Glasgow Daily Times, Glasgow, KY

Opinion

March 14, 2010

Census letter about Census form sends wife into fit

GLASGOW — I’ve rarely seen my wife as angry at government waste as she was this week after opening a letter from the U.S. Census Bureau.

I didn’t read the letter, but it roughly stated, “Hi. We’re from the U.S. Census Bureau and we’re sending you this letter just to let you know we’re soon going to be sending you the Census survey.”

The next thing I know I’ve got an angry woman in the house wanting to know why the government is wasting money to send us a letter letting us know they’re going to send us a letter. She was irritated about the waste of paper, man hours that went into it being sent — basically the entire process.

You know I thought I might get this reaction after the numerous commercials on television and radio talking about the Census, but I guess she just hasn’t received the same barrage since all her TV watching is recorded and she listens to NPR, while I spend most of my time watching and listening to sports and don’t skip commercials. 

Look, I understand the Census is important. Population counts impact government funding, etc., etc.

The government is doing the best it can to receive an accurate count, but at some point the spending is enough. Just imagine the cost in paper to send the letter stating the government is going to send the letter, it would have to be millions of dollars. That doesn’t even include the postage, unless the Postal System cuts the Census office a break, probably not the best idea when the postal service is losing money faster than the Federal Reserve can print it.

In a down economic time, when the government agencies throughout the nation are considering cutbacks, fighting over budgets and working to try to find any way to increase revenue, is it really in anyone’s best interest to brow beat the public into filling out a Census form?

As Kentucky’s government is considered cuts to the higher education and removing two much needed days in the yearly education of the state’s youth, it is irritating to see such a blatant waste of money.

You read stories all the time about government waste and inefficiency, but rarely does the issue show up in the mailbox. I had written off the commercials as just something that needed to be done for an accurate count, but now I believe that money could be have spent much better elsewhere, in fact it would have gone to better use just about anywhere else.

There had to have been a better way to inform people.

The government probably could have saved everybody some money if they had just given people a small tax break, $5 or $10, if they would send the Census form back in with their taxes. But, then again, that would be asking the government to act in an efficient manner, not exactly a strong suit.

Burton Speakman is news editor for the Daily Times. He can be reached by e-mail at bspeakman@glasgowdailytimes.com.

Text Only
Opinion
  • Americans need to change attitudes

    There’s something inherently wrong with this country’s societal standards when a mother is harassed and humiliated for breastfeeding her child in public, while any partial or complete display of the same woman’s breasts in the media or on the street for the purpose of sexual objectification would seem acceptable to many Americans, male and female alike.

    February 10, 2012

  • Near miss on super prediction

    Let’s take a step into the past my seven faithful readers and review some predictions made in this space in early September. (Too bad it wasn’t late September and we could borrow the line “should be back in school.”)

    February 4, 2012

  • Redistricting plans equally indefensible

    I don’t know how Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd will rule in the re-districting case. Nor am I a constitutional attorney, so I can’t say with any authority the maps drawn by the Democratic controlled House to benefit Democrats or the one drawn by the Republican Senate to benefit Republicans are constitutional.

    February 4, 2012

  • Comer sets good example

    Newly elected Ag Commissioner Jamie Comer, a Gamaliel Republican, requested an audit of the department upon his taking the position earlier this month.

    January 14, 2012

  • Fortis will be good partner

    I put shoulder to the wheel in search of photos Thursday morning. First, there was an ancient bread van parked amongst some saplings on the side of which there was a woman’s name painted in white, puffy letters. Whose van might that be and I wonder if it comes with the for sale property?

    January 7, 2012

  • Farewell to Gatewood

    As word spread of Gatewood Galbraith’s passing, the same phrase was heard repeatedly: “Gatewood was a colorful character.”

    January 7, 2012

  • Computers should make records easier to get

    The digital revolution was supposed to make record-keeping easier and less costly for companies. Therefore it should make things simpler for the public or news outlets seeking open records to find them.

    December 31, 2011

  • Resolutions for the new year

    New Year’s is the time for resolutions, a lot of which won’t last until spring.

    December 31, 2011

  • Things to rejoice this Christmas

    The year that will soon lapse has been tough. It has been a year of immovable politics; a year of contentious state elections; a year of absurd gesticulations by certain fiscal court members.

    December 24, 2011

  • YOUR VIEWS: Remember Christ’s birth

    December 23, 2011

AP Video
Nordic Festival Puts North Korea in Spotlight 'Rumor Has It' Adele's Rolling in the Grammys Grohl, Grammy Nominees Cut Up on the Red Carpet Greece Passes New Austerity Deal Amid Rioting Coroner: Houston Autopsy Results Weeks Away Raw Video: Greek Rioting Ahead of Austerity Vote Raw Video: Child Rescued After Kosovo Avalanche Pop Music Superstar Whitney Houston Dies at 48 Whitney Houston's Church Mourns Her Passing Reaction to Houston's Death at Clive Davis Party 79 Turtles Seized at Shanghai Airport Severe Cold Wreaks Havoc in China Fuel Removal Under Way on Capsized Italian Ship Police: Houston Found Dead in Her Hotel Room Paul Suffers Narrow Loss to Romney in Maine Palin Brings Anti-Washington Message to CPAC Obama Scraps Birth Control Mandate Navy Names Ship for Gabrielle Giffords Uzbek Man Pleads Guilty in Plot to Kill Obama Marines: No Punishment for Nazi-like Flag
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Seasonal Content
Twitter Updates
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
Facebook