Drones Cost $28,000 Per Arrest, On Average 280
mpicpp sends this report from CNN:
They are sleek, mostly silent converted weapons of war: Drones used by the Border Patrol to scan the skies in the empty deserts of the Southwest to spot illegal immigrants and then, if things work out, have agents arrest them. That's the idea, and the agents who use them say the drones give them a vantage point they never had before. Flying at 18,000 feet, the drones view the landscape below, lock onto potential suspects crossing the Arizona desert, and agents on the ground move into make the arrests. But it's outrageously expensive: $28,000 for a single arrest.
Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's assume for a moment that they're serious about deporting people.
What's the cost if they get through, and have to be tracked down by traditional methods? What's the cost of putting more people there to achieve the same level of effectiveness? What's the cost of flying conventional aircraft to do the job?
When pitted against those methods by comparison, $28,000 might actually not be all that bad.
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:4, Interesting)
well considering that minimum wage for yearly is something around $22,283 then yeah 28k is a bit expensive. let's say that the employer costs are double what the employee gets.
yes, you could hire guys with motorbikes and have them drive around 6 months to catch one guy per one hired guy EASY.
it's friggin expensive thats what it is. besides, borders aren't that hard to keep. for some reason russia-finnish border keeps people from getting over it illegally very, very tight - and it's wilderness for most part. though russians are very very keen to keep Russians from coming over..
Re: (Score:2)
well considering that minimum wage for yearly is something around $22,283 then yeah 28k is a bit expensive. let's say that the employer costs are double what the employee gets.
How is minimum wage relevant in this topic? Generally when you are guarding international borders you don't pay your people so little that they actively seek out bribes. 28K an arrest in the infancy of a program like this is astoundingly cheap and keep in mind that this should include the cost of the manpower behind it so they're washing in some of the already existing overhead to hype up the story. Even if this was 10 years from now after they have had time to discover and implement new inefficiencies in t
Re: (Score:3)
For starters, it would be more efficient to just provide minimum wage jobs to the immigrants, even if the entirety of their employment is to undo the work of other immigrants. However, there's a great likelihood that they will actually do something useful in the course of work, meaning that we might even be able to pay them a US living wage.
Perhaps you might want to pick a better example th
Re: (Score:3)
borders aren't that hard to keep.
Isn't that what East Germany said? Walls, landmines, razor wire, snipers, papers please... and they still leaked like a sieve.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
well considering that minimum wage for yearly is something around $22,283
This is why geek businesses fail.
If you're paying someone 22k a year in paychecks, you are almost certainly spending closer to $44k/year to actually have them as an employee. Assuming you had no office/uniform/tools to buy and maintain for them, at a bare minimum, you're still looking at $30k/year or so just due to taxes. Remember, your employe pays some taxes for you as well as what comes out of your paycheck that you see.
And then theres the whole ACA thing now, which is another cost, worst still, becaus
Re: (Score:2)
well considering that minimum wage for yearly is something around $22,283 then yeah 28k is a bit expensive
Ah - so instead of deporting them, it'd be cheaper to just hire them :-).
Re: (Score:2)
nearly all of them? not directly of course. and why do you think I gave the leeway of double expenses(6months).
what do you think subcontractors or rentals are getting.
they could make it into a jobs program as well, no biggie.
also, I could see the point of the drone program at 28k per arrest if it was effective at keeping the border shut. but it's not! it's ridiculous that it's not shut with all the resources put into it, it's like they don't even want it to be shut
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
The math for calculating this cost is deceptively simple-minded - and the article doesn't offer any way to compare it with other methods.
A (very) brief search for the US Border Patrol budget and apprehensions found these:
or FY2014 budget of $13.6 Billion and 486,651 apprehensions.
That gives an average cost of $27946/apprehension for the entire organization. My (very, very) simple minded calculation is remarkably similar to the Office of Inspector General's figures for just the drone program. If anything, it shows that just introducing drones doesn't change the cost-per-apprehension of the Border Patrol. A more important question would be whether cost-per-apprehension is even a valid metric for the Border Patrol.
Re: (Score:2)
It doesn't yet. Presumably you'd need to fire a bunch of the patrollers whose job is done better by one guy with a drone before you saw any financial savings. That's likely to be unpopular though, so instead you argue increased efficacy.
Re: (Score:2)
Specifically you are comparing the cost to apprehend PLUS all the fixed costs of the agency vs the cost to apprehend with a drone.
IN reality, the cost per deportation is estimated at LESS than 15,000 per deportation - including apprehension costs. Clearly the fixed costs of the agency are far greater than you realize. Effectively, the drone program more than doubles the cost to apprehend.
Re: (Score:2)
That's actually exactly how the drone costs were calculated [dhs.gov]. They took the cost to operate the drones, then added all the fixed costs of the personnel, equipment, and miscellaneous agency overhead. That inflated the drone costs from $2,468 per hour to $12,255 per hour. It's actually your deportation cost which is missing some of the
Re: (Score:2)
In fact, the cost is NOT simple, you are simply too ignorant to realize how complex the calculation is. Your math is way way off.
The drones a
Re: (Score:2)
"A more important question would be whether cost-per-apprehension is even a valid metric for the Border Patrol. "
:blink: That is probably the only valid metric for them. Well that and the accuracy of the determined status, and the treatment of those apprehended...
Re: (Score:2)
We need to consider a few things:
- What sort of drones are we talking about? For example those huge military drones that probably use as much fuel as a helicopter?
- What is the relative cost compared to the previous method?
- What are the cost break downs?
It is a huge amount of money and seems like they need to change there costing model.
Re: (Score:2)
One of the big advantages of drones is that they are far more fuel efficient. The predator has a loiter time of 24 hours I believe, and the much larger and more expensive global hawk can do 28 hours. You'd be hard pressed to find a helicopter with that kind of fuel capacity. Helicopters are inefficient because instead of a large fixed wing they have several smaller wings that are rotated at very high speed. Planes are more efficient because their fixed wing can generate lift from the drones momentum. Predat
Re: (Score:2)
But the actual cost per arrest to deport is about less than $1,000, from what I understand.
The average cost to arrest, try and deport an illegal immigrant is only $12,000 (source = http://blog.chron.com/immigrat... [chron.com] )
So the cost of $28k is ridiculous.
Re: (Score:2)
Let's assume for a moment that they're serious about deporting people.
Why? What evidence do you have?
Re: (Score:2)
28k is just bullshit.
If you bought a million dollar drone (they don't) and only caught 80 people that it gets credit for (which is not the case), then your at 25k per drone. Thats assuming you discard it after catching those 80 people (they don't)
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Americans have no interest in those jobs. I see no shortage of minimum wage, unskilled labor job postings here. Problem is most people think they're better than that.
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
Correction. Americans have no interest in those jobs at the wages being offered. Of course the wages will never rise when the employer can exploit illegal aliens at lower and sometimes even illegal wages.
But wait you think, those are minimum wage jobs. Well, nothing forces them fo pay only minimum wage. Should a real and legal market exist, they would likely be paying above minimim wage and would not be minim wage jobs.
Re: (Score:3)
Yeah, hiring troves of border protection agents is hard when Americans don't want to do that job for the rate I'm willing to pay, but that gives me an idea... does anybody know where I can find people who are willing to work for low pay, in horrible conditions, and if I don't like how hard they work, I can just send them back to their own country? Anyone? Anyone?
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Newsflash... minimum wage isn't supposed to.
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Informative)
"The purpose of the minimum wage was to stabilize the post-depression economy and protect the workers in the labor force. The minimum wage was designed to create a minimum standard of living to protect the health and well-being of employees." - actually, yea, that was the logic behind its creation.
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
Bullshit. Minimum wage is supposed to keep employers from abusing the desperate by making sure someone working full time or more can afford to survive without working themselves to death.
When people have to work 18 hours a day, 7 days a week just to afford a roof and food they find crime becomes an attractive alternative.
Re: (Score:3)
So you honestly believe that employers who currently treat their workers like disposible slaves wouldn't keep doing the same thing if they could start paying them 1/10th what they currently do?
You have gone completely off the libertarian deep end. Dear god i hope you aren't in a position of educational authority.
Re: (Score:2)
Corporate Greed and Unions are the exact same issue. Both want more than the market can bear, and eventually it all collapses. And government comes in an props up the failing Corporation/Union, often at the same time (think GM).
Why? because we're afraid of allowing failure. YET Failure is a great teacher. Something we keep failing to learn ;)
Re: (Score:3)
Actually, yes, minimum wage was meant to be at least barely adequate to keep you and your family off of food stamps and welfare.
Stop paying the CEO as much as everyone on the factory floor put together and it's not that big of a problem.
Tell the management to quit trying to pay silly stupid low wages.
It's funny how quickly the so called free market capitalists cry foul when unions demand whatever the market will bear. Sorry, you can't have it both ways.
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
Problem is most people think they're better than that.
Americans have no interest in those jobs at the rate they are currently paying. Before the influx of illegal immigration (as well as offshoring), the working class was making a living wage. Nowadays, it's damn near impossible to survive (much less thrive) on the pittance that's being passed off as minimum wage. It's literally better to not work, get on welfare, and instead live a no-stress life - free of the abuses the lowest rung on the ladder normally take. It's not an issue of what they think - people are better than that.
OH THE LOLS!
The working class was making a living wage doing, for the most part, manual unskilled job (pull a lever on a converyor belt or making US flags. That went away with globalization, starting with the rise of Japan, and then the opening of China (and India to a degree).
Many studies have already debunked the idea that illegals have been depressing salaries. Overseas competition is what is killing jobs and depressing salaries. Not that I'm supporting illegal immigration (any country must have the right to control its borders), nor demonizing overseas competition (adapt or die motherfuckers.) But let's keep shit more or less accurate, shall we?
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
The working class was making a living wage doing, for the most part, manual unskilled job (pull a lever on a converyor belt or making US flags.
I'd like to know where you got the idea that the working class was doing mostly manual unskilled jobs.
I lived in Brooklyn, where a major industry was manufacturing and repairing electric motors. That all disappeared with cheap (usually lower-quality) Japanese electric motors. We had a big electronics industry in New York. We had a big printing industry, which requires a lot of skilled workers. We had a big garment industry. We had airports with big maintenance shops. Most of the American airlines are now sending their planes out to mechanics in Latin America.
It wasn't because Americans were less efficient, or because foreign workers were willing to do the same job cheaper. German workers kept their industries and kept competitive while they paid their workers the same salaries Americans used to get. It was because the American businesses made a decision that treating their workers well wasn't a factor.
There are a wide range of jobs in an industrial factory, but most of them were skilled and high-paid. We lost them with free trade.
All the benefits of free trade went to the business owners, and none of the benefits went to the workers.
Re: (Score:2)
So importing cheap labor is better than fixing a broken system that is leaving over 100 million working-aged citizens in the lurch?
Why presume the two are mutually exclusive?
There isn't a finite amount of jobs that people compete for. When we buy cheap stuff from China, we make a decision not to pay for creation of more jobs here. Jobs that can go to people willing to work and live here, pay taxes here, and support the local economy - whether the workers were born in Tijuana or San Diego.
Re: (Score:2)
I totally agree, they probably work harder than me, I hate cleaning toilets and am not very good at it, and are just as essential, if not more, to the smooth running of society as doctors and lawyers. If all the garbage collectors stopped working tomorrow, may more people would die than if all the doctors did.
If a person is working, then they deserve dignity and wage that they can live off. What is more important? That you have the latest phone, bigger house, flasher car? Or that everyone that works can aff
Re: (Score:2)
Is there a fixed amount of labor to go around? No.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L... [wikipedia.org]
Do they make our economy more dynamic and flexible? Yes. Is this more than every? Yes.
Which is more of an argument for a overhaul of our immigration policy rather than immigration policing, but still, we should welcome immigrants.
Re: (Score:2)
Thank you. I followed the legal route, filling in countless forms (each one with a high filing fee) and waited, and waited.
Stupid me!
Congratulations, you are one of the lucky few who is even given an option to follow a legal route.
Re: (Score:3)
So your position is that the law is irrelevant. If someone wants to come in, anyway they can is OK by you.
I bet you think you have the right to download free shit from the internet too.
Re:Is that really a lot? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ya...they all came in legally, through Ellis Island. Underwent exams, were quarantined if needed and many sent back.
And they came in through the Golden Door, not the Back Door.
Re: (Score:2)
I wish humanity in general never got rid of the concept of "prison islands" and deported people that whined too much, were lazy or otherwise shit at everything.
What a shame. You were doing so well decrying the idiocy we too often see, and then that.
Re: (Score:2)
I wish you morons understood the difference between Legal and Illegal immigration.
Re: (Score:2)
I wish you morons understood the difference between Legal and Illegal immigration.
I wish you morons understood the difference between various illegal acts. There is a large moral difference between illegal immigration or pirating music, and robbing a liquor store or killing someone. Everyone who wants to reform our immigration system understands illegal immigrants have broke laws. Some of us just think the punishment for that minor infraction should be of similar magnitude as being caught speeding, rather than committing a violent or other major crime.
Re: (Score:2)
Wrong kind of drone? (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead of using a multi million dollar Predator drone to scan the border, perhaps they should be using something smaller and cheaper like a beefed up version of a Parrot drone instead.
Do we really need something that flies at 18,000 feet to patrol the border?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Years ago they were talking about teathering balloons and blimps to reach the same objective. I guess drones are much cooler.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
For a given payload, rotary-wing aircraft consume about 2-4x as much fuel [stackexchange.com] as fixed-wing aircraft. The quad-copter is actually an even bigger disadvantage since it's got 4 engines vs 1 on the Predator. (Fewer engines = more efficient. It's why airlines have been transitioning to twin-engine airliners.)
Also, if you read some of the linked docs in TFA, the $28,000 per arrest figure is the
Re: (Score:2)
Instead of using a multi million dollar Predator drone to scan the border, perhaps they should be using something smaller and cheaper like an office drone
I hear that office drones basically do anything for money as long as they can play candy crush or angry birds
Re: (Score:2)
You could pay someone minimum wage to fly cheap drones, with explosives, into border crossers.
You could have a variety of drones even. Wedge shaped ones for slicing through people, large heavy ones for crushing people, ones that break up into smaller drones for cluster bombing.
Re: (Score:2)
Well you don't even need drones for that. Just a big enough slingshot. The office drones in gp post would probably be really good at it
Re: (Score:2)
Why pay minimum wage? I bet we could outsource that work to a 3rd world country and only pay a 1/10 of minimum wage. It is not like the pilots would have to be physically here in the US to run them remotely.
Re: (Score:3)
I bet we could outsource that work to a 3rd world country and only pay a 1/10 of minimum wage. It is not like the pilots would have to be physically here in the US to run them remotely.
Good idea! We can hire drone pilots for cheap in, say, Pakistan. I can't think of anything that could possibly go wrong with this plan. ;^)
Re: (Score:2)
Better yet, produce a game for Xbox or PS4 in which the players are operating drones and think that they're playing a game when they're really fragging people on the ground. You won't have to pay them- they'd pay for the privilege to play.
Re: (Score:2)
Why not increase the number of H1-B visas for people to do this?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Damn lag...
Re: (Score:2)
That's kind of what I was thinking. The border isn't going anywhere, so since the observation area is pretty static, it seems like a string of observation blimps would work just about as well.
Re: (Score:2)
Probably, yes. If you can station a high endurance drone up high it can cover more ground than a bunch of little ones, and only needs one pilot and a launch and recovery team at an airport somewhere. The little ones each need a launch and recovery team. The secret to making it cost effective is to fire a bunch of patrol teams that it replaces.
Re: (Score:3)
Don't be silly!
Have you ever seen the view from a tall building? How about from an airplane? From 18k feet you can see a lot of ground. Predator drones can stay up for many hours (maybe even days at a time).
Parrot drones fly at rock-throwing altitudes for about 10 minutes at a time. How many thousands of them (and people to operate them) do you think it would take to view the same area as one predator flying at 18k feet?
Re: (Score:2)
expensive? that's the idea. (Score:2)
Getting lots of money to War, Inc. is the *goal*; the way it's dressed up doesn't really matter that much.
Scanning the skies? (Score:5, Funny)
scan the skies in the empty deserts of the Southwest to spot illegal immigrants
Hey guys, I think I see the problem.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
To make sure they stay empty and keep them that way.
Actually, skme of this is more humanitarian than authoritarian. A lot of these places in the desert will ohtfight kill yoh before you can cross it if you are not prepared.
Re: (Score:2)
scan the skies in the empty deserts of the Southwest to spot illegal immigrants
Hey guys, I think I see the problem.
Why not? Aliens usually come in Unidentified Flying Objects...
Government spending money on anything is terrible (Score:2, Insightful)
except for the military, naturally. Republicans love them some war boners.
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly. Because military is one of the very few things, which is the government's actual responsibility per the Constitution.
Most of the rest is just that — unconstitutional:
The lost [npr.org]
Re: (Score:2)
The lost [npr.org] "War on Poverty", which we've been fighting for the last 50 years, has cost us — inflation-adjusted — $22 trillion or, roughly three times more than all actual wars combined since founding of the Republic [infowars.com]
Anyone who thinks that the US has spent less than 7 trillion dollars on war, total, and adjusted for inflation, is cherry-picking from a very conservative data set. No wonder the linked article doesn't give a citation for that figure.
Re: (Score:2)
Dear Cthulhu, I just noticed that he cited /Infowars/ and expected people to take it seriously. Infowars, founded by Alex Jones, who never met a conspiracy theory he didn't like.
Re: (Score:2)
Seriously? You are disputing the figure, because I cited Infowars? Ok, how about these guys [dailykos.com]? True to form, and with the customary wit and sophistication, the DailyKos are "killing the zombie lies about the war on poverty" — but even they cite and do not dispute the cost of the war: $22 trillion in today's (well, last year's) dollars.
Re: (Score:2)
You may find it hard to believe, but I don't count Kos as a reliable source either. They're just as interested in pushing a political POV as Infowars.
Given your inability to pick any sort of reliable politically-neutral source, I'm going to assume you're a fucktard and ignore you.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, yes, anyone who disagrees with you is a moron, right.
One would have thought, Hans Christian Andersen took care of this kind of argument [wikipedia.org], but an opinion of a long-dead White dude does not matter to you, does it?
Well, this one [dailykos.com] does — and though it disputes a number of
Re: (Score:2)
Please, don't hate.
Ho ho ho, that's rich coming from you.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You have remarkably little self-awareness.
Wrong kind of metric... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Wrong kind of metric... (Score:5, Funny)
I wish my performance review would have a category of percent of undiscovered bugs.
Re: (Score:2)
Specifically, it could have said:
Drone cost to apprehend: $28,000
Piloted aircraft cost to apprehend: $15,000
Piloted Boat cost to apprehend: $10,000
Land Vehicle cost to apprehend: $1,000
Foot agent cost to apprehend: $1,500
If the article had done this then we could have easily said no drones, piloted aircraft only AND limit the
Not a bad price (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Can you really put a price on oppression? Not everything has to be about the bottom line.
You know if you just start putting fining... (Score:3, Insightful)
I lived in Nevada and the landlord used to complain every day about all the illegals in the area. I got frustrated with her one day and stated if you stop employing them to paint, do yard work, and cook they would all leave or at least stop coming here.
Farmers need some method to get folks willing to help to the farms, that system has to be in place along side the other ones.
Once the Nancy pelosi's and others employing them as maids and gardeners get fined and put in prison this will end. You will never stop this with drones or guns. Stop the Money and you stop the problem. At this point in time, I'd jump the fence and take the chance just like they are in their positions.
Taking a vacation to america to have a baby has to end also. Its an archaic method that has to stop.
But drones are so kewl (Score:5, Interesting)
At first glance I was prepared to say, "Expensive compared to what?" I was initially prepared to support the drone program. But when I read TFA and got some details, I think it would be fair to say that this drone program is something of a failure.
The border is always in the same place, and therefore the same areas are being patrolled. You don't need a drone to do that. Couldn't you practically accomplish the same thing with observation blimps at a much lower cost? Sure, it doesn't quite have the same "cool" factor, but I would wager it could get the job done.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't think it's about the "cool" factor as much as the fact that the same people that own the military industry also own the politicians who make these decisions.
Re: (Score:2)
$28,000 per arrest could be cheap compared to the alternatives [zdnet.com]. You can use as many or as few drones to cover a given area as you need to maintain an acceptable captur rate. And drones can be moved more easiy than stuff that's fixed or tied to ground facilities.
If we are going to do numbers that way..... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3)
Bad math (Score:2)
Take the development cost plus all of the manufacturing costs and divide by the number of arrests so far....
So with every arrest, the average price decreases! Let's see it in 10 years.
Actual Cost (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
And of course, illegals
* Prop up the economy
* Depress the working wage
If they actually managed to put up a proper border control, people might have to pay their gardener / maid / pickers a decent wage....
It must be hard being a right-wing politician. On one hand, wanting "American jobs for Americans!". On the other hand, not wanting to actually have to pay for them.
Re: (Score:2)
As opposed to Democrats who love illegal immigrants and want them here by the millions, but then can't understand why wages can't keep up as the labor market gets flooded.
Re: (Score:2)
Not about cost. It's about value.
For that cost, for the price of a couple of drones you could put another couple of officers, stationed permanently to do just their job. And thereby free up whatever officers would also, presumably, need to be present to enable the original drones to operate too.
Simplify the choice - one drone, or two officers (maybe an officer and a half) on the ground doing the same job and NOTHING else - and the value motive really comes to the fore.
Law enforcement isn't about what it c
Re: (Score:2)
Not at all. Because the intention of my post was to expose yet another bit of an orchestrated campaign in support of mass immigration.
And not by people like myself, who are attracted by Americans' freedoms and seek to escape oppressive regimes at home. No, those folks are rather inconvenient — for they tend to argue and fight for preservation of those freedoms that they found so attractive in the firs
Re: (Score:2)
If you hope to one day collect a social security check from the Ponzi scheme that it is, you'd better start welcoming immigrants with open arms.
Re: (Score:2)
Ah, so it is not about "compassion" or "children", after all, is it? Interesting way for the truth to come out...
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
I get, and sometimes sign, online petitions from the democrat party (as well as tea party-type petitions -- liberals incorrectly think I'm a liberal; conservatives incorrectly think I'm a conservative; go figure). One of the latest ones was titled something like "OMG, the Republicans want to shut down DHS; sign this to stop them!" and all I could think was that it's about damned time -- why the fuck would I want to stop them?! Shutting down DHS is an example of the Republicans doing something right, for a c
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
"A supermajority of voters favor deficit spending, so that's the policy we currently have."
So why cry about "outrageous" spending in the first place?
"Amortize the deficit across everyone, and you'll find that all households cost "the taxpayer" many thousands of dollars per year."
You apparently missed the 'net' part of my comment. If you'd RTFA, you'd see that Heritage was talking net results, meaning total contribution vs cost; And yes, that means that a giant pile of American citizens are leeches, you're