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Tough question: How do we bypass the slogans and make government more effective?
Tough question: How do we bypass the slogans and make government more effective?

Yahoo

time20-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Tough question: How do we bypass the slogans and make government more effective?

"We trained hard — but it seemed that every time we were beginning to form up into teams we were reorganized. I was to learn later in life that we tend to meet any new situation by reorganizing, and what a wonderful method it can be for creating the illusion of progress while actually producing confusion, inefficiency, and demoralization." ― Attributed to Gen. Frank Merrill, who headed "Merrill's Mauraders" during World War II Donald Trump campaigned on a pledge to target federal agencies for elimination, reduce the number of federal employees and reshape the federal government. And he promised a fast start. 'We're going to give them the best first day, the biggest first week and the most extraordinary first 100 days of any presidency in American history,' Trump said on the day before he was sworn in for a second term. Still, few expected him to name billionaire businessman Elon Musk to lead a Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and launch the initiative with an assault some compared to the "shock and awe" invasion of Iraq by American forces in 1991. Here in Oklahoma, Gov. Kevin Stitt also played the reform and reorganization card. He announced at the opening of this year's legislative session a plan to create a state version of DOGE "to keep the focus on flat budgets and limited government." More: Get ready for a rough ride. 'Draining the swamp' will be no easy task | Opinion Stitt's Elon Musk is Norman attorney Mark Nuttle. The governor's office declined a request to interview Nuttle, but he is someone with long and varied history in Oklahoma politics, if not a background that suggests a particular expertise in organizational efficiency. Nuttle managed Stitt's transition team after his election as governor in 2018. Much earlier, he headed the 2001 "Yes" campaign to make Oklahoma a "Right to Work" state, one in which union membership is optional and workers are protected by the union's collective bargaining agreement even if they don't pay dues. The success of that campaign marked a significant milestone in Oklahoma's transition from Democratic to Republican. A few years later, Nuttle was managing partner of an investment firm that announced plans to build an assembly plant in Ardmore for MG automobiles in partnership with Nanjing Automobile Group, a Chinese firm. The effort fizzled out. Nuttle's own website notes that he "specializes in international trade, international foreign policy, and international political affairs." Unlike Trump, who encouraged Musk to start cutting government payrolls "on Day 1," Stitt said Nuttle had been given until March 31 "to submit a report outlining agency budget findings, recommendations for fiscal reforms and strategies for efficiencies." And unlike Trump, who did not particularly stress government efficiency in his first term, Stitt called in 2020 for consolidation of state agencies and had the Office of Management and Enterprise Services hire a consulting firm for $1.1 million to make recommendations on how state government could be reorganized to increase efficiency. The Washington, D.C., consulting firm, Guidehouse, later submitted a reorganization "blueprint" that focused primarily on the Oklahoma Department of Transportation. It's unclear how many of the recommendations were implemented. Former state Sen. Kay Floyd, of Oklahoma City, the Democratic Senate leader at the time, said "I've been here seven years, and I think governors come in and they want to streamline government, which I think is a noble cause," but she said the state needs to be careful about making changes, especially in agencies dealing with complicated health care issues. And former Republican Senate Pro Tem Greg Treat, of Oklahoma City, said, "state leaders go back and forth nearly every decade on whether to consolidate agencies or undo agency consolidation. The pendulum swings back and forth, and it's hard to get the balance just right." What is the "right" balance? At the federal level, Trump and Musk have suggested elimination of entire agencies, including the Department of Education and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and job cuts have been fast and furious. More: DOGE-OK? Seems like Oklahoma has become ground zero to roll out Project 2025 | Opinion Cuts in the Federal Aviation Agency even reached Oklahoma, where an uncertain number of FAA employees got emails last week saying they'd lost their jobs. The FAA is responsible for ensuring the safety of air travel, and given the number of recent airplane crashes and a chronic shortage of air traffic controllers, some have questioned whether job cuts are the right way to increase the agency's effectiveness. Effectiveness is the key word. Taxpayers want to see value in the government they pay for, just as they do in the automobiles and other consumer goods they purchase. State schools Superintendent Ryan Walters pushed a number of employees out the door at the Oklahoma State Department of Education. Did that help the agency become more effective in helping school districts improve math and reading scores? The Oklahoma Department of Corrections is struggling. What needs to be done first to fix its many interrelated problems? Will cuts to the department help? Nuttle's challenge is huge in making his reorganization plan more than just "an illusion of progress." Gov. Stitt has said that his goal is to leave state government "smaller" and "leaner" that it was when he was first elected. Let's hope his effort involves more than head count. Let's hope his success is in making state agencies more successful ― more effective in delivering worthwhile services to the people at a reasonable cost. William C. Wertz is deputy Viewpoints editor. You can reach him with comments and story ideas at wwertz@ This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Reorganization — often it's just sound and fury | Opinion

Stitt picks Norman lawyer, business leader to lead DOGE-OK. 'Time is of the essence'
Stitt picks Norman lawyer, business leader to lead DOGE-OK. 'Time is of the essence'

Yahoo

time14-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Stitt picks Norman lawyer, business leader to lead DOGE-OK. 'Time is of the essence'

After announcing the plans to bring Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency strategy to Oklahoma, Gov. Kevin Stitt has appointed its new advisor. Marc Nuttle will serve as an "unpaid, special volunteer" leading DOGE-OK with hopes of refining agency budgets, legislative appropriations and more, according to a press release from the governor's office. "Marc Nuttle is volunteering his time to lead this effort and root out additional waste. With his help, we'll leave state government leaner than we found it," Stitt said about Nuttle's selection in the press release. With the new leader, Stitt said that DOGE-OK would submit a report outlining agency budget findings, recommendations for fiscal reforms and strategies for efficiencies by March 31. "We recognize President Trump's commitment, through DOGE, to restructure government spending. This includes federal funds co-managed with state funds. We will work to establish a new federal/state fiscal partnership to develop an acceptable plan to realize savings while maintaining critical services necessary to protect Oklahoma's way of life," Nuttle said in the press release. More: Gov. Kevin Stitt launches DOGE-OK, calls for income tax cuts, attacks DEI during state address To Nuttle, he said his mission is simple: to ensure every tax dollar is spent strategically with purpose and accountability. "Time is of the essence," he said. In Nuttle's daily work, he is an attorney based in Norman specializing in international trade, international foreign policy and political affairs. Nuttle has served on the Industrial Policy Advisory Committee for Trade and Policy under the President Ronald Reagan administration. During this time, he wrote and advised the administration on international trade and General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT) for six year. He has gone on to advise for George H.W. Bush's presidential campaigns and legal advisor in the Bush-Gore re-count effort in Florida 2000. Nuttle's international experience also includes advising the countries of Bulgaria, Ukraine, Russia and Guatemala as well as corporations owned by the People's Republic of China. Inspired by Elon Musk's efforts in the country's newly formed Department of Government Efficiency, Governor Kevin Stitt noted during his State of the State speech on Feb. 3 that the state will form a similar practice. Nuttle's position will be unpaid and operate in the Office of Management and Enterprise Services to build upon past efficiency initiatives. 'Our top responsibility as leaders is ensuring we are working on behalf of all four million Oklahomans in the most efficient way possible,' Stitt said in a statement. 'DOGE-OK will help identify and root out inefficiencies and government waste. It's an essential part of making us a top-10 state.' This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt picks Marc Nuttle to lead DOGE-OK

Stitt hires ‘unpaid, special volunteer' to lead Oklahoma's new government efficiency division
Stitt hires ‘unpaid, special volunteer' to lead Oklahoma's new government efficiency division

Yahoo

time14-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Stitt hires ‘unpaid, special volunteer' to lead Oklahoma's new government efficiency division

Oklahoma State Capitol Building seal (Photo by Kyle Phillips/For Oklahoma Voice) OKLAHOMA CITY — Gov. Kevin Stitt on Friday tapped a businessman and economist to head the state's new Division of Government Efficiency. Marc Nuttle will serve as the 'unpaid, special volunteer' tasked with examining the inner workings of government to develop strategies to eliminate wasteful spending and make government operations more efficient, according to a press release. 'My mission is simple: to ensure every tax dollar is spent strategically with purpose and accountability,' Nuttle said in a statement. 'Time is of the essence.' Stitt announced the creation of the Oklahoma-centric division during his State of the State address earlier this month. Oklahoma's effort is modeled after the federal Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, launched by President Donald Trump. 'We've stopped agencies from contracting with lobbyists and using outside PR firms, and we're on track to have fewer state employees at the end of my term than when I took office,' Stitt said Friday. 'Marc Nuttle is volunteering his time to lead this effort and root out additional waste. With his help, we'll leave state government leaner than we found it.' Nuttle will have immediate access to agency records, software and IT systems as part of an executive order issued by Stitt forming the division. Nuttle will be required to submit his findings no later than March 31. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

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