that the executive levels of the respondents were roughly representative of their frequency in government, as was the gender and ethnic mix among the respondents. While the White House refused to give detailed demographic information about the PASs, it eventually allowed OPM to release some statistical data. Again, the problem of the difference in OPM and White House personnel counts presents itself. Nonetheless, percentages may present a useable point of comparison (see table A.1).
|
Table A.1. Demographics of PAS Survey Response Rate and OPM PAS Statistics (in percent)
|
| OPM a (N=480)
| PAS Sur v ey (N= 182)
| Female
| | | Caucasian
| | | EL 1
| | | EL 2
| | | EL 3
| | | EL 4
| | | EL 5
| | | Source: The Bush PAS Survey. a As of June 30, 1992 .
|
The second methodological approach used the postsurvey interviews. These interviews, from an hour to an hour and a half in length, were conducted in the late summer and early fall of 1992 with twenty-eight PAS executives who completed and signed their surveys, volunteering for an interview.
|
Scheduling conflicts created insurmountable difficulties with some PASs. Nevertheless, those interviewed represented Executive Levels (ELs) 2 through 5 in a wide variety of executive agencies and independent regulatory commissions (IRCs), as well as in the Executive Office of the President (EOP). For example, the agencies included Agriculture, Labor, Health and Human Services, Interior, Commerce, Education, NASA, the CIA, and OPM. The IRCs included the Federal Labor Relations Board, the Interstate Commerce Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, among others. EOP offices included the Office of Science and Technology and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). One cabinet secretary (EL 1) had volunteered to be interviewed but canceled due to campaign demands on his time as the presidential election approached.
|
The twenty-eight interviewees included six women, two minorities, eight independent regulatory commission members, and four inspectors general. The majority, as might be expected, were Republicans, five were Democrats (in the
|
|