Despite cuts to military spending enforced by Congress and the president, the Defense Department paid $5.4 million in taxpayer dollars, over a three-year period, to 14 NFL teams on ad campaigns promoting the military, reported the New Jersey Advance.
From 2011 to 2014, the Department of Defense paid $5.4 million to
NFL teams for salutes to the military and other advertising, with
$5.3 million coming from the National Guard, according to federal
contracts.
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The majority of the money under “advertising and marketing,”
according to NJ Advance, was spent by the Army and National
Guard and, in 2014, included the following payments: the Atlanta
Falcons received $114,500, the Buffalo Bills $150,000, the Green
Bay Packers $50,000, the Indianapolis Colts $200,000, the New
York Jets $115,000, the Pittsburgh Steelers $27,000 from the Air
Force, and St. Louis Rams $60,000.
The revelation first surfaced during Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake’s
“weekly roasting of egregious federal spending” and his
#PorkChop campaign, which last week “roasted” the New
Jersey Army National Guard for spending roughly $100,000 dollars
on advertising segments at a Jets home game.
“Between $97,500 and $115,000 [went] to the NFL’s New York
Jets for ‘advertising and promotion’ that fans may have assumed
were genuine gestures to thank and recognize soldiers,”
said Sen. Flake on his website.
Flake said the money went towards featuring pictures of New
Jersey Army National Guard (NJANG) soldiers as Home Town Heroes.
Their pictures were displayed, their names were announced by loud
speaker, and tickets for them and their friends or family were
granted from the club room.
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Another 10 soldiers attended the kickoff lunch in New York City,
with their pictures taken with the team and then used for
recruiting and retention purposes by the Guard. Another project
involved Jets players and soldiers building or refurbishing a new
playground or existing park, again for recruiting or retention
purposes.
Flake said most in the general public believe the segments were
heartfelt salutes by their hometown football team, not an
advertising campaign paid for with their money. The Guard
defended the arrangement as an effective recruitment tool for the
force, while the Jets pointed out numerous other ways in which
they support the military.
The items were listed under a Statement of Work as
“advertising and marketing” between the NFL and NJANG.
After an initial conversation between Flake’s office and the
NJANG, the Guard stopped returning his calls.