Order Code RL33441
Executive Branch Reorganization and
Management Initiatives: A Brief Overview
Updated September 16, 2008
Harold C. Relyea
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division

Executive Branch Reorganization and Management
Initiatives: A Brief Overview
Summary
This report provides a brief overview of recent executive branch reorganization
actions and related management initiatives. President George W. Bush came to
office from a campaign which had emphasized efficiency in government, particularly
through the use of information technology, but revealed no plans for executive
branch reorganization. The departing Clinton Administration had conducted an active
effort at “reinventing government,” spearheaded by a National Performance Review
(NPR) announced shortly after the 1993 inauguration. The NPR produced a series
of reports proposing various organizational and operational reforms.
A number of major NPR recommendations were awaiting implementation when
the 1994 congressional elections resulted in Republican majority control of both
houses of the 104th Congress. Republican congressional leaders had unveiled a
Contract With America reform plan in late September 1994. Its core principles
regarded the federal government as being too big, spending too much, being
unresponsive to the citizenry, and perpetuating burdensome regulations. At the
conclusion of the 104th Congress, both the President and Republican congressional
leaders could claim some victories in downsizing government, but no department was
eliminated, and only a few small agencies were abolished.
Following his 2001 inauguration, President Bush announced plans to address
a number of management problems in the federal government. Then, in the aftermath
of the September 11, 2001 (9/11), terrorist attacks, the organization of the federal
government for maintaining homeland security and combating terrorism became a
major consideration for both the President and Congress. Establishment of the Office
of Homeland Security in October 2001 as a coordinating entity was an important first
step, followed by the creation of a Department of Homeland Security during the final
weeks of the 107th Congress. Oversight of the initial operations of the new
department was a primary matter for the 108th Congress, which, in the closing months
of 2004, implemented many of the recommendations of the national commission
which had investigated the circumstances of the 9/11 attacks.
At the outset of the 110th Congress, President Bush did not indicate any plans
for major reorganization within the executive branch. However, the restoration of
presidential reorganization plan authority appeared to remain of interest to the Bush
Administration. Of likely interest to congressional overseers in the second session
are such organizational issues as the efficiency, economy, and effectiveness of the
administrative structure of the Department of Homeland Security; the organizational
status of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA); enhancement of the
department’s policy office; the operations of the Privacy and Civil Liberties
Oversight Board, recently reconstituted as an independent establishment within the
executive branch; and the recommendations of the HELP Commission to overhaul
the organization and management of the foreign assistance program (H.R. 1, H.R.
1684, S. 4, S. 547). This report will be updated as events warrant.


Contents
Most Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Background and Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Reinventing Government by the Clinton Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Reorganization During the Bush Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Organizing for Homeland Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Intelligence Reorganization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Congressional Literature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Legislation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
For Additional Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
CRS Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

Executive Branch Reorganization and
Management Initiatives: A Brief Overview
Most Recent Developments
With the convening of the 110th Congress, no proposals for a major
reorganization of the executive branch were awaiting congressional attention. Early
in the first session, legislation (H.R. 1; S. 4) was introduced to implement unfinished
recommendations of the 9/11 Commission. Title 8 of the House bill would have
reconstituted the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) as an
independent establishment within the executive branch, required Senate confirmation
of all members of the PCLOB, set qualifications and terms for nominees to be board
members, vested the board with subpoena power, required the designation of Privacy
and Civil Liberties Officers, and enhanced the authorities of the DHS Privacy
Officer. The House approved the bill on January 9, 2007, on a 299-128 vote.
The Senate counterpart bill was referred to the Committee on Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs, which held a January 9 hearing on full
implementation of the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission. Reported on
February 22 with an amendment in the nature of a substitute, but without an
accompanying written report, the bill came under Senate consideration on March 1
after the committee-reported substitute amendment was withdrawn by unanimous
consent. The Senate concluded its deliberations on the bill on March 13, and
approved the measure with an amendment on a 60-38 yea-nay vote. Title 6 of the
Senate bill would have reconstituted the PCLOB as an agency within the Executive
Office of the President; required Senate confirmation of all members of the board;
set qualifications and terms for nominees to be board members; authorized the board
to request the Attorney General to issue a subpoena on its behalf; and required the
Attorney General, if such a request were modified or denied, to report such action to
the House and Senate Committees on the Judiciary.
Conferees on the reform legislation filed their report on July 25. The Senate
adopted the report the following day on a 85-8 vote; the House concurred on July 27
on a 371-40 vote. The legislation, signed into law on August 3, reconstitutes the
board as an independent agency with modified analysis, review, and advisory
responsibilities, requires Senate confirmation of all members of the PCLOB, sets
qualifications and terms for nominees to be board members, authorizes the Attorney
General to exercise subpoena power on behalf of the board, requires the designation
of Privacy and Civil Liberties Officers, and enhances the authorities of the DHS
Privacy Officer.1
1 P.L. 110-53; 121 Stat. 266.

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Other matters of interest to congressional overseers in the 110th Congress are
organizational issues regarding the efficiency, economy, and effectiveness of the
administrative structure of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the
organizational status of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and
enhancement of the department’s policy office. Several key lawmakers, during the
initial weeks of the new Congress, had indicated frustration with the lack of progress
on the congressionally mandated restructuring of FEMA within DHS.2 Other aspects
of DHS organization and administrative structural reform were reflected in the
Department of Homeland Security Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (H.R.
1684), introduced by Representative Bennie Thompson on March 26, 2007, and
referred to the Committee on Homeland Security, which marked up the bill and
ordered it, as amended, favorably reported on a 26-0 vote on March 28. A report on
the measure was filed on May 4.3 The House adopted the bill, with amendments, on
a 296-126 vote on May 9. The legislation was received in the Senate on May 1,
when it was referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs.
Title 2 of H.R. 1684, as approved by the House, would establish within DHS a
Directorate for Policy, headed by an Under Secretary appointed by the President with
Senate approval. The new directorate would replace the existing Office of Policy and
otherwise have within it an Office of the Private Sector, a Victim Assistance Officer,
a Tribal Security Officer, and a Border Community Liaison Officer. The bill would
also direct the Secretary of Homeland Security to delegate to each Chief Operating
Officer within DHS direct authority over that Officer’s counterparts in component
agencies to ensure that the component agencies adhere to the laws, rules, regulations,
and departmental policies which each Officer is responsible for implementing. The
Secretary would be made responsible, moreover, for conducting a Comprehensive
Homeland Security Review regarding departmental homeland security strategy; the
adequacy of personnel resources and organizational structure necessary for the
successful execution of DHS missions called for in the department’s strategy; and a
related budget plan, acquisition strategy, and procurement process necessary to
provide sufficient resources for the successful execution of the full range of missions
called for in the department’s strategy. The bill would also set qualifications for any
nominee for the existing position of Under Secretary for Management. A sense of
Congress provision indicated that the consolidation of DHS and its key component
headquarters on the West Campus of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital “should move forward
as expeditiously as possible.” Finally, the bill directs the Secretary of Homeland
Security to ensure that the Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs has adequate
authority over the Assistant Secretary’s respective counterparts in component
2 The Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006, which was enacted as
Title VI of the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2007 (120 Stat.
1394), reestablished FEMA within DHS with an Administrator, appointed by the President
with Senate confirmation, who is the principal advisor to the President on emergency
management and who would report directly to the President when addressing disasters and
catastrophic incidents.
3 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Homeland Security, Department of Homeland
Security Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008
, report to accompany H.R. 1684, 110th
Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 110-122 (Washington: GPO, 2007).

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agencies of DHS to ensure that the component agencies adhere to the laws, rules, and
regulations to which the department is subject and the departmental policies that the
Assistant Secretary is responsible for implementing.
Among the provisions in Title 3 of the bill is a section directing the Chief
Financial Officer of DHS to establish an Authorization Liaison Officer to provide
timely budget and other financial information to the House Committee on Homeland
Security and the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs,
as well as other appropriate committees, and to ensure, to the greatest extent possible,
that all reports prepared for the congressional appropriations committees are
submitted concurrently to the House Committee on Homeland Security and the
Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, as well as other
appropriate committees. Another provision would require the Secretary to actively
consult with the congressional homeland security committees, and to keep such
committees fully and currently informed with respect to all activities and
responsibilities within the jurisdictions of these committees.
On August 1, 2007, the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs approved S. 547 by voice vote without debate. The bill,
introduced on February 12 by Senator George Voinovich with bipartisan support,
would create a Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security for Management, who would
be appointed by the President with Senate approval, would serve a five-year term,
and would function as a chief management officer and principal advisor to the
Secretary of Homeland Security on all issues related to management of DHS. The
nominee for the position, according to the bill, is expected to have “extensive
executive level leadership and management experience in the public or private
sector,” “strong leadership skills,” “a demonstrated ability to manage large and
complex organizations,” and “a proven record in achieving positive operational
results.”
In early December 2007, just prior to the opening of the second session of the
110th Congress, the Helping to Enhance the Livelihood of People (HELP) Around the
Globe Commission issued its final report regarding U.S. development assistance to
foreign countries. Mandated by provisions in the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2004,4 the commission, among other recommendations, proposed (1) reducing the
number of agencies responsible for development; (2) rewriting the Foreign
Assistance Act to make development and humanitarian assistance programs less
diffuse and more focused; (3) improving interagency coordination; (4) establishing
parity between policy decisions about foreign assistance and those responsible for
program design, implementation, or operations; and (5) creating a new structure for
foreign assistance activities. Options offered regarding the last recommendation
include (1) creating a new Department for International Development with Cabinet
status; (2) folding federal development organizations into the Department of State;
or (3) establishing a new Department of International Affairs that reconstitutes the
Department of State, the Agency for International Development, and most of the
4 118 Stat. 3 at 101.

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other organizations funded by the international affairs budget into a single
department with Cabinet status.5
While neither Senator John McCain nor Senator Barack Obama, the principal
contenders for the presidency, have indicated any plans for reorganizing the
executive branch if elected (see below), some independent views in this regard have
begun to appear. Businessman Stanton Anderson and attorney Herb Fenster, finding
it “doubtful than an executive branch organized to fulfill the needs of a population
of 80 million (1900) or 150 million (1950) can effectively serve a population of 300
million (2000) or 570 million (2100),” have called for a comprehensive review of the
structure and components of the executive branch.
Each departmental and agency function and the interactions (or lack thereof)
among them needs review. There is no single shortcut to correcting
organizational sprawl. Each piece, function and role must be examined.
To conduct this review and examination, they propose “A joint commission
with membership from the three branches, nongovernmental organizations, public
service organizations, industry and academia should be created by the next
president.” They add, however, that “candidates running for the presidency should
begin to discuss the need for a complete reorganization of the federal government.”6
While neither Senator McCain nor Senator Obama have revealed any
reorganization plans, both have alluded to program reviews with a view to efficiency,
economy, and effectiveness. When accepting the nomination to be the presidential
candidate of the Democrats, Obama pledged to “go through the federal budget, line
by line, eliminating programs that no longer work and making the ones we do need
work better and cost less — because we cannot meet 21st century challenges with a
20th century bureaucracy.” To some observers, this undertaking was reminiscent of
the mission of the National Performance Review (NPR) launched during the Clinton
Administration: “Creating a government that works better & costs less.” Moreover,
serving as advisers to the Obama campaign are David Osborne, the author of
Reinventing Government and one of the architect’s of the NPR, and John Kamensky,
the former deputy director of the NPR.7
McCain also has called for “top-to-bottom reviews of all federal programs to
weed out failing ones.” The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is seen as a
vehicle for conducting such reviews.8 When accepting the Republican nomination
for President, he called for changing “the way government does almost everything.”
5 U.S. Helping to Enhance the Livelihood of People (HELP) Around the Globe Commission,
Beyond Assistance (Washington: GPO, 2007), pp. 68-89.
6 Stanton Anderson and Herb Fenster, “Executive Reorganizing,” Washington Times, July
23, 2008, p. A22.
7 Robert Brodsky, Alyssa Rosenberg, and Tom Shoop, “Obama Calls for End of ‘20th
Century Bureaucracy’,” GovExec, Aug. 29, 2008, available at [http://www.govexec.com/
story_pagwe_pf.cfm?articleid=40842&printerfriendlyvers=1].
8 Elizabeth Newell, “The Reformer,” Government Executive, Sept. 2008, p. 20.

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From the way we protect our security to the way we compete in the world
economy, from the way we respond to disasters to the way we fuel our
transportation network, from the way we train our workers to the way we educate
our children. All these functions of government were designed before the rise
of the global economy, the information technology revolution and the end of the
Cold War. We have to catch up to history, and we have to change the way we
do business in Washington.
He also said “my administration will set a new standard for transparency and
accountability.”9 Several days later, his vice presidential running mate, Alaska
Governor Sarah Palin, indicated that “government reform” was one of three areas she
would focus on, with McCain’s agreement, if he is elected President.10
In terms of institutional changes, it has been reported that Obama, if elected
President, “would likely create a national technology czar with broad authority to
develop policy, elevating high-tech issues to the cabinet level in a major recalibration
of the government’s approach to regulating the communications sector.”11 He has
also indicated he would reestablish the National Space Council, which was chaired
by the Vice President and was located within the Executive Office of the President
(1988-1993).12
Background and Analysis
For well over a century, the structure and program responsibilities of the federal
executive branch, including all of the departments and agencies, were determined by
Congress. In the aftermath of World War I, however, with the rise of the new public
administration profession and growing sentiment for attaining efficiency and
economy in government, came efforts to strengthen the President’s management
ability. In 1932, the Chief Executive was statutorily authorized to issue executive
orders proposing reorganization within the executive branch for purposes of reducing
expenditures and increasing efficiency in government.13 A reorganization order
became effective after 60 days unless either house of Congress adopted a resolution
of disapproval. When President Herbert Hoover submitted 11 different
reorganization orders in 1932, all were disapproved by the House of Representatives
9 Tom Shoop, “McCain Pledges to Attack Bureaucracy, Limit Government,” GovExec, Sept.
5, 2008, available at [http://www.govexec.com/story_page_pf.cfm?articleid=
40893&printerfriendlyvers=1].
10 Juliet Eilperin, “Priorities: Palin’s List Includes Energy,” Washington Post, Sept. 16,
2008, p. A4.
11 David Hatch, “Tech Czar Might Rule Policy Under Obama,” CongressDaily AM, Sept.
10, 2008, available at [http://www.nationaljournal.com/congressdaily/
print_friendly.php?ID=cda_20080910_6421].
12 William J. Broad, “Presidential Candidates’ Positions on An Array of Issues in Science,”
New York Times, Sept. 16, 2008, p. D3.
13 47 Stat. 413.

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on the grounds that his newly elected successor, Franklin D. Roosevelt, might have
different reorganization ideas.
President Roosevelt did submit a number of reorganization orders pursuant to
a revised and extended version of the 1932 statute, which expired automatically in
1935. Some major actions taken in these orders included creating procurement and
disbursement divisions in the Treasury Department, establishing an enlarged National
Park Service in the Interior Department, and making the Farm Credit Administration
an independent agency.
Congress subsequently mandated a similar arrangement in a 1939 statute.14
Once again, the objective was to achieve efficiency and economy in administration.
A presidential reorganization plan, submitted to Congress, became effective after 60
days unless both houses of Congress adopted a concurrent resolution of disapproval.
In his initial reorganization plan, President Roosevelt created the Executive Office
of the President, an enclave for entities immediately assisting the Chief Executive.
Such reorganization authority, renewed periodically a dozen times between 1945
and 1984, with slight variation, remained available to the President for nearly half a
century. At different junctures, qualifications were placed upon its exercise. For
example, reorganization plans could not abolish or create an entire department, or
deal with more than one logically consistent subject matter. Also, the President was
prohibited from submitting more than one plan within a 30-day period and was
required to include a clear statement on the projected economic savings expected to
result from a reorganization.
Modification of the President’s reorganization plan authority was made
necessary in 1983 when the Supreme Court, in the Chadha case, effectively
invalidated continued congressional reliance upon a concurrent resolution to
disapprove a proposed plan.15 Under the Reorganization Act Amendments of 1984,
several significant changes were made in the reorganization plan law.16 Any time
during the period of 60 calendar days of continuous session of Congress following
the submission of a reorganization plan, the President might make amendments or
modifications to it. Within 90 calendar days of continuous session of Congress
following the submission of a reorganization plan, both houses must adopt a joint
resolution (which, unlike a concurrent resolution, becomes law with the President’s
signature — a central issue in the Chadha case) for a plan to be approved. This
amendment, however, continued the President’s reorganization plan authority only
to the end of 1984, when it automatically expired.17 Neither President Ronald
Reagan nor President George H. W. Bush requested its reauthorization. President
14 53 Stat. 561.
15 INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919 (1983).
16 98 Stat. 3192.
17 See 5 U.S.C. 901-912 (1988).

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William Clinton also did not seek its renewal, although his National Performance
Review recommended this course of action in September 1993.18
The National Strategy for Homeland Security, released by President George W.
Bush in July 2002, recommended the restoration of reorganization plan authority to
allow reconfiguring portions of the executive branch to better combat terrorism and
maintain homeland security.19 In his FY2003 budget message, President Bush had
indicated that his Administration would “seek to re-institute permanent
reorganization authority for the President to permit expedited legislative approval of
plans to reorganize the Executive Branch.”20 However, no draft legislation was
subsequently offered in this regard. When the National Commission on the Public
Service presented its report in January 2003, one of its recommendations was to give
the President “expedited authority to recommend structural reorganization of federal
agencies and departments.”21 Congressional interest in possibly restoring the
President’s reorganization plan authority was evidenced with an April 3, 2003,
hearing on the matter by the House Committee on Government Reform, but soon
faded.22
In the absence of reorganization plan authority, the President may propose
executive branch reorganizations to be realized through the constitutionally
prescribed legislative process. The Departments of Energy, Education, Veterans
Affairs, and Homeland Security were established in this manner. This approach,
however, does not incorporate action-forcing deadlines or a required final
congressional vote on proposed reorganization plans that are thought to expedite the
consideration of reorganizations. The President might attempt a minor
reorganization, such as establishing a small, temporary entity within the Executive
Office of the President, by issuing a directive, such as an executive order.
Attempting more ambitious reorganizations through a presidential directive, if not
ultimately found to be illegal, may incur congressional displeasure and subsequent
legislative and fiscal reaction. As a result of the absence of reorganization plan
authority, more recent reform efforts to improve the efficiency and economy of
government operations have emphasized management improvements of both a
government-wide and specific program variety, including applications of information
technology that some have characterized as electronic government.
18 U.S. Office of the Vice President, From Red Tape to Results: Creating a Government that
Works Better and Costs Less, Report of the National Performance Review
(Washington:
September 7, 1993), p. 161
19 U.S. Office of Homeland Security, National Strategy for Homeland Security (Washington:
July 2002), p. xi.
20 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the U.S. Government: Fiscal Year
2003
(Washington: GPO, 2002), p. 52.
21 National Commission on the Public Service, Urgent Business for America: Revitalizing
the Federal Government for the 21st Century
(Washington: January 2003), p. 17.
22 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Government Reform, Toward a Logical Governing
Structure: Restoring Executive Reorganization Authority
, hearing, 108th Cong., 1st sess.,
April 3, 2003 (Washington: GPO, 2003).

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Reinventing Government by the Clinton
Administration
An ambitious effort at realizing executive branch reorganization and
management reform was launched by President Clinton at the outset of his
Administration when, on March 3, 1993, he initiated a National Performance Review
(NPR) to be conducted under the leadership of Vice President Albert Gore, Jr. Six
months later, on September 7, the initial NPR report was delivered to the President.
Various accompanying supplemental reports on both specific agencies and functional
areas of government were subsequently published during 1994. The bulk of the
initial report’s almost 380 major recommendations (broken into over 1,230 action
items) was directed to management reforms; several proposals addressed executive
reorganization, including one for congressional restoration of presidential
reorganization plan authority.
During the 12 months after the initial NPR report was issued, its
recommendations were implemented by 22 presidential directives, several enacted
bills, and various agency actions. Anniversary reports, marking progress in
implementing NPR recommendations, were issued in September of 1994, 1995, and
1996. The last of these indicated that 43% of the NPR’s initial 833 agency action
items were completed and 42% were in progress, and that 38% of its initial 430
management systems action items were completed and 49% were in progress. Of an
additional 187 agency recommendations, 19% were completed and 62% were in
progress. As of January 1996, the executive workforce had been reduced by nearly
240,000. In addition, almost 2,000 obsolete field offices had been closed and
approximately 200 programs and agencies had been eliminated. As of September
1996, said the report, “savings of about $97.4 billion have been ensured through
legislative or administrative action.” According to the report, of the original $108
billion in savings projected in 1993, about $73.4 billion had been realized.23
The Clinton Administration renewed its reinventing government effort in
mid-January 1995 with Phase 2 of the NPR, which was detailed in the President’s
FY1996 budget. Shortly thereafter, in late February, the President announced new
regulatory reform proposals, including page-by-page review of federal regulations to
determine those that were obsolete, replaceable by private sector alternatives, or
better administered by state and local government. He also proposed to abolish the
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) and reconstitute the Federal Aviation
Administration’s air traffic control services as a wholly owned government
corporation. The elimination of the ICC was subsequently realized in December
1995. Certain functions of the commission were transferred to the Surface
Transportation Board, newly established within the Department of Transportation by
the ICC termination statute.24
23 U.S. Office of the Vice President, The Best Kept Secrets in Government: A Report to
President Bill Clinton
(Washington: September 1996), pp. 1-7, 73, 149, 167.
24 109 Stat. 803.

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With the convening of the 105th Congress, the reinvention effort entered another
new phase, emphasizing improved service delivery; use of partnerships and
community-based strategies to solve problems, not big government; and techniques
for improving performance in a time of diminishing resources, including the use of
performance-based organizations. As a reflection of this third revamping, the NPR,
known heretofore as the National Performance Review, became the National
Partnership for Reinventing Government in January 1998.
In May 2000 testimony before a subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Governmental Affairs, Donald F. Kettl, then a University of Wisconsin professor,
who had conducted extensive research on the NPR reforms, gave the effort an overall
grade of “B,” saying there was “room for improvement.” Brookings Institution
scholar Paul C. Light added that the NPR program had created “unnecessary
politicization of government reform.” Two other analysts were also critical of the
NPR effort.25 A few months later, in September, a GAO report concluded that the
NPR reinvention effort had been largely successful, with more than 90% of key
Clinton Administration recommendations having been fully or partly implemented.
The report was based upon a review of 72 NPR recommendations by 10 federal
agencies, which found that 33 of them were fully implemented and another 30 were
partly implemented.26
Reorganization During the Bush Administration
During his campaign for the presidency, Texas Governor George W. Bush
emphasized efficiency in government, particularly through the use of information
technology, but revealed no plans for reorganizing the executive branch. The
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 (9/11), however, prompted various structural
changes, particularly in the areas of homeland security and intelligence.
Organizing for Homeland Security
A major objective of restructuring was to realize governmental arrangements
resulting in more efficient, economical, and effective homeland security.
Reinstatement of the President’s reorganization plan authority was proposed, and
legislation to create a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) was introduced and
subsequently enacted.27 Working with a White House proposal unveiled on June 6,
2002, the House completed action on the DHS legislation in late July; the Senate did
not begin work on a counterpart measure until after the August recess, and then was
slowed by debate on various amendments. Final legislation reached the President’s
desk in late November.
25 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, Has Government Been
“Reinvented”?
hearing, 106th Cong., 2nd sess., May 4, 2000 (Washington: GPO, 2000).
26 U.S. General Accounting Office, Reinventing Government: Status of NPR
Recommendations at 10 Federal Agencies
, GAO Report GAO/GGD-00-145 (Washington:
September 2000).
27 116 Stat. 2135.

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The primary issue for Congress and the President was determining the program
composition and administrative organization of the new department. In the course
of mandating DHS, this overarching consideration broke down into a series of lesser,
more finite issues, not the least of which were threshold questions concerning the
value of the new entity. President Bush contended that his proposal did not
constitute an expansion of the federal government, but merely consolidated existing
programs within a more efficient and effective management structure. However,
neither the President’s proposal nor the principal congressional bills made use of a
definition of the concept of homeland security to guide the component composition
of the new department. Moreover, whole agencies were proposed for transfer to the
department with little effort to sort out non-homeland-security functions and
programs for possibly more appropriate administration elsewhere other than in the
new department.
There were, as well, those who doubted that merely rearranging programs within
a new department would truly improve the nation’s defenses against terrorism.
Others maintained that, no matter how well management and operating arrangements
were fine-tuned, the effectiveness of the department and its leadership could not be
legislatively guaranteed. And still others wondered aloud who would be willing to
serve, for very long, in the leadership of such a department.
Some initially criticized the President’s proposal as an inadequate response to
what they viewed as intelligence failures, suggesting that, in the context of
considering the components of the new homeland security department, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the federal intelligence community, particularly the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), should not escape scrutiny. Two FBI units — the
National Domestic Preparedness Office and the National Infrastructure Protection
Center — would have been transferred to the new department under the President’s
plan, and ultimately were in the bill that was signed into law. The criticism,
however, suggested that those developing the President’s plan had not given adequate
consideration to the prospect of transferring or restructuring FBI and CIA
counterterrorism responsibilities. Others questioned why the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, and Firearms, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission were not included. GAO, among others, noted that, because
the concept of “homeland security” had not been defined, “certain organizational,
management, and budgetary decisions cannot currently be made consistently across
agencies.”28
In creating the new department, Congress had the responsibility for determining
the appropriate administrative structure for the Secretary to manage, with efficiency,
economy, and effectiveness, an organization of some 170,000 employees (many of
whom would be working in field facilities), composed of diverse units, with shared
responsibility and partnership with state and local governments, as well as the private
sector. A key consideration was the Secretary’s span of control over the operations
of primary divisions and internal agencies, together with such broad departmental
28 U.S. General Accounting Office, Homeland Security: Key Elements to Unify Efforts Are
Underway but Uncertainty Remains
, GAO Report GAO-02-610 (Washington: June 2002),
p. 2.

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functions as human and information resources management, budget setting, and
financial management. Under the bill initially adopted by the House, the Secretary
of Homeland Security might have had as many as 15 senior officials of the
department reporting directly to him or her (or more if the assistant secretaries
actually had this relationship); under one Senate version of the legislation, 17 senior
officials seemingly would have been reporting directly to the Secretary.
Ultimately, the statute mandating DHS placed most of the entities and functions
transferred to the new department within four primary directorates for border and
transportation security, emergency preparedness and response, science and
technology, and information analysis and infrastructure protection. The Coast Guard
and the Secret Service were excepted from this arrangement and given independent
status within the department. The heads of these six components, along with
upwards of 12 assistant secretaries and approximately 14 other senior officials,
appeared to report directly to the Secretary. In general, the administrative framework
statutorily established for the department supported strong vertical management
structures while being somewhat weak in detailing horizontal working arrangements
among headquarter’s divisions and internal agencies.
The President’s proposal contained a provision authorizing the Secretary of
Homeland Security, in regulations prescribed jointly with the director of the Office
of Personnel Management, to establish and, from time to time, adjust a human
resources management system for some or all of the organizational units of the
department, “which shall be flexible, contemporary, and grounded in public
employment principles of merit and fitness.” The provision raised various issues
concerning staffing requirements, such as adequate numbers of personnel and
planning for the replacement of retiring staff; hiring, particularly direct hiring which
would not involve traditional guarantees of being merit-based and free of political
influence and lacked preference for veterans; and pay, particularly pay parity or
equity for employees who are performing similar jobs. Civil service protections and
collective bargaining rights for department workers were among the most contentious
issues surrounding the establishment of the Department of Homeland Security.
Ultimately, the statute mandating the new department largely supported the
President’s position on these matters.
Upon signing the Homeland Security Act into law on November 25, 2002,
President Bush transmitted, pursuant to Section 1502 of the statute, his
reorganization plan for the Department of Homeland Security. This document set
deadlines for the transfer of agencies, programs, and functions to the new department,
and specified related agency consolidations, reorganizations, or streamlinings. DHS
became operational on January 24, 60 days after its statutory mandate was signed into
law. That same day, Tom Ridge, the President’s homeland security adviser and
director of the Office of Homeland Security (OHS), was sworn in as the Secretary of
Homeland Security. A reorganization of border agencies was announced by
Secretary Ridge on January 30. Formulation of the Department of Homeland
Security took a major step on March 1 when, in accordance with the President’s
reorganization plan, some three dozen agencies and programs were transferred to the
new department. Ultimately, all such transfers were completed by September 30,
2003.

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The future of OHS, which had been created by presidential directive in response
to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, came into question in late July 2003 when House
appropriators, in their report on the Departments of Transportation and Treasury and
Independent Agencies Appropriations Bill, 2004, revealed that the Bush
Administration had changed the “Office of Homeland Security” account to one for
the “Homeland Security Council.” The current council is mandated by the Homeland
Security Act of 2002.29 The report questioned the role of OHS, saying “it is not clear
what work remains that cannot be effectively performed by the Department of
Homeland Security.” The account change apparently also implied the shift of 66
staff from OHS to the council, which the report questioned “given the existence and
support of the Department of Homeland Security.” The committee cut the
President’s request of $8.3 million for the council to $4.1 million.30 The full House
approved the recommended amount. In the Senate counterpart bill, appropriators
recommended $8.3 for the council, the amount requested, but placed the funds in a
separate account.31 Conferees on the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2004 (H.R.
2673), which included funding for agencies of the Executive Office of the President,
made no recommendation of funds for OHS, but did propose $7.2 million for the
Homeland Security Council in the White House Office account. The House agreed
to the conference report on December 8 and adjourned sine die; the Senate completed
action on the legislation on January 23, 2004, and the President signed the measure
the following day.32 OHS disappeared from the President’s budget request for
FY2005.
In a first-year assessment of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS),
Donald F. Kettl, a veteran public administration analyst then at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, gave it a grade of C+. This overall grade derived from
evaluations of five areas of department responsibility: aviation security (B-),
intelligence (B-), immigration (C+), coordination with state and local governments
(C), and departmental management (C+). “As is scarcely surprising given the
enormity of the task it faced,” wrote Kettl, “the department’s performance has varied
widely. In some areas, the DHS has done exceptionally well, yet in other areas,
conditions are worse than before the DHS was created. The biggest areas needing
improvement,” he proffered, “in fact, deal with the very coordination — ‘connecting
the dots’ — problems that the department was created to solve.” Kettl’s study, made
available in an advance copy in early March 2004, subsequently appeared in a book
published later in the year by the Century Foundation of New York.33
29 116 Stat. 2258.
30 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Departments of Transportation and
Treasury and Independent Agencies Appropriations Bill, 2004
, report to accompany H.R.
2989, 108th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 108-243 (Washington: GPO, 2003), p. 163.
31 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Transportation, Treasury and
General Government Appropriations Bill, 2004
, report to accompany S. 1589, 108th Cong.,
1st sess., S.Rept. 108-146 (Washington: GPO, 2003), p. 135.
32 118 Stat. 3.
33 Donald F. Kettl, ed., The Department of Homeland Security’s First Year: A Report Card
(New York: Century Foundation Press, 2004), p. 7.

CRS-13
Intelligence Reorganization
In addition to prompting the creation of DHS, the 9/11 terrorist attacks also
initiated some reorganization of the federal intelligence community. On February 14,
2002, the leadership of the House and Senate intelligence committees announced a
bipartisan, bicameral examination of the operations and activities of the intelligence
community pertaining to the 9/11 attacks. This joint inquiry resulted in a report
which, among other recommendations, called for the appointment of a Cabinet-level
national intelligence chief, who would rank above the Director of Central Intelligence
(DCI).34
In its final report, released July 22, 2004, the National Commission on Terrorist
Attacks Upon the United States recommended, among other proposals, the creation
of a board within the executive branch to monitor the federal government’s
commitment to defending civil liberties, a National Counterterrorism Center
(NCTC), and a National Intelligence Director (NID) to replace the current Director
of Central Intelligence. It also suggested establishing other national intelligence
centers — for example, on counterproliferation, crime and narcotics, and China —
and folding the responsibilities of the Homeland Security Council into the National
Security Council.35 During the August 2004 recess, several House and Senate
committees began hearings to explore the commission’s recommendations.
Legislative efforts to implement the 9/11 Commission’s recommendations
began in earnest when Congress reconvened after Labor Day. Meeting with
congressional leaders on September 8 to discuss reforming and strengthening the
federal intelligence services, President Bush endorsed establishing an NID, who,
among other considerations, would have been located within the executive branch,
but not within the Executive Office of the President; would not have served in the
Cabinet; would have received National Foreign Intelligence Program funds and
allocated them, as apportioned by OMB, to the intelligence community; would have
supervised the NCTC; and would have had a role in the appointment of any
individual to a position heading an organization or element within the intelligence
community. The President subsequently sent to Congress a September 16 draft
proposal to strengthen the intelligence capabilities of the federal government.
During the latter weeks of September, the principal legislative vehicles for
implementing 9/11 Commission recommendations and strengthening intelligence
capabilities emerged. The Senate bill (S. 2845) was developed in the Committee on
Governmental Affairs, introduced on September 23, and initially considered in the
Senate on September 27. The legislation would have mandated a National
Intelligence Authority (NIA) as an independent establishment within the executive
branch, which would have been headed by a NID, who would have been appointed
34 U.S. Congress, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence, Joint Inquiry into Intelligence Community Activities Before and
After the Terrorist Attacks of September 11, 2001
, report, 107th Cong., 2nd sess., S.Rept. 107-
351 and H.Rept. 107-792 (Washington: GPO, 2002).
35 U.S. National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, The 9/11
Commission Report
(Washington: GPO, 2004).

CRS-14
by the President with Senate confirmation. A NCTC would have been established
within the NIA; the head of this entity also would have been appointed by the
President with Senate confirmation and would have reported to the NID on the
NCTC budget, programs, and activities and to both the President and the NID on the
planning and progress of joint counterterrorism operations. A Privacy and Civil
Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) would have been established within the
Executive Office of the President (EOP). Its chair and four additional members
would have been appointed by the President with Senate confirmation for six-year
terms.
The House bill (H.R. 10) was introduced on September 24 by Speaker Dennis
Hastert and was referred to 13 committees, five of which — Armed Services,
Financial Services, Government Reform, Intelligence, and Judiciary — conducted
markups and ordered reported on September 29 amended versions of the bill. As
introduced, the bill would have created an NID, who would have been appointed by
the President with Senate confirmation and not located within the Executive Office
of the President. A NCTC would have been established within the office of the NID
and would have been headed by a director, who would have been appointed by the
NID. A Civil Liberties Protection Officer, who would have been appointed by the
NID, also would have been created within the office of the NID to serve as a civil
liberties and privacy overseer of the intelligence community, but no provision was
made for a civil liberties oversight board. The President would have been authorized
to prepare and submit to Congress for affirmation plans to reorganize components of
the intelligence community. On October 7, the Committee on Rules reported a
version of the legislation for floor consideration and made 23 amendments in order
for consideration. The House completed its action on the legislation on October 8
when it approved the modified bill on a 282-134 vote.
Conference committee deliberations on the reform measures began on October
20, 2004, but became prolonged due to considerable differences between the two
bills, including their institutional and organizational aspects. Agreement on a
November 20 compromise version of the legislation quickly unraveled in the House.
Subsequently, another compromise version was realized, and the conferees filed their
report on this legislation on December 7.36 That day, the House, on a 336-75 vote,
approved the conference committee report, and the Senate accepted it the following
day on an 89-2 vote. President Bush signed the bill into law on December 17.37 The
reform legislation established a National Intelligence Director (NID), appointed by
the President with Senate confirmation, to serve as the principal intelligence adviser
to the President, head the intelligence community, and oversee and direct the
National Intelligence Program. Other new components included a National
Counterterrorism Center, within the office of the NID, to serve as the primary
executive branch organization for counterterrorism intelligence and strategic
operational planning. In addition, the President was authorized to establish a
National Counter Proliferation Center to prevent and halt the proliferation of
36 U.S. Congress, Conference Committee, Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act
of 2004
, conference report to accompany S. 2845, 108th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Rept. 108-796
(Washington: GPO, 2004).
37 118 Stat. 3638.

CRS-15
weapons of mass destruction, their delivery systems, and related materials and
technologies; and the NID was authorized to establish one or more national
intelligence centers to address intelligence priorities, including regional issues. A
PCLOB, composed of five members appointed by, and serving at the pleasure of, the
President, was also created and located within the EOP. Implementation of the
legislation occurred during the initial months of 2005.
Shortly after the convening of the 109th Congress, the Senate Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs held a January 26, 2005, oversight
hearing on the “road ahead” for DHS. Witnesses included the DHS Acting Inspector
General and management experts from the Brookings Institution, Council on Foreign
Relations, Heritage Foundation, and Rand Corporation. Several major organization
and management issues were discussed, and two reforms, in particular, appeared to
enjoy some support, particularly from Senator Susan Collins, the committee’s chair,
and Senator Joseph Lieberman, the panel’s ranking minority member. These
reforms, which had been discussed in a December 2004 Heritage Foundation report,
DHS 2.0: Rethinking the Department of Homeland Security,38 included (1)
eliminating the DHS management directorate and Under Secretary for Management,
but relocating the chief management officers to the office of the Deputy Secretary;
and (2) establishing an Under Secretary for Policy, who would be assisted by a
unified policy planning staff. It was thought that the first reform would eliminate an
unnecessary layer of bureaucracy and otherwise strengthen the roles of the chief
management officers, and that the second reform would bring unity to DHS through
the development of proactive, strategic homeland security policy and plans.
Indications were that these reforms, among others, would be considered for inclusion
in subsequent legislation reauthorizing DHS programs within the jurisdiction of the
Senate committee. At the hearing, some consideration was also given to merging the
department’s Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Bureau of
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).39
The prospect of merging CBP and ICE was the subject of a March 9, 2005,
hearing by the Subcommittee on Management, Integration, and Oversight of the
House Committee on Homeland Security. Among those testifying was one of the
coauthors of the Heritage Foundation report DHS 2.0: Rethinking the Department of
Homeland Security
, wherein the merger had been proposed. Other participants at the
hearing included a retired immigration and customs enforcement agent, who
supported the merger; a representative of the National Homeland Security Council
of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), who had mixed
views on the merger; a representative of the National Border Patrol Council of the
AFGE, who supported the merger; a former immigration senior special agent, who
supported the merger; and a former senior deportation officer, who proffered that a
merger was “not necessary at this time and may well cause the department to move
38 James Jay Carafano and David Heyman, DHS 2.0: Rethinking the Department of
Homeland Security
, Heritage Special Report SR-02 (Washington: December 13, 2004), pp.
11-12, 15-16.
39 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs,
Department of Homeland Security: The Road Ahead, hearing, 109th Cong., 1st sess., January
26, 2005 (Washington: GPO, 2005).

CRS-16
backwards.” A GovExec.com Daily Briefing issued just before the House
subcommittee hearing described the merger issue in the following terms: “Many ex-
Customs investigators are unhappy with ICE management and want to be merged
into CBP because it will reunite them with their old colleagues. But many former
[Immigration and Naturalization Service] officials want ICE to remain a distinct
entity because it gives them more clout and pay than they had prior to the merger.”40
Secretary Chertoff has continued to resist a CBP-ICE merger.
Several days thereafter, in remarks made at a March 22, Washington, DC,
luncheon sponsored by the IBM Center for the Business of Government, Clay
Johnson III, OMB Deputy Director for Management, reportedly told his audience that
renewal of the President’s reorganization plan authority is not one of the Bush
Administration’s top priorities. Indicating that there was no interest in regaining this
authority just for the purpose of reorganization, Johnson stressed that the
Administration placed more emphasis on the importance of leadership. “No agency,”
he said, “is so well conceived that bad management can’t mess it up.” Good
management, he proffered, must be a priority of Cabinet secretaries. Furthermore,
he stressed that he did not want to wait to see how new personnel systems at the
Departments of Defense and Homeland Security turn out before proposing
government-wide civil service reform. While the Administration had expressed
interest in the reauthorization of the President’s reorganization plan authority as early
as July 2002, Johnson’s remarks left some with uncertainty as to whether or not the
White House had any particular reorganizations under consideration.41
The House, on May 18, 2005, amended and approved the Department of
Homeland Security Authorization Act for FY2006 (H.R. 1817). The legislation did
not make some of the major managerial or structural changes that had been discussed
in the past, such as creating an Under Secretary for Policy Planning, or dissolving the
management directorate and relocating its chief officers in the office of the Deputy
Secretary. It does, however, allocate some of the responsibilities of the Under
Secretary for Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection to Assistant
Secretaries for closer supervision and more immediate execution. The position of the
director of the National Cyber Security Division, which was thought to be at a
“relatively low level,” is elevated to an Assistant Secretary. Having cleared the
House, the bill is pending with the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs.
On October 7, the Senate approved the conference report on the Department of
Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2006, clearing the bill for the President’s
signature.42 The conferees, “[f]or the most part,” provided an appropriations
structure reflecting a DHS reorganization deriving from Secretary Michael Chertoff’s
40 Chris Strohm, “Turmoil Erupts Over Merging Homeland Security Agencies,”
G o v E x e c . c o m D a i l y B r i e f i n g , M a r c h 8 , 2 0 0 5 , a v a i l a b l e a t
[http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/ 0305/030805c1.htm].
41 Kimberly Palmer, “Bush Administration Official Downplays Reorganization,”
GovExec.com Daily Briefing, March 22, 2005, available at [http://www.govexec.com/
dailyfed/0305/032205k1.htm].
42 119 Stat. 2064.

CRS-17
Second Stage Review (2SR). Conducted during the prior four months, the 2SR
initiative resulted in a six-point agenda, announced on July 13, 2005, with DHS
organizational structure being one primary area of focus.43 Conferees, among other
actions, concurred with abolishing the Border and Transportation Security
Directorate and relocating its functions elsewhere in DHS components; splitting the
Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection Directorate into a Preparedness
Directorate and Intelligence and Analysis Office; and establishing a Policy Office,
which may be statutorily established as a Policy Directorate (see S. 1866).44 Despite
major controversy regarding the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s
(FEMA’s) response and recovery effort following Hurricane Katrina, attempts to
investigate and evaluate that effort, and uncertainty concerning how much of the 2SR
reorganization could be unilaterally implemented without congressional action,
Secretary Chertoff, with little public notice, proceeded with the October 1, 2005,
implementation of his 2SR plan.
Congressional Literature
U.S. Congress. House. Conference Committee. Intelligence Reform and Terrorism
Prevention Act of 2004. Conference report to accompany S. 2845. 108th
Congress. 2nd session. H.Rept. 108-796. Washington: GPO, 2004.
——. Conference Committee. Making Appropriations for the Department of
Homeland Security for the Fiscal Year Ending September 30, 2006, and for
Other Purposes.
Conference report to accompany H.R. 2360. 109th Congress.
1st session. H.Rept. 109-241. Washington: GPO, 2005.
Legislation
P. L. 110-53; H.R. 1 (Thompson); S. 4 (Reid)
A bill to implement unfinished recommendations of the 9/11 Commission to
fight the war on terror more effectively, to improve homeland security, and for other
purposes; Title 8 of H.R. 1 would reconstitute the Privacy and Civil Liberties
Oversight Board (PCLOB) as an independent establishment within the executive
branch, require Senate confirmation of all members of the PCLOB, set qualifications
and terms for nominees to be board members, vest the board with subpoena power,
require the designation of Privacy and Civil Liberties Officers, and enhance the
authorities of the DHS Privacy Officer. Title 6 of S. 4 would reconstitute the PCLOB
as an agency within the Executive Office of the President; require Senate
43 See CRS Report RL33042, Department of Homeland Security Reorganization: The 2SR
Initiative
, by Harold C. Relyea and Henry B. Hogue.
44 See U.S. Congress, Conference Committee, Making Appropriations for the Department
of Homeland Security for the Fiscal Year Ending September 30, 2006
, and for Other
Purposes
, conference report to accompany H.R. 2360, 109th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 109-
241 (Washington: GPO, 2005), p. 30.

CRS-18
confirmation of all members of the board; set qualifications and terms for nominees
to be board members; authorize the board to request the Attorney General to issue a
subpoena on its behalf; and require the Attorney General, if such a request were
modified or denied, to report such action to the House and Senate Committees on the
Judiciary. House bill introduced January 5, 2007, and approved on a 299-128 vote
on January 9; Senate bill introduced January 4 and referred to the Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; hearing January 9; reported on
February 22 with an amendment in the nature of a substitute, but without an
accompanying written report; Senate consideration begun March 1 after the
committee reported substitute amendment was withdrawn by unanimous consent;
approved with an amendment on a 60-38 yea-nay vote March 13, 2007. Conferees
on the reform legislation filed their report on July 25. The Senate adopted the report
the following day on a 85-8 vote; the House concurred on July 27 on a 371-40 vote.
The legislation, signed into law on August 3 (P.L. 110-53; 121 Stat. 266),
reconstitutes the board as an independent agency with modified analysis, review, and
advisory responsibilities; requires Senate confirmation of all members of the
PCLOB; sets qualifications and terms for nominees to be board members; authorizes
the Attorney General to exercise subpoena power on behalf of the board; requires the
designation of Privacy and Civil Liberties Officers; and enhances the authorities of
the DHS Privacy Officer.
H.R. 1684 (Thompson)
Department of Homeland Security Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008.
Introduced March 26, 2007, and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security;
marked up and ordered favorably reported on a 26-0 vote March 28; report filed
(H.Rept. 110-122) May 4; approved by the House, as amended, on a 296-126 vote
May 9; received in the Senate and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs May 11.
S. 547 (Voinovich)
Effective Homeland Security Management Act of 2007. Introduced February
12, 2007, and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs. Approved by voice vote without debate in committee August 1, 2007.
For Additional Reading
Carafano, James Jay, and David Heyman, “DHS 2.0: Rethinking the Department of
Homeland Security.” Heritage Special Report SR-02. Washington: December
13, 2004. 33 p.
Kettl, Donald F. Reinventing Government: A Fifth-Year Report Card. Washington:
Brookings Institution, 1998. 71 p.
——, ed. The Department of Homeland Security’s First Year: A Report Card. New
York: Century Foundation, 2004. 33p.

CRS-19
National Commission on the Public Service. Urgent Business for America:
Revitalizing the Federal Government for the 21st Century. Washington:
Brookings Institution, 2003. 49 p.
National Performance Review. Most literature may be found at the NPR website
“library” at [http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/npr/library/review.html].
Relyea, Harold C. “Organizing for Homeland Security,” Presidential Studies
Quarterly, vol. 33 (September 2003), pp. 602-624.
Stanton, Thomas H., ed. Meeting the Challenge of 9/11: Blueprints for More
Effective Government. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 2006. 331 p.
U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Office of Inspector General. Major
Management Challenges Facing the Department of Homeland Security. OIG-
05-06. Washington: December 2004. 23 p.
——. Review of the Status of Department of Homeland Security Efforts to Address
Its Major Management Challenges. OIG-04-21. Washington: March 2004. 73
p.
CRS Reports
CRS Report RL33042, Department of Homeland Security Reorganization: The 2SR
Initiative, by Harold C. Relyea and Henry B. Hogue.
CRS Report RL33369, Federal Emergency Management and Homeland Security
Organization: Historical Developments and Legislative Options, by Henry B.
Hogue and Keith Bea.
CRS Report RL33729, Federal Emergency Management Policy Changes After
Hurricane Katrina: A Summary of Statutory Provisions, by Keith Bea, coord..
CRS Report RS22334, Federal Hurricane Recovery Coordinator: Appointment and
Oversight Issues, by Henry B. Hogue.
CRS Report RL31500, Homeland Security: Human Resources Management, by
Barbara L. Schwemle.
CRS Report RL30596, The National Performance Review and Other Government
Reform Initiatives: An Overview, 1993-1999, by Harold C. Relyea, Maricele J.
Cornejo Riemann, and Henry B. Hogue.