Dems Force Army to Send Christmas Day Layoff Notices

Secretary Gates recently warned that because Congress has not passed legislation to fund the war on terror in fiscal year 2008 (which began October 1), the Department of Defense is being forced to plan furloughs for civilian personnel. To that end, Army Vice Chief of Staff General Richard Cody has ordered top officers at all Army bases to provide detailed plans on how to trim excess spending and replace civilians with troops. Cody directs the bases to work under the assumption that furloughs will begin on or about February 23. Since civilian employees are entitled to 60 days advance notice, they’ll get their furlough warnings on December 25–more or less. Fedblog reprints the text of the memo.

This is a planning effort, repeat, a planning effort to reduce OMA funded operations to the minimum mission essential level. Your initial plans will identify the weekly cost to continue those OMA funded minimum mission essential activities allowable under Feed and Forage after 23 February 08 and will include the amount of OMA funds available for return to the Department when all other services and functions are discontinued… Include these assumptions in your plans: a. On or about 22 February 08, all distributed Operation and Maintenance, Army (OMA) funds will be fully obligated or committed. b. On 23 February 08, installations and commands will move to a “warm base” status and all OMA funded activities will cease except those noted in paragraph 4 below… Civilian Personnel. Identify the number of minimum mission essential (Life, Health and Safety) and non-mission essential civilian personnel funded through direct OMA appropriations. You should anticipate that the Department will issue furlough notices to civilian employees with sufficient lead time to implement a furlough on or about 23 February 08. For foreign national personnel, provide the equivalent of furlough procedures under the respective Status of Forces Agreement. Identify the weekly payroll cost of mission essential civilian personnel. Furlough dates will be provided for US Civilian personnel by G1.

Congress will be under the gun in the days before Christmas to pass the normal fiscal year 2008 appropriations bills, energy legislation, a FISA reauthorization, and other priorities. There will be no greater pressure however, than to pass legislation to fund the war on terror. And considering that the Democratic defense amounts to saying ‘but we already funded it,’ it’s hard not to imagine them backing down on this one. Nevertheless, expect war opponents in Congress and the MoveOn crowd to scream like stuck pigs. As a result, the war on terror funding is likely to be added as late as possible, in broad omnibus legislation that’s hard to oppose. Meanwhile, how are things going in Iraq? Glad you asked: 6,000 Sunnis Join Pact with U.S., Convoy of Returning Refugees Arrives, UB, Iraq University Sign Deal. The only real question is whether the legislation to fund the war will be accompanied by a return to reality on the part of Congressional Democrats.

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