Forst: GSA is the βengine roomβ that runs government
Ed Forst never served in the Navy, but the metaphor he uses to describe the role the General Services Administration would make any admiral proud.
Forst, who has been at the helm of GSA since late December, believes agencies, like ships, have two distinct compartments. One is to focus on the mission. The other is the engine room that makes the mission run.

βI think in every business, every enterprise, every agency, every department, and what I think makes great sense, and I believe the President does too, is, letβs advance mission and letβs have the engine room, whatβs behind the curtain, consolidate and get even better. Thatβs where I see GSA in the federal government. Weβre the engine room,β Forst said at the Coalition for Common Sense in Government Procurement winter conference on Jan. 14. βNow, interestingly, GSA is its own agency, so we happen to have both. Weβve got mission and the engine room as well. So I think because of that, we really do appreciate the mission piece of that and serving our stakeholders and our constituents.β
For GSA, being that engine room in part means making acquisition less burdensome, cheaper and more agile so agency customers can meet their mission needs more quickly.
GSA has been pursuing several initiatives over the last year to fine tune the acquisition piece of the engine room.
Laura Stanton, the deputy commissioner of GSAβs Federal Acquisition Service, said between the Office of Centralized Acquisition Services (OCAS), the OneGov initiative and the implementation of changes from the Federal Acquisition Regulation rewrite, GSA is delivering speed to acquisition like never before.
For example, OCAS now centrally buys for three agencies: the Office of Personnel Management, the Small Business Administration and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Stanton said GSA brought on OPM and SBA in about a month.
Stanton said OCAS is using an opt-in approach to help agencies and trying to relieve some of the burden on GSAβs Assisted Acquisition Service.
βWeβre having conversations with a number of agencies about what are their needs. One of the things that we set up OCAS to be able to support is the buying of common goods and services,β Stanton said. βWe also recognize that there are mission critical items that and thereβs common things that are mission critical that can be used for governmentwide contracts, and then things where there are specialized contracts. So weβre having those types of conversations with a number of agencies at this point.β
Under the OneGov program, GSA has signed 18 agreements to reduce the price of commonly used software across government. Additionally, 45 agencies have taken advantage specifically of the enterprisewide agreements for artificial intelligence tools.
βThis is a radical shift in how we think about it, and how we think about how we come to market, and also how we want you to treat us as a customer,β Stanton said at the conference. βThis requires changes, not only on the government side, but itβs also going to require changes on the industry side to make that happen. We want to be better aligned when it comes to terms pricing and performance, when it comes to all aspects of that.β
Forst said he was especially focused on the performance aspects of the equation for GSA.
Measuring performance against peer groups
He said measuring performance, and holding organizations and people accountable are among his key focuses areas.
βWeβre putting out some priorities for having deliverables. Iβm committing every quarter and Iβm going to report on ourselves on that,β he said. βI think weβre all better if we find a way to talk about measurement or metrics, whatever you want to call it. Thereβs a common language and vocabulary about that, so I am a big proponent.β
Forst said he will be looking at both the performance of FAS in terms of βrevenue,β as well as their performance relative to peer organizations.
βIf you had a record year, youβd probably beat plan. All that should be good. Thatβs absolute measurement. Thatβs you versus you. And I think thatβs important. I think itβs also really important to accompany that with whoβs in your peer group and how did they do? I think the relative performance matters a ton as well,β he said. βYou could be down 7% and on an absolute basis, angst to death over down seven if your peer groupβs down 15, thatβs a home run. So I think itβs important. But if you had a record year and youβre up 6% and your peer groupβs up 12%, Iβd say good record, but you underdelivered versus the other side. I think we have to be honest with ourselves and look at both us versus us over the time series, and look at us versus a peer group. That seems to make sense.β
Forst said GSA plans to bring in a peer group analysis to raise their awareness and their overall performance.
The third piece of moving bringing speed to capability is the FAR rewrite. GSA will begin implementing the FAR changes within its own acquisition regulations in the coming weeks. It already issued deviations to the current FAR to begin the process.
Jeff Koses, GSAβs senior procurement executive, said in a post on LinkedIn that they have βlimited the issuance of mandatory acquisition policies to my office, the Office of Acquisition Policy. Legacy mandatory policy will have to be reissued at the agency level, converted to discretionary guidance, or cancelled.β
Koses said GSA will begin culling down 500 pages of its acquisition manual, 300 pages of office policy, 500 pages of FAS policy and another 500 pages of Public Buildings Service policy and then 1,000 pages of real property leasing policy.
Reviewing the GSA schedule catalog of items
Larry Allen, the associate administrator in the Office of Governmentwide Policy, said at the CGP conference that GSA, in helping out the FAR Council, is working closely with OFPP to get all of the rulemaking completed by the end of the fiscal year.
βIt may be delayed a little bit because we had a little shutdown in the fall, but that tells you exactly what type of timetable we are on. Itβs aggressive, and you will see change, and we want you to be part of that change,β Allen said.
Stanton added that GSA understands the FAR rewrite has moved quickly and is addressing complex acquisition issues that will take time for government and industry to wrap their arms around.
βWhen we think about this year, itβs going to be a year of both adopting and adaptation, and acceleration all at the same time, and that becomes really challenging to do,β she said.
Stanton said another key initiative kicking into gear this year is GSAβs review of its multiple award schedule catalog. She said the driving theory is how can the agency operate it more efficiently and deliver more value to agency customers.
βI look at the at the catalog that we run for the multiple award schedule and it has over 100 million items in it. Only 1% or fewer of those items sell, and so this is putting burden on all of you, making sure that youβre meeting all of our terms and conditions, that those items are Trade Agreements Act (TAA) compliant, that they meet the government standards, and that the pricing is fair and reasonable,β she said. βWe have contracting officers who have to evaluate those items, and what is the value that either you or the government is getting for that work? I think that this is a big opportunity for us to truly assess where is the governmentβs demand. As weβre also moving into making transactional data reporting mandatory, how do we effectively have a catalog that delivers on what the government needs? How do we meet those needs effectively? How do we move quickly if we have something thatβs not in the catalog? Itβs a lot easier to move quickly if weβre not burdened by putting things in there that are not actually being used.β
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