Senators Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Fill Inspectors General Vacancies
“Inspectors General play a valuable role in the oversight of government efficiency and effectiveness. They also investigate allegations of fraud and other illegal activities. IGs enable Congress to improve programs, conduct thorough oversight, and reduce waste of taxpayer dollars. Congress is committed to reducing IG vacancies, and this legislation will encourage this President and future Presidents to make this a priority as well,” Boozman said.
“Inspectors Generals are taxpayers’ best advocates to fight waste, fraud and abuse throughout the federal government,” Shaheen said. “Making sure we have our watchdogs in place is absolutely critical to putting our fiscal house in order and managing the government as efficiently and effectively as possible.”
“Inspectors general play an important role in rooting out waste, mismanagement, and inefficiency within the federal government,” Ayotte said. “Our bipartisan legislation will help reduce vacancies and ensure that these critical oversight positions are held by well-qualified, experienced individuals.”
Recent IG vacancies have extended for years. The nomination for IG of the State Department occurred on June 27, 2013, following a 1,989 day vacancy that began on January 16, 2008, during the previous administration. Vacancies at other cabinet-level agencies stretch back to 2011.
The Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998 seeks to prevent vacancies that stretch beyond 210 days. The VACANT Inspectors General Act puts teeth behind this law. For vacancies that go 210 days without a nomination, this bill would provide the Speaker and the Senate President Pro Tempore the authority to appoint an IG based on recommendations from the House Committee on Oversight & Government Reform, the Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs, and the Council of Inspector Generals for Integrity and Efficiency (CIGIE). A similar process is used to select the non-partisan director of the Congressional Budget Office.
In Buckley v. Valeo, the Supreme Court affirmed that Congress has the ability to appoint officials – such as Inspectors General – with authorities that are essentially of an investigative and informative nature, such as the power to conduct audits and investigations, issue subpoenas, produce reports, and provide recommendations. Therefore, under the bill, congressionally-appointed IGs would have the same authority as all other IGs, except for the power to make an arrest without a warrant for certain crimes, or to seek and execute warrants for arrest, search, and seizure.
Tags: bipartisan bill, inspector Generals, IG, vacancies, VACANT, Supreme Court, John Boozman, Arkansas, Jeanne Shaheen, New Hampsire, Kelly Ayotte, New Hampshire To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service. Thanks!
Posted by Bill Smith at 10:12 AM - Post Link


2 Comments:
IG's are SUPPOSED to be unbiased investigators but when Congress is involved in their appointments, they are anything BUT.
When the President appoints them, the president is definitely biased. However, when a president refuses to appoint them, there is a major problems, scandals and cover-ups. How is Congress more bias than a singular person - the President? Congress is multifaceted and represents not only their own constituents and to provide oversight of the Executive Branch As identified in the article, when the IG is not appointed for an agency, then there is no one in that agency checking on that agency's compliance with laws, regulations, procedures, and the Constitution.
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