The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lamont’s office: Overhauls an ‘enormous opportunit­y’ for efficienci­es

- By Keith M. Phaneuf save

Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion will take a key step next month to prepare state agencies for the potential retirement of thousands of employees within the next two years.

The administra­tion will hire a consultant to help department­s better utilize technology, create other efficienci­es and otherwise improve delivery of services — all with smaller staff.

“There’s an enormous opportunit­y here,” said Josh Geballe, Lamont’s chief operating officer. “Our agencies largely operate in silos, and as a result of that we sometimes provide very fragmented services to people.”

That opportunit­y stems, in part, from a 2017 concession­s deal struck between state employee unions and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy.

That agreement tightens retirement benefits in several areas — including caps on pension adjustment­s and increased medical costs — for workers who leave service after June 30, 2022.

Comptrolle­r Kevin P. Lembo, whose office first warned of a mass exodus had estimated last year that nearly 14,800 workers would be eligible for retirement by mid-2022. About 2,220 of those employees have since retired, but Lembo says 12,540 — roughly 25 percent of the workforce — still would be able to eligible two years from now.

That doesn’t mean state officials expect all of those potential retirees to step down in mid-2022. But most agree it does mean state operations are in for a substantia­l change.

“We’re talking about a loss of talent, a loss of experience,” the comptrolle­r said. “Some of that can be healthy, if it’s handled correctly.”

When veteran workers retire, “we lose the opportunit­y to groom the next group of people,” Lembo added. “Each one of these jobs has to be looked at very closely.”

Lamont has insisted since before he took office in 2019, that this “silver tsunami” presents an opportunit­y not only to save money, but also to improve delivery of services.

The governor inherited a network of agencies that often relies on fragmented and outdated informatio­n technology systems.

For example, when the coronaviru­s pandemic struck in March, the Department of Labor’s computer network — which relied largely on a COBOL programmin­g language that dates back to the 1980s — was swamped by hundreds of thousands of applicatio­ns for benefits. The agency had to redirect staff to prepare emergency programmin­g modificati­ons to correct the backlog.

Investment­s in technology can do more than allow agencies to operate more efficientl­y with fewer staffers, Geballe said. This venture also should enhance government’s ability to collect data and anticipate challenges before they arrive.

For example, recipients of state-sponsored social and health care services routinely communicat­e with multiple state agencies. With better informatio­n sharing, agencies not only could avoid duplicativ­e efforts, but also coordinate and improve services, Geballe said.

Lamont’s budget director, Office of Policy and Management Secretary Melissa McCaw, recently urged all department heads to be efficient with staffing as they prepare their requests for the next two-year state budget. The governor must propose that biennial plan to the General Assembly in February.

“Agencies are therefore strongly encouraged to be creative in considerin­g alternativ­e service delivery models, updates to your practices and procedures, cross-agency collaborat­ions, and other new ways to do business,” McCaw wrote.

But the leader of the largest state employee union said Thursday that the administra­tion’s venture is inherently flawed.

“It is disappoint­ing and rather perplexing that in an effort to money the state would needlessly spend money,” said Jody Barr, executive director of Council 4 of the American

Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. “Once again, the state ends up hiring outside consultant­s rather than partnering with workers to find savings and plan for the future.”

Barr said the coronaviru­s pandemic has reminded Connecticu­t that “government is not a business and thus cannot be run as one.”

Many state agencies were able to maintain critical services specifical­ly because they employed sufficient staff who adapted quickly to find solutions to new challenges, Barr added. “Connecticu­t was able to rely on its strong and resilient workforce that’s connected to the communitie­s they serve.”

But Geballe added that while the wave of retirement­s should arrive in two years, the evolution of state agencies will take longer than that, giving officials ample time to make adjustment­s if problems develop.

“The plan is to embrace technology and really change how we operate state government,” he added. “That’s going to take a significan­t amount of time.”

 ?? John Minchillo / Associated Press ?? Gov. Ned Lamont addresses the media on Aug. 7 in Westport. Lamont’s administra­tion will hire a consultant to help department­s better utilize technology, create other efficienci­es and otherwise improve delivery of services — all with smaller staff.
John Minchillo / Associated Press Gov. Ned Lamont addresses the media on Aug. 7 in Westport. Lamont’s administra­tion will hire a consultant to help department­s better utilize technology, create other efficienci­es and otherwise improve delivery of services — all with smaller staff.

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