Boozman Secures Funding for Arkansas Priorities
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| U.S Senator John Boozman (AR) |
“Congress has an obligation to fund the government. Passing the appropriations bills ensures we are investing in programs that support the needs of Americans. I’m proud to craft legislation that fully funds the VA MISSION Act and electronic health record modernization programs while supporting new initiatives to reduce and prevent veteran suicide,” Boozman said. “I’m pleased Congress approved resources for programs important to Arkansas.”
Boozman authored the section of the bill that funds military
construction and veterans affairs. He also secured resources
for several Arkansas-related priorities:
- Air Force Training: $8 million to support training at Razorback
Range.
- Pine Bluff Arsenal: Over $30 million for munitions
manufacturing.
- Fort Chaffee:
$15 million for the construction of the Arkansas National Guard Readiness
Training Center which will provide greater support for training exercises and
help ensure Arkansas guardsmen continue to be some of the best.
- 188th Wing: $2.6 million for the Energy Resilience
and Conservation Investment Program renewable energy project.
- Department
of Defense Research: Funding for collaborative research in which Arkansas companies are engaged,
including more than $34 million for silicon carbide research to make
smaller components for more sophisticated modern weapons.
- National Center for Toxicological
Research: $66.7 million to support the
Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) research to promote and protect public
health conducted at the National Center for Toxicological Research. This
facility is located in Jefferson County.
- Rural Broadband: $635 million to help close the digital
divide and invest in rural broadband through the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s ReConnect Program.
- Rural Development: Expanding business development and job training
opportunities in rural areas, including $2.8 million for the Appropriate
Technology Transfer for Rural Access (ATTRA) program which connects Arkansas
agricultural producers to information that helps them improve their operations.
ATTRA administers the Armed to Farm program that assists veterans in transition
to civilian life by training them for a career in farming. ATTRA has a regional
headquarters located in Fayetteville.
- High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Program
(HIDTA): $290 million to support
effective and innovative drug control efforts by federal, state, local and
tribal law enforcement agencies operating in HIDTA areas. In Arkansas this
includes Benton, Jefferson, Pulaski and Washington
counties.
- Veterans Treatment Courts: Support for critical components of our judicial system
that offer an alternative treatment to jail for individuals suffering from drug
and alcohol addiction. Veterans treatment courts received $25 million to help
break the cycle of addiction.
- Law Enforcement Grants: $484 million for the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant
(Byrne JAG) program which provides federal, state and local governments the
tools to prevent and combat crime and keep their communities safe. In Arkansas,
Byrne JAG helps fund multi-jurisdictional programs like Drug Task
Forces.
- SRF WIN Funding: $5 million is included to help meet underserved or unmet
water infrastructure needs, a program Boozman-authored last Congress to create
an innovative approach to modernizing critical water
infrastructure.
- Community Health Centers (CHC): In Arkansas, there are more than 130
CHC facilities that help nearly 200,000 people get the medical, dental, vision
and behavioral health care services they need. The Senate allocates $1.68
billion for these health facilities.
- Delta Regional Authority (DRA): The DRA works to improve economic
opportunity for residents of the Delta region through targeted investments. The
bill includes more than $30 million for the DRA which supports grants to the
region and funding for basic public infrastructure development and
transportation improvements.
- Small Business Development: More than $30
million is included for programs that support small business development such as
the Federal and State Technology (FAST) Partnership Program, Women’s Business
Centers and Regional Innovation Clusters program.
- McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River
Navigation System (MKARNS): The bill includes report language
discussing the importance of the MKARNS inland waterway deepening and encourages
the Army Corps of Engineers to provide funds for non-structural activities, such
as channel deepening, when funding is sufficient to accommodate such
projects.
- National Feral Swine Damage
Management Program:
Increases funding to the National Feral Swine Damage Management Program under
the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to reduce adverse ecological and
economic impacts caused by feral swine across Arkansas and the
nation.
- Community Development Block Grant: The bill provides $3.5 billion for the Community
Development Block Grant program, the federal government's largest and most
widely available source of financial assistance supporting state and local
government-directed neighborhood revitalization, housing rehabilitation and
economic development activities. Grants are used to implement plans intended to
address housing, community development and economic development needs, as
determined by local officials.
- Contract Tower Program: The bill funds this program—which provides enhanced
safety, improved air traffic control services and significant Federal Aviation
Administration cost savings—at $173 million. This program benefits aviation
safety by allowing small commercial service and general aviation airports to
receive air traffic control services. There are five contract towers in
Arkansas: Fayetteville, Springdale, Rogers, Bentonville and Texarkana.
- University Transportation Centers: $78 million for researching and developing improved
transportation methods. The Mack-Blackwell Transportation Center at the
University of Arkansas has been a U.S. Department of Transportation University
Transportation Center since 1992.
- Workforce Training: $35 million for the Workforce Opportunity for Rural
Communities initiative to support workforce training and education in rural
communities across the Delta and Appalachian regions.
- Head Start and Child Care Development
Block Grant (CCDBG) Program: $135 million increase for Head Start
and $85 million increase to provide child care assistance for families in need.
CCDBG funds are critical to supporting the needs of working parents and enabling
child care to continue to operate, a key to economic
recovery.
- Water Infrastructure: $1.1 billion for the Drinking Water
State Revolving Fund which helps public water systems finance the costs of
infrastructure improvements needed to achieve or maintain compliance with Safe
Drinking Water Act requirements and to protect public health. $1.6 billion for
the Clean Water State Revolving Fund to provide communities low-cost financing
for water quality improvement projects.
John Boozman is the senior US Senator representing Arkansas.
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