2. 2000 ($17.7 billion in earmark spending)
$1.75 million for animal waste research at the University of Missouri and Purdue University
$1 million for a dinosaur exhibit at the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History
$22.5 million to the East/West Center, North/South Center (no longer funded) and the Asia Foundation
2001 ($18.5 billion in earmark spending)
1.5 million to refurbish the Vulcan Statue in Birmingham, Alabama (increased to $2 million in 2002)
$1.4 million for the Thad Cochran National Warmwater Aquaculture Center and the Cochran Fellowship Program - appropriated by Sen.
Thad Cochran (R-Mississippi)
$25 million for the International Fund for Ireland
2002 ($20.1 billion in earmark spending)
$50,000 for a tattoo removal program in San Luis Obispo, California
Another $2 million grant to refurbish that Vulcan Statue in Birmingham, Alabama
2003 ($22.5 billion in earmark spending)
$202,500 for the National Peanut Festival Fairgrounds in Dothan, Alabama
$250,000 for a National Preschool Anger Management Project ("What Do You Do with the Mad that You Feel?")
$9.5 million for "wood research"
2004 ($22.9 billion in earmark spending)
$2.25 million for Shakespeare-related projects
$2.2 million for projects to benefit North Pole, Alaska -- and its 1,570 residents
$200,000 for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
$50 million for an indoor rainforest in Coralville, Iowa
2005 ($27.3 billion in earmark spending)
$25,000 for the Clark County, Nevada School District for curriculum development to study mariachi music
$75,000 for the Greater Syracuse Sports Hall of Fame and $70,000 for the Paper Industry Hall of Fame (tax exempt)
$100,000 for the Tiger Woods Foundation
$100,000 for the Punxsutawney Weather Discovery Center Museum (home of Groundhog Day)
3. 2006 ($29 billion in earmark spending)
$1 million for a Waterfree Urinal Conservation Initiative
$13.5 million for the International Fund for Ireland, including funds for the World Toilet Summit
$500,000 for the Sparta Teapot Museum in Sparta, North Carolina (I'm an expensive little teapot…")
$550,000 for the Museum of Glass in Tacoma, Washington
2007 (Pork takes an all too short holiday)
During 2007, pork barrel spending dropped to $13.2 billion, a significant decrease from the $29 billion spent in 2006. In 2007, nine of the
11 annual spending bills were subject to a moratorium on earmark spending that was enforced by House and Senate Appropriations
Committee. In 2008, however, a similar moratorium proposal failed and earmark spending jumped to $17.2 billion.
2008 ($17.2 billion in earmark spending)
$211,509 for olive fruit fly research in Paris, France
$148,950 for the Montana Sheep Institute
$98,000 to develop a walking tour of Boydton, Virginia
$196,000 to renovate the historic downtown Las Vegas Post Office
2009 ($19.6 billion in earmark spending)
$1.9 million for a water taxi service to Pleasure Beach, Connecticut - population 0
$1.8 million in swine odor and manure management research in Ames Iowa
4. 1. Should the government be able to require health insurance for all of its
citizens?
2. Should the US government be more involved in the lives of its citizens?
Explain how and why.
3. What programs and organizations should the government be involved in
creating and administering? What should they leave to private companies?
4. What should they spend taxpayer money on? What should they not spend
taxpayer money on?
Cost of War
US Federal Budget