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- <text id=91TT2261>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: Washington:Perk City
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- WASHINGTON
- Perk City
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Wonder why Congress is so arrogant about bounced checks? Perhaps
- because its members are so used to the freebie life.
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Ann Blackman and Nancy Traver/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> Members of Congress expect to be called Honorable, but
- their claim to that honorific is looking pretty flimsy. First
- came the check-bouncing scam, when investigators found that
- lawmakers wrote more than 8,000 rubber checks at their private
- bank last year, free of charge. Then came word of members'
- stiffing the House restaurant, where prices are already dirt
- cheap. Suddenly, talk-show comedians, radio deejays, newspaper
- editorialists and the mailman were all talking about exactly the
- same thing: How can members of Congress balance a budget and
- spend tax dollars wisely when they can't even balance their
- checkbooks or make good on their meal tabs?
- </p>
- <p> What could be a better invitation to civil-disobedience
- revolt than watching lawmakers who earn $125,100 travel around
- the world for free, have massages in the House gym for free,
- have their cars parked for free and have their tickets fixed,
- refusing to pay for the few perks that are not granted outright.
- "If ordinary people did that, they would be charged out the
- wazoo," says C.T. Anderson, a bartender at Manuel's Tavern in
- Atlanta, who has heard plenty from his customers. "People are
- just fed up."
- </p>
- <p> Hoping it would all go away, House Speaker Tom Foley at
- first declared that check-bouncing privileges would be canceled
- and members would be required to pay the same penalties as
- everyone else for overdrawing their accounts. But rather than
- blowing out to sea, the storm only gathered strength. Last week
- Republican Pat Roberts of Kansas and Democrat Mary Rose Oakar
- of Ohio revealed that roughly 300 legislators owed the main
- House restaurant and catering service more than $300,000,
- thereby confirming the charge that in Congress there is indeed
- a free lunch.
- </p>
- <p> With a flutter of contrition, House members voted 390-8 to
- shut down their private bank, which by this time had been
- dubbed B.C.C.I., the Bank of Corrupt Congressional Incumbents.
- Dozens of lawmakers came forward and admitted writing bad
- checks, offering up the occasional absentminded staffer as a
- sacrificial lamb. Refusing to release names of all the
- deadbeats, Foley referred the issue to the House ethics
- committee. But that move also invited derision at the idea of
- the ethically blind leading the ethically blind. It turns out
- at least some committee members, including the chairman, have
- been named in the scandal.
- </p>
- <p> The furor began when the General Accounting Office
- revealed that in one year alone, members of Congress bounced
- 8,331 checks--581 for $1,000 or more--giving themselves, in
- effect, interest-free loans. Millionaire lawmakers, said
- investigators, were among the worst offenders, but the habit was
- shared by Foley, majority leader Richard Gephardt and minority
- whip Newt Gingrich, which may help explain the lack of
- enthusiasm for an investigation among any but the most novice
- Congressmen. "I wrote one check for insufficient funds," said
- Gingrich, "and deposited funds to cover it within 48 hours."
- Period.
- </p>
- <p> In some cases, debts of $10,000 and more were rolled over
- month after month, with no penalties and no interest charged.
- Sergeant at arms Jack Russ, who is in charge of the House bank,
- bounced a check for $10,000 in 1989. Republican Phil Crane of
- Illinois announced that he had heard of one case where a member
- had bounced a single check for $23,000 in the House bank, while
- already owing $20,000.
- </p>
- <p> Those who were innocent of any creative financial activity
- rushed to clear their names in a nasty spectacle of finger
- pointing. Some asked for letters stating they had never
- committed any offense or for some official vindication. That
- turned out to be a bad idea for Democrat David Obey of
- Wisconsin, who demanded that Foley release a list of delinquent
- members in the hope that his name would be cleared. Instead,
- Obey discovered he too had bounced several checks for small
- amounts during a 12-day period.
- </p>
- <p> Other members would not, as they say, dignify the charges
- with a response. Ways and Means Committee chairman Dan
- Rostenkowski was particularly forthright. "None of your
- business," he told reporters. "None of your damn business." One
- of his staff members explained that Rostenkowski had never
- bounced a check but viewed any inquiries as "an intrusion into
- his private affairs." An aide to Democrat Gus Savage of Illinois
- said, "We're not discussing this at all with the press. If a
- receptionist had answered the phone you never would have heard
- from me."
- </p>
- <p> Majority leader Gephardt was at pains to explain that
- lawmakers had been irresponsible only with each other's money,
- not the Treasury's. "The public should be aware that no taxpayer
- funds were used to cover insufficiencies," he said. "The funds
- of other members of Congress were employed to that end."
- Meanwhile, Speaker Foley called the reporting on the story
- "hysterical" and observed that the vast majority of the checks
- were for very small amounts.
- </p>
- <p> Which is, of course, utterly beside the point. All the
- posturing just ignored the symbolism. Members of Congress seemed
- in some cases to be genuinely surprised at the rage the
- revelations unleashed. Why is everyone interested in this, they
- wondered, and not my views on the coup in Haiti? All of which
- served to confirm the impression of a body of lawmakers out of
- touch with the lives of their constituents and in the habit of
- placing themselves above the law. This is the Congress, after
- all, that defends affirmative action and passes laws banning
- racial discrimination in hiring but then exempts itself from the
- same guidelines. It was impossible to get all the names of the
- check bouncers last week because Congress is not covered by the
- Freedom of Information Act.
- </p>
- <p> Certainly it would be unfair to charge an entire
- institution with crimes committed by a few. But the real issue
- here is not about criminal behavior. It is about a congressional
- culture of privilege and protection that is entirely legal
- because its members make its laws. And it is about how
- representatives go about doing their jobs when they are their
- own employers.
- </p>
- <p> There is no shortage of excuses from those who defend the
- privileges. Many lawmakers consider public service a personal
- sacrifice. If they were lawyers in private practice, they could
- make many times the salary they take home as legislators. They
- are often required to maintain two homes, attend costly fund
- raisers for innumerable causes, live in an expensive city, work
- long hours and go begging to wealthy supporters for the money
- they need to keep their jobs for two more years. A cheap car
- wash may not seem much in return.
- </p>
- <p> But this culture of privilege, so stubbornly protected, is
- not well suited to these hard times. When uninsured workers
- live in fear that one illness could wipe out their life
- savings, it is enraging to hear of the House pharmacy dispensing
- free prescription drugs, not to mention the private
- congressional ambulance that protects members from the urban
- nightmare of emergency-room gridlock. When families who know how
- to squeeze a dollar until the eagle screams still cannot find
- the money for a haircut, the House barber takes on a special
- symbolic weight. When young families cannot get a mortgage on
- a house, the idea of free loans to lawmakers is bound to rankle.
- </p>
- <p> Those members of Congress who ventured back to their
- districts got an earful last week. "They're supposed to be
- making policy for the United States, and they can't even keep
- their checkbooks balanced," said attorney Steve Adams of
- Naperville, Ill. "For God's sake, who's running the store?"
- Freshman Republican James Nussle was back in Iowa eating at a
- local Pizza Hut with his family when a nearby diner asked if he
- planned to pay by check. Democrat Pat Schroeder, who insists
- that she has not bounced any checks, says the furor "captures
- the brick-through-the-window political mood. It shows you how
- angry people are with the incumbents." She was talking to her
- father on the telephone at the end of the week, and even he
- asked if she had been writing rubber checks. "No, Daddy, I
- didn't," she replied. "I can't believe that even you are asking
- me about this."
- </p>
- <p> But with the onset of a campaign season, everyone will be
- asking, as lawmakers are bound to learn in the months to come.
- No event could have better breathed life into the call for
- limiting the number of terms a Congressman can serve, a proposal
- that refuses to die and is bound to land on ballots next fall.
- But for what it was worth, legislators could take some small
- comfort in the fact that few people could claim to be perfectly
- clean. The culture of special privilege, it turns out, is so
- pervasive that those using the House bank included not only
- members and their staffs but also journalists who cover Capitol
- Hill. Maybe it's time to move the nation's capital to Omaha.
- </p>
- <p>PERK CITY
- </p>
- <p> FRAMING
- </p>
- <p> Legislators and members of their staffs can get pictures for
- their offices framed free of charge at a shop in the Capitol
- building. Though the practice is frowned upon, some have
- pictures for their homes framed as well.
- </p>
- <p> DINING
- </p>
- <p> There are 14 Senate and House eating establishments, ranging
- from simple cafeterias to opulent dining rooms with crystal
- chandeliers and black-tie waiters. A chicken-salad sandwich
- costs $2.75, filet mignon $7.50.
- </p>
- <p> PRESCRIPTIONS
- </p>
- <p> The Capitol physician provides immediate medical treatment
- for House and Senate members, and all prescriptions are free.
- Health insurance is provided by a group plan offered through
- Congress.
- </p>
- <p> PARKING
- </p>
- <p> Finding a parking place is no sweat for members of Congress.
- When on official business, they can park in any spot, except in
- hospital zones or in front of fire hydrants. And at local
- airports they have access to specially marked lots, which are
- free.
- </p>
- <p> HAIRCUTS
- </p>
- <p> Capitol Hill barbershops hark back to the good old days.
- Price of a haircut is $5, a fraction of what most other shops in
- town charge. Lawmakers can keep the rest of their bodies in
- shape at the House gym, which features a masseuse.
- </p>
- <p> CAR WASH
- </p>
- <p> Members of Congress and their staffs can keep their vehicles
- spruced up in two car washes located under the House office
- buildings. The charge: a nominal $3.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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