logo image

The Public Manager Magazine Article

A New Year

Ron Sanders opens the January 2016 issue of The Public Manager.

By

Mon Jan 11 2016

Loading...

The last time I penned my introductory column for The Public Manager, our storied publication had just begun the digital age. This new electronic medium doesn't change our message, as Editor Paula Ketter and I have stressed, and this month's issue is a perfect example of both our commitment and our currency.

The IRS's John Koskinen, commissioner of America's most favorite government agency (as an alum, I can say that), comes to us right out of today's headlines—much to his chagrin, I'm sure. And with our new format, we're able to bring his thoughts on public management to you in less than half the time it would have taken us to plan, prepare, and publish the former print version of the publication. In those "good old days" we typically had a six-month reaction time at best, from the emergence of a critical topic or personality to in-depth coverage in an article in our journal. Given today's hyper-accelerated news cycle, six months isn't fast enough for public managers.

Advertisement

Take the case of Koskinen. He faces one of the most daunting leadership and public management challenges in the history of the federal government. Hyperbole? I think not. The IRS is the lifeblood of most of our departments and agencies, collecting the taxes that ultimately fund our programs. And while we whine about paying those taxes, we also know that the IRS is just the messenger—left to enforce a complex, bewildering tax code that is the product of our equally complex and bewildering political system.

That makes Koskinen's job hard enough. Add a growing number of taxpayers demanding more of the technology-enabled solutions they've come to take for granted from the private sector, plummeting budgets and staff, and a partisan political controversy that has exacerbated both, and you can see why his job (and the jobs of the agency's 85,000+ employees, managers, and executives) is so challenging.

I know this firsthand—I was the IRS's HR chief during a similar "perfect storm" of scandal and scrutiny in the late 1990s—and in my view, the IRS and its commissioner represent a microcosm of the environment every public manager must face. To be sure, theirs may be an extreme case, but most of us can probably see a little bit of our own challenges in the issues at the IRS.

That's why there's so much to learn from Koskinen and those he leads. And that's why we hope that interviews such as his become one of the signature offerings from The Public Manager.

Ron Sanders

Advertisement

Chairman, The Bureaucrat Inc. Board of Directors

sanders\_[email protected]

You've Reached ATD Member-only Content

Become an ATD member to continue

Already a member?Sign In

Advertisement

Copyright © 2024 ATD

ASTD changed its name to ATD to meet the growing needs of a dynamic, global profession.

Terms of UsePrivacy NoticeCookie Policy