$100 million there, $100 million here
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Today the President held his first
cabinet meeting, and made clear that relentlessly cutting out waste was
part and parcel of their mission to make the investments necessary for
recovery and long-term stability. Speaking to the press afterwards,
he began his remarks expressing his pride in his Cabinet and the work
they have been doing to start creating jobs again, then turned to the
central message of the day for them:
Many of the agencies have
already taken some extraordinary steps to consolidate, streamline, and
improve their practices. Just a couple of examples: Veterans Affairs
has cancelled or delayed 26 conferences, saving nearly $17.8 million,
and they're using less expensive alternatives like videoconferencing.
The USDA, under Secretary Vilsack, is working to combine 1,500
employees from seven office locations into a single facility in 2011,
which we estimate will save $62 million over a 15-year lease term.
Janet Napolitano at the Department of Homeland Security estimates that
they can save up to $52 million over five years just by purchasing
office supplies in bulk.
So there are a host of
efficiencies that can be gained without increasing our personnel or our
budget, but rather decreasing the amount of money that's spent on
unnecessary things in order to fund some of the critical initiatives
that we've all talked about. Obviously, Bob Gates just came out with a
historic budget proposal with respect to the Pentagon, and we expect to
follow up with significant procurement reform that's going to make an
enormous difference.
He laid out a specific undertaking as a first step:
So one of the things that --
messages that I delivered today to all members of the Cabinet was: As
well as you've already done, you're going to have to do more. I'm
asking for all of them to identify at least $100 million in additional
cuts to their administrative budgets, separate and apart from the work
that Peter Orszag and the rest of our team are doing to go line by line
with the budget and identify programmatic cuts that need to be made.
And in the next few weeks we
expect to cut at least 100 current programs in the federal budget so
that we can free up those dollars in order to put them to use for
critical areas like health care, education, energy, our foreign policy
apparatus, which is so important.
Read our fact sheet
to go deeper into savings being found across government, ranging from
rooting out fraud perpetrated on the USDA, to eliminating an
international attaché at the Department of Education, to energy
efficiency at DHS to going paperless at DOJ and the State Department.
The President took a key question at the end of his remarks:
Q A hundred million dollars, isn't that a drop in the bucket, sir?
THE PRESIDENT: It is, and
that's what I just said. None of these things alone are going to make
a difference. But cumulatively they would make an extraordinary
difference because they start setting a tone. And so what we're going
to do is line by line, page by page, $100 million there, $100 million
here, pretty soon, even in Washington, it adds up to real money. All
right, thank you, guys.
(President Barack Obama holds his first cabinet meeting, April 20, 2009. White House Photo/ Pete Souza.)



