Connecticut lawmakers hope for new era of earmarks

February 20, 2012

By Ana Radelat

Washington -- Hoping to stir public outrage against a rival, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum are brawling over who is responsible for the most "earmarks," special projects inserted into spending bills.

While the presidential hopefuls portray earmarks as a corrupting influence on politics and a waste of taxpayer funds, Connecticut lawmakers, among others, are taking a different view.

Rep. John Larson, D-1st District, calls earmarks "the most misunderstood thing in Congress."

"There's a difference between a 'bridge to nowhere' and funding for the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum," he said.

The "bridge to nowhere" was a project in a remote corner of Alaska that cost taxpayers millions and benefited just a handful of people. During the 2008 campaign, it became a symbol of waste and corruption and helped put an end to earmarks, at least temporarily.

The House and Senate established a two-year moratorium on these special projects in 2011. But next year, unless that moratorium is extended, lawmakers can once again seek money for pet projects.

Steve Ellis of Taxpayers for Common Sense, which tracks and criticizes earmarked spending, said if earmarks come back, there will be greater scrutiny of their merits.

"I'm clear-eyed that earmarks are going to come back in some form," he said.

But for now, in an election year, Ellis said earmarks are "radioactive,"

That's evident by the spat between GOP presidential candidates Romney and Santorum. Romney says that Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, secured millions of dollars in earmarks when he was in Congress. Santorum struck back by saying Romney, as a former Massachusetts governor, requested millions of dollars in earmarks from his state's congressional delegation.

Despite public distaste over earmarking, there are signs that lawmakers are frustrated with the ban on special projects.

Attempts to extend the moratorium earlier this month were firmly voted down in the Senate. Connecticut Sens. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat, and Joseph Lieberman, an independent, voted with the majority that rejected an extension of the ban.

Connecticut lawmakers, as with those in other states, steered hundreds of millions of dollars in earmarks to the state before the practice was suspended.

Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, sought millions of dollars to help Connecticut's defense industry and the submarine base in Groton. In 2010, Courtney secured $4.4 million for a dry deck for the Electric Boat Corp., $4 million for a turbine engine program at Pratt & Whitney and $5.6 million for an MK-48 torpedo magazine for the sub base.

Larson was also responsible for many defense-related projects, including $7.2 million for a project at Goodrich Pump & Engine Control Systems in West Hartford.

Rep. Chris Murphy, D-5th District, helped win $3.2 million for a University of Connecticut Health Center program that helps soldiers recover from bone injuries, and he steered hundreds of thousands of dollars to other projects for his district.

As chairwomen of a House Agriculture subcommittee, Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-3rd District, was responsible for more than $9 million in agriculture-related earmarks in 2010. They included $401,000 for the University of Connecticut's Food Marketing Policy Center, and $300,000 for the Massaro Community Farm in Woodbridge.

The Pig Book, a compilation by earmarks by Citizens Against Government Waste, pointed out that some earmarks were inserted into spending bills anonymously, including $465 million put into a 2010 defense bill to continue development and purchase the first alternate engines for the Joint Strike Fighter. Those engines would compete with the engines Pratt & Whitney is constructing in Connecticut.  In an ad, Pratt & Whitney called the appropriation "the mother of all earmarks."

In the 2010 Pig Book, Connecticut was ranked 25th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia in "pork per capita." The book said the state received about $115.6 million in earmarks that year, or about $32.80 for each Connecticut resident.

Few say the days of a free-spending Congress will return, especially after "the bridge to nowhere" and recent revelations that lawmakers procured projects that increased the value of their homes and businesses and steered earmarks to groups that hired relatives.

Some conservative Republicans, especially those who espouse tea party ideas, will continue to fight against earmarks, which account for a fraction of 1 percent of the federal budget.

But members of Connecticut's congressional delegation say they could make a comeback, although in altered form.

"Earmarks had gotten out of control, and I think this cooling off period has been constructive," said Murphy.

Murphy wants a reformed system. But he said lawmakers know the needs of constituents better than federal agencies, which are now the only dispensers of federal funds, usually through merit-based grants.

"It doesn't serve my constituents well to have bureaucrats in Washington decide where all the money should be spent," Murphy said. "Congress should have a role."

DeLauro also said she would support a reformed system, possibly one that included a panel to scrutinize lawmaker requests.

Blumenthal, who came to Congress after the earmark ban, agreed that a new system is needed.

"Directing money to local projects is a good idea as long as the projects are worthwhile and it's done transparently and with accountability," he said.

According to The Center for Responsive Politics, Rep. Jim Himes, D-4th District, helped secure about $20 million in earmarks in 2010. But Himes said he's now "conflicted" about them.

"If there were a process to make sure members did not benefit from them and they were directed at clearly valuable projects, I think you have a very legitimate discussion on whether they should come back," he said.

For Larson, whose seniority would give him an advantage in the earmark chase, there's no doubt about the merits of special projects.

"If you have representative government, shouldn't I be representing the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum?" he said.

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Comments

What is missed in this

What is missed in this article are the huge costs that come with the Federal or State dollars. In all cases if the mandates such as but not limited to prevailing wage and Davis Bacon were removed the cost of the project would be decreased by more than a 1/3.

John Larson is a baffoon. Why

John Larson is a baffoon.

Why doesn't he consider building submarines and aircraft the Pentagon steadfastly says it doesn't want or need to be 'bridges to nowhere'?

Did the author of this article 'quiz' Larson on his own wastefull spending i.e. bridges to nowhere?

What this an interview with Larson or a 'you sit' and 'you print what I say' arrangement?

Extremely disappointing.

Cortney and Blumenthal are just as bad. ""Directing money to local projects is a good idea as long as the projects are worthwhile and it's done transparently and with accountability," (Blumenthal)said.

Shameless all around.

Incumbent Democrats are

Incumbent Democrats are playing the Washington 2-step. President Obama intends to inflict severe reductions in Defense Spending. At the same time, Job Killers like Joe Courtney are promising huge injections of new earmarks to help sustain the anemic 2nd District economy.

Connecticut Governor, Dannel 88, proposes a "busway to nowhere" and bribes companies to move into the state by subsidizing $1 million dollara per job.

How about some common sense. Make Connecticut a "right to work" state and let welfare recipients compete with special interest unions to work repairing bridges. Unskilled workers learned fast in the Depression. They

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Ear marks are one of many

Ear marks are one of many reasons we are so deeply in debt. This is welfare to the states in many cases. And as far as transparency..non-existent. Any insertion into another bill should be prohibited. Any crafted bill, should only deal with the bills main subject matter, and keep the rats out. Author's of these little inserted pieces should be clearly identified so that they are subjected to back lash from their constituents in the future. Major scrutiny should be applied to make sure the author(s) are not gaining personally from the spending. This free-for-all should

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I think having congress

I think having congress determine earmarks, even with transparency, is a bad idea. Projects worthy of federal funding should be selected in a non-political way. - and I do believe that there are projects worthy of funding.

It is unclear why there was an attack on Gov Malloy in the comments. Part of the reason Gov Malloy has backed the busway is to plan ahead for the future when the highway interchanges in Hartford will be reconfigured. Without advance planning, the traffic problems during construction would cripple travel and dramatically affect businesses.

I am also unclear

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There is no logic to most

There is no logic to most earmarks because they are driven by the political ambitions of corrupt members of Congress like Joe Courtney, Larson, DeLauro, Murphy and Himes (not to leave anyone out). Every earmark is an opportunity for them to toot their horn, even though the money comes from the taxpayers. But earmarks are particularly egregious when they are awarded to induce members of Congress to vote for bills they might not otherwise support, instead of voting on their merits. The recent Heritage Foundation study lays this out showing how earmarks peaked when certain critical pieces

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