Thursday, November 19, 2009

Obama finding improper spending and cracking down

More than $98 billion in improper gov't payments

More than $98 billion in taxpayer dollars spent bygovernment agencies was wasted, much of it on questionable claims for tax credits and Medicare benefits, representing an increase of $26 billion from the previous year.

In all, about 5 percent of spending in federal programs in fiscal year 2009 was improper, according to new details of a government financial report that were released Tuesday. Saying the overall error rate was similar in 2008, officials attributed the $26 billion jump to some changes in how to define improper spending as well as an increase in overall spending due to the recession.

President Barack Obama is expected to sign an executive order within the next week aimed at cracking down on government waste and fraud, particularly in Medicare and other benefit programs. In the 2009 report, the government officially reported questionable Medicare payments of roughly $36 billion, but that amount will be revised upward to about $48 billion next year as the Health and Human Services Department fully converts to a new methodology that imposes stricter documentation requirements.

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Obama campaigned that he could fund new programs without raising taxes by cracking down. He's said that they can medicare's budget without cutting its benefits by cracking down. His new, stricter documentation requirements and his executive orders will fulfill his promises.

Faux News Caught Twice in Same Week

Fox News rolls wrong video of Palin 'crowds.' Will heads roll too?


Again? Last week, Jon Stewart's Daily Show caught Hannity's show showing old footage to exaggerate the size of a health care rally.

There's a difference between seeing something different and deceiving. There's a difference between a news organization w/ a bias and a news organization that plans controversial rallies. There's a difference between a news organization that takes a side, and one that does it and then says it's "fair and balanced".