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U.S. Sen. Harkin: Harkin, colleagues, seek to restore funding for crime prevention
3/31/2008

Contact: Jennifer Mullin / Semonti Mustaphi (202) 224-3254
Iowa would receive more than $6 million to support drug task forces, local police
 
Washington, D.C. – Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) and 55 of his Senate colleagues today sent a bipartisan letter to the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Appropriations seeking $489.6 million in this year’s supplemental appropriations bill for the Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne/JAG) program.  The additional funding would restore Byrne/JAG funding for fiscal year 2008 to $660 million – including $6 million for Iowa – the same level that the Senate originally provided for in the Commerce Justice and Science Appropriations bill that passed the Senate last year.
 
While the Senate provided $660 million for Byrne/JAG grants, following a veto threat, the Omnibus Appropriations bill that ultimately passed funded the programs at only $170 million.  This funding level represents a more than two-thirds drop from the 2007 level, and is down from nearly $900 million in 2002.
 
“Sheriffs and police officers from communities large and small have told me that Byrne Grants are essential to fighting the war on drugs,” said Senator Harkin. “In Iowa, the cut will lead to layoffs and the elimination of 15 of our 21 drug task forces. We cannot continue to slash the funding for such a vital program that has proven successful in keeping drugs and criminals off the street and making our neighborhoods safer.”
 
“As long as drug trafficking organizations continue to smuggle large amounts of meth and other illegal drugs into our state, multi-jurisdictional drug task forces are required to help keep our communities safe. Without these task forces, it would be open season for drug dealers. If something isn’t done to restore or offset the reduction in federal funding, the safety of Iowans will suffer,” said Gary Kendell, Director, Iowa Office of Drug Control Policy. “We are thankful for Senator Harkin’s leadership, and the support of Iowa’s entire congressional delegation, on this critical issue.”
 
The Byrne Grant Program, named after a police officer killed by a violent drug gang twenty years ago, is the only source of federal funding for multi-jurisdictional efforts to prevent and fight crime.  The program funds drug task forces that have been vital in reducing methamphetamine labs around the country. In 2007, the grant provided the means for the Iowa Drug Task Force to seize more than 3,300 pounds of drugs. Byrne also helps pay for police, technology and crime prevention programs.  The grant has also resulted in major innovations in crime control, including drug courts, gang prevention strategies and prisoner reentry programs.
 
A copy of the letter with signatures can be found here, the text is below.
 
March 31, 2008

The Honorable Robert Byrd                                         The Honorable Thad Cochran
Chairman                                                                      Ranking Member
Committee on Appropriations                                       Committee on Appropriations
United States Senate                                                     United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510                                                Washington, DC 20510
 
Dear Chairman Byrd and Senator Cochran:
 
            Restoration of severe cuts made to the Edward Byrne Justice Grant (Byrne/JAG) program through last year’s omnibus appropriations bill is vital to avoid law enforcement layoffs and suspension of hundreds of anti-drug, gang and violent offender efforts across the country.  Therefore, we respectfully request that you provide $489.6 million for the Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne/JAG) program in any Supplemental Appropriations bill that comes before the Senate.  This addition would restore Byrne/JAG funding to the same level previously approved by the Senate in the Commerce-Justice Science (CJS) Appropriations bill for fiscal year 2008 (FY 2008).
 
            The Byrne Formula Grant Program is a tried and tested program that has served us well for more than two decades.  The program’s broad-based support was verified in the Senate’s passage last year of S.231, the Feinstein-Chambliss Byrne/JAG Reauthorization Act, which would extend this $1.095 bill authorization through 2012.  The bill received 52 co-sponsors and passed the Senate by unanimous consent.
 
            As you know, the Senate-approved CJS Appropriations bill for FY2008 would have funded Byrne/JAG at $660 million.  Following a veto threat, however, difficult choices had to be made in conference, and in the Omnibus Appropriations bill that ultimately passed, Byrne/JAG funding for FY2008 was reduced to only $170.4 million.  This figure represented more than a 2/3 drop from Byrne/JAG’s actual appropriated levels in FY2007.
 
            In the wake of these drastic cuts, various law enforcement agencies, as well as numerous police and sheriff’s offices, have notified us that these FY2008 Byrne/JAG cuts will have a devastating effect on law enforcement, forcing them to possibly close multi-jurisdictional drug and gang task forces, and negatively affecting a variety of other crime control programs.  Particularly at a time when a risk of adverse economic conditions may lead to increased crime, it is vitally important that we support our nation’s finest in their efforts on the front lines, where they risk their lives daily keeping Americans safe.
 
            Unless these Byrne/JAG funds are restored promptly, law enforcement agencies may be forced to dismantle multi-jurisdiction task forces that often took years to create and develop.  And individual officers serving on those task force members will face a loss of income or even their jobs, some of which have been held for years.
 
            Each year, Byrne/JAG dollars fund over 4,000 police officers and prosecutors working on over 750 drug enforcement task forces in all 50 states across hundreds of urban and rural countries and cities.  On an annual basis, Byrne/JAG funding leads to over 220,000 arrests, 54,000 weapons seized, the seizure of 5.5 million grams of methamphetamine, and the breakup of almost 9,000 methamphetamine labs.  These successes show that we need to continue what we are doing, not cut back.
 
            Funding for Byrne/JAG, at its $1.095 billion authorized level, has long been supported by America’s leading law enforcement organizations, including the National Narcotic Officers’ Associations’ Coalition, National Sheriffs’ Association, National Association of Counties, National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors, Legal Action Center, National District Attorneys’ Association, National HIDTA Directors Association, International Association of Chiefs of Police, Major County Sheriffs Association, National Criminal Justice Association, National Alliance of State Drug Enforcement Agencies, Major City Chiefs Association, National Troopers Coalition, State Association of Addiction Services, the National Crime Prevention Council and the Fraternal Order of Police.
 
            There is strong bipartisan support for the Byrne/JAG Program, and we urge you to provide this critically needed funding in any supplemental appropriations bill that comes before the Senate this year.


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