Thomas Frank of E&E News reports on earmark funding.
- Earmark funding in the recently passed 2022 spending plan went largely to affluent constituencies, despite the administration’s push to fund climate projects in underserved communities.
- Earmarks allow special interests and the government to picking winners and losers across economic sectors, including climate and energy.
- To reduce climate risk in a fiscally responsible way that benefits all communities, Congress should ban earmarks.
“Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) got $2.25 million for Newburyport to rebuild a coastal retaining wall that protects the city’s downtown and a waterfront boardwalk. A city of 18,000 on Massachusetts’ exclusive North Shore, Newburyport has a median household income of $111,000 and a population that is 93 percent non-Hispanic white, according to census figures.”
Read the full article here.
The views and opinions expressed are those of the author’s and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of C3.