Goode, Goodlatte say local endeavors worthy of earmarks

Goode, Goodlatte say local endeavors worthy of earmarks

Rep. Virgil Goode (left) sponsored $6 million in defense earmarks. Rep. Bob Goodlatte had fewer earmarks, mostly for smaller local projects.

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By Ray Reed

Published: June 7, 2008

The two members of Congress who represent the Lynchburg area take different approaches to earmarks, an often-controversial and sometimes ridiculed practice lawmakers use to steer federal money to specific projects.

Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-6th District, and Rep. Virgil Goode, R-5th District, don’t hesitate to explain the earmarks they sponsored in fiscal 2008. Localities in their districts benefited, they said.

Taxpayers for Common Sense, a watchdog organization, credited Goode with spreading $35.9 million of earmarked federal funds around the 5th District, which includes Appomattox, Campbell and Bedford counties.

Some of Goode’s earmarks benefited defense-related businesses whose executives contributed to his campaign chest.

“I support having a strong Navy,” Goode said, referring to a $2.4 million earmark to a Sperry Marine project that would improve ship navigation and guidance. Sperry Marine employs many people in the Charlottesville area, Goode said.

Several contributions listed in Goode’s campaign finance reports are from people connected to Northrup Grumman, parent company of Sperry Marine. Others are linked to executives with subsidiaries of General Dynamics, the nation’s other shipbuilding conglomerate, and to lobbyists who represent the two corporations.

“It all depends on your definition of an earmark,” Goode said. “I consider overseas AIDS an earmark,” he said, referring to presidentially proposed funding to combat the disease in other countries.

Goode said that instead of curbing AIDS in other countries, he would prefer to fund National Institutes of Health efforts to deal with heart disease, multiple sclerosis, and other problems of American citizens.

Goode said some earmarks he’s helped obtain did not appear in the Taxpayers for Common Sense report, but he wanted to claim credit for helping with federal grants that went to many volunteer fire departments, although perhaps in other years before 2008.

Goode said he also steered funds to several local sheriff’s departments through a program he designated as Southside Law Enforcement.

The taxpayers organization reports that Goodlatte, who said he has tried unsuccessfully to end Congress’s earmarks practice, sponsored $12.2 million in projects in the 6th District. Amherst County and Lynchburg are part of his district.

Goodlatte said that for the past two years he has not sponsored any earmark that would provide funds to a corporation.

“People don’t like them,” Goodlatte said, but as long as earmarks are being distributed his district is entitled to some of them.

Goodlatte’s earmarks in 2008 went to local governments and community programs, including Lynchburg’s central sewer system upgrade and the Poplar Forest museum program to preserve Thomas Jefferson’s heritage.

“An amendment was offered in Congress to try to remove” the Poplar Forest earmark, Goodlatte said. “It got the lowest support of any amendment that was offered to remove a project,” he said, because “the recognition of Thomas Jefferson’s place in history is very strong.”

Goode’s defense-related earmarks totaled $14.4 million in a database compiled by Taxpayers for Common Sense. Several of those earmarks focused on research being done in Charlottesville and Danville, both in the 5th District, or at Virginia Tech.

The Sperry Marine project to improve shipboard navigation capabilities deserves funding because “our Navy needs to stay competitive with the Chinese,” in terms of building affordable technology within the United States and also in the face of China’s upgrading its own navy, Goode said.

Technology development “is the only way we can stay competitive with China, and hope China doesn’t steal it too quick,” Goode said. “Sperry Marine is an example of a company that does that work for the Navy, and there are several of them in the Charlottesville area,” Goode said.

Another Goode earmark appears in the taxpayer group’s database as benefiting a company in Torrance, Calif., but its research is being done in the Danville area at the local airport and at Virginia International Raceway.

The research focuses on robotic controls for unmanned aircraft, and also for remote-controlled land vehicles that can be used in warfare. Virginia Tech is participating in the research, Goode said.

The drone aircraft “will fly over an area in Iraq to see what the enemy is doing, and sometimes the enemy will hear that aircraft and shoot at it. That gives our soldiers an opportunity to shoot at them,” Goode said.

Another Goode earmark, for $2.4 million, involves gathering data on missiles owned by other countries. Virginia Tech would participate in that program too, he said.

“I don’t know how far that has gotten,” Goode said.

It’s a Defense Department project that wasn’t funded in the budget proposed by the president.

The Defense Department “gets an amount” in the proposed federal budget, Goode said, “but then there are some things that are not funded within the budget and yet they think they are good ideas. If they can get it funded through the legislative process, they like to do that,” he explained.

Taxpayers for Common Sense said that practice is one of the reasons earmarks are often criticized — Congress circumvents the standard budgetary process to bestow what appears to be favors on campaign contributors.

Goode said the U.S. Constitution gives the House of Representatives the power to raise and spend money, and therefore the practice is appropriate. Presidents have usurped Congress’ authority through their budgetary powers, Goode said, and earmarks such as these are a way to reassert Congress’ role, he said.

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( markluvslabs ) on June 08, 2008 at 10:39 pm

This just goes to demonstrate why Republicans can’t be trusted today any more than Democrats can be.  Goode was a Dem at one time and can use that as his excuse.  Republicans elected Goode and Goodlatte and many of the Republicans who are Sheriffs and council members to office so that they would cut spending, not justify it.  If the Jeffersonian lovers out there want to restore Poplar Forest than let them fund it or vote to.  Nowhere in the Constitution does it say anything about the federal gov’t paying for homage to a politician’s summer home.  Defense spending can be justified but not the wasteful, never-ending funding for every local law enforcement and fire group out there.  Does anyone really believe that every agency needs a tank or has to always drive new trucks or have equipment that is rarely if ever used?  I’d love to see just once these so-called Republicans try and close a gov’t agency or return some unspent money or say that he’d rather be voted out of office for doing what’s right with the taxpayer’s money rather than trying to buy votes with it.

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Posted by ( bigjimm ) on June 08, 2008 at 8:34 am

You know the problem with good old term limits Bob don’t you? He’s just not very good at anything. Do you remember back in 1994 and the republican’s contract on America?( they called it contract with America, but it didn’t work out that way). Well, Bob got himself elected by saying that those old dems were corrupt as heck because they got to stay in congress forever because of how hard it was to defeat an incumbent. So he ran on the term limits banner, promising to make it into law and he promised to stay for only twelve years no matter what.
Well, once the republicans got there they forgot all about term limits and after eleven years into his personal promise good ol’ Bob realized he would never get another job like this one where he could get rich, live like a prince and not have to do anything. Heck, Bob thought, seniority is much more important than term limits and after all, he was a republican, not some old corrupt democrat. He ran again and proved that he had been right back in 94, you can’t beat an incumbent and the only thing worse than a lying corrupt democrat is a lying, corrupt republican that can’t bring home the bacon.
The least this boob should be able to do is get some earmarks marked for us, but no, all he can do is push farm bills that help the rich get richer and help other congressmen push through bills to help their constituents. He bragged about keeping that pittance in for Poplar Forest, big flip, Bob.
Bob, you’ve stayed too long so do us all a favor and go away. Don’t go away mad, but for God’s sake, go away.

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Posted by ( JacksonPollock ) on June 08, 2008 at 7:02 am

Typical Goode.  His homophobia and ignorance of AIDS comes out with the statement: “he would prefer to fund National Institutes of Health efforts to deal with heart disease, multiple sclerosis, and other problems of American citizens.“  Completely short-sighted and isolationist. 

Goode is still trying to figure out global warming (new heat records three days in a row doesn’t give him a clue, but allows one of his contributors, Sperry Marine, to sell more boats and “fish trackers,“) so how can he understand the importance to this country of eliminating AIDS worldwide?

Earmarks are earmarks, and Goode’s earmarks are so self-serving that they are absurd.  Hopefully, the new congress (Democratic) will put an end to the foolishness of “bidnez as usual” in Washington with such “Earmark Earles” as Virgil Goode.  Until Congress does something about campaign funding by big business, which buys “needy” politicians like Goode, the same group of individuals, who care more about being re-elected than the future of our country, will continue to be returned to Washington. 

Goode is one who needs, deperately, to be sent back to Franklin county.

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