Federal Daily News

Gates orders reductions to senior staff, flag officers

Following up on a pledge to cut staffing, Defense Secretary Robert Gates has ordered DoD to eliminate 102 general and flag officer positions, as well as 176 civilian senior executive slots and 33 highly qualified expert positions. An additional 23 officer jobs will be downgraded.

In a March 14 memo, Gates said most of the jobs would be eliminated at the conclusion of fiscal 2011, which ends Sept. 30. The senior civilian jobs to be terminated include 97 Senior Executive Service positions, 21 Senior Level and Scientific Professional positions, five Defense Intelligence Senior Executive Service positions and 53 Defense Intelligence Senior Level slots.

Of the 176 senior positions, 118 of the positions are paid under SES or similar pay plans. The memo said that allocations within the alternate pay pools can be retained by the parent sub-agencies and used to fill emerging pay pool requirements.

While the terminations are a mix of vacant and filled positions, the memo states that a reduction-in-force should be avoided, and that DoD will try to find jobs for as many of the affected employees as possible.

The memo also orders the reduction of DoD contractor support, including 1,000 positions in the Missile Defense Agency over the next two years, for a savings of $225 million in fiscal 2012. TRICARE Management Activity will lose 364 contractor jobs, as well as 24 positions it shares with other DoD functions.

In the memo, Gates estimated the terminations, reductions and reassignments will save more than $14 billion, in addition to other efficiencies in play across the department.

In January, Gates announced the details of a Pentagon plans to cut projected spending by $78 billion over the next five years. The cuts and reductions are part of a larger effort, begun last year, to trim unnecessary costs and ensure funding for military modernization.



 

Reader comments

Tue, Mar 22, 2011 David Engelman Charleston, S.C.

It is said there are more admirals now than during WWII when we had 10 times the ships. When I worked at the Charleston Naval Shipyard 17 years ago, we had one Senior Executive Service billot across 8,800 positions and that SES worked for NAVSEA 08. We also had but 18 GS-15 positions. Under the Kennedy administration we had 1.9M civil servants with a much smaller population. Today we have 2.1M civil servants across a population of 308M, but now we also have 10.5M contractors. 7 out of 8 jobs created under the last 4 administrations are service industry jobs paying about $8.00/hr. We have lost our manufacturing base and everyone is trying to get a piece of a shrinking pie. China is eating our lunch and we are doing all of this to ourselves in the name of free and fair trade. But there is nothing fair about free trade for the American worker and there is no one willing to lead this once-great nation out of this self-destructive mess.

Mon, Mar 21, 2011

I agree with both Bill Dunn & David of Texas! Well done Secretary Gates! DoD seems to have always been too top heavy, as is with other federal agencies. We have too many contractors that do the work for federal civilians, too with not quite the same urge for mission requirements & standards.

Mon, Mar 21, 2011 Bill Dunn Kerrville, TX

BRAVO! Secretary Gates is right on the mark. We're going to miss his acumen when he departs from DOD.

Mon, Mar 21, 2011 David Texas

Elimnating the contractors are way overdue. We have too many contractors working in DoD. There was a time when our military trained their own to do the job the contractors took away. Having been retired, I know first hand how it is to work with some contractors who don't think they have to perform to standard, because they don't wear a uniform.

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