GovLoop

Perspectives from the past – Former OPM directors weigh in on the shutdown

It has been 17 years since the federal government last faced a partial shutdown. 9/11 changed the government, leaving federal employees, citizens and even government decision-makers confused about what a shutdown would mean.

Every shutdown is different. The politics that cause them are different. Because of technology and structural overhauls, the way the government functions has changed since 1996. Much of what will happen is unknown.

But there are lessons to be learned from past shutdowns. The Government Workforce conference, sponsored by ASTD Government and The Public Manager brought together three past OPM directors to talk past shutdowns, civil service reforms and their ideas about how to improve government.

On the panel were:

State of the Civil Service:

“Do you remember the punching bag toy you played with as a kid. You would punch and then it would come back up and pop you right back. You almost feel like that is how the workforce is now. The civil service has been taking blows from all different sides. The public and parts of the media have sort of latched onto it. The workforce just keeps coming back up to help the people that are punching them. In some ways, it shows what is right about public servants in an environment where there is a lot of badness going on,” said Springer.

“I am not sure much has changed since I was the OPM director in the 90s. At that point I think people that were part of the civil service felt a measure of stress, but I think it is much worse now. The service is a bit stymied because it is hard to get elected officials to focus on personnel issues. Frankly what i’ve learned is it is not just these issues, but it’s anything that is complicated that doesn’t lend itself to soundbites, it off limits” said Lachance.

“What’s wrong with the civil service now is what’s wrong with government in general. There is no economic stability anymore. There is no stability in government. Bipartisan is a word that doesn’t mean anything. There is a lack of trust on all parts. It is also a sea of information. You can’t make mistakes anymore, because once it’s made it is spread all over, so that makes it hard for people that govern who are trying to do the right thing, because there is a cost to them if they ever make a mistake,” said Newman.

Lachance’s tales from the last shutdown:

How do you keep people motivated despite a shutdown?

“It’s a tough because it has just been piling on. I think any human capital leader at any agency not just OPM needs to be an advocate and a cheerleader for what the public workforce is doing day in and day out. Get out there wherever you can, work with your public affairs officers to recognize internally and externally the good work that the government is doing. The government is also an employer and it has responsibilities as an employer in addition to its governance. So I think we have to play that role too for people especially in these times,” said Springer.

“So much depends on signals sent from the leadership. Everybody is a leader to somebody. There needs to be more recognition of the importance of the workforce. People are going to be unhappy about not getting paid or getting paid late, that is hard to deal with but if you add in the context of not having people respect what they do, then it’s even harder to take. It is the responsibility from everyone from the President on down to praise the good work and recognize honestly that without the people in government government doesn’t work,” said Newman.

The government workforce matters

“There has been this de-personalization of the workforce. It’s called the workforce. Like it is a building or a car. But it is people. And I think a lot of times people lose a sense of that,” said Springer.

You can see all GovLoop’s shutdown coverage here.

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