Pentagon
too broke to buy a new fax machine
RT,
16
September, 2013
The
United States went ahead with major spending cuts earlier this year,
slicing around $85 billion off the federal budget. But while most
government offices remain afloat, a fax machine on the fritz may be
too costly for the Pentagon to fix.
Investigative
journalists working for the website Muckrock.com have identified one
side-effect of the sequester that is only now starting to cause
concerns. A facsimile machine at Defense Department headquarters has
reportedly been out of commission for almost three weeks now and is
hindering the ability for reporters to file Freedom of Information
Act requests with the military.
“Starting
two weeks ago, requests faxed to the Office of the Secretary of
Defense (OSD) started coming back as undeliverable. After several
subsequent attempts and troubleshooting on our end, MuckRock reached
out to the OSD. Sure enough, their fax machine is down,” journalist
Shawn Musgrave wrote on the site last week.
What’s
more, though, is that Musgrave reported that the fax machine in
question — the only one at the Pentagon handling FOIA requests,
according to him — may remain out-of-service for another month, if
not more.
When
Musgrave pressed the Pentagon to deliver an estimated date when the
machine might be back up and running, Defense Department officials
said that, should no replacement be immediately available, the matter
must wait until the start of the new fiscal year.
“We
would that it is back up sometime in October, but could extend into
the beginning of November,” Aaron Graves of the OSD replied to
Muckrock.
“It
bears repeating,” Musgrave after that exchange. “The office that
oversees the most powerful military in history (not to mention the
best-funded) is unable to project when its single fax machine will
once again be operational.”
Meanwhile,
the US military is budgeted to spend over one trillion dollars in
FY2012, and its in-progress F-35 fighter jet program — the most
expensive weapons system ever ordered — could come at a price-tag
that exceeds even that when all is said and done.
Of
course, that isn’t to say that a pesky fax problem isn’t the only
item at hand causing concerns in Washington. A study released last
week by Goldman Sachs suggested that as many as 100,000 federal jobs
could disappear due to budget cuts during the next year.
"[M]any
federal agencies have employed temporary strategies to adjust to
sequestration this year, such as employee furloughs and deferral of
maintenance and training, with the hope that sequestration would
ultimately be reversed,” the report reads in part. “If
sequestration continues, more permanent adjustments will become
necessary and agencies may be more willing to undertake them if
Congress declines once again to reverse the cuts."
In
the meantime, journalists might want to go about sending their FOIA
requests the old fashioned way, or else resort to what Musgrave
called “a clunky online request portal that doesn't play nice with
other systems.”
And
if that doesn’t work, someone might want to tell the Pentagon that
the Best Buy down the road can have a brand-new Panasonic laser
fax/copier in stock within days for only around $150.
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