Using Federal Money to Undermine Federalism
The Cato Institute's Walter Olson highlights a little-known federal program aimed at encouraging the states to pass more restrictive swimming pool regulations in exchange for federal grant money. As he explains, the end result of this and similar arrangements has been the undermining of our system of checks and balances:
This forlorn little program is a tiny and failed example of a genre of federal initiative that all too often enjoys success: using federal tax dollars to bribe states and localities into raising spending and extending regulation. The proliferation of such programs helps explain why the earlier and sounder idea of federalism — which saw the national and state governments as checking each others' overweening powers — has given way to a spirit of mutual enablement ("cooperative federalism") at the expense of the citizenry and its freedom. Thus the Obama administration, realizing that public opinion is not yet ready for a federal-level campaign to demonize fattening and salty foods, is happy to drop millions of dollars on local governments like Mayor Bloomberg's in New York City to do exactly that. And for decades Congress has been creating programs subsidizing local hiring of teachers, police officers and other public employees — with the presumably unintended result of saddling localities with unsustainable payrolls and pension obligations when times turn tough.
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Sometimes dude you reall have to wonder about them folks!
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,i>And for decades Congress has been creating programs subsidizing local hiring of teachers, police officers and other public employees ? with the presumably unintended result of saddling localities with unsustainable payrolls and pension obligations when times turn tough.
Unless the inevitable bailouts come with strings that give the Federal government even more control over state and local policies. But I'm sure that's just a paranoid fantasy.
Laboratories of bureaucracy...
This is old news.
"Don't like the speed limits/alcohol ages/healthcare mandates/[insert pet issue] that we want? Fine; we'll just take this highway money and give it to somebody else...oh what's that? You've had a sudden change of heart? We thought so. Here's your check."
In the private sector, that's called "extortion".
When government does it... suddenly, it's not illegal.
"JUMP THROUGH THESE FUCKING HOOPS TO GET YOUR OWN MONEY BACK, 'states'! You're OUR bitches!!!"
:blink:
:blink:
Why do you have a problem with this?
It's like saying you gave your wallet voluntarily to the nice man with the pistol ski mask because, after all, he never shot you.
...pistol and ski mask...
more restrictive swimming pool regulations
Surely the greatest of threats to our nation.
This is just an incremental measure until the TSA can be extended to cover swimming pools.
nah. the outright banning of swimming pools, because of the amount of fresh water they rape from Mother Earth.
Something or another about the power to tax, once granted, consuming and destroying.
Feature, not a bug.
I wonder how many times the same funding gets used to extort different programs. It would be interesting to run an audit to see if a state could end up saving a huge amount of money by dumping the mandates.