Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Management

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Assistant Secretary of Treasury for Management
Seal of the United States Department of the Treasury.svg
Seal of the United States Department of the Treasury
Flag of the United States Assistant Secretary of the Treasury.svg
Flag of the Assistant Secretary of Treasury
Incumbent
vacant
U.S. Department of the Treasury
Reports toThe United States Deputy Secretary of the Treasury
SeatWashington, D.C.
AppointerThe President
Term lengthNo fixed term
Websitewww.treasury.gov

The Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Management, Chief Financial Officer, and Chief Performance Officer (ASM/CFO/CPO) is the principal policy advisor to the Secretary and Deputy Secretary on the development and execution of the budget for the Department of the Treasury and the internal management of the Department and its bureaus. The ASM/CFO/CPO also oversees Department-wide management programs including human resources, information and technology management, financial management and accounting, strategic planning, performance budgeting/metrics, acquisition/procurement, training, human capital and workforce management, equal employment opportunity, environmental health and safety, emergency preparedness, small business programs, and administrative services for Treasury's headquarters, the Departmental Offices.

The Office of the ASM/CFO has broad responsibilities in the Departmental Offices and Department-wide, exercising management and financial authorities for the Secretary and the Deputy Secretary under various delegations, as well as authorities provided by statute or at the direction of the Secretary or Deputy Secretary. The Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990 mandated the establishment of Chief Financial Officers (CFO)[1] in federal agencies at the Assistant Secretary level. Historically, the Assistant Secretary for Management is also appointed by the President as the CFO, creating the position of ASM/CFO. The ASM has also been appointed as the Chief Performance Officer[2] for the Department.

The ASM is a presidentially appointed position. Until 2012, the position also required Senate confirmation. The CFO position continues to require Senate confirmation. The ASM reports directly to the Secretary, through the Deputy Secretary. Until about 1985, the position was called the Assistant Secretary for Administration, but included similar duties, absent CFO duties. As a senior management official in the Department, the ASM/CFO has an active role in the oversight of the bureaus. This role is enhanced due to the ASM/CFO’s responsibilities for the Department’s budget, as well as Department-wide policy in the areas of human resources, EEO/diversity/inclusion, performance, financial management, privacy, information technology, emergency planning, small business goal achievement, and procurement.

The responsibilities of the ASM have evolved over the years. In the late 1990s, for example, the ASM/CFO supervised the Mint, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and the Treasurer of the United States, as well as the Office of Security, which included some of the duties of what would become the Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence in 2004. The Office of the ASM/CFO also played a key transition role following the passage of the Homeland Security Act in 2002, when several Treasury bureaus transferred to the Department of Homeland Security and the Justice

Officeholders[]

Name In office Appointed by President Secretary served under
David F. Eisner April 2018 - January 2021 Donald Trump Steven T. Mnuchin
Kody H. Kinsley July 2016 – Mar 2018 Barack Obama Jacob J. Lew

Steven T. Mnuchin

Brodi Fontenot Jan 2015 - June 2016 Barack Obama Jacob J. Lew
Nani A. Coloretti Nov 16, 2012 - Dec 8, 2014 Barack Obama Timothy Geithner

Jacob J. Lew

Dan Tangherlini July 2009 - April 2, 2012 Barack Obama Timothy Geithner
Peter B. McCarthy Aug 2007 - Jan 20, 2009 George W. Bush Henry Paulson
Sandra L. Pack Aug 2005 - Dec 2006 George W. Bush
Teresa Mullet Ressel Nov 2002 - Feb 2004 George W. Bush
Edward R. Kingman 2001–2002 George W. Bush
Lisa Ross 2000–2001 William J. Clinton
Nancy Killefer 1997–1999 William J. Clinton
George Muñoz 1993–1997 William J. Clinton

References[]

  1. ^ "Chief Financial Officers Council". cfo.gov. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  2. ^ "Performance Improvement Officers | PIC.gov". www.pic.gov. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
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