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Page 172 - வரலாற்று ரீதியாக கருப்பு கல்லூரிகள் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Biden s first budget includes billions more for high-poverty schools, environmental programs and the CDC

Biden s first budget includes billions more for high-poverty schools, environmental programs and the CDC Joey Garrison, USA TODAY Replay Video UP NEXT WASHINGTON  In his first budget request to Congress, President Joe Biden is proposing spending billions more on Head Start programs, high-poverty schools and the Environmental Protection Agency and boosting civil rights initiatives, including police reform and the prosecution of hate crimes. © Mandel Ngan, AFP via Getty Images US President Joe Biden speaks about the March jobs report in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on April 2, 2021. The plan also includes the largest increase in the Centers for Disease Control s budget in nearly 20 years as Biden looks to continue combatting the coronavirus pandemic.

Second IG Disparity Review Survey coming > Air Force Reserve Command > News

Second IG Disparity Review Survey coming > Air Force Reserve Command > News
af.mil - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from af.mil Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Gov Beshear signs bill limiting no knock warrants

Governor Andy Beshear has signed more bills into law. In a ceremony at the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage in Louisville, Beshear signed Senate Bill 4, which limits no-knock warrants in the state. The family of Breonna Taylor, including her mother Tamika Palmer, was on hand for the signing. The governor also signed into law a bill that awards tuition grants to Historically Black Colleges and Universities Simmons College and Kentucky State University to produce more African American teachers.

Biden Proposes Major Spending Boost for Civilian Agencies in Fiscal 2022

Government Executive Get the latest on need-to-know topics for federal employees delivered to your inbox. email Biden Proposes Major Spending Boost for Civilian Agencies in Fiscal 2022 The administration is requesting a 16% increase in non-defense discretionary funding to harness the government s power to solve multiple crises. Administration officials on Friday released a 58-page outline of President Biden’s fiscal 2022 federal budget proposal, which includes a whopping 16% increase in non-defense discretionary spending. The aim is to marshal the power of the government to solve some of the most pressing challenges the nation faces, including the pandemic, climate change and racial inequity. Biden is proposing $769 billion for civilian agencies and $753 billion for national defense programs, a 1.7% increase over fiscal 2021 defense spending.

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