
| Msg # 515 of 2619 on ZZNY4433, Thursday 9-28-22, 9:00 |
| From: RAGING HAL |
| To: ALL |
| Subj: Re: NYC Government Corruption and Incomp |
XPost: alt.government.abuse, nyc.general, nyc.politics XPost: nyc.transit From: RagingHAL.removethis@netscape.net In article <1110778535.215126.295670@l41g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>, AllstonParkingRefugee@hotmail.com says... > Raging HAL wrote: > > The problem with New York City government is complicity. Parts of the > > middle and upper layers of bureacracy value loyalty over competence, and > > the balancing mechanisms are ineffectual. > > > > Things could be worse if we had a partisan mayor. > > New York City and State really need some political heroes, who will > focus on fixing the things that matter, instead of wasting money on > sports megaprojects and driving us further and further into debt. How would one find a hero among a group of partisan politicans, who must return favors to those who put him in power? We are already beholden to the State and the Federal government for many things. Everyone says that he wants to fix things that matter. This Mayor has done a good job so far by getting rid of Board of Education, and implementing 311, among other things. A starting point towards "fixing things that matter" is improving the quality of the budget documents. The budget may tell how much was / is planning to be spent, but many project items have incomplete project definition and milestone information. There are few key performance indicators (if any) elsewhere that link performance, results, and dollars. Parts of the career bureaucracy press the ambiguity created by this reporting environment to their advantage, masked and aided by the sheer size and programmatic width of the City's $48.3 billion budget, the Mayor's loyalty to his employees, political popularism, and general public apathy. Other parts of the bureaucracy have a "If other people waste tax dollars, why can't I?" mentality at certain management levels. Improved financial transparency would lessen complicity in New York City government. It would be a step forward toward the elimination of the "pleading ignorance" defense (unpopular right now in private sector, but very prevalent in public sector) because it would give the public and the press a greater ability to ask "What did you do with our money?" --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) |
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