By Alyssa Rosenberg | Thursday, November 20, 2008 | 11:48 AM
I think Ezra Klein's point that the policy review teams Obama announced yesterday indicate that he’s picked a few priorities for policy review is well taken. But I take issue with the suggestion that the fact that there’s a “Technology, Innovation, and Government Reform” team indicates that management is a priority to the new administration. This team appears to be a technology policy review team, not a government reform team.
First, let's look at the team members' resumes. Unlike the agency review teams that deal with government, where the participants bring a real diversity of relevant experience, the resumes of Blair Levin, Sonal Shah and Julius Genachowski are heavily weighted toward technology. Both Levin and Genachowski worked at the Federal Communications Commission, and for both, that is their only experience working in a government agency. Shah worked at Treasury -- but on policy rather than administration issues -- and at the National Security Council.
There's no question that Levin, Shah and Genachowski have sterling technology reform resumes, and obviously that's an important policy issue to pursue. And it's clear that Obama sees a connection between technology and government reform. Whether it's his Google for Government proposals or having the first transition blog, technology is Obama's vehicle of choice for transparency.
But it's not enough. This would have been a great place to get a serious management person on board, someone with deep, deep experience with the civilian and political workforces. It didn't happen, and that's a lost opportunity. Maybe these folks have really innovative government reform ideas. Maybe they're ethics experts. Maybe they have some cutting-edge private sector models they think would work in government that we're all going to think is a game-changer. I hope so. But least in Obama’s choice of people to run this team, government reform is just a tacked-on phrase.
Comments
Let's hope they have some really good management experts on board, because technology without direction isn't any help. My office is working on implementing some new technology options, but it's a struggle to convince everyone that the technology is simply a TOOL. It won't make managing information any easier unless we also address the management processes we're using. If we don't, then at best the new technology won't help... at worst, it will introduce even more red tape and complications.
Colleen Ayers | Friday, November 21, 2008 | 09:53 AMThere are a lot of technological improvements to be made. Agencies cannot interact for joint projects. Agencies hire technology contractors who pursue their own agendas without coordination across agency lines. However, much of government's function is to enforce and regulate. Computers are great tools, but they never put the cuffs on a bad guy. Unless the men and women on the front lines are in the mix, and the focus is on mission--not budget or politics--other reforms won't accomplish anything.
Ted Bean | Thursday, November 20, 2008 | 12:52 PMABOUT THIS BLOG
Government Executive Editor Tom Shoop takes a look at news and events affecting the federal bureaucracy, from the perspective of a longtime observer of government.
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