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We Need a Civilian ROTC (Guest Voice)

WASHINGTON — Imagine a time when government work was exciting, widely admired, and much sought after.

It seems an outlandish thought at a moment when you cannot turn on your television without hearing government spoken of as almost an alien creature. It is cast as far removed from the lives of average Americans and more likely to destroy the achievements of private citizens than to accomplish anything worthwhile.

True, we don’t apply our anti-government sentiments to at least one group of Americans who draw government paychecks: our men and women in uniform. All the polls show they are, deservedly, held in high esteem. But civilians who do the daily work of government are more likely to be referred to as “bureaucrats,” “time servers,” and various unprintable things than as public servants.

This has not always been the American way. There were important eras in our history when citizens in large numbers were drawn to government service with a sense of mission and exhilaration. The New Deal was certainly such a time and so were the days of the New Frontier and (it is unjustly derided now) the Great Society.

They came in part — take note, President Obama — because they were inspired by leaders who made it a point to call them into government. Caroline Kennedy has said that when she was growing up, “hardly a day went by when someone didn’t come up to us and say: ‘Your father changed my life. I went into public service because he asked me.’”

But inspiration is not enough. The military, after all, does not rely solely on patriotic feelings to build its force, and neither should the civilian parts of government. One of the most powerful incentives the military has is the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, which offers assistance to those seeking higher education. It’s time for a civilian ROTC.

That’s the idea of a bipartisan group of Senators and House members who are proposing to create the Roosevelt Scholars program, named after Teddy Roosevelt. Reps. David Price, D-N.C., and Mike Castle, R-Del., have introduced a bill in the House, and a similar measure is expected in the Senate this week from Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and George Voinovich, R-Ohio.

Although there is sentiment to include undergraduates in the program, the House bill is aimed at graduate students, because the federal government has a special demand for highly qualified employees who are otherwise attracted (and heavily recruited) by the private sector. In exchange for generous scholarships in fields such as engineering, information technology, foreign languages and public health, the scholars would commit to three to five years of service in an agency of the federal government.

“With the aging of the boomers and those who responded to Kennedy’s call to service, we need to replenish the government work force,” says Max Stier, president and CEO of the Partnership for Public Service.

Stier, a one-man evangelizing squad on behalf of government service, notes that the government must fill 273,000 “mission-critical” positions in the next three years. This will require vast improvements in the way government recruits and a new willingness to invest in its work force.

The military, he says, gets roughly 40 percent of its officer corps through ROTC. It makes sense to undertake a comparable investment in the civil service.

In the small and underappreciated world of those who care passionately about improving government’s performance and prestige, there are competing visions of how to achieve this. One group of activists and legislators has been pushing to create a Public Service Academy, modeled after the military academies, to prepare a new generation of leaders in government.

It’s a good idea and would send another powerful signal that government work is and should be valued. But with the extraordinary constraints on the federal budget, the prospects of the large investment that would be required to build a new institution are not exactly rosy. A civilian ROTC would be a good first step. The Roosevelt program has the benefit of drawing on the entire higher education system’s capacity to produce specialists.

The Roosevelt program could also be an antidote to two debilitating trends in our politics. It would push back against the tendency of politicians to deride government (an odd habit, since politicians are themselves engaged in government service). And it might open the way for a bipartisan achievement at a time when such endeavors are in very short supply.

This column is copyrighted and licensed to run in full on TMV. (c) 2009, Washington Post Writers Group

Editor’s Note: This was supposed to run yesterday but due to a glitch it’s publication on TMV was delayed.



9 Responses to “We Need a Civilian ROTC (Guest Voice)”

  1. DLS says:

    Poor Dionne. [sigh] “Investment” [sic] and all. [shaking head]

    Oh, well. At least he kept it largely pre-election starry-eyed, and didn't advocate a People's Draft.

  2. DaGoat says:

    So the government needs to fill 273, 000 jobs over the next three years. With over 10% unemployment why do we need a new program to fill these positions?

  3. Andy says:

    Imagine a time when government work was exciting, widely admired, and much sought after.

    That time is now, what is he talking about?

  4. JeffersonDavis says:

    We already have a civilian ROTC:

    It's called The Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of America.

    Their main focus is civic duty and devotion to country.

    The problem is, our society has made that kind of activity a “negative” in lieu of more “important” things like football, basketball, baseball, and video games. You only get out of kids what you put into them. And we haven't been putting and civics into them for several decades now.

  5. TheMagicalSkyFather says:

    The Scouts are amazing and largely ignored.

  6. JeffersonDavis says:

    Awesome of you to say that, MSF.

    I'm a scoutmaster – well, an Assistant Scout Master when military duty dictates otherwise.

  7. ProfElwood says:

    I just took up being an assistant leader last year, when I signed up my son.

  8. Father_Time says:

    Just post the jobs and people will apply.

    Especially after they've been royally screwed by some capitalist pig company board making tens of millions of dollars in pay and bonuses, wasting hundreds of millions of the people’s invested retirement monies in stupid white elephant projects that they never get criticized for in the media. Unless of course the Government has to bail them out with more of the people’s money. Then they catch a little bit of heat, but ultimately the government will get blamed anyway.

    The way you stop this is with public caning.

  9. DLS says:

    “The way you stop this is with public caning.”

    Don't forget the good, old-fashioned stockade.

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