Given the magnitude of the amount allocated, it's unlikely we'll ever truly know the extent to which con artists, fraudsters and elected officials stole, wasted or misappropriated the billions in taxpayer funds distributed as part of the government's response to the pandemic.
But one thing we do know: Washington showered so much money on states and local governments that most haven't come close to spending it all. Recently, the Government Accountability Office released a quarterly report that tracks coronavirus spending through March 31, about three years from the onset of the pandemic.
"States reported obligating 60 percent ($118.3 billion) and spending 45 percent ($88.2 billion)" of State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds, the office reported. "Localities reported obligating 54 percent ($67/5 billion) and spending 38 percent ($47.9 billion) of their awards during the same period."
How was the money distributed?
"The states and localities reported spending the largest amount of their awards to replace revenue lost due to the pandemic," the GAO found. "Specifically … 45 percent ($39.5 billion) of states' reported spending and 68 percent ($32.4 billion) of localities' reported spending was used for this purpose."
In other words, state and local governments are still sitting on billions in unspent virus cash — and the money they have spent went primarily to pad their coffers rather than to aid businesses or individuals who were harmed by shutdowns and business closures.
Chris Edwards of the Cato Institute told Reason that the analysis highlights Washington's lack of fiscal discretion. "By the fall of 2020, it was clear that the states were in good fiscal shape and not facing Armageddon as many policymakers were claiming," he said. "They did not need federal handouts."
Yet congressional Democrats insisted on using virus relief as a slush fund that blue states could tap to disguise fiscal mismanagement.
The GAO also revealed that "14 percent of localities did not report to Treasury their uses" of these federal funds, as required by law, so it's impossible to know where those billions went.
No doubt, pandemic relief was warranted during those unprecedented times, particularly in early and mid-2020. But the GAO report reveals an exercise in excess that federal taxpayers are still paying for today. Not only should Congress take action against local governments that fail to report how they used pandemic funds, it should also consider clawing back billions in unspent funds from states and localities.
As the national debt roars past $33 trillion, it's time to shut down the party.
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Previously:
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Senate delegation reassures Israel; where's the House?
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Senate delegation reassures Israel; where's the House?
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Chicago takes victim blaming to an absurd new low
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The utter failure of money to improve education
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Group identity drives American division
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The downside of Biden's drug price control scheme
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WARNING: Here's why top insurers are fleeing
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'They even laughed in my face'
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Red states power Biden's economy
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'If you have private insurance, you can' … OOPS!
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Ignoring the Bill of Rights when its convenient
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Hunter cops a plea --- but the Biden probes continue
• Will we every truly know the depth of pandemic fraud?
• Hello there, Big Brother! Please, come right in
• Its not perfect, but it's a start on immigration reform
• IRS wants to branch out
• Gas stove ban conspiracy theory comes true
• Biden's busy bureaucrats beef up regulatory state
• Don't even dare think of emulamating New Yawk!
• Where have all the nation's college students gone?
• Soft-on-crime policies hit hard wall of political reality
• Joe Biden and Monty Python is no comedy
• Global warming was supposed to wreak havoc on polar bears. Looks like someone forgot to tell the polar bears