• Saturday, November 21, 2009

Congressional Earmarks for Higher Education, 2008

Earmarks are noncompetitive grants directed by Congress to specific constituents, including colleges and universities, usually in lawmakers' own districts or states. This practice -- also known as pork-barrel spending -- is controversial because it bypasses the normal competitions for federal grants.

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<< start | < previous | 1 - 30 of 401 listings | next > | end >>
Institution
Earmarks
Description
Sponsors
AIB College of Business
Iowa
Education
$383,187
to provide scholarships in captioning and court reporting
Rep. Fattah (D, Pa.)
Sen. Grassley (R, Iowa)
Sen. Harkin (D, Iowa)
Aims Community College
Colorado
Education
$42,249
for equipment for career training in the health professions
Rep. Udall (D, Colo.)
Rep. Musgrave (R, Colo.)
Sen. Salazar (D, Colo.)
Albany State University
Georgia
Education
$525,654
shared
to be shared with two other colleges, for an initiative to increase the success of minority males and nontraditional students in postsecondary education
Rep. Bishop (D, Ga.)
Albany Technical College
Georgia
Education
$525,654
shared
to be shared with two other colleges, for an initiative to increase the success of minority males and nontraditional students in postsecondary education
Rep. Bishop (D, Ga.)
Albertson College of Idaho
Idaho
Education
$286,899
to support equipment, technology, and library upgrades
Sen. Craig (R, Idaho)
Sen. Crapo (R, Idaho)
Albright College
Pennsylvania
Education
$85,480
for laboratory-equipment acquisition
Sen. Specter (R, Pa.)
Alpena Community College
Michigan
Education
$243,667
for curriculum development for the Rural Communications Initiative
Sen. Carl Levin (D, Mich.)
Sen. Stabenow (D, Mich.)
Alvernia College
Pennsylvania
Education
$85,480
for scholarships and nursing-education programs
Sen. Specter (R, Pa.)
Rep. Gerlach (R, Pa.)
Angelo State University
Texas
Education
$191,593
for a teacher-training initiative
Rep. Conaway (R, Tex.)
Anne Arundel Community College
Maryland
Education
$118,886
for training programs for health-care workers
Rep. Ruppersberger (D, Md.)
Sen. Cardin (D, Md.)
Arcadia University
Pennsylvania
Education
$406,767
shared
to be shared with seven institutions in the Southeastern Pennsylvania Consortium for Higher Education, for the purchase of equipment
Sen. Casey (D, Pa.)
Arcadia University
Pennsylvania
Education
$120,851
shared
to be shared with seven institutions, for the SouthEastern Pennsylvania Consortium for Higher Education to provide professional development to schoolteachers in mathematics and science
Rep. Patrick Murphy (D, Pa.)
Rep. Schwartz (D, Pa.)
Rep. Gerlach (R, Pa.)
Sen. Casey (D, Pa.)
Sen. Specter (R, Pa.)
Armstrong Atlantic State University
Georgia
Education
$272,161
for lab equipment for the Cyber Security Research Initiative
Sen. Chambliss (R, Ga.)
Sen. Isakson (R, Ga.)
Asnuntuck Community College
Connecticut
Education
$238,755
for manufacturing-technology training programs
Rep. Courtney (D, Conn.)
Sen. Lieberman (I, Conn.)
Assumption College
Massachusetts
Education
$118,886
to support education activities
Rep. McGovern (D, Mass.)
Sen. Kennedy (D, Mass.)
Sen. Kerry (D, Mass.)
Azusa Pacific University
California
Education
$383,187
for nursing programs
Rep. Lewis (R, Calif.)
Baylor College of Medicine
Texas
Education
$621,941
shared
to be shared with six institutions, for facilities and equipment for the Alliance for NanoHealth
Rep. Culberson (R, Tex.)
Baylor University
Texas
Education
$95,305
for the Language and Literacy Center
Rep. Edwards (D, Tex.)
Bellevue Community College
Washington
Education
$315,392
for development of a computer-security curriculum
Rep. Reichert (R, Wash.)
Sen. Cantwell (D, Wash.)
Beloit College
Wisconsin
Education
$191,593
for equipment in a new science building
Rep. Baldwin (D, Wis.)
Bemidji State University
Minnesota
Education
$335,043
for equipment for an applied-research center for manufacturing
Rep. Peterson (D, Minn.)
Sen. Klobuchar (D, Minn.)
Sen. Coleman (R, Minn.)
Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology
Massachusetts
Education
$200,436
for educational equipment and curriculum development to support medical-technology professional training programs
Rep. Lynch (D, Mass.)
Bennett College for Women
North Carolina
Education
$516,811
for technology upgrades on campus
Rep. Watt (D, N.C.)
Sen. Dole (R, N.C.)
Sen. Burr (R, N.C.)
Bluegrass Community and Technical College District
Kentucky
Education
$335,043
for equipment and technology for science laboratories and classrooms
Rep. Chandler (D, Ky.)
Boise State University
Idaho
Education
$191,593
for the Idaho SySTEMic Solution program
Rep. Simpson (R, Idaho)
Sen. Crapo (R, Idaho)
Bowie State University
Maryland
Education
$191,593
for creation of a Principals Institute, to train and certify all Maryland school principals
Rep. Hoyer (D, Md.)
Sen. Mikulski (D, Md.)
Sen. Cardin (D, Md.)
Bristol Community College
Massachusetts
Education
$162,117
for the expansion of adult-literacy and career-development academic programs
Sen. Kennedy (D, Mass.)
Sen. Kerry (D, Mass.)
Brookdale Community College
New Jersey
Education
$238,755
for the Enrichment and Student Success Center in Asbury Park
Rep. Pallone (D, N.J.)
Sen. Lautenberg (D, N.J.)
Sen. Menendez (D, N.J.)
Broward Community College
Florida
Education
$286,899
for an education and training program in emergency preparedness and response
Rep. Hastings (D, Fla.)
Bucknell University
Pennsylvania
Education
$191,593
for environmental-studies programs and community outreach
Rep. Carney (D, Pa.)
<< start | < previous | 1 - 30 of 401 listings | next > | end >>
Related Materials

Article: Colleges' Earmarks Grow, Amid Criticism

Article: An Inside Look at 5 Earmarks

Table: Institutions Receiving Non-Shared Earmarks, Ranked by Total Dollar Amount

Table: More Colleges Win More Projects

Database: Congressional earmarks, 1990-2003


NOTES ON THESE DATA

This database and accompanying news articles are based on a Chronicle survey of earmarks at institutions of higher education for the 2008 fiscal year, which began on October 1, 2007.

To assemble this list, The Chronicle relied on Congress's own definition of earmarks, first written last year: appropriations for specific amounts, directed by lawmakers to specific recipients, outside of the competitive award processes normally used by federal agencies to distribute grants. Using that definition, Congress listed earmarks in its spending bills for 2008 for the first time.

Legislators expressly identified the intended recipients in reports accompanying the appropriations bills, in letters of disclosure filed by House of Representatives members, and in news releases issued by senators and representatives. (The Chronicle obtained descriptions of the projects from those same sources.)

For some earmarks, the intended recipient was not spelled out in any of those sources. Most of those projects were sponsored by members of the Senate, which unlike the House chose not to disclose the recipients. As a result, this database may be incomplete.

Federal agencies assert that they also have a say over who gets money from Congressional earmarks and how much. The agencies often require the intended recipients of earmarks to submit grant applications that are reviewed before the recipients receive financing.

However, experts familiar with earmarks say these reviews appear to be pro forma because agency officials almost always give earmarked funds to the recipients favored by Congress. The agencies may take until the end of the fiscal year to complete the reviews and release the money.

For some earmarks, Congress specified multiple recipients and did not say how much money each was to get. The Chronicle's database lists the full amount of each such earmark for each academic partner involved, noting the amount as "shared." The project description usually indicates how many partners were involved in the project. In some cases, universities shared the money with corporations, municipal governments, and other organizations outside of academe.

The Chronicle did not consider those shared amounts when it ranked academic institutions and states receiving the most earmarked money.

The full value of each of these shared earmarks was counted only once in determining the total dollar amount of all 2,306 earmarks involving academic recipients this year.

Some earmarks listed did not go directly to an institution but still directly benefited it. The Chronicle included some earmarks, for example, provided to teaching hospitals affiliated with academic medical schools for research carried out by faculty members.

Dollar amounts reported may not be precise. Some agencies may subtract small amounts from the earmarked awards for their administrative costs. Further, some universities may redistribute some of their earmarked money to other colleges or corporations. Our list may not reflect all of those redistributions or reductions.

Some Department of Transportation earmarks in this database show no entry (N/A) for the Congressional sponsor. These projects were financed through a transportation bill (the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: a Legacy for Users) enacted in 2005, before Congress established that sponsors be publicly identified.

The Chronicle carried out annual surveys of academic earmarks between 1990 and 2003 using a somewhat different methodology. It relied on federal agencies' interpretations of Congress's intended recipients when they were not identified in spending bills. A database of those projects is available at http://chronicle.com/premium/stats/pork/legacyindex.php


TIPS ON SEARCHING

You may enter words or phrases that you want to find in the keyword search box. This query will look for the exact word(s) within the following categories in this database:

  • Descriptions of academic projects financed through earmarks.
  • Institutions receiving earmarks.
  • Federal agencies financing earmarks.
  • Congressional sponsors of earmarks (last names only).

Unlike some search engines, this one does not allow and, or, and not connectors to search for words in separate categories. For example, if you enter the search string Maine and blueberry in the keyword box, the search engine will not produce an earmark designated for the University of Maine for research on blueberries. But if you search on the University of Maine or blueberry, you will find such an earmark.

You can nevertheless search several of the categories at once. To perform such a search, type a search term in the keyword box and narrow the search by using the other boxes to pick specific states and agency names.