CSotD: It’s good to be the watchdog
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The blossoming scandal over the General Services Administration's fun-filled 2010 convention in Las Vegas was served up to cartoonists on a platter, by virtue of the GSA hiring a clown and fitting themselves out in silly costumes and then video recording the results.
Matt Wuerker is one of several commentators who seem to have caught on that the GSA is not simply an agency of go-fers who rent offices and purchase paperclips for everyone else, but (thereby, but also specifically by stated mission) the watchdog for government spending.
Probably doesn't hurt that his home base has been on the story. Politico reported that the cost of these lavish even-year gatherings "soared from $93,000 in 2004 to $323,855 in 2006," a leap of barely under 250 percent.
This puts it square in the middle of NannyBooBooLand, where one side can shout "You started it!" and the other can shout, "You failed to notice it!"
Because they're not apt to shout, "Yes, but we were in charge of tanking the economy — you're the ones in charge of fixing it!"
Cooler heads have noted that it's more scandalous for this to emerge in a time of crisis than it would have been back in the second Bush administration, which is true but not a whole lot more compelling than the argument that it shouldn't have happened then, either. Two wars, tax cuts, you remember the deal.
And the fact that the conference was planned and approved under the previous tenants does not negate the fact that it is perfectly reasonable to expect the new folks to walk in, look around and say, "What the hell's going on here?"
What I find most disturbing is that this agency creates the procurement templates for all the other agencies and you assume that, as part of their ongoing duties, they would have a good sense of what is being spent on similar events by those other agencies.
Barring an actual corrupt backroom decision that "we can do whatever we want because we're the only ones who see the receipts," you have to assume that somewhere around 2005, someone saw what the others were doing and decided it was okay to ramp things up.
Bloomberg is reporting just that, and then looking at wretched excess in the private sector as well, in an appallingly wonderful article.
It's particularly hard to watch this from the vantage point of an industry that has been hard hit by the combination of changing media and tough overall spending patterns.
Which is to say that even journalists who still have jobs are aware of the many who do not.
Except possibly for those hot house flowers in the Beltway, who see nothing wrong with taking a red carpet stroll on camera each year at the annual White House Lapdogs Dinner or whatever the hell they call it.
Meanwhile, I did my taxes this weekend and either Turbotax has decided to safeguard its users with belt and suspenders or the IRS is getting pickier, but I had to go back and refigure some expenses because the categories were much more specific and, within those categories, there were questions to be answered.
A couple of years ago, I simply tossed my laptop into a general office expenses category, along with the software I had to buy for it. This year, those not only had to be listed separately, but I was asked what date I bought my new laptop and what percentage of its use was for business.
(That last question was easier to answer than it probably should be. A number of years ago, I asked one of my sons if he thought I was becoming a workaholic. He answered, "You mean to the point where it interferes with your social life?" and then started laughing.)
Anyway, I don't think the GSA asked its conference planning committee the kinds of detailed questions the IRS was asking me, and this is one time when a comparison between government spending and personal budgeting has some validity: "How much are you spending and how do you justify it?" is a reasonable question on either level.
And now, here is your moment of zen:
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