"Principal"
INT. SCHOOL PRINCIPAL'S OFFICE
Two concerned PARENTS. A stern PRINCIPAL. One adorable, teenage
GIRL in big trouble.
SALLY
Mom. Dad. I know I took some food from the cafeteria without
exactly paying, and I used school yearbook money to buy these cool
new jeans. But I think you should forget the whole thing, pat me
on the back, and put one of those "My Kid is Student of the Month"
bumper stickers on the car.
PRINCIPAL
We don't treat unethical people like that, Sally.
SALLY
Uh-huh, you do. Richard Pombo. Our Congressman, Richard Pombo. He
used taxpayers' money to pay for a private family vacation to our
National Parks.
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Pombo was reimbursed $4,935.82 from the House Resources
Committee budget to rent an RV to travel, with his family, to seven
national parks from July 27 to August 11, 2003. According to a list
released by his spokesman, Brian Kennedy, Pombo visited Sequoia, Kings
Canyon, and Joshua Tree national parks in California; Yellowstone
National Park in Wyoming; the Grand Canyon in Arizona; and Mount
Rushmore and Badlands national parks in South Dakota. (Tracy Press,
2/10/06)
In an article posted under Pombo's name to his Resources Committee
website in the summer of 2003 Pombo said, "This August, my family and I
rented an RV and set out to explore the West. We spent two weeks on
vacation, stopping along the way to enjoy the splendor of many of our
national parks." However, when confronted with the trip Pombo claimed
that the purpose of the trip was to meet with park personnel and learn
about park issues he oversees as chairman of the committee. Pombo
insisted that he spent virtually the entire trip talking to the park
superintendents and other officials. Pombo said, "It was not a personal
trip." (Tracy Press, 2/9/06; Associated Press, 2/10/06; San
Francisco Chronicle, 2/10/06)
At least two parks officials claim that Pombo never showed up for his
official visits. "I was working in the park then and can't confirm that
a meeting like that ever took place. I generally remember the
congressmen that come here," said Joe Zarki, a spokesman at Joshua Tree
National Park. According to a spokesperson for Badlands National Park,
Pombo made arrangements to visit but never arrived. "We had it all set
up for him to come, and he never showed up, and I mean we had gone to a
lot of work," said Pam Livermont, the secretary to Badlands'
superintendent. (Tracy Press, 2/10/06)
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MOM
... That's different.
SALLY
Not really, Mom. Because then he wanted to take 15 of those parks
and sell them to developers who supported him. Plus he used
taxpayer money to pay his government staff while they worked on
political campaigns!
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In a draft bill, Pombo proposed the sale of 15 national
parks. The parks to be sold were Eugene O'Neill National Historical
Site, California, Alibates Flint Quarries National Monument, Texas, Fort
Bowie National Historical Site, Arizona, Frederick Law Olmsted National
Historical Site, Massachusetts, Mary McLeod Bethune Council House,
District of Columbia, Minuteman Missile National Historic Site, South
Dakota, Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial, Pennsylvania, Thomas
Stone National Historical Site, Maryland, Aniakchak National Monument
and Preserve, Alaska, Bering Land Bridge National Preserve, Alaska, Cape
Krusenstern National Monument, Alaska, Kobuk Valley National Park,
Alaska, Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Alaska, Noatak National
Preserve, Alaska, Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve, Alaska (San
Francisco Chronicle, 9/24/05; Proposed Recommendations for Budget
Reconciliation, Title VI – Committee on Resources, Subtitle C –
Subcommittee on National Parks, Section 6308)
Over the course of his career, Pombo has taken $354,608 in campaign
contributions from development interests, including $290,390 from real
estate agents and $64,218 from homebuilders (Center for Responsive
Politics)
Pombo gave his committee staff leave to work on campaigns at taxpayer
expense. Pombo granted his 47 GOP staffers on the House Resources
Committee a month of paid administrative leave time prior to Election
Day. Chief of staff Steve Ding called this time off compensation for
many long hours worked by the staff. Republican and Democratic committee
staff directors said it was highly unusual to shut down a committee
during the peak election season. Some aides used the taxpayer-sponsored
leave to volunteer for two of the House's most embattled Republicans,
Reps. Rick Renzi and Steve Pearce who were also members of the Resources
Committee. (The Hill, 10/6/04; Modesto Bee, 10/21/04)
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PRINCIPAL
-- Enough Sally. We know you're good at Civics.
SALLY
I'm sure, as loving parents and educators you don't mean to send
mixed messages --so why should I be held to a higher standard than
our Congressman? I say: if it's good enough for Congressman Pombo,
it's good enough for me! Let's just say: I pulled a Pombo! |
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