
OMB Unlikely to Release Funds for Real Property Compliance; Requirements Will Not be Relaxed

Free Copy of Federal Real Property Association Presentation
Available at VISTA Web Site
Herndon, VA (27 APRIL | 2007) The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is not likely to support or fund reforms of real property asset management practices during the remainder of the current Administration. Rather, OMB actions result in making real property professionals' jobs more difficult so that agencies eventually will do whatever they can to relieve the constant pressure.
VISTA Vice President for Corporate Development Ray Summerell provided a candid presentation at the April 10 monthly luncheon of the Federal Real Property Association (FRPA) in Washington, DC. Titled "Federal Real Property Reporting Compliance: ROI in Today's Budgetary Realities," the overview offered plain talk about where demands for improved performance originate.
Copies of Ray Summerell's FRPA presentation may be downloaded for free from the VISTA Web site: www.vistatsi.com. The presentation will also be available at the FRPA's Web site: www.frpa.us.
Pulling from resources including the General Services Administration (GSA), the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and Congress, Summerell urged luncheon attendees to think of ways to tie their real property goals to their agencies' missions. Without such a linkage, Summerell argued, real property programs will languish due to insufficient budgets and funding.
According to Summerell, OMB's publicly stated goal (statements by OMB Deputy Director Clay Johnson in 2005) is to reduce surplus real property by five percent (or $15 billion, by OMB's own estimates) by 2009. If that estimate of surplus is correct, Summerell noted, "that's a scary number."
"Based on the government's own numbers, there could be excess property equal to 1.186 billion square feet, or 32 percent of the entire portfolio," Summerell continued.
"How many believe that 32 percent of the inventory is excess?" he asked. "No one. And yet these are the kinds of arguments that are out there, working against us."
Summerell also noted that newly proposed legislation is likely to expose more real property to surplus considerations. He cited draft Senate telework legislation S.1000, proposed by Senator Ted Stevens (R-AK) and Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA), which would make teleworking an option for any federal employee whose job was not site-specific for reasons of security or other special purpose.
Real property professionals may need to be prepared to justify maintaining their current inventory if this legislation is adopted, Summerell said. For example, he explained, "assume that one-third of non-military real property may not lend itself to telework, because of security or special purpose considerations. That means that in some circles the remaining two-thirds of the inventory will have to be reviewed carefully to determine whether as much as half becomes surplus, as teleworking becomes prevalent.
Certainly, it's unlikely that a slice of the inventory so large will become surplus even if teleworking is widely accepted, said Summerell. But, perceptions are as difficult to argue against as facts. Real property asset management with better data can help counter such misconceptions.
The key to real property asset management lies in the accuracy of data, and the tools to property analyze that data. Summerell pointedly asked attendees: "How accurate is your data? Do you have the right tools - but more importantly, do you have sustainable data, processes and information on which those tools can be used?
"Can you trust that your data will enable you to make good decisions?" Summerell asked. "Even if you're 90 percent confident in your data, the 10 percent that's still in question calls the entire data set into question. It only takes one bad answer to instill a lack of confidence."
Cost avoidance by better real property asset management is one way of retroactively paying for data collection, validation and verification, Summerell explained. He used an example from the military, in which a branch of the armed services, by their own estimates, saved over $1 billion in unnecessary construction costs through a regimented real property planning and management program.
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