Politics & Government

Cuts Could Cost State $275 Million: Report

Ccuts to job services, education and public safety, if no deal is reached by Friday.

New York would lose $275 million in federal funding for education, job training, public health and law enforcement if a deal on the looming "sequestration" cuts can’t be reached by Friday, March 1, reported the Times-Union.

In a White House statement issued Sunday night, officials in the Oval Office gave a state-by-state breakdowns of the fiscal fallout, if no budget deal is sealed in the coming days.

And for New York State, thousands more job losses for civilian employees is the biggest potential blow. But that also would mean a laundry list of inconveniences at the civil service level, including longer lines in government buildings/offices, protracted airport delays, fewer food inspections and more.

Find out what's happening in Forest Hillswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The Department of Defense would see the greatest percentage of job losses between civil and social services, with a 13 percent reduction — approximately 12,000 jobs, while non-defense programs can expect to see an average 9 percent reduction.

Additionally, around 70,000 young children would lose access to the Head Start program.

Find out what's happening in Forest Hillswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Many are hoping both sides pull through before March 1, and devise a solution that is bi-partisan and crafted, rather looking towards the default as an acceptable conclusion. 

However, Republican House Speaker John Boehner said last week in a Wall Street Journal op-ed that the sequester "is a product of the President's own failed leadership."


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