Las Vegas Review-Journal

Whose cup of tea?

Federal job training programs a waste

- Frank Russo Henderson

How hard is it to kill a government program? Well, even something as useless as the federal Tea Tasting Board managed to survive for a century until finally succumbing in 1996.

“We do not have a Coffee Board or a Candy Board,” said Nevada’s own Harry Reid, who led the effort in the Senate to pull the plug on the regulatory panel, which cost taxpayers about $250,000 a year. “We do not need a Tea Board.”

Remember, this was a More substantiv­e federal programs tend to be anchored in the Beltway like the towers of a massive suspension bridge secured far below the depths.

Consider Washington’s vast array of “job training” programs. The U.S. government spends more than $6 billion a year on 47 different such endeavors that are spread throughout nine federal agencies. Problem is, there’s no evidence they actually work.

A U.S. Labor Department report compiled during the Obama administra­tion concluded “the programs are largely ineffectiv­e at raising participan­ts’ earnings and are offering services that don’t meet the needs of job seekers or employers,” The Hill reported last year.

The New York Times recently came to the same conclusion regarding one of the biggest federal job training efforts, Job Corps, which costs taxpayers $1.7 billion annually. The program, which dates to LBJ’S Great Society, is intended to help high school dropouts — principall­y black and Hispanic — learn a trade. But despite costing up to $45,000 per student, the Times noted this week, the Labor Department’s inspector general found that “Job Corps could not demonstrat­e beneficial job training outcomes.”

Yet craven pols on both sides of the aisle are petrified of opposing a program intended to secure a slice of the American Dream for underprivi­leged minority kids. When Donald Trump proposed eliminatin­g Job Corps last year, supporters went into attack mode. Job Corps survived.

The Times reports that Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta remains intent on imposing reforms and even closing failed Job Corps centers. But she has her work cut out for her, because Job Corps centers are, not surprising­ly, scattered throughout congressio­nal districts across the country to ensure continued support and funding.

“You have a program with a rich and complicate­d history that’s one of the biggest leftovers from the war on poverty,” Eric M. Seleznow, who served in the Labor Department under President Barack Obama, told The Times, “and it is enormously complicate­d to make any significan­t changes.”

Good intentions aside, it’s virtually criminal that members of Congress are so cavalierly willing to set billions in taxpayer dollars afire each year in order to perpetuate programs that even government auditors admit are wasteful and ineffectiv­e.

Federal job training programs may have occasional successes, but there’s no evidence they accomplish anything as a whole that the private market can’t achieve. It’s time many of them went the way of the government tea tasters.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

The Review-journal welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should not exceed 275 words and must include the writer’s name, mailing address and phone number. Submission­s may be edited and become the property of the Review-journal.

Email letters@reviewjour­nal.com Mail Letters to the Editor

P.O. Box 70

Las Vegas, NV 89125

Fax 702-383-4676 of the rest of our students at risk and should be liable for any harm coming to the students who come for the right reasons.

The board has added what could be the last ingredient to a dangerous recipe of hundreds of unfilled teaching positions, overcrowde­d classrooms, mismanaged funds, uninvolved parents and a top layer of bureaucrat­ic fat. Shame on you all for allowing this to happen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States