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Vol. III No. 7
March 9, 1998
New
Support to Close Excess Bases
With the support
of a brand-new coalition of budget and military watchdog organizations,
the Pentagon is seeking Congressional approval to close excess military
bases which drain $5.6 billion from the federal budget every year.
The Defense
Departments (DOD) request for two more rounds of military
base closures in 2001 and 2005 would continue a process that has
been widely regarded as a success. An independent commission of
outside experts reviews the entire domestic base structure of the
U.S. and proposes a list of bases for closure or reorganization.
Because Congress casts an up-or-down vote on a package of recommendations,
the process has successfully limited political deal-making. Preliminary
figures indicate the initial rounds of base closures will save more
than $56.7 billion.
A new round
of base closures would consolidate military strengths and free up
funds to give back to taxpayers or pay for higher priority defense
needs. Defense Secretary William Cohen has warned that weapons modernization
and long-term readiness are threatened by what the DOD calls the
"budgetary drain of excess infrastructure." According
to a senior Air Force official: "We cant remain as inefficient
as we are, being spread so thin.
We have too few wings spread
out on all that concrete."
TCS is a member
of the new coalition formed just this week to support DODs
request. Members come from all political perspectives and include
Business Executives for National Security (BENS).
Despite the
promise of budget savings and improved military readiness, the Senate
failed to approve the Pentagons request last year.
For more information,
contact Alise Frye at (202) 546-8500x104 or nationalsecurity@taxpayer.net
or Erik Pages of BENS (202) 296-2125 or epages@bens.org .
Stadium
Subsidies
A new website
criticizing corporate welfare for new professional sports stadiums
argues that an estimated $11 billion of public funds over the course
of the 1990s plus billions more in hidden tax subsidies and "infrastructure"
improvements have been wasted. The site, touting an upcoming book
on the subject, Field of Schemes, is located at www.echonyc.com/~neild/fieldofschemes. |