[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 174 (Tuesday, December 10, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S8603]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Mrs. FISCHER (for herself and Mr. Manchin):
S. 1792. A bill to close out expired, empty grant accounts; to the
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Mrs. FISCHER. Mr. President, I rise today to introduce the Grants
Oversight and New Efficiency Act or the GONE Act. This legislation
would require federal agencies to close out expired grant accounts with
an empty balance.
``U.S. government spends $890,000 on nothing''--it sounds like a bad
joke, but it is no laughing matter. The Washington Post recently
reported, ``This year, the government will spend at least $890,000 on
service fees for bank accounts that are empty. At last count, Uncle Sam
has 13,712 such accounts with a balance of zero.''
According to an official government report, the Government
Accountability Office, GA0, reported last year that the Payment
Management System, the largest civilian payment system for grants
managed by the Department of Health and Services, was charged $173,000
to maintain the Department of Health and Human Services' 28,000 expired
grant accounts with a zero balance. Furthermore, the GAO estimates that
if federal agencies were billed for the entire year, maintaining
expired grant accounts with a zero balance for the entire year would
cost $2 million in fees.
To tackle this problem, I am introducing the GONE Act, a bill with a
commonsense goal: to increase accountability. My legislation would
require the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and
Efficiency to submit a report to Congress and the agency head including
a list of each expired, empty grant account held by the Federal
Government, recommend which grant accounts should be immediately
closed, and for those grant accounts that have been expired for more
than 90 days, to explain why it has not been closed out. It would also
require the agency head to close out the expired, empty grant accounts
and to update the Council on whether the grant accounts were closed.
Additionally, the bill would require the Council to submit a follow-up
report to Congress and the committees of jurisdiction on the status of
grant accounts identified for closure.
While the fees currently spent on expired grant accounts may seem
like a drop in the bucket, it nonetheless proves there is plenty of fat
to trim. At a time when our country faces serious fiscal challenges and
a soaring $17 trillion national debt, these fiscal blunders are more
than foolish--they are dangerously irresponsible. This example of
government waste underscores the critical importance of proper
congressional oversight of federal agencies and their funding.
I hope my colleagues on both sides of the aisle will join me in
supporting this simple, commonsense legislation to cut wasteful
spending and help bring greater accountability to Washington.
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