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Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) – A Senate appropriations subcommittee voted Tuesday to cut abstinence education funding by 25 percent, but President Bush may veto the bill that includes the change. The funding cut is included in a $631 billion bill that funds the departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and Education.
The cut reduces the funding to $84.8 million for fiscal year 2009.
Abstinent education is under attack. This is a second thread in a different forum because this is very important.The bill also significantly increases funding for community health centers that distribute contraception and birth control from $150 million to $2.2 billion.lifenews.com/nat4008.html
Sad, $50 million in federal funding available this year and only $21 million has been distributed because Governors are rejecting the money.
ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5j…RYBpQD91GKIIO5
ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5g…iCCuQD91GJE7G0
The 28 states participating in a federal abstinence education program and the amount they have received in federal grants this year:
Alabama, $716,369
Arizona, $776,082
Arkansas, $440,640
Florida, $1.9 million
Georgia, $1.1 million
Hawaii, $122,091
Illinois, $1.4 million
Indiana, $565,556
Iowa, $238,648
Kansas, $252,832
Kentucky, $612,974
Louisiana, 962,673
Maryland, $427,257
Michigan, $1.1 million
Mississippi, $621,716
Missouri, $664,196
Nebraska, $164,055
Nevada, $210,130.
New Hampshire, $71,177
North Carolina, $936,723
North Dakota, $66,744
Oklahoma, $517,756
Oregon, $365,772
South Carolina, $563,972
South Dakota, $102,285
Texas, $3.6 million
Utah, $216,117
West Virginia, $289,389
Quote:
A federal tally shows that participation in the program is down 40 percent over two years, with 28 states still in. Arizona and Iowa have announced their intention to forgo their share of the federal grant at the start of the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1.