Tamarine Cornelius
Wisconsin Budget

5 Ways Trump’s Budget Hurts State

Huge losses for schools, heating assistance, environment, state budget.

By , Wisconsin Budget Project - Mar 31st, 2017 10:49 am
Donald Trump. Photo from whitehouse.gov.

Donald Trump. Photo from whitehouse.gov.

President Donald Trump has released an outline of a federal budget that would make it harder for Wisconsin families to make ends meet, harm the environment, and make it less likely for students to graduate –  leaving the state on the hook to make up some of the difference. His budget won’t do much to “make America great again,” but it would harm Wisconsin residents in very specific ways. Here are five of them:

1. By making it harder for Wisconsin residents to stay warm in the winter.

President Trump’s budget eliminates the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which helps people with low incomes heat their homes. In 2016, 199,190 people in the state received federal heating assistance to keep their homes heated through the cold Wisconsin winter. President Trump’s budget proposal eliminates that assistance.

2. By making it more difficult for struggling students to keep out of trouble and stay in school.

Trump’s budget zeroes out funding for community learning centers, which provide after-school programs for students in school districts in low-income areas. Wisconsin has more than 200 community learning centers, which receive $15 million in federal funding. This cut would harm students in every corner of Wisconsin – from Barron County, where the Boys and Girls club would lose $100,000 in funding, to Racine, where the school district would lose $600,000 to provide services to students.

Community learning centers get results, despite the claims of Trump’s budget director.  An evaluation of Wisconsin community learning centers showed that the centers helped students miss fewer days of school and have fewer out-of-school suspensions. Students participating in the programs were more likely to graduate from high school, and more likely to continue their education after high school.

3. By making it harder to keep Wisconsin shorelines clean.

Presidents Trump’s budget wipes out $300 million in funding for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, which pays for projects that improve water quality, protect and restore native habitats and species, and address environmental problems in Wisconsin and other Great Lakes states.

In Wisconsin, eliminating the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative would mean the loss of resources that fund green infrastructure projects to improve public health and water quality for shoreline cities. Examples of projects funded in 2016 include:

  • $175,000 to Algoma to install improvements that will prevent 110,000 gallons of untreated runoff from reaching Lake Michigan;
  • $175,000 to Two Rivers for constructing wetlands to improve water quality, preventing 10 million gallons of wastewater from reaching Lake Michigan; and
  • $168,000 to the City of Manitowoc to replenish its beach and improve water quality near the shore.

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker opposes Trump’s proposed cuts to Great Lakes funding, saying that “the Great Lakes are an incredible asset. They’re an asset from a commercial standpoint in terms of fishing and tourism, but also in general in terms of quality of life.”

4. By denying equal access justice to people with low incomes.

Trump’s budget axes the Legal Services Corporation, which in 2016 provided $5 million to organizations in Wisconsin to provide free legal services for people who can’t afford a lawyer. Last year, almost 16,000 Wisconsin residents were helped by these legal services.

5. By shifting costs to our state government and making it harder to balance the state budget.

Federal money makes up almost a third of the Wisconsin state budget. That means that out of every dollar the state spends, 29 cents comes from the federal government. Federal money in Wisconsin’s budget provides health care coverage for families and individuals with low incomes, supports research at the University of Wisconsin, and strengthens Wisconsin’s transportation network.

Federal resources are critical to making investments in Wisconsin’s workforce, education, and communities that are necessary for businesses and families to thrive – yet Trump’s budget would cut the money coming into the state, leaving Wisconsin on the hook to make up part of the nearly $11 billion per year in these federal investments.

The Federal Government and Wisconsin Budget

The Federal Government and Wisconsin Budget

 

These are just a few examples taken from a budget proposal that would harm Wisconsin families, schools, and communities in a myriad of ways. Read more about the Trump budget proposal: Trump Budget Harms Those he Promised to Help.

4 thoughts on “Wisconsin Budget: 5 Ways Trump’s Budget Hurts State”

  1. kunk says:

    That’s not Trump, That’s Walker and his mob

  2. judy says:

    All these people want is….give me, give me, give me!!! President Trump is trying to balance a budget and you sure don’t do that by throwing money away. It’s time that people start to understand that!

  3. Jake formerly of the LP says:

    Uhhh Judy- he’s throwing of tens of billions of additional dollars into the military, $20 billion for a flipping wall, and God knows how much for his trips and lodging at Mar-a-Lago as well as Melania’s suite in NYC.

    Oh, and there’s the tax cuts, which will blow the deficit sky-high. But enjoy the higher state taxes you’ll have to pay.

    You can’t be this foolish in real life, can you?

  4. Vincent Hanna says:

    Yes Trump with his history of bankruptcies combined with his massive existing personal debt is so good at not throwing money away! Denial is strong with you judy.

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