ernment officials in relation to the career employees. In contrast to the long tenure of careerists, "the average tenure of Senate-confirmed presidential appointees (PAS) is about 2.0 years. The average tenure of noncareer SES members is 18 months, and every year one third of them change positions or leave the government" (emphasis added) (Volcker 1989, 215).
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With the increase in political appointees and their filtration lower down into the executive ranks of the bureaucracy via Schedule C, there are now more of them at the GS 13-15 levels alone than there were total Schedule C appointees at all levels in 1976. As noted, this displacement means that fewer positions are now available for career employees, thus motivating an exodus out of public service. This has resulted in a brain drain and loss of morale: 52 percent of the career SES employees left government service between 1979 and 1982. Additionally, as observed, changes in presidential administrations mean that the entire top layer of an agency, as it is now often composed solely of political appointees, suddenly disappears, sometimes down to the Schedule C secretaries. In fact, any change of personnel often wipes out the next lower layers. The departing players leave behind no semblance of institutional memory; sometimes even basic knowledge of organizational functioning disappears with them. Continuity is thus lost and start-up time lengthened for the next troupe of political players (ibid., 215-16).
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To reverse what the commission calls "the deterioration of the executive infrastructure of the government," it recommends, as have other studies, that the president give strong public as well as private support to the public service and improve the quality of political appointees. It also recommends a reduction of one-third, to two thousand in the combined political ranks of SES, PAS, and Schedule C, stating, as others have, that "excessive numbers of presidential appointees may actually undermine effective presidential control of the executive branch" by impeding communication between political and career executives (ibid., 17). While President Bush agreed with the overall direction of the commission's report, he rejected this counsel.
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The commission calls for the movement of career executives into mid- and upper-level executive branch positions. To attract better noncareer executives it recommends improved orientation of newcomers, improved communications between the president and the appointees, a transition plan that begins with the party nominating conventions, and less rigorous financial disclosure requirements.
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It is widely agreed that current financial disclosure requirements hinder the search for the best appointees. Waterman, for example, notes the
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