The Public Service Academy - Let's Hope it Happens
Thursday, January 8, 2009 at 1:51PM
Justin Bathon in Governance, chris asch, government service, psa, public service academy, service academies

The big education story in the New York Times today is on the Public Service Academy and I wanted to highlight it because I am indirectly connected to it through a friend of a friend and it is gaining momentum to the point where it is probably more likely to happen than not (a lot of new folks in the Obama Administration support it, although not Obama himself, yet anyway). 

Here's the idea: We have West Point to train the best of the best in the Army. We have the Naval Academy and the Air Force Academy. Why not have a top flight Academy for Government Servants as well? Students would get a four year free ride in exchange for five years of paid public service. In theory it is a win-win (as long as those students prove useful for the money the government spends on them). 

My friend Suzanne Eckes, who worked in Mississippi with the guy who started it, told me about the idea as far back as a couple of years ago and I have never settled on whether I liked or disliked it. Several of the campuses around D.C. already serve this purpose, such as George Washington U., which my sister attends. And what of all the public oriented programs around the United States such as the Patterson School of Diplomacy here at UK? Plus, I don't really like the name (I hope the Congress gives it a name other than the Public Service Academy) and the logo is even worse (I think the need to hire a creative director!). On top of all that, there is no guarantee this is going to work. Are the best and brightest really going to go to the Public Service Academy rather than Kennedy School of Government? The military academies pretty much have a monopoly whereas this school would have to compete with the best of the best that have been around for centuries.   

Well, I am officially going to support this idea and I will probably send a note to my Congressmen here in Kentucky about it. The fact is that we do need people more excited about being in government. Does anyone send their kid off to college to be a bureaucrat? Yet, as these hard times have made clear, we need to reflect on who really runs this country? Who's got this country's back when times are hard? Its our government servants that are there to steady the ship. As a country, we need the best and brightest to be willing to leave Wall Street and take a job on Independence Ave. (its the street on which the Department of Ed. sits). Yes, I think there will be challenges for the PSA (see, that doesn't work at all), but for a relatively low price (200 million/year) we could potentially train a consistent crop of educated and informed bureaucrats that could make our government better from the inside. I think that is a chance worth taking. 

Article originally appeared on The Edjurist - Information on School and Educational Law (http://edjurist.com/).
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