Skip to content
  • ABOUT
    • MISSION HISTORY
    • DIRECTORS/STAFF
    • Support
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ’S
    • FINANCIAL INFORMATION
  • WASTEWATCHER
  • MEDIA
    • CONGRESSIONAL RATINGS
    • PORKER OF THE MONTH
    • COMMENTARY
    • PRESS RELEASES
  • LEGISLATIVE
    • Communications to the States
    • Communications to Congress
    • Coalition Letters
    • Testimony
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Action Alerts
    • Support
DONATE
Facebook X-twitter Icon-instagram-1 Icon-youtube

staff

General Waste

The CVC – Not a Capitol Idea

03/01/2006 staff

With 580,000 square feet, three underground stories, and space three-quarters the size of the Capitol itself, the Capitol Visitor Center (CVC) is a monument to Congress’s own excess.  It was recently announced that the project is experiencing yet another cost increase and construction delay.  On February 15, an official from the Government Accountability Office testified […]

National Security

Bingo Terror

02/01/2006 staff

In October 2005, the Kentucky Office of Charitable Gaming won a $36,300 grant from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to protect bingo halls from terrorists.  The money will pay for laptop computers with access to a law-enforcement database.  Authorities are concerned that terrorists may attempt to raise large amounts of cash by  playing bingo or running a charitable game. 

Housing, Taxes

“Buy America” Rips Off America

01/01/2006 staff

“Buy America” provisions have been insterted into legislation, especially defense bills, for many years.  Usually, such provisions are removed from the final version of the defense legislation.  That happened late last year, when Senate leaders and administration officials convinced House Services Committee Chairman Duncan Hunger (R-Calif.) to drop the provision from the fiscal 2006 Defense Authorization Act, which was then signed into law by President Bush.  The Buy America clause would have blocked the Pentagon from buying military equipment from international companies that receive government subsidies.  The removal of this language constitutes a victory for taxpayers and national security.  More competition in Defense procurement can only result in better value for taxpayers and improved equipment for military personnel. 

General Waste

Government Credit Cards and Hurricane Katrina

01/01/2006 staff

The damage inflicted by Hurricane Katrina left no question that taxpayers would be paying a hefty bill for rescue and reconstruction.  In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, more than $39 million of that bill was paid for by federal employees with government credit cards.  The Government Accountability Office (GAO) will soon release the first comprehensive audit of Katrina-related emergency expenditures.  A December 27, 2005 Associated Press article provided a glimpse at what the report might include; namely, charges that were excessive or used for purposes other than Katrina relief.

Posts pagination

Previous 1 … 49 50

Search

Council for Citizens Against Government Waste works to eliminate waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government through research and public education.

  • MISSION HISTORY
  • DIRECTORS/STAFF
  • SUPPORT
  • FINANCIAL INFORMATION
  • CONTACT US
  • CAGW
  • 1-800-USA-DEBT ®
  • media@ccagw.org
  • 317 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, N.E.
    SUITE 300
    WASHINGTON, D.C. 20002

© Council for Citizens Against Government Waste