Got any insight on these programs?
Here are NR’s top-ten favorite — which is to say, most scoff-worthy and absurd — examples of how the government wastes your time, energy, and hard-earned cash.
www.nationalreview.com
I work only for HHS for the most part and I don't recognize any of those projects. I'm not an expert in all things that the government spends money on. It's very common for the government to fund, through its many agencies, small pilot projects. Sometimes what seems silly has some bigger benefit. For instance, the funding of solar panels for beer might have been a pilot project where there was a return on investment, and they wanted to see. I mean, the feds are spending billions on subsidizing solar all over the nation. There is a real cost benefit to that. The fact that they once spent a tiny amount of money on beer production solar doesn't seem that weird to me.
The $5000 fiddler documentary was strange, but that might have been from the National Endowment of the Arts. There may have been a desire to preserve some history there. It's a tiny amount of money.
I notice they aren't showing the real wastes. None of those are wasteful government programs of any significance. The waste comes from other things.
For example, in my company, if our project officer changes their mind about how to proceed (often for good reason, adapting to the times), we are very accommodating to the extent possible. Rarely do we charge more. Go look at the work of tech and military contractors. They charge for nearly every change that takes place and often the cost of those changes exceeds the total spending on health prevention programs. So changing our minds and lacking clear direction wastes billions. A lot of time we are all asked to do things for unrealistically small amounts of money. The norm is to go after it, tell them it can't happen for that amount, but then once the contract is awarded, ask for more money to finish the task. In my field, there isn't enough money for that to amount to much, nor does it happen often. Yet in military contracts I see cost overruns all the time. Making a project deliverable a moving target is really bad for budgets and its really common.
We also have a lot of regulations that people hear about, complain about, and yet, if they aren't there, everyone wonders how this happens. For example, many of you are probably very upset about all the data breaches that have caused your personal information to be stolen. Well, guess how much it costs to shore up, secure and protect, and then authorize a data system for use in federal contracts. Anywhere from $100,000 to well over a million dollars. That isn't development costs, that just the cost of documenting and monitoring the system to meet federal requirements. These requirements are great, very important, anyone who thinks their tech companies are already doing it right are nuts, so I applaud having something, but the costs are crazy. It ruins projects. Huge waste of money. Yet I don't have a better solution. As someone who manages this process for my company, I can tell you, even the big companies like Amazon and Google routinely screw this up. They do better than most though, I'd call them 90% reliable. Small companies are more like 10% reliable. Recognizing the high costs and work, they reinterpret the security concepts in inappropriate ways.
In the last 6 months my companies business contact information (which is publicly available) was compiled into business databases that were then stolen and misused. It made us a target for hacking groups with excess phishing which then puts our sensitive data at risk. Those companies failed to follow even the remotest of best practices.
You might argue this is wasteful bureaucracy but the costs are no different in the private sector. Those who hire professionals to just follow best practices (not government regulations) spend a fortune. Everything we do with data systems, websites, software, etc. is costing billions of dollars more just to address security. CISSO's are among the highest paid C level executives in companies these days. Pay as you Go CISSO consulting services outpace IT costs by a factor of 2. In fact the nice thing about the government regulation is that it also regulates cost. You can't charge the government as much as you charge in the private sector, so we get a sizable discount.