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Obama administration opposes funding for 9/11 health bill | |||
2010-01-29 | |||
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"I was stunned — and very disappointed," said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who like most of the other legislators had expected more of a discussion on how to more forward. "To say the least, I was flabbergasted," said Staten Island Rep. Mike McMahon. The 9/11 bill would spend about $11 billion over 30 years to care for the growing numbers of people getting sick from their service at Ground Zero, and to compensate families for their losses.
The legislators were shocked the idea was falling lower on the administration priority list than other parts of the war on terror and financial bailouts. "She made it clear that the administration does not support any kind of funding mechanism that goes into the bill," said Bronx Rep. Eliot Engel. "I think it's fiscal restraint... but you know what? They find money for everything else, they need to find money for this," Engel said.
Victims and advocates of 9/11 families are similarly stunned. Lorie Van Auken, whose husband died on 9/11 and who supports the White House in its push to try the terrorists in New York, was crestfallen at the news. "I thought that these people would be taken care of. I would have expected better from this administration," Van Auken said, adding that she thought it sends the wrong message to all of America's would-be heroes that the government won't be there for them. "These people put their lives on the line to help people who live here and who were in danger, and now the government doesn't want to support them," Van Auken said. "What happens in the future when something else happens? Are people going to say, 'No, sorry, I'm not going to help?'" The legislators did hold out hope, though. McMahon and others said they would appeal to the President to consider adding 9/11 money to the list of mandatory items, rather than discretionary measures subject to the White House planned budget freeze. Health and Human Servicices officials and the White House did not have an immediate response. | |||
Posted by:Steve White |
#5 Perhaps another round of soaring rhetoric will do the trick. |
Posted by: gorb 2010-01-29 14:07 |
#4 well, in a sick kind of way as so many New Yorkers voted for the current clown-in-chief this is somewhat fitting. |
Posted by: Broadhead6 2010-01-29 13:12 |
#3 This is a disgrace, but considering how tone deaf they have been towards NYC (KSM trial, the fly-by photo shoot featuring Air Farce One), I'm not really shocked by this one bit. |
Posted by: Cornsilk Blondie 2010-01-29 08:37 |
#2 Shhh, Jinens, don't give teh Won Buraq any ideas! Not that I don't think he's sociopathic enough to be so thick he would get it. But just in case... |
Posted by: twobyfour 2010-01-29 03:50 |
#1 President Obama is trying to saddle New York with civilian trials for 9/11-linked terrorists and crushing new taxes for our lifeblood banking industry. He supported a health care bill which would have been devastating to this state and now he pisses on our heroes. And all of this because he assumes that an ultra-blue state will always be in his party's pocket come election time. Did the man learn nothing from Scott Brown's resounding victory? |
Posted by: Jinens Lumplump6738 2010-01-29 02:29 |