Valentine's Fun for Families at the Library 

The library will offer a "Knight in Shining Armor" Valentine's Day Party, to complement the children's  Midwinter Knight's Read winter reading challenge. Join us at 2:00 pm on Saturday, Feb. 1 at the Rock Island 30/31 Branch Library, 3059 30th Street, is part of expanded Saturday programming offered to meet the needs of families with work or scheduling conflicts during the week. 

 

The event will repeat at 6:00 pm on Monday, Feb. 3 at the Rock Island Southwest Branch, 9010 Ridgewood Road.

 

Among other activities, children will make a knight's shield and valentine cards and play valentine bingo. "This is more than a storytime," said Children's Librarian Ranell Dennis. "It's a one-stop event with games, several stories and multiple crafts that beat cabin fever with some free family time at the library. And beyond fun, events like these foster a lifelong love of reading and learning." 

 

Each Super Saturday starts with a early childhood storytime at 11:00 am, with the all ages party connected to a different holiday or theme following at 2:00 pm. Additional Super Saturday parties include a St. Patrick's Day party on Saturday, March 8 at the Southwest Branch; an April showers frog party on Saturday, April 19 at the 30/31 Branch, and a yellow-brick road Wizard of Oz party on Saturday, May 17 at the Main Library Children's Room, 401 19th Street. The Saturday storytime is at the same location as each month's party.

 

Community Partnerships at Your Library 
Get Enrolled for Health Insurance! Walk-in one-on-one help sessions are available on the 2nd floor of the Rock Island Main Library, 401 19th Street, on every Thursday, from 2:00 pm to 5:00 pm. Counselors will be on hand to help you sign up.

Counselors from the Rock Island County Health Department will be here during the United Way Tax Assistance Day to help people enroll for health coverage. They'll be here from 9 am to 1:30 pm, on Saturday, Feb. 8. 

Get free tax preparation assistance from certified volunteers at the United Way Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) project on Saturday, Feb. 8 from 9:30 to 2:00 pm at Rock Island Main Library Community Room, 401 19th Street. Free tax preparation at no cost for qualifying individuals and families from certified volunteers. Appointments are strongly encouraged - those without appointments may experience long waiting times or be unable to be seen. A second "Super Saturday" will be offered on Saturday, April 5, from 9:30 pm to 3:00 pm at the Main Library. 

The library provides the room only and cannot take appointments. Please call United Way of the Quad Cities to make an appointment and find out what papers you need to bring with you before you come. See attached document for more details. United Way Tax Preparation Locations

Contact the United Way information line by dialing 2-1-1 or 563-355-9900
Citizenship Connection Is as Close as Your Library

A new "Citizenship Connection" partnership involving Rock Island Public Library, Casa Guanajuato Quad Cities, Moline Library, Davenport Library, and Silvis Library, kicked off Monday with a free workshop at Rock Island LIbrary, and the establishment of citizenship collections at participating libraries. 

 

The third of its kind in the nation, the partnership will help future citizens navigate questions about the immigration and citizenship processes with materials, special programs, library resources and other information.

 

The Rock Island Library has established a centralized collection at the Main Library. Material call numbers begin with "Citizen" and include books on becoming a citizen, the U.S. Constitution, and two citizenship kits. The section also includes information from Casa and the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services department.

 

CASA volunteers will offer 10-week Citizenship classes with step-by-step study instructions for the naturalization test. That class will be at the Main Library for 10 Saturdays from Feb. 15th through April 26th, from 10:00-11:30 am. There will be no meeting on April 5.  Registration is required. Call Casa a t309-736-7727.

 

Additional citizenship and DACA (deferred action for childhood arrivals) workshops offered in February at Moline Public Library, in March at Davenport Public Library, April at the Silvis Public Library and in May again at the Rock Island Main Library. CASA staff will discuss, one-on-one with interested immigrants about applying for citizenship, naturalization, and changing their immigration status.

 

Workshops are free and open to the public.For more information, call Casa Guanajuato at 563-322-3723 or 736-7727.

More Opportunities for Adults 
Independent Movie Night for Adults - Thursday, Feb. 6 at 6:00 pm, Rock Island Main Library. Movie is 

La Sirga, Spanish with English subtitles

 

Knit for Peace - Tuesday, Feb. 11th, 6:00 pm

Main Library. Come meet other knitters the second Tuesday of each month at the Main Library and bring your knitting needles or crochet hooks! 

 

Library How-To: Download Magazines - Tuesday, February 4th, 6:30 pm, Main Library. Learn how to use the Library's downloading magazine service, Zinio, to download some of your favorite magazines to your computer or other personal device!

 

In 2014, the Friends of the Library Big Book Sale returns to an every other month schedule. The first discount book sale of the year is Thursday, Feb. 6, from 9;00 am to 8:00 pm, at the Rock Island 30/31 Branch Library, 3059 30th Street. 

Can't wait? You don't have to! The book sale room is open during regular branch hours. Stop by and pick up some great deals, anytime you are in the neighborhood.

Looking for something to do? Volunteers wanted for the Book Sale Room. Stop by and talk to a Friends volunteer. 
Beat Cabin Fever with Great Programs 

February history and culture programs for adults at the Main Library, 401 19th Street, include;

 

Intimate Life of Abraham Lincoln, 2:00 pm, Wed., Feb. 12On a day set in November 1862, Abraham Lincoln reflects on his relationships with three men, both his past and his present time.  Presenter Michael Thomas Masters will read from Yours Forever, lead a question and answer session, and screen a documentary documentary screening on Lincoln.

 

A Leap of Faith: History of the Black Church, 6:30 pm, Thurs., Feb. 13. Rev. Dwight Ford, director of the Martin Luther King, Jr Community Center, presents on a discussion for Black History Month on the moral and ethical agency of the Black Church in history.

 

River of Logs: 19th Century Logging, 6:30 pm, Thurs., Feb. 20. In an illustrated talk based on her chapter in the 2004 Grand Excursions on the Upper Mississippi, Gayle Rein describes logging in Wisconsin and Minnesota and the rafting of logs down the Mississippi River to lumber companies in the Quad Cities area.  She includes many photos and stories from the early logging camps and rafting. 

 

Historic Bridges, 6:30 pm, Tues, Feb. 25. Illustrated presentation by Professor Curt Roseman on the major bridges on the Mississippi and Rock Rivers in the Quad Cities. Collectively, the bridges represent a great variety of styles and histories.  Included are truss, arch, and suspension bridges. Serveral QC bridges are historically significant, including one span that was built in 1868 and the first railroad bridge to span the Mississippi. His talk includes stories of how and why these bridges were originally conceived and built.  

Winter is Made for Reading! 

It's cold outside - so why not get credit for the reading you are already doing? The "Midwinter Knight's Read" winter reading challenge is going on now at all Rock Island locations. 

 

Kids get a prize just for signing up. If they read 12 books or 3 hours of time, they'll win a book and bookbag. Special events during winter reading include a free "Clone Wars" children's movie at 1:00 pm on Friday, Feb. 14 at at the Rock Island Main Library. 

 

Teens can pick up entry slips at any Rock Island Library locations, turning in a slip for each five hours of reading time. Prizes will be drawn from all completed slips after the close of the promotion on March 1.

 

Adults participate just by completing one entry form for each adult book, eBook or audiobook completed during the Jan. 21 to March 1 challenge period. Only books read between the contest period should be counted. Entries will go into a random drawing for the grand prize of an Amazon Kindle Fire HD, or secondary prizes of gift cards and passes to restaurants, merchants and attractions. 

 

Entries are due back to Rock Island Library by  5:00 pm Saturday, March 1. "Joust" read and you could win! 

 

Save the Date

Money Smart Week Community Shred Day: Saturday, April 12, 10 am to noon, Rock Island Main Library, 401 19th Street. Identity protection project for Money Smart Week. Bring personal papers to be shredded in bulk by Document Destruction & Recycling Service (DDRS). Drive up, drop off, for secure bulk shredding offsite at the DDRS plant in Davenport. 

CHICAGO - Governor Pat Quinn today issued the following statement regarding the Monday evening accident on the Reagan Memorial Tollway (I-88) in Aurora that killed Tollway employee Vincent Petrella and seriously injured an Illinois State Trooper:

"Vincent Petrella is a hero. Both he and the injured State Trooper were doing heroic work - assisting their fellow citizens in an emergency. Both men were committed to keeping our roads safe and to helping those in need.

"Vincent was a selfless man, dedicated to his family and his job. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family, friends and fellow employees during this difficult time.

"I am ordering the state's flags to be flown at half-staff so all Illinois citizens can be reminded of Vincent's life of service and sacrifice.

"We also offer our wishes for a full recovery for the injured Illinois State Trooper, and thank him for bravely going above and beyond the call of duty."

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                WASHINGTON ? A comment from Sen. Chuck Grassley regarding President Obama's State of the Union Address will be available tonight for television and radio.  A written comment will also be sent later this evening.  

                An audio comment is expected to be available after 9 p.m. (CST) on Grassley's website, Grassley.senate.gov

                Video comments will be available by satellite between 9:15 and 9:45 p.m. (CST) at the following coordinates:     

SD Coordinates

AMC 1

Transponder C22 Slot A (9MHz)

Downlink 4126.50 Vertical

FEC ¾

Symbol Rate 6.1113

Data Rate 8.448

MPEG-2

DVB-S QPSK

4:2:0

SD 4:3 NTSC

 

HD Coordinates

AMC 1

Transponder C24 Slot A (18MHz)

Downlink 4171.00 Vertical

FEC ¾

Symbol Rate 13.235

MPEG-2

DVB-S QPSK

4:2:0

HD 16x9 1080i

Please call the control room at 202-224-9203 if there are problems during the feed. 

 

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ESPN.com Released 2014 Rankings This Morning

 

HOUSTON, TX - The Houston Astros minor league system has been ranked as the best in baseball this morning by ESPN.com's Keith Law.  The top three clubs in Law's rankings are as follows:  

1. Houston Astros

2. Minnesota Twins

3. Pittsburgh Pirates

The Astros minor league clubs experienced a great deal of success in 2013, with all six domestic teams making the postseason, with two winning championships. Over the past two seasons (2012-13), the combined record of the Astros minor league clubs is tops in baseball. This represents a dramatic turnaround as the Astros minor league clubs had the worst combined record in baseball in both 2010 and 2011.

When General Manager Jeff Luhnow was hired by the Astros in December of 2011, one of the main objectives of the organization was to build a top farm system that would lead to sustained success on the Major League level in the future.

"We have been focused on developing the best young talent in baseball in the past few years," Luhnow said.   "Our scouts, coaches, trainers and front office should be proud of the talent we have accumulated.  The next step is to turn that into wins for the Houston Astros."

In addition to the success of the minor league clubs, the Astros top prospects have also been recognized nationally by several outlets. Seven prospects were included in MLB.com's Top 100 list, released last week: Carlos Correa (#8), Mark Appel (#17), George Springer (#21) Jon Singleton (#50), Lance McCullers Jr. (#52), Mike Foltynewicz (#54) and Delino DeShields, Jr. (#66). 

Five prospects were included on the Baseball Prospectus Top 101 list, also released last week: Correa (#5),  Springer (#20), Appel (#21), Foltynewicz (#43) and Singleton (#57).

Last year, Law and other outlets ranked the St. Louis Cardinals as having the top minor league system. Prior to joining the Astros, Luhnow served as the vice president of scouting and player development for St. Louis for several seasons. Sixteen players on the 2013 NL Champion Cardinals playoff roster were drafted while Luhnow was VP of scouting and player development.

-Astros-

PLATTEVILLE, WI (01/28/2014)(readMedia)-- University of Wisconsin-Platteville hosted its fall graduation on Dec. 14, 2013 at Williams Fieldhouse. A total of 589 graduate and undergraduate students earned the right to participate in the commencement ceremonies.

Among those receiving degrees, with their hometowns and majors, were

Ryan Cady a Industrial Technology Management major from DeWitt, IA

John Christman a Health and Human Performance major from Davenport, IA

Mary DePauw a Elementary Education major from Port Byron, IL

Joseph Fisher a Social Science Comprehensive major from Port Byron, IL

Carolyn Heiar a Elementary Education major from Milan, IL

Abigail Heiar a Communication Technologies major from Milan, IL

Sarah Jacobs a Biology major from LeClaire, IA

Joseph Kluever a Criminal Justice major from Bettendorf, IA

Meredith Oostenryk a Criminal Justice major from Morrison, IL

Joseph Peterson a German major from East Moline, IL

Zachary Stralow a Agricultural Business major from Morrison, IL

Kevin Ybarra a Business Administration major from Sterling, IL

University of Wisconsin-Platteville, founded in 1866, is settled in a historic mining town near the Iowa and Illinois borders and enrolls 7,500 undergraduate students. It is an institution whose mission is to produce intellectually astute individuals who will participate in society as competent professionals and knowledgeable citizens. For more information on the University of Wisconsin-Platteville, visit www.uwplatt.edu.

Physican Shares 4 Tips for Enjoying Life to the Fullest

Have you ever felt like you need an upgrade on your life? Most of us have - and there's a way to get it, says veteran physician Sanjay Jain.

"First, I tell people, 'Don't be afraid of making your life clearer.' Many argue that life is not simple and, therefore, there are no easy answers, but as we have paraphrased from Chinese philosopher Laozi, 'The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step,' " says Jain, whose specialties include integrative medicine. He's also an international speaker and author of Optimal Living 360 - available February 2014 (www.sanjayjainmd.com).

"Lives are built from many small components which, when viewed as an assembled whole, can appear overwhelmingly complex," Jain says. "But when we break them down and consider the pieces as we make decisions in our lives, it's much easier to see how small adjustments can result in a better return on all of the investments we make - not only in health, but in relationships, finances, and all the other essential aspects of our lives."

Jain offers four points to keep in mind as you start the journey.

• Life is short, so live it to its fullest potential. Live it optimally. This is your life, so don't waste its most precious resource - time. No matter one's spiritual leanings, economic and education status, health, intelligence level, etc. - one thing is true for all: Our time on Earth is finite. There will be a time for most of us when, perhaps after a frightening diagnosis from a doctor, we reflect deeply upon our time and consider the most important moments, and all the time that may have been squandered.

• Balance is key. Too much or too little of something, no matter how good, is actually not good. Balance is one of the easiest tenets to understand, but arguably the most difficult to maintain. Obviously, too much alcohol is bad; then again, there are some health benefits to moderately imbibing red wine. What about too much of a good thing; can a mother love her children too much? Yes, if she is an overprotective "helicopter parent." The best antidote to overkill of anything is awareness; try to be aware of all measures in your life.

• Learn to tap your strengths and improve upon your weaknesses. Engaging your strengths at work and in your personal life is important. When we do what we're good at and what comes easily, we feel self-confident and satisfied. Some people, however, are not in jobs that utilize their strengths, or they don't put their talents to work at home because they're mired in the prosaic work of living. It's important to identify your strengths and find ways to engage them. It's equally important to recognize our weaknesses and work on improving them (because we can!) This is essential for achieving balance.

• Life is about making the right choices. Integrative decision-making makes this easier. There are many different types of decision-making, including systematic, hierarchal, impulsive, decisive and flexible. Integrative decision-making can be used for problems large and small, and includes the following process: 1. Define the problem. 2. Frame the problem. 3. Develop all your options. 4. Analyze your options. 5. Make the decision. 6. Execute your decision. 7. Debrief yourself. While experts may be the best consultants for compartmentalized areas of your life, only you know the other aspects that affect your well-being and can determine how a decision in one area will affect another area.

About Sanjay Jain, MD, MBA: Sanjay Jain is a U.S.-trained physician with certifications in Diagnostic Radiology, Integrative Medicine, and Healthcare Quality and Management and more than 15 years of clinical experience. He graduated from Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine and The Ohio State University, where he earned a master's in business administration. This unique blend and perspective has made him a highly sought after domestic and international speaker. He remains actively involved with many medical organizations at both the local and national levels.

Join the new Christopher & Banks as they celebrate a grand re-opening!

WHO: Christopher & Banks will host a ribbon cutting and a grand re-opening in style with fun promotions, new sales and spectacular savings in their newly remodeled location at SouthPark Mall.

WHAT: The dual-format store encompasses the CJ Banks concept and the Christopher & Banks For more information on great sales, visit www.shopsouthparkmall-il.com/sales or follow concept into one location. The new location will provide a one-stop-shopping experience for regular size and plus-size clothing including, Missy 4-16, Petite 4P-16P and Women 14W-24W.  For more information on great sales, visit www.shopsouthparkmall-il.com/sales or follow us on Twitter @SouthParkMallIL and like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/SouthParkMallIL.

WHEN: January 31, 2014, 10:00 a.m.

WHERE: SouthPark Mall in between Younkers and Dillard's.

The St. Olaf Band, dubbed "one of America's preeminent bands" by The New Yorker, will perform in the Quad Cities area as part of its 2014 national tour.  The concert will take place on

Sunday, February 2, 2014 at 2 p.m. at Muscatine High School.  This will be a free concert.

The St. Olaf Band's national tour will feature repertoire that includes David Maslanka's A Child's Garden of Dreams, as well as a work by the conductor entitled Scenes from a Life Danced. Other works on the program will include Overture for Band by John Heins, the second movement from Persichetti's Symphony No. 6, and Dan Welcher's Zion.

Founded in 1891, the St. Olaf Band is an ensemble noted for superb musicianship. Under the leadership of conductor Dr. Timothy Mahr, the St. Olaf Band performs the very best compositions and transcriptions for symphonic band, producing an exciting, crowd-pleasing style.

The St. Olaf Band is the oldest music organization at St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, a campus internationally renowned for its high caliber of musical ensembles. The band has toured nationally since 1904 and internationally since 1906 when they performed a four-week, 30-concert tour of Norway, making them the first American collegiate band to tour Europe. The band has subsequently toured several times in Norway, Great Britain, Japan, and central Europe, with an upcoming tour to the Mediterranean planned for June 2014.

In October of 2011 the St. Olaf Band performed for King Harald and Queen Sonja of Norway during their visit to St. Olaf College, the second time they have had this honor on royal visits since 1995. After the King and Queen's visit to St. Olaf in 1995, the band toured Norway with the St. Olaf Choir and St. Olaf Orchestra in commemoration of the centennial of Norway's peaceful separation from Sweden.

In March of 1997 the St. Olaf Band was one of four college and university bands from the United States invited to perform for the American Bandmasters Association annual convention in San Diego, California. The band also performed during the opening concert of the 2004 National Convention of the Music Educators National Conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota. In 2013 the St. Olaf Band was selected through a blind adjudication process as one of only 10 collegiate wind ensembles to perform at the College Band Directors National Association (CBDNA) national conference at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

Dr. Timothy Mahr '78, St. Olaf Band conductor and professor of music at St. Olaf College, is a nationally recognized composer with more than 60 works to his credit, including The Soaring Hawk, for which he received the ABA/Ostwald Award. Mahr has guest-conducted a number of professional and award-winning ensembles, including the United States Air Force Band and the United States Army Field Band, as well as intercollegiate and all-state bands in over 25 states. He is the principal conductor of the Minnesota Symphonic Winds, a featured ensemble at the 2008 Midwest Clinic, the largest international band conference in the world.

Watch video and listen to audio of the St. Olaf Band and learn more about the ensemble, current members and conductor at www.stolaf.edu/stolaf-band.

Says RFS proposal would hurt Iowa's rural communities, cost thousands of jobs

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack today submitted comments to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) about the unacceptable proposed renewable fuels volume obligations (RVOs) for the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS). Since the rule was first proposed last year, Loebsack has been leading the fight to highlight the importance of the RFS to Iowa's farmers, rural communities and economy. Loebsack has met with EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy and led a delegation of his colleagues in calling for a meeting with the White House to personally deliver Iowans' message. He also joined Governor Branstad in hosting "Hearing in the Heartland: Supporting the Renewable Fuel Standard," which gave all Iowans an opportunity to have their voices heard. Today is the final day that the EPA is accepting comments. Any concerned Iowan is encouraged to submit comments online at www.regulations.gov or via email at a-and-r-docket@epa.gov. All comments should reference Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0479.

"I've heard strong concerns from my constituents and from Iowans across the state about the proposed 2014 renewable fuel volume obligations (RVOs) for the Renewable Fuel Standard," wrote Loebsack. "I strongly believe the RFS is working and is the right policy for Iowa, our country, our farmers, and our rural communities. [They] should not have to solely bear the costs of the inflexibility of Big Oil to control the market and consumer choices. Thank you for your time and consideration, and I once again urge you to reconsider the proposed 2014 RVOs."

A copy of Loebsack's comments can be found here.

 

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Floor Statement of Senator Chuck Grassley

Before the United States Senate

Oversight at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

Delivered Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Recently, the Obama administration has been talking a lot about income inequality and poverty.

The U.S. has spent trillions of dollars in the last fifty years fighting the so-called "War on Poverty."

The results have been marginal.

Yet, this administration wants to spend more money on more programs.

That doesn't fix the problems.

If you just hand this money out with no strings and no oversight, it gets diverted and misused.

Wasted money doesn't help the poor.

There are a lot of people who make a nice profit from the poverty of others.  And, the Obama administration has been helping a number of these profiteers, while the poor suffer.

Through my oversight work, I have seen this happen over and over again.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development hands out $4 billion in federal money every year to local housing authorities.

This money is supposed to help provide clean, affordable housing to the poor.

But, while no one is watching, so much of the money gets spent on high salaries and perks for the people who run the housing authorities.

These housing authorities have other sources of money, but for most of them, up to 90 percent of their total funding comes from that $4 billion contributed by federal taxpayers.

HUD argues that because housing authorities are state and local government entities, there is no reason to scrutinize them from Washington.

As far as I'm concerned, HUD is missing about four billion reasons.

Taxpayer money should come with federal oversight.

I have been conducting oversight of wasteful spending at housing authorities for almost four years.

I have been urging the Obama administration to look at what is happening and take action.

But, there is little, if any, interest in oversight of these federal dollars by the folks writing the checks in Washington.

They just want to send the check and pat themselves on the back.

They don't want to talk about what actually happens to the money.

Federal funds end up feathering the nests of local housing authority bureaucrats instead of housing the poor.

Here are some of the most egregious examples of how ineffective the Department of Housing and Urban Development has been at policing local housing authorities:

Bradenton, Florida, is an area of the country that was hit extremely hard during the foreclosure crisis.

But, employees at the Bradenton Housing Authority only have to work four days a week.

They get two weeks off at Christmas, bonuses in June and December, and the option to cash out up to a month of sick leave twice per year.

They get free use of a car purchased by the housing authority.

After 15 years of employment, they get to keep the car when they leave, or take $10,000 instead.  It's their choice.

Those are generous fringe benefits.

But, many housing authorities also provide very lucrative salaries.

These salaries far exceed the salaries of the federal employees who hand out taxpayer money to the housing authorities.

The biggest salary jackpot winners I've encountered so far are at the Atlanta Housing Authority.

At least 22 employees there earn between $150,000 and $303,000 per year.

The Atlanta Housing Authority benefits from a special HUD designation called Moving to Work.

That program exempts designated housing authorities from certain requirements including salary justifications.

This is not just an isolated example.

The executive director of the Raleigh, North Carolina, housing authority receives about $280,000 in salary and benefits, plus up to 30 vacation days.

He also accumulates comp-time for any hours he works over seven and a half hours per day.

He has used over 20 days of comp time per year since 2009.

Add that to his regular vacation time, and he was out of the office nearly three months per year.

Nine months of work for $280,000 is an annualized salary of nearly $375,000 per year.

Very few taxpayer funded jobs pay anything close to that amount.

What is the justification for such high salaries?

After years of ignoring the issue, HUD finally capped federal funding for executive salaries at $155,500 per employee.  Of course, this was only after various local media and I exposed deep-rooted problems and pushed HUD to act.

But now, housing authority executives have turned to creative accounting tricks to get around the limit.

Since some of their money comes from other sources, the housing authorities simply claim that any salary over the federal limit comes from one of those other sources.

Because of my oversight letters on this subject, HUD recently notified the housing authorities that they must document the original source of the funding used to pay salaries over the federal limit.

That's good news, but there are still larger problems.

The Department is still not making this salary data public in a reasonable timeframe.

For example, the Obama administration refused to release the 2010 set of data for almost a year.   I hope we don't have to wait a year to get the new data.

Like many of our federal agencies, some housing authorities spend large amounts of money on travel for conferences and training.

Staff and board members often attend the same conferences throughout the United States, year after year.

They often attend multiple conferences in a single year.

In addition to travel costs, housing authorities must pay a conference fee for each attendee they send, often ranging between $400 and $1,000 per employee.

That money could easily be used to improve conditions and make needed repairs in public housing facilities, but instead it is frittered away on conferences.

The Tampa Housing Authority has spent more than $860,000 since 2009 for staff and board members to attend various conferences, seminars and training programs.

Tampa has been sending 20 or more employees per year to conferences sponsored by the National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials.

That alone costs more than $177,000 per year.

The Atlanta Housing Authority has spent more than $480,000 since 2009 for employees to attend conferences and training sessions.

In fact, the housing authority paid over $68,000 in conference fees to a software company after giving them a multi-million dollar contract for a new computer system.

I wonder if the housing authority executive director thought to ask for a discount.

Many of the housing authorities with questionable spending don't limit the abuses to salaries or travel.

The Tampa Housing Authority purchased a new $7 million administrative office that includes nearly $3 million in renovations and upgrades. That could have helped hundreds, if not thousands, of poor people needing housing.

They are also paying nearly $800,000 in salary and benefits for a public relations department while paying an employee another $170,369 as a PR consultant.

Other housing authorities are also spending exorbitant amounts for outside consultants.

Some of these consultants are former employees of the local housing authority.

In 2013, the Pittsburgh Housing Authority retained 10 law firms for a total of $3.5 million over three years.

One law firm has been representing the housing authority during inquiries by the HUD Office of Inspector General and the city Controller.

Think about that.

It's bad enough that taxpayer money meant to help the poor is wasted.

But then the taxpayer also pays the lawyers to defend the very organization from scrutiny about whether the taxpayer money was wasted.

That just adds insult to injury.

In Philadelphia, outside lawyers blocked the Inspector General's office from accessing spending data for months, costing the taxpayers millions.

The Pittsburgh Housing Authority also paid an outside consulting firm $1.25 million for 2012.

The vice president at the consulting company billed the housing authority $404,000 for 2,400 hours of work.

That's 48 hours a week for a year.

It is more than double the $168,000 salary of the housing authority executive director.

Harris County, Texas, is one of the most egregious examples of out of control spending.

In 2013, the HUD Inspector General questioned the mismanagement of over $27 million in federal funding in Harris County.

The IG provided the following examples of fraud and abuse:

·           Over $1.7 million in excessive payroll expenses;

·           $190,000 for statues and monuments;

·           $66,000 for employee shirts embossed with logos;

·           $27,000 for trophies, plaques and awards;

·           $14,500 for a helicopter, a chartered bus and golf cart rentals for a grand opening; and

·           $18,000 for letters written by Abraham Lincoln

I continue to send my oversight letters to the Senate appropriators and the Senate Banking committee.

These committees have jurisdiction over the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

They have the authority to do something about these abuses.

My colleagues need to know the extent of the problems and that I am ready to work with members of this body to address these issues.

I would like to have these letters placed into the record.

Employment at a public housing authority should be about public service.

It's supposed to be about providing clean, safe, and affordable housing for those in need ? not helping bureaucrats live large on the taxpayers' dime.

If the Obama administration is truly serious about income inequality, and not just using it for political purposes, it would stop shoveling taxpayer money out the door with practically no oversight, no controls, and no limits.

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