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Apr 26, 2008

Haven't Noticed Much Of This At SSA

From the Washington Post:

Joseph Wassmann thought he had a secure position producing videos for the U.S. Military Academy, but not long ago he found his job on the line because of a Bush administration plan to inject more efficiency into the federal bureaucracy.

Wassmann, 40, was among a group of information management employees at West Point who had to prove that they could do their jobs better and more cheaply than a private contractor. If they could not, they were told, the work would be outsourced. It was all part of President Bush's government-wide plan to reduce costs by inviting contractors to bid on about 425,000 federal jobs that could be considered "commercial" in nature.

The West Point competition dragged on for more than two years. In the end, Wassmann and most of his co-workers won, but only by agreeing to downsize from 119 employees to 88. And the mood has never been worse, he said. ...

The public-private face-off at West Point illustrates just what Bush envisioned when he proposed the "competitive sourcing" initiative in 2001 as part of his management agenda. It turned on a simple idea: Force federal employees to compete for their jobs against private contractors and costs will decrease, even if the work ultimately stays in-house.

But as Bush's presidency winds down, the program's critics say it has had disappointing results and shaken morale among the federal government's 1.8 million civil servants.

Private contractors have grown increasingly reluctant to participate in the competitions, which federal employees have won 83 percent of the time.

The article says that 210 Social Security employees' jobs were threatened in this way and that 84% of those employees kept their jobs. It makes you wonder why Social Security brass seem convinced that they can get much better productivity out of their employees when private enterprise seem unwilling to compete with the productivity that Social Security is already getting from those employees.

4 comments:

  1. Try looking at the kind of SSA jobs eligible for these competitions. The ones that matter most - claims reps, service reps, disability examiners, case techs, ALJs, should all be considered inherently governmental.

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  2. SSA stuck it to quite a few WG employees. They pretty much wiped out all the print shop jobs.

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  3. Not to mention just about every WG job in the supply warehouses and a good part of the transportation jobs.

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  4. Yep. The lowest paid employees had to compete with companies with even lower paid employees. Beautiful. Perfect. About what you'd expect from people who made torture our national policy.

    As Warren Buffett put it, "If there's class warfare going on in America, then my class is winning."

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