Goodbye This is the final edition of GovManagement Daily, which is ending publication as the editor moves on to other pursuits. The editor wishes to express his gratitude to the American Society for Public Administration, which has generously underwritten publication of GovManagement Daily for five years. And watch your inbox: ASPA will soon be launching a new daily email newsletter focusing on government management. For more information, contact Karen Garrett (kgarrett@aspanet.org). |
NEWS: Dec. 23, 2016 The Presidency | The Nation Trump Transition Team Wants Details on State Department Programs for Women President-elect Donald Trump's transition team has asked the State Department to submit details of programs and a list of positions aimed at promoting gender equality around the world, rattling employees concerned that the incoming administration will roll back a cornerstone project of former secretary of state Hillary Clinton. >> New York Times, Los Angeles Times RNC Official Named White House Press Secretary Trump named Republican National Committee official Sean Spicer as White House press secretary, filling what is likely to be a challenging position given Trump's sometimes hostile relationship with the media and his propensity to communicate directly on Twitter. >> Washington Post Military, Secret Service Map NYC Escape Routes for Trump A search-and-rescue aircraft and two helicopters seen flying at low levels over midtown Manhattan last week were conducting surveillance and mapping escape routes for the Secret Service as part of a security plan for Trump, two law-enforcement officials said. >> CNN Public Officials | Los Angeles County Sheriff's Corruption Case Ends in Mistrial with Jury Split A mistrial was declared in the corruption case against former Sheriff Lee Baca after a federal jury split 11 to 1 in favor of an acquittal. The mistrial on charges that he tried to obstruct an FBI investigation into A mistrial was declared in the corruption case against former Sheriff Lee Baca after a federal jury split 11 to 1 in favor of an acquittal. The mistrial on charges that he tried to obstruct an FBI investigation into allegations that deputies abused jail inmates offers at least a temporary reprieve for Baca, who ran the nation's largest sheriff's department for more than 15 years and resigned in 2014 as the jail scandal enveloped his agency. >> Los Angeles Times Immigration | The Nation Obama Scraps Immigrant Registration Program The Obama administration officially scrapped the last vestiges of a registration system for immigrant men arriving from the Islamic world, a post-9/11 program that hasn't been enforced since 2011. If President-elect Donald Trump now wants to introduce an expanded version of the program, he will have to start from scratch. >> AP/Yahoo News Obama: Help Immigrants in Military Access Benefits President Obama directed federal agencies to do a better job making sure immigrants who serve in the U.S. military and their families have access to benefits and other assistance for which they are eligible. >> Government Executive Public Workforce | The Nation Senator Asks Agencies for More Info on Retaliation Against Whistleblowers Responding to what she has called troubling weaknesses in protections for federal-government whistleblowers, U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat, has asked federal agencies for information on senior managers who may have retaliated against government workers who reported wrongdoing. >> New York Times Bill Boosts Early-Out Pay for Defense Civilians by $15,000 Defense Department civilians willing to retire early would get a $15,000 bump in voluntary separation pay, allowing them to receive up to $40,000, under the 2017 defense authorization bill. >> Federal News Radio Human Services | Texas Program Linking Car Registrations to Child Support Boosts Collections The Texas Attorney General's office says has collected more than $160,000 in child support from 541 parents statewide since unveiling a program earlier this year that prevents parents who are behind on payments from renewing their vehicle registrations. >> Dallas Morning News Public Health | The World Scientists: Ebola Vaccine 100% Effective Scientists announced a milestone in the fight against Ebola, reporting that a major trial of an experimental vaccine showed 100 percent efficacy in protecting people from the virus, which since 2013 has infected nearly 30,000 people and killed 11,000 worldwide. >> Washington Post >> Follow GovManagement on Twitter >> Share this edition: | Coming soon: ASPA's Annual Conference
The most comprehensive public-administration event of the year will be held March 17-21, 2017, in Atlanta, offering an array of educational options -- panels, workshops, roundtables -- along with hundreds of public-service experts for learning and networking. For more information and registration, click here. |
VIEWPOINT Public Administration James P. Pfiffner The Kind of Team a New President Needs The foundation for good management in the federal government is effective leadership at both the political and career levels of an administration. Presidents do not run the government alone. They must work with the thousands of political appointees they name, who must in turn work with the career executives who implement the president's policy agenda and execute the laws. Three challenges face the White House Office of Presidential Personnel. >> Government Executive PLUS: Richard Clay Wilson Jr. on the collision of government's professionals and political ideology. >> Governing | More commentaries QUOTABLE “My father would not bring home a pen because he thought it was stealing.” Paul Gallant, son of Joseph V. Gallant Jr., who was a Massachusetts state social worker in the 1960s, spent 37 years in state government and in the 1990s implemented sweeping welfare reforms, first as the state's welfare commissioner and later as health secretary, recalling the stringent personal code of ethics of his father, who died recently at the age of 81 >> Boston Globe “I just deal with the reality that sea levels are rising. I don't want to rile people up about it.” Thomas Bradford, the town manager of Palm Beach, Fla.--home of the Mar-a-Lago estate of President-elect Donald Trump, who at various times has questioned climate change or dismissed the idea as a hoax--which this year overhauled 12 pumping stations to push storm runoff up a huge pipe to the Intracoastal Waterway under a 20-year, $120 million infrastructure plan to deal with increased rainfall and street flooding >> Bloomberg BusinessWeek | More quotes DATAPOINT 1,579 Number of editions of GovManagement Daily, which is ceasing publication today, that have been published since the newsletter was launched on April 5, 2010 >> GovManagement.com | More data UPCOMING EVENTS American Society for Public Administration BookTalk webinar: "America, the Owner's Manual: You Can Fight City Hall--and Win" Jan. 4, 1 p.m. ET Brookings Institution Address by Lawrence H. Summers, paper release and discussions: "From Bridges to Education: Best Bets for Public Investment" Jan. 9, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. ET, Washington, D.C. American Enterprise Institute Book discussion: "Age of Discovery: Navigating the Risks and Rewards of Our New Renaissance" Jan. 9, noon-1 p.m. ET, Washington, D.C. Heritage Foundation Book discussion: "Waging Insurgent Warfare: Lessons from the Vietcong to the Islamic State" Jan. 10, 11 a.m.-noon ET, Washington, D.C. Urban Institute Discussions: "Housing Policy Past and Future: Lessons Learned through the Crisis and the Path Forward" Jan. 11, 6-8 p.m. ET, Washington, D.C. American Society for Public Administration Webinar: "How to Support Decisions in Health Care" Jan. 17, 2 p.m. ET
|