Gillibrand Releases Earmarks List -
Advanced Energy Conversion Project Listed
Congresswoman's Web site posts wish list for federal funding for 72
projects worth $383.3 million
Courtesy of the Albany
Times Union
SARATOGA SPRINGS (April 24,2008) --
U.S. Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-Greenport, published a list of projects
Wednesday she hopes will be paid for by federal tax dollars.
The earmark, or funding request list, was submitted to the House
Appropriations Committee in March. It lists 72 projects worth $383.3
million.
The list ranges from $50,000 for the town of Berlin to study its water
system, to $17.5 million to renovate the Franklin D. Roosevelt
Presidential Library in Hyde Park, Dutchess County.
Other highlights include:
$700,000 for the Hudson Headwaters Health Network to convert its
medical records to electronic records (the health centers received
$95,305 for that purpose last year).
$2.5 million to help build a hydropower plant run with wastewater in
Malta, to be built by Advanced Energy Conversion LLC.
$244,000 for the Saratoga Springs Police Department to buy a SWAT
vehicle and give officers tactical gear.
Gillibrand said she is one of only a handful of Congress members who
posts the wish list on her Web site. It's hard to say exactly who else
releases one.
"There is no standard procedure for releasing the list because it is
not required," said Gabriela Schneider, a spokeswoman for the Sunlight
Foundation, a Washington D.C., watch dog group. "Most do it by press
release. It's a great step toward transparency, but it's hard to
track."
Rep. Mike Honda, D-California, Rep. Jim Cooper, D-Tennessee and Rep.
Darrell Issa, R-California, are among those who release their earmark
lists.
Sen. Barack Obama, D-Illinois, posted his request for the 2008 fiscal
year but later joined Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, on a crusade against
earmarks and said he would not request any for 2009. Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton, D-NY, does not disclose her list.
Gillibrand's list last year had 189 projects on it and 32 were at least
partially funded for a total of $19.2 million. That included $1.5
million for power line upgrades at the Luther Forest Technology Campus.
The congresswoman scaled down her requests by 60 percent this year.
"Since 1996, the number of congressional earmarks has increased by
1,200 percent, and I felt it was important to lead by example in
cutting the number of my own requests," Gillibrand wrote in a
statement.
According to Gillibrand's spokeswoman, Rachel McEneny, fulfilling
requests that would do the greatest good or fulfill the greatest need
was the guiding principle as the congresswoman chose projects. There
was no per-county quota; she considered which projects had the best
chance of getting funded, McEneny said.