Posted on 16 November 2009 by admin
According to the Recovery.gov Montana website, over $4.7 million was spent in Montana’s 2nd Congressional district. The main problem is, of course, Montana only has one at-large Congressman.

The break down on Montana's Recovery Act Spending
Hopefully this is just bad book keeping, but as I dive further, I’ll post updates.
edit 4pm: Waiting for comment from Rehberg’s office.
update 4:23pm: Other states are having the same problem.
update 5pm: Missouri project listed as MT project. University system lists Congressional District as CD00. Thanks to John Bacino for these ones, more as I have time to go over the reports.
update 10:10pm: Police officer for the Ft. Peck Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes, $0, 1 job? – CD5; $7500 for gravel delivery from the Dept. of Interior – CD14; Culvert Replacement in Dillon – CD11; $3200 for an energy efficient “office air conditioner” in Malta & 4800 for a Heater – CD04
Posted on 09 March 2009 by admin

…so says Peter Orszag, Obama’s Budget Director.
According to CNN’s interview, Orszag claims that “the White House had little choice but to support the $410 billion omnibus spending bill which it inherited from the previous administration.”
That sounds an awful lot like an easy cop out to hard promises made on the campaign trail: “ …we can no longer accept an earmarks process in which many of the projects being funded fail to address the real needs of our country.”
Posted on 02 March 2009 by admin
The Governor’s Office has put up a web page:Montana Recovery.
[The purpose of] …this site is to allow all Montanans to follow how we are reinvesting and rebuilding Montana with funding from the Recovery and Reinvestment Act. An estimated 11,000 jobs will be created or saved and the majority of Montanans will see tax relief.
…
Total investment in Montana – AT LEAST $626,000,000
The site is informative, full of tables and graphs explaining how the proposed money will be spent. My hope is that this site transitions to one that tracks this money; it could provide accountability and evaluation for this enormous amount of taxpayer money.