From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


[PCUSANEWS] Church leaders call for halt in budget process


From PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ECUNET.ORG>
Date Wed, 14 Sep 2005 15:21:19 -0500

Note #8905 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

05482
Sept. 14, 2005

Church leaders call for halt in budget process

Kirkpatrick, 4 others say federal spending plan
would empty cupboards of poor and hungry

by Toya Richards Hill

LOUISVILLE - The devastation and suffering left in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina have given church leaders an opportunity to call again for the U.S.
Congress to halt the federal budget-reconciliation process, which they say
promises to gut programs for the poorest and most marginalized Americans.

The Rev. Clifton Kirkpatrick, the stated clerk of the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.), joined the leaders of four other "mainline" Christian
denominations in sending a letter to Congress that said, in part: "The
devastation wrought by Katrina has exposed the anguished faces of the poor in
the wealthiest nation on the planet" - faces that "compel us to set before
Congress once again our concerns for the FY (fiscal year) '06 federal budget
and its impact on people living in poverty."

The others who signed the Sept. 13 letter are the Rev. Frank T.
Griswold, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church USA; the Rev. Mark Hanson,
presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; the Rev. John
H. Thomas, general minister and president of the United Church of Christ; and
James Winkler, general secretary of the general board of church and society
of the United Methodist Church.

Although Congress this week postponed the budget-reconciliation
process for four weeks, Kirkpatrick and the others are calling for a complete
halt to the process.

"The FY '06 reconciliation bill that is working its way through the
authorizing committees will send more people searching for food in cupboards
that, quite frequently, are bare," the letter said. "With renewed urgency, we
call on Congress to stop the FY '06 federal budget reconciliation process
immediately."

The $2.6 trillion budget resolution passed by Congress is an outline
for federal tax and spending for the next five years, said Carolynn Race,
associate for domestic poverty and environmental issues in the PC(USA)'s
Washington office. The resolution directed Congressional committees to reduce
spending for mandatory programs under their jurisdiction, such as Medicaid
and food stamps, Race said.

It is these committee actions that Kirkpatrick and his cohorts are
trying to halt.

"This is a very critical time for the (Katrina) evacuees, and also
for the millions who are living in poverty," Race said.

In April, the same denominational coalition asked Congress not to cut
the budgets of essential entitlement programs, arguing that such a move would
"ask our nation's working poor to pay the cost of a prosperity in which they
may never share."

The faith community constitutes "a prophetic voice" on issues
affecting the nation, rather than simply acting as advocates for particular
issues, said Race, who had the letter in hand as she met with House and
Senate staff on Wednesday.

The letter comes on the heels of recently released U.S. Census Bureau
figures showing that 37 million people lived in poverty in 2004, an increase
of more than one million from 2003.

To subscribe or unsubscribe, please send an email to
pcusanews-subscribe-request@halak.pcusa.org or
pcusanews-unsubscribe-request@halak.pcusa.org

To contact the owner of the list, please send an email to
pcusanews-request@halak.pcusa.org


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home