During a Monday hearing to investigate widely publicized problems at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, lawmakers and Army officials placed partial blame on a public-private job competition that sapped the facility of workers, and on uncertainty about the slated closure of the center in the ongoing Base Realignment and Closure process. Several lawmakers questioned whether it had been a mistake to outsource base operations support through a competition conducted under the Office of Management and Budget’s Circular A-76 rules. The Walter Reed competition began in January 2000 and went through numerous protests and appeals. The contractor selected to perform the work, Cape Canaveral, Fla.-based IAP Worldwide Services, finally took over operations on Feb. 4 of this year. ‘We certainly could have done it better, and maybe we shouldn’t have done it at all,’ said Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, the head of the Army Medical Command and Walter Reed’s commander from 2002 to 2004, in response to a question from Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif. Maj. Gen. George Weightman, who was fired last week from his command of the center after holding the position for just more than six months, testified that over the course of the extended […]
Sunday, March 11th, 2007
Officials Say Outsourcing Partly to Blame for Walter Reed Failures
Author: JENNY MANDEL
Source: GovExec.com
Publication Date: Sunday 11 March 2007
Link: Officials Say Outsourcing Partly to Blame for Walter Reed Failures
Source: GovExec.com
Publication Date: Sunday 11 March 2007
Link: Officials Say Outsourcing Partly to Blame for Walter Reed Failures
Stephan: I believe that history will reveal that the Iraq/Afghanistan Wars, and the Bush Administration's policy of outsourcing, constitute one of the largest transfers of public wealth to private hands in American history -- and this is a highly competitive field. Selected Republicans are making astronomical sums of money. The media has slumbered through this whole chapter of our recent lives.