The History of Now

The History of Now – Social commentary on modern life told with a touch of humor.

DHS Has a Data Problem

What is a writer to do when a story has three equal headlines? Each drawn this month from public documents and government reports from the Inspector General.Headline Number One: Homeland Security has a Data Problem!Headline Number Two: Inspector General Demonstrates 22% Error Rate with FEMA Programs.Headline Number Three: FEMA to provide $1B for infrastructure and communities.Headline number one derives from the most recent DHS OIG report (published 24 MAY 2021). The Inspector General states that persistent data problems hinder DHS mission, programs, and operations. Rather stinging statement.Headline number two was published by the same IG earlier this month on the 7th of May 2021. They didn’t make the headline they should have. I worked hard to find the information. But it is in there.Headlines number three was also released this week (the last week of May 2021). We’ve decided to entrust FEMA with an additional $1 billion in grants for infrastructure and communities. As Rachel, my niece, said over dinner this week: So, that means about $200 million in errors?I guess so.What could possibly go wrong? Let’s explore than now.https://ChristinaMoore.us/the-history-of-now/

06-09
25:05

Pay me Twice, Please or Does FEMA really overpay by 20%?

The U.S. government’s response to COVID involves contradictory, complicated, and confusing streams of funding. The government committed to spent at least $4 trillion to assist with the response, management, and recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. Funding for government responses; funding for research and vaccine development; funding for vaccine distribution; funding now for personal funerals; funding for state, county, and municipal responses; funding for personal protective equipment; funding to hospitals and first responders. These funds, like so much of what the U.S. governments funds, become grants. Nearly every agency administers grant programs while distributing grant funds. The agency with the greatest responsibility has a demonstrated, through public audits of an error rate over 20%. Listen now, read along https://ChristinaMoore/the-history-of-now/

05-19
40:43

Land of Eleven - 11 steps to avoid mistakes with $2T

The U.S. federal government is providing nearly 4 trillion dollars to assist with the management of coronavirus. $2 trillion through the CARES Act and more then followed. Much of this money will be provided to organizations as grant funds. I fear that people will focus on the urgent needs, the pressures of the day, and miss the importance of following federal law. In a few years FEMA and the Inspector General will review these grants and the associated paperwork only to discover that the grant fund recipients did not follow federal procurement law; or that they did not keep the necessary documentation; or that they did not use standardized FEMA pricing guidelines when applicable. Listen now, read here: https://ChristinaMoore.us/the-history-of-now/

05-05
32:15

The History of Now (trailer)

Fraudsters fraud; corrupt officials corrupt resulting in the maltreatment of public funds and public trust. While not shaming I will continue to identify critical issues, flaws, and core problems. Yes, there are genuine crooks in the world employed as public servants. Alas, the complexity of the rules and poor communication invite unintentional mistakes as well. What can we together formant an environment where the crooks get spotted more quickly?Three promises. First, I will remain apolitical and non-partisan. Second, I will strive for accurate and honest reporting. For my third promise, if I can’t be helpful, I’ll try to be funny. I will continue to write about what I know; therefore, I focus on U.S. federal agencies involved in funding communities through grant programs. My favorites are Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and especially FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Another favorite is local fraud – fraud within municipal and state government – especially in New England. What could possibly go wrong by looking closely at all of the data available ?Each episode will be between 30 and 45 minutes. The script of the episode will be published in whole on my website: https://ChristinaMoore.us. 

05-04
01:56

An October Respite

Show notes, illustrations, transcripts all at https://ChristinaMoore.us/an-october-respite/

10-14
21:58

Fraud in Vermont, I'm Shocked

Show notes, transcript, pictures, and more at https://ChristinaMoore.us/fraud-in-vermont-shocked/

10-07
21:23

Do Something Now

Resources, photos, transcript, show notes all at https://ChristinaMoore.us/do-something-now/

09-30
35:30

Enron Haunts Us Still

Show notes, links, transcripts, etc all at https://ChristinaMoore.us/enron-haunts-us-still/

09-23
14:23

Sarah Chayes Interview

Little Lie Big Lie, Christina Moore, coronavirus, corruption, Storm Petrel, true crimes of public funding, true story, waste fraud and abuse, covid19, social commentary, pandemic, SCOTUS, McDonnell v United States, Skilling v United States, Puerto Rico, Afghanistan, Iraq, On Corruption in America, Thieves of State, King Midas, Hydra

09-16
56:43

Fraud at FEMA?!

Resources, links, show notes, transcript at https://ChristinaMoore.us

09-09
15:44

Thieves of State

Show notes and transcript at https://christinamoore.us/economic-justices/

09-02
16:03

The Department of Homeland Secrecy

Show notes, resources, links, and script can be found at https://ChristinaMoore.us

08-26
11:12

FEMA - Fiddle, Fumble, Flop

For show notes, script, and resources, please go to https://ChristinaMoore.us

08-19
18:45

Knobs & Twiddly Bits

Show notes, script, resources and links: https://christinamoore.us/knobs-and-twiddly-bits/

08-12
09:29

Analog People vs. Digital People

Show notes, script, resources, and links https://ChristinaMoore.us/analog-people-versus-digital-people/

08-05
10:16

75% Failure Rate, Not Bad Huh?

In a typical year, 75% of FEMA fund recipients, usually local governments and non-profits fail to follow the law. While the original analysis I did has aged some over the last four years, I’ll bet we’re still looking at massive failures with disaster related funds. First, show you how I derived this failure rate. Second, I’ll show you the significant risks you and I have when communities fail to manage FEMA and federal grants well. Third, I am going to place blame. You and I know that during these months I have done little to name names and point fingers

07-29
20:22

What does missing data look like?

For show notes, script, resources, and links visit: https://christinamoore.us/what-missing-data-looks-like/

07-22
09:54

We've Been DUN in

For show notes, script, resources, and links visit the website: https://christinamoore.us/weve-been-dun-in/

07-15
07:33

Transparency: Can you see it?

Show notes, script, resources, and links at https://ChristinaMoore.us

07-08
07:15

Data Contracts Blood and Money

Visit the website for show notes, scripts, and other resources: https://christinamoore.us/data-contracts-blood-and-money/ 

07-01
05:33

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