Shutdown Threatens Essential DC City Services

With the shutdown of the federal government, the District of Columbia government is unable to receive approval from Congress to fund basic operations and essential city programs.
Shutdown Threatens Essential DC City Services
District of Columbia Mayor Vincent Gray calls on Congress to grant the District exemption from the Government shutdown so that the city may fund public services including the Metro and Medicaid service provideers. Ron Dory/The Epoch Times
Updated:

WASHINGTON—Because of the District of Columbia’s unique relationship with Congress, the city’s spending must be approved by Congress. With the federal government shutdown, Congress cannot approve funding for the city’s operations and programs. 

At the moment, the District government is operating on budget reserves. However, it has already had to delay payment of its obligations, which includes payments to Medicaid healthcare providers and payments to the Washington Metro Transit Authority, according to the mayor’s website.

District of Columbia Mayor Vincent Gray and Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton passionately called for Congress to grant the District of Columbia budget autonomy at a press conference on the East Lawn of the U.S. Capitol on Oct. 9. 

House Oversight Committee Chairman Darryl Issa (R-Calif.), District Councilman Kenyan McDuffie, and community leaders also spoke in support of Congress releasing the District’s funds. 

Citing that the reserve funds will soon be depleted, Mayor Gray demanded that the federal government “Free us so that we can spend our own money.” During the federal shutdown that began in 1995 and ended in 1996, the District government was granted an exemption after 5 days, according to the mayor’s website.

Now into the 10th day, the Government shutdown is affecting organizations in the District that provide social and medical services to District residents. 

Maria Gomez, president and CEO of the Mary’s Center, a Federally Qualified Health Center, voiced her frustration and implored Congress to see the human impact of the shutdown. If the District government remains unable to meet its obligations, mental health patients will be on the street. “Please understand the harm to [D.C.’s] 28,000 mental health patients,” she said, according to DCist Daily 

The Maria Center is a community-based health center that provides medical and mental health services to low income District residents. According to Dr. Julie Martinez Ortega, board chair of Mary’s Center, the organization is the second largest non-profit serving Medicaid patients in the District, behind United Healthcare. 

Mary’s center receives funding from sources that include the District government and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

Other service providers voiced their discontentment over the District’s current financial woes. “We are very disappointed in Congress,“ said Darrion Gates, a program manager with the Art and Drama Therapy Institute (ADTI), a center for adults with intellectual disabilities. ”They don’t hear our cry. We need our services.”

Gates and a group of adult participants in ADTI’s program brandished signs at the press conference that read “Please release DC Funding.” ADTI receives funding from Medicaid and District agencies that include the Department of Disability Services, Gates said. 

President Obama was notified of the potential effects that the federal shutdown would thrust upon D.C. residents in a letter from Mayor Gray.

“In no other part of our country are Americans facing the loss of basic municipal or state services due to the federal government shutdown,“ the letter read. ”Families in Chicago, Cincinnati, and Las Vegas are not worried that their local governments won’t be able to maintain basic services like schools, police and fire protection, or trash collection—and neither should families here in the District of Columbia.” 

Mayor Gray sent the letter on Oct. 8.