Now that the "stimulus" bill has been signed into law, the
looting and pillaging will really begin as the interest groups
swarm government agencies. And federal agencies are
preparing to respond by opening their doors and putting out
welcome mats.
Reports the Washington Times:
Passing the economic recovery bill may turn out to have been
the easy part: The sheer size of spending increases in the $787
billion measure threatens to overwhelm the agencies that
administer the money and the government watchdogs who keep the
agencies in line.
Two chief examples are the Transportation Department, whose
2008 budget of $68 billion will be augmented by an additional
$43 billion over the life of the bill, and the Energy
Department, with an annual budget of $25 billion, which is
slated to disburse $42 billion for grants, loans and other
programs under its jurisdiction.
"This is a lot of money going out, and we want to make sure the
money it's going out for are projects that have economic
merit," said David M. Walker, who was the nation's comptroller
general for a decade before leaving last year to become
president of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. "It's going to
be challenging for them to be able to do that, especially in
the procurement area."
President Obama on Tuesday signed the stimulus bill in Denver,
calling it the "beginning of the end" of rough economic times
while saying more work remains on stemming the tide of housing
foreclosures and shoring up financial institutions. Mr. Obama's
spokesman even left the door open for still more emergency
spending to pump money into the economy, though he said there
aren't specific plans right now.
Some federal agencies have only begun to determine how they
will spend their windfalls. The National Aeronautics and Space
Administration will be getting $1 billion in extra spending
under the stimulus bill, including a $2 million boost in the
inspector general's office.
Well, you really didn't want that savings you pain-stakingly
accumulated, did you? Washington can put it to so much
better use than you can.