Word: ceta
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...politician--though scatterbrained, he thinks about issues in new terms and with new solutions. It may not make a lot of practical sense when discussing economic problems to say "let's explore outer space." But it is, at least, an idea, and perhaps more palatable than either giving people CETA jobs or awarding them the chance to make minimum and less at McDonalds. Yes, what John Anderson said made sense, more sense than the solutions of either of the two major candidates. But the answers Anderson provided were only the easy, suburban and utterly conventional ones. Tax gasoline...
...supported Reagan probably don't care that he offered little but a far-away trickle-down effect to workers without powerful unions behind them; that Reagan opposed any advance of the American trade union movement; or that the proposed rearmament of America would be at the expense of the CETA and Social Security payments. So, it is up to us to wonder exactly what if any solidarity exists among American working people in the United States. Although union leaders defend the air traffic controllers strike officially, they must have little sympathy for PATCO because the growing trend of strikes...
...Reagan Administration, which is already eliminating existing job-training programs like the much maligned Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA), is not likely to help fill the void with yet another federally financed jobs effort. Nor does Congress seem disposed to help. Says Indiana Republican Dan Quayle, chairman of a Senate subcommittee on employment and productivity: "The more that Government gets involved in training, the worse the problem gets...
...cuts. Perkins called his committee Democrats into caucus and chose to restore $1.75 billion for such programs as school impact aid, student loans and Head Start preschool education centers. The committee offset that by eliminating $1.57 billion from other programs -$1 billion from the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) job program, as the Administration had recommended...
Jones accepted, by his own estimate, 75% of Reagan's expenditure-slashing proposals, including some of the most celebrated: for example, wiping out the CETA public service jobs program and reducing federal grants that enable states to offer extended benefits to the unemployed. The heart of the difference over the remaining 25% is a matter of priorities. Jones originally recommended spending $4.4 billion less for defense next fiscal year than Reagan would, largely by canceling a 5.3% military pay increase due July 1; conservative Democrats would not go along, so he dropped the idea. The committee did agree...