Federal Contractors Are $600 Screwdrivers
ideonexus writes "Last month an article appeared on Slashdot about how the government pays IT contractors twice what it pays its own workers. Missing from the article was how much the IT contractor pays its own workers. After working for a federal contractor for 10 years, a document accidentally leaked to employees by the contractor illustrated the incredible disparity between what the contractor was paying us and what they were charging the government. Like most contracts according to the GAO, the government provided our offices, utilities, computers, and training, leaving our salaries as the only overhead to the IT contractor, giving them an incredible incentive to keep them as low as possible to maximize profits. When the top 100 defense contractors cost taxpayers $306 billion, eliminating the federal contractor middle-man seems like an obvious place to start the austerity measures."
Labor unions have had policies put in place by which government employees are impossible to fire if you don't fire them within one year. Administration is way easier with contractors, whereas the unions have made employee management a nightmare. Dude here punched his boss in the face and they were unable to fire him, so transferred him to another department instead, same pay grade, no demotion.
Support my political activism on Patreon.
This summary is a confused mishmash of thoughts. First they talk about how the government pays for offices, utilities, computers, and training then they bring up defense contractors, who aren't the kind of contractors that the earlier statement is talking about (I assure you that defense contractors pay for their own overhead costs). Secondly, in what world does a company having many significant expenses mean that they don't try to optimize the largest one? Companies minimize costs and maximize revenues wherever possible, it is the one thing that they are good at (and why capitalism comes as close to working as it does). Removing some expenses doesn't especially encourage companies to reduce costs in other areas, just like increasing costs doesn't encourage them to gouge their customers, if they could get away with gouging their customers (or employees for that matter) they'd already be doing it.
What you get with contractors is freedom from salaries, benefits, leave, and liability. Depends on what you are wanting. As someone who has worked for the state, I can say the contractors we hired were worth 3-4 internal employees. The contractors have incentive, the in-house never did, they got paid the same no matter how hard they worked, just as long as they kept that seat warm between 8-5.
CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
And unless you want to establish a Soviet-syle Department of War Production, you'll have a lot of that no matter what. Most of that $306B is spent on acquisition of military hardware that costs an incredible sum of money because it is all custom-built for a single, specialized market. There is no "adjacent market" for a F22 or nuclear air craft carrier ($5B+/ship).
Obviously, there is room to get rid of a lot of that, but the most effective process would be the following which neither liberals nor conservatives would tolerate:
1. Make civilian employment at-will (liberals: booooo)
2. Fire the dead weight left and right (liberals: boooo)
3. Change the law so that government agencies can legally poach government contractors as new employees (conservatives: booo) even if there were pre-existing non-poaching agreements.
4. Liberalize the procurement regulations so that federal managers can hire 1099s on a no-bid basis for temporary work with the caveat that the federal manager can be fired on a performance basis if their contractor cannot or did not do the work (both: boooo)
Actually, not really. While there is plenty of bullshit, the government requires a certain portion of the work to go to small businesses. So there is a good chance that a small business will get the work.
However, the small businesses that do get the work, tend to be partnered with larger firms, who end up doing all the paperwork to help the small business win the contract. I know, I work for one of those monstrous companies and we partner with, and supply the paper framework all the time.
I came, I conquered, I coredumped
So what Union is funding this research with the money taken out of each full time worker, to do this research that we already know.
You will find mixed messages against Contractors from unions.
If they are communicating to the general public, their argument is that contractors are too expensive and their tax money is wasted on them.
If they are communicating with the union employees they state that they are a threat because business can hire them for less to do the jobs.
The real contention is the fact that contractors are not Union Employees thus not paying them dues.
The real costs and values.
Contractors are valuable when there are projects that need a particular skill set and need either part time work or is a limited time line for a project.
Contractors are expensive when you have them working 9-5 Mon-Fri year around for projects that do not have an end to them.
Contractors are valuable when you needs something done that is politically sensitive that none of the full time employees want to get their feet in it because failure could be disastrous to their career.
Contractors are expensive when they are not shown or allowed to do things too far outside your organizations standards where they build them self's a long term job.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
Or consider that the "toilet seat" is actually an entire commode hooked into a waste-disposal system on an aircraft carrier or airplane, which isn't allowed to simply dump waste out everywhere.
I'm reminded of the episode of The West Wing where one of the WH staffers gets in the face of a navy officer about the "$60 ashtrays" used on naval ships... he smashes one on the desk to show her how it splits into three neat pieces, because the last thing you need in a firefight is sharp glass or ceramic shards from your ordinary model of ashtray flying around living compartments.
Shit that morons from the "waah why does it cost so much" department never fucking consider...