Нема на них Пшонки і справедливого нашого суду
04/06/2012 | Hadjibei
http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-pn-video-shows-federal-employee-at-gsa-bragging-about-lavish-spending-20120406,0,2258767.story?track=rss
Reporitng from Washington —
A video unearthed by congressional investigators has added fuel to an already raging fire over the General Services Administration’s lavish spending on employee perks and agency conferences.
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform published the video, made by an employee of the GSA’s Hawaii office, in which the employee appears to be bragging about agency spending and says that he’d never be investigated for it. The committee dubbed it “Federal Worker ‘American Idle’.”
“I buy everything your field office can't afford," the employee raps in the video. "I'll never be under OIG investigation."
OIG refers to the Office of the Inspector General. Ironically, it is an inspector general’s report about an October 2010 GSA conference in Las Vegas, released earlier this week, that turned the spotlight on the agency’s spending and led to the resignation of GSA Administrator Martha Johnson. The report detailed potentially wasteful spending at the Las Vegas conference, including a $100-plus-per-person reception and $6,325 for commemorative coins to commend GSA employees’ work.
Reporitng from Washington —
A video unearthed by congressional investigators has added fuel to an already raging fire over the General Services Administration’s lavish spending on employee perks and agency conferences.
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform published the video, made by an employee of the GSA’s Hawaii office, in which the employee appears to be bragging about agency spending and says that he’d never be investigated for it. The committee dubbed it “Federal Worker ‘American Idle’.”
“I buy everything your field office can't afford," the employee raps in the video. "I'll never be under OIG investigation."
OIG refers to the Office of the Inspector General. Ironically, it is an inspector general’s report about an October 2010 GSA conference in Las Vegas, released earlier this week, that turned the spotlight on the agency’s spending and led to the resignation of GSA Administrator Martha Johnson. The report detailed potentially wasteful spending at the Las Vegas conference, including a $100-plus-per-person reception and $6,325 for commemorative coins to commend GSA employees’ work.