Meet Mr. Procurement Policy
Robert Burton sets directions for OFPP and steers governmentwide acquisition
Hes known as the man behind the curtain at the Office of Federal Procurement Policy. Robert Burton, deputy administrator, has been a steady influence, a fixture guiding governmentwide acquisition policy through good times and bad.Burton has seen much change since he became deputy in 2001. OFPP administrators Angela Styles and David Safavian came and went, and now Paul Denett leads the office.Each time an administrator left, Burton picked up the pieces as acting administrator and directed procurement policy-making. Despite the changes in political leadership and Safavians felony conviction for obstructing justice during an investigation of the Jack Abramoff corruption scandal, OFPP has started several governmentwide initiatives, including a federal acquisition workforce survey and an inventory of interagency contracts under Burtons watch.OFPP has pushed numerous acquisition initiatives during a challenging period shaped by the 2001 terrorist attacks, Hurricane Katrina and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Through it all, OFPPs top priority under Burton has been shoring up the acquisition workforce.Success or failure rests on the skills of the workforce, Burton said.Policy experts say Burton is an analytical leader who studies policy issues and works well with task forces, working groups and procurement panels. Procurement experts describe him as a go-to guy who industry leaders and congressional staff members seek for answers to federal acquisition questions.Burtons background gives him extensive knowledge to draw from. In 2001, Styles summoned Burton to OFPP from the Defense Departments Defense Logistics Agency, where he had worked for 20 years as an acquisition attorney.OFPP has published policies on rebuilding the acquisition workforces diminishing numbers and appraising the skills of contracting officers so officials can direct resources and training to the areas that most need them. OFPP, along with the Federal Acquisition Institute, conducted a competency survey in March. The survey of contracting officers gathered information on demographics, business and technical competencies, skills and professional certifications. The survey response rate was more than 60 percent, higher than Burtons office had expected.The assessment survey targeted employees other than contracting officers and included agency program and project managers. Program managers are an integral part of the acquisition workforce, Burton said. Program managers clearly need acquisition training.An April 25 OFPP memo states that program managers and contracting officers must share an understanding of how to fulfill the governments acquisition requirements. The memo requires managers in each executive agency to become certified in core skills and competencies.Under Burton, OFPP has urged agencies to consider rehiring retired acquisition workers to bring their experience back into the government. The office has directed agencies to implement the Bush administrations strategic-sourcing policy by consolidating their supply sources. Burton has used the authority of the office to get agencies to implement competitive sourcing policies that invite contractors to compete with federal employees for certain jobs.Burton also has urged agencies to use performance-based contracting to get better results and gathered the Federal Acquisition Regulations emergency acquisition rules into one section of the FAR to make it easier for contracting officials to look up rules during emergencies.Industry officials say they have a good working relationship with Burton. Ray Bjorklund, senior vice president and chief knowledge officer at FedSources, said, Rob cares about getting the facts and making good policy decisions based on the facts. Its a tough job for an agency at the highest levels of the executive branch to be totally apolitical.Stan Soloway, president of the Professional Services Council, said Burton thinks through issues and doesnt make rash decisions while under political pressure. Instead, he seeks the facts of the case and reaches out to people who have a stake in particular issues, Soloway said.
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