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The District and surrounding areas continue to rock and with the likely increase in Homeland Security, Defense, CyberDefense and Infrastructure spending it looks like the economy will only increase the speed at which it will grow.
Consider Boston Scientific, a powerhouse in the medical manufacturing industry. It develops medical devices, including cutting-edge heart stents, tubes that keep blood flowing through clogged or weak arteries. It discovered all sorts of new ways to boost profit margins by shaping federal policy.
Back in 2000, the company spent a mere $260,000 lobbying Congress, federal records show. Its lobbyists mostly talked to lawmakers about health care: medical manufacturing issues, Medicare reimbursement rates, privacy of health records, and congressional oversight of the Food and Drug Administration.
By the end of the decade, the company had broadened its horizons dramatically. "Government relations" now accounted for $2.6 million — a tenfold increase. On one quarterly disclosure report from 2010, Boston Scientific listed 35 different pieces of legislation on which it was lobbying.
They included proposals on patent reform, tax penalties for moving American jobs abroad, tax credits for research and development, rules for transporting lithium batteries, limits on workers' ability to form labor unions and federal regulation of certain types of financial derivatives.
It might not be a bad idea to put in a bid on a contract soon if you are buying a new home or condo.