Feeding Time.In a town where a pile of new laws New Laws: see Las Casas, Bartolomé de. and programs is considered progress, grousing is often heard about the "do nothing" Republican Congress. If only it were so. The GOP has mastered the art of legislating leg·is·late v. leg·is·lat·ed, leg·is·lat·ing, leg·is·lates v.intr. To create or pass laws. v.tr. To create or bring about by or as if by legislation. in at least one area: pork-barrel spending. In fiscal year 1995, the last year the Democrats controlled congressional spending, members reached into the public purse for $6.9 billion in highly dubious spending programs specifically earmarked for the districts and states of influential legislators. In fiscal year 2000, the last year for which there is finalized data, legislators doled out Adj. 1. doled out - given out in portions apportioned, dealt out, meted out, parceled out distributed - spread out or scattered about or divided up a record amount of such pork, with a total just under $18 billion. Congress has almost certainly broken that mark in fiscal year 2001, whose budget was decided late last year, by funding such projects as a documentary titled The Appalachians, and a monument to Dr. Seuss Noun 1. Dr. Seuss - United States writer of children's books (1904-1991) Geisel, Theodor Seuss Geisel in Springfield, Massachusetts Springfield is a city in Massachusetts, United States. It is the county seat of Hampden County.GR6 In the 2000 census, the city population was 154,082. . "We're at $16 billion with five appropriations bills left to analyze," says Sean Rushton, spokesman for Citizens Against Government Waste, a D.C.-based group that tallies up federal spending. "We expect it to come in at roughly $20 billion." |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion