Posted on 12/22/2010 2:38:11 PM PST by Kaslin
Changing how Washington works begins with a change in schedule, according to Brad Dayspring, spokesperson for Majority Leader-elect Rep. Eric Cantor. Cantor recently released the schedule that will govern the GOPs first year of majority in the House.
Kevil Nevins, who will serve as Cantors Deputy Chief of Staff, said the new schedule is possibly the biggest structural overhaul of the House calendar in 40 years. Its a plan Nevins said Cantor is very committed to because he believes an altered structure will affect the Houses output.
Two changes the office is hoping will pay off literally for the taxpayer are the 11 percent decrease in the amount of weeks spent in Congress and ending voting at 7 p.m. Theyre hoping the voting deadline will decrease House operating costs, although theres no way to ensure people wont still be in their offices working after 7 p.m or a guarantee that the 7 p.m. voting deadline will hold. The vote cutoff also a way to decrease strain placed on the support staff as an inevitable result of Congress operating late in the evening.
The schedule change could also help make policy more conservative. Dayspring cited the health care debate last fall when members spent long stretches of time in Washington, D.C., away from their districts, which meant that they were listening to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and other Beltway residents rather than back home talking to their constituents.
The schedule has always created more liberal policy, Dayspring said.
The new calendar is built off representatives spending every third or fourth week back in their districts. The reduced amount of weeks the amount of days spent in Congress is similar, just condensed could translate to less flights members need to take, a cost-cutting measure. A more certain schedule also helps prevent additional expenses incurred from having to book flights last-minute.
The days were so disorganized here, Dayspring said.
The schedule is a marked contrast to the past year in the Housewhich saw voting late into the night and weekend sessions despite the fact that Pelosi began her time as speaker in 2006 with a claim of overseeing the most honest, most open and most ethical Congress in history.
Whats to ensure the GOP doesnt follow in Pelosis backtracking footsteps? Nevins says the difference for Republicans is theyre defining what they mean by transparency, such as making legislation to the public before voting. The announced changes give people a measuring stick for the GOP keeping its word, whereas Pelosi never defined what she meant, according to Nevins.
A transition team helped craft the calendar, and input was drawn from several sources, including current members of both parties, former members now a part of the Bipartisan Policy Center, and the desires the drafters believed voters expressed in the 2010 midterm elections: a less active, more transparent government that would cut spending. Cantor drew on his eight years of experience in House leadership positions as well.
The new schedule will also feature protected committee time, which should help ensure quality work at the committee level without having to worry about the proceedings being interrupted by votes. Cantors office said committee members attendance and voting record will be marked online.
The one thing that I have noted after following the Pubs since 1958, is that they rarely announce, pronounce or communicate their views, ideology or agenda on a daily and weekly level. CSPAN is not enough. They need to continually communicate and not let the Left to clear the field with charges and counter-charges.
Very rarely did the House have these long sessions. Most of the time they only met in any meaningful way from Tuesday through Thursday, with some kind of formality on Monday and Friday that will show that the House was in session, but that almost no one was there. A study of flight date and times of Congressman would be very interesting.
I hope Republicans don't go overboard (or anywhere) about bi-partisanship. The Dems and the media's definition of that is Republicans voting with them.
OMG, you mean he actually expects congress to be professional? I don’t know if they can handle that.
In order to save even more money via energy savings, make at least 1/3 of their committee conference and office time via Internet conference sites. Set up video conferencing calls with constituents. If MDs & CEOs can work long distance via the internet, so can legislators.
A complete analysis of staff work could show that at least 20% of their work could be done from home, via the Internet, as well.
Limit publicly-financed personal transportation to small, efficient vehicles, like a Focus. The individual critters and staffers can pay for these, themselves. The government fleet can be more than 2-years old and doesn't need chauffeurs. For those living nearest the Capitol, provide vans and have the individuals pay for each trip.
Ration paper and ink cartridges and mandate that they all pay for these out of pocket once they go over the limit. Examine the menus in the various Congressional dining areas and make changes to bring them into line with those of public schools or perhaps, even prisons. Absolutely no public payment for anything personal, such as dinners, events, personal phone calls, hair cuts, etc. Along with this, the quality of toilet paper and cleaning supplies could be reduced. If they want the top of the line or brand names versus vinegar, ammonia and baking soda-based cleaners, they can pay for it out-of-pocket.
Since they no longer will have to travel as much or support the present level of amenities, their pay can be cut to whatever the prevailing private sector wages are in their home district. Benefits can be equal to the same level.
They can use a portion of the savings to support monthly financial audits of each member. The rest of the savings can be assigned to deficit reduction. All of this should be published monthly online in each district.
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