By Stephen Barr
Friday, November 3, 2006; D04
Top policymakers who oversee federal management issues talk all the time in the privacy of their offices and are rarely seen in public together. But yesterday, five officials appeared together in public to discuss internal workings of the government.
They shared no secrets, talking in general terms about the urgency of reshaping the federal workforce, cleaning up the government's financial books and pulling the plug on duplicative technology systems.
It was, for the most part, a comfortable venue for the five -- four from the Office of Management and Budget and one from the Office of Personnel Management. They took questions from a lunchtime audience of about 200 current and former federal officials, scholars and public administration experts.
Unmentioned were next week's congressional elections and poll-fed speculation that Democrats could take control of one or both houses of Congress. A Democratic Party victory, of course, would probably push the president's management agenda to the sidelines.
Still, a couple of the questioners had an eye to the future, asking the officials what they hoped to accomplish in the last two years of the Bush administration and whether they thought President Bush's management agenda would survive in the next White House.
Karen Evans , the OMB's technology chief, said she would find it hard to believe that the next president wouldn't care about privacy and cybersecurity issues. She promised to keep pushing agencies to shut down overlapping computer networks and produce long-term savings.
But she acknowledged that in the next administration, "you may see that [federal technology] investments will change . . . to support different priorities."
Paul Dennett , in charge of federal procurement policy at OMB, pledged to continue efforts aimed at putting federal work up for private-sector competition to see whether in-house teams or contractors can perform commercial activities at less cost. "It is very important that we make competitive sourcing work," he said.
The contracting initiative has been one of the most controversial workforce efforts undertaken by the administration, prompting union protests and some congressional restrictions.
Robert Shea , who has headed up a project to rate federal programs based on their performance, said he would urge the next White House to use a scorecard to track agencies' progress toward management goals.
Joining Shea, Evans and Dennett were Linda Combs , who handles financial management policy at the OMB, and Solly Thomas , the acting associate director at the OPM who oversees efforts to hold agencies accountable for managing their workforces.
The forum was sponsored by the IBM Center for the Business of Government, which sponsors research on how to improve the effectiveness of federal, state and local governments.
Blair Named to Postal CommissionDan G. Blair , deputy director at the OPM, will be nominated by the president to serve on the Postal Rate Commission and, upon confirmation, would be named as the panel's chairman, the White House announced yesterday.
Before joining the OPM in 2002, Blair was senior counsel for the old Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs. He earlier served as staff director of the House government reform subcommittee on the Postal Service. At the OPM, he did a stint as acting director and has overseen efforts to streamline the federal hiring process and to improve recruitment of college graduates into the federal service.
The Postal Rate Commission is an independent agency that reviews Postal Service requests to increase the price of stamps and adjust domestic mail rates. The commission's recommendations are sent to the board of governors for the Postal Service.
New Management Chief for DHSPaul A. Schneider , a defense and aerospace consultant, has been named by the president to serve as undersecretary for management in the Department of Homeland Security, the White House said.
Schneider began his career in 1965 as a project engineer at a naval shipyard and has held several executive positions in the Navy. He also has served as the senior acquisition executive of the National Security Agency.
As management chief for Homeland Security, Schneider will oversee procurement, personnel, technology and budget policies affecting the 22 agencies that merged to become the department.
Talk ShowsRobyn Kehoe , Washington representative for the Federal Employee Education & Assistance Fund, will be the guest on "FedTalk" at 11 a.m. today on http://federalnewsradio.com and WFED radio (1050 AM).
R. David Paulison , director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, will be the guest on "The IBM Business of Government Hour" at 9 a.m. Saturday on WJFK radio (106.7 FM).
Stephen Barr's e-mail address isbarrs@washpost.com.
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