[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 100 (Tuesday, June 13, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3451-S3452]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO CAROLYN LERNER AND MARK COHEN
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, today I wish to recognize the service
of Special Counsel Carolyn Lerner. Ms. Lerner's term as the leader of
the U.S. Office of Special Counsel, OSC, has expired. By many accounts,
she has been the most successful leader of that office in the agency's
40 year history.
This office has a critical mission, one that is more important now
than ever. It protects government whistleblowers and helps to eliminate
government waste, fraud, and abuse. It is also responsible for the
enforcement of the Hatch Act, which keeps the Federal workplace free
from improper partisan politics.
Special Counsel Lerner was confirmed unanimously by the Senate in
June 2011. During her tenure, she restored the integrity of the Office
of Special Counsel after a difficult period. Moreover, she
reestablished the OSC as a safe and effective office to defend
government whistleblowers.
Moreover, I would also like to recognize the exemplary service of her
principal deputy, Mark Cohen, who is leaving government service as
well. The OSC played a critical role in protecting hundreds of
whistleblowers at the Department of Veterans Affairs. They worked with
these courageous employees to improve care for veterans at hospitals
across the country, including efforts to improve conditions for
veterans in the Baltimore VA.
Under Ms. Lerner and Mr. Cohen's leadership, the OSC worked with
Homeland Security whistleblowers to end an improper overtime program,
saving the taxpayers $100 million a year according to the Congressional
Budget Office.
These and many, many other victories for whistleblowers and taxpayers
set a new standard in terms of effectiveness for this important office.
As my colleague and friend from Maryland, Congressman Cummings,
stated in a recent Washington Post article, ``Ms. Lerner turned the
Office of Special Counsel `into a model agency and set the bar as the
head of that office.' '' I ask unanimous consent to have this article
printed in the Record at the conclusion of my remarks.
As Senator Grassley, a longtime champion of government
whistleblowers, stated in the same article, ``Her leadership should be
a road map for future leaders of this office.''
Given the office's important good government role, the OSC enjoyed
broad, bipartisan support under Lerner and Cohen's leadership. I concur
with my colleagues and encourage the next leaders of that office to
follow their lead as I pay tribute to their government service.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the Washington Post, June 7, 2017]
Special Counsel Lerner Leaves Office as Trump Rejects Highly Praised
Whistleblower Advocate
(By Joe Davidson)
The defining moment for the Office of Special Counsel (OSC)
after Carolyn Lerner became head of the agency was a gruesome
one about body parts and a dismembered Marine.
It's not the usual fare for the office on M Street NW that
deals with Hatch Act violations and prohibited personnel
practices. But protecting whistleblowers is where OSC makes
its reputation--as in the 2011 case involving the Defense
Department's Port Mortuary in Dover, Del.
Soon this little but powerful office will have a new
special counsel. Rejecting the advice of Republicans and
Democrats to keep Lerner, President Trump has nominated Henry
Kerner to take her place. He is a former Republican
congressional staffer and currently assistant vice president
at the Cause of Action Institute, a small-government advocacy
organization.
Lerner, who leaves office on June 14, had been on the job
only a few months when she revealed reports by federal
employees of grisly transgressions at the morgue operated by
the Air Force. Body parts were lost in two cases, and in
another, the office reported that the mangled body of a
Marine ``was dismembered with a saw in order to make the body
fit inside a military uniform, without the consent or
notification of the family.''
With a staff that wouldn't begin to fill one Pentagon
hallway, Lerner humbled and embarrassed the Defense
Department, the government's largest agency. Lawmakers were
appalled. The Air Force secretary at the time expressed his
sincere ``regret'' for ``lapses in our standards at Dover,''
a non-apologetic understatement.
The action of the Office of Special Counsel--no relation to
a special prosecutor or to Robert S. Mueller III, the special
counsel investigating Russian meddling in the 2016
presidential election--secured mortuary reforms and protected
the employees who were targets of Air Force retaliation.
``I think that we have sent the federal community a message
that whistleblowers should be valued,'' Lerner said Monday in
her office overlooking St. Matthew's Cathedral.
``Whistleblowers now feel comfortable coming forward, and
that is helping our government.''
The Port Mortuary case ``really helped the federal
community understand that OSC was robust enforcer of
whistleblower laws,'' she added.
Considering the widespread retaliation against federal
whistleblowers, her assessment of their comfort might be
optimistic, but there is no doubt that the Office of Special
Counsel is a more robust agency than the moribund place they
found before she got there.
It moved ``from last-resort option to first choice for
getting relief for whistleblowers,'' said Tom Devine, legal
director of the Government Accountability Project, a
whistleblower advocacy organization.
Relief for individual whistleblowers also can mean systemic
improvements for federal agencies and taxpayers. The
Department of Veterans Affairs is the obvious example.
Congress approved VA improvements following a 2014 scandal
over the coverup of long patient wait times, which was
revealed by whistleblowers. Whistleblower disclosures also
led to a new overtime pay system for Border Patrol agents.
Lerner's office was instrumental in both.
Devine's strong praise for OSC is not unqualified. ``The
bad news is they operate at a molasses pace'' in some
instances, he said. He added that he would like Lerner to be
more aggressive about taking legal action against federal
agencies that violate whistleblower rights.
Despite the slow pace, agency statistics show impressive
gains. There were ``276 favorable actions for whistleblowers
and other victims of PPPs [prohibited personnel practices]
this past year, more than double the annual average,'' the
office said in its budget justification to Congress. ``In the
last two years, OSC has achieved five times the number of
favorable actions in whistleblower retaliation complaints
than in any prior two-year period in agency history . . . .
In FY 2016, for the second straight year, OSC received
upwards of 6,000 new matters, a 25 percent increase over the
prior two-year period.''
The increased caseload leads to bigger backlogs, but it
also demonstrates that employees are more willing to trust
the office with sensitive cases.
Ironic criticism comes from James J. Wilson, the agency's
chief human capital officer. He filed a whistleblower
retaliation complaint against Lerner with the Merit Systems
Protection Board after failing to find success before the
Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and
Efficiency. Regarding his complaints to the council, Wilson,
who previously filed grievances against former employers at
two other agencies, signed an affidavit saying, ``I received
final decisions closing these four matters with no further
action being taken.''
Whatever the criticism of Lerner, it is outweighed by
praise from whistleblowers and Members of Congress.
``She's fearless,'' Robert MacLean, an air marshal
whistleblower, told me earlier this year. His was the first
federal whistleblower case heard by the Supreme Court and
MacLean credits his victory largely to work done by OSC.
Unusual in this era of hyper-polarization, she is lauded by
both sides of the aisle.
``Leading the Office of Special Counsel requires a deep
appreciation for the patriotic work that whistleblowers do to
shine a light on fraud or misconduct in government. Carolyn
Lerner has been a steadfast advocate for government
whistleblowers, and I am grateful for her service at OSC,''
said Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman of the
Senate Judiciary Committee. ``Her leadership should be a road
map for future leaders of this office.''
The Senate Whistleblower Protection Caucus, founded by
Grassley and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), had urged the Trump
administration to retain Lerner.
``I am disappointed the president chose not to take Sen.
Grassley's and my recommendation to renominate Carolyn
Lerner, who is an experienced leader with bipartisan
support,'' said Wyden.
It's also bicameral. Before Trump's decision, Rep. Rod Blum
(Iowa), Republican chairman of the House Whistleblower
Protection Caucus, led a bipartisan House letter saying
Lerner deserved another term. Among those who signed was Rep.
Elijah Cummings (Md.), the ranking Democrat on the House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
Lerner turned the Office of Special Counsel ``into a model
agency and set the bar as the
[[Page S3452]]
head of that office,'' Cummings said by email Monday. ``She
served with independence and tenacity to hold agency
officials accountable when they retaliated against
whistleblowers.''
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