Maybe it should be open source. It is using our tax dollars after all. But I think this failure isn't a failure of the software. But a failure of using software. And of have complex laws/criteria of who can be helped. We should craft laws and programs that are uncomplex. 400 million dollars on admin software to ultimately deny people care they want. That just shouldn't be a thing. We should have spent that money on helping people, and using it to 'eat' the cost of accepting too many people.Our justice system acknowledges that it's flawed and it's flawed with the idea of letting guilty people go, in order to make sure we aren't charging innocent people.(granted we are failing at that). But we should be crafting care with the intention of accidentally helping people who may have no qualified so that all qualified people would get care.
lenerdenator|1 year ago
We should just have a publicly-funded health insurance plan that applies to every American at a basic level. Then you don't have to have a massive bureaucracy to figure out who's eligible, who's not, how long they are eligible, etc.
We've successfully spent more money trying to deny people public benefits than we probably would have just providing a basic level of public benefits to everyone.
ToucanLoucan|1 year ago
Think of every single employer in this country that employs people who, despite working full time, still qualify for welfare. All of those companies have a direct financial incentive to pour shit tons of cash into ensuring our social safety net is as shitty as possible.