Sunday, January 16, 2011

Executive Director's Column

January 14, 2011
Washington, DC

Itís January 2011 and, once again, we welcome the nationís mayors to Washington for the 79th Winter Meeting.

New leaders have been elected in the House since the mid-term November elections. Committees are formed and soon the work begins.

President Obama and his economic team will soon send his 2011 budget proposals to Capitol Hill. The President proposes and Congress disposes.

At issue for us is the flagstone federal program since 1974, the HUD Community Development Block Grant program. Rumors and leaks from inside the Administration pointed to a proposed 25 percent cut in the CDBG program.

Calls involving mayors through the Christmas Holiday, on Christmas Eve and throughout the week leading up to New Years weekend continued expressing strong support for CDBG funding. Mayors continue to state that with the economic crunch we are experiencing, it is not the time to reduce the ongoing level of CDBG funds to cities throughout America.

We trust the voices of mayors and county officials supporting the CDBG program will be heard and that the Presidentís economic and political advisors will stand with President Obama who, at our 2008 Annual Meeting in Miami, said as a Presidential Candidate he supported "full funding of CDBG."

The New Congress

It is a bit early to tell where the new Congress is going to land as it deals with the CDBG program. Certainly, there is the air of the tea party to cut, cut, cut, cut and spend less.
It will be up to the mayors to protect this program. The Conference staff and our leadership will provide our mayors with the best economic and political arguments that CDBG should be fully funded. History shows that this block grant program has strong Republican support.
As a bipartisan group of elected officials, mayors must work on both sides of the aisles and up the middle of the aisle to protect this program. We can do it if we work together, and we will.
As we gather here in Washington this week, we will muster the support to return again in February and through the Spring to fight for this successful key priority, which is so needed during the economic downturn in so many cities.

We are appreciative of the way The National Association of Counties, The National League of Cities and The National Community Development Association have all come together as allies for this effort. The business community will be there giving support as they have been in the past. And together we will prevail.

Tucson Shooting - Arizona

Mayors from all over America and the globe have expressed their deepest sympathy and outrage over the senseless killings in Tucson. We applaud Tucson Mayor Walkup and Pima County Sheriff Dupnik for their leadership during this tragedy.

JFK 50th

Fifty years ago, he stood and made a speech that rings true today. He welcomed the challenges and he asked each of us to do something in our own way for our country. His daughter, Caroline, and I met early last year to keep his spirit and work alive. We are so proud and thankful to hundreds of mayors who have joined in the effort to go into our schools and ask our youth what they can do for our cities. Thank you Caroline Kennedy and thank you mayors for understanding and appreciating the force and living legacy of President John F. Kennedy our beloved 35th President.

2011 Congress - Action

Again, welcome to Washington for our 79th Winter Meeting and if I can be of any assistance to you while you are here and after you return home, please let me know. The coming weeks and months will present many challenges for key Conference of Mayors federal/city funded priorities. Working together, we will, as we have in the past, rise to the occasion and win. It is important that mayors and staff across America pay close attention to our calls to action as the Congress starts the appropriation and budgetary process. I look forward to working with you and Conference of Mayors President Elizabeth Kautz as we go forward.

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