Concerned about government travel expenses?
Here’s a thought.
Concerned about government travel expenses?
Here’s a thought.
Joe Davidson
Joe Davidson writes the Federal Diary, a column about the federal workplace that celebrated its 80th birthday in November 2012. Davidson previously was an assistant city editor at The Washington Post and a Washington and foreign correspondent with The Wall Street Journal, where he covered federal agencies and political campaigns.
More from Federal Diary:
House hearing may reveal more information about who is to blame. Lois Lerner, director of exempt organizations for the Internal Revenue Service, is at the center of the IRS scandal about targeting conservative organizations for extra scrutiny. She’s scheduled to testify Wednesday before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
FEDERAL DIARY | Earlier this month, Vice President Biden and Secretary of State John Kerry participated in the American Foreign Service Association ceremony, which honored government workers slain abroad.
FEDERAL DIARY | Even before the current troubles involving the IRS’s targeting of conservative political groups and the Justice Department’s secret seizure of AP telephone records, trust in the federal government was low. Current scandals will smear federal employees, but provide lessons for other agencies.
Slice agency budgets, across the board.
Tell employees not to work one or two days a week. Don’t pay them for that time.
This recipe not only will reduce federal employee travel, it also will make an across-the-board cut in their morale and do a disservice to American taxpayers.
There is a better way to reduce government travel expenses, even if Congress can’t find a better way to run the government than the across-the-board cuts known as sequestration, which are set to take effect Friday.
But going too far, cutting too much travel spending in ways that aren’t smart, can have unintended bad consequences — witness the sequester.
A good way to cut travel spending is to put it under a microscope. That’s been the case since top leaders of the General Services Administration resigned or were fired in April after a report about excessive spending on a 2010 agency conference off the Las Vegas Strip.
The next month, the Office of Management and Budget directed agencies to reduce travel spending for fiscal 2013 by at least 30 percent from 2010 levels. The lower levels are to be maintained through 2016.
Because of the GSA’s bad publicity, senior management approval now is required for conference spending over certain levels, and this year agencies began online posting of annual conference spending over $100,000, Daniel I. Werfel, the OMB’s controller, told a House hearing Wednesday.
Apparently, those and other measures are paying off.
Travel spending dropped by $2 billion from 2010 to 2012, Werfel said.
“These reductions have been the result of reducing overall travel, and also ensuring that required travel is completed in a cost-effective manner,” he told the Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee on the federal workforce, U.S. Postal Service and the census.
Congress also is curtailing its travel. House members will be allowed overseas trips only to review military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, my colleague Paul Kane reported Wednesday.
Agencies are cutting conference expenses in various ways and some of them make good sense. But there’s a danger that clamping down too hard on federal employee travel could be counterproductive.
Rep. Rush D. Holt (D-N.J.) sounded a note of caution. “As we work to ensure oversight on travel expenditures, we also should work to preserve the many benefits of appropriate travel, which can promote collaboration and innovation,” Holt, a physicist, told the panel.
“As a scientist, I know firsthand how important scientific conferences and meetings are,” he said. “The informal conversations, as well as the formal presentations and poster sessions that go into a conference among scientists from different institutions, lead to new collaborations that have the promise of new discoveries. These are not fancy junkets.”
Pointing to the Government Spending Accountability Act (H.R. 313) and the OMB’s May 2012 guidance to agencies, Holt said they “initiate prohibitions and impediments that would hinder American scientists’ ability to collaborate and communicate with scientists at other institutions and laboratories.”
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