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Waste, Fraud, Abuse and Government Charge Cards

By Ralph Smith

Thursday, April 17, 2008

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It would be hard to find a paper of any size in the past week that has not had an article about the abuse of federal charge cards by federal employees. Quotes such as this one have popped up all over the country: "We're poking fun at fiscally abusive bureaucrats, but there's really nothing funny about the cavalier manner in which so many public servants misuse public funds for their own amusement. Billions in taxes - the ones we all sweat bullets trying to pay our fair share of each April - too often seem to be getting funneled toward improving the lives of a small army of federal workers....If U.S. citizens are going to continue to be dressed down before boarding planes that aren't properly inspected, federal workers should be forced to follow tougher rules for spending our tax dollars."

There is no doubt that the GAO report has resonated with Americans who do not like to think of large sums of money being spent by federal employees on internet dating services, seductive lingerie and generally using federal tax money for their personal benefit. Intentionally or otherwise, the GAO report came out just as millions of Americans were calculating their tax obligation to the federal government to meet the April 15th tax filing deadline.

Moreover, the response from the General Services Administration (See Charge Card Abuse? Who Cares?) did not seem particularly helpful and seemed to take the approach that  agencies had a problem and that they should scrutinize credit card usage more closely but that, overall, told GAO to keep the problem in perspective because the government is raking in a few hundred million each year in extra fees.

Perhaps as a result of all the publicity and outrage on editorial pages in the nation's newspapers, the Office of Management and Budget has issued new guidance to agencies as well to try and address the problem. In a memo to agency heads, it directs agencies to:

Whether this will make any long term difference remains to be seen.

I have no doubt that the vast majority of those of us in the federal community would prefer to have a year go by without a continuing stream of GAO or IG reports showing how federal employees use purchase and travel cards to improve their personal financial situation through the use of kiting schemes, $60,000 for an aquarium, buying beer (allegedly for a patient in a VA facility), and numerous other examples that routinely pop up in IG and GAO reports and then on to the front page of newspapers around the country. All of us should share in the outrage.

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Readers' Comments

  • Perhaps there were good public policy reasons for all purchases to be performed by professionals in a purchasing organization prior to the implementation of micro-purchase proceedures. Adding review on the front and backend of card purchases re-creates the transaction cost that was supposed to be a...
    Posted: April 28, 2008 10:37 AM
  • Though this article mostly discusses the purchase card, similar issues have been frequent about the travel card. Why does the government continue to mandate the use of the travel card versus allowing the traveler to use his/her personal card? Arguable benefits to the government for mandating use...
    Posted: April 21, 2008 11:10 AM
  • I read these articiles and wonder who is doing this?? I have been working for this command for a lot of years. Our contract department has always been so strick on use of the government credit card. They monitor our every purchase. We have to get five approving signatures before we can pur...
    Posted: April 18, 2008 12:34 PM

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