Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
R48109
Congressional Research Service
This report provides a brief summary of the status of FY2025 Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education (LHHS) appropriations as of the cover date of this report. It also provides background on the scope of the LHHS bill generally and the context for congressional appropriations decisions, including the submission of the President’s budget request for FY2025 and budget enforcement in the absence of a budget resolution.
Congress has not reached agreement on full-year regular FY2025 LHHS appropriations. In the interim, FY2025 funding has been provided temporarily through a continuing resolution (CR). The CR was signed into law on September 26, 2024 (Division A of H.R. 9747; P.L. 118-83), providing continuing appropriations for all 12 annual appropriations acts (including LHHS) through December 20, 2024. In general, the CR funds discretionary programs at the same rate and under the same conditions as in FY2024 and funds annually appropriated entitlements at their current-law levels. The CR includes a few provisions that are specific to LHHS accounts or related activities.
The FY2025 LHHS bill has not received initial floor consideration in either the House or the Senate as of the cover date of this report.
On May 23, 2024, the House Appropriations Committee voted to report its draft initial suballocations for all 12 subcommittees, including LHHS (30-22). (These draft suballocations, and subsequent revised suballocations, have not been reported to the House.) The Senate Appropriations Committee reported to the Senate its full set of suballocations (S.Rept. 118-190) on July 11, 2024 (15-11).
On July 10, the House Appropriations Committee marked up its FY2025 LHHS bill in full committee, and voted to report the bill (31-25). The bill (H.R. 9029) was reported to the House on July 12, 2024 (H.Rept. 118-585). Previously, the LHHS subcommittee had approved the draft LHHS bill on June 27, 2024 (voice vote).
On August 1, the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to report its FY2025 LHHS bill (25-3); the bill (S. 4942) was subsequently reported to the Senate that same day (S.Rept. 118-207). The measure was not formally marked up in subcommittee prior to full committee consideration.
November 7, 2024
Karen E. Lynch Specialist in Social Policy
Jessica Tollestrup Specialist in Social Policy
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
Congressional Research Service
Scope of the LHHS Bill ................................................................................................................... 1
Context for FY2025 ......................................................................................................................... 3
President’s Budget Submission for FY2025 ............................................................................. 3 FY2025 Discretionary Spending Levels and Appropriations Committee Allocations .............. 4
Statutory Spending Limits .................................................................................................. 4 Appropriations Committee Allocations Under the Budget Resolution ............................... 5
FY2025 LHHS Legislative Action .................................................................................................. 6
FY2025 Continuing Appropriations .......................................................................................... 6
Congressional Action on a LHHS Bill ...................................................................................... 6
LHHS Funding Levels ..................................................................................................................... 7
Table 1. LHHS Discretionary Appropriations: Comparison of FY2023 Enacted, FY2024
Enacted, FY2025 House Appropriations Committee Bill (H.R. 9029), and FY2025 Senate Appropriations Committee Bill (S. 4942) ......................................................................... 7
Author Information .......................................................................................................................... 9
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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his report provides a brief summary of the status of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education (LHHS) appropriations during the FY2025 appropriations cycle. It includes relevant congressional actions and a top-line comparison of discretionary funding enacted
in FY2023 and FY2024, versus relevant FY2025 legislative proposals. It also provides background on the scope of the bill and context for congressional budgetary decisionmaking.
Congress has not reached agreement on full-year regular FY2025 LHHS appropriations. In the interim, FY2025 funding has been provided temporarily through a continuing resolution (CR). The CR was signed into law on September 26, 2024 (Division A of H.R. 9747; P.L. 118-83), providing continuing appropriations for all 12 annual appropriations acts (including LHHS) through December 20, 2024. In general, the CR funds discretionary programs at the same rate and under the same conditions as in FY2024 and funds annually appropriated entitlements at their current-law levels. The CR includes a few provisions that are specific to LHHS accounts or related activities.
The FY2025 LHHS bill has not received initial floor consideration in either the House or the Senate as of the cover date of this report.
On July 10, the House Appropriations Committee marked up its FY2025 LHHS bill in full committee, and voted to report the bill (31-25). The bill (H.R. 9029) was reported to the House on July 12, 2024 (H.Rept. 118-585). Previously, the LHHS subcommittee had approved the draft LHHS bill on June 27, 2024 (voice vote).
On August 1, the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to report its FY2025 LHHS bill (25-3); the bill (S. 4942) was subsequently reported to the Senate that same day (S.Rept. 118-207). The measure was not formally marked up in subcommittee prior to full committee consideration.
Congressional clients may consult the LHHS experts list in CRS Report R42638, Appropriations: CRS Experts, for information on which analysts to contact at the Congressional Research Service (CRS) with questions on specific agencies and programs funded in the LHHS bill.
The LHHS bill is the largest of the 12 annual appropriations bills when accounting for both mandatory and discretionary funding ($1.4 trillion in FY2024).1 It provides annually appropriated budget authority for the following federal departments and agencies:
• the Department of Labor (DOL);
• most agencies at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), except for the Food and Drug Administration (funded through the Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies appropriations bill), the Indian Health Service (funded through the Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies appropriations bill), and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (funded through the Interior- Environment appropriations bill);
1 This is calculated based on the explanatory statement accompanying the FY2024 LHHS omnibus (P.L. 118-47) available in the Congressional Record, vol. 170, no. 51, book II, March 22, 2024, pp. H1886-H2070. The discretionary funding provided in the LHHS appropriations act is both provided and controlled by that act. The mandatory funding provided in the LHHS act is controlled by provisions in authorizing law. For definitions of these and other budget terms, see U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), A Glossary of Terms Used in the Federal Budget Process, GAO-05-734SP, September 1, 2005, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-734SP. (Terms of interest may include budget authority, appropriated entitlement, direct spending, discretionary, entitlement authority, and mandatory.)
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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• the Department of Education (ED); and
• more than a dozen related agencies (RA), including the Social Security Administration (SSA), Corporation for National and Community Service, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Institute of Museum and Library Services, National Labor Relations Board, and Railroad Retirement Board.
In general, mandatory funding represents more than 80% of the total LHHS bill, supporting annually appropriated entitlements such as Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). Discretionary funds, which account for less than 20% of total funds in the bill, tend to be the focus of congressional debate during the appropriations process.2 This is because the appropriations process generally has little control over the amount of mandatory funding provided for appropriated entitlements; rather, the authorizing statute controls the program parameters (e.g., eligibility rules, benefit levels) that entitle certain recipients to payments. Consequently, the focus of this report generally is on the discretionary spending for LHHS programs and activities under various laws and proposals.
Even though discretionary appropriations represent a relatively small share of the entire LHHS bill, the bill is typically the largest single source of nondefense discretionary funding for the federal government. (The Department of Defense bill is the largest single source of discretionary funding overall.)
2 For an illustrative discussion of the distribution of funds among the different titles of the bill, and between discretionary and mandatory spending, see the summary of FY2024 Senate committee-approved LHHS appropriations on pages 7-11 of CRS Report R47936, Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education: FY2024 Appropriations.
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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Calculating T otal LHHS Budget Authority
Budget authority is the amount of money a federal agency is legally authorized to commit or spend. Appropriations bills may include budget authority that becomes available in the current fiscal year, in future fiscal years, or some combination. Amounts that become available in future fiscal years are typically referred to as advance appropriations (e.g., the FY2024 LHHS appropriations act generally contains advance appropriations that become available in FY2025 and FY2026 for certain programs and activities). In addition, while new budget authority is generally subject to a variety of statutory and congressional rules that are intended to control the budget (i.e., budget controls), some budget authority may be effectively exempted from those controls, including budget authority for emergency requirements, health care fraud and abuse control, and continuing disability reviews and redeterminations. The amount of LHHS budget authority can be tabulated in various ways. The total amount of budget authority provided in an appropriations bill (i.e., total in the bill) would be calculated regardless of the year in which the funding becomes available.3 In some cases, such as the 302(b) suballocations (discussed later), the total is based on current-year appropriations (i.e., the amount of budget authority available for obligation in a given fiscal year), which is calculated regardless of the year in which it was first appropriated.4 Additionally, budgetary totals may or may not include Congressional Budget Office (CBO) scorekeeping and other adjustments to reflect budget enforcement conventions and special instructions of Congress.5 Finally, calculations of LHHS budget authority might include or exclude budget authority that is exempted from budget controls.
Congressional development and consideration of annual appropriations traditionally is preceded by the submission of the President’s budget request and the adoption of the congressional budget resolution. In addition, statutory discretionary spending limits on defense and nondefense spending are in effect for FY2025. Background related to these issues is provided below.
The Budget and Accounting Act of 1921 (P.L. 67-13, as amended), requires the President to submit an annual consolidated federal budget to Congress at the beginning of each regular congressional session, not later than the first Monday in February. Many of the proposals in the President’s annual budget recommend changes to laws that govern mandatory spending levels or policies, which are typically established on a multiyear or permanent basis. Discretionary spending, however, which is roughly one-third of the federal budget,6 is decided and controlled each fiscal year through the annual appropriations process. While Congress is ultimately not required to adopt the President’s proposals or recommendations, the submission of the President’s budget typically initiates the congressional budget process and informs Congress of the President’s recommended spending levels for agencies and programs.7
The President’s budget request for FY2025 was submitted on March 11, 2024, about five weeks after it was due. At the time the FY2025 budget request was being developed, discretionary
3 Such figures include advance appropriations provided in the bill for future fiscal years, but do not include advance appropriations provided in prior years’ appropriations bills that become available in the current year.
4 Such figures typically exclude advance appropriations for future years, but include advance appropriations from prior years that become available in the given fiscal year.
5 For more information on scorekeeping, see CRS Report 98-560, Baselines and Scorekeeping in the Federal Budget Process. See also a discussion of key scorekeeping guidelines included in the joint explanatory statement accompanying the conference report to the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (H.Rept. 105-217, pp. 1007-1014).
6 Congressional Budget Office (CBO), The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2023 to 2033, p. 21, https://www.cbo.gov/ system/files/2023-02/58848-Outlook.pdf.
7 For more information, see CRS Report R47019, The Executive Budget Process: An Overview.
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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funding for FY2024 was being provided by a series of temporary continuing resolutions (CRs), instead of full-year appropriations acts. Consequently, both the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and agency budget materials use estimates for FY2024 that are derived from annualized estimates of funding provided under FY2024 CRs (P.L. 118-15, P.L. 118-22, P.L. 118- 35, and P.L. 118-40). In other words, they do not reflect the LHHS levels that were enacted on March 23, 2024, in Division D of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024 (P.L. 118- 47; FY2024 LHHS omnibus).
On May 22, 2024, a package of amendments to the FY2025 budget request was submitted by the President to Congress.8 The one LHHS-related amendment—to an ED general provision—was not estimated to have a budgetary effect.
For FY2025, the discretionary spending levels in appropriations measures are enforceable by both statutory and procedural means. Statutory budget enforcement is through the discretionary spending limits for FY2025 in the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (BBEDCA; P.L. 99-177, as amended). These statutory limits are enforced through sequestration: largely across-the-board reductions made to the category of spending that is in excess of the limit (defense or nondefense), to eliminate the excess spending.9 Procedural budget enforcement is primarily associated with the budget resolution, which provides a process for the House and Senate to agree on budgetary targets ahead of consideration of spending and revenue legislation. These targets are enforced through points of order.
Certain spending is effectively exempt from these limits (commonly referred to as adjustments to those limits). In recent years, adjustments that have been applied to LHHS appropriations are for emergency requirements, to accommodate new budget authority for specified “program integrity” initiatives at HHS (health care fraud and abuse control), the SSA (continuing disability reviews and redeterminations), and for DOL to fund reemployment services and eligibility assessments conducted by the states related to unemployment compensation.10
The current statutory limits on discretionary spending were enacted as part of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (FRA; P.L. 118-5) on June 3, 2023. The FRA amended the BBEDCA to provide limits on defense discretionary (all discretionary spending under budget function 050) and nondefense discretionary (all other discretionary spending) for FY2024 and FY2025.11 All
8 The package of amendments was published at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/FY-2025- Budget-Amendment-Package.pdf.
9 For more information, see CRS Insight IN12168, Discretionary Spending Caps in the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023. The Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (FRA; P.L. 118-5) also contains procedures by which these limits might be temporarily or permanently adjusted in the case of a continuing resolution (CR). For a summary of these adjustments, see CRS Insight IN12183, The FRA’s Discretionary Spending Caps Under a CR: FAQs.
10 For further information on how these generally function, see Appendix A in CRS Report R47936, Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education: FY2024 Appropriations.
11 Prior to the FRA, statutory limits on discretionary spending had been in effect from FY2012 through FY2021 (having expired at the end of FY2021).These limits were initially established in 2011 by the amendments made by the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA; P.L. 112-25) to the BBEDCA, but they were subsequently revised several times over the course of their effective period. For a summary of these changes, see CRS Insight IN11148, The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019: Changes to the BCA and Debt Limit.
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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funding in the LHHS bill is subject to the nondefense limit. The statutory limit on nondefense discretionary spending for FY2025 is $710.688 billion. This is a $7 billion (+1%) increase relative to the FY2024 nondefense discretionary spending limit. (Conformance with this limit is calculated as the net of any Congressional Budget Office [CBO] scorekeeping adjustments, and prior to any adjustments to the limits pursuant to BBEDCA authorities.12) For LHHS programs and activities, the FRA also provided for adjustments to the nondefense spending limit for health care fraud and abuse control, continuing disability reviews and redeterminations, and reemployment services and eligibility assessments, up to a specified amount of funding for FY2025.13 The maximum amount of funding allowed for these FY2025 LHHS adjustments is $2.531 billion, an $83 million (+3%) increase over FY2024.
Appropriations Committee Allocations Under the Budget Resolution
The budget resolution process dates back to the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, and is used each year to impose a limit on total discretionary spending available to the appropriations committees (commonly referred to as a 302(a) allocation) and subsequently, limits on spending under the jurisdiction of each appropriations subcommittee (referred to as 302(b) suballocations).14
As of the cover date of this report, there has been no House or Senate action on a FY2025 budget resolution.15 For the purposes of providing 302(a) allocations and budgetary aggregates for the consideration of FY2025 appropriations, as well as other matters that would have been traditionally associated with the budget resolution, the FRA directed the chair of the Senate Budget Committee to enter those amounts into the Congressional Record not later than May 15, 2024. These were published in the Senate on May 14, 2024.16 The FRA did not include a similar provision for the House.17
Generally, the next step in the appropriations process is for each of the appropriations committees to adopt suballocations from the total amount allocated to them. These 302(b) suballocations provide a limit on current-year (i.e., FY2025) appropriations within each subcommittee’s jurisdiction and incorporate any applicable scorekeeping adjustments made by CBO.18 On May 23, 2024 the House Appropriations Committee voted to approve draft (“interim”) suballocations
12 The FRA includes a provision described as incentivizing Members to enact regular full-year appropriations legislation. The FRA states that in the event that a CR is in effect on January 1 of 2024 or 2025 for any budget account, the discretionary spending limits for that fiscal year are automatically revised. The revision would result in an increase in nondefense discretionary budget authority and a decrease for defense discretionary spending levels when compared with the original levels. Under such a scenario, a sequester order would be issued on April 30, 2025. The FRA states that the revised limits would revert to the original FRA limits if full-year appropriations were enacted before April 30. For more information, see CRS Insight IN12183, The FRA’s Discretionary Spending Caps Under a CR: FAQs.
13 The FRA also provided for a designation for emergency requirements, which would generally be available for funding under the purview of any appropriations act (not just LHHS).
14 For further information, see CRS Report R47388, Enforceable Spending Allocations in the Congressional Budget Process: 302(a)s and 302(b)s.
15 The House Budget Committee voted to report a FY2025 budget resolution on March 7, 2024, but the measure has not been reported.
16 “Budget Enforcement Levels,” Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 170, no. 83 (May 14, 2024), pp. S3679- S3670.
17 For more information, see CRS Insight IN12353, Discretionary Spending: Setting a Topline Amount for FY2025 Appropriations.
18 Such suballocations are commonly revised throughout the appropriations process to reflect changing budgetary priorities.
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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for all 12 subcommittees, including LHHS (30-22).19 (These draft suballocations, and subsequent revised suballocations, have not been reported to the House.20) The Senate Appropriations Committee reported to the Senate its full set of suballocations (S.Rept. 118-190) on July 11, 2024 (15-11).21
FY2025 LHHS regular appropriations are currently being provided by a CR, which was signed into law on September 26, 2024 (Division A of H.R. 9747; P.L. 118-83). The CR provides continuing appropriations for all 12 of the annual appropriations acts (including LHHS) through December 20, 2024. H.R. 9747 was introduced by Representative Cole, the House Appropriations Committee Chair, on September 23, 2024. On September 25, the measure was passed by the House (341-82) and the Senate (78-18), and signed into law the following day.
In general, the FY2025 CR funds discretionary programs at the same rate and under the same conditions as in FY2024 annual appropriations acts (§101), with specified exceptions, and funds annually appropriated entitlements at their current-law levels (§111).22 The CR also includes a few provisions that are specific to LHHS accounts or related activities (§§144, 145).23
The FY2025 LHHS bill has not received initial floor consideration in either the House or the Senate as of the cover date of this report.
On July 10, the House Appropriations Committee marked up its FY2025 LHHS bill in full committee, and voted to report the bill (31-25). The bill (H.R. 9029) was reported to the House on July 12, 2024 (H.Rept. 118-585). Previously, the LHHS subcommittee had approved the draft LHHS bill on June 27, 2024 (voice vote).
On August 1, the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to report its FY2025 LHHS bill (25-3); the bill (S. 4942) was subsequently reported to the Senate that same day (S.Rept. 118-207). The measure was not formally marked up in subcommittee prior to full committee consideration.
19 The House Appropriations Committee suballocations have not been formally reported, but they have been published by the committee at https://appropriations.house.gov/events/markups/full-committee-markup-fiscal-year-2025-military- construction-veterans-affairs-and.
20 The House Appropriations Committee draft suballocations were revised on July 10, 2024, as published at https://appropriations.house.gov/events/markups/full-committee-markup-fiscal-year-2025-labor-health-and-human- services-and-education.
21 Subsequently, the Senate Appropriations Committee revised its subcommittee allocations in H.Rept. 118-197 and S.Rept. 118-203.
22 For an estimate of the discretionary appropriations contained in Division A of H.R. 9747, see CBO, H.R. 9747 Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2025, September 24, 2024, https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2024-09/ CBO_Estimate_for_hr9747.pdf.
23 The LHHS-specific provisions in the CR are discussed in CRS Report R48214, Overview of Continuing Appropriations for FY2025 (Division A of P.L. 118-83).
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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Table 1 displays the CBO estimate of enacted LHHS discretionary appropriations for FY2023 and FY2024, alongside the FY2025 House Appropriations Committee bill (H.R. 9029), and the FY2025 Senate Appropriations Committee bill (S. 4942). The amounts shown for “regular discretionary appropriations” do not include any funding that is subject to program integrity adjustments or emergency designations. The amounts shown represent current-year budget authority subject to the spending limits and take into account any applicable CBO scorekeeping adjustments. Under this method of estimating the bill, the FY2025 House Appropriations Committee bill would provide $8.6 billion (-4%) less than FY2024 enacted, and $21.6 billion (- 10%) less than FY2023 enacted. The FY2025 Senate Appropriations Committee bill would provide $4.2 billion (+2%) more than FY2024 enacted, and $8.7 billion (-4%) less than FY2023 enacted.
As mentioned previously, certain LHHS appropriations, such as those allowed for program integrity funding or designated as for emergency requirements, are effectively exempt from the discretionary spending limits (see discussion in the “FY2025 Discretionary Spending Levels and Appropriations Committee Allocations” section). The “adjusted appropriations” total in the table includes funding under these adjustments, plus “regular discretionary appropriations.” The FY2025 House Appropriations Committee bill would provide a total of $1.9 billion in funding subject to the adjustments, which is $271 million less than the total amount allowed for those adjustments in FY2025 ($2.5 billion). (No FY2025 funding would be provided that meets the criteria for the Reemployment Services and Eligibility Assessments adjustment.) The Senate Committee bill would provide the full amount allowed for the adjustments. The House Appropriations Committee bill does not include any FY2025 funding for emergency requirements, whereas the Senate Committee bill would provide $7.0 billion in emergency- designated discretionary funding.24
Table 1. LHHS Discretionary Appropriations: Comparison of FY2023 Enacted,
FY2024 Enacted, FY2025 House Appropriations Committee Bill (H.R. 9029), and
FY2025 Senate Appropriations Committee Bill (S. 4942)
(budget authority in billions of dollars)
FY2023
Enacted
FY2024
Enacted
FY2025 House
Appropriations
Committee Bill
(H.R. 9029)
FY2025 Senate Appropriations
Committee Bill
(S. 4942)
Regular discretionary appropriations
207.367 194.434 185.797 198.655
Adjustments:
Program Integrity 2.345 2.447 2.260 2.531
Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control (non-add)
0.576 0.604 0.630 0.630
24 Emergency-designated funding in S. 4942 was proposed for a total of nine accounts under the Health and Human Services (Title II) title of the bill.
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
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FY2023
Enacted
FY2024
Enacted
FY2025 House
Appropriations
Committee Bill
(H.R. 9029)
FY2025 Senate Appropriations
Committee Bill
(S. 4942)
Continuing Disability Reviews and Redeterminations (non-add)
1.511 1.578 1.630 1.630
Reemployment Services and Eligibility Assessments (non-add)
0.258 0.265 0.000 0.271
Emergency requirementsa
9.434 0.531 — 7.000
Adjusted appropriations 219.146 197.412 188.057 208.186
Source: The FY2023 Enacted amounts are from CBO, Report on the Status of Discretionary Appropriations, FY2023, U.S. Senate (as of June 3, 2023), https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2023-07/FY2023-Senate-2023-06- 03.pdf, (except that, for consistency with later years, this table excludes certain prior-year emergency-designated funds pursuant to Section 103 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 [P.L. 118-5]). FY2024 Enacted amounts are from CBO, Report on the Status of Discretionary Appropriations, FY2024, U.S. Senate (as of April 23, 2024), https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2024-05/FY2024-Senate-2024-04-23.pdf. The FY2025 House Appropriations Committee Bill amounts are as published on page 4 of H.Rept. 118-585, along with CRS analysis of bill text for the program integrity adjustments. The FY2025 Senate Appropriations Committee Bill amounts are as published on page 7 of S.Rept. 118-207, along with CRS analysis of bill text for the program integrity adjustments and emergency-designated funding amounts. The distribution of amounts for Program Integrity adjustments in the FY2023 LHHS omnibus and FY2024 LHHS omnibus are from a CRS analysis of those laws. Notes: Amounts reflect current-year discretionary budget authority subject to spending limits. “Regular discretionary appropriations” totals exclude funds for which special rules apply under the spending limits (e.g., funds for certain program integrity activities and emergency requirements); those funds are included under the “Adjustments” table heading. The table excludes funds that are exempted from the spending limits (i.e., those provided under authorities in the 21st Century Cures Act [P.L. 114-255], and the prior-year emergency- designated advance appropriations in Division J of P.L. 117-58 and Division B of P.L. 117-159, pursuant to Section 103 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 [P.L. 118-5]). a. Several emergency-designated appropriations during this period have no definite dollar amount specified (e.g., the budgetary effects of Section 301 of Division B of P.L. 118-50, related to eligibility for certain benefits, see CBO, “CBO Estimate for H.R. 8035, Ukraine Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024, As posted on the website of the House Committee on Rules on April 17, 2024,” April 19, 2024, https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2024-04/ hr8035_Ukraine_Security_Supplemental_Appropriations_Act_2024.pdf). For this indefinite emergency- designated funding, CRS relies on the CBO estimates in the Status of Discretionary Appropriations report series, which may be subject to change depending on various programmatic and economic factors.
Status of FY2025 LHHS Appropriations: In Brief
Congressional Research Service R48109 · VERSION 8 · UPDATED 9
Karen E. Lynch Specialist in Social Policy
Jessica Tollestrup
Specialist in Social Policy
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