- one big thing was government procurement credit cards. A fine idea, except someone forgot to include oversight functions to catch fraud, abuse, and screwups. Those had to be added later, after news reports which gave bureaucrats a bad name.
- another big thing was flattening the bureaucracy, reducing the number of layers. I'd like to see a GAO analysis comparing now with 20 years ago. My bet is there's been no real change.
- a small thing--getting rid of agricultural programs. As I remember, he got the honey loan program and the wool/mohair incentive programs. Last I checked, Congress had replaced both.
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, February 28, 2013
Al's Back Reinventing Government
Government Executive reports Al Gore will speak at a 20th anniversary event of his "Reinventing Government". Though I voted for the guy, 3 times actually, I didn't and don't think much of his initiative. Why?
Uphill Both Ways
Memory is fallible. I posted a comment on the Wonkblog yesterday recalling the 1986 Gramm-Rudman-Hollings reductions. Easy to do, since it was agony for us. All fine, except I wrote it was a 5.6 percent reduction. Did a little searching this morning; it was actually 4.3 percent.
So memory is fallible, but I know I walked to and from school uphill both ways.
So memory is fallible, but I know I walked to and from school uphill both ways.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
COBOL and Binary
Back in the dark ages when I learned COBOL, the prerequisite was a course on computer basics, including number systems, binary, hex, etc.. Which is why I unabashedly steal this joke from James Fallows:
"There are only 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't."
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Least Surprising News of the Day
"Agriculture Has Slipped from DC's Radar" is the headline on a Politico article.
Innovation and Productivity
The head of Yahoo is making the news because she's telling her employees to come to work; they can't work from home. Apparently there's research showing there's more innovation when employees meet face-to-face, have casual interactions, etc. (I don't remember which company, Bell Labs, Apple, who, which designed its building to maximize such interactions. On the other hand working from home increases employee satisfaction, enables you to hire better employees, maximizes productivity, etc.
My only contribution: face time and casual conversation is important. That's also a reason for meetings, national conferences or just meetings in the FSA context. Perhaps my best contribution to FSA was when I overheard Solomon Ramirez talk about his work with DFU (an early System/36 utility software package) when we were all imbibing after a national meeting.
[update: see article on Google's building]
My only contribution: face time and casual conversation is important. That's also a reason for meetings, national conferences or just meetings in the FSA context. Perhaps my best contribution to FSA was when I overheard Solomon Ramirez talk about his work with DFU (an early System/36 utility software package) when we were all imbibing after a national meeting.
[update: see article on Google's building]
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Parker on the Past and USDA Sensitivity Training
Kathleen Parker, the conservativish columnist for the Post, writes mocking the sensitivity training at USDA. I understand the mockery, but she grew up in a very different America than I did, when she writes:
There was a time when such lessons, otherwise known as manners, were taught in every American home [emphasis added]. Said homes were not privileged in most cases but they were occupied by a mother and father who, though they perhaps did not adore each other every waking moment, were at least committed to the mutual task of rearing thoughtful, well-behaved children.The WASPy upper middle class was taught to be considerate of people's feelings; we would use "Negro" rather than "colored", at least to people's faces, and the "n-word" was reserved for the locker room. But those "good manners", if they were such, are not sensitivity to others.
When I Don't Post, My Page Views Go UP?
Having been traveling for a few days, I find the increase in page views amazing. I don't really want to face the logic of the message the statistics are sending me: my audience [sic] wants me to blog less. I take back everything I've written about wanting government websites to publish their statistics.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Even Slower Blogging and the Horde of Dollars
Tom Friedman, the columnist for the Times, is much richer and smarter than I. But today he wrote about Apple's "horde" of dollars, a mistake which provides a lovely image: convert Attila the Hun's horde into dollar bills on horses. (He meant "hoard").
It always pleases me when big shots screw up and I can feel superior to them.
Having said that, we'll be traveling for a few days so my blogging is likely to be nonexistent
It always pleases me when big shots screw up and I can feel superior to them.
Having said that, we'll be traveling for a few days so my blogging is likely to be nonexistent
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Friday, February 15, 2013
USDA Sensitivity Training Gets Attention
From the right, see this Daily Caller article. It brings back memories of my past sensitivity training sessions. As described, it sounds as if the instructor kept the session lively enough so no one went to sleep. I've mixed feelings about the worth of such session. On the one hand I feel superior to them: of course I'm above average in sensitivity so why would I need training (a Lake Woebegone trait Mr. Keillor skipped), on the other hand occasional bits stick--I remember being told by the instructor in our ADA training that everyone was only temporarily able-bodied.
It's easy to mock this stuff, and hard to do it well.
It's easy to mock this stuff, and hard to do it well.
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