reflection of gray mosque on water
Photo by Kendall Hoopes on Pexels.com

Today, Congressman Gabe Amo (D-RI-01) voted in support of six fiscal year 2024 appropriations bills, including $20,075,769 in federal Community Project Funding for Rhode Island’s First Congressional District.

“I am incredibly grateful former Congressman David Cicilline initiated these projects that I can now carry forward because they will have a profound impact on communities across our First Congressional District,” said Congressman Amo. “The over $20 million in direct federal funding for these projects will make a real difference in the lives of countless Rhode Islanders. Across our great district, these federal investments will expand affordable housing options, improve public safety, revitalize our public spaces, and support the next generation of learners. Despite the delays, I am glad to have voted on a bipartisan resolution on our 2024 budget.”

Congressman Amo moved forward funding for 15 projects that will directly benefit Rhode Island’s First Congressional District residents. These include:

  • $1,000,000 for Affordable Housing for Victims of Abuse in Rhode Island
  • $789,000 for the Children’s Home Rehabilitation Project
  • $920,000 for Green Infrastructure Installations at Mashapaug Pond
  • $1,000,000 for the Halliwell School Redevelopment Project
  • $585,000 for Higher Ground International, Community Programming Rooms Construction
  • $486,490 for IT Media Lab and Entrepreneurship Center Build-out
  • $689,000 for the Lincoln Emergency Communications Systems Project
  • $500,000 for Multi-Purpose Community Center  Cass Pond Restoration at Cass Park
  • $5,000,000 for Newport Cliff Walk
  • $1,666,279 for North Main Street Revitalization
  • $500,000 for Pawtucket Library, Sayles Building Re-Pointing
  • $850,000 for Renovation of Boys and Girls Clubs of Northern Rhode Islands Cumberland-Lincoln Clubhouse and Grounds
  • $3,000,000 for Supportive Housing Expansion
  • $2,240,000 for the Town of Warren for Pump Station Upgrades
  • $850,000 for Woonasquatucket River Greenway – Smithfield, RI Trail Construction

This package includes the following funding bills for Fiscal Year 2024: Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies; Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies; Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies; Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies; Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies; and Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies.

The text of the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2024 is available here. A full summary of the appropriations provisions in the bill is available here.

Second Congressional District

Representative Seth Magaziner (RI-02) today announced the House passage of $12,353,131 in federal funding requested by Rep. Magaziner for 14 community projects in Rhode Island’s 2nd Congressional District in this year’s government funding package. The legislation will now be taken up by the Senate, and is expected to be passed and sent to President Biden for his signature. 

“Delivering results for Rhode Islanders has always been my top priority in Congress, and I’m proud to have secured federal funding that will benefit the working people of our state,” said Rep. Seth Magaziner. “This funding will go towards local projects to improve public safety, invest in schools and libraries, upgrade water management systems, and make Rhode Island a better place to live. I’m excited to see these projects break ground and come to fruition.”

14 of Rep. Magaziner’s Community Project Funding requests were included in the first tranche of government funding legislation for fiscal year 2024. The remaining six government funding bills are due on March 22, and are expected to include additional funding for Rhode Island as requested by Rep. Magaziner.

The following funding requests will head to the Senate, then to President Biden to be signed into law:

  1. $2,080,000 to manage, reduce, and recapture stormwater in the Town of Johnston. 
  1. $1,576,031 to inspect, test, and clean sewer interceptors located within the Town of West Warwick to correct deficiencies within the collection system to prevent catastrophic failure and prevent sewage overflows entering the Pawtuxet River. 
  1. $1,000,000 to construct an Indoor Recreation Facility in North Kingstown that will dually serve as an Emergency Shelter for the Town and provide physical and mental-well being programming to all ages. 
  1. $1,000,000 to construct a safe, ADA accessible, and visible pedestrian connection to the Woonasquatucket River Greenway
  1. $963,000 for the Town of East Greenwich for a waterfront development project to improve shoreline accessibility.
  1. $803,100 to rehabilitate Family Service of RI’s Mount Pleasant Academy, one of the state’s premiere day treatment facilities for children with emotional, behavioral, and/or psychiatric needs.
  1. $795,000 for the University of Rhode Island’s Secure Compute/Data Enhancement project to increase their capabilities to perform cutting edge, innovative research for their partnership with the National Institute of Undersea Vehicle Technology and the U.S. Navy. 
  1. $707,000 for the Coventry Police Department for general equipment and technology upgrades for specialty vehicles, communications improvements and technology upgrades for server capacity. 
  1. $700,000 for the Ocean Community YMCA’s Westerly-Pawcatuck Branch renovation to improve existing program areas to better serve some of the most vulnerable community members, including seniors, at-risk youth, and children on the neurodivergent spectrum. 
  1. $700,000 to rehabilitate the Peace Dale Library into a fully accessible community space to support academic education, workforce development, remote work and study, and personal health monitoring activities. 
  1. $700,000 to provide critical and functional repairs and rehabilitation to spaces at the Providence Public Library
  1. $500,000 to construct an ADA accessible handicap viewing plaza in Burrillville with adjacent handicap parking spaces, handicap drop off zone and handicap accessible viewing platform overlooking a field for public events.
  1. $485,000 for the Johnston Police Department for emergency services equipment to increase their response time and community safety.
  1. $344,000 for the Cranston Police Department to upgrade their K9 vehicle fleet.

More information on these 14 local projects can be found here.

For All of Rhode Island

With passage today in the U.S. House of Representatives, Congress is on track to approve a $467.5 billion ‘minibus’ appropriations package of six spending bills this week.   The first batch of appropriations bills will fund a variety of key federal departments, agencies, and programs. The bills are: Agriculture; Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS); Energy-Water; Interior-Environment; Military Construction-Veterans Affairs (Milcon-VA); and Transportation-Housing and Urban Development (THUD). 

Now Senate Republicans who want to join Democrats in actually governing must act and send this spending package to the President to be signed into law ahead of a March 8 deadline.  Then, a second batch of outstanding appropriations bills must be acted on by March 22 to prevent a partial federal government shutdown.

U.S. Senator Jack Reed (D-RI), a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee and the Chairman of the Legislative Branch subcommittee, helped include key funding for Rhode Island in the minibus bill. In addition to $122.7 million in federal earmarks for a variety of Rhode Island projects that Reed helped secure, Rhode Island’s senior senator says the fiscal year 2024 minibus appropriations package will direct well over $1 billion to the Ocean State.

“This legislation makes major investments in America and Rhode Island.  It will help grow our economy and support working families.  I’m pleased to include funds to upgrade roads and bridges, improve public health and safety, and help increase the supply of housing.  The bill also delivers federal dollars to feed the hungry, protect our environment, and more,” said Senator Reed. “This is an impactful bill that makes wise investments.  I worked with my colleagues to direct federal funds back to the state to strengthen communities and invest in Rhode Island priorities.  Now that the House has acted, Senate Republicans must join Democrats to finish the job and work together on a bipartisan basis to help drive our economy forward.  I’m committed to getting this bill across the finish line.”

On a national scale, the minibus appropriations package makes substantial investments that will impact Rhode Island, including:

Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and Related Agencies: $26.2 billion in total funding

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) would receive $22.3 billion and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) would get $3.5 billion.  In Rhode Island, USDA funding has helped communities with a variety of programs, from assistance for local farms, tree planting, and growing the state’s food economy to flood prevention and the purchase of new police cars.

This section of the bill will provide millions of dollars to the Ocean State for critical nutrition assistance programs, by fulling funding the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP); the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC); and Child Nutrition Programs—like the School Lunch program, school breakfast program, and the Summer EBT program—to ensure schools can continue to serve healthy meals to all eligible children.  It also includes Reed’s report language directing USDA to develop a plan to address factors limiting seafood consumption in schools.

Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies: $68.53 billion in discretionary funding

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) would get $37.52 billion to help keep Americans safe, uphold the rule of law, and invest in lifesaving DOJ grant programs. The U.S. Department of Commerce would receive $10.8 billion to promote and support American businesses and exports, spur economic development nationwide, and manage critical weather and ocean programs.  The bill provides over $9 billion for the National Science Foundation (NSF) to promote discovery and American competitiveness and also supports space exploration under the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

Rhode Island utilizes CJS funding for a wide variety of priorities, including support for law enforcement, the justice system, and the U.S. Attorney’s office, assistance to victims of domestic violence, to research grants for local universities, and economic development grants from the Department of Commerce.

Senator Reed also included a $5 million set aside for a pilot program based on the Collins-Reed Working Waterfront Preservation Act to provide federal grants for projects that preserve and improve infrastructure for fishing and maritime communities.

The overall bill also includes Reed’s language to renew the Undetectable Firearms Act (UFA) for seven years.  The UFA makes it illegal to manufacture, own, or sell a firearm that isn’t detectable by a walk-through metal-detection machine and a scanning device. 

Energy and Water Development: $58.19 billion in total funding for the Department of Energy, Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation, and independent agencies

The bill includes about $50 billion for U.S. Department of Energy programs and over $8.5 billion for the Army Corps of Engineers.  Rhode Island utilizes millions of dollars in funding under this section of the bill for a variety of clean energy research and renewable energy initiatives, grid infrastructure, as well as water infrastructure projects and port, harbor, and waterway maintenance.

Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies: $41.2 billion in total funding

The bill includes federal funding for the U.S. Department of the Interior, including the National Park Service; the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA); the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH); and more.

In Rhode Island, this translates to funding for things like the state’s national wildlife refuges and national parks; the state’s Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (SRFs); beach protection grants; environmental protection measures; Brownfields clean up grants; and forest fire prevention as well as funds for artistic and cultural programs through the NEA and NEH.

Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies: $135.25 billion in non-defense discretionary funding and $172.5 billion in mandatory funding, to fulfill our nation’s obligations to our veterans and to upgrade housing for service members and their families

This funding goes to help the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) care for veterans, including medical care, mental health, and telehealth services.  The bill fully funds veterans’ medical care and benefits and delivers historic investments to increase mental health services for veterans, help end veteran homelessness, and support women veterans’ health care. The bill also fully funds the Honoring Our PACT Act to assist veterans exposed to toxic burn pits, and provides funding for veterans cemeteries, disability benefits, and education and workforce initiatives. 

The bill also provides funds for the Department of Defense (DOD) for the planning and construction of several military projects, including $30 million for a new National Guard Readiness Center in North Kingstown and up to $1.9 million in planning and design funds for facility upgrades at the Camp Fogarty Training Site.  It also helps with cleanup of per- and polyfluoroalkyl (PFAS) chemicals.

Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies: $106 billion in total funding for Transportation and $70.07 billion for Housing and Urban Development

A former Chairman of the Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, Senator Reed played an important role in crafting key pieces of the bill that will benefit Rhode Island and make critical investments in America’s infrastructure.  This section of the bill provides critical funding for Rhode Island transportation, housing, and economic development programs.  The Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) and Rhode Island Department of Housing (RIDOH) utilize this federal funding to upgrade the state’s infrastructure, improve mobility, and enhance economic opportunity and smart growth.

On the transportation side, Senator Reed estimates Rhode Island will receive well over $300 million for federal highways, bridge repairs, and transportation safety programs.  The bill invests in transportation infrastructure, and, when combined with Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) investments, will provide a total of $1.845 billion in RAISE Grants in fiscal year 2024.  Last year, Rhode Island won a $25 million RAISE grant to enhance the heavily trafficked Route 37.  It also sets aside funding to hire more air traffic controllers and rail safety inspectors.  It includes key Airport Improvement Program (AIP) funds to benefit T.F. Green International Airport as well as funds for Amtrak.  The bill will also provide critical funding for the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority’s (RIPTA) capital expenses.

On the Housing side, the bill protects vital rental assistance to help millions of households keep a roof over their head and invests in key programs to help build more housing.  It includes sustained investments in the HOME program and the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program, which give local governments needed resources to develop their communities, support businesses, create jobs, and ensure the availability of decent, affordable housing.  Senator Reed also led efforts to include funding to address lead poisoning.

Notably, the bill also includes an extension of funding for Community Health Centers, National Health Service Corps, Teaching Health Centers, the Special Diabetes Program, and a temporary increase in Medicare physician reimbursement rates, among other Medicare payment policies through December 31, 2024.

Now that the minibus appropriations bill has been approved by the House, it must also be cleared by the U.S. Senate before it can be sent to President Biden to be signed into law.

Next, Congress must take up and pass the remaining six appropriations bills, which include: Defense; Financial Services and General Government; Homeland Security; Labor-Health, Human Services, and Education (LHHSE); Legislative Branch; and State and Foreign Operations.

Leave a comment

We welcome relevant and respectful comments. Off-topic comments may be removed.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *