The four ideas received the most votes over the last four months out of more than 10,000 ideas. This is the fourth year OMB has held the SAVE Awards. The winner...
During a time when Congress and the White House are debating trillions in cuts, sometimes it’s the simple idea that may have the most tangible impact.
Take one idea to limit the use of court reporters or transcribers during federal meetings, or stopping the use of buses to shuttle federal employees between agencies for meetings, both could save the government real money.
These are two of the four ideas that reached the finals in the administration’s annual hunt for money saving ideas. The Office of Management and Budget opened public voting today on the fourth annual Securing Americans Value and Efficiency (SAVE) Award.
The four finalists rose to the top out of 10,000 total ideas, which garnered 12,000 comments and 71,000 votes from 17,000 users. This is the fewest number of ideas, comments and votes in the history of the program. In 2009, OMB received 38,000 ideas; in 2010, it received 18,000 suggestions; last year it received 19,000 ideas.
Few would argue that these ideas will be anything more than a drop of water in an ocean of fiscal problems, but the goal of the administration with the SAVE Awards has been as much around getting rid of long-standing processes that make little sense anymore as it has to save money.
“Over the last four years, federal workers have submitted tens of thousands of ideas to curb unnecessary spending, both in their own agencies and across the government — covering everything from implementing new measures to conserve energy use to cutting back on paper copies of publications already available online like the Federal Register,” wrote acting OMB Director Jeff Zients in a blog post today. “These ideas alone won’t solve the Nation’s long-term fiscal challenges, but they are saving hundreds of millions of dollars and represent common-sense steps to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of government and provide a better value to the American people.”
The finalists are:
Voting will be open until noon on Dec. 21, 2012 and OMB will include the winning idea in the fiscal 2014 budget request. The winner will get to present their idea to the president as well. Traditionally, OMB also includes other potential money saving ideas in the budget request. Last year, it submitted 26 that came from the SAVE Award contest.
Previous winners included Nancy Fichtner’s idea in 2009 to let veterans take home the medication they receive at the Veteran Affairs hospital instead of throwing it away. In 2010, Trudy Givens of the Bureau of Prisons won for suggesting ending the mailing of thousands of Federal Registers to federal employees.
In 2011, NASA’s Matthew Ritsko proposed a “lending library” to make it easier for agencies to find tools and equipment that others already paid for and could be reused.
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Jason Miller is executive editor of Federal News Network and directs news coverage on the people, policy and programs of the federal government.
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