WASHINGTON – As they prepared to launch the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) in early 2011, Obama administration officials settled on its permanent headquarters: a vacant government building a block from the White House.
They planned to turn the former home of the defunct Office of Thrift Supervision into a showplace befitting the first new federal agency created in decades to focus specifically on protecting American consumers.
The 35-year-old building would be renovated to include a state-of-the-art public lobby with interactive kiosks and 21st-century learning centers, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., then a White House aide who headed the consumer bureau's organizing, said at the time.
But nearly three years later, the bureau's seven-story home remains just another drab concrete-and-glass Washington office building — stuck in the mid-20th century. A handful of posters amid large plants in the lobby tout the bureau's mission and vision. Outside, two simple green-and-white signs feature the agency's name and logo.
The $95 million cost of the renovation has become the latest rallying cry for Republicans still trying to restrict the bureau's power and alter its structure under the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law that created it.
"This is simply an egregious example of waste and Washington bureaucrats living a life much different from an average American," Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., said of the renovation costs. "It shows a complete disregard for the taxpayer."
Republicans have long chafed at Dodd-Frank, which nearly all of them opposed. The law left Congress with little say over the functioning of the powerful new bureau, which is funded through the Federal Reserve and does not have to go through the appropriations process.
Richard Cordray, the bureau's director, defended the headquarters renovation as "a significant one-time investment."