FY2000 Budget
................................................................
Get a copy of the FY2000
budget
................................................................
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
6:00 PM on February 1, 1999
Contact: (202) 456-2437
White House AIDS Czar
Applauds FY2000 Budget Increases
Washington,
DC - Sandra Thurman, Director of the White House Office of National AIDS
Policy, applauded the Administration's leadership on HIV/AIDS as reflected
in its Fiscal Year 2000 budget proposal to Congress. "Once again, President
Clinton and Vice President Gore have demonstrated their commitment to ending
this epidemic. There are substantial increases in AIDS-specific programs--over
$165 million--as well as several special initiatives that will be critical to
addressing the ongoing needs of those living with HIV/AIDS," said Thurman.
"These include support for the Jeffords-Kennedy Work Incentives Improvement
Act, Patients' Bill of Rights, increased Medicaid coverage for immigrants,
and support for long-term care. As there are more and more Americans living
with HIV and AIDS, it is vital that our response include those programs that
benefit the broader disability community including people with
HIV/AIDS."
"Most
importantly, this Administration will continue its efforts to address HIV/AIDS
in racial and ethnic minorities. Secretary Shalala's budget at HHS
continues emergency funding for these efforts, announced by the President and
the Secretary this past October," said Thurman.
Included in
the budget proposal released today are the following:
- $100
million increase in the Ryan White CARE Act,
which supports states and cities in caring for those living with HIV and
AIDS;
- $35
million increase in the AIDS Drug Assistance Program to assist in providing
life-saving treatments to people with HIV/AIDS who cannot otherwise afford
them;
- $36
million increase in early intervention programs of
Ryan White (Title III), with most of the new
funding going to serve racial and ethnic minorities in furtherance of the
Administration's efforts to address the racial disparity in
HIV/AIDS;
- $10
million increase in HIV prevention and education at the
CDC to initiate a "Know Your HIV Status" campaign
targeting minority populations and youth; and
The
President's budget proposal also includes new initiatives that will
provide substantial benefit to people living with HIV/AIDS,
including:
- Demonstration Program to
Expand Disability Coverage, allowing States to offer health coverage to
individuals who meet an expanded definition of disability set by the States.
This expanded definition--an important component of the
Jeffords-Kennedy Work Incentives Improvement Act (S.
331)--will include persons who have a medical conditions, such as HIV or
diabetes, that will become disabling but for the provision of Medicaid-covered
services;
- Flexibility to Cover People
With Disabilities: building on a provision of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA), this proposal will give
States broad flexibility to set higher income and resource standards in
Medicaid to encourage people
with disabilities to return to work. In addition, Medicaid will allow States
that adopt the more generous income and resource standards to cover individuals
who no longer meet SSI and Social
Security Disabled Insurance (SSDI) disability criteria because of medical
improvement. States offering new options would receive grants to develop
support systems that help people with disabilities--including those disabled by
HIV/AIDS-- who return to work;
- Tax
Credit for Long-Term Care: will help people with chronic illness or the
families with whom they live. People with significant long-term care needs or
their care givers would receive a $1,000 tax credit beginning in 2000.
Approximately two million people would benefit, at a cost of $5.5
billion;
- Restored
Medicaid Eligibility for Legal Immigrants to three vulnerable groups of
legal immigrants: children; pregnant women; and disabled immigrants whose
eligibility for SSI would also
be restored. As the President has pledged, and has achieved for other groups so
affected, this would reverse an inequity enacted in welfare reform. Over 50% of
adults and 90% of children living with HIV/AIDS depend on
Medicaid, making this
restoration critically important to addressing the needs of legal immigrants
living with HIV/AIDS;
- A
Strong and Enforceable Patients' Bill of Rights remains a top
Administration priority, though it is not specifically included in the FY2000
budget proposal. For those persons living with HIV/AIDS who must interact
regularly with the health care system, the key provisions of the Bill of
Rights--access to specialists, coverage of emergency room services, continuity
of care, internal and independent external appeals, and patient
protections--are absolutely critical.
ANALYSIS OF FY2000 BUDGET SELECTED
AIDS PROGRAMS
numbers in thousands
|
Enacted 1999 |
Proposed FY2000 |
$ Change |
% Change |
|
Ryan
White CARE Act |
Title I |
505,200 |
521,200 |
+ 16,000 |
+ 3% |
Title II (excluding ADAP) |
277,000 |
287,000 |
+ 10,000 |
+ 4% |
Title II (ADAP) |
461,000 |
496,000 |
+ 35,000 |
+ 8% |
Title III (Early Intervention) |
94,300 |
130,300 |
+ 36,000 |
+ 38% |
Title IV (Women, Children, Youth) |
46,000 |
48,000 |
+ 2,000 |
+ 4% |
Dental Services |
7,800 |
8,000 |
+ 200 |
+ 3% |
AIDS Education Training Centers |
20,000 |
20,000 |
+ 0 |
+ 0% |
Subtotal |
1,411,300 |
1,510,500 |
+ 99,200 |
+ 7% |
Office
of the Secretary of HHS |
Discretionary fund for minorities |
50,000 |
50,000 |
+ 0 |
+ 0% |
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention |
HIV Prevention and Education
|
657,000 |
667,000 |
+ 10,000 |
+ 2% |
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration |
Center
for Substance Abuse Treatment (HIV-specific) |
76,441 |
79,539 |
+ 3,098 |
+ 4% |
Center
for Substance Abuse Prevention (HIV-specific) |
16,402 |
15,992 |
(- 410) |
- 2% |
Subtotal |
92,843 |
95,531 |
+ 2,688 |
+ 3% |
National Institues of Health |
AIDS Research |
1,798,424 |
1,833,826 |
+ 35,402 |
+ 2% |
Department of Housing and Urban
Development |
HOPWA |
225,000 |
240,000 |
+ 15,000 |
+ 7% |
|
TOTAL |
$4,346,821 |
$4,396,857 |
$162,290 |
+ 4% |
|