December 2, 2008

$621 Million Air Freshener?

Marc Comtois

Harry Reid, so classy:

"My staff tells me not to say this, but I'm going to say it anyway," said Reid in his remarks. "In the summer because of the heat and high humidity, you could literally smell the tourists coming into the Capitol. It may be descriptive but it's true."
Reid was talking about the new Capitol Visitors Center--all $621 Million worth of it. Citizens Against Government Waste sums up this case-study in "government boondoggle":
Initially conceived in the early 1990s and projected to cost $71 million, the CVC has become an example of out-of-control government contracting and mismanagement. After costs ballooned and construction schedules spiraled out of control, the three-level, underground monument to congressional excess finally came in at a whopping $621 million and three years behind schedule.

“The mismanagement and bloat associated with the construction of the Capitol Visitors Center is emblematic of the rampant waste in the nation’s capitol,” said CAGW President Tom Schatz. “This boondoggle should give pause to anyone contemplating the expenditure of hundreds of billions more taxpayer dollars for any federal infrastructure projects as part of any new stimulus package. Like the federal budget itself, Congress used the CVC as a warehouse for tens of millions of dollars in extravagant bells and whistles for itself. Even more reprehensible, members of Congress seeking to add special features for themselves used security concerns surrounding the September 11 attacks to justify their extravagant add-ons and constant change orders.”

Original plans called for more than half of the CVC space to be left as unfinished “shell space,” available to be outfitted for future needs. Instead, in 2001 Congress began implementing its wish list for the unfinished spaces. The House side got a two-story hearing room and the Senate grafted on a collection of small hearing rooms and a television and radio studio with adjoining makeup facilities so that senators could cut spots for their constituents back home. Those two efforts alone added $85 million to the cost of the CVC. The CVC will also have a 450-seat dining area, two orientation theaters (one for each chamber), a large auditorium, and an exhibition hall.

Air fresheners would have been cheaper.

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I can smell the condescension when you enter the room, senator.

Posted by: rhody at December 2, 2008 4:38 PM

And these same legislators think that it's a good idea for the government to get its hands on health care...

How many years of my life will be spent filling out government paperwork in triplicate, only for it to get lost, and be filled out again?

Right now Gov. Jindal is looking like a great antidote to the excesses of the leftist illuminati in D.C. It would appear that he, at least, does not need his ego compensated.

Posted by: gippergal at December 2, 2008 5:42 PM

The CVC is a lot less expensive than the ridiculous war in Iraq. Compared to the waste of the war it's near the bottom of the wasteful spending list.

OldTimeLefty

Posted by: OldTimeLefty at December 2, 2008 6:02 PM

(Good line, Rhody.)

I'm speechless. Mr. Senate President:

1.) You should listen to members of your staff more often.

2.) Would it be the money of those same smelly people which you are spending hand over fist?

3.) Wouldn't a far preferable solution be for Congress to become a part time legislature? Say October - April. Less smelly for you; less expensive and intrusive for the rest of us.

Posted by: Monique at December 2, 2008 10:07 PM
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