Porker of the Month: Sen. Chuck Schumer
Watch CAGW’s August Porker of the Month Video
CAGW Applauds Court’s Smack Down of FCC Overreach
CAGW
praised the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit for its August
10 ruling against the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) claim
that it could override state laws relating to municipal broadband
deployment. The case stems from a 2015 vote by the FCC to preempt laws
in North Carolina and Tennessee that placed restrictions on local
municipalities’ ability to build government-owned broadband networks.
Twenty states have enacted such restrictions – and for good reason.
CAGW has documented
how municipal broadband networks across the country have been a
financial drain on local taxpayers, lack long-term resources for
maintenance and upgrades, and compete unfairly with existing
private-sector broadband providers. Reacting to the ruling, CAGW
President Tom Schatz said, “The assertion that the [FCC] could overturn
state laws … was a stretch, and another example of the FCC’s – and the
entire Obama Administration’s – massive overreach. This case … upholds
the constitutional rights of states.” Learn more about the court’s decision.
CAGW Reacts to USPS’s $1.6 Billion Loss
CAGW reacted with frustration and indignation after the United States Postal Service (USPS) announced
a loss of $1.6 billion in the third quarter of fiscal year (FY) 2016.
The loss is a $981 million, or 167.4 percent, increase from the same
quarter in FY 2015. This brings the total amount lost by USPS over the
past nine years to more than $50 billion. Despite having an estimated
$18 billion financial advantage over its private-sector rivals, USPS has
continued to turn in increasingly dismal financial numbers. Responding
to the report, CAGW President Tom Schatz said, “USPS is quick to point
out supposed obstacles, while ignoring its exclusive advantages. As
mail volume continues to decline, agency leaders persist in peddling the
misguided belief that financial salvation lies in accounting gimmicks
and starting new non-postal ventures. USPS should focus solely on its
letter mail products and not stray from its original mission.” Read more about the Postal Service’s mounting losses.
From “The Swine Line” ...
On
August 5, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the nonpartisan
legislative agency that analyzes government spending, released an updated estimate of
$590 billion for the FY 2016 federal budget deficit – 10 percent
greater than originally projected – reports CAGW Policy and Government
Affairs Associate Rachel Cole on CAGW’s “Swine Line” blog. The FY 2016
deficit will rise as a percentage of GDP for the first time since FY
2009 and is up roughly one-third over last year’s deficit of $438
billion. CBO attributed the increase to higher-than-expected spending
on Social Security benefits, interest on the debt, Medicare, Medicaid,
and the Department of Veterans Affairs and lower-than-expected tax
revenue. Given those facts, instead of asking Americans to fork over
even more of their hard-earned dollars in taxes to cover the gap,
Congress should focus on reducing spending, concludes Cole. Read more on “The Swine Line.”
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