The Mercury News Weekend

White House proposes merging education, labor

- By Jill Colvin and Ken Thomas The Associated Press

WASHINGTON » The Trump administra­tion proposed a major reorganiza­tion of the federal government on Thursday, calling for merging the education and labor department­s, moving the federal food stamp program to the Department of Health and Human Services and renaming that agency. The plan represente­d the latest aspiration of a presidenti­al administra­tion to revamp a sprawling federal government.

Mick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, told The Associated Press in an interview that the effort is part of President Donald Trump’s “drain the swamp agenda” and was aimed at streamlini­ng a long list of overlappin­g regulation­s and department functions.

The sweeping reorganiza­tion proposal, which was formally unveiled during the president’s Cabinet meeting Thursday, is the result of an order signed by Trump in March 2017 calling for a reviewof the federal government aimed at identifyin­g redundanci­es and streamlini­ng agencies. It’s the latest in a long line of federal government overhaul proposals announced by administra­tions from both parties.

Mulvaney pointed to the fact that there are currently more than 40 job training programs spread across 16 different Cabinet agencies— just one of a list of examples he cited.

“If it’s cheese pizza, it’s FDA, but you put pepperoni on it and it becomes a USDA product. I mean, come on?” he said. “An open-faced roast beef sandwich is USDA, a closed-faced roast beef sandwich is FDA. Not making this up. You can’t make this kind of stuff up. This would only happen in the government.”

Among the specific proposals outlined is a plan to merge the department­s of education and labor into a single Department of Education and the Workforce, or DEW. The combined agency would oversee programs for students and workers, ranging from education and developing skills to workplace protection­s and retirement security.

The plan would also create a single food safety agency under the Agricultur­e Department and move the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as SNAP, from the USDA to Health and Human Services, which would be renamed the Department of Health and Public Welfare and be refocused more broadly on public assistance programs. Housing programs run by the USDA would also move to the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and certain functions of the Army Corps of Engineers would be moved to the department­s of transporta­tion and interior.

The U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s policy function would be moved into the Executive Office of the President, while background checks would move over to the Department of Defense. Mulvaney said the plan was “not designed as a costsaving” or as “a way to reduce the size of government” but said: “If efficiency drives you there, there’s nothing wrong with that.”

Soon after he took office, Trump charged the Office of Management and Budget with coming up with a plan to reorganize the government and eliminate unnecessar­y agencies, pointing to redundancy and billions of dollars being wasted

“We will develop a detailed plan to make the federal government work better, reorganizi­ng, consolidat­ing and eliminatin­g where necessary,” Trump said last year after signing an executive order on the reorganiza­tion. “In other words, making the federal government more efficient and very, very cost productive.”

But whether the proposal will prove effective is unclear.

Many of the changes would require approval from Congress and congressio­nal leaders have been hesitant to adopt a plan that would eliminate federal agencies they are charged with overseeing.

Even before the plan was announced, it was met with skepticism among lawmakers and labor unions.

Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, a union representi­ng 1.7 million teachers and education profession­als, said under normal circumstan­ces combining the education and labor department­s might make sense as a way of bringing together education and workforce developmen­t programs.

“But there is nothing normal about this administra­tion, so we’re extremely skeptical of the motivation­s here, given how hostile (Education Secretary) Betsy DeVos and President Trump have been to public education, workers and unions,” Weingarten said.

 ?? TOYA SARNO JORDAN — BLOOMBERG ?? MickMulvan­ey said the plan is “not designed as a cost-saving” or as “a way to reduce the size of government.”
TOYA SARNO JORDAN — BLOOMBERG MickMulvan­ey said the plan is “not designed as a cost-saving” or as “a way to reduce the size of government.”

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