Congressional Perks: House members, staff get daycare, on-call doctor

Congressional Perks: House members, staff get daycare, on-call doctor

Spread the love

Job perks like an on-call doctor, on-site daycare and millions of dollars for food, beverages and bottled water sound like something offered to employees of big tech firms.

But actually, taxpayers are paying for those perks for members of Congress and often their staff, an investigation by The Center Square found.

Since the 2019 fiscal year, taxpayers paid about $30 million for the Office of Attending Physician, which handles medical emergencies but also offers members routine care for just $650 a year, an analysis of congressional data shows.

At least $10 million was spent on the House Childcare Center that provides staff and members below-market-rate childcare starting at $1,100 a month, data and interviews show. With Washington, D.C., having some of the highest daycare costs, the perk is popular and there is a waiting list.

U.S. House staff and members also are feasting on taxpayer dollars with $30 million spent on food and beverages, and $4.1 million just on bottled water since 2019, an analysis of 3 million lines of House spending data shows.

House leadership and the Republican conference alone spent $122,000 on Chick-fil-A over the past six years. Former U.S. Rep. Steven Palazzo, R-Miss., led individual congressional offices by ordering nearly $15,000 in chicken sandwiches and chips from the popular fast food venue, The Center Square analysis showed.

Gillian Mason, executive director of Healthcare-NOW, a Texas nonprofit that advocates for universal single-payer health coverage, said it is great that lawmakers are getting good care at taxpayer expense but the average taxpayer has to struggle to get medical treatment.

“One of the reasons it is so difficult to push health care reform for regular people is our reps and senators aren’t seeing the full force of what is happening out there because they’re isolated,” said Mason, who conceded she did not know about the attending physician perk in Congress until The Center Square told her about it. “They like their publicly funded health care … but won’t give it to anyone else.”

David Williams, president of the Taxpayers Protection Alliance, was outraged by the spending of taxpayer money for items that aren’t vital to the operations of Congress.

“It’s not Congress valuing their employees, it’s the taxpayer paying for this,” he said. “It’s easy to spend someone else’s money. I mean, that’s the easiest thing in the world to do.”

Williams said there was a spreadsheet shared around Congress listing all the free lunches available to staff and members so no one is starving on Capitol Hill with or without taxpayers chipping in.

Since no one in Congress – though some individual Congress members’ communications directors provided email statements – would agree to an interview on the record about their spending of taxpayer money, The Center Square asked the Bipartisan Policy Center to explain why it thinks some of the spending is necessary. The center studies government efficiency and worked with the House Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress to make suggestions to improve Congress.

J.D. Rackey, the center’s associate director of the Structural Democracy Project, said Congress works long and unusual hours and so staff need certain perks both to do their jobs and to hire good people.

“Congress has this problem of always losing its institutional memory and the idea is, if we want to be able to recruit and retain top talent, then we need to be able to pay them more and also have other professional development opportunities for staff and things like that, so that Congress can actually function the way it’s intended,” he told The Center Square. “Congress is a workplace, but it’s kind of a little bit of an unusual workplace.”

Samantha Carter, spokeswoman for the chief administrative officer in the House, wrote, “The CAO has no comment. Thank you.” when The Center Square asked for basic information about the spending on various perks. Carter, paid $173,000 by taxpayers last year, according to Legistorm, didn’t respond to subsequent emails.

Congressional members and staff do not get the federal employee health insurance and must sign up through Small Business Health Options Program, according to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management.

Big bucks to Politico, Bloomberg

Congressional members also are still spending millions in taxpayer funds for subscriptions to publications like Politico and Bloomberg despite Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency targeting similar subscriptions to left-leaning publications by USAID and other executive branches, the data shows.

Since 2019, Politico subscriptions by Congress cost taxpayers $14 million, Bloomberg received nearly $13 million, CQ Rollcall $5.4 million, and $2.5 million went to the National Journal, the data shows.

Punchbowl News received $1.5 million, Thompson-Reuters about $2 million and the New York Times about $870,000, data shows.

Williams conceded that Congress needs access to the news and information but questioned the cost.

“There’s got to be a happy medium here,” he said after The Center Square told him of the price tags. “There’s got to be a way where Congress can still remain informed, whether it’s Politico, Roll Call or whatever, but not spend tens of millions of dollars.”

Since 2019, taxpayers have paid for roughly $88 million worth of publications and reference materials for members of the House and their staff.

Rackey said the House is working on internal ways to track bills and access staff lists without using some of the Politico Pro tools.

“I do have good news on that front in that over the past few years, as the work of the modernization committee and the House digital service has been ramping up,” he said. “They’ve been building more systems internally … Congress is never going to limit, saying, ‘oh, you can’t spend this money on Politico Pro,’ but they have been building systems internally that might make it obsolete.”

Doctors, daycare and food

The in-house doctor was started in 1928 after a House member dropped dead and two collapsed, which was attributed to overwork, according to a Senate.gov write up of the history. The House then passed a resolution to have a Navy medical officer present when in session. In 1996, that perk cost $1.2 million but has since increased to more than $4 million a year, according to data from the American Governance Institute provided to The Center Square.

Williams said with telemedicine readily available and a plentiful supply of doctors around the D.C. area, the on-call physician’s office is “stuck in the past.” The on-call physician’s office staff did not respond to requests for comment.

When it comes to food, House leadership led the way in orders.

The Democratic Caucus and House speakers, a Democrat between 2019 and 2023 before Republicans took over, each spent $1.7 million since 2019 on food, beverages and meals. The offices of the minority leaders and majority whip spent $2.2 million combined. The Republican conference came in seventh in spending for food with about $686,000.

Those included both catering at the Capitol and meals while traveling.

The individual member with the most food, beverages and meals expenses in the past six years was U.S. Rep. Nanette Diaz Barragan, D-Calif., with $334,000 spent since 2019. Rounding out the top three individual office food spenders were U.S. Reps. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, and Al Green, D-Texas, whose offices each spent about $189,000 since 2019, data shows. None of those lawmakers’ staff responded to requests for comment.

When it came to Chick-fil-A, the speaker’s office spent $51,537.85, minority leader $36,308.56, majority whip $18,313.33 and Republican conference $16,517.28. Palazzo was next on the list with $14,585.27 and the Committee on Oversight and Accountability was sixth with $7,906.28 in chicken-sandwich spending, data shows.

Palazzo, who lost his primary reelection bid in 2022, said the Chick-fil-A tab was to feed about 300 to 400 high school seniors from his district each year who attended his youth leadership summit. He said that increased spending in the members representational allowance is absolutely vital to keeping congressional offices running and finding good staff.

“I think MRAs are absolutely important and need to increase as salaries and cost of labor increased,” he said, adding he opposed the 2011 Tea Party cuts.

He felt the spending on food was legitimate to help educate his youngest constituents.

Mason said lawmakers are disconnected from the problems of regular people because of the perks of office.

“Don’t sit in your ivory tower judging the system based on what you’re experiencing and your constituents aren’t getting the same care,” she told The Center Square.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

lincoln-way-school-district.3-scaled-e1750128024313

Lincoln-Way Plans New Turf Field at Central and Courts at West for 2026

Lincoln-Way 210 Board of Education Meeting | Jan. 15, 2026 Article Summary: District 210 administrators presented a $4.5 million capital projects plan for Summer 2026, headlined by a new auxiliary...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Frankfort Township Road Commissioner Warns County Panel Against Low-Speed Vehicles

Will County Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee Meeting | Jan. 13, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee moved forward with a ban on low-speed vehicles on...
GOP hopefuls seek support, blast Pritzker at IL gubernatorial candidate forum

GOP hopefuls seek support, blast Pritzker at IL gubernatorial candidate forum

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – All four Illinois Republican gubernatorial candidates have no shortage of criticism for current Gov. J.B. Pritzker. 2022...
Illinois lawmaker questions IDHS over years-long data breach

Illinois lawmaker questions IDHS over years-long data breach

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois lawmaker slammed the state agency as “incompetent” after the Department of Human Services revealed...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Draft County Federal Agenda Opposes Sharing Medicaid Patient Data with ICE

Article Summary: A proposed federal policy platform presented to the Will County Board takes a hard line against a federal agreement that allows Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to access...
mokena fire district #2 logo graphic.5

Mokena Fire Fleet Undergoes Major Repairs; Station 2 Upgrades Near Completion

Mokena Fire Protection District Meeting | December 9, 2025 Article Summary: Fire district officials provided a comprehensive update on fleet maintenance, including significant repairs to Truck 92 and Engine 92....
Will County Logo Graphic

Northern Builders Development Brings Changes to Laraway and Gougar Roads in New Lenox

Will County Board Meeting | January 15, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board approved access permits for a new development by Northern Builders at the intersection of Laraway Road...

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee for January 6, 2026

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | January 6, 2026 Meeting SummaryThe Will County Board Public Works & Transportation Committee met on Tuesday, January 6, 2026, to discuss...
Sarah McCarthy

Mokena Police Staffer Sworn in as President of State Association

Article Summary: Sarah McCarthy, an Administrative Assistant with the Mokena Police Department, has been sworn in as the 2026 President of the Illinois Law Enforcement Administrative Professionals Association (IL-LEAP). IL-LEAP...
Will County Board Graphic.03

County Board Debates Legislative Agendas; State Agenda Passes, Federal Agenda Sent Back

Will County Board Meeting | January 15, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board engaged in a vigorous and at times confusing debate over its 2026 legislative priorities, ultimately passing...
lincoln way school district 210 logo.1

District 210 Updates Online Course Policy and Increases Summer School Fees

Lincoln-Way 210 Board of Education Meeting | Jan. 15, 2026 Article Summary: The Board of Education approved an increase in summer school fees and clarified policies regarding online coursework for...
Congratulations to Corporal Kurtis Ingram

Corporal Ingram completes elite leadership training program

Corporal Kurtis Ingram has successfully completed the School of Police Staff and Command (SPSC) at Northwestern University’s Center for Public Safety. The SPSC is an intensive 10-week program focused on...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Executive Committee for January 8, 2026

Will County Board Executive Committee Meeting | January 8, 2026 Overall Meeting SummaryThe Will County Board Executive Committee met on Thursday, January 8, 2026, tackling a heavy agenda that included...
Fire-Ambulance-Rescue-Logo

Automatic Sprinklers Contain Industrial Fire in New Lenox

Article Summary: New Lenox firefighters responded to a machinery fire at a facility on Berens Drive early Tuesday afternoon, where the building's fire suppression system prevented the blaze from spreading....
mokena fire protection district logo graphic.6

Mokena Firefighters Contain Basement Fire on Revere Circle

Article Summary: Mokena firefighters responded to a residential fire on Revere Circle early Wednesday afternoon, quickly containing the blaze to a single unit without any reported injuries. Mokena Fire Incident...