Overcoming Trump’s U.S. Health Care Wrecking Ball
It is critical to understand these cuts in the broader context of the already highly dysfunctional U.S. health care system.
According to the Washington Post, a new GAO report identifies over $100 million in Small Business Administration contracts that have improperly been given to businesses falsely claiming to be located in economically distressed zones.
Usually the businesses just set up a fake storefront in the zone, even if their real operations are thousands of miles away. However, the GAO submitted several test applications with completely bogus information, some listing a Starbucks shop for the main company address. Several of these contracts were approved.
According to the article:
SBA officials said they would work on their internal systems to improve the verification process. Last year, administration officials quashed legislation that would have required on-site visits of applicants and other measures to ensure businesses' eligibility, calling them "burdensome or undesirable."
Incompetence and fraud at the SBA is nothing new under the Bush Administration. For a catalog of similar shenanigans from 2002-2005, see Christopher Moraff's The Incredibly Shrinking Company from our Jan/Feb 2006 issue.