WASHINGTON — March 9, 2013 - One federal department stands conspicuously protected from the automatic budget cuts falling across the government: the Department of Veterans Affairs with its 300,000 employees and $140 billion budget, a mammoth agency second in size only to the Defense Department.The exemption, carved out in the 2011 legislation establishing the cuts, reflected rare bipartisan agreement in Washington that the VA should be spared the threatened budget turmoil.
But while the VA is protected from the budgetary ax known as sequestration, veterans are not.
Programs supporting veterans — on issues from housing to mental health — that are operated by agencies other than the VA are subject to the cuts.
They include the Department of Labor’s VETS job-training program, which was being revamped and has been touted by the Obama administration as a key weapon in reducing high unemployment among post- 9/11 era veterans. In February, that unemployment rate was 9.4 percent, higher than the overall rate of 7.7 percent. read more>>>
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