Waste in Federal Government

I'm going to keep this thread to detail all the waste in Federal Government. Feel free to add yours - from the right or the left. The topic comes up often, and moonbats like Ricter and Futurecurrents will tell you the government is efficient or that the cost of rooting out waste/fraud is more than the benefit, or that there just isn't all that much fraud.

Not every example will be fraudulent or specific "waste" but ways we could save money that should be obvious to anyone.

First up is today's special:

Feds to Spend $194K to Study Skill-Building for Male Sex Workers in Peru

The federal government has awarded the University of California Los Angeles $193,989 in taxpayer funds to study skill-building as HIV prevention for male sex workers in Peru.

The grant was issued by the National Institute of Mental Health, a part of the National Institutes of Health, and proposes “a pilot study for a group that has been neglected in the Peruvian HIV epidemic, namely male sex workers (fletes).”

Men having sex with men in Peru have a “high burden of HIV” at 10 to 15 percent, compared to male sex workers, who have a 23 percent prevalence, researchers found.

According to the grant, recent HIV and sexually transmitted infection (STI) research in Peru has focused on “possible bridge populations” that include: heterosexually identified men, male sex partners of pregnant women, male clients of female sex workers, and men who have sex with men and women.

“However, there has been limited epidemiologic research and no prevention research focusing on fletes,” the grant said. “Our research has demonstrated that fletes are an important component of the Peruvian HIV epidemic with specific social, cultural, and behavioral characteristics that place them at high risk for acquisition and transmission of HIV and STIs.”

“Fletes engage in survival sex work for a very low wage and with significant pressure to accept all of the primarily male clients that solicit their services, limited ability to negotiate condom use, and low rates of condom use,” the grant added.

The grant recipient conducted research on the lives, sexual behaviors, and HIV/STI risk of two subpopulations in Lima – “higher-income fletes in more affluent neighborhoods and low-income fletes from the city’s urban core.”

The research revealed 23 percent of low-income “fletes” had HIV and 22 percent had syphilis. Thus, they concluded there was “an urgent need for HIV prevention interventions that specifically address the issues” that fletes face.

The study will analyze the “feasibility and acceptability of a multi-service skill-building center on the transmission of HIV and sexually transmitted infections among low-income male sex workers” in Peru.

“The Center will provide a space for fletes to engage with each other and develop a sense of shared community while accessing: (1) fundamental life needs, (2) safe socialization opportunities, (3) basic healthcare, (4) HIV/STI risk reduction activities, (5) personal development activities, and (6) vocational training,” the grant abstract said.

The grant specifies three aims – the first of which is “to estimate the effectiveness of the intervention for reducing incidences of HIV and syphilis among fletes, the proportion of fletes’ income derived from sex work, and the proportion of fletes reporting unprotected sex with clients.”

Secondly, researchers aim “to assess the (a) feasibility and (b) acceptability of the intervention and identify factors that hinder or facilitate implementation.”

And third, the project aims “to test the effectiveness of strategies (a) to avoid contamination through participation of the comparison group in the intervention and (b) to retain all participants for follow-up in a longer-term study.”

The project started on Aug. 1, 2013 and will be completed by April 30, 2015. The budget start date was May 1, 2014 and will end on April 30, 2015.

Attempts to contact Thomas Coates, project leader for the grant, for comment were unanswered by press time.
 
Top 10 Examples of Government Waste in 2013

Among them...

5. Booze and crystal for the State Department: $5.4 million. The State Department went on a bender the week before the government shutdown, purchasing $5 million of “exquisite” crystal glassware to presumably drink the $400,000 in booze they purchased in 2013.


3. Seven-figure stack of rocks at the London Embassy: $1 million. The American Embassy in London will be receiving a granite sculpture from an artist “whose work resembles stacked piles of paving stones,” according to the Daily Mail.


2. Artwork for Veterans Affairs offices: $562,000. The Department of Veterans Affairs went on a spending spree during “use it or lose it” season, purchasing over half a million in artwork and millions in furniture in a single week.
 
http://posey.house.gov/wasteful-spending/

Just one of the listed examples:

Alaskan town home to airport with no planes and harbor with no road

Remember Alaska's infamous bridge to nowhere? Well, another town in "Seward's Icebox" has upped the ante after building an unused $75.5 million airport and a $29 million harbor with no roads connecting to the town.

The Aleutians community of Akutan is home to just over 1,000 seasonal workers and 75 full-time residents, though only about five boats, as KUCB reports.

"I personally own half a vessel," Akutan mayor Joseph Bereskin told the publication. Though, for the record, Bereskin says he supported construction of the harbor and hopes it will grow in popularity once a connecting road is eventually built.

The Army Corps of Engineers, using $29 million in federal stimulus money, built the harbor.

"Yes. It's not normal," Steve Boardman, head of the Army Corps of Engineers civil projects division, told KUCB. "And it has prevented the construction of harbors in the past, when that supporting infrastructure is not there."

There have been tentative plans to build a connecting road for years, but Jacob Stepetin of the Akutan Traditional Council says the project still lacks financial commitments from the state and federal governments and local businesses.

And along with the missing road, the harbor is also currently lacking electricity, running water, and, well, boats. The hope is that along with possessing "strategic importance," the harbor will be used by Trident Seafoods, the largest seafood processor in the Aleutians.

The inactive harbor now shares Akutan territory with the nearby airport. Residents are required to stake a six-mile hovercraft ride to reach the airstrip, which is located on a nearby island. However, there are no airlines currently serving the airport.

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/alaskan-town-home-airport-no-planes-harbor-no-230803871.html
 
WTF Headline Of The Day: US Forfeits $480 Million Loss On Nigerian Dictator Scam

While we assumed everyone knew that correspondence from Nigerian leaders requesting funds were always fradulent, it appears the US government decided the opportunity was worth the risk...

*U.S. FORFEITS OVER $480 MILLION STOLEN BY FORMER NIGERIAN DICTATOR
*DOJ SAYS MONEY WAS STOLEN BY FORMER NIGERIAN DICTATOR
*DOJ: $480M IN CORRUPTION PROCEEDS FROM SANI ABACHA

The DoJ describes it as "the largest forfeiture ever." Oh well - we hear Rwanda is looking to issue some bonds..."We might go for double that or more, up to $1 billion."
 
Without even researching or grabbing my calculator. I'm confident our federal budget could be balanced over night. If only they would end the wonton waste.
 
Without even researching or grabbing my calculator. I'm confident our federal budget could be balanced over night. If only they would end the wonton waste.

I hate it when they waste wontons. Especially the ones filled with cream cheese.
 
I hate it when they waste wontons. Especially the ones filled with cream cheese.

Ah, the Grammarian strikes again!

grammarian.jpg


Grammarian usually has little to contribute to a discussion and possesses few effective weapons. To compensate, he will point out minor errors in spelling and grammar. Because of Grammarian's obvious weakness most Warriors ignore him.
 
State Dept spends $545,000 on “testimony coach” to teach how to evade Congressional grilling

When you appear before Congress, your job is to “tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you, God.” It’s really not all that hard. But telling the truth isn’t something the Obama administration likes to do in public. That’s why the State Department just spent half a million dollars on a “testimony coach” to train their employees to evade tough questions during Congressional hearings.

from Washington Times:

After suffering through a striking number of rough grillings at the hands of Congress, State Department officials have approved a contract worth up to $545,000 to help train themselves for how to brief lawmakers and to testify at hearings.

The contract with Orlando, Florida-based AMTIS, Inc. includes classes entitled “Communicating with Congress: Briefing and Testifying” and pays for one-on-one sessions to hold a mock hearing with questioners playing the role of lawmakers asking hard questions of the would-be witnesses.

Over the last two years, department officials have stumbled through hearings on their handling of the 2012 terrorist attack in Benghazi, been berated for failing to be able to lay out a new legal framework for the war on terror and seen one top campaign bundler for President Obama admit he’d never traveled to Argentina — the country he’d been nominated to serve in as U.S. ambassador.

State Department officials did not respond to questions about the contract by deadline on Thursday.
 
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