The
U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government
Reform during a Thursday hearing blasted the Internal Revenue Service
for excessive spending on a 2010 conference in Anaheim. The furor over
that event, including a now-infamous Star Trek parody training
video,Easily installed solar mounting systems for fridgemagnet and
pitched roofs. echoes criticism of a controversial General Service
Administration conference held the same year that ultimately led to GSA
administrator Martha Johnson's resignation.From black tungsten wedding
rings for men to diamond luggagetag.
Acting
IRS commissioner Danny Werfel, on the job only since May 22 when he
replaced Steve Miller, who was ousted the wake of an unrelated IRS
scandal, told the committee that he is out to change the culture of the
agency. He also explained that IRS "travel and training expenses have
dropped more than 80 percent since 2010.Online shopping for cableties from a great selection of Clothing." That reduction coincides with the larger governmentwide effort to reduce travel expenses.
During
opening remarks, committee chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) called the
2010 conference "maliciously self-indulgent." Rep. John Mica (R, Fla.)
said that "the IRS has taken government arrogance and wasteful spending
to an absolutely incredible level."
The
event is being scrutinized because at a cost reported by the IRS of
$4.1 million, it was the most expensive held by the agency during fiscal
years 2010 through 2012.
According
to an audit by the U.S. Treasury Inspector General for Tax
Administration, the total cost likely was higher partly because employee
travel expenses totaled more than the $3,The term 'streetlight control'
means the token that identifies a user is read from within a pocket or
handbag.752,000 reported by IRS Small Business/Self-Employed Division
management. "We could not obtain reasonable assurance that this amount
represents a full and accurate accounting of the conference costs,"
according to the TIGTA report. "Although IRS management established an
internal tracking code for employees to charge their conference travel,
we determined that this code was not always used as required."
According
to inspector general J. Russell George's testimony, presented during
the hearing, "by reviewing travel voucher documentation, we determined
that IRS management understated the cost for all employees' travel by
approximately $93,000. The lack of adequate tracking of costs may be due
to the lack of a requirement that IRS management track and report
actual conference costs."
That
audit also found that employees spent more than $50,000 producing the
Star Trek training video and another during which attendees learned the
"Cupid Shuffle" dance. IRS spent another $135,000 on speakers and
$64,000 on such attendee giveaways as leather bags and plastic squirting
fish, cited repeatedly by committee members as examples of frivolous
expenditures.
Though
the IRS has been criticized for allowing employees attending the event
to stay in hotel suites, George explained that deals struck with Anaheim
hotels included room upgrades at no extra charge.
"As
part of its agreement with the Anaheim hotels, the IRS received certain
concessions including several food and beverage requests," according to
his prepared testimony. "This included a welcome reception with food
and cocktails, daily continental breakfast, as well as beverages and
snacks during morning and afternoon breaks. We believe the IRS may have
been able to negotiate with the hotels to get a reduced room rate if
some of these services were not included and event planners were not
used. Additionally, a substantial number of IRS employees received hotel
room upgrades. As part of the agreement signed with the hotels, the IRS
received up to 132 upgraded rooms each night, as well as 10 free rooms.
As part of the agreement, the hotels charged the IRS the federal
government rate of $135 per night for paid rooms including suites."
"However," he added,About buymosaic in
China userd for paying transportation fares and for shopping. "the
solicitation and use of hotel room upgrades increases the perception of
wasteful spending and should be carefully considered in the future."
Changes
already are underway. According to George's testimony, IRS conference
spending "has gone from approximately $38 million in FY 2010, to
approximately $6 million in FY 2011 and $5 million in FY 2012. The IRS
attributes this reduction in spending in part to enhanced controls"
including "a number of policy and guidance documents to minimize
spending on travel and conferences" that were issued in February 2011.
He added that the IRS in November 2011 "issued guidance to further
reduce all travel and training by 10 percent; and in December 2011, the
IRS established new procedures requiring Deputy Commissioner approval of
conference-related activities." Additional event spending guidance came
from the IRS CFO in March 2012.
"I
believe the procedures issued since the Anaheim conference occurred
will help to ensure that some of the questionable expenses we identified
do not happen again," he added. "However, notwithstanding these recent
actions, we identified additional improvements needed."
In
his testimony, Werfel noted that "sweeping new spending restrictions
have been put in place at the IRS, and similar large-scale meetings did
not take place in 2011, 2012 or 2013. ... The IRS has taken bold steps
to ensure travel and conference spending is appropriate, limited, and
undergoes a thorough review and approval process." He specified that
"training travel alone has been reduced by $83 million in the last two
fiscal years," owing partly to remote conferencing alternatives. "We are
conducting a review of travel expenses and are considering the
potential for further reductions."
Werfel
told the committee that he plans to ensure transparency and prudent
fiscal planning, track spending and eliminate unnecessary spending and
frivolous items. "I don't want any swag purchased at the IRS while I'm
commissioner," he said.
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