Tag Archives: government waste

IRS Spends Nearly $100 Million on Office Furniture

Just remember, you don’t pay enough in taxes, you are greedy to want to keep your own earnings, and you can’t deduct legitimate home office use without getting audited… But if you are the government, you can buy chairs for $1,209 each, then go to Congress and tell them you don’t have any money to “support the taxpayer needs.”  Big government is the problem, not political parties.

Obama’s IRS Spends Nearly $100 Million on Office Furniture

Spending on furniture outnumbers Bush administration

Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew / AP

BY:
May 12, 2014 9:59 am

The IRS has spent $96.5 million on office furniture under the Obama administration and is now claiming it has insufficient funding to adequately serve taxpayers.

Treasury Secretary Jack Lew testified before the House two weeks ago about the IRS’ need for additional funding for the upcoming fiscal year. The IRS is currently seeking an increase of $1.2 billion—a 7 percent raise over its FY 2014 $11.29 billion budget. It would bring the agency’s FY 2015 budget to $12.48 billion.

A review of contracts by the Washington Free Beacon shows the IRS in the past five fiscal years has spent $96.5 million refurbishing IRS offices across the country. Those contracts include fiscal years 2010 through 2014.

That amount already exceeds what the agency spent during the entire eight years under President George W. Bush, fiscal years 2002 through 2009.

The purchases during the current administration show contracts are for various amounts. They range from several millions to hundreds of thousands of dollars for each agency office.

The first fiscal year budget for which President Obama was responsible was FY 2010 and it was a banner year—when the agency spent the most on new furniture. Records show $44.4 million was spent that year.

The Free Beacon found in a total of 3,777 contracts he IRS has purchased various types of furniture. The contracts include new chairs, showcases, partitions and shelving, and wood furniture.

A sampling from the volume of contracts includes the agency’s Lowell, Mass., office, which spent $5.04 million on showcases, partitions and shelving. The contract was signed in 2012 was completed on April 30, 2013.

The Philadelphia IRS office spent $2.8 million for “furniture systems.”  That contract was signed in 2011 and the work was completed in 2012.

Other IRS offices also had multi-million dollar makeovers.  A contract in 2011 shows the “purchase of systems furniture” in the amount of $2.67 million for the Colorado office. The Washington, D.C., office received $2.6 million in “new system furniture/service” and the work was completed in 2012.

Still another contract shows the Iowa office had a $1.08 million makeover. The contract did not detail the type of furniture purchased.

Michigan, which has six IRS offices, has spent the most on furniture of all the states during this time frame.  Its contracts include $1.57 million in taxpayer funds spent for its Leeward office, and another $1.36 million on its Zeeland office.

While it is unclear what type of furniture was purchased for the IRS office in Jasper, Ind., records show two large purchases were completed just four months apart. One contract for $689,719 was completed in November 2010.  Another contract for $805,515 was completed in March 2011.

Contracts also revealed that hundreds of thousands of dollars were spent solely on chairs for the IRS’ office in Haverhill, Mass. The contract shows $618,881 was spent on “Task Chairs Phase II.” That work was completed on Dec. 31, 2012. Due to the volume of contracts, the Free Beacon could not find the amount spent for Phase I of the task chairs project or if there were any additional phases after this second one.

Another contract shows the agency’s offices in Seattle and Austin received over $1.1 million in new furniture. One contract for $810,200 and another for $327,908 were both completed in February 2013.

The top three prime award contractors were Knoll, Herman Miller, and Haworth International. While some records did not give detailed information on the types of furniture purchased, the high-end retailers’ websites do give taxpayers a sampling of their products and costs.

Herman Miller has chairs that cost $1,209, and storage units that cost $1,749. Knoll’s chairs retail for $659. Another company awarded several contracts claims on its website it partners with “best interior products manufacturers” in the industry.

In his testimony, Lew said, “The IRS continues its commitment to carrying out its responsibilities, providing quality service to taxpayers and preserving the public’s faith in our tax system, but the lack of sufficient funding in recent years has made it difficult to provide the kind of services American taxpayers deserve.”

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Want to Be Angry?

I try to keep upbeat on my blog, so if you don’t want to hear about something infuriating…stop now and skip this post.

Prior to retiring to be a writer, I was a healthcare executive.  I read the entire healthcare reform act bill, now referred to as Obamacare, and did an analysis.  I was accused of being crazy, anti-Obama, anti-healthcare, alarmist, etc.  I need to find that original analysis and reprint it.  I was all too correct on how it would be implemented.  For the record, I am for universal healthcare in the United States – but not run in any way by the government.  I believe the patient and their doctor should control treatment.  The only way to do that is to have the patient paying and selecting the care and the doctor charging and recommending the care.  Having the government and an insurance company pay and decide sucks.  Government paid vouchers for the poor to buy insurance is the way to do it.

But that is not the part that infuriated me.  It was when I found out what was spent on Health.gov, the federal site.  Mind you, this site, which does not function, is the ONLY thing the federal HHS had to do.  It simply takes applications, then refers them to the state exchanges.  The state exchanges then determine eligibility and screen for Medicaid and SCHIP eligibility, then give you a list of options and calculate your subsidy if any.  The insurers then provide the medical treatment.  HHS had four years – and ONLY one job to do…

1) They originally budgeted $100 million for this website – the cost has now soared to over $600 million;

2) They hired a company with a history of ripping off governments and not performing – http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/10/23/red-flags-company-behind-obamacare-site-has-checkered-past/

3)  They knew about the problems and did not fix them;

4) They said now, they will bring in the best and brightest to fix it (why not do that to start with);

5) They won’t tell us how many people were actually able to sign up, but the number leaked out that nationwide, the first day – SIX, yes, one more than five, just six people were able to enroll;

6)  Secretary Sebelius illegally went around the country raising funds for pro-Obamacare advertising and shaking down insurance companies, but didn’t get the website fixed.  If you are willing to bend or break laws to get people to support it, why not actually get it to work too?

7) So now, the administration is bringing in the folks who did their campaign to help – http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/10/obamacare-healthcaregov-harper-reed

8)  That’s right, Obama’s donor firm gets the money now – http://nypost.com/2013/11/01/obama-donors-firm-hired-to-fix-web-mess-it-helped-make/

9) The Democrats refused to let Republicans delay the individual mandate, even when they shut down the government to try.

10)  As a result, people without insurance will be fined by the IRS or have their refunds withheld, even though those same people can’t actually get on the site to get their insurance.

11)  Over 15 million people are losing their individual insurance policies and if and when they can sign up for the ‘free health care’, their premiums are going to double on average.

12) Up to 60 million other people are on the bubble as businesses decide whether or not to continue coverage.

Whether you are for or against healthcare reform, $600 million, crony politics, and people still can’t sign up?

Yep, I’m pretty fed up with crap.  The worst part is I am paying for it, and you are, and our grandchildren each owe about $50,000 as well for the debt we have racked up for what?

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Air Force Buys New Planes – Immediately Junks Them

The Air Force spent $567 million to buy new cargo planes it does not need.  They are going straight from the assembly line out to the Arizona desert to be stored with the surplus planes.  Nice to know there is NOWHERE to cut the federal budget to help the deficit, only higher taxes will do.  (heavy dose of sarcasm intended) Oh, and the manufacturing did not pay for jobs here, they were made in Italy.

New Air Force cargo planes fly straight into mothballs

Published October 07, 2013

FoxNews.com
  • C27J.jpg

    There’s nothing wrong with the C-27J, it’s just that the Pentagon doesn’t want it given budget constraints.

The Pentagon is sending $50 million cargo planes straight from the assembly line to mothballs because it has no use for them, yet it still hasn’t stopped ordering the aircraft, according to a report.

A dozen nearly new Italian-built C-27J Spartans have been shipped to an Air Force facility in Arizona dubbed “the boneyard,” and five more currently under construction are likely headed for the same fate, according to an investigation by the Dayton Daily News.  The Air Force has spent $567 million on 21 of the planes since 2007, according to purchasing officials at Dayton’s Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Of those, 16 have been delivered – with almost all sent directly to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson, where some 4,400 aircraft and 13 aerospace vehicles, with a total value of more than $35 billion, sit unused.

The C-27J has the unique capability of taking off and landing on crude runways, Ethan Rosenkranz, national security analyst at the Project on Government Oversight, told the newspaper. But with sequestration dictating Pentagon cuts, the planes were deemed a luxury it couldn’t afford.

“When they start discarding these programs, it’s wasteful,” he said.

The planes are built by Rome-based Alenia Aermacchi, under what was initially a $2 billion contract, though that was scaled back.

Local politics appear to have played a role in the planes continued manufacture, according to the newspaper. Ohio’s senators, Democrat Sherrod Brown and Republican Rob Portman, were both defenders of the C-27J when 800 jobs and a mission at Mansfield Air National Guard Base depended on it. Brown urged the military in a 2011 letter to purchase up to 42 of the aircraft, saying too few planes “will weaken our national and homeland defense.” Congress pulled the plug on the broader expenditure.

But canceling orders for planes already being built is not feasible — even if they are not needed, according to Air Force spokesman Darryl Mayer.

“They are too near completion for a termination to be cost effective and other government agencies have requested the aircraft,” Mayer told the paper.

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