Rep. Salmon Introduces Final 2016 Shrink our Spending Bill

Jul 14, 2016
Press Release
Ends Wasteful EPA Grants on “Environmental Justice”

Washington, D.C. — Today, Rep. Matt Salmon (AZ-05) announced the thirteenth bill in his 2016 Shrink our Spending Initiative to highlight and cut wasteful taxpayer-funded programs. Upon introduction of his latest bill to end the EPA’s “Environmental Justice” grants, Rep. Salmon released the following statement:

“This week, as the final bill in my 2016 SOS Initiative, I’m proposing we cut a grant program designed by environmental extremists that primarily serves as a pet slush fund for state and local environmental lobby projects—things that should not only be left to state and local governments, but also to citizens concerned for their neighborhoods.  Litter cleanups and gardens are not an area requiring federal dollars borrowed on the backs of future generations of Americans.  This has to stop.”

Background:  The Environmental Justice Small Grants program was created by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1994 to address environmental justice issues in communities around the country. Since then, the mission of this program has grown to fund projects that are solely local in nature, such as neighborhood litter cleanups, urban gardening, composting, and the effects of urban sprawl and automobile dependence, totaling more than $24 million. Eliminating funding for the Environmental Justice Small Grant program in the EPA would save $12 million over 10 years.

Background on Rep. Salmon’s SOS Initiative:

In 2014, Rep. Salmon began a program to identify and cut wasteful spending government-wide, because he knew every federal department, office, and agency has wasteful spending within their budgets.  The program was called the “Shrink Our Spending” Initiative and aimed at finding $ 1.5 billion in wasteful spending.  In 2015, the initiative identified and cut over $3 billion in government waste.

Rep. Matt Salmon (AZ-05) serves on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs as Chairman of the Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific. He is also a member of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.
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