The recovered funds had been initially assigned to the housing and urban development department (HUD) for financial services administration, but were deemed unnecessary due to operational inefficiencies.
“$1.9 billion of HUD money was just recovered after being misplaced during the Biden administration due to a broken process. These funds were earmarked for the administration of financial services, but were no longer needed,” DOGE announced on X.
Working collaboratively, HUD secretary Scott Turner and DOGE resolved the situation, resulting in the funds being de-obligated and released for alternative use by the US Treasury.
This development followed Turner’s previous day’s announcement regarding the establishment of a DOGE oversight committee within HUD to strengthen financial accountability.”We will be very detailed and deliberate about every dollar spent in serving tribal, rural, and urban communities across America,” Turner stated in his X video post. He additionally mentioned his team’s recent discovery of $260 million in potential savings.DOGE’s ongoing scrutiny of government expenditure has identified several questionable spending patterns. Recently, EPA administrator Lee Zeldin reported cancelling a $50 million environmental justice grant, approved during Biden’s tenure, which was allocated to an organisation promoting “climate justice travels through a Free Palestine.”
Zeldin also highlighted that under Biden’s administration, the EPA transferred $160 million in full payment to a Canadian electric bus manufacturer, which subsequently went bankrupt. The payment was made in advance rather than in instalments linked to bus production, raising questions about financial oversight.
These findings highlight DOGE’s significance in identifying and addressing financial inefficiencies whilst promoting accountable government spending.