Thousands of Empty Govt. Buildings Costing Taxpayers up to $8 Billion
The U.S. government could save taxpayers up to $8 billion by selling off the estimated 55,000 to 77,000 vacant properties it owns or leases. At a time when the White House says it cannot find the $18,000 a week it needs to fund tours, unloading unused properties to save taxpayers billions might seem like a no-brainer. But the federal government does not even know how many unused
properties it controls because no one has kept an inventory of them.
Further, attempts to sell such properties are bound in red tape. This month, for example, the government sold a building for $19.5
million; the process took 10 years, leaving taxpayers paying for
maintenance and upkeep for a decade. "This is a problem
that has been identified for years,” said Tom Shatz of Citizens Against
Government Waste. “Every time someone in the White House says 'let's
sell property,' the red tape is simply too much for this process." One
of the largest hurdles to expediting the sale of vacant federal
buildings is a 1987 law that forces properties first to be offered to
other federal agencies, then state agencies, and finally offered for use
as homeless shelters before they can be sold. "We spend about 8
billion dollars a year maintaining properties that we have no use for,”
said Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK). “Now that 8 billion dollars is just thrown
down the drain because we can't get past the homeless lobby to get a
common-sense way to take care of their problems and also us to unload
properties."...more
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