What: | Payroll services consolidation |
When: | The Bush administration went from 22 to 4 payroll providers starting in 2003. |
Why it matters: | The e-payroll initiative was one of the most successful examples of federal shared services in the last 20 years. It reduced the cost of processing employee pay and let agencies focus on strategic human capital management rather than processing transactions. |
Politics
The perfect storm drove payroll consolidation to success


There is a little known provision in the Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996 that few federal chief information officers have ever taken advantage of.
But back in January 2003, Mark Forman, the first administrator of e-government and IT — eventually renamed the Federal CIO — at the Office of Management and Budget, knew exactly how to put Section 5113, Performance-based and results-based management, to work.
Forman, one of the architects on the Hill behind the law, worked with OMB Director Mitch Daniels to issue one of the few Clinger-Cohen Act letters. The Bush administration was using this relatively obscure authority to consolidate payroll processing across the government.
“Through you and your agency’s support for this important initiative, agencies have documented good teamwork that resulted in a business case that will yield a better quality and more cost effective approach to government payroll processing. OMB approved the business case for e-Payroll. By consolidating duplicative payroll modernization efforts, the e-Payroll initiative should provide high quality service while saving over $1.2 billion in future IT investment costs from economies of scale and cost avoidance,” Daniels wrote in M-03-05, which was the official Clinger-Cohen letter to initiate the effort.
Over the course of the next several years, OMB, the Office of Personnel Management and agency leaders persuaded, convinced and converted a government of doubters to accomplish what many consider the most successful example of federal shared services by moving from 22 payroll providers to four federal offerings. OMB used the Clinger-Cohen letter to bring together or stop altogether otherwise disparate funding for human resources system modernization efforts.
“It is a very powerful governance and accountability section that is at the heart of treating IT as an investment, using shared services, requiring process improvement before selecting IT and buying IT-as-a-service,” Forman said. “It includes the two-step IT investment reviews, when systems are flailing and at the annual budget process. 5113(b)(5) is particularly relevant to the Clinger Cohen letters such as for ePayroll. It included the authorization for using footnoting and apportioning that we did behind scenes to get alignment in ways that never made it to the press.”
Former federal officials involved in the e-payroll effort credited OMB and OPM’s leadership as well the willingness of the Bush administration to use the law’s authorities to initially force and later shepherd agencies along.
“I think it was two things. One was a decision that OMB and OPM made together, which was where does payroll need to exist? Is it at OPM? Is it at [OMB] from a policy standpoint? How do you make up the difference between managing all of the people and infrastructure and make sure that everybody’s going toward the initiative and are supporting it?” said Jeff Pon, the former deputy director of the E-Gov initiatives at OPM. “The other thing is the willingness of the few to lead this, and I’m talking about people like [former OMB deputy CIO] Tim Young, [former OPM Director] Kay Cole James and [former OPM E-Gov director] Norm Enger as well as all the payroll providers.”
Top down, bottom up approach
Pon, who also served as OPM’s director and as the chief human capital officer at the Energy Department, said the leadership created a structure that fell under the President’s Management Agenda, giving agency leaders a path to get to “green” on the scorecard, but also brought in career budget, IT and human resources leaders to feel a part of the broader effort.
Stephen Galvan, the former OMB E-Gov portfolio manager for the Internal Efficiency and Effectiveness Portfolio, said the White House set up the parameters of the program, starting with letting the agencies choose their payroll provider, with OMB and OPM approval, of course.
But more importantly, the E-Gov program management office created a series of councils that took care of everything from policy to technology to change management challenges to even vendor input.
Kunal Suryavanshi was the lead consultant for OPM’s e-gov initiatives when he worked at IBM in the early 2000s.
Suryavanshi, who is now the growth leader for federal civilian agencies LMI, said the secret sauce to the entire initiative was the Multiagency Executive Strategy Committee (MAESC).
“These 24 agencies came to the table, and we asked them for volunteers of HR experts to participate in these sessions, which were put together by my team in coming up with what they called the Business Reference Model (BRM). The Business Reference Model was the foundation of the ‘to be’ state of the HR function in government,” he said. “That BRM was a seminal document because it was the first time the government had mapped the HR function and the key subfunctions.”
The HR BRM now features 16 functions and 50 sub-functions that represent all the statutorily required activities the government must perform to establish and manage its workforce.
Source: OPM HR LOB website.
Suryavanshi said the councils also helped develop other reference models like for service components, technology and a concept of operations.
“We really had to first gain an understanding of how many payroll centers were there. It was stunning that 22 agencies were doing their own payroll operations. That was just mind blowing. Why do you need 22 agencies doing their own payroll and each doing it slightly differently?” he said. “I think it was low hanging fruit that if we can convince agencies to move to a center of excellence type of model, shut down the redundant payroll centers and move to a handful of agencies, which are really good at doing this, it’s going to save the taxpayer a heck of a lot of money and also allow agencies to focus on what is really important, which is the strategic management of human capital, as opposed to doing the transactional bits, which could be done by somebody who does it faster, better and cheaper.”
Pon added OMB and OPM based the whole entire payroll consolidation upon enterprise architecture.
“What business are you in? Payroll. Then the BRM, what services do you provide? We pay people. What performance do you need to have? We need to be on time and pay people. What data do you need to provide so that people get paid? What’s the technology map that supports all these things? So that’s the five enterprise architecture areas. You can actually see that on the line of business which will spread out to the other initiatives. But that’s the basis of our conversation,” he said.
OMB and OPM program team had to convince the agencies that they were not giving up control of their systems and it will not lead to a decline in service quality.
Suryavanshi said the goal was to convince them of the opposite: They will see an uptick in the quality of service and then can redirect funds to better uses, rather than paying for payroll operations and modernizing their payroll systems.
Experts agreed that consolidating payroll providers was no easy task. First off, they said the criticality of getting payroll right helped drive the initiative.
The second challenge was the lack of standardization across the government.
Galvan said there were roughly 192 different pay plans in the government.
“Some pay plans were on different cycles. So one of the benefits of this effort was to standardize. So how are you going to handle it? How are you going to switch over to different pay plans? There was all those kinds of issues which OPM would have worked very closely with the different organizations, with the different agencies there,” he said.
Galvan credited the 2002 Joint Financial Management Improvement Program (JFMIP) white paper that analyzed federal payroll processing and systems as underlying data and structure to this effort. He said this analysis became the basis for the business case and rationale to consolidate the 22 payroll systems.
Graphic by: Derace Lauderdale
The benefits of the consolidation were clear from the beginning and the data is why back-office consolidation is a priority of the Trump administration.
Galvan said before the payroll consolidation, the government’s average cost to process a single employee’s payroll was $77. That cost per employee came way down and the Government Accountability Office estimated in 2009 that the government saved or avoided spending $1.3 billion because of this initiative.
The ultimate success of the payroll consolidation effort led Pon to a memorable moment.
“We gave [GAO] the presentation, and it was probably one of the best moments of my government career because at the end, they stood up and started clapping. GAO started clapping. I’ve never seen GAO clap for anybody, let alone have a standing ovation for a presentation on payroll,” he said. “You hear payroll, it’s not very sexy. But it was one of the best run initiatives across government and it made a huge impact in the federal government, literally billions of dollars of savings.”
The experts agreed that the move to consolidate other back office functions lost momentum in the waning years of the Bush administration and never picked up the kind of steam that e-payroll did.
Galvan said e-payroll took time, effort and leadership, and without each of these three legs, the stool would’ve fallen.
“We’ve seen DOGE and there’s a lot of cost identification and cost reductions and all that, but you’re going into this next phase now: We have got to achieve delivery performance. How are we going to measure performance? How are we going to manage the contracts to address performance? It’s going to still take data. It’s going to take a real detail as to where you want to be and how you’re going to get there,” he said. “You’re just not going to say, ‘I’m going to drop this new technology because it’s there and it allows me to do a number of things.’ You still have to migrate that over. You’ve got to train your workforce. You have to justify it to OMB, to Congress, and you’ve got to really deal with the performance outcomes for where the agencies are going. That takes a lot of lot of time and effort, and then you’ve got to do your operations.”
During the first Trump administration, OMB and the General Services Administration led an effort through the Technology Modernization Fund to further modernize payroll processing, called New Pay. In September 2018, the TMF board made awards to two teams of vendors who received $20.7 million to begin working on further consolidation and move systems to the cloud. GSA never could get the program out of the initial prototype and testing stages.
“Given uncertain timing of agency migrations to the new tool and lack of appropriations for planning and migration activities in fiscal 2019 and 2020, GSA reduced the scope and funding required for their TMF investment,” the TMF website states.
The TMF Board ended the project in July 2021 after investing $7.3 million.
Suryavanshi, the former IBM contractor, said OMB should bring back the idea of a managing partner to lead these future consolidation efforts.
“When the managing partner authority changed or got redirected or got watered down, you could see that agencies started investing in shadow back office operations, and the momentum was lost. I think that maintaining that managing partner model, which was subsequently renamed as Quality Service Management Office (QSMO), made it too complicated,” he said. “A managing partner was very clear. It was very clear vocabulary that a certain agency is the managing partner. Treasury was the managing partner for financial management. OPM was a managing partner for human resources. These were the agencies that would drive the consolidation and standardization and common solutions in those functions. I think the momentum was lost and I think it’s a pity because they did realize about $1.3 billion in cost savings, but they could have easily gone even further and driven even more cost out of this function.”
Suryavanshi said he would like to see OMB “dust off” the e-government playbook for shared services and with the technology advancements like generative artificial intelligence, the government has a much bigger opportunity to consolidate and drive savings.
The post The perfect storm drove payroll consolidation to success first appeared on Federal News Network.
Politics
Victor Reacts: This Is Almost Too Stupid to Be True – NYC Transgender Homeless Shelter (VIDEO)

Democrats continue to somehow subvert the lowest of expectations as they fight their woke crusades.
In a first ever virtue signal, New York City is set to open a transgender only homeless shelter.
The Gateway Pundit reported,
The city of New York is opening the nation’s first transgender-only homeless shelter.
The shelter, a partnership between a local LGBTQ nonprofit and the city government, will cost the city an extraordinary $65 million and will be the first transgender homeless shelter in the nation.
“ We’ve watched so many other corporations and foundations and businesses just like completely turn their back on the community and the city didn’t do it,” said Sean Ebony Coleman, founder and CEO of Destination Tomorrow, the nonprofit that will manage the shelter for the city.
“The city is keeping in line with what New York City has always been, a sanctuary city, a safe haven, but more importantly, a trendsetter when it comes to LGBTQ rights.”
The opening comes amid a broader homelessness crisis in New York City, where more than 100,000 people are estimated to be without stable housing on any given night.
The city’s shelter system is already stretched thin, with demand rising due to a combination of economic hardship, an influx of illegal aliens ,and a severe shortage of affordable housing.
Who cares about all the other homeless people in New York City each night, the transgender homeless come first.
Truth has become stranger than parody. With any luck, Democrats will continue down this path of self destruction that has been so thoroughly rejected by the American people.
The post Victor Reacts: This Is Almost Too Stupid to Be True – NYC Transgender Homeless Shelter (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
Suspect in Deadly Montana Bar Shooting Captured After a Weeklong Manhunt

A weeklong manhunt has come to a close with the apprehension of Michael Paul Brown, a 45-year-old Army veteran, following a fatal mass shooting at The Owl Bar in Anaconda.
On August 1, 2025, at approximately 10:30 a.m., Brown entered The Owl Bar, where he lived next door, and opened fire with a rifle, killing four local residents: bartender Nancy Lauretta Kelley (64) and patrons Daniel Edwin Baillie (59), David Allen Leach (70), and Tony Wayne Palm (74).
A multi-agency effort, including state law enforcement, the U.S. Marshals Service, and federal resources, scoured the mountainous terrain surrounding Anaconda. Helicopters, K9 units, and tactical teams were deployed across the region.
A reward of $7,500 to $10,000 was offered for information leading to Brown’s capture.
On Friday, Montana Governor Greg Gianforte confirmed Brown’s arrest via social media, acknowledging the rapid and resolute law enforcement response.
“The Anaconda shooter Michael Brown has been apprehended. Incredible response from law enforcement officers across Montana. Thank you to all partners for your commitment to the search. May God continue to be with the families of the four victims still grieving their loss,” Gianforte.
The Anaconda shooter Michael Brown has been apprehended.
Incredible response from law enforcement officers across Montana. Thank you to all partners for your commitment to the search.
May God continue to be with the families of the four victims still grieving their loss.
— Governor Greg Gianforte (@GovGianforte) August 8, 2025
CNN reported:
Brown had been on the run since the “biggest” shooting in the state of Montana in a decade. He was arrested around 2 p.m. local time Friday near the search area in Anaconda and is now in the custody of Anaconda-Deer Lodge County authorities, according to the Montana Department of Justice.
Brown, an Army veteran, was seen on security footage fleeing The Owl Bar, where the fatal shooting occurred, investigators said. Since then, he had been sought by authorities representing at least 38 local, state and federal agencies traversing challenging terrain in the western Montana wilderness.
“I am proud of the unrelenting law enforcement effort this week to find and arrest Michael Paul Brown. The support we’ve seen for the community of Anaconda from across the state and the nation has also been remarkable,” Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen said in a statement following the arrest. “The families and friends of the victims remain in my prayers.”
[…]
Brown served as an armor crewman in the US Army from January 2001 to May 2005 and was deployed to Iraq from February 2004 to March 2005, Lt. Col. Ruth Castro, a spokesperson with the US Army, previously told CNN.
Brown’s niece, Clare Boyle, previously told CNN he struggled with his mental health during his time in the Army and was never the same after his service. Brown’s mental health got progressively worse with the passing of both of his parents, Boyle said.
The post Suspect in Deadly Montana Bar Shooting Captured After a Weeklong Manhunt appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
WATCH: Fire Ravages World-Famous Mosque-Cathedral in Cordoba, Spain

Fire breaks out in the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption in Cordoba.
More than a tourist attraction, more than an architectural treasure, the Mosque-Cathedral in the Andalusian city of Cordoba, Spain is a historical monument and a spiritual center – so, all around the world, both the faithful and the history lovers are mourning as a massive fire consumes the building complex.
Newsweek reported:
“Firefighters are responding to the blaze at the major tourist attraction and UNESCO-listed heritage site in Andalusia. Footage shows thick smoke billowing out from the millennia-old building as flames lapped at its roof.
Firefighters from the city of Córdoba are still battling to extinguish the fire at the Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba but local reports say the blaze is mostly contained as of 10 p.m. local time. The extent of damage is not yet clear.”
MASSIVE fire devours historic Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba as firefighters race to control the blaze pic.twitter.com/AAAf5qz7MX
— RT (@RT_com) August 8, 2025
La mezquita de Córdoba en llamas.
Sánchez hijo de puta, vete ya que eres una plaga bíblica para el país. pic.twitter.com/CueUtni9WI— Jose Maria Baena Roldan (@BaenaRolda13716) August 8, 2025
Being simultaneously one of the most significant buildings both in Islamic and in Christian architectural history, it began as a grand mosque in the 8th century and was transformed into a cathedral in 1236.
“The Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba, officially called the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption, was built as a mosque over 200 years starting 785 CE. The mosque opened in 988 CE, and remained a Muslim site for nearly 300 years before the Christian conquest of Cordoba in 1236 CE.
The structure converted to a cathedral, undergoing additional modifications and building until one final, major addition in 1607 CE.”
– ́
Fuego en el Patio de los Naranjos provoca desalojo y corte de accesos. No hay heridos reportados.
Fuente: Cadena SER
Like y Comparte #Cordoba #Spain #BreakingNews pic.twitter.com/u0P5CSkAEP— Global Network News (@iluminnatii) August 8, 2025
Read more, from November 2024:
‘The Virgin of Paris’: Medieval Statue of the Virgin Mary With Baby Jesus, That Survived the 2019 Fire, Is Returned to the Notre Dame Cathedral Ahead of December Grand Reopening
The post WATCH: Fire Ravages World-Famous Mosque-Cathedral in Cordoba, Spain appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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