The House is proposing to cut funding for school safety programs, even as Congress continually increases spending on its own security. Some lawmakers and education advocates question the logic of this amid a nationwide conversation on school security, gun violence and self-harm.

The House’s draft fiscal 2019 spending bill to fund the Education and Health and Human Services departments proposes about $110 million in reductions to programs meant to improve school safety and steer behavioral health services toward students.

While there are proposed increases in a separate House spending bill for school security measures funded by the Justice Department, those would be outweighed by the other cuts. Compared to a decade ago, programs meant to foster safe school environments have dwindled dramatically. In 2007, federal funding for school safety programs exceeded $600 million. Today, it’s around $400 million, if you include a wide array of broader violent crime reduction grants for local police forces.

In comparison, spending on security services for lawmakers is going in the other direction. The Capitol Police budget would exceed $450 million in fiscal 2019 under the House’s Legislative Branch bill, compared to $393 million in fiscal 2017. The Sergeant at Arms for the House and the Senate respectively received $5 million and $7.7 million extra for fiscal 2018 explicitly for lawmakers’ security.

The House Appropriations Committee plans to mark up the broad $177.1 billion Labor-HHS-Education spending measure Tuesday, the same day a Senate appropriations subcommittee is likely to mark up its $179.3 billion version. Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., who chairs the subcommittee that crafts the bill, said it’s possible some funding will be restored before the markup.