Sat Apr 21, 2012 2:17 pm
No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests
By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
Published: April 17, 2012
MIAMI — Ushered in amid promises that it would save taxpayers money and deter drug users, a Florida law requiring drug tests for people who seek welfare benefits resulted in no direct savings, snared few drug users and had no effect on the number of applications, according to recently released state data.
“Many states are considering following Florida’s example, and the new data from the state shows they shouldn’t,” said Derek Newton, communications director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, which sued the state last year to stop the testing and recently obtained the documents. “Not only is it unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, but it doesn’t save money, as was proposed.”...
Sat Apr 21, 2012 5:31 pm
Sat Apr 21, 2012 7:24 pm
Sat Apr 21, 2012 7:33 pm
How many such clinics are in the state? And what proportion of their drug testing workload is welfare drug testing?kingprout wrote:something seems a little off here.
four months of testing, and only 4000 people were tested statewide?
we do about half that many mass-spec urinalyses in the same time period in one clinic alone.
wait. let me see...
lowball estimates: @half of our patients get tested per visit...
@30 tests each saturday
@12 tests on each M, T, W, TH
so... call it 75 tests a week
300 tests per month
1200 tests in four months.
in ONE clinic.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 8:14 pm
No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Sat Apr 21, 2012 8:28 pm
Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non productive behavior?
Sat Apr 21, 2012 8:47 pm
excineribus wrote:Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non productive behavior?
Well, dork-butt, excuse me, Gov. Scott said, as part of his seven-step plan to create 700,000 private-sector jobs, that he could save taxpayers $77 million by adding a testing requirement and more stringent work provisions for cash welfare recipients.
http://www.politifact.com/florida/promi ... ecipients/
But even if it was to "stop rewarding non productive behavior" it seems to be, besides unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, rather ineffective.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 8:50 pm
freedumb2003 wrote:excineribus wrote:Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non productive behavior?
Well, dork-butt, excuse me, Gov. Scott said, as part of his seven-step plan to create 700,000 private-sector jobs, that he could save taxpayers $77 million by adding a testing requirement and more stringent work provisions for cash welfare recipients.
http://www.politifact.com/florida/promi ... ecipients/
But even if it was to "stop rewarding non productive behavior" it seems to be, besides unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, rather ineffective.
If you are talking about the 4th and 5th Amendment, you need to get thee to a school where these things are taught. Putting strings of ANY kind on government money is eminently constitutional, so long as the strings apply to all equally.
If you want your privacy, don't ask for my money.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 8:58 pm
both, albeit the latter should be the main purpose. And if it saves money, so much the better.Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non-productive behavior?
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:00 pm
GSlob wrote:both, albeit the latter should be the main purpose. And if it saves money, so much the better.Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non-productive behavior?
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:15 pm
excineribus wrote:Gov. Scott said, as part of his seven-step plan to create 700,000 private-sector jobs, that he could save taxpayers $77 million by adding a testing requirement and more stringent work provisions for cash welfare recipients.
But even if it was to "stop rewarding non productive behavior" it seems to be, besides unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, rather ineffective.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:18 pm
excineribus wrote:Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non productive behavior?
Well, *****, excuse me, Gov. Scott said, as part of his seven-step plan to create 700,000 private-sector jobs, that he could save taxpayers $77 million by adding a testing requirement and more stringent work provisions for cash welfare recipients.
http://www.politifact.com/florida/promi ... ecipients/
But even if it was to "stop rewarding non productive behavior" it seems to be, besides unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, rather ineffective.
***** = unnecessary and unproductive phrasing removed by Mod Coyote
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:21 pm
GSlob wrote:How many such clinics are in the state? And what proportion of their drug testing workload is welfare drug testing?kingprout wrote:something seems a little off here.
four months of testing, and only 4000 people were tested statewide?
we do about half that many mass-spec urinalyses in the same time period in one clinic alone.
wait. let me see...
lowball estimates: @half of our patients get tested per visit...
@30 tests each saturday
@12 tests on each M, T, W, TH
so... call it 75 tests a week
300 tests per month
1200 tests in four months.
in ONE clinic.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:22 pm
excineribus wrote:freedumb2003 wrote:excineribus wrote:Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non productive behavior?
Well, dork-butt, excuse me, Gov. Scott said, as part of his seven-step plan to create 700,000 private-sector jobs, that he could save taxpayers $77 million by adding a testing requirement and more stringent work provisions for cash welfare recipients.
http://www.politifact.com/florida/promi ... ecipients/
But even if it was to "stop rewarding non productive behavior" it seems to be, besides unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, rather ineffective.
If you are talking about the 4th and 5th Amendment, you need to get thee to a school where these things are taught. Putting strings of ANY kind on government money is eminently constitutional, so long as the strings apply to all equally.
If you want your privacy, don't ask for my money.
Your argument lost in Michigan, even before it was shot down in Florida. Good luck with it, though.
Of course, if the underlined were true, it might pass muster, and, hell, I'd pay to watch the CEOs of government contracting firms and those with special tax breaks pee in a cup.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:26 pm
Ichneumon wrote:excineribus wrote:Gov. Scott said, as part of his seven-step plan to create 700,000 private-sector jobs, that he could save taxpayers $77 million by adding a testing requirement and more stringent work provisions for cash welfare recipients.
What part of "and" are you having trouble with?
But even if it was to "stop rewarding non productive behavior" it seems to be, besides unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, rather ineffective.
...if one swallows an agenda-driven piece in the New York Times as necessarily complete, accurate, and the whole story, especially when it contains red flags that anyone familiar with competent analysis would have snapped to.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:27 pm
excineribus wrote:GSlob wrote:both, albeit the latter should be the main purpose. And if it saves money, so much the better.Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non-productive behavior?
And, again, it didn't seem to do much one either count. Mostly it was about "how can we punish welfare recipients?". On that, it succeeded, for a while, by putting one more humiliating hoop in the way of aid.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:37 pm
freedumb2003 wrote:...The lack of embarrassment is what is driving welfare. It SHOULD be humiliating to take welfare -- that is the biggest incentive to get off it...
My mom was on welfare for many years and she hated it. She made it clear to us that she didn't like it, did it to keep a roof over our heads, went to school, got her degree, got a job and got the hell off the dole as soon as she could.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:55 pm
excineribus wrote:freedumb2003 wrote:If you are talking about the 4th and 5th Amendment, you need to get thee to a school where these things are taught. Putting strings of ANY kind on government money is eminently constitutional, so long as the strings apply to all equally.excineribus wrote:But even if it was to "stop rewarding non productive behavior" it seems to be, besides unconstitutional and an invasion of privacy, rather ineffective.
If you want your privacy, don't ask for my money.
Your argument lost in Michigan, even before it was shot down in Florida.
Good luck with it, though.
Of course, if the underlined were true, it might pass muster, and, hell, I'd pay to watch the CEOs of government contracting firms and those with special tax breaks pee in a cup.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 9:57 pm
Sat Apr 21, 2012 10:03 pm
Ichneumon wrote:...Unfortunately this meant that the second 6th Circuit second hearing had no resolution, the first hearing didn't count, and since the matter was unresolved at the Appeals court level, the original district court single-judge injunction was left in effect.
Sat Apr 21, 2012 11:26 pm
freedumb2003 wrote:excineribus wrote:GSlob wrote:both, albeit the latter should be the main purpose. And if it saves money, so much the better.Sam Cree wrote:No Savings Are Found From Welfare Drug Tests, FL
Was the purpose to save money, or was it to stop rewarding non-productive behavior?
And, again, it didn't seem to do much one either count. Mostly it was about "how can we punish welfare recipients?". On that, it succeeded, for a while, by putting one more humiliating hoop in the way of aid.
The lack of embarrassment is what is driving welfare. It SHOULD be humiliating to take welfare -- that is the biggest incentive to get off it. Nowadays they issue Debit cards that can be used in casinos and Disneyland -- on MY dime. The song "Swipe your EBT" is pretty well fact-based.
My mom was on welfare for many years and she hated it. She made it clear to us that she didn't like it, did it to keep a roof over our heads, went to school, got her degree, got a job and got the hell off the dole as soon as she could.
Sun Apr 22, 2012 8:38 am
GSlob wrote:Precisely. It SHOULD be humiliating. It used to be, now it is not - high time to put some of it back in. And because of the degradation since then, one needs, at least initially, to put more of it in. As the moral fiber improves, the internal humiliation would be taking over, and it would be possible to cut down on the external one.
Sun Apr 22, 2012 9:37 am
freedumb2003 wrote:The lack of embarrassment is what is driving welfare. It SHOULD be humiliating to take welfare -- that is the biggest incentive to get off it.
Sun Apr 22, 2012 1:03 pm
StultisTheFool wrote: I would recommend the sonsofbitches at the ACLU rethink their practice of systematically blocking, on contrived grounds, commonsense reforms to social programs. I fear -- and I mean literally fear -- we are rapidly approaching a tipping point,
Sun Apr 22, 2012 1:07 pm