General Services Administration

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General Services Administration
US-GeneralServicesAdministration-Seal-Alt.svg
Official seal
US-GeneralServicesAdministration-Logo.svg
Logo
Agency overview
Formed July 1, 1949
Headquarters General Services Administration Building
1800 F Street NW
Washington, D.C.
Employees 11,502 (FY 2014)[1]
Annual budget $20.9 billion
Agency executives
Child agencies
  • Public Buildings Service
  • Federal Acquisition Service
  • Office of the Inspector General
  • Civilian Board of Contract Appeals
  • Staff Offices (12)
Website www.gsa.gov

The General Services Administration (GSA) is an independent agency of the United States government, established in 1949 to help manage and support the basic functioning of federal agencies. The GSA supplies products and communications for U.S. government offices, provides transportation and office space to federal employees, and develops government-wide cost-minimizing policies, and other management tasks.[3]

GSA employs about 12,000 federal workers and has an annual operating budget of roughly $26.3 billion. GSA oversees $66 billion of procurement annually. It contributes to the management of about $500 billion in U.S. federal property, divided chiefly among 8,300 owned and leased buildings and a 210,000 vehicle motor pool. Among the real estate assets managed by the GSA are the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington, D.C., the largest U.S. federal building after The Pentagon, and the Hart-Dole-Inouye Federal Center (which had previously been the Battle Creek Sanitarium run by John Harvey Kellogg).

GSA's business lines include the Federal Acquisition Service (FAS)[4] and the Public Buildings Service (PBS). Other divisions include the Office of Government-wide Policy, and various Staff Offices, including the Office of Small Business Utilization, the Office of Civil Rights, and the Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies. The official U.S. government web portal, USA.gov, and the Spanish-language web portal to U.S. government services, GobiernoUSA.gov, are members of the Office of Citizen Services and Communication's family of websites, which also includes pueblo.gsa.gov (the Federal Citizen Information Center), Kids.gov, ConsumerAction.gov, and WebContent.gov.

The GSA is member of the Procurement G6, an informal group leading the use of framework agreements and e-procurement instruments in public procurement.

History

In 1947 President Harry Truman asked former President Herbert Hoover to lead what became known as the Hoover Commission to make recommendations to reorganize the operations of the federal government. One of the recommendations of the commission was the establishment of an "Office of the General Services." This proposed office would combine the responsibilities of the following organizations:

GSA became an independent agency on July 1, 1949, after the passage of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act. General Jess Larson, Administrator of the War Assets Administration, was named GSA's first Administrator.

The first job awaiting Administrator Larson and the newly formed GSA was a complete renovation of the White House. The structure had fallen into such a state of disrepair by 1949 that one inspector of the time said the historic structure was standing “purely from habit.” Larson later explained the nature of the total renovation in depth by saying, “In order to make the White House structurally sound, it was necessary to completely dismantle, and I mean completely dismantle, everything from the White House except the four walls, which were constructed of stone. Everything, except the four walls without a roof, was finally stripped down, and that's where the work started.” GSA worked closely with President Truman and First Lady Bess Truman to ensure that the new agency's first major project would be a success. GSA completed the renovation in 1952.[5] GSA headquarters, located at Eighteenth and F Streets, NW, was U.S. General Services Administration Building listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 as Interior Department Offices.[6]

In 1985, The National Archives and Records Administration was part of GSA until it was made an independent agency.

In July 1991, GSA contractors began the excavation of what is now the Ted Weiss Federal Building in New York City. The planning for that building did not take into account the possibility of encountering the historic cemetery for colonial-era African New Yorkers that was located beneath the footprint of the $276-million-dollar office building. When initial excavation disturbed burials, destroying skeletons and artifacts, GSA sent archaeologists to excavate—but hid their findings from the public. Revelation of the discoveries led to 18 months of activism by African-descendant community members, public officials, academics, and concerned citizens. Ultimately, GSA made public amends by funding extensive scientific research under the auspices of Michael Blakey; creating a new subagency, the Office of Public Education and Interpretation; truncating the building plan; and funding public reports on the story of the African Burial Ground. The efforts led to the creation of a new unit of the National Park Service, The African Burial Ground National Monument, at the facility. GSA fully funded that portion of the National Park Service[7] until 2010, when GSA's formal involvement with the African Burial Ground ceased.[8]

In 2003, the Federal Protective Service was moved to the Department of Homeland Security. In 2005, GSA reorganized to merge the Federal Supply Service (FSS) and Federal Technology Service (FTS) business lines into the Federal Acquisition Service (FAS).[9]

On April 3, 2009, President Barack Obama nominated Martha N. Johnson to serve as the GSA Administrator. After a 9-month delay, the United States Senate confirmed her nomination on February 4, 2010. On April 2, 2012, Johnson resigned[10] in the wake of a management-deficiency report that detailed improper payments for a 2010 "Western Regions" training conference put on by the Public Buildings Service in Las Vegas.[11] It stated that PBS Regions 7, 8, 9, and 10 (covering the western half of the United States) had been holding WRCs since the early 1990s. Before turning in her own resignation, Johnson fired two other GSA senior executives, PBS head Robert Peck and senior advisor Stephen Leeds. Four PBS Regional Commissioners, who had been responsible for planning the conference, were placed on administrative leave. The conference had been the most recent in a series of similar lavish conferences organized by regions of GSA's Public Buildings Service. In previous years, Western Regions conferences had been in New Orleans, Oklahoma City, San Antonio, and Lake Tahoe (where Caesars Hotel provided lakefront views, a lagoon-style indoor swimming pool, and a 24-hour casino). U.S. Representative John Mica, chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, called for a congressional investigation into the misuse of federal money by GSA.[10][12][13][14]

In an earlier scandal, President George W. Bush had forced a previous GSA Administrator, Lurita Doan, to resign; GSA had awarded a sole source contract for $20,000 to her friend. Doan appeared to have violated the Hatch Act.[15]

Organization

Current GSA Administrator Denise Turner Roth

Structure

GSA consists of two major services: the Public Buildings Service (PBS) and the Federal Acquisition Service (FAS). The Administrator of General Services is the chief executive of the agency. Daniel Tangherlini was named as acting administrator on April 2, 2012 and was succeeded by Denise Turner Roth on 23 February 2015.[16][17] In addition to the two major services, the agency also includes the:

  • Office of Government-wide Policy, which has policymaking authority in the areas of personal and real property, travel and transportation, information technology, regulatory information and use of federal advisory committees, and includes the
    • Office of Acquisition Policy (OAP), which carries out acquisition management under the guidance of the Chief Acquisition Officer and the Senior Procurement Executive,
    • Office of Federal High-Performance Green Buildings, which assists GSA and customer agencies in reducing the economic and environmental footprint of federal buildings,
    • Office of Asset and Transportation Policy, which develops government-wide policies and guidance to achieve economical and effective management processes for government assets,
    • Office of Committee and Regulatory Management, which includes the Committee Management Secretariat which develops government-wide policies, guidance, performance measures, regulations, and training on the management and operation of Federal advisory committees, and the Regulatory Information Service Center (RISC) which gathers and publishes information about federal regulations and their effect on society,
    • Office of Information, Integrity, and Access (I2A), which develops coordinates, and defines information technology business strategies,
    • Office of Executive Councils, which collaborates with Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and federal management councils to identify government-wide performance improvement initiatives, including the
      • Chief Acquisition Officers Council (CAOC), previously the Procurement Executives Council (PEC) and the Federal Acquisition Council (FAC), consists of federal acquisition professionals and provides a senior level forum for monitoring and improving the federal acquisition system,
      • Chief Financial Officers Council (CFOC), an organization of the chief financial officers and deputy chief financial officers which advises and coordinates the activities of the member agencies,
      • Chief Information Officers Council (CIOC), the principal interagency forum on federal agency practices for IT management,
      • Performance Improvement Council (PIC), which is composed of the performance improvement officers (PIOs) of federal agencies and departments as well as senior OMB officials, and the
      • President's Management Council (PMC), which is composed of chief operating officers of major Federal Government agencies and advises the President and OMB on government reform initiatives;
  • Office of the Inspector General; and
  • Civilian Board of Contract Appeals, an independent tribunal which hears and decides contract disputes between government contractors and the GSA and other executive agencies.

Regions

GSA conducts its business activities through 11 offices (known as GSA Regions) throughout the United States, located in: Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Ft. Worth, Kansas City, Missouri, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle (Auburn), and Washington, D.C.

Region # Region Name Complex Location
1 New England Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. Federal Building Boston, MA
2 Northeast and Caribbean Jacob K. Javits Federal Building New York, NY
3 Mid-Atlantic 100 S Independence Mall W Philadelphia, PA
4 Southeast Sunbelt Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Building Atlanta, GA
5 Great Lakes Kluczynski Federal Building Chicago, IL
6 Heartland Two Pershing Square Kansas City, MO
7 Greater Southwest Fritz G. Lanham Federal Building Fort Worth, TX
8 Rocky Mountain Denver Federal Center Denver (Lakewood), CO
9 Pacific Rim 50 United Nations Plaza San Francisco, CA
10 Northwest/Arctic 400 15th St. SW Seattle (Auburn), WA
11 National Capital 301 7th St. SW Washington, DC

GSA also provides specific services out of the Central Office for nationwide programs (e.g., Federal Systems Integration and Management Center (FEDSIM)).

Operations

Procurement and the GSA Schedule

The Federal Acquisition Service (FAS) provides comprehensive solutions for products and services across the government.[18] GSA assists with procurement work for other government agencies. As part of this effort, it maintains the large GSA Schedules, which other agencies can use to buy goods and services. The GSA Schedule can be thought of as a collection of pre-negotiated contracts.[19] Procurement managers from government agencies can view these agreements and make purchases from the GSA Schedule knowing that all legal obligations have been taken care of by GSA.

The GSA Schedule is awarded as a prime contract entered into by the federal government and a vendor that has submitted an acceptable proposal. At the core of the GSA Schedule contract lie two key concepts: 1) Basis of Award customer or group of customers and 2) Price Reduction Clause. The two concepts are applied in concert to achieve the government's pricing objectives for the GSA Schedule program. Namely, the government wants to ensure that when the vendor experiences competitive pressures to reduce its pricing, then the government can benefit from these and be extended reduced pricing as well.[20]

The Basis of Award customer or group of customers represents the customer or group of customers whose sales are affected on the same terms and conditions as those with GSA, and whose pricing is used: 1) as the baseline during negotiations to establish discounts offered to GSA, and 2) as a price floor that, when breached, constitutes additional discounting that triggers the Price Reduction Clause.

The Price Reduction Clause ensures that vendor discounting practices and GSA Schedule prices maintain a fixed relationship. The vendor specifies in its GSA proposal, and during negotiations of GSA Schedule contract prices, the discounts to be given to Basis of Award customer(s). If the vendor then provides a larger discount to a Basis of Award customer than what was agreed upon in the GSA Schedule contract (i.e., if the price floor is breached), then the vendor's GSA price will be reduced proportionately and retroactively.[21]

Effective Price Reduction Clause compliance procedures will protect vendors if their discounting practices are fully and accurately disclosed in their original proposals to GSA and then are used as a basis for compliance over the term of the contract. Although not ideal, a compliance system implemented after a contract has been awarded can bring a contract into compliance, although sometimes at the expense of profits. If implementing a system in the middle of a contract period, inaccuracies that turn up should be corrected immediately, and the GSA contracting officer should be made aware of them. Price Reduction Clause compliance systems and procedures can range from the simple to the complex. A simple, manual system would be appropriate for a service contractor with standard labor rates that are not discounted. A complex system would be required for a reseller with thousands of products and discounting policies that differ among product groups.

In response to increased mandates and standards required by the Federal Government of its agencies, in a push to plan for federal sustainability, GSA offers online tools to aid in the building and management of government offices that are subject to these requirements.[22]

GSA has delegated authority to the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to procure medical supplies under the VA Federal Supply Schedules Program.[23]

Federal property and buildings

Thoughtful analysis to balance GSA preservation, cost, and performance goals supported historic window retention with replacement of non-historic windows at this 1930 courthouse

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The Public Buildings Service (PBS) acquires and manages thousands of federal properties. In accordance with Title 40 of the United States Code, GSA is charged with promulgating regulations governing the acquisition, use, and disposal of real property (real estate and land) and personal property (essentially all other property). This activity is centered in GSA's Office of Governmentwide Policy. Policies promulgated by GSA are developed in collaboration with federal agencies, and are typically published for public comment in the Federal Register prior to publication as a Final Rule.

The Public Buildings Service provides workplaces for federal customer agencies and United States courthouses at good economies to the American taxpayer.[24] PBS is funded primarily through the Federal Buildings Fund, which is supported by rent from federal customer agencies.[24]

Disposal of surplus real property is managed by the Office of Property Disposal within the Public Buildings Service. The Office is responsible for property which includes land, office buildings, warehouses, former post offices, farms, family residences, commercial facilities, or airfields located in the United States, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or the U.S. Pacific Territories.[25] Surplus property is made available to both government and private bidders and, in some cases, land sold for public purposes (such as parks or welfare) may be made available for a discount of up to 100% of the fair-market value.[25]

GSA has earned a LEED rating for 24 green buildings.[26] Some of green offerings at new buildings includes green roofs (planted roofs that can substantially reduce rainwater run-off during storms and provide significant insulation for the buildings),[27] underfloor air distribution (that delivers cooling and heating air at floor level instead of from the ceiling),[28] purchasing and using renewable power from utility companies, and light shelves (located outside of the building that reduce the amount of heat radiating into the building from the sun while increasing the amount of natural light and high ceilings that help direct daylight deep into the work environment).[29] The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 made available not less than $4.5 billion for measures necessary to convert GSA facilities to High-Performance Green Buildings, as defined in the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (Public Law 110-140).

The Department of Energy's Federal Energy Management Program facilitates to the GSA the implementation, through project transaction services, applied technology services and decision support services, to deploy renewable energy technologies and cultivate change to embrace energy efficiency.[30]

In 2004, the GSA was presented with the Honor Award from the National Building Museum for "success in creating and maintaining innovative environments for the federal community as well as providing a positive federal presence for the public."[31]

Federal vehicle fleet management

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GSA contributes to the management of U.S. Federal property, including a 210,000 vehicle motor pool.

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (stimulus bill) included $300 million to acquire energy-efficient motor vehicles for the federal fleet. President Barack Obama announced that GSA was to support the U.S. auto industry with orders for about 17,600 new fuel-efficient vehicles by June 1, 2009, on an accelerated schedule, with money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The GSA was to pay $285 million to General Motors Corporation, Chrysler LLC, and Ford Motor Company. It was to include 2,500 hybrid sedans—the largest one–time purchase yet of hybrid vehicles for the federal government—and each new vehicle was claimed to yield at least a 10% fuel economy improvement over its predecessor. The GSA was to spend $15 million more that year on a pilot fleet of advanced-technology vehicles, including all-electric vehicles and hybrid buses.[32]

Hybrids accounted for about 10 percent of the 145,473 vehicles the U.S. General Services Administration bought during the fiscal years 2009 and 2010, after making up less than 1 percent of government vehicle purchases in 2008. As for specific models, Obama took a buy-American stance. The U.S. government bought about two-thirds of the Chevrolet Malibu Hybrids sold during the past two years, and almost a third of the Ford Fusion Hybrids, but only 17 Toyota Prius hybrids and five Honda Civic Hybrids.[33] Ground Force One, so designated when transporting the POTUS, is one of two armored buses procured in 2010 for the transportation of dignitaries under protection of the Secret Service, at a cost of $1.1 million each. The coaches were assembled in Tennessee on frames made in Canada.[34]

Interagency Resources Management Conference

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Interagency Resources Management Conference (TIRMCO) was a federal executive conference of the General Services Administration, hosting about 300 federal and industry leaders each year. The Interagency Resources Management Conference began in 1961 as the ADPCO conference. In 1979, the Department of Commerce, GSA and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) jointly sponsored a conference for Senior Executive Service (SES) officials at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. At the same time, the National Archives hosted a small records management conference for senior executives, also located in Gettysburg. These two conferences merged with ADPCO and became The Interagency Resources Management Conference. Over the years, the conference has evolved its focus from highly specialized to integrated. In 1996, when U.S. Congress mandated the role of Chief Information Officer (CIO), these new federal executives were invited to attend The Interagency Resources Management Conference.[35]

The Interagency Resources Management Conference was the government's primary senior executive conference when it was held as an offsite retreat for leaders from across government. Originally, industry participation was managed by a division of the Washington Post, Post-Newsweek Tech Media, and from 1999 to 2008, Post-Newsweek, with the assistance of a small, woman-owned business, Hosky Communications Inc., developed a strong following from the SES community for the event, on average generating 3-400 attendees with a 3:1 government to industry ratio. GSA leadership crafted conference content that directly addressed the Administration's goals throughout those years which the industry showcase demonstrated the roles that partners play in executing cost-cutting technology solutions for government.

In 2008, Hosky was awarded a competitive contract to continue to manage and develop the forum. From 2008 to 2010, TIRMCO drew attendees from about 65 federal agencies, and diverse disciplines including information technology, human resources, acquisition, management and finance.

Once travel restrictions and budget concerns surfaced late 2010, TIRMCO was moved to a local venue under the management services of A-S-K Associates, where primary attendance by industry was established as a means to inform commercial firms on GSA policies. TIRMCO 2011 was held in Washington, D.C., at the Kellogg Conference Center and Hotel on the campus of Gallaudet University.[36]

Shortly after TIRMCO 2011, GSA's Associate Administrator for Governmentwide Policy, Kathleen Turco, announced to media that she and other GSA officials felt that TIRMCO had lost its spark and retired the event.[37]

Technology Transformation Service

Since 1997, the GSA .gov[38] program has managed government websites. In 2014 GSA launched a technology 'start-up' program called 18F. 18F is a digital services agency which makes digital products for government organizations and uses lean startup methods, open source code, and contemporary programming languages.

The Technology Transformation Service, a new subunit starting in May 2016, will incorporate 18F, the Presidential Innovation Fellows program, and the Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies. "Phaedra Chrousos, formerly associate administrator of OCSIT, [will be] the Technology Transformation Service's first commissioner. Her deputy will be Aaron Snow, executive director of 18F." The Technology Transformation Service is to be a "service line of business", parallel to the two others GSA offers, the Federal Acquisition Service and the Public Buildings Service.[39]

Section 1122 Program

In 2009, Section 1122 of the FY 1994 National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 was added. This expanded the program from buying counter-drug materials and equipment at a discount to homeland security and emergency response operations. Besides the GSA, the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) provide equipment, as in the 1033 program.[40]

See also

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References

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  37. Weigelt, Matthew. (2012-03-15) IRMCO is done, Acquisition Excellence takes its place. FCW. Retrieved on 2013-07-19.
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  39. Billy Mitchell. GSA launches tech service for agencies. Fedscoop.com. May 3, 2016.
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External links