Jan 19

Live Event

The New Public Service: Talent Pool or Brain Drain?

Summary

The government-centered public service is mostly a thing of the past.

Today's most talented public servants are seeking to make a difference wherever they can, be it in government, nonprofit agencies, or private firms. During the past two decades, as Congress and the President have downsized the federal workforce and shifted the responsibilities to states and communities, hundreds of thousands of new public service jobs have opened up in the nonprofit and private sectors. The shift has created new opportunities for public service, but it has also forced government to compete for its fair share of talent in a much more mobile and far less loyal job market.

How can government make the most of this transition to a "new public service," while keeping its own talented pool from going dry?

Details

January 19, 2000

Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Panel Discussion

  • Panelists

    • Constance Berry Newman

      Secretary

      Smithsonian Institution

    • Donna E. Shalala

      Secretary

      Department of Health and Human Services

    • Ed Gund

      Senior Vice President and COO

      Lockheed Martin IMS

    • Fred Grandy

      President and CEO

      Goodwill Industries

  • Welcome and Introductions

    • James Johnson

      Chairman

      Brookings Institution

    • Michael Armacost

      President

      Brookings Institution