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Republican Lawmakers Spin Funding Tall Tales

Republicans

JOAN LOWY   10/30/11 12:59 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — It's an outrageous tale: The federal government spends one out of every $10 in transportation aid on wasteful projects such as refurbishing a giant roadside coffee pot and constructing turtle tunnels.

That's what Republican lawmakers have said repeatedly in recent weeks in the Senate, in public appearances and in news releases. They are trying to eliminate a requirement that states use a portion of their highway aid for "transportation enhancements," 12 categories of projects from bike and walking paths to scenic overlooks and landscaping.

But it's not exactly true.

To make their case, lawmakers have exaggerated and misrepresented some projects that have received aid.

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., raised the issue last month when he temporarily blocked action on a transportation bill. He said he wanted to allow state transportation departments to use all their federal aid on basic needs such as roads, bridges and tunnels, instead of setting some aside for enhancements.

"We are not pouring asphalt, we are not laying concrete, we are not decreasing congestion, and we are not increasing safety," Coburn complained. He produced a list of 39 projects that he said exemplify extravagance at a time when states don't have enough money to repair structurally deficient bridges.

Coburn picked his examples from the more than 25,000 projects that have received money since Congress established the enhancement set-aside nearly two decades ago.

First on the list: the Lincoln Highway 200-Mile Roadside Museum in south-central Pennsylvania. It was described as receiving $300,000 in 2004 for signs, murals, colorful vintage gas pumps painted by local artists and refurbishing of a former roadside snack stand from 1927 that's shaped like a giant coffee pot.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., was apparently working from Coburn's list two weeks ago when he offered an amendment to narrow the types of projects eligible for enhancement funds.

"Pennsylvania ranks first out of all states for deficient bridges. Yet it seems to be more important to furbish large roadside coffee pots," McCain said.

But no transportation aid was spent on the coffee pot's $100,000 restoration, said Olga Herbert, executive director of the Lincoln Highway Heritage Corridor. The money was raised entirely from preservation and civic organizations and local supporters.

"We did not use any of this $300,000 award for anything to do with the coffee pot," she said. "It's interesting that nobody from Senator Coburn's office called me about this."

Also on Coburn's list was a lighthouse renovation in the harbor of Toledo, Ohio, that would be partly funded with $500,000 in federal money. Actually, no transportation dollars have been authorized or awarded. The lighthouse renovation is among projects community officials tentatively hope to get around to in 2019.

Coburn's list includes a 1996 grant for preservation of a "factory used to make saddletrees" – the foundation of a riding saddle – in Madison, Ind. Not mentioned is that the grant wouldn't qualify for enhancement money under current program rules, according to Transportation Department officials.

The Texas Department of Transportation is described as spending $16.2 million in enhancement money to restore the Battleship Texas, docked in the Houston Ship Channel. If so, they weren't federal transportation dollars. U.S. transportation officials said an application for the money was turned down.

The list cited landscaping to screen a junkyard in Aiken, S.C. After checking with state and local authorities, federal officials said the project was canceled years ago and again, no funds were awarded.

"We picked some of the more interesting and exciting ones to get our colleagues' attention," McCain acknowledged during his effort to pass his amendment.

McCain said he was reluctant to mention a $198,000 grant in 2007 to the National Corvette Museum in Warren County, Ky., to build a simulator theater because he fondly remembers owning a Corvette once. But then he mentioned it anyway.

"Since a National Corvette Museum simulator theater has very little to do with transportation enhancement, I felt compelled to add this," he said.

The simulator theater is really a driver-education classroom for free driving classes for older people and teenagers, not a chance to pretend to be behind the wheel of a Corvette, museum officials said.

But what has provoked the most scorn from enhancement critics are the "turtle tunnels" near Tallahassee, Fla.

"Don't tell the people of Kentucky they need to finance every turtle tunnel and solar panel company on some bureaucrat's wish list in order to get their bridges fixed," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said last month. His comment came in a speech criticizing President Barack Obama's request for $50 billion for highways, bridges and airport runways as part of his jobs plan.

Kentucky's other senator, Republican Rand Paul, protested last week: "Something is seriously wrong with government when we are forcing state governments to spend 10 percent of their transportation money on turtle tunnels, white squirrel parks, and movie theaters."

Florida transportation officials used federal aid to build mile-long barrier walls on either side of U.S. 27, a busy four-lane highway along the shore of Lake Jackson, and three culverts that run underneath the road. The lake is teeming with wildlife, but the critters were getting flattened by cars as they tried to cross to the vegetation on the other side.

While turtle deaths prompted the project, the culverts are being used by many other species, including beavers, otters, alligators and snakes. They make driving safer for motorists who were swerving to avoid turtles and alligators, said Matt Aresco, the former Florida State University Ph.D. student who led a grassroots campaign for the project.

"It's a significant safety issue," he said.

The project used economic stimulus funds rather than regularly budgeted transportation money. Coburn's list, provided to reporters and posted on his Senate website, said Florida plans to spend $3.4 million on the project, but it will require $6 million more to finish "and it was unclear how long it will take to get the project built."

Actually, the project was finished in September 2010 and came in under budget at $3 million, according to the Transportation Department.

GOP members of Congress also have said repeatedly that states are required to spend 10 percent of their transportation aid on enhancements. Actually, the set-aside for enhancements is equal to 10 percent of the aid states receive through one transportation program, not their total federal aid. Enhancement funds amounted to $927 million in the past year, 2 percent of the $46 billion the government spent on highway programs.

___

Online:

National Transportation Enhancements Clearinghouse http://www.enhancements.org/projectlist.asp

___

Associated Press writers Travis Loller in Nashville, Tenn., Peter Jackson in Harrisburg, Pa., and Michael Schneider in Orlando, Fla., contributed to this report.

___

Follow Joan Lowy on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

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WASHINGTON — It's an outrageous tale: The federal government spends one out of every $10 in transportation aid on wasteful projects such as refurbishing a giant roadside coffee pot and construct...
WASHINGTON — It's an outrageous tale: The federal government spends one out of every $10 in transportation aid on wasteful projects such as refurbishing a giant roadside coffee pot and construct...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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CCee 10:51 AM on 10/30/2011
If noise is coming from a Republican's Pie-hole you can guarantee it is carried forth with a deadly sin attached to to it.

If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and IS a duck, you will have no problem finding a Republican trying to convince somebody, somewhere, that it's an invasion of librul illegal aliens, carrying weapons of mass destruction who are coming to take away yer  Read More...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:56 PM on 11/01/2011
Different day same names of GOP that contiue to Obstruct the whole process to create Jobs an work with the President on anthing ! Where the Hell has John Bone/head been besides Golfing ? 0 + 0 = 0 ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miketothad
trollslayer
12:35 PM on 10/31/2011
The Republican party runs on ignorance, hate and gossip.
The GOP couldn't survive without it, and the willfully ignorant GOP base knows it.
03:05 AM on 11/01/2011
Right, typical GOP lies, exaggerations and small factoids blown out of proportion to appear they are the entire story. Par for the richie golf course.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
invmartyc
Greedy Old People SUPER PAC
11:16 AM on 10/31/2011
The GOP doesn't want to confuse us with facts and the truth. And Mitch McConnell doesn't want to tell us about the millions in tax breaks he gets his billionaire horse racing budies back in Kentucky.

And let's not forget the GOP selling their soles to the rich by signing an agreement with the rich protecting their lower taxes.

Greedy
Obstructing
Polititians

Leave no billionaire behind-Vote GOP 2012
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dahile00
Your micro-bio is empty
11:10 AM on 10/31/2011
So, block *ALLLLL* money because some relatively paltry amount is going to attractions--WHICH BRING IN ****REVENUE***, BY THE WAY!!!

That must be why the roads are falling apart here in McConnell's districts.
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smp276dp
free us from the craziness
10:40 AM on 10/31/2011
And the party would impolde. They would lose that black stain on their heart.
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smp276dp
free us from the craziness
10:32 AM on 10/31/2011
Why is it this McConnell looks like he is always on drugs? Do they drug test in congress?
There would be nothing more satifiying then Obama winning next year and have this yahoo eat his words.
09:11 AM on 10/31/2011
It seems like lieing like mad dogs has become a part of the daily menu that's being served to the American people, yet they have the nerves to call this a Democracy instead of by its proper name, a MOCKERY which they've made of our Democracy.
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smp276dp
free us from the craziness
10:33 AM on 10/31/2011
Very well said. Fanned.
satyrday
If my micro-bio is way too long, will it be trunca
08:14 AM on 10/31/2011
McConnell better find himself a good turtle tunnel before somebody accidentally runs him over.
Clevelandinwi
Progressive is good; regressive, not so much.
06:51 AM on 10/31/2011
Republicans LIE. Who knew?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rodger leMonde
I call them as I see them.
12:34 AM on 10/31/2011
I can think of one white squirrel park that suck up to much money, in Washington DC.
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TimFredrickson
Klaatu Barada Nikto
12:29 AM on 10/31/2011
These Republican Congress people should actually know better but they're not going to stand in the way of a good political fable. The truth and reality seem to be out of the intellectual grasp of these rightwingnutfundietalibanlibertardteabaggernitwits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cgin
10:16 PM on 10/30/2011
This nonsense shouldn’t be of any real surprise to anyone whose been paying attention. As a matter of fact, I’ll be shocked if anyone is truly surprise. The Teapublicans have serendipitously discovered that nowadays outright lies and blatantly shameless hypocrisy have no damaging consequences to their political ambitions. They have also gladly discovered that most media, either for their own financial interest or ineptitude, is unwilling to challenge lies aggressively no matter how conspicuous and pernicious the lie.
The confluence of these frightening circumstances has inevitably created what some have dubbed the new alternate reality paradigm that which no thriving democracy can withstand without collapsing.
gmikejake
resist evil
07:31 AM on 10/31/2011
This is not new. I trace it back to the administration of Saint Reagan. He regularly told some "whoppers" on a wide variety of subjects and it worked for him. Part of his genius as the "great communicator" was being able to artfully provide what his "base" wanted to hear. I taught social policy, human diversity, welfare policy, etc. during his administration and he, unfortunately, for me was a "teaching tool" that would not go away. His lies forced students to look for facts as his information and mine, and the texts, were often contradictory. They learned a lot but they told their parents and some complained to university administration at my very conservative, religious university. In the end the majority of students, independently determined that President Reagan was either delusional or a liar. They chose liar. But, for their parents, and for the important people in university administration, I became a "liar," a "communist," an "atheist," and whatever else their socialization taught them to do and say about someone so "different." So we moved, which was actually a good thing, and the students learned, another good thing. And Reagan continued his "sainthood" among the regressives. And our country has "regressed" since that point ... increasing inequities in wealth and income, shrinking middle class, ever larger numbers of people living in poverty. Again, the evidence is correct if one bothers to look at it. The students would still be correct about both the evidence and the lies.
07:11 AM on 11/06/2011
Congratulations on teaching your students to be critical thinkers. They are the future and will pass their skills forward to others and so on. We need more instructors to do the same thus producing more critical thinkers/thinking citizens. I have found that very often those who can’t handle truth condemn the messenger.

I was brought up to think. Growing up I was always thought of as "different" because I did not see things as most saw them. Years later as an adult and as a seminarian, I realized that yes, indeed I was "different" and proud of it; because I questioned and refused to accept the status quo.

St. Reagan was an actor with the biggest performance of his life was as president. Unfortunately, he initiated much damage to our country which still ripples into the 21st Century.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MmeFlutterbye
Mmeflutterbye
09:59 PM on 10/30/2011
"To make their case, lawmakers have exaggerated and misrepresented some projects that have received aid."

Yep! Rick Perry's their man! He'd fit right in.
08:20 PM on 10/30/2011
Pot calling the kettle black
Google "Mitch McConnell river front project" LOL May 23, 2011 – Bureaucratic red tape has held up the riverfront projects. ... U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell obtained $10 million for the Henderson riverfront .
ASHLAND, Ky. McConnell remembered the rainy day he joined in the groundbreaking for the $11 million project. Paducah Ky Riverfront Redevelopment: Phase 1 ... Funding in place for construction includes approximately $10 million secured by Senator Mitch McConnell and $170000 . Mitch McConnell obtained $10 million for the Henderson riverfront in 2005
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Jack Starr
Not one of the Top 2%
07:25 PM on 10/30/2011
Nothing new, just more lies from the republicans.