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Dan Bongino stepping down as FBI deputy director; VA braces for premium hikes as GOP denies vote extending tax credits; Line 5 fight continues as tribe sues U.S. Army Corps; Motion to enjoin TX 'Parental Bill of Rights' law heads to federal court.

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House Democrats gain support for forcing a vote on extending ACA subsidies. Trump addresses first-year wins and future success and the FCC Chairman is grilled by a Senate committee.

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States are waiting to hear how much money they'll get from the Rural Health Transformation Program, the DHS is incentivizing local law enforcement to join the federal immigration crackdown and Texas is creating its own Appalachian Trail.

Thousands Protest NASA Budget Cuts At Kennedy Space Center

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Wednesday, March 3, 2010   

TITUSVILLE, Fla. - Thousands of Floridians braved this week's cold temperatures to protest proposed Congressional budget cuts that would ground the human space flight operations at Titusville's Kennedy Space Center.

Florida AFL-CIO spokesman Rich Templin says the proposal would mean immediate job cuts for about 9,000 NASA workers and result in another 23,000 lost jobs in central Florida. He insists the cuts would make little difference in the federal budget, although they would bring the economic engine of this portion of Florida to a halt, and send shock waves across the state.

"The cancellation of these human space flight operations is like an atomic bomb that will be dropped on Brevard County and central Florida. But the ripples of that explosion are going to travel across the state and impact families as far south as Miami, as far west as Pensacola."

Templin says the Kennedy Space Center has a $2.4 billion annual economic footprint, as well as offering some of the highest-paying jobs in Florida. One of them belongs to Rob Schneider, a heavy equipment mechanic at the Kennedy Space Center for almost ten years. Now, he says, each day he goes to work knowing it could be his last.

"This is the best job I've ever had, and I would have liked to keep it and retire from it. My wife works for the schools but, if they close the Space Center down, the schools are going to have to cut back also, because people are going to move away. So, you know, we may end up losing both of our jobs."

Templin calls the proposed budget cuts be a short-term fix – with long-term implications for Florida families.

"This is not the time for the federal government to be eliminating those sectors of the economy that we know work, that we know put people to work, that we know put food on families' tables, that we know generate economic activity throughout the state."

The most recent space shuttle launch at Kennedy was April 5.



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