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The Most Wasteful Gov. Agency You've Never Heard OF
Reason ^ | 10/06.2017 | Christian Britschgi

Posted on 10/09/2017 1:48:11 AM PDT by gattaca

The Navajo Housing Authority (NHA) brags on its website that it is "the largest Indian housing authority in the country", managing 8,500 housing units across Navajo nation in the southwestern American states of Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico.

The NHA is also probably the most wasteful and scandal-ridden governmental entity in the United States today.

Multiple media reports, governmental audits, and one investigation by the Office of Senator John McCain (R – Ariz.) describe an agency that has received over $1.6 billion from the Department of Housing and Urban Development's Indian Housing Block Grant (IHBG) program, while delivering projects over-budget, years-delayed, or unfinished.

According the NHA's 2011 estimates, the authority needs to build some 34,000 homes and significantly repair another 34,000 to address the Navajo reservation's chronic housing problems, something it says will cost nearly $9 billion.

Since 1998, NHA has received an average of $95.6 million a year from HUD to address these needs. Over the past decade, NHA has spent $803 million of program funds, and built 1,010 housing units in that time.

That works out to about $723,000 for each new housing unit, or about the median home price in ultra-expensive Seattle. The median home price on the Navajo reservation community of Keyenta, Arizona is $67,000.

To top it all off, the NHA now has to pay back some $26 million to HUD for ten housing developments that it promised to build, but never completed, according to a settlement reached in September and first reported by AZCentral Wednesday.

"The settlement follows years of costly and time-consuming litigation," said HUD spokesperson Elena Gaona in a statement to Reason, saying that the $26 million was the "largest enforcement action" ever taken against a recipient of IHBG funds.

In 2012 NHA received $215 million from HUD to build 17 housing projects. By 2013, the NHA had spent $66 million completing seven of the projects. The other ten projects were chronically underfunded by NHA, receiving less than 40 percent of the money that had been earmarked for them. The NHA, under certain restrictions, can keep block grant funds that it does not spend in a single year.

After seeing the lack of progress, HUD that year demanded NHA give back $96 million, setting off a long and contentious court battle between the housing authority and its federal paymaster. The two eventually agreed to a $26 million settlement.

"The agreement will allow HUD and Navajo Housing Authority staff and members to focus on meeting the housing needs of Navajo families," Gaona says. It's a pretty rosy prognosis, given how frequently NHA has failed to meet those housing needs in the past.

Investigations of NHA reveal where much of the federal money wound up.

In 2002, the NHA had spent $4.4 million on a housing complex for the future staff of a school that never opened. In 2008 they spent $2 million renovating the complex in the hopes of renting it out to low income tenants. No one ever moved in.

Another $2.8 million went to building a woman's shelter in 1999. After completion, the shelter stood empty for nearly 18 years, despite receiving up to $1 million in yearly grants and contributions. When reporters from the Arizona Republic visited the site as part of a 2016 story on NHA, they found a homeless woman sleeping outside the completed but empty shelter.

Then there is the Bluestone Development project, described by the McCain investigation as "a bigger disaster than originally thought." Bluestone was a planned 200-unit community in Houck, Arizona. The project was initially estimated to cost $60 million and be completed by 2016. Since then, costs have risen to $125 million, and the first 30 units are not expected to be completed until 2018.

The McCain investigation also found considerable good old-fashioned executive abuse of discretionary funds, including travel per diems of $355 and taxpayer underwritten professional development trips to Las Vegas and Hawaii.

"If NHA were a business, it would have defaulted years ago," said the authority's own vice-president, Johnathan Nez back in June.

Indeed, the taxpayer-funded NHA has experienced very few consequences for its record of fraud, waste, and abuse. The leadership of NHA resigned in June 2017, following the publication of McCain's investigation, but little else has changed.

The NHA still receives annual appropriations of around $80 million from HUD, the most of any Native American tribe.

The $26 million that NHA has had to pay back in its recent settlement with HUD will go into the general IHBG fund, and will be reapportioned in 2018. When asked by Reason if NHA would be eligible to receive some of that $26 million in 2018, HUD spokesperson Gaona said yes.

Even if NHA were a better managed organization (it's hard to imagine it being more poorly managed), the root problems of housing on reservations would still remain says Chris Edwards, of the Cato Institute.

Says Edwards, "there is very little economic development on many reservations because of federal rules and regulations and the fact that Indian reservations don't have property rights."

One estimate puts the percentage of privately-held reservation land at 5 percent of total reservation land. The other 95 percent is held in trust by the federal government, and is managed either by tribal bureaucracies or individuals.

According to Edwards, this trust land cannot generally be leased, mortgaged, or transferred without approval from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Thanks to this trust status, most tribal land cannot be easily developed or used as collateral for loans.

Reservations are cut off from normal market forces that build housing and maintain housing for the rest of the country, Edwards says. The long-term solution, he tells Reason, is moving to "a system of property rights on reservations which will generate economic development on reservations, so that the Indians can generate their own incomes and tax revenues for their own housing programs or anything else they want."

Without crucial property rights, tribal citizens on the Navajo reservation will continue to depend on the serially inept NHA and an ennabling HUD to meet their increasingly dire housing needs.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: americanindians; federalspending; navajo
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1 posted on 10/09/2017 1:48:11 AM PDT by gattaca
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To: gattaca

>> The other 95 percent is held in trust by the federal government, and is managed either by tribal bureaucracies or individuals.

Longmire Season 6 is looking to be promising...


2 posted on 10/09/2017 2:06:37 AM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: Gene Eric

That’s a great show.


3 posted on 10/09/2017 2:07:25 AM PDT by gattaca ("Government's first duty is to protect the people, not run their lives." Ronald Reagan)
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To: gattaca

They want to be sovereign nations when it comes to casinos and tobacco and pay no taxes.

They want billions in American taxpayer welfare programs cause they are citizens. And also vote.


4 posted on 10/09/2017 2:08:51 AM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: Smokin' Joe

Ping


5 posted on 10/09/2017 2:12:02 AM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: gattaca

That is true. ;)


6 posted on 10/09/2017 2:12:55 AM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: gattaca

No wonder McCain is hanging on...I’m sure much of the coverage is pocketed.


7 posted on 10/09/2017 2:15:24 AM PDT by CincyRichieRich (The Left's family value: 'The U.S. is the great enemy of mankind!' (Che Guevara, 1961))
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To: 2banana

Not only that, but they are given preference over other “minorities” when it comes to federal contracting.

If you want to be first in line at the federal trough, form an Indian-owned shell company and subcontract the actual work to non-minority companies.


8 posted on 10/09/2017 2:18:10 AM PDT by Fresh Wind (Hillary: Go to jail. Go directly to jail. Do not pass GO. Do not collect 2 billion dollars.)
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To: 60Gunner

ping


9 posted on 10/09/2017 2:25:57 AM PDT by null and void (The internet gave everyone a mouth. It gave no one a brain.)
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To: Fresh Wind

Exact same situation in Canada. Most of our Indian communities are corrupt from top to bottom. They run protection rackets, fix elections and steal from their own people. The reserve system needs to be abolished.


10 posted on 10/09/2017 2:32:42 AM PDT by littleharbour
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To: gattaca

Add to this the Bureau of Indian Affairs, a group that has wasted billions and accomplished squat.
If you’ve Ever gone to some of the reservations of the Navajo, they live like dogs in a real crappy area.


11 posted on 10/09/2017 3:13:28 AM PDT by Joe Boucher (President Trump makes obammy look like the punk he is.)
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To: Joe Boucher

As a kid I live on the edge of a reservation....and its worse than most can imagine.


12 posted on 10/09/2017 3:52:43 AM PDT by rrrod (just an old guy with a gun in his pocket.6l)
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To: rrrod

Cherokee of North Carolina live like kings compared to indians around the grand canyon. And those just east of Glacier National live in the middle ages.
Drugs prevelant. Dispair everywhere.


13 posted on 10/09/2017 4:37:31 AM PDT by Joe Boucher (President Trump makes obammy look like the punk he is.)
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To: Joe Boucher

“If you’ve Ever gone to some of the reservations of the Navajo, they live like dogs in a real crappy area.”

Just Puerto Ricans with feathers on their heads! Or Haitians.


14 posted on 10/09/2017 4:40:18 AM PDT by vette6387 (LOCK HER UP! COMEY TOO.)
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To: gattaca

I’’ll bet we have some alphabet soup “Federal Agency” for every damned Indian tribe in the country?


15 posted on 10/09/2017 4:54:52 AM PDT by vette6387 (LOCK HER UP! COMEY TOO.)
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To: rrrod

I have camped all over the Western United States.

In that time I have traversed many a res. They are uniformly sad and despairing. I got the feeling that any smart or capable person up and left long ago. The remainders are low IQ who huff aerosol cans of Aquanet and butter flavored Pam.

It is hard to explain to an ignorant person that this level of decrepitude and utter poverty exists within our borders.

The irony is that some of their land is super beautiful. Those people just destroy and despoil it.

I say any dollar spent on an Indian is a wasted dollar. Sorry, but that’s the truth as I see it.


16 posted on 10/09/2017 5:33:10 AM PDT by T-Bone Texan (Trump's election does not release you from your prepping responsibilites!)
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To: gattaca

Can someone name one Government Agency that is not wasteful?


17 posted on 10/09/2017 5:36:55 AM PDT by TruthWillWin (The problem wiath socialists is that you eventually run out of other peoples money.)
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To: Joe Boucher

You want to see real poverty and despair on a third-world scale? Visit Rosebud or Pine Ridge in South Dakota.


18 posted on 10/09/2017 5:39:33 AM PDT by IronJack (sh)
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To: 2banana

There is a joke for people in the Indian Health Service don’t get sick past February, it has no money. Yet they spend more per person than Medicare or Medicaid.
The Indian education system spends $20,000 per student but has schools with leaking roofs. It is worse than the worst public school districts except without the scrutiny.


19 posted on 10/09/2017 5:48:10 AM PDT by tbw2
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To: gattaca
In 2010 I spent a full summer as an ER travel nurse on the Navajo reservation at Fort Defiance in northeast Arizona.

I can tell you that in all the driving around that region that I did (and I did a lot), I never saw a single modern (less than 10 years old) house or complex. Not one.

In Window Rock (the Navajo Nation capitol), garbage was everywhere. When I drove into the town on my first day, I noted at one major road junction the bloated carcass of a cow. It looked like a nasty, dusty, dirty, run-down third-world country.

These are your tax dollars at work, folks.

20 posted on 10/09/2017 7:59:56 AM PDT by 60Gunner (The price of apathy towards public affairs is to be ruled by evil men. - Plato)
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