grifting.gov

DOGS THAT BARK

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Bowling Green Ky
Now you have to remember this site was produced by O and crew to combat "misinformation"

While there are numerous publications reporting on the grifting on this site thought I'd use O's hometown paper--since it's T-day and I'm feeling benevolent. :)

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/editorials/chi-1124edit1nov24,0,4087665.story

Stimulus snow job

The Obama administration claims that its $787 billion economic stimulus program has "created or saved" 640,329 jobs across the country, with more to come. That breathtaking figure includes 24,448 jobs in Illinois.

Really? Those employment claims are looking like a snow job.

As the Tribune's Bob Secter and Erika Slife recently reported, the figures for Illinois don't come close to adding up.

State and federal officials claimed that the stimulus money had saved 473 education jobs in North Chicago. But the school district there employs only 290 people. Officials claimed 166 jobs were saved in Wilmette schools. The real number: 0. The 382 jobs supposedly saved in Dolton-Riverdale? That's 142 more people than the school district employs. And on and on.

Across the country, journalists and government watchdogs are finding the same yawning gap between stimulus claim and stimulus reality.


Alabama housing authority officials said that a $540,071 grant would create 7,280 jobs. They were off by only 7,266 jobs, the Birmingham News reported.

ABC News reported that Moore's Shoes & Services in Campbellsville, Ky., claimed nine jobs were created from an $890 grant for nine pairs of work boots for the Army Corps of Engineers. Yes, $890. No zeros are missing.

The California State University system supposedly saved 26,156 jobs -- but that's more than half the university's statewide work force.

The Wall Street Journal found hundreds of reports that, taken together, artificially inflated the stimulus claims by at least 20,000 jobs. College work-study money? Jobs saved! Money spent to give some folks modest raises? Jobs saved!

The government's Web site, Recovery.gov, reported that 30 jobs were saved or created in Arizona's 15th Congressional District. Except Arizona has only eight congressional districts. Memo to Washington: There is no 99th Congressional District in the U.S. Virgin Islands. In all, officials claimed jobs were created in more than 400 phantom congressional districts, according to ABC News.

So is this fraud or wishful thinking or rampant sloppiness?

Here's the most benign explanation: Tens of thousands of public and private entities have received money. There is a long, tedious and apparently confusing government form to fill out. Obama folks have been keen on showing that the billions they've shoveled out have gone to good purpose.

Result: Grateful locals happily reported magnificent results and a grateful administration didn't ask any questions. Probably because hard questions -- the kind being asked by reporters -- show that a lot of stimulus money has not been targeted at economic stimulation. It has been old-fashioned government largesse.

Trying to measure if a job has been "saved" by a federal windfall is like trying to find the pea in a shell game. Chances are you're going to be fooled. If the money covered a worker's paycheck for a few weeks, is that a job saved? No. But let's count it anyway!

Administration officials say they're scrambling to fix the problems. But their credibility on the impact of stimulus spending at this point has been badly wounded.

Actually, you can precisely measure it: 0.

 

THE KOD

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Victory Lane
Food banks nationwide report more 1st timers
ShareThisPrint E-mail By SOPHIA TAREEN

The Associated Press

CHICAGO ? Prentice Jones worked construction jobs around Chicago for most of his 60 years and is quick to boast of a foreman job he once held at a revamped city college and 23 years at a steel company.

Enlarge photo In this photo taken Nov. 25, 2009, Arlene Bell, 52, leaves with a cart full of groceries as long lines assemble outside St. Columbanus Food Pantry on Chicago's South Side. The pantry now serves about 500 people per week and has about 40 new people signing up per week. (AP Photo/M. SpencerGreen)

Enlarge photo Women walk out with food items from the All Saints Parish in southwest Detroit, Tuesday, Nov. 24, 2009. Despite, Detroit's slumping economy and massive job losses, donations to the busy food pantry still are good. But lean months lie ahead as more people are turning out three days each week for bags of canned goods, rice, beans, powdered milk and other food items. Food banks across the country report about a 30 percent increase in demand on average, but some have seen as much as a 150 percent jump in demand from 2008 through the middle of this year, according to Feeding America. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

Enlarge photo In this photo taken Nov. 25, 2009, Prentice Jones, center, waits in line for groceries for the first time as long lines assemble outside St. Columbanus Food Pantry on Chicago's South Side. The pantry now serves about 500 people per week and has about 40 new people signing up per week. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

But these days, work has been so scarce that the man with a penchant for cowboy hats has been forced to move in with his mother and do something this week he never expected ? visit a food pantry.

"There's no work now," Jones said while waiting in line at St. Columbanus Parish for a frozen turkey and bags of apples, bread and potatoes. "I pray it's temporary."

A surge in first time visitors has contributed to the greatest demand in years at food banks nationwide, according to Feeding America, a Chicago-based national food bank association. Many of the first timers were middle class but lost jobs or had their wages cut.

"They were doing pretty well," said Ross Fraser of Feeding America. "They've completely had the rug pulled out from under them."

Federal agencies and national organizations have just started tracking first timers. But anecdotal evidence and statistics from individual pantries is clear: More and more new faces are appearing among the approximately 25 million Americans who rely on food pantries each year.

St. Columbanus Pantry, which serves about 500 people a week on Chicago's South Side, has had up to 50 new people sign up each week since February.

The Friendly Center in Orange, Calif., serves 80 families a day, with about 20 new peopletrying to qualify each day, far more than last year.

And at the Community Kitchen and Food Pantry of West Harlem, N.Y., about 250 of the 1,000 people who show up each day ? up from 750 this time last year ? are newcomers.

"The line has grown so long that when you walk outside, it's overwhelming," said Jesse Taylor, senior director at the pantry. "A lot of people are coming out in suits, they're carrying brief cases."

Food banks across the country report about a 30 percent increase in demand on average, but some have seen as much as a 150 percent jump in demand from 2008 through the middle of this year, according to Feeding America.

Reliance on food banks and the number of Americans using food stamps ? at least 35 million currently ? are two indicators of hunger. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said earlier this month that 49 million people, or 14.6 percent of U.S. households, struggle to put food on the table, the most since the agency began tracking food security levels in 1995.

First timers to food banks have worries others might not experience.

For starters, they may not know what to do.

"Some don't have the coping skills, they've never been in this situation," said Elizabeth Donovan, a director at the Northern Illinois Food Bank, which serves 13 counties. "Asking for help is difficult."

Jones was cajoled into coming into the food pantry by a friend who knew where to go, where to wait and how to apply for services.

But others say the experience is fraught with shame, confusion or anger.

"We're hearing from more and more middle class who have never in their life gone to a food pantry," said Diane Doherty, an executive director at the Illinois Hunger Coalition. "They're very, very frustrated and angry."

About half of the almost 40,000 families who have been fed atHoly Family Food Pantry in Waukegan, Ill., about 40 miles north of Chicago, are new, services director Barb Karacic said.

They include Gail Small, a 55-year-old school bus driver who got laid off from her $16 an hour job at the Waukegan Public School District earlier in the year and hasn't been able to find work since.

"It was very embarrassing," Small said. "I didn't tell my children. I didn't tell my dad."

Others say at some point, the need to survive trumps emotions.

Linda Herrera, 59, went to All Saints Parish on Detroit's southwest side for the first time this week. Herrera, who is on state assistance, said the embarrassment of having to pick up food was offset by her empty cupboards.

"We were down to practically nothing," she said, carrying out bags containing juice, mashed potatoes, dried milk, rice and beans. "I'm trying to just make it now 'til the end of the month, until I get my check."

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I am sure you and hege could pick out the ones that are stealing and lazy . The people just taking from the doles.

Neo cons dont get it .

Tax these people more .

___
 
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