Ben Carson—who infamously suggested early in his tenure as head of the Department of Housing and Urban Development that public housing for the nation’s poor should not be “too cozy”—is under fire for a pricey redecoration of his D.C. offices, which comes as the administration proposes billions in cuts to his agency’s annual budget, a move that could force millions of Americans out onto the streets.
For the 2019 fiscal year, President Donald Trump has suggested a 14 percent cut of $6.8 billion from HUD. Characertizing the proposal as “a shocking assault on millions of people who rely on rental assistance,” George Zornick at The Nation, citing experts, said it “would be the most radical attack on federal housing aid since the U.S. Housing Act became law in 1937. If enacted, the Trump budget would be a vicious eviction notice to millions of low-income families.”
Meanwhile, at HUD’s headquarters in D.C., top agency staff have reportedly spent $31,561 on a new dining set for Carson’s office, and another $165,000 on “lounge furniture.” The furniture purchases were reported by the New York Times and the Guardian following an official complaint that Helen Foster, a career HUD staffer, filed with the Office of Special Counsel (OSC), a federal whistle-blowing agency.
Foster told OSC in a complaint obtained by the Guardian that she was demoted after refusing to comply with her superiors’ requests that she work around a federal law which stipulates that any redecoration costs exceeding $5,000 need congressional approval. She says one boss remarked “$5,000 will not even buy a decent chair.”
While HUD declined to comment on OSC’s investigation into Foster’s claims, agency spokesman Raffi Williams told the Times that the table set wasn’t submitted to Congress for approval because it was a “building-wide need,” despite being located in Carson’s 10th-floor office suite. The Guardian noted that a federal procurement document for the set describes it as “secretary’s furniture.” The lounge furniture costs were revealed by another procurement document obtained by the newspaper, and Williams said further details about the purchase were not immediately available.
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