As I told the
Washington Examiner a few hours ago after reviewing the
Obama stimulus bill and the proposed fiscal 2010 budget for the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), ACORN
and other left-wing advocacy groups could have a shot at
pocketing up to $8.5 billion this year.
Here’s how I arrived at the $8.5 billion figure.
The $800 billion-plus stimulus bill, which is now formally known
as the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 or Public
Law 111-5, originally
set aside $5.2 billion that could flow directly or indirectly
into the coffers of ACORN and its liberal friends. It
appears the $5.2 billion was chopped down to $3 billion in the
version of the bill that President Obama signed into law on
February 17. The $3 billion consists of $2 billion in funds set
aside for the redevelopment of abandoned and foreclosed homes and
$1 billion in Community Development Block Grants (CDBG).
CDBG is good old-fashioned graft. Local politicians of both
parties love CDBG because it is flexible. The program gives them
wide latitude when spending grant money and allows local leaders
to use federal dollars on local projects that they wouldn’t dream
of spending their own local tax dollars on. ACORN loves CDBG
because it is adept at lobbying for CDBG funds.
In addition to the $3 billion available in the stimulus package,
the proposed $47.5 billion HUD budget for the fiscal year
that begins October 1 provides $1 billion for an affordable
housing trust fund and $4.5 billion in CDBG funds that could be
funneled to ACORN indirectly.
Of course ACORN won’t get it all, and given its history of
electoral fraud and racketeering, it shouldn’t get a penny of
federal money.
According to the Washington Examiner article, ACORN
has taken in $53.6 million in federal funding since 1994.
Amazingly, ACORN spokesman Scott Levenson told reporter
Kevin Mooney that his group has “received no significant
federal funding.”
(crossposted
at the Capital Research Center blog)