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“GOLDEN FLEECE” AWARD TO KNIK ARM BRIDGE AND TOLL AUTHORITY
Federal Taxpayers Already on the Hook for $75 Million to Push for a Bridge that will Cost WASHINGTON, DC — Today, Taxpayers for Common Sense awarded the Golden Fleece to the Knik Arm Bridge and Toll Authority (KABATA) in Alaska for a decade of waste resulting from its pursuit of a bridge in Anchorage. The Knik Arm Bridge would cost at least $1.6 billion to construct, and is the less infamous but no less wasteful sibling of the “Bridge to Nowhere” in Ketchikan. Both received hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars in the form of earmarks in the 2005 transportation bill. “KABATA has spent millions of federal taxpayer dollars on the Knik Arm Bridge, with virtually nothing to show for it,” said Ms. Ryan Alexander, president of Taxpayers for Common Sense. “The recent legislative audit calls into serious question the financial underpinnings of the project, and causes us to question whether KABATA is working in the best interest of taxpayers and Alaskans.” In the Golden Fleece report, Taxpayers for Common Sense cited the litany of problems regarding KABATA and the Knik Arm Bridge:
“The nation’s transportation program is already awash in red ink, so we can’t spend billions on a project simply because it’s supported by expensive cheerleaders,” continued Alexander. “KABATA has had ten years to get this project across the finish line, and there are more questions than ever about the costs and benefits of the bridge.” The Golden Fleece award was created in 1975 by the late Senator William Proxmire. It is intended to highlight instances of wasteful spending. After retirement, Sen. Proxmire served as Honorary Chairman of Taxpayers for Common Sense's Advisory Board and passed the mantle of the Golden Fleece to the organization in 2000. # # # |
For our full analysis on this most recent recipient of the Golden Fleece: KABATA – Taxpayer Funded Cheerleaders for Alaska’s Knik Arm Bridge
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