- United States
- Maine
- Letter
Trump’s 250-Statue “Garden of Heroes” Project Requires Real Oversight
To: Sen. Collins, Sen. King, Rep. Pingree
From: A constituent in Portland, ME
May 2
As your constituent, I urge immediate oversight of the National Garden of American Heroes project, which involves tens of millions in taxpayer funds, grant activity, a 250-statue plan, unresolved siting questions, and a compressed 2026 timetable. Before funds are obligated, contracts finalized, statues accepted, or site commitments made, Congress should require legal review, cost controls, public reporting, and oversight hearings. The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has announced grant opportunities of up to $200,000 per statue. Public reporting indicates that $40 million in Congressional funding has been made available. TAXPAYER MONEY REQUIRES LEGAL REVIEW Whatever one thinks of honoring American figures, Congress must ensure every legal step is followed before taxpayer funds are obligated. Review should cover legal authority, grants, procurement, site approval, environmental and historic-preservation review, conflicts of interest, public access, ownership, and maintenance. A RUSHED TIMELINE CANNOT OVERRIDE LEGAL REVIEW The compressed schedule creates risks of rushed spending, incomplete review, and long-term costs. A project with many statues, unresolved siting issues, and future maintenance obligations should not be rushed before legal review, site approval, fabrication, installation, and maintenance planning are complete. Congress should require a public report identifying officials, agencies, legal reviews, obligated funds, contracts or grants, future costs, and outstanding approvals. COST CONTROLS MUST COME BEFORE MORE SPENDING Public art can have civic value, but unmanaged projects can become expensive, opaque, and hard to reverse. Congress should require the least costly lawful approach, use existing federal sites where possible, cap administrative and installation costs, and limit maintenance obligations. No money should be shifted from cultural, educational, historical, or humanities programs without public explanation and clear legal basis. CONGRESS MUST ACT BEFORE THIS PROJECT ADVANCES Taxpayers may be locked into spending, contracts, site obligations, and maintenance costs before Congress and the public have basic answers. I urge you to take these steps: (1) Hold hearings in appropriate House and Senate committees. (2) Require the administration to identify the full legal authority. (3) Require a total cost estimate, including maintenance. (4) Require disclosure of contracts, grants, awards, and obligations already made. (5) Require disclosure of selected or considered sites, site control, and approvals still required. (6) Require safeguards against waste, conflicts, duplication, and favoritism in selecting artists, contractors, sites, and vendors. (7) Require review of lower-cost alternatives, including existing public spaces. (8) Condition or pause obligations until the administration provides a legal justification, cost estimate, site plan, approval plan, and schedule. Thank you.
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