[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 135 (Thursday, September 8, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5449-S5450]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WASTEFUL SPENDING
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, today I return to the floor for talk No.
49--49 weeks of coming to the floor to talk about what we have
described as ``waste of the week.'' We originally started this about 50
weeks ago in this cycle, with some skipping of weeks when we were not
in session, trying to look at ways to make government more efficient
and effective and to save taxpayer dollars. We set a goal of reaching
$100 billion.
Whether it was the Congressional Budget Office, whether it was the
inspectors general overseeing expenditures in the various agencies, we
kept receiving these reports about taxpayer money that is wasted
through waste, fraud, and abuse. We have talked about everything from
the ridiculous to the really serious in terms of mismanagement, fraud,
and waste that has occurred in this Federal Government.
At a time when we cannot begin to balance our budget, when
expenditures keep significantly exceeding revenues that are coming in
no matter how much tax we collect, we find ourselves in a situation
where we are continuing to borrow and borrow and borrow and borrow into
the trillions and trillions and trillions of dollars--a truly
unsustainable rate which will cause great harm to the American people
at some point, if it hasn't already. Clearly, it is holding down our
ability to grow. Clearly, it is putting us in a situation where
expenditures on just paying interest on the money we have to borrow
continues to increase, depriving us of the opportunity to address some
essential needs, such as infrastructure and basic science. NIH
research, the CDC, and others are being squeezed because we simply
don't have the funds available without continuing to go into debt.
So this is No. 49. It is one of the more minor ones. Keep tuning in
because next week we have a big one coming. We could come down here
almost every day and talk about something, with the backlog of waste,
fraud, and abuse documented by agencies that are nonpartisan. They are
not Republican. They are not Democratic. These are agencies that just
deal with numbers, they just deal with facts, and they report to us, as
Members of the Senate and the Congress, to make this available to the
public and to demonstrate that we could run a much better shop here and
save the taxpayers a lot of money.
Today I want to highlight abuse of a fund that exists within the
Department of Health and Human Services. It is called the Nonrecurring
Expenses Fund, otherwise known as NEF. ``Nonrecurring expense fund'' is
another fancy description the Federal Government has put out so that
nobody can understand what it is, but we looked into this and found
that the Nonrecurring Expenses Fund is a fund that was created to place
money which wasn't used. There was money appropriated by Congress for
specific purposes, but they didn't use all of it. Instead of turning it
back to the Treasury or the taxpayer, they said: Let's create this fund
that we can put this excess money in that hasn't been used for the
purpose it was designated. We will put it in a fund, and it will be
there for use for some other purposes.
Well, you know how government works: Never return a penny of the
money that has been allocated to you by the Congress because the next
time it comes up on an annual basis for your allocation, Congress may
say: Well, they didn't need all that money, so let's give them less
money next year.
Oh, no, we don't want to be in that position, so let's make sure we
find a way to spend it.
Anyway, the money is sitting here in this slush fund called the
Nonrecurring Expenses Fund, and it is supposed to be used for one-time
expenses that come up on construction or IT projects and they can go to
the fund and take some money out and use it for specified purposes.
Well, all that was fine, I guess. I think it should have gone back to
the Treasury. They did put a 5-year limit on it, and if it is still
there after 5 years, it is supposed to go back to the Treasury but
instead goes to this fund.
Well, along came ObamaCare and all of its promises: Don't worry, it
is not going to cost you a penny more than what is already being paid.
If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor. Your premiums won't
go up.
All that was promised to us by the President. After every declarative
thing he said, he added: Period. Not one penny increase, period. Keep
your doctor, period. Done deal, folks. Trust us.
Well, of course none of that happened. ObamaCare seems to be
collapsing under the weight of its own regulations and rules and
operations. We read every day, almost every week of an exchange
closing, of premiums skyrocketing. We are in for a very big surprise
this fall. Some of this has been documented about the numbers coming in
and the increases in premiums in the various States that are
staggering. People are dropping out, people can't afford to get in, and
on and on it goes.
In any event, under ObamaCare, as we all remember, when they set it
up, the Web site didn't work and people couldn't make the phone calls,
so the expenditures have been significantly higher than what we were
told and what was projected, and we are talking about big money here.
So the administration thought, well, let's sort of look around, dig
around, and maybe we will find a fund somewhere where there is some
excess money we can use to prop up ObamaCare rather than having to go
back to the Congress.
Now, this is money appropriated for a specific purpose and not to be
used or tapped into to pay for some other failing program over here,
but, of course, that didn't stop the White House from doing that. It
seems nothing does stop them, including laws passed by the Congress.
In any event, they determined that, wow, here is a slush fund. Over
the course of 4 years, it had about $1.3 billion in it. So why don't we
just take it? It breaches the rules, maybe even the constitutionality
of the fact that Congress appropriates money for specific purposes and
puts it in specific places, and the administration doesn't have the
right to simply go over there and say: Oh, there is a pot of money over
there. It has been sitting there. Even though the law says it should
expire after 5 years and it has to go back to the Treasury, we will
ignore that and
[[Page S5450]]
take that money, and we will apply it to pay for some of the bills on
ObamaCare.
And that is exactly what they did. So $1.3 billion was taken from a
fund without a congressional vote--an abuse of power undermining
Congress's constitutional authority over appropriations. So here we are
adding to our total the $1.3 billion that could have been saved, that
was appropriated but not used. It could have been used for many things.
We are talking about trying to find ways to pay for Zika funding. This
is a serious matter. Zika is having an impact. We have known that. The
opposition here--the Democrats--have voted three times to prohibit us
from going forward on that. But one of the issues here is the pay-for
that we are under. If we are going to start a new program or
appropriate more money to a program, we want to find something else to
pay for it. Well, here is the perfect way to do it, and the amount of
money is more than actually requested. Mr. President, $1.3 billion
could be easily used as a pay-for for the Zika problem. That would get
the CDC and get the States out there to deal with this very significant
and difficult problem. But no, nope; it had to go to ObamaCare. It had
to sort of once again fill the gap from expenditures that have gone all
over the place.
So what we have done is shown that this is money that we could have
saved the taxpayer or that could have used for a better purpose, and
under the waste of the week total here, we are now adding this $1.3
billion, which brings our total to $240 billion--$240,785,726,817. It
just keeps going up. Here we are sitting on a total of nearly $241
billion of waste, fraud and abuse.
As I said, fasten your seatbelts, folks; the next one coming in next
week is a staggering number of documented waste, fraud and abuse.
Mr. President, with that, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. MARKEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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