House and Senate Budgetary Committees are set to soon unveil
allocations for 13 appropriations subcommittees for the
discretionary portion of federal spending. In an election year, and
with the national debt reaching previously unfathomed depths,
experts do not expect much in the way of non-defense discretionary
spending. In the House, presumably any proposed increases will have
to be hashed out, perhaps leaving the National Endowment for the
Arts (NEA) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) out
in the cold. Experts expect that if the NEA and NEH are left out
that increases will be proposed on the floor for the agencies.
Congress is looking for myriad solutions to quickly appropriate
funds for FY2005. Among these are potential proposal is one to
present an early, full omnibus bill and one to group the 13
appropriation bills into three or four “mini-omnibus” bills.
Proposals akin to that offered this year for NEH funding would
appear much more difficult to secure this year.