Chattanooga Times Free Press

YOUR TAX DOLLARS FOR WOKE KINDERGART­EN

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Washington is once again facing a potential shutdown. Funding for the federal government will run out in early March unless the House and Senate can bridge their difference­s and pass spending legislatio­n.

At the same time, the city of San Francisco seems to have few problems doling out huge amounts to well-connected activist groups and hard-left ideologues.

While those two realities might seem disconnect­ed, there are important links between them.

Disagreeme­nts over federal spending focus on how to divide taxpayer dollars between national defense, veterans’ benefits, and the bureaucrac­ies that operate a nearly endless array of social and economic programs.

While spending bills crafted by House Republican­s would impose common-sense cuts to many wasteful and unnecessar­y programs, the Senate’s bills are loaded with budget gimmicks and pork-barrel projects.

The federal government isn’t the only source of political pork. Many states and localities also play fast and loose with public resources.

A recent series of stories from San Francisco have highlighte­d the wealthy city’s severe mismanagem­ent.

On Feb. 3, the San Francisco Chronicle revealed that an elementary school paid $250,000 to a group called Woke Kindergart­en. This group’s “educationa­l” materials are not only predictabl­y biased on issues such as race and genders, but also completely inappropri­ate for toddlers.

On Feb. 8, the city celebrated that it had lowered the cost of a public bathroom from $1.7 million to $725,000, when a more reasonable fee would be a fraction of that amount.

On Feb. 9, the website Pirate Wires released an expose on San Francisco’s $100 million-per-year web of bureaucrat­s and left-wing nonprofit groups that focus on political crusades such as gender ideology, “racial equity” and identity-based cash handouts.

It would be one thing if these were purely paid for by residents of the highwealth city. However, San Francisco benefits from the more than $1.2 trillion in transfers that the federal government gives to state and local government­s every year.

For example, the Chronicle story notes that the payment to Woke Kindergart­en came from federal education funds. This is far from an anomaly: The federal Department of Education has overseen surging growth for bureaucrat­s but stagnant test scores for the nation’s children.

Other federal programs for localities are similarly captured by ideologues.

The Highway Trust Fund now pays for frivolitie­s such as hiking trails and bike lanes, and the Biden administra­tion has added inappropri­ate carve-outs for “environmen­tal justice” and “diversity, equity and inclusion” to infrastruc­ture projects.

Tens of billions of federal dollars per year for social services, welfare and “community developmen­t” provide means for local politician­s to dole out favors while trapping poor neighborho­ods in cycles of dependency.

The Biden administra­tion has gone out of its way to exacerbate this problem, illegally extending a “COVID” program that is little more than a slush fund for state and local government­s.

Freebies from Washington make space for mischief in local budgets. Without Uncle Sam’s payola, cities would either have to raise taxes (which is already driving waves of people out of California ) or focus their spending on real responsibi­lities.

As members of Congress convene to discuss the federal budget, they would be wise to prioritize spending bills on core priorities such as the military while streamlini­ng less-necessary parts of the federal behemoth.

Trimming or eliminatin­g the multitude of government-to-government transfer programs would provide much-needed savings, make it easier to reach agreement on funding levels, and reduce the amount of nonsense in places like San Francisco that is subsidized by taxpayers from across the country.

David Ditch is a senior policy analyst at The Heritage Foundation’s Hermann Center for the Federal Budget.

 ?? ?? David Ditch
David Ditch

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