OMB Watch Submits Comments on Contractor Database

Your Comments Please

Yesterday, OMB Watch submitted comments on the proposed Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity Information System (FAPIIS), the new contractor performance database called for under last year's National Defense Authorization Act. Our comments focused on three areas: data quality and display; database training for contracting officials; and public access to the database. Look for a more in-depth treatment of the proposed database and the comments we supplied in next week's Watcher.

read in full

Just Don't Call it "Stimulus"

Ever since it's passage (even before), conservative voices in Congress have complained about the $787 economic stimulus bill, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The nut of the complaints is that the Act does nothing for the economy or the American people while adding nearly a trillion dollars to the federal deficit. So effective, apparently, is this charge, that the word "stimulus" has become a dirty word. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke had to walk back his statement that a second stimulus was being "hotly discussed and very seriously considered" by some members of Congress and the Obama Administration.

read in full

CBO Reports $108 Billion Spent on Stimulus

 

Updated below.
Today, the Congressional Budget Office, Congress' independent budgetary analysis arm, released a report on FY 2009 Recovery Act spending. Back in February, the CBO predicted that federal agencies, which are tasked with spending the stimulus funds, would spend $106 billion in FY 2009. Today's report confirms that approximate number. According to the CBO, agencies spent $108 billion (excluding tax provisions), within 1 percent of the original predicted value. Not too shabby.

read in full

Targeting Recovery Act Funding

As we continue to go over the recipient data the Recovery Board released late Friday, another article by the AP today shed an interesting light on another factor in Recovery Act spending. While many commentators are focusing on how fast the money is being spent, or how many jobs are being created per Recovery Act dollar (a particularly inane exercise), it's important that we figure out where that money is going, and that it's going to those who need it most. As the article reminds us, the stimulus is supposed to target "economically distressed" communities, but it can be difficult to actually deliver money to these communities.

read in full

Recovery.gov Search Finds More Stuff

It appears that the Recovery.gov search engine improved over the weekend (my guess is that the indexing service took a while to organize all the data). When I search recipient reports for "alpha," "Alpha Building Foundation Corp" still isn't found, but some 110 results are displayed for other awards containing the word "alpha." And when I search for "Savannah River," "Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC" is returned, unlike what I was seeing on Friday.

read in full

A Note on New Recovery.gov Features

We've been pawing at Recovery.gov for a couple of hours now and the results are...mixed.

read in full

Recovery Board Releases Rest of Recipient Data

Finally, at long last, the Recovery Board has now released the totality of recipient reports to the public through Recovery.gov. Today's release covers grant and loan data, as the Board published the contract data on Oct. 15. This new batch of data, though, is magnitudes larger.

read in full

Congress Passes Second Continuing Resolution

I had a feeling when Congress passed a continuing resolution (CR) last month that funded the federal government for only 30 days that they'd be back to pass another one. And so they did.

read in full

Senate Budget Committee Task Force Gets Underway

Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA)I blogged yesterday about a new task force that was recently created within the Senate Budget Committee that will focus on government performance issues. The task force (SBCTFGP?) got things started this morning with its first hearing, where Jeffrey D. Zients, the Deputy Director for Management and Chief Performance Officer at Office of Management and Budget testified along with Sir Michael Barber from McKinsey & Company and Dr. Paul Posner from George Mason University.

read in full

Recovery Act Job Creation Numbers, cont.

As a follow up to Craig's earlier post on the AP article/Recovery Act job numbers, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities just put up a great article on what we will and will not see, data-wise, on Oct. 30, when the rest of the recipient reports are published. The timely report serves as a reminder that the recipient reporting doesn't cover most Recovery Act spending, nor does it reflect many of the jobs "created" by the Act.

read in full

Pages

Subscribe to The Fine Print: blog posts from Center for Effective Government