Archive for the ‘Blog’ Category

Corruption and Waste at Government Water Agencies


Monday September 12th, 2016   •   Posted by K. Lloyd Billingsley at 11:43am PDT   •   0 Comments

Government corruption is a staple of the news, with politicians such as San Francisco Democrat Leland Yee, a consort of gangsters such as Raymond “Shrimp Boy” Chow, recently landing in prison. Chris Reed of Calwatchdog has charted corruption in the California city of Bell, which “was being run like a criminal enterprise.” In the…
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The Cost of the War on Terror


Sunday September 11th, 2016   •   Posted by Craig Eyermann at 9:00am PDT   •   0 Comments

The U.S.’ War on Terror has endured for 15 years and has cost U.S. taxpayers over 1.75 trillion dollars. MyGovCost is marking the occasion by illustrating its accumulating cost from year to year along with a timeline of the major events that have defined it. Timeline of Key Events in War on Terror from…
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Reforms Failing at the VA


Friday September 9th, 2016   •   Posted by Craig Eyermann at 6:12am PDT   •   1 Comment

In 2014, the Phoenix branch of the Department of Veterans Affairs became ground zero for the national health care rationing wait list scandal that rocked the federal agency. In response, both President Obama and the department’s bureaucrats pledged to implement reforms that would fix the problems that led to thousands of the nation’s veterans…
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How Government Mistakes “Balloon into Sizable Money”


Thursday September 8th, 2016   •   Posted by K. Lloyd Billingsley at 10:28am PDT   •   0 Comments

Last year an independent audit revealed that the City of Sacramento, California’s capital, had overpaid city retirees by $2.8 million. The overpayments, which had been going on since 2005, prompted the Sacramento Bee to editorialize that “a mistake can balloon into sizable money,” citing a $60 million gap between projected payouts and expected revenue…
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State Stem Cell Institute Still Conflicted


Wednesday September 7th, 2016   •   Posted by K. Lloyd Billingsley at 4:55am PDT   •   1 Comment

As we noted, California’s $3 billion Stem Cell Research and Cures Act, Proposition 71, promised life-saving cures and therapies for a host of afflictions including heart disease, diabetes, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Celebrity promoters included Christopher Reeve, Michael J. Fox and Arnold Schwarzenegger. In 2004 voters approved the measure, which created the California Institute for…
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U.S. Taxpayer Cash to Iran


Tuesday September 6th, 2016   •   Posted by Craig Eyermann at 6:55am PDT   •   3 Comments

In January 2016, the Obama administration transferred $1.71 billion to Iran from the U.S. Treasury. Of that money, the equivalent of $400 million in cash was directly flown to Iran in an unmarked Iranian cargo plane, predominantly in the form of small denomination Euros and Swiss francs that had been bundled and stacked on…
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New State-Funded Center Targets Gun Owners


Thursday September 1st, 2016   •   Posted by K. Lloyd Billingsley at 4:54am PDT   •   3 Comments

Thanks to bills California governor Jerry Brown signed in July, Californians now face ID and background checks to purchase ammunition, and the state will create a new database of ammunition owners. Magazines holding more than 10 rounds are banned and the state now restricts the loaning of guns, without background checks, even to close…
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Feds Foil California Pension Reform


Wednesday August 31st, 2016   •   Posted by K. Lloyd Billingsley at 9:50am PDT   •   0 Comments

Shortly after signing a contract with general manager Mike Wiley, Sacramento’s Sacramento Regional Transit “slipped into financial duress from which it has yet to recover,” wrote Tony Bizjak of the Sacramento Bee. “The agency has tapped reserve accounts in the last three years to balance its budget, leaving it with virtually no emergency funds…
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Bureaucrats Working in Pajamas


Monday August 29th, 2016   •   Posted by Craig Eyermann at 6:17am PDT   •   0 Comments

Six years ago, the U.S. Congress passed the Telework Enhancement Act of 2010, which permitted eligible bureaucrats who work in the civilian portion of the executive branch of the U.S. federal government to telecommute to work. When the law was passed, lawmakers expected to realize several benefits, particularly in the nation’s capital: Less traffic…
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CBO: Bigger Than Expected Budget Deficit in 2016


Thursday August 25th, 2016   •   Posted by Craig Eyermann at 6:55am PDT   •   0 Comments

The CBO has issued its mid-year update to its Budget and Economic Outlook, which covers the years from 2016 through 2026. Here’s their summary of the main change in what they project for the next 10 years. CBO’s estimate of the deficit for 2016 has increased since the agency issued its previous estimates in…
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