Monday, March 30, 2009

Georgia Chosen to Participate in Pew Center Project

Gov. Sonny Perdue announced that Georgia is one of three states selected by the Pew Center on the States to participate as a government “laboratory” for projects that will enable the state to use resources more efficiently.

Georgia will receive $50,000 and intensive management support from Pew experts to assist it in delivering better value through its purchasing power.

Georgia’s project will build a system that collects and analyzes data on the billions of dollars spent by more than 150 state agencies and University System campuses on purchases of goods and services. Departments spend an estimated $6 billion a year – a third of the state budget – on thousands of items to operate state functions, including vehicles, maintenance contracts, computers and office supplies. Georgia will then share its best practices with other states to spur government improvements across the nation.


The Pew Center ranked Georgia’s government in its top tier of best-managed states in 2008. All 50 states were eligible to apply for the program and projects were selected based on the ability to assemble a senior-level team responsible for implementing improvement strategies with results for state taxpayers. Ohio and West Virginia were the other states selected.

The new Management Labs build off the work of Pew’s Grading the States Report. Pew has been examining all 50 states’ management of money, people, information and infrastructure for more than 10 years.

For more information on the report, log onto www.pewcenteronthestates.org/gpp_report_card.aspx.

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