Labor commissioner's good deed hard to swallow
It is said that no good deed goes unpunished. If you don't believe that, ask
These have not been easy times for Georgia DOL. Like most everything and everybody these days, the department has been hammered by the pandemic, as have those it is pledged to serve.
In the days before COVID-19, the
More than 624,000 people reported losing their jobs in
According to reports, the
What's more, it has had to deal with thousands of frustrated citizens who have been unable to get workers on the phone or their emails answered. Many face eviction or their cars repossessed. Some have taken to pinning notes on the doors of local
This is where a good deed comes in that proceeds to blow up like a cheap balloon. To show his hard-working
employees he appreciated their efforts, beginning in
The problem is that this good deed was paid for taxpayer-funded state and federal money, much of which was earmarked for unemployment benefits. Chew on that for a moment.
A state audit obtained by
In other words, there is no such thing as a free lunch - at least not on the taxpayer's dime, no matter how worthy the cause might seem to be.
Commissioner Butler defended his decision, telling the AJC he received permission to provide the free meals from Comm.
Services, which oversees state spending. DOL says they were given permission to treat the meals as "urgent" and free from the state's normal requisition process. DOAS said the meals became "routine planned
events" exceeding what they thought was a limited request.
"This isn't something we did on our own without asking," Butler said. "I fully explained to him the reasons why we were doing it - to keep our people safe, to minimize bringing the COVID-19 virus into our buildings and to require all the individuals who work here to work all through the day."
In a report to Gov.
"Notably, DOL never supported these expenditures by claiming that they resulted in increased productivity," McAfee said.
"By offering to purchase meals, DOL removed any incentive for individual employees to prepare and pack their own meal, a practice that is generally more cost-effective and efficient when compared to retail purchases."
Butler said, "I'll stand up for our folks here. I'm going to take care of them because they were taking care of
What Comm.
This is one good deed that could get him eaten alive in next year's elections. Just some food for thought.
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