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Economy
Stimulus funds boost number of federal jobs
2009-09-25
The $787 billion economic recovery package also is stimulating growth in the federal government as agencies hire thousands of workers and spend millions of dollars to oversee and implement the package, according to government records and spokesmen.

Fourteen of the top federal agencies responsible for spending under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act say they've hired about 3,000 workers with stimulus money. That's helped fuel the continued growth of the federal government, which increased by more than 25,000 employees, or 1.3%, since December 2008, according to the latest quarterly report. During that time, the ranks of the nation's unemployed increased by nearly 4 million, Labor Department statistics show.

Overall, there are about 2 million federal workers, the data show.

Thirteen agencies that report stimulus-related administrative expenses separately on their weekly spending reports say they've spent $186.8 million so far on salaries and other overhead. Those agencies have reported spending $46.1 billion in stimulus funds overall.

The new workers are tackling such tasks as managing stimulus-funded contracts, processing Social Security benefit claims and investigating possible cases of fraud and waste. They're overseeing about $288 billion in tax cuts and nearly $500 billion in federal spending, much of it in the form of transfers to state governments for education, health care and jobless benefits.

The Social Security Administration, for example, has hired 2,115 workers, spokeswoman Kia Green said. The Energy Department has hired about 240 workers, including engineers, contract managers and accountants, spokeswoman Tiffany Edwards said in an e-mail.

Stimulus critics such as Rep. Darrell Issa of California, the top Republican on the House oversight committee, say the package has enlarged the federal bureaucracy without making a dent in the nation's unemployment rate, which was 9.7% in August. "The only thing we have seen stimulated by this package has been the size of the federal government," Issa said in an e-mailed statement.

The growth is small and temporary, says John Berry, head of the federal government's Office of Personnel Management.

"The stimulus money hasn't really gone to federal employees; it's gone out into the economy," Berry says. "There's no permanent increase in the size of the federal government from the stimulus money."

Adding extra responsibilities with relatively few new employees threaten to overtax the federal workforce and undercut the Obama administration's goal of preventing improper spending, says Donald Kettl, dean of the University of Maryland's School of Public Policy.
Posted by:Fred

#5  "Learning To Do More With Less". It's not just a motto, it's a lifestyle career :-)
Posted by: Frank G   2009-09-25 21:13  

#4  And so begins the most efficient period of Frank G's life...
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-09-25 10:29  

#3  at my So Cal local gubbamint employer, we just cut 55 people last week and are anticipating up to 400 more in the next two years
Posted by: Frank G   2009-09-25 10:01  

#2  Eventually there will be a two class society; those who work for the government and those who don't work? Time to find that website I bookmarked: The most remote place on earth...some island in the south Atlantic that receives a mail ship once/year.
Posted by: JohnQC   2009-09-25 06:57  

#1  Stimulus funds boost number of temporary federal jobs.

Fixed - no charge.

Government cannot create WEALTH - it can only consume it. No doubt the Stimulus funds will destrory more permanent jobs than the temporary jobs it will create.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2009-09-25 00:21  

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