Securing America's Future Act of 2018

Jun. 21, 2018 | H.R. 4760

The FY 2019 Department of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education (Labor HHS) Appropriations bill, reflects a misguided and dangerous approach to funding programs that serve millions of working Americans. Despite the increase of $18 billion for non-defense discretionary programs in FY 2019, there is no increase in the Labor HHS allocation over FY 2018. The bill would reduce funding for the Department of Labor (DOL) by $289 million, including a rescission of $200 million from the Dislocated Worker training program. The bill cuts DOL’s Wage and Hour Division by $2 million, reduces the current funding for the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) by almost $13 million, and guts DOL’s Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) by $68 million (a reduction of 78.5 percent). ILAB does critical work to fight child labor, forced labor, and human trafficking and to enforce the labor rights commitments in our trade agreements. The proposed reduction in funding for ILAB would significantly undermine its capacity to help other countries improve their labor standards. The bill also targets worker safety programs, reducing funding for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) by $7.5 million and funding for the Mine Safety and Health Administration by $6 million. These cuts would occur at a time when the OSHA inspection staff is already at near record low levels and mining deaths are on the rise. The bill eliminates OSHA’s Susan Harwood training grants, which have trained over a million workers in hazardous industries, while it increases funding for employer compliance assistance. These cuts to worker safety and health programs will result in increased disease, injuries, and deaths on the job. While the bill provides for a modest increase in funding for the Department of Health and Human Services, it would cut funding for Medicare and Medicaid operations and block implementation of the Affordable Care Act. The bill failed to pass the House on June 21, 2018.

This is Bad for working people.

Vote result: Failed

YEAs: 193
NAYs: 231

Legislator State Sort descending District Party Vote
Rep. Doug Lamborn
CO
5 Republican Yes
Rep. Elizabeth Esty
CT
5 Democrat No
Rep. Joe Courtney
CT
2 Democrat No
Rep. Jim Himes
CT
4 Democrat No
Rep. Rosa DeLauro
CT
3 Democrat No
Rep. John B. Larson
CT
1 Democrat No
Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester
DE
At Large Democrat No
Rep. Francis Rooney
FL
19 Republican Yes
Rep. Carlos Curbelo
FL
26 Republican No
Rep. Kathy Castor
FL
14 Democrat No
Rep. Stephanie Murphy
FL
7 Democrat No
Rep. Gus Bilirakis
FL
12 Republican Yes
Rep. Charlie Crist
FL
13 Democrat No
Rep. Ted Yoho
FL
3 Republican Yes
Rep. Neal Dunn
FL
2 Republican Yes
Rep. Bill Posey
FL
8 Republican Yes
Rep. John Rutherford
FL
5 Republican Yes
Rep. Frederica Wilson
FL
24 Democrat No
Rep. Darren Soto
FL
9 Democrat No
Rep. Vern Buchanan
FL
16 Republican Yes