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Sequestration and Boston – Plus the DorobekINSIDER’s 7 Stories

On GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

But up front: Sequestration and Boston

Day 53 of sequestration:

After weeks of talking about the impacts of sequestration, it is starting to come to fruition by way of furloughs and the work that doesn’t get done during those furloughs… and it also leaves government workers in the lurch.

Meanwhile, Simpson-Bowles has a new proposal to find middle ground. Former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson and former White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles are not backing off their calls for new revenues but also aren’t pitching the same phased-in gas tax increase. Read the plan.

Boston

Some of us argued that these situations demonstrate why good government matters — and why we should make decisions about what matters and what doesn’t rather than using something like sequestration.

All of that being said, I have to believe there will be many lessons coming from the Boston bomber search. Some interesting reads that are starting that conversation:

Reddit + Boston: Journalism gets better when more people are doing it.

How the Boston bombings will impact political Washington- Boston’s week-long nightmare ended Friday evening. But, for political Washington the reverberations of what happened in the Hub have only just begun. Start with the Sunday talk shows, which were dominated by talk of Boston and its aftermath. Disagreements have already begun to emerge between Republicans like Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.) and Democrats like Dianne Feinstein (Calif.) over whether Dzhokhar Tsarnaev should be treated as an enemy combatant. (Graham says he should, Feinstein disagrees.) Then consider the fallout that the bombings have already had on efforts to reform the country’s immigration system — with the likes of Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Dan Coats (R-Ind.) urging Congress to slow down in the wake of Boston. (Graham, for what it’s worth, said Sunday that the bombings in Boston are an argument to speed up the reform of immigration laws). – Washington Post.

Boston frames surveillance debate: Police state paranoia has long stoked angst and outrage, until an incident like the Boston Marathon bombings takes place and the nation heaves a sigh of relief that security cameras gazed unblinkingly upon Beantown’s streets and sidewalks. – Politico.

The SEVEN stories that impact your life

  1. House oversight committee is looking into your pay. The Washington Post reports, the Congressman have requested a study of the federal pay scale. In a letter to the Government Accountability Office, Reps. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) and Blake Farenthold (R-Tex.) asked the congressional watchdog agency to ”identify the attributes of a modern, effective classification system and the extent to which the GS system is consistent with those attributes.”
  2. The Pentagon is boosting its spending on offensive cyberwarfare capabilities. Military Times reports, the military is increasing its budget for cyber-warfare and expanding its offensive capabilities, including the ability to blind an enemy’s radar or shut down its command systems in the event of war, according to two defense officials. In the 2014 defense budget released recently, the money allocated for cyber-operations rose to $4.7 billion, up from $3.9 billion.
  3. Eric Fanning has been confirmed by the Senate to be the next Air Force undersecretary, a position that’s been open since June 2012, when Erin Conaton left the job to become undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness. In the meantime, Jamie Morin has held the position on an acting basis. Fanning, who previously served as the Navy’s deputy undersecretary and deputy chief management officer, is expected to be sworn into his new position later this month.
  4. In your furlough update. All 90,000 employees at the Internal Revenue Service will begin to receive their furlough notices today — including Acting Commissioner Steven Miller. Federal Times reports, the furloughs will occur on May 24, June 14, July 5, July 22 and Aug. 30, with another two days possible in August and September.
  5. Combined Federal Campaign pledges fell to $257.2 million in 2012, down more than $15 million about 6 percent — from the preceding year, according to new federal figures. Federal Times reports, the total represents the third straight yearly drop for the troubled workplace charity drive; the numbers —are the lowest since at least 2004, when pledges amounted to $256.9 million.
  6. The Veterans Affairs Department announced a new plan to expedite disability claims from the veterans who have waited the longest. VA says it is making provisional decisions on claims that are at least a year old. It will use the evidence at hand. The agency is responding to criticism about the soaring number of claims that have been pending for longer than 125 days. The VA said that of the nearly 900,000 claims pending in the system, some 250,000 are from veterans who have been waiting at least a year for a decision.
  7. And on GovLoop in case you missed the DorobekINSIDER Live panel discussion on citizen engagement – you can find the recap here.

The DorobekINSIDER water-cooler fodder

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