December 08, 2020

Manchin: Congress Must Reauthorize Secure Rural Schools And PILT Program Funding

West Virginia Educators, Superintendents, and Treasurers Urge Congress To Reauthorize SRS

Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) led 27 bipartisan Senators in urging Congressional leadership to include a reauthorization of the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act (SRS) and maintain robust Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PILT) program funding as part of the Appropriations process. 

“SRS and PILT serve as a lifeline to rural America’s local governments and now, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the budgets of these rural counties have taken a hit.  These two programs fund roads, schools, law enforcement, and essential county services, such as public health programs. With additional demands on their resources as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, rural communities and counties are stretched thinner than ever,” said the Senators in part. “Congress must include a reauthorization of SRS, including the programmatic amendments to S. 430 passed on a broad bipartisan basis in the Energy and Natural Resources Committee.”

The Senators’ letter comes as the budgets for rural communities and counties across the country are stretched thinner than ever due to the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic. Educators and local leaders from across West Virginia have voiced concerns over West Virginia counties’ ability to properly fund basic services like road maintenance and childhood education without this authorization. They urged Congressional leaders to reauthorize the SRS program and maintain the PILT funding that is critical to the success of their counties.

“I am writing asking again for the support of Secure Rural Schools for Pocahontas County, our most rural county of West Virginia, as well as many other rural areas of West Virginia, including counties of Greenbrier, Pendleton, Randolph, Tucker, Webster and across the United States. In addition, we ask you to include a reauthorization of SRS funding as part of the appropriations process,” said Sherry Radcliff, Director of Finance, Pocahontas County Board of Education. “Thank you to Senator Manchin for the $908 billion COVID-19 Emergency Relief Framework that he and his bipartisan colleagues are supporting to help with this pandemic and for supporting SRS funding for our rural counties of West Virginia.”

Last December, Senator Manchin secured a 2-year extension to the SRS program in the Fiscal Year 2020 Appropriations package. The extension provided a total of $1,778,953.84 for counties in West Virginia with Forest Service lands.

Read the Senators’ letter below or click here:

 

Dear Leader McConnell, Speaker Pelosi, Leader Schumer and Leader McCarthy:

We write to share our steadfast support for the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act (SRS) and the Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PILT) program.  Specifically, we urge you to include a reauthorization of SRS and maintain robust PILT funding as part of the appropriations process. 

SRS and PILT serve as a lifeline to rural America’s local governments and now, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the budgets of these rural counties have taken a hit.  These two programs fund roads, schools, law enforcement, and essential county services, such as public health programs. With additional demands on their resources as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, rural communities and counties are stretched thinner than ever.  

Despite being small, rural, and generally relatively remote, county governments that rely on SRS and PILT are responding to the same national health crisis facing larger cities and urban areas. Extending and funding these two programs has wide, bipartisan support, which was on display as recently as 2019, when the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee held a legislative hearing on PILT and SRS. 

As Congress works to establish a permanent county payments solution, diversify rural economies, improve forest management and forest health, strengthen historic forest revenue sharing with local governments, and ensure that public lands provide a range of values such as clean water, jobs, grazing opportunities, and wood fiber for local economies, a short-term reauthorization is critical for counties across the country.

In order to assist these rural counties’ response to the current public health crisis, as well as to invest in infrastructure, schools, and law enforcement, Congress must include a reauthorization of SRS, including the programmatic amendments to S. 430 passed on a broad bipartisan basis in the Energy and Natural Resources Committee. Further, we urge you to maintain robust funding for PILT as you continue funding negotiations for the remainder of the fiscal year.