Drowning in wastefulness
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Alicia Robinson
California ranks near the bottom of the 50 states in wasteful federal
spending, but Congress approved more than $3 million in local “pork
barrel” projects, according to Citizens Against Government Waste. The
Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit group on Wednesday released its
annual “pig book,” which catalogs what it sees as unnecessary
congressional spending.
Statewide, 2004 wasteful spending was listed at nearly $643
million, which averaged about $18.12 per person and ranked California
43rd nationwide in pork spending, the group said.
Local projects it considered wasteful were the Army Corps of
Engineers’ receipt of $500,000 for construction in the Upper Newport
Bay; $1.05 million Vanguard University received for equipment and
construction of a new science center; $500,000 that went to Newport
Beach company Multi Dimensional Imaging Inc. from the Department of
Health and Human Services; and $1 million the Orange County
Sanitation District received for wastewater treatment programs.
The group also criticized $423 million in Homeland Security pork
spending that included $60 million for science and technology
fellowship programs for students and universities and $20 million for
the Homeland Security department headquarters. Rep. Chris Cox, who
chairs the House committee on homeland security, was unavailable for
comment.
Cox hires 20-year journalist and Enron investigator
Rep. Chris Cox announced last week he has hired Ken Johnson,
former aide and advisor to Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-Los Angeles), as a
senior advisor on the leadership staff and Homeland Security
Committee.
Johnson has worked on legislation including the national
do-not-call list and the 2003 Energy Policy Act. As deputy staff
director for the House Energy and Commerce Committee he was involved
in congressional investigations into corporate debacles including
Enron, Global Crossing and Martha Stewart. He also has 20 years of
experience as a journalist and has won more than 50 awards for his
work in that field.
Campbell sure spending won’t get out of hand
Now that California voters have approved Proposition 57, a
$15-billion bond issue, and Proposition 58, an initiative requiring
state legislators to balance the budget, 70th District Assemblyman
John Campbell will hold off on backing an initiative that would
impose stricter controls on state spending.
The initiative was approved by the Secretary of State’s office for
signature collection last week, but Campbell said there wouldn’t have
been enough time to get the 600,000 signatures needed to qualify for
the November ballot by the April 16 deadline. He’ll make some
revisions to the measure and try to get it on the ballot in March
2006, the next statewide election.
“There could be 15 or more initiatives on the November ballot,”
Campbell said. “It’s going to be a mess.”
Campbell said he’s not concerned that the delay in getting the
initiative before voters will result in wild overspending by his
colleagues.
“If Gov. Davis were still in office I’d be worried, but until we
get a constitutional spending limit, Gov. Schwarzenegger is the
spending limit, so I’m confident that he will keep a lid on things at
least through 2006,” he said.
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