News Paul Ryan has record of pushing for and earmarking federal funds for his district
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Friday, 17 August 2012 21:07

Paul Ryan has record of pushing for and earmarking federal funds for his district

Written by  Jerry Markon and David S. Fallis | Washington Post

Five months ago, Rep. Paul Ryan reached out to the Transportation Department, urging that it look favorably upon his home town’s request for $3.8 million, which would help build a new city transit center.

That was the same project that four years ago received $735,000 in federal funds through an earmark Ryan (R-Wis.) had secured. 

The Republican vice presidential candidate has often used the powers of his office over his 13 years in Congress to seek federal funds for his Wisconsin district, sometimes from existing pools of money and other times in ways that would increase federal spending. His success has meant funding for projects ranging from a runway extension at a local airport to an environmental study of the Kenosha Harbor.

There’s nothing improper or even unusual about what Ryan has done — in fact, it’s the essence of what many congressmen do and what many of their constituents expect. But it complicates the image that Ryan, and now the Romney campaign, have sought to project of a man who is single-mindedly focused on sharply cutting the federal budget and erasing the nation’s deficit.

Ryan’s advocacy has blurred party lines: In several instances, he sought earmarks opposed by the George W. Bush administration. In 2009, he urged the Obama administration to award millions of economic stimulus dollars for “green” jobs in his district, even though he had voted against the stimulus package that year.

The congressman’s stance on federal dollars drew more attention this week when he denied that he had ever sought stimulus dollars in an interview with a Cincinnati television station. Earlier he had made the same claim on a Boston radio show.

He backtracked Thursday and acknowledged he had sought stimulus funds, but he said his office had mishandled the requests. He continued to voice opposition to the stimulus program, which he has called a “wasteful spending spree.’’

Ryan, who pledged in 2008 to no longer seek earmarks, already had done so less than most his congressional colleagues, and Janesville officials said he has kept his 2008 pledge. Brendan Buck, a Ryan spokesman, rejected any contradiction between the congressman’s efforts to secure federal funds and his budget-cutting mantra, and he contrasted Ryan’s approach with what he characterized as President Obama’s budget-busting policies.

“While President Obama has racked up massive debt and overseen an unprecedented credit downgrade, Congressman Ryan has forged bipartisan solutions to address the real drivers of our debt,’’ Buck said Friday. “And by swearing off earmarks years ago, he led by example to change the way Washington works — something President Obama simply can’t say.”

Even with his pledge not to seek earmarks, Ryan “has still remained supportive of projects in the community that he feels are worthwhile,’’ said Jay Winzenz, Janesville’s assistant city manager.

In his March 12 letter to the Transportation Department on behalf of Janesville’s application for the transit center grant, Ryan wrote that “I was pleased to learn that the City believes that a new facility will relieve current space constraints and operational inefficiencies.’’ The city won the grant, and Winzenz called the federal support “important to moving forward” with the project.

And last year, Ryan signed a letter with other members of the Wisconsin delegation seeking a federal grant for the Wisconsin Department of Transportation. The letter, dated Aug. 1, 2011, said the funds would be used to replace aging vehicles and “invest in green technology and alternative fuels.’’

Ryan, an avid deer hunter, cosponsored bipartisan legislation in 2003 that would allocate $20 million nationwide to fight chronic wasting disease in deer and elk, a malady similar to mad cow disease. Congress wound up allocating $19 million for the measure, including $1.75 million that would go to Wisconsin.

Ryan’s advocacy for his constituents extends back to soon after he took office in 1999. In an October 2000 press release, he said he had “succeeded in including” $1.5 million in a federal transportation bill for a runway extension at the Rock County Airport, primarily to benefit a local General Motors plant.

“This is great news for Rock County,’’ said Ryan, who added that he personally met with FAA Adminstrator Jane Garvey about the airport and would “continue to work with her to secure the full federal funding request for this project.”

The congressmen sent out similar statements saying he had intervened with federal agencies to secure or allocate funds to better equip Janesville firefighters, and to help low-income Wisconsin students take more advanced placement classes.

In July 2005, his office said his efforts led to $12.8 million in a federal transportation measure for three Wisconsin road projects, along with engineering funds for commuter rail and a “streetcar expansion project” in Kenosha.

Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, said Ryan had secured “about the average amount” of earmarks compared to other rank-and-file lawmakers, many of whom were requesting pet projects in the bill.

Ryan obtained more earmarks in 2008, records show, including the funding for the Janesville transit center, $1.3 million for the 1,200 mile Ice Age National Scenic Trail and $3.3 million for Wisconsin bus facilities. Ryan alone requested the Janesville money; the other two earmarks also were requested by other legislators, including Democrats.

However, compared to other lawmakers that year, Ryan ranked 401st out of 435 members in the House based on total dollars secured, said Ellis, whose organization monitors earmarks.

Three years ago, Ryan pushed for funds from a spending source anathema to Republicans: Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package.

Ryan wrote letters in 2009 to the Labor and Energy departments seeking stimulus funds for two energy-conservation groups in his district. One letter to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, on behalf of the Wisconsin Energy Conservation Corp., said the corporation wanted to use the money to reduce energy costs and greenhouse gas emissions.

Ryan said he was “pleased to learn” that the project would build “sustainable demand for green jobs,’’ a major Obama administration priority, according to the letter, dated Dec. 18, 2009. The letters were first reported by the Wall Street Journal and the Boston Globe.

In March 2009, Ryan wrote a letter of support to the Energy Department on behalf of the Energy Center of Wisconsin, which was working with a solar energy laboratory at the University of Wisconsin in Madison to fund research into alternative heating and cooling systems.

The grant was awarded, and Sanford Klein, director of the laboratory, said a portion of it helped pay the stipend for a doctoral student who conducted research.

Ryan also signed a bipartisan letter with the state’s delegation in 2009 asking the Treasury Department to dip into a $25 billion pool of grants and low-interest loans to prevent Chrysler from closing its automotive plant in Kenosha.

The letter, dated May 7, 2009, said the money would help the automaker “retool” the plan to produce more fuel-efficient engines.

 

Alice Crites contributed to this story

Original article on The Washington Post

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