House Votes to Prohibit Federal Government from Mailing
Out Cash for Surveys
WASHINGTON,
D.C. –
The House of
Representatives today passed, in a bipartisan vote of
355 to 51, an amendment by Congressman Scott Tipton
(CO-03) to an amendment to the FY 2013 Energy and Water
Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act to
prohibit the federal agencies under the bill from
mailing out cash as an incentive to complete government
surveys.
“Enticing
survey responses with cash incentives to prove a
societal need for a project is wrong on so many levels,”
said Rep. Tipton.
“First and foremost, it’s a blatant waste and abuse of
taxpayer dollars. Collecting data this way is
disingenuous, and a downright sneaky move by this
Administration’s cadre of out-of-touch bureaucrats.”
In 2011, the
Department of the Interior (DOI) distributed a
nationwide survey with the questionable purpose of
measuring the societal, non-economic value of removing
four privately owned dams on the Klamath River in Oregon
and California. The survey consisted of several waves of
mailings, some of which included a two dollar bill used
as an incentive to respond, and a letter sent to
non-responders promising that DOI will send an
additional $20 if the completed survey is returned
before a specific deadline. According to the Federal
Register, an estimated 10,400 households were contacted
about the survey.
In March 2012,
House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Doc Hastings
(WA-04) and Water & Power Subcommittee Chairman Tom
McClintock (CA-04) sent letters to the
Bureau of Reclamation and the
Office of Management and Budget requesting
information on the use of American tax dollars to pay
for the controversial DOI survey. The Agencies have
since confirmed that the survey in question cost over
$850,000.
###
|