A Thousand Cuts
President Obama’s Campaign to Cut Waste was launched in June 2011, but it started earlier than that. It was presaged in his 2011 State of the Union address, when he said the government needed to be reorganized. While that hasn’t happened yet, there are a number of initiatives federal managers have been inundated with to develop plans and implement. . . . A thousand cuts begin with directives, memos, and orders, so here’s a list from the past year (there are more that go back further!):
- Executive Order 13589: “Promoting Efficient Spending.” November 9, 2011
- OMB: M-11-35, Eliminating Excess Conference Spending and Promoting Efficiency in Government (September 21, 2011)
- OMB: M-11-31, Delivering an Efficient, Effective, and Accountable Government (August 17, 2011)
- OMB: M-11-30, Fiscal Year 2013 Budget Guidance (August 17, 2011)
- OMB Memo, Campaign to Cut Waste (June 28, 2011)
- Executive Order 13576, “Delivering an Efficient, Effective, and Accountable Government.” June 13, 2011
- OMB: M-11-24, Implementing Executive Order 13571 on Streamlining Service Delivery and Improving Customer Service (June 13, 2011)
- OPM: Guidance on Awards for Fiscal Years 2011 and 2012 (June 10, 2011)
- OMB: M-11-22, Realignment of Federal Real Estate (May 4, 2011)
- OMB: M-11-21, Implementing the Presidential Memorandum "Administrative Flexibility, Lower Costs, and Better Results for State, Local, and Tribal Governments" (April 29, 2011)
- Executive Order 13571: Streamlining Service Delivery and Improving Customer Service (April 27, 2011)
- OMB: M-11-18, Implementation of the SAVE Award in the President's FY 2012 Budget (April 25, 2011)
- OMB: M-11-17, Delivering on the Accountable Government Initiative and Implementing the GPRA Modernization Act of 2010 (April 14, 2011)
- Presidential Memo: Government Reform for Competitiveness and Innovation (March 11, 2011)
- Presidential Memo: Administrative Flexibility, Lower Costs, and Better Results for State, Local, and Tribal Governments (February 28, 2011)
- OMB: M-11-04, Increasing Efforts to Recapture Improper Payments by Intensifying and Expanding Payment Recapture Audits (November 16, 2010)
(if you know of more, please add in the comment box below!)
What’s been the impact? Washington Post’s Ed O’Keefe writes about the latest executive order to reduce administrative expenses by 20 percent (saving about $4 billion a year to be re-directed to higher priorities). The order targets travel, technology, and “swag” promotional items. He quotes the reaction of one employee at the Agriculture Department’s headquarters office, who said the agency “has removed every other light bulb in the halls, consolidated office space, barely heats the space enough to keep pipes from freezing, has cut cleaning to the bone (creating a vermin problem), and leaves many employees to purchase their own office supplies.”
Trying to be helpful, the Government Accountability Office even wrote a report, “Streamlining Government: Key Practices from Select Efficiency Initiatives Should Be Shared Governmentwide.” GAO recommends that OMB share best practices between agencies on how to cut.
A more hopeful lens for how to approach the cuts, though, was offered by GSA Administrator Martha Johnson in her remarks at the Executive Leadership Conference in Williamsburg, VA several weeks ago: “Tight budgets should trigger innovation, not fear.”