Being old, I've no need to sign up for Obamacare, so I've no personal experience with the website. From what I've read, however, apparently the "navigators" who are helping people sign up are using the same software/website as those who are signing up on their own. If so, that seems wise to me. It's hard enough to keep one set of software operational and supporting the program. It would be much harder to keep two sets up-to-date: one set for the public and one set for the government employees. It would be particularly challenging when you have legislation passed late which requires changes to implement.
I don't know how MIDAS is set up, but I hope they've followed the same approach.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Monday, December 23, 2013
Is BLS Missing the Food Movement?
Government Executive has a piece on the Bureau of Labor Statistics predictions of job growth by occupation over the next 10 years. It's interesting, but BLS projects that jobs in agriculture will shrink (-3.4 percent), the only occupation for which that's true. However, the piece revisits the predictions from 2002. It turns out they had predicted a 2 percent drop in ag jobs, but the reality was a 7.4 percent increase!
That might tie into the increase the Ag census has seen in the number of farms, which in turn might be driven by the popularity of organic and niche farm products, otherwise known as the food movement. I can see it growing, particularly as Whole Foods (we own shares) does more linking with local producers and moves into smaller cities, like Boise, Idaho.
That might tie into the increase the Ag census has seen in the number of farms, which in turn might be driven by the popularity of organic and niche farm products, otherwise known as the food movement. I can see it growing, particularly as Whole Foods (we own shares) does more linking with local producers and moves into smaller cities, like Boise, Idaho.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Chicoms Were Also Conspiracy Theorists
Apparently the Chinese thought the Vietnamese willingness to meet for peace talks led to the assassination of MLK:
From a Lawyer, Guns and Money post:
From a Lawyer, Guns and Money post:
And this leads Communist leaders to say hurtful things to one another. The fascinating moving parts:
- The apparent belief of Zhou Enlai that the MLK assassination was orchestrated by the U.S. government.
- The notion that accepting the idea of peace talks gave the U.S. government the leeway it needed to carry out the assassination.
- The notion that, even if this were true, Le Duan would care enough about MLK one way or the other to change policy.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Our Weak Government: David Brooks on
From a long interview with David Brooks by the U of Chicago paper
Also:
I think even he [Obama] came to office thinking the presidency had a lot more power than it does. I would say that’s a constant of my journalistic world: every president I’ve covered has learned that the office is in some ways much weaker than they anticipated. In some ways they still think it has some power, but it’s not an awesomely powerful office.You'd think some politician would read Neustadt.
Also:
Humor is more or less a young person’s game. You get a little more ponderous and earnest as you get older.Gosh, I hope not. I was prematurely ponderous and earnest as a youth.
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Land History and Precision Agriculture
Via Marginal Revolution, here's Blake Hurst in The American (AEI) writing about precision agriculture. He argues that automated equipment will enable a big jump in the size of farms. Sounds logical, but...
In FSA I used to be responsible for reconstitutions, the rules on how to make history follow the land as new owners and new operators changed the configuration of farms. For years I dodged getting into it because it seemed more complex than I wanted to grapple with, but then I gradually succumbed and found it interesting.
With that background I started to muse about the effect of precision agriculture on changes in farms. As Hurst describes it, a good part of precision farming is building up a base of detailed data associated with each square meter (or other unit) of land, base extending over several years worth of plantings, fertilizations, and harvestings, data including weather and soil conditions.
So if I farm a section for several years and build up this database, what happens when I die and someone else takes over. Does the landowner own the data or is it the operator? (I'm not clear whether the farmer is storing the data in the cloud, or in a device which he owns and controls.) Can there be provisions for transferring the data from one operation to another?
In FSA I used to be responsible for reconstitutions, the rules on how to make history follow the land as new owners and new operators changed the configuration of farms. For years I dodged getting into it because it seemed more complex than I wanted to grapple with, but then I gradually succumbed and found it interesting.
With that background I started to muse about the effect of precision agriculture on changes in farms. As Hurst describes it, a good part of precision farming is building up a base of detailed data associated with each square meter (or other unit) of land, base extending over several years worth of plantings, fertilizations, and harvestings, data including weather and soil conditions.
So if I farm a section for several years and build up this database, what happens when I die and someone else takes over. Does the landowner own the data or is it the operator? (I'm not clear whether the farmer is storing the data in the cloud, or in a device which he owns and controls.) Can there be provisions for transferring the data from one operation to another?
Friday, December 13, 2013
COBOL Lives!
So says the FCW, in this article.
What really surprised me was not the continuing use of COBOL in legacy applications, but the fact that a quarter of colleges still teach COBOL and for some it's still a required subject. I would have thought that COBOL was so old-fashioned and unappealing that it would have died out in the realms of academia, even though there's still a need for people who know it.
For legacy work, I suspect there's still things where it works pretty well. Consider the example of payrolls, one of the early applications of computers. You do payrolls every two weeks, or every month, which means batch processing must work okay. No need for fancier languages which support objects or whatever is today's hot concept.
I started programming in COBOL back when I was disillusioned with my bureaucratic career. Then, after I stayed in the bureaucracy, I got quite good with WordPerfect macros, back before the WYSIWYG days. Finally I did some Javascript in the mid 90's. But these days Python seems well beyond me, and not something useful. It's a shame; there was a rush of satisfaction every time you completed something and ran a test and it worked correctly. Of course, that rush was usually followed by the frustration of failure when the next test bombed.
Did anyone notice that Google had a tribute to Rear Admiral Grace Hopper, one of the mothers of COBOL?
What really surprised me was not the continuing use of COBOL in legacy applications, but the fact that a quarter of colleges still teach COBOL and for some it's still a required subject. I would have thought that COBOL was so old-fashioned and unappealing that it would have died out in the realms of academia, even though there's still a need for people who know it.
For legacy work, I suspect there's still things where it works pretty well. Consider the example of payrolls, one of the early applications of computers. You do payrolls every two weeks, or every month, which means batch processing must work okay. No need for fancier languages which support objects or whatever is today's hot concept.
I started programming in COBOL back when I was disillusioned with my bureaucratic career. Then, after I stayed in the bureaucracy, I got quite good with WordPerfect macros, back before the WYSIWYG days. Finally I did some Javascript in the mid 90's. But these days Python seems well beyond me, and not something useful. It's a shame; there was a rush of satisfaction every time you completed something and ran a test and it worked correctly. Of course, that rush was usually followed by the frustration of failure when the next test bombed.
Did anyone notice that Google had a tribute to Rear Admiral Grace Hopper, one of the mothers of COBOL?
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
The Benefits of Decentralized Government
One of my pet ideas is the weakness of the federal government, but it turns out that in at least one respect, we're too centralized. The Office of Personnel Management makes the snow decisions for the feds in the DC area. In Canada, there's no central decision making body according to this Gov. Exec. rerun of a Wired report. Seems to me some decentralization in the US might work better--let the USGS in Reston have a different decider than SSA in MD.
De Minimus Benefits
From Tuesday's Farm Policy:
" Some states, such as New York, will make a $1 Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program payment to low-income people in order to automatically qualify them for the maximum federal food stamps Standard Utility Allowance for 12 months.We used to have a "de minimus" provision. I'm ashamed to admit I don't remember in what connection, but the idea basically was that something was too small to worry about. A similar idea applied to certain small claims, whether it was $10 or $25 I forget. But why shouldn't the government have a blanket policy: no payments, no claims if the amount is less than $20 or whatever?
“According to a source tracking the farm bill talks, the Congressional Budget Office has estimated that raising the minimum energy subsidy states would be required to make to $20 would be enough to disincentivize states from utilizing the loophole, potentially saving the government $8 billion over 10 years.”
Monday, December 09, 2013
Community Gardeners Are No Angels
Grist links to an article on some problems some community gardens face. Our garden too has locks on the gates and people complain of stolen produce and tools.
The White House Garden
I've failed to keep up with the White House garden. Maintenance on it was shut down during the government shutdown in November. They've had a harvest of fall vegetables, installed some hoop houses, and now are facing ice and snow as the storm moves through. Don't remember whether they did hoop houses last year. A few of our fellow gardeners in the community garden are using hoop houses; my wife and I aren't.
The swiss chard won't last through a hard freeze being outside a hoop house; the kale will be fine for spring. Not sure what she means by the rosemary being gone--that should survive the winter. Cilantro will be okay in the spring before it bolts.
The swiss chard won't last through a hard freeze being outside a hoop house; the kale will be fine for spring. Not sure what she means by the rosemary being gone--that should survive the winter. Cilantro will be okay in the spring before it bolts.
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