Who are these people and how did they get into office? Who elected these people in the first place and why are they still in office? This November will give us all a chance to clean house and start over with new blood. Vote out the democrats and the 'wana-be democrats'. multiple
Ten Agencies Doing One Task
Source: George Korte, "Government Often Has 10 Agencies Doing One Job," USA Today, April 8, 2014.
April 16, 2014
The federal government sometimes has 10 different agencies running a single program, says USA Today. A new report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) reveals just how much duplication exists within our federal programs.
Republican Senator Tom Coburn authored the legislation that requires these yearly reports from the GAO, and he urged lawmakers to take this list and make cuts to the budget.
Darrell Issa, Republican congressman from California, has sponsored legislation that would require better tracking of spending data on money transferred from Congress to an agency to its final destination. The bill passed the House and is awaiting a Senate vote.
- Programs addressing AIDS in minority communities takes 10 different federal offices.
- Autism research has 11 separate agencies.
- The search for prisoners of war and Americans missing in action is spread across eight agencies within the Department of Defense.
- And at the Schriever Air Force Base in Colorado, eight different satellite control centers are used to control 10 satellite programs.
Republican Senator Tom Coburn authored the legislation that requires these yearly reports from the GAO, and he urged lawmakers to take this list and make cuts to the budget.
- This is the fourth year that the GAO has produced these reports.
- Eighty-three percent of the agency's recommendations have been "at least partly implemented" by the Obama administration.
- According to Comptroller General Gene Dodaro, Congress has taken up 52 percent of the recommendations.
Darrell Issa, Republican congressman from California, has sponsored legislation that would require better tracking of spending data on money transferred from Congress to an agency to its final destination. The bill passed the House and is awaiting a Senate vote.
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