Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
In a previous post, The DOE vs Ugly Reality, I discussed how a businessman takes over a government department. In this case it’s the Department of Energy (DOE). As a part of the 74 questions posed in the memo from the Trump Transition Team to the DOE, there were a couple of questions that obviously set people’s hair on fire. Let me quote those two questions and my comments about them from my previous post. Questions are in bold type, my comments are below the questions.
13 Can you provide a list of all Department of Energy employees or contractors who have attended any Interagency Working Group on the Social Cost of Carbon meetings? Can you provide a list of when those meetings were and any materials distributed at those meetings, emails associated with those meetings, or materials created by Department employees or contractors in anticipation of or as a result of those meetings?
Now, this is the one that has the “scientists” involved most concerned. Me, I think they damn well should be concerned because what they have been doing all this time is HALF OF A COST/BENEFIT ANALYSIS!!
This is a pet peeve of mine. You can’t just talk of costs in a vacuum. To do that without considering the accompanying benefits is scientific malfeasance. To do it as a policy matter is nothing less than deliberately lying to the public. As a result, I hope that everyone engaged in this anti-scientific effort gets identified and if they cannot be fired for malfeasance then put them to work sweeping the floors. Talk about “fake news”, the so-called “social cost of carbon” is as fake as they come.
That was the first question that I said had set their hair on fire. The other one was:
19 Can you provide a list of Department employees or contractors who attended any of the Conference of the Parties (under the UNFCCC) in the last five years?
An IPCC Conference of Parties is much more party than conference—it’s basically an excuse to party in some lovely location (think Bali, Cancun, …), with the party occasionally interrupted by the pesky conference. It is a meaningless exercise which ends up with an all-night session that finishes by announcing that everyone has signed on to the latest non-binding fantasy about how to end the use of fossil fuels, drive up energy prices, and screw the poor. And yes, if I were appointed to run the DOE, I would definitely want to know who has gone on these useless junkets.
Now, I know that people are going to complain about “scientific freedom” regarding the memo asking who worked on what … but if you don’t want to tell the incoming team what you’ve worked on … why not? Are you ashamed of what you’ve done? Look, every job I’ve had, if a new boss came in, they wanted to know what I had worked on in the past, and I simply answered them honestly. Scientists are no different.
Finally, government scientists presumably work on what their agency directs them to work on … so the issue of “scientific freedom” is way overblown in this context where they are NOT free to work on projects of their own choice.
Today, we get the first salvo fired in response. From the Washington Post
“Our career workforce, including our contractors and employees at our labs, comprise the backbone of DOE (Department of Energy) and the important work our department does to benefit the American people,” Eben Burnham-Snyder, a DOE spokesman, told the Washington Post in an email. “We are going to respect the professional and scientific integrity and independence of our employees at our labs and across our department. We will be forthcoming with all publicly-available information with the transition team. We will not be providing any individual names to the transition team.” [Emphasis in original.]
When I saw that, I cracked up. Busted out laughing. I thought “You idiots! You just fell into the trap!”
Here’s the deal. The Transition Team sent that memo out. It doesn’t ask for anything other than the duties the employees performed. It doesn’t ask them to change their views or alter their scientific conclusions. It just wants to know, who worked on these projects? There is no reason to refuse that—it’s asked in this situation all over the world. A new boss comes in and says “Hey, who worked on the Jones project?” And Sally and Bob raise their hands. No harm, no foul.
Now, over at my blog … dang, that still sounds strange … anyhow, over at my blog at the request of a commenter I wrote a piece on the rules of thumb that I use to clarify murky situations. However, I forgot a very useful one. It goes like this:
If a man is hiding something … … … it’s because he’s got something to hide.
Applying this to the DOE certainly raises interesting questions. But to return to the issue, here’s why I say that they fell into the trap.
When I wrote the first piece, people noticed that the Transition Team started each memo question out with some variation of “can you provide” … and people wondered why.
Inter alia, this is why—it encourages fools to think that refusing to answer is a real option rather than a polite form of an order.
Anyone with half a brain would look at those polite questions and go nope, not gonna refuse, boss will be here in six weeks, dumb move. But we’re talking government employees here.
Let me see if I can explain this plainly. If you want to take over a bureaucracy, the key thing to know is that a single bureaucrat all alone is almost always a weak, pitiful creature for a simple reason.
He/she finds it very, very difficult to make a decision on his/her own.
Why do you think bureaucracies always spawn double handfuls of boards and commissions and working groups and the like? As a group, they can make decisions, no problem. Might not be good decisions, but they can make them. Plus which it makes them brave to have six or eight other men and women in agreement. But by themselves, chronological inertia takes over, and they slowly sink into their natural vegetative state of torpor.
In addition to a group, sometimes you do get a sort of a leader among bureaucrats. All too often they see their function as opposing the management … but they do have enough gumption to encourage others to take foolish chances and do dumb things. So you need to neutralize them along with the groups. When you’ve done that, 95% of the takeover is complete.
SO … if you want to take over a bureaucracy, how do you do it? Well, you either take over or abolish the groups that give individual bureaucrats power, and you isolate or otherwise neutralize the leaders.
Regarding the first one, me offer you question 1 from the memo once again:
1. Can you provide a list of all boards, councils, commissions, working groups, and FACAs [Federal Advisory Committees] currently active at the Department? For each, can you please provide members, meeting schedules, and authority (statutory or otherwise) under which they were created?
Clearly the authors of the memo know that the easiest way to get rid of something is to investigate the authorizing authority. The working group is not statutory? Bye-bye working group. Board membership is bloated beyond initial authorization? Bye bye extra board members. Soooo … that pretty much takes care of the “boards, councils, commissions, working groups, and FACAs”, you can be sure what will happen to those. But what about the leaders?
Well … you could hand the employees a list of questions phrased as “can you provide”, in the hopes that somebody will be foolish enough to stir up the ranks until they refuse to answer. What they refuse lets you know what they are hiding … and of course, who prompted the refusal will also be clear. Want to know who the leaders are? Foment a rebellion …
Here’s the truly insane part to me about this rebellion. It is doomed to fail, and thus can only make things worse.
There’s no conceivable way that they can hide who went to the Paris Conference of the Parties. There are hotel bills, airline ticket stubs, claims for reimbursement, per-diem issuance records, international phone calls, per diem expense vouchers, it’s the freakin’ Government, for heaven’s sake, they live on paper, they produce reams of details. And that’s just internal DOE records, that doesn’t even touch the UN Records of the conference with participant lists and emails and photographs of smiling time-wasters …
And the same is true about the scientific monstrosity called the “Social Cost of Carbon”. The people who worked on that will have their fingerprints all over all kinds of subsidiary documents and timesheets and records. There’s no way it can remain hidden.
But that’s not the bad news for the fools sticking their heads above the parapets. The bad news is that when Rick Perry comes in the door, he is the boss, and he or one of his lesser demons can call up any dang record they please … and he can also call employees one by one into the office and ask “Who worked on the Jones project”. That’s not a question affecting, what was it, their “professional and scientific integrity and independence” of anyone, it’s a bog-standard business question. And you can be sure somebody will want to curry favor with the new boss and will say “It was Jimmy that did it! I told him not to do so but he did it anyway!”.
And what is this nonsense about “independence”??? You are EMPLOYEES, idiots! If you want independence, DON’T WORK FOR ANYONE!
But wait, it’s worse. Rick Perry can also call people in one by one and ask them “whose bright idea was it to not answer the questions in the memo” …
Like I said … if you want to know who the leaders are, foment a rebellion.
I would ask “How can these people be so foolish as to refuse to answer what they will soon be forced to answer, particularly when it can’t possibly be hidden anyway” … but then, to be fair to them, they are government bureaucrats …
Anyhow, that’s why I busted out laughing at the news that they are taking a brave, principled stand against evil people who want to … who want to … want to know what they have been working on. Horrible cruel question.
Best to all, I’ll cross-post this at my blog.
w.
If I were Rick Perry, I would get the names of all those who refused to answer the questionnaire. I will give them the choice to voluntarily resign or reassign to Antarctica. I will create a low-budget field research project there for them.
Antarctica is a lovely cold place to study global warming
http://theplanetd.com/images/camping-antarctica-7.jpg
Good thinking:
http://www.usmilitariaforum.com/uploads//monthly_10_2015/post-34986-0-02132300-1445220749.jpg
Willis,
Oh, dear! You Yanks are going about it all the wrong way!
Rather more mature civilisations, like the Chinese, and the Brits, know exactly how to operate a bureaucracy which does precisely the opposite of what it is ordered to do. As an example, the entire series of ‘Yes Minister’ (a British satirical comedy) provides ample illustration:
“Social Cost of Carbon” this would surely translate as “No Carbon – No Society” so surely it would be better to phrase it “Social Cost of No Carbon”
Willis, your post is excellent. Among those who read it will likely fall into one of two camps, those like me who are laughing and the other camp who will have flaming hair and exploding heads!
I’ll bet that few in the flaming hair camp will comment here as they would have a difficult argument. I’m still smiling!
eyesonu
Does “Polar Bear” Griff showing up to “stand by his claim Susan Crockford is unqualified” count as hair on fire or head exploding?
JC
Naa, he’s from the camp that lives under his bridge. Flaming hair and blistered skin may apply though. He takes a lot of heat with regards to what he writes.
“He takes a lot of heat with regards to what he writes.”
That’s what he’s paid to do.
SunEdison Shareholders Made Stunning Accusations In Court
http://seekingalpha.com/article/4030452-sunedison-shareholders-made-stunning-accusations-court#alt2
Summary
Shareholders have submitted 60 letters to Honorable Judge Bernstein, the U.S. Trustee, and the Wall Street Journal.
The letters implicate at least five high-ranking businessmen and politicians of wide spread collusion, corruption, and fraud.
SunEdison was ordered to answer allegations that its value has increased since it filed for bankruptcy.
Since my last article covering SunEdison Inc (OTCMKTS: OTCPK:SUNEQ), there have been several developments in the bankruptcy proceedings. October’s Monthly Operating Report was released, Homer Parkhill gave a statement for the first time since early summer, and SunEdison formally objected to the Unsecured Creditors’ motion to claw back Terraform Global (NASDAQ: GLBL) and Terraform Power (NASDAQ: TERP). In addition, a number of shareholders have inundated the court’s inbox with letters and emails (60 as of this writing) in a mad attempt to reopen the case for an Equity Committee.
The letters from shareholders vary in purpose and quality, but among their requests are: calls to prosecute Paul Gaynor (former First Wind CEO), Larry Summers (Chief of National Economic Council), Rahm Emanual (former White House Chief of Staff), Steve Scharzman (CEO of Blackstone), and John Podesta (Lobbyist for Renewable Energy) of wide spread collusion, corruption, and fraud; as well as several pleas to reverse the Official Equity Committee denial.
New Boss: “Good morning, Bob. I see you’ve been working here for about ten years now. Tell me a little bit about what you have been doing, some of the things you are especially proud of and a thing or two that you don’t think you/we should do again.”
Bob: “No.”
A pure scientist got nothing to hide, everything significant is founded on facts and anyhow documented in a traceable manner.
DOE better be getting their answers ready. Their new Secretary is going to demand them, and will likely fire anybody who is non-compliant.
While I did not go into the depth that Willis did, my impression was the same. Why piss off your boss? There is one big difference between the feds and a business. It is almost impossible to fire idiots in the federal government. However, what is done all the time, is they are “repurposed”. In other words, they are sent to a dark corner of the agency to shuffle paper clips, waste tax payer money drawing a salary, but do nothing.
I suspect there are going to be a lot of dark corner occupants over the next 4 years. The swamp of DC is not just about congress. it is about the work force. That 35% who promised to quit if Trump was elected should have kept their promise.
Even if they’re fired, they’ll be sure to get some cushy UN or Greenpeace jobs denouncing Trump and d*ni*rs in general.
Not if they’ve been locked up for ripping off the taxpayer they’re not.
Probably true. Those who suckle at the teats of government do not know how to make an honest living, and so just seek another GO.
Robert Bryce wrote this awhile back and should be noted. I have also been writing about the same for years and will add to it shortly.
http://www.robertbryce.com/articles/667-wind-energy-sector-gets-176-billion-worth-of-crony-capitalism
Well done Willis for this excellent piece – and also to Scott Rabone for that enlightening (partial!) list…
One has to wonder how any of the countries listed functioned during the Paris Conference, when all those – presumably invaluable – worthies were absent…
Reminds me of the Jewish patriarch on his deathbed with all his family gathered round in anguish, when the old man tugs at the sleeve of his eldest son sitting nearby and whispers: ‘Who’s minding the shop..?’
Well, maybe a mass firing of DOE people like Reagan did with the air traffic controllers is in order.
Reagan was only able to fire the air traffic controllers because they were in violation of their contract. Their contract had a no strike clause, and they went on strike.
Trump can only fire these guys if they somehow violate their work agreements. I suspect that being insubordinate might qualify. Especially for the higher rankings.
As I indicated in part one of this topic, the government can cancel any contract for the convenience of the government (e.g., a research effort is no longer necessary). In addition, if functions of an agency are eliminated, the government can do a formal Reduction in Force (RIF) to eliminate unnecessary employees, who can compete for the retained positions based on their qualifications.
And if the DoE was created by Executive Fiat, and not by statute, then it can be eliminated the same way. With any functions deemed necessary transferred to some other organization.
I do not think insubordination is a firing grounds (it is a reprimand one). However, there are ways to quietly get rid of some of the top echelon. And it only takes a few to bring the rest of the lemmings in line. They are not leaders, they are followers. That is why when they get the names of those who said “no”, they will be gone. Not the rest who just went along with the no people.
MarkW that is incorrect. It had nothing to do with violating their contract. Reagan fired the air traffic controllers because U.S.C. Title 5 law made it illegal for them (and all Federal employees) to strike and, IIRC, states that if they do strike, their jobs are immediately forfeit. They swore an oath that they would not strike. Reagan gave them 48 hours to come back and some of them did to continue working. The rest forfeit their jobs (i.e. quit).
Dept of Energy was established by statute.
http://uscode.house.gov/statviewer.htm?volume=91&page=569
Come January 22 the “businessman” will be able to send in US Marshals with subpoenas and the “resistance” will come to a screeching halt.
Come Jan 22, “businessman” won’t need subpoenas or US marshals. Just Saying. Don’t expect the resistance to end until they are defunded.
I’ll repeat the purpose was simple: To identify the low hanging fruits for consolidation/elimination within the DOE. The methods to achieve are not yet clear, but the tried and true approach is to cut the overall budget, and let those within DOE who know what is important (to the agency and the Congress) to make the many organizational decisions stay/go/combine/change. Those decisions will be based upon how well those organizations support the agency core mission(s). I emphasized one of those DOE missions: national PROSPERITY.
For DOE’s fed employees the handwriting is on the wall. RIFs are coming.
This approach would work across the entire Fed Govt, agency by agency, and then again Govt wide. Duplication would be eliminated or at least drastically reduced, and agencies would hone internal organizations to first support their core missions.
The only weak point is the outcry from the recipients of the grants/contracts/funding from those non-core functions. That’s why we see the crying from the lab folks and their supporters.
The news report this morning states the Trump transition team has “disavowed” the DOE questionnaire. As people have noted, the requested information can be derived from public records. Maybe some Russian hackers will organize it all and give it to WIkileaks.
They stopped asking because they’re going to shut down that division anyway.
Why bother with questions?
Mike
You might be right, maybe that’s why he put Perry in charge that way after he shuts it down he won’t have to remember it the next time he is on a debate stage running for office.
Well Mike, perhaps they bothered with questions for real purpose of identifying personnel that it would be profitable to transfer to other departments when redundant departments are eliminated.
Paul
Yup; that’s it: all the valuable employees in DOE are hiding on foreign climate boondoggles.
Everything having to do with CO2 and global warming should be transferred to the EPA.
Then they can eliminate the federal EPA and return the responsibility back to the states.
I think you’ll find that the states won’t want that, when it comes to clean up sites they’d rather it be handled by the EPA due to budgetary issues.
If the states can’t afford it singly, what makes people think the federal government can afford it severally?
Phil
Have you asked the states about this?
Javert Chip December 15, 2016 at 1:22 pm
Phil
Have you asked the states about this?
My home state, yes. I had discussions with the state DEP about a local clean up and that’s exactly why they preferred that the EPA handled it (which they did very successfully).
Oh, yes, states love to let the Infinite Gravy Train with Biscuit Wheels pay for things.
Looking at that UNFCC list of US participants we see the “Office of the Special Envoy for Climate Change” and the “Office of Global Change”. What the frack are those? Whatever they are, hopefully they’ll be jettisined with all the other deadwood.
Mr. Trump is going to be very angry when he finds out being president doesn’t necessarily make him the boss on a whole bunch of issues, and in fact many times he will be the one taking orders not giving orders. That is just how it is … and I don’t see him accepting it.
Does that explain why Oh Bummer did nothing for 8 years?
And yet he is the boss, and his job is to pick those to go in and run all these governmental agencies and programs. That includes prosecutors and investigators. Time to start locking these criminal scumbags up and taking back all the money they have stolen.
Yes presidents “pick” people to run things, but sometimes that pick is controlled by coming off a list of acceptable candidates provided by someone else. Makes you wonder who is really in control.
And yet DJT is not using any pre-approved list, is he? He is actually looking for QUALIFIED people, not approved by Democrat Party people.
At no time is the president ever restricted to working from a list provided by others.
On a small handful of appointments, the senate has a chance to disapprove, but that’s it.
That’s right he won’t be King. It’s called separation of powers. And just as the CEO of his real estate empire he has obey the law. But he will be the presiding officer of the executive branch.
Trump is the boss of everyone who works for the Executive branch, which includes the DOE.
He will set the agenda, which is the opposite of obams
No, Scott–Trump won’t have to be taking orders from a bunch of renegade “scientists” (I use the term loosely) who have distorted reality to the point that nobody believes them anymore (except that inner circle of pal-review sycophants).
Remember someone famously said “You’re FIRED!”? Well, that’s what this boss will say, especially when a bunch of renegade people work in a department that reports to him.
I do not see Trump accepting it either. Trump is not a politician and does not subscribe to the “go along to get along” theory of negotiation. He has a way of upsetting the political order in Washington and from what I have seen the political order is out-of-their-element with under estimation.
“At no time is the president ever restricted to working from a list provided by others”
MarkW Its well known when the president makes his “pick” for head of the Federal Reserve, it’s off a short list made by others. His “pick” is silly and meaningless and an illusion of control. That’s just an example we know about.
Just because president’s have traditionally used such a list is not evidence that they are required to use such a list. Which is what you claimed earlier.
and in fact many times he will be the one taking orders not giving orders.
====================
politicians take orders from their donors.
Right on Ferdberple. Since he hasn’t used any donors, Trump will be taking orders from his conscience instead.
Perhaps this whole episode is a means to provide motivation and political cover for the next congress to reform the job protections of civil servants. People in the private sector know that defying the wishes of the boss is not a good career move and will see little reason for the public sector to have it any better.
@ur momisugly Willis
If the DOE manages not to answer these questions could they be used as the basis for a FOIA request???
John G
John
You don’t need a “basis” for an FOIA request. You just need a cogent request.
Josh Earnest….i’m sorry; I have to laugh at that oxymoron ic name every time I read it….has unwittingly told us why Obama could not rein in his rouge agencies even if he had wished to. They transcend his administration.
Ha, ha. A bit of truth coming out of error. You obviously meant to say “rogue,” but the behavior of the agency goes beyond pink to “rouge.”
Mod, no post that I type on any computer is accepted by this site any longer. Can you tell me what the issue is?
Not sure kevin…nothing we are doing
I think the “independence” thing illustrates an interesting point or two about regressives:
* They think government employment is like a tenured “professorship” at a university: a sinecure devoid of accountability, and who can blame them — in many cases that’s what it is in practice;
* They confound the government and the society that government is intended to serve (e.g. how many times have you heard the government’s fiscal status confused with “the economy”? )
It would be kind and merciful to expose those people to market forces so they can start to understand how the real world works, which they obviously don’t given their pointless obstinacy.
the government’s fiscal status confused with “the economy”
===========
Hillary called government debt an investment in the future and none of the news services even questioned this.
Didn t the head of epa,gina macarthy, proclaim that sceptics should either quit working for epa or keep quiet ?
UN is a round table of member states’ elected leaders or their nominated representatives. UNFCCC, IPCC etc are no exception.
So, integrity or anonymity DoE? Using both doesn’t evoke confidence.