GSA Business Roundtable Highlights

As you know, on Wednesday the General Services Administration and Coalition members came together at the Coalition’s GSA Business Roundtable. The roundtable featured an engaging “Myth-Busters” dialogue focusing on GSA’s new mission statement and priorities:

The mission of GSA is to deliver the best value in real estate, acquisition, and technology services to government and the American people.”

GSA’s Six Priorities

  • Delivering better value and savings to customer agencies
  • Serving our partners (customer agencies and vendors)
  • Expanding opportunities for small business
  • Making a more sustainable government
  • Leading with innovation
  • Building a stronger GSA

Among key discussion points throughout the day were the future of the GSA Multiple Award Schedule (MAS) program and the impending update/modernization of the MAS pricing policy. The discussion highlighted the challenges and costs associated with contract duplication and GSA efforts to reduce unnecessary duplication. The roundtable also included wide ranging discussion on how GSA can deliver best value to customer agencies through its acquisition, real estate and technology programs while lowering the total cost of acquisition. Importantly, this included a dialogue around GSA’s messaging to customer agencies; a topic area that the Coalition will continue to focus on in the coming months.

One of the highlights of the roundtable was the Myth-Busters Discussion Activity. During this “brain-storming” session the attendees identified over 150 suggestions for meeting/addressing GSA’s six priorities. The Coalition will be providing the list of recommendations to GSA and to our membership in the coming days. We look forward to further dialogue around these suggestions and the six priorities.

Thank you to Acting Administrator Dan Tangherlini for addressing the roundtable on what the new mission statement and priorities mean for customer agencies, GSA, and contractors. Thank you to Anne Rung, GSA Chief Acquisition Officer and Special Advisor to the Administrator, Tom Sharpe FAS Commissioner, and Michael Gelber PBS Deputy Commissioner for addressing the attendees and participating in the Myth-Busters dialogue. Indeed, the Coalition thanks all of the GSA leaders from across FAS and PBS that participated in the event! The Coalition looks forward to continuing the dialogue!

Thank you to all our members for your support of the roundtable! A special thank you to our Keystone members: Allsteel, Booz Allen Hamilton, CACI, Deloitte, General Dynamics Information Technology, HON, L-3, Northrop Grumman, and SAP.

Finally, Memorial Day weekend is now upon us. Please read the message below and make sure you keep those who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our safety and freedom in your thoughts and prayers.

Originally published in the Friday Flash on May 25, 2012:

Memorial Day marks the unofficial beginning of summer (growing up in small town in Northern Maine it usually seemed that summer didn’t begin till July 4th). As a child I remember that in days leading up to Memorial Day, members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) would stand outside the grocery store requesting donations and handing out “Buddy Poppies.” To me, these men were a big deal, most were World War II or Korean War Veterans. These men were considered local heroes, highly respected for their service. One or two were World War I veterans—I grew up in the 1960’s and 70’s and there were still many World War I veterans who were in their 60’s and 70’s. On Memorial Day our town would hold a parade honoring those who had fallen in service to our nation. All the local veterans would march in the parade, accepting donations and handing out Buddy Poppies.

So what is a “Buddy Poppy?” The Buddy Poppy was inspired by the poem “In Flanders Fields,honoring the fallen of the First World War. The poem was written by Colonel John McCrae, a Canadian surgeon, who served in the War. The poem is haunting:

In Flanders fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses, row on row

That mark our place; and in the sky

The larks still bravely singing, fly

Scare heard amid the guns below.

We are the dead. Short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved, and were loved, and now we lie

In Flanders fields

Take up our quarrel with the foe:

To you from failing hands we throw

The torch; be yours to hold high.

If ye break faith with us who die

We shall not sleep though poppies grow

In Flanders fields.

The red poppy flower became the “Flower of Remembrance” for those who served on the Allied side in the First World War. In 1921, the Franco-American Children’s League sold artificial poppies in America to support orphans and those left destitute by the war in Belgium and France. Subsequently, the Franco-American Children’s League dissolved, and in the spring of 1922 the VFW began selling poppies made in France to support the orphans and destitute. By 1924, the VFW began selling “Buddy Poppies” made by disabled veterans.

Since that time, the VFW’s National Buddy Poppy Committee has ensured that the artificial poppies are made by veterans located in VA Hospitals and facilities throughout the country. The proceeds from the sales of a Buddy Poppies primarily go to support local veteran services. So when you “contribute” or buy a Buddy Poppy at your local grocery store, it will support a veteran and a neighbor! Please, when you make your grocery list for the Memorial Day barbecue, make sure you include a “Buddy Poppy.”

This Memorial Day, please make sure you take time to honor all service men and women who have fallen in defense of freedom. God bless them and their families. God bless and protect all those in harm’s way. Please also remember those contractor personnel who have fallen while supporting our troops around the world.

More information regarding the history of the Buddy Poppy campaign can be found at the VA and the VFW websites.

Roger Waldron

President

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