Center for American Progress

Update: The Trump Budget Cuts Hit Coal Communities and Workers Where It Hurts
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Update: The Trump Budget Cuts Hit Coal Communities and Workers Where It Hurts

President Trump’s Fiscal Year 2018 budget would cut economic development and workforce training programs that have helped coal miners, their families, and communities.

In this May 12, 2016, photo, coal miner Scottie Stinson, front, drives a man trip as he and fellow workers head into an underground mine less than 40-inches high to start their shift in Welch, West Virginia. (AP/David Goldman)
In this May 12, 2016, photo, coal miner Scottie Stinson, front, drives a man trip as he and fellow workers head into an underground mine less than 40-inches high to start their shift in Welch, West Virginia. (AP/David Goldman)

This column contains a correction.

In his Fiscal Year 2018 budget request, President Donald Trump has proposed cuts to programs that would hurt coal miners, their families, and their communities. Using the earlier Trump budget blueprint, the Center for American Progress analyzed federal awards for economic development and workforce training across coal country and mapped where those grants benefited counties that voted for President Trump in the election. CAP revisited that analysis after the White House released its full budget request on Tuesday. The following table outlines updates from the president’s newly released FY 2018 budget.

In response to criticism that the cuts in the FY 2018 budget request would pull the rug out from under coal communities, the Trump administration will likely highlight its request for an additional $66 million in funding for the U.S. Department of Labor’s Dislocated Worker National Reserve. These funds are meant to create “grants to Appalachian communities that have experienced job losses due to reductions in employment.” But this request is yet another example of bad budget math and is cynical in the face of severe cuts and the elimination of so many other programs that aid coal communities in Appalachia and several other regions.

Apparently, cynicism about American workers abounds in the Trump administration. In an April interview with CNBC, Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney captured President Trump’s and his own sentiment and deliberation in the budget process on items that affect coal country: “‘Mr. President, this is not an efficient use of the taxpayer dollars. This is not the best way to help the people in West Virginia.’” On whether President Trump is aware the budget cuts would undermine his own supporters, Mulvaney replied, “when you say … the people that voted for him are hurt, that’s not the issue.”

Coal miners, their families, and their communities know what works best for economic growth in coal country. They are also becoming more and more aware of how the Trump budget cuts would hurt them and limit their future economic and educational opportunities.

Luke H. Bassett is the associate director of domestic energy policy at the Center for American Progress.

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Authors

Luke Bassett

Associate Director, Domestic Energy and Environment Policy