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- Conclusion
-
- ********************************
- Though I do not believe that a plant will spring up where no seed
- has been, I have great faith in a seed. Convince me that you
- have a seed there, and I am prepared to expect wonders.
-
- Henry David Thoreau
- ********************************
-
- Unlike many past efforts to change the government, the
- National Performance Review will not end with the publication of
- a report. We have identified what we must do to make government
- work better and cost less: We must serve our customers, cut red
- tape, empower employees to get results, and cut back to basics.
- Now, we will take action.
-
- The task is immense. The federal government has 2.1 million
- civilian employees, 800,000 postal workers, 1.8 million military
- personnel, and a $1.5 trillion budget--more than the entire gross
- domestic product of Germany, the world's third largest economy.
- The National Performance Review has identified the problems
- and defined solutions. The President will issue directives,
- cabinet secretaries will change administrative practices, and
- Office of Management and Budget will issue guidance. We will work
- with Congress for legislation where it's needed. Senseless
- regulations will be repealed; mechanisms to enhance customer
- service will be created; change will begin.
-
- But we do not pretend to have solved every problem. We will
- transform the federal government only if our actions--and the
- Reinvention Teams and Labs now in place in every
- department--succeed in planting a seed. That seed will sprout
- only if we create a process of ongoing change that branches
- outward from the work we have already done.
-
- *****************************
- This performance review will not produce another report just to
- gather dust in some warehouse. We have enough of them already.
- President Bill Clinton
- Remarks announcing the National Performance Review, March 3, 1993
- *****************************
-
- How we proceed will be as important as what we have done to
- date. We must avoid the pull of implementation models that are
- familiar and comfortable but poorly suited to today's world. We
- must avoid creating new bureaucracies to reform the old. We must
- actively involve government leaders at all levels. We must seek
- the guidance of those who have successfully transformed large
- organizations in both the private and public sectors.
-
- The nature of our strategies will no doubt cause discomfort.
- They will be unfamiliar. They will not look like business as
- usual. They will challenge the current federal culture. And they
- will demand risk-taking.
-
- If we are to bring about true change, however, some
- discomfort is inevitable. Our strategies are not untested; they
- have been used successfully by both public and private
- organizations throughout the country.
-
- *********************************
- What we're trying to do is to create a large number of changes,
- simultaneously, in the federal government. Because if you just
- change one thing without changing some of the other things that
- need to be changed, we won't get anywhere. We can bring the
- quality revolution, for example, into the federal workforce as
- well as it could possibly be done, and if we didn't fix some of
- the other problems, it wouldn't amount to much. We could fix the
- personnel system, but if we didn't fix the budgetary system and
- the
- procurement system, then we would still be mired in a lot of the
- difficulties that we encounter today. We are trying to do a lot
- of things at the same time.
-
- Vice President Al Gore
- Town Hall Meeting,
- Department of Veterans Affairs
- August 4, 1993
- ***********************************
-
- To succeed where others have failed, the President and Vice
- President have committed to specific initiatives that will create
- a culture capable of sustaining fundamental change. This shift in
- culture will not occur overnight. To bring it about, we will
- continue:
-
- - a cascading process of education, participation, and
- ownership at the highest levels of the executive branch;
-
- - two-way communication with federal employees and
- organizations;
-
- - bi-partisan partnership with Congress;
-
- - processes to listen to and use feedback from customers and
- citizens; and
-
- - government-wide mechanisms to monitor, coordinate, and
- facilitate plans for reinvention.
-
-
-
- The administration has already taken a number of steps to
- bring about the changes we are recommending.
-
- First, we have launched Reinvention Teams and Reinvention
- Labs in every department to continue seeking ways to improve the
- government and put these ideas in practice.
-
- Second, we have begun to work--and will continue to expand
- relationships--with leaders and representatives of federal
- employees from throughout the government. Indeed, the National
- Performance Review is the first government-wide change initiative
- to be run and staffed by federal employees. Our actions will make
- employees' jobs better, and their participation will make our
- actions better.
-
- Third, the President and Vice President have begun to work
- with the cabinet to develop performance agreements that will
- institutionalize a commitment to and establish accountability for
- change.
-
- Fourth, we have developed a mechanism to spread our basic
- principles throughout the government. The President will meet
- with the cabinet to develop strategies reflecting these
- principles and ideas, committing all involved to take
- responsibility for changing the way we do business. Cabinet
- members will then go through the same process with their senior
- managers, who will go through it with their senior managers, and
- so on.
-
- Fifth, the President is establishing a management council
- to monitor change and provide guidance and resources to those
- working to bring it about. The President's Management Council
- will be charged with responsibility for changing the culture and
- management of the federal government.
-
- Sixth, the Federal Quality Institute will help agencies with
- access to information, education, research, and consultation on
- quality management. Like our other initiatives, this models a
- basic tenet of the behavior we recommend--encouraging managers to
- define their own missions and tasks, but providing the support
- they need to do a good job.
-
- Seventh, we will launch future reviews of the federal
- government, targeted at specific problems. The National
- Performance Review was a learning experience; we learned what we
- could do in six months, and what we still need to do. We focused
- heavily on the basic systems that drive federal agencies: the
- budget, personnel, procurement, financial management,
- accountability, and management systems. In subsequent reviews, we
- will narrow our focus. For example, we plan a review of the
- antiquated federal field office structure, which dates from the
- 1930s and contains some 30,000 field offices. (See Chapter 4.)
- Other targets might include the abandonment of obsolete programs;
- the elimination of unproductive subsidies; the redesign of failed
- programs; the redefinition of relationships between the federal
- government and state and local governments; and the
- reinvigoration of relationships between the executive and
- legislative branches.
-
- Finally, the National Performance Review will continue to
- rely on its greatest asset: the federal employees who made it
- happen. They have all worked hard for change, and many will
- continue to work on reinvention in their own agencies. They
- constitute a network that will reach out to other employees,
- sharing their enthusiasm, energy, and ideas.
-
- ******************************
- Our task is not to fix the blame for the past, but to fix the
- course for the future.
- President John F. Kennedy
- ******************************
-
- During this process, a vision of change will emerge beyond
- that which is contained in this report. Leadership and management
- values will, over time, change--not in response to a mandate, but
- because people are working together to change their government.
- If we have done our job well, the next generation of changes will
- be built on the foundation we have laid with this report. We are
- merely initial planners; the President, the Vice President, the
- cabinet, federal managers and employees will be the architects
- and builders.
-
- Despite all the horror stories and years of scorn heaped on
- federal employees, our government is staffed by people committed
- to their jobs, qualified to do them better, and hungry for the
- opportunity to try. The environment and culture of government
- have discouraged many of these people; the system has undermined
- itself. But we can--and will--change that environment and
- culture.
-
- Over time, it will become increasingly obvious that people
- are not the problem. As old ways of thinking and acting are
- replaced by a culture that promotes reinvention and quality, a
- new face of government will appear--the face of employees newly
- empowered and newly motivated, and of customers newly satisfied.
-
-
-
- What Reinventing Government Means for You
-
- We have talked enough of what we will do and how we will
- change. The more important question is how life will change for
- you, the American people.
-
- If we succeed--if the administration can implement our
- recommended actions and Congress can pass our legislative
- package--you will begin to see a different government. Your mail
- will be delivered more rapidly. When you call a Social Security
- office, you'll get through. When you call the Internal Revenue
- Service, you'll get accurate answers-- and if you don't, you will
- no longer be penalized.
-
- If you lose your job, a local career center will help you
- find a new one. If you want retraining, or you want to go back to
- school, you'll find counselors who can help you sort out your
- options, pick the best program, and pay for it. If you run a
- small business, you will have fewer forms to fill out.
-
- ****************************
- Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir men's blood, and
- probably themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim
- high in hope and work, remembering that a noble logical diagram,
- once recorded, will never die, but long after we are gone will be
- a living thing, asserting itself with ever-growing insistency.
- Daniel Burnham 1907
- ****************************
- If you live in public housing, your apartment complex might
- get cleaner and safer. Perhaps you'll even be able to move your
- family to a safer, quieter, more stable neighborhood.
-
- Our workplaces will get safer because they are inspected
- more often. Our water will get cleaner. Your local government
- will work better because it is no longer hamstrung by silly
- federal
- regulations.
-
- And perhaps the federal debt--that $4 trillion albatross
- around the necks of our children and grandchildren--will slow its
- rampage. Our federal agencies will begin to figure out, bit by
- bit by bit, how to cut spending, eliminate the obsolete, and
- provide better service for less money.
-
- You will begin to feel, when you walk into a post office or
- social security office or employment service or veterans'
- hospital, like a valued customer. We will begin to spend more
- money on things you want and need--health care, training,
- education, environmental protection--and less on bureaucracy. One
- day you will be able to conclude that you are getting a dollar of
- value for every dollar of taxes you pay.
-
- This is our vision of a government that works better and
- costs less. We know it will not come to be overnight, but we
- believe it is a vision we can bring to life. We believe this
- because we have already seen this vision come to life--in local
- governments, in state agencies, even in a few federal agencies.
- We believe it is the right vision for government as we approach
- the 21st century.
-
- It will take more than a dedicated President and Vice
- President to make this vision a reality, however. It will take
- more than dedicated employees. It will take dedicated citizens,
- willing to work long and hard to improve their government.
-
- It will take citizens willing to push their social security
- offices and unemployment offices to treat them like
- customers--and to demand that their voices be heard when they
- don't get satisfaction. It will take citizens willing to demand
- information about the performance of their federal organizations.
- And it will take citizens willing to act on the basis of that
- information.
-
- As our President has said so often, the future is ours--if
- we have the courage to create it.
-
-