By David Hogberg on 2.12.04 @ 12:08AM
Who needs a lottery when you’ve got Congress playing Music Man? Thank you, Senator Grassley.
On the matter of federal spending, the ratio of bad news to good
news seems to be 3 to 1. For every positive announcement, like
Bush's new budget holds growth in non-defense, non-homeland
security discretionary spending to 1%, we also hear that Bush will
increase spending on the National Endowment for the Arts, will
increase spending on the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and
contend, as he did in his interview with Tim Russert, that he is
not spending more than Bill Clinton.
Alas, I fear the ratio will only worsen. I was talking about
this matter with a professor pal of mine the other day, someone who
had meant so much to me during my undergraduate days. When I
mentioned that Bush was threatening to veto the highway spending
bill if Congress didn't hold down the cost, he replied "Bush will
not veto a bill from a GOP Congress." After I went into an
elaborate explanation as to why it was possible that Bush might do
that, he repeated, "Bush will not veto a bill from a GOP Congress."
Sigh…the student gets into a flight of fancy, and the master
knocks him back to reality.
Making the reality all the more grinding for those who favor
limited government is the fact that not only has Congress lost all
of its will to control spending, it seems to be on the verge of
losing its sanity. Exhibit A is a project called "Iowa Child,"
which received $50 million in federal taxpayer funds in the
recently passed "Leave No Pork Behind" appropriation's bill.
Iowa Child
is a plan, headed by Des Moines developer Ted Townsend, to
construct a 4.5 acre rainforest under an 18-story translucent dome,
complete with an aquarium and a media theater, in the Iowa
City-Coralville area (about 2 hours east of Des Moines and home to
the University of Iowa). Many Iowa bloggers have been all over the
problems with this boondoggle, not the least of which is forcing
the U.S. taxpayer to fund the plaything of a millionaire
developer.
First there are the projections of the impact that Iowa Child
will have. Supposedly, it will create 500 temporary construction
jobs and 400 permanent jobs with a ripple effect of 2,000 other
jobs in the community, have an economic impact of $1 billion over a
decade, and attract 1.3 to 1.5 million visitors a year. As blogger
Cedar Pundit asks, "Who is smoking crack here?"
Even if the rainforest was open 365 days a year, it would have to
attract more than 3,500 visitors a day to reach the 1.3 million
visitors per year. Cedar Pundit also notes that a lot of aquariums nationwide are now
in financial trouble. One of the biggest reasons is that attendance
projections were way off the mark.
Indeed, it could hardly be in a less ideal location if it were
located underwater. The Iowa City-Coralville area has a population
of barely 80,000, is an hour from the nearest metropolitan area
(Quad Cities), near no major airports, and has no other tourist
attractions such as theme parks, oceans, or forests. Compare that
to the Henry Doorly Zoo, which has a smaller version of a
rainforest (1.5 acres, 8 stories high), and also has many things
Iowa Child will not, including a white tiger exhibit, an aviary,
and desert biome. The Henry Doorly Zoo is located right across
Iowa's western border in Omaha, population 390,000. According to
zoo officials, annual attendance is about -- ready for this? -- 1.3
million.
Then there are the costs of Iowa Child. Initial construction
estimates are about $180 million. But as Iowa blogger Jeff Cordts
at Tusk and Talon notes:
…the projected construction costs will go up
tremendously before this thing is actually completed. In order to
convince people it is worth it, government projects are always sold
to the public on the absolute most optimistic cost projection.
After all, once it's started, we aren't going to back out on it.
We'll have to push through to completion. Look for the actual
construction costs to be double of what is being said right now.
Second, this thing is going to take millions of dollars a year to
operate. We'll pay consultants millions to pick the right type of
plants. We'll pay experts tens of thousands a year to take care of
the plants. It'll cost about a bazillion dollars a year to keep a
glass enclosure heated to steaming jungle temps during an Iowa
winter. We'll have to pay people to work there. There will be
liability payouts to kids who trip and fall in the place. There
will be sand and salt for the parking lot. There'll be repair costs
to the dome. There will be upkeep to the grounds. Those types of
nickels and dimes, or more correctly, the Grants and Franklins, add
up quickly.
Finally, there is the little matter of what the free market
seems to think about this little project. Until the feds came in
with their largesse, Townsend had only been able to raise about $40
million for the project since 1999 -- including $10 million of his
own money! Upon receiving the news that the American taxpayer was
giving Iowa Child a "gift" of $50 million, the project's director
David Oman exclaimed, "This will be a national facility. There is
nothing like it in our country." As Jeff Cordts suggest, "Perhaps
there is a reason for that, gentlemen. Perhaps that should clue you
in."
BUT WHAT IS MOST DEPRESSING is not that taxpayers are funding this
boondoggle, or that they'll probably be called on to bail it out if
(and probably when) it fails. No, what is most disheartening is the
name of the Iowa politician most responsible for getting this pork:
Senator Chuck Grassley.
Yes, deficit hawk Chuck Grassley.
Keep-an-eye-on-all-the-waste-in-the-defense-budget Chuck Grassley.
Grassley defended his action, saying, "It will create jobs. It is
being built on a [hazardous waste] site that would otherwise have
to have a lot of taxpayer money for cleanup. Tourism is a major
goal of state government, and this is a big tourism project." I
could go on about how the tourism-as-economic-development bug has
infected the Iowa political scene, but that is another article for
another day.
It is tempting to attribute Grassley's lack of fiscal restraint
to his being up for re-election this year. But thus far it looks
like Grassley will run unopposed in the general election, and even
if he did have a challenger he could lose 15% off of his recent
margins of victory and still win. No, it is symptomatic of a
spending addiction among members of Congress, encapsulated by
Grassley's expression of regret. "The only thing I feel bad about
is not getting more money," he said. "It is such a worthy
project."
If the otherwise fiscally sane Grassley has fallen prey to this
disease, one only wonders the extent to which it has ravaged the
rest of Congress. It suggests that Bush's half-hearted attempts to
control spending are all but doomed. Any serious effort to control
government growth will have to wait until attitudes in Congress
change, and that could be a very long time.
topics:
Bill Clinton, NATO