Remarks at the
Presentation Ceremony for the Presidential Rank Awards for the Senior Executive
Service
I
appreciate this opportunity every year to honor and reward a special group of
individuals who provide the creativity and energy that ensure the people of the
Thomas
Jefferson once said that one of the toughest tasks of any President was finding
the right person for the right job. Well, I'm grateful that those of you we
honor today are people who worked your way into positions of responsibility and
have taken that responsibility seriously.
Now,
there's a story I'd like to tell. You knew I'd have one of those. [Laughter]
There's only one thing: I'm standing here very uncertain right now, because I'm
hoping that I haven't told you this one before. [Laughter] It's about a young
fellow. He had a great feeling for animals and wanted to work with animals. And
then one day in the help wanted ads he saw an ad from the zoo. They were
advertising for someone to come and work in the zoo. Well, he went down, and he
found out that his first job was going to be -- if he took the job -- to get
into a gorilla suit and enter the cage to replace their gorilla who'd died until the one they'd ordered could arrive. But
then there would be a regular job for him after he had done that and the real
gorilla arrived. Well, he took them on. And he got in the cage, and there he
was in the suit and -- couldn't just sit around. And when the kids,
particularly, were in front of the cage, he started doing tricks and everything
he could think of for them. And one day he was swinging on a rope, and he got
so enthused he swung over into the lion's cage. And the lion came roaring at
him, and he started screaming for help. And the lion jumped on him and said,
``Shut up, or you'll get us both fired.'' [Laughter]
I
guess whoever was running that zoo was certainly employing innovative problemsolving. [Laughter] Seriously though, I know that
many of you've saved the Government -- and that really means the taxpayers --
considerable money. You've done it by your diligence and your intelligence. But
you've also done more than that: You've provided leadership. And more often
than not, that's worth more than money. Today's awards are designed as a way of
saying thank you and letting you know that you are appreciated.
This
is my seventh year of being part of this ceremony, and I believe your service
warrants my personal congratulations, and I want each of you to know that. This
year there are 58 distinguished and 267 meritorious winners, almost double the
number that was approved in prior years. Large and small agencies are
represented, from civilian executives in the military service to executives in
the National Science Foundation.
Thirteen
award winners this year come from outside the
If
I were the CEO of a giant corporation, I couldn't find a better group of
executives to run my operation than the nearly 7,000 members of the Senior
Executive Service whom you represent here today.
So,
thank you from the bottom of my heart, and God bless you. And now, Connie
Horner, who worked with me at the Office of Management and Budget and has been
doing a fine job as Director of the Office of Personnel Management, and Kirke Harper, our Director of Executive Personnel, will
help me present the awards.
Note: The President
spoke at