Porker of the Month: EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy
Citizens
Against Government Waste (CAGW) has named Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) Administrator Gina McCarthy Porker of the Month for her
agency’s creepy plan to monitor the hotel shower habits of millions of Americans. The EPA’s $15,000 grant
to the University of Tulsa “aims to develop a novel low cost wireless
device for monitoring water use from hotel guest room showers. This
device will … wirelessly transmit hotel guest water usage data to a
central hotel accounting system.” While the shower grant is certainly
not the EPA’s most expensive example of government waste, it is both the
most recent and extremely obnoxious. Administrator McCarthy requested a
6 percent, or $452 million, increase in the EPA’s budget for fiscal year (FY) 2016, perhaps to implement the 27,854 pages
of regulations issued by the EPA since the beginning of 2009. “Even
‘Big Brother’ did not watch what people were doing in the shower,” said
CAGW President Tom Schatz. For her agency’s unremitting and invasive
use of taxpayer dollars to intrude on the personal habits of Americans,
EPA Administrator “Big Sister” McCarthy is the March Porker of the
Month. Read more about the Porker of the Month.
CCAGW Lauds Routine Passage of Budget
The
Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) this month
praised the House of Representatives and Senate for following standard
procedures in adopting a budget for the first time in many years. The
House approved H. Con. Res. 27 by a vote of 228-199 on March 25. In a letter
to the House, CCAGW observed that, as reported by the Budget Committee,
the FY 2016 House budget resolution would cut spending by $5.5 trillion
over 10 years and balance the budget by 2025. In addition, the House
Budget Committee report referenced CAGW’s cost-cutting recommendations as a resource for eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse. CCAGW also sent a letter
asking senators to support or oppose a total of 55 amendments to the FY
2016 Senate budget resolution, S. Con. Res. 11, which the Senate
approved by a vote of 52-46 on March 27. The budget blueprint crafted by
the Senate Budget Committee also addressed wasteful spending, including
budget process reforms and greater transparency, and balances in 10
years, a clear divergence from President Obama’s budget, which never
balances at all. The budget resolutions now move to a House-Senate
conference committee, which will craft a compromise. Read more about developments with the FY 2016 federal budget.
GAO Report Shows Taxpayers’ Losses Are Rising
CAGW
reacted with dismay to the rise in improper payments described during
Comptroller General Gene L. Dodaro’s March 4 testimony before the Senate
Budget Committee. The hearing was called to review GAO’s report
on “Opportunities to Reduce Fragmentation, Overlap, Duplication, and
Improper Payments and Achieve Other Financial Benefits,” which
disappointingly notes, “For the first time in recent years, the
government-wide improper payment estimate significantly increased – to
$124.7 billion in fiscal year 2014, up from $105.8 billion in fiscal
year 2013. This increase of almost $19 billion was primarily due to
estimates for Medicare, Medicaid, and the Earned Income Tax Credit.” The
Medicare fee-for-service improper payment rate is going up for at least
two reasons. First, GAO faults the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) for failing to make good use of the anti-waste tools it
has at hand, and second, CMS has suspended the Recovery Audit Contractor
(RAC) program. “CMS’s mismanagement of improper payments is
unnecessarily costing taxpayers money. The RAC program had returned
$9.7 billion to the Medicare Trust Fund before it was cut off,” declared
CAGW President Tom Schatz. “It is time for CMS to use every tool it
has and fully restore all RAC audits immediately.” Read more about the rise in improper federal payments.
CAGW Slams New Net Neutrality Regulations
CAGW this month blasted the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) 400-page “Open Internet Order” that fleshes out the FCC decision on February 26
to reclassify the Internet as a public utility under Title II of the
1934 Communications Act, which was written to regulate the monopoly
telephone industry as a common carrier. The FCC issued its
controversial decision two months after a directive to do so by
President Obama on November 10, 2014. An initial review of the 400-page
order confirmed CAGW’s previously-held judgment that net neutrality is a
solution in search of a problem. The order does not cite a specific
harm and rests instead upon perceived future harms if the Internet is
not walled in by the FCC. As FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai said in his
dissent, the FCC will now have “the power to micromanage virtually every
aspect of how the Internet works. It’s an overreach that will let a
Washington bureaucracy, and not the American people, decide the future
of the online world.” Read more about the FCC’s takeover of the Internet.
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