Appropriations Letter on Behalf of BLS in FY 2018

The Honorable Tom Cole, Chair

House Appropriations Committee, Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education

Washington, DC 20515

The Honorable Rosa DeLauro, Ranking Member

House Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education

Washington, DC 20515

Dear Chairman Cole and Ranking Member DeLauro,

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) of the U.S. Department of Labor is the principal federal agency responsible for measuring labor market activity, working conditions, and price changes in the economy. Federal agencies and countless businesses, state and local governments, researchers, and policy makers rely on the uniquely accurate, objective and timely statistical information produced by BLS.

Among the critically important products that BLS provides are the:

  • Jobs outlook upon which job seekers, employers and matriculating students plan their participation in the labor market;

  • Consumer Price Index, which measures inflation and guides monetary policy;

  • National, state and local job growth, unemployment and wages that track the business cycle and regional labor market conditions;

  • Measures of productivity that gauge our nation’s economic performance; and

  • Monthly data on the change in the prices of imported and exported goods.

As you prepare the Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 Labor, Health and Human Services and Education Appropriations bill, the undersigned members of the Friends of BLS urge you to revitalize BLS’s budget and provide the agency with $629 million in budget authority, an increase of $20 million over the FY 17 enacted, to fill critical gaps in their staffing and technology upgrades.

Over the last decade, BLS’s funding has remained flat, which has dramatically reduced the bureau’s resources in terms of real dollars. As a result, they have had to cut back on replacement and development of staff and to delay modernizing data and processes. This additional funding will allow BLS to cover critical gaps in upgrading technology, staffing and training, activities that are vital to building the strong evidence infrastructure sought by this administration.

It is BLS’s mission to collect, analyze and disseminate essential economic information to support public and private decision making. No other agency provides the labor market, workforce and consumer price data upon which we, our members, and so many more rely. Thank you for supporting this crucial agency and its role in evidence-based policy making.

Sincerely, Erica Groshen, Chair

John Thompson, Co-Chair

Organizations

American Sociological Association

American Statistical Association

Association of Population Centers

Association of Public Data Users

California Center for Population Research at UCLA

Center for Human Resource Research at the Ohio State University

Cornell Population Center

Council for Professional Associations on Federal Statistics

CUNY Institute for Demographic Research

Haver Analytics

Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan

ICPSR at the University of Michigan

National Association for Business Economists

Population Association of America

Puerto Rico Institute of Statistics

W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research

Workforce Data Quality Campaign

Individuals

Affiliations listed for identification only. Individuals have signed on their own behalf, and the views expressed are their own, not those of their institution, trustees or funders.

John B. Casterline, Director, Institute for Population Research at the Ohio State University

Jack Kleinhenz, Kleinhenz & Associates

Demetra Nightingale, Urban Institute

Andrew Reamer, GW Institute of Public Policy, George Washington University

Raymond Stone, Rutgers University, former BLS's Data Users Advisory Committee

Brady West, ISR and JPSM University of Maryland, Statistical Consultant for CSCAR

Read the Senate version here.