* Cuts mean longer airport lines, more homeless  -administration                
* U.S. military not seen compromised at 2007 funding levels                
* Government furloughs could take weeks to implement after  March 1                
By David Lawder                
WASHINGTON, Feb 14 (Reuters) - Hundreds of thousands of  people made homeless, long waits at airports and criminals going  unpunished.                
Those were among the dire warnings from the Obama  administration on Thursday of the consequences of automatic  public spending cuts that are due to kick in next month.                
While the measures do indeed threaten jobs and the economic  recovery, experts say government agencies are overplaying the  effect of the $85 billion "sequestration" cuts to jolt lawmakers  into halting them.                
Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told a Senate  Appropriations Committee hearing that U.S. military readiness  would be eroded by the across-the-board cuts, to be split evenly  between military and domestic discretionary programs.                
Carter said some 46,000 contract employees would be laid  off, and 800,000 civilian employees would be furloughed for 22  days and ship and aircraft maintenance would be slashed.                
But the cuts are only a small portion of the overall $3.6  trillion U.S. annual budget, and a miniscule component of the  vast U.S. economy.                
"Somehow, the idea that if we go back to 2007 military  funding levels we're going to be a second-rate power, well  that's overdoing it," said Lawrence Korb, a senior fellow with  the Center for American Progress and a former U.S. assistant  defense secretary.                
"If you kept this cut, you're back to $500 billion a year. I  find it hard to get that worried about it," Korb said, noting  that this was still vastly more than any other country spends on  its military.                
A senior White House budget official cautioned, though, that  sequestration will have grave real effects.                
"We simply cannot cut $85 billion out of our budget over the  next seven months without critical consequences for defense and  non-defense," said Danny Werfel, controller for the Office of  Management and Budget.                
He was one of several administration officials, including  cabinet secretaries, to list the serious ramifications if  Congress and President Barack Obama did not reach an agreement  to stop sequestration.                
The Justice Department predicted that it would handle 1,000  fewer criminal cases this year due to the cuts. The FBI would  have to furlough all of its employees for up to 14 days, which  the agency said was the equivalent of taking 775 agents off the  streets.                
"Criminals that should be held accountable for their actions  will not be held accountable and violators of our civil laws may  go unpunished," Attorney General Eric Holder wrote in a letter  to Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland, the chairwoman of the  Senate Appropriations Committee.                
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said that  screening lines at busy U.S. airports could grow by up to an  hour as Transportation Security Administration staff are  furloughed.                
Waits at border crossings could reach 4 to 5 hours, ports  could face gridlock and reduced Coast Guard patrols would mean  less interdiction of drug and illegal immigrants and more  pressure on fisheries, she said.                
Secretary of State John Kerry said that "vital missions of  national security, diplomacy and development" were at risk from  the budget crunch.                
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan  predicted some 225,000 people, including veterans, could be at  risk of becoming homeless as they lose access to housing  vouchers or emergency shelter programs.                
FURLOUGH NOTICES                
The Pentagon has more flexibility to deal with the cuts than  domestic agencies, said Gordon Adams, an American University  foreign policy professor.                
Domestic agencies are more payroll-based, so they have  little choice but to lose people, whereas the Pentagon has all  of its war operations and military pay exempted, and its  procurement activities can largely run on previously allocated  dollars. "We are not suddenly going to be subject to overseas  coercion."                
But even on the domestic side, the predictions of gloom are  subject to hyperbole and political calculation, he said.                
"If I'm the administration, I'm going to ramp up the biggest  and most horrible effects I can to put pressure on the  Republicans" to reach a deal to prevent the cuts.                
Werfel acknowledged that, unlike a government shutdown, not  all of the effects are going to happen immediately when the cuts  begin on March 1.                
In some cases, furlough notices will go out at that time,  but employees may not be sent home for 30 days due to statutory  notice periods. In other cases, negotiations with unions over  implementation of furloughs may take longer.                
But the effects of the cuts, will build up "relatively  quickly" within weeks and months, Werfel said. The layoffs,  furloughs and curtailed services described by administration  officials would more likely be spread over the seven months to  the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.                
Part of the problem the administration faces is a lack of  flexibility in prioritizing the cuts, which were aimed at nearly  every discretionary budget account and designed to pressure  lawmakers to reach a broader agreement to reduce deficits.                
Lack of alternative preparations means that agencies have  little choice but to furlough employers and curtail operations  to meet their savings targets for the fiscal year.                
But after that, defense savings can be found that will not  compromise U.S. security, said Mattea Kramer, research director  at the National Priorities Project, a Massachusetts research  group focused on the U.S. budget.                
"There is waste, there are obsolete programs to be  sunsetted, there is Cold War technology that we need not be  investing in any longer," Kramer said.                
The dire warnings of chaos on the domestic side may be more  motivated by worries that the automatic cuts will hit economic  growth, which is the top Democratic priority, said Ethan Siegal,  who advises institutional investors on Washington politics.                
The Congressional Budget Office forecast last week that if  the sequester occurred, it would reduce U.S. economic output by  0.6 percentage points and slash 750,000 jobs.                
Siegal said the administration may find ways to mitigate the  effects of the cuts, but it is not politically advantageous to  do so at this time, when it wants to put maximum pressure on  Congress to reach a budget deal.                
He predicted that the sequester would be delayed again just  before a March 27 deadline for new government funding  legislation.                
"Government agencies are marvelous at massaging these things  and moving money around."                
In a sign that lawmakers are looking for ways to prevent the  cuts, Senate Democrats offered a plan on Thursday to replace the  sequester with tax hikes and reduced farm subsidies, but the  proposal is expected to be quickly shot down by Republicans.                
OMB's Werfel said that the administration will do what it  can to blunt the cuts.                
"Whatever the tools we have, we're going to use. I'm not  going to comment on specific aspects, I just know that it is  going to be enormously challenging and there is no way we're  going to mitigate these impacts effectively enough,"  he told  reporters after the hearing.
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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/14/sequestration_n_2690860.html
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