Budget, the role of contractors and other issues at PSC's annual conference
Closed to the press, but open to Twitter, we take a look at some of the highlights from PSC's annual conference.
The Professional Services Council annual conference ended on Tuesday and while the event is closed to the press, it was open to Twitter.
What I tracked on Twitter – #PSCConf – gives a good indication of where the industry group sees the market headed. They had an impressive slate of government speakers, including James Clapper, director of National Intelligence; Deborah James, Air Force secretary; Terry Halvorsen, Defense Department CIO; and Soraya Correa, chief procurement officer of the Homeland Security Department. (Still a mystery to me how you have such high ranking government officials speaking at a closed event.)
Thanks to Twitter, we know that Clapper talked about the role of contractors and that the intelligence community thinks of contractors as part of their workforce.
We absolutely should be thinking about #govcon as we do our workforce planning, says @ODNIgov Clapper at #PSCConf
— PSC (@PSCSpeaks) October 5, 2015
Contractor support down from 30% in 2007 to about 17% now in the intelligence community. @PSCSpeaks #pscconf
— SOS International (@SOSi_HQ) October 5, 2015
18% of the workforce is contractor and it is declining although we don't know where or when the bottom will hit. #pscconf #racetothebottom
— Eagle Ray Inc. (@Eaglerayinc) October 5, 2015
The intelligence community needs industry help with its cyber mission, Clapper said. He also emphasized a need for clearances and transparency. A healthy public-private partnership is critical.
Another session at the conference, I would have loved to cover in detail was a panel titled, Surviving the Knock on Your Door. The speakers included Lynne Halbrooks, former DOD inspector general and now a partner at Holland & Knight; GSA’s former inspector general Brian Miller; and Jeremy Wensinger, the former president of global security and solutions at USIS.
Wensinger lived through that proverbial knock when USIS ran into a False Claims Act lawsuit and a Justice Department investigation. And while his portion of the business wasn’t the target, the reverberations were felt throughout the company. Eventually, USIS sold Wensinger’s business to PAE and the rest of the company went into bankruptcy and dissolved.
His message to attendees was to be prepared have a crisis team that understands the government market.
From an industry perspective, Jeremy Wensinger says important 4 crisis team to understand the biz of govcon when knock comes. #PSCconf
— PSC (@PSCSpeaks) October 5, 2015
Brian Miller, former GSA IG, said when IGs knock it's important 4 #govcon to know who is knocking so can respond appropriately #PSCConf
— PSC (@PSCSpeaks) October 5, 2015
Lynne Halbrooks, former acting DOD IG, said ltd resources means knock @ door won't come merely out of curiosity. #PSCConf
— PSC (@PSCSpeaks) October 5, 2015
I was a bit disappointed that PSC’s twitter feed was relatively quiet for its lunch session on the agenda for the next president.
The speakers included IBM’s Anne Altman as well as Kymm McCabe, former executive with ASI Government. The session was led by PSC CEO and President Stan Soloway.
PSC is collecting ideas on its webpage for initiatives for the next administration around ideas related to the federal marketplace, getting better value from government contractors by unleashing their skills, and creating an environment that encourages partnerships between government and industry.
During the conference session, McCabe floated the idea of a “compliance BRAC.” BRAC is the base realignment and closure process where a committee recommends a list of military facilities to be closed, and Congress votes yes or no on the entire list. The process is designed to remove the politics from closing bases.
McCabe recommended a similar approach to analyzing compliance and recommending changes.
@KymmMccabe says next POTUS should conduct a "compliance BRAC" 2 analyze the compliance burden & develop recs 2 reduce the burden. #PSCConf
— PSC (@PSCSpeaks) October 5, 2015
.@AnneAltman: "We have to create radical change and tell agencies you have to have a retirement plan for that aging structure." #PSCconf
— PSC (@PSCSpeaks) October 5, 2015
AF Sec: DoD spent thousands of man hours preparing for possible shutdown; long term CR and shutdown not acceptable #PSCConf @PSCSpeaks
— Eric Crusius (@EricCrusius) October 6, 2015
Long term CR worse for @usairforce - $3 B less than sequestration budget. #pscconf @SecAF23 #PSCConf
— Samantha ONeil (@soneil16) October 6, 2015
.@SecAF23: there is nothing more inefficient than gov #shutdown & long-term CRs. Hard 2 op if don't know how much $ u have or when #PSCConf
— PSC (@PSCSpeaks) October 6, 2015
S,o based on the Twitter-verse, that’s my take on the PSC annual conference. Search the hashtag #PSCConf for more, especially if you want to read the justifiably nice things people said about Soloway as he departs the organization after 15 years.
While I truly hate to see him leave, maybe his successor will let me and the rest of the press corps attend next year, but I’m not holding my breath.