tl;dr: As it turns out, I’m allowed to talk to congressional staffers. I honestly didn’t know this. In fact, it is unlawful to attempt to prohibit a federal employee from talking to any Member, committee, or subcommittee of the Congress.
Category Archives: risk
On regulations
When I was in pilot training, I had a crusty, old, retired C-130 pilot as a ground instructor. He liked to tell us wet-behind-the-ears lieutenants that:
Regulations are guidance to the wise,
and for the strict obedience of fools.
And he would go on to explain that Continue reading
The Ethics of Blogging as a Fed
[Update, 1 May 2014: The issue of 1st amendment free-speech protection as a fed is more complicated than I knew at the time this post was written. I’ve recently learned of the 2006 Supreme Court Decision, Garcetti v. Ceballos, which significantly restricts the protection for speech as a government employee. I will probably write a new post once I’ve read the Court’s opinions and understood the implications thereof.]
So.
I got in trouble for blogging. Sorta. And I got applauded too. More on that later.
One of the posts on my blog got noticed. People were offended that I would speak out of turn. Apparently, a senior military officer printed a copy of the post and handed it to my boss’s boss’s boss, and recommended that I receive ethics counseling. I suspect that he has not read the Cluetrain Manifesto.
To the great credit of my leadership, they took this under advisement. Some of them even read the blog. One of the comments that got back to me was, “That was a well written post.” My supervisor did call the Standards of Conduct Office, and he recommended that I go speak with an Ethics Official (an attorney), just so I would know what the boundaries were, and what I could (or could not) do. I met with a very informed and articulate attorney and had a pleasant conversation with her.
Here is a synopsis of what I’ve learned about defense-civilian-blogger’s rights: (side commentary in green)
- I absolutely have a first-amendment right to free speech and my leadership was very respectful of that right. [UPDATE: The first-amendment protections apply to me as a citizen, but not to my speech as an employee, under Garcetti v. Caballos]
- As a federal employee who is not an official spokesperson, I cannot speak in a public forum without a disclaimer that I speak for myself and not the government. (JER 3-305.a, & 5 CFR § 3601.108) I knew this and had such a disclaimer already. The attorney reviewed my disclaimer and found it adequate.
- Use of the word ‘we’ to refer to the Defense Department or to government civilians could create the (mis-)impression that I was acting as a spokesperson, which is forbidden (see above). I was strongly discouraged from using the word “we” in this way, especially considering that it is not necessary to do so to make my points.
My inner lawyer wanted to argue this point, but it’s fundamentally reasonable. (I subsequently edited my posts to avoid this practice.) - “DoD personnel, while acting in a private capacity and not in connection with their official duties, have the right to prepare information for public release through non-DoD fora or media. This information must be reviewed for clearance if it meets the criteria in DoDI 5230.29.” (DoDD 5230.09) “Writing that pertains to military matters, national security issues, or subjects of significant concern to DoD shall be reviewed for clearance by appropriate security and public affairs offices prior to publication.” (JER 3-305.b & DoDD 5230.09 para. 4.b, emphasis added)
The dilemma with this restriction, of course, is that the definition of “military matters, national security issues, or subjects of significant concern” is subjective. I was given two pieces of advice:- Recommendation #1: In order to avoid the running afoul of this restriction, I could submit my blog posts to the Office of Security Review.
Years ago, I authored a briefing and submitted it to the OSR, and it came back to me, as a subject matter expert, to review and approve. Ever since, I’ve been disinclined to waste the time and resources of the OSR. (Waste is officially frowned upon, BTW.) - Recommendation #2: I could submit posts to my supervisor to review, prior to publication.
This is similarly unsatisfying, in my humble opinion. To the extent that anything I might post is controversial (but protected) speech, the consequences are risks that I must be willing to accept. It is unfair, and perhaps even cowardly, to shift this risk to my supervisor, who as a federal civilian, is naturally risk averse. (q.v. previous post on Risk Aversion)
- Recommendation #1: In order to avoid the running afoul of this restriction, I could submit my blog posts to the Office of Security Review.
- An employee shall not use his official title or position to identify himself in connection with his writing, except that he may include his title or position as one of several biographical details, provided that his title or position is given no more prominence than other details. (5 CFR § 2635.807)
- “An employee shall not engage in a financial transaction using nonpublic information, nor allow the improper use of nonpublic information to further his own private interest or that of another, whether through advice or recommendation, or by knowing unauthorized disclosure.” (5 CFR § 2635.703, emphasis added)
“Non-public information” is defined as, “information that the employee gains by reason of Federal employment and that he knows or reasonably should know has not been made available to the general public.” (5 CFR § 2635.703)
This point I found very interesting. Several government employees that I spoke with believed that it was inappropriate or impermissible to disclose any nonpublic information gained as a result of public employment, for any reason. The actual guidelines do not say that, and to do so would run contrary to the many whistleblower-protection laws that exist. The statute does say that it is unethical use non-public information to “further his own private interest or that of another“. On the contrary, using non-public information (i.e. my personal experiences in gov’t service) to illustrate a principle about efficiency of government activities, is precisely not to further my own private interest, but rather to further a public interest.
In short, “insider trading” is forbidden; “inside baseball” is not. (Unless it’s classified or otherwise controlled information.)
That was my official “ethics counseling” on blogging as a federal civilian. There was one additional issue, concerning cross-posting to Intelink-U. Separately, I asked this question to a colleague on Intelink staff, who passed it on to local counsel. Here is an excerpt from the response, which is too precious not to share:
Having read the blog, I have couple of observations on the blog and its content–
- I see nothing in the content that violates the Intelink Terms of Use
- A blog, by definition, is personal commentary on a relevant topic.
- I see nothing in the content that conflicts with the Federal employee ethics regulations codified in 5 C.F.R. Part 2635: Standards of ethical conduct for employees of the executive branch.
Based on a close read of Mr. Risacher comments, it could be reasonably argued that his commentary directly relates to his ethical obligations under 5 CFR Part 2635.101 (b) (11), “Employees shall disclose waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption to appropriate authorities. Albeit, it is not “politically correct/wise” to use a public forum as the method of “disclosure.”
His use of a “real” example to make his points about the well known disconnects between many “program management” and “operations” activities. Without such a concrete example, however, his commentary would have been vague and hypothetical, and dismissed as such.
And, oh by the way, while he is not a DNI employee one of the core values and performance measure is Courage…”moral, intellectual, even physical. We have the integrity (indeed, the duty) to seek and speak the truth, to innovate, to change things for the better, regardless of personal or professional risk.” In fact, a key assessment criteria for all DNI employees under the Personal Leadership and Integrity section is “a commitment to excellence, and the courage and conviction to express their professional views”
There are a few relevant questions one should consider:Is is therefore appropriate to punish Mr. Risacher for doing what would be demanded of an IC professional?
In fact, is it not contrary to such principles to suggest such a notion?He has effectively thrown a “stupid flag” and now someone is more concerned about the fact that his comments might be professionally embarrassing/inconvenient. Nowhere in the ethics regulations, does it say that it is ethical to shoot the messenger of inconvenient truths.
Amen. Thank you.
Last stop for the Cluetrain: Federal Government
I’ve been reading the Cluetrain Manifesto (10th Anniversary Edition), a book that examines the impact of the Internet on both markets (consumers) and organizations. The over-the-top introduction reads like this (with minor editorial deletions/additions):
A powerful global conversation has begun. Through the Internet, people are discovering and inventing new ways to share relevant knowledge with blinding speed. As a direct result, markets are getting smarter—and getting smarter faster than most
companiesgovernment agencies.These markets are conversations. Their members communicate in language that is natural, open, honest, direct, funny and often shocking. Whether explaining or complaining, joking or serious, the human voice is unmistakably genuine. It can’t be faked. Continue reading
Risk Aversion and Job Security
Most federal civilians have really good job protections: while they are subject to furlough and sequestration, taking actual punitive actions against a general schedule civilian employee is pretty uncommon. In particular, things like the Employee Rights & Appeals process, and Merit Systems Protection Board exist to protect employees, and they do this so well that when I was a military officer with civilian subordinates, I was candidly advised not to bother – demoting or firing civilians was just too hard. (Unless their performance was really bad.)
Now, if you had really strong job security – as most federal civilians do – you could afford to take a few risks, couldn’t you? So long as you aren’t committing an actual crime – what’s the worst that’s gonna happen to you? If your project doesn’t work or you make a mistake, you’re gonna come to work tomorrow and keep collecting the same pay.
So why are federal civilians so unbelievably risk averse? Continue reading