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Friday, August 25, 2006
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Case for transparent government is open and shut
by Ed Feulner
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Will Congress pass Obamacare by the end of the year?

How good is government at wasting our tax dollars? Consider the Department of Homeland Security.

It's not yet five years old, but it's already experienced at throwing away cash. A recent congressional report found that 32 DHS contracts "experienced significant overcharges, wasteful spending or mismanagement." Federal credit cards were used to buy beer-brewing equipment and iPods. Tax money was squandered on luxury hotels and "training" sessions at golf and tennis resorts.

Altogether, those contracts cost the government -- meaning you and me -- $34 billion. Sadly, a lot of that was wasted.

DHS says it can solve the problems -- if it can hire more inspectors. "We need more," Elaine Duke, the DHS chief procurement officer, told lawmakers. "We have an increase coming in the current '07 budget of about 200 additional [workers], and we are working towards needing even more over time."

But the answer isn't to hire more bureaucrats to supervise what the current bureaucrats are doing. There's a simpler, cheaper and more permanent solution: Allow 300 million Americans to review how government spends our money.

That's the idea behind the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act, a measure co-sponsored by an unlikely duo: conservative Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) and liberal Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), with strong support from Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).

The bill would require the Office of Management and Budget to build an easy-to-use Web database containing detailed information about all the grants and contracts the federal government hands out. This database would allow virtually anyone to see how much money a federal program received and how it spent that money. And, to ensure that public oversight is timely, information about spending would, by law, have to be posted within 30 days of when Congress authorized the money.

"It shouldn't matter if you think government ought to spend more money or less money," Obama said. "We can all agree that government ought to spend money efficiently. If government money can't withstand public scrutiny, then it shouldn't be spent." Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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Open Government
Some might chuckle to themselves as they sit cleaning their battle accoutriments waiting for the rest of America to come to it's senses. There comes a time when all of the words have been spoken and the only recourse is Revolution! We can speak the words of change forever to those who will not listen or we can expedite those changes by the use of physical force! Those who don't care about the issues will become cannon fodder as a just reward.

Open Governmnet - Accounting
It seems in most agencies that the organizatiion at the bottom of the totem pole is the group that tracks authorized appropriations against the spending by the agency. Therefore, this organization gets the worst equipment, funding and people. In 1999, I worked in one such organization that was using PENTIUM II computers.
I was told by a government insider that in 1990 all government agencies were given 10 years to get theirs books in order so that they could be audited by private indusry General Accounting Principals. in 2000, they quietly dropped it because NONE of the agencies could do it. If the books were open, maybe the embarresment and competition between agencies would get these groups more resources.
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