumor has changed to the point where a different or additional treatment is needed and struggle to accurately predict which treatment will be most effective at a particular point. As a result, people, especially those facing an advanced cancer, may receive treatments that are not effective.  ARPA-H’s Advanced Analysis for Precision cancer Therapy (ADAPT) program will develop next-generation tools that predict the optimal treatment for each person facing advanced cancer, monitor tumors and determine precisely when they change, ensure patients receive the right treatment at the right time, and ultimately, save and extend lives. Today’s announcement builds on other recent progress, including the launch of the National Cancer Institute’s Clinical Trials Innovation Unit, which is accelerating clinical testing of cutting-edge cancer prevention, diagnostic, treatment, and survivorship approaches.
  • Lowering Costs and Delivering Patient Navigation Support.  Cancer is one of the costliest diagnoses a person can face in the United States.  Patient out-of-pocket costs for cancer care total more than $16 billion each year and approximately 40 percent of cancer patients fully deplete their assets by the second year of their diagnosis.  President Biden believes that access to health care is a right, not a privilege, and more Americans have health insurance today than under any President.  Starting next year, millions of seniors on Medicare will save up to tens of thousands a year when the $2,000 out-of-pocket cap on prescription drugs goes into effect, especially those receiving cancer drugs, which are among the most expensive drugs for Medicare beneficiaries.  This week, President Biden announced new steps to lower drug and health care costs, including for Americans facing cancer, and to deliver support to people with a cancer diagnosis through expanded patient navigation services.  Cancer navigation is personalized assistance to patients, caregivers, and families to help identify and resolve barriers to high-quality and timely cancer care through care coordination and advocacy.  Because these services improve patient outcomes, reduce healthcare costs, and advance health equity, President Biden has prioritized increasing access to navigation service and last year the Biden Cancer Moonshot announced new steps to deliver cancer navigation services across America.  With the First Lady’s leadership, today the Administration announced new commitments from seven leading insurance companies which cover more than 150 million Americans to reimburse for navigation services and new actions from 40 comprehensive cancer centers and community oncology practices to bring effective navigation support to more communities.
  • Tackling the Drivers of Cancer and Cancer DeathsThe Biden Administration is working to tackle the drivers of cancer in America, including by making the largest investment in clean water in America history thanks to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.  The President is committed to ensuring every community has access to clean drinking water, free of PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” that can cause cancer.  President Biden is delivering funding to every single state and territory in the country to expand access to clean drinking water, replace lead pipes, improve wastewater and sanitation infrastructure, and remove PFAS contamination in water.  And with billions of dollars of additional investment from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the Biden-Harris Administration is cleaning up toxic Superfund sites, an important step toward environmental justice and cancer prevention.  In addition, the Department of Health and Human Services is releasing a Framework to Support and Accelerate Smoking Cessation, setting out an agenda and actions to expand equitable access and effectiveness of smoking cessation services to more Americans.  As an early step in the execution of this roadmap, CMS is supporting efforts to reach Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries with effective support to quit smoking and the Department of Veterans Affairs is expanding its capacity to offer tobacco-use treatment to Veterans receiving lung cancer screening and through outreach.

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Statement from President Joe Biden on the February Jobs Report

Fri, 03/08/2024 - 10:15

The great American comeback continues.

Last night, I put forward my vision for America’s future: one where we build the economy from the middle out and the bottom up, where we invest in all Americans, and where the middle class has a fair shot and we leave no one behind.

Three years ago, I inherited an economy on the brink. Now, our economy is the envy of the world. We added 275,000 jobs last month—nearly 15 million since I took office. Unemployment has been under 4% for the longest stretch in more than 50 years. Wages keep going up. Inflation keeps coming down. And I’m taking action to continue lowering costs by taking on Big Pharma, getting rid of hidden junk fees, and making housing more affordable.

Across the country, the American people are writing the greatest comeback story never told. The days of trickle-down are over.

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Joint Statement from the European Commission, the Republic of Cyprus, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and the United States Endorsing the Activation of a Maritime Corridor to Deliver Humanitarian Assistance to Gaza

Fri, 03/08/2024 - 06:44

The humanitarian situation in Gaza is dire, with innocent Palestinian families and children desperate for basic necessities.  That is why today, the European Commission, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, the Republic of Cyprus, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and the United States announce our intent to open a maritime corridor to deliver much-needed additional amounts of humanitarian assistance by sea.

Cyprus’ leadership in establishing the Amalthea Initiative—which outlines a mechanism for securely shipping aid from Cyprus to Gaza via sea—was integral to enabling this joint effort to launch a maritime corridor.  Together, our nations intend to build on this model to deliver significant additional aid by sea, working in coordination with UN Senior Humanitarian and Reconstruction Coordinator for Gaza Sigrid Kaag — who is charged with facilitating, coordinating, monitoring, and verifying the flow of aid into Gaza under UN Security Council Resolution 2720.  The dedicated efforts of the UAE to mobilize support for the Initiative will result in the initial shipment of food by sea to the people of Gaza. 

Cyprus will soon convene senior officials to discuss how we can accelerate this maritime channel supporting those in need, supplementing land and air routes, including from Egypt and Jordan.  The United States announced an emergency mission led by the U.S. military to establish a temporary pier in Gaza, in coordination with humanitarian partners and other countries, to enable the delivery of significant quantities of assistance by sea. These efforts will be closely coordinated with the Government of Israel.  

The delivery of humanitarian assistance directly to Gaza by sea will be complex, and our nations will continue to assess and adjust our efforts to ensure we deliver aid as effectively as possible.  This maritime corridor can—and must—be part of a sustained effort to increase the flow of humanitarian aid and commercial commodities into Gaza through all possible routes.  We will continue to work with Israel to expand deliveries by land, insisting that it facilitate more routes and open additional crossings to get more aid to more people.  We affirm that protecting civilian lives is a key element of international humanitarian law that must be respected. And together, we must all do more to ensure aid gets to people who desperately need it.

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Announcement of the Presidential Trade and Investment Mission to the Philippines

Thu, 03/07/2024 - 21:25

Today, the White House announced the delegation for the Presidential Trade and Investment Mission to the Philippines from March 11-12, 2024.

The Honorable Gina Raimondo, Secretary of the United States Department of Commerce, will lead the delegation.

Presidential Trade and Investment Mission Delegation:

Steven Brown, President, GreenFire Energy, Inc.

Sapna Chadha, Vice President, Southeast Asia and South Asia Frontier, Google Asia Pacific

Narsingh Chaudhary, President, Asia Pacific and India, Black & Veatch Corp.

Chris Clark, Chairman, Asia Pacific, Visa Inc.

Mark Ein, Chairman, President’s Export Council

Charlie Ergen, Co-Founder/Chairman of the Board, EchoStar/DISH

Kimberly Getgen, Founder and CEO, InnovationForce

Brett Hart, President, United Airlines

Laura Lane, Executive Vice President and Chief Corporate Affairs and Sustainability Officer, United Parcel Service (UPS)

Rich Lesser, Global Chair, Boston Consulting Group

David Luboff, Partner, Head of Asia Pacific Infrastructure and Co-Head of KKR Asia Pacific, KKR

Thomas L. Marquis, Co-Founder, Vice President and Director of Marketing, Marquis

Scott McHugo, CEO and Chairman of the Board, Sol-Go

Sara Murphy, President, Capital One Philippines

Ted Osius, President and CEO, U.S.-ASEAN Business Council

Anne-Marie Padgett, Regional President, East Asia and Pacific, Bechtel

Allan Pineda (aka Apl.de.Ap), Founder, Apl.de.Ap Foundation International

Kawal Preet, President of Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa Region, FedEx

Shamina Singh, Founder and President, Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth, and Executive Vice President, Sustainability, Mastercard

Mary Snapp, Vice President, Global Strategic Initiatives, Office of the President, Microsoft Corp.

Eric Starr, Co-Founder and CEO, UltraPass ID

Francesco Venneri, Founder and CEO, Ultra Safe Nuclear Corp.

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Statement from President Joe Biden Welcoming Sweden to NATO

Thu, 03/07/2024 - 12:37

Today, I am honored to welcome Sweden as NATO’s 32nd Ally.
 
75 years ago—when the United States and 11 other nations came together to establish the North Atlantic Treaty Organization—President Truman said the Alliance, “would create a shield against aggression and fear of aggression.” Today, that shield—and transatlantic security—is stronger than ever with the formal addition of Sweden to NATO.
 
When Putin launched his brutal war of aggression against the people of Ukraine, he thought he could weaken Europe and divide NATO. Instead, in May 2022, Sweden and Finland—two of our close partners, with two highly capable militaries—made the historic decision to apply for full NATO membership. Alliance members ratified Finland’s membership last year ahead of our historic summit in Vilnius. And, with the addition of Sweden today, NATO stands more united, determined, and dynamic than ever—now 32 nations strong.
 
Today, we once more reaffirm that our shared democratic values—and our willingness to stand up for them—is what makes NATO the greatest military alliance in the history of the world. It is what draws nations to our cause. It is what underpins our unity. And together with our newest Ally Sweden—NATO will continue to stand for freedom and democracy for generations to come. I look forward to hosting all 32 Allies for the 75th Anniversary NATO Summit this summer in Washington D.C.

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