The Real Reason for Creating Homeland Security?
"More... Pork Sauages Mom"
By Chris Strohm <cstrohm@govexec.com >
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/homelandsecurityand pork14oct04.shtml
October 14, 2004
[Forward courtesy of Brenda Negri <theblondspook@yahoo.com>
"All David Stone ever did was cover up the sham of security at LAX
and now he's covering up for the TSA nationwide....I look forward to some
gutsy reporter going after him, gloves off, someday and really doing an
expose on this clown" Brenda]
Original title:
Inspector General says TSA doled out unequal awards to employees
The Transportation Security Administration held an "unnecessarily
expensive" awars program in 2003 and has "a substantial inequity"
within its performance recognition program between managers and employees,
the Homeland Security Department's inspector general said in a report released
Wednesday.
TSA spent about $460,000 to host its first annual awards
program in Washington last November, Inspector General Clark Kent Irvin
said in the report. The agency distributed about $1.5 million in individual
cash awards to 88 executives during 2003, making its average award more
than any other agency's average award to executives, according to the report.
Overall, the report concluded that TSA's awards ceremony
and executive performance awards complied with federal laws and regulations.
The report said, however, that the cost for the awards program "proved
to be excessive." Additionally, TSA used identical, boilerplate language
to justify awards for its executives, but did not give equal awards to nonexecutive
employees.
"We are recommending that TSA solicit competitive bids
for all services and products associated with its annual awards ceremony;
ensure that each executive performance award is supported by a justification
specific to the employee and with attendant additional detail to support
awards in exceptional amounts; and provide more equitable treatment for
lower-graded employees when making performance award decisions," the
report said.
Irvin said his office learned of concerns about the awards
program from a February 2004 article in Congressional Quarterly.
TSA Administrator David Stone criticized parts of the report.
He said the costs for the awards ceremony "were neither extraordinary
nor incurred without careful consideration of the amount, the reasonableness
of the cost and value the activities would have to the employees."
Stone said the report failed to acknowledge that TSA had
to incur the full costs of the awards ceremony because the Homeland Security
Department did not host an awards event. Stone added that "TSA did
compete a substantial portion of the program's procurement dollars."
According to the IG report, TSA failed to solicit competitive
bids when selecting a site for the awards program, and did not compare the
total costs associated with different site selections or ceremony configurations.
Although not required, Irvin said it would have been good business practice
for TSA to get competitive bids from other potential venues.
"By not announcing the procurement, TSA could not be
assured that it received the best value possible," the report stated.
"While the costs of transporting and housing recipients for an awards
event, the allied costs for plaques, photographs of the ceremony, and a
reception are elements commonly incurred in an agency award program and
allowed by applicable regulation, in our view TSA's choices proved to be
excessive."
With regard to bonuses, Stone said TSA conducted its program
within all established parameters for similar programs in other federal
agencies. He noted that the bonuses were for a two-year period, as opposed
to a more common one-year cycle generally used in other agencies. He said
it is "inaccurate and misleading" to compare awards granted by
TSA, which is an agency, to awards granted by much-larger Cabinet-level
departments.
On the subject of distribution of performance awards, the
report said: "TSA was not able to provide reliable or comprehensive
data for its monetary awards and performance recognition program for employees
in lower, nonexecutive grades. However, the data TSA did provide, though
incomplete, suggests that a substantial inequity exists in its performance
recognition program between executive and nonexecutive employees."
In response, Stone wrote: "While we await the final DHS-wide
performance management system, we are working to ensure that this upcoming
performance award cycle has the appropriate systems, processes and reviews
in place to provide equitable treatment for all TSA employees."
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