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Tom Ridge: First Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. Antonella Demartini PA 762 Case Study Presentation December 7, 2011. Presentation Overview. Ridge’s background National context Leader challenges and accomplishments Constraining and facilitating factors
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Tom Ridge: First Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Antonella Demartini PA 762 Case Study Presentation December 7, 2011
Presentation Overview • Ridge’s background • National context • Leader challenges and accomplishments • Constraining and facilitating factors • Leadership theory • Conclusion
Ridge’s Career of Public Service • Vietnam veteran • Assistant District Attorney of Erie, Pennsylvania • Pennsylvania Representive, six terms • Pennsylvania Governor, two terms • Director of White House Office of Homeland Security • First Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security
Context: National Crises & Extraordinary Legislation • September 11, 2001 • Anthrax poisoning, September 2001 • PATRIOT Act, 2001 • Homeland Security Act, 2002
Leader Challenges I • No job description • Overwhelming list of potential terrorist threats • infrastructure, bioterrorism, transportation security, water supply, natural disaster relief • Associated Press figures (Ridge, 2009, 67-68) • 600,000 bridges; 2,800 power plans (104 of them nuclear) • 190,000 miles of natural gas pipelines; 95,000 miles of coastline • 463 skyscrapers; 416 commercial airports • 285 million people were spread out over 3,717,792 square miles • Review of daily threat matrix with CIA, FBI, DOJ, Pentagon, NSA
Leader Challenges II • Corroborating intelligence • Risk management: weighing risks and making tradeoffs because being all places at once was impossible • Culture of secrecy: “need to know culture” versus “need to share culture” • Local and state officials without adequate information, staffing, training, funding
Constraining Factors • Political • Responsible for monitoring an overwhelming list of terrorism threats • Accountable to multitude of stakeholders • Oversight by 86 Congressional committees (Ridge, 2009, 200) • Economic • No funding for state and local jurisdictions - had to absorb cost in their budgets • Social • Challenging the “keep everyone out” mentality • Few believed increased security was about “secure borders and open doors”
Facilitating Factors • Political • No job description, no predecessor – discretion to devise methods/procedures/programs • Presidential support • Economic (Ridge, 2009, 131) • $ 37.5 billion budget for FY 2003-2004 • 180,000 employees • Social • Talk show host humor increased issue awareness
Leader Accomplishments • Homeland Security Advisory System (HSAS) • U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indication Technology (US-VISIT) program • Widespread support for the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) • Increased border/airport inspectors; vaccine stockpiling; increased standards for water quality and food inspection
Leadership Theory I • Traits/Characteristics: Ridge was a “decisive, clear thinking executive who kn[ew] how to solve problems. He [was] a person of integrity and a person of good judgement” (Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, 2003). • Styles • Strategic – aligned organization with the external environment • Achievement oriented - HSAS, US-VISIT, increased security measures • Collaborative – partnerships with federal/state/local agencies
Leadership Theory II • Transformational leadership theory because unprecedented time • Referent power, ideological appeal (career of public service) • Triggers of change (9/11 and anthrax poisoning) creating instability, crisis, need for change • Leader of an open system (DHS) • Split attention between internal and external demands (multiple stakeholders) • Adaptation to new processes, organizational structures, technologies (22 gov’t agencies combined, biometrics) • Environmental scanning, consulting, networking/partnering • Ethical leadership • sacrificing personal life out of obligation to public service
Conclusion • Effective leader who created a functioning department • Increased awareness of and national preparedness for terrorism attacks in/on the United States • Questions?