WASHINGTON, D.C. - Funding for more than $100 million in Ohio military projects could be delayed or canceled if money is diverted to build President Donald Trump’s proposed wall on the Mexican border, according to a list the Pentagon released Monday.

The U.S. House of Representatives and Senate last week passed resolutions to cancel the border emergency that Trump declared so he could draw money from other sources after Congress refused to provide the level of funding he sought for the wall.

Trump vetoed the measure on Friday, arguing that the border situation is a true emergency and his “highest obligation as President is to protect the nation and its people.” The measure did not pass either legislative body with enough votes to overturn Trump’s veto, so his emergency declaration will stand for now.

According to the list of projects released by Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan, Wright Patterson Air Force Base in the Dayton area could be the state’s biggest loser if the cuts go through. On the chopping block is $61 million for a new building at its National Air And Space Intelligence Center, along with $6.8 million for a Fire/Crash Rescue Station.

Millions of dollars are also in jeopardy at other Air Force facilities in Ohio, including $15 million for new fighter aircraft hangars at Toledo Express Airport, $13 million to replace a fire station at Mansfield’s Lahm airport, and $8.8 million to relocate the main gate at the Youngstown Air Reserve Station.

Closer to Northeast Ohio, a $7.4 million automated multipurpose machine gun range at Camp Ravenna in Portage County is also on the list of projects that might be cut.

The Defense Department said it hasn’t yet decided which funds will be transferred to the border barrier project, but said the money might not be needed if the Pentagon’s budget request for 2020 is enacted on time.

The top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, Rhode Island’s Jack Reed, called the potential cuts “a slap in the face to our military that makes our border and the country less secure.”

“He is planning to take funds from real, effective operational priorities and needed projects and divert them to his vanity wall,” Reed said of Trump.. “That may help shore up his political base, but it could come at the expense of our military bases and the men and women of our Armed Forces who rely on them.”

Ohio Republican Sen. Rob Portman released a statement that said he’ll work to ensure that the projects at Ohio military facilities move forward as planned.

“I urge the administration to use money other than MILCON funds to fully protect important military construction projects in Ohio and around the country,” said Portman, who was among a dozen Senate Republicans who voted to rescind Trump’s emergency declaration.

Ohio Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown released a statement that called it “reckless and irresponsible” for Trump to “go around Congress and take funding away from our military to support his vanity project.”

"After last week’s bipartisan rebuke by Congress, I hope the President would realize that any attempt to rob Ohio of these funds would be met with vehement opposition,” said Brown

A statement from Niles-area Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan called it “unacceptable” that Trump’s “fake national emergency is jeopardizing critical military projects in Ohio.”

“Not only is the President undermining Congress and the Constitution, his actions make America and our service members less secure and less prepared to deal with threats at home and abroad,” Ryan said.