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OPENING STATEMENT OF
SENATOR GEORGE V. VOINOVICH, CHAIRMAN
SUBCOMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT OF GOVERNMENT MANAGEMENT, THE FEDERAL
WORKFORCE AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
FIELD HEARING AT WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE
“AN OVERLOOKED ASSET: THE DEFENSE CIVILIAN WORKFORCE”
MONDAY, MAY 12, 2003
The Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management and
the Federal Workforce will come to order. Good afternoon,
and thank you all for coming. I thank General Charles Metcalf
and the Air Force Museum for hosting this field hearing. I
appreciate your hard work and cooperation. As many of you
know, this hearing was originally scheduled to take place
in February, but inclement weather in Washington and Ohio
caused its postponement. I am pleased that we were able to
reschedule the event for this spring.
Today’s hearing is entitled, “An Overlooked Asset:
The Defense Civilian Workforce.” This is the thirteenth
hearing that this Subcommittee has held on the formidable
human capital challenges confronting the federal government.
Today we are examining one significant element of the federal
government’s 1.8 million employee workforce: the civilian
staff of the Department of Defense, the almost 700,000 workers
who stand behind our men and women in uniform each and every
day.
I mean this literally, in that they conduct vital research
and development, administer bases, build and repair military
equipment in arsenals and depots, operate the commissaries
and exchanges that are so important to the morale of our servicemen
and women, and countless other tasks.
However, I mean it figuratively as well. Congress and the
Administration often spend more time examining and trying
to ensure the health of the uniformed services than the Defense
civilian workforce. To some extent, this is understandable.
Military personnel are often sent into harm’s way, and
can expect long separations in harsh, isolated locations from
their homes and families. These are just two aspects of serving
in uniform that the vast majority of civil servants do not
face.
Nevertheless, we must stop overlooking the Defense civilian
workforce and instead ensure that it too has the tools and
resources it needs to perform its absolutely vital missions.
We will ill serve the men and women on the front lines if
the workforce designed to support them is inadequately manned
and trained. I would note, however, that this year is different.
The Bush Administration is working this address these issues,
and Secretary Rumsfeld and his Defense Department team are
to be commended for those efforts.
In March 2001, the Subcommittee held a hearing entitled,
“National Security Implications of the Human Capital
Crisis.” Among our panel of distinguished witnesses
that day were was former Defense Secretary James Schlesinger,
member of the U.S. Commission on National Security in the
21st Century. Secretary Schlesinger discussed a comprehensive
evaluation on national security strategy and structure that
was undertaken by the Commission. Regarding human capital,
the Commission’s final report concluded:
“As it enters the 21st century, the United States finds
itself on the brink of an unprecedented crisis of competence
in government. The maintenance of American power in the world
depends on the quality of U.S. government personnel, civil
and military, at all levels. We must take immediate action
in the personnel area to ensure that the United States can
meet future challenges.”
Secretary Schlesinger added further:
“...it is the Commission’s view that fixing the
personnel problem is a precondition for fixing virtually everything
else that needs repair in the institutional edifice of U.S.
national security policy.”
Since 1999, I have worked to express the urgency of the
federal government’s human capital challenges –
and their impact on critically important government functions,
such as national security – to my colleagues. I have
championed a series of legislative reforms in Congress, which
should have a significant impact on the way the federal government
manages its people in the coming years.
In fact, the first legislative solution I authored had its
genesis right here at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Three
years ago, base leadership shared with me their concerns that
the civilian workforce was not configured properly to achieve
current and projected mission requirements. Working with my
colleagues on the Governmental Affairs and Armed Services
Committees, we drafted a measure to address these workforce
shaping challenges. I was the primary sponsor of an amendment
to the Fiscal Year 2000 Defense Authorization Act that authorized
9,000 voluntary early retirement and voluntary separation
incentive payments through this fiscal year. Of those 9,000
slots, 365 have been used here at Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base, 101 of which were used by the Aeronautical Systems Center.
I am interested in hearing more about how the Department of
Defense, as well as the Air Force and Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base, have used those authorities.
In addition, significant governmentwide flexibilities, which
I also authored, were included in the homeland security legislation
that became law last year. I hope to learn today how the Department
intends to use those authorities. On a related topic, the
Department recently presented to Congress and requested enactment
of the Defense Transformation for the 21st Century Act, which
includes a proposed “National Security Personnel System”
that would dramatically overhaul the way DoD manages its people.
Although committees in the House of Representatives have examined
and marked up NSPS in a series of hearings during the past
two weeks, I am hoping today that our Senate Subcommittee
may learn more of the details and justifications behind this
major reform proposal.
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