This article is provided
courtesy of Stars & Stripes, which
got its start as a newspaper for Union troops
during the Civil War, and has been published
continuously since 1942 in Europe and 1945
in the Pacific. Stripes reporters have
been in the field with American soldiers,
sailors and airmen in World War II, Korea,
the Cold War, Vietnam, the Gulf War, Bosnia
and Kosovo, and are now on assignment in the
Middle East.
Stars and Stripes has one of the widest distribution
ranges of any newspaper in the world. Between
the Pacific and European editions, Stars
& Stripes services over 50 countries
where there are bases, posts, service members,
ships, or embassies.
Related Links:
Current
Archive
Stars
& Stripes Website
Sound
off in our Discussion Boards
Have an opinion on the issues discussed in
this article? Sound off.
Get
Breaking Military News Alerts
|
|
|
|
September 21, 2004
[Have an opinion about the issues discussed in this article?
Sound
off in our Discussion Boards.]
By Jon R. Anderson,
Stars and Stripes European Edition
Military leaders are expecting additional delays in launching a
controversial new Department of Defense-wide civilian personnel
system.
Already delayed once, officials had planned to launch a pilot program
for the National Security Personnel System, or NSPS, by July 2005.
“I wouldn’t doubt that slips because that’s still a very aggressive
schedule. So it will probably be sometime after summer,” Jeannie
Davis, the Army’s
assistant deputy chief of staff for civilian personnel in Europe,
told a gathering of top civilian managers in Heidelberg, Germany,
last week.
Now, DOD-wide implementation for the program is expected no sooner
than July 2007.
The expected delay comes after Pentagon leaders were told to scrap
plans to have a new system to manage the military’s some 670,000
civilians in place by next month.
The new civilian management program was approved under the 2004
Defense Authorization Act last year.
The Pentagon had planned to launch it on Oct. 1, with the beginning
of the new fiscal year. Military leaders have become increasingly
frustrated with the current system, which is seen by many as too
bureaucratic with cumbersome hiring and firing policies.
Davis pointed to one example where several hundred DOD police were
needed in Washington, D.C., after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
“It took two years to get them hired,” she said.
Officials were hoping to quickly change all that with NSPS.
“So, from November 2003 to October 2004 the plan was to develop
and deploy an entire new personnel system,” said Davis.
Federal labor groups and others had balked at such a quick overhaul
and felt largely out of the loop in developing the replacement.
“There was a lot of concern about how quickly they were moving,
how quickly they were developing this new system and not involving
a whole lot of other people,” Davis said. “Earlier this year, things
came to a head. Congress expressed some concern — as did the unions
— saying things were going too fast.”
Now, the Defense Department is adopting a take-it-slow approach,
trying to reach out to military civilians in an effort to build
consensus on what the new system should look like.
There’s still resistance, however.
 |
|
| (Raymond T. Conway / S&S) Department
of Defense civilians such as Sheryl Cooks, a postal clerk at
Rhein-Main Air Base in Germany, could be subjected to serveral
changes in the way DOD manages its civilian work force under
the National Security Personnel System now being studied. |
|
Davis said one senior leader was recently briefing a gathering
of about 400 DOD civilians. All but about 100 walked out in protest,
she said.
“It’s been a difficult time,” said Davis. “Labor relations have
been tough.”
Undeterred, officials are holding town hall meetings at military
installations around the world.
“The message from DOD and the Army is that we want to hear from
you,” said Davis. “I know a lot of times we’ve heard that before
and it hasn’t been true. Well, this time it’s true.”
A year into the effort, said Davis, “the plan is still being developed
and so a lot of the information you’re going to want to know I’m
not going to be able to tell you, unfortunately. The details about
the system, what it’s going to look like, how it’s going to effect
people are just not there yet.”
“They have to have it in place by 2008,” Davis said.
Legislation authorizing the new system expires at the end of 2008.
Email
this page to friends
©2004 Stars & Stripes. All opinions
expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily
reflect those of Military.com.
|