And federal workers won’t return to the office (!)

OpenTheBooks had issued a report in October 2023 giving a first look at many of the other spending items, including:
- $14.4 million for the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation to get new furniture, averaging $14,400 per employee, with 1,000 working for the agency
- $6.5 million for the Environmental Protection Agency to buy trendy furniture, while it downsized to move into a 300,000-square-foot office space at Four Penn Central in Philadelphia
- $284,000 at the Federal Emergency Management Agency for conference rooms
- $237,960 for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to purchase roughly 30 solar-powered picnic tables
- $213,828 at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency for conference rooms
- Roughly $182,000 on plexiglass panels at the IRS offices, a COVID mitigation method that the NIH couldn’t find evidence for being highly effective
The highest-spending departments included Defense ($1.63 billion), Veterans Affairs ($590.4 million), Justice ($555.5 million), State ($508.5 million) and the General Services Administration ($552.8 million), where the hearing was held.
The top contractors for the agency’s renovations were Kreuger International ($346 million), Ethan Allen ($251.6 million), Herman Miller ($119.8 million) and the high-end furniture maker Price Modern ($110.8 million).
What A Waste: Federal Agencies Spent $4.6 Billion On Furniture For Empty Buildings
The hefty expenditures are part of the federal government’s big property problem, wasting mountains of taxpayer money.
By: M.D. Kittle, The Federalist, April 9, 2025:
Perhaps you should sit down for this.
ADVERTISEMENTA new report found federal agencies spent $4.63 billion on furniture in the Covid years to furnish the mostly empty offices of overpriced federal government buildings.
The new expenditure check by government tracker Open the Books (OTB) shows a host of absolutely insane purchases on the taxpayer’s dime — from $182,000 on plexiglass panels for IRS offices as part of a scientifically stupid Covid mitigation plan, to $237,000 for solar-powered picnic tables with charging stations at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Remember, the CDC was the same government agency whose absurd social-distancing guidance urged Americans to stay at least six feet apart at all times. Gee, Yogi, it’s hard to social distance around a picnic table.
All of this wasteful spending was going on, as the OTB report notes, during the height of Covid and the prolonged remote-working policies for federal workers when occupancy rates at government buildings in Washington, D.C. were between approximately 2 percent and 26 percent capacity, according to a 2024 report to Congress by the Public Buildings Reform Board. The study noted the properties’ average occupancy rate in 2023 — when U.S. health agencies declared the end of Covid — was an obscene 12 percent.
Federal workers are now having to do what has been the unthinkable under President Joe Biden: show up to work. One of Trump’s first orders of business was to tell bureaucrats to stop clocking in remotely and head back to their “respective duty stations on a full-time basis.”
OTB’s findings are part of a growing body of work exposing inexcusable waste in the federal government, including billions of dollars every year to maintain and operate tens of thousands of federally-owned properties, too many of them underused or mostly empty.
“Today’s expansive, excessive and sometimes opulent federal real estate portfolio is both a monument to the administrative state and a mausoleum of lost dreams, opportunity and freedom for American taxpayers,” said Open the Books CEO John Hart during his opening statements Tuesday before a Delivering on Government Efficiency (DOGE) subcommittee hearing titled, “Federal Foreclosure: Reducing the Federal Real Estate Portfolio.” The subcommittee is an arm of the House’s Government Oversight Committee.
The Trump administration has made a good start in reducing the federal footprint, but government fat cutters say there’s much more work to do.
You Paid for ThisADVERTISEMENTAs the radical left holds made-for-accomplice-media protests demanding the Trump administration keep its “Hands Off!” bloated federal agencies, the latest records reckoning shows the same agencies getting quite handsy with taxpayer money. And it appears they’ve had expensive tastes in furniture and decor as part of their spending bender.
Between fiscal year 2021 and 2025, executive agencies spent more than $4.6 billion on furniture alone, Hart told the committee. To put the number in perspective, the massive expenditures could buy 9.2 million American families a modest $500 kitchen table, he said.
“It’s true that beautiful spaces can make us more productive. But beauty at what cost and on whose dime?” Hart asked. “Do federal employees need seven figures-worth of abstract modern art to make government run?”
Good questions. Apparently, unelected bureaucrats — and many members of congress who have approved a smorgasbord of debt-busting spending bills since the start of Covid — think so.
The OTB report notes some eye-popping numbers over the previous four years:
› $700,000 for one regional conference room at the Securities and Exchange Commission building in New York.
› $284,000 for high-end, modern Herman Miller furniture in a Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters conference room. Yes, the same FEMA that has misspent billions of dollars in response to natural disasters has surrounded itself in stylish — and expensive — comfort.
› $39,000 for conference tables in the old Nancy Pelosi Federal Building in San Francisco, despite the fact that employees were directed to work remotely in 2023 amid rising high crime rates around the government property.
Some federal agencies spent lavishly on decor for their high-priced office spaces, according to OTB.
› The State Department purchased $1.4 million of artwork and drawings for its embassies, including $200,000 for two oil paintings by modern abstract artist Alfred Jansen.
› $120,000 for Ethan Allen leather recliners for the State Department embassy in Islamabad.
› And $4 million for furniture and cubicles for serial tax dollar abuser USAID’s operations in West Africa, Mozambique, and Ukraine.
“The Embassy in Islamabad is a place where you can put your feet up thanks to 40 Ethan Allen chairs, which cost taxpayers $120,000,” Hart told the subcommittee.
‘Expensive by Most Taxpayers’ Standards’
The Department of Defense was by far the biggest spender on furniture and decorating, handing the taxpayer a $1.63 billion bill over the period, followed by the Department of Veterans Affairs ($590 million). While Biden’s Department of Justice made going after the left’s political enemies a top priority, it made time to scratch its interior decorating itch, shelling out $555 million, while the State Department dropped more than $508 million for fresh furniture and accessories.
Krueger International, a Green Bay, Wisconsin-based institutional furniture supplier, was the top federal government contractor over the period, raking in $364 million, according to OTB.
“Expensive by most taxpayers’ standards, Ethan Allen was second with $251.6M [million]” the report states. “Herman Miller’s corporate parent was sixth with $119.8M; similar high-end modern furniture purveyor Price Modern booked $110.8M in federal government business,” the report notes.
Federal agencies made the brunt of the furniture and decor purchases — about $3.3 billion — during the peak years of Covid, from 2020 to 2022, even as work migrated to Zoom, according to the review. A 2023 Government Accountability Office study found that 39 federal buildings, housing 17 of 24 agencies, used an average of 25 percent or less of their building’s capacity.
Continued……
The Truth Must be Told
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