No. No I don't. The mail end of that is taken into account IN the postage costs, and the Australian Bureau of Statistics and the Australian Electoral Commission are Federal government departments that have extensive workforces of people that are already employed and trained, just for this. Yes, they had to bring on some temps for a month or three. Not 70 million dollars worth.
I don't agree. The ABS and AEC are big organizations, yes, but they do
not have people just sitting around all year long just to process election data. The Electoral Commission's work is seasonal, only when there is an election. They're bringing those resources to bear. They are not just people sitting around waiting to process 16 million pieces of mail at once.
If they did in fact have the needed capacity just sitting around to be able to soak up the processing of 16 million bits of correspondence without putting on many extra staff, then of course that just creates a new flaw in the logic - the ongoing costs of that wasted capacity year in, year out, would be vastly more than the cost of the plebiscite, and are you railing against
waste in the ABS/AEC in general?
The people who work for the AEC especially are
seasonal workers, the hours they work are
contingent on their being an election, so the costs are entirely contingent. If you e.g. assume that each piece of written correspondence generates about 1 minute worth of total labor needed for handling, then you're looking at a good 10% of the total budget just paid out for people's asses sitting on chairs. And the direct labor costs of someone sitting in an office chair are not the bulk of office costs.
I'm not saying that the plebiscite is a good idea or not a waste of money. I'm just saying that your logic is wrong on that. You're unable to separate your disdain for the process as a whole with
illogical critiques on the specifics of process. Processing 16 million bits of physical stuff that have all been handled by different people, and then collating that into a single source of data that is also auditable with checks and balances and protecting confidentiality, while also verifying sources is a
very expensive and time-consuming process, it's not the same as a production-line process.
No, there is no "someone" who made a lot of money off this. There are a lot of little someones who work for the ABS and especially the AEC who got extra shifts out of this, and a pile of other money went into the Australian Post Office. All of which are government-owned. I guess you could say whoever they bought the paper and envelopes from made money however.