WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Rob Portman (R-OH) and Gary Peters (D-MI), Ranking Member and Chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, announced that their bipartisan Metropolitan Areas Protection and Standardization (MAPS) Act, legislation to help protect communities across the country from possible consequences that may occur by changing the population threshold for metropolitan areas, has been signed into law. Communities in Ohio and across the United States count on this designation for federal funding that goes towards important programs. The White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) had previously proposed increasing the population threshold for metropolitan areas from 50,000 to 100,000 which could have threatened access to vital federal resources for communities across the country. However, following calls from Portman and Peters, OMB announced it would halt the proposed change. This law will ensure that future modifications to this designation are carefully deliberated to prevent unintended consequences.
“I am pleased that our bipartisan MAPS Act has been signed into law to ensure that moving forward, federal agencies will have to provide the public an opportunity to comment on whether they should adopt a metropolitan statistical area change for the distribution of benefits.” said Senator Portman. “Further, OMB will have to provide a public report to Congress estimating the county-level impact and justifying the scientific basis for any proposed change to an existing statistical area standard.”
“Untested changes to metropolitan area standards could put communities throughout Michigan at risk of losing access to vital federal resources,” said Senator Peters. “This new law will ensure that the federal government carefully considers how changes to this classification may impact communities across the nation before they go into effect.”
Metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) were created to standardize and identify the nation’s largest centers of population and activity. Metropolitan and non-metropolitan designations are used by agencies across the federal government to determine eligibility for funding and services. OMB’s previously proposed change could have impacted federal resources for nearly 150 communities across the nation, including five in Ohio. Communities in Ohio that would have been affected by this change include Lima, Mansfield, Springfield, Weirton-Steubenville, and Wheeling.
The MAPS Act will provide needed analysis and transparency by requiring OMB to collaborate with federal agencies to study and disclose the impacts to federal programs before any change to metropolitan area standards can be implemented. The law would extend the public comment period for potential changes and ensure the public is aware of how MSAs are used to determine federal benefits. Finally, it would also instruct OMB to publish a report on the estimated impact to domestic assistance programs for any proposed change to metropolitan area standards.
The MAPS Act is supported by the U.S. Conference of Mayors; the National Rural Health Association; the National Association of Counties; Mayor Warren Copeland and City Manager Bryan Heck of Springfield, Ohio; Mayor David Berger of Lima, Ohio; the Lima/Allen County Chamber of Commerce; the Greater Springfield Partnership; the Ohio Mayors Alliance; and the Richland Area Chamber of Commerce.
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