Jewish Community Budget Priorities
March 18, 2009
Dear Member of Congress:
The recently released Fiscal Year 2010 Presidential budget proposal includes requests for significant healthcare reform and increases in human needs funding. We, the undersigned organizational members of the Jewish community, applaud President Obama’s pledge to fix our broken healthcare system and his commitment to safeguarding funding for the most vulnerable members of our society during these unprecedented economic times. We have long been involved with the annual budget process, advocating for policies and programs that assist the most vulnerable people in our nation.
Our community’s commitment to ending poverty is encapsulated in the Torah, where it is commanded: “If there is among you a poor man, one of your brethren… you shall not harden your heart or shut your hand against your poor brother” (Deuteronomy 15:7).
We are told in Proverbs 31:9, to “speak up, judge righteously, champion the poor and the needy,” and we learn that helping fellow human beings, or tzedakah, is not simply a matter of charity, but one of responsibility, righteousness, and justice. These values frame our advocacy.
In the coming weeks, Congress will begin crafting the FY2010 budget to determine funding levels for programs that will help the poorest and those feeling the harshest effects of this economic recession. We hope to work with your office to ensure that the following Jewish communal priorities are highlighted in the FY2010 Congressional Budget Resolution:
- Healthcare Reform: We have long been advocates for healthcare reform that will provide quality, affordable, accessible choices to all. While we must protect the vulnerable populations served by Medicaid and Medicare, the current economic crisis makes comprehensive reform more urgent than ever. As the ranks of the uninsured swell and businesses struggle to stay afloat while still providing their employees with health benefits, it is more apparent than ever that our nation’s economic health and our nation’s health care system are deeply connected. The possibility of comprehensive healthcare reform, including long-term care, must be included in the FY2010 federal budget, enabling the authorizing committees to move forward with a plan that will reduce costs while improving quality and access.
Many in our community have significant concerns with the Administration’s proposal to partially finance this reform by reducing the deduction for charitable contributions. We believe that governmental policy should serve to maximize incentives for charitable giving and fear that the proposal will move away from that worthwhile goal at a time when charities are struggling to help those in need. As you devise a fiscally responsible way to finance health reform, we urge you to consider the impact that this proposal would have on non-profit charitable organizations, including the Jewish community’s network of agencies, which serve as the government’s partner in providing a variety of social programs. - Discretionary Spending: We urge you to include in the budget sufficient discretionary spending to allow for new investments in critical human needs programs such as Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), the Community Development Block Grant program (CDBG), the Social Services Block Grant, the Community Services Block Grant, the Older Americans Act, and Sections 8, 811 and 202 housing. These programs help states, localities, and non-profits, such as those in the Jewish community, to better serve those in need.
- Child Nutrition Reauthorization: Child nutrition programs safeguard the well-being of America's children by reducing hunger and increasing access to high-quality, nutritious foods. We urge Congress to provide $4 billion per year in new funding for child nutrition programs in the FY 2010 budget in advance of the reauthorization of the Child Nutrition Programs. Such an investment would enable the authorizing committees to make critical improvements to enhance access, increase participation, improve benefit adequacy, and help eliminate child hunger.
- National Housing Trust Fund: We urge you to include funding for the National Housing Trust Fund in the FY2010 Budget. At a time when every Congressional district faces an affordable housing crisis, initial capitalization of the Trust Fund in the FY2010 budget would represent a down payment for a dedicated source of revenue to build, rehabilitate and preserve 1.5 million units of housing for the lowest income families over the next 10 years.
Now, more than ever, this economic crisis requires a federal budget that balances the need for long-term fiscal discipline with the need to sustain critical services in this time of economic crisis. Too many Americans face harsh economic realities and are forced to make choices between competing human needs: food bank resources are dwindling, low-income seniors choose between paying for home heating and obtaining prescription drugs, and social service agencies are forced to turn people away. Today, as poverty continues to rise and service providers across the country scramble to fill budget gaps, a federal budget that elevates these human needs is more critical than ever.
We urge you to pass a budget that reflects these current realities and the important work our nonprofits do in our communities. If you should need any assistance in shaping your response to the budget proposals, please contact Melissa Boteach at the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, mboteach@thejcpa.org, 202-212-6039 or Amy Aarons Rosen at United Jewish Communities, Amy.Rosen@ujc.org, 202-736-5871.
Sincerely,
National Groups:
- American Jewish Committee
- Association of Jewish Aging Services of North America
- Association of Jewish Family & Children’s Agencies
- B'nai B'rith International
- Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS)
- The Jewish Council for Public Affairs
- Jewish Labor Committee
- Jewish Reconstructionist Federation
- Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America
- MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger
- Men of Reform Judaism
- National Council of Jewish Women
- Rabbinical Assembly
- Union for Reform Judaism
- United Jewish Communities
- United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism
- Women’s League of Conservative Judaism
- Women of Reform Judaism
Local Groups:
- Baltimore Jewish Council
- Brownstein Jewish Family Service (Southbury, Connecticut)
- Chicago Region Jewish Labor Committee
- Cleveland Jewish Labor Committee
- Community Relations Committee of the Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland
- Community Relations Committee of the Jewish Federation of Collier County
- Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Greater Middlesex County
- Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Rhode Island
- Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley
- Community Relations Committee of the Knoxville Jewish Alliance
- Community Relations Council of the Louisville Jewish Federation
- Community Relations / Jewish Community Federation of Greater Rochester NY
- Federation Early Learning Services (Philadelphia)
- F•E•G•S Health and Human Services System, New York
- Indianapolis Jewish Community Relations Council
- The Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington
- JARC Residential Care and Community Inclusion (Detroit)
- JEVS Human Services (Philadelphia, PA)
- Jewish Apartments & Services (Detroit)
- Jewish Board of Family and Children's Services, Inc. (New York)
- Jewish Child Care Association of New York
- Jewish Community Centers of Greater Philadelphia
- Jewish Community Federation of Richmond
- Jewish Community Relations Committee of the Birmingham Jewish Federation
- Jewish Community Relations Council of Austin
- Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston
- Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Dallas
- Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Greater Hartford
- Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia
- Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Southern Arizona
- Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Southern New Jersey
- Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit
- Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas
- Jewish Community Relations Council of the UJA Federation of Northern New Jersey
- Jewish Family & Career Services in Louisville
- Jewish Family & Children’s Service – St. Louis, MO
- Jewish Family & Children's Service of Greater Philadelphia
- Jewish Family & Children's Service of Minneapolis
- Jewish Family & Children's Service (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
- Jewish Family & Children’s Services of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin and Sonoma Counties
- Jewish Family & Children's Service of Southern Arizona
- Jewish Family & Children Service of Southern New Jersey
- Jewish Family & Children’s Service – St. Louis, MO
- Jewish Family Service, Inc. of Broward County (Florida)
- Jewish Family Service of Austin, Texas
- Jewish Family Service of Buffalo & Erie County New York
- Jewish Family Service of Central New Jersey
- Jewish Family Services (Danbury, Connecticut)
- Jewish Family Services of Dutchess County
- Jewish Family Services of Greater Orlando, Inc.
- Jewish Family Service of Metropolitan Detroit
- Jewish Family Service of North Jersey
- Jewish Family Services of Silicon Valley
- Jewish Family Service of St. Paul (Minnesota)
- Jewish Family Service (Toledo, Ohio)
- Jewish Family Service of Worcester, Inc.
- Jewish Federation of the Berkshires
- Jewish Federation of Central New Jersey
- Jewish Federation of Cincinnati
- The Jewish Federation of Eastern Fairfield County, CT
- Jewish Federation of Greater Ann Arbor
- Jewish Federation of Greater Des Moines
- Jewish Federation of Greater Middlesex County
- Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia
- Jewish Federation of Greater Portland
- Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle
- Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit
- Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago
- Jewish Federation of Monmouth County
- Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley
- Jewish Labor Committee – Western Region
- Jewish Seniors Agency of Rhode Island
- Jewish Vocational Services (Detroit)
- Kadima Jewish Support Services for Adults With Mental Illness (Detroit)
- Lions Gate Continuing Care Community (New Jersey)
- Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty
- Milwaukee Jewish Council for Community Relations
- Milwaukee Jewish Federation
- New England Region Jewish Labor Committee
- New Jersey State Association of Jewish Federations
- Ohio Jewish Communities
- Philadelphia Jewish Labor Committee
- Selfhelp Community Services, Inc, New York City
- St. Louis Jewish Community Relations Council
- UJA-Federation of New York
- UJA Federation of Northern New Jersey
- Yad Ezra (Michigan’s Kosher Food Pantry)

