Excess Personal Property


Book Description

Excess Personal Property: DOD Should Further Reassess the Priorities of Its Disposal Process




GAO-16-44; Excess Personal Property


Book Description

GAO-16-44; Excess Personal Property: DOD Should Further Reassess the Priorities of Its Disposal Process




Excess Personal Property, DOD Should Further Reassess the Priorities of Its Disposal Process


Book Description

"Each year the military services identify thousands of items of personal property -- including military equipment and materiel -- that they need to dispose of because it is obsolete, not repairable, or excess to their requirements. For fiscal year 2014, DOD reported that excess and surplus property with a total original acquisition value of approximately $3.18 billion in nominal dollars was reutilized, transferred, or donated. DOD reported total revenues of almost $128 million from items sold in fiscal year 2014. Congress included provisions in reports accompanying legislation for GAO to review DOD's current process for disposing of excess personal property. This report (1) describes the process for disposing of DOD's excess personal property in the U.S.; (2) assesses how DOD's priorities in its disposal process affect the distribution of excess property; and (3) assesses the extent to which DOD has encountered challenges in its capacity to manage excess personal property to be processed. GAO reviewed guidance; obtained the most recently available calendar year (2013-2014) data on property obtained by law enforcement agencies, wait times, and backlogs; and interviewed cognizant officials"--Preliminary page.







Federal Property Disposal


Book Description

Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Department of Defense's (DOD) personal property disposal process, focusing on: (1) the way the disposal process works; (2) DOD's rate of return when it sells this property and the private sector's rate of return on certain sales; and (3) the best business practices and innovative techniques DOD is using or considering for use in disposing of unwanted personal property. GAO noted that: (1) the DOD disposal process, which is governed by numerous laws and regulations, starts when DOD activities turn in items to the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Offices (DRMO) for disposal; (2) upon receipt, DRMO personnel inspect the items for condition, acquisition value, and special handling requirements such as those for pilferable or militarily sensitive items; (3) items are accumulated for 14 to 28 days and then processed together; (4) the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Service's (DRMS) disposition priorities are to reutilize property within DOD, transfer items to other federal agencies and organizations with equivalent priority for the purpose of obtaining excess property, and donate the remaining items to eligible entities such as state and local governments, among many others; (5) items that remain after these priorities have been served are sold to the general public or disposed of, primarily through service contracts; (6) DRMS' overall rate of return on the reported acquisition value of all usable property it sold in fiscal year 1996 was 1.97 percent; (7) when compared with the private sector's rate of return for similar items, DRMS' rates are low; (8) there are many reasons for DRMS' lower rate of return; (9) for example, many of the aircraft parts it disposes of only have military application, and those with commercial application are not certified by the Federal Aviation Administration, a requirement for commercial use; (10) another factor lowering DRMS' rate of return is that the best items are reutilized, transferred, or donated, leaving the least marketable items available for sale; (11) the volume of items DRMS disposes of annually also make it difficult for DRMS to develop expertise or to tailor disposal strategies for individual items like the private sector does; (12) moreover, the quantities, constant influx of items, and time limits on the various phases of the process drive DRMS' emphasis on moving items through the process quickly to make room for incoming items; (13) DOD is seeking to improve its process by using more commercial practices and making greater use of the private sector in disposing of property; and (14) among the key initiatives it is employing or considering include contracting with private auctioneering companies to conduct property sales, using the Internet to advertise available property, selling the property to private contractors that will then dispose of it and share the proceeds with DOD, and restructuring DRMS' organization to operate and compete more like a private enterprise.










Public Administration and Public Affairs


Book Description

Public Administration and Public Affairs demonstrates how to govern efficiently, effectively, and responsibly in an age of political corruption and crises in public finance. Providing a comprehensive, accessible and humorous introduction to the field of Public Administration, this text is designed specifically for those with little to no background in the field. Now in its 13th edition, this beloved book includes: Engaging, timely new sections designed to make students think, such as "Why Are So Many Leaders Losers?" and "Even Terrorists Like Good Government" Comparisons throughout of the challenges and opportunities found in the nonprofit sector vs. the public sector (sections such as "The Dissatisfied Bureaucrat, the Satisfied Nonprofit Professional?") Extensive new material on e-governance, performance management, HRM, intersectoral and intergovernmental administration, government contracting, public budgeting, and ethics. The 13th edition is complete with an Instructor’s Manual, Testbank, and PowerPoint slides for instructors, as well as Learning Objectives and Self-test Questions for students, making it the ideal primer for public administration/management, public affairs, and nonprofit management courses.




Model Rules of Professional Conduct


Book Description

The Model Rules of Professional Conduct provides an up-to-date resource for information on legal ethics. Federal, state and local courts in all jurisdictions look to the Rules for guidance in solving lawyer malpractice cases, disciplinary actions, disqualification issues, sanctions questions and much more. In this volume, black-letter Rules of Professional Conduct are followed by numbered Comments that explain each Rule's purpose and provide suggestions for its practical application. The Rules will help you identify proper conduct in a variety of given situations, review those instances where discretionary action is possible, and define the nature of the relationship between you and your clients, colleagues and the courts.