The Seven Smallest Earmarks

Here are the smallest North Carolina earmark requests:

JOB HELP. U.S. Rep. Howard Coble requested $25,000 for the Sandhills Teen Challenge, a Carthage nonprofit, to help former drug users find work.

LIFE AFTER PRISON. Rep. Larry Kissell asked for $35,000 for Project Fresh Start to help former prison inmates "live a productive life."

PROSTATE CANCER. Rep. David Price requested $75,000 for the N.C. Institute of Minority Economic Development to run prostate cancer screenings.

SCHOOL SECURITY. Rep. Kissell asked for $94,242 for the Cabarrus County Sheriff's Department to provide school resource officers.

VARIOUS (TIE). Rep. Mike McIntyre asked for $100,000 each to restore slave quarters and perform beach renourishment. Rep. Price asked a special court on child support.

Price requested $265m in earmarks

U.S. Rep. David Price is seeking $264.6 million in earmarks.

The Chapel Hill Democrat released his list of 89 requested appropriations for the federal budget on his Web site. 

The largest request is $28 million for Reading is Fundamental, a Washington-based nonprofit that encourages children to read. The smallest is $75,000 for a prostate cancer initiative through the N.C. Institute of Minority Economic Development.

Other notable earmarks:

* The National Textile Center at N.C. State, $16.5 million

* Adding Rocky Fork to the Cherokee National Forest, $13.5 million.

* A virtual reality center on urban warfare and disaster response at UNC-Chapel Hill, $3.7 million.

* An internal wiki system for government intelligence sharing, $2 million.

* A beaver management program that was criticized by Sen. John McCain, $300,000.

In 2008, Price was the top member of the state's delegation for earmark requests, in part because he is the only member of the House Appropriations Committee, which allocates federal tax dollars. 

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