[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 147 (Tuesday, October 4, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H6515]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE EDA ELIMINATION ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Kansas (Mr. Pompeo) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POMPEO. Mr. Speaker, since coming to Congress 9 years ago, I have
sadly relearned that the government in Washington D.C. only grows and
grows and grows. When Democrats and many Republicans, too, come to the
floor of the House and talk about spending cuts, they are often talking
simply about slowing the rate of growth of government. There is seldom,
if ever, any real discussion about cutting the size of the Federal
Government or about eliminating an entire program or agency. But today,
with $14.8 trillion in debt, we can't continue to simply slow the rate
of growth. We've got to cut it, and we've got to get rid of some
things.
As a first step this week, I will proffer a bill that will eliminate
the Economic Development Agency. It's part of the Department of
Commerce and was established in 1965 as an element of President
Johnson's Great Society. For over 45 years, the EDA has spent billions
on local projects, not national projects, trying to pick winners and
losers amongst various projects by region, industry, and community.
Much like a stimulus bill or earmarks, the EDA provides loans and
grants to pet projects of the administration in power.
In 2008, the EDA spent $2 million on the Harry Reid Research and
Technology Park at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Just last year,
it spent $25 million on the Global Climate Mitigation Incentive Fund.
This year, the agency will spend almost $300 million of taxpayer
dollars. Now, this might not sound like a lot of money sometimes here
in Washington, D.C., but in Newton, in Independence, in Wichita, and in
Goddard, Kansas, that's still a lot of money.
I want to take just a minute to talk about the EDA. Most folks in
Congress and most folks back in Kansas will have never heard of it. I
had not before I entered Congress. It provides these grants and loans
to projects it selects all over the country. At its very core, the EDA
is nothing more than a giant wealth redistribution machine. It takes
money from people in one place and at one time and redistributes it all
across the country for inherently local projects.
For example, it gave $2 million to the ``culinary amphitheater,''
wine tasting room, and gift shop in Washington State. It gave $350,000
to renovate a theater in Colorado. In 2011, it gave $1.4 million to
build infrastructure development so that a steel plant of $1.6 billion
could be built in Minnesota. Like the vast majority of projects, that
steel plant would have been built without Federal taxpayer dollars. It
was a $1.6 billion project helped by the Federal Government to the tune
of only $1.4 million.
Our even bigger problem, however, is with EDA. It's duplicative. It's
just one of at least 80 Federal economic development agencies. HUD and
Ag and HHS all have economic development grants as well.
Second, it's ineffective. It typically provides a very small part of
any given project. The GAO reports that most of its financing did not
have any significant effect on the success of projects and produced, at
best, inconclusive results and, in some cases, may even detract from a
more flexible workforce.
Third, this is an incredibly wasteful agency. It was identified by
GAO as one of the agencies that ought to go away. Indeed, a recent
inspector general audit of 10 projects totaling $45 million showed that
29 percent of the grant money had been wasted due to various violations
of EDA grant requirements. Four of the 10 projects EDA funded in that
group were never completed.
Finally and perhaps more importantly, this is not the role of the
Federal Government. As the Cato Institute has written, the Federal
Government has no business trying to direct economic activity through
politicized subsidy vehicles like the EDA. We've seen that with bad
outcomes, like with Solyndra, only too recently.
Every great journey starts with a single step. This is a small
agency, but it's time for the first time in decades that we eliminate
an entire program, an entire agency, so that it cannot continue to grow
and grow and grow as part of our Federal Government. I would ask my
colleagues to support the EDA Elimination Act.
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