November 18, 2009 7:57 PM

Did "Phantom" Districts Get Stimulus Cash?

(AP)  Did the Obama administration really pump billions of dollars into "phantom" congressional districts?

Republicans, bloggers and conservative think tanks have been circulating reports suggesting that money intended to create jobs and shore up the economy was unaccounted for, misused or lost in some sort of bookkeeping black hole.

The problem is real. Its significance is overstated, and in some instances, fabricated.

THE CHARGE: Using stimulus reports available on Recovery.gov, New Mexico attorney and political activist Jim Scarantino reported on his blog Monday that millions of dollars were being spent in New Mexico congressional districts that don't exist. Republicans on Capitol Hill quickly began circulating the report and reporters and bloggers began searching for other nonexistent districts.

Soon, the "phantom" congressional district story became shorthand for government waste.

The Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, a government watchdog group led by former Republican staffers, put out a report showing $6.4 billion in stimulus money had been spent in hundreds of nonexistent congressional districts.

Columnist D.K. Jamaal, writing on the Web site of the Washington Examiner, reported that "the dunderheads running Washington can't find it and don't know where it went."



THE FACTS: Scarantino's original report was correct, and his analysis was the latest discovery of problems in the massive database of stimulus spending.

Jobs have been overstated or counted multiple times. Jobs in multiple cities have been logged under the same city. Some businesses and local governments didn't follow the guidelines for counting jobs. And temporary, part-time jobs have been counted as full-time, full-year positions.

Those problems raise questions about how accurate the administration is when it claims more than 640,000 jobs saved or created so far.

Earl Daveny, chairman of the stimulus oversight board, told Congress this week he could not say for certain that the job total displayed by Recovery.gov and touted by the White House is accurate. And a government watchdog report to be released Thursday found 58,386 jobs that were created for projects that have yet to receive money.

There are other problems, too, like the misnumbered congressional districts, that make it harder to analyze the data but don't undercut the administration's claims. For instance, dozens of ZIP codes have also been entered incorrectly. One recipient listed the ZIP code for Birmingham, Ala., as 35025. It is actually 35205.

The origin of all these problems is the same. When thousands of businesses, local governments, universities and nonprofit groups entered information into the massive government database, they didn't always do it right. And the government oversight group collecting the data didn't catch the errors.

But anyone with a computer can still easily find out the name of the business or agency that received the money, which city and state it is located, where the money came from, how much it received, and what it's for.

ZIP code 35025 doesn't exist. Neither does Virginia's 12th District.

But it's easy to find out that the mistyped ZIP code was Birmingham, submitted by a subcontractor working on an Air Force repair contract. And that the Triangle Volunteer Fire Department in Nathalie, Va., spent $50,000 in grant money on a dozen masks and tanks for rescue crews.

Scarantino said Wednesday that his initial blog post was just trying to show problems in the data. The nonexistent congressional districts amount to a "huge red flag," he said. If the oversight board that released the data can't catch that, what else is missing?

"I'm not going to say it went into a black hole," Scarantino said.

And people who are using the error to suggest the money has been misused or lost? "They should do some of their own research," he said.

There are problems with the stimulus data being reported, problems that call into question how accurate the job count is. But the "phantom congressional districts" are being used as a phantom issue to suggest that stimulus money has been misspent.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 14 Comments
by crikeytx46 November 19, 2009 7:36 AM EST
Hey CBS, if you had been doing your job (investigative journalism) instead of writing puff pieces for obama and dissing any and all republican or conservative in office, maybe this would have been caught earlier. Oh forget it, you people (CBSMSNBCABCDNNHLNPBS) wouldn't know REAL INVESTIGATIVE journalism if it slapped you in the face. John Stossel could eat all of you for breakfast. ;-) !!!!
Reply to this comment
by jackp32 November 19, 2009 7:03 AM EST
Check the freezers of all the politicians in the area. You will find the money there.
Reply to this comment
by 50BMS13 November 19, 2009 6:45 AM EST
"YES WE CAN" "CHANGE YOU CAN COUNT ON" ........"Oh, I got your vote and won? Suckers! hahahahaahaha." same old same old....same game different players.
Reply to this comment
by jgg000015 November 18, 2009 9:59 PM EST
actually, ABC broke this story and CBS is playing catch-up
Reply to this comment
by roach9703 November 18, 2009 9:58 PM EST
Well folks, the computer geniuses failed database management. Building data checkers for city states and zip codes is not that hard. Did they ever think of asking the Postal Service for Help? Setting up a data base of congressional districts with numbers and labels is first semester database management.
I guest that SQLed the taxpayer.
Reply to this comment
by jgg000015 November 18, 2009 9:45 PM EST
this gov't website was set up specifically to track stimulus money at a cost of $18M. "SherifF Joe"..."nobody messes with joe" was supposed to ride herd over every penny. Now we have bogus, useless data, and a "jobs created or saved" measurement that also cannot actually be substantiated. You can make up any numbers you want.
Reply to this comment
by payback108 November 18, 2009 9:12 PM EST
Just like all the phantom jobs that were created or saved
Reply to this comment
by velma179 November 18, 2009 7:37 PM EST
Newsflash... send immediately to all right wing websites... Newsflash:

Somebody, somewhere made a mistake... Oh no THIS must mean something ery sinister. Predict, dire circumstances to follow, fear and loathing, oh no!

Assign the blame: This is the fault of the Democrats, The Obama administration, ALL liberals, anyone who doesn't vote for our team...


Sheesh

All I can say is if the Republicans ever DO get back in power, they sure have opened some serious cans of "back-at-ya"....
Reply to this comment
by 2012EOD November 18, 2009 8:12 PM EST
Newsflash for you, you do remember that "Joe" was going to make sure it was on the up and up. This is not a good sign of that, no matter if you are a Democrat or Republican.

These guys are amatures.
by troopf4 November 19, 2009 8:25 AM EST
The mismanagement and fraud in government run programs is over the top,
billions and billions , reported regarding fiscal year 2009.
It's always someone else's fault re the democrats.
Incompetence is incompetence. The American people are suppose to go along with the government's plan to overhaul Health Care. What needs to be done is to do something about the fraud and mismanagement across the board in government NOW. How can all of these college educated brains get numbers so wrong - I think they just make it up as they
go along. Good grief people - how much more of this are we going to stand for. I had been a democrat all my adult life but this administration has made me ashamed to ever have been a democrat and
the MSM can thank themselves for glorifying an unknown just to get a democrat elected.
It was never about the People with MSM, and it's not about the people as far as the democrats now that they are a majority.
by 2012EOD November 18, 2009 7:23 PM EST
Like I said, late to the dance, and then only when they have to.

Good Job CBS, this story is two days old. I guess the truth comes out after all.

Sorry Obama :(
Reply to this comment
by velma179 November 18, 2009 7:41 PM EST
This story WAS on CBS a day or so ago... on Political Hotsheet, I think. I first saw it here.

This article is not about the actual errors, but about the right wing response creating a "phantom issue" -- did you read it, or just the headline?

From the article:

"There are problems with the stimulus data being reported, problems that call into question how accurate the job count is. But the "phantom congressional districts" are being used as a phantom issue to suggest that stimulus money has been misspent."
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