AJR 29, as amended, Brown. Senior nutrition services and programs: funding.
This measure would memorialize the Congress and President of the United States to restore federal funding cuts, due to sequestration, to senior nutrition programs, and to declare senior nutrition services and programs exempt from further budget cuts.
Fiscal committee: no.
P2 1WHEREAS, The United States federal budget reductions, known
2as sequestration began on March 1, 2013; and
3WHEREAS, In 2011, the United States Congress adopted, and
4President Obama signed, the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L.
5112-25, hereafter the act), as an intended compromise and incentive
6to address fundamental federal budgetary policy and direction;
7and
8WHEREAS, Section 302 of the act directed that, if a 10-year
9deficit reduction plan was not enacted, significant amounts of
10discretionary federal fiscal year 2013 funds would not be available
11for spending; and
12WHEREAS, As the act mandates, and because Congress failed
13to pass a bill reducing the federal deficit by $1.2 trillion, that
14amount will be automatically sequestered through across-the-board
15federal budget cuts from mandatory and discretionary spending in
16the years 2013 to 2021, inclusive, unless Congress takes alternate
17action; and
18WHEREAS, The cuts enacted by the act, initially set to begin
19on January 1, 2013, were postponed by two months by the
20American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-240), thereby
21amplifying the impact of spending reductions starting on March
221, 2013; and
23WHEREAS, The act requires that every federal program be cut
24equally, including programs and services authorized by the Older
25Americans Act of 1965 and administered by the Administration
26for Community Living which oversees food and nutrition programs,
27elder abuse prevention, caregiver support, healthy aging, and
28employment for low-income seniors isolated due to extreme
29poverty and disability; and
30WHEREAS, Nutrition programs provide important links to other
31supportive in-home and community-based services, including
32homemaker-home health aide services, transportation, physical
33activity programs, home repair, home modification programs, as
34well as nutrition screening, assessment, education, and counseling,
35and special health assessments for diseases including hypertension
36and diabetes; and
37WHEREAS, Home-delivered meal programs provide vital
38nutrition to homebound individuals, and provide volunteers and
39paid staff delivering meals an opportunity to check on the welfare
40of those homebound meal recipients, and to report any health or
P3 1other problems those volunteers and staff may notice during those
2visits, which may decrease feelings of isolation among those
3homebound meal recipients; and
4WHEREAS, Congregate nutrition programs provide nutritious
5meals, nutrition education, and nutrition risk screening, and provide
6seniors with positive social contact with other seniors; and
7WHEREAS, Providing meals to eligible individuals can enhance
8their ability to remain independent and in their own homes, thus
9preventing unnecessary, costly, and premature institutionalization;
10and
11WHEREAS, Older Californians are far less likely, due to age
12and disability, to obtain employment to compensate for lost
13nutrition and other benefits, forcing their families to back-fill with
14resources intended to support their children and placing their entire
15family’s well-being at greater risk; and
16WHEREAS, State and federal funding reductions result in the
17loss of equipment, deterioration of distribution systems, and erosion
18of other innovations created by networks of community
19organizations, local governmental agencies, and faith communities
20upon which a vast array of food-insecure Californians rely; and
21WHEREAS, According to the California Department of Aging,
22the sequester cuts will result in federal funds to these
23home-delivered, congregate nutrition, and nutrition services
24incentive programs being reduced by approximately an aggregate
25of $6.6 million during federal fiscal year 2013-14, and
26approximately an aggregate of $5.09 million in each subsequent
27federal fiscal year, thus depriving thousands of California seniors
28of vital health and nutrition services; now, therefore, be it
29Resolved by the Assembly and the Senate of the State of
30California, jointly, That the Legislature memorializes the Congress
31and President of the United States to restore funding to senior
32nutrition programs, similar to the way funding was restored for air
33traffic control services; and be it further
34Resolved, That the Legislature memorializes the Congress and
35President to declare senior nutrition services and programs exempt
36from further budget cuts due to the disproportionate growth of the
37aging population and the corresponding disproportionate impact
38of the sequester cuts upon that population; and be it further
39Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
40of this resolution to the President and Vice President of the United
P4 1States, to the Majority Leader of the Senate, to the Speaker of the
2House of Representatives, to each Senator and Representative from
3California in the Congress of the United States, to the Director of
4the California Department of Aging, and to the author for
5appropriate distribution.
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