litical people don't know a hill of beans about their area. Those who are confirmed by the Senate are generally good, but at the lower levels, they don't have a lot of background, and have to rely on the career people"' (ibid., 121).
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Tom McFee, longtime career executive, joins the debate: "Numbers, alone . . . are not the most critical issue . . .. but, rather, the types of positions that are filled by political appointments." Although PAS positions increased significantly (they more than quadrupled from 1965, when there were 152, to 1992, when there were 639), he feels that this increase was mostly justified as it kept pace with the growing size and complexity of government and was part of an overall management plan.
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| | The types of PAS positions which have experienced the most growth are those of the assistant secretary or agency head or their deputy level, or, in some cases, major program directors. . . . these positions require an act of Congress to be established [and] are normally scrutinized as part of the legislative committee process. [They] are only established after Congress and the administration agree that their mutual interest in the incumbents of these positions justifies their establishment. (McFee 1991)
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However, beyond the increase in numbers, per se, is the related issue of loss of career positions through a process by which they are converted into noncareer positions. For example, the position of assistant secretary for administration or management (ASAM), was originally established as a career position in line with recommendations of the First and Second Hoover Commissions (1949 and 1955). Over time, however, these positions have been converted to PAS positions to meet demands for political responsiveness. Part of the problem was the manner in which the conversions were handled: there was no coherent congressional or executive plan to provide order and rationale for such a realignment.
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Another problem is the premature "topping out" of civil service careers as the positions at the top of its career ladder disappear into the political ranks. In late 1992 only three of these ASAM positions remained filled by careerists, McFee being one. He agrees with the Volcker Commission recommendation that these positions should be returned to career status and suggests that they be established under the direction of a new political position of undersecretary for management (ibid.).
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The SES General category allows positions to be filled by either career or noncareer persons and creates "a hodgepodge of reporting relationships wherein noncareer appointees can report to career managers and executives, etc. This wreaks havoc in our performance management processes
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