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House To End Page Program After Nearly 200 Years

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LARRY MARGASAK   08/ 8/11 07:55 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — After nearly 200 years, the House page program that allowed high school students to serve as messengers and learn about Congress is ending, rendered obsolete by the Internet and email in cost-cutting times.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Monday that the $5 million annual expense can no longer be justified when messages and other materials are delivered electronically. The blue-jacketed pages, who have been a common sight in the House since the 1820s, now have little to do, according to the two leaders.

The program, which also has been touched by scandal, will end by Aug. 31.

Before the Internet and personal electronic devices, pages "crisscrossed the congressional complex each day delivering countless messages and documents to members, committees and leadership offices," the two leaders said in a letter to House members – delivered via email.

Two studies begun in 2008 found that while the young aides were once "stretched to the limit delivering large numbers of urgently needed documents and other packages," they now are "rarely called upon for such deliveries, as most documents are now transmitted electronically."

Today, the pages "are severely underutilized," the letter said.

Boehner and Pelosi wrote that while they are "mindful of the special place their unique experience holds in the memories of the young Americans privileged to serve as pages over the years, our decision to close the program reflects two current realities: Changes in technology have obviated the need for most page services, and the program's high costs are difficult to justify, especially in light of diminished benefits to the House."

While the page program usually functioned as a government learning experience, it had its share of occasional headline-grabbing scandals.

In 1983, the House censured Republican Dan Crane of Illinois and Democrat Gerry Studds of Massachusetts for sexual relationships with pages; Crane with a young woman and Studds with a young man.

More recently, in 2006, Republican Mark Foley of Florida resigned in disgrace after it was learned he had sexually suggestive email communications with former male pages.

After the Foley case, the House overhauled the board that supervised pages, including giving both parties an equal say in overseeing the program. The Republican chairman of the board during the Foley scandal had failed to notify other board members of Foley's questionable emails. The board also was expanded to include a former page and the parent of a page.

The pages have their own school, with a regular faculty, and live in a dormitory near the Capitol. A study calculated the per-page cost for a two-semester school year at $69,000-$80,000 annually, depending on the size of each semester's class.

Applicants must have a 3.0 average in core subjects. They wear black uniforms and must have a hairstyle that is "appropriate for a business environment." They earn $1,804 a month.

Rep. John Dingell, the longest serving House member, was a page for five years from 1936 to 1941, while his father was a congressman.

"It's very sad," said the Michigan Democrat, who began his tenure in December 1955. "There have been some scandals, but you'd be amazed how they've blossomed. Most kids get a great deal of good out of it. It taught me about government and gave me a real knowledge of what happens in the House. It gave me an appreciation of public service."

Dingell said four of his page friends were killed in World War II.

Jerry Papazian, president of the Capitol Page Alumni Association, said he was "stunned and saddened" when he received an email Monday from House Speaker John Boehner's office announcing the end of the program. Papazian was a House page in 1971 and 1972, working on the House floor.

"Nixon was president, it was just before Watergate. We were observing history first-hand," said Papazian, who is now managing director of a management consulting firm in Rolling Hills Estates, Calif. "It was one of the most profound experiences of my life."

He said the alumni association is preparing for a reunion of pages from the House, Senate and Supreme Court next spring. The Supreme Court ended its page program in the 1970s, Papazian said.

The Senate page program will continue.

____

Associated Press writer Stephen Ohlemacher contributed to this report.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elamatt
Ever the optimistic realist
06:02 PM on 08/10/2011
Perhaps any student wishing to find out about government could write his/her legislator to see about interning. The program is another victim of our wired social-media society; it simply is not worth the money spent on the program, although valuable it may be/have been. Change is inevitable.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:37 AM on 08/10/2011
We need to continue to reward obvious cost-cutting measures such as this.
The program served its purpose and now has outlived its usefulness.
Build the bridge and get over it already.
Five million here and five million there is a good start.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
09:05 AM on 08/10/2011
So they ended their child slave labor program. Now how will these kids learn to be good slaves? Guess the government schools do good enough job of brainwashing them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elamatt
Ever the optimistic realist
06:03 PM on 08/10/2011
Where did that last line come from?!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
08:41 PM on 08/10/2011
Government schools teach kids to bow down to government and authority. It is patriotic to back your government no matter how bad it is. Just get a job and be proud to pay the money they steal from you with threats of violence. Critical thinking and other legitimate forms of governing society are never taught.

In go free thinking, curious and adventurous children and out come obedient tax slaves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JeffreyGold
Senator Jeffrey Gold (I)
12:58 AM on 08/10/2011
So, we're moving from transparency to inaccessibility. Thank goodness we're cutting programs like these. But, in retrospect, programs like these were created to show young people how government works. But since it doesn't, it makes total sense to cut the program and to have the young ones place their efforts elsewhere...like finding jobs that don't exist, or get paid shabby post-Recession wages so they can help their parents with the rent. Does that fatherfukker Boehner shed tear for them? I guess not. I hope he's not shedding tears around the fires he's setting---they might go out with his lugubriousness.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fire Krotch
"What might never could have been!"
05:48 PM on 08/09/2011
Looks like it's back to paying hookers for the GOP!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DTSLW
05:04 PM on 08/09/2011
And how many jobs, low paying or not, got cut?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PrairieGayCompanion
Everything red will be blue again.
05:01 PM on 08/09/2011
Why, just the other day I saw them fetching water and and other items for MC's who think the pages are servants.
sonofsonoflars
Theres a 99% chance you can't afford to vote R.
04:39 PM on 08/09/2011
Send them to an $80,000 school (one year) and pay them almost $24,000 yearly salary? To deliver messages? Um yeah, time to end that particular program. Maybe these kids can intern at goldman sachs. If they want to get into government, probably the best place to start.
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SeenItBefore
Ya want to super size that?
04:51 PM on 08/09/2011
I agree. I was a good student, went to a decrepit public school and earned 10 cents a bushel picking truck crops. Had I had the opportunity to become a page, I might have become impressed with the bucks and the neat blue coats and grown up to be Bill Clinton.

On a more serious note: a measly 5 million a year! This is their big answer to saving the nation!

Phfsst!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
p c r
Compassionate and Conservative are polar opposites
05:25 PM on 08/09/2011
You had the opportunity. Any high school student can apply.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Clearing-Brush
Badges? We don't need no stinkin badges.
04:32 PM on 08/09/2011
Hey...more job cuts...the GOP is on a roll.....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tomt
04:12 PM on 08/09/2011
Oh, too bad. Who will GOP Congressmen prey upon?
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
05:36 PM on 08/09/2011
dc has lots of escort services -- they will have to pay more now.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lhanderson86
04:02 PM on 08/09/2011
Saving $5 million is really not that impressive. Try cutting back on the bloated defense budget, then maybe I'll applaud.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
05:40 PM on 08/09/2011
they are pushing for an AA rating. Would love to hear what BofA would say to someone that owed a few thousand and could only come up with 1.50. .
Meanwhile Bernanke is giving low interest rates because the rich need to save some more.
DUSAA-1775
never moon a werewolf
06:22 PM on 08/09/2011
I didn't see where people were saying that cutting $5 million was supposed to be impressive. It is supposed to be common sense.
However, cutting out nonproductive obsolete jobs is obviously an action that many Liberal posters here find objectionable.
shlack123
Independent; Moderate; Atheist; Texan.
09:28 AM on 08/10/2011
Not I - the cut needed to be made. Every little bit helps.
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tenzenz
Save the Nation Boil a Tea Bag
03:55 PM on 08/09/2011
This is a sound fiscal move, but I can't help but believe, that somewhere along the line, the House Members will give themselves a Raise to make sure they are not giving this money back to the Treasury
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Soundofthunder
Listen to the thunder
03:01 PM on 08/09/2011
The GOP's priority is what? Getting rid of JOBS. ALL jobs. ANYTHING to undermine the economy.

S
DUSAA-1775
never moon a werewolf
06:24 PM on 08/09/2011
That is truly and ignorant statement.
Good for you !!
02:57 PM on 08/09/2011
The teenagers employed as "Page Programs" got discontinued for the Supreme Court in 1970 because it caused scandals to occur. So now the teenaged Page Programs personnel for the House floor are going to discontinue on August 31st this month because the delivery of papers in those blue folders can be delivered electronically by computer instead of teenage human labor. The teenaged Page Programs personnel are going to continue staying employed for the Senate floor. So my question is, why can't "papers in blue folders" be delivered electronically by computers as well, instead of delivery by teenaged human labor, to save even money on taxes?

O.K. so the Federal government is making small changes to save money on Federal taxes, good! President Barack Obama should keep doing that because the Federal Reserve does not have any cash, only debts of 14 trillion dollars which we owe the country of China.
03:02 PM on 08/09/2011
"So my question is, why can't "papers in blue folders" be delivered electronic­ally by computers as well, instead of delivery by teenaged human labor, to save even money on taxes?"

Sorry, let me rephrase my question. Why can't teenage Page Program personnel be replaced by electronic delivery for the Senate floor also?
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CoastalNC
Good thoughts create good things
03:58 PM on 08/09/2011
I was wondering about that too.
maruski
Liberal Lutheran; lean left, save America!
02:53 PM on 08/09/2011
Great--that is what should happen-- we all should be getting dividends like this because of the cyber world. We have to evolve--that means getting rid of old stuff that doesn't serve us a big dividend. "Bang for your buck" that should be what we look for in all our tax dollars