Having already secured $1.5 million in federal funding for the DNA lab, Glendale officials are slated to begin work on the project soon.
President Obama also announced in his State of the Union address last month that he would veto any bill that included federal earmarks.
Now officials may have to get more creative to secure additional funding.
“We do definitely need the money to continue our DNA lab project,” said Glendale Police Capt. Ray Edey.
While the lab can be built and opened without the funds, the extra $1 million would allow for more staff and increased operations, he added.
In a statement, Schiff said he will do his best to help keep some federal money flowing to local coffers amid the belt-tightening.
“There will continue to be federal grants available for many of these purposes,” he said. “Given the tremendous cutbacks we anticipate at the state and federal level, I will be working with all my cities to make sure we have every opportunity to compete and win these vital resources.”
Meanwhile, the earmark ban has been cheered by taxpayer advocacy groups and conservative lawmakers who have long assailed the “pork barrel” spending as contributing to the nation’s massive deficit.
But city officials say their share of federal dollars have supported important projects, like the DNA lab, that are a far cry from those assailed in national media, such as a teapot museum or the infamous “bridge to nowhere” in Alaska.