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Forum Post: Government Worker Spends $820,000 in Vegas

Posted 11 years ago on April 3, 2012, 9:09 p.m. EST by Jflynn1964 (-206)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement

Don't worry it's not the public's money it's the government's money:

When Las Vegas officials encourage conveentioners to stay and play in Sin City, it’s usually with the intention that they’ll spend a lot of money on city establishments and entertainment.

But this week, everyone is wishing one government agency hadn’t spent quite so much.

Martha Johnson, head of the government’s General Services Administration, announced to her employees Monday that she’d be stepping down from her post after an internal government investigator found that her agency had blown too much money — $820,000 — on a 2010 conference for 300 agency workers at the M Resort in Henderson.

“We are always happy when people choose to visit Las Vegas,” said Jeremy Handel, spokesman for the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. “However, we’re even happier when people choose to visit responsibly. Taxpayers need to know that their money is being spent wisely, no matter where that is.”

The government’s frustration is not simply with how much money was spent, but also with how much investigators say could have — and should have — been saved.

A thousand sushi rolls at $7 apiece, $48.80 breakfasts and $95 dinners, $75,000 for a team-building bike-building exercise and a total of $136,504 for two pre-event scouting trips, five planning meetings and a “dry run” of the conference were among the most egregious costs listed in the government inspector’s report, submitted Tuesday.

“GSA spending on conference planning was excessive, wasteful and in some cases impermissible,” the inspector general’s report read. “GSA’s approach to the conference indicates that minimizing expenses was not a goal.”

The inspector general found the government’s conference planners had engaged in a quid-pro-quo with the M Resort: In exchange for meeting the government’s per diem rate on hotels (capped at $105 per night; the cost per room ended up being $93, $2 less than the hotel’s base rate as advertised on budget travel sites), they would foot a higher-than-usual bill for food — such as the almost $50-per head cost of breakfast, when the government normally caps that expense in Vegas to $12.

"Recognizing that [the lower hotel rate] 'would in essence cost the hotel $16,800,' GSA offered the hotel 'concessions,'" the report reads. "These included increasing the food and beverage minimum. ... As an additional concession, GSA said it would attempt to book another event at the hotel in March 2011, noting that 'GSA absolutely loves this property' and 'would gladly share any future leads with M Resort.'"

The report also found the government disclosed their maximum allotted spending cap per day of the conference — $75,000 — during the pricing negotiations. A spokeswoman for the resort did not return a message for comment Tuesday.

Lavish meals and overpriced food may be par for the course for corporate trips to Las Vegas, but for a government that's committed itself to cost-cutting, it doesn’t fly.

"President Obama made clear that the people who serve in his administration are keepers of the public trust and that public service is a privilege,” said White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew. “He was outraged by the excessive spending, questionable dealings with contractors and disregard for taxpayer dollars. He called for all those responsible to be held fully accountable given that these actions were irresponsible and entirely inconsistent with the expectations that he has set as president."

Even Las Vegas’ biggest Washington boosters agreed that the GSA convention had gone too far.

"Las Vegas is the best place in the world to hold a convention, and it's understandable why people want to have business meetings here," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said. “However, this situation demonstrates a complete lack of common sense.”

While the White House’s pointed response to the overspending at the GSA conference sends a message about the administration’s position on overspending, it also contextualizes a complicated history of comments the president has made about Las Vegas.

The White House has sought to quash speculation that the president is anti-Vegas ever since 2009, when Obama told an audience in Indiana that bankers accepting bailout funds shouldn’t be heading to Vegas "on the taxpayers' dime." A year later, he told a crowd in New Hampshire that people shouldn’t “blow a bunch of cash in Vegas” when times are tight.

(The president has since made several trips to Nevada to campaign for Reid as well as three trips in the past six months to Las Vegas; First Lady Michelle Obama and her two daughters, Malia and Sasha, were also vacationing in Las Vegas just last week.)

Las Vegas brass bristled at the suggestion that the president was warning people away from Sin City — but that doesn’t appear to be the case, according to the inspector general’s report.

"The conference was to 'celebrate, share, and showcase the diverse professional and personal talents of GSA associates.' GSA considered this theme a good match for the Las Vegas location, which, as GSA stated, has long 'been a destination for talented musicians, dancers, magicians and showmen' to 'showcase their talents to the international audience Las Vegas attracts,'" the report reads, suggesting the administration had quite a Vegas-friendly conference policy.

But the GSA activities disclosed lend some support to what may have been the source of the president’s earlier quips of Vegas apprehension. It’s fine to support the performers and entertainers of Las Vegas — the administration just wishes they hadn’t spent quite so much taxpayer money doing so.

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[-] 1 points by Craptastic41 (16) from ANIAK, AK 11 years ago

Chump change. Not important.

[-] 1 points by MattLHolck (16833) from San Diego, CA 11 years ago

like stock market losses