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Home :  Federal Budget & Tax : 
Federal Budget & Tax:      News     Blog     Background    



Friday, June 29, 2007

Emanuel Amendment Voted Down

The Emanuel amendment to the Financial Services/General Government appropriations bill, which would have defunded part of the Office of Vice President, failed by a vote of 209 to 217 (roll call). The amendment was an attempt to get the OVP to comply with a request for information regarding the US attorneys scandal (See this Think Progress post for more).

Correction: Vice President Cheney's claim was about classified material, which, under an executive order, a National Archives offices oversees (link).



Posted by Matt Lewis, 12:34:31 PM



Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Doan Headlines at Three Ring Circus on Capitol Hill

Embattled GSA Administrator Lurita Doan returned to Capitol Hill today for a hearing before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA) invited Doan to testify in the continuing saga of her tenure - this time to examine statements made by Doan that impugn the reputation of federal officials who cooperated with a Committee investigation into Ms. Doan's conduct at the General Services Administration. There was plenty of fireworks at the hearing, particularly because of the release one week earlier of a report by the White House's Office of Special Counsel that found Doan had broken the law by violating the Hatch Act, which prohibits the use of government resources for political activity.



Get the full details of the hearing...

Posted by Adam Hughes, 03:46:33 PM



Friday, June 01, 2007

Put that Burger Down and Get Out of Your SUV!

Since it's Friday and we've had a slow week here at the Budget Brigade, I wanted to put up a little light-hearted reading today. Enter this article from The Hill newspaper about an effort by the advocacy group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) to give a tax credit to - get this - vegetarians.

The logic goes like this. According to researchers at the University of Chicago, becoming a vegetarian would reduce carbon emissions 50 percent more per person than switching to a hybrid car. This certainly seems logical since a recent U.N. report cited the livestock industry as "one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global," including global warming.

One problem though. Let's suppose you stop eating meat - no more steak dinners at Morton's, sausages on the grill, or chicken burritos at Chipotle. How much will your individual decision in this case actually reduce the level of activity of the livestock sector? How many fewer cows, chickens, pigs, etc, would be slaughtered and shipped around the country? Probably not too many. The estimates of reduction in emissions from this choice is an aggregate number - the average of each meat-eater's contribution to the emissions of an entire industry - not the actual reduction by each individual's decision to stop eating meat. To have an actual impact on emissions, a large enough number of meat-eaters would have to act in conjunction with each other over a long-enough period of time to be able to shrink the size of the livestock sector. Given that meat consumption has doubled over the last fifty years, my guess is you'll have to convince a whole bunch of your friends to join you at the salad bar.

A hybrid car, on the other hand, actually reduces your own physical emissions immediately. You don't have to wait for your neighbor to trade in his Hummer for a Prius for your individual decision to make a (albeit very small) difference. I'm not saying I think you should keep eating meat - that's really up to you. I just wanted to point out the relative benefits of a tax credit for hybrid cards vs. for being a vegetarian. Besides, this line of thinking probably isn't that important anyway beacuse I don't think you could really implement this type of credit - how in the world would the government be able to verify that you, in fact, had not eaten meat?





Posted by Adam Hughes, 02:50:19 PM




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