Congress advances bills targeting $186 billion payment problem

Congress advances bills targeting $186 billion payment problem

Spread the love

Congress moved this week on both sides of the Capitol to address a problem that has persisted for decades after a new report found federal agencies made an estimated $186 billion in improper payments in fiscal year 2025, a $24 billion increase from the prior year.

The House Oversight Committee approved nine bills designed to reduce payment errors in federal programs. That same day, the Senate unanimously passed a bill to lengthen the timeframe for prosecuting pandemic-era fraud, part of a larger 17-bill anti-fraud initiative that Senate Republicans are advancing toward a floor vote.

Improper payments are defined as those that should not have been made or were made in incorrect amounts, including overpayments, underpayments, payments to ineligible recipients and payments lacking sufficient documentation. Fraud is one cause; eligibility errors, outdated data systems, and documentation failures are others, according to the GAO report.

Since fiscal year 2003, cumulative improper payment estimates have totaled about $3 trillion. GAO has identified improper payments as a material weakness in federal financial management every year since 1997.

Five program areas accounted for about 73% of the fiscal year 2025 total: Medicare at $57 billion, Medicaid at $37 billion, the Earned Income Tax Credit at $21 billion, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program at $10 billion and the Small Business Administration’s Shuttered Venue Operators Grant program at $10 billion.

The $186 billion total is likely an undercount itself. The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, which spent about $16.5 billion in fiscal year 2025, was excluded because of statutory limitations on reporting.

Only 12 of the 24 major agencies covered by the Chief Financial Officers Act fully complied with federal payment integrity law in the most recent reporting year. Nine of the ten recommendations GAO made to Congress in 2022 to improve the system remain unacted upon.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., framed the scale of the problem in terms that taxpayers would recognize.

“Taxpayers are footing the bill for fraud while criminals get rich,” he said during the markup. “Fraud at these levels costs each tax filer between $1,000 and $3,000 a year.”

The centerpiece of the House package is a shift from what Comer called the “pay and chase” model – in which agencies attempt to recover improper payments after the fact – to pre-payment verification.

Two bills, the Pre-Payment Fraud Prevention and Treasury Data Access Act and the Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act, would require agencies to conduct risk evaluations before payments go out and give Treasury new authority to return payment requests flagged as high-risk.

Other bills would replace static annual improper payment estimates with continuous rolling risk assessments, extend Treasury’s Do Not Pay system to state governments administering federally funded programs for the first time and make agency chief financial officers explicitly responsible for internal financial controls.

Rep. Maxwell Frost, D-Fla., co-sponsor of the Do Not Pay expansion bill, noted the system already prevented, detected and helped recover $11.7 billion in potential improper payments in fiscal year 2025.

Support was broadly bipartisan. Ranking Member Robert Garcia, D-Calif., backed multiple bills outright, and Democrats co-sponsored three. Opposition centered on two bills: one that critics said used vague criteria that could delay legitimate payments, and another that would move pandemic-era fraud oversight functions from their existing independent structure into the Treasury Department, a change some Democrats argued could weaken the arrangement’s effectiveness.

In the Senate, Iowa Republican Joni Ernst, chair of the Senate DOGE Caucus, unveiled a 17-bill Protecting American Taxpayers Act on April 22, projected by Ernst’s office to save $240 billion.

The nine House bills next advance to the full House floor.

Rep. Gary Palmer, R-Ala., a sponsor of one of the bills, offered a measured assessment of what the package could accomplish.

“This legislation puts us in a better position,” Palmer said. “It’s not going to solve it all, but it puts us in a much better position to advance on this, to try to eliminate the fraud as we go along.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Kiley, Wahab, Desmond hold onto leads in House districts

Kiley, Wahab, Desmond hold onto leads in House districts

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square There are still 37 days left for counting ballots, but Democrat Aisha Wahab has a big lead in the race for California's Congressional District 14....
GOP maintains leads despite congressional redistricting

GOP maintains leads despite congressional redistricting

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Republican candidates in congressional races throughout California’s redrawn districts still maintain razor-thin margins with all precincts partially reporting on Wednesday afternoon. Several Republican incumbents maintained...

WATCH: Trump acknowledges Iranian hardliners could jeopardize deal

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Still hopeful the U.S. and Iran can strike a deal on its nuclear program, President Donald Trump acknowledged Wednesday that the volatility inside Iran, not...
Advocates applaud, condemn SPLC wire fraud charges

Advocates applaud, condemn SPLC wire fraud charges

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Lawmakers and political action groups simultaneously applauded and condemned the U.S. Department of Justice’s new superseding indictment from a grand jury against the Southern Poverty...
Gallagher elected to serve rest of LaMalfa's term in Congress

Gallagher elected to serve rest of LaMalfa’s term in Congress

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California Assemblymember James Gallagher, R-East Nicolaus, has been elected to serve the rest of the late Republican U.S. Rep. Doug LaMalfa's current term. Gallagher is...
Four House Republicans rebel against Trump, help pass War Powers Resolution

Four House Republicans rebel against Trump, help pass War Powers Resolution

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square In the second congressional rebuke of the Trump administration's mission against Iran, the U.S. House passed a War Powers Resolution when four Republicans joined Democrats...
Hilton, Becerra remain ahead in California gubernatorial race

Hilton, Becerra remain ahead in California gubernatorial race

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square It still appears that Steve Hilton and Xavier Becerra will advance out of the June 2 primary and into the Nov. 3 general election for...
Budget math undercuts Bessent's deficit reduction pledge

Budget math undercuts Bessent’s deficit reduction pledge

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump's next budget projects federal deficits running more than double Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's stated target through at least 2029 while also calling...
State Police, IDOT break ground on $14M training facility

State Police, IDOT break ground on $14M training facility

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois State Police and the Illinois Department of Transportation broke ground on a joint venture to...
Republican data privacy bill scrutinized in congressional hearing

Republican data privacy bill scrutinized in congressional hearing

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Businesses and online privacy advocates hold diametrically opposing views on the wisdom of congressional Republicans’ plans to enact a nationwide framework for consumer data privacy...
World Cup: Economic impact equation includes displaced regular tourism

World Cup: Economic impact equation includes displaced regular tourism

By Kim JarrettThe Center Square Putting a dollar figure on the economic impact of the FIFA World Cup games scheduled for Atlanta is not an exact science, economists say. Eight...
Illinois Quick Hits: Johnson says comptroller running is 'no breaking news'

Illinois Quick Hits: Johnson says comptroller running is ‘no breaking news’

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says it’s no breaking news that Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza is running for...
Trump targets 60 economies with forced labor tariffs

Trump targets 60 economies with forced labor tariffs

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The U.S. Trade Representative proposed tariffs of 10% to 12.5% on imports from 60 economies, including Canada, Mexico, Japan and the European Union, arguing that...
Lawmakers probe $1.2B Ohio Medicaid fraud

Lawmakers probe $1.2B Ohio Medicaid fraud

By Christine Johnson and Andrew RiceThe Center Square Federal lawmakers called for greater fraud enforcement in the Medicaid Waiver Program on Wednesday, citing concerns over recent reports of $1.2 billion...
Debt burden, pensions burden Chicago Public Schools

Debt burden, pensions burden Chicago Public Schools

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The author of a new Civic Federation report says taking on more debt would be a death...