Government waste remains an enduring problem--paper pushers, nine-to-five attitudes, patronage jobs, unneeded bureaucracy, overlapping agencies, backward technologies, earmarks and all the rest. No doubt about it spending is out of hand.
One of the most overlooked places of government waste is not at the federal or state level. It's at the local level where in many places we have myriad forms of county, town/city/village governments with separate balkanized school districts all operating with various layers of officials doing the same jobs. And we all wonder why property taxes are so high in so many places.
Let's look at public schools. Within some counties there may be scores of separate school districts, each with their own high paid superintendent and staffs replicating policy, handling purchasing, managing HR, hiring various consultants, doing their own thing without any buying power or efficiencies gained from consolidating operations. Parents want to avoid losing control and influence in the schools where they send their kids, and school quality underlies property values in many places. But school taxes are out of sight partly because of all this bloated administration.
And tell me it makes sense to have all these separate county and village police departments, highway agencies, fire departments, etc., etc. Each has their own chief, uniforms, radio equipment, cars, and on and on--again with no administrative efficiencies. It's a great way to have lots of extra functionaries, equipment, and office space paid for by taxpayers.
In some major cities you even have multiple police agencies getting in each other's way. To Rudy Guiliani's credit, when mayor he consolidated separate transit and housing police departments into the New York police department. But New York Fire and Police departments still use separate radio systems and balk at merging emergency responder systems even after the shortcomings highlighted during 9/11.
New Jersey Gov. Corzine is one of the few government leaders taking on unnecessary local governments, arguing against providing state aid for smaller jurisdictions. We should pay attention to see if consolidating local government gains any taxpayer support. If it doesn't we have only ourselves to blame for paying higher taxes.
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