Hawaii received $2,284,000 of federal stimulus funds for the 11the Congressional district, $40,903,941 for the 15th Congressional district, $1,651,811 for the “00” Congressional district, and $799,656 in the 99th congressional district creating a combined “3.4” jobs or $13,423,355 per job, according to the federal government’s transparency web site for stimulus funds, https://www.Recovery.gov/.
However, Hawaii has just two congressional districts, 1 and 2.
Those districts received $592,211,484 and $174,075,308 respectively, according to the federal web site, creating combined total of 1,541.5 jobs.
See the full report on Hawaii here:
https://www.recovery.gov/Transparency/StateSummaries/Pages/statesummary.aspx?StateCode=HI
Media inquires to the governor’s office, the state budget office, Hawaii’s US Senators’ office, and the Recovery.gov web site manager this morning about the $45,639,408 allocated to four phantom districts has so far has yielded two responses.
US Sen. Daniel Akaka’s spokesperson, Jesse Van Dyke Broder, says the allocation report most likely has a “clerical” error. He says his office will alert the White House to the problem.
Russell Pang, spokesperson for the governor, says “Mark Anderson, who is the lead for the state on our federal stimulus funds, is sorting through this to see if he can match up what we’ve been awarded / received versus what is reported below for each district.”
Hawaii is far from the only state finding clerical errors in the Recovery.gov web site.
According to the Franklin Center report seen here – https://watchdog.org/2009/11/17/6-4-billion-stimulus-goes-to-phantom-districts/ – New Mexico Watchdog broke the story on Monday morning after finding that $26 million in stimulus money had been distributed to 13 congressional districts