California officials have racked up a bill of more than $82,000 in travel expenses in the last 18 months, despite an April 2011 ban on non-essential travel, according to a CBS Sacramento investigation.
The investigation found California Department of Veterans Affairs executives have been charging California taxpayers even when their trips do not meet the definition of mission-critical. Among the worst offenders are CalVet Undersecretary Robin Umberg and department director Peter Gravett:
“As a taxpayer it makes me sick,” the insider told CBS13.
Umberg is just one of five top administrators at the department known as CalVet — all apparent members of an exclusive CalVet Travel Club.
Gravett, meanwhile, has racked up the highest expense report, CBS says:
Gravett has a home in Rolling Hills Estates in Southern California, and records indicate 75 percent of Gravett’s trips have been to attend events near his home.
Of his 58 trips CBS13 tallied up, 45 of them were non-mission critical as defined by Gov. Brown.
Brown’s mandate was intended to help curb the state’s out-of-control spending. California is currently running a $28 billion budget deficit, which is only part of its total debt of $34 billion.
To help fill the gap, Californians voted to raise taxes on themselves in November 2012, the first general tax to pass in the state in two decades. But according to the CBS investigation, those tax dollars may simply be funding more travel:
That insider told CBS13 executive travel at the department has increased — even under Gov. Brown’s executive order.