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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Mon Mar 19, 2012, 09:01 AM Mar 2012

The Artificial Line Between Social and Economic Issues: Exhibit A, Andrew Cuomo

http://www.thenation.com/blog/166836/artificial-line-between-social-and-economic-issues-exhibit-andrew-cuomo

The bright line that we often draw between the economic and social can lead us to ignore one at the expense of the other. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is a perfect example of that. He became a hero of the left when he helped usher through the legalization of gay marriage in July. But the rest of his agenda is so fiscally conservative that he’s currently embroiled in a fight with public sector unions over decreasing retirees’ pension payments and benefits for new workers.

In the very same year that Cuomo was lauded by the left for his stance on gay rights, he was busy implementing a budget that refused to raise taxes and filled a fiscal hole with huge cuts to services. The enacted 2011 budget reduced overall spending by 2 percent from the year before, “largely through cuts to services and State operations, as well as streamlined government actions,” the Human Services Council reports. But the enacted budget was much kinder than the one Cuomo originally proposed: he would have cut $400 million to health and human services, while the enacted budget added $271 million back. HSC concludes, however, that even with those restorations, “the final budget [did] not meet the need for services in New York’s communities.”

Those service cuts had a huge impact on what we likely categorize as a social issue: domestic violence. The current budget eliminates the TANF non-residential domestic violence initiative, leaving women seeking services but not in need of a shelter out of luck. Meanwhile, cuts to programs for the homeless will impact women fleeing domestic violence. Abuse leads to homelessness for 28 percent of families. Yet the current state budget proposes the elimination of its share of the Advantage housing subsidy program, which helps the homeless move from shelters to permanent housing. The city will also drop its commitment, meaning that $192 million in funding for housing subsidies will disappear. Both cuts mean far less support for women fleeing abusive situations.

Budget cuts have impacted other social issues in direct and indirect ways. Take crime enforcement. Cuomo’s 2011 budget proposed cutting $60 million from the state police force’s budget, constituting an 8.4 percent decline. That trend is widespread. A Justice Department report states, “The economic decline has severely affected law enforcement agencies’ operating budgets across the nation.” One-third of police department budgets have seen a drop of more than 5 percent since 2009. This has skewed the priorities for many forces: 8 percent of departments are no longer responding to car thefts, and 9 percent are ignoring burglar alarms. Yet at the same time, drug enforcement is either staying steady or rising. This is at least partly because drug arrests bring in money, particularly as a reward from federal anti-drug grants for more arrests and drug seizures. Those arrests don’t fall evenly: black adults were arrested on drug charges 2.8 to 5.5 times more often than white Americans in every year from 1980 to 2007. Cutting police budgets will have a huge impact on black Americans across the country.
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The Artificial Line Between Social and Economic Issues: Exhibit A, Andrew Cuomo (Original Post) xchrom Mar 2012 OP
k/r marmar Mar 2012 #1
indeed. nt xchrom Mar 2012 #2
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