Press release from the issuing company
Washington, D.C. – U.S. Government Publishing Office (GPO) Acting Deputy Director Andrew M. Sherman has announced his retirement following 38 years of Federal service, all at the GPO. Following his departure at the end of June, GPO’s Chief Administrative Officer, Herbert H. Jackson, Jr., will become Acting Deputy Director, in accordance with the GPO’s succession directive.
Sherman has served under nine heads of the GPO during his career. He joined the agency in 1980 as a budget analyst. In 1985 he began working as a staff assistant reporting to the Office of the Director (formerly the Office of the Public Printer), gaining extensive experience with the agency’s budget, appropriations, legislation, strategic planning, and congressional and public affairs operations. He was named Director of Congressional and Public Affairs in 1997 by Public Printer Michael DiMario, Chief Communications Officer by Public Printer William Boarman in 2011, and Chief of Staff by Public Printer and then Director Davita Vance-Cooks in 2013. Following the retirement of Deputy Director Jim Bradley in March 2018, Sherman became the head of the agency as Acting Deputy Director.
Throughout his career Sherman was directly involved in GPO’s transformation from a print-centric to a digital-centric agency as a major participant in congressionally-sponsored studies of GPO by the Office of Technology Assessment and the National Academy of Public Administration; in legislation to authorize digital operations at the GPO, convert GPO’s Congressional Record Indexers to the Civil Service, change GPO’s name to the Government Publishing Office, and provide appropriations to the GPO; and in reshaping GPO’s operations and staff to reduce costs and expand digital operations. For more than 20 years Sherman was the GPO’s principal liaison to the congressional Joint Committee on Printing, which oversees GPO, gaining the Committee’s approval for GPO’s annual spending plans and other investments, as well as for the wage agreements signed by GPO’s management and unions for GPO’s employees. For more than 30 years he authored GPO’s Annual Reports to Congress.
He worked directly on confirmation proceedings for four Public Printers, coordinating between the White House and the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. Sherman played a significant role in making space within GPO’s buildings available to other agencies; two current projects involve the development of archival space within the GPO to house the congressional legislative archives of the National Archives and Records Administration, and to house the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped for the Library of Congress. With GPO Historian George Barnum he contributed to the writing of an official history of the GPO, Keeping America Informed, published in 2011 and revised in 2016, as well as Picturing the Big Shop, a book of over 200 of GPO’s historical photographs, released in 2016. Sherman also participated in the revision and issuance of three editions of GPO’s popular Style Manual, for 2000, 2008, and 2016.
Sherman is a past recipient of the Public Printer’s Meritorious and Distinguished Service awards. From 1986 to 2011, he served as GPO’s representative to the National Government Publishing Association, an organization of state and other printing and publishing organizations, where successively he held the offices of Eastern regional director, treasurer, and president.
“It’s been a real privilege to work at the agency whose mission is Keeping America Informed,” said Sherman. “In my view there is no finer group of men and women in the Federal Government than those employed at the GPO, where their expertise, dedication, and willingness to advance technology change in serving Congress, Federal agencies, and the American public is unmatched. I’m proud to have worked with them and wish them all the best.”
Sherman holds a B.A. and an M.A. in Government from The University of Virginia. Prior to joining the GPO he was a graduate teaching assistant in American history at Old Dominion University.
© 2024 WhatTheyThink. All Rights Reserved.