<<http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0504/052004cdam1.htm>>

GAO says Medicare videos violated law 
By Emily Heil, CongressDaily


The Bush administration violated anti-propaganda law when it distributed
videos to news stations earlier this year about the newly passed Medicare
prescription drug law, the General Accounting Office said Wednesday.
Parts of the "video news releases" that the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services issued were not properly identified as coming from a
government source, the GAO found, making their distribution a violation
of the law that bans the use of public funds for publicity or propaganda.

Democrats have complained that, under the guise of educating
beneficiaries, the administration hyped the new Medicare bill in a bid to
curry political favor with voters, particularly older Americans.

Democrats requested that GAO look into whether the administration's s and
direct-mail fliers violated anti-propaganda law, and although GAO found
the fliers were legal, it widened the probe to examine the use of VNRs.

GAO determined that part of the VNR materials did not make it clear the
government was the source of the information, including "news stories"
narrated by people acting as reporters who were actually hired by the
government's subcontractor, and suggested scripts for TV anchors to use.

CMS had argued that it properly identified the entire package as coming
from the government. But those portions of the video package were
targeted not only at TV news producers, but TV viewers, GAO said. "CMS's
effort to identify itself to the news organizations that received the
VNRs did not alert television viewers that CMS was the source of the
story package."

The finding could pave the way for lawsuits. An HHS spokesman said
department officials disagreed with the ruling, arguing that TV producers
were free to attribute the story.

"They could have said 'brought to you by,'" the spokesman said. He also
noted that GAO rulings are nonbinding and would not say whether HHS plans
to comply with GAO's determination that the agency should report the
misuse of funds to Congress and the president.

Democrats, meanwhile, pointed to the GAO findings as another cloud over
the passage of the controversial new Medicare law.

"It was bad enough to conceal the cost of the Medicare drug bill from the
Congress and the American people," said Senate Health, Education, Labor
and Pensions ranking member Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., referring to a
related controversy over differing estimates of the cost of the Medicare
bill. "It is worse to use Medicare funds for illegal propaganda to try to
turn this lemon of a bill into lemonade for the Bush campaign."

Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., who requested the initial GAO probe into
the fliers, said he would introduce emergency legislation today requiring
the Bush-Cheney campaign to return taxpayer dollars spent on the VNRs to
Medicare.

"The Bush administration has illegally spent Medicare funds on covert
political activities," Lautenberg said. "The Bush-Cheney campaign should
pay every dime they spent on these fake news stories back to our seniors.
These funds were meant to help our seniors, not the president's
re-election campaign."

House Ways and Means ranking member Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., and Health
Subcommittee ranking member Fortney (Pete) Stark, D-Calif., said they
would ask local stations that broadcast the VNR to run retractions or
corrections noting that the administration erred in sending out the VNRs.

The GAO's finding is the latest in a string of problems for the new law.

A group of House Government Reform Committee Democrats is suing to gain
access to HHS cost estimates for the bill while Congress was debating it.

And an HHS inspector general's investigation also is under way to
determine allegations by Chief Medicare Actuary Richard Foster that
former CMS Administrator Thomas Scully threatened to fire him if he
shared the administration's higher estimates for the Medicare bill with
members of Congress.


-----
I Pledge Impertinence to the Flag-Waving of the Unindicted
Co-Conspirators of America
and to the Republicans for which I can't stand
one Abomination, Underhanded Fraud
Indefensible
with Liberty and Justice Forget it.

 -Life in Hell (Matt Groening)

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