Tuesday, September 27, 2010

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley today said that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Center for Substance Abuse Treatment has awarded a $3,352,000 grant to the Iowa State Department of Public Health.

According to the Department of Health and Human Services, the Iowa State Department of Public Health will use the money to fund the project entitled, "Access to Recovery."

Each year, thousands of local Iowa organizations, colleges and universities, individuals and state agencies apply for competitive grants from the federal government.  The funding is then awarded based on each local organization or individual's ability to meet criteria set by the federal entity administering the funds.

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Senator Grassley Floor Speech

Reid-Durbin-Dorgan's "Creating American Jobs and Ending Offshoring Act"

Delivered, September 27, 2010

Mr. President, I rise to speak out against the Reid-Durbin-Dorgan bill, S. 3816.  This bill is being sold as somehow having the potential to create American jobs, but it would likely have the exact opposite effect - it would lead to a net decrease in American jobs.  For that reason, I encourage my colleagues to vote against this bill.

The bill has three key aspects:  1) a payroll tax holiday for employers hiring U.S. workers to replace foreign workers; 2) a denial of business deductions for any costs associated with moving operations offshore; 3) and ending deferral for income of foreign subsidiaries for importing goods into the U.S.  This last provision, according to Senator Dorgan, is the "principal issue" of the three.  It certainly is the most dangerous, so I would like to address that in detail.

To understand this partial repeal of deferral, it is best to consider the topic of deferral more generally and then we can consider this particular idea in context.

The term "deferral" refers to how a U.S. corporation pays U.S. income tax on the foreign earnings of its foreign subsidiaries only when those earnings are repatriated to the U.S.  That is, the U.S. tax is deferred until the earnings are paid by means of a dividend back to the U.S. parent corporation.

Deferral is not a new policy.  Rather, it has been a feature of the tax law for a century.

President Kennedy proposed outright repeal of deferral, but the then-Democratic Congress did not agree with him on that.  Instead, the Congress and the President compromised.  The compromise was this:   For passive kinds of income (such as interest, dividends, royalties and the like) earned by the foreign subsidiary, the U.S. parent company would pay immediate U.S. tax - whether or not the foreign subsidiary sent the earnings back to the parent.  However, for active business income of the foreign subsidiary, there would be no U.S. tax until the foreign subsidiary sent such money back to the parent.

In short, the compromise was this:  For passive income, deferral was repealed.  For active income, deferral would still be allowed.  That compromise is embodied in Subpart F of the Internal Revenue Code.  That compromise was hammered out in 1962.  And, with slight tweaks at the margin, that compromise has stayed in place for the last 48 years.

The compromise struck in 1962 was the right one.  Passive income is easy to move from one jurisdiction to another.  If a U.S. corporation had a lot of interest income, it was very easy to instead have a foreign subsidiary earn such interest income in a low-tax jurisdiction.  So, when interest income was earned by a foreign subsidiary of a U.S. parent corporation, there was a high likelihood that it was earned in the foreign jurisdiction out of a motivation to avoid U.S. tax.

But with active business income, there are usually legitimate non-tax business reasons for the income to be earned overseas.  The reason a U.S. car company sells cars in Hong Kong is not out of some desire to avoid U.S. tax, but rather out of a desire to sell cars to customers in Hong Kong.

So, the underlying rationale to the Subpart F compromise is this:  If there is a high likelihood that a particular type of income is earned overseas out of a desire to avoid U.S. tax, then deferral will not be allowed.  And if there is not a significant likelihood of that, then deferral will still be allowed.

And this is a very sensible rationale because one of the most fundamental tax principles of all is this:  Transactions should not be tax motivated, but should be motivated by business or other non-tax reasons.  Tax-motivated transactions should not be allowed the benefits of the favorable tax-treatment sought.  This fundamental tax principle prevents the tax laws from distorting decision-making and from distorting the economy.

But this Reid-Durbin-Dorgan "runaway plant" bill cannot be justified by any similar rationale.  They say they want to repeal deferral for a foreign subsidiary having income from importing goods back into the United States.

But are they claiming that when a foreign subsidiary of a U.S. company imports back into the U.S. that there is a high likelihood that the production of the good would have been in the U.S., but for a motivation to avoid U.S. tax?  They would have to be claiming that if they wanted to be consistent with a half-century of reasons why certain specific limitations on deferral have been justified.

But that simply can't be.  There are numerous non-tax reasons for having a foreign subsidiary of a U.S. parent company import goods into the U.S.  I would like to mention just a few of those reasons here.

One reason could be that there's only small demand for the product back in the United States as compared with its overseas markets.  For example, diesel-engine cars are very popular in Europe, comprising 50% of all car-sales there.  Here, in the U.S., diesel-engine cars are well less than 10% of all car-sales.  So, there are very good business reasons for having diesel-engine cars made in Europe, and not here.  Nonetheless, the Reid-Durbin-Dorgan bill acts as if the reason these cars are not made here is tax-motivated.

It may be that some items simply aren't found in appreciable quantities in the U.S.  For example, there is no diamond mining, nor chromium mining, to speak of in the U.S.  A U.S. parent mining corporation with a foreign subsidiary engaged in diamond mining, or chromium mining, where such diamonds or chrome are imported into the U.S., may find deferral repealed.  This could be true to the extent that the parent had any domestic restructuring at the same time it starts up any foreign operations.

But obviously the reason for the diamond and chrome mining outside the U.S. is not tax avoidance - the reason is that those minerals are not found here.  So, I would like the sponsors of this bill to make clear whether minerals not found in the U.S. and imported into the U.S. would be included in this proposal.

I would also like to know whether this proposal would have applied to Ford Motor Company's ownership of Volvo.  Ford owned Volvo Cars from 1999 to 2008.  During that time, many Volvos were made in Sweden and imported to the U.S. for sale.  If the acquisition had happened after date of enactment, deferral would be denied in this situation - at least to the extent that Ford may have been shutting down any plants in the U.S.  However, no one can seriously claim that the reason the cars were made in Sweden rather than the U.S. was from a desire to avoid U.S. tax.

Keep in mind that another foreign car company, let's say Volkswagen, would not be treated the same way Ford's Volvo car income would be treated.  Volkswagen would be better off tax-wise on competing auto sales into the U.S. market over Ford's Volvo, thanks to this bill.

There are lots of non-tax reasons for having foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies import into the U.S.  But it seems that the Reid-Durbin-Dorgan bill does not recognize that.  Or does not care.  Perhaps the bill is motivated not by a desire to curb tax-motivated transactions, but by something else.  Perhaps the bill has anti-free-trade motivations.  Perhaps the bill is attempting to make it more difficult for American companies to conduct business outside the U.S..  Whatever the case, the bill's sponsors should make the rationale clearer - is it to curb tax avoidance?  Or something else?

Perhaps the bill's sponsors will admit that the bill has nothing to do with curbing U.S.-tax avoidance.  Perhaps they will say that it instead has to do with preserving and creating U.S. jobs.  But if that is their position, that cannot be right.  In some limited circumstances, perhaps it would increase employment in the U.S. (although probably mostly for tax lawyers than anybody else).  But whatever the case, the net effect would be to decrease employment in the U.S.

Allow me to explain why the net effect of the bill would be to decrease U.S. employment.

First of all, if a U.S. parent company has a foreign subsidiary, then this creates managerial headquarters jobs in the U.S. that would not otherwise be there.  The Reid-Durbin-Dorgan bill might encourage American companies to simply sell off their foreign subsidiaries.  This would in turn mean laying off employees at management positions at the American headquarters.

A bigger way this bill would hurt employment in the U.S. would be to discourage assembly jobs in the U.S.   A U.S. parent company could have foreign subsidiaries engaged in manufacturing parts that are shipped back to the U.S. parent.  The U.S. parent in turn might assemble those parts here in the U.S. into a finished product.  So, yes, just maybe this bill would encourage the company to repatriate the parts production, but it's just as easy to imagine that this bill would encourage the company to expatriate the assembly jobs.  So, this bill is an unacceptable gamble with American jobs.

In the words of the late Senator Moynihan in speaking in opposition to this proposal 14 years ago:  "Investment abroad that is not tax driven is good for the United States."

More recently, Senator Baucus' concerns that this would put the United States at a competitive disadvantage are exactly right.  Last Thursday, Senator Baucus was quoted in Congress Daily saying, "I'm looking at it.  I think it puts the United States at a competitive disadvantage. That's why I'm concerned."

Phil Morrison, the Treasury Department's International Tax Counsel, criticized this proposal in Congressional testimony in 1991.  Mr. Morrison noted that the bill would be very hard to administer and that it departed from the traditional focus of the limited areas where deferral is denied.

As President Clinton's International Tax Counsel, Joe Guttentag explained in 1995, "Current U.S. tax policy generally strikes a reasonable balance between deferral and current taxation in order to ensure that our tax laws do not interfere with the ability of our companies to be competitive with their foreign based counterparts."

This proposal has been made year after year for 20 years.  I ask that my colleagues again reject it, in an effort to keep American companies globally competitive, to protect American jobs, and to preserve the underlying rationale of why deferral should only be denied in limited circumstances.

Finally, let me briefly comment on one other aspect of the bill - the payroll tax holiday.  This too has provisions that will be difficult to administer - for example, do foreign workers actually have to be fired to have their employer get the payroll tax holiday in the U.S., or do they need only to be re-assigned job roles?

This provision only scores, according to the JCT, as costing $1 billion.  So, let's make sure we are clear on this point - the other side is seriously considering raising taxes on small businesses - the lead creator of jobs - by tens of billions of dollars by letting top individual rates go back up in 2011, but, in an effort to support job creation, they offer up this $1 billion payroll tax holiday?

According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, 50% of small business flow-through income will be hit by a marginal tax hike of 17 to 24%.  That tax increase is scheduled to hit these job-creating small businesses in a little over three months.  Finance Committee Republican tax staff calculate the effect of that tax hike to be 50 times the benefit provided by this bill.  On our side, we don't see the logic of raising $50 in taxes and providing a complicated tax benefit of $1.

Why aren't we dealing with the real problem, for the folks responsible for creating 70% of America's jobs.  I'm talking about a time-out on the tax hit that's coming to those small businesses.  That's what we ought to be debating here on the Senate Floor.

But the Democratic Leadership would rather spend valuable time talking about a bill that's artfully politically labeled a "jobs" bill.  Given that the bill will lead to a net loss in American jobs, it seems there might be a truth-in-labeling claim against the Democratic Leadership.

Let's have votes on real job creation incentives.  Let's get out of this gamesmanship.  Let's do the people's business and forestall the big tax hike coming at American small business.

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The Quad City Symphony Orchestra launches its 2010-11 season with a concert commemorating the 200th birthday of Chopin with Gustavo Romero's performance of Chopin's First Piano Concerto. This concert also features the powerful music of Beethoven's Egmont: Overture, as well as his famous 7th Symphony. These concerts will be performed on October 2 and 3, and are sponsored in memory of Elsie von Maur and Donald McDonald, by their family. Saturday evening's concert will be held at the Adler Theatre in Davenport at 8 PM, and followed on Sunday afternoon at 2 PM at Centennial Hall in Rock Island. Tickets for this concert can be purchased in person at the QCSO Box Office, 327 Brady Street in Davenport, by phone at 800.745.3000 or online at www.qcsymphony.com.

On the Thursday before the concerts, Quad Citians will get the chance to hear Music Director Mark Russell Smith share his insights into the upcoming performance at Inside the Music. Expert and novice alike will enjoy this casual musical conversation at the Figge Art Museum in Davenport from 5 to 6:30 PM on Thursday, October 1. This event is free to the public, with free hors d'eouvres and cash bar available.

On Friday, October 1, Gustavo Romero will be leading a piano Master Class at West Music in Moline from 4 to 5:30 PM. Concert pianist Gustavo Romero has a stellar reputation for both the technical brilliance and interpretive depth of his playing, as well as his commitment to in-depth exploration of individual composers. Mr. Romero, a native of San Diego with heritage in Guadalajara, Mexico, discovered his love and gift for music at age five. He started taking lessons, and gave his first public performances at the age of 10. His early teachers included Ilana Mysior. Highlights of the past three years include feature stories on NPR, a seven city recital tour of Japan, as well as concerts in South Africa, Asia, Mexico and the United States.  This Master Class is presented free of charge, with all interested adults and students are welcome to attend. A few select students will be pre-selected to participate.

Mark Russell Smith will also be available at Kai Swanson's Concert Conversations, held in the concert hall an hour before each of the weekend's concerts. At Concert Conversations the audience members will be given a quick tour of highlights from the program they are about to experience. This look into the background of the concert's repertoire, sponsored by Rich James of Wells Fargo Advisors, is in its tenth year and has become an audience favorite.
Returning this season will be Saturday night's Afterglow reception at the Woodfire Grill immediately following the Saturday night concert. Audience members are invited to reminisce about the evening's performance, mingle with Mark Russell Smith and musicians from the QCSO, and sometimes even meet the guest artists. You never know who will be there! The evening promises free hors d'oeuvres, cash bar, and remarkable repartee.

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Washington, D.C. - September 27, 2010 - Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA) today applauded a decision by the Unites States Department of Labor (DOL) to release $2 million in funding to Iowa Workforce Development, which will use the grant to create about 350 temporary jobs for eligible dislocated workers.  The workers will assist with clean-up and recovery efforts in the wake of severe storms, flooding, and tornadoes in July and August of this year.  

"Iowa has weathered storms both natural and economic over the past few years," Harkin said. "Today's funding will help repair some of that damage by putting Iowans to work rebuilding our state by reconstructing infrastructure and helping move Iowa toward a stronger economic future."   

Today's funds will be used to provide temporary employment on projects assisting with clean-up, demolition, repair, renovation, and reconstruction of destroyed public structures and lands.  The grant may also be used to perform work on the homes of economically disadvantaged individuals who are eligible for the Federally-funded weatherization program, with priority given to services for the elderly and individuals with disabilities.

Today's grant of $2,000,000 is part of a total of up to $5,800,000 that DOL has allocated for this project.  The balance of the funds will be released as justified by enrollment and expenditure levels.  The grant is funded by resources made available for National Emergency Grants. The geographic areas covered by this funding are:  the counties of Adams, Appanoose, Audubon, Black Hawk, Boone, Buchanan, Buena Vista, Butler, Calhoun, Cherokee, Clarke, Clay, Clayton, Dallas, Davis, Decatur, Delaware, Dickinson, Dubuque, Emmet, Fayette, Franklin, Guthrie, Hamilton, Howard, Humboldt, Ida, Iowa, Jackson, Jasper, Jones, Keokuk, Lee, Lucas, Lyon, Madison, Mahaska, Marion, Mills, Monroe, Montgomery, O'Brien, Osceola, Palo Alto, Polk, Ringgold, Shelby, Sioux, Story, Union, Van Buren, Wapello, Warren, Washington, Wayne, Webster and Wright.

National Emergency Grants are part of the Secretary of Labor's discretionary fund and are awarded based on a state's ability to meet specific guidelines.  For more information, visit http://www.doleta.gov/NEG.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Grassley:  Independent assessment needed to verify savings for hospitals and others under existing system for group purchasing

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley said today that more needs to be done to determine if Group Purchasing Organizations are helping to achieve significant savings for hospitals and others buying medical products, much of which is ultimately taxpayer funded.

"Whether Group Purchasing Organizations are able to help save money on medical supply costs, or not, impacts federal health care spending," Grassley said.  "There's no data with which to independently verify the effect, one way or another, and that's a shortcoming in the current system."

Grassley's comments came along with the release of a new review by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) and a report of his own staff about Group Purchasing Organizations.  Grassley requested the GAO report in January 2009, to update its earlier study on the business practices of Group Purchasing Organizations.

Grassley said the report of his staff of the Senate Committee on Finance summarizes the information he received directly from Group Purchasing Organizations, about their activities and operations, in response to the requests he made in 2009.  He said there is not empirical data available to support claims of savings by Group Purchasing Organizations.

Group Purchasing Organizations act as purchasing intermediaries that negotiate contracts between health care providers and vendors of medical products.  The GAO said that a 2009 study found that Group Purchasing Organization contracts account for an average of 73 percent of non-labor purchases that hospitals make.  Others estimate that about 98 percent of hospitals use Group Purchasing Organizations to purchase products.

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Monday, September 27, 2010

WASHINGON - Senator Chuck Grassley has been named a "Guardian of Small Business" by the National Federation of Independent Business, or NFIB, for his outstanding voting record on behalf of America's small business owners in the 111th Congress.

"Small business owners pay close attention to how their lawmakers vote on the issues affecting their businesses. The Guardian award is a symbol of sincere appreciation from the small business community for votes that supported their ability to own, operate and grow their businesses," said NFIB President and CEO Dan Danner.

"I really appreciate receiving this award from small business owners," Grassley said.  "Small businesses create 70 percent of new jobs, and we ought to do everything possible to put them in a stronger position to grow and hire workers.  America's economic recovery and new opportunities depend on the ability of small businesses to succeed."

As Ranking Member or Chairman of the Committee on Finance since 2000, Grassley has been in a position and used it to promote and advance tax and health care policies that would help small businesses establish themselves and grow.

For example, last year, Grassley protested the placement of liens by the Internal Revenue Service, or IRS, on small businesses that unknowingly invested in prohibited tax shelters. Some of these businesses were assessed tax penalties as high as $300,000 per year but received a tax benefit for as little as $15,000 from the transaction.  Grassley fought hard to persuade the IRS to provide temporary relief to small businesses facing these penalties until Congress could enact bipartisan legislation to fix the penalty structure.  Grassley announced he would hold up all Treasury nominees until the IRS agreed to continue to suspend its enforcement actions, and the IRS agreed to suspend collection enforcement action.  Grassley said it was a matter of fairness, as the Treasury Department was giving favorable tax treatment to government bailout participants, including big banks like Citigroup, while showing no leniency and placing liens on small businesses contrary to congressional intent.  This week, legislation making a permanent fix for small business was passed by Congress and is on its way to the President for signature.

Similarly, Grassley strongly protested the way small businesses were neglected in the $814 billion stimulus bill enacted in February 2009.  Less than one-half of one percent of the tax relief in that bill was directed to small business.  In June 2009, Grassley introduced a comprehensive small business tax relief bill, the Small Business Tax Relief Act of 2009, or S.1381.  Grassley said his goal was to "leave more money in the hands of small businesses so that they can hire more workers, continue to pay the salaries of their current employees, and make additional investments in their business."  The NFIB strongly supported the Grassley bill and said, "To get the small business economy moving again, small businesses need the tools and incentives to expand and grow their business.  S. 1381 provides the kinds of tools and incentives that small businesses need."

Most of the tax provisions in the small business bill passed by the Senate this month, which the President is scheduled to sign into law today, come from that comprehensive tax relief bill for small businesses that Grassley introduced last year.  Unfortunately, the bill that passed left out the largest and most important provision in Grassley's bill:  a 20-percent deduction for small business income.  "Small businesses need the tax certainty this provision offers, and I'll continue to work for policies that will leave more money in the hands of small businesses," Grassley said.

Grassley also continues to work to educate Congress and the public about the impact of various policy proposals on small businesses.  For example, the President and Democratic leadership of Congress have proposed increasing the top two marginal tax rates from 33 and 35 percent to 36 and 39.6 percent, respectively; increasing the tax rates on capital gains and dividends to 20 percent; fully reinstating the personal exemption phase-out, known as PEP, for those making over $200,000; and fully reinstating the limitation on itemized deductions, which is known as Pease, for those making over $200,000.

Grassley said it's not the case that increases in the top two tax rates would hit only wealthy individuals and only a small percentage of small businesses.  "According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, 50 percent of all flow-through business income would be subject to the tax rate hikes," Grassley said.  "So this hits small businesses especially hard because most small businesses are flow-through entities as S corporations, partnerships, limited liability companies and sole proprietorships."  Grassley makes his arguments based on nonpartisan data from both the Joint Committee on Taxation and the Congressional Budget Office.

Similarly, during the health care reform debate, Grassley highlighted the cost of various proposals on small businesses, both in terms of their ability to provide health care to their employees and the regulatory burden imposed on them by the new health care regime. Grassley followed up on his previous statement about the Form 1099 reporting requirement enacted in the health care bill by voting to repeal the provision two weeks ago.  While the measure failed, there is bi-partisan support to repeal these reporting requirements so Grassley continues to work for repeal before the provision becomes effective.

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley today, Monday, September 27th, announced that the U.S. Department of Education has awarded a $46,041 grant to the Iowa Department of Education.

According to the U.S. Department of Education, the Iowa Department of Education will use the money to fund an in-service training program for Iowa Vocational Rehabilitation Services staff

Each year, thousands of local Iowa organizations, colleges and universities, individuals and state agencies apply for competitive grants and loans from the federal government.  The funding is then awarded based on each local organization or individual's ability to meet criteria set by the federal entity administering the funds.

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One of State's Largest Aviation Projects to Create 21st Century Airport, 155 Jobs

PEORIA - September 25, 2010. Governor Pat Quinn was joined by state and local officials today to announce a $5.4 million investment in the General Wayne A. Downing Peoria International Airport. The mix of federal, state and local dollars will help support ongoing work on a new terminal and other major improvements. The work is expected to create 155 jobs.

"Airports play a critical role in our economy," said Governor Quinn. "These airport improvements are creating construction jobs today and will ultimately better connect Peoria-area businesses to the global marketplace, providing them with a competitive advantage as they grow and add new employees."

Funding through the Illinois Jobs Now! capital program helped the state leverage the $5.1 million federal grant, which is providing the majority of the project's funding. The remainder of the total is being financed with local dollars. To date, the state has provided funding to leverage a total of $11.8 million towards improvements at the airport.

"Thanks to the hard work of Governor Quinn and the General Assembly, we have leveraged capital funding from the Illinois Jobs Now! to secure federal grants for many important infrastructure projects," said IDOT Secretary Gary Hannig. "A modern airport is key to Peoria's economic future."

The highlight of the ongoing two-year overhaul at the General Wayne A. Downing Peoria International Airport is the replacement of the 50-year-old terminal with a brand new $60 million building. When it is completed next year, the one-story terminal will make the airport experience easier and more convenient for travelers, while meeting aviation needs in Peoria and the surrounding areas for years to come.

IDOT is currently leading Illinois' largest construction program in state history through Governor Quinn's Illinois Jobs Now! capital construction program. The program will modernize our infrastructure across the state through major improvements in roadways, airports, railroads, and transit systems. Projects from the Illinois Job's Now! capital program are creating an estimated 155,000 short-term and permanent jobs.

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WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley, ranking member of the Finance Committee, and six other committee members are asking for an inspector general review of whether Obama Administration officials illegally accessed and disclosed confidential taxpayer information.

The inquiry comes after media reports quoted a senior Obama Administration official describing the tax structure of Koch Industries, Inc.  Taxpayer confidentiality laws are strict, in part to prevent the use of tax information for political gain.  The official appeared to indicate knowledge of Koch Industries' tax structure beyond what is publicly available.

Grassley, along with Sens. Jon Kyl, Jim Bunning, Pat Roberts, Michael B. Enzi, John Cornyn and John Ensign, asked the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration to investigate whether Obama Administration officials inappropriately examined and disclosed confidential taxpayer information and if so, whether they violated the taxpayer confidentiality law, known as section 6103.

"... the statement that Koch is a pass-through entity implies direct knowledge of Koch's legal and tax status, which would appear to be a violation of section 6103," the senators wrote.  "Alternatively, if the statement was based on speculation, it raises the question of whether the Administration speculating about any specific taxpayer's liability is appropriate."

The Finance Committee has exclusive Senate jurisdiction over tax policy.  The signed version of the senators' letter is available here.  The text of the senators' letter follows below.

An article from The Wall Street Journal quoting a senior Obama Administration official describing Koch Industries' tax structure is available here.

A transcript of a speech by President Obama in which he singles out Americans for Prosperity is available here.

Friday, September 24, 2010

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley is asking the Labor Department to justify how it counts arbitrators, mediators, conciliators, financial analysts, investment underwriters, marketing managers, personal financial advisers, public relations specialists, and reporters in its definition of what is a green job.

Grassley said the Labor Department is apparently allowing stimulus dollars that were supposed to support green jobs to be spent on these sorts of positions.  The Labor Department also administers the spending of $125 million a year on "energy efficiency and renewable energy" worker retraining through the Green Jobs Act of 2007.  That law specifies that federal dollars will support retrofitting buildings, biofuels and wind turbines.

"I'm a strong supporter of green jobs, and taxpayers deserve an honest reporting of how their money is being spent.  This kind of work is not what most people would think of as green jobs," Grassley said.  "It's a matter of responsible stewardship of tax dollars.  Since February 2009, the Department of Labor has given out $490 million in stimulus dollars for 'green jobs training,' and the Department tells me that it's still working to define green jobs."

Grassley began pressing the Secretary of Labor, Hilda Solis, for information about how the administration defines a green job in June.  In response, an assistant secretary said that the Bureau of Labor Statistics is "working to develop a definition for green jobs sectors and jobs" and directed Grassley to the Occupational Information Network of the Labor Department, or O*NET.  O*NET listed jobs that could be classified as green, including those now in question.

Grassley followed up on his initial inquiry in a letter sent today which asks the Secretary of Labor what changes, if any, are being made to the stimulus spending program at the Department of Labor to make sure tax dollars aren't squandered on jobs that aren't really green and on programs that produce few employment results.  Grassley's June letter and the Labor Department's response are attached to today's letter.

Grassley is conducting congressional oversight of stimulus spending by various federal agencies, including the Department of Energy and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.  The stimulus bill enacted in February 2009 has an $814 billion price tag.  Grassley did not vote for the measure.

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