Congress Wastes Billions With Bogus Emergency Declaration
And it isn't the first time.

What constitutes an emergency? According to Congress' new spending package, research equipment and facilities for the National Science Foundation is an emergency. So are the 2024 Democratic National Committee convention and the Republican National Committee convention. So is NASA space exploration.
By classifying all these line items as emergencies, Congress can get hundreds of millions of taxpayer funding for them with reduced oversight.
Congress' latest spending package, released this week, is hardly the first time obviously nonemergency projects have been given this special funding designation. According to a January report from the Cato Institute, Congress has approved over $12 trillion in spending for emergencies over the past three decades, making up around 1 in 10 federal budget dollars spent—more than both Medicaid and veterans programs combined.
How is this possible? Much of it comes down to lax rules that let lawmakers classify regular spending projects as "emergencies."
"Congress has complete discretion in designating spending for emergencies because what qualifies as an emergency is subject to interpretation," Romina Boccia and Dominik Lett wrote in Cato's report. While the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has laid out several criteria that emergency spending is supposed to meet, Boccia and Lett note that "the current process lacks a mechanism to evaluate whether an emergency provision meets the OMB's test, which means that anything can count as emergency spending."
Once spending gets earmarked as an emergency, it isn't subjected to typical caps on discretionary spending, allowing Congress to rack up costs with little accountability. "Unfortunately, over the course of the last 30-some years, Congress took what was designed to be a 'break glass in case of emergency' escape valve, and they've turned it into a major source of funding for federal activity," David Ditch, a senior policy analyst at The Heritage Foundation, tells Reason."It's just a way for [Congress] to avoid fiscal consequences. And that's part of how we got where we are."
"Emergencies are, by definition, unexpected and urgent situations requiring immediate action—except in Congress, where the term is increasingly used to justify spending decisions that should be part of the normal budget process," Eric Boehm pointed out in the April 2024 issue of Reason magazine, "Because emergency spending bypasses some of the scrutiny applied to the normal budgetary process, it has become a convenient way for lawmakers and presidents to hike spending—and add to the national debt."
Cato's report highlights some particularly egregious examples of this exact phenomenon, including $600 million earmarked for replacing aircraft used in weather forecasting, $347 million for prison construction and detention costs, and $278 million to speed up the building process for a single research center.
"To me, the original sin in all of this is too many members of Congress don't care at all about where the money comes from, all they care about is getting as much money out the door that they can take credit for," says Ditch. "They're more concerned with their next reelection than they are with the nation's trajectory 20 and 30 years down the line."
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By classifying all these line items as emergencies, Congress can get hundreds of millions of taxpayer funding for them with reduced oversight.
This is insane and Congress should change its general rules for declaring an emergency. IMO - any such declaration should require:
1. the militia (or parts of it) to be mustered. Explicitly so that the unanticipated and critical issues to be addressed by that state of emergency can be addressed by we the people. By their skills - not some money thrown at the wall.
2. 'reduced oversight' is worse than insane. It is criminal and corrupt. Obviously an emergency means something wasn't anticipated - and esp not in the previous election that elected Congress. Which means there is no electoral mandate re some particular path. So quickly assemble a 500-person assembly (virtualZoom is fine to start of course) to focus on and deal with that issue - by lot, same as both juries today and virtually all ad-hoc government in ancient Athens. If they advise taxes or money spent or some org set up or something else 'emergency-like' then they can figure out how to do it - and then they themselves take a victory lap and go back home.
For Congress of course this raise the 'cost' of declaring an emergency. They gotta disrupt everyone's life by mustering the militia - and they gotta let a randomly chosen group of people get the credit for 'fixing it'. Or they have to ignore an actual emergency and have it bite them in the next election.
You're really dedicated to starting a civil war, aren't you?
Pretty much every bill gets the Emergency or the Interstate Commerce tag to justify bypassing all the rules. Governments shouldn't have Emergency Powers.
fakebook insta & youtube all go down same day and your article title isn't Censorship!?!? We'll Shut The Whole Fucking Show Down For A Day.??
Um, what's this? Item number three thousand, four hundred and twenty-six on the list of over five thousand problems with Congressional performance? Sorry, I've lost count ...
I read an interesting article in a defense journal on how if we authorize and preorder contracts on military acquisition instead of doing it year by year, we would end up with major savings in military procurement. This would allow contractors to preplan the workforce, space and preorder equipment and supplies needed to fulfill the contracted. For example if we say we are going to buy 12 new destroyers over the next four years and guarantee we will purchase three a year until the contract is fulfilled and we will put x amount (say 33%) of the cost down and pay the balance on each destroyer as it's delivered this would allow the shipyards to say "okay, we need 100 workers, 24 marine diesel engines, 24 spy radars etc (steel, titanium, aluminum etc), and we will need to set aside two dry docks for four years to meet the delivery requirements." By buying the equipment in bulk at the beginning, this would both reduce costs (and protect against cost overruns) and also speed up the building of the ships we need. instead we say 'we want to buy 12 destroyers, but we will only order two for this year with plans to order two more next year, etc". The contractors are not going to put out the expense of ordering the supplies needed to build 12 destroyers when they're only guaranteed that the government will purchase 2. They also won't block off valuable dry dock or workforce for four years when they're only guaranteed one year of purchase. We saw this happen with the F-22. The USAF had planned to buy so many, but Obama cancelled purchase, just as prices were starting to drop. Then the F-35 vastly overran costs and had an extreme amount of teething problems that ultimately led to the project costing more than was saved by cutting the F-22, and the USAF is still struggling to acquire enough F-35 to replace aging legacy fighters, to a degree that the DoD has examined restarting the F-22 program. The costs, however, have become prohibitive because Boeing et al rededicated the line used to build the F-22 to other projects and it would cost to much to retool them back, and not surprisingly Boeing et al really aren't interested after Obama cancelled the program before purchasing the amount the USAF had originally forecasted. The same thing could happen with the XM-5 rifle system slated to replace the M-16/M-4 system in the US Army, the Army has told SigSauer they intend to purchase x amount but haven't guaranteed they will purchase them, and many experts fear the XM-5 will go the way of the numerous other replacements for the seventy year old designed M-16. Hell we're still replacing M1A1 with newer M1A2, and the M1A2 was introduced in the mid 90s. A large part is they have done the upgrade (because General Dynamics Land is not building new tanks, they're refurbishing existing tanks to the new specks) piecemeal, x amount this year, project we will spend x amount next year, and maybe x amount the year after, but often the actual annual order has been for less than the forecasted amount. Thus the upgrade (which BTW the M1A2 is in it's third upgrade to) has gone far longer and cost billions more than originally forecasted.
This applies to this story. What the commerce department should do is say we replace fifteen printers on average every year (whatever the number is) so let's call Dell and order 60, that will cover normal usage for four years. Now, we used up all sixty and we're only in year three, so let's ask Congress to buy another twenty. Or whatever. First of all, the government does not upgrade it's computer systems annually, or even every four years, so purchasing four years worth shouldn't be a problem. Secondly, if they do upgrade and have excess, and it no longer is compatible with the new computers, they can sell the excess as government surplus because a lot of people also don't replace their home computers or work computers that fast. Maybe the surplus sale price might end up discounted, but generally speaking, more times than not it will save tax payers money if the government did some preplanning and preordering (and honored it's contracts).
"Congress took what was designed to be a 'break glass in case of emergency' escape valve, and they've turned it into a major source of funding for federal activity...."
Kinda like Emergency Rooms in hospitals. They've become 24/7/365 clinics that prioritize patients who are having actual bona fide emergencies. Unless non-emergency patients are turned away, they keep coming. And why not? No appointment needed. But you need to bring something to occupy yourself while waiting to see someone.
Patients don't get turned away because in most cases it's illegal to, and doctors and nurses want to avoid lawsuits (or it's just the flu, but then it turns out to be SARS-HIV-Ebola-Smallpox version 21, and you missed it and they died now the family is suing you for everything you have and then some, so why take the chance?).
Also should have added Google MD or whatever site you put your symptoms into says yeah the headache and malaise could be flu, but it could also be cancer, MS, cerebral hemorrhage, aneurism, stroke and a heart attack, so now you feel you need to see the doctor at 3 AM so you can insure it isn't one of these things. Because they rarely ever give you the actual probability that it's one of these more serious conditions, because those websites also don't want to be sued.
Plus, there's the people who call for an ambulance ride to the ER just so they can get a free ride downtown to go shopping.
Not had to deal with that to much, since most of my experience, outside the military, has been in rural medicine.
If you are mugged and brought to the ER unconscious and without a wallet, do you want them to wait to find out who you are and how you will pay, or do you want them to treat you first? So we have a law that the ER treats everyone.
The problem isn't with that law, it's with what comes afterwards. The ER should be making sure everyone is identified before they leave, or at least fingerprinted. If you cannot make arrangements for payment on the spot: the hospital attempts to collect the debt once, then it sells the debt to the IRS for collection. It is NOT left with unpaid expenses that it passes on to paying customers.
--If you are a citizen or permanent resident: The IRS is allowed to seize anything belonging to you, and to garnish a portion of any income, including welfare.
--If you are a foreigner visiting temporarily, you need to pay or make a payment plan before you leave the country. Otherwise, they'll sell your ticket home and substitute the cheapest ticket, move up your departure date if it's more than a few weeks out, confiscate valuables from your luggage, and pursue the debt in your home country.
--If you are an alien and not here legally, they deport you immediately, and put your face and fingerprints into the database of aliens not allowed to re-enter.
The REAL emergency is "Unless this emergency appropriation gets passed, Mr./Ms./NGO/Corporation/Union, won't kick in to my re-election fund."
BUT WHAT ABOUT THE DEADBEAT STUDENT LOAN EMERGNCY?!?
SADLY, NO ONE, FREAKIN' NO ONE remembers or even realizes Trump's Public Health Emergency declaration & the edicts of its accompanying Opioid Commission - BUT why should you? There's only 100 untreated #ChronicPainPatients committing suicide everyday in our country {if you believe 10/2021 DEAD report to the CDC I & J board that 85% of ALL suicide attempts & successes are comprised of these tortured Americans} b/c they're being denied the FDA approved pain meds which worked to improve their quality of life & could no longer live as a volunteer parolee subjected to off-label pharmaceutical & medical device experimentation due to their ineffectiveness.
These Americans, 50M if your believe the CDC, can be legally stigmatized as being broke depressed drug seekers who can't be trusted & as such subjected to the same basic philosophies & practices government utilizes with CRIMINAL PAROLEES, & best of all, any time one of these Americans has the audacity to question their Drs. actions, that Dr. is legally allowed to abandon that patient w/o any fear of any sort of legal reprisal, b/c after all, FDA approved opiate pain meds so much more dangerous than the NON-FDA approved, but cleared procedures being imposed on these Americans.
The good news is that we are killing off American men between ages of 45-64 at a rate that exceeds all mathematical mortality models as a result of denying them proper & human pain treatment. Now while the Social security savings is beneficial for nation, unfortunately those savings are being gobbled up as a result of all the ancillary health issues created as a result of untreated pain. Sure, the 350% increase in illegal drug over dose deaths that originally occurred in the 1st yr under Trump's PHE/OC was terrible, but fortunately we have been able to maintain that 1st yr increase 100K+/yr consistently for the last 6 yrs & I'm sure the 2023 will be no different. The best of this ramification is the rising number of senior citizens who dying due to illegal drugs. My home state of IL went from 0 senior OD deaths in 2016 to over 200 in 2017, & now that number exceeds 350/yr.
For the record, this isn't just a GOP public emergency which has gone awry, because Biden & the democrats chose to continue these emergency edicts & governmental intervention in place, including the prosecution of Drs. who dare to treat these citizens appropriately, humanely, & legally with those allegedly dangerous FDA approved medications.
Obviously, if you want pharmaceutical companies to negotiate their profits on behalf of medicare/medicaid patients, the government must provide something of value in return; how about a plethora of #ChronicPainPatients - who have NO CHOICE but to participate in all your experimental stuff & we'll pay you to do it; whether they work or don't.
Then there's the physicians, who know they are causing great harm to these patients by forcing them off the safe medication that's improving their lives and into wonderous world of experimental profiteering. Another one of Trump's PHE/OC benefits is how easy it is for every Dr to make money off their patients thanks to human body's reactions to untreated pain. Rising blood pressures lead to heart attacks & strokes, always profitable, and because these patients are eating Tylenol & Motrin like candy, liver & kidney diseases have damn near doubled over these last 7 yrs.
Don't worry folks, this practice of ignoring pain is being used all across in the country in the majority of surgeries. You may get the new & improved superduper-strength Tylenol/Mortrin combination or your very psychological shaman to help you meditate thru the pain, but you won't get what we know works for pain, because it was so easy to blame Drs for overprescribing for those 30K OD deaths in 2016 b/c there was money to made; just look at all that money pharmaceutical companies paid to the states in court settlements, except CA. They missed out on the big money because one of their supreme court justices had the temerity to ask the state to provide proof of its claims; at least 25% of all patients become addicted to their pain meds. Sadly, the state, who relied on PROP's {Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing) & Indivior pharmaceuticals did not have any evidence to prove their claims, going so far as to admit the alleged science MMEs (Morphine Milligram Equivalents) was a total fabrication,
Notice how much Libertarians are talking about this hideously deadly issue?
I am one of those 45-64 year old patients having just been released two weeks ago from care for open heart surgery. Opioids were the only pain medication that actually worked. I even purposely tested their effect while in ICU by refusing them at one point, and then restarting their use later. While off them, I was in enough discomfort that I refused to walk the floor (part of recovery is to get the patient out of bed and up and about.) While on them, I was almost eager to start physical therapy. I can't imagine how people with chronic pain can be treated with so much disrespect.