Realistic illustration of U.S. Army official Adam Telle launching a 27-step initiative to reduce bureaucracy and accelerate Corps of Engineers infrastructure projects.
Realistic illustration of U.S. Army official Adam Telle launching a 27-step initiative to reduce bureaucracy and accelerate Corps of Engineers infrastructure projects.
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Army civil works office rolls out 27-step ‘Building Infrastructure, Not Paperwork’ overhaul for Corps projects

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Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works Adam Telle has launched a 27-part efficiency initiative for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ civil works program, aiming to cut red tape, speed project delivery and sharpen how the agency communicates about what the president’s budget does—and does not—fund.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ civil works program is the target of a new Pentagon-backed efficiency push that officials say is designed to reduce delays and paperwork tied to water resources projects such as navigation improvements, dredging and other infrastructure work.

Adam Telle, the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works, announced the initiative—branded “Building Infrastructure, Not Paperwork”—on Feb. 23, 2026, according to a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers news release. The plan is organized into 27 initiatives grouped under five broad categories: maximizing delivery of national infrastructure, cutting red tape, focusing on efficiency, improving transparency and accountability, and prioritization.

In the release, Telle said the effort is intended to refocus the Corps on core missions, shorten permitting timelines and reduce “extraneous regulations and paperwork” that can slow project delivery. The Corps also said the policy changes are aimed at increasing transparency and accountability for project partners, the public and elected officials who make annual funding decisions.

The initiative is separate from the Corps’ emergency response missions, with the Corps stating that the changes do not affect its support for natural and manmade disasters.

Telle discussed the initiative and broader criticisms of how the Corps markets and manages its workload in an interview published by The Daily Wire, including concerns about how federal budgeting information is communicated to potential project sponsors. The Daily Wire article also quoted Telle criticizing what he described as an “out there to market” posture—encouraging more work rather than concentrating on delivering nationally strategic priorities.

On project costs, the Daily Wire report cited Telle’s criticism of the Port Everglades navigation project in South Florida. However, publicly available Corps project material describes a markedly smaller cost range than the multi‑billion‑dollar figure cited in the Daily Wire interview: a Corps fact sheet for Port Everglades lists an estimated total cost of about $517.6 million (with an estimated federal share of about $367.2 million), and notes the project includes channel widening and deepening as well as environmental mitigation and related analysis.

Separately, the Trump administration has promoted broader cost-cutting efforts through the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) within the Defense Department. The Pentagon said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced $5.1 billion in contract cuts on April 10, 2025, following an earlier announcement on March 20, 2025, of $580 million in cuts. In the April announcement, Hegseth said the savings would be redirected to priorities such as health care for service members and their families, and he specifically criticized high-cost business process consulting.

Army Secretary Dan Driscoll has also argued publicly that bureaucratic inefficiencies can slow innovation and put soldiers at risk, calling for faster delivery of needed capabilities.

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Discussions on X about the 'Building Infrastructure, Not Paperwork' 27-step overhaul for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers projects are primarily positive from official USACE accounts, highlighting reduced bureaucracy, faster project delivery, and alignment with emergency responses. Journalists note Adam Telle's emphasis on cutting red tape in related infrastructure efforts. No significant negative or skeptical reactions to the specific initiative were found in recent high-engagement posts.

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Federal employees leaving a government building amid workforce cuts, with officials and charts illustrating reductions under the Trump administration's DOGE initiative.
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Trump administration accelerates federal workforce cuts as DOGE-led push reshapes agencies

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By year’s end, the civilian federal workforce is projected to fall from about 2.4 million to roughly 2.1 million employees, according to Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor. The cuts—championed by budget chief Russell Vought and the White House initiative dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency, which Elon Musk led for the first four months—have targeted agencies overseeing health, the environment, education, and financial regulation while expanding immigration enforcement.

The Department of War cut its civilian workforce by more than 10% in 2025, dropping from 794,538 to 712,677 employees, according to Pentagon data. This reduction, led by Secretary Pete Hegseth under President Donald Trump, aimed to eliminate redundancies and refocus resources on military priorities. The changes emphasized voluntary departures to minimize involuntary separations.

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The Senate is pushing for a sweeping reorganization of the Department of Public Works and Highways to curb corruption and address procurement loopholes following recent Blue Ribbon committee investigations.

Secretary Vince Dizon appealed to the bicameral conference committee to restore P45 billion in the Department of Public Works and Highways' 2026 budget. He argued that the Senate's reductions were based on flawed calculations regarding construction costs. Thousands of projects could be scaled back if the funding is not reinstated.

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Three officials from the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) second engineering district in Pampanga have been relieved of their duties for allegedly demanding up to eight percent commissions from government contracts. Public Works Secretary Vince Dizon announced the move during an inspection of the Candating flood control project in Arayat. A full investigation will determine if the allegations hold true.

The Trump administration has issued a final rule allowing the reclassification of about 50,000 federal employees in policy roles, stripping them of civil service protections and making them at-will employees. Effective March 9, the change aims to improve government efficiency but faces strong opposition and legal challenges for potentially politicizing the bureaucracy. Critics warn it could undermine the nonpartisan nature of the civil service.

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Department of Public Works and Highways Secretary Vince Dizon announced that the agency will scrap the so-called 'parametric formula' used for district budget allocations amid corruption allegations. The reform aims to base projects on actual needs rather than political influence. He expressed confidence that President Marcos will approve the changes.

 

 

 

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