Feel The Pain!-Repost

The Obama administration denied an appeal  for flexibility in lessening the sequester’s effects, with an email  this week appearing to show officials in Washington that because they already  had promised the cuts would be devastating, they now have to follow through on  that.

In the email sent Monday by Charles  Brown, an official with the Animal  and Plant Health Inspection Service office in Raleigh, N.C., Mr.  Brown asked “if there was any latitude” in how to spread the sequester cuts  across the region to lessen the impacts on fish inspections.


SEE RELATED:  Democrats pull out race card in sequester game


He said he was discouraged by officials in Washington, who gave him this  reply: “We have gone on record with a notification to Congress  and whoever else that ‘APHIS would eliminate  assistance to producers in 24 states in managing wildlife damage to the  aquaculture industry, unless they provide funding  to cover the costs.’ So it is our opinion that however you manage that  reduction, you need to make sure you are not contradicting what we said the  impact would be.”

“This email confirms what many Americans have suspected: The Obama  administration is doing everything they can to make sure their worst  predictions come true and to maximize the pain of the Sequester cuts for  political gain,” said Rep. Tim Griffin,  Arkansas Republican.

Mr. Brown, the official who sent the  email and who is eastern regional director for wildlife services at APHIS,  didn’t immediately return a call Tuesday afternoon seeking comment.

APHIS is an agency within the Agriculture  Department, and on Tuesday department Secretary Tom  Vilsack was challenged on the email at a House committee hearing by Rep.  Kristi Noem, who said she hoped the department  wouldn’t tie agencies’ hands.

Mr. Vilsack said he hadn’t seen the email,  but said agencies are supposed to be trying to find ways to manage the impact of  the cuts.

“If we have flexibility,  we’re going to try to use it to make sure we use sequester in the most equitable  and least disruptive way,” the secretary testified. “There are some  circumstances, and we’ve talked a lot about the meat inspection, where we do not  have that flexibility because there are so few accounts.”


SEE RELATED: Airports to Janet Napolitano: You’re wrong about  delays


The administration earlier had warned  that supplies of beef, pork and poultry could drop this year because  slaughterhouse inspectors will have to be furloughed, and under federal  law  meat can’t be processed without inspectors present.

Ms. Noem told Mr.  Vilsack the email made it sound like the administration was sacrificing flexibility in  order to justify dire predictions.

“I’m hopeful that isn’t an agenda that’s been put forward,” the South Dakota  Republican congresswoman told Mr.  Vilsack.

The $85 billion in sequesters began Friday, and have hit most of the federal  government, where employees will face furloughs.

But even amid the cuts, APHIS is still hiring  new employees and interns.

Since Sunday the agency has posted 24 help-wanted ads including 22 student  internships, one ad seeking a clerk in a New York office, and one ad seeking  three “insect production workers” to grow bollworms in Phoenix.

Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/mar/5/email-tells-feds-make-sequester-painful-promised/#ixzz2Mhv6m9az Follow us: @washtimes on Twitter

This entry was posted in A Crime, Only In America and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink.