Norton Secures Victories in D.C. Appropriations Bill

Press Release

Date: June 15, 2022
Location: Washington, DC

The House Committee on Appropriations today released the fiscal year 2023 District of Columbia Appropriations bill, which includes many victories secured by Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC). The bill provides $40 million for the D.C. Tuition Assistance Grant Program (DCTAG), a program a Norton bill created, and increases the annual and lifetime DCTAG awards; prohibits the president from federalizing the D.C. police department; and removes the two enacted fiscal year 2022 riders, which prohibit D.C. from spending its local funds on abortion services for low-income women and on recreational marijuana commercialization.

"I am very pleased with the House's fiscal year 2023 D.C. Appropriations bill, and D.C. residents will be, too," Norton said. "I am particularly pleased the bill provides $40 million for DCTAG and increases the annual and lifetime DCTAG awards. DCTAG is critical for D.C. students and families, who do not have the same array of public institutions of higher education that most states do, and for the D.C. tax base because DCTAG encourages taxpayers to move to and remain in the District. I am grateful to Committee on Appropriations Chair Rosa DeLauro and Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government Chair Mike Quigley for this strong bill."

Norton secured the following victories:

The bill provides $40 million for DCTAG, an increase in the annual DCTAG award from $10,000 to $15,000, and an increase in the lifetime DCTAG award from $50,000 to $75,000. The bill also repeals the provision that reduced the maximum family income eligibility from $750,000 to $500,000. DCTAG makes up the difference for D.C. residents between in-state and out-of-state tuition at public institutions of higher education in the United States.
The bill has no anti-home-rule riders. In particular, it removes the two enacted fiscal year 2022 riders, which prohibit the District from spending its local funds on abortions for low-income women and on recreational marijuana commercialization.
The bill allows the District to spend its local funds under the Local Budget Autonomy Act, which means that the local budget adopted by D.C. can take effect after a congressional review period, like all other D.C. bills.
The bill exempts D.C. from federal government shutdowns in fiscal year 2024. Norton has gotten annual shutdown exemptions enacted every year since the 2013 federal government shutdown.
The bill provides $8 million for DC Water for ongoing work to control flooding in D.C. and to clean up the Anacostia and Potomac rivers and Rock Creek.
The bill provides $5 million to combat HIV/AIDS in D.C.
The bill provides $600,000 for the Major General David F. Wherley, Jr. District of Columbia National Guard Retention and College Access Program.
Norton is disappointed that the bill allows new students to enroll in the D.C. private school voucher program, instead of only permitting current students to remain in the program. Congress imposed the voucher program on the District, which is the only federally funded or created voucher program, even though Congress has rejected a national voucher program. The program does not deserve federal funding because, among other things, it has failed to meet its own goal of improving academic achievement, as measured by math and reading test scores. However, Norton is pleased that the bill requires participating voucher schools to comply with federal civil rights laws.


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