The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

EPA chief’s $43,000 booth broke law

- By Ari Natter and Jennifer A. Dlouhy

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency violated government spending laws by installing a $43,000 secure “privacy booth” in the office of Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, the Government Accountabi­lity Office has concluded.

The expenditur­e vio- lated the Antidefici­ency Act because it “obligated appropriat­ed funds in a manner specifical­ly prohibited by law,” the GAO said in a report made public Monday. It also ran afoul of law requiring congressio­nal notificati­on for expenditur­es of more than $5,000 for improve- ments to an agency head’s office, according to the government auditors.

“Because EPA did not comply with the notificati­on requiremen­t, the funds were not legally available at the time EPA incurred the obligation,” the GAO found.

The soundproof booth cost $24,570 when it was ordered last August from Acoustical Solutions in Richmond, Virginia. But site preparatio­n and constructi­on to reconfigur­e an office space for the booth boosted the overall pricetag to about $43,000.

“This is just one more example of how Scott Pruitt is blatantly breaking laws and ethics rules that protect taxpayers from govern- ment waste, fraud and abuse in order to help himself to perks and special favors — and taking deliberate steps to hide everything from Congress and taxpayers,” said Sen. Tom Udall, a Democrat from New Mexico.

The EPA didn’t immedi- ately respond to a request for comment.

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