Listen "Washington Tackles Government Efficiency with DOGE Test, Targeting Pentagon Spending and Public Sector Transparency"
Episode Synopsis
Washington’s new Government Efficiency Standard, known as the DOGE Test, is dominating policy conversations this fall as lawmakers and watchdogs debate its impact on public spending and transparency. The Department of Government Efficiency, DOGE for short, was introduced during the Trump administration to tackle excessive costs and waste across federal agencies. Ben Freeman at the Quincy Institute points out that the Pentagon, with its ballooning $850 billion budget and notorious audit failures, is a prime candidate for DOGE action. Freeman singles out the F-35 fighter program as emblematic of government inefficiency, costing taxpayers an eye-watering $1.5 trillion and plagued by overruns and lingering performance issues. The department also scrutinizes unused Pentagon facilities and annual payments to weapons contractors, fueling calls for targeted cuts and reforms.Across Washington state, efficiency debates aren’t limited to defense. This July, Governor Bob Ferguson issued Executive Order 25-07, requiring Project Labor Agreements for major public construction, a move described by critics at the Washington Policy Center as likely to drive up costs and shrink competition. Studies show PLAs can bump construction expenses by 10 to 20 percent, with high-profile infrastructure plans, such as Seattle’s Sound Transit, running hundreds of millions over budget.Meanwhile, the Center for Digital Government and Governing magazine report surging interest at the state and local levels in smarter budgeting, procurement, and grant processes. Washington stands out for tying budgets to measurable outcomes—safer neighborhoods, stronger schools, healthier families—and publishing public reports that link spending directly to results. The aim is to make efficiency a practical reality for residents, not just a slogan.Transparency also got a boost in early October as Attorney General Nick Brown released revised model rules for public records requests. Supported by media organizations like The Seattle Times, these changes are expected to speed up records disclosure and help build public trust, countering years of slow access and bureaucratic delays.From defense audits to construction policy and open government reforms, the DOGE Test is now central in pushing accountability and practical efficiency across Washington. Thanks for tuning in and make sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.For more http://www.quietplease.aiGet the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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