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S. 3110 Senate Real Bill Referred to Committee 117th Congress

Zombie Programs Survival Guide Act

They're Already Dead, but the Checks Keep Coming

Legislative Progress Introduced Oct 28, 2021
Senate Origin → Both Chambers → President
Senate (origin)
Introduced
2
Committee
3
Passed Senate
House
4
Received in House
5
Committee
6
Passed House
President
President
Absurdity Index
5/10
4-6Pork-Adjacent

Targets 'zombie' federal programs that have expired but keep getting funded anyway. Yes, the federal government has been funding dead programs to the tune of hundreds of billions. They just won't stay dead.

Sponsor
James Lankford R
Committee
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Introduced
Oct 28, 2021
Category
Government Reform

Party Balance

R
Primary Sponsor James Lankford
Republican
Cosponsors (1 total)
R:1

Key Milestones

2 total actions

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

Introduced in Senate.

Estimated Taxpayer Cost

$158,316

~2 hours of congressional session time at $79,158/hour

(535 members × $174k salary ÷ 147 session days ÷ 8 hours)

Simplified estimate based on salary costs only. Actual costs include staff, facilities, and lost productivity.

Satire notice: Spending figures, pork tracking, and editorial commentary below are satirical estimates for entertainment purposes. They are not official government cost analyses. Legislative history and vote records are real — verify at Congress.gov .

Pork Barrel Meter
$0
$0$100B$1T+
"Squeaky Clean"

Satirical estimate for entertainment purposes

Watch the Sausage Get Made

See how this bill transformed through 3 stages of the legislative process.

Deep Dive

Official CRS Summary

Requires the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to compile and publish a comprehensive list of all federal programs whose authorizations have expired but which continue to receive annual appropriations.

Read full summary on Congress.gov
All Legislative Actions 2
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Introduced in Senate.
Text Versions 1
Introduced in Senate

Congressional Research Service Summary

The Zombie Programs Survival Guide Act would require the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to compile and publish a comprehensive list of all federal programs whose authorizations have expired but which continue to receive annual appropriations. The bill would also require agencies to justify continued spending on unauthorized programs.

Bill Details

According to the Congressional Budget Office, hundreds of federal programs worth hundreds of billions of dollars in annual spending operate without current authorizations. These “zombie programs” persist because Congress funds them through the appropriations process without bothering to reauthorize the underlying legislation.

The bill would have required:

  • GAO to compile and maintain a public database of expired authorizations
  • Agencies to explain why continued funding is necessary
  • Annual updates to the “survival guide”
  • Public transparency about unauthorized spending

The Zombie Problem

The bill name is cheeky, but the problem is real. Programs can run for years or even decades past their authorization expiration dates. Examples include:

  • Certain Department of Justice programs (unauthorized since 2009)
  • Some State Department operations (unauthorized since 2003)
  • Various transportation programs (expired authorizations)

The CBO estimated that in FY 2021, over $400 billion was appropriated for expired authorizations. That’s nearly half a trillion dollars spent on programs Congress hasn’t formally reauthorized.

Why It Happens

The authorization-appropriations distinction creates this zombie army:

  • Authorization bills create programs and set funding limits
  • Appropriations bills actually provide the money

Authorizations typically expire after a few years, but appropriations committees can keep funding programs regardless. The result: programs shuffle along indefinitely without Congress ever formally reviewing whether they should continue.

The Irony

Sen. Lankford has made government waste a signature issue, publishing an annual “Federal Fumbles” report highlighting questionable spending. The Zombie Programs Survival Guide Act would have institutionalized this kind of oversight.

The bill died in committee — meaning the legislation designed to expose undead programs was itself killed. The zombie programs, meanwhile, continue to receive funding.

Source: This is a real bill introduced in the 117th Congress. View on Congress.gov.

Disclaimer: The absurdity score and editorial commentary above represent this site’s opinion. Bill details should be verified at Congress.gov.

This page is satirical commentary by AbsurdityIndex.org. Legislative history comes from public congressional records; spending estimates and "pork" figures are editorial and may not reflect official cost analyses. Absurdity scores are subjective editorial ratings. Verify all claims at Congress.gov