PinkSlip advocates this position often. Why is that? Does he consider FEMA a portfolio addition too?? American jobs outsourced for profit......is there nothing he DOESN'T think should be outsourced??
PinkSlip advocates this position often. Why is that? Does he consider FEMA a portfolio addition too?? American jobs outsourced for profit......is there nothing he DOESN'T think should be outsourced??
EVERYBODY call in sick tomorrow, then watch real change begin. Hit the corporate fat cats directly in the pocketbook.
I see no one can refute or argue this point.
Good call.
EVERYBODY call in sick tomorrow, then watch real change begin. Hit the corporate fat cats directly in the pocketbook.
Sorry... did you say something?
my junk is ugly
Outsourcing certain government agencies is a good thing. Am I on board for outsourcing FEMA; I don't know? I am not knowledgeable enough on the workings of FEMA to say.
There is too much “red tape” for government agencies to operate effectively, the private sector can avoid red tape and get it done more efficiently and at a lower cost. This cannot be a bad thing when looking at our budget crisis.
Examples on how the Federal Government has failed and should outsource include The Post Office and AMTRAX. Other examples on big government failures are easy to spot, the biggest being Social Security, followed by Medi Care and Medi Cade. If the latter two worked well there would not be private business advertising to assist with those programs.
What I do know is there are several nonprofit organizations that are responsive and far more flexible than FEMA. Convoys of Hope and the Red Cross are examples, they do not burden the tax payer but rely on the community to pitch in and help. Additionally, and this is a question, what does FEMA provide that the National Guard (NG) cannot?
The NG has engineers and equipment, man power, and supplies to include food and shelter that are already payed for. In my opinion FEMA money would be better spent equipping the NG to handle these issues. In addition with the NG being specific to each state you could train and localize specialist. South East states, for example, would be equipped to handle hurricane and flood catastrophes. Instead of having a large centralized agency that is a jack of all trades it seems to make more sense to have localized and specialized units already stationed near the affected areas.
Feel free to critique and educate me.
PL
Last edited by patlape; 11-05-2012 at 01:39 PM.
How would one completely privatize FEMA?
What would be investor incentive and what resources would such an operation entail?
I don't see privatizing FEMA as a viable option from a business plan perspective, but TBH I haven't really considered figures at this juncture. Pure questionable speculation on my part.
my junk is ugly
Privatizing works in some respects, but not others. In cities for example, garbage collection improved when turned over to the private sector. However, road clearing as in snow removal in the interior of British Columbia is a nightmare. You can't predict when a storm is going to hit or how long it will last. Thus you get serious overtime.
FEMA is not one of those with which privatizing will work; however some aspects could be outsourced. I mean those fools ran out of bottled water for three days. If getting paid was the motive you can bet your smelly ass there would be water from somewhere. But government bureaucrats don't think like that and need week ends off to recuperate from posting on political forums all week long.
chippygirl (11-05-2012)
FactCheck.com...no results.
You don't privatize FEMA, but FEMA uses the various types of federal contracts to leverage the private sector to move into action ASAP after a disaster.