By Danielle Owen
Read this blog from The Corps Network’s Government Relations Team about recent updates from Washington and what they mean for the Service and Conservation Corps community.
2024 Federal Election Results
Elections were held throughout the country on November 5, 2024. Former President Donald Trump won a second term as President. Going into the upcoming 119th Congress, the Republican Party will now have the majority of seats in the U.S. Senate. In the U.S. House of Representatives, the Republican Party maintained its majority, but that majority remains a very slim one.
In the weeks following the election, President-Elect Trump has been announcing his nominees for his cabinet. Most relevant to the Corps world, this includes the following individuals:
- EPA Administrator: former New York Congressman Lee Zeldin
- Secretary of Commerce: Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick
- Secretary of Energy: Liberty Energy CEO Chris Wright
- Secretary of Interior: North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum
- Secretary of Agriculture: Brooke Rollins, President of the America First Policy Institute
- Secretary of Labor: Representative Lori Chavez-DeRemer
- Secretary of Transportation: former Wisconsin Representative Sean Duffy
Congressional Leadership Elections
Since the November federal elections, both parties in the House and the Senate have held their leadership elections to prepare for the upcoming Congress. In the Senate, the current Republican Leader Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) will be stepping down from his leadership position in the next Congress. Senator John Thune (R-ND), the current Senate Republican Whip, was elected by the Senate Republicans to serve as their leader and thus the Senate Majority Leader in the upcoming Congress. Also in the Senate, Democrats voted for their leadership for the next Congress. Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) will continue to lead the soon-to-be minority party for a fifth term. Over on the House side, current Speaker Johnson won a unanimous vote of the House Republicans to lead their party in the upcoming Congress while House Democrats voted again for Congressman Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) to serve as their party leader. Although both House Republicans and Democrats have chosen their current leaders in the chamber, there will be a vote held to elect a new Speaker of the House in the upcoming Congress. While the current Speaker, Mike Johnson (R-LA), is expected to remain in his role there are some in his caucus that might put up a fight against him once the vote for Speaker occurs.
Fiscal Year 2025 Appropriations and Disaster Supplemental Funding
The federal government has been funded through several Continuing Resolutions (CR) since October 1, 2024. The current CR expires on December 20, 2024. As for Fiscal Year 2025 funding bills, the House has passed five of the twelve annual funding bills for Fiscal Year 2025, out of their chamber. The Senate has passed none out of their chamber. As a reminder, the current proposed House Labor, Health and Human Services Subcommittee funding bill, which funds the Department of Labor (DOL) and AmeriCorps, contains an 11% funding cut below its Fiscal Year 2024 enacted level. The House bill, as written, would eliminate funding for AmeriCorps State and National, AmeriCorps NCCC, and the National Service Trust that funds the Education Awards. The bill would also eliminate funding for DOL’s Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act Youth Job Training and includes severe cuts for the Registered Apprenticeships program as well.
On December 17, 2024, the House Republicans released bill language for a new CR that would extend current (Fiscal Year 2024) funding until March 14, 2024. This CR also contains disaster aid funding to, amongst other things, replace the Key Bridge in Baltimore and to help with recovery from Hurricanes Helene and Milton. It also contains the Stronger Workforce for America Act, a bill to reauthorize the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act. The Corps Network’s Government Relations Team is still reviewing this portion of the bill text but so far, we know that it includes an update to the definition of “out of school” youth to “opportunity” youth. It would also establish the Youth Apprenticeship Readiness Grant (YARG) program to increase youth participation in new or existing apprenticeship and pre-apprenticeship programs and support high-quality career pathways for in-school and opportunity youth. The proposed CR contains a one-year extension of the Farm Bill. It does not include funding for AmeriCorps that would have been specifically for their work in response to Hurricanes Helene and Milton.
It is hopeful that both chambers of the U.S. Congress can pass this CR before 12:01 a.m. on December 21, 2024, and the President can sign it into law to avoid a federal government shutdown. There is a possibility that we could see a temporary shutdown if the timing does not go perfectly on passage.