Washington Post/ February 6, 2012, 11:04 PM

Lawmakers' properties can benefit from earmarks

This story is the latest installment in the Washington Post's series "Capitol Assets," based on an examination of the finances of all 435 members of the House of Representatives and 100 members of the U.S. Senate. This story was written by David S. Fallis, Scott Higham and Kimberly Kindy.

A U.S. senator from Alabama directed more than $100 million in federal earmarks to renovate downtown Tuscaloosa near his own commercial office building. A congressman from Georgia secured $6.3 million in taxpayer funds to replenish the beach about 900 feet from his island vacation cottage. A representative from Michigan earmarked $486,000 to add a bike lane to a bridge within walking distance of her home.

Thirty-three members of Congress have steered more than $300 million in earmarks and other spending provisions to dozens of public projects that are next to or within about two miles of the lawmakers' own property, according to a Washington Post investigation.

Under the ethics rules Congress has written for itself, this is both legal and undisclosed.

The Post analyzed public records on the holdings of all 535 members and compared them with earmarks members had sought for pet projects, most of them since 2008. The process uncovered appropriations for work in close proximity to commercial and residential real estate owned by the lawmakers or their family members. The review also found 16 lawmakers who sent tax dollars to companies, colleges or community programs where their spouses, children or parents work as salaried employees or serve on boards.

In recent weeks, lawmakers have acknowledged the public's growing concern that they appeared to be using their positions to enrich themselves. In response, the Senate last week passed legislation that would require lawmakers to disclose mortgages for their residences. The bill, known as the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act, would also require lawmakers and executive branch officials to disclosure securities trades of more than $1,000 every 30 days. At the same time, the Senate defeated an amendment, 59-40, that would have permanently outlawed earmarks.

The House is scheduled to vote on the Stock Act on Thursday.

Earmarks have long been controversial, with the focus on spending that unduly favors campaign donors or constituents. The Post's review is the first systematic effort to examine the alignment of earmarks with lawmakers' private interests.

Earmarks are a fraction of the federal budget, and the numbers uncovered by The Post are relatively small in the scheme of the overall Congress, but the behavior by lawmakers from both parties points to a larger issue at a time when confidence in Capitol Hill is at an all-time low.

The congressional financial disclosure system obscures certain relationships. Lawmakers are not required to disclose the addresses of their personal residences or the employment of their children and parents. The lawmakers are also allowed to put properties in holding companies without disclosing the properties' locations. Current versions of the Stock Act would not change that. To provide a fuller portrait of congressional connections, The Post compared the disclosure forms with the public record to track spending on projects near legislators' properties or on programs employing their relatives.

In interviews, lawmakers said their earmarks were needs brought to them by the city and state officials they represent to help pay for safer roads, nicer neighborhoods or improved local economies. They characterized questions about the nearby locations of their own holdings as irrelevant, insisting there is no conflict. Any potential personal benefit -- financial or otherwise -- is nonexistent, minimal or secondary to the needs of the public, they said.

Mere proximity to a lawmaker's property does not establish that an earmark was unwarranted. In some cases, the public benefit of the spending was large, improving life for thousands. In others, the benefit appeared narrower. In some cases, the work was within a mile or two of the properties; in others, it was directly in front of the lawmaker's land.

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) secured a $900,000 earmark that was used to resurface about two dozen roads in Mississippi in 2010. One of those was LC Turner Circle, a quarter-mile residential loop in the small town of Bolton, where Thompson and his daughter own two homes.

Thompson said it was one of numerous paving earmarks he secured for his district.

"I didn't say, 'Do the street that I live on,' " Thompson said. "The earmark went to the county. It had no designation on it whatsoever, and that was it."

Bolton Mayor Lawrence Butler said city leaders chose to repave the street, where about 48 families live, because "it had gone to the dogs." Butler described Thompson as a close friend but said the lawmaker "didn't have anything to do with where the asphalt went."

By design, ethics rules governing Congress are intended to preserve the freedom of members to direct federal spending in their districts, a process known as earmarking. Such spending has long been cloaked in secrecy and only in recent years has been subjected to more transparency.

Although Congress has imposed numerous conflict-of-interest rules on federal agencies and private businesses, the rules it has set for itself are far more permissive.

Lawmakers are required to certify that they do not have a financial stake in the actions they take. In the cases The Post examined, not one lawmaker mentioned that he or she owned property that was near the earmarked project or had a relative who was employed by the company or institution that received the earmark. The reason: Nothing in congressional rules requires them to do so, and the rules do not address proximity.

Congress's interpretation of what constitutes a conflict is narrowly construed: If lawmakers or their immediate families are not the sole beneficiaries, there is considered to be no conflict.

The chambers of Congress have different standards. In the Senate, members must certify that neither they nor their "immediate" family members have a financial interest. But in the House, only lawmakers and their spouses are covered, not children or parents.

The economic impact of earmarks on lawmakers' properties was often difficult to determine. Many of the earmarks documented by The Post went to projects still underway. Public works projects can have the immeasurable benefit of stabilizing land values in the volatile market of recent years.


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12 Comments Add a Comment
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michael2040 says:
There should be a public body that reviews each and every congressmen/senators action and choices while in office. Then they should post the findings and let the people decide thier raises and or removal from office. After all it is we the people, right? But we all know the correuption runs deep.
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Concerned2009 says:
Asking Congress to pass laws regulating itself is like asking the fox in the hen house not to eat the chickens.

Congress has ALWAYS been an example of corruption.

Vote the crooks out, give some teeth to the Ethics Committee, punish violaters AND the recipients of the earmarks (by withdrawl of funds).
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sirmarion-2009 says:
They need to run Senator Shelby out of office for all his pork barreling of money,he just is addicted to it. He is the senator from Alabama that always has his finger in the barrel,just waiting to take more and more,and more,and more.
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ammo17 says:
this government we have now reminds me of the monarchies that were in europe in the middle ages,the prince and princesses(our senate) the dukes and duchesses (our congress) and of cource the king and the queen in the whitehouse,with the middle class paying for everything.i can see another 1776 happening in this country.
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ddaryl1 says:
Welcome to the fascist plutocracy of the United States.
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sirmarion-2009 says:
It is just like more insider trading,where we would go to jail for they get rich for it. I have seen mayors get roads built to nowhere untill it was discovered that they owned the property that fronted the road way.All spend needs to be under severe scrutiny.
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Observer1504 says:
In China they would be imprisoned or executed. In America they are re-elected.
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Well_You_Aint_Me replies:
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Not what would happen to them in China.

In China this is just business as usual, only there is no investigation.
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longtree-2009 says:
corruption is the norm on capital hill and across the nation. no one should be surprised or shocked. loopholes are always found and many use them even when it is just wrong but legal.
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KSAXT1 says:
Just sounds like business as usual. Until it's decided that they (congress) cannot write their own rules to govern their behaviour they will line their pockets at will.
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Strykeroee says:
Congress is America's single biggest enemy, wreaking more harm than al-Qaeda and the Taliban combined could even dream of.
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Well_You_Aint_Me replies:
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Agreed.

And they warn everyone else to "tighten your belt", which is synonymous with "We in congress are preparing to vote ourselves a pay raise."
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