The proposal
Posted: Thu May 05, 2011 10:56 am
The Proposal
When a company falls on difficult times, one
of the things that seems to happen is they reduce their staff and
workers. The remaining workers must find ways to continue to do a
good job or risk that their job would be eliminated as well.
Wall street and the media normally
congratulate the CEO for making this type of "tough decision", and
the board of directors gives upper corporate management big
bonuses ..
Our government should not be immune from similar risks.
Therefore:
Reduce the House of Representatives from the
current 435 members to 218 members.
Reduce Senate members from
100 to 50 (one per State). Then, reduce their
remaining staff by 25%.
Accomplish this over the next 8 years (two
steps/two elections) and of course this would require some
redistricting.
Some Yearly Monetary Gains Include:
$44,108,400 for elimination of base pay for congress. (267
members X $165,200 /member/ yr.) $437,100,000 for
elimination of their staff.
(Estimate $1.3 Million in staff per each member of the House, and $3
Million in staff per each member of the Senate every year)
$108,350,000 for the reduction in remaining staff by 25%.
$7,500,000,000 reduction in pork barrel earmarks each
year. (Those members whose jobs are gone. Current estimates for
total government pork earmarks are at $15 Billion/yr ).
The remaining representatives would need to
work smarter and improve efficiencies. It might
even be in their best interests to work
together for the good of our country!
We may also expect that smaller committees
might lead to a more efficient resolution of issues as well.
It might even be easier to keep track of what your
representative is doing.
Congress has more tools available to do their jobs than it
had back in 1911 when the current number
of representatives was established. (Telephone,
computers, cell phones to name a few)
Note:
Congress does not hesitate to head home for extended
weekends, holidays and recesses, when what the nation
needs is a real fix for economic problems. Also, we had
3 senators who were not doing their jobs for the 18+ months
(on the campaign trail) and still they all accepted full pay.
Minnesota survived very well with only one senator for the first
half of this year. These facts alone support a reduction in senators
and congress.
Summary of opportunity:
$44,108,400 reduction of congress members.
$282,100,000 for elimination of the reduced house
member staff.
$150,000,000 for elimination of reduced senate
member staff.
$70,850,000 for 25% reduction of staff for remaining
house members.
$37,500,000 for 25% reduction of staff for remaining
senate members.
$7,500,000,000 reduction in pork added to bills by
the reduction of congress members. $8,084,558,400 per
year, estimated total savings. (That's 8-BILLION just to start!)
Corporate America does these types of cuts all the time.
There's even a name for it.
"Downsizing."
------------------------------
Also, if Congresspersons were required to serve 20, 25 or 30 years (like
everyone else) in order to collect retirement benefits, taxpayers
could save a bundle.
Now they get full retirement after serving
only ONE term.
IF you are happy with how Washington spends
our taxes, delete this message.
Otherwise, it's time to "downsize" Congress.
When a company falls on difficult times, one
of the things that seems to happen is they reduce their staff and
workers. The remaining workers must find ways to continue to do a
good job or risk that their job would be eliminated as well.
Wall street and the media normally
congratulate the CEO for making this type of "tough decision", and
the board of directors gives upper corporate management big
bonuses ..
Our government should not be immune from similar risks.
Therefore:
Reduce the House of Representatives from the
current 435 members to 218 members.
Reduce Senate members from
100 to 50 (one per State). Then, reduce their
remaining staff by 25%.
Accomplish this over the next 8 years (two
steps/two elections) and of course this would require some
redistricting.
Some Yearly Monetary Gains Include:
$44,108,400 for elimination of base pay for congress. (267
members X $165,200 /member/ yr.) $437,100,000 for
elimination of their staff.
(Estimate $1.3 Million in staff per each member of the House, and $3
Million in staff per each member of the Senate every year)
$108,350,000 for the reduction in remaining staff by 25%.
$7,500,000,000 reduction in pork barrel earmarks each
year. (Those members whose jobs are gone. Current estimates for
total government pork earmarks are at $15 Billion/yr ).
The remaining representatives would need to
work smarter and improve efficiencies. It might
even be in their best interests to work
together for the good of our country!
We may also expect that smaller committees
might lead to a more efficient resolution of issues as well.
It might even be easier to keep track of what your
representative is doing.
Congress has more tools available to do their jobs than it
had back in 1911 when the current number
of representatives was established. (Telephone,
computers, cell phones to name a few)
Note:
Congress does not hesitate to head home for extended
weekends, holidays and recesses, when what the nation
needs is a real fix for economic problems. Also, we had
3 senators who were not doing their jobs for the 18+ months
(on the campaign trail) and still they all accepted full pay.
Minnesota survived very well with only one senator for the first
half of this year. These facts alone support a reduction in senators
and congress.
Summary of opportunity:
$44,108,400 reduction of congress members.
$282,100,000 for elimination of the reduced house
member staff.
$150,000,000 for elimination of reduced senate
member staff.
$70,850,000 for 25% reduction of staff for remaining
house members.
$37,500,000 for 25% reduction of staff for remaining
senate members.
$7,500,000,000 reduction in pork added to bills by
the reduction of congress members. $8,084,558,400 per
year, estimated total savings. (That's 8-BILLION just to start!)
Corporate America does these types of cuts all the time.
There's even a name for it.
"Downsizing."
------------------------------
Also, if Congresspersons were required to serve 20, 25 or 30 years (like
everyone else) in order to collect retirement benefits, taxpayers
could save a bundle.
Now they get full retirement after serving
only ONE term.
IF you are happy with how Washington spends
our taxes, delete this message.
Otherwise, it's time to "downsize" Congress.