13 April 2005
Anyone who cares about responsible budgeting and the health of America's
rivers and wetlands should pay attention to a bill now before the Senate
Committee on Environment and Public Works. The bill would shovel $17
billion at the Army Corps of Engineers for flood control and other water-related
projects -- this at a time when President Bush is asking for major cuts
in Medicaid and other important domestic programs. Among these projects
is a $2.7 billion boondoggle on the Mississippi River that has twice
flunked inspection by the National Academy of Sciences.
The Government Accountability Office and other watchdogs accuse the
corps of routinely inflating the economic benefits of its projects.
And environmentalists blame it for turning free-flowing rivers into
lifeless canals and destroying millions of acres of wetlands -- usually
in the name of flood control and navigation but mostly to satisfy Congress's
appetite for pork.
This is a bad piece of legislation.
The New York Times