The Associated Press adds today to a distressingly small body of media-watchdog work on the still unfolding stimulus. AP dug into the transportation dollars, which the White House talked up as a centerpiece of the initiativeโs job-creation potential. Turns out shovels full of money are pouring into counties with low unemployment, while the ones struggling the most are getting little, er, stimulation. AP explains:
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The very promise that Obama made, to spend money quickly and create jobs, is locking out many struggling communities needing those jobs.
The money goes to projects ready to start. But many struggling communities don't have projects waiting on a shelf. They couldn't afford the millions of dollars for preparation and plans that often is required.
Itโs important to note that weโre only talking about the transportation money, which as AP notes is just $38 billion of the $787 billion expenditure. Other communities may do better when we get to stuff like school construction, for instance. But the president himself made lots of noise about the immediate economic bump the โshovel-readyโ transportation projects would provide. The need for an immediate payout, in fact, crowded out lots of smart-growth and development plans beyond building more highways. Now, it turns out the new jobs arenโt coming to the places where theyโre most needed.
APโs report buttresses findings from an ongoing ProPublica investigation of the stimulus spending. ProPublica found a similar disparity at the state level back in February, when it crunched numbers based on the allocation formula. Wyoming, with an unemployment rate of just 3.2 percent, was slated to get a little over $20,000 per unemployed worker. Michigan, with its 9.6 percent unemployment, was to get just under $2,500 per unemployed worker. Check out ProPublicaโs interactive map and chart comparing stimulus transportation dollars and jobless numbers.
All this wonkery is not nearly as fun as opining about the swine flu and Rush Limbaugh. (And hey, Iโm a fan of both topics, certainly.) But for all the screamingโon both sides of the partisan isleโabout governmentโs role in our economy, somebody needs to be reading the fine print. Thereโs a whole lot shaking inside the Beltway these days. And as weโve seenโdrug war laws, the Patriot Act, Iraq invasionโhaste too often makes waste on Capitol Hill and Pennsylvania Avenue. So letโs hope we see increased and ongoing scrutiny for the implementation side of President Obamaโs many important ideas.
โKAI WRIGHT
Straight From
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