WASHINGTON (AP) - The overdue $397.4 billion compromise spending package includes millions of
dollars for Texas transit systems, roads and hospitals as well as $90,000 for Fort Worth's cowgirl
museum.
Rep. Kay Granger, R-Fort Worth, snared the $90,000 for the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of
Fame. The private, non profit museum plans to use the money to develop an audio tour of the museum
in English and Spanish, Granger said.
"If you are from where I am from, Cowtown, it makes sense," said Granger, referring to the Fort
Worth's nickname.
"Absolutely we need to be looking at priorities ... Life does go on, however, and this museum has been
long in planning. It's important to educate people about what women had to do in taming the west and
in history," Granger said.
Granger also was able to get included in the bill $3.41 million for four Trinity River flood control and
development projects.
Debate over drought aid and education spending delayed this year's spending plan. The House passed
the measure Thursday night and the Senate was expected to do the same on Friday, which would
then send the bill to President Bush.
The package is billions of dollars more costly than what Bush wanted but he has said he would sign it.
A spokeswoman at the cowgirl museum was not immediately available, but the song played for callers
put on hold seemed fitting: "Without your contribution, life wouldn't be the same. Hitch your wagon to
the Cowgirl Hall of Fame," the recording said.
But Keith Ashdown, policy vice president for Taxpayers for Common Sense, said government funding
of things like the cowgirl museum are cluttering the budget and preventing agencies from getting
money they need. Appropriations for specific projects in the budget are generally referred to as
earmarks.
"The amount may be small, but it really is an example of pork barrel spending and earmarking out of
control," Ashdown said.
He said the spending package is likely to contain a lot of earmarks because Congress failed to
approve 11 of the 13 government spending bills for 2003 last session and is now passing them as a
single omnibus spending bill.
"All the lawmakers were holding up their hand saying this bill is going to be fiscally responsible and
they've gone out and porked out again," Ashdown said. "In a time when we're going to have to spend
billions on war in Iraq and have to figure out how to balance the budget, this is insulting."
Rep. Martin Frost, D-Arlington, also criticized the spending plan. He said the 3,000-page compromise
bill was not filed until 6 a.m. Thursday and only one copy was provided to House Democrats. Usually,
Frost said, committee members have time to explain details of areas of the spending plan.
"Today, the vast, vast majority of members will have no opportunity to even read the budget for this
year. That's the definition of fiscal irresponsibility," Frost said.
The bill, for the budget year that began Oct. 1, would increase spending over last year for schools,
border and immigration agents, biomedical research, the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration and battling AIDS in Africa and elsewhere overseas.
It also provides money for a number of large Texas projects.
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, and Rep. Henry Bonilla, R-San Antonio, snared another $10
million for farmers who suffered crop damage because of a water dispute with Mexico. About 1,800
checks have been mailed to farmers with money from $10 million Congress provided last session.
The spending plan provides Austin Capital Metro, the city's transit agency, $5 million to improve
security and to buy hybrid-electric buses and $2.5 million for a jobs and commuting program,
Hutchison's office said. It also provides $750,000 for the Border Health Medical Complex in El Paso,
her office said.
Majority Leader Tom DeLay's office said $6.5 million he requested for Harris County flood control is in
the spending plan.
Some of the Texas spending in the package includes:
-- $135,000 to build an educational and cultural center in Hopkins County.
-- $6.5 million for Interstate 69
-- $1 million for closed caption training at Alvin Community College
-- $1.1 million for Williamson County Law Enforcement Center
-- $130,000 for development of the olive industry in Texas.
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On the Net: National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame: http://www.cowgirl.net/