Waste in Government—always a nice term, sounds like it means something.
What you will see as you go through these readings is the difficulty of agreement
(as understood through public opinion polls)–what government waste means, or
what we agree upon to exactly go after. The Government Accountability Office
(GAO) report is quite long —you want to read parts of it but not
necessarily the whole thing. What you need to get out of that report is to
understand the specifics associated with going after waste (or in the case of that
report—duplication or overlap).
Talk about the difficulty of agreement on the public side regarding
going after government waste (as you can understand it through the readings
addressing public opinion polls) and then get to specifics on what to go after, why,
and how. A friend (an elected official) jokes about government critics: That
particular person defines a government critic as someone with a driver’s license,
they just don’t know where they are going.
demonstrate that you have some understanding of the issues associated with
where you are going. It is easy to criticize in some general, vague sort of way—it
is difficult to get to specifics. “Big government” is always one of those terms that
seems to mean something on a nightly cable news show, the specifics on how
exactly to cut “waste” out of Social Security, Medicare, defense spending, well
that’s a different story.
A 2008 survey asked respondents if they had used any of 21 different Federal
government social programs including Social Security, unemployment benefits, or
student loans. Of those respondents, 94 percent said they had not used any
government social program, when, in fact, they had. The average number of
programs used was four. The actor, Craig Nelson, in an interview with Glen Beck,
when he was on FOX News, said, “I’ve been on food stamps, anyone help me
out?” seeming to miss the contradiction of his statement. No doubt, Nelson (as
well as Beck) think of themselves as critics of Big Government that is filled with
waste, but probably have difficulty getting to the specifics—the generalizations
are good enough. the generalizations are not good enough—
get to the specifics: What are you addressing and why and how do you look at the
money saved?
1) should be a minimum of five typed double spaced)
2) Do discuss some of the specifics in the GAO report
3) After reading the pieces addressing public opinion polls how do they give
you some insight into how to understand what can and cannot be
accomplished. You need to understand that the public, in many ways, is a
brake upon what public officials can achieve: Public officials cannot be way
out in front of the public, public opinion, or public understanding, often
provides the parameters within which policy options, policy choices, can
feasibly exist.
4) Notice how the readings address the topic of government waste quite
differently than what exists on the nightly cable news shows—do
incorporate those readings
Report to Congressional Addressees
March 2011
GAO-11-318SP
United States Government Accountability Office
GAO
Opportunities to
Reduce Potential
Duplication in
Government
Programs, Save Tax
Dollars, and Enhance
Revenue
1
Contents
Letter
Section I GAO Identified Areas of Potential Duplication,
Overlap, and Fragmentation, Which, if Effectively
Addressed, Could Provide Financial and
Other Benefits 5
Section II Other GAO-Identified Cost-Saving and
Revenue-Enhancing Areas 155
Appendix I List of Congressional Addressees 334
Appendix II Objectives, Scope, and Methodology 336
Page i GAO-11-318SP
Abbreviations
AC Bureau of Arms Control
AFR Agency Financial Report
AFV alternative fuel vehicle
AHLTA Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology
Application
ARS Agricultural Research Service
ATF Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
AUR Automated Underreporter Program
BEA business enterprise architecture
BEST Border Enforcement Security Task Force
BLM Bureau of Land Management
BOEMRE Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement
BPA blanket purchase agreement
BRAC base realignment and closure
CBP Customs and Border Protection
CDE Community Development Entities
CFDA Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
CDFI Community Development Financial Institution
CERP Commander’s Emergency Response Program
CIO Chief Information Officer
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
COBRA Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1985
Commerce Department of Commerce
Corrosion Office Office of Corrosion Policy and Oversight
DHS Department of Homeland Security
DLA Defense Logistics Agency
DNDO Domestic Nuclear Detection Office
DOD Department of Defense
DOT Department of Transportation
DSH Disproportionate Share Hospital
EAS Essential Air Service
Education Department of Education
EDA Economic Development Administration
EHR Electronic Health Record
Energy Department of Energy
EPA Environmental Protection Agency
EPAct Energy Policy Act
FAM Foreign Affairs Manual
Page ii GAO-11-318SP
FBI Federal Bureau of Investigation
FCC Federal Communications Commission
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency
FFS fee-for-service
FMCSA Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
FPDS-NG Federal Procurement Data System-Next Generation
FSIS Food Safety and Inspection Service
FSSI Federal Strategic Sourcing Initiative
FTA Federal Transit Administration
FTHBC First-Time Homebuyer Credit
Fund Universal Service Fund
GAGAS generally accepted government auditing standards
GHG greenhouse gas
GPO Government Pension Offset
GPRA Government Performance and Results Act
GSA General Services Administration
HHA home health agency
HHS Department of Health and Human Services
HUBZone Historically Underutilized Business Zone
HUD Department of Housing and Urban Development
IBET Integrated Border Enforcement Team
IED improvised explosive device
IG Inspector General
Interior Department of the Interior
IPERA Improper Payments Elimination and Recovery Act
IRS Internal Revenue Service
ISN Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation
ISR intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
IT information technology
JIEDDO Joint IED Defeat Organization
Justice Department of Justice
Labor Department of Labor
MAS Multiple Award Schedule
MEA math error authority
MHS Military Health System
MPPR multiple procedure payment reduction
NAFTA North American Free Trade Agreement
NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration
NMTC New Markets Tax Credit
NP Bureau of Nonproliferation
NSLP National School Lunch Program
Page iii GAO-11-318SP
OFPP Office of Federal Procurement Policy
OMB Office of Management and Budget
ONRR Office of Natural Resources and Revenue
O&S operating and support
PAR Performance and Accountability Report
PBL performance-based logistics
PMS Payment Management System
RAC recovery audit contractor
RFS renewable fuel standard
ROI return on investment
S&T Science and Technology Directorate
SBA Small Business Administration
SNAP Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
SPOT Screening of Passengers by Observation Techniques
SSA Social Security Administration
State Department of State
STEM science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
TANF Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
Treasury Department of the Treasury
TSA Transportation Security Administration
USAC Universal Service Administrative Company
USAID U.S. Agency for International Development
USDA Department of Agriculture
USICH U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness
VA Department of Veterans Affairs
VC Bureau of Verification and Compliance
VCI Bureau of Verification, Compliance and
Implementation
VEETC Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit
VistA Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology
Architecture
WEP Windfall Elimination Provision
WIA Workforce Investment Act
WIC Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women,
Infants, and Children
This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright protection in the
United States. The published product may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety
without further permission from GAO. However, because this work may contain
copyrighted images or other material, permission from the copyright holder may be
necessary if you wish to reproduce this material separately.
Page iv GAO-11-318SP
Page 1 GAO-11-318SP
United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548
March 1, 2011
Congressional Addressees:
This is GAO’s first annual report to Congress in response to a new
statutory requirement that GAO identify federal programs, agencies,
offices, and initiatives, either within departments or governmentwide,
which have duplicative goals or activities. Congress asked GAO to conduct
this work and to report annually on our findings.1 This work will inform
government policymakers as they address the rapidly building fiscal
pressures facing our national government. GAO’s most recent update of its
annual simulations of the federal government’s fiscal outlook underscores
the need to address the long-term sustainability of the federal
government’s fiscal policies. 2 Since the end of the recent recession, the
gross domestic product has grown slowly and unemployment has
remained at a high level. While the economy is still recovering and in need
of careful attention, there is widespread agreement on the need to look not
only at the near term but also at steps that begin to change the long-term
fiscal path as soon as possible without slowing the recovery. With the
passage of time, the window to address the challenge narrows and the
magnitude of the required changes grows. GAO’s simulations show
continually increasing levels of debt that are unsustainable over time
absent changes in current fiscal policies.
The objectives of this report are to (1) identify federal programs or
functional areas where unnecessary duplication, overlap, or fragmentation
exists, the actions needed to address such conditions, and the potential
financial and other benefits of doing so; and (2) highlight other
opportunities for potential cost savings or enhanced revenues. To meet
these objectives, we are including 81 areas for consideration based on
related GAO work. This report is divided into two sections. Section I
presents 34 areas where agencies, offices, or initiatives have similar or
overlapping objectives or provide similar services to the same populations;
or where government missions are fragmented across multiple agencies or
1Pub. L. No. 111-139, § 21, 124 Stat. 29 (2010), 31 U.S.C. § 712 Note.
2GAO, The Federal Government’s Long-Term Fiscal Outlook: Fall 2010 Update,
GAO-11-201SP (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 15, 2010). Additional information on the federal
fiscal outlook, federal debt, and the outlook for the state and local government sector is
available at: www.gao.gov/special.pubs/longterm/.
Comptroller General
of the United States
programs. These areas span a range of government missions: agriculture,
defense, economic development, energy, general government, health,
homeland security, international affairs, and social services. Within and
across these missions, this report touches on hundreds of federal
programs, affecting virtually all major federal departments and agencies.
Overlap and fragmentation among government programs or activities can
be harbingers of unnecessary duplication. Reducing or eliminating
duplication, overlap, or fragmentation could potentially save billions of tax
dollars annually and help agencies provide more efficient and effective
services. The areas identified in this report are not intended to represent
the full universe of duplication, overlap, or fragmentation within the
federal government. We will continue to identify additional issues in future
reports.
Given today’s fiscal environment, Section II of this report summarizes 47
additional areas—beyond those directly related to duplication, overlap, or
fragmentation—describing other opportunities for agencies or Congress to
consider taking action that could either reduce the cost of government
operations or enhance revenue collections for the Treasury. These cost-
savings and revenue opportunities also span a wide range of federal
government agencies and mission areas. The issues raised in both sections
were drawn from GAO’s prior and ongoing work.
Many of the issues included in this report are focused on activities that are
contained within single departments or agencies. In those cases, agency
officials can generally achieve cost savings or other benefits by
implementing existing GAO recommendations or by undertaking new
actions suggested in this report. However, a number of issues we have
identified, particularly in the duplication area, span multiple organizations
and therefore may require higher-level attention by the executive branch
or enhanced congressional oversight or legislative action.
In some cases, there is sufficient information available today to show that
if actions are taken to address individual issues summarized in this report,
financial benefits ranging from the tens of millions to several billion
dollars annually may be realized by addressing that single issue. For
example, while the Department of Defense is making limited changes to
the governance of its military health care system, broader restructuring
could result in annual savings of up to $460 million. Similarly, we
developed a range of options that could reduce federal revenue losses by
up to $5.7 billion annually by addressing potentially duplicative policies
designed to boost domestic ethanol production. Likewise, we identified a
number of other opportunities for cost savings or enhanced revenues such
Page 2 GAO-11-318SP
as reducing improper federal payments totaling billions of dollars, or
addressing the gap between taxes owed and paid, potentially involving
billions of dollars. Collectively, these savings and revenues could result in
tens of billions of dollars in annual savings, depending on the extent of
actions taken.
In other cases, precise estimates of the extent of unnecessary duplication
among certain programs, and the cost savings that can be achieved by
eliminating any such duplication, are difficult to specify in advance of
congressional and executive branch decision making. In some instances,
needed information on program performance is not readily available; the
level of funding in agency budgets devoted to overlapping or fragmented
programs is not clear; and the implementation costs that might be
associated with program consolidations or terminations, among other
variables, are difficult to predict. For example, we identified 44 federal
employment and training programs that overlap with at least one other
program in that they provide at least one similar service to a similar
population. However, our review of three of the largest programs showed
that the extent to which individuals receive the same services from these
programs is unknown due to program data limitations. In addition,
Congress’ determinations in making policy decisions and actions that
agencies may take would affect the potential savings associated with any
given option.3 Nevertheless, considering the amount of program dollars
involved in the issues we have identified, even limited adjustments could
result in significant savings.
Given the challenges noted above, careful, thoughtful actions will be
needed to address many of the issues discussed in this report, particularly
those involving potential duplication. Additionally, in January 2011, the
President signed the GPRA Modernization Act of 2010,4 updating the
almost two-decades-old Government Performance and Results Act
(GPRA).5 Implementing provisions of the new act—such as its emphasis
on establishing outcome-oriented goals covering a limited number of
crosscutting policy areas—could play an important role in clarifying
3The mandate calling for this report also asked GAO to identify specific areas where
Congress may wish to cancel budget authority it has previously provided—a process
known as rescission. To date, GAO’s work has not identified a basis for proposing specific
funding rescissions.
4Pub. L. No. 111-352, 124 Stat. 3866 (2011).
5Pub. L. No. 103-62, 107 Stat. 285 (1993).
Page 3 GAO-11-318SP
desired outcomes, addressing program performance spanning multiple
organizations, and facilitating future actions to reduce unnecessary
duplication, overlap, and fragmentation.
As the nation rises to meet the current fiscal challenges, GAO will
continue to assist Congress and federal agencies in reducing duplication,
overlap, or fragmentation; achieving cost savings; and enhancing revenues.
In GAO’s future annual reports, we will look at additional federal
programs to identify further instances of duplication, overlap, or
fragmentation, as well as other opportunities to reduce the cost of
government operations or increase revenues to the government. Likewise,
we will continue to monitor developments in the areas we have already
identified. Issues of duplication, overlap, and fragmentation will be
addressed in our routine audit work during the year as appropriate and
summarized in our annual reports.
This report is based substantially upon work conducted for ongoing audits
and previously completed GAO products, which were conducted in
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards or
with GAO’s quality assurance framework, as appropriate. We conducted
the work for the overall report from February 2010 through February 2011.
For issues being reported on for the first time, GAO sought comments
from the agencies involved and incorporated those comments as
appropriate. Appendix II contains additional details of our scope and
methodology.
This report was prepared under the coordination of Patricia Dalton, Chief
Operating Officer, who may be reached at (202) 512-5600, or
DaltonP@gao.gov; and Janet St. Laurent, Managing Director, Defense
Capabilities and Management, who may be reached at (202) 512-4300, or
StLaurentJ@gao.gov. Specific questions about individual issues may be
directed to the area contact listed at the end of each summary.
Gene L. Dodaro
Comptroller General
of the United States
Page 4 GAO-11-318SP
Section I: GAO Identified Areas of Potential
Duplication, Overlap, and Fragmentation,
Which, if Effectively Addressed, Could
Provide Financial and Other Benefits
Section I: GAO Identified Areas of Potential
Duplication, Overlap, and Fragmentation, Which, if
Effectively Addressed, Could Provide Financial and
Other Benefits
Table 1 presents 34 areas for consideration related to duplication, overlap,
or fragmentation from GAO’s recently completed and ongoing work. In
some cases, there is sufficient information to estimate potential savings or
other benefits if actions are taken to address individual issues. In those
cases, as noted below, financial benefits ranging from hundreds of millions
to several billion dollars annually may be realized. In other cases,
estimates of cost savings or other benefits would depend upon what
congressional and executive branch decisions were made, including how
certain GAO recommendations are implemented. Additionally, information
on program performance, the level of funding in agency budgets devoted
to overlapping or fragmented programs, and the implementation costs that
might be associated with program consolidations or terminations, are
factors that could impact actions to be taken as well as potential savings.
Following the table are summaries for each of the 34 areas listed. In
addition to summarizing what GAO has found, each area presents actions
for the executive branch or Congress to consider. Each of the summaries
contains a “Framework for Analysis” providing the methodology used to
conduct the work and a list of related GAO products for further
information.
Table 1: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation Areas Identified in This Report
Missions
Agriculture
Defense
Areas identified
1. Fragmented food safety system has caused inconsistent
oversight, ineffective coordination, and inefficient use of
resources
2. Realigning DOD’s military medical command structures
and consolidating common functions could increase efficiency
and result in projected savings ranging from $281 million to
$460 million annually
3. Opportunities exist for consolidation and increased
efficiencies to maximize response to warfighter urgent
needs
Federal agencies and programs where
duplication, overlap, or fragmentation
may occur
The Department of Agriculture’s (USDA)
Food Safety and Inspection Service and
the Food and Drug Administration are the
primary food safety agencies, but 15
agencies are involved in some way
Department of Defense (DOD), including
the Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Health Affairs, the Army, the Navy, and
the Air Force
At least 31 entities within DOD
Page
8
13
18
4. Opportunities exist to avoid unnecessary redundancies and
improve the coordination of counter-improvised explosive
device efforts
The services and other components
within DOD 23
5. Opportunities exist to avoid unnecessary redundancies and
maximize the efficient use of intelligence, surveillance, and
reconnaissance capabilities
6. A departmentwide acquisition strategy could reduce DOD’s
risk of costly duplication in purchasing Tactical Wheeled
Vehicles
Multiple intelligence organizations within
DOD
DOD, including Army and Marine Corps
26
31
Page 5 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Section I: GAO Identified Areas of Potential
Duplication, Overlap, and Fragmentation,
Which, if Effectively Addressed, Could
Provide Financial and Other Benefits
7. Improved joint oversight of DOD’s prepositioning programs
for equipment and supplies may reduce unnecessary
duplication
DOD including Air Force, Army, and
Marine Corps 34
8. DOD business systems modernization: opportunities exist
for optimizing business operations and systems
About 2,300 investments across DOD 38
Economic
development
9. The efficiency and effectiveness of fragmented economic
development programs are unclear
USDA, Department of Commerce
(Commerce), Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), and the Small
Business Administration (SBA); 80
programs involved
42
10. The federal approach to surface transportation is
fragmented, lacks clear goals, and is not accountable for
Five agencies within the Department of
Transportation (DOT); over 100 programs 48
results involved
11. Fragmented federal efforts to meet water needs in the U.S. USDA, Commerce’s Economic
Mexico border region have resulted in an administrative Development Administration,
burden, redundant activities, and an overall inefficient use of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
resources Department of Health and Human
Services’ (HHS) Indian Health Service,
52
Department of the Interior’s (Interior)
Bureau of Reclamation, HUD, and the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Energy 12. Resolving conflicting requirements could more effectively A number of agencies, including the
achieve federal fleet energy goals Department of Energy (Energy) and the
General Services Administration (GSA) 55
play a role overseeing the
governmentwide requirements
13. Addressing duplicative federal efforts directed at increasing EPA and the Department of the Treasury
domestic ethanol production could reduce revenue losses 59
by up to $5.7 billion annually
General
government
14. Enterprise architectures: key mechanisms for identifying
potential overlap and duplication
Governmentwide 62
15. Consolidating federal data centers provides opportunity to Twenty-four federal agencies
improve government efficiency and achieve significant cost 66
savings
16. Collecting improved data on interagency contracting to Governmentwide
minimize duplication could help the government leverage its 70
vast buying power
17. Periodic reviews could help identify ineffective tax Governmentwide
expenditures and redundancies in related tax and spending
programs, potentially reducing revenue losses by billions of
75
dollars
Health 18. Opportunities exist for DOD and VA to jointly modernize their
electronic health record systems
DOD and the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA)
79
19. VA and DOD need to control drug costs and increase joint
contracting whenever it is cost-effective
DOD and VA 82
20. HHS needs an overall strategy to better integrate nationwide
public health information systems
Multiple agencies, led by HHS 88
Homeland 21. Strategic oversight mechanisms could help integrate USDA, DOD, Department of Homeland
security/Law fragmented interagency efforts to defend against biological Security (DHS), HHS, Interior, and others;
enforcement threats more than two dozen presidentially 92
appointed individuals with responsibility for
biodefense
Page 6 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Section I: GAO Identified Areas of Potential
Duplication, Overlap, and Fragmentation,
Which, if Effectively Addressed, Could
Provide Financial and Other Benefits
22. DHS oversight could help eliminate potential duplicating DHS and other federal law enforcement
efforts of interagency forums in securing the northern partners 96
border
23. The Department of Justice plans actions to reduce overlap in Department of Justice’s Federal Bureau
explosives investigations, but monitoring is needed to of Investigation and Bureau of Alcohol, 101
ensure successful implementation Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
24. TSA’s security assessments on commercial trucking DHS’s Transportation Security
companies overlap with those of another agency, but efforts are Administration (TSA) and DOT 105
under way to address the overlap
25. DHS could streamline mechanisms for sharing security- Three information-sharing mechanisms
related information with public transit agencies to help funded by DHS and TSA 111
address overlapping information
26. FEMA needs to improve its oversight of grants and establish DHS’s Federal Emergency Management
a framework for assessing capabilities to identify gaps and Agency (FEMA); 17 programs involved 116
prioritize investments
International 27. Lack of information sharing could create the potential for Principally DOD and the U.S. Agency for
affairs duplication of efforts between U.S. agencies involved in International Development 120
development efforts in Afghanistan
28. Despite restructuring, overlapping roles and functions still
exist at State’s Arms Control and Nonproliferation Bureaus
Two bureaus within the Department of
State (State)
123
Social 29. Actions needed to reduce administrative overlap among USDA, DHS, and HHS; 18 programs
services domestic food assistance programs involved 125
30. Better coordination of federal homelessness programs may Seven federal agencies, including
minimize fragmentation and overlap Department of Education (Education),
HHS, and HUD; over 20 programs
129
involved
31. Further steps needed to improve cost-effectiveness and USDA, DOT, Education, Interior, HHS,
enhance services for transportation-disadvantaged persons HUD, Department of Labor (Labor), and 134
VA; 80 programs involved
Training, 32. Multiple employment and training programs: providing Education, HHS, and Labor, among
employment,
and
information on colocating services and consolidating
administrative structures could promote efficiencies
others; 44 programs involved 140
education
33. Teacher quality: proliferation of programs complicates Ten agencies including DOD, Education,
federal efforts to invest dollars effectively Energy, National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, and the National Science
144
Foundation; 82 programs involved
34. Fragmentation of financial literacy efforts makes
coordination essential
More than 20 different agencies; about 56
programs involved
151
Source: GAO analysis based on areas addressed in Section I of this report.
Page 7 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Food Safety System Has Caused
Inconsistent Oversight, Ineffective
Coordination, and Inefficient Use of
Resources
Fragmented Food Safety System Has Caused
Inconsistent Oversight, Ineffective Coordination, and
Inefficient Use of Resources
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The fragmented federal oversight of food safety has caused inconsistent
oversight, ineffective coordination, and inefficient use of resources.
Fifteen federal agencies collectively administer at least 30 food related
laws. Budget obligations for the two primary food safety agencies—the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS)—totaled
over $1.6 billion in fiscal year 2009. USDA is responsible for the safety of
meat, poultry, processed egg products, and catfish and FDA is responsible
for virtually all other food, including seafood. Three major trends also
create food safety challenges: (1) a substantial and increasing portion of
the U.S. food supply is imported, (2) consumers are eating more raw and
minimally processed foods, and (3) segments of the population that are
particularly susceptible to food-borne illnesses, such as older adults and
immune-compromised individuals, are growing.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
For more than a decade, GAO has reported on the fragmented nature of
federal food safety oversight. The 2010 nationwide recall of more than 500
million eggs due to Salmonella contamination highlights this
fragmentation. FDA is generally responsible for ensuring that shell eggs,
including eggs at farms such as those where the outbreak occurred, are
safe, wholesome, and properly labeled and FSIS is responsible for the
safety of eggs processed into egg products. In addition, while USDA’s
Agricultural Marketing Service sets quality and grade standards for the
eggs, such as Grade A, it does not test the eggs for microbes such as
Salmonella. Further, USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
helps ensure the health of the young chicks that are supplied to egg farms,
but FDA oversees the safety of the feed they eat.
Oversight is also fragmented in other areas of the food safety system. For
example, the 2008 Farm Bill assigned USDA responsibility for catfish, thus
splitting seafood oversight between USDA and FDA. In September 2009,
GAO also identified gaps in food safety agencies’ enforcement and
collaboration on imported food. Specifically, the import screening system
used by the Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) does not notify FDA’s or FSIS’s systems when imported
food shipments arrive at U.S. ports. Without access to time-of-arrival
information, FDA and FSIS may not know when shipments that require
examinations arrive at the port, which could increase the risk that unsafe
food could enter U.S. commerce. GAO recommended that the CBP
Commissioner ensure that CBP’s new screening system communicates
time-of-arrival information to FDA’s and FSIS’s screening systems and
GAO continues to monitor their actions.
Page 8 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Food Safety System Has Caused
Inconsistent Oversight, Ineffective
Coordination, and Inefficient Use of
Resources
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
GAO has made numerous recommendations intended to address the
fragmented federal oversight of the nation’s food supply. One key
recommendation in October 2001 was to reconvene the President’s
Council on Food Safety, which disbanded earlier that year. In response,
the President created the Food Safety Working Group in 2009 to
coordinate federal efforts and develop goals to make food safer. Through
the working group, which is co-chaired by the Secretaries of Health and
Human Services and Agriculture, federal agencies have begun
collaborating in certain areas that cross regulatory jurisdictions—
improving produce safety, reducing Salmonella contamination, and
developing food safety performance measures. However, as a
presidentially appointed working group its future is uncertain, and the
experience of the Council on Food Safety, which disbanded less than 3
years after it was created, illustrates that this type of approach can be
short lived. In addition, developing a results-oriented governmentwide
performance plan for food safety, commissioning a detailed analysis of
alternative organizational structures, and enacting comprehensive risk-
based food safety legislation could help address fragmentation. In January
2007, GAO said that what remains to be done is to develop a
governmentwide performance plan that is mission based, has a results
orientation, and provides a cross-agency perspective. In July 2009, the
Food Safety Working Group issued its key findings—a set of goals and
actions for improving food safety. While the key findings are mission
based and offer a cross-agency perspective, they are not fully results
oriented. Further, the working group has not provided information about
the resources that are needed to achieve its goals. As a next step, the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget, in consultation with the
federal agencies that have food safety responsibilities, should develop a
governmentwide performance plan for food safety that includes results-
oriented goals and performance measures and a discussion of strategies
and resources. Without a governmentwide performance plan for food
safety, decision makers do not have a comprehensive picture of the federal
government’s performance on this crosscutting issue. In addition, the
federal government does not formulate an overall budget for food safety,
making it difficult for Congress to monitor the federal resources allocated
to federal food safety oversight.
GAO, in October 2001, suggested that Congress consider commissioning
the National Academy of Sciences or a blue ribbon panel to conduct a
detailed analysis of alternative food safety organizational structures. A
detailed analysis has yet to be commissioned and GAO reiterated its
suggestion to Congress in February 2011. GAO and other organizations
Page 9 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Food Safety System Has Caused
Inconsistent Oversight, Ineffective
Coordination, and Inefficient Use of
Resources
have identified alternative organizational structures that could be analyzed
in more detail, including:
• a single food safety agency, either housed within an existing agency or
established as an independent entity, that assumes responsibility for all
aspects of food safety at the federal level;
• a single food safety inspection agency that assumes responsibility for
food safety inspection activities, but not other activities, under an
existing department, such as USDA or FDA;
• a data collection and risk analysis center for food safety that
consolidates data collected from a variety of sources and analyzes it at
the national level to support risk-based decision making; and
• a coordination mechanism that provides centralized, executive
leadership for the existing organizational structure, led by a central
chair who would be appointed by the president and have control over
resources.
GAO, the National Academy of Sciences, and others have also suggested
that Congress enact comprehensive risk-based food safety legislation. In
May 2004, GAO reported that such legislation can provide the foundation
for focusing federal oversight and resources on the most important food
safety problems from a public health perspective. New food safety
legislation that was signed into law in January 2011 strengthens a major
part of the food safety system and expands FDA’s oversight authority.
However, the law does not apply to the federal food safety system as a
whole and GAO reiterated its suggestion for comprehensive, risk-based
food safety legislation in February 2011. The European Union adopted
comprehensive food safety legislation in 2004 intended to create a single,
transparent set of food safety rules.
Although reducing fragmentation in federal food safety oversight is not
expected to result in significant cost savings, new costs may be avoided by
preventing further fragmentation, as illustrated by the approximately $30
million for fiscal years 2011 and 2012 that USDA officials had said they
would have to spend developing and implementing the agency’s new
congressionally mandated catfish inspection program. Subsequently, no
funding was proposed for the program in the President’s fiscal year 2012
budget because of the need for considerable stakeholder engagement and
regulatory development before its adoption and implementation. In
addition, GAO has reported that user fees are means of financing federal
Page 10 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Food Safety System Has Caused
Inconsistent Oversight, Ineffective
Coordination, and Inefficient Use of
Resources
services that can be designed to reduce the burden on tax payers and
promote economic efficiency and equity. The Congressional Budget Office
has estimated that if FSIS charged user fees, federal revenues would
increase by $902 million in fiscal year 2011 and could offset inspection
costs. FDA has proposed user fees in its fiscal year 2011 congressional
budget request that it estimates could increase revenues by almost $194
million and could enable the agency to expand its food safety efforts.
GAO recognizes that reorganizing federal food safety responsibilities is a
complex process. Further, GAO’s work on other agency mergers and
transformations indicates that reorganizing food safety could have short-
term disruptions and transition costs. However, reducing fragmentation
and overlap could result in a number of nonfinancial benefits. GAO
reported in March 2004 that integrating food safety oversight can create
synergy and economies of scale and can provide more focused and
efficient efforts to protect the nation’s food supply. In June 2008, GAO also
reported that other countries that reorganized their food safety systems
have experienced additional benefits, such as improved public confidence
in the systems. For example, GAO reported that industry and consumer
stakeholders generally had positive views of the reorganized food safety
systems and said that transparency had improved.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO
products listed below. In addition, GAO reviewed relevant food safety
reports and legislation, and interviewed officials from USDA, FDA, and the
Office of Management and Budget. GAO also collected and analyzed
information about the Food Safety Working Group, its activities, and its
plan for food safety, as well as alternative organizational structures for
food safety oversight.
Related GAO
Products
High-Risk Series: An Update. GAO-11-278. Washington, D.C.:
February 16, 2011.
Live Animal Imports: Agencies Need Better Collaboration to Reduce the
Risk of Animal-Related Diseases. GAO-11-9. Washington, D.C.:
November 8, 2010.
Food Safety: Agencies Need to Address Gaps in Enforcement and
Collaboration to Enhance Safety of Imported Food. GAO-09-873.
Washington, D.C.: September 15, 2009.
Page 11 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Food Safety System Has Caused
Inconsistent Oversight, Ineffective
Coordination, and Inefficient Use of
Resources
Seafood Fraud: FDA Program Changes and Better Collaboration among
Key Federal Agencies Could Improve Detection and Prevention.
GAO-09-258. Washington, D.C.: February 19, 2009.
Food Safety: Selected Countries’ Systems Can Offer Insights into
Ensuring Import Safety and Responding to Foodborne Illness.
GAO-08-794. Washington, D.C.: June 10, 2008.
Oversight of Food Safety Activities: Federal Agencies Should Pursue
Opportunities to Reduce Overlap and Better Leverage Resources.
GAO-05-213. Washington, D.C.: March 30, 2005.
Food Safety and Security: Fundamental Changes Needed to Ensure Safe
Food. GAO-02-47T. Washington, D.C.: October 10, 2001.
For additional information about this area, contact Lisa Shames at Area Contact
(202) 512-3841 or shamesl@gao.gov.
Page 12 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Realigning DOD’s Military Medical Command
Structures and Consolidating Common
Functions Could Increase Efficiency and
Reduce Costs
Realigning DOD’s Military Medical Command Structures
and Consolidating Common Functions Could Increase
Efficiency and Reduce Costs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Department of Defense (DOD) components provide health care to over
9.6 million eligible beneficiaries, including U.S. military personnel,
retirees, and their family members. With more than 130,000 military and
government medical professionals, a large network of private health care
providers, 59 DOD hospitals, and hundreds of clinics worldwide, DOD’s
collective Military Health System (MHS) manages more than 200,000
medical visits and fills more than 300,000 prescriptions per day.
Additionally, the MHS is an important source for education, military
medical training, and research and development. However, MHS costs
have more than doubled from $19 billion in fiscal year 2001 to $49 billion
in 2010 and are expected to increase to over $62 billion by 2015. Studies by
GAO and others over many years have identified opportunities to gain
efficiencies and save costs by consolidating administrative, management,
and clinical functions.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
The responsibilities and authorities for DOD’s military health system are
distributed among several organizations within DOD with no central
command authority or single entity accountable for minimizing costs and
achieving efficiencies. Under the MHS’s current command structure, the
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, the Army,
the Navy, and the Air Force each has its own headquarters and associated
support functions, such as information technology, human capital
management, financial activities, and contracting. Additionally, the three
services each have Surgeons General to oversee their deployable medical
forces and operate their own health care systems. Moreover, while the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs controls the Defense
Health Program budget, this office does not directly supervise the services’
medical personnel.
In 2005, GAO identified DOD’s health care system as an example of a key
challenge facing the U.S. government in the 21st century as well as an area
in which DOD could achieve economies of scale and improve delivery by
combining, realigning, or otherwise changing selected support functions.
In 2001, a RAND Corporation study on reorganizing the MHS uncovered at
least 13 studies since the 1940s that had addressed military health care
organization. All but three of those studies had either favored a unified
system or recommended a stronger central authority to improve
coordination among the services. However, DOD has taken limited actions
to date to consolidate common administrative, management, and clinical
functions within its MHS.
Page 13 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Realigning DOD’s Military Medical Command
Structures and Consolidating Common
Functions Could Increase Efficiency and
Reduce Costs
In 2005, DOD formed a working group to develop an implementation plan
for a joint medical command. This group in 2006 developed and evaluated
several reorganization alternatives to promote effectiveness and efficiency
in its medical command structure by increased sharing of resources, use of
common operating processes, and reduction in duplicative functions and
organizations. One alternative would have established a unified medical
command similar to DOD’s unified transportation command; the second
alternative would have established two separate commands—one to
provide operational/deployable medicine and another to provide
beneficiary care through military hospitals and contracted providers; and a
third alternative would have designated one of the military services to
provide all health care services across DOD.
Because of an inability to obtain a consensus among the services on which
alternative to implement, the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and
Readiness and the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
presented a new concept which, in November 2006, the Deputy Secretary of
Defense approved. This chosen concept directed seven smaller scale,
incremental reorganization efforts designed to minimize duplicative layers
of command and control where possible; reduce redundant efforts,
personnel, and expenses; and leverage efficiencies through combining
common service support functions being performed within each of the
services, such as finance, information management and technology, human
capital management, support, and logistics. However, the concept left the
existing command structures of the three services’ medical departments
over all military treatment facilities essentially unchanged. In updating its
previous reviews, GAO found that DOD officials have made varying levels of
progress in implementing four of the seven incremental steps.
More specifically, DOD is taking actions to (1) create a command, control,
and management structure in DOD’s base realignment and closure (BRAC)
markets (National Capital Area and San Antonio); (2) realign command
and control of the Joint Medical Education Training Center in San
Antonio; (3) colocate the Military Health System and service medical
headquarters; and (4) consolidate all medical research and development
under the Army Medical Research and Material Command. Progress on
these actions has been facilitated by the fact that three of them are related
to BRAC recommendations made in 2005 that DOD must complete by the
BRAC statutory deadline of September 2011. According to officials, DOD
has not implemented actions to (1) establish a Joint Military Health
Service Directorate under Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health
Affairs; (2) consolidate command and control in other locations with more
than one DOD component providing military health care services; and
Page 14 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Realigning DOD’s Military Medical Command
Structures and Consolidating Common
Functions Could Increase Efficiency and
Reduce Costs
(3) realign current TRICARE Management Activity to focus on health plan
management. The Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health
Affairs has not provided guidance on how and when to accomplish the
three remaining steps, and officials indicated that further action is not
likely to occur until the results of a broader, ongoing DOD-wide
organizational and efficiency assessment is completed.
For the three BRAC-related steps under way, DOD’s BRAC budget
reporting1 indicates a net annual savings of $275 million after full
implementation. However, DOD medical officials have expressed
uncertainty as to whether these savings will be achieved because of
changes that occurred within the MHS since the BRAC decision was made.
For example, they point out that the care of casualties from operations in
Iraq and Afghanistan and the congressional direction to provide “world
class health care” in the National Capital Region have all significantly
increased MHS costs.
Finally, GAO reported in July 2010 that DOD would benefit from enhanced
collaboration among the services in their medical personnel requirements
determination processes and recommended that DOD identify, develop,
and implement cross-service medical personnel standards for common
capabilities. The report made recommendations to each of the services to
improve their medical personnel requirements determination processes.
That report also recognized that while each of the services has unique
operational medical capabilities, the day-to-day operations at military
treatment facilities are very similar across the services and could be more
collaboratively managed, and that DOD should identify the common
medical capabilities that are shared across the services in their military
treatment facilities that would benefit from the development of cross-
service medical personnel standards. DOD replied that developing cross-
service standards in specific medical functional areas where there is
measurable benefit makes good sense, and the services generally agreed
with the need for improvements to their respective requirements
determination processes.
1DOD is required by section 2907 of the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Act of 1990,
Pub. L. No. 101-510 (as amended by section 2831(b) of Pub. L. No. 109-163 (2006) and
section 2711 of Pub. L. No. 110-417 (2008)) to, among other reporting requirements,
estimate the total expenditures required and cost savings to be achieved by each closure
and realignment. To calculate DOD’s expected BRAC annual savings, GAO used dollar
amounts obtained from DOD’s budget submission for fiscal year 2011.
Page 15 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Realigning DOD’s Military Medical Command
Structures and Consolidating Common
Functions Could Increase Efficiency and
Reduce Costs
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial
and Other Benefits
To reduce duplication in its command structure and eliminate redundant
processes that add to growing defense health care costs, DOD could take
action to further assess alternatives for restructuring the governance
structure of the military health care system. In 2007, GAO recommended
that DOD needed to demonstrate a sound business case for proceeding
with its chosen concept, including an analysis of benefits, costs, and risks
of implementing that choice. Although not explicitly stated, such an
analysis, to be complete, would require analyzing other alternatives such
as a unified medical command. These analyses have not been conducted,
and GAO’s ongoing review will seek to determine the extent to which DOD
has developed an approach for implementing the remaining actions in its
chosen concept. Without such actions, DOD is not in a sound position to
assure the Secretary of Defense and Congress that it made an informed
decision in implementing its chosen concept over other alternatives or
whether it will have the desired impact on DOD’s MHS or achieve
anticipated results.
In 2006, if DOD and the services had chosen to implement one of the three
other alternatives studied by the DOD working group, a May 2006 report
by the Center for Naval Analyses showed DOD could have achieved
significant savings. GAO’s adjustment of those projected savings from 2005
into 2010 dollars indicates those savings could range from $281 million to
$460 million annually depending on the alternative chosen and numbers of
military, civilian, and contractor positions eliminated. The report largely
focused on personnel as the primary source of potential savings or costs.2
However, the report indicated that these savings would require a long and
potentially costly transition period to be realized. Additionally, the report
stated that DOD’s ability to realize the potential savings depended
crucially on clear command and control to make the necessary changes.
In his selection of the chosen option in 2006, the Deputy Secretary of
Defense acknowledged that implementing the chosen concept may not
achieve the estimated level of savings of implementing a unified medical
structure but believed minimum annual savings of about $200 million
($221 million in 2010 dollars) was a realistic goal. Additionally, significant
cost avoidance from improved performance once changes had been
2The Center for Naval Analyses categorized the potential savings into the following 10
areas: health care operations; comptroller operations; information management and
information technologies; education and training; research and development; logistics;
strategic planning; human capital management; force health protection and environmental
health; and general headquarters.
Page 16 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Realigning DOD’s Military Medical Command
Structures and Consolidating Common
Functions Could Increase Efficiency and
Reduce Costs
implemented was anticipated. For example, in September 2010, DOD
officials told GAO that they had identified about $30 million in annual
savings from the reduction in contract medical staff among the newly
established joint hospitals in the National Capital Region—one of the seven
incremental steps of the chosen concept. Additionally, officials believe the
colocation of the medical headquarters will provide improved collaboration
and opportunities for consolidating their operations where possible.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on the GAO reports
listed below as well as work updating the extent to which DOD has
(1) conducted a cost benefit analysis of its chosen concept and
(2) implemented its 2006 chosen concept. To do this, GAO obtained,
reviewed, and discussed with DOD officials any analyses performed
related to the chosen concept or other alternatives subsequently
considered. Additionally, GAO reviewed DOD documents, policies,
directives, briefings, and concept papers related to DOD’s 2006 chosen
concept, as well as GAO’s prior findings and recommendations associated
with this effort. In meetings with officials from OSD, the services’ medical
departments, and other relevant offices, GAO obtained, analyzed, and
discussed documents related to the status, costs, and results of the seven
steps in the chosen concept. In obtaining oral comments, DOD officials
said that they generally agreed with the facts and findings in this analysis.
Related GAO
Products
Military Personnel: Enhanced Collaboration and Process Improvements
Needed for Determining Military Treatment Facility Medical Personnel
Requirements. GAO-10-696. Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2010.
Defense Health Care: DOD Needs to Address the Expected Benefits, Costs,
and Risks for Its Newly Approved Medical Command Structure.
GAO-08-122. Washington, D.C.: October 12, 2007.
Defense Health Care: Tri-Service Strategy Needed to Justify Medical
Resources for Readiness and Peacetime Care. GAO/HEHS-00-10.
Washington, D.C.: November 3, 1999.
For additional information about this area, contact Brenda S. Farrell at Area Contact
(202) 512-3604 or farrellb@gao.gov.
Page 17 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for Consolidation and
Increased Efficiencies to Maximize Response
to Warfighter
Urgent Needs
Opportunities Exist for Consolidation and Increased
Efficiencies to Maximize Response to Warfighter
Urgent Needs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Forces in Iraq and Afghanistan have faced significant risks of mission
failure and loss of life due to rapidly changing enemy threats. In response,
the Department of Defense (DOD) established urgent needs processes to
rapidly develop, modify, and field new capabilities, such as intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) technology, and counter-
improvised explosive devices (IED) systems. GAO identified at least 31
entities that play a role in DOD’s urgent needs processes and has
estimated funding for addressing urgent needs through those entities to be
at least $76.9 billion, since 2005.
GAO has identified challenges with the department’s fragmented guidance
and GAO and others have raised concerns about the numbers and roles of
the various entities and processes involved and the potential of overlap
and duplication. With the shift in priority for overseas operations from Iraq
to Afghanistan—a theater that may pose more complex long-term
challenges—deployed or soon-to-deploy units will likely continue to
request critical capabilities to help them accomplish their missions.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Over the past two decades, the fulfillment of urgent needs has evolved as a
set of complex processes within the Joint Staff, the Office of the Secretary
of Defense, each of the military services, and the combatant commands to
rapidly develop, equip, and field solutions and critical capabilities to the
warfighter. DOD’s experience with the rapidly evolving threats in Iraq and
Afghanistan has led to the expanded use of existing urgent needs
processes, the creation of new policies, and establishment of new
organizations to manage urgent needs and to expedite the development of
solutions to address them. However, DOD has not comprehensively
evaluated opportunities for consolidation across the department, even
though concerns have been raised by the Defense Science Board, GAO,
and others about the numbers and roles of the various entities and
processes involved and the potential of overlap and duplication. For
example, the Defense Science Board, in July and September 2009 reports,
found that DOD has done little to adopt urgent needs as a critical, ongoing
DOD institutional capability essential to addressing future threats, and has
provided recommendations to the department about potential
consolidations. Many DOD and military service officials stated that higher-
level senior leadership needs to take decisive action to evaluate the
breadth of DOD’s urgent needs activities to determine what opportunities
may exist for reducing unnecessary duplication in staff, information
technology, support, and funding.
Page 18 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for Consolidation and
Increased Efficiencies to Maximize Response
to Warfighter
Urgent Needs
Additionally, GAO found that overlap exists among urgent needs entities in
the roles they play as well as the capabilities for which they are
responsible. For example:
• There are numerous places for the warfighter to submit a request for an
urgently needed capability. Warfighters may submit urgent needs,
depending on their military service and the type of need, to one of the
following different entities: Joint Staff J/8, Army Deputy Chief of Staff
G/3/5/7, Army Rapid Equipping Force, Navy Fleet Forces Command or
Commander Pacific Fleet, Marine Corps Deputy Commandant for
Combat Development and Integration, Air Force Major Commands,
Special Operations Requirements and Resources, or the Joint IED
Defeat Organization. These entities then validate the submitted urgent
need request and thus allow it to proceed through their specific
process.
• Multiple entities reported a role in responding to similar types of
urgently needed capabilities. GAO identified eight entities focused on
responding to ISR capabilities, five entities focused on responding to
counter-IED capabilities, and six entities focused on responding to
communications, command and control, and computer technology. In
some cases, duplication of efforts may have occurred—see related
summaries in this report on the subjects of intelligence, surveillance,
and reconnaissance systems and counter-improvised explosive devices.
The department is hindered in its ability to identify key improvements,
including consolidation to reduce any overlap, duplication, or
fragmentation because it lacks a comprehensive approach to manage and
oversee the breadth of its urgent needs efforts. Specifically, DOD does not
have a comprehensive, DOD-wide policy that establishes a baseline and
provides a common approach for how all joint and military service urgent
needs are to be addressed—including key activities of the process such as
validation, execution, or tracking. For example, the Joint Staff, the Joint
IED Defeat Organization, the military services, and the Special Operations
Command have issued their own guidance that varies in terms of the key
activities associated with processing and meeting urgent needs—including
how an urgent needs statement is generated by the warfighter, validated as
an urgent requirement, and tracked after a solution is provided.
Furthermore, DOD does not have visibility over the full range of its urgent
needs efforts. For example, DOD cannot readily identify the cost of its
Page 19 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for Consolidation and
Increased Efficiencies to Maximize Response
to Warfighter
Urgent Needs
departmentwide urgent needs efforts, which is at least $76.9 billion1 since
2005 based on GAO’s analysis. Additionally, DOD does not have a
comprehensive tracking system, a set of universal metrics, and a senior-
level focal point to lead the department’s efforts to fulfill validated urgent
needs requirements. Without DOD-wide guidance and a focal point to lead
its efforts, DOD risks having duplicative, overlapping, and fragmented
efforts, which can result in avoidable costs.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
In the absence of a comprehensive DOD evaluation, GAO’s March 2011
report identified and analyzed several options, aimed at potential
consolidations and increased efficiencies in an effort intended to provide
ideas for the department to consider in streamlining its urgent needs
entities and processes. These options include the following:
• Consolidate into one entity, within the Office of the Secretary of
Defense, all the urgent needs processes of the services and DOD, while
keeping at the services’ program offices the development of solutions.
• Consolidate entities that have overlapping mission or capability
portfolios regarding urgent needs solutions.
• Establish a gatekeeper within each service to oversee all key activities
to fulfill a validated urgent needs requirement.
• Consolidate within each service any overlapping activities in the urgent
needs process.
The options GAO identified are not meant to be exhaustive or mutually
exclusive. Rather, DOD would need to perform its own analysis, carefully
weighing the advantages and disadvantages of options it identifies to
determine the optimal course of action. Additionally, it must be recognized
that many entities involved in the fulfillment of urgent needs have other
roles as well. However, until DOD performs such an evaluation, it will
remain unaware of opportunities for consolidation and increased
efficiencies in the fulfillment of urgent needs.
1Estimate is based on funding data provided by urgent needs-related entities responding to
our data collection instrument and includes funding for processing of urgent needs as well
as development of solutions and some acquisition costs.
Page 20 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for Consolidation and
Increased Efficiencies to Maximize Response
to Warfighter
Urgent Needs
GAO’s March 2011 report recommended that the department develop
comprehensive guidance that, among other things, creates a focal point to
lead its urgent needs efforts. Additionally, GAO recommended that DOD’s
Chief Management Officer evaluate potential options for consolidation to
reduce overlap, duplication, and fragmentation and take appropriate
action. DOD concurred with these recommendations. This is an issue that
may warrant continuing congressional oversight. Timely and effective
actions on these recommendations should improve DOD’s ability to
address urgent warfighter needs in the most efficient and cost-effective
manner by minimizing the risks of duplication, overlap, and fragmentation.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Warfighter Support: DOD’s Urgent Needs Processes Need a More
Comprehensive Approach and Evaluation for Potential Consolidation.
GAO-11-273. Washington, D.C.: March 1, 2011.
Warfighter Support: Improvements to DOD’s Urgent Needs Processes
Would Enhance Oversight and Expedite Efforts to Meet Critical
Warfighter Needs. GAO-10-460. Washington, D.C.: April 30, 2010.
Warfighter Support: Actions Needed to Improve Visibility and
Coordination of DOD’s Counter-Improvised Explosive Device Efforts.
GAO-10-95. Washington, D.C.: October 29, 2009.
Warfighter Support: Challenges Confronting DOD’s Ability to Coordinate
and Oversee Its Counter-Improvised Explosive Devices Efforts.
GAO-10-186T. Washington, D.C.: October 29, 2009.
Defense Management: More Transparency Needed over the Financial
and Human Capital Operations of the Joint Improvised Explosive
Device Defeat Organization. GAO-08-342. Washington, D.C.: March 6,
2008.
Defense Logistics: Lack of a Synchronized Approach between the Marine
Corps and Army Affected the Timely Production and Installation of
Marine Corps Truck Armor. GAO-06-274. Washington, D.C.: June 22, 2006.
Page 21 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for Consolidation and
Increased Efficiencies to Maximize Response
to Warfighter
Urgent Needs
Defense Logistics: Several Factors Limited the Production and
Installation of Army Truck Armor during Current Wartime Operations.
GAO-06-160. Washington, D.C.: March 22, 2006.
Defense Logistics: Actions Needed to Improve the Availability of Critical
Items during Current and Future Operations. GAO-05-275. Washington,
D.C.: April 8, 2005.
Defense Logistics: Preliminary Observations on the Effectiveness of
Logistics Activities during Operation Iraqi Freedom. GAO-04-305R.
Washington, D.C.: December 18, 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact William M. Solis at Area Contact
(202) 512-8365 or solisw@gao.gov.
Page 22 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Improve the Coordination
of Counter-Improvised Explosive Device
Efforts
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Improve the Coordination of
Counter-Improvised Explosive Device Efforts
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Improvised explosive devices (IED) continue to be the number one threat
to U.S. troops. IED incidents in Afghanistan numbered 1,128 in the month
of May 2010—a 120 percent increase over the prior year. In addition to
Afghanistan incidents, the IED threat is increasingly expanding throughout
the globe with over 300 IED events per month worldwide, according to the
Joint IED Defeat Organization (JIEDDO). The Department of Defense
(DOD) created this organization in 2006, reporting directly to the Deputy
Secretary of Defense, to lead and coordinate all of DOD’s counter-IED
efforts. While Congress has appropriated over $17 billion to JIEDDO
through fiscal year 2010 to address the IED threat, other DOD
components, including the Armed Services, have devoted at least
$1.5 billion to develop their own counter-IED solutions.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
DOD created JIEDDO to lead and coordinate all of DOD’s counter-IED
efforts, but many of the organizations engaged in the counter-IED-defeat
effort prior to the creation of JIEDDO have continued to develop,
maintain, and expand their own IED-defeat capabilities. GAO has
preliminarily identified several instances in which DOD entities operate
independently and may have developed duplicate counter-IED capabilities.
For example, both the Army and the Marine Corps continue to develop
their own counter-IED mine rollers with full or partial JIEDDO funding.
The Marine Corps’ mine roller per unit cost is about $85,000 versus a cost
range of $77,000 to $225,000 per unit for the Army mine roller. However
officials disagree about which system is most effective, and DOD has not
conducted comparative testing and evaluation of the two systems.
Additionally, JIEDDO does not adequately involve the Services in its
process to select initiatives. For example, the Navy developed a directed
energy technology to fill a critical theater capability gap, yet JIEDDO later
underwrote the Air Force’s development of the same technology for use in
a different system. However, the Air Force has now determined that its
system will not meet requirements and has deferred fielding it pending
further study. This may have a negative impact on the continued
development of this technology by the Navy or others for use in theater.
For example, according to DOD officials, during the recent testing of the
Air Force’s system, safety concerns were noted unique to that system that
may limit warfighters’ willingness to accept the technology.
Eliminating unnecessary duplication and enabling effective coordination in
counter-IED efforts is hindered, in part, because neither JIEDDO nor any
other DOD organization has full visibility over all of DOD’s counter-IED
efforts. GAO has recommended that DOD establish a DOD-wide database
for all counter-IED initiatives to establish comprehensive visibility,
Page 23 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Improve the Coordination
of Counter-Improvised Explosive Device
Efforts
however, DOD has yet to develop such a tool. According to DOD officials,
DOD had initiated a database—the Technology Matrix—to establish a
comprehensive list of counter-IED efforts and the organizations sponsoring
these efforts; however, DOD has not required its various organizations
involved in developing counter-IED solutions to use this database nor
otherwise taken action to ensure these organizations provide information to
JIEDDO on their respective counter-IED efforts. Therefore, the database
has not been as comprehensive as intended. To date, DOD’s senior
leadership has not taken adequate action to facilitate improved visibility,
coordination, and authority for JIEDDO to address these shortcomings. This
lack of leadership attention may be another key factor contributing to the
lack of full visibility and effective coordination of the wide range of counter-
IED measures conducted throughout DOD. Consequently, DOD components
and the Services continue to pursue counter-IED efforts independent of one
another that may be redundant or overlapping.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
DOD has taken steps to address several of GAO’s prior recommendations
regarding the improvement of its counter-IED programs, such as revising
JIEDDO’s process for evaluating and implementing counter-IED solutions.
However, 5 years after its coordination efforts began through JIEDDO,
DOD has still not achieved full visibility over all of its counter-IED
investments and resources nor has it required comprehensive data from all
DOD components and the Services to enable effective coordination.
JIEDDO has encountered difficulty obtaining information on all counter-
IED efforts, in part, because according to JIEDDO officials, the Services
and components are not inclined to share this information. Therefore,
DOD’s senior leadership, to include the Deputy Secretary of Defense,
should consider what actions the department can take to assure that
JIEDDO can centrally collect information and coordinate efforts and
whether it should enhance JIEDDO’s tools to ensure all information on
DOD-wide counter-IED programs is centrally collected and evaluated to
limit unnecessary duplication, overlap, and fragmentation. DOD leadership
should also take a more active role to ensure investment decisions of each
of the individual counter-IED activities are consistent with DOD’s
overarching counter-IED goals and objectives and that they are pursued in
a coordinated and efficient manner.
The information contained in this analysis is based on prior GAO products Framework for
below, as well as GAO’s ongoing work on DOD’s counter-IED efforts. As part
Analysis of this ongoing work GAO will comprehensively identify, to the extent
possible, all counter-IED organizations and efforts within DOD, and collect
Page 24 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Improve the Coordination
of Counter-Improvised Explosive Device
Efforts
quantitative data on these efforts such as the funds invested and the number
of persons engaged in these efforts. Using these data, GAO will evaluate the
nature and extent of any overlap or duplication, as well as the potential for
consolidation, improved coordination, or other efficiencies. GAO is also
evaluating DOD’s progress in improving visibility over all counter-IED efforts.
Related GAO
Products
Warfighter Support: DOD’s Urgent Needs Processes Need a More
Comprehensive Approach and Evaluation for Potential Consolidation.
GAO-11-273. Washington, D.C.: March 1, 2011.
Warfighter Support: Actions Needed to Improve Visibility and
Coordination of DOD’s Counter-Improvised Explosive Device Efforts.
GAO-10-95. Washington, D.C.: October 29, 2009.
Warfighter Support: Challenges Confronting DOD’s Ability to Coordinate
and Oversee Its Counter-Improvised Explosive Devices Efforts.
GAO-10-186T. Washington, D.C.: October 29, 2009.
Defense Management: More Transparency Needed over the Financial
and Human Capital Operations of the Joint Improvised Explosive
Device Defeat Organization. GAO-08-342. Washington, D.C.:
March 6, 2008.
Defense Logistics: Lack of a Synchronized Approach between the Marine
Corps and Army Affected the Timely Production and Installation of
Marine Corps Truck Armor. GAO-06-274. Washington, D.C.: June 22, 2006.
Defense Logistics: Several Factors Limited the Production and
Installation of Army Truck Armor during Current Wartime Operations.
GAO-06-160. Washington, D.C.: March 22, 2006.
Defense Logistics: Actions Needed to Improve the Availability of Critical
Items during Current and Future Operations. GAO-05-275. Washington,
D.C.: April 8, 2005.
Defense Logistics: Preliminary Observations on the Effectiveness of
Logistics Activities during Operation Iraqi Freedom. GAO-04-305R.
Washington, D.C.: December 18, 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact William M. Solis at Area Contact
(202) 512-8365 or solisw@gao.gov.
Page 25 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Maximize the Efficient Use
of Intelligence, Surveillance, and
Reconnaissance Capabilities
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Maximize the Efficient Use of
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance
Capabilities
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
To plan and execute military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, military
commanders depend on intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
(ISR) systems to collect, process, and disseminate timely and accurate
information on adversaries’ capabilities and vulnerabilities. The
Department of Defense’s (DOD) ISR enterprise consists of multiple
intelligence organizations that individually plan for, acquire, and operate
manned and unmanned airborne, space-borne, maritime, and ground-
based ISR systems. The success of ISR systems at providing key
information has led to increased demand, and DOD continues to invest in
ISR programs. For example, DOD requested about $6.1 billion in fiscal
year 2010 for unmanned aircraft programs alone. DOD is further
examining its airborne ISR budget needs for fiscal year 2012 and beyond.
Further, GAO has reported since 2005 that ISR activities are not integrated
and efficient; effectiveness may be compromised by lack of visibility into
operational use of ISR assets; and agencies could better collaborate in the
acquisition of new capabilities.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
ISR activities cut across services and defense agencies, and no single entity
at the departmental level has responsibility, authority, and control over
investments to prioritize resources to meet joint priority requirements. The
ISR enterprise exhibits extensive, structural fragmentation with a high
number of separate organizations sharing the same roles. For example,
multiple ISR organizations conduct strategic planning, budgeting, and data
analysis across intelligence disciplines. Although DOD has designated the
Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence to manage ISR investments as a
departmentwide portfolio, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology, and Logistics has been designated to lead the task force
responsible for oversight of issues related to the management and
acquisition of unmanned aircraft systems that collect ISR data. In addition,
as the ISR portfolio manager, the Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence has only advisory authority and cannot direct the services or
agencies to make changes in their investment plans.
Further, two key factors make tracking DOD’s ISR spending difficult. First,
funding for DOD’s ISR capabilities can come from several sources,
including the Military Intelligence Program, the National Intelligence
Program, and service budgets. Second, each service maintains or develops
its own requirements process, budget, and strategic plans. For example,
each service identifies its requirements and prioritizes spending for its
equipment and personnel needs, and tracks and accounts for ISR funding
differently.
Page 26 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Maximize the Efficient Use
of Intelligence, Surveillance, and
Reconnaissance Capabilities
The Secretary of Defense has identified ISR as an area of scrutiny for
potential cost savings in the military intelligence program budget, which
totals $27 billion in spending for fiscal year 2010 including ISR capabilities
and personnel. In addition, the National Intelligence Program budget of
$53.1 billion includes some resources for DOD ISR activities. Since 1988,
GAO has reported on the potential for duplication and fragmentation in
DOD’s unmanned ISR systems. Service-driven requirements and funding
processes continue to hinder integration and efficiency and contribute to
unnecessary duplication in addressing warfighter needs. Although several
unmanned aircraft systems have achieved some commonality among the
airframes they use, most are pursuing service-unique subsystems and
components. The lack of collaboration and commonality among the
services has led to duplicative costs for designing and manufacturing ISR
systems, and has resulted in inefficiencies in the contracting and
acquisition processes. For example in 2005, the Army initiated a
development program with the same contractor for a variant of the Air
Force Predator estimated to cost nearly $570 million, although the
Predator was already successfully providing capabilities to the warfighter.
Similarly, in 2009 GAO reported that, although the Navy expected to save
time and money by using the Air Force’s existing Global Hawk airframe,
the Navy also planned to spend over $3 billion to develop maritime
surveillance capabilities. Conversely, the Marine Corps avoided the cost of
initial system development and was able to quickly deliver a useful
capability to the warfighter by choosing to procure existing Army Shadow
systems rather than developing its own unmanned aircraft.
DOD has established numerous organizations and initiatives intended to
integrate the determination of requirements, development, acquisition, and
operation of ISR systems to address joint and service-specific needs, but
these efforts have not had the desired effect of minimizing fragmentation
and overlap in its ISR enterprise. For example, although the Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence, as capability portfolio manager,
updated the congressionally directed ISR Integration Roadmap, the
Roadmap does not represent a comprehensive ISR architecture to guide
service investments to meet joint needs. For example, the Roadmap does
not enable comparison and tradeoffs between intelligence platforms and
capabilities. In addition, the Joint Requirements Oversight Council, which
is charged with validating requirements and approving proposals for new
capabilities to meet joint capability gaps, has been generally ineffective in
ensuring that the services collaborate in developing capabilities for joint
requirements.
Page 27 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Maximize the Efficient Use
of Intelligence, Surveillance, and
Reconnaissance Capabilities
In 2010, the Joint Staff launched a decision support tool intended to
catalog existing airborne ISR capabilities and validate new requirements.
This tool could help DOD prioritize investments in new programs and
make tradeoffs among capabilities that could result in cost savings, but it
is uncertain whether the effort will receive funding for expanding the
database to include other ISR assets and improve functionality.
Meanwhile, DOD continues to invest in ISR capabilities that may not be
the most efficient or effective use of resources. Further, although DOD has
invested heavily in capabilities to collect ISR data, it has not invested
proportionally in the capabilities that would enable it to process and use
the information. Weaknesses in the military services’ ability to process and
securely share ISR data have led to gaps in or duplicative collection efforts
and contributed to continuing warfighter demands for ISR assets to
support their missions.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
DOD has taken steps to improve ISR management, but these actions have
not had the desired effect. To develop a more fully integrated approach to
minimizing fragmentation, overlap, and duplication in its ISR enterprise,
DOD could align DOD-wide strategic goals, identify performance
measures, and establish linkages between ISR acquisition plans and
strategic goals to inform investment decisions.
Since 2005, GAO has identified challenges with DOD’s ISR enterprise and
made a number of recommendations to assist DOD in improving its ISR
management and reducing unnecessary duplication and overlap. DOD has
taken some positive steps to address GAO’s recommendations, such as
recent military service efforts to acquire some common unmanned aircraft
and sensors and develop performance measures, but its efforts are limited
and have not yet improved its ability to integrate ISR requirements
generation, development and acquisition, or utilization. In keeping with
GAO’s previous recommendations, DOD could take several actions to
develop a more fully integrated approach to minimize fragmentation,
overlap, and duplication in its ISR enterprise. Specifically, DOD could do
the following:
• Develop an integrated ISR architecture, including manned and
unmanned systems, to align DOD-wide strategic goals.
• Continue to develop tools—such as the Joint Staff’s decision support
tool—and performance measures to inform investment decisions.
Page 28 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Maximize the Efficient Use
of Intelligence, Surveillance, and
Reconnaissance Capabilities
• Establish linkages between ISR acquisition plans and strategic goals to
better inform investment decisions.
• Develop and enforce commonality and interoperability standards for
sharing of ISR data and establish timelines for implementation.
Increased integration of DOD’s ISR enterprise could improve efficiencies,
reduce redundancies and avoid duplication of similar development
initiatives, possibly saving production and life-cycle costs and improve the
interoperability among systems. Although the department has begun to
take some initial steps in this area, until all participants in the defense
enterprise successfully share ISR information, inefficiencies will hamper
the effectiveness of efforts to support the warfighter, and ISR data
collection efforts may be unnecessarily duplicative. In addition,
comprehensive data on its ISR enterprise, including resources and
performance measures to assess the effectiveness of ISR assets, could
better position DOD to make trade-offs among ISR capabilities.
Framework for
Analysis
In addition to obtaining information from the reports listed below, GAO
reviewed documentation related to DOD’s funding for ISR through the
Military Intelligence Program and analyzed planned ISR investments in
DOD’s Future Years Defense Program Fiscal Years 2012-2015. GAO also
assessed the ISR Integration Roadmap against strategic planning and
legislative criteria, and reviewed the Joint Staff’s ISR assessment tool. In
addition, GAO conducted interviews with officials from the offices of
DOD’s Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence, the Joint Staff, the
military services, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the National Geospatial
Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Agency.
Related GAO
Products
Defense Acquisitions: DOD Could Achieve Greater Commonality and
Efficiencies among Its Unmanned Aircraft Systems. GAO-10-508T.
Washington, D.C.: March 23, 2010.
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance: Establishing Guidance,
Timelines, and Accountability for Integrating Intelligence Data Would
Improve Information Sharing. GAO-10-265NI. Washington, D.C.:
January 22, 2010.
Defense Acquisitions: Opportunities Exist to Achieve Greater
Commonality and Efficiencies among Unmanned Aircraft Systems.
GAO-09-520. Washington, D.C.: July 30, 2009.
Page 29 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist to Avoid Unnecessary
Redundancies and Maximize the Efficient Use
of Intelligence, Surveillance, and
Reconnaissance Capabilities
Unmanned Aircraft Systems: Additional Actions Needed to Improve
Management and Integration of DOD Efforts to Support Warfighter
Needs. GAO-09-175. Washington, D.C.: November 14, 2008.
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance: DOD Can Better Assess
and Integrate ISR Capabilities and Oversee Development of Future ISR
Requirements. GAO-08-374. Washington, D.C.: March 24, 2008.
Unmanned Aircraft Systems: Advance Coordination and Increased
Visibility Needed to Optimize Capabilities. GAO-07-836. Washington,
D.C.: July 11, 2007.
Unmanned Aircraft Systems: New DOD Programs Can Learn from Past
Efforts to Craft Better and Less Risky Acquisition Strategies.
GAO-06-447. Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2006.
For additional information about this area, contact Davi M. D’Agostino at Area Contact
(202) 512-5431 or dagostinod@gao.gov.
Page 30 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
A Departmentwide Acquisition Strategy
Could Reduce DOD’s Risk of Costly
Duplication in Purchasing Tactical Wheeled
Vehicles
A Departmentwide Acquisition Strategy Could Reduce
DOD’s Risk of Costly Duplication in Purchasing Tactical
Wheeled Vehicles
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of Defense (DOD) spends billions of dollars each year to
procure tactical wheeled vehicles, such as several types of Mine Resistant
Ambush Protected vehicles. Tactical wheeled vehicles are used to
transport people, weapons, and cargo. The advent of improvised explosive
devices has had a significant effect on designing tactical wheeled vehicles
for survivability. DOD is in the process of acquiring two new armored
designs—the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected All Terrain Vehicle, and
the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle. The estimated total acquisition cost for the
Mine Resistant Ambush Protected All Terrain Vehicle is about $12.5
billion. The military services expect to have a variety of tactical wheeled
vehicles in use at any given time. Since 2008, GAO has identified tactical
wheeled vehicle procurement as being at risk for duplication, and in 2009
GAO recommended that DOD develop a unified acquisition strategy.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
DOD’s acquisition of two similar tactical wheeled vehicles—the Mine
Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle, including an All Terrain variant, and
eventually the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle—creates a risk of unplanned
overlap in capabilities that could increase acquisition costs significantly.
The Mine Resistant Ambush Protected All Terrain vehicle contractor was
expected to complete deliveries in November 2010. According to program
officials, the vehicles fielded so far appear to be performing well.
Development efforts for the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle, with an expected
initial acquisition of over 60,000 vehicles, are still ongoing. While
acquisition costs for the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle are yet to be
determined, a low-end estimate is $18.5 billion. The cost per unit, including
mission equipment, could be over $800,000 each.
To date, the services have not considered using the vehicles in the Mine
Resistant Ambush Protected family—with the exception of some vehicles
planned for use by route clearance, explosives ordinance disposal, and
medical evacuation units—to offset the need for or replace other tactical
wheeled vehicles. Currently, the services consider Mine Resistant Ambush
Protected vehicles to be mainly additive to their fleets. Given the high
potential cost of the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle, reducing the number of
units acquired could offer substantial savings, albeit with potential
performance tradeoffs. To illustrate, a 5 percent reduction in Joint Light
Tactical Vehicle quantities could save nearly $2.5 billion, assuming a unit
cost of $800,000.
DOD does not have a unified tactical wheeled vehicle strategy that
considers timing, capabilities, affordability, and sustainability. DOD stated
in 2009 that it would create a unified plan for tactical wheeled vehicle
Page 31 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
A Departmentwide Acquisition Strategy
Could Reduce DOD’s Risk of Costly
Duplication in Purchasing Tactical Wheeled
Vehicles
investment decisions. The plan would be a comprehensive strategy
compatible with Army and Marine Corps equipping strategies. As of
January 2011, the Army had completed and released its updated tactical
wheeled vehicle strategy, the Marine Corps had not yet completed its
updated strategy, and DOD had not yet issued a timetable for completing a
unified, departmentwide strategy.
With the Army and Marine Corps facing decisions about whether to repair,
upgrade, or replace older tactical vehicles, it is important to fully assess
the requirements and cost for buying and maintaining all classes of tactical
wheeled vehicles from the dual perspectives of mission need and
affordability. The services need to know what capabilities the Joint Light
Tactical Vehicle will have, the scope and cost of any recapitalization of
other vehicles or production effort, and the sustainment cost of placing
the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected family of vehicles in their force
structures. The services have expressed concern about their ability to fund
operations and support costs for tactical wheeled vehicles in the future.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
DOD could save both acquisition and support costs through a
departmentwide tactical wheeled vehicle strategy that considers costs and
benefits of the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle compared to other tactical
wheeled vehicle options.
To help the agency assess the affordability of these acquisitions and their
implications for competing demands within the department, DOD needs to
complete its planned DOD-wide tactical wheeled vehicle strategy to
determine
• what capabilities Joint Light Tactical Vehicle will have,
• the scope and cost of any recapitalization of other vehicles or
production effort, and
• the sustainment cost of placing the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected
family of vehicles in their force structures.
In addition, as GAO recommended in November 2010, DOD should include
in the strategy a cost-benefit analysis that could minimize the collective
acquisition and support costs of the various tactical wheeled vehicle
programs and reduce the risk of unplanned overlap or duplication. Such a
cost-benefit analysis should provide an estimate of dollar savings for
Page 32 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
A Departmentwide Acquisition Strategy
Could Reduce DOD’s Risk of Costly
Duplication in Purchasing Tactical Wheeled
Vehicles
various options for offsetting Joint Light Tactical Vehicle quantities in
favor of recapitalizing existing vehicles.
Any potential offsets between Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles
and Joint Light Tactical Vehicles, to the extent that they are supported by
cost-benefit analyses, could save both acquisition and support costs.
Simply reducing the number of Joint Light Tactical Vehicles DOD procures
could result in billions of dollars in cost savings. For instance, a reduction
of just 5 percent would save $2.5 billion, assuming a unit cost of $800,000.
In addition to saving initial procurement costs, reducing tactical wheeled
vehicle acquisition quantities has the potential to reduce future
operational and maintenance costs.
DOD concurred with GAO’s recommendations and said that the Joint Light
Tactical Vehicle program will conduct an analysis of alternatives that
explores potential offsets to planned acquisition quantities, including
those related to the replacement of Mine Resistant Ambush Protected
vehicles. In addition, as a part of DOD’s planned analysis of alternatives to
the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle, the Army and Marine Corps have stated
they will explore the implications, including maintenance and lifecycle
cost benefits, of acquiring a Joint Light Tactical Vehicle family of vehicles
as a part of a mixed vehicle fleet.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Defense Acquisitions: Issues to Be Considered as DOD Modernizes Its
Fleet of Tactical Wheeled Vehicles. GAO-11-83. Washington, D.C.:
November 5, 2010.
Defense Acquisitions: Department of Defense Needs a Unified Strategy
for Balancing Investments in Tactical Wheeled Vehicles. GAO-09-968R.
Washington, D.C.: September 28, 2009.
Rapid Acquisition of Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicles.
GAO-08-884R. Washington, D.C.: July 15, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Mike Sullivan at (202) Area Contact
512-4841 or sullivanm@gao.gov.
Page 33 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Joint Oversight of DOD’s
Prepositioning Programs May Reduce
Unnecessary Duplication
Improved Joint Oversight of DOD’s Prepositioning
Programs May Reduce Unnecessary Duplication
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of Defense (DOD) prepositions equipment and supplies
worth billions of dollars, including major items such as combat vehicles,
rations, medical supplies, and repair parts at strategic locations around the
world. Both afloat and ashore, prepositioning enables DOD to field
combat-ready forces in days, rather than the weeks it would take if
equipment had to be moved from the United States to the locations of
conflicts. Prepositioned equipment can also be used to support security
cooperation, deterrence, multilateral training exercises, and humanitarian
assistance or disaster relief.
The Air Force, Army, and Marine Corps have drawn on their prepositioned
stocks to support military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, increasing
the opportunities to gain efficiencies in rebuilding these stocks. Since
2005, GAO has identified challenges regarding DOD’s prepositioned stocks
and made numerous recommendations related to strategic planning,
requirements determination, inventory management, and other issues.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Although the services are expected to operate in a joint environment,
some prepositioning activities are fragmented among the services, with the
potential for unnecessary duplication. For example, the Army’s and Air
Force’s transportable base equipment, including mobile housing and
dining facilities, illustrates an instance in which the services separately
fund and manage prepositioned equipment that has been used
interchangeably among the services. Since 2005, GAO has reported that
the lack of a departmentwide approach to prepositioning potentially
misses opportunities to achieve greater efficiencies by reducing
unnecessary duplication. Greater efforts toward a departmentwide
approach to prepositioning that ensures the services’ plans to spend
billions of dollars to rebuild prepositioned stocks accurately reflect DOD’s
current and future needs could help prevent unnecessary duplication and
expenditures.
While prior GAO recommendations and DOD’s own instruction indicate
the need for a departmentwide approach to prepositioning, the
department still does not have such an approach. In 2008 DOD published
an instruction on prepositioned stocks directing the development of
overarching strategic guidance on prepositioning. However, as of
September 2010 DOD’s guidance contained little information related to
prepositioned stocks. As a result, the services’ individual plans and
priorities for rebuilding their prepositioned stocks may continue to be
implemented without a clear understanding of how these plans fit together
to meet evolving defense goals. DOD has estimated that as of the end of
Page 34 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Joint Oversight of DOD’s
Prepositioning Programs May Reduce
Unnecessary Duplication
fiscal year 2009, such replenishment will take about 8 years and cost an
estimated $6.1 billion. GAO has reported that, as the rebuilding progresses,
without the development and implementation of departmentwide guidance
that includes planning and funding priorities linking current and future
needs and desired responsiveness of DOD’s prepositioned stocks, the
services may not be able to make fully informed decisions that would
support the effective and efficient achievement of national military
objectives.
Organizational challenges that have hindered DOD’s joint oversight of its
prepositioned stocks further illustrate the lack of a departmentwide
approach to prepositioning. DOD’s 2008 instruction on prepositioned
stocks formalized the establishment of a joint prepositioning working
group. According to the federal standards for internal control, federal
agencies are to employ internal control activities, such as reviews by
managers, to help ensure that an organization’s directives are carried out
and resources are effectively and efficiently used. However, as GAO
recently reported, the working group has had a limited focus, such as
information sharing, and has not conducted the wider range of tasks the
working group was directed to perform, such as addressing joint issues
concerning requirements for prepositioned stocks, developing
recommendations for improved processes, and making recommendations
that balance limited resources against operational risk during budget and
program reviews. If performed, these tasks could produce cost savings.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Joint, departmental, and service components within DOD are in the
process of undertaking or have completed five major reviews, which may
have the potential to identify areas of needed enhancements to the
management of prepositioning activities. Nevertheless, without
overarching guidance and the organizational means to institutionalize the
results of these efforts, their impact may be limited. Therefore, as GAO
recently recommended, the Secretary of Defense should take the following
actions to enhance joint oversight of DOD’s prepositioning programs:
• Direct the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Policy to
develop strategic guidance that includes planning and resource
priorities, linking the department’s current and future needs for
prepositioned stocks to evolving national defense objectives.
• Direct the Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and
Logistics, in coordination with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, to strengthen DOD’s joint oversight of its prepositioned stocks
Page 35 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Joint Oversight of DOD’s
Prepositioning Programs May Reduce
Unnecessary Duplication
through such actions as clarifying lines of authority and reporting
between the joint prepositioning working group and other components
within DOD.
• Direct the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Secretaries of
the military services to synchronize at a DOD-wide level, as
appropriate, the services’ prepositioning programs so that they include
updated requirements and maximize efficiency in managing
prepositioned assets and activities across the department to reduce
unnecessary duplication.
In November 2010 DOD concurred with GAO’s recommendations, but
insufficient time has passed to assess progress in implementing them.
Also, information is not available on the extent of potential savings that
may result from the integration of elements of the services’ prepositioning
programs. Any actual savings would be dependent upon specific steps
taken. However, implementing joint management for the staging and
maintenance of prepositioned equipment stored on ships; consolidating
elements common among the services’ programs, such as expeditionary
base and fuel transfer equipment; and leveraging the Defense Logistics
Agency to manage some prepositioned repair parts are some steps that
service officials believe may reduce costs.
Framework for
Analysis
This analysis draws on information contained in the GAO products listed
below and in a classified report that GAO issued in February 2011. For this
analysis, GAO excluded all information associated with certain details that
DOD identified as being classified or sensitive in nature, which must be
protected from public disclosure. Although the information contained in
this analysis omits classified and sensitive information, these omissions
addressed other issues and have no bearing on the findings, conclusions,
and recommendations stated above. GAO plans to issue a full unclassified
version of its report and conduct future work on DOD’s prepositioned
stocks in response to its annual reporting mandate.
Defense Logistics: Department of Defense’s Annual Report on the Status Related GAO
of Prepositioned Materiel and Equipment Can Be Further Enhanced to
Products Better Inform Congress. GAO-10-172R. Washington, D.C.:
November 4, 2009.
Page 36 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Joint Oversight of DOD’s
Prepositioning Programs May Reduce
Unnecessary Duplication
Defense Logistics: Department of Defense’s Annual Report on the Status
of Prepositioned Materiel and Equipment Can Be Enhanced to Better
Inform Congress. GAO-09-147R. Washington, D.C.: December 15, 2008.
Force Structure: Restructuring and Rebuilding the Army Will Cost
Billions of Dollars for Equipment but the Total Cost Is Uncertain.
GAO-08-669T. Washington, D.C.: April 10, 2008.
Military Readiness: Impact of Current Operations and Actions Needed
to Rebuild Readiness of U.S. Ground Forces. GAO-08-497T. Washington,
D.C.: February 14, 2008.
Defense Logistics: Army Has Not Fully Planned or Budgeted for the
Reconstitution of Its Afloat Prepositioned Stocks. GAO-08-257R.
Washington D.C.: February 8, 2008.
Defense Logistics: Army and Marine Corps Cannot Be Assured That
Equipment Reset Strategies Will Sustain Equipment Availability While
Meeting Ongoing Operational Requirements. GAO-07-814. Washington
D.C.: September 19, 2007.
Defense Logistics: Improved Oversight and Increased Coordination
Needed to Ensure Viability of the Army’s Prepositioning Strategy.
GAO-07-144. Washington, D.C.: February 15, 2007.
Defense Logistics: Better Management and Oversight of Prepositioning
Programs Needed to Reduce Risk and Improve Future Programs.
GAO-05-427. Washington, D.C.: September 6, 2005.
For additional information about this area, contact William Solis at Area Contact
(202) 512-8365 or solisw@gao.gov.
Page 37 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DOD Business Systems Modernization:
Opportunities Exist for Optimizing Business
Operations and Systems
DOD Business Systems Modernization: Opportunities
Exist for Optimizing Business Operations and Systems
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Delivering modernized business systems is at the heart of the Department
of Defense (DOD) efforts to transform its business operations. These
systems include timeworn and duplicative systems that support DOD
business operations such as civilian personnel, finance, health, logistics,
military personnel, procurement, and transportation. Since 1995, GAO has
designated the department’s business systems modernization efforts as
high risk. One key to effectively modernizing DOD’s multibillion dollar
systems environment is ensuring that business system investments comply
with an enterprisewide strategic blueprint, commonly called an enterprise
architecture. For DOD’s business systems modernization, it is developing
and using a federated business enterprise architecture (BEA), which is a
coherent family of parent and subsidiary architectures, to help modernize
its nonintegrated and duplicative business operations and the systems that
support them.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
DOD reports that its business systems environment includes about 2,300
investments, which are supported by billions of dollars in annual
expenditures and are intended to support business functions and
operations. As GAO has previously reported, DOD’s business systems
environment has been characterized by (1) little standardization, (2)
multiple systems performing the same tasks, (3) the same data stored in
multiple systems, and (4) manual data entry into multiple systems.
According to DOD, one purpose of the federated BEA is to identify and
provide for sharing common applications and systems across the
department and the components and promote interoperability and data
sharing among related programs. Because DOD spends over $10 billion
each year on its business systems and related information technology
infrastructure, the potential for identifying and avoiding the costs
associated with duplicative functionality across its business system
investments is significant.
To accomplish this, DOD has developed an automated tool to map each
system’s functionality to the BEA operational activities and business
functions that the system supports. Using an enterprise architecture in this
way offers significant dollar savings potential, as it provides an
authoritative frame of reference against which to analyze proposed
investments and collect the information needed to identify where a given
investment may overlap with other investments and thus unnecessary
duplication of effort can be avoided. However, GAO has previously found
that much remains to be done in extending and developing DOD’s BEA
and ensuring that disciplined management controls are applied at the
institutional and program-specific levels. Without sufficient rigor in its
Page 38 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DOD Business Systems Modernization:
Opportunities Exist for Optimizing Business
Operations and Systems
business systems modernization, GAO found that DOD programs were at
increased risk of being defined and implemented in a way that does not
sufficiently ensure interoperability and avoid duplication and overlap. To
adequately ensure that DOD business system investments are defined and
implemented within the context of the federated BEA, GAO recommended
in August 2008 that DOD use the program-specific data in its architecture
compliance tool to identify and analyze potential overlap and duplication
and thus take advantage of opportunities for reuse and consolidation
among programs. DOD agreed and stated that it plans to update its
investment review board process guidance to require use of program-
specific data for certification decisions on business systems compliance
with the BEA. However, it has yet to establish a date for doing so.
More broadly, GAO has recommended steps DOD needs to take to further
improve its business systems modernization efforts. At the institutional level
• the supporting component architectures need to be developed and
aligned with the corporate architecture to complete the federated
business enterprise architecture,
• DOD business system investments need to be defined and implemented
within the context of its federated business enterprise architecture, and
• the investment process needs to evolve and be institutionalized at all
levels of the organization.
Furthermore, DOD needs to ensure that its business system programs and
projects are managed with integrated institutional controls and that they
consistently deliver benefits and capabilities on time and within budget.
Between 2005 and 2008, GAO reported that DOD made progress
implementing key institutional modernization management controls in
response to GAO recommendations as well as to statutory requirements.
For example, the department had continued to develop updates to its BEA
that addressed important elements related to statutory requirements and
best practices that GAO previously identified as missing. In addition, DOD
defined and began implementing investment controls, such as the Business
Capability Lifecycle, which is intended to streamline business system
capability definition, acquisition, and investment oversight processes, to
guide and constrain its departmentwide systems modernizations. However,
notwithstanding this progress, additional actions are still needed.
Page 39 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DOD Business Systems Modernization:
Opportunities Exist for Optimizing Business
Operations and Systems
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
In May 2009, GAO reported that the pace of DOD’s efforts in defining and
consistently implementing fundamental business systems modernization
management controls (both institutional and program specific) had
slowed compared with progress made in previous years, leaving much to
be accomplished. To this end, GAO’s work has highlighted challenges that
DOD still faces in aligning its corporate architecture and its component
organization architectures, leveraging the federated architecture to avoid
investments that provide similar but duplicative functionality in support of
common DOD activities, and institutionalizing the business systems
investment process at all levels of the organization. In addition, ensuring
that effective system acquisition management controls are implemented
on each business system investment also remains a formidable challenge,
as GAO’s recent reports on management weaknesses associated with
individual programs have disclosed.
Because of these limitations, DOD programs continue to be at increased
risk of being defined and implemented in a way that does not sufficiently
ensure interoperability and avoid duplication and overlap, which are both
goals of the BEA and the department’s related investment management
approach. If these limitations are addressed, DOD and its components
could have a sufficient basis for knowing if its business system programs
have been defined to effectively and efficiently support corporate business
operations. Congress can play a critical role by continuing to provide
focus and oversight.
At the request of the Senate Armed Services Committee, GAO is initiating
two engagements focusing on (1) the status and progress of the military
departments’ enterprise architecture programs and (2) prior GAO
recommendations pertaining to the department’s and the military
departments’ investment management processes, and the effectiveness of
the department’s investment review boards in approving and certifying
business system investments in accordance with applicable criteria.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
reports listed below.
Analysis
Page 40 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DOD Business Systems Modernization:
Opportunities Exist for Optimizing Business
Operations and Systems
Related GAO
Products
Business Systems Modernization: Scope and Content of DOD’s
Congressional Report and Executive Oversight of Investments Need to
Improve. GAO-10-663. Washington, D.C.: May 24, 2010.
DOD Business Systems Modernization: Navy Implementing a Number of
Key Management Controls on Enterprise Resource Planning System, but
Improvements Still Needed. GAO-09-841. Washington, D.C.: September 15,
2009.
DOD Business Systems Modernization: Recent Slowdown in
Institutionalizing Key Management Controls Needs to Be Addressed.
GAO-09-586. Washington, D.C.: May 18, 2009.
DOD Business Systems Modernization: Important Management Controls
Being Implemented on Major Navy Program, but Improvements Needed
in Key Areas. GAO-08-896. Washington, D.C.: September 8, 2008.
DOD Systems Modernization: Maintaining Effective Communication Is
Needed to Help Ensure the Army’s Successful Deployment of the Defense
Integrated Military Human Resources System. GAO-08-927R.
Washington, D.C.: September 8, 2008.
DOD Business Systems Modernization: Planned Investment in Navy
Program to Create Cashless Shipboard Environment Needs to Be
Justified and Better Managed. GAO-08-922. Washington, D.C.: September
8, 2008.
DOD Business Systems Modernization: Key Navy Programs’ Compliance
with DOD’s Federated Business Enterprise Architecture Needs to Be
Adequately Demonstrated. GAO-08-972. Washington, D.C.: August 7, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Valerie C. Melvin at Area Contact
(202) 512-6304 or melvinv@gao.gov.
Page 41 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Fragmented
Economic Development Programs Are Unclear
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Fragmented Economic
Development Programs Are Unclear
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Economic development programs that are administered efficiently and
effectively can contribute to the well-being of the nation’s economy at the
least cost to taxpayers. Absent a common definition for economic
development, GAO has previously developed a list of nine activities most
often associated with economic development. These activities include:
planning and developing strategies for job creation and retention,
developing new markets for existing products, building infrastructure by
constructing roads and sewer systems to attract industry to undeveloped
areas, and establishing business incubators to provide facilities for new
businesses’ operations.
GAO is currently examining 80 economic development programs at four
agencies—the Departments of Commerce (Commerce), Housing and
Urban Development (HUD), and Agriculture (USDA); and the Small
Business Administration (SBA)—to assess potential for overlap in the
design of the programs, the extent to which the four agencies collaborate
to achieve common goals, and the extent to which the agencies have
developed measures to determine the programs’ effectiveness. Funding
provided for these 80 programs in fiscal year 2010 amounted to $6.5
billion, of which about $3.2 billion was for economic development efforts,
largely in the form of grants, loan guarantees, and direct loans. Some of
these 80 programs can fund a variety of activities, including those focused
on noneconomic development activities, such as rehabilitating housing
and building community parks. This analysis presents the preliminary
findings of GAO’s ongoing work in conjunction with findings from its prior
work.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Preliminary results of GAO’s ongoing work involving 80 economic
development programs at four agencies—Commerce, HUD, SBA, and
USDA—indicate that the design of each of these fragmented programs
appears to overlap with that of at least one other program in terms of the
economic development activities that they are authorized to fund. For
example, as shown in the table below, the four agencies administer a total
of 52 programs that can fund “entrepreneurial efforts,” which includes
helping businesses to develop business plans and identify funding sources.
Page 42 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Fragmented
Economic Development Programs Are Unclear
Overlap and Fragmentation Among Selected Agencies Authorized to Fund
Economic Development Activities
Programs by agency
Activity Commerce HUD SBA USDA Total
Entrepreneurial efforts 9 12 19 12 52
Infrastructure 4 12 1 18 35
Plans and strategies 7 13 13 6 39
Commercial buildings 4 12 4 7 27
New markets 6 10 6 6 28
Telecommunications 3 11 2 10 26
Business incubators 5 12 — 3 20
Industrial parks 5 11 — 3 19
Tourism 5 10 — 4 19
Source: GAO
Note: Numbers of programs by agency do not total to 80 since an individual program may fund
several activities.
GAO’s prior work going back more than 10 years also identified potential
overlap and fragmentation in economic development programs and found
that many of the programs were differentiated by legislative or regulatory
restrictions that targeted funding on the basis of characteristics such as
geography, income levels, and population density (rural or urban).
While some of the 80 programs GAO is currently assessing fund several of
the nine economic development activities, almost 60 percent of the
programs (46 of 80) fund only one or two activities. These smaller,
narrowly scoped programs appear to be the most likely to overlap because
many of them can only fund the same limited types of activities. For
example, narrowly scoped programs comprise 21 of the 52 programs that
fund entrepreneurial efforts. Moreover, most of these 21 programs target
similar geographic areas.
To address issues arising from potential overlap and fragmentation in
economic development programs, GAO has previously identified
collaborative practices agencies should consider implementing in order to
maximize the performance and results of federal programs that share
common outcomes. These practices include leveraging physical and
administrative resources, establishing compatible policies and procedures,
monitoring collaboration, and reinforcing agency accountability for
collaborative efforts through strategic or annual performance plans.
Preliminary findings from GAO’s ongoing work show that Commerce,
Page 43 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Fragmented
Economic Development Programs Are Unclear
HUD, SBA, and USDA appear to have taken actions to implement some of
the collaborative practices, such as defining and articulating common
outcomes, for some of their related programs. However, the four agencies
have offered little evidence so far that they have taken steps to develop
compatible policies or procedures with other federal agencies or search
for opportunities to leverage physical and administrative resources with
their federal partners. Moreover, GAO is finding that most of the
collaborative efforts performed by program staff on the front line that
GAO has been able to assess to date have occurred only on a case-by-case
basis. As a result, it appears that the agencies do not consistently monitor
or evaluate these collaborative efforts in a way that allows them to identify
areas for improvement. GAO reported in September 2008 that the main
causes for limited agency collaboration include few incentives to
collaborate and no guide for agencies to rely on for consistent and
effective collaboration. In GAO’s ongoing work, USDA and SBA officials
also stated that certain statutory authorities may impede their ability to
collaborate. In failing to find ways to collaborate more, agencies may miss
opportunities to leverage each other’s unique strengths to more effectively
promote economic development, in addition to inefficiently using the
taxpayer dollars set aside for that purpose.
In addition, a lack of information on program outcomes is a current and
long-standing concern. This information is needed to determine whether
this potential overlap and fragmentation is resulting in ineffective or
inefficient programs. More specifically:
• Commerce’s Economic Development Administration (EDA), which
administers eight of the programs GAO is currently reviewing,
continues to rely on a potentially incomplete set of variables and self-
reported data to assess the effectiveness of its grants. The incomplete
set of variables that the agency relies on to estimate the effectiveness
of EDA program grants may lead to inaccurate claims about program
results, such as the number of jobs created. Moreover, EDA staff
request documentation or conduct site visits to validate the self-
reported data provided by grantees only in limited instances. GAO first
reported on this issue in March 1999 and issued a subsequent report in
October 2005. In response to a recommendation GAO made in 2005,
EDA issued revised operational guidance in December 2006 that
included a new methodology that regional offices are to use to
calculate estimated jobs and private sector investment attributable to
EDA projects. However, GAO’s ongoing work found that the agency
still primarily relies on grantee self-reported data and conducts a
limited number of site visits to assess the accuracy of the data. While
Page 44 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Fragmented
Economic Development Programs Are Unclear
acknowledging these findings, EDA officials stated that they do employ
other verification and validation methods in lieu of site visits. These
methods include reviews to ensure the data are consistent with
regional trends and statistical tests to identify outliers and anomalies.
GAO plans to assess the quality and adequacy of these methods as part
of its ongoing work.
• The USDA’s Office of Rural Development, which administers 31 of the
programs GAO is reviewing, has yet to implement the USDA Inspector
General’s (IG) 2003 recommendation related to ensuring that data exist
to measure the accomplishments of one of its largest rural business
programs—the Business and Industry loan program, which cost
approximately $53 million to administer in fiscal year 2010. USDA
officials stated that they have recently taken steps to address the open
recommendation, including requiring staff to record actual jobs created
rather than estimated jobs created, but according to an IG official it is
too early to tell whether their actions will fully address the
recommendation.
• HUD does not track long-term performance outcome measures for its
Section 108 program because the agency continues to lack a reporting
mechanism to capture how program funds are used, an issue the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) reported on in 2007. Moreover,
OMB also found in 2007 that the program’s impact and effectiveness in
neighborhoods remained unknown.
• SBA has not yet developed outcome measures that directly link to the
mission of its Historically Underutilized Business Zones (HUBZone)
program, nor has the agency implemented its plans to conduct an
evaluation of the program based on variables tied to its goals. GAO
reported in June 2008 that while SBA tracks a few performance
measures, such as the number of small businesses approved to
participate in the program, the measures do not directly link to the
program’s mission. While SBA continues to agree that evaluating
program outcomes is important, to date the agency has not yet
committed resources for such an evaluation.
Without quality data on program outcomes, these agencies lack key
information that could help them better manage their programs. In
addition, such information would enable congressional decision makers
and others to make decisions to better realign resources, if necessary, and
to identify opportunities for consolidating or eliminating some programs.
Page 45 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Fragmented
Economic Development Programs Are Unclear
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Preliminary findings of ongoing GAO work have identified several areas
that could benefit from continued attention.
• Agencies need to further utilize promising practices for enhanced
collaboration. GAO first made this recommendation to SBA and USDA
in September 2008, but these agencies have taken only limited steps to
fully address GAO’s concerns. The actions that the four agencies
should consider include seeking more opportunities for resource-
sharing across economic development programs with shared
outcomes, and identifying ways to leverage each program’s strengths to
improve their existing collaborative efforts. Continuing to explore the
extent to which these agencies collaborate could help identify
promising practices that may result in more effective and efficient
delivery of economic development programs to distressed areas.
• Agencies need to collect accurate and complete data on program
outcomes and use the information to assess each program’s
effectiveness. In June 2008 GAO made a similar recommendation to
SBA about its HUBZone program, but the agency has taken limited
action thus far.
Additional work to assess progress in collaboration and evaluation could
identify areas for improvement, consolidation, or elimination. Further,
programs that are designed to target similar economic development
activities, locations, and applicants may not be adding unique value, and
more analysis is needed by the agencies and OMB to determine the actual
amount of duplicative spending.
The above are actions that could be taken by agencies to address
fragmentation and overlap, and increase program efficiencies across the
multiple agencies, which support economic development efforts.
However, given the long-standing nature of these issues, GAO also believes
that increased attention and oversight by OMB and Congress are
warranted to ensure needed actions are taken.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on the GAO products
listed below, as well as GAO’s ongoing work following up on the
recommendations from those products, and the preliminary results of
GAO’s ongoing evaluation of economic development programs at four
federal agencies. For the most recent work, GAO gathered new
information related to, for example, program missions, targeted
populations, and funding provided for the programs. The data on program
Page 46 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Fragmented
Economic Development Programs Are Unclear
funds were self-reported by agency officials. The data were determined to
be sufficiently reliable for the purposes of this review. For this review,
GAO focused on USDA, Commerce, HUD, and SBA. GAO met with
officials from each of the agencies to discuss each of the programs and the
program missions. Because SBA officials view all of their programs as
being related to economic development, GAO included all SBA programs
in this review. Using the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance and other
agency documents, GAO identified 80 federal programs administered by
the four agencies that could fund economic development activities. GAO
did not include tax credit programs aimed at economic development in
this review. For information on how tax programs can contribute to
duplication, see the section of this report entitled “Periodic Reviews Could
Help Identify Ineffective Tax Expenditures and Redundancies in Related
Tax and Spending Programs.”
Related GAO
Products
Rural Economic Development: Collaboration between SBA and USDA
Could Be Improved. GAO-08-1123. Washington, D.C.: September 18, 2008.
Small Business Administration: Additional Actions Are Needed to
Certify and Monitor HUBZone Businesses and Assess Program Results.
GAO-08-643. Washington, D.C.: June 17, 2008.
Rural Economic Development: More Assurance Is Needed That Grant
Funding Information Is Accurately Reported. GAO-06-294. Washington,
D.C.: February 24, 2006.
Economic Development Administration: Remediation Activities Account
for a Small Percentage of Total Brownfield Grant Funding. GAO-06-7.
Washington, D.C.: October 27, 2005.
Economic Development: Multiple Federal Programs Fund Similar
Economic Development Activities. GAO/RCED/GGD-00-220. Washington,
D.C.: September 29, 2000.
Economic Development: Observations Regarding the Economic
Development Agency’s May 1998 Final Report on Its Public Works
Program. GAO/RCED-99-11R. Washington, D.C.: March 23, 1999.
For additional information about this area, contact William B. Shear at Area Contact
(202) 512-4325 or shearw@gao.gov.
Page 47 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Federal Approach to Surface
Transportation Is Fragmented, Lacks Clear
Goals, and Is Not Accountable for Results
The Federal Approach to Surface Transportation Is
Fragmented, Lacks Clear Goals, and Is Not Accountable
for Results
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The nation’s surface transportation system is critical to the economy and
affects the daily life of most Americans. The Department of Transportation
(DOT) currently administers scores of surface transportation programs
costing over $58 billion annually. The cost to repair and upgrade roads,
bridges, and other infrastructure so they can safely and reliably meet
current and future demands is estimated in the hundreds of billions of
dollars. However, large increases in federal expenditures for transportation
in recent years have not commensurately improved system performance.
Proposals to reauthorize the surface transportation program—which
expired in September 2009 and has been extended until March 2011—have
recommended consolidating or eliminating some of these programs.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
The current federal approach to surface transportation was established in
1956 to build the Interstate Highway System, but has not evolved to reflect
current national priorities and concerns. Over the years, in response to
changing transportation, environmental, and societal goals, federal surface
transportation programs grew in number and complexity to encompass
broader goals, more programs, and a variety of program approaches and
grant structures. This variety of approaches and structures did not result
from a specific rationale or plan, but rather an agglomeration of policies
and programs established over half a century without a well-defined
overall vision of the national interest and federal role in our surface
transportation system. This has resulted in a fragmented approach as five
DOT agencies with 6,000 employees administer over 100 separate
programs with separate funding streams for highways, transit, rail, and
safety functions. This fragmented approach impedes effective decision
making and limits the ability of decision makers to devise comprehensive
solutions to complex challenges. For example, the federal government
largely lacks mechanisms for aiding projects that span multiple
jurisdictions and implementing projects that involve more than one state
or local sponsor or multiple transportation modes.
At the core of this fragmentation is the fact that federal goals and roles for
the program are unclear or may conflict with other federal priorities,
programs lack links to the performance of the transportation system or of
the grantees, and programs do not use the best tools to target investments
in transportation to the areas of greatest benefit. For example, the federal
government lacks a comprehensive national strategy that defines its role in
freight transportation projects, even though enhancing freight mobility is
viewed as a top transportation priority. Furthermore, efforts to spur
economic development through highway construction may conflict with
efforts to improve air quality, and motor fuel taxes that encourage fuel
Page 48 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Federal Approach to Surface
Transportation Is Fragmented, Lacks Clear
Goals, and Is Not Accountable for Results
consumption to finance highways may conflict with reducing carbon
emissions. The largest highway, transit, and safety grant programs
distribute funds through formulas that are typically not linked to
performance and, in many cases, have only an indirect relationship to
needs. As a result, it is difficult to assess the impact of funding on
achieving transportation goals. The federal aid highway program, in
particular, distributes about $40 billion a year to the states through
complicated formulas that are ultimately overridden by provisions that
return federal fuel excise tax revenues to their state of origin. Once DOT
apportions funds, states have wide latitude to select their own projects
and considerable flexibility to reallocate their funds among highway and
transit programs. While these provisions give states the discretion to
pursue their own priorities, the provisions may impede the targeting of
federal funds toward specific national goals and objectives. To some
extent, the federal aid highway program functions as a cash-transfer
general-purpose grant program, rather than as a tool for pursuing a
cohesive national transportation policy.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
A fundamental re-examination and reform of the nation’s surface
transportation policies is needed. Since 2004, GAO has made several
recommendations and matters for congressional consideration to address
the need for a more goal-oriented approach to surface transportation,
introduce greater performance and accountability for results, and break
down modal stovepipes. Also, GAO has identified a number of principles
that can help guide a fundamental re-examination and reform of the
nation’s surface transportation policies that recognizes emerging national
and global imperatives—such as reducing the nation’s dependence on
foreign fuel sources and minimizing the effect of transportation systems
on global climate. These principles include ensuring the federal role is
defined based on identified areas of national interest and goals,
incorporating accountability for results by entities receiving federal funds,
employing the best tools and approaches to emphasize return on targeted
federal investment, and ensuring fiscal sustainability.
Applying these principles to a re-examination and reform of surface
transportation programs would potentially result in a more clearly defined
federal role in relation to other levels of government and thus a more
targeted federal role focused around evident national interests. Where
national interests are less evident—for example, where the economic
benefits are more locally focused or there are varying regional
preferences—other stakeholders could assume more responsibility, and
some functions could potentially be assumed by the states or other levels of
Page 49 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Federal Approach to Surface
Transportation Is Fragmented, Lacks Clear
Goals, and Is Not Accountable for Results
government. This would then result in a more streamlined federal program
approach and enhance the efficient delivery of programs and services.
From the standpoint of state and local governments, re-examination and
reform of the federal approach could reduce the administrative expenses
states face complying with myriad federal statutory and regulatory
requirements. For example, in May 2009, GAO reported that consolidating
the application processes for three federal transit programs that provide
funding for transportation-disadvantaged populations could reduce the
administrative burden for states and transit agencies applying for these
funds. However, GAO has reported that estimates from the states on the
costs of complying with some federal requirements are not available.
Congressional reauthorization of surface transportation programs presents
an opportunity to address GAO recommendations and matters for
congressional consideration that have not been implemented in large part
because the current multiyear authorization for surface transportation
programs expired in 2009, and existing programs have been funded since
then through temporary extensions. Several reform proposals have been
introduced, which indicate that some of GAO’s more recent
recommendations and matters for congressional consideration are gaining
traction. In its 2008 report, the National Surface Transportation Policy and
Revenue Study Commission, established by Congress, recommended that
federal surface transportation investments be carefully aligned with
defined national interests through a comprehensive performance-based
approach. In a bipartisan “blueprint” for reauthorization, the leadership of
the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee proposed
redefining the federal role and restructuring programs by consolidating or
eliminating more than 75 programs. The American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 helped break down modal barriers by
establishing a $1.5 billion discretionary grant program that placed
increased emphasis on integrated solutions to transportation challenges
and provided an unprecedented ability for proposed projects that cut
across modes of transportation to compete for federal funding.
The information contained in this analysis is based on previously issued Framework for
work listed in the following related GAO products.
Analysis
Page 50 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Federal Approach to Surface
Transportation Is Fragmented, Lacks Clear
Goals, and Is Not Accountable for Results
Related GAO
Products
Surface Transportation Planning: Opportunities Exist to Transition to
Performance-Based Planning and Federal Oversight. GAO-11-77.
Washington, D.C.: December 15, 2010.
Federal Transit Programs: Federal Transit Administration Has
Opportunities to Improve Performance Accountability. GAO-11-54.
Washington, D.C.: November 17, 2010.
Highway Trust Fund: Nearly All States Received More Funding Than
They Contributed in Highway Taxes Since 2005. GAO-10-780.
Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Federal Transit Administration: Progress and Challenges in
Implementing and Evaluating the Job Access and Reverse Commute
Program. GAO-09-496. Washington, D.C.: May 21, 2009.
Surface Transportation: Clear Federal Role and Criteria-Based Selection
Process Could Improve Three National and Regional Infrastructure
Programs. GAO-09-219. Washington, D.C.: Feb. 6, 2009.
Federal-Aid Highways: Federal Requirements for Highways May
Influence Funding Decisions and Create Challenges, but Benefits and
Costs Are Not Tracked. GAO-09-36. Washington, D.C.: December 12, 2008.
Surface Transportation Programs: Proposals Highlight Key Issues and
Challenges in Restructuring the Programs. GAO-08-843R. Washington,
D.C.: July 29, 2008.
Surface Transportation: Restructured Federal Approach Needed for More
Focused, Performance-Based, and Sustainable Programs. GAO-08-400.
Washington, D.C.: March 6, 2008.
Freight Transportation: National Policy and Strategies Can Help
Improve Freight Mobility. GAO-08-287. Washington, D.C.: January 7, 2008.
Intermodal Transportation: DOT Could Take Further Actions to Address
Intermodal Barriers. GAO-07-718. Washington, D.C.: June 20, 2007.
Intercity Passenger Rail: National Policy and Strategies Needed to
Maximize Public Benefits from Federal Expenditures. GAO-07-15.
Washington, D.C.: November 13, 2006.
For additional information about this area, contact Phillip Herr at (202) Area Contact
512-2834, or herrp@gao.gov.
Page 51 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Federal Efforts to Meet Water
Needs in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region Have
Resulted in an Administrative Burden,
Redundant Activities, and an Overall
Inefficient Use of Resources
Fragmented Federal Efforts to Meet Water Needs in the
U.S.-Mexico Border Region Have Resulted in an
Administrative Burden, Redundant Activities, and an
Overall Inefficient Use of Resources
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Meeting the drinking water and wastewater needs of rural areas,
particularly areas such as the U.S.-Mexico border region, can be difficult.
More than 90 percent of public water supply systems and 70 percent of
wastewater systems throughout the United States serve communities with
populations fewer than 10,000, usually in rural areas. The lack of access to
safe drinking water and sanitation systems can pose risks to human health
and the environment, including the risk of waterborne illnesses. In 2009,
GAO found that seven federal agencies active in the border region—the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA), the Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD), the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Indian Health Service, the
Economic Development Administration (EDA), and the Department of the
Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation—obligated at least $1.4 billion from fiscal
years 2000 through 2008 to fund numerous projects in the region.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Key federal agencies recognized more than a decade ago that coordinated
policies and procedures would improve federal efforts to deliver water
and wastewater systems to rural areas, including those in the U.S.-Mexico
border region; however, overall these programs remain uncoordinated and
fragmented, and their delivery continues to be inefficient and ineffective.
The U.S.-Mexico border region is predominately rural in nature, and
federal agencies can find it difficult to meet the needs of residents in this
region. Specifically, the remoteness of some communities can make it
challenging to identify residents in need of water and wastewater services,
communities may not have the institutional capacity to identify solutions
to address their water and wastewater needs, and rural areas typically lack
adequate funds for constructing and upgrading water supply and
wastewater treatment facilities. Overcoming differences in agency
missions and cultures, as well as program differences resulting from
separate mandates and project eligibility requirements, add to the
complexity of meeting these communities’ water and wastewater needs.
In December 2009, GAO found that federal efforts to meet drinking water
and wastewater needs in the border region have been ineffective, in part,
because most of the seven federal agencies that provide assistance have
not comprehensively assessed the needs of the region. Federal agencies
have assembled some data and conducted limited studies of drinking
water and wastewater conditions in the border region, but the resulting
patchwork of data does not provide a comprehensive assessment of the
region’s needs. Without a comprehensive needs assessment, federal
agencies cannot target resources toward the most urgent needs or provide
assistance to communities that do not have the technical or financial
Page 52 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Federal Efforts to Meet Water
Needs in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region Have
Resulted in an Administrative Burden,
Redundant Activities, and an Overall
Inefficient Use of Resources
resources to initiate a proposal for assistance. Instead, GAO found that
most federal programs generally provide funds to those communities with
the ability to initiate projects and seek assistance, which may not be the
ones with the greatest need. Only one agency—the Indian Health
Service—had collected data on water and wastewater conditions for each
tribal reservation in the region, enabling it to select projects that target the
greatest need.
In addition, GAO found that the key agencies have not developed
coordinated policies and procedures for selecting water and wastewater
projects, resulting in an administrative burden, duplication of efforts, and
inefficient use of resources. Specifically, most programs have different
applications and application processes for water or wastewater projects,
different requirements for engineering and environmental reports, and
different deadlines for submitting applications. Because most federal
programs require separate documentation to meet similar requirements
and the agencies do not consistently coordinate in selecting projects,
applicants can experience increased costs and delays in project
completion. For example, a public utility engineer in Texas said that one
applicant trying to expand water service to a particular area paid $30,000
more in fees because the engineer had to complete two separate sets of
engineering documentation for EPA and USDA. Also, because most federal
programs have no process by which to coordinate and share information
on projects they have selected for funding, GAO found examples where
agencies made inefficient use of limited resources. For example, GAO
found a case where HUD provided a utility in Hudspeth County, Texas,
over $860,000 in grant funds from 2004 to 2006 to extend water
distribution and waste collection lines for residents of a community.
However, through September 2009, the distribution lines remained unused
because the utility did not have enough water to serve the additional
households. The utility intended to use funding from USDA to construct a
new well, but the funding obligated by the agency was not enough to cover
project costs. Three years after the HUD funds were provided to construct
the distribution lines, the utility had not been able to obtain additional
assistance from federal agencies to construct the well.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
To improve program coordination for rural water and wastewater
infrastructure in the U.S.-Mexico border region, GAO suggested in
December 2009 that Congress may wish to consider requiring federal
agencies to establish an interagency mechanism or process, such as a task
force on water and wastewater infrastructure, in the border region. GAO
also suggested that Congress could direct a group or task force to conduct
Page 53 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmented Federal Efforts to Meet Water
Needs in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region Have
Resulted in an Administrative Burden,
Redundant Activities, and an Overall
Inefficient Use of Resources
certain activities. Specifically, GAO suggested that a task force, in
partnership with state and local officials, should leverage collective
resources to identify needs within the border region and establish
compatible and coordinated polices across relevant agencies, such as a
coordinated process for the selection of projects, and standardize
applications, environmental review requirements, and engineering
requirements to the extent possible. Such activities would help to ensure
that a comprehensive needs assessment for the region is completed and
that coordination in other areas occurs. Although such coordination and
uniformity will not likely result in significant cost savings for the federal
government, these activities, if implemented, could improve the
effectiveness of federal water and wastewater programs and result in more
efficient use of funds provided to the border region. Most of the cost
savings would likely be realized by the communities and utilities that
would benefit from federal agencies establishing a uniform application and
coordinated funding cycles. While these actions have not yet been taken, a
bill introduced in the House of Representatives in March 2010 would have
established a Southwest Border Region Water Task Force with specific
responsibilities such as assessing the water needs of communities in the
region and reporting to Congress every 6 months on its progress.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below.
Analysis
Rural Water Infrastructure: Improved Coordination and Funding Related GAO Product
Processes Could Enhance Federal Efforts to Meet Needs in the U.S.
Mexico Border Region. GAO-10-126. Washington, D.C.: December 18, 2009.
For additional information about this area, contact Dave Trimble at (202) Area Contact
512-3991 or trimbled@gao.gov.
Page 54 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Resolving Conflicting Requirements Could
More Effectively Achieve Federal Fleet
Energy Goals
Resolving Conflicting Requirements Could More
Effectively Achieve Federal Fleet Energy Goals
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The federal government’s vehicle fleet has over 600,000 civilian and
nontactical military vehicles and consumes over 963,000 gallons of
petroleum-based fuel per day. In fiscal year 2009, the federal government
spent approximately $1.9 billion on procuring new vehicles. According to
General Services Administration (GSA) officials, the governmentwide fleet
is used to support of a variety of missions and consists of approximately
60 percent trucks, buses, and ambulances; fewer than 40 percent are
passenger vehicles including passenger vans and sport utility vehicles.
The federal government’s goals to reduce reliance on petroleum fuel and
the negative impacts of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have led
Congress and the Administration to prioritize the acquisition of alternative
fuel vehicles (AFV) by federal agencies. The following federal laws and
executive orders have set requirements and goals for acquiring alternative-
fuel and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, increasing use of alternative fuels
and reducing petroleum consumption: Energy Policy Act (EPAct) of 1992,
EPAct of 2005, the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007,
Executive Order 13423, and Executive Order 13514. These laws and
executive orders affect over 20 agencies. A number of federal agencies
play a role in overseeing and implementing these requirements including,
the Department of Energy (DOE) and GSA.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
In light of multiple and sometimes conflicting statutes and a lack of
performance measures, fleet managers often lack the flexibility and tools
to meet the goal of reducing the federal fleet’s use of petroleum and its
GHG emissions. Congress and the Administration have defined a set of
energy requirements for the federal fleet through statutes and executive
orders. However, these statutes and orders were enacted and issued in a
piecemeal fashion and represent a fragmented rather than integrated
approach to meeting key national goals. Specifically, the requirements and
priorities to increase use of alternative fuels, reduce petroleum use, and
reduce GHG emissions, compel fleet managers to resolve the following
conflicts:
• Increase the use of alternative fuels vs. the unavailability of
alternative fuels. Agencies are required to increase alternative fuel use,
although most alternative fuels are not yet widely available. Thus,
agencies have been purchasing primarily flex-fueled AFVs, those that
can operate on E85—a blend of up to 85 percent ethanol and
petroleum—or petroleum. However, since E85 was only available at 1
percent of U.S. fueling stations in 2009, agencies are requesting waivers
from the requirement to use alternative fuels. According to DOE, in
Page 55 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Resolving Conflicting Requirements Could
More Effectively Achieve Federal Fleet
Energy Goals
2010, approximately 55 percent of flex-fueled AFVs received a waiver.
Further, some fleet operators indicated they use petroleum without a
waiver when alternative fuels are available because it is either more
convenient, less expensive, or both.
• Acquire AFVs vs. reduce petroleum consumption. Agencies are
required to purchase AFVs, but this requirement may, in some cases,
undermine the requirement to reduce petroleum consumption. Virtually
every agency has succeeded in acquiring more AFVs, but there have
been only modest reductions in petroleum use and modest increases in
alternative fuel use, due to the lack of available alternative fuels. As
previously stated, the lack of available alternative fuels results in
agencies using petroleum to fuel AFVs. In areas where alternative fuels
are not available, purchasing more fuel efficient non-AFVs could
reduce petroleum consumption more than purchasing AFVs.1
• Reduce GHG emissions vs. acquire AFVs. Under existing law,
according to DOE, some vehicles with the lowest GHG emissions do
not qualify as AFVs; and according to GSA, some AFVs emit more GHG
emissions than some petroleum-fueled vehicles. Thus, by procuring a
new vehicle with low GHG emissions the agency may meet the
requirement to reduce GHG emissions, but not the requirement to
purchase AFVs for its fleet.
• Use plug-in hybrid vehicles vs. reduce electricity consumption in
federal facilities. Other conflicts exist between fleet energy goals and
the federal government energy goals. Agencies are encouraged to
acquire plug-in hybrids for their fleets when they become publicly
available; however, this could conflict with other requirements that
encourage agencies to reduce electricity consumption in federal
facilities. Thus, if an agency acquires plug-in vehicles they may meet
the requirement, but this may lead to increased electricity
consumption.2
1According to DOE, agencies may acquire low-GHG-emitting vehicles and consider them
AFVs when alternative fuels are not available. However, agencies have found very few low-
GHG options exist that meet mission requirements.
2DOE has identified a reporting approach that would allow fleet electricity use to be
subtracted from facility electricity use.
Page 56 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Resolving Conflicting Requirements Could
More Effectively Achieve Federal Fleet
Energy Goals
Because fleet managers have to follow these conflicting and narrowly
defined requirements, they do not always have the flexibility to make
procurement decisions that would maximize the reduction in petroleum
use and GHG emissions.
GAO has previously recommended that federal agencies propose
legislative changes to resolve conflicts and set priorities for the
requirements. DOE and GSA are working with stakeholders to develop
proposed legislation that would create broader requirements targeted at
fleet efficiency. These changes could streamline the federal fleet
requirements to focus broadly on the reduction of petroleum use and GHG
emissions. DOE has provided the results of these efforts to the Office of
Management and Budget to inform their work.
A broader, performance-based approach, as DOE and GSA propose, would
provide federal agencies—subject to these laws and executive orders—
greater flexibility to make procurement decisions that would maximize the
reduction in petroleum use and GHG emissions. GAO has found that
results-oriented organizations strive to ensure that their day-to-day
activities move them closer to accomplishing their goals. Further, GAO has
reported that performance-based measures should cover multiple
priorities, support decision making by providing useful information, and
be limited to a few vital measures. Interviews and meetings with DOE,
GSA officials and other fleet managers indicate that such broad goals and
related performance measures would provide agencies greater flexibility
to achieve the requirements of reduced petroleum use, decreased GHG
emissions, or any other requirement defined in statute. For example, GSA
officials indicated that a simple mandate to reduce petroleum
consumption and GHG emissions by increasing fleet efficiency—rather
than by narrowly defining the vehicle or fuel type—would provide agency
fleet managers with a rational target and allow them to use a variety of
available options to attain it.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Changes in existing laws could streamline the requirements and provide
fleet managers with more flexibility in meeting goals. DOE, in consultation
with GSA and other appropriate agencies and organizations, has taken
steps to implement GAO’s prior recommendation to propose legislative
changes that resolve conflicts and set priorities for agencies by providing
proposed legislative changes to OMB. This is an important step in
addressing the issue of conflicting and narrowly defined requirements. In
addition to helping agencies set priorities, these proposals could inform
Congress and agencies on how to potentially resolve conflicting
Page 57 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Resolving Conflicting Requirements Could
More Effectively Achieve Federal Fleet
Energy Goals
requirements by developing performance-based goals and related
measures which could provide agencies with greater flexibility allowing
them to optimize strategies and meet broader goals. If properly developed,
performance-based goals and measures would support fleet managers’
decision making by providing a few key measures that help managers
balance the priorities of the fleet requirements.
The information contained in this analysis is based primarily on previously Framework for
issued work listed in the related GAO products below. Interviews with and
Analysis documentation from GSA and DOE, as well as attendance at and
discussions during fleet operators’ meetings, together provided updated
information.
Related GAO
Products
Federal Energy and Fleet Management: Plug-in Vehicles Offer Potential
Benefits, but High Costs and Limited Information Could Hinder
Integration into the Federal Fleet. GAO-09-493. Washington, D.C.: June 9,
2009.
Federal Energy Management: Agencies Are Acquiring Alternative Fuel
Vehicles but Face Challenges in Meeting Other Fleet Objectives.
GAO-09-75R. Washington, D.C.: October 22, 2008.
U.S. Postal Service: Vulnerability to Fluctuating Fuel Prices Requires
Improved Tracking and Monitoring of Consumption Information.
GAO-07-244. Washington, D.C.: February 16, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact Susan Fleming at Area Contact
(202) 512-2834 or flemings@gao.gov.
Page 58 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Duplicative Federal Efforts Directed at
Increasing Domestic Ethanol Production Cost
Billions Annually
Duplicative Federal Efforts Directed at Increasing
Domestic Ethanol Production Cost Billions Annually
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Congress supported domestic ethanol production through a $5.4 billion
tax credit program in 2010. The Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit
(VEETC or the ethanol tax credit), a 45-cent-per-gallon federal tax credit,
is provided to fuel blenders that purchase and blend ethanol with gasoline.
Congress also supported domestic ethanol production through a
renewable fuel standard (RFS or the fuel standard) that applies to
transportation fuels used in the United States. First enacted in 2005 and
expanded in 2007, the fuel standard generally requires overall
transportation fuels in the United States to contain certain volumes of
biofuels, such as ethanol and biodiesel. The fuel standard generally
requires rising use of ethanol and other biofuels, from 12.95 billion gallons
in 2010 to 36 billion gallons in 2022. At present, the fuel standard is largely
met from conventional biofuels—defined as ethanol derived from corn
starch—which made up 12 billion gallons of the 12.95 billion gallon fuel
standard for 2010. Of the 36 billion gallon total required for 2022, 15 billion
gallons can come from conventional biofuels. The other 21 billion gallons
are to come from advanced biofuels such as ethanol made from the
cellulose of plants. To meet the RFS, the Departments of Agriculture and
Energy are developing advanced biofuels that use cellulosic feedstocks,
such as corn stover and switchgrass. The Environmental Protection
Agency administers the RFS.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
The ethanol tax credit and the renewable fuel standard can be duplicative
in stimulating domestic production and use of ethanol, and can result in
substantial loss of revenue to the Treasury. If reauthorized and left
unchanged, the VEETC’s annual cost to the Treasury in forgone revenues
could grow from $5.4 billion in 2010 to $6.75 billion in 2015, the year the
fuel standard requires 15 billion gallons of conventional biofuels. The
ethanol tax credit was recently extended at 45-cents-per-gallon through
December 31, 2011, in the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance
Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. No. 111-312).
However, as GAO reported in August 2009, given the requirements of the
fuel standard, the ethanol tax credit is largely unneeded today to ensure
demand for domestic ethanol production.
Since the 1970s the federal government has provided increasing levels of
support to the domestic ethanol industry. The Energy Tax Act of 1978,
among other things, provided tax incentives designed to stimulate the
production of ethanol for blending with gasoline. These tax incentives
were restructured in 2005 as the Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit. In
addition, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 created the RFS, which established
increasing annual floors for the amount of renewable fuels to be blended
Page 59 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Duplicative Federal Efforts Directed at
Increasing Domestic Ethanol Production Cost
Billions Annually
into U.S. transportation fuels. The act generally required transportation
fuels in the United States to contain 4 billion gallons of renewable fuels,
such as ethanol and biodiesel, in 2006 and 7.5 billion gallons in 2012. The
Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 expanded the RFS by
substantially increasing its annual biofuel volume requirements, including
up to 9 billion gallons of conventional corn starch ethanol in 2008 and up
to 15 billion gallons of conventional corn starch ethanol in 2015. To offset
the advantage foreign ethanol producers may gain from the ethanol tax
credit, a 54-cent-per-gallon tariff is placed on imported ethanol.
Both the ethanol tax credit and the fuel standard create demand for
domestic ethanol production. Fuel blenders receive the ethanol tax credit
for each gallon of ethanol they combine with gasoline and sell, yet they are
also required under the fuel standard to acquire and blend specified
volumes of ethanol with gasoline. As GAO reported in August 2009, the
ethanol tax credit was important in helping to create a profitable corn
starch ethanol industry when the industry had to fund investment in new
facilities, but it is less important now for sustaining the industry because
most of the capital investment in corn starch ethanol refineries has already
been made. As of January 2010, the domestic corn starch ethanol industry
had 13 billion gallons of refining capacity with an additional 1.4 billion
gallons under construction, according to the Renewable Fuels Association.
This domestic refining capacity is nearing the effective fuel standard limit
of 15 billion gallons per year for conventional ethanol beginning in 2015.
Importantly, the fuel standard is now at a level high enough to ensure that
a market for domestic ethanol production exists in the absence of the
ethanol tax credit and may soon itself be at a level beyond what can be
consumed by the nation’s existing vehicle infrastructure. The ethanol
content in gasoline available for most vehicles is 10 percent. This 10
percent limitation results in an upper bound of about 15 billion gallons of
ethanol that can be blended into the nation’s fuel pool. While EPA recently
allowed newer vehicles to use gasoline that contains up to 15 percent
ethanol this fuel is not yet readily available.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
The VEETC will cost $5.7 billion in forgone revenues in 2011. Because the
fuel standard allows increasing annual amounts of conventional biofuels
through 2015, which ensures a market for a conventional corn starch
ethanol industry that is already mature, Congress may wish to consider
whether revisions to the ethanol tax credit are needed. Options could
include the following:
Page 60 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Duplicative Federal Efforts Directed at
Increasing Domestic Ethanol Production Cost
Billions Annually
• Maintain the VEETC at current levels.
• Allow the VEETC to expire at the end of 2011.
• Reduce the VEETC as Congress did in the 2008 Farm Bill, when the
ethanol tax credit was reduced from 51 cents to 45 cents per gallon.
• Phase out the VEETC over a number of years.
• Modify the VEETC to counteract fluctuations in other commodities
that can influence ethanol production, such as changes in crude oil
prices. For instance, the ethanol tax credit could increase when crude
oil prices are low and decrease when crude oil prices are high.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below. In addition, information on the Tax Relief,
Analysis Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010
and information on tax expenditure estimates and domestic ethanol
refining capacity were updated from more recent sources.
Biofuels: Potential Effects and Challenges of Required Increases in Related GAO Product
Production and Use. GAO-09-446. Washington, D.C.: August 25, 2009.
For additional information about this area, contact Frank Rusco at Area Contact
(202) 512-3841 or ruscof@gao.gov.
Page 61 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Enterprise Architectures: Key Mechanisms for
Identifying Potential Overlap and Duplication
Enterprise Architectures: Key Mechanisms for
Identifying Potential Overlap and Duplication
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
An enterprise architecture is a modernization blueprint that is used by
organizations to describe their current state and a desired future state and
to leverage information technology (IT) to transform business and mission
operations. In light of the importance of developing well-defined
enterprise architectures, GAO recently issued a seven-stage enterprise
architecture management maturity framework that defines actions needed
to effectively manage an architecture program. The alternative, as GAO’s
work has shown, is the perpetuation of the kinds of operational
environments that burden most agencies today, where a lack of integration
among business operations and the IT resources supporting them leads to
systems that are duplicative, poorly integrated, and unnecessarily costly to
maintain.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Historically, federal agencies have struggled with operational
environments characterized by a lack of integration among business
operations and IT resources supporting them. A key to successfully
leveraging IT for organizational transformation is having and using an
enterprise architecture—or modernization blueprint—as an authoritative
frame of reference against which to assess and decide how individual
system investments are defined, designed, acquired, and developed. The
development, implementation, and maintenance of architectures are
widely recognized as hallmarks of successful public and private
organizations, and their use is required by the Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996
and the Office of Management and Budget.
GAO’s experience has shown that attempting to modernize (and maintain)
IT environments without an architecture to guide and constrain
investments results in organizational operations and supporting
technology infrastructures and systems that are duplicative, poorly
integrated, unnecessarily costly to maintain and interface, and unable to
respond quickly to shifting environmental factors. For example, GAO’s
reviews of enterprise architecture management at federal agencies, such
as the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, as well as reviews of critical agency functional areas, such
as Department of Defense financial management, logistics management,
combat identification, and business systems modernization have
continued to identify the absence of complete and enforced enterprise
architectures, which in turn has led to agency business operations,
systems, and data that are duplicative, incompatible, and not integrated;
these conditions have either prevented agencies from sharing data or
forced them to depend on expensive, custom-developed system interfaces
to do so.
Page 62 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Enterprise Architectures: Key Mechanisms for
Identifying Potential Overlap and Duplication
GAO’s framework provides a standard yet flexible benchmark against
which to determine where the enterprise stands in its progress toward the
ultimate goal: having a continuously improving enterprise architecture
program that can serve as a featured decision support tool when
considering and planning large-scale organizational restructuring or
transformation initiatives. In addition, it also provides a basis for
developing architecture management improvement plans, as well as for
measuring, reporting, and overseeing progress in implementing these
plans.
In August 2006, GAO reported on its work in applying its prior framework
across 27 major federal departments and agencies. This work showed that
the state of enterprise architecture development and implementation
varied considerably across departments and agencies, with some having
more mature architecture programs than others. However, overall, most
departments and agencies were not where they needed to be, particularly
with regard to their approaches to assessing each investment’s alignment
with the enterprise architecture and measuring and reporting on
enterprise architecture results and outcomes.
Accordingly, GAO made recommendations to departments and agencies
that are aimed at improving the content and use of their respective
architectures. Nonetheless, while some progress has been made, more
time is needed for agencies to fully realize the value of having well-defined
and implemented architectures. Such value can be derived from realizing
cost savings through consolidation and reuse of shared services and
elimination of antiquated and redundant mission operations, enhancing
information sharing through data standardization and system integration,
and optimizing service delivery through streamlining and normalization of
business processes and mission operations.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
If managed effectively, enterprise architectures can be a useful change
management and organizational transformation tool. The conditions for
effectively managing enterprise architecture programs are contained in
GAO’s enterprise architecture management maturity framework. To
advance the state of enterprise architecture development and use in the
federal government, senior leadership in the departments and agencies
need to demonstrate their commitment to this organizational
transformation tool, as well as ensure that the kind of management
controls embodied in GAO’s framework are in place and functioning.
Collectively, the majority of the departments and agencies’ architecture
efforts can still be viewed as a work in progress with much remaining to
Page 63 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Enterprise Architectures: Key Mechanisms for
Identifying Potential Overlap and Duplication
be accomplished before the federal government as a whole fully realizes
their transformational value. Moving beyond this status will require most
departments and agencies to overcome significant obstacles and
challenges, such as organizational parochialism and cultural resistance,
inadequate funding, and the lack of top management understanding and
skilled staff. One key to doing so continues to be sustained organizational
leadership. As GAO’s work has demonstrated, without such organizational
leadership, the benefits of enterprise architecture will not be fully realized.
In GAO’s prior work, most departments and agencies reported they expect
to realize the benefits from their respective enterprise architecture
programs, such as improved alignment between their business operations
and the IT that supports these operations and consolidation of their IT
infrastructure environments, which can reduce the costs of operating and
maintaining duplicative capabilities, sometime in the future. What this
suggests is that the real value in the federal government from developing
and using enterprise architectures remains largely unrealized. GAO’s
framework recognizes that a key to realizing this potential is effectively
managing department and agency enterprise architecture programs.
However, knowing whether benefits and results are in fact being achieved
requires having associated measures and metrics. In this regard, it is
important for agencies to satisfy the core element associated with
measuring and reporting enterprise architecture results and outcomes.
Examples of results and outcomes to be measured include costs avoided
through eliminating duplicative investments or by reusing common
services and applications and improved mission performance through re-
engineered business processes and modernized supporting systems. GAO’s
work has shown that over 50 percent of the departments and agencies
assessed had yet to fully satisfy this element. On the other hand, some
have reported they are addressing this element and have realized
significant financial benefits. For example, the Department of the Interior
has demonstrated that it is using its enterprise architecture to modernize
agency IT operations and avoid costs through enterprise software license
agreements and hardware procurement consolidation. These architecture-
based decisions have resulted in financial benefits of at least $80 million.
This means that the departments and agencies can demonstrate
achievement of expected benefits, to include costs avoided through
eliminating duplicative investments, if enterprise architecture results and
outcomes are measured and reported. The Office of Management and
Budget can play a critical role by continuing to oversee the development
and use of enterprise architecture efforts, to include the measurement and
reporting of enterprise architecture results and outcomes across the
federal government.
Page 64 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Enterprise Architectures: Key Mechanisms for
Identifying Potential Overlap and Duplication
GAO plans to follow up with those departments and agencies that reported
having satisfied the element associated with measuring and reporting
return on enterprise architecture results and outcomes to identify
associated dollar savings resulting from elimination of duplicative
investments.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
reports listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Organizational Transformation: A Framework for Assessing and
Improving Enterprise Architecture Management (Version 2.0).
GAO-10-846G. Washington, D.C.: August 2010.
Enterprise Architecture: Leadership Remains Key to Establishing and
Leveraging Architectures for Organizational Transformation.
GAO-06-831. Washington, D.C.: August 14, 2006.
Information Technology: A Framework for Assessing and Improving
Enterprise Architecture Management, version 1.1. GAO-03-584G.
Washington, D.C.: April 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact Valerie C. Melvin at Area Contact
(202) 512-6304 or melvinv@gao.gov.
Page 65 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Consolidating Federal Data Centers Provides
Opportunity to Improve Government
Efficiency
Consolidating Federal Data Centers Provides
Opportunity to Improve Government Efficiency
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The federal government’s demand for information technology (IT) is ever-
increasing. Over time, this increasing demand has led to a dramatic rise in
the number of federal data centers (defined as data processing and storage
facilities over 500 square feet with strict availability requirements)—and a
corresponding increase in operational costs. The growth in the number of
federal data centers, many offering similar services and resources, has
resulted in overlap and duplication among the centers.
In February 2010, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) launched
the Federal Data Center Consolidation Initiative to guide federal agencies
in developing and implementing data center consolidation plans. OMB
plans to oversee the agencies’ plans and measure their progress.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
In recent years, as federal agencies modernized their operations, put more
of their services online, and increased their information security profiles,
they have demanded more computing power and data storage resources.
According to OMB, the number of federal data centers grew from 432 in
1998 to more than 2,000 in 2010. These data centers often house similar
types of equipment and provide similar processing and storage
capabilities. These factors have led to concerns associated with the
provision of redundant capabilities, the underutilization of resources, and
the significant consumption of energy.
Operating such a large number of centers places costly demands on the
government. In 2010, the Federal Chief Information Officer (CIO) reported
that operating and maintaining such redundant infrastructure investments
was costly, inefficient, and unsustainable, and had a significant impact on
energy consumption. While the total annual federal spending associated
with data centers has not yet been determined, the Federal CIO has found
that operating data centers is a significant cost to the federal government,
including hardware, software, real estate, and cooling costs. For example,
according to the Environmental Protection Agency, the electricity cost to
operate federal servers and data centers across the government is about
$450 million annually. According to the Department of Energy, data center
spaces can consume 100 to 200 times as much electricity as standard
office spaces. Reported server utilization rates as low as 5 percent and
limited reuse of these data centers within or across agencies lends further
credence to the need to restructure federal data center operations to
improve efficiency and reduce costs.
In February 2010, OMB and the Federal CIO announced the Federal Data
Center Consolidation Initiative and outlined four high-level goals:
Page 66 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Consolidating Federal Data Centers Provides
Opportunity to Improve Government
Efficiency
• Promote the use of Green IT by reducing the overall energy and real
estate footprint of government data centers.
• Reduce the cost of data center hardware, software, and operations.
• Increase the overall IT security posture of the government.
• Shift IT investments to more efficient computing platforms and
technologies.
As part of this initiative, OMB directed federal agencies to prepare an
inventory of their data center assets and a plan for consolidating these
assets by August 30, 2010, and to begin implementing them in fiscal year
2011. In October 2010, OMB reported that all of the agencies submitted
their plans. OMB plans to monitor agencies’ progress through annual
reports and has established a goal of closing 800 of the over 2,100 federal
data centers by 2015.
Data center consolidation makes sense economically and as a way to
achieve more efficient IT operations, but challenges exist. For example,
agencies face challenges in ensuring the accuracy of their inventories and
plans, providing upfront funding for the consolidation effort long before
any cost savings accrue, integrating consolidation plans into fiscal year
2012 agency budget submissions (as required by OMB), establishing and
implementing shared standards (for storage, systems, security, etc.),
establishing reimbursement mechanisms to fund the centralized
operations, overcoming cultural resistance to such major organizational
changes, and maintaining current operations during the transition to
consolidated operations. Mitigating these and other challenges will require
commitment from the agencies and continued oversight by OMB and the
Federal CIO.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Moving forward, it will be important for individual agencies to move
quickly to correct any missing items in their plans, establish sound
baselines so that progress and efficiencies can be measured, begin their
consolidation efforts, track their progress, and report to OMB on their
progress over time. It will also be important for OMB to work with
agencies to establish goals and targets for consolidation (both in terms of
cost savings and reduced data centers), maintain strong oversight of the
agencies’ efforts, and look for consolidation opportunities across agencies.
Doing so will more fully address unnecessary overlap and duplication, and
Page 67 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Consolidating Federal Data Centers Provides
Opportunity to Improve Government
Efficiency
could achieve further operational improvements, efficiencies, and
financial benefits.
As part of their individual consolidation plans, each federal department
and agency was expected to estimate cost savings over time. In ongoing
work, GAO reviewed 15 of the 24 agencies’ consolidation plans. In these
plans, agencies provided the following information on estimated savings:
• Seven agencies estimated savings totaling over $369 million between
fiscal years 2011 and 2015; however, actual savings may be even higher
because three of these agencies’ estimates were only partial estimates.
They included expected energy savings but not savings from other
sources, such as facilities or equipment reductions.
• Two agencies reported that net savings would not accrue until fiscal
years 2017 and 2018, respectively.
• Six agencies did not provide estimated cost savings; however, two of
these agencies suggested that they plan to develop cost-benefit
analyses in the future.
Although some agencies reported that it was too soon to estimate cost
savings because they are just beginning to plan to consolidate and other
agencies noted that near-term savings were offset by consolidation costs,
the opportunity for long-term savings is significant. In October 2010, a
council of chief executive officers representing technical industry
companies estimated that the federal government could save $150 billion
to $200 billion over the next decade, primarily through data center and
server consolidation.
GAO has ongoing work reviewing the Federal Data Center Consolidation
Initiative as well as federal agencies’ efforts to develop and implement
consolidation plans.
Framework for
Analysis
As part of an ongoing review of the Federal Data Center Consolidation
Initiative, GAO analyzed 15 of 24 federal agencies’ data center
consolidation plans and inventories to identify plans and anticipated cost
savings, and discussed challenges to the consolidation initiative with those
agencies. GAO also met with agency officials to discuss data center
consolidation initiatives at OMB, the Agency for International
Development, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Defense,
the Department of Energy, the Department of Homeland Security, the
Page 68 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Consolidating Federal Data Centers Provides
Opportunity to Improve Government
Efficiency
Department of the Interior, the Department of Labor, the Department of
State, the Department of the Treasury, the Environmental Protection
Agency, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, the Small Business Administration, the
Department of Commerce, the Department of Education, the Department
of Health and Human Services, the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, the Department of Justice, the Department of
Transportation, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the General Services
Administration, the National Science Foundation, the Office of Personnel
Management, and the Social Security Administration.
Related GAO
Products
Information Security: Governmentwide Guidance Needed to Assist
Agencies in Implementing Cloud Computing. GAO-10-855T. Washington,
D.C.: July 1, 2010.
Information Security: Federal Guidance Needed to Address Control
Issues with Implementing Cloud Computing. GAO-10-513. Washington,
D.C.: May 27, 2010.
Social Security Administration: Effective Information Technology
Management Essential for Data Center Initiative. GAO-09-662T.
Washington, D.C.: April 28, 2009.
For additional information about this area, contact David Powner at (202) Area Contact
512-9286 or pownerd@gao.gov.
Page 69 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Data on Interagency Contracting
Needed to Minimize Duplication and Better
Leverage the Government’s Buying Power
Improved Data on Interagency Contracting Needed to
Minimize Duplication and Better Leverage the
Government’s Buying Power
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Interagency and agencywide contracting was responsible for at least $54
billion of the approximately $540 billion that was obligated
governmentwide for goods and services in fiscal year 2009. Interagency
contracting is a process by which one agency either uses another agency’s
contract directly or obtains contracting support services from another
agency. In agencywide contracting, sometimes called enterprisewide
contracting, a component within an agency awards a contract for use by
all components of that agency. Both contracting methods are intended to
leverage the government’s buying power and provide cost savings. By
providing a simplified, expedited, and lower cost method of procurement,
they can help agencies save both time and administration costs. However,
unjustified duplication among available contracts can result in increased
costs to the government.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Agencies have created numerous interagency and agencywide contracts
using existing statutes, the Federal Acquisition Regulation, and agency-
specific policies. The creation of these contracts is based on a number of
rationales, including avoiding user fees that would be paid for using
another agency’s contract, allowing for cost-reimbursement contracts, and
gaining more control over procurement actions within the agencies. With
the proliferation of these contracts, however, there is a risk of unintended
duplication and inefficiency. Billions of taxpayer dollars flow through
interagency and agencywide contracts, but the federal government does
not have a clear, comprehensive view of which agencies use these
contracts and if they are being utilized in an efficient and effective manner.
Without this information, agencies may be unaware of existing contract
options that could meet their needs and may be awarding new contracts
when use of an exiting contract would suffice. The government, therefore,
might be missing opportunities to better leverage its vast buying power.
Government contracting officials and representatives of vendors have
expressed concerns about potential duplication among the interagency
and agencywide contracts across government, which they said can result
in increased procurement costs, redundant buying capacity, and an
increased workload for the acquisition workforce. Some vendors stated
they offer similar products and services on multiple contracts and that the
effort required to be on multiple contracts results in extra costs to the
vendor, which they pass to the government through increased prices.
Some vendors stated that the additional cost of being on multiple
contracts ranged from $10,000 to $1,000,000 per contract due to increased
bid and proposal and administrative costs. One vendor stated that General
Services Administration contracts compete with agencywide contracts,
Page 70 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Data on Interagency Contracting
Needed to Minimize Duplication and Better
Leverage the Government’s Buying Power
and from industry’s perspective, this has introduced redundant buying
capacity.
For several years the General Service Administration’s Federal Acquisition
Service and its Inspector General have reported that unnecessary
duplication exists within the Multiple Award Schedule (MAS) program.
Similarly, the January 2007 Report of the Acquisition Advisory Panel
identified several problems regarding interagency contracting. In
particular, the report noted that too many choices without information
related to the performance and management of these contracts make the
cost-benefit analysis and market research needed to select an appropriate
acquisition contract impossible. Such problems persist, as GAO reported
in April 2010.
GAO has identified two overriding factors that hamper the government’s
ability to realize the strategic value of using interagency and agencywide
contracts: (1) the lack of consistent governmentwide policy on the
creation, use, and costs of awarding and administering some contracts;
and (2) long-standing problems with the quality of information on
interagency and agencywide contracts in the federal procurement data
system. Both factors may have contributed to unnecessary duplication.
In April 2010, GAO recommended that the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB), which has governmentwide procurement policy
responsibilities, establish a policy framework for establishing some types
of interagency contracts and agencywide contracts, including a
requirement to conduct a sound business case. GAO also recommended
that OMB take steps to improve the data on interagency contracts
including updating existing data on interagency and agencywide contracts,
ensuring that departments and agencies accurately record this data, and
assessing the feasibility of creating and maintaining a centralized database
of interagency and agencywide contracts. This database would allow
contracting officers to identify and make informed decisions on available
contracts. GAO’s recommendations were consistent with provisions in the
2009 National Defense Authorization Act, which directed that the Federal
Acquisition Regulation be amended to require that certain interagency
contracts entered into by an executive agency be supported by a business
case analysis and all interagency contracting be supported by a written
determination that the approach is the best procurement alternative. An
interim regulation addressing the legislation was issued in December 2010.
OMB has taken some steps to improve interagency contracting and related
data. It reported in August 2010 that agencies are working to improve their
Page 71 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Data on Interagency Contracting
Needed to Minimize Duplication and Better
Leverage the Government’s Buying Power
internal management controls, such as making determinations that using
another agency’s contract is in the best interest of the government. In
addition to the recent interim regulation, OMB reported that it planned to
issue overarching guidance that would address the need for agencies to
prepare business cases describing the need for a new multiagency or
agencywide contract, the value added by its creation, and the agency’s
suitability to serve as an executive agent. According to OMB, the
upcoming guidance will require agencies to address the anticipated impact
that a proposed multiagency contract will have on the government’s ability
to leverage its buying power—such as how it differs from an existing
contract and the basis for concluding that it will offer greater value than
an existing contract. This business case analysis also will require the
agency to evaluate the cost of awarding and managing the contract and
compare this cost to the likely fees that would be incurred if the agency
used an existing contract or sought out acquisition assistance.
While the interim regulation and OMB’s plans concerning a requirement
for agencies to submit business cases for new multiagency or agencywide
contracts constitute steps forward, in the absence of better data regarding
the universe of such contracts, agencies may face challenges in evaluating
the value of existing contracts. GAO has reported numerous times over the
years on issues related to the quality of the government’s data on
contracts. In that regard, OMB reports that it has a new effort under way
to improve contract information in the Federal Procurement Data System-
Next Generation (FPDS-NG), the current federal government database for
information and data on all federal contracts. OMB also is discussing
options for creating a clearinghouse of existing interagency and
agencywide contracts.
In OMB’s announcement of its planned guidance, it noted that progress
has been insufficient on the issue of contract duplication and concerns
remain that agencies are duplicating each other’s contracting efforts and
creating redundant contracting capacity. Until controls to address the
issue of duplication are fully implemented, the government will continue
to miss opportunities to take advantage of the government’s buying power
through more efficient and more strategic contracting. At the same time,
the added workload for the acquisition workforce and procurement costs
for vendors, which result in higher prices for the government, will
continue until this problem is addressed.
Page 72 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Data on Interagency Contracting
Needed to Minimize Duplication and Better
Leverage the Government’s Buying Power
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
To realize the benefits of using interagency and agencywide contracts,
OMB and the General Services Administration will need to fully implement
the steps they are taking to address identified shortcomings in the
management of interagency contracting. The procuring agencies will have
to play their parts as well. In particular, despite numerous GAO
recommendations over the years, improvements are still needed regarding
the accuracy of the federal contracts database in order to determine
whether the contracts are being used in an efficient and effective manner.
Continued congressional oversight of this issue is warranted.
Requiring business case analyses for new multiagency and agencywide
contracts and ensuring agencies have access to up-to-date and accurate
data on the available contracts will promote the efficient use of
interagency and agencywide contracting and, by reducing the costs
associated with duplicate contracts, help the government better leverage
its purchasing power when buying commercial goods and services.
The information contained in this analysis has been based on the related Framework for
products list below, with updates provided through the OMB Report to
Analysis Congress from August 2010 and an interview with OMB officials. GAO
determined that the data it used were sufficiently reliable for its purposes.
Related GAO
Products
Contracting Strategies: Better Data and Management Needed to Leverage
Value of Interagency and Enterprisewise Contracts. GAO-10-862T.
Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Contracting Strategies: Data and Oversight Problems Hamper
Opportunities to Leverage Value of Interagency and Enterprisewide
Contracts. GAO-10-367. Washington, D.C.: April 29, 2010.
Federal Contracting: Observations on the Government’s Contracting
Data Systems. GAO-09-1032T. Washington, D.C.: September 29, 2009.
High-Risk Series: An Update. GAO-09-271 Washington, D.C.: January
2009.
Interagency Contracting: Need for Improved Information and Policy
Implementation at the Department of State. GAO-08-578. Washington,
D.C.: May 8, 2008.
Page 73 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Improved Data on Interagency Contracting
Needed to Minimize Duplication and Better
Leverage the Government’s Buying Power
Department of Homeland Security: Better Planning and Assessment
Needed to Improve Outcomes for Complex Service Acquisitions.
GAO-08-263. Washington, D.C.: April 22, 2008.
Federal Acquisition: Oversight Plan Needed to Help Implement
Acquisition Advisory Panel Recommendations. GAO-08-160. Washington,
D.C.: December 20, 2007.
A Call For Stewardship: Enhancing the Federal Government’s Ability to
Address Key Fiscal and Other 21st Century Challenges. GAO-08-93SP.
Washington, D.C.: December 2007.
Improvements Needed to the Federal Procurement Data System-Next
Generation. GAO-05-960R. Washington, D.C.: September 27, 2005.
Contract Management: Opportunities to Improve Pricing of GSA
Multiple Award Schedules Contracts. GAO-05-229. Washington, D.C.:
February 11, 2005.
High-Risk Series: An Update. GAO-05-207. Washington, D.C.: January
2005.
Contract Management: Guidance Needed to Promote Competition for
Defense Task Orders. GAO-04-874. Washington D.C.: July 30, 2004.
For additional information about this area, contact John Needham at Area Contact
(202) 512-4841 or needhamjk1@gao.gov.
Page 74 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Periodic Reviews Could Help Identify
Ineffective Tax Expenditures and
Redundancies in Related Tax and Spending
Programs
Periodic Reviews Could Help Identify Ineffective Tax
Expenditures and Redundancies in Related Tax and
Spending Programs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
According to the sum of U.S. Department of the Treasury estimates for
fiscal year 2009, almost $1 trillion in federal revenue was forgone due to
tax exclusions, credits, deductions, deferrals, and preferential tax rates—
legally known as tax expenditures. The revenue that the government
forgoes is viewed by many analysts as spending channeled through the tax
system. Similar to spending programs, tax expenditures represent a
substantial federal commitment in a wide range of mission areas. For
fiscal year 2009, the U.S. Department of the Treasury listed a total of 173
tax expenditures, some of which were of the same magnitude or larger
than related federal spending for some mission areas. Like mandatory
spending programs such as Medicare, many tax expenditures are governed
by eligibility rules and formulas that provide benefits to those who are
eligible and wish to participate. Since 1994, GAO has recommended
greater scrutiny of tax expenditures.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Tax expenditures, if well designed and effectively implemented, can be an
effective tool to further federal goals, such as encouraging economic
development in disadvantaged areas, financing higher education, and
stimulating research and development. However, tax expenditures can
contribute to mission fragmentation and program overlap, thus creating
the potential for duplication. Moreover, some tax expenditures may be
ineffective at achieving their social or economic purposes. Tax
expenditures do not compete overtly with other priorities in the annual
budget, and spending embedded in the tax code is effectively funded
before discretionary spending is considered. Many tax expenditures are
not subject to congressional reauthorization. Therefore, Congress lacks
the opportunity to regularly review their effectiveness. Periodic reviews
could help identify redundancy in related tax and spending programs and
determine how well specific tax expenditures work to achieve their goals
and how their benefits and costs compare to those of programs with
similar goals.
In the case of higher education, the federal government offers seven tax
expenditures and nine spending programs—grant and loan programs
authorized by Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965—to help
students and their families pay for postsecondary education. In 2005, the
number of tax filers claiming a higher education tax credit or tuition
deduction surpassed the number of Title IV aid recipients. Perhaps due to
the multiple, complex tax provisions, hundreds of thousands of taxpayers
in 2005 failed to claim tax incentives or did not claim the most
advantageous tax benefit. Simplifying the tax, grant, and loan programs
may reduce complexities in higher education financing, including reducing
Page 75 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Periodic Reviews Could Help Identify
Ineffective Tax Expenditures and
Redundancies in Related Tax and Spending
Programs
the number of eligible taxpayers that do not claim tax benefits. However,
GAO reported in 2008 that Congress had received little information about
the roles and effectiveness of the tax and Title IV programs.
To date, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has not used its
budget and performance review processes to systematically review tax
expenditures and promote integrated reviews of related tax and spending
programs.
Past GAO reviews of specific tax expenditures have identified options to
improve their design and better target resources. For example, in 2010,
GAO suggested that Congress modify the Research Tax Credit to reduce
windfalls to taxpayers for research spending they would have done
anyway. GAO also suggested that Congress convert at least part of the
New Markets Tax Credit to a grant program to increase the amount of
federal subsidy reaching businesses in impoverished, low-income
communities.
Data availability has been a challenge in assessing tax expenditure
performance. In the case of the Empowerment Zone, Enterprise
Community, and Renewal Community programs, the lack of tax benefit
data limits the ability of the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) and the Department of Agriculture to evaluate the
overall mix of grant and tax programs to revitalize selected urban and
rural communities. In response to GAO recommendations, HUD and the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) collaborated to share data on some
program tax credits. However, the IRS data do not tie the program tax
incentives to specific designated communities, making it difficult to assess
the impact of the tax benefits.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Coordinated reviews of tax expenditures with related federal spending
programs could help policymakers reduce overlap and inconsistencies and
direct scarce resources to the most effective or least costly methods to
deliver federal support.
In 2005, GAO recommended that the Director of the Office of Management
and Budget in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury take specific
actions to ensure that policymakers have necessary information to
exercise scrutiny of tax expenditures:
• Present tax expenditures in the budget together with related outlay
programs.
Page 76 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Periodic Reviews Could Help Identify
Ineffective Tax Expenditures and
Redundancies in Related Tax and Spending
Programs
• Develop and implement a framework for conducting performance
reviews of tax expenditures. This includes (1) outlining leadership
responsibilities and coordination among agencies with related
responsibilities; (2) setting a review schedule; (3) identifying review
methods and ways to address the lack of credible tax expenditure
performance information; and (4) identifying resources needed for tax
expenditure reviews.
• Develop guidance on incorporating tax expenditures in agencies’
strategic plans and performance reports.
• Require that tax expenditures be included in Executive Branch budget
and performance review processes.
The Executive Branch had made little progress in implementing similar
recommendations that GAO made in 1994, and, OMB, citing
methodological and conceptual issues, disagreed with GAO’s 2005
recommendations. However, in its fiscal year 2012 budget guidance, OMB
instructed agencies, where appropriate, to analyze how to better integrate
tax and spending policies that have similar objectives and goals. Such
analysis could be useful in identifying redundancies.
Improving tax expenditure performance or eliminating tax expenditures
could reduce revenue losses, potentially by billions of dollars. For
example, improved designs may enable individual tax expenditures to
achieve better results for the same revenue loss or the same results with
less revenue loss. Also, reductions in revenue losses from eliminating
ineffective or redundant tax expenditures could be substantial depending
on the size of the eliminated provisions. Whether and how much federal
revenues would increase from improving tax expenditures’ performance
or eliminating them also would depend on whether and how much
Congress might adjust overall tax rates as tax expenditure inefficiencies
are addressed. GAO believes that tax expenditure performance is an area
that would benefit from enhanced congressional scrutiny as Congress
considers ways to address the nation’s long-term fiscal imbalance.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below and GAO’s work following up on the
Analysis recommendations from those products.
Page 77 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Periodic Reviews Could Help Identify
Ineffective Tax Expenditures and
Redundancies in Related Tax and Spending
Programs
Related GAO
Products
Revitalization Programs: Empowerment Zones, Enterprise
Communities, and Renewal Communities. GAO-10-464R. Washington,
D.C.: March 12, 2010.
New Markets Tax Credit: The Credit Helps Fund a Variety of Projects in
Low-Income Communities, but Could Be Simplified. GAO-10-334.
Washington, D.C.: January 29, 2010.
Tax Policy: The Research Tax Credit’s Design and Administration Can
Be Improved. GAO-10-136. Washington, D.C: November 6, 2009.
Higher Education: Multiple Higher Education Tax Incentives Create
Opportunities for Taxpayers to Make Costly Mistakes. GAO-08-717T.
Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2008.
21st Century Challenges: How Performance Budgeting Can Help.
GAO-07-1194T. Washington, D.C.: September 20, 2007.
Empowerment Zone and Enterprise Community Program:
Improvements Occurred in Communities, but the Effect of the Program
is Unclear. GAO-06-727. Washington, D.C.: September 22, 2006.
Government Performance and Accountability: Tax Expenditures
Represent a Substantial Federal Commitment and Need to Be
Reexamined. GAO-05-690. Washington, D.C.: September 23, 2005.
Student Aid and Postsecondary Tax Preferences: Limited Research
Exists on Effectiveness of Tools to Assist Students and Families through
Title IV Student Aid and Tax Preferences. GAO-05-684. Washington, D.C.:
July 29, 2005.
Community Development: Federal Revitalization Programs Are Being
Implemented, but Data on the Use of Tax Benefits Are Limited.
GAO-04-306. Washington, D.C.: March 5, 2004.
Tax Policy: Tax Expenditures Deserve More Scrutiny.
GAO/GGD/AIMD-94-122. Washington, D.C.: June 3, 1994.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov.
Page 78 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for DOD and VA to
Jointly Modernize Their Electronic Health
Record Systems
Opportunities Exist for DOD and VA to Jointly
Modernize Their Electronic Health Record Systems
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Departments of Defense (DOD) and Veterans Affairs (VA) operate two
of the nation’s largest health care systems, providing health care to 9.6
million active duty service members and their beneficiaries and 6 million
veterans at estimated annual costs of about $49 billion and $48 billion,
respectively. Although they have identified many common health care
business needs, both departments have spent large sums of money to
develop and operate electronic health record systems that they rely on to
create and manage patient health information. Furthermore, the
departments have each begun multimillion dollar modernizations of their
electronic health record systems. Specifically, DOD has obligated
approximately $2 billion over the 13-year life of its Armed Forces Health
Longitudinal Technology Application (AHLTA) and requested $302 million
in fiscal 2011 year funds for a new system. For its part, VA reported
spending almost $600 million from 2001 to 2007 on eight projects as part of
its Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology Architecture
(VistA) modernization. In April 2008, VA estimated an $11 billion total cost
to complete the modernization by 2018.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Although DOD and VA have many common health care business needs, the
departments have begun separate modernizations of their electronic
health record systems. Reduced duplication in this area could save system
development and operation costs while supporting higher-quality health
care for service members and veterans.
In May 2010, the departments identified 10 areas—inpatient
documentation, outpatient documentation, pharmacy, laboratory, order
entry and management, scheduling, imaging and radiology, third-party
billing, registration, and data sharing—in which they have common
business needs. Moreover, the results of a 2008 study conducted for the
departments found that over 97 percent of functional requirements for an
inpatient electronic health record system are common to both
departments. Nevertheless, DOD has initiated an effort called the EHR
(Electronic Health Record) Way Ahead to modernize AHLTA. At the same
time, VA has begun a separate effort to modernize VistA.
The departments’ distinct modernization efforts are due in part to barriers
they face to jointly addressing their common health care system needs.
These barriers stem from weaknesses in three key information technology
(IT) management areas: strategic planning, enterprise architecture, and
investment management. First, the departments have not articulated
explicit plans, goals, and time frames for jointly addressing the health IT
requirements common to their electronic health record systems. For
Page 79 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for DOD and VA to
Jointly Modernize Their Electronic Health
Record Systems
example, DOD’s and VA’s joint strategic plan, which is intended to
describe the departments’ coordination and sharing efforts, does not
discuss how or when the departments propose to identify and develop
joint health IT solutions, and department officials have not yet determined
whether the IT capabilities developed for the new Federal Health Care
Center can or will be implemented at other DOD and VA medical facilities.
Second, although DOD and VA have taken steps toward developing and
maintaining elements of a joint health architecture, such as a description
of business processes and supporting technologies, it is not being used to
guide the departments’ health IT modernization efforts. For example, the
departments have not defined how they intend to transition from their
current architecture to a planned future state. Third, DOD and VA have not
established a joint process for selecting IT investments based on criteria
that consider cost, benefit, schedule, and risk elements, which would help
to ensure that the chosen solution meets their common health IT needs
and provides better value and benefits to the government as a whole.
Without these key management capabilities in place, DOD and VA are
impeded in identifying and implementing efficient and effective IT
solutions to jointly address their common needs and achieving the
seamless, comprehensive access to information that is necessary to
optimally treat patients as they transition from servicemember to veteran
status.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
GAO’s recent work identified several actions that the Secretaries of
Defense and Veterans Affairs could take to overcome barriers that DOD
and VA face in modernizing their electronic health record systems to
jointly address their common health care business needs, including the
following:
• Revise the departments’ joint strategic plan to include information
discussing their electronic health record system modernization efforts
and how those efforts will address the departments’ common health
care business needs.
• Further develop the departments’ joint health architecture to include
their planned future state and transition plan from their current state to
the next generation of electronic health record capabilities.
• Define and implement a process, including criteria that considers costs,
benefits, schedule, and risks, for identifying and selecting joint IT
investments to meet the departments’ common health care business
needs.
Page 80 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Opportunities Exist for DOD and VA to
Jointly Modernize Their Electronic Health
Record Systems
Officials from both DOD and VA agreed with these recommendations.
GAO will continue to monitor their progress on this important issue.
Efforts by the departments to jointly identify and develop common IT
solutions to address their mutual health care needs could result in system
development and operation cost savings while supporting higher-quality
health care for service members and veterans. Although the financial
benefit of reducing duplication in this area is to be determined, a joint
approach to electronic health record modernization should not only result
in cost savings, it should also improve the departments’ ability to share
health information, which in turn can optimize the quality of health care
the departments provide to service members and veterans.
The information contained in this analysis is based on findings from GAO’s Framework for
recent report on DOD and VA electronic health record system
Analysis modernizations and the other products listed below.
Related GAO
Products
Electronic Health Records: DOD and VA Should Remove Barriers and
Improve Efforts to Meet Their Common System Needs. GAO-11-265.
Washington, D.C.: February 2, 2011.
Information Technology: Opportunities Exist to Improve Management of
DOD’s Electronic Health Record Initiative. GAO-11-50. Washington, D.C.:
October 6, 2010.
Information Technology: Management Improvements Are Essential to
VA’s Second Effort to Replace Its Outpatient Scheduling System.
GAO-10-579. Washington, D.C.: May 27, 2010.
Electronic Health Records: DOD and VA Interoperability Efforts Are
Ongoing; Program Office Needs to Implement Recommended
Improvements. GAO-10-332. Washington D.C.: January 28, 2010.
Veterans Affairs: Health Information System Modernization Far from
Complete; Improved Project Planning and Oversight Needed.
GAO-08-805. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Valerie C. Melvin at Area Contact
(202) 512-6304 or melvinv@gao.gov.
Page 81 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
VA and DOD Need to Control Drug Costs and
Increase Joint Contracting Whenever it is
Cost Effective
VA and DOD Need to Control Drug Costs and Increase
Joint Contracting Whenever it is Cost Effective
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the Department of Defense
(DOD) spent about $11.4 billion on prescription drugs for beneficiaries in
fiscal year 2009. Reflecting national trends, VA and DOD drug
expenditures have risen significantly. Since the early 1980s, Congress has
urged the departments to achieve greater efficiencies through increased
collaboration. Therefore, VA and DOD have attempted to restrain
pharmacy costs by jointly contracting for some drugs to obtain discounts
from drug manufacturers. In 2001, GAO recommended that VA and DOD
jointly procure all brand name and generic drugs for which such
procurement was clinically appropriate and cost-effective and report to
Congress annually on their joint drug procurement efforts. VA and DOD
agreed with GAO’s recommendations. Also, GAO testified that addressing
differences in their health care systems could increase joint contracting
for brand name drugs, which make up a smaller share of the departments’
drug volume than generic drugs but account for a far higher share of
expenditures.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
As GAO previously recommended, from fiscal year 2002 through 2005, VA
and DOD increased joint procurement of brand name and generic drugs.
However, GAO found that by fiscal year 2009, joint national contracts1 for
prescription drugs accounted for only a small proportion of VA and DOD
spending on prescription drugs. Specifically, in fiscal year 2009, VA spent
about $3.7 billion and DOD spent about $7.7 billion on prescription drugs,
while spending under joint national contracts represented about 5 percent
and less than 1 percent of those totals, respectively. As the following bar
chart shows, although VA and DOD spending on joint national contracts
increased from $183 million on 76 contracts in fiscal year 2002 to $560
million on 84 contracts in fiscal year 2005, it decreased by fiscal year 2009
to $214 million on 67 contracts.2
1Joint national contracts are one of the strategies used by VA and DOD to obtain discounts
on drugs from manufacturers beyond those that might otherwise be available to federal
purchasers.
2The Veterans Benefits and Health Care Improvement Act of 2000 included a provision
encouraging VA and DOD to increase their level of cooperation in the procurement and
management of prescription drugs. Pub. L. No. 106-419, § 223, 114 Stat. 1822, 1845 (2000).
Page 82 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
VA
VA and DOD Need to Control Drug Costs and
Increase Joint Contracting Whenever it is
Cost Effective
VA and DOD Joint National Contracts and Spending
Spending on Joint National Contracts (dollars in millions)
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
193187
308301
422
367
207
116
213782
163
138
140
104
67
214224
390
464
560
507
311
183
Year
76 85 81 84 78 65 59 67
Total Joint National Contracts by year
DOD
VA
Sources: VA and DOD.
With regard to brand name drugs—which account for more than 80
percent of VA’s and DOD’s total drug spending—VA and DOD had no joint
national contracts for brand name drugs in 2002, had three in 2003, four in
2004 and 2005, three in 2006, two in 2007, and none in 2008 or 2009. VA and
DOD have attributed significant cost avoidance3 to their joint contracting
efforts; for example, VA estimated about $666 million in cost avoidance in
fiscal year 2005 alone. These cost avoidance estimates have declined
significantly as joint contract spending has decreased.
VA and DOD officials attributed the decline in joint contracting since 2005
primarily to the elimination of joint contracting for brand name drugs due
to a change to DOD’s drug procurement process which occurred as a
3VA and DOD generally calculate the cost avoidance attributable to joint contracting efforts
by determining the difference between actual costs under the joint contract pricing and
estimated costs they would have incurred had the joint contract pricing not been in place.
Page 83 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
VA and DOD Need to Control Drug Costs and
Increase Joint Contracting Whenever it is
Cost Effective
result of its implementation of its uniform formulary.4, 5 Prior to DOD’s
implementation of its uniform formulary process, a VA contracting officer
offered formulary placement to a drug manufacturer in connection with
the award of a brand name drug joint contract, taking into account clinical
reviews conducted by the relevant VA and DOD committees.6 By statute,
responsibility for DOD’s uniform formulary is vested under the Secretary
of Defense, and by DOD regulation the Director of DOD’s TRICARE
Management Activity is responsible for formulary placement decisions.7
VA and DOD officials told us that DOD’s uniform formulary process
therefore precludes DOD from participating in a VA-led joint contract that
offers formulary placement as part of the contracting process. According
to VA and DOD, they can still jointly contract for generic drugs because
these contracts do not usually require formulary addition.8 In 2001, GAO
reported that a DOD uniform formulary could increase joint contracting
opportunities because the larger the departments’ formularies, the greater
the chance they would overlap and provide opportunities to jointly
procure brand name drugs. However, DOD’s formulary process appears to
have limited rather than increased joint contracting opportunities. VA data
confirm that the decline in spending under joint national contracts since
4Formularies are lists of medications that health care organizations encourage or require
providers to prescribe for patients. By concentrating their purchases on particular drugs,
organizations can negotiate with manufacturers to secure better prices. Likewise,
manufacturers have a strong interest in having their drugs listed on formularies in order to
capture greater market shares for their drugs. VA and DOD each has had centralized
formularies since 1997, but DOD implemented its current uniform formulary in fiscal year
2005.
5DOD was required by the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 to
establish a uniform formulary. Pub. L. No. 106-65, § 701, 113 Stat. 512, 677-80 (1999).
Neither the act nor the accompanying reports addressed joint contracting with VA, and it is
not clear whether or not Congress considered the matter when passing the uniform
formulary requirement.
6For VA these committees are the VA Pharmacy Benefits Management Strategic Healthcare
Group, Medical Advisory Panel, and Veterans Integrated Service Network Formulary
Leaders Committee. For DOD, this committee is the Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee.
7TRICARE is DOD’s regionally structured health care program for active duty personnel
and their dependents, eligible National Guard and Reserve servicemembers and their
dependents, and retirees and their dependents and survivors.
8Typically, a generic drug being considered for a joint national contract would already be
included on VA’s and DOD’s formularies. For generic drug joint contracts, one
manufacturer is selected from a group of manufacturers who make the same generic drug.
In contrast, a joint contract for a brand name drug would typically involve selection of one
brand name drug from a group of drugs that were determined to be therapeutic
alternatives, with the selected drug being placed on the formularies.
Page 84 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
VA and DOD Need to Control Drug Costs and
Increase Joint Contracting Whenever it is
Cost Effective
2005 can be largely attributed to the elimination of joint contracting for
costly brand name drugs. VA data show that spending under joint national
contracts for generic drugs has remained relatively constant between
fiscal years 2005 and 2009, fluctuating between $175 million and $196
million, while VA spending under joint national contracts for brand name
drugs declined over this period, from $232 million in 2005 to $0 in 2008 and
2009.
In addition, officials told us that joint contracting is not available for a
large segment of drug spending. Specifically, DOD does not contract,
jointly or on its own, for drugs dispensed through retail pharmacies. In
fiscal year 2009, DOD officials reported $5.8 billion in retail pharmacy drug
spending, none of which currently presents a joint contracting
opportunity.
Despite the limits to joint contracting, VA and DOD officials said they are
independently achieving cost savings in other ways. VA officials told us
that VA obtains equally good prices working independently as it does
when it jointly contracts with DOD, and consequently VA officials believe
VA is not missing any savings opportunities by not jointly contracting with
DOD for brand name drugs. VA officials told us they do not think
additional joint contracting could lead to increased cost savings for VA.
Additionally, DOD officials said that while joint contracting has declined,
their uniform formulary process has been more effective at producing
savings, citing $926 million in cost avoidance in fiscal year 2007.9
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
While VA and DOD officials assert they are independently achieving
significant drug cost savings, the departments’ spending on brand-name
drugs has been increasing, totaling almost $10 billion dollars in fiscal year
2009, or about 85 percent of the approximately $11.4 billion in total drug
spending that year. Since it is unclear whether substantial cost savings
could be realized if the departments resumed joint contracting for brand
name drugs, VA and DOD should analyze whether greater cost savings
could be achieved through joint contracting for brand name drugs than are
currently achieved through their independent strategies, and determine
whether it would be cost-effective to take steps to resume joint
9For more information about uniform formulary cost savings, see GAO, DOD Pharmacy
Benefits Program: Reduced Pharmacy Costs Resulting from the Uniform Formulary and
Manufacturer Rebates, GAO-08-172R (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 31, 2007).
Page 85 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
VA and DOD Need to Control Drug Costs and
Increase Joint Contracting Whenever it is
Cost Effective
contracting for brand name drugs. Regardless of whether joint contracting
for brand name drugs is practicable, the departments face continued
challenges in controlling increasing drug costs, and should make finding
drug savings a priority. For example, GAO previously recommended that
DOD identify, implement, and monitor efforts to control retail pharmacy
spending, an area for which drug spending is increasing and cannot be
controlled through joint contracting efforts.10 DOD agreed with this
recommendation. The departments should also continue their efforts to
jointly contract for generic drugs, and look for opportunities to increase
joint contracting efforts as generic versions of existing brand name drugs
become available. Officials noted, for example, that generic versions of
drugs for reducing cholesterol and controlling asthma may become
available within a few years.
VA and DOD provided comments on GAO’s draft analysis of this issue. VA
stated that it would explore whether cost savings might be possible if it
resumed joint contracting for brand name drugs, and agreed that the
departments should continue and potentially increase joint contracting for
generic drugs. DOD concurred with the draft and offered additional
contextual information. For example, DOD noted that while its retail
pharmacy network remains the largest and most costly component of its
pharmacy benefit, the agency has received a total of over $960 million in
federal pricing discounts11 on purchases made through retail pharmacies in
fiscal years 2009 and 2010.12
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based in part on the related
GAO products listed below. In addition, to determine the factors that
contributed to the decline in joint contracting since 2005, GAO interviewed
VA and DOD pharmacy and procurement officials and obtained and
reviewed relevant documents, including articles and reports to Congress
related to VA’s and DOD’s pharmacy management systems. GAO also
reviewed VA and DOD drug spending and joint contracting data from 2002
10See GAO, DOD Pharmacy Program: Continued Efforts Needed to Reduce Growth in
Spending at Retail Pharmacies, GAO-08-327 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 4, 2008).
11The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 required that federal pricing
arrangements be applied to drugs dispensed at retail pharmacies as of January 28, 2008. See
Pub. L. No. 110-181, § 703, 122 Stat. 3, 188 (codified at 10 U.S.C. § 1074g(f)).
12DOD reported federal pricing discounts received through July 31, 2010.
Page 86 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
VA and DOD Need to Control Drug Costs and
Increase Joint Contracting Whenever it is
Cost Effective
through 2009 and determined that the data were sufficiently reliable for
use in this report.
Related GAO
Products
Prescription Drugs: Overview of Approaches to Control Prescription
Drug Spending in Federal Programs. GAO-09-819T. Washington, D.C.:
June 24, 2009.
DOD Pharmacy Program: Continued Efforts Needed to Reduce Growth
in Spending at Retail Pharmacies. GAO-08-327. Washington, D.C.: April 4,
2008.
DOD Pharmacy Benefits Program: Reduced Pharmacy Costs Resulting
from the Uniform Formulary and Manufacturer Rebates. GAO-08-172R.
Washington, D.C.: October 31, 2007.
Mail Order Pharmacies: DOD’s Use of VA’s Mail Pharmacy Could
Produce Savings and Other Benefits. GAO-05-555. Washington, D.C.: June
22, 2005.
DOD and VA Pharmacy: Progress and Remaining Challenges in Jointly
Buying and Mailing Out Drugs. GAO-01-588. Washington, D.C.: May 25,
2001.
DOD and VA Health Care: Jointly Buying and Mailing Out
Pharmaceuticals Could Save Millions of Dollars. T-HEHS-00-121.
Washington, D.C.: May 25, 2000.
For additional information about this area, contact Randall B. Williamson Area Contact
at (202) 512-7114 or williamsonr@gao.gov.
Page 87 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
HHS Needs an Overall Strategy to Better
Integrate Nationwide Public Health
Information Systems
HHS Needs an Overall Strategy to Better Integrate
Nationwide Public Health Information Systems
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Public health functions in the United States—such as disease surveillance
and emergency detection and response—are conducted by public health
officials from 59 state and territorial health departments; more than 3,000
local health departments; over 180,000 clinical laboratories; and multiple
federal agencies. As the federal point of contact for public health
initiatives, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is
responsible for coordinating nationwide efforts to detect and respond to
disease outbreaks and other public health emergencies. Because of the
many participants involved, the identification and management of public
health emergencies call for effective communication and collaboration
across all levels of government and the private sector. In addition, officials
at HHS and other federal, state, and local agencies recognize the need to
improve the use of information technology to collect, analyze, and share
data that can be used to enhance nationwide public health situational
awareness—that is, public knowledge of key health-related events and the
availability of medical and emergency response resources.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
HHS has taken steps over the past decade to improve the ability of public
health entities to electronically collect, analyze, and share information that
supports early event detection and emergency response operations, but
the department’s initiatives have been undertaken without the strategic
planning needed to coordinate and integrate the priorities, goals, and
objectives of various related initiatives. HHS officials have identified at
least 25 information technology systems that are key to the department’s
efforts to support public health situational awareness. In fiscal year 2009,
reported costs for developing and implementing these systems were
approximately $40 million. Additionally, other federal, state, local, and
tribal public health entities throughout the country have expended scarce
resources to develop and implement numerous other systems for
conducting public health functions within their own jurisdictions.
HHS has also defined data and other technical standards intended to
better enable public health entities throughout the nation to develop and
implement interoperable systems for collecting, analyzing, and sharing
data. However, the department has not developed and implemented an
overall strategy that defines goals, objectives, and priorities and that
integrates related strategies to achieve the unified electronic nationwide
situational awareness capability required by the Pandemic and All-Hazards
Preparedness Act.1 Rather, HHS and the public health community have
1Pub. L. No. 109-417 (Dec. 19, 2006).
Page 88 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
HHS Needs an Overall Strategy to Better
Integrate Nationwide Public Health
Information Systems
developed and implemented information systems to enhance public health
situational awareness in an often stove-piped fashion, focusing on specific
public health functions. Therefore, public health entities are limited in
their ability to electronically collect, analyze, and share information
needed to enhance public health situational awareness and improve the
effectiveness of their efforts to prepare for and respond to public health
emergencies.
In December 2006, the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act
mandated that the Secretary of HHS, in collaboration with state, local, and
tribal public health entities, develop and implement a strategic plan for the
establishment of an electronic network of interoperable systems to
enhance nationwide public health situational awareness. GAO’s December
2010 report on HHS’s efforts to establish an electronic network for
enhancing nationwide situational awareness of public health emergencies
found that the Secretary of HHS had not developed and delivered a
strategic plan within 180 days of the mandate as required (i.e., by June 16,
2007). Without an overall strategic plan that defines requirements for
establishing and evaluating the capabilities of existing and planned
information systems implemented throughout the public health
community, HHS cannot be assured that its resources are being effectively
used to provide a unified electronic nationwide public health situational
awareness capability. Further, absent more effective planning, HHS runs
the risk of expending additional funds for continued fragmented efforts
without realizing the mandated goal.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
GAO’s December 2010 report recommended that the Secretary of HHS
develop and implement a strategic plan that defines goals, objectives, and
priorities for establishing an electronic public health situational awareness
network. Such a plan should include performance measures for evaluating
capabilities of existing and planned information systems. Additionally, the
strategic plan should integrate related strategies and information
technology initiatives within HHS for sharing information among federal,
state, local, and tribal entities. In responding to the report, HHS stated that
a complete strategy for health and public health situational awareness will
be developed and incorporated into the Biennial Implementation Plan for
the National Health Security Strategy, which will identify actions to be
accomplished in the next 2 years. The department added that it intends to
release this first biennial plan in early 2011. As discussed in GAO’s report,
developing a strategic plan that integrates the goals, objectives, and
priorities of related strategies will be essential to establishing
cohesiveness of HHS’s related information technology initiatives, therefore
Page 89 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
HHS Needs an Overall Strategy to Better
Integrate Nationwide Public Health
Information Systems
better ensuring the success of the department’s efforts to support and
enhance nationwide public health situational awareness. To what extent
future savings may be expected from this effort are unclear, but more
effective planning has the potential to ensure more cost-effective efforts in
the future.
GAO expects to complete additional work in the future assessing HHS’s
progress toward developing and implementing an overall strategic plan for
establishing and evaluating an electronic network of systems that meets
the information-sharing requirements for enhanced nationwide public
health situational awareness defined by law.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the GAO products Framework for
listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Public Health Information Technology: Additional Strategic Planning
Needed to Guide HHS’s Efforts to Establish Electronic Situational
Awareness Capabilities. GAO-11-99. Washington, D.C.: December 17,
2010.
Biosurveillance: Efforts to Develop a National Biosurveillance
Capability Need a National Strategy and a Designated Leader.
GAO-10-645. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Biosurveillance: Developing a Collaboration Strategy Is Essential to
Fostering Interagency Data and Resource Sharing. GAO-10-171.
Washington, D.C.: December 18, 2009.
Health Information Technology: More Detailed Plans Needed for the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Redesigned BioSense
Program. GAO-09-100. Washington, D.C.: November 20, 2008.
Information Technology: Federal Agencies Face Challenges in
Implementing Initiatives to Improve Public Health Infrastructure.
GAO-05-308. Washington, D.C.: June 10, 2005.
Combating Terrorism: Evaluation of Selected Characteristics in
National Strategies Related to Terrorism. GAO-04-408T. Washington,
D.C.: February 3, 2004.
Page 90 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
HHS Needs an Overall Strategy to Better
Integrate Nationwide Public Health
Information Systems
Bioterrorism: Information Technology Strategy Could Strengthen
Federal Agencies’ Abilities to Respond to Public Health Emergencies.
GAO-03-139. Washington, D.C.: May 30, 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact Valerie C. Melvin at Area Contact
(202) 512-6304 or melvinv@gao.gov.
Page 91 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Strategic Oversight Mechanisms Could Help
Integrate Fragmented Interagency Efforts to
Defend against Biological Threats
Strategic Oversight Mechanisms Could Help Integrate
Fragmented Interagency Efforts to Defend against
Biological Threats
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
A catastrophic biological event, such as a terrorist attack with a weapon of
mass destruction or a naturally occurring pandemic, could cause mass
casualties, weaken the economy, damage public morale, and threaten
national security. Biodefense includes measures to prevent, detect,
respond to, and recover from harm or damage caused by microorganisms
or biological toxins to humans, animals, or the food supply. In January
2010, the bipartisan Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass
Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism (now known as the WMD Center),
which was established by the Implementing Recommendations of the 9/11
Commission Act (Pub. L. No. 110-53, § 1851), gave the nation a failing
grade in its efforts to enhance capabilities for rapid response to prevent
biological attacks from inflicting mass casualties.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
According to the head of the WMD Center, there are more than two dozen
presidentially appointed individuals with some responsibility for
biodefense. In addition, numerous federal agencies, encompassing much
of the federal government, have some mission responsibilities for
supporting biodefense activities. However, there is no individual or entity
with responsibility, authority, and accountability for overseeing the entire
biodefense enterprise.
According to Homeland Security Presidential Directive 10, published in
April 2004, successful implementation of the nation’s biodefense
enterprise requires optimizing critical cross-cutting functions such as
information management and communications, research and
development, and acquisition. In 2004, GAO reported that interagency and
intergovernmental activities can benefit from the leadership of a single
entity with sufficient time, responsibility, authority, and resources needed
to provide assurance that the federal programs are well coordinated, and
that gaps and duplication in capabilities are avoided. GAO also reported in
2001 that complex interagency and intergovernmental efforts can benefit
from developing a national strategy.
Biodefense is organized into four pillars—threat awareness, prevention
and protection, surveillance and detection, and response and recovery—
and multiple federal agencies have some biodefense responsibilities within
them, as shown in the figure below. Each of these pillars comprise
numerous activities—such as controlling access to dangerous biological
agents used in research—that generally require coordination across
federal departments as well as with state, local, and international
governments, and the private sector. Deterrence of bioterrorism rests
upon the ability of the nation to mitigate the effects of an attack.
Page 92 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Strategic Oversight Mechanisms Could Help
Integrate Fragmented Interagency Efforts to
Defend against Biological Threats
According to the WMD Center’s January 2010 report, Prevention of WMD
Proliferation and Terrorism Report Card, there is no national plan to
coordinate federal, state, and local efforts following a bioterror attack, and
the United States lacks the technical and operational capabilities required
for an adequate response. The report goes on to say that these technical
and operational capabilities are each links in a chain, critical to the
strength of the attack response, and that weakness in any capability leads
to a diminished response, and diminished effectiveness in deterring an
attack.
Pillars of Biodefense and Examples of Associated Federal Departments
Threat
awareness
Prevention
and protection
Surveillance
and detection
Response
and recovery
Department of
Homeland Security
Federal Bureau
of Investigation
Department of Defense
Intelligence Community
Department of Health
and Human Services
Department of Health
and Human Services
Department of Agriculture
Department of Health
and Human Services
Department of Defense
Department of Health
and Human Services
Department of Agriculture
Department of the Interior
Department of
Homeland Security
Department of
Homeland Security
Department of Health
and Human Services
Department of Agriculture
Department of Defense
Source: GAO analysis of Homeland Security Presidential Directive 10.
GAO’s past work has highlighted fragmentation in the surveillance and
detection pillar, which indicates the need for strategic oversight
mechanisms—such as a national strategy and a focal point—across the
entire biodefense enterprise. In June 2010, GAO reported that an activity in
the surveillance and detection pillar known as biosurveillance is
fragmented and that the decision makers responsible for developing a
national biosurveillance capability are spread across multiple agencies and
Page 93 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Strategic Oversight Mechanisms Could Help
Integrate Fragmented Interagency Efforts to
Defend against Biological Threats
departments, as it is with the rest of the biodefense enterprise. Yet,
strategic oversight mechanisms, such as a focal point or national strategy,
had not been established to coordinate and lead efforts across the multiple
federal departments with biosurveillance responsibilities. GAO
recommended that the Homeland Security Council, which was established
to serve as a mechanism for ensuring coordination of federal homeland
security-related activities and development of homeland security policies,
should direct the National Security Staff to establish a focal point and
charge this focal point with the responsibility for developing a national
biosurveillance strategy. The National Security Staff did not comment on
these recommendations.
While some high-level biodefense strategies have been developed, there is
no broad, integrated national strategy that encompasses all stakeholders
with biodefense responsibilities that can be used to guide the systematic
identification of risk, assessment of resources needed to address those
risks, and the prioritization and allocation of investment across the entire
biodefense enterprise. Further, neither the Office of Management and
Budget nor the federal agencies account for biodefense spending across
the entire federal government. As a result, the federal government does
not know how much is being spent on this critical national security
priority. However, a private sector analysis of the fiscal year 2011 federal
budget for civilian biodefense estimates that the U.S. biodefense effort will
total $6.48 billion across 8 of the more than 12 federal agencies with
biodefense responsibilities. GAO’s work noted that having a strategy in
place to guide development of a national biosurveillance capability could
potentially help agencies address challenges that are complex, inherent to
building capabilities that cross mission areas and agencies, and not easily
resolved—challenges that are also present in the larger biodefense
enterprise. A national strategy could define the scope of the problems to
be addressed, and in turn could lead to specific objectives and activities
for tackling those problems, better allocation and management of
resources, clarification of roles and responsibilities, and, finally, to
integration of a biodefense strategy with other related preparedness and
response strategies. In addition, because responsibilities and resources are
dispersed across a number of federal agencies, the nation’s biodefense
enterprise could benefit from designated leadership—a focal point—that
provides leadership for the interagency community.
Page 94 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Strategic Oversight Mechanisms Could Help
Integrate Fragmented Interagency Efforts to
Defend against Biological Threats
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Because none of the departments has authority over the entire biodefense
enterprise, the Homeland Security Council should consider establishing a
focal point to coordinate federal biodefense activities, including
biosurveillance, consistent with GAO’s previous recommendation for the
Council to establish a focal point for biosurveillance. The overarching
biodefense enterprise would benefit from strategic oversight mechanisms,
including a focal point such as a national biodefense coordinator and a
national strategy, to ensure efficient, effective, and accountable results.
Reduced fragmentation in the biodefense enterprise could enhance
assurance that the nation is prepared to prevent, detect, and respond to
biological attacks with potentially devastating consequences in terms of
loss of life, economic damage, and decreased national security.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below. GAO also has work under way on threat and risk
Analysis assessments and countermeasure development, which focuses on issues
of integration and coordination across multiple agencies and expects to
report on its results in spring 2011.
Related GAO
Products
Biosurveillance: Efforts to Develop a National Biosurveillance
Capability Need a National Strategy and Designated Leader.
GAO-10-645. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Combating Terrorism: Evaluation of Selected Characteristics in
National Strategies Related to Terrorism. GAO-04-408T. Washington,
D.C.: February 3, 2004.
Combating Terrorism: Selected Challenges and Recommendations.
GAO-01-822. Washington D.C.: September 20, 2001.
For additional information about this area, contact William O. Jenkins at Area Contact
(202) 512-8777 or jenkinswo@gao.gov.
Page 95 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Oversight Could Help Eliminate
Potential Duplicating Efforts of Interagency
Forums in Securing the Northern Border
DHS Oversight Could Help Eliminate Potential
Duplicating Efforts of Interagency Forums in Securing
the Northern Border
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has primary responsibility
for securing the nearly 4,000 miles that comprise the U.S.-Canadian border
from Washington state to Maine. DHS components, in collaboration with
other federal, state, local, tribal, and Canadian law enforcement partners,
are responsible for securing this border, which involves coordination and
the leveraging of scarce resources through interagency forums. In
December 2010, GAO reported on overlap and potential duplication among
two of these forums—the Integrated Border Enforcement Team (IBET)
and the Border Enforcement Security Task Force (BEST). These forum
members meet to share information on coordination of cross-border law
enforcement efforts, among other activities, to enhance bi-national border
security. IBET members focus on national security, organized crime, and
other criminal activity between ports of entry; BEST members work to
identify, disrupt, and dismantle organizations seeking to exploit border
vulnerabilities. DHS components, such as U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the U.S.
Coast Guard, along with Canadian law enforcement partners participate in
24 IBETs (which are part of 15 regions across the northern border) and 3
BESTs (led by Immigration and Customs Enforcement) that have been
established across the northern border.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
In December 2010, GAO reported on northern border interagency
coordination and highlighted concerns about mission overlap and
potential duplication of effort between the BEST and IBET interagency
forums. For example, of the 13 partners GAO interviewed that operate
within two jurisdictions where two BEST and four IBET interagency
forums are located, more than half of these partners cited concerns about
mission overlap between these two forums that could result in duplication
of effort. Specifically, these partners expressed concern that some BEST
activities to investigate and interdict cross-border illegal activity
duplicated IBET efforts to conduct the same activities because, among
other factors, smuggling rings and other criminal organizations do not
limit their activities by geographic area.
Overlap and potential duplication of effort between the BEST and IBET
may also exist when these interagency forums are established in the same
location, as has been done in at least two jurisdictions where BEST and
IBET forums are located. DHS officials stated that decisions to establish
interagency forums are made, in part, by DHS components participating in
the forums based on their work requirements. Specifically, the
Immigration and Customs Enforcement headquarters program manager
stated that the agency sponsored the establishment of BEST interagency
Page 96 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Oversight Could Help Eliminate
Potential Duplicating Efforts of Interagency
Forums in Securing the Northern Border
forums along the northern border because of the need for additional
Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigative resources, and that
the locations were identified on the basis of the agency’s investigative
workload requirements, but that analyses of whether the existing IBETs
established in these areas could be used for these investigative purposes
were not a factor.
Moreover, in an April 2007 report, the DHS Inspector General reported
that it was not clear how a BEST would operate differently from IBETs
and that care should be taken to avoid duplication of efforts with IBETs on
the northern border. In 2009, IBET members convened an interagency
working group to study the interaction between the IBET and BEST.1 This
group raised concerns about mission overlap and duplication of effort
between the two interagency forums and identified the need for a vision
that clearly defines IBET-BEST roles and responsibilities, as well the
framework for their routine interaction and collaboration. According to
DHS officials, in November 2010, DHS, the Department of Justice, and
Canadian officials established another working group to evaluate best
practices of existing interagency forums, including the IBET and BEST, to
improve U.S.-Canadian border enforcement efforts.2 However, as of
December 2010 it is too soon to tell whether this effort will address the
recommendation made by the previous working group.
In December 2010, GAO reported that DHS does not provide guidance or
oversight to its components to establish or assess the results of
interagency forums across northern border locations. GAO has previously
reported that federal agencies can enhance and sustain their collaborative
efforts by, in part, developing mechanisms to monitor their results. DHS
officials stated that DHS is developing processes to provide department-
level oversight of those forums; however, DHS has not provided
documentation to support its plans, and thus the scope and the time
frames for finalizing this effort are unclear. Completing such guidance and
1Eight agencies were represented on the IBET/BEST working group, including Canada’s
Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canada Border Services Agency and U.S. agencies
including Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the
Coast Guard, and the Department of Justice. The findings of this working group were
published in a final report. DHS, IBET/BEST Interaction Final Report (Washington, D.C.,
April 2009).
2This working group consists of the representatives from the same agencies that served on
the 2009 interagency working group, which include DHS, Department of Justice, and
Canadian law enforcement agencies, according to DHS officials.
Page 97 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Oversight Could Help Eliminate
Potential Duplicating Efforts of Interagency
Forums in Securing the Northern Border
processes for oversight could better position DHS to identify areas of
duplication and determine if existing forums could be modified or
consolidated to leverage its resources more efficiently in conducting
border security operations.
DHS intends to outline a vision for interagency coordination with an
emphasis on partnerships, including the Canadian government, through its
northern border strategy scheduled to be issued in calendar year 2011.3 In
addition, in November 2010, the Secretary of Homeland Security directed
DHS components to develop a new approach to better integrate northern
border enforcement efforts. Until DHS clearly defines IBET-BEST roles
and responsibilities, aligns its resources, and ensures accountability
through oversight, DHS risks hindering collaborative relationships with its
partners and lacks reasonable assurance that resources are deployed
efficiently and effectively to secure the northern border.
DHS is also working to establish a mechanism to identify and report on the
benefits achieved through its participation in the IBET-BEST interagency
forums, but has not maintained comprehensive data on the costs of these
forums to help it ascertain whether the benefits obtained outweigh the
costs. For example, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials
maintained information on that agency’s participation in two of three
northern border BEST locations and estimated its costs for IBET
locations.4 However, DHS could not provide information on the costs
incurred by other federal, state, local, tribal, and international agencies
that participate in BEST or IBET. The interagency group studying these
forums raised concerns about law enforcement agencies gathering the
resources necessary to participate in the increasing number of these
forums. By leading efforts to develop a framework for identifying both its
3According to DHS officials, in addition to emphasizing the importance of its partners, this
strategy is to guide efforts to deter and prevent illicit smuggling and trafficking along the
northern border.
4Specifically, in 2010, Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s costs ranged from
approximately $1.5 million to $6.3 million per BEST location and from almost $480,000 to
about $2 million per IBET location (dedicated personnel, facilities, and equipment). Since
IBET positions are created out of the responsible Immigration and Customs Enforcement
office’s base funding, all costs associated with these programs are estimated since each
responsible Immigration and Customs Enforcement office has to shift resources from one
program to another. Customs and Border Protection does not track its costs of
participating in either forum, but a Customs and Border Protection official responsible for
patrolling the border estimated that its fiscal year 2010 cost averaged $100,000 for one
BEST location and $182,000 for IBET.
Page 98 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Oversight Could Help Eliminate
Potential Duplicating Efforts of Interagency
Forums in Securing the Northern Border
and its partners’ costs for participating in each forum, DHS would be
better positioned to evaluate the need for and success of both forums.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Ongoing DHS oversight of the interagency forums could help prevent
duplication of efforts. DHS headquarters officials report that policies
governing DHS coordination efforts are under development and that
Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border
Protection have deployed personnel to key northern border locations to
improve collaboration and facilitate timely information sharing. However,
DHS does not currently provide guidance or oversight to its components
to establish or assess the results of interagency forums—which include
both IBET and BEST interagency forums—across northern border
locations to help ensure that forums established in the same locations do
not duplicate activities. Accordingly, GAO recommended in December
2010 that DHS provide guidance and oversight for interagency forums to
help prevent duplication of effort and help efficiently utilize personnel
resources to strengthen DHS’s coordination efforts along the northern
border. By implementing this recommendation, DHS could help prevent
duplication and identify whether existing forums can be modified or
consolidated to better leverage scarce resources and more efficiently
conduct border security operations. Moreover, as DHS establishes a
mechanism for determining the benefits of participating in the IBET and
BEST interagency forums, DHS could lead efforts to develop a framework
for identifying the costs incurred by all partners participating in each
forum. Doing so could help DHS evaluate the success of these forums and
the need for both the IBETs and BESTs.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis was based on GAO’s December
2010 report as well as selected updates obtained from September 2010
through February 2011, including cost data related to Immigration and
Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection’s participation
in IBET and BEST for fiscal year 2010. GAO interviewed relevant agency
officials responsible for overseeing the accuracy of these data and
determined they were sufficiently reliable for purposes of this report.
Border Security: Enhanced DHS Oversight and Assessment of Related GAO
Interagency Coordination Is Need for the Northern Border. GAO-11-97.
Products Washington, D.C.: December 17, 2010.
Page 99 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Oversight Could Help Eliminate
Potential Duplicating Efforts of Interagency
Forums in Securing the Northern Border
Border Security: Additional Actions Needed to Better Ensure a
Coordinated Federal Response to Illegal Activity on Federal Lands.
GAO-11-177. Washington, D.C.: November 18, 2010.
For additional information about this area, contact Richard M. Stana at Area Contact
(202) 512-8777 or stanar@gao.gov.
Page 100 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Department of Justice Plans Actions to
Reduce Overlap in Explosives Investigations,
but Monitoring Is Needed to Ensure
Successful Implementation
The Department of Justice Plans Actions to Reduce
Overlap in Explosives Investigations, but Monitoring Is
Needed to Ensure Successful Implementation
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
In fiscal year 2009, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives (ATF) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), both
components of the Department of Justice (Justice), initiated over 1,600
cases involving explosives incidents such as actual or attempted bombings
with improvised explosive devices. Since 2004, Justice has taken actions
intended to address duplication and overlap in the areas of explosives
investigations jurisdiction, training, information sharing and use of
databases, and laboratory forensic analysis. However, a 2009 report from
Justice’s Inspector General found there has been little progress since 2004
in addressing overlap and duplication. In response to the Inspector
General’s report, in August 2010, the Acting Deputy Attorney General
issued a protocol for assigning lead agency jurisdiction in explosives
investigations. The memorandum accompanying the protocol directed the
ATF and FBI to take actions to conduct assessments of its explosives
operations and make recommendations by November 1, 2010, for
consolidating and eliminating redundancies, where appropriate.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
GAO has reviewed actions planned by Justice to reduce overlap and
duplication and improve explosives investigation coordination between
the ATF and FBI. GAO found that the actions Justice is proposing should
address most of these issues, but additional monitoring by Congress and
agency personnel could help ensure that plans to address these long-
standing challenges are fully implemented and successful since Justice did
not follow through on past efforts to achieve these same objectives. GAO
has reported that federal agencies can enhance and sustain their
collaborative efforts by creating the means to monitor and evaluate their
efforts to identify areas for improvement. In his August 2010 memorandum
directed to ATF and FBI, the Deputy Attorney General highlighted four
areas of explosives investigations where duplication and redundant efforts
needed to be addressed: jurisdiction, explosives training, shared
explosives databases, and laboratories.
Jurisdiction. The Deputy Attorney General noted that defining lead
agency jurisdiction over explosives investigations has been a persistent
problem for Justice; led to confusion among federal, state, and local law
enforcement; and resulted in duplication of effort between ATF and FBI.
GAO’s ongoing work on law enforcement coordination found that disputes
have occurred over the past 5 years between the agencies regarding
jurisdiction of explosives investigations and there is potential overlap. For
example, Justice had designated FBI as the lead agency for incidents
related to domestic terrorism but had not defined the term, so ATF and
FBI have had disputes about when an incident would be related to
Page 101 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Department of Justice Plans Actions to
Reduce Overlap in Explosives Investigations,
but Monitoring Is Needed to Ensure
Successful Implementation
terrorism, and, therefore, under FBI’s jurisdiction. A 2009 Inspector
General report found that, despite Justice’s attempts to coordinate
explosives investigations and activities, the components have developed
separate and conflicting approaches to these investigations. The August
2010 directive attempted to resolve the dispute regarding jurisdiction by
citing a definition for both “International Terrorism” and “Domestic
Terrorism,” and outlining factors associated with an explosive incident
that indicate a presumptive nexus to terrorism. The directive also intended
to clarify roles and responsibilities in all other explosives jurisdiction
matters. However, it is too soon to know to what extent the directive will
resolve the dispute.
Explosives training. ATF and FBI continue to separately operate their
own explosives-training facilities and programs, both of which are located
at the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, resulting in potential
duplication.1 Regarding facilities, for example, the FBI’s Hazardous
Devices School trains and certifies federal, state, and local bomb
technicians and bomb squads. Similarly, ATF’s National Center for
Explosives Training and Research offers explosives courses to ATF and
state and local law enforcement personnel. Regarding programs, both
components offer post-blast explosives training.2 According to ATF and
FBI data, the cost of the training facilities in fiscal year 2010 totaled $11.0
million and $7.5 million, respectively.3 In August 2010, the Deputy Attorney
General directed the components to provide a joint plan to consolidate
training programs with recommendations for consolidating and
eliminating redundancies. Justice officials said the components submitted
a plan in November 2010 that proposed consolidating post-blast training
programs and curricula beginning in the spring of 2011, which is
consistent with the Deputy Attorney General’s directive. Justice officials
also stated that both components concluded they should continue to
operate separate explosives-training facilities because of the high demand
and wait lists for explosives courses offered at each facility. By continually
monitoring the need to support both facilities, Justice’s ability to
determine that its resources are being used effectively could be
strengthened.
1FBI also operates the Secure Training Facility and Vehicle-Borne Improvised Explosives
Device Training Facility as part of the Hazardous Devices School in Alabama.
2Post-blast explosives training teaches methods and processes for investigating explosives
scenes.
3$7.4 million of ATF’s cost were for construction.
Page 102 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Department of Justice Plans Actions to
Reduce Overlap in Explosives Investigations,
but Monitoring Is Needed to Ensure
Successful Implementation
Shared explosives database. In 2009, Justice’s Inspector General reported
that ATF and FBI have not effectively consolidated and maintained one
distinct explosives incident reporting database, as directed by the Attorney
General. Also, the Inspector General found that although FBI had
discontinued use of its database that compiles information on explosives
incidents and transferred its historical data into ATF’s Bomb and Arson
Tracking System,4 FBI had not subsequently input any additional explosives
incident information. In addition, ATF had not consistently reported all its
explosives incidents to the Bomb and Arson Tracking System. Taken
together, these omissions undermined the components’ ability to accurately
determine trends in explosives incidents. In response to the August 2010
protocol, according to Justice officials, the components have developed and
plan to implement information-sharing procedures in early 2011 to ensure
that FBI bomb technicians and state and local bomb squads have access to
and report explosives incidents to the reporting system. By monitoring
implementation of this plan, Justice would be better positioned to obtain
feedback for improving both policy and operational effectiveness.
Explosives laboratories. Both ATF and FBI have laboratories that perform
forensic analysis of explosives evidence. Specifically, ATF operates
laboratories in Maryland, Georgia, and California, while FBI uses its
Virginia laboratory for forensic analysis. For fiscal year 2010, ATF reported
the cost to operate its three laboratories was $11.2 million,5 and FBI
reported the cost to conduct analysis at its laboratory was $6.6 million.6 In
2004, the Attorney General required Justice to establish a Lab Board to
examine its available laboratory resources and workloads, analyze
demands, and make recommendations to the Deputy Attorney General on
the most productive allocation of resources. While Justice established the
Lab Board, its Inspector General found no record of a report or
recommendations. In August 2010, the Deputy Attorney General directed
the Lab Board to reconvene to develop recommendations by November 1,
2010, for further integration of Justice’s laboratory capabilities, among
other things. According to Justice officials, the components submitted a
4The Bomb and Arson Tracking System is intended to be Justice’s single source for
reporting and sharing explosives incident information.
5According to ATF, the laboratory costs include explosives, arson, and firearms forensic
analysis.
6According to FBI, the costs for explosives forensic analysis does not include Laboratory
Division employees who perform forensic analysis on improvised-explosive-device-related
submissions.
Page 103 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
The Department of Justice Plans Actions to
Reduce Overlap in Explosives Investigations,
but Monitoring Is Needed to Ensure
Successful Implementation
progress report in November 2010 that outlines areas they believed could
produce operational efficiencies and better coordination. These areas
include the adoption of a common laboratory information management
system and coordinated training of laboratory personnel. By continually
monitoring these actions, Justice’s ability to ensure that the components
follow through on these areas to better coordinate and integrate
laboratory resources could be enhanced.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Continually monitoring these efforts can help key decision makers within
the agencies, as well as clients and stakeholders, obtain feedback for
improving policy and operational effectiveness. Justice, ATF, and FBI
officials have planned or begun actions to reduce duplication and overlap,
and achieve efficiencies, which Justice officials stated are responsive to
the Deputy Attorney General’s directives. These actions represent positive
steps that, if implemented effectively, should lead to more efficient
approaches to explosives investigations and related activities such as
training, information sharing, and forensic analysis. However, given that
the components did not fully follow through on past efforts to achieve
these same objectives, by continually monitoring the components’ actions,
Congress and Justice would be better positioned to ensure that the plans
have their intended effect and are enforced.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on GAO’s ongoing
work for the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee on law
enforcement coordination and recent Inspector General reports and
internal efforts at Justice to address the Inspector General’s
recommendations to improve explosives-related coordination between
ATF and FBI. GAO interviewed representatives from the Deputy Attorney
General’s Office, FBI, and ATF to discuss actions planned or under way to
remedy duplication and overlap in explosives-related operations. GAO also
obtained and analyzed fiscal year 2010 cost data from the components, and
assessed the data sources. GAO found the components’ cost data reliable
for the purposes of this report.
No GAO products related to this issue have previously been published. Related GAO Product
For additional information about this area, contact Eileen R. Larence at Area Contact
(202) 512-8777 or larencee@gao.gov.
Page 104 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Transportation Security Administration’s
Security Assessments on Commercial
Trucking Companies Overlap with Those of
Another Agency, but Efforts Are Under Way
to Address Overlap
Transportation Security Administration’s Security
Assessments on Commercial Trucking Companies
Overlap with Those of Another Agency, but Efforts Are
Under Way to Address Overlap
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Terrorist attacks on transportation systems in Moscow and Mumbai
caused significant loss of life and highlighted the vulnerability of surface
transportation systems to terrorist attacks. The Transportation Security
Administration (TSA), within the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS), is the primary federal agency responsible for securing the nation’s
transportation system. GAO has previously reported that TSA has taken
actions to improve transportation security, but additional actions could
enhance its efforts, such as consistently coordinating security
assessments. GAO made recommendations to improve TSA’s coordination
with stakeholders, including other DHS entities and federal agencies.
Likewise, the Administration’s Surface Transportation Security Priority
Assessment highlighted the need for federal entities to coordinate their
security assessment activities given that TSA’s security assessment
responsibilities overlap with those of other federal agencies, such as the
Department of Transportation (DOT). The report recommended, among
other things, an integrated federal approach for conducting security
assessments to produce more thorough risk-based evaluations.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
GAO has found that TSA and DOT do not have a process in place to share
information on the results of their security programs, and stakeholders in
the commercial trucking industry have expressed concerns about a lack of
coordination between the two agencies. Specifically, TSA’s security
assessments for hazardous material trucking companies overlapped with
efforts conducted by DOT’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
(FMCSA), and as a result, government resources were not being used
effectively. After GAO discussed this overlap with TSA in January 2011,
TSA officials stated that, moving forward, they intend to only conduct
reviews on trucking companies that are not covered by FMCSA’s program,
which, if implemented as intended, GAO projects could save more than $1
million over the next 5 years. However, it will be important for TSA and
FMCSA to continue efforts to improve data sharing and coordination to
help prevent future overlap in security reviews, as well as continue efforts
toward the long-term goal of TSA assuming full regulatory responsibility
from FMCSA for commercial trucking security, thereby reducing
fragmentation.
In February 2009, GAO reported that TSA and FMCSA have similar
security review programs for hazardous material trucking companies. TSA
conducts corporate security reviews (TSA review)—voluntary in-person
Page 105 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Transportation Security Administration’s
Security Assessments on Commercial
Trucking Companies Overlap with Those of
Another Agency, but Efforts Are Under Way
to Address Overlap
reviews of a trucking company’s security practices and plans.1 FMCSA,
which has primary responsibility for commercial trucking safety, conducts
security contact reviews (FMCSA review)—mandatory in-person reviews
that enforce the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration’s
regulations on hazardous material trucking companies’ security plans. In
2010, GAO continued to identify considerable overlap between TSA’s and
FMCSA’s security reviews. For example, nearly half (43 percent) of the 95
questions in a TSA review were either “somewhat similar” or “substantially
or entirely similar” to one or more of the questions in an FMCSA review,
and almost all (92 percent) of the 48 questions that comprise an FMCSA
review were either “somewhat similar” or “substantially or entirely
similar” to one or more of the questions in a TSA review.2 In addition,
officials from both agencies agreed that there are similarities between the
two reviews. Furthermore, 71 of the 200 TSA reviews performed from
fiscal years 2006 through 2010 by TSA staff on hazardous material trucking
companies were conducted on companies that had received an FMCSA
review during the same period; of these, 31 were conducted less than 2
years after the FMCSA review.3 The Implementing Recommendations of
the 9/11 Commission Act of 2007 requires that DOT consult with DHS to
limit, to the extent practicable, duplicative reviews of hazardous material
security plans.4
In February 2009, GAO recommended that TSA establish a process to
strengthen coordination with the commercial vehicle industry, including
ensuring that the roles and responsibilities of industry and government are
fully defined and clearly communicated. DHS concurred with this
recommendation and has taken steps to address it. However, in August
and September 2010, officials from three industry associations GAO
interviewed continued to express concerns about overlap between TSA’s
1TSA also conducts corporate security reviews on nonhazardous material trucking
companies, as well as entities in other transportation modes. GAO excluded these other
reviews from its analysis.
2For the purposes of this analysis, the term “substantially or entirely similar” refers to
questions for which a trucking company would likely provide the same or mostly the same
information. The term “somewhat similar” refers to questions for which a trucking
company would likely provide some of the same information, but would likely also provide
additional or different information for one of the questions.
3TSA reviews were also conducted by state inspectors in five states, primarily Missouri.
However, TSA was unable to provide comprehensive data for these reviews, and as a result
GAO excluded them from its analysis.
4Pub. L. No. 110-53, § 1555, 121 Stat. 266, 475 (2007) (codified at 6 U.S.C. § 1205).
Page 106 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Transportation Security Administration’s
Security Assessments on Commercial
Trucking Companies Overlap with Those of
Another Agency, but Efforts Are Under Way
to Address Overlap
and FMCSA’s security reviews and a lack of coordination between the two
agencies. Moreover, in July 2010, the Office of Management and Budget
advised TSA to work with DOT to implement an integrated federal
approach for security assessments and take advantage of existing
information to avoid redundancy.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
By taking action to reduce or eliminate overlap in hazardous material
security reviews and improve data sharing and coordination, TSA and
FMCSA could use their resources more effectively and improve the
relationship between the federal government and industry stakeholders.
TSA and FMCSA officials have stated that TSA’s long-term plan is to
develop security regulations for hazardous material trucking companies to
replace the existing security regulations FMCSA enforces, which they
believe would address the overlap between the two agencies’ security
reviews. These officials added that once TSA develops regulations, the
agencies plan to work together to eliminate FMCSA’s security-related
regulatory responsibilities so that it can focus solely on safety issues while
TSA focuses on security issues. However, TSA is in the early stages of the
rulemaking process, which TSA officials believe may take up to 3 years.
Until the rulemaking is completed and TSA is able to assume full
responsibility for commercial trucking security, it will be important for
TSA and FMCSA to continue efforts to delineate their respective security
roles and reduce fragmentation.
Until TSA issues security regulations to replace the existing regulations
enforced by FMCSA, GAO has identified two potential options for
improving data sharing and coordination to address the overlap of TSA’s
and FMCSA’s security reviews in the short term; in addition, TSA proposed
a third option that GAO believes, if implemented as intended, should also
address existing overlap in the short term:
(1) Improve interagency coordination by sharing each other’s schedules
for conducting future security reviews, and avoid scheduling reviews
on hazardous material trucking companies that have recently
received, or are scheduled to receive, a review from the other agency.
TSA and FMCSA considered this option worthy of pursuit, and in
October 2010 they signed an interagency agreement to coordinate
with each other when scheduling their respective security reviews.
The agreement is intended to eliminate duplicate visits to the same
trucking company that occur within 2 years of each other. However,
it is too early to assess the results from this effort.
Page 107 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Transportation Security Administration’s
Security Assessments on Commercial
Trucking Companies Overlap with Those of
Another Agency, but Efforts Are Under Way
to Address Overlap
(2) Enable TSA to access the full results of past FMCSA reviews through
an existing DOT Web portal. This increased access could enable TSA
to leverage security information on the thousands of hazardous
material trucking companies that have received FMCSA reviews
without having to conduct a TSA review on them, thereby efficiently
increasing the agency’s knowledge of industry security. TSA has
spent $400,000 since February 2010 to access the Web portal, and
according to FMCSA, TSA already has access to data on FMCSA
reviews through the portal. However, although the portal does
include some data related to FMCSA reviews (such as the dates and
recipients of past reviews), it does not contain the full results of these
reviews, which TSA officials agreed would be beneficial. DOT
officials who administer the portal stated that adding this information
to the portal and granting TSA access to it most likely would be
relatively straightforward, but doing so would require a request and
cooperation from both TSA and FMCSA. TSA officials added that they
were unsure whether future budget constraints would allow
continued funding for TSA access to the portal.
(3) Discontinue conducting the voluntary TSA reviews on hazardous
material trucking companies, thereby enabling TSA to increase its
security efforts in other areas. For example, TSA could seek to
improve security practices among nonhazardous material trucking
companies, as these entities are not subject to the FMCSA security
reviews. TSA officials stated in January 2011 that they intend to
pursue this option, which, if implemented as intended, should
eliminate the short-term overlap between FMCSA and TSA
commercial trucking security assessments. However, as stated
previously, GAO believes it will be important for TSA and FMCSA to
continue efforts to improve data sharing and coordination to help
prevent future overlap in security reviews, as well as continue efforts
toward the long-term goal of TSA assuming full regulatory
responsibility from FMCSA for commercial trucking security, thereby
reducing fragmentation.
Reducing overlap between TSA’s and FMCSA’s security reviews could
result in cost savings. TSA’s total spending on the 71 reviews it conducted
from fiscal years 2006 through 2010 on companies that had also received
an FMCSA review during the same period was about $268,000. TSA’s
spending on the 31 reviews that occurred less than 2 years after an FMCSA
review at the same company was about $120,000. Extrapolating from data
from prior years, GAO estimated that, over the next 5 years, avoiding TSA
reviews conducted on companies less than 2 years after an FMCSA review
Page 108 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Transportation Security Administration’s
Security Assessments on Commercial
Trucking Companies Overlap with Those of
Another Agency, but Efforts Are Under Way
to Address Overlap
could save approximately $164,000; avoiding TSA reviews on companies
that receive an FMCSA review during the same 5-year period could save
approximately $373,000; and eliminating all TSA reviews on hazardous
material trucking companies could save over $1 million.5 Reducing overlap
between the two agencies’ security reviews could also improve their
relationship with the commercial trucking industry. As industry observes
more coordination among federal agencies, trucking companies may be
more willing to participate in voluntary security initiatives and share
information with federal stakeholders.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on a previously issued
report, noted below, and recent efforts to update that work. To update that
information and identify continuing issues related to overlap in
commercial trucking security assessments, GAO interviewed officials from
TSA, FMCSA, and other agencies, as well as officials from three key
industry groups that represent a large portion of the trucking industry.6
GAO also reviewed prior reports and relevant documentation, including
DHS/DOT interagency agreements and examples of completed TSA and
FMCSA security reviews. To estimate the amount of overlap in trucking
company security assessments, GAO compared the 95 questions in TSA’s
hazardous material corporate security review protocol with the 48
questions in FMCSA’s security contact review protocol and assessed their
similarity using three categories: substantially or entirely similar,
5All estimated costs are reported in 2010 dollars and based on TSA estimates of the staff
time, staff salaries, and travel costs associated with conducting TSA reviews. While
eliminating some or all TSA reviews could result in cost savings, it may also result in the
loss of some security information, since TSA reviews do not completely duplicate FMCSA
reviews. Additionally, GAO identified 84 FMCSA reviews from fiscal years 2006 through
2010 on trucking companies that had also received a TSA review during the same time
period. Of these FMCSA reviews, 21 were conducted less than 2 years after a TSA review.
However, FMCSA was unable to provide cost estimates for its security reviews, so GAO
could not calculate the cost associated with this overlap. Moreover, FMCSA conducted
more than 9,000 reviews during the same period, and less than 1 percent of these reviews
overlapped with a TSA review.
6These three stakeholder groups were the American Trucking Associations, the
Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance, and the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers
Association.
Page 109 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Transportation Security Administration’s
Security Assessments on Commercial
Trucking Companies Overlap with Those of
Another Agency, but Efforts Are Under Way
to Address Overlap
somewhat similar, and not at all or slightly similar.7 To determine the
extent to which TSA’s and FMCSA’s security reviews were conducted on
the same companies, GAO analyzed TSA and FMCSA data on reviews
conducted from fiscal years 2006 through 2010. GAO reviewed the data for
obvious errors and spoke with knowledgeable officials to determine that
the data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of its review. GAO
estimated the cost of overlapping security reviews on hazardous material
trucking companies by using TSA data on (1) the number of TSA reviews
conducted from fiscal years 2006 through 2010 and (2) the staff time,
estimated staff salaries, and estimated travel costs associated with
conducting these reviews. Cost estimates do not include indirect costs,
such as general administrative costs. GAO estimated the potential financial
savings associated with eliminating overlapping security reviews by (1)
estimating the average annual number of reviews, and (2) multiplying by
the estimated cost of conducting a review. GAO reviewed the data for
obvious errors and spoke with knowledgeable TSA officials to determine
that the data were sufficiently reliable to provide a general indication of
costs and potential savings.
Commercial Vehicle Security: Risk-Based Approach Needed to Secure the Related GAO Product
Commercial Vehicle Sector. GAO-09-85. Washington, D.C.: February 27,
2009.
For additional information about this area, contact Steve Lord at (202) Area Contact
512-4379 or lords@gao.gov.
7GAO categorized each question based on its assessment of the similarity of the
information that trucking companies would likely provide in response to that question.
Specifically, if GAO determined that, in response to a TSA review question, a company
would likely provide the same or mostly the same information as it would in response to an
FMCSA review question (and vice versa), those questions were considered “substantially or
entirely similar.” If GAO determined that a company would likely provide some of the same
information in response to a TSA review question as it would in response to an FMCSA
review question (and vice versa)—but would likely also provide additional or different
information for one of the questions that likely would not be provided for the other—those
questions were considered “somewhat similar.” If GAO determined that a company would
likely provide mostly or completely different information in responding to a TSA review
question relative to an FMCSA review question (and vice versa), those questions were
considered “not at all or slightly similar.”
Page 110 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Could Streamline Mechanisms for
Sharing Security-Related Information with
Public Transit Agencies to Help Address
Overlapping Information
DHS Could Streamline Mechanisms for Sharing
Security-Related Information with Public Transit
Agencies to Help Address Overlapping Information
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Since January 2005, GAO has identified sharing terrorism-related
information as a high-risk area because the federal government continues
to face challenges with its information-sharing efforts. To facilitate
information sharing with the public transit industry, the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) and the Transportation Security Administration
(TSA) created and funded various mechanisms. For example, the publicly
funded but privately operated public transit analysis center and the public
transit subportal on DHS’s information network were established to serve
as the primary mechanisms for sharing security threats and other types of
security-related information with public transit agencies. In March 2010,
TSA also introduced its portal on DHS’s information network to share
information with the transportation industry. However, in September 2010,
GAO reported that public transit agencies receive similar security-related
information from multiple sources and recommended that DHS establish
time frames for its working group to assess opportunities to streamline
information-sharing mechanisms to reduce any unneeded overlap. DHS
concurred and has begun taking steps to address this recommendation,
but has not provided specifics on the extent to which its actions will
reduce overlap.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
GAO identified the potential for overlap between three information-
sharing mechanisms that DHS funds and uses to communicate security-
related information with public transit agencies, which could
unnecessarily complicate those agencies’ efforts to discern relevant
information and take appropriate actions to enhance transportation
security. While a certain amount of redundancy is understandable and can
be beneficial if it occurs as part of a management strategy to provide
better customer service delivery, GAO found that this potential for overlap
could overwhelm public transit agencies with similar information.
According to a key TSA transportation strategy document, a streamlined
and effective system to share transit and passenger rail information is
needed to facilitate information sharing among the federal government
and public and private stakeholders.
In September 2010, GAO reported that public transit agencies received
similar security-related information from a variety of sources, including
the three discussed below. Specifically, GAO reported that:
• According to the American Public Transportation Association, which
co-sponsors the public transit analysis center, this mechanism is
intended to be a one stop shop for public transit agencies’ information
Page 111 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Could Streamline Mechanisms for
Sharing Security-Related Information with
Public Transit Agencies to Help Address
Overlapping Information
needs. This mechanism received a total of $1.2 million during fiscal
years 2009 and 2010 from TSA.
• TSA officials stated that the agency intends for the public transit portal
on DHS’s information network to be the primary mechanism for
sharing such information with public transit agencies. DHS could not
provide cost data for the operation of this specific portal because,
according to DHS officials, the department does not break out the costs
associated with maintaining individual portals on its information
network. However, DHS reported that for fiscal years 2009 and 2010,
the department expended $62 million on its information network—
which includes the public transit portal—and its estimated lifecycle
costs are $451 million.
• According to TSA officials, TSA’s portal on DHS’s information network
was established to serve as a collaborative information-sharing
platform for all transportation modes, including public transit.1 In
September 2010, TSA told GAO that for fiscal years 2009 and 2010, it
applied $2.5 million to its portal on DHS’s information network,
primarily on developing and organizing data for all transportation
modes.
GAO’s survey of 96 U.S. public transit agencies, representing about 91
percent of total 2008 public transit ridership, highlighted the variety of
mechanisms used by public transit agencies to obtain security-related
information. Twenty-four of the 80 transit agencies that responded to the
survey provided comments in favor of consolidating existing information-
sharing mechanisms to reduce the volume of similar information they
receive.
GAO reported in 2007 and 2009 that effective information sharing
continues to be a challenge for the federal government. Similarly, the
Administration’s March 2010 Surface Transportation Security Priority
Assessment recommended that TSA take steps to improve the
effectiveness of information flow. In August 2010, the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) added DHS’s information network to its
list of high-priority information technology projects, indicating that this
mechanism is at risk of failure and requires additional oversight.
According to the Federal Chief Information Officer, in order to justify
1The six transportation modes include aviation, maritime, public transit, highway, freight
rail, and pipeline.
Page 112 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Could Streamline Mechanisms for
Sharing Security-Related Information with
Public Transit Agencies to Help Address
Overlapping Information
future funding for these technology projects, agencies will need to, among
other things, define deliverables and outcomes and put in place a strong
governance structure. Projects that do not meet such criteria will not be
continued. DHS officials have indicated that they are working with OMB to
address OMB’s concerns, but have not provided GAO with information
related to the specific actions that DHS has taken.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Taking steps to streamline information sharing with public transit agencies
could reduce the volume of similar information public transit agencies
receive, making it easier for them to discern relevant information and take
appropriate actions to enhance security. Government and private sector
stakeholders are participating in an information-sharing working group to
review how information-sharing mechanisms might be streamlined to
reduce the volume of overlapping information public transit agencies
receive. In September 2010, GAO recommended that TSA establish time
frames for this working group to develop options for improving its
information-sharing efforts with public transit agencies. In October 2010,
TSA reported that the working group had agreed upon a consolidated
product for sharing security-related information with public transit
agencies. In January 2011, TSA reported that the working group had
established a proposed time frame for piloting and implementing this
product. However, TSA did not provide specifics on the extent to which
this product will reduce overlap among existing information-sharing
mechanisms. Thus, it is too early to tell whether GAO’s recommendation
has been fully addressed.
GAO’s review of the costs associated with maintaining the public transit
analysis center, the public transit portal on DHS’s information network,
and the TSA portal on DHS’s information network found that the
department continues to face challenges collecting and reporting useful
financial management information. According to DHS officials, the
department does not break out the costs associated with maintaining
individual portals on its information network—including the public transit
portal and TSA’s portal—and therefore could not provide GAO with a
reliable estimate of the potential cost savings resulting from consolidating
the public transit portal on DHS’s information network with the public
transit analysis center or the TSA portal on DHS’s information network.
Developing such cost data could assist the department in determining how
to best allocate its limited resources to provide public transit agencies
with quality security-related information.
Page 113 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Could Streamline Mechanisms for
Sharing Security-Related Information with
Public Transit Agencies to Help Address
Overlapping Information
Moreover, by assessing the various mechanisms available to public transit
agencies and the information they provide, and identifying opportunities
to streamline these mechanisms, DHS could identify and implement ways
to more efficiently share security-related information, which would allow
public transit officials to more quickly obtain security-related information
and thereby enhance transit agencies’ efforts to secure their transportation
systems. In doing so, DHS could develop and track verifiable cost data
specific to each of its information-sharing mechanisms as part of TSA’s
streamlining and financial management efforts. Developing such baseline
cost data could assist TSA in identifying potential cost savings resulting
from the consolidation of these mechanisms and provide opportunities for
the agency to better allocate its information-sharing resources.
DHS officials stated that conducting a cost comparison of the public
transit portal on DHS’s information network, TSA’s portal on this network,
and the public transit analysis center would not result in a meaningful
comparison because DHS’s information-sharing mechanism costs are
distributed across several transportation sectors, including public transit,
while the costs for the public transit analysis center are applied to a
specific sector. Additionally, TSA officials stated that TSA’s portal on
DHS’s information network was not designed to compete with the public
transit analysis center or the public transit subportal on DHS’s information
network since TSA’s portal shares information with all transportation
modes. GAO recognizes that TSA’s portal was designed to share
information with all transportation modes, including public transit.
However, GAO believes that to the extent possible, TSA should consider
ways to reduce any unneeded overlap of information sharing for the public
transit industry regardless of the mechanisms used to share such
information. Furthermore, GAO continues to believe that developing and
tracking verifiable cost data specific to each information-sharing
mechanism as it relates to services provided to the public transit sector
could assist TSA in identifying potential cost savings resulting from
consolidating such mechanisms.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on GAO’s September
2010 report on federal efforts to share security-related information with
public transit agencies. In addition, this analysis contains updated
information obtained from September 2010 through January 2011. GAO
reviewed DHS’s cost data for completeness and accuracy and determined
the data were reliable for the purposes of this analysis.
Page 114 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
DHS Could Streamline Mechanisms for
Sharing Security-Related Information with
Public Transit Agencies to Help Address
Overlapping Information
Related GAO
Products
Public Transit Security Information Sharing: DHS Could Improve
Information Sharing through Streamlining and Increased Outreach.
GAO-10-895. Washington, D.C.: September 22, 2010.
Interagency Collaboration: Key Issues for Congressional Oversight of
National Security Strategies, Organizations, Workforce, and
Information Sharing. GAO-09-904SP. Washington, D.C.: September 25,
2009.
High-Risk Series: An Update. GAO-09-271. Washington, D.C.: January 22,
2009.
Information Technology: Management Improvements Needed on the
Department of Homeland Security’s Next Generation Information
Sharing System. GAO-09-40. Washington, D.C.: October 8, 2008.
Homeland Security: Departmentwide Integrated Financial Systems
Remain a Challenge. GAO-07-536. Washington, D.C.: June 21, 2007.
Information Technology: Numerous Federal Networks Used to Support
Homeland Security Need to Be Better Coordinated with Key State and
Local Information-Sharing Initiatives. GAO-07-455. Washington, D.C.:
April 16, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact Steve Lord at Area Contact
(202) 512-4379 or lords@gao.gov.
Page 115 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
FEMA Needs to Improve Its Oversight of
Grants and Establish a Framework for
Assessing Capabilities to Identify Gaps and
Prioritize Investments
FEMA Needs to Improve Its Oversight of Grants and
Establish a Framework for Assessing Capabilities to
Identify Gaps and Prioritize Investments
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
From fiscal year 2002 through 2010, Congress appropriated over $34
billion for homeland security preparedness grant programs to enhance the
ability of state, territory, local, and tribal governments to prevent, protect
against, respond to, and recover from terrorist attacks and other disasters,
according to the Congressional Research Service. The number of
preparedness grant programs Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) administers has grown from 8 in 2002 to 17 in 2010 as the result of
congressional and executive branch actions. A number of FEMA’s
preparedness grant programs fund common eligible recipients (such as
state homeland security agencies) for similar-broad purposes.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
FEMA does not compare and coordinate grant applications across its
preparedness programs to identify potential duplication. In addition,
FEMA has not established measurable goals or performance measures for
preparedness capabilities to identify gaps to assist in effectively
prioritizing national investments through preparedness grant programs.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Inspector General reported
in March 2010 that FEMA’s application process for its preparedness grant
programs did not promote effectiveness and efficiency because FEMA did
not compare and coordinate grant applications across preparedness
programs to identify and mitigate potential duplications (for example,
planning and interoperable communications are two activities that can be
funded by almost all of the programs reviewed by the Inspector General);
the report recommended FEMA do so.1 The report also cited barriers at
the legislative, departmental, and state levels that impede FEMA’s ability
to coordinate these programs, such as annual appropriation laws that may
contain congressional earmarks dedicating funds toward specific grant
projects. The report made two other recommendations for improving
grant management, and FEMA concurred, saying the agency had efforts
under way that will help to address the report’s findings. Until FEMA
evaluates grant applications across grant programs, FEMA cannot
ascertain whether or to what extent multiple funding requests are being
submitted for similar purposes.
1The Inspector General reviewed 13 preparedness grant programs; see Department of
Homeland Security Office of Inspector General, Efficacy of DHS Grant Programs, OIG-10
69 (Washington, D.C., Mar. 22, 2010).
Page 116 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
FEMA Needs to Improve Its Oversight of
Grants and Establish a Framework for
Assessing Capabilities to Identify Gaps and
Prioritize Investments
In October 2006, the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act
charged FEMA with leading the nation in developing a national
preparedness system.2 The act requires FEMA to develop a national
preparedness system and assess preparedness capabilities—capabilities
needed to respond effectively to disasters—to determine the nation’s
preparedness capability levels and the resources needed to achieve
desired capability levels.3 In a report to Congress in March 2009, FEMA
identified, among other things, the need for federal agencies to work
jointly to develop national standards for describing the functionality and
performance characteristics of preparedness resources and capabilities
for use by relevant homeland security grant programs to enable cross-
program coordination and assessment.4
In October 2010, GAO reported that FEMA had not developed measurable
national preparedness capability requirements to provide a framework for
these assessments. In January 2011, FEMA reported that the Administrator
had established a strategic priority, referred to as “Whole of Community”
that identified a series of requirements or core capabilities, to ensure
response and recovery actions are driven by the needs of the affected
community in the event of a catastrophic disaster. As a result, FEMA is
planning to generate measurable national preparedness capability
requirements, and evaluation criteria (e.g., in terms of speed, effectiveness,
and efficiency, among other factors) that are to provide a comprehensive
framework for guiding investments and assessing readiness. Until FEMA
has done so, it cannot operationalize and implement its approach for
assessing local, state, and federal preparedness capabilities to identify gaps
for prioritizing investments in national preparedness. According to program
officials, FEMA’s efforts to define a framework within which its capability
assessments can be effectively applied rely on the results of two key efforts:
the recommendations of the October 2010 report of the congressionally
mandated Local, State, Tribal and Federal Preparedness Task Force, and
2Pub. L. No. 109-295, § 644, 120 Stat. 1355, 1425 (2006) (codified at 6 U.S.C. § 744). The Act
defines capability as “the ability to provide the means to accomplish one or more tasks
under specific conditions and to specific performance standards.” Id. at 641, 120 Stat. at
1424 (codified at 6 U.S.C. § 741).
3Pub. L. No. 109-295, § 649, 120 Stat. 1355, 1428 (2006) (codified at 6 U.S.C. § 749).
4FEMA, Grant Programs Directorate, Interagency Report on Preparedness Grant
Programs, Report to Congress (Washington, D.C., May 2009).
Page 117 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
FEMA Needs to Improve Its Oversight of
Grants and Establish a Framework for
Assessing Capabilities to Identify Gaps and
Prioritize Investments
planned revisions to Homeland Security Presidential Directive-8.5 If the
problems regarding preparedness grant applications and capabilities are not
addressed, FEMA could spend billions of dollars without the ability to
identify duplication of effort and prioritize the development and
maintenance of the most important preparedness capabilities.
On October 12, 2010, Congress enacted the Redundancy Elimination and
Enhanced Performance for Preparedness Grants Act.6 The act calls for the
FEMA administrator to identify redundant reporting requirements for
recipients of certain grants and regularly report to Congress on efforts to
eliminate identified redundancies; submit a plan for developing
performance metrics for the grants; and conduct an assessment of the
grant programs. In January 2011, FEMA reported that it is reviewing its
grant programs and application processes to identify operational
redundancies and is working with DHS to consolidate grant programs
where activities are allowable under multiple grants. FEMA also stated
that the agency is working with the National Academy of Public
Administration to develop a plan by December 2011, for developing
quantifiable performance measures and metrics to assess the effectiveness
of preparedness grant programs. While these are positive steps, it is too
early to determine their effectiveness in eliminating redundancies,
increasing efficiency in administering FEMA’s grant programs, and
assessing the effectiveness of preparedness grant programs.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
GAO has not previously made recommendations in this area, but to identify
and address any unnecessary overlap and duplication, as well as to achieve
operational improvements, efficiencies, and associated financial benefits,
FEMA could benefit from examining its grant programs and coordinating its
application process to eliminate or reduce redundancy among grant
recipients and program purposes. FEMA’s actions in response to the
Redundancy Elimination and Enhanced Performance for Preparedness
Grants Act may help FEMA measure and assess the performance of its
grants programs and achieve efficiencies and savings in administering these
5The Local, State, Tribal and Federal Preparedness Task Force is a group of experts
charged with assessing the state of the nation’s disaster preparedness and making
recommendations to the Secretary of Homeland Security about ways to build preparedness
in communities across America. The Task Force is composed of 35 members of federal,
state, local and tribal governments.
6Pub. L. No. 111-271, 124 Stat. 2852 (2010).
Page 118 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
FEMA Needs to Improve Its Oversight of
Grants and Establish a Framework for
Assessing Capabilities to Identify Gaps and
Prioritize Investments
programs. However, FEMA’s actions in response to this act are still ongoing,
thus it is too early to assess their effectiveness.
In addition, Congress may wish to consider limiting preparedness grant
funding to maintaining existing capabilities (as determined by FEMA) until
FEMA completes a national preparedness assessment of capability gaps at
each level based on tiered, capability-specific performance objectives to
enable prioritization of grant funding. According to FEMA officials, the
administration is planning to issue a revision of Homeland Security
Presidential Directive-8 (no issue date has been set); the revision will
significantly affect FEMA’s national preparedness policies and plans.
Once FEMA has completed a comprehensive, measurable, national
preparedness assessment of capability gaps, as described above, FEMA
could identify the potential costs for establishing and maintaining those
capabilities at each level, and determine what capabilities federal agencies
should provide. Accordingly, Congress may wish to consider limiting the
use of federal preparedness grant programs to fund only projects that
support the development of identified, validated, and documented
capability gaps.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on GAO’s review of
agency reports and other sources well as the related GAO products listed
below. GAO determined that the data it used were sufficiently reliable for
its purposes.
At the request of the House Homeland Security Committee, GAO has a review
under way examining FEMA’s management of selected homeland security
grants and potential duplication and expects to issue a report in 2011.
Related GAO
Products
FEMA Has Made Limited Progress in Efforts to Develop and Implement
a System to Assess National Preparedness Capabilities. GAO-11-51R.
Washington, D.C., October 29, 2010.
National Preparedness: FEMA Has Made Progress, but Needs to
Complete and Integrate Planning, Exercise, and Assessment Efforts.
GAO-09-369. Washington, D.C.: April 30, 2009.
For additional information about this area, contact William O. Jenkins Jr. Area Contact
at (202) 512-8757 or jenkinswo@gao.gov.
Page 119 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Lack of Information Sharing Could Create the
Potential for Duplication of Efforts between
U.S. Agencies Involved in Development
Efforts in Afghanistan
Lack of Information Sharing Could Create the Potential
for Duplication of Efforts between U.S. Agencies
Involved in Development Efforts in Afghanistan
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The United States has appropriated over $16 billion since fiscal year 2002
for development efforts in Afghanistan, implemented by the U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID) and the Department of Defense
(DOD). USAID, through its assistance program, and DOD, through its
Commander’s Emergency Response Program (CERP), have implemented
development projects focusing on similar initiatives, such as improving
Afghanistan’s road, water, and other infrastructure sectors. This line of
effort is an integral part of the U.S. integrated civilian-military campaign
plan focused on countering insurgents in Afghanistan and requires
extensive interagency coordination and information sharing. There is a
potential for duplication of agencies’ efforts.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Agencies involved in the implementation of development projects in
Afghanistan—principally USAID and DOD—have not adopted a centralized
data system that tracks all U.S. government-funded Afghan development
efforts and is accessible by all relevant agencies. GAO has made
recommendations for such action and agencies have concurred with those
recommendations. Without a centralized data system to improve visibility of
individual development projects, the U.S. government may not be able to
fully leverage available resources and risks duplicating efforts and wasting
taxpayer dollars, as a result of fragmented or overlapping efforts.
Maintaining an accessible data system that promotes interagency
information sharing is particularly important in an environment such as
Afghanistan, where several agencies are involved in similar development
efforts that are dispersed throughout the country. In a review of U.S.
funded road projects in Afghanistan, GAO reported in July 2008 that,
despite CERP guidance requiring DOD to provide CERP-funded project
information to a USAID-maintained database, DOD had not done so. As a
result, a comprehensive database of all U.S.-funded road projects in
Afghanistan did not exist. Moreover, DOD officials said that because of
missing documentation and frequent staff rotation, they did not know
where some CERP-funded roads were built. GAO recommended that
information on DOD’s CERP-funded road projects be included in a USAID-
maintained database, and DOD concurred.
However, in a May 2009 report that reviewed DOD’s coordination of
CERP-funded projects in Afghanistan with USAID, GAO found that, while
the two agencies had mechanisms in place to facilitate coordination, they
lacked a common database accessible to all parties involved in
development efforts in Afghanistan. GAO noted that DOD used a classified
database—Combined Information Data Network Exchange—to track
Page 120 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Lack of Information Sharing Could Create the
Potential for Duplication of Efforts between
U.S. Agencies Involved in Development
Efforts in Afghanistan
CERP-funded projects, while USAID used a database called GeoBase to
track its development projects. GAO further noted that in early 2009,
USAID officials were granted access to the unclassified portion of DOD’s
database, but DOD officials did not have access to USAID’s GeoBase
database at the time.
Subsequently, in late 2009 USAID initiated a new database system, known
as Afghan Info, to replace GeoBase. According to USAID, Afghan Info is
intended to provide a comprehensive and transparent interagency picture
of how project implementers use foreign assistance resources to support
U.S. objectives in Afghanistan. USAID officials said they would like the
Afghan Info system designated as the official system for data on U.S.
assistance activities in Afghanistan, subject to Ambassador-level approval.
However, GAO’s review of U.S. development efforts in Afghanistan’s water
sector completed in November 2010 found that a centralized database that
contains information on all U.S.-funded development projects, including
information on water sector projects, still did not exist. Each agency
continues to maintain its own project tracking system that identifies
agency-specific information on water projects in Afghanistan.
A USAID official responsible for developing the Afghan Info database
noted that Afghan Info did not include data from any other agency, aside
from unclassified quarterly CERP data that DOD began providing to
USAID in February 2010. This official also did not know whether the
system was being used to coordinate water sector development in
Afghanistan. Moreover, senior DOD officials told GAO they were not
familiar with the Afghan Info system or the data it contained. For its
CERP-related data, DOD continues to use the Combined Information Data
Network Exchange, which was not intended as a platform for interagency
coordination. Agency officials have acknowledged that having access to
project data from other agencies would contribute to better project
planning, eliminate potential overlap, and allow agencies to leverage each
other’s resources more effectively.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
To enhance interagency coordination and to help ensure there is no
overlap or duplication and to increase accountability for use of agency
funds, USAID, in consultation with DOD and other relevant U.S. agencies,
should consider designating Afghan Info or some other database as the
centralized U.S. government database for U.S. development efforts in
Afghanistan. This database should, among other things, ensure that the
information in the database (1) captures all agency development efforts
Page 121 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Lack of Information Sharing Could Create the
Potential for Duplication of Efforts between
U.S. Agencies Involved in Development
Efforts in Afghanistan
and (2) is accessible to all U.S. government agencies involved in U.S.
funded development projects in Afghanistan.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related products Framework for
identified below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Afghanistan Development: U.S. Efforts to Support Afghan Water Sector
Increasing but Improvements Needed in Project Planning, Coordination,
and Management. GAO-11-138. Washington, D.C.: November 15, 2010.
Military Operations: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight and
Interagency Coordination for the Commander’s Emergency Response
Program in Afghanistan. GAO-09-615. Washington, D.C.: May 18, 2009.
Afghanistan Reconstruction: Progress Made in Constructing Roads, but
Assessments for Determining Impact and a Sustainable Maintenance
Program Are Needed. GAO-08-689. Washington, D.C.: July 8, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Charles Michael Area Contact
Johnson at (202) 512-7331 or johnsoncm@gao.gov.
Page 122 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Despite Restructuring, Overlapping Roles and
Functions Still Exist at State’s Arms Control
and Nonproliferation Bureaus
Despite Restructuring, Overlapping Roles and
Functions Still Exist at State’s Arms Control and
Nonproliferation Bureaus
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
State assumed direct responsibility for arms control, nonproliferation, and
disarmament issues in 1999 and established three bureaus to perform these
missions. In 2004, the Department of State (State) Inspector General (IG)
concluded that State’s three-bureau structure for conducting arms control
and nonproliferation policy—the bureaus for Arms Control (AC),
Nonproliferation (NP), and Verification and Compliance (VC)—did not
adequately address post-September 11 challenges, including possible
terrorist use of weapons of mass destruction. The IG also noted that State
had yet to formalize the responsibilities of the three bureaus in its Foreign
Affairs Manual (FAM), which sets out agency organization and functions.
Between late 2005 and early 2006, State created a new two-bureau
structure—the bureaus for International Security and Nonproliferation
(ISN) and Verification, Compliance and Implementation (VCI)—to better
address these issues and improve efficiency. In July 2009, GAO documented
continuing problems with the department’s reorganization of these bureaus.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
GAO’s 2009 review of the reorganization of State bureaus responsible for
nonproliferation activities found that the lack of clear guidance in the FAM
contributed to past and current overlap problems among the AC, NP, and
VC bureaus (referred to as T bureaus). Despite previous reorganization
efforts, the fragmentation, overlap, and redundancies continue to exist
among the T bureaus. This may be due somewhat to the lack of clear
guidance in the department’s FAM.
In 2004, the State IG identified a number of areas of overlap among the T
bureaus. The overlap included multiple bureau reporting channels for some
U.S. international conference representatives and treaty negotiators, and
unclear and conflicting demarcation of responsibilities between AC and NP
for their South Asia and North Korea issues. State’s objectives of the 2006
reorganization were to eliminate overlap among the bureaus, missions, and
issues; reduce bureaucratic inefficiencies and top-heavy management; and
enable the department to better focus on post-September 11 challenges.
State officials noted that the reorganization undertaken in 2006 addressed
some organizational redundancies. Specifically, State reduced the number
of offices, functions, and staff slots when it merged its three-bureau
structure for conducting arms control and nonproliferation policy into a
two-bureau structure. However, a May 2006 State study on workforce
allocation conducted after the reorganization found that mission
redundancies persisted for chemical weapons, missile defense and space
policy, nuclear nonproliferation, and bioterrorism issues among 14 offices
and functions of the new ISN and VCI bureaus.
Page 123 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Despite Restructuring, Overlapping Roles and
Functions Still Exist at State’s Arms Control
and Nonproliferation Bureaus
GAO’s 2009 review of the reorganization found that the lack of clear
guidance in the FAM contributed to past and current overlap problems
among the T bureaus. As a result, concerns about mission overlaps persist;
State employees stated that some offices remain overworked while others
are underworked. The section of the manual detailing the roles and
responsibilities of these bureaus had never been drafted and approved
since the 1999 incorporation of the Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency into State and the creation of the AC, NP, and VC bureaus. A State
official on the panel responsible for assigning roles and missions under the
new two-bureau structure stated that their deliberations were hindered by
the lack of an up-to-date FAM. The department agreed with GAO’s 2009
recommendation that it delineate the roles and responsibilities for the ISN
and VCI bureaus and add them to the FAM. On October 1, 2010, State
announced a new reorganization of its arms control and nonproliferation
functions, with the goal of improving and revitalizing efforts to enhance
U.S. national security by effectively addressing global nuclear, chemical,
biological, and conventional weapons threats. However, as of January
2011, State has not modified the FAM.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
State should implement GAO’s recommendations to (1) formally delineate
in the FAM the roles of the two new bureaus, and (2) direct that key
transformation practices and steps be incorporated into the FAM.
Implementing these recommendations could reduce personnel and other
overhead costs by helping the T bureaus address the multiple mission
redundancies identified among the offices and functions of the new ISN
and VCI bureaus. The fiscal year 2010 appropriations for the ISN and VCI
bureaus were $48.9 million and $31.0 million, respectively.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related product Framework for
identified below.
Analysis
State Department: Key Transformation Practices Could Have Helped in Related GAO Product
Restructuring Arms Control and Nonproliferation Bureaus. GAO-09-738.
Washington, D.C.: July 15, 2009.
For additional information about this area, contact Joseph Christoff at Area Contact
(202) 512-8979 or christoffj@gao.gov.
Page 124 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Actions Needed to Reduce Administrative
Overlap among Domestic Food Assistance
Programs
Actions Needed to Reduce Administrative Overlap
among Domestic Food Assistance Programs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The federal government spent more than $62.5 billion on 18 domestic food
and nutrition assistance programs in fiscal year 2008. Programs’ spending
ranged from $4 million for the smallest program to more than $37 billion
for the largest. These programs help ensure that millions of low-income
individuals have consistent, dependable access to enough food for an
active, healthy life. Programs provide nutrition assistance in a variety of
forms, ranging from agricultural commodities to prepared meals to
vouchers or other targeted benefits used in commercial food retail
locations. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Food and
Nutrition Service oversees most of these programs—including the five
largest. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS) also fund food assistance programs.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Domestic food and nutrition assistance is provided through a
decentralized system of primarily 18 different federal programs that shows
signs of overlap and inefficient use of resources. In addition to USDA,
HHS, DHS, and multiple state and local government and nonprofit
organizations work together to administer a complex network of programs
and providers. GAO has found that some of these programs provide
comparable benefits to similar or overlapping populations. For example,
individuals eligible for groceries through the Commodity Supplemental
Food Program are also generally eligible for groceries through the
Emergency Food Assistance Program and for targeted benefits that are
redeemed in authorized stores through the largest program, the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP—formerly the Food
Stamp Program). The availability of multiple programs with similar
benefits helps ensure that those in need have access to nutritious food, but
can also increase administrative costs, which account for approximately a
tenth to more than a quarter of total costs among the largest of these
programs. In addition, GAO’s previous work has shown that overlap
among programs can lead to inefficient use of federal funds, duplication of
effort, and confusion among those seeking services.
These 18 programs were created individually by Congress over the past
several decades to address a variety of emerging needs, such as targeting
benefits to groups at high risk of malnutrition or hunger. Agency officials
and local providers have indicated that the multiple food assistance
programs work together and provide various points of entry to the system
to help increase access to food for vulnerable or target populations. Those
officials and providers told us that, since no one program alone is intended
to meet a household’s full nutritional needs, the variety of food assistance
Page 125 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Actions Needed to Reduce Administrative
Overlap among Domestic Food Assistance
Programs
programs can help households fill gaps and address the specific needs of
individual members.
Despite the potential benefits of varied points of entry, program rules related
to determining eligibility often require the collection of similar information by
multiple entities. For example, six programs—the National School Lunch
Program, the School Breakfast Program, the Fresh Fruit and Vegetable
Program, the Summer Food Service Program, the Special Milk Program, and
the Child and Adult Care Food Program—all provide food to eligible children
in settings outside the home, such as at school, day care, or summer day
camps. Most of the 18 programs have specific and often complex legal
requirements and administrative procedures that federal, state, and local
organizations follow to help manage each program’s resources. According to
previous GAO work and state and local officials, rules that govern these and
other nutrition assistance programs often require applicants who seek
assistance from multiple programs to submit separate applications for each
program and provide similar information verifying, for example, household
income. This can create unnecessary work for both providers and applicants
and may result in the use of more administrative resources than needed.
Moreover, not enough is known about the effectiveness of many of these
programs. Research suggests that participation in 7 of the 18 programs—
including the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants,
and Children (WIC), the National School Lunch Program, the School
Breakfast Program, and SNAP—is associated with positive health and
nutrition outcomes consistent with programs’ goals, such as raising the
level of nutrition among low-income households, safeguarding the health
and well-being of the nation’s children, and strengthening the agricultural
economy. Yet little is known about the effectiveness of the remaining 11
programs because they have not been well studied. As part of its broader
recommendation GAO suggested that USDA consider which of the lesser-
studied programs need further research, and USDA agreed to consider the
value of examining potential inefficiencies and overlap among smaller
programs
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Actions to address food assistance programs’ overlap and inefficiencies
are needed to better leverage government resources. Provided such
actions are balanced with the program goals of serving eligible vulnerable
and low-income individuals and the need to maintain program integrity,
creating efficiencies could put these agencies in a position to better assist
program participants while decreasing administrative burdens. In April
2010, GAO recommended that USDA identify and develop methods for
Page 126 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Actions Needed to Reduce Administrative
Overlap among Domestic Food Assistance
Programs
addressing potential inefficiencies and reducing unnecessary overlap
among its smaller food assistance programs while ensuring that those who
are eligible receive the assistance they need. These methods could include
conducting a study as a first step; convening a group of experts;
identifying which of the lesser-studied programs need further research and
taking steps to fill the research gap; or identifying and piloting proposed
changes. To date, USDA has not taken action on this recommendation.
One of the possible methods for reducing program inefficiencies would
entail USDA broadening its efforts to simplify, streamline, or better align
eligibility procedures and criteria across programs to the extent that it is
permitted by law. For example, the Child Nutrition and WIC
Reauthorization Act of 2004 requires sharing of data between SNAP and
the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) to allow automatic eligibility
for NSLP without further application. According to USDA officials, by the
2008-2009 school year, 78 percent of local educational agencies directly
certified SNAP-participant children for free school meals, which increased
administrative efficiency and reduced improper payments. While privacy
concerns and incompatible data systems pose challenges, expanding these
efforts across programs could further improve efficiency. Because the
legislative and regulatory eligibility criteria for the various entitlement
programs are not identical, with some more stringent than others, changes
to better align eligibility criteria could result in either fewer or more
eligible individuals. Nevertheless, such efforts could result in sizable
administrative cost savings since, as noted earlier, they are a large part of
program costs.
Options such as consolidating or eliminating overlapping programs also
have the potential to reduce administrative costs but may not reduce
spending on benefits unless fewer individuals are served as a result. For
example, in fiscal years 2007, 2008, and 2009, USDA proposed eliminating
the Commodity Supplemental Food Program, which targets low-income
pregnant women, children, and persons age 60 or over, but Congress
continued to fund the program. USDA viewed this program as duplicative
of other programs, and eliminating the program would have yielded close
to $140 million savings in fiscal year 2008. However, according to agency
officials, because the program is targeted to particularly vulnerable
groups, elimination of the program would likely increase enrollment in
programs such as WIC, reducing overall savings. As part of any effort to
significantly change the nutrition assistance benefit delivery system, care
must be taken to understand the likely effects on target populations.
Nevertheless, GAO believes opportunities exist for reducing costs and
improving the efficiency of nutrition assistance programs.
Page 127 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Actions Needed to Reduce Administrative
Overlap among Domestic Food Assistance
Programs
The information contained in this analysis builds upon prior GAO work, Framework for
which is cited below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Domestic Food Assistance: Complex System Benefits Millions, but
Additional Efforts Could Address Potential Inefficiency and Overlap
among Smaller Programs. GAO-10-346. Washington, D.C.: April 15, 2010.
School Meal Programs: Experiences of the States and Districts That
Eliminated Reduced-price Fees. GAO-09-584. Washington, D.C.: July 17,
2009.
Food Stamp Program: Options for Delivering Financial Incentives to
Participants for Purchasing Targeted Foods. GAO-08-415. Washington,
D.C.: July 30, 2008.
Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service: Special
Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children
(WIC): Revisions in the WIC Food Packages. GAO-08-358R. Washington,
D.C.: December 17, 2007.
Nutrition Education: USDA Provides Services through Multiple
Programs, but Stronger Linkages among Efforts Are Needed.
GAO-04-528. Washington, D.C.: April 27, 2004.
Federal Food Safety and Security System: Fundamental Restructuring Is
Needed to Address Fragmentation and Overlap. GAO-04-588T.
Washington, D.C.: March 30, 2004.
Food Stamp Program: Steps Have Been Taken to Increase Participation
of Working Families, but Better Tracking of Efforts Is Needed.
GAO-04-346. Washington, D.C.: March 5, 2004.
For additional information about this area, contact Kay Brown (202) 512Area Contact
7215 or brownke@gao.gov.
Page 128 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Better Coordination of Federal Homelessness
Programs May Minimize Fragmentation and
Overlap
Better Coordination of Federal Homelessness Programs
May Minimize Fragmentation and Overlap
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
According to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD),
approximately 643,000 individuals and persons in families experienced
homelessness on a single night in January 2009. Multiple federal programs
provide assistance targeted to those experiencing homelessness or more
broadly assist low-income populations. GAO reported that in 2009 federal
agencies spent about $2.9 billion on over 20 programs targeted to address
the various needs of persons experiencing homelessness. Some federal
programs may offer similar types of services and serve similar
populations, potentially leading to overlap or fragmentation.
In June 2010, GAO recommended that the Departments of Education,
Health and Human Services (HHS), and HUD develop a common
vocabulary to better coordinate homeless services. GAO also
recommended in July 2010 that HUD and HHS consider more formally
linking their housing and supportive services programs. The agencies
concurred with these recommendations and to date have taken some
actions to address them.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Several federal agencies provide a range of programs that offer not only
housing assistance but also supportive services to those experiencing
homelessness and to those at risk of becoming homeless, but coordination
of these programs varies by program and agency. A number of federal
programs are specifically targeted to address issues related to
homelessness while other mainstream programs that are generally
designed to help low-income individuals by providing housing assistance
and services such as health care, job training, and food assistance may
also serve those experiencing homelessness or at risk of becoming
homeless. In some cases, different agencies may be offering similar types
of services to similar populations. For example, GAO reported in July 2010
that at least seven federal agencies administered more than 20 programs
that provide some type of shelter or housing assistance. Similarly, five
agencies administered programs that deliver food and nutrition services,
and four agencies administered programs that provide health services
including mental health services and substance abuse treatment. This
range of programs has resulted in a fragmented service system.
Fragmentation and overlap in some of these programs may be due in part
to their legislative creation as separate programs under the jurisdiction of
Page 129 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Better Coordination of Federal Homelessness
Programs May Minimize Fragmentation and
Overlap
several agencies.1 Moreover, additional programs have since developed
incrementally over time to address the specific needs of certain segments
of the population. Nevertheless, this fragmentation can create difficulties
for people in accessing services as well as administrative burdens for
providers who must navigate various application requirements, selection
criteria, and reporting requirements. Fragmentation of programs across
federal agencies has also resulted in differing methods for collecting data
on those experiencing homelessness. In part because of the lack of
comprehensive data collection requirements, the data have limited
usefulness. Complete and accurate data are essential for understanding
and meeting the needs of those who are experiencing homelessness and to
prevent homelessness from occurring.
Coordination among targeted homelessness programs and with other
mainstream programs that support individuals or families experiencing
homelessness includes agencies working together on program guidance
and prevention strategies. In July 2010, GAO reported that agencies had
taken some steps toward improved coordination and that the U.S.
Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH) has provided a renewed
focus on such coordination. However, the lack of federal coordination was
still viewed by some local service providers as an important barrier to the
effective delivery of services to those experiencing homelessness. Without
more formal coordination of federal programs to specifically include the
linking of supportive services and housing, federal efforts to address
homelessness may remain fragmented and not be as effective as they
could be.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Federal agencies have taken some positive steps to improve coordination
of programs that benefit those experiencing homelessness and reduce
overlap and fragmentation but more needs to be done. In 2010, the 19
members and staff of USICH, including the Departments of Education,
HUD, and HHS, worked collaboratively to develop a plan—the Federal
Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness. The plan is an important
1Many federal programs providing services to persons experiencing homelessness were
created by the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, Pub. L. No. 100-77 (1987). The
act, enacted originally as the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act, was renamed
in 2000. Pub. L. No. 106-400. The act originally consisted of 15 programs providing a range
of services to persons experiencing homelessness, including emergency shelter,
transitional housing, job training, primary health care, education, and some permanent
housing.
Page 130 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Better Coordination of Federal Homelessness
Programs May Minimize Fragmentation and
Overlap
first step that recognizes that to prevent and end homelessness, targeted
and mainstream programs including housing, health, education, and
human services must be coordinated. Consistent with recent GAO
recommendations, a key plan objective is to increase collaborative
planning and better target initiatives to populations that need support
across multiple systems.
In keeping with GAO’s previous recommendations and the plan’s objective
to increase coordination, it will be important for the federal agencies that
have adopted the plan to develop implementation plans that include but
are not limited to a project schedule, resource allocation, outreach
measures, and a performance measurement strategy to evaluate their
progress. The plan recognizes that collection, analysis, and reporting of
quality, timely data on homelessness are essential for targeting
interventions, tracking results, strategic planning, and resource allocation.
As noted above, currently each federal program generally has distinct data
requirements. The plan acknowledges that a common data standard and
uniform performance measures across all federal programs that are
targeted at homelessness would facilitate greater understanding and
simplify local data management. Consistent with the plan, representatives
with USICH noted that agencies are taking steps to improve and
coordinate data, specifically citing the December 2010 announcement by
the Department of Veterans Affairs to participate in Homeless Information
Management Systems over the next 12 months.2 The formal coordination
among agencies outlined in this plan may minimize fragmentation of
federal programs and help address gaps in supportive services while
linking housing and supportive services. The linking of these services is
considered to be important for effectively delivering assistance to those
experiencing homelessness.
Implementation challenges could hamper efforts to increase agency
coordination as outlined in the plan. For example, according to
representatives with USICH, agencies may face challenges in coordinating
plans, programs, and activities because of individual agency regulations
2The Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) is a software application designed
to record and store information on the characteristics and service needs of those
experiencing homelessness. HUD and other planners and policymakers at the federal,
state, and local levels can use aggregate HMIS data to obtain information about the extent
and nature of homelessness over time. Specifically, HMIS can be used to produce an
unduplicated count of homeless persons, understand patterns of service use, and measure
the effectiveness of homeless programs.
Page 131 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Better Coordination of Federal Homelessness
Programs May Minimize Fragmentation and
Overlap
that could prohibit sharing budgetary or other predecisional program
information. Nevertheless, to facilitate interagency coordination, the plan
encourages identifying and removing barriers to working together and
seeking opportunities to conduct data matches and share data on those
experiencing homelessness. It also indicates agencies at the state and local
levels could review budget processes to determine if avenues exist for
recognizing savings across partners and seek opportunities for engaging
congressional committees jointly on issues related to preventing and
ending homelessness. Despite these potential challenges, it is important
for agencies to improve collaborative efforts as outlined in the plan. Given
the importance of these issues, GAO believes that coordination of targeted
and mainstream federal programs could benefit from increased Office of
Management and Budget and congressional oversight.
GAO plans to examine further the extent to which these programs have
been evaluated on their efficiency and effectiveness and the potential
benefits of consolidating or eliminating federal programs that deliver
services to those experiencing homelessness. GAO also plans to evaluate
what other options may more fully address fragmentation and overlap and
achieve operational improvements, efficiencies, or financial savings.
GAO reviewed prior reports, listed below, about federal agencies that Framework for
provide homelessness assistance. GAO also obtained information from
Analysis representatives of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness as well
as national policy and advocacy organizations that deal with issues of
homelessness.
Related GAO
Products
Rural Homelessness: Better Collaboration by HHS and HUD Could
Improve Delivery of Services in Rural Areas. GAO-10-724. Washington,
D.C.: July 20, 2010.
Homelessness: A Common Vocabulary Could Help Agencies Collaborate
and Collect More Consistent Data. GAO-10-702. Washington, D.C.: June
30, 2010.
Homelessness: Improving Coordination and Client Access to Programs.
GAO-02-485T. Washington, D.C.: March 6, 2002.
Homelessness: Barriers to Using Mainstream Programs.
GAO/RCED-00-184. Washington, D.C.: July 6, 2000.
Page 132 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Better Coordination of Federal Homelessness
Programs May Minimize Fragmentation and
Overlap
Homelessness: Coordination and Evaluation of Programs Are Essential.
GAO/RCED-99-49. Washington, D.C.: February 26, 1999.
For additional information about this area, contact Alicia Puente Cackley Area Contact
at (202) 512-8678 or cackleya@gao.gov.
Page 133 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Further Steps Needed to Improve Cost-
Effectiveness and Enhance Services for
Transportation-Disadvantaged Persons
Further Steps Needed to Improve Cost-Effectiveness
and Enhance Services for Transportation-
Disadvantaged Persons
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Millions of Americans are unable to provide their own transportation or
have difficulty accessing public transportation. Individuals who are
“transportation disadvantaged” may include people who are elderly, have
disabilities, or low incomes. In 2003, GAO reported that eight federal
departments had 62 programs providing transportation services to this
population. At that time, GAO was unable to identify spending on
transportation services for more than half of these programs. However,
spending for 29 programs totaled more than $2 billion in fiscal year 2001.
Following GAO’s recommendation to increase federal agency participation,
a 2004 Executive Order expanded the existing Interagency Transportation
Coordinating Council on Access and Mobility to include 10 federal agencies
and charged it with promoting interagency cooperation and establishing
mechanisms to minimize program duplication and overlap. A 2004 GAO
report found that some federal agencies were developing guidance and
technical assistance for transportation coordination as recommended by
GAO, and the Coordinating Council had launched the “United We Ride”
transportation coordination initiative. These actions notwithstanding,
program overlap and fragmentation continue today.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Agencies providing transportation services to transportation-disadvantaged
persons often provide similar services to similar client groups, leading to
potential duplication and service inefficiencies when coordination does not
occur. Interagency forums for coordination at the federal, state, and local
levels have expanded in recent years, but participation has varied among
federal departments and program requirements have not been aligned to
facilitate coordination. To improve cost-effectiveness and transportation
services, federal departments should facilitate coordination by identifying
and assessing programs, collecting information on expenditures, and
developing or disseminating guidance and policies.
GAO and others have reported that the variety of federal programs
providing transportation services to the transportation disadvantaged has
resulted in fragmented services that can be difficult for clients to navigate
and narrowly focused programs that may result in service gaps. Further,
services can be costly because of inconsistent, duplicative, and often
restrictive program rules and regulations.
Page 134 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Further Steps Needed to Improve Cost-
Effectiveness and Enhance Services for
Transportation-Disadvantaged Persons
• GAO identified 80 existing federal programs in eight departments that
provided funding for transportation services for the transportation
disadvantaged in fiscal year 2010 (see table).1
• Programs may provide bus tokens, transit passes, taxi vouchers, or
mileage reimbursement, for example, to transportation-disadvantaged
persons for trips to access government services (such as job-training
programs), the grocery store, medical appointments, or for other
purposes.
As in prior work, GAO could not determine the total amount spent,
because agencies often do not separately track transportation costs from
other program costs. However, GAO obtained fiscal year 2009 funding
information for 23 programs, which spent an estimated total of $1.7 billion
on transportation services that year. Further, the Medicaid program in the
Department of Health and Human Services spent $704 million in fiscal year
2010—the first year for which such information was available.
Number of Programs GAO Identified That Provide Transportation Services to
Transportation-disadvantaged Persons, by Federal Department, as of October 2010
Federal department Number of programs identified
Agriculture 2
Education
Health and Human Services
Housing and Urban Development
Interior
Labor
Transportation
Veterans Affairs
Totala 80
Source: Federal departments and GAO analysis of the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (October 2010).
aThe Corporation for National and Community Service—an independent federal agency—also funds
three programs that provide transportation services.
The Interagency Transportation Coordinating Council on Access and
Mobility—the venue charged with promoting interagency coordination—
1Two new programs in the Departments of Agriculture and Housing and Urban
Development have not yet awarded grants, but will have transportation as an eligible use of
funds. These have not been included in the count of programs.
Page 135 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
11
30
11
7
9
7
3
Further Steps Needed to Improve Cost-
Effectiveness and Enhance Services for
Transportation-Disadvantaged Persons
has developed an action plan and a policy statement to encourage and
facilitate coordination, but action by federal departments—individually
and in concert—will be necessary to better coordinate programs and
eliminate duplication and fragmentation at the federal level. For example,
because neither the Coordinating Council nor most federal departments
have an inventory of existing programs providing transportation services
or their expenditures, they lack the information to identify opportunities
to improve the efficiency and service of their programs through
coordination. Available information is outdated and incomplete.
Additionally, departments have not aligned program requirements. For
instance, a 2009 report by the National Resource Center for Human
Service Transportation Coordination found that three federal departments
providing transportation services—the departments of Health and Human
Services, Labor, and Education—had yet to coordinate their planning
processes or requirements with the Department of Transportation.2 GAO
found that these steps still had not occurred as of the end of 2010. These
departments account for 50 of the 80 existing programs identified.
With limited interagency coordination and direction at the federal level,
the “United We Ride” initiative and the Federal Transit Administration
(FTA) have encouraged state and local coordination. For example, certain
FTA transit programs require that projects selected for grant funding be
derived from locally developed, coordinated public transit-human service
transportation plans.3 The National Conference of State Legislatures
reported in 2010 that 25 states had created councils to improve
coordination among state and local grantees.4 Some states also have
regional or local councils. These councils are generally responsible for
identifying available transportation services, conducting needs
assessments, and determining how gaps should be filled. However,
participation by non-FTA grantees—which is optional—has varied,
limiting these efforts.
2See Report to the Secretary of Transportation, National Resource Center for Human
Service Transportation Coordination (March 2009).
3
See Formula grants for special needs of elderly individuals and individuals with
disabilities, 49 U.S.C. § 5310(d)(2)(B); Job Access and Reverse Commute formula grants, 49
U.S.C. § 5316(g)(3); New Freedom Program, 49 U.S.C. § 5317(f)(3).
4National Conference of State Legislatures, State Human Service Transportation
Coordinating Councils: An Overview and State Profiles (Denver, Colo., February 2010).
Page 136 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Further Steps Needed to Improve Cost-
Effectiveness and Enhance Services for
Transportation-Disadvantaged Persons
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
Federal coordination of transportation services can lead to economic
benefits, such as funding flexibility, reduced costs or great efficiency, and
increased productivity, as well as improved customer service and
enhanced mobility, as GAO and others have reported. To realize these
benefits, GAO now suggests departments undertake actions in two key
areas to help identify opportunities to eliminate duplication and
fragmentation and improve coordination:
• Program information. To reduce fragmentation, overlap, and
duplication, federal departments on the Coordinating Council should
identify and assess their transportation programs and related
expenditures and work with other departments to identify potential
opportunities for additional coordination such as the use of one-call
centers, transportation brokerages, or shared resources, among other
options. The Coordinating Council should develop the means for
collecting and sharing this information by establishing agency roles and
responsibilities and developing a strategy to reinforce cooperation.
• Policies and guidance. Federal departments also have more work to
do in developing and disseminating policies and grantee guidance for
coordinating transportation services. This is important because state
and local grantees typically look to their administrating departments
for guidance on issues such as coordination. Some stakeholders
indicated that policies for cost sharing among programs still need to be
developed. Another noted that some coordination policies, such as
vehicle sharing among service providers, could be better disseminated.
In 2003, GAO discussed three potential options to overcome obstacles to
the coordination of transportation for the transportation disadvantaged,
two of which would require substantial statutory or regulatory changes
and include potential costs: making federal program standards more
uniform or creating some type of requirement or financial incentive for
coordination. As a result, at that time GAO recommended expanding the
Coordinating Council and better disseminating guidance. Subsequently,
the Coordinating Council was expanded and several coordination
initiatives were launched, and progress has been made in coordination
efforts, particularly at the state and local level. However, to assure that
coordination benefits are realized, Congress may want to consider
requiring key programs to participate in coordinated planning.
Page 137 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Further Steps Needed to Improve Cost-
Effectiveness and Enhance Services for
Transportation-Disadvantaged Persons
Framework for
Analysis
GAO reviewed prior work listed below on the coordination of
transportation services and the Job Access and Reverse Commute
program. GAO interviewed department officials with the FTA and United
We Ride and contacted the Departments of Agriculture, Education, Health
and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, the Interior,
Justice, Labor, and Veterans Affairs. GAO also spoke with the National
Resource Center for Human Service Transportation Coordination, the
National Council on Disability, American Association of Retired Persons,
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, and
Project ACTION, and reviewed relevant reports. Finally, GAO searched the
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance for 2010 to confirm that programs
identified in 2003 still exist and offer transportation services and to
identify new programs funding these services. Program information was
verified with department officials, who provided spending data.
Related GAO
Products
Federal Transit Administration: Progress and Challenges in
Implementing and Evaluating the Job Access and Reverse Commute
Program. GAO-09-496. Washington, D.C.: May 21, 2009.
Transportation Disadvantaged: Progress in Implementing the New
Freedom Program Has Been Limited, and Better Monitoring Procedures
Would Help Ensure Program Funds Are Used as Intended. GAO-07-999R.
Washington, D.C.: July 19, 2007.
Transportation-Disadvantaged Populations: Actions Needed to Clarify
Responsibilities and Increase Preparedness for Evacuations. GAO-07-44.
Washington, D.C.: December 22, 2006.
Federal Transit Administration: Progress Made in Implementing
Changes to the Job Access Program, but Evaluation and Oversight
Processes Need Improvement. GAO-07-43. Washington, D.C.: November 17,
2006.
Disaster Preparedness: Preliminary Observations on the Evacuation of
Vulnerable Populations due to Hurricanes and Other Disasters.
GAO-06-790T. Washington, D.C.: May 18, 2006.
Transportation-Disadvantaged Seniors: Efforts to Enhance Senior
Mobility Could Benefit from Additional Guidance and Information.
GAO-04-971. Washington, D.C.: August 30, 2004.
Transportation-Disadvantaged Populations: Federal Agencies Are Taking
Steps to Assist States and Local Agencies in Coordinating Transportation
Services. GAO-04-420R. Washington, D.C.: February 24, 2004.
Page 138 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Further Steps Needed to Improve Cost-
Effectiveness and Enhance Services for
Transportation-Disadvantaged Persons
Transportation-Disadvantaged Populations: Some Coordination Efforts
Among Programs Providing Transportation Services, but Obstacles
Persist. GAO-03-697. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2003.
Transportation-Disadvantaged Populations: Many Federal Programs
Fund Transportation Services, but Obstacles to Coordination Persist.
GAO-03-698T. Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact David Wise at Area Contact
(202) 512-2834 or wised@gao.gov.
Page 139 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Multiple Employment and Training Programs:
Providing Information on Colocating Services
and Consolidating Administrative Structures
Could Promote Efficiencies
Multiple Employment and Training Programs: Providing
Information on Colocating Services and Consolidating
Administrative Structures Could Promote Efficiencies
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Federally funded employment and training programs play an important
role in helping job seekers obtain employment. In fiscal year 2009, 47
programs spent about $18 billion to provide services, such as job search
and job counseling, to program participants. Most of these programs are
administered by the Departments of Labor, Education, and Health and
Human Services (HHS).
GAO has previously issued reports on the number of programs that
provide employment and training services and overlap among them. In the
1990s, GAO issued a series of reports that identified program overlap and
possible areas of resulting inefficiencies. In 2000 and 2003, GAO identified
programs for which a key program goal was providing employment and
training assistance and tracked the increasing number of programs. GAO
recently updated information on these programs, found overlap among
them, and examined potential duplication among three selected large
programs—HHS’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and
the Department of Labor’s Employment Service and Workforce Investment
Act (WIA) Adult programs.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Forty-four of the 47 federal employment and training programs GAO
identified, including those with broader missions such as multipurpose
block grants, overlap with at least one other program in that they provide
at least one similar service to a similar population. Some of these
overlapping programs serve multiple population groups. Others target
specific populations, most commonly Native Americans, veterans, and
youth. Even when programs overlap, they may have meaningful
differences in their eligibility criteria or objectives, or they may provide
similar types of services in different ways.
GAO examined the TANF, Employment Service, and WIA Adult programs
for potential duplication and found they provide some of the same services
to the same population through separate administrative structures.
Although the extent to which individuals receive the same services from
these programs is unknown due to limited data, GAO found these
programs maintain parallel administrative structures to provide some of
the same services, such as job search assistance, to low-income
individuals (see following table). It should be noted that employment is
only one aspect of the TANF program, which also provides a wide range of
other services, including cash assistance. At the state level, the TANF
program is typically administered by the state human services or welfare
agency, while the Employment Service and WIA Adult programs are
typically administered by the state workforce agency and provided
Page 140 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Multiple Employment and Training Programs:
Providing Information on Colocating Services
and Consolidating Administrative Structures
Could Promote Efficiencies
through one-stop centers. Agency officials acknowledged that greater
efficiencies could be achieved in delivering services through these
programs, but said factors such as the number of clients that any one-stop
center can serve and one-stop centers’ proximity to clients, particularly in
rural areas, could warrant having multiple entities provide the same
services.
Selected Employment and Training Services Provided by the Employment Service,
TANF, and WIA Adult Programs, Fiscal Year 2009
Program name
Employment
counseling and
assessment
Development
of job
opportunities
Job readiness
skills training
Job
referrals
Job search or
job placement
activities
Employment Service/Wagner-
Peyser Funded Activities (DOL)
Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families (HHS)
WIA Adult Program (DOL)
Primary services Secondary services
Source: GAO survey of agency officials.
Note: DOL = Department of Labor
Colocating services and consolidating administrative structures may
increase efficiencies and reduce costs, but implementation can be
challenging. Some states have colocated TANF employment and training
services in one-stop centers where Employment Service and WIA Adult
services are provided. Three states—Florida, Texas, and Utah—have gone
a step further by consolidating the agencies that administer these
programs, and state officials said this reduced costs and improved
services, but they could not provide a dollar figure for cost savings. States
and localities may face challenges to colocating services, such as limited
office space. In addition, consolidating administrative structures may be
time consuming and any cost savings may not be immediately realized.
An obstacle to further progress in achieving greater administrative
efficiencies is that little information is available about the strategies and
results of such initiatives. In addition, little is known about the incentives
that states and localities have to undertake such initiatives and whether
additional incentives are needed.
Page 141 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Multiple Employment and Training Programs:
Providing Information on Colocating Services
and Consolidating Administrative Structures
Could Promote Efficiencies
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
To facilitate further progress by states and localities in increasing
administrative efficiencies in employment and training programs, GAO
recommended in 2011 that the Secretaries of Labor and HHS work
together to develop and disseminate information that could inform such
efforts. This should include information about state initiatives to
consolidate program administrative structures and state and local efforts
to colocate new partners, such as TANF, at one-stop centers. Information
on these topics could address challenges faced, strategies employed,
results achieved, and remaining issues. As part of this effort, Labor and
HHS should examine the incentives for states and localities to undertake
such initiatives, and, as warranted, identify options for increasing such
incentives. Labor and HHS agreed that they should develop and
disseminate this information. HHS noted that it lacks legal authority to
mandate increased TANF-WIA coordination or create incentives for such
efforts.
To the extent that colocating services and consolidating administrative
structures reduce administrative costs, funds could potentially be
available to serve more clients or for other purposes. For the TANF
program alone, GAO estimated that states spent about $160 million to
administer employment and training services in fiscal year 2009. According
to a Department of Labor official, the administrative costs for the WIA
Adult program were at least $56 million in program year 2009. Officials
told GAO they do not collect data on the administrative costs associated
with the Employment Service program, as they are not a separately
identifiable cost in the legislation. Labor officials said that, on average, the
agency spends about $4,000 for each WIA Adult participant who receives
training services. In periods of budgetary constraints, it is all the more
important that resources are used effectively. Depending on the reduction
in administrative costs associated with colocation and consolidation, these
funds could be used to train potentially hundreds or thousands of
additional individuals.
The information contained in this analysis is based on GAO products listed Framework for
below. GAO did not conduct a legal review in order to determine the
Analysis programs, their requirements, or goals.
Page 142 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Multiple Employment and Training Programs:
Providing Information on Colocating Services
and Consolidating Administrative Structures
Could Promote Efficiencies
Related GAO
Products
Multiple Employment and Training Programs: Providing Information
on Colocating Services and Consolidating Administrative Structures
Could Promote Efficiencies. GAO-11-92. Washington, D.C.: January 13,
2011.
Multiple Employment and Training Programs: Funding and
Performance Measures for Major Programs. GAO-03-589. Washington,
D.C.: April 18, 2003.
Multiple Employment and Training Programs: Overlapping Programs
Indicate Need for Closer Examination of Structure. GAO-01-71.
Washington, D.C.: October 13, 2000.
For additional information about this area, contact Andrew Sherrill at Area Contact
(202) 512-7215 or sherrilla@gao.gov.
Page 143 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs
Complicates Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars
Effectively
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs Complicates
Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars Effectively
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
In fiscal year 2009, the federal government spent over $4 billion
specifically to improve the quality of our nation’s 3 million teachers
through numerous programs across the government. Teacher quality can
be enhanced through a variety of activities, including training, recruitment,
and curriculum and assessment tools. In turn, these activities can
influence student learning and ultimately improve the global
competitiveness of the American workforce in a knowledge-based
economy. Prior GAO reports have noted that sustained coordination
among key federal education programs could enhance state efforts to
improve teacher quality.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Federal efforts to improve teacher quality have led to the creation and
expansion of a variety of programs across the federal government;
however, there is no governmentwide strategy to minimize fragmentation,
overlap, or duplication among these many programs. Specifically, GAO
identified 82 distinct programs designed to help improve teacher quality,
either as a primary purpose or as an allowable activity, administered
across 10 federal agencies. Many of these programs share similar goals.
For example, 9 of the 82 programs support improving the quality of
teaching in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM
subjects) and these programs alone are administered across the
Departments of Education, Defense, and Energy; the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration; and the National Science Foundation. Further,
in fiscal year 2010, the majority (53) of the programs GAO identified
supporting teacher quality improvements received $50 million or less in
funding and many have their own separate administrative processes.
The proliferation of programs has resulted in fragmentation that can
frustrate agency efforts to administer programs in a comprehensive
manner, limit the ability to determine which programs are most cost-
effective, and ultimately increases program costs. For example in the
Department of Education (Education), eight different offices administer
over 60 of the federal programs supporting teacher quality improvements,
primarily in the form of competitive grants. Education officials believe that
federal programs have failed to make significant progress in helping states
close achievement gaps between schools serving students from different
socioeconomic backgrounds, because, in part, federal programs that focus
on teaching and learning of specific subjects are too fragmented to help
state and district officials strengthen instruction and increase student
achievement in a comprehensive manner. While Education officials noted,
and GAO concurs, that a mixture of programs can target services to
underserved populations and yield strategic innovations, the current
Page 144 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs
Complicates Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars
Effectively
programs are not structured in a way that enables educators and
policymakers to identify the most effective practices to replicate.
According to Education officials, it is typically not cost-effective to
allocate the funds necessary to conduct rigorous evaluations of small
programs; therefore, small programs are unlikely to be evaluated. Finally,
it is more costly to administer many separately authorized federal
programs because each program has its own policies, applications, award
competitions, reporting requirements, and, in some cases, federal
evaluations.
While all of the 82 federal programs GAO identified support teacher quality
improvement efforts, several overlap in that they share more than one key
program characteristic. For example, teacher quality programs may
overlap if they share similar objectives, serve similar target groups, or fund
similar activities. GAO previously reported that 23 of the programs
administered by Education in fiscal year 2009 had improving teacher
quality as a specific focus, which suggested that there may be overlap
among these and other programs that have teacher quality improvements
as an allowable activity. When looking across a broader set of criteria,
GAO found that 14 of the programs administered by Education overlapped
with another program with regard to allowable activities as well as shared
objectives and target groups (see table). For example, the Transition to
Teaching program and Teacher Quality Partnership Grant program can
both be used to fund similar teacher preparation activities through
institutions of higher education for the purpose of helping individuals from
non-teaching fields become qualified to teach.
Page 145 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs
Complicates Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars
Effectively
Areas of Overlap among Selected Programs Administered by Education That Support Teacher Quality Improvement
Ev
en
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ta
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a
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a
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or
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ac
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r Q
ua
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ge
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es
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ic
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: B
ac
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a
Objective
Improve Education in
Specific Subjects
Improve Education
in General
Improve Education for
Special Populations
Tar g et Group
Current Teachers
Prospective Teachers
Other Education
Professionals
Activity b
Teacher Preparation
Professional
Development
Recruitment or
Retention
Certification or
Licensure
Induction or Mentoring
Source: GAO analysis of Department of Education documents and interviews.
Note: The 14 programs shown in the table are a subset of over 60 Education programs supporting
teacher quality improvement either specifically or as an allowable activity. Specifically, although Title
I, Part A, School Improvement Grants, and Even Start allow program funds to be used for teacher
quality activities, this is not their primary focus. The 14 programs presented above overlapped with at
least 1 other program across objective, target group, and activity.
aEducation has proposed consolidating this program under a broader program in its proposal for the
reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.
bThis is not an exhaustive list of activities allowed under these programs, but rather the activities GAO
determined were most relevant for the purposes of this analysis.
Although there is overlap among these programs, several factors make it
difficult to determine whether there is unnecessary duplication. First,
when similar teacher quality activities are funded through different
programs and delivered by different entities, some overlap can occur
Page 146 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs
Complicates Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars
Effectively
unintentionally, but is not necessarily wasteful. For example, a local
school district could use funds from the Foreign Language Assistance
program to pay for professional development for a teacher who will be
implementing a new foreign language course, and this teacher could also
attend a summer seminar on best practices for teaching the foreign
language at a Language Resource Center. Second, by design, individual
teachers may benefit from federally funded training or financial support at
different points in their careers. Specifically, the teacher from this
example could also receive teacher certification through a program funded
by the Teachers for a Competitive Tomorrow program. Further, both
broad and narrowly targeted programs exist simultaneously, meaning that
the same teacher who receives professional development funded from any
one or more of the above three programs might also receive professional
development that is funded through Title I, Part A. The actual content of
these professional development activities may differ though, since the
primary goal of each program is different. In this example, it would be
difficult to know whether the absence of any one of these programs would
make a difference in terms of the teacher’s ability to teach the new
language effectively.
In past work, GAO and Education’s Inspector General have concluded that
improved planning and coordination could help Education better leverage
expertise and limited resources, and to anticipate and develop options for
addressing potential problems among the multitude of programs it
administers. Generally, GAO has reported that uncoordinated program
efforts can waste scarce funds, confuse and frustrate program customers,
and limit the overall effectiveness of the federal effort. However, given the
large number of teacher quality programs and the extent of overlap, it is
unlikely that improved coordination alone can fully mitigate the effects of
the fragmented and overlapping federal effort.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
In 2009, GAO recommended that the Secretary of Education work with
other agencies as appropriate to develop a coordinated approach for
routinely and systematically sharing information that can assist federal
programs, states, and local providers in achieving efficient service
delivery. Coordination is essential to ensure that programs do not work at
cross-purposes, do not repeat mistakes, and do not engage in wasteful
duplication of services. Education has established working groups to help
develop more effective collaboration across Education offices, and has
reached out to other agencies to develop a framework for sharing
information on some teacher quality activities, but it has noted that
coordination efforts do not always prove useful and cannot fully eliminate
Page 147 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs
Complicates Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars
Effectively
barriers to program alignment, such as programs with differing definitions
for similar populations of grantees, which create an impediment to
coordination.
Congress could help eliminate some of these barriers through legislation,
particularly through the pending reauthorization of the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act of 1965 and other key education bills.
Specifically, to minimize any wasteful fragmentation and overlap among
teacher quality programs, Congress may choose either to eliminate
programs that are too small to evaluate cost-effectively or combine
programs serving similar target groups into a larger program. Education
has already proposed combining 38 programs into 11 programs in its
reauthorization proposal, which could allow the agency to dedicate a
higher portion of its administrative resources to monitoring programs for
results and providing technical assistance. Congress might also include
legislative provisions to help Education reduce fragmentation, such as by
giving broader discretion to the agency to move resources away from
certain programs. Congress could provide Education guidelines for
selecting these programs. For example, Congress could allow Education
discretion to consolidate programs with administrative costs exceeding a
certain threshold or failing to meet performance goals, into larger or more
successful programs. Finally, to the extent that overlapping programs
continue to be authorized, they could be better aligned with each other in
a way that allows for comparison and evaluation to ensure they are
complementary rather than duplicative.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based in part on issued GAO
products listed below. Additionally, it is based on recent GAO analysis of
overlap among teacher quality programs among a broad range of 82
federal programs that support teacher quality efforts directly as a primary
purpose, or as an allowable activity. GAO reviewed programs that it had
previously identified as teacher quality programs and refined the initial list
of programs based on a keyword search of the Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance (CFDA) for programs that included “teacher quality,”
“teacher training,” or “professional development” in their descriptions.
GAO then reviewed agency Web sites, budget documents, and other
information to verify that these programs support teacher quality
improvements directly or allowed funds to be used to support teacher
quality improvements. Education verified that the 63 programs that they
administer and that GAO identified as supporting teacher quality
improvement did so either directly or as an allowable activity; GAO did not
ask other agencies to verify other programs on the list.
Page 148 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs
Complicates Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars
Effectively
To specifically identify potential fragmentation and overlap among these
programs, GAO reviewed the CFDA descriptions and other documentation
to determine if programs had similar objectives, served similar target
groups, and provided similar types of assistance. For purposes of this
report, GAO focused on Education programs, which further narrowed the
list of potentially overlapping programs to 14. GAO then interviewed
responsible program officials to obtain more detailed information about
each of these programs. GAO also interviewed Education officials to
determine if progress had been made in addressing previous
recommendations aimed at improving coordination among agencies
administering teacher quality programs, and to obtain information about
the potential impact of consolidating or eliminating programs that GAO
identified as being potentially duplicative.
Related GAO
Products
English Language Learning: Diverse Federal and State Efforts to
Support Adult English Language Learning Could Benefit from More
Coordination. GAO-09-575. Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2009.
Teacher Preparation: Multiple Federal Education Offices Support
Teacher Preparation for Instructing Students with Disabilities and
English Language Learners, but Systematic Departmentwide
Coordination Could Enhance This Assistance. GAO-09-573. Washington,
D.C.: July 20, 2009.
Teacher Quality: Sustained Coordination among Key Federal Education
Programs Could Enhance State Efforts to Improve Teacher Quality.
GAO-09-593. Washington, D.C.: July 6, 2009.
No Child Left Behind Act: Education Actions Could Improve the
Targeting of School Improvement Funds to Schools Most in Need of
Assistance. GAO-08-380. Washington, D.C.: February 29, 2008.
Teacher Quality: Approaches, Implementation, and Evaluation of Key
Federal Efforts. GAO-07-861T. Washington, D.C.: May 17, 2007.
No Child Left Behind Act: States Face Challenges in Measuring
Academic Growth that Education’s Initiatives May Help Address.
GAO-06-661. Washington, D.C.: July 17, 2006.
Troops-to-Teachers: Program Brings More Men and Minorities to the
Teaching Workforce, but Education Could Improve Management to
Enhance Results. GAO-06-265. Washington, D.C.: March 1, 2006.
Page 149 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Teacher Quality: Proliferation of Programs
Complicates Federal Efforts to Invest Dollars
Effectively
No Child Left Behind Act: Improved Accessibility to Education’s
Information Could Help States Further Implement Teacher Qualification
Requirements. GAO-06-25. Washington, D.C.: November 21, 2005.
Higher Education: Activities Underway to Improve Teacher Training,
but Reporting on These Activities Could Be Enhanced. GAO-03-6.
Washington, D.C.: December 11, 2002.
Early Education and Care: Overlap Indicates Need to Assess
Crosscutting Programs. GAO/HEHS-00-78. Washington, D.C.: April 28,
2000.
Federal Education Funding: Multiple Programs and Lack of Data Raise
Efficiency and Effectiveness Concerns. GAO/T-HEHS-98-46. Washington,
D.C.: November 6, 1997.
For additional information about this area, contact George Scott at Area Contact
(202) 512-7215 or scottg@gao.gov.
Page 150 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmentation of Financial Literacy Efforts
Makes Coordination Essential
Fragmentation of Financial Literacy Efforts Makes
Coordination Essential
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Improving financial literacy is essential to ensuring consumers’ economic
well-being and security. Poor money management and financial decision
making can lower a family’s standard of living and interfere with crucial
long-term goals, such as buying a home and financing retirement.
Financial literacy has broader public policy implications as well. For
example, financial markets work best when consumers understand how
financial services providers and products work and know how to choose
among them. Federal financial literacy programs and resources are spread
widely among many different federal agencies, raising concerns of
potential duplication or fragmentation.
What GAO Has Found
to Indicate
Duplication, Overlap,
or Fragmentation
Federal financial literacy activities are fragmented across multiple
agencies, with more than 20 different federal agencies providing about 56
programs related to financial literacy. This increases the risk of
inefficiency and highlights the need for strong coordination of these
efforts. Federally funded financial literacy programs cover a number of
topics (such as saving for retirement and avoiding fraudulent practices),
target a range of audiences (such as schoolchildren, prospective
homeowners, and investors), and include a variety of delivery mechanisms
(such as classroom curricula, print materials, Web sites, broadcast media,
and individual counseling). To streamline federal efforts in this area and
improve coordination, Congress created the multiagency Financial
Literacy and Education Commission (the Commission) in 2003. It charged
the Commission with, among other things, developing a national strategy
to promote financial literacy and education, coordinating federal efforts,
and identifying—and proposing means of eliminating—areas of overlap
and duplication.
GAO recommended in 2006 that the Commission use an unbiased, third-
party evaluator to examine the extent of overlap and duplication among
federal financial literacy activities. In response, the Treasury Department,
which staffs and chairs the Commission and coordinates its activities,
contracted for two studies, both of which found limited evidence of
overlap and duplication. Staff at four federal agencies and two research
institutions that GAO spoke with noted that even when different agencies’
programs appeared similar, closer inspection can reveal important
differences in such elements as the target audience or the specific content.
However, with 20 different agencies playing a role in financial education,
federal financial literacy efforts clearly are fragmented. There are some
advantages to having multiple federal agencies involved in financial
literacy—for example, agencies can focus their efforts on the particular
Page 151 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmentation of Financial Literacy Efforts
Makes Coordination Essential
subject matter or target audiences for which they have expertise. At the
same time, fragmentation across agencies can also make it difficult to
develop a coherent global approach for identifying gaps and needs and for
rationally allocating overall resources. In part to encourage a more
coordinated approach to federal financial literacy resources, Congress
mandated the Commission to develop a national strategy. However, as
GAO has reported, the 2006 National Strategy for Financial Literacy largely
was descriptive rather than strategic; generally did not include a plan for
implementation; and only partially addressed or defined elements such as
performance measures, resource needs, and roles and responsibilities. In
December 2010, the Commission released a new national strategy, which
identifies five action areas—policy, education, practice, research, and
coordination—as well as a series of goals and related objectives intended
to help guide financial literacy efforts over the next 3 to 5 years. The
Commission stated that in 2011 it will release an implementation plan for
how the Commission, its members, and other organizations can best
incorporate the new strategy into their activities and initiatives. As that
implementation plan is developed, GAO believes that one of its goals
should be to address the fragmentation of federal financial literacy efforts.
Fragmentation across federal agencies has the potential to result in
inefficient, uncoordinated, or redundant use of resources. In the case of
financial literacy programs, there are numerous funding streams and little
good data on the amount of federal funds devoted to financial literacy.
Financial literacy efforts are not necessarily organized as separate budget
line items or cost centers within federal agencies and there is no estimate
of overall federal spending for financial literacy and education, according
to the Department of the Treasury. The Commission was charged with
coordinating federal resources, but GAO has noted in the past that the
Commission faces significant challenges in its role as a centralized focal
point: it is composed of many agencies, but it has no independent budget
and no legal authority to compel member agencies to take any action.
Actions Needed and
Potential Financial or
Other Benefits
GAO has identified several possible steps that could be taken to address
fragmentation in federal financial literacy efforts:
• Improve coordination among federal agencies. Because of the
crosscutting nature of financial literacy, it would be difficult, if not
impossible, for one agency alone to address the issue, but coordination
among agencies is clearly essential. In prior work, GAO has identified
barriers to coordinating programs and initiatives across the federal
government, which can include competing missions, concerns about
Page 152 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmentation of Financial Literacy Efforts
Makes Coordination Essential
protecting resources, and a lack of clearly articulated roles and
responsibilities. The Commission should enhance its efforts to
coordinate federal activities, such as by exploring further opportunities
to strengthen its role as a central clearinghouse for federal financial
literacy resources.
• Delineate roles for two key financial education offices. In 2010,
Congress enacted legislation creating an Office of Financial Education
within the new Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection. This office is
charged with duties that are in some ways similar to those of the
separate Office of Financial Education and Financial Access within the
Department of the Treasury. The respective offices will need to
coordinate their roles and activities closely to avoid unnecessary
overlap and make the most productive use of their respective
resources.
• Foster public-private partnerships. Given the wide array of state,
local, nonprofit, and private organizations providing financial literacy
programs, it is essential to leverage private sector resources and
coordinate federal activities with resources at the community level.
The Commission should build on progress it has made in recent years
in promoting such partnerships. Federal collaboration with state and
local governments may be particularly important given the critical role
that school districts can play in improving financial literacy among
young people.
• Measure outcomes and focus resources accordingly. Federal financial
literacy resources should be focused on those agencies and programs
with the most expertise and best track records. The Commission and
the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection could potentially play a
role in developing or disseminating a standard set of evaluation tools or
benchmarks that would help assess which federal initiatives have the
most effective outcomes.
The potential monetary savings to coordinating or consolidating financial
literacy efforts is unknown. As noted earlier, there is no estimate of overall
federal spending for financial literacy and education, and most federal
agencies do not have an estimate for spending on “financial literacy” per
se. However, streamlining federal financial literacy resources would have
other benefits—it would make the best use of scarce resources and focus
efforts on programs and initiatives that have been shown to be most
effective in improving the financial literacy of the American people.
Page 153 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Fragmentation of Financial Literacy Efforts
Makes Coordination Essential
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis builds upon prior GAO work,
which is cited below. To supplement that work, GAO reviewed two studies
on federal financial literacy resources that were conducted by private
entities and commissioned by the Department of the Treasury. GAO also
conducted interviews with staff at four federal agencies and two research
organizations.
Related GAO
Products
Financial Literacy and Education Commission: Progress Made in
Fostering Partnerships, but National Strategy Remains Largely
Descriptive Rather Than Strategic. GAO-09-638T. Washington, D.C.: April
29, 2009.
Financial Literacy and Education Commission: Further Progress
Needed to Ensure an Effective National Strategy. GAO-07-100.
Washington, D.C.: December 4, 2006.
Highlights of a GAO Forum: The Federal Government’s Role in
Improving Financial Literacy. GAO-05-93SP. Washington, D.C.:
November 15, 2004.
For additional information about this area, contact Alicia Puente Cackley Area Contact
at (202) 512-8678 or cackleya@gao.gov.
Page 154 GAO-11-318SP Section I: Duplication, Overlap, or Fragmentation
Section II: Other GAO-Identified Cost-Saving
and Revenue-Enhancing Areas
Section II: Other GAO-Identified Cost-Saving and
Revenue-Enhancing Areas
Table 2 provides 47 areas for consideration where the government can
achieve cost savings or enhance revenue collections. The table includes
the estimated cost savings or additional revenues, if available. In many
cases, there is sufficient information to show that if actions are taken to
address individual issues summarized in Table 2, financial benefits ranging
from tens of millions to tens of billions of dollars annually may be realized.
In other cases, however, estimates for savings or revenues would depend
upon the nature and scope of congressional and executive branch
decisions, or additional programmatic data may be needed. Following the
table are summaries for each of the areas listed. Each of the summaries
contains a “Framework for Analysis” providing the methodology used to
conduct the work and a list of related GAO products for further
information.
Table 2: Federal agencies and programs where cost saving or revenue enhancement opportunities may exist
Missions
Agriculture
Defense
Economic
development
Areas identified
35. Reducing some farm program payments could result in
savings from $800 million over 10 years to up to $5 billion
annually
36. DOD should assess costs and benefits of overseas
military presence options before committing to costly
personnel realignments and construction plans, thereby
possibly saving billions of dollars
37. Total compensation approach is needed to manage
significant growth in military personnel costs
38. Employing best management practices could help DOD
save money on its weapon systems acquisition
programs
39. More efficient management could limit future costs of
DOD’s spare parts inventory
40. More comprehensive and complete cost data can help
DOD improve the cost-effectiveness of sustaining
weapon systems
41. Improved corrosion prevention and control practices
could help DOD avoid billions in unnecessary costs over
time
42. Revising the essential air service program could improve
efficiency and save over $20 million annually
Federal agencies and programs where
cost-saving or revenue-enhancement
options may exist
Department of Agriculture
Department of Defense (DOD)
DOD
DOD
DOD, including the military services and
Defense Logistics Agency
DOD
DOD’s Office of Corrosion Policy and
Oversight
Department of Transportation
Page
159
164
169
173
178
182
186
190
43. Improved design and management of the universal
service fund as it expands to support broadband could
help avoid cost increases for consumers
Federal Communications Commission; four
programs involved 194
Page 155 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Section II: Other GAO-Identified Cost-Saving
and Revenue-Enhancing Areas
Missions Areas identified
Federal agencies and programs where
cost-saving or revenue-enhancement
options may exist Page
44. The Corps of Engineers should provide Congress with
project-level information on unobligated balances
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
198
Energy 45. Improved management of federal oil and gas resources
could result in approximately $1.75 billion over 10 years
Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land
Management, Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation and Enforcement,
and Office of Natural Resources Revenue
200
General
government
46. Efforts to address governmentwide improper payments
could result in significant cost savings
About 20 federal agencies; over 70
programs involved
205
47. Promoting competition for the over $500 billion in federal
contracts can potentially save billions of dollars over time
Governmentwide
211
48. Applying strategic sourcing best practices throughout the
federal procurement system could save billions of dollars
annually
Governmentwide
215
49. Adherence to new guidance on award fee contracts could
improve agencies’ use of award fees and produce savings
Several agencies, including DOD and the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration
219
50. Agencies could realize cost savings of at least $3 billion by
continued disposal of unneeded federal real property
Governmentwide, including DOD, General
Services Administration (GSA), and
Department of Veterans Affairs
222
51. Improved cost analyses used for making federal facility
ownership and leasing decisions could save tens of
millions of dollars
Primarily GSA, the central leasing agent for
most agencies 226
52. The Office of Management and Budget’s IT Dashboard
reportedly has already resulted in $3 billion in savings and
can further help identify opportunities to invest more
efficiently in information technology
Governmentwide
230
53. Increasing electronic filing of individual income tax
returns could reduce IRS’s processing costs and increase
revenues by hundreds of millions of dollars
Department of the Treasury’s (Treasury)
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) 234
54. Using return on investment information to better target
IRS enforcement could reduce the tax gap; for example, a
1 percent reduction would increase tax revenues by $3
billion
IRS
238
55. Better management of tax debt collection may resolve
cases faster with lower IRS costs and increase debt
IRS
241
collected
56. Broadening IRS’s authority to correct simple tax return
errors could facilitate correct tax payments and help IRS
avoid costly, burdensome audits
IRS
244
57. Enhancing mortgage interest information reporting could
improve tax compliance
IRS
248
58. More information on the types and uses of canceled debt
could help IRS limit revenue losses on forgiven mortgage
debt
IRS
251
Page 156 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Section II: Other GAO-Identified Cost-Saving
and Revenue-Enhancing Areas
Missions Areas identified
Federal agencies and programs where
cost-saving or revenue-enhancement
options may exist Page
59. Better information and outreach could help increase
revenues by tens or hundreds of millions of dollars
annually by addressing overstated real estate tax
deductions
IRS
254
60. Revisions to content and use of Form 1098-T could help
IRS enforce higher education requirements and increase
IRS
258
revenues
61. Many options could improve the tax compliance of sole
proprietors and begin to reduce their $68 billion portion of
the tax gap
IRS
260
62. IRS could find additional businesses not filing tax
returns by using third-party data, which show such
businesses have billions of dollars in sales
IRS
264
63. Congress and IRS can help S corporations and their
shareholders be more tax compliant, potentially increasing
tax revenues by hundreds of millions of dollars each year
IRS
267
64. IRS needs an agencywide approach for addressing tax
evasion among the at least 1 million networks of
businesses and related entities
IRS
270
65. Opportunities exist to improve the targeting of the $6 billion
research tax credit and reduce forgone revenue
Treasury and IRS
273
66. Converting the new markets tax credit to a grant program
may increase program efficiency and significantly reduce
the $3.8 billion 5-year revenue cost of the program
Treasury
276
67. Limiting the tax-exempt status of certain governmental
bonds could yield revenue
Treasury
279
68. Adjusting civil tax penalties for inflation potentially could
increase revenues by tens of millions of dollars per year,
not counting any revenues that may result from
maintaining the penalties’ deterrent effect
IRS
281
69. IRS may be able to systematically identify nonresident
aliens reporting unallowed tax deductions or credits
IRS
284
70. Tracking undisbursed balances in expired grant
accounts could facilitate the reallocation of scarce
Governmentwide
286
resources or the return of funding to the Treasury
Health 71. Preventing billions in Medicaid improper payments
requires sustained attention and action by CMS
Department of Health and Human Services’
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS)
289
72. Federal oversight over Medicaid supplemental payments
needs improvement, which could lead to substantial cost
savings
CMS
293
73. Better targeting of Medicare’s claims review could reduce
improper payments
CMS
296
Page 157 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Section II: Other GAO-Identified Cost-Saving
and Revenue-Enhancing Areas
Missions Areas identified
Federal agencies and programs where
cost-saving or revenue-enhancement
options may exist Page
74. Potential savings in Medicare’s payments for health care CMS 300
Homeland
security/Law
enforcement
75. DHS’s management of acquisitions could be
strengthened to reduce cost overruns and schedule and
performance shortfalls
Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
306
76. Improvements in managing research and development
could help reduce inefficiencies and costs for homeland
security
DHS
311
77. Validation of TSA’s behavior-based screening program
is needed to justify funding or expansion
Transportation Security Administration
(TSA)
316
78. More efficient baggage screening systems could result in
about $470 million in reduced TSA personnel costs over
the next 5 years
TSA
320
79. Clarifying availability of certain customs fee collections
could produce a one-time savings of $640 million
DHS’s Customs and Border Protection
(CBP)
324
Income
security
80. Social Security needs data on pensions from noncovered
earnings to better enforce offsets and ensure benefit
fairness, resulting in estimated $2.4-$2.9 billion savings
over 10 years
Social Security Administration
326
International
affairs
81. Congress could pursue several options to improve
collection of antidumping and countervailing duties
CBP
330
Source: GAO analysis based on areas addressed in Section II of this report.
Page 158 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Reducing Some Farm Program Payments
Could Result in Substantial Savings
Reducing Some Farm Program Payments Could Result
in Substantial Savings
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Between 2005 and 2009, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) spent
an average of about $15 billion annually on programs to support farm
income, assist farmers after disasters, and conserve natural resources.
Under one of these federal farm programs, USDA provides fixed annual
payments—called direct payments—to farmers based on a farm’s history
of crop production. Direct payments were most recently reauthorized in
the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008, which will expire in 2012
without future action.
GAO has shown that taxpayer dollars can be saved with strengthened
oversight of farm program payments, including direct payments. For
example, GAO reported in October 2008 that USDA provided farm
program payments to thousands of individuals with incomes exceeding
income eligibility caps. GAO has also shown that USDA’s oversight and
enforcement of program rules is not always effective. For example, in July
2007, GAO reported that USDA paid $1.1 billion in such payments to more
than 170,000 deceased individuals, and in April 2004 GAO reported that
USDA provided such payments to people who may have had only limited
involvement in farming because the agency lacks sufficient management
controls. Since then, USDA has taken some actions in response to GAO’s
recommendations.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Reducing or eliminating direct payments to farmers—particularly those to
large farming operations—could achieve cost savings of as much as $5
billion annually. In contrast to other major farm programs, which
compensate farmers for declines in price or lost crops, direct payments go
to farmers regardless of risk factors. Direct payments are calculated using
a formula that considers the crop and production history and the number
of acres planted during certain years in the past on a farm. Generally, a
percentage of the acres that were planted is multiplied by a set payment
rate for the crop that was planted.1 For 2009 through 2011, this percentage
is 83.3 percent, and for 2012, it will be 85 percent. Although a farmer’s
direct payments are based on the historical production of a particular
crop, the farmer has almost complete flexibility in deciding which crops to
plant and whether to plant any crops at all. To be eligible for such a
payment, a farmer’s average nonfarm income (over the preceding 3 tax
1Specifically, the formula uses a percentage of the average number of acres planted during
1998 through 2001 and multiplies it by a set payment rate and the historical crop yield for a
farm. The percentage and payment rates for each crop are specified in legislation
commonly referred to as farm bills passed by Congress roughly every 5 years.
Page 159 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Reducing Some Farm Program Payments
Could Result in Substantial Savings
years) can be no more than $500,000, or average farm income no more
than $750,000. Direct payments are limited to $40,000 per person per year;
however, a farm can receive multiple payments depending on its
ownership structure. For example, a husband and wife operating a farm
together can collect up to $80,000 annually, and a partnership with 10
partners can collect up to $400,000 annually.
In light of the following observations made by GAO and others, the need
for direct payments should be reconsidered:
• Farmers receive direct payments even in years of record farm
income. Although direct payments were established after a period of
relatively lower farm income in the early 1990s, USDA reported that the
top 5 earnings years since the payments began have occurred after
2004, attesting to the profitability of farming in this decade.
Furthermore, USDA estimated farm income was about $82 billion in
2010—up by $19 billion, or 31 percent, from 2009—which would be the
third-highest level ever recorded for U.S. farming.
• Direct payments are concentrated among the largest recipients
because they are tied to land and paid on a per-acre basis. About 62
percent of farm program payments—including direct payments—went
to the largest 12 percent of farms in 2008, according to USDA.
Similarly, GAO found that in 2009, 305 farm operations each received
$200,000 or more in direct payments, in part because they were
structured so that five or more partners or members of a farm business
were eligible to receive the payments. Noting this concentration of
payments, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and others
have cited direct payments for failing to target the payments to those
who need them the most, including small farmers.
• Recipients of farm program payments have higher incomes, on
average, than other tax filers. When farm programs were first
established, farmers had lower incomes on average than other
Americans, but now the opposite may be true—particularly for those
receiving program payments. In 2008, GAO reported that individuals
who receive program payments, including direct payments, are more
than twice as likely to have higher incomes as other tax filers. For
example, in examining the more than 138 million federal tax returns
filed for 2006, GAO found that 4.6 percent of individuals receiving
program payments reported adjusted gross income of between
$200,000 and $500,000, whereas 2.3 percent of other tax filers reported
income at this level.
Page 160 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Reducing Some Farm Program Payments
Could Result in Substantial Savings
• Direct payments may compound challenges for beginning farmers.
GAO reported in September 2007 that beginning farmers face multiple
challenges, including a need for funds to purchase farmland. With an
aging farmer population in the United States, USDA set a goal of
increasing assistance to beginning farmers, but direct payments may
instead compound the challenges beginning farmers face. According to
USDA studies, these payments result in higher prices to buy or rent
land because in some cases the payments go directly to landowners—
resulting in increased land value—and in other cases the payments go
to tenants, prompting landlords to increase rental rates. Furthermore,
because direct payments are linked to a farm’s number of acres, large
farms can use these payments to expand their operations, but higher
land values make it difficult for beginning farmers to do so, as OMB
and others have noted.
• Direct payments were expected to be transitional. According to the
Conference Report to the 1996 farm bill, direct payments were
established to help farmers make a transition to planting decisions on
the basis of market signals rather than government programs.
Accordingly, the payments were scheduled to decrease over time and
expire in 2002. However, subsequent farm bills have continued these
payments.
• Direct payments may no longer be needed to comply with trade
agreements. Proponents of direct payments say they help the United
States meet its commitments under international trade agreements,
which set ceilings on government payments classified as trade-
distorting. Unlike other farm program payments, direct payments do
not depend on current market prices, so the World Trade Organization
generally considers them to be non-trade distorting and the United
States does not count them against the international restrictions. As a
result, other farm program payments can be provided with a reduced
risk of exceeding the ceilings. However, according to economists, this
advantage has become less relevant recently because high crop prices,
which are expected to continue through the foreseeable future, have
kept farm program payments well below the ceiling on trade-distorting
payments.
Page 161 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Reducing Some Farm Program Payments
Could Result in Substantial Savings
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Recognizing current budget constraints, the National Commission on
Fiscal Responsibility and Reform,2 the Debt Reduction Taskforce,3 the
administration, Members of Congress, GAO, and some farming groups
have proposed options to reduce or eliminate direct payments. For
example, Congress may wish to consider the following three. To reduce
direct payments, the administration and others have proposed lowering
payment or income eligibility limits. They argue that lower limits leave
payments intact for recipients of smaller payments or with smaller
incomes and could therefore still help smaller and beginning farmers. On
the other hand, critics say, focusing on payment limits may be ineffective
because farmers may develop methods to avoid being restricted by the
limits. GAO previously reported that many farmers structure their
operations to avoid payment limits and that USDA has not consistently
enforced eligibility requirements, bringing into question the effectiveness
of both types of limits.
Congress may also wish to consider reducing the portion of a farm’s acres
eligible for direct payments. In 2009, GAO reported that reducing the
portion of eligible acres to 80 percent from 83.3 percent might save
millions of dollars annually.4 Further reducing the portion of eligible acres
to 75 percent could save millions more each year. Such an across-the
board reduction would affect all recipients. Moreover, Congress may wish
to consider terminating the payments. Some agriculture organizations,
including the National Farmers Union and the Iowa Farm Bureau, have
recommended phasing out or terminating the payments altogether and
using the savings to bolster other farm programs.
2The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform was established under
Executive Order 13531 (Feb. 18, 2010). It issued The Moment of Truth: Report of the
National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform (Washington, D.C., December
2010).
3Led by former Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici and former White
House Budget Director Alice Rivlin, the Debt Reduction Task Force issued Restoring
America’s Future: Reviving the Economy, Cutting Spending and Debt, and Creating a
Simple, Pro-Growth Tax System (Washington, D.C., Nov. 17, 2010).
4See http://www.gao.gov/highrisk/opportunities/natural_resources/
strengthening-integrity-and-efficiency-of-federal-farm-programs.php.
Page 162 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Reducing Some Farm Program Payments
Could Result in Substantial Savings
GAO has identified the following potential for cost savings:
• about $800 million over 10 years by reducing payment and income
eligibility limits for a very small portion of recipients, according to the
administration’s estimate in its budget for fiscal year 2011;
• about $600 million annually by reducing the portion of acres used to
calculate payments to 75 percent, according to GAO’s estimate; or
• about $5 billion annually by terminating or phasing out the payments.
Framework for
Analysis
To update information on the number of farms receiving direct payments
of $200,000 or more, GAO used data from USDA’s Producer Payment
Reporting System and determined that the data were sufficiently reliable
for its purposes. To estimate the potential savings from reducing the
portion of acres used to calculate direct payments and from terminating
the payments, GAO used the most recent budget figures from the
Congressional Budget Office. Other information in this analysis is
primarily based on the related GAO products listed below.
Related GAO
Products
Federal Farm Programs: USDA Needs to Strengthen Controls to Prevent
Payments to Individuals Who Exceed Income Eligibility Limits.
GAO-09-67. Washington, D.C.: October 24, 2008.
Beginning Farmers: Additional Steps Needed to Demonstrate the
Effectiveness of USDA Assistance. GAO-07-1130. Washington, D.C.:
September 18, 2007.
Federal Farm Programs: USDA Needs to Strengthen Controls to Prevent
Improper Payments to Estates and Deceased Individuals. GAO-07-818.
Washington, D.C.: July 9, 2007.
Farm Program Payments: USDA Needs to Strengthen Regulations and
Oversight to Better Ensure Recipients Do Not Circumvent Payment
Limitations. GAO-04-407. Washington, D.C.: April 30, 2004.
For additional information about this area, contact Lisa Shames at Area Contact
(202) 512-3841 or shamesl@gao.gov.
Page 163 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
DOD Should Assess Costs and Benefits of
Overseas Military Presence Options Before
Committing to Costly Personnel Realignments
and Construction Plans
DOD Should Assess Costs and Benefits of Overseas
Military Presence Options Before Committing to Costly
Personnel Realignments and Construction Plans
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Overseas presence provides operational capabilities and demonstrates a
commitment to our allies. In addition to the costs of supporting ongoing
combat operations, the Department of Defense (DOD) spends billions of
dollars annually on its network of installations around the world. For
example, according to data provided by the military services, between
fiscal years 2006 and 2009 the military services obligated $17.2 billion for
the installations they manage in Europe. These obligations do not include
funds obligated by other DOD organizations that use those facilities,
overseas contingency funding, or personnel costs. Further, the military
services estimated a requirement of $24 billion through fiscal year 2015 to
build, operate, and maintain these installations. In light of current fiscal
challenges facing the country, questions have arisen about the magnitude
of overseas basing projects and costs, and whether DOD’s planned
investments support a coherent and affordable strategy. GAO’s prior work
has shown that DOD has taken positive steps to improve its planning for
overseas infrastructure, but continues to devote insufficient attention to
costs or analysis of alternatives.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Having U.S. troops stationed overseas provides benefits, such as deterring
aggression against U.S. allies, but permanent stationing may come at
significantly higher costs than other alternative approaches such as
deploying domestically stationed forces when needed. GAO’s work since
2006 has found a systemic lack of cost information used to inform DOD’s
planning for its overseas infrastructure. As a consequence, DOD and
Congress lack reasonable assurance that overseas presence is being
planned and implemented in a cost-effective and financially sustainable
way. Reliable and complete cost estimates are critical to allow analyses of
alternatives and oversight by decision makers.
Since 2008, DOD has taken steps to develop regional plans for its overseas
infrastructure, but department guidance regarding these posture plans has
not required comprehensive cost information to support this emerging
process. Recognizing the considerable costs involved with stationing
forces overseas, in August 2010 the Secretary of Defense identified DOD’s
overseas presence as an area for review. Among other concerns, the
Secretary of Defense questioned the growth in the number of general and
flag officers across the department, highlighting that the U.S. European
Command maintains four-star service component headquarters more than
20 years after the end of the Cold War and the vast majority of their
fighting forces have departed from the region. Recent GAO reports have
identified several evolving elements of DOD’s global infrastructure, which
have the potential to cost—or possibly save—the department billions of
Page 164 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
DOD Should Assess Costs and Benefits of
Overseas Military Presence Options Before
Committing to Costly Personnel Realignments
and Construction Plans
dollars depending on decisions DOD and Congress make. For each of
these decisions, reliable, complete cost data will be invaluable to the
ability of decision makers to choose among available options. For
example:
• Plans to reduce forces in Europe are being reconsidered. DOD
recently held up the planned return of two Army brigades from
Germany pending an announcement of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization’s strategic concept as well as the results of ongoing U.S.
assessments of the global defense posture. GAO’s work has shown that
leaving these two brigades in Europe could cost DOD between $1
billion and $2 billion over 10 years compared to bringing the forces
back to the United States. In addition, the Army plans to continue to
invest in a new Army headquarters in Germany even though the
Secretary of Defense has questioned the size of U.S. European
Command and its associated service component commands, and DOD
may ultimately return some forces to the United States. U.S. European
Command and service officials noted that forward military presence in
Europe provides important but difficult-to-quantify benefits, including
commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Recognizing
this, in September 2010, GAO recommended that DOD reassess its
alternatives for Europe, weighing the costs of the presence against its
perceived benefits to ensure DOD takes a cost-effective course of
action. DOD officials agreed with this recommendation and noted that
certain actions have already been undertaken, and DOD is currently
conducting a broad review of the European theater.
• Efforts to establish military presence in Africa have met with
concerns. DOD has few facilities in Africa, but Camp Lemonnier in
Djibouti houses a 2,000-person joint task force as well as supports
other U.S. and multinational missions such as building the security
capacity of partner states, at a cost of about $238 million in 2010.
However, as GAO reported in April 2010, the task force’s future is
uncertain because it relies on overseas contingency operations
appropriations. Moreover, the task force’s original war-fighting mission
has evolved to civil affairs missions like drilling water wells and
building schools, and needs to be reassessed. Efforts to date have not
always yielded the intended results or were sometimes poorly
coordinated with other U.S. agencies. It is uncertain where DOD will
ultimately place a headquarters for U.S. Africa Command, which it
designated as being fully operational in 2008. DOD had planned to
locate the headquarters in Africa but stepped back from those plans
after some African nations raised concerns. The command currently
Page 165 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
DOD Should Assess Costs and Benefits of
Overseas Military Presence Options Before
Committing to Costly Personnel Realignments
and Construction Plans
occupies temporary facilities in Stuttgart, Germany, and has postponed
its decision on a permanent headquarters until 2012.
• Substantial costs are anticipated for enduring locations in Iraq,
Afghanistan, and other locations in southwest Asia. Supporting the
continuing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan is DOD’s priority, and its
regional presence includes installations in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar,
among other nations. While DOD has made progress executing the
drawdown, challenges remain that could impact DOD’s ability to close
bases in Iraq as planned. GAO has begun work to examine how much
DOD’s presence in the region will cost moving forward relative to the
potential benefits and what other alternatives to current plans may
exist.
• Large and costly realignment is being undertaken in Asia. DOD has
several major initiatives under way in the Pacific region that represent
a significant restructuring and transformation of the U.S. military
presence in Asia. For example, DOD plans to increase the U.S. military
presence on Guam from about 15,000 in 2009 to more than 39,000 by
2020, which will increase the current island population by about 14
percent over those years. GAO has previously reported that the
reported costs for these and other posture initiatives may be
significantly understated. GAO is examining the scope, magnitude,
management, and costs associated with DOD posture initiatives in
Asia, as well as the extent to which DOD has incorporated cost and
benefit analysis into its decision-making process. GAO plans to report
the results of its analysis in early 2011.
GAO has made recommendations since 2006 that DOD gather more
comprehensive cost data and report it to Congress; in general, DOD has
generally agreed with these recommendations but has yet to implement
them in full. As a result, initiatives are proceeding without assurance that
the efforts are being undertaken in a cost-effective way.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Given the significant resources being dedicated to building and
maintaining DOD’s global presence, DOD needs to ensure it is routinely
assessing the benefits of its overseas presence relative to the cost of
maintaining that presence. Specifically, DOD should conduct a
comprehensive reassessment of its overseas presence, including the costs
and benefits of various alternatives.
Page 166 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
DOD Should Assess Costs and Benefits of
Overseas Military Presence Options Before
Committing to Costly Personnel Realignments
and Construction Plans
To address the specific regional issues in Europe and Africa, GAO has
issued a number of recommendations that DOD generally agreed with
including reassessing:
• plans in Europe, including the costs and benefits of keeping Army
brigades in Germany and the appropriateness of building a new Army
headquarters given the potential changes in force structure; and
• missions of the combined joint task force in Djibouti as well as
identifying the projected costs for the task force and, in concert with
DOD or the Navy, developing a realistic funding plan for the task
force’s sustainability.
The financial stakes are high for DOD, since according to DOD data the
department has obligated billions of dollars annually to build and maintain
its global network of installations. A thorough consideration of
alternatives and an assessment of their costs and benefits could help DOD
shape its future overseas investments and ensure long-term affordability.
Savings or cost avoidances would be dependent upon the nature of
changes made to DOD’s plans and how DOD implements its chosen
options.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Defense Management: Additional Cost Information and Stakeholder
Input Needed to Assess Military Posture in Europe. GAO-11-131.
Washington, D.C.: February 3, 2011.
Defense Planning: DOD Needs to Review the Costs and Benefits of
Basing Alternatives for Army Forces in Europe. GAO-10-745R.
Washington, D.C.: September 13, 2010.
Defense Management: Improved Planning, Training, and Interagency
Collaboration Could Strengthen DOD’s Efforts in Africa. GAO-10-794.
Washington, D.C.: July 28, 2010.
Operation Iraqi Freedom: Actions Needed to Facilitate the Efficient
Drawdown of U.S. Forces and Equipment from Iraq. GAO-10-376.
Washington, D.C.: April 19, 2010.
Page 167 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
DOD Should Assess Costs and Benefits of
Overseas Military Presence Options Before
Committing to Costly Personnel Realignments
and Construction Plans
Defense Management: DOD Needs to Determine the Future of Its Horn of
Africa Task Force. GAO-10-504. Washington, D.C.: April 15, 2010.
Defense Infrastructure: Guam Needs Timely Information from DOD to
Meet Challenges in Planning and Financing Off-Base Projects and
Programs to Support a larger Military Presence. GAO-10-90R.
Washington, D.C.: November 13, 2009.
Force Structure: Actions Needed to Improve DOD’s Ability to Manage,
Assess, and Report on Global Defense Posture Initiatives. GAO-09-706R.
Washington, D.C.: July 2, 2009.
Defense Management: Actions Needed to Address Stakeholder Concerns,
Improve Interagency Collaboration, and Determine Full Costs
Associated with the U.S. Africa Command. GAO-09-181. Washington,
D.C.: February 20, 2009.
Defense Management: Comprehensive Strategy and Annual Reporting
Are Needed to Measure Progress and Costs of DOD’s Global Posture
Restructuring. GAO-06-852. Washington, D.C.: September 13, 2006.
For additional information about this area, contact John Pendleton at Area Contact
(404) 679-1816 or pendletonj@gao.gov or Brian Lepore at (202) 512-4523 or
leporeb@gao.gov.
Page 168 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Total Compensation Approach Is Needed to
Manage Significant Growth in Military
Personnel Costs
Total Compensation Approach Is Needed to Manage
Significant Growth in Military Personnel Costs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Over the years, the Department of Defense’s (DOD) military compensation
system has become an increasingly complex and piecemeal addition of
pays, allowances, and benefits costing over $200 billion each year. Pay and
benefits are important tools used by DOD to recruit, retain, and motivate
sufficient numbers—approximately 1.4 million active duty and 1.2 million
reservists—of qualified people. In recent years, Congress has taken steps
to fund enhanced compensation and benefit programs for active duty and
reserve personnel at a time when many military personnel are spending
months or years away from home, often in harm’s way. DOD leaders have
expressed concern about growing personnel costs and their effect on
other important investments, such as recapitalizing equipment and
infrastructure.
In 2005 and in 2007, GAO found that the cost for military compensation
was significantly increasing, and the total cost for compensation was not
transparent because it was spread across different budgets within DOD.
GAO recommended that DOD improve the transparency of compensation
costs and assess the appropriateness of its compensation system.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
DOD and Congress have expanded military pay and benefits using a
piecemeal approach rather than a total compensation approach that could
help to balance the appropriateness, affordability, and sustainability of
personnel-related costs. GAO has estimated that the federal government’s
total compensation costs for active duty servicemembers increased about
32 percent, using fiscal year 2008 constant dollars, from $143.8 billion in
fiscal year 2000 to $189.4 billion in fiscal year 2008. Also, GAO found that
using fiscal year 2008 constant dollars, the federal government’s total
estimated compensation for reserve and national guard members grew
over 31 percent from about $17.8 billion in fiscal year 2001 to nearly $23.5
billion in fiscal year 2008. Basic pay alone, the largest component of active
duty military compensation, has increased from $45 billion to $50.1 billion
between fiscal years 2000 and 2008. In addition to basic pay, DOD expends
billions of dollars each year to recruit, retain, and motivate its personnel
using other pays and benefits. For instance, in fiscal year 2008, for active
duty servicemembers, DOD spent $17.1 billion on non-taxable housing
allowances; $6.4 billion on special and incentive pays, such as enlistment
and re-enlistment bonuses; $10.9 billion on health care for active duty
Page 169 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Total Compensation Approach Is Needed to
Manage Significant Growth in Military
Personnel Costs
servicemembers and their dependents1; and $31.4 billion on retirement pay
and retiree health care.
Much of the increase in basic pay in recent years has been driven by
concerns that military basic pay was not equivalent to civilian (or private
sector) pay, without taking into consideration other types of
compensation beyond basic pay. GAO reported in April 2010 that studies
done by the Congressional Budget Office and the Center for Naval
Analyses concluded that when pay and some benefits are taken into
account, military compensation compares favorably to civilian
compensation when considering personnel of similar age and education
level. GAO also reported that when comparing military and civilian
compensation, it is reasonable to take into account other types of
compensation than basic pay. For example, according to DOD, in 2010 the
basic allowance for housing for an O-5 (i.e., a lieutenant colonel) with
dependents living in the Washington, D.C., metro area is approximately
$2,900 a month. In addition, recent growth of total compensation has been
driven by the costs for deferred compensation, primarily attributed to
enhanced health care benefits, and DOD officials anticipate significant
continued growth in health care costs because of these expansions in
coverage.
DOD has sponsored some efforts to assess its military personnel
compensation strategy, such as the 10th Quadrennial Review of Military
Compensation, which was released in 2008, but these reviews have not
been comprehensive, and the department does not know the extent to
which the current mix of pays and benefits is best suited to meet its
human capital goals. Further, GAO’s work has shown that DOD is unable
to demonstrate the efficiency and effectiveness of these changes in
meeting its recruiting and retention goals because it does not have
performance measures for its compensation system. Without performance
measures, DOD cannot determine the return on its compensation
investment or make fact-based choices on how its compensation
resources should be allocated.
1This is an estimated costs for providing active duty servicemembers and their dependents
health care. It does not include costs such as medical personnel salaries or construction
costs of medical facilities. However, a more comprehensive medical cost for DOD is the
Unified Medical Budget, which for fiscal year 2010 was about $50 billion. This cost includes
military medical personnel costs, construction cost of any medical facilities, operation and
maintenance funds, procurement funds, and research and development funds.
Page 170 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Total Compensation Approach Is Needed to
Manage Significant Growth in Military
Personnel Costs
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Using a total compensation approach in making decisions about military
pay and benefits would provide DOD with an important tool for more
efficiently and effectively managing its human-capital-related costs.
Assessing the mix of pay and benefits and developing a comprehensive
compensation strategy could enable DOD to more effectively recruit and
retain a highly qualified force with the right skills in sufficient numbers to
carry out its mission while minimizing unnecessary cost increases. GAO
has recommended in the past that DOD (1) assess the affordability and
sustainability of its military compensation system, as well as the
reasonableness and appropriateness of the allocation to cash and benefits,
and whether changes in the allocation are needed to more efficiently
achieve recruiting and retention goals; and (2) establish a clear
compensation strategy that includes performance measures to evaluate
the efficiency of compensation in meeting recruiting and retention goals
and use of data from the performance measures to monitor the
effectiveness of compensation and assess what mix of compensation will
be most efficient in the future.
DOD concurred with GAO’s recommendation to assess the affordability
and sustainability of its military compensation system and stated that it is
engaged in multiple simultaneous efforts to assess the overarching
strategy. GAO acknowledges that DOD has sponsored and engaged in a
number of studies looking at aspects of compensation, such as the
Quadrennial Review of Military Compensation, but the department has not
taken a total compensation approach to assessing compensation.
DOD partially concurred with GAO’s recommendation to establish a clear
compensation strategy noting that it has consistently communicated its
approach to Congress in congressional testimony. GAO continues to assert
that with a total compensation strategy the department would be in a
better position to make business case arguments for or against changes to
its compensation system, and provide fact-based evidence regarding the
efficiency of the allocation of cash, noncash, or deferred compensation.
GAO’s prior work has indicated that compensation areas should have
closer scrutiny in terms of continued need and the potential to reduce
unnecessary costs. For example, GAO reported in 2006 and 2009 instances
of excessive payments of enlistment and re-enlistment bonuses (types of
special and incentive pays) to servicemembers in occupations that
exceeded their authorized levels while other occupations were underfilled.
GAO recommended that DOD, among other things, assess reasons
occupations are over- or underfilled and justify use of financial incentives
for overfilled occupations. As a result of GAO’s findings and
Page 171 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Total Compensation Approach Is Needed to
Manage Significant Growth in Military
Personnel Costs
recommendations, DOD developed a more rigorous approach to managing
and overseeing its recruiting and retention bonuses leading to savings
totaling $947.3 million. More broadly, DOD could recognize long-term cost
avoidance by addressing in a compensation strategy what types of
compensation are effective and not incurring costs for compensation that
may not be effective in helping the department achieve its recruiting and
retention goals.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related products Framework for
listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Questions for the Record Related to Military Compensation.
GAO-10-803R. Washington, D.C.: June 3, 2010.
Military Personnel: Military and Civilian Pay Comparisons Present
Challenges and Are One of Many Tools in Assessing Compensation.
GAO-10-561R. Washington, D.C.: April 1, 2010.
Military Personnel: Reserve Component Servicemembers on Average
Earn More Income While Activated. GAO-09-688R. Washington, D.C.: June
23, 2009.
Military Personnel: Army Needs to Focus on Cost-Effective Use of
Financial Incentives and Quality Standards in Managing Force Growth.
GAO-09-256. Washington, D.C.: May 4, 2009.
Military Personnel: DOD Needs to Establish a Strategy and Improve
Transparency over Reserve and National Guard Compensation to
Manage Significant Growth in Cost. GAO-07-828. Washington, D.C.: June
20, 2007.
Military Personnel: DOD Needs to Improve the Transparency and
Reassess the Reasonableness, Appropriateness, Affordability, and
Sustainability of Its Military Compensation System. GAO-05-798.
Washington, D.C.: July 19, 2005.
For additional information about this area, contact Brenda Farrell at Area Contact
(202) 512-3604 or farrellb@gao.gov.
Page 172 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Employing Best Management Practices Could
Help DOD Save Money on Its Weapon Systems
Acquisitions
Employing Best Management Practices Could Help
DOD Save Money on Its Weapon Systems Acquisitions
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Over the next 5 years, the Department of Defense (DOD) expects to invest
almost $343 billion (in fiscal year 2011 dollars) on the development and
procurement of major defense acquisition programs. Defense acquisition
programs usually take longer, cost more, and deliver fewer quantities and
capabilities than DOD originally planned. For several decades, Congress
and DOD have taken steps to improve the acquisition of major weapon
systems, yet some program outcomes continue to fall short of what was
agreed to when the programs started. With the prospect of slowly growing
or flat defense budgets for the foreseeable future, DOD must get better
value for its weapon system spending and find ways to deliver needed
capability to the warfighter for less than it has spent in the past.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Increasing combat demands and fiscal constraints make it critical for DOD
to ensure that its weapon systems investments not only meet the needs of
the warfighter but make the most efficient use of available resources. Over
the last several years, GAO’s work has highlighted a number of underlying
systemic causes for cost growth and schedule delays in weapon programs.
At the strategic level, DOD’s processes for identifying warfighter needs,
allocating resources, and managing acquisitions, which together define its
weapon system investment strategy, are often not fully aligned. For
example, the department often fails to balance the competing needs of the
warfighter and commits to more programs than available resources can
support. At the program level, GAO’s work has shown that DOD’s culture
and environment often allow programs to start with too many unknowns,
such as entering the acquisition process without a full understanding of
requirements; cost and schedule estimates based on overly optimistic
assumptions; and insufficient knowledge about the maturity of technology,
the completeness and the performance of the design, and predictability of
manufacturing processes when decisions are made to move forward into
the next phase of the acquisition process. Poor outcomes in DOD’s
weapon system programs reverberate across the entire federal
government as every additional dollar spent on acquiring weapon systems
is less money available for other priorities.
Since fiscal year 2000, DOD has significantly increased the number of
major defense acquisition programs and its overall investment in them.
From that time to the present, acquisition outcomes in some cases
continued to fall short of what was agreed to when the programs started.
In most cases, the programs GAO assessed failed to deliver capabilities
when promised—often forcing the department to spend additional funds
on maintaining legacy systems. In March 2009, GAO reported that
programs experienced, on average, a 22-month delay in delivering initial
Page 173 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Employing Best Management Practices Could
Help DOD Save Money on Its Weapon Systems
Acquisitions
capabilities to the warfighter. Continued cost growth in such acquisitions
results in less funding being available for other DOD priorities and
programs. Schedule delays prevent timely delivery of critical capabilities
to the warfighter.
GAO has reported that greater adherence to proven management practices
at key phases of the acquisition process can reduce weapon system costs,
help contain pressures for increased funding, and better address critical
warfighter needs. Early systems engineering, ideally beginning before a
program is initiated and a business case is set, is critical to designing a
system that meets requirements within available resources. In addition, an
analysis of alternatives can help ensure that new programs have a sound,
executable business case and represent a cost-effective solution to
meeting warfighters’ needs. Another key step in the process involves
managing requirements changes, which if minimized, could decrease the
amount of cost growth experienced by acquisition programs. Finally, more
prototyping early in programs could help DOD ensure that a system’s
proposed design can meet performance requirements.
Additionally, DOD requirements continue to be driven primarily by the
individual services with little involvement from the combatant commands,
which are largely responsible for planning and carrying out military
operations. By continuing to rely on capability proposals that lack a joint
perspective, DOD may be losing opportunities to improve joint warfighting
capabilities and reduce the duplication of capabilities in some areas.
DOD has demonstrated a strong commitment, at the highest levels, to
address the management of its weapon system acquisitions, and has
started to reprioritize and rebalance its weapon system investments. In
2009 and 2010, the Secretary of Defense proposed canceling or
significantly curtailing certain weapon programs, such as the Army’s
Future Combat System Manned Ground Vehicle and the Navy’s DDG-1000
Destroyer—which he characterized as too costly or no longer relevant for
current operations. DOD plans to replace several of the canceled programs
and therefore has an opportunity to pursue knowledge-based acquisition
strategies on the new programs. In addition, DOD plans to eliminate
redundant programs within capability portfolios and make affordability a
key requirement for weapon programs. These actions are consistent with
past GAO findings and recommendations. However, if these initiatives are
going to have a lasting, positive effect, they need to be translated into
better day-to-day management and decision making.
Page 174 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Employing Best Management Practices Could
Help DOD Save Money on Its Weapon Systems
Acquisitions
GAO’s recent observations present a mixed picture of DOD’s adherence to
a knowledge-based acquisition approach, which is key for improving
acquisition outcomes. For 42 programs GAO assessed in depth in 2010,
there was continued improvement in the technology, design, and
manufacturing knowledge the programs had at key points in the
acquisition process. However, most programs were still proceeding with
less knowledge than best practices suggest, putting them at higher risk for
cost growth and schedule delays.
Congress passed a number of acquisition reforms in the Weapon Systems
Acquisition Reform Act of 2009 to emphasize and increase oversight and
reporting on cost estimating, early systems engineering, developmental
testing, and technology maturity for major weapon system programs.
Since then, DOD has begun to implement a revised acquisition policy
based on these congressional reforms to address these and other areas of
acquisition risk. If DOD consistently implements these reforms, the
number of programs adhering to a knowledge-based acquisition approach
should increase and the outcomes for DOD programs should improve.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
DOD can take steps to maximize its use of taxpayer dollars by improving
its business operations, including the acquisition process. By employing
best management practices at all phases of its weapon system acquisition
process—including early systems engineering, analyzing alternatives,
managing changes in system requirements, and more prototyping early in
programs development testing—DOD could achieve significant cost
savings. While activities, such as early prototyping, require upfront
investments, the knowledge gained can help products proceed more
quickly and smoothly through development into production, thereby
lowering the costs to develop them.
While DOD’s acquisition policies and process may be improving, fiscal
pressures continue to build. In addition to the federal government’s long-
term fiscal challenges, DOD faces its own near- and long-term fiscal
pressures as it attempts to balance competing demands, including ongoing
operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, initiatives to grow and modernize the
force, and increasing personnel and health care costs. DOD’s fiscal year
2010 budget request started the process of reprioritizing acquisition dollars
to meet warfighters’ most pressing needs, but the department must still
address the overall affordability of its weapon system investments.
As DOD competes for resources in a constrained fiscal environment, it can
not afford to miss opportunities to achieve greater efficiencies and free up
Page 175 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Employing Best Management Practices Could
Help DOD Save Money on Its Weapon Systems
Acquisitions
resources for higher-priority needs. Because of the complexity and
magnitude of the challenges facing DOD in transforming its business
operations, it will need strong and sustained leadership, as well as sound
strategic planning to guide and integrate its efforts. Ultimately, DOD still
needs to do a better job planning and executing programs on a day-to-day
basis to achieve better outcomes. Critical to achieving successful
outcomes is establishing and sustaining knowledge-based, realistic
program baselines. Without realistic baselines, there is no foundation for
accurately measuring the knowledge and health of programs.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Defense Acquisitions: Observations on Weapon Program Performance
and Acquisition Reforms. GAO-10-706T. Washington, D.C.: May 19, 2010.
Defense Acquisitions: Strong Leadership Is Key to Planning and
Executing Stable Weapon Programs. GAO-10-522. Washington, D.C.: May
6, 2010.
Defense Acquisitions: Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs. GAO
10-388SP. Washington, D.C.: March 30, 2010.
Defense Acquisitions: Managing Risk to Achieve Better Outcomes. GAO
10-374T. Washington, D.C.: January 20, 2010.
Maximizing DOD’s Potential to Face New Fiscal Challenges and
Strengthen Interagency Partnerships. GAO-10-359CG. Washington, D.C.:
January 6, 2010.
Defense Acquisitions: Many Analyses of Alternatives Have Not Provided
a Robust Assessment of Weapon System Options. GAO-09-665.
Washington, D.C.: September 24, 2009.
Defense Acquisitions: Measuring the Value of DOD’s Weapon Programs
Requires Starting with Realistic Baselines. GAO-09-543T. Washington,
D.C.: April 1, 2009.
Defense Acquisitions: Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs. GAO
09-326SP. Washington, D.C.: March 30, 2009.
Page 176 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Employing Best Management Practices Could
Help DOD Save Money on Its Weapon Systems
Acquisitions
Defense Acquisitions: DOD Must Prioritize Its Weapon System
Acquisitions and Balance Them with Available Resources. GAO-09-501T.
Washington, D.C.: March 18, 2009.
DOD’s High Risk Areas: Actions Needed to Reduce Vulnerabilities and
Improve Business Outcomes. GAO-09-460T. Washington, D.C.: March 12,
2009.
Defense Acquisitions: Fundamental Changes Are Needed to Improve
Weapon Program Outcomes. GAO-08-1159T. Washington, D.C.: September
25, 2008.
Defense Acquisitions: DOD’s Requirements Determination Process Has
Not Been Effective in Prioritizing Joint Capabilities. GAO-08-1060.
Washington, D.C.: September 25, 2008.
Defense Acquisitions: Better Weapon Program Outcomes Require
Discipline, Accountability, and Fundamental Changes in the
Acquisition Environment. GAO-08-782T. Washington, D.C.: June 3, 2008.
Defense Acquisitions: Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs. GAO
08-467SP. Washington, D.C.: March 31, 2008.
Best Practices: Successful Application to Weapon Acquisitions Requires
Changes in DOD’s Environment. GAO/NSIAD-98-56. Washington, D.C.:
February 24, 1998.
For additional information about this area, contact Mike Sullivan at Area Contact
(202) 512-4841 or sullivanm@gao.gov.
Page 177 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Efficient Management Could Limit
Future Costs of DOD’s Spare Parts Inventory
More Efficient Management Could Limit Future Costs
of DOD’s Spare Parts Inventory
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The military services and the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) purchase
spare parts to keep military equipment ready and operating. At the end of
fiscal year 2009, the Department of Defense (DOD) reported that the total
value of its inventory of over 4 million spare parts and other support
items—not including weapons systems and other primary equipment—
was more than $90 billion. GAO has identified weaknesses in DOD’s
inventory management practices, including problems in accurately
forecasting demand for spare parts. At a time when U.S. military forces
and materiel are in high demand and the nation and military face long-term
fiscal challenges, it is critical that DOD demonstrate good stewardship
over the billions of dollars invested in its spare parts inventory while
continuing to supply warfighters with the right items at the right time.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
DOD can enhance efficiencies in the management of its spare parts
inventory and potentially achieve significant cost avoidance in the future
by aligning inventory levels more closely with current needs and projected
demand. DOD has made some improvement in recent years but continues
to consistently have higher levels of inventory than needed to meet current
needs (called the requirements objective) plus projected demands over the
next 2 years. DOD inventory data show that much of the inventory that is
beyond current needs and projected demand is either retention stock
(stock that is considered inactive but is being held for possible future use
or for other reasons) or potential reutilization stock (stock that has been
identified as “excess” and may be disposed of). These data include both
on-hand inventory and on-order inventory that is not yet in DOD’s
possession. Some inventory items may be in such low demand that current
supplies could last for decades. Acquiring large amounts of inventory for
which actual demand is much lower than expected reduces the amount of
funding available for other current military needs.
In a series of reports issued from 2007 to 2010, GAO analyzed spare parts
inventory managed by the Air Force, the Navy, the Army, and DLA and
identified factors contributing to higher-than-needed inventory levels.
Most recently, GAO reviewed DLA inventory levels and reported in 2010
that DLA, over a period of 3 fiscal years, averaged $1 billion of inventory
annually in potential reutilization stock. DOD policy requires that its
components minimize investment in inventory while also providing
inventory needed to support requirements, but several factors were
causing DLA to order and stock parts that did not align with current needs
and projected demand. These factors often occur in the initial stages of the
inventory process when acquisition decisions are being made.
Page 178 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Efficient Management Could Limit
Future Costs of DOD’s Spare Parts Inventory
• First, DLA’s ability to determine how many parts to buy is hindered by
inaccurate estimates of customers’ future demand for parts—known as
demand forecasting—as well as by other challenges such as unresolved
problems with accurately estimating lead times needed to acquire
parts.
• Second, DLA has initiatives that show promise for reducing the
acquisition and retention of unneeded parts, but these initiatives do not
appear to be achieving their full potential. DLA continues to face
difficulties closing gaps in providing accurate, timely data to inventory
managers to better inform purchase decisions, as well as modifying or
canceling planned purchases that may no longer be needed.
• Finally, DLA is not tracking the overall cost efficiency of its inventory
management processes.
GAO identified similar issues in its prior reviews of spare parts inventory
managed by the Air Force, the Navy, and the Army. In all three of those
reviews, the predominant reason for mismatches between inventory levels
and needs was changes in demand. In addition, Army data revealed
substantial amounts of inventory deficits, where quantities of on-hand and
on-order spare parts were not sufficient to meet current requirements. In
prior reports, GAO also has addressed other aspects of inventory
management, including problems with asset visibility, lead times for
acquiring parts, and managing retention stocks.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
GAO has identified a number of areas where DOD could improve the
efficiency of its inventory management, while maintaining effective supply
support for warfighter requirements. Since GAO’s work has consistently
shown that the greatest opportunities to minimize investment in unneeded
inventory are at the initial stages of the inventory management process
when acquisition decisions are being made, DOD could limit future costs
by focusing its efforts on better managing on-order inventory, with a view
toward reducing on-order inventory levels that are not needed for current
needs or projected demand. For example, GAO found in its review of DLA
inventory that the agency could benefit from efforts to (1) identify and
evaluate planned purchases of spare parts that, if carried out, might result
in the potential procurement of unneeded parts, and (2) take action to
modify or cancel these planned purchases. Also, GAO has recommended
that DOD address systemic weaknesses in demand forecasting, revise
management practices to incorporate flexibility needed to minimize the
impact of demand fluctuations, and track the cost efficiency of its
Page 179 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Efficient Management Could Limit
Future Costs of DOD’s Spare Parts Inventory
inventory management processes. DOD has generally concurred with
these recommendations.
Recent legislative action underscores the need for DOD to address
inventory management weaknesses. Specifically, Section 328 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 required the Secretary of
Defense to submit a comprehensive plan for improving the inventory
management systems of the military departments and DLA, with the
objective of reducing the acquisition and storage of inventory that is excess
to requirements. The act directed DOD to address eight areas of inventory
management. DOD submitted its plan to Congress in November 2010.
DOD states in its plan that it has already reduced unneeded inventory and
that further reductions are possible. DOD has reported, for example, that
$10.3 billion (11 percent) of its secondary inventory has been designated
as excess and categorized for potential reuse or disposal. The plan cites a
number of improvement efforts and establishes two broad goals for
reducing (1) the value of on-order potential reutilization stock as a
percentage of total obligated on-order dollars and (2) the value of on-hand
potential reutilization stock as a percentage of total inventory value.
DOD’s plan is an important step in improving inventory management
practices; however, successful implementation will be challenging and will
require sustained oversight by DOD as well as collaboration among the
services and DLA.
To assess the potential for DOD to achieve cost savings by better aligning Framework for
inventory levels with requirements, GAO relied on its prior work.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
DOD’s 2010 Comprehensive Inventory Management Improvement Plan
Addressed Statutory Requirements, but Faces Implementation
Challenges. GAO-11-240R. Washington, D.C.: January 7, 2011.
Defense Inventory: Defense Logistics Agency Needs to Expand on Efforts
to More Effectively Manage Spare Parts. GAO-10-469. Washington, D.C.:
May 11, 2010.
Defense Inventory: Army Needs to Evaluate Impact of Recent Actions to
Improve Demand Forecasts for Spare Parts. GAO-09-199. Washington,
D.C.: January 12, 2009.
Page 180 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
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Future Costs of DOD’s Spare Parts Inventory
Defense Inventory: Management Actions Needed to Improve the Cost
Efficiency of the Navy’s Spare Parts Inventory. GAO-09-103. Washington,
D.C.: December 12, 2008.
Defense Inventory: Opportunities Exist to Save Billions by Reducing Air
Force’s Unneeded Spare Parts Inventory. GAO-07-232. Washington, D.C.:
April 27, 2007.
Defense Inventory: Opportunities Exist to Improve the Management of
DOD’s Acquisition Lead Times for Spare Parts. GAO-07-281. Washington,
D.C.: March 2, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact Jack E. Edwards at Area Contact
(202) 512-8246 or edwardsj@gao.gov.
Page 181 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Comprehensive and Complete Cost Data
Can Help DOD Improve the Cost
Effectiveness of Sustaining Weapon Systems
-More Comprehensive and Complete Cost Data Can Help
DOD Improve the Cost-Effectiveness of Sustaining
Weapon Systems
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of Defense (DOD) spends billions of dollars each year to
sustain its weapon systems. After a weapon system is developed, tested,
and produced, it enters the operating and support (O&S) phase of its life
cycle. O&S costs can account for 70 percent or more of the total
ownership costs over a system’s lifetime and include the direct and
indirect costs for spare parts, fuel, maintenance, personnel, support
facilities, and training. GAO’s work has shown that weapon systems may
experience O&S cost growth after they are acquired due to various factors
such as lower than expected reliability, obsolete replacement parts, and
increased usage. If agency budgets tighten, the continued burden of O&S
cost growth could affect DOD’s ability to afford other priorities.
In an effort to improve weapon system support and reduce costs in the
late 1990s, DOD began to use a support strategy known as performance-
based logistics (PBL). Unlike more traditional support arrangements,
which involve the purchase of individual support elements (such as parts),
PBL arrangements involve the purchase of performance outcomes such as
weapon system availability.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
DOD can improve the cost-effectiveness of sustaining individual weapon
systems, potentially saving billions of dollars, by enhancing its effort to
collect, retain, and analyze more comprehensive and accurate O&S cost
data, including cost data for PBL arrangements. In the absence of key
information on O&S costs for its major weapon systems, DOD may not be
well equipped to analyze, manage, and reduce these costs. DOD estimated
that costs for supporting its weapon systems amounted to at least $132
billion in fiscal year 2008, but the department does not know total O&S
costs associated with its systems.
GAO reviewed seven aviation weapon systems and reported in 2010 that
DOD lacked life-cycle O&S cost estimates and complete historical data on
actual O&S costs, which are needed to effectively track and analyze the
growth of these costs. Life-cycle cost estimates are developed to support
decisions at key acquisition milestones and, under GAO’s guidance for cost-
estimating best practices, the thorough documentation and retention of
these estimates are also essential for use in preparing future cost estimates.
However, current DOD acquisition and cost-estimating guidance does not
specifically address requirements for the retention of life-cycle O&S cost
estimates and supporting documentation.
Additionally, GAO found problems with incomplete and inaccurate data in
the services’ cost visibility data systems designated as the authoritative
Page 182 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
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Can Help DOD Improve the Cost-
Effectiveness of Sustaining Weapon Systems
sources for historical data on actual O&S costs. DOD has issued guidance
that includes a recommendation regarding the types of historical data on
actual O&S costs that the services could collect for their weapon systems,
but this suggestion is not mandatory. Although O&S costs for the seven
systems GAO reviewed had grown, it was unclear how much of the growth
was unexpected without more complete cost information.
While DOD has moved toward PBL as its preferred strategy to support
weapon systems, GAO reviewed PBL arrangements for selected weapon
systems in 2008 and found that the ability of these arrangements to reduce
costs remained unclear. According to a department assessment in 2009,
about 20 percent of weapon systems were being supported under PBL
arrangements. GAO found that many DOD program offices that
implemented PBL arrangements lack detailed support cost data.
Additionally, various other factors—such as the lack of business case
analyses to compare the costs and benefits of PBL against other weapon
system support options—further limited an evaluation of the costs of this
support strategy. At the time GAO conducted its review, it found that
neither DOD nor the services required detailed cost reporting for PBL
arrangements. Also, GAO reported that business case analyses were
inconsistently used for PBL decision making because DOD did not require
that the analyses be conducted and updated or provide specific criteria to
guide their development.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
DOD currently has a number of initiatives to improve weapon system
support and better manage and reduce weapon system O&S costs. For
example, DOD has indicated its intent to focus more attention on O&S
cost requirements and weapon system reliability during the acquisition
process. DOD is also working to implement the recommendations made in
an internal November 2009 assessment of weapon system product support.
The assessment identified weaknesses in O&S cost management and
recommended a number of corrective actions, such as (1) establishing an
O&S affordability requirement, including linking O&S budgets to
readiness; (2) developing and implementing an affordability process with
all DOD stakeholders (such as the financial and program management
communities); and (3) increasing the visibility of O&S costs and their
drivers across the supply chain. Regarding PBL, the Air Force now
requires program managers to conduct business case analyses, thereby
comparing the costs and benefits of PBL against other support options,
and Air Force interim guidance, issued in 2009, also directs detailed cost
reporting for contractor logistics support arrangements, which often
include PBL arrangements. DOD also included a broad cost reporting
Page 183 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
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Can Help DOD Improve the Cost-
Effectiveness of Sustaining Weapon Systems
requirement for certain programs in acquisition guidance and is
developing additional guidance for the collection of more comprehensive
cost data from PBL support providers. However, this guidance and DOD’s
other initiatives are either not yet implemented or too recent for GAO to
evaluate their impact.
While DOD has taken some positive steps, more remains to be done to
improve the collection, retention, and analysis of O&S cost data—steps
that would significantly enhance DOD’s ability to manage and potentially
reduce O&S costs. GAO recommended in July 2010 that the department
take the following actions:
• Revise guidance to specifically require the retention of life-cycle O&S
cost estimates for major weapon systems, as well as the supporting
documentation used to develop these estimates. These estimates and
supporting documentation, if retained, could provide a benchmark for
subsequent cost analysis of the weapon systems, enable identification of
major cost drivers, and aid in improving cost estimates for future
systems.
• Identify the cost elements needed to track and assess actual O&S costs
for effective cost analysis and program management for major weapon
systems, and require the collection of these elements in the services’
O&S cost visibility data systems. Collecting complete data would put
the services in a good position to track costs over time, compare costs
with previous estimates, and determine whether and why cost growth
is occurring.
• Require the services to periodically update life-cycle O&S cost
estimates for major weapon systems after these systems are acquired,
which would enhance DOD’s ability to compare actual performance to
planned or expected results.
DOD concurred or partially concurred with these and other related
recommendations, noting that the department is committed to
strengthening its O&S data availability as well as its use of O&S estimates
in the governance process for major defense acquisition programs.
With regard to PBL, GAO recommended in December 2008 that the
department (1) require program offices to collect and report detailed
support cost data for their PBL arrangements; (2) revise guidance to
require the development of PBL business case analyses to better support
the decision-making process on the use of these arrangements; and (3)
Page 184 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Comprehensive and Complete Cost Data
Can Help DOD Improve the Cost-
Effectiveness of Sustaining Weapon Systems
define the elements to be included in these analyses so they are
comprehensive and sound.
These actions would generate more detailed cost data and improve the
analyses of PBL arrangements to determine if they are the most cost-
effective approach to supporting weapon systems. DOD concurred or
partially concurred with these and other related recommendations but has
not yet implemented all corrective actions.
The lack of complete and reliable O&S cost data makes it difficult to
determine the full extent of potential savings on weapon system O&S
costs. However, based on DOD’s estimate that it spent at least $132 billion
in fiscal year 2008 on weapon system support alone, for every 1 percent
reduction in costs, there would be an annual cost savings of $1.3 billion.
As an illustration of the potential for significant cost-savings, a goal of
reducing support costs by 5 percent over a period of time would translate
to annual cost savings of approximately $6.6 billion. More ambitious O&S
cost reduction goals would potentially result in greater cost savings.
To assess the potential for DOD to achieve savings by reducing its O&S Framework for
costs, GAO relied on the prior work below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Defense Management: DOD Needs Better Information and Guidance to
More Effectively Manage and Reduce Operating and Support Costs of
Major Weapon Systems. GAO-10-717. Washington, D.C.: July 20, 2010.
Defense Logistics: Improved Analysis and Cost Data Needed to Evaluate
the Cost-effectiveness of Performance Based Logistics. GAO-09-41.
Washington, D.C.: December 19, 2008.
Defense Management: DOD Needs to Demonstrate That Performance-
Based Logistics Contracts Are Achieving Expected Benefits. GAO-05-966.
Washington, D.C.: September 9, 2005.
Best Practices: Setting Requirements Differently Could Reduce Weapon
Systems’ Total Ownership Costs. GAO-03-57. Washington, D.C.: February
11, 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact Jack E. Edwards at Area Contact
(202) 512-8246 or edwardsj@gao.gov.
Page 185 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Corrosion Prevention and Control
Practices Could Help DOD Avoid Billions in
Unnecessary Costs
Improved Corrosion Prevention and Control Practices
Could Help DOD Avoid Billions in Unnecessary Costs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of Defense (DOD) estimates that corrosion costs the
department over $23 billion each year. Corrosion—the unintended
destruction or deterioration of a material due to interaction with the
environment—affects military readiness. According to a 2009 study,
corrosion was responsible for taking up to 16 percent of military assets,
most notably aircraft, out of action. Corrosion also creates safety hazards.
GAO reported in 2007 that the Army attributed over 50 aircraft accidents
and 12 fatalities to corrosion since 1985. Corrosion takes such varied
forms as rusting; pitting; calcium or other mineral buildup; degradation
from exposure to ultraviolet light; and mold, mildew, and other organic
decay. It negatively affects all military assets, including equipment and
infrastructure. In 2003, DOD created the Office of Corrosion Policy and
Oversight (Corrosion Office), which is responsible for the prevention and
mitigation of corrosion. Since 2008, the Director of the Corrosion Office
reports directly to the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology and Logistics.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Corrosion, if left unchecked, can degrade the readiness and safety of
equipment and facilities and can result in substantial, sometimes
avoidable, costs. The Defense Science Board Task Force estimated in a
2004 report that 30 percent of corrosion costs could be avoided through
proper investment in prevention and mitigation of corrosion during design,
manufacture, and sustainment. Using fiscal year 2006 data, DOD’s
Corrosion Office estimated that approximately a quarter of the $80 billion
in annual expenses to maintain its ships, aircraft, strategic missiles, and
ground combat and tactical vehicles is spent for corrosion-related
concerns. DOD also spends about $10 billion annually to maintain about
577,000 buildings and structures, with about $1.9 billion of that amount
spent for corrosion-related concerns. According to DOD, increased
corrosion prevention and control efforts are needed to adequately address
the wide-ranging and expensive effects of corrosion on equipment and
infrastructure. However, DOD did not fund about one-third of acceptable
corrosion projects for fiscal years 2005 through 2010. Also, military
departments have not validated the cost-effectiveness of many of the
previously funded corrosion projects.
To target funding toward corrosion prevention and control, DOD
established a separate program element and line item within its budget.
Among other things, the Corrosion Office uses much of that budget to fund
projects designed to develop and test new technologies. To receive
Corrosion Office funding, the military departments submit project
proposals that are evaluated by a panel of experts assembled by the
Page 186 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Corrosion Prevention and Control
Practices Could Help DOD Avoid Billions in
Unnecessary Costs
Director of the Corrosion Office. The Corrosion Office currently funds up
to $500,000 per project, and the military departments pledge
complementary funding for each project they propose. The level of
military department funding and the estimated return on investment are
two of the criteria used to evaluate the projects proposals. For fiscal years
2005 through 2010, the Corrosion Office judged 271 corrosion prevention
and control projects to be acceptable for funding. However, DOD funded
$129 million (63 percent) of the $206 million that was needed to fund those
271 projects.
During the 6 years that the Corrosion Office has been funding corrosion
projects, the average estimated return on investment for those projects
has been 50:1. DOD is currently asking the military departments to validate
the actual return on investment for the projects funded in fiscal year 2005
compared to the original estimates. To date, validations have been
completed for 10 of the 28 corrosion projects funded in that fiscal year.
Nine of the 10 projects were facilities projects with a validated return on
investment of 11:1. Weapons projects have been estimated to have higher
returns on investment (67:1 average), but these estimates have not been
validated by the military departments. Also, none of those estimates have
been independently validated.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
If the corrosion prevention and control projects accepted from fiscal years
2005 through 2010 had been fully funded, DOD potentially could have
avoided $3.6 billion in corrosion-related costs—assuming those projects
achieved the same level of cost-effectiveness as was estimated for all
accepted projects in those years. In April 2010, GAO reported that the
corrosion requirements for the fiscal year 2011 budget identified $12
million for projects, leaving an unfunded requirement of about $35 million.
If fully funded, that $35 million could result in a potential cost avoidance
of $418 million. Similarly, by underfunding all of its estimated corrosion
prevention and control requirements, DOD may be missing an opportunity
for additional cost avoidance totaling $1.4 billion.
However, these calculations are highly contingent on the accuracy of
estimated return on investment data provided by the Corrosion Office,
much of which have not been validated by the military departments or an
independent entity. GAO has recommended that the Corrosion Office
ensure that return on investment estimates for funded corrosion
prevention and control projects are validated. If the Corrosion Office
wishes to convince DOD and congressional decision makers that more
fully funding its corrosion prevention programs could provide such a
Page 187 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
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Practices Could Help DOD Avoid Billions in
Unnecessary Costs
Page 188 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
significant return on investment, the Corrosion Office needs to complete
the validation of return on investment estimates in order to demonstrate
the costs and benefits of its corrosion prevention and control projects.
GAO is required by law to report annually on DOD’s corrosion prevention
and control budget submission and on the corrosion report that
accompanies defense budget materials. GAO has also done other work on
corrosion issues. This analysis is based on GAO’s previously published
work in that area from 2003 through 2010.
Defense Management: DOD Has a Rigorous Process to Select Corrosion
Prevention Projects, but Would Benefit from Clearer Guidance and
Validation of Returns on Investment. GAO-11-84. Washington, D.C.:
December 8, 2010.
Defense Management: Observations on Department of Defense and
Military Service Fiscal Year 2011 Requirements for Corrosion
Prevention and Control. GAO-10-608R. Washington, D.C.: April 15, 2010.
Defense Management: Observations on the Department of Defense’s
Fiscal Year 2011 Budget Request for Corrosion Prevention and Control.
GAO-10-607R. Washington, D.C.: April 15, 2010.
Defense Management: Observations on DOD’s Fiscal Year 2010 Budget
Request for Corrosion Prevention and Control. GAO-09-732R.
Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2009.
Defense Management: Observations on DOD’s Analysis of Options for
Improving Corrosion Prevention and Control through Earlier Planning
in the Requirements and Acquisition Processes. GAO-09-694R.
Washington, D.C.: May 29, 2009.
Defense Management: Observations on DOD’s FY 2009 Budget Request
for Corrosion Prevention and Control. GAO-08-663R. Washington, D.C.:
April 15, 2008.
Defense Management: High-Level Leadership Commitment and Actions
Are Needed to Address Corrosion Issues. GAO-07-618. Washington, D.C.:
April 30, 2007.
Framework for
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Improved Corrosion Prevention and Control
Practices Could Help DOD Avoid Billions in
Unnecessary Costs
Defense Management: Additional Measures to Reduce Corrosion of
Prepositioned Military Assets Could Achieve Cost Savings. GAO-06-709.
Washington, D.C.: June 14, 2006.
Defense Management: Opportunities Exist to Improve Implementation
of DOD’s Long-Term Corrosion Strategy. GAO-04-640. Washington, D.C.:
June 23, 2004.
Defense Management: Opportunities to Reduce Corrosion Costs and
Increase Readiness. GAO-03-753. Washington, D.C.: July 7, 2003.
Defense Infrastructure: Changes in Funding Priorities and Strategic
Planning Needed to Improve the Condition of Military Facilities.
GAO-03-274. Washington, D.C.: February 19, 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact Jack E. Edwards at Area Contact
(202) 512-8246 or edwardsj@gao.gov.
Page 189 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Revising the Essential Air Service Program
Could Improve Efficiency and Reduce Costs
Revising the Essential Air Service Program Could
Improve Efficiency and Reduce Costs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Since 1978, the Essential Air Service (EAS) program, administered by the
Department of Transportation, has subsidized air service to eligible
communities. In 2010, the program supported air service to about 150
communities nationally. The EAS program was originally established as a
10-year transitional program to ease communities into a deregulated
aviation environment. The cost of this program has risen as subsidies to
air carriers and the number of communities being served have increased.
Over the years GAO has expressed concerns that rising costs may
jeopardize the EAS program’s long-term viability.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Revising the EAS program and re-examining the need for air service across
the country could increase program efficiency and reduce costs. In fiscal
year 2009, Congress appropriated $136.2 million for the EAS program, and
in 2010 increased this amount to $200 million.1 Costs could continue to
increase for a number of reasons; for example, some eligible communities
may lose existing unsubsidized air service and obtain EAS subsidies. GAO
has previously reported on issues related to the EAS program, including
the following:
Eligibility criteria are dated and not well targeted. Eligibility for the
program was set in 1978 and largely based on communities that had or
could have scheduled air service at that time; thus eligibility may bear little
relation to current demand for air service. Communities have been added
and removed from EAS funding, but the approach to determining EAS
eligibility has remained the same and affects the cost of the program. For
example, EAS currently uses distance to medium- and large-hub airports
as a basis for eligibility. Past GAO analyses have shown that if eligibility
criteria considered the distance to small-hub airports, in addition to the
current criteria of distance to medium- and large-hub airports, and used a
125 mile distance instead of the current 70 miles, fewer communities
would be eligible for EAS. In addition, because communities located near
each other are eligible for EAS flights, in some regions duplicate federal
subsidies are paid to air carriers when a single subsidy could provide air
service. Communities and states have been reticent to select one regional
airport to serve needs for a greater region because they do not want to
give up the service for which they are eligible.
1These amounts include the $50 million EAS receives each year through a permanent,
indefinite appropriation.
Page 190 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Revising the Essential Air Service Program
Could Improve Efficiency and Reduce Costs
Operating requirements are inefficient. The program has operating
requirements that are inefficient and increase costs. For example,
legislation mandates that airlines use larger aircraft when smaller, less
expensive to operate, aircraft could in some instances meet passenger
demand.2 In addition, the program requires a certain number of flights,
regardless of passenger demand. Past GAO analyses have shown that most
EAS flights operate with aircraft that are largely empty—some EAS
airports operate with fewer than five passengers per day. In fiscal year
2008, the percentage of available seats filled by passengers was 37 percent
on EAS flights.
Alternative transportation options could be more cost-effective in some
cases. Some communities have not been able to generate sufficient
demand to justify costly air service, resulting in rising per-passenger
subsidies. Because potentially cost-effective alternatives, such as bus
service to other airports, are not used, subsidies may be higher than
necessary to link these communities to the nation’s passenger aviation
system.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Congress may wish to consider fundamentally re-examining the design and
efficiency of the EAS program. GAO has reported on several potential
solutions to these issues facing the EAS program that Congress and the
Department of Transportation may wish to consider. All have drawbacks,
but they present the opportunity for the government to target and use
funds more efficiently.
• Updating eligibility criteria and targeting service. Changing the
program criteria to target more remote communities would result in
savings. In 2006 GAO found that about $24 million could be saved
annually if service were terminated at airports that were within 125
highway miles of a medium- or large-hub airport. Under this approach,
more remote communities would have remained eligible for EAS, but
less remote communities receiving subsidized service would have been
ineligible. In addition, changing program criteria to consolidate
subsidized air service to one regional airport could help reduce the
number of EAS locations served while maintaining regional
connections to the nation’s air transportation system. However, this
potential solution is controversial at the local level, in part because
2Communities currently may waive their guarantee of larger aircraft.
Page 191 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Revising the Essential Air Service Program
Could Improve Efficiency and Reduce Costs
regionalizing service would require some communities to give up their
own service for potentially improved service at a less convenient
regional facility
• Revising operating requirements to improve efficiency. Revising
operating requirements to better match capacity with community use
could improve efficiency and save federal subsidies. Air carriers could
reduce unused capacity by using smaller aircraft, for example, by using
9-seat aircraft in place of the 19-seat aircraft typically used, or reducing
the number of flights. This would improve the efficiency of the
program, but it would also create challenges, since smaller aircraft may
not be suitable for certain routes, such as those in mountainous areas
that require pressurized cabins. Similarly, reducing the number of
flights would mean passengers have fewer options from which to
choose. However, as discussed below, passengers could potentially
have additional transportation options if given other means of
transportation to alternative airports.
• Assessing multimodal solutions to provide communities alternatives
to EAS. Other means of transportation might be more cost-effective
and practical than EAS subsidies for intercity transportation for small
communities that may have limited demand for air service due to the
proximity of other airports or limited population. This could include
potentially more cost-effective bus service to hub airports or on-
demand air service on small aircraft, usually called air taxi service.
While communities may be concerned about losing existing scheduled
air service, assessing multimodal alternatives could maintain access to
the aviation system at a lower cost.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related products Framework for
below.
Analysis
National Transportation System: Options and Analytical Tools to Related GAO
Strengthen DOT’s Approach to Supporting Communities’ Access to the
Products System. GAO-09-753. Washington, D.C.: July 17, 2009.
Commercial Aviation: Programs and Options for Providing Air Service
to Small Communities. GAO-07-793T. Washington, D.C.: April 25, 2007.
Page 192 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Revising the Essential Air Service Program
Could Improve Efficiency and Reduce Costs
Commercial Aviation: Programs and Options for the Federal Approach
to Providing and Improving Air Service to Small Communities.
GAO-06-398T. Washington, D.C.: September 14, 2006.
Federal Aviation Administration: Reauthorization Provides
Opportunities to Address Key Agency Challenges. GAO-03-653T.
Washington, D.C.: April 10, 2003.
Commercial Aviation: Issues Regarding Federal Assistance for
Enhancing Air Service to Small Communities. GAO-03-540T.
Washington, D.C.: March 11, 2003.
Commercial Aviation: Factors Affecting Efforts to Improve Air Service
at Small Community Airports. GAO-03-330. Washington, D.C.: January 17,
2003.
Options to Enhance the Long-Term Viability of the Essential Air Service
Program. GAO-02-997R. Washington, D.C. August 30, 2002.
For additional information about this area, contact Gerald Dillingham at Area Contact
(202) 512-2834 or dillinghamg@gao.gov.
Page 193 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Design and Management of the
Universal Service Fund As It Expands to
Support Broadband Could Help Avoid Cost
Increases for Consumers
Improved Design and Management of the Universal
Service Fund As It Expands to Support Broadband
Could Help Avoid Cost Increases for Consumers
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The policy that Americans should enjoy “universal” access to affordable
communications services has existed since the 1930s. In 2009, the nation’s
Universal Service Fund (Fund), managed by the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC), disbursed roughly $7.3 billion to subsidize telephone
and other communications services through four programs. The High Cost
program subsidizes companies serving rural and high-cost areas. The Low-
Income, E-rate, and Rural Health Care programs subsidize telephone bills
and communications services for low-income consumers, schools and
libraries, and rural health care providers, respectively. The National
Broadband Plan, released in March 2010 by an FCC task force, calls for
modifying the Fund to support greater deployment of more expensive
broadband technologies. Universal Service Fund programs are funded
through mandatory payments from companies providing
telecommunications services—payments usually passed along to
consumers as a line item fee on their telephone bill. Fund disbursements
have more than tripled since beginning in 1998. GAO has reported the need
for improved management practices in each of the four programs.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
GAO has examined each of the Fund’s programs and concluded that
proposals to modify them to support greater deployment of more
expensive broadband technologies without re-examining the purpose,
design, and management of the programs could increase disbursements
from the Fund and the costs borne by consumers. FCC’s design of Fund
programs, including the High Cost and Low-Income programs having no
limits on disbursements, have allowed disbursements to grow significantly
over time. For example, due to increased program participation, Low-
Income support payments for 2010 are estimated to reach approximately
$1.4 billion—a 36 percent single-year increase over 2009. In September
2010, FCC indexed the E-rate program’s $2.25 billion annual funding cap to
inflation, which will lead to increases in that program’s expenditures.
Using each program to support greater broadband deployment will further
increase the upward pressure on spending.
Page 194 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Design and Management of the
Universal Service Fund As It Expands to
Support Broadband Could Help Avoid Cost
Increases for Consumers
Total Fiscal Year Disbursements from the Four Universal Service Fund Programs
Dollars in billions
8
7.47.3
20091998 2008200720062005200420032002200120001999
7.0
6.87
6.3
6 5.75.6
5.1
4.95
4.0
4
3.3
3
2.3
2
1
0
Fiscal year
Source: GAO presentation of FCC data.
In February 2005, GAO raised concerns with the unusual structure that
FCC established for the Fund that has caused FCC to struggle over the
years with identifying the fiscal and accountability requirements that apply
to the Fund. These concerns included the extent to which FCC has
delegated some functions to the Universal Service Administrative
Company (USAC)—the not-for-profit corporation that FCC appointed as
the permanent administrator of the Fund. In response to GAO’s concerns
that USAC was operating and disbursing funds under less explicit federal
ties than many other federal programs, FCC established a memorandum of
understanding with USAC in 2007. However, concerns about FCC’s design
and structure of the Fund remain, including the Fund being outside of
Congress’ annual appropriations oversight process.
In its management of the Fund, FCC has not undertaken a data-driven
approach to overseeing the four programs. For example, GAO found in its
November 2010 report on the Rural Health Care program that FCC never
conducted a comprehensive needs assessment to learn how the program
can best target the telecommunications needs of rural health care
providers. Proper needs assessments are crucial to the effective design
and assessment of programs. If FCC had obtained data through a needs
assessment, it may have been able to articulate a clearer vision for the
Page 195 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Design and Management of the
Universal Service Fund As It Expands to
Support Broadband Could Help Avoid Cost
Increases for Consumers
program, more accurately ascertain why some rural health care providers
do not participate in the program, and better ensure that FCC’s
programmatic changes achieved the intended results. Using data-based
assessments would supplement the information gained through FCC’s
regulatory procedures and enhance FCC’s ability to manage Fund
programs.
Finally, GAO has found that FCC lacks performance goals and measures
for all four Fund programs. Results-oriented organizations establish a
strong foundation for successful program management through setting
performance goals to clearly define desired outcomes and developing
performance measures that are linked to the program goals. GAO has
recommended over the years that FCC establish performance goals and
measures for all of the Universal Service Fund programs and FCC has
generally agreed with these recommendations. However, FCC has made
only partial progress toward implementing performance goals and
measures in each of the four programs.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
The National Broadband Plan recommends shifting Universal Service
Fund support from legacy voice technologies to supporting a broadband
platform that enables many applications, including voice. However, two of
the programs remain uncapped and FCC has not adequately addressed the
Fund’s continued growth. GAO’s work illustrates the need for a broader
rethinking of the vision, size, structure, and goals of the Universal Service
Fund, coupled with management improvements by FCC that will address
GAO’s recommendations. For example, FCC conducting comprehensive
needs assessments would be a good first step toward designing programs
that properly target broadband needs. Establishing clear performance
goals and measures for the programs will allow FCC to better determine
the proper amount of funding for each program, target the funding to meet
the needs of the intended beneficiaries, and conduct needed program
evaluations. FCC and USAC have noted they will work together to respond
to recent GAO recommendations regarding improving internal controls
and other oversight mechanisms. Beyond GAO’s previous
recommendations, Congress may also wish to give the Fund increased
attention since it falls outside of the annual appropriations process. These
actions would help ensure stronger governmental accountability over the
Fund in the future and help avoid continued cost increases for rate payers.
Page 196 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Design and Management of the
Universal Service Fund As It Expands to
Support Broadband Could Help Avoid Cost
Increases for Consumers
This analysis is based on the work conducted for the products listed Framework for
below, as well as a review of the March 2010 National Broadband Plan and
Analysis FCC’s recent proposed rulemakings and orders related to implementation
of Universal Service Fund reform.
Related GAO
Products
Telecommunications: FCC’s Performance Management Weaknesses
Could Jeopardize Proposed Reforms of the Rural Health Care Program.
GAO-11-27. Washington, D.C.: November 17, 2010.
Telecommunications: Improved Management Can Enhance FCC
Decision Making for the Universal Service Fund Low-Income Program.
GAO-11-11. Washington, D.C.: October 28, 2010.
Telecommunications: FCC Should Assess the Design of the E-rate
Program’s Internal Control Structure. GAO-10-908. Washington, D.C.:
September 29, 2010.
Telecommunications: Long-Term Strategic Vision Would Help Ensure
Targeting of E-rate Funds to Highest-Priority Uses. GAO-09-253.
Washington, D.C.: March 27, 2009.
Telecommunications: FCC Needs to Improve Performance Management
and Strengthen Oversight of the High-Cost Program. GAO-08-633.
Washington, D.C.: June 13, 2008.
Telecommunications: Greater Involvement Needed by FCC in the
Management and Oversight of the E-Rate Program. GAO-05-151.
Washington, D.C.: February 9, 2005.
Telecommunications: Federal and State Universal Service Programs and
Challenges to Funding. GAO-02-187. Washington, D.C.: February 4, 2002.
Schools and Libraries Program: Actions Taken to Improve Operational
Procedures Prior to Committing Funds. GAO/RCED-99-51. Washington,
D.C.: March 5, 1999.
Telecommunications: FCC Lacked Authority to Create Corporations to
Administer Universal Service Programs. GAO/T-RCED/OGC-98-84.
Washington, D.C.: March 31, 1998.
For additional information about this area, contact Mark Goldstein at Area Contact
(202) 512-2834 or goldsteinm@gao.gov.
Page 197 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
The Corps of Engineers Should Provide
Congress With Project-Level Information on
Unobligated Balances
The Corps of Engineers Should Provide Congress With
Project-Level Information on Unobligated Balances
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) is the world’s largest public
engineering, design, and construction management agency. The Corps
provides vital public engineering services in peace and war to strengthen
the nation’s security, energize the economy, and reduce risks from
disasters.
Congress provides the Corps with “no-year” appropriations—that is, funds
that are available for obligation until expended—so funding may be
carried over to subsequent fiscal years. For example, if the Corps obligates
$40 million of a $50 million appropriation, the $10 million that was not
obligated is available for use in subsequent years.
In fiscal year 2010 the Corps’ civil works program received about $5.7
billion to plan, construct, operate, and maintain hundreds of water
resource projects. However, the budget presentation does not provide
information on the amount of unobligated balances that remain available
for each project. Such project-level information would help congressional
decision makers make appropriations and oversight decisions informed by
the availability of existing resources.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
The budget presentation for the Corps lacks transparency on key elements
of the President’s budget request. Specifically, it does not include
information on how much remains available for specific projects that
could potentially offset new funding requests for projects. For example, a
Sabine-Neches Waterway project in Texas had about $31 million in
unobligated balances from its fiscal year 2009 allocation that remained
available to offset its fiscal year 2010 request. Consequently, Congress has
not been able to consider the full level of resources available for projects
when making its appropriations decisions. Corps review boards routinely
review whether projects are meeting financial milestones, so unobligated
balance information is available. Although a senior Corps budget official
told GAO that detailed project-level information—such as remaining
balances—would not be available until after budget materials are
submitted to Congress, the Corps would be able to provide timely
information before final appropriations decisions are made.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
To ensure that all relevant information is considered during congressional
deliberations, GAO recommended in April 2010—and the Department of
Defense agreed—that the Corps provide Congress with information on
estimated project-level unobligated balances as a supplement to its budget
presentation. GAO expects to follow up at a later date to assess the
Page 198 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
The Corps of Engineers Should Provide
Congress With Project-Level Information on
Unobligated Balances
implementation of this recommendation. Although GAO cannot quantify
the potential savings, this information would enable Congress to consider
how much of the previous year’s funding remains available to offset new
funding requests.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the previously Framework for
issued report cited below.
Analysis
Army Corps of Engineers: Budget Formulation Process Emphasizes Related GAO Product
Agencywide Priorities, but Transparency of Budget Presentation Could
Be Improved. GAO-10-453. Washington, D.C.: April 2, 2010.
For additional information about this area, contact Denise Fantone at Area Contact
(202) 512-4997 or fantoned@gao.gov or Anu K. Mittal at (202) 512-3841 or
mittala@gao.gov.
Page 199 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Ensuring the Federal Government Receives
Fair Market Value for Its Oil and Gas
Resources Could Enhance Federal Revenues
Ensuring the Federal Government Receives Fair Market
Value for Its Oil and Gas Resources Could Enhance
Federal Revenues
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of the Interior (Interior) collected approximately $40
billion in oil and gas revenues from company bids for new oil and gas
leases, annual rents on existing leases, and royalties paid on oil and gas
sold from federal leases in fiscal years 2008 through 2010. Interior’s
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) manages onshore oil and gas leases,
and its Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE) manages offshore leases. Interior’s Office of
Natural Resources and Revenue (ONRR) is responsible for collecting
revenues associated with oil and gas produced from onshore and offshore
leases.
GAO has reviewed Interior’s oil and gas management and revenue
collection and found in September 2008 that Interior has not routinely
evaluated its federal oil and gas revenue collection system. By not
evaluating this system, Interior is unable to state whether current revenue
policies ensure that the federal government is receiving a fair return on the
production and sale of oil and gas produced from federal leases.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Revising Interior’s federal oil and gas revenue collection system represents an
opportunity to collect substantial additional revenues from the development
of federal oil and gas resources. In fiscal year 2010, Interior estimated that
increasing both rental rates for non-producing oil and gas leases and onshore
oil and gas royalty rates would generate over $1.7 billion over 10 years.
A considerable body of legislation governs Interior’s authority and
obligations to manage resources on federal lands and within federal
waters. For example, under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act1 and the
Federal Land Policy and Management Act,2 Interior must ensure the United
States receives fair market value on the development of its oil and gas
resources. The federal government receives payment for the development
of oil and gas resources on federal lands and waters in potentially three
ways. First, to obtain federal leases, companies generally must pay the
federal government an amount—called a bonus bid—determined through
a competitive auction. Second, after the lease is awarded, companies must
pay rent to hold the land. Onshore, for example, the rental rate is generally
between $1.50 and $2 per acre per year. Third, after production begins, the
companies must accurately measure the oil and gas volumes and pay
1Pub. L. No. 83-212, 67 Stat. 462 (1953) (codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. §§ 1331-1356a).
2Pub. L. No. 94-579, 90 Stat. 2743 (1976) (codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1784).
Page 200 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Ensuring the Federal Government Receives
Fair Market Value for Its Oil and Gas
Resources Could Enhance Federal Revenues
royalties to Interior based on a percentage of the cash value of oil and gas
produced and sold. The royalty rates for onshore leases are generally 12.5
percent, while royalty rates for offshore leases in the Gulf of Mexico
generally range from 12.5 percent to 18.75 percent.
In October 2008, GAO reported that Interior does less to encourage
development of oil and gas on federal leases than some states and private
landowners. Moreover, some of the tools that states and private landowners
use may also result in increased revenues. For example, four of the eight
states GAO reviewed increase rental rates over time on nonproducing oil
and gas leases to (1) encourage faster development of oil and gas
resources—on which royalties are due, and (2) increase revenues from
nonproducing leases. While Interior officials stated that rental rates for a 10
year onshore federal lease increased from $1.50 per acre per year for the
first 5 years to $2 per acre per year for years 6 through 10, states GAO
reviewed typically increased rental rates to a greater extent. For example,
one state increases the rental rate from $5 per acre per year to $25 per acre
per year if the lease is not developed by the end of the third year.
In September 2008, GAO reported that Interior had not conducted a
comprehensive evaluation of the oil and gas revenue system in over 25
years and that it did not have a system in place to evaluate whether the
federal system is in need of reassessment. At the time, GAO also reported
that Interior collected lower levels of revenues for oil and gas production
than do some resource owners, including other countries and some U.S.
states. For example, GAO reported that federal revenues for oil and gas
produced in the Gulf of Mexico were lower than 93 out of 104 resource
owners. In addition, the lack of price flexibility in royalty rates—automatic
adjustment of these rates to changes in oil and gas prices or other market
conditions—and the inability to change fiscal terms on existing leases put
pressure on Interior and Congress to change royalty rates in the past on an
ad hoc basis with consequences that could amount to billions of dollars of
foregone revenue. For example, special lower royalty rates—referred to as
royalty relief—granted on leases issued in the deep water areas of the Gulf
of Mexico from 1996 to 2000 (a period when oil and gas prices and
industry profits were much lower than they are today) could result in $21
billion to $53 billion in lost revenue to the federal government, compared
with what it would have received without these provisions. GAO’s 2008
User Fee Design Guide also notes the importance of regular fee reviews to
determine whether a fee needs to be adjusted. User fees represent a
charge to readily identifiable users of a government service or benefit
above and beyond what is normally available to the general public.
Further, fee reviews can facilitate effective communication and provide
Page 201 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Ensuring the Federal Government Receives
Fair Market Value for Its Oil and Gas
Resources Could Enhance Federal Revenues
opportunity for stakeholder input. GAO has previously reported that such
communication with stakeholders can provide feedback that could affect
the outcome of changes in fees and program implementation.
In 2010, GAO issued two reports that found Interior’s verification of the
volume of oil and gas produced from federal leases—on which royalties
are due to the federal government—does not provide reasonable
assurance that operators are accurately measuring and reporting these
volumes. In March 2010, GAO reported that Interior’s measurement
regulations and procedures for oil and gas measurement were insufficient
for providing reasonable assurance that oil and gas were being measured
accurately. As a result, there is a risk that the government is not receiving
all the oil and gas royalties it is due. Additionally, GAO reported in October
2010 that Interior’s data likely underestimated the amount of natural gas
produced on federal leases that is released directly to the atmosphere
(vented) or is burned (flared). This vented and flared gas contributes to
greenhouse gases and represents lost royalties. It is also important to
consider the costs of verification and validation in the context of the
benefits likely to be realized. GAO’s User Fee Design Guide discusses the
importance of striking a balance between ensuring compliance and
minimizing the administrative costs of collection.
Interior has begun to address these issues. For example, in January 2007,
Interior announced that it was raising the royalty rate for new deep water
leases in the Gulf of Mexico from 12.5 percent to 16.7 percent. At that time,
Interior estimated that the increased royalty rate of 16.7 percent for new
deepwater offshore Gulf of Mexico leases would increase revenue from
royalty payments by $4.5 billion over 20 years. Interior also estimated that
the increase in royalty rates would decrease the amount companies would
bid for the rights to explore for and develop oil and gas on affected leases
as well as reduce the amount of oil and gas ultimately produced in affected
areas, but that in net, the increase in revenue would be greater than the
reductions associated with lower bids and production. Furthermore, in
response to GAO’s October 2008 report, Interior stated in 2010 that the
administration would propose legislation to impose a fee on new
nonproducing oil and gas leases to encourage energy development on both
onshore and offshore leases. To date, such a fee has not come into effect.
However, in an April 12, 2010, press release, Interior stated that it is
undertaking a study in response to GAO’s September 2008 report, which it
expects to complete in 2011. The purpose of the study is to inform
decisions about federal lease terms, such as royalties, by consistently
comparing the federal oil and gas fiscal systems with such systems of
other countries. Specifically, Interior stated that the results of this study
Page 202 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Ensuring the Federal Government Receives
Fair Market Value for Its Oil and Gas
Resources Could Enhance Federal Revenues
will enable it to ensure that its leasing policies give the public a fair return
on federally owned oil and gas resources, while balancing other
objectives, including production and environmental quality. The results of
the study may reveal the potential for greater revenues to the federal
government. Given the significant financial stakes, there may be
opposition from the oil and gas industry. Interior may also face significant
difficulties designing and implementing an entirely new revenue collection
system, given its recent struggles to successfully oversee oil and gas
production. Finally, while Interior agreed with the recommendations from
both reports issued in 2010 addressing improvements to its oversight of
the measurement of oil and gas produced from federal leases, it has not
yet implemented these recommendations.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
To encourage companies to diligently develop oil and gas leases, ensure
that the government obtains a fair return on oil and gas produced from
federal leases, and for Interior to have reasonable assurance that oil and
gas produced from federal oil and gas leases is being measured accurately:
• Congress may need to take action to authorize or encourage Interior to
revise its rental fee structure for nonproducing leases.
• Interior should complete its study examining how other oil and gas
resource owners select fiscal parameters for leasing and adjusting oil
and gas royalty rates and use that information to adjust, as appropriate,
its royalty rates to a level that ensures the government a fair return. In
doing so it should ensure opportunities for substantive, two-way
communication with program stakeholders.
• Depending on the results of the study, Congress may wish to provide
additional guidance or take additional actions to enable Interior to
change how it oversees federal lands and waters and the revenues
derived from production of oil and gas there.
• Interior should implement GAO’s recommendations from prior reports
addressing a variety of oil and gas measurement factors.
According to Interior, increasing the rental fee for onshore nonproducing
leases to $4 per acre per year would generate $760 million over 10 years.
While the total additional revenue generated by adjusting both onshore
and offshore royalty rates is uncertain, a 2010 Interior estimate of
increasing onshore royalty rates projects additional federal revenues of $1
billion over 10 years.
Page 203 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Ensuring the Federal Government Receives
Fair Market Value for Its Oil and Gas
Resources Could Enhance Federal Revenues
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Federal Oil and Gas Leases: Opportunities Exist to Capture Vented and
Flared Natural Gas, Which Would Increase Royalty Payments and Reduce
Greenhouse Gases. GAO-11-34. Washington, D.C.: October 29, 2010.
Oil and Gas Management: Interior’s Oil and Gas Production
Verification Efforts Do Not Provide Reasonable Assurance of Accurate
Measurement of Production Volumes. GAO-10-313. Washington, D.C.:
March 15, 2010.
Oil and Gas Leasing: Interior Could Do More to Encourage Diligent
Development. GAO-09-74. Washington, D.C.: October 3, 2008.
Oil and Gas Royalties: The Federal System for Collecting Oil and Gas
Revenues Needs Comprehensive Reassessment. GAO-08-691. Washington,
D.C.: September 3, 2008.
Oil and Gas Royalties: Litigation over Royalty Relief Could Cost the
Federal Government Billions of Dollars. GAO-08-792R. Washington, D.C.:
June 5, 2008.
Federal User Fees: A Design Guide. GAO-08-386SP. Washington, D.C.:
May 29, 2008.
Oil and Gas Royalties: A Comparison of the Share of Revenue Received
from Oil and Gas Production by the Federal Government and Other
Resource Owners. GAO-07-676R. Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2007.
Oil and Gas Royalties: Royalty Relief Will Cost the Government Billions
of Dollars but Uncertainty Over Future Energy Prices and Production
Levels Make Precise Estimates Impossible at this Time. GAO-07-590R.
Washington, D.C.: April 12, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact Frank Rusco at Area Contact
(202) 512-3841 or ruscof@gao.gov.
Page 204 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Recent Efforts to Address Governmentwide
Improper Payments Could Result in
Significant Cost Savings
Recent Efforts to Address Governmentwide Improper
Payments Could Result in Significant Cost Savings
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Reported estimated improper payments governmentwide have steadily
increased over the past decade from an estimated $20 billion in 2000 to
approximately $125 billion in 2010. An improper payment is defined as any
payment that should not have been made or that was made in an incorrect
amount (including overpayments and underpayments) under statutory,
contractual, administrative, or other legally applicable requirements.
Reported improper payments also include payments for which insufficient
or no documentation was found. GAO’s work has demonstrated that
improper payments continue to be a long-standing, widespread, and
significant problem in the federal government.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
For fiscal year 2010, about 20 federal agencies reported estimated
improper payments for over 70 programs totaling about $125.4 billion, for
a governmentwide error rate of about 5.5 percent. According to GAO’s
analysis of those agencies’ fiscal year 2010 Performance and
Accountability Reports (PAR) or Agency Financial Reports (AFR), the
majority of reported estimated improper payments for fiscal year 2010 is
accounted for by the following 10 programs:
Program Agency
FY 2010 estimated
improper payments Primary cause(s)a
Medicare Fee-for-
Service
Health and Human
Services
$34.3 billion Medically unnecessary services and insufficient
documentation
Medicaid Health and Human
Services
$22.5 billion Insufficient or no documentation provided for conducting
medical review and cases that were either ineligible or
their eligibility status could not be determined
Unemployment
Insurance
Labor $17.5 billion Eligibility errors, errors in handling separation issues, and
claimants who have returned to work and continue to
claim benefits
Earned Income Tax
Credit
Treasury $16.9 billion High turnover of eligible claimants, confusion among
eligible claimants, complexity of the law, structure of the
program, unscrupulous return preparers, and fraud
Medicare Advantage Health and Human
Services
$13.6 billion Insufficient supporting documentation, and errors in the
transfer of data and payment calculations
Supplemental Security
Income
Social Security
Administration
$4.8 billion Incorrect computations, misapplication of an income or
resource exclusion, and inadequate verification of
accounts and wages
Old Age Survivors’
and Disability
Insurance
Social Security
Administration
$3.2 billion Computation errors; nonverification of earnings, income
or work status; and incorrect processing of applications or
payments
Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance
Agriculture $2.2 billion Incomplete or inaccurate reporting of income by
participants and incorrect eligibility determination by
caseworkers
Page 205 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Recent Efforts to Address Governmentwide
Improper Payments Could Result in
Significant Cost Savings
Program Agency
FY 2010 estimated
improper payments Primary cause(s)a
National School Lunch Agriculture $1.5 billion Verification and authentication errors including
inadequate documentation and fraud or
misrepresentation by participants
Pell Grants Education $1 billion Verification errorsb
Source: GAO
aAs reported by the agencies.
bPrimary causes were provided by the Department of Education and were not reported in the AFR.
Agencies have made progress in reducing improper payments, and, in
some programs, they have reported reducing the rate of improper
payments. For example, the Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) reported that the fiscal year 2010 Head Start program’s estimated
improper payments decreased by $90 million—or 1.3 percent of total
program outlays—from the estimated amount reported for fiscal year
2009. HHS reported that it reduced improper payments errors by issuing
additional guidance for employees on verifying income eligibility and
developing a standard template form to help guide grantees in the
enrollment process. In another example, the Department of Agriculture
reported reductions from fiscal year 2009 to fiscal year 2010 for seven of
its programs, including the Marketing Assistance Loan Program which had
a reduction in improper payments of about $50 million—or 1.75 percent of
total program outlays. The agency reported actions taken to reduce
improper payments, which include providing additional training and
instruction on improper payment control procedures, and integrating the
employee’s individual performance results related to reducing improper
payments into annual performance ratings.
Nonetheless, the federal government still faces challenges in determining
the full extent to which improper payments occur, and in ensuring
appropriate actions are being taken to reduce them. For example, three
agencies have not reported on the extent of improper payments for seven
risk-susceptible programs with significant amounts of outlays. Most
notably, HHS has yet to report a comprehensive improper payment
estimate amount for the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit program,
which had about $59 billion in outlays in fiscal year 2010. However, HHS
expects to report a comprehensive estimate for this program in fiscal year
2011. In addition, it is not always clear whether agencies are identifying
the root cause or the underlying internal control weaknesses that caused
the payment error in order to determine the appropriate corrective action.
Page 206 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Recent Efforts to Address Governmentwide
Improper Payments Could Result in
Significant Cost Savings
To help reduce improper payments, the President issued (1) Executive
Order 13520, Reducing Improper Payments, in November 2009, focused
on increasing transparency and accountability for reducing improper
payments, and creating incentives to reduce improper payments; (2) a
Presidential Memorandum in March 2010 that expands agency efforts to
recapture improper overpayments;1 and (3) a Presidential Memorandum in
June 2010, directing that a Do Not Pay List be established to prevent
improper payments from being made to ineligible recipients. Moreover, in
July 2010, Congress passed the Improper Payments Elimination and
Recovery Act (IPERA) to enhance reporting and recouping of improper
payments. These actions further heightened awareness of the need to
reduce improper payments and eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse in
federal programs. In addition, the President has set goals, as part of the
Accountable Government Initiative, for federal agencies to reduce overall
improper payments by $50 billion and recapture at least $2 billion in
improper contract payments and overpayments to health providers, by the
end of 2012.
Under the Executive Order, the Office of Management and Budget
established a Web site (www.paymentaccuracy.gov) to enhance
transparency and accountability, and designated 14 high-error programs to
focus attention on the programs that significantly contribute to the federal
government’s improper payments.2 The Web site contains important
information on the programs’ senior accountable officials responsible for
efforts to reduce improper payments; current, targeted, and historical
estimated rates of improper payments; why they occur; and what agencies
are doing to reduce and recover them. For example, the Web site reported
a current improper payment rate for HHS’s Medicare Fee-for-Service
program of 10.5 percent for fiscal year 2010 and a reduction target for
fiscal year 2013 of 5.8 percent.
1Payment recapture audits, also called recovery audits, are conducted to identify and
reclaim payments made in error.
2The 14 high-error programs designated by the Office of Management and Budget for fiscal
year 2010 include: Medicare Fee-for-Service; Medicaid; Unemployment Insurance; Medicare
Advantage; Supplemental Security Income; Retirement, Survivors, and Disability Insurance;
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program; National School Lunch Program; Rental
Housing Assistance Programs; Federal-Aid Highway Program, Highway Planning and
Construction; Children’s Health Insurance Program; Earned Income Tax Credit; High Cost
Program of the Universal Service Fund; and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit. The
Children’s Health Insurance Program, High Cost Program of the Universal Service Fund,
and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit programs did not report improper payment error
rates and amounts for fiscal year 2010.
Page 207 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Recent Efforts to Address Governmentwide
Improper Payments Could Result in
Significant Cost Savings
IPERA established additional requirements related to manager
accountability, recovery auditing, compliance and noncompliance
determinations and reporting, and an opinion on internal controls over
improper payments. For example, IPERA repealed a previous recovery
audit requirement and enacted a new, broader requirement for agencies to
conduct recovery audits for those programs with at least $1 million in total
program outlays, where cost-effective. Final guidance on expanding
payment recapture audits is expected to be issued under IPERA
implementing guidance, in early 2011.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
GAO views these efforts as positive steps toward improving transparency
over, and reducing, improper payments; however, it is too soon to
determine whether the activities called for in Executive Order 13520, the
Presidential Memoranda, and IPERA will achieve their goals of reducing
improper payments while continuing to ensure that federal programs serve
and provide access to intended beneficiaries. Identifying the nature, extent
and underlying causes of improper payments is an essential prerequisite to
taking action to reduce them. Moreover, corrective actions needed to
reduce improper payments vary across specific entities and programs.
Until the federal government has implemented effective processes to
determine the full extent to which improper payments occur and to
reasonably assure that appropriate actions are taken across entities and
programs to effectively recover and reduce improper payments, the
federal government will not have reasonable assurance that the use of
taxpayer funds is adequately safeguarded.
In addition, the level of importance the agencies and the administration
place on the efforts to implement the requirements established by IPERA,
the Executive Order, and other guidance will be a key factor in
determining their overall effectiveness in reducing improper payments and
ensuring that federal funds are used efficiently and for their intended
purposes. If fully and successfully implemented, the requirements will
provide additional transparency, improve oversight and accountability,
and should help to reduce the federal government’s vulnerability to
improper payments in the future. Continuous congressional oversight is
key to determining whether these recent efforts are effective in reducing
improper payments. Congressional efforts to monitor agencies will be
essential to ensure they are taking action to fully implement these
legislative requirements to improve accountability, achieve targeted goals,
and reduce overall improper payments.
Page 208 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Recent Efforts to Address Governmentwide
Improper Payments Could Result in
Significant Cost Savings
This analysis is based on agency-reported information in their fiscal year Framework for
2010 Performance Accountability and Agency Financial Reports, as well as
Analysis previous GAO reports.
Related GAO
Products
Medicare Recovery Audit Contracting: Lessons Learned to Address
Improper Payments and Improve Contractor Coordination and
Oversight. GAO-10-864T. Washington, D.C.: July 15, 2010.
Medicare Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: Challenges and Strategies for
Preventing Improper Payments. GAO-10-844T. Washington, D.C.: June 15,
2010.
U.S. Government Financial Statements: Fiscal Year 2009 Audit
Highlights Financial Management Challenges and Unsustainable Long-
Term Fiscal Path. GAO-10-483T. Washington, D.C.: April 14, 2010.
Medicare Recovery Audit Contracting: Weaknesses Remain in
Addressing Vulnerabilities to Improper Payments, Although
Improvements Made to Contractor Oversight. GAO-10-143. Washington,
D.C.: March 31, 2010.
Improper Payments: Significant Improvements Needed in DOD’s Efforts
to Address Improper Payment and Recovery Auditing Requirements.
GAO-09-442. Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2009.
Improper Payments: Responses to Posthearing Questions Related to
Eliminating Waste and Fraud in Medicare and Medicaid. GAO-09-838R.
Washington, D.C.: July 20, 2009.
Improper Payments: Progress Made but Challenges Remain in
Estimating and Reducing Improper Payments. GAO-09-628T.
Washington, D.C.: April 22, 2009.
Improper Payments: Responses to Posthearing Questions Related to
Status of Agencies’ Efforts to Address Improper Payment and Recovery
Auditing Requirements. GAO-08-819R. Washington, D.C.: June 20, 2008.
Improper Payments: Status of Agencies’ Efforts to Address Improper
Payment and Recovery Auditing Requirements. GAO-08-438T.
Washington, D.C.: January 31, 2008.
Page 209 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Recent Efforts to Address Governmentwide
Improper Payments Could Result in
Significant Cost Savings
Improper Payments: Federal Executive Branch Agencies’ Fiscal Year
2007 Improper Payment Estimate Reporting. GAO-08-377R. Washington,
D.C.: January 23, 2008.
Improper Payments: Responses to Posthearing Questions Related to
Agencies’ Progress in Addressing Improper Payment and Recovery
Auditing Requirements. GAO-07-834R. Washington, D.C.: May 30, 2007.
Improper Payments: Agencies’ Efforts to Address Improper Payment and
Recovery Auditing Requirements Continue. GAO-07-635T. Washington,
D.C.: March 29, 2007.
Improper Payments: Posthearing Responses on a December 5, 2006,
Hearing to Assess the Improper Payments Information Act of 2002.
GAO-07-533R. Washington, D.C.: February 27, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact Kay Daly at Area Contact
(202) 512-9312 or dalykl@gao.gov.
Page 210 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Promoting Competition for Federal Contracts
Can Produce Savings
Promoting Competition for Federal Contracts Can
Produce Savings
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Competition is a cornerstone of the federal acquisition system and a
critical tool for achieving the best possible return on what has grown to
become an annual investment of about $540 billion. The benefits of
competition in acquiring goods and services from the private sector are
well established. Competitive contracts can save money, improve
contractor performance, and promote accountability for results.
Federal agencies generally are required to award contracts competitively,
but a substantial amount of federal money is being obligated on
noncompetitive contracts annually. Full and open competition, defined as
allowing all responsible sources to submit proposals, is the required
method for federal agencies to award contracts, unless an exception
applies. For example, full and open competition is not required under
urgent circumstances, or when the required goods or services are available
from only one source. Full and open competition also may not be required
for contracts below certain dollar values or some contracts awarded under
small business programs, such as the 8(a) small business development
program of the Small Business Administration (SBA).
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Although some agency decisions to forego competition may be justified,
GAO has found that when federal agencies decide to open their contracts
to competition, they frequently realize savings. For example, the
Department of State (State) awarded a noncompetitive contract for
installation and maintenance of technical security equipment at U.S.
embassies in 2003. In response to a GAO recommendation, State
subsequently competed this requirement, and in 2007 it awarded contracts
to four small businesses for a total savings of over $218 million. In another
case, GAO found in 2006 that the Army had awarded noncompetitive
contracts for security guards, but later spent 25 percent less for the same
services when the contracts were competed.
Federal agencies obligated approximately $170 billion on noncompetitive
contracts in fiscal year 2009 alone. While there has been some fluctuation
over the years, the percentage of obligations under noncompetitive
contracts recently has been in the range of 31 percent to over 35 percent.
GAO reported in July 2010 that circumstances precluding competition
included the government’s lack of access to a contractor’s proprietary
data, which may be needed by other contractors in order to compete, or in
some cases its reliance on a particular contractor’s expertise. In other
instances, agencies have used the competition exception allowed for the
SBA’s section 8(a) business development program, which provides
agencies with an easy and fast method to award contracts without using
Page 211 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Promoting Competition for Federal Contracts
Can Produce Savings
full and open competition. Congress created the 8(a) program to help
small disadvantaged businesses access the federal procurement market
and eventually compete successfully in the U.S. economy. But there have
been concerns about the lack of competition in the program, such as large,
sole-source contracts awarded to 8(a) firms owned by Alaska Native
Corporations, which have special advantages in the 8(a) program. In
response to those concerns, legislation now requires agencies to provide
more scrutiny of noncompetitive contracts over $20 million awarded
under SBA’s 8(a) program.
Another issue involves the extent of competition actually achieved.
Specifically, the government obligates billions of dollars every year on
procurements categorized as competitive even though only one offer was
received. There is currently no requirement for agencies to assess the
reasons why only one offer was received. GAO reported that the
government’s requirements can influence the number of offers received
under competitive solicitations. For example, when existing contracts
expire and are opened to competition, the new contract’s requirements
may be written so restrictively that they are geared toward the holder of
the current contract. GAO has recommended that the Office of Federal
Procurement Policy (OFPP) determine whether the regulations should be
amended to require agencies to evaluate the circumstances leading to only
one offer being received and to identify additional steps that can be taken
to increase the likelihood that multiple offers will be submitted in the
future. The OFPP Administrator agreed with GAO’s recommendation.
GAO work also shows that agencies do not always use a competitive
process when establishing or using blanket purchase agreements (BPA)
under the General Services Administration’s schedules program. These are
agreements agencies put in place in advance of known requirements,
which then may be used to order goods or services quickly when specific
needs arise. Agencies have frequently entered into BPAs with just one
vendor, even though multiple vendors could satisfy agency needs. And
even when agencies entered into BPAs with multiple vendors, GAO has
found that agencies have not always held subsequent competitions among
those vendors for orders under the BPAs, even though such competitions
at the ordering level are required. GAO recommended that OFPP consider
amending the regulations to clarify this requirement, and OFPP agreed. By
not consistently promoting competition, federal government agencies have
not taken advantage of opportunities for significant cost savings.
Page 212 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Promoting Competition for Federal Contracts
Can Produce Savings
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the executive agency that
oversees the federal procurement process, has provided additional
guidance for agencies to promote competition in contracting, and improve
the effectiveness of their competition practices. In July 2009, OMB called
for agencies to reduce obligations under new contract actions that are
awarded using high-risk contracting authorities by 10 percent in fiscal year
2010. These high-risk contracts include, among other considerations, those
that are awarded noncompetitively and those that are structured as
competitive but for which only one offer is received. While sufficient data
are not yet available to determine whether this goal was met, GAO is
currently reviewing the agencies’ savings plans to identify steps taken
toward that goal, and will continue to monitor the progress agencies make
toward achieving this and any subsequent goals set by OMB. Further, OMB
has challenged agencies to take immediate action to aggressively seek
deeper discounts on BPAs.
In addition to legislation and guidance, promoting competition in
contracting to the greatest extent possible requires overcoming
conventional thinking. For example, because program officials have an
essential role in the acquisition process, it is important that these officials,
not just contracting officers, actively promote competition. This means not
insisting on retaining incumbent contractors even when competition is
possible. Keeping an incumbent contractor in place without competition
simply because the contractor is doing a good job, or resisting legitimate
suggestions that competition be used even though it may take longer,
could result in missed opportunities for savings.
By more consistently promoting competition in contracts, federal agencies
would have greater opportunities to take advantage of the effectiveness of
the marketplace and potentially achieve billions of dollars in cost savings.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related products Framework for
listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Federal Contracting: Opportunities Exist to Increase Competition and
Assess Reasons When Only One Offer Is Received. GAO-10-833.
Washington, D.C.: July 26, 2010.
Recovery Act: Contracting Approaches and Oversight Used by Selected
Federal Agencies and States. GAO-10-809. Washington, D.C.: July 10, 2010.
Page 213 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Promoting Competition for Federal Contracts
Can Produce Savings
Contract Management: Agencies Are Not Maximizing Opportunities for
Competition or Savings under Blanket Purchase Agreements despite
Significant Increase in Usage. GAO-09-792. Washington, D.C.: September
9, 2009.
High-Risk Series: An Update. GAO-09-271. Washington, D.C.: January 22,
2009.
Department of State Contract for Security Installation at Embassies.
GAO-07-34R. Washington, D.C.: November 8, 2006.
Contract Management: Increased Use of Alaska Native Corporations’
Special 8(a) Provisions Calls for Tailored Oversight. GAO-06-399.
Washington, D.C.: April 27, 2006.
Contract Security Guards: Army’s Guard Program Requires Greater
Oversight and Reassessment of Acquisition Approach. GAO-06-284.
Washington, D.C.: April 3, 2006.
For additional information about this area, contact John Hutton at Area Contact
(202) 512-4841 or huttonj@gao.gov.
Page 214 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Applying Strategic Sourcing Best Practices
throughout the Federal Procurement System
Could Produce Significant Savings
Applying Strategic Sourcing Best Practices throughout
the Federal Procurement System Could Produce
Significant Savings
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Since 2002, spending on federal contracts has more than doubled to about
$540 billion in 2009, consuming a significant share of agencies’
discretionary budgets. Because procurement at federal departments and
agencies generally is decentralized, the federal government is not fully
leveraging its aggregate buying power to obtain the most advantageous
terms and conditions for its procurements.
In the private sector, however, an approach called strategic sourcing has
been used since the 1980s to reduce procurement costs at companies with
large supplier bases and high procurement costs. Strategic sourcing is a
process sometimes led by a central procurement organization that improves
purchasing activities by moving a company away from numerous individual
procurements to a broader aggregate approach. Leading companies GAO
reviewed in 2002 found they could save billions of dollars and improve the
quality of the products and services received by using strategic sourcing.
Bringing about such changes was not easy, but the strategic sourcing best
practices of leading companies GAO studied can serve as a framework to
guide federal strategic sourcing efforts.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
The federal government could save billions of dollars annually by
leveraging its enormous buying power. Like the federal government, major
companies in the private sector rely on products and services from
numerous suppliers, and many have struggled with methods to better
manage their purchasing. GAO has reported that to reduce costs, improve
productivity, and more effectively procure products and services, many
companies have adopted a strategic sourcing approach—centralizing and
reorganizing their procurement operations to get the best value for the
company as a whole. The federal government could do the same and
realize significant savings as a result.
The leading companies GAO studied in 2002 made a number of dramatic
changes to the way they managed procurement and found that these
changes, in turn, resulted in significant cost savings and other
improvements. These changes generally began with a corporate decision
by top leaders to pursue a strategic procurement approach. This approach
involved a range of activities—from developing a better picture of what
the company was spending on various types of supplies and services, to
taking an enterprisewide approach to procurement, to developing new
ways of doing business. Specifically, once top leaders committed to taking
a strategic approach, the companies took a hard look at how much they
were spending on products and services and from whom. By using this
Page 215 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Applying Strategic Sourcing Best Practices
throughout the Federal Procurement System
Could Produce Significant Savings
“spend analysis” to arm themselves with knowledge, the companies
identified opportunities to leverage their buying power, reduce costs, and
better manage their suppliers. The companies also instituted a series of
structural, process, and role changes aimed at moving away from a
fragmented procurement process to a more efficient and effective
enterprisewide process.
Applying a strategic sourcing approach in the private sector clearly has paid
dividends. Studies have reported significant cost savings for some
companies of 10 percent to 20 percent of their total procurement costs. For
example, GAO identified one 2002 survey of 147 companies in 22 industries
that indicated a strategic sourcing approach produced savings of more than
$13 billion in the year 2000 alone. Saving even 10 percent of total federal
procurement spending would produce more than $50 billion in savings
annually.
Since 2005, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has encouraged
agencies to coordinate their buys through Federal Strategic Sourcing
Initiative (FSSI) interagency procurement vehicles1 awarded by the
General Services Administration. In addition, some agencies have awarded
agencywide (also referred to as enterprisewide) contracts awarded under
strategic sourcing programs within an individual federal department or
agency. In July 2010, OMB’s congressional testimony on the status of
improvements to federal acquisition cited examples of what progress is
being achieved under agency strategic sourcing efforts. Under the FSSI
effort for example, a team of agencies selected office products in late 2009
as a promising strategic sourcing opportunity to combine buying power
for about $250 million in requirements. This office products initiative is
expected to reduce costs at these agencies by as much as 20 percent, for a
total savings of almost $200 million over the next 4 years. Further, an
agencywide initiative at the Department of Homeland Security—which
accounted for $14.3 billion in contract spending in 2009—is expected to
save $87 million during the next 6 years for a standardized suite of
discounted desktop operating systems, e-mail, and office automation
products.
1The FSSI was launched in 2005 to strategically source across federal agencies and create a
strategic sourcing community of practice. The FSSI is led by the General Services
Administration, in partnership with the Department of Treasury, with active participation
by more than 20 federal agencies. FSSI contracts have been made for office products,
domestic delivery services, and wireless device ordering and expense management
services.
Page 216 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Applying Strategic Sourcing Best Practices
throughout the Federal Procurement System
Could Produce Significant Savings
These results demonstrate the potential to achieve significant savings
through the use of strategic sourcing approaches. The starting point for
such efforts, however, is having good data on current spending. But
according to an April 2010 GAO report, OMB and agencies cannot be sure
the government is fully leveraging its buying power because of the lack of
comprehensive, reliable data to effectively manage and oversee an
important segment of total procurement spending: interagency and
agencywide contracts. That is, the total number of and sales volume of these
contracts are unknown because the federal government’s official
procurement database does not fully capture this information. To provide
better transparency and a coordinated approach, GAO has recommended
that OMB ensure that departments and agencies accurately record these
contracts in the procurement data system. The President has called on OMB
to issue governmentwide guidance on improving the effectiveness of
government acquisition. In response, OMB’s 2009 guidance calls on agencies to
increase their participation in strategic sourcing initiatives that will leverage
federal buying power. Because these types of contracts are now being used
as part of the governmentwide strategic sourcing initiative, improved
knowledge will help identify additional opportunities for savings and ensure
that these contracts are being used in an efficient and effective manner.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Acquisition leaders across the government need to more fully embrace the
strategic sourcing initiative beginning with collecting, maintaining, and
analyzing data on current procurement spending. Then, agencies have to
conduct assessments of acquisition and supply chain functions to initiate
enterprisewide transformations. Only then will they be able to fully
implement strategic sourcing programs that drive immediate and long-
term efficiencies.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related products Framework for
listed below with updates provided by more recent OMB testimony. GAO
Analysis determined that the data it used were sufficiently reliable for its purposes.
Related GAO
Products
Streamlining Government: Opportunities Exist to Strengthen OMB’s
Approach to Improving Efficiency. GAO-10-394. Washington, D.C.:
May 7, 2010.
Contracting Strategies: Data and Oversight Problems Hamper
Opportunities to Leverage Value of Interagency and Enterprisewide
Contracts. GAO-10-367. Washington, D.C.: April 29, 2010.
Page 217 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Applying Strategic Sourcing Best Practices
throughout the Federal Procurement System
Could Produce Significant Savings
U.S. Postal Service: Purchasing Changes Seem Promising, but
Ombudsman Revisions and Continued Oversight Are Needed.
GAO-06-190. Washington, D.C.: December 15, 2005.
Amtrak Management: Systemic Problems Require Actions to Improve
Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Accountability. GAO-06-145. Washington,
D.C.: October 4, 2005.
Homeland Security: Successes and Challenges in DHS’s Efforts to Create
an Effective Acquisition Organization. GAO-05-179. Washington, D.C.:
March 29, 2005.
Best Practices: Using Spend Analysis to Help Agencies Take a More
Strategic Approach to Procurement. GAO-04-870. Washington, D.C.:
September 16, 2004.
Opportunities for Congressional Oversight and Improved Use of
Taxpayer Funds: Budgetary Implications of Selected GAO Work.
GAO-04-649. Washington, D.C.: May 7, 2004.
Contract Management: High-Level Attention Needed to Transform DOD
Services Acquisition. GAO-03-935. Washington, D.C.: September 10, 2003.
Opportunities for Oversight and Improved Use of Taxpayer Funds:
Examples from Selected GAO Work. GAO-03-1006. Washington, D.C.:
August 1, 2003.
Best Practices: Improved Knowledge of DOD Service Contracts Could
Reveal Significant Savings. GAO-03-661. Washington, D.C.: June 9, 2003.
Best Practices: Taking a Strategic Approach Could Improve DOD’s
Acquisition of Services. GAO-02-230. Washington, D.C.: January 18, 2002.
For additional information about this area, contact John Needham at Area Contact
(202) 512-4841 or needhamjk1@gao.gov.
Page 218 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Adherence to New Guidance on Award Fee
Contracts Could Improve Agencies’ Use of
Award Fees and Produce Savings
Adherence to New Guidance on Award Fee Contracts
Could Improve Agencies’ Use of Award Fees and
Produce Savings
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
GAO has reported that several major agencies spent over $300 billion from
fiscal year 2004 through fiscal year 2008 on contracts that included
monetary incentives known as award fees. The purpose of these incentives
is to motivate enhanced contractor performance. In 2005, however, GAO
found that the Department of Defense (DOD) paid billions of dollars in
award fees regardless of acquisition outcomes. In 2007, GAO found
significant disconnects between program results and fees paid at the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration. In 2009, GAO reported
that five agencies had paid more than $6 billion in award fees, but were
not consistently following award fee guidance and did not have methods
for evaluating the effectiveness of an award fee as a tool for improving
contractor performance.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
GAO has identified three primary issues related to the use of award fees
that, if addressed, could improve the use of these incentives and produce
savings. Specifically, (1) award fees are not always linked to acquisition
outcomes, (2) award fee payments are made despite unsatisfactory
contract performance, and (3) contractors have been permitted to earn
previously unearned award fees in subsequent evaluation periods, a
practice known as “rollover,” where unearned award fees are transferred
from one evaluation period to a subsequent period, thus allowing
contractors additional opportunities to earn previously unearned fees.
GAO has made recommendations to address these issues, several of which
have been reflected in revised Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
guidance and in amendments to the Federal Acquisition Regulation,
effective October 2010. The key to improving the use of these fees,
however, will be whether agencies change their practices to conform to
the revised policies.
Although required by OMB guidance since 2007, GAO reported in 2009 that
award fees were not always linked to acquisition outcomes. But when
efforts are made to do so, savings can be achieved. For example, the Joint
Strike Fighter program created metrics for areas such as software
performance, warfighter capability, and cost control that were previously
assessed using less-defined criteria. By using metrics to assess
performance, the Joint Strike Fighter program paid an estimated $29
million less in fees in the 2 years since the policy changed than it might
have when applying the former criteria.
As GAO previously reported, OMB guidance directed agencies to ensure
that no award fee should be paid for performance that does not meet
contract requirements or is judged to be unsatisfactory. GAO found in
practice the guidance was not always followed. Specifically, GAO reported
Page 219 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Adherence to New Guidance on Award Fee
Contracts Could Improve Agencies’ Use of
Award Fees and Produce Savings
in 2009 that programs across the agencies reviewed used evaluation tools
that could allow contractors to earn award fees without performing at a
level that is acceptable to the government under the terms of the contract.
For example, a Department of Energy research contract allowed the
contractor to earn up to 84 percent of the award fee for performance that
was defined as not meeting expectations. In addition, GAO found two
Department of Health and Human Services contracts, including a contract
for Medicare claims processing, in which it was possible for the contractor
to receive at least 49 percent of the award fee for unsatisfactory
performance. Some programs within DOD, by contrast, have prohibited
award fee payments for unsatisfactory performance. For example, GAO
found that the Air Force saved $10 million on a contract for a satellite
program by not paying an award fee to a contractor with unsatisfactory
performance.
DOD guidance on award fees since 2006 has been that the practice of
rollover should be limited to exceptional circumstances to avoid
compromising the integrity of the award fee process. GAO found that
based on contracts reviewed in 2005, DOD rolled over an average of 51
percent of the total unearned fees. For example, the contractor for the F
22 Raptor received over 90 percent of the award fee, including fee paid in
subsequent evaluation periods, even though the program’s cost and
schedule targets had to be revised 14 times. By later limiting rollover, GAO
estimated in 2009 that DOD would save over $450 million on 8 programs
from April 2006 through October 2010. A DOD Inspector General report in
2010, however, indicates that rollover is still being used. The recent
amendments to the Federal Acquisition Regulation now prohibit rollover
of unearned award fees.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Recent changes to the Federal Acquisition Regulation and practices on
award fees are encouraging:
• Amendments to the Federal Acquisition Regulation in 2010 have
prohibited the practices of rollover of unearned award fees and
awarding fees to contractors that have performed unsatisfactorily.
Some agencies are updating and disseminating guidance that could
increase the pace and success rate of implementing these new
regulations.
• Further, agencies such as DOD are increasing the likelihood that award
fees would be better linked to acquisition outcomes by implementing
key practices. For example, DOD is implementing a peer review
Page 220 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Adherence to New Guidance on Award Fee
Contracts Could Improve Agencies’ Use of
Award Fees and Produce Savings
process for contracts over a certain dollar threshold that includes
examining the plan for administering award fees.
• However, sustained progress in the use of award fees will require that
contracting agencies adhere to the recent changes to the Federal
Acquisition Regulation. Enhanced oversight by OMB and Congress may
be useful as well.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Defense Acquisitions: Status of DOD’s Implementation of Independent
Management Reviews for Services Acquisitions. GAO-10-284.
Washington, D.C.: January 28, 2010.
Federal Contracting: Application of OMB Guidance Can Improve Use of
Award Fee Contracts. GAO-09-839T. Washington, D.C.: August 3, 2009.
Federal Contracting: Guidance on Award Fees Has Led to Better
Practices but Is Not Consistently Applied. GAO-09-630. Washington, D.C.:
May 29, 2009.
Defense Contract Management: DOD’s Lack of Adherence to Key
Contracting Principles on Iraqi Oil Contract Put Government Interests
at Risk. GAO-07-839. Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2007.
NASA Procurement: Use of Award Fees for Achieving Program Outcomes
Should Be Improved. GAO-07-58. Washington, D.C.: January 17, 2007.
Defense Acquisitions: DOD Wastes Billions of Dollars through Poorly
Structured Incentives. GAO-06-409T. Washington, D.C.: April 5, 2006.
Defense Acquisitions: DOD Has Paid Billions in Award and Incentive
Fees Regardless of Acquisition Outcomes. GAO-06-66. Washington, D.C.:
December 19, 2005.
For additional information about this area, contact John Hutton at Area Contact
(202) 512-4841 or huttonj@gao.gov.
Page 221 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Agencies Could Realize Cost Savings by
Disposal of Unneeded Federal Real Property
Agencies Could Realize Cost Savings by Disposal of
Unneeded Federal Real Property
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The federal real property portfolio is vast and diverse. In fiscal year 2009,
the federal inventory included over 3 billion square feet of building space
and over 900,000 assets. The Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs,
the U.S. Postal Service, and General Services Administration (GSA) hold
the majority of federally owned and leased space.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is responsible for reviewing
agencies’ progress on federal real property management and chairs the
Federal Real Property Council, which includes representatives from the
major property-holding agencies. Congressional committees that provide
oversight of this area include the Senate Environment and Public Works,
Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, House
Transportation and Infrastructure, House Oversight and Government
Reform, and appropriations committees.
GAO designated management of federal real property as a high-risk area in
2003 due to problems with excess and underutilized property, among other
things.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Many federal agencies hold real property they do not need, including
property that is excess or underutilized.1 Disposing of these properties
presents potential governmentwide cost savings by generating sales
proceeds, reducing maintenance and operating costs, and avoiding rent
costs by ending leases. According to data from the Federal Real Property
Profile, a central database, in fiscal year 2009, agencies reported 45,190
underutilized buildings, an increase of 1,830 such buildings from the
previous fiscal year. These figures are conservative, as they do not include
the U.S. Postal Service, a major property holder that does not report to the
Federal Real Property Profile. Excess and underutilized properties present
significant potential risks to federal agencies because they are costly to
maintain. For example, in fiscal year 2009, agencies reported underutilized
buildings accounted for $1.66 billion in annual operating costs. Excess
properties also represent a lost opportunity to generate sales revenue for
the federal government. Many assets are no longer effectively aligned with,
or responsive to, agencies’ changing missions. In April 2007 GAO reported
1“Excess property” has been determined by the controlling federal agency as not required
to meet the agency’s needs. “Not utilized property” is property not occupied for the
agency’s current purposes. “Underutilized property” is property that is used only at
irregular periods or is used for purposes that can be satisfied with only a portion of the
property.
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Agencies Could Realize Cost Savings by
Disposal of Unneeded Federal Real Property
that technological advances have changed the way the public interacts
with the federal government, and this change will have significant
implications for the type and location of property needed in the 21st
century.
In 2004, Executive Order 13327 established the Federal Real Property
Council and required senior real property officers to, among other things,
develop and implement an agency asset management plan, identify and
categorize all real property owned and leased by their agency, and
prioritize actions needed to improve the operational and financial
management of the agency’s real property inventory.2 According to OMB
officials, a governmentwide initiative started under the executive order
focused on disposing of unneeded assets. In a June 2010 Presidential
Memorandum to federal agencies, the administration established a new
target of saving $3 billion through disposals and other methods by the end
of fiscal year 2012. However, federal agencies continue to face obstacles to
disposing of unneeded property, such as competing stakeholder interests.
For example, the U.S. Postal Service has faced resistance to facility
closures and consolidations because of concerns of how these actions
might affect jobs, service, and communities as GAO reported in April 2010.
Legal and budgetary limitations also have implications for real property
decisions. For example, as GAO reported in April 2007, federal agencies
are required by law to assess and pay for any environmental cleanup that
may be needed before disposing of a property—a process that may require
years of study and result in significant costs, and in some cases, may
exceed the costs of continuing to maintain the excess property in a shut
down status. If the government does not address the issue of excess and
underutilized property, the costs to maintain these properties will
continue to rise, putting the government at risk for lost dollars and missed
opportunities.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
The recent Presidential Memorandum’s targeted $3 billion in savings
related to property disposals and other methods represents another step in
realigning the federal portfolio to agencies’ missions and needs. However,
OMB could assist agencies in meeting this target by implementing GAO’s
April 2007 recommendation of developing an action plan to address key
problems associated with disposing of unneeded real property, including
2Executive Order 13327 applies to 24 executive branch departments and agencies but not to
the U.S. Postal Service, which is an independent establishment in the executive branch.
Page 223 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Agencies Could Realize Cost Savings by
Disposal of Unneeded Federal Real Property
reducing the effect of competing stakeholder interests on real property
decisions. OMB agreed with the recommendation but has yet to fully
implement it.
The cost savings for real property disposals are not limited to a one-time
savings or income. Once a lease is ended, the government continues to
save the rent payments from that property indefinitely. As GAO reported in
June 2010, operations and maintenance costs typically represent from 60
percent to 85 percent of the costs of a facility over its lifetime, while
design and construction costs represent about 5 percent to 10 percent of
these costs. Thus, once the government disposes of an owned property, it
avoids costs related to operations and maintenance that would have
otherwise continue to accrue, eventually representing approximately 10
times the design and construction costs of the property.
Framework for
Analysis
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO
products listed below. In addition, to update existing information on this
topic, GAO staff interviewed federal government officials from OMB and
real property-holding agencies (Departments of Defense, Homeland
Security, Energy, the Interior, State, and Veterans Affairs; U.S. Postal
Service; and GSA), and analyzed governmentwide and agency-level real
property plans and reports.
Related GAO
Products
Federal Real Property: The Government Faces Challenges to Disposing of
Unneeded Buildings. GAO-11-370T. Washington, D.C.: February 10, 2011.
Federal Courthouse Construction: Better Planning, Oversight, and
Courtroom Sharing Needed to Address Future Costs. GAO-10-417.
Washington, D.C.: June 21, 2010.
U.S. Postal Service: Strategies and Options to Facilitate Progress toward
Financial Viability. GAO-10-455. Washington, D.C.: April 12, 2010.
VA Real Property: VA Emphasizes Enhanced-Use Leases to Manage Its
Real Property Portfolio. GAO-09-776T. Washington, D.C.: June 10, 2009.
Federal Real Property: Authorities and Actions Regarding Enhanced Use
Leases and Sale of Unneeded Real Property. GAO-09-283R. Washington,
D.C.: February 17, 2009.
Page 224 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Agencies Could Realize Cost Savings by
Disposal of Unneeded Federal Real Property
U.S. Postal Service Facilities: Improvements in Data Would Strengthen
Maintenance and Alignment of Access to Retail Services. GAO-08-41.
Washington, D.C.: December 10, 2007.
Federal Real Property: DHS Has Made Progress, but Additional Actions
Are Needed to Address Real Property Management and Security
Challenges. GAO-07-658. Washington, D.C.: June 22, 2007.
U.S. Postal Service: Mail Processing Realignment Efforts Under Way
Need Better Integration and Explanation. GAO-07-717. Washington, D.C.:
June 21, 2007.
Federal Real Property: Progress Made Toward Addressing Problems, but
Underlying Obstacles Continue to Hamper Reform. GAO-07-349.
Washington, D.C.: April 13, 2007.
Federal Real Property: Most Public Benefit Conveyances Used as
Intended, but Opportunities Exist to Enhance Federal Oversight.
GAO-06-511. Washington, D.C.: June 21, 2006.
Federal Real Property: Further Actions Needed to Address Long-standing
and Complex Problems. GAO-05-848T. Washington, D.C.: June 22, 2005.
Federal Real Property: Vacant and Underutilized Properties at GSA, VA,
and USPS. GAO-03-747. Washington, D.C.: August 19, 2003.
VA Health Care: Improved Planning Needed for Management of Excess
Real Property. GAO-03-326. Washington, D.C.: January 29, 2003.
For additional information about this area, contact David Wise at Area Contact
(202) 512-5731 or wised@gao.gov.
Page 225 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Cost Analyses Used for Making
Federal Facility Ownership and Leasing
Decisions Could Lead to Cost Savings
Governmentwide
Improved Cost Analyses Used for Making Federal
Facility Ownership and Leasing Decisions Could Lead
to Cost Savings Governmentwide
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Federal building ownership is often more cost-effective than leasing to meet
long-term space needs, and its increased use could save millions of dollars
over the period used. Federal agencies rely extensively on leasing, and
leased about 289 million square feet of buildings in 2008. The General
Services Administration (GSA), the central leasing agent for most agencies,
leases more than 8,000 assets and now leases more space than it owns.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is responsible for reviewing
agencies’ progress on real property management and chairs the Federal
Real Property Council, which includes representatives from major
property-holding agencies. Congressional committees that provide
oversight of this area include the Senate Committee on Environment and
Public Works, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs,
House Transportation and Infrastructure, House Oversight and
Government Reform, and appropriations committees.
GAO added managing federal real property to its high-risk list in 2003 due
in part to costly leasing.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
GAO’s work over the years has repeatedly shown that building ownership
often costs less than operating leases, especially for long-term space needs.
• In December 1989, GAO found that GSA could have saved $12 billion
over 30 years by constructing instead of leasing real property in 43
projects.
• In July 1995, GAO found that 55 of 73 GSA proposed operating leases
cost $700 million more than construction over 30 years.
• In January 2008, GAO found that decisions to lease selected federal
properties were not always driven by cost-effectiveness considerations.
Four of seven GSA leases GAO analyzed were more costly than
construction by $83.3 million based on 30-year net present value
calculations. For example, the decision to lease the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s field office in Chicago, Illinois, instead of constructing a
building the government would own, was estimated to cost about $40
million more over 30 years. GSA officials stated that limited availability
of upfront capital and security considerations, among other reasons,
prevented ownership at that time.
While federal ownership is less expensive than leasing in many cases, in
certain situations it is not. For example, in 2008, GAO found that for three
Page 226 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Cost Analyses Used for Making
Federal Facility Ownership and Leasing
Decisions Could Lead to Cost Savings
Governmentwide
of seven GSA leases it analyzed, leasing was less costly than construction
by $35 million over 30 years. Agency operational requirements such as
immediate space needs, security requirements, or desire for flexibility as
well as short-term or small space needs are also situations where leasing is
often preferred by agencies and may be economically advantageous over
ownership.
Federal budget scorekeeping rules require the full cost of construction to
be recorded upfront in the budget, whereas only the annual lease
payments plus cancellation costs need to be recorded for operating leases.
As a result, leases appear less expensive in any single year when compared
to new construction even though they generally are more costly over time.
GAO has raised the scorekeeping issue as a challenge that needs to be
addressed in several reports and testimonies over the past 20 years.
According to GSA officials, constraints on capital funding influence their
ability to pursue ownership as a realistic option in many cases. If not
addressed, GAO expects continued reliance on leasing at a potentially high
cost over the long term.
The Federal Real Property Profile, a real property inventory, is an
important tool available to track governmentwide trends on real property
management, including leasing. Updated annually, it includes information
helpful to measuring overall volume as well as annual operating costs of
leased versus owned properties, among other factors.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
OMB has not yet implemented GAO’s recommendation, made in April 2007
and January 2008, to develop a strategy to reduce agencies’ reliance on
costly leasing where ownership would result in long-term savings. Such a
strategy could identify the conditions under which leasing is an acceptable
alternative, include an analysis of real property budget scoring issues, and
provide an assessment of viable alternatives. This strategy would inform
future decision making on this difficult issue. As GAO reported in January
2008, implementation challenges such as obtaining consensus on specific
changes to scoring rules are expected. Efforts to resolve the leasing
challenge could benefit from input from Federal Real Property Council
and stakeholders, including Congress.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below, interviews with federal government officials at
Analysis OMB and major property holding agencies including GSA, and analysis of
governmentwide and agency-level real property plans and reports.
Page 227 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Cost Analyses Used for Making
Federal Facility Ownership and Leasing
Decisions Could Lead to Cost Savings
Governmentwide
Related GAO
Products
Building Security: New Federal Standards Hold Promise, But Could Be
Strengthened to Better Protect Leased Space. GAO-10-873. Washington,
D.C.: September 22, 2010.
Federal Real Property: An Update on High Risk Issues. GAO-09-801T.
Washington, D.C.: July 15, 2009.
Government Printing Office: Issues Faced in Obtaining a New Facility.
GAO-09-392R. Washington, D.C.: February 20, 2009.
Federal Real Property: Strategy Needed to Address Agencies’ Long-
standing Reliance on Costly Leasing. GAO-08-197. Washington, D.C.:
January 24, 2008.
General Services Administration: Improvements Needed in Managing
Delegated Authority of Real Property Activities. GAO-07-1000.
Washington, D.C.: September 5, 2007.
Federal Real Property: Progress Made Toward Addressing Problems, but
Underlying Obstacles Continue to Hamper Reform. GAO-07-349.
Washington, D.C.: April 13, 2007.
GSA Leasing: Initial Implementation of the National Broker Services
Contracts Demonstrates Need for Improvements. GAO-07-17. Washington,
D.C.: January 31, 2007.
Federal Real Property: NIH Has Improved Its Leasing Process, but Needs
to Provide Congress with Information on Some Leases. GAO-06-918.
Washington, D.C.: September 8, 2006.
Federal Real Property: Further Actions Needed to Address Long-standing
and Complex Problems. GAO-05-848T. Washington, D.C.: June 22, 2005.
General Services Administration: Factors Affecting the Construction
and Operating Costs of Federal Buildings. GAO-03-609T. Washington,
D.C.: April 2, 2003.
General Services Administration: Opportunities for Cost Savings in the
Public Buildings Area. GAO/T-GGD-95-149. Washington, D.C.: July 13,
1995.
Public Buildings: Budget Scorekeeping Prompts Difficult Decisions.
GAO/T-AIMD/GGD-94-43. Washington, D.C.: October 28, 1993.
Page 228 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improved Cost Analyses Used for Making
Federal Facility Ownership and Leasing
Decisions Could Lead to Cost Savings
Governmentwide
Federal Office Space: Increased Ownership Would Result in Significant
Savings. GAO/GGD-90-11. Washington, D.C.: December 22, 1989.
For additional information about this area, contact David Wise at Area Contact
(202) 512-2834 or wised@gao.gov.
Page 229 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
OMB’s IT Dashboard Can Further Help
Identify Opportunities to Invest More
Efficiently in Information Technology
OMB’s IT Dashboard Can Further Help Identify
Opportunities to Invest More Efficiently in Information
Technology
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Each year the federal government spends billions of dollars on
information technology (IT) investments; federal spending on IT has risen
to an estimated $79 billion for fiscal year 2011. Over the past several years,
GAO has reported and testified on the Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) initiatives to highlight troubled IT projects, justify investments, and
use project management tools. Given the importance of transparency,
oversight, and management of the government’s IT investments, in June
2009 OMB established a public Web site, referred to as the IT Dashboard,
that provides detailed information on about 800 investments at 27 federal
agencies, including ratings of their performance against cost and schedule
targets. The public dissemination of this information is intended to allow
OMB; other oversight bodies, including Congress; and the general public to
hold agencies accountable for results and performance.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
In July 2010, GAO reported that OMB’s Dashboard had increased
transparency and oversight, but that improvements were needed for the
Dashboard to more fully realize its potential as a management and cost-
savings tool. Specifically, the cost and schedule ratings on the Dashboard
were not always accurate for the investments that GAO reviewed. GAO
found that four of the eight selected investments had notable
discrepancies in either cost or schedule ratings. For example, the
Dashboard indicated that one investment had a less-than-5-percent cost
variance for every month from July 2009 through January 2010. However,
GAO’s analysis showed that this investment had a cost performance
variance from 10 percent to less than 15 percent in December 2009
through January 2010. In another case, an investment on the Dashboard
reported that it has been less than 30 days behind schedule since July
2009. Investment data that GAO examined, however, showed that the
investment was behind schedule by 30 days to almost 90 days from
September to December 2009.
A primary reason for the data inaccuracies was that while the Dashboard
was intended to represent near real-time performance information, the
cost and schedule ratings did not take into consideration current
performance. As a result, the ratings were based on outdated information.
For example, cost ratings for each of the investments were based on data
from 2 months to almost 2 years old. Another issue with the ratings
stemmed from the wide variation in the number of milestones agencies
reported, which was partly because OMB’s guidance was too general.
Having too many milestones can mask performance problems because the
performance of each milestone (dated and recent) was equally averaged
into the ratings. This means that investments that performed well during
Page 230 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
OMB’s IT Dashboard Can Further Help
Identify Opportunities to Invest More
Efficiently in Information Technology
previously completed milestones can maintain ratings that reflect good
performance, even if they begin to perform poorly. Conversely, having too
few milestones limits the amount of information available to rate
performance, allowing agencies to potentially distort their ratings.
GAO also assessed whether the data on the Dashboard were being used as
a tool to improve the management of IT investments. Officials at three of
the five agencies in GAO’s review stated they were not using the
Dashboard to manage their investments because they already had existing
means to do so; officials at the other two agencies indicated they were
using the Dashboard to supplement their existing management processes.
The Federal Chief Information Officer stated that the Dashboard greatly
improved oversight capabilities compared to previously used mechanisms
and that it has increased the accountability of agencies’ chief information
officers and established much-needed visibility. OMB officials indicated
they had relied on the Dashboard as a management tool, including using
investment trend data to identify and address performance issues and to
select investments for a TechStat session—a review of selected IT
investments between OMB and agency leadership that is led by the
Federal Chief Information Officer. According to OMB, as of December
2010, 58 TechStat sessions have been held with federal agencies.
Additionally, OMB officials stated that, as a result of these sessions, 11
investments have been reduced in scope and 4 have been cancelled. For
example, TechStats on
• the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Transformation
Initiative investment resulted in the reduction of projects from 29 to 7
and the limit of fiscal year 2010 funds for these 7 priority projects to
$85.7 million (from $138 million); and
• the National Archives and Records Administration’s Electronic
Records Archives investment resulted in six corrective action steps,
including halting fiscal year 2012 development funding pending the
completion of a strategic plan.
To better ensure that the Dashboard provides meaningful ratings and
accurate investment data, GAO recommended that OMB report on the
effect of planned changes to the Dashboard to improve the accuracy of
ratings and to provide guidance to agencies to standardize milestone
reporting. OMB agreed with these recommendations and initiated work to
update the Dashboard to factor the performance of ongoing milestones
into cost and schedule ratings.
Page 231 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
OMB’s IT Dashboard Can Further Help
Identify Opportunities to Invest More
Efficiently in Information Technology
Finally, GAO has work under way to evaluate the data provided by the
Dashboard in order to determine the extent to which agencies may be
investing in projects in the same line of business. GAO is also reviewing
OMB’s current approach to identifying and acting on such duplicative
investments.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
According to the Federal Chief Information Officer, use of the Dashboard
as a management and oversight tool has already resulted in a $3 billion
budget reduction. OMB’s planned improvements to the Dashboard, along
with full implementation of GAO’s recommendations (as discussed above)
and the possible identification of duplicative investments, have the
potential to result in further significant savings. Additional opportunities
for potential cost savings exist with the use of the Dashboard by executive
branch agencies to identify and make decisions about poorly performing
investments, as well as its continued use by congressional committees to
support critical oversight efforts.
The information above is based on ongoing work on the Dashboard and Framework for
related GAO products listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Information Technology: OMB’s Dashboard Has Increased Transparency
and Oversight, but Improvements Needed. GAO-10-701. Washington, D.C.:
July 16, 2010.
Information Technology: Management and Oversight of Projects
Totaling Billions of Dollars Need Attention. GAO-09-624T. Washington,
D.C.: April 28, 2009.
Information Technology: OMB and Agencies Need to Improve Planning,
Management, and Oversight of Projects Totaling Billions of Dollars.
GAO-08-1051T. Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2008.
Information Technology: Further Improvements Needed to Identify and
Oversee Poorly Planned and Performing Projects. GAO-07-1211T.
Washington, D.C.: September 20, 2007.
Information Technology: Improvements Needed to More Accurately
Identify and Better Oversee Risky Projects Totaling Billions of Dollars.
GAO-06-1099T. Washington, D.C.: September 7, 2006.
Page 232 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
OMB’s IT Dashboard Can Further Help
Identify Opportunities to Invest More
Efficiently in Information Technology
Information Technology: Agencies and OMB Should Strengthen
Processes for Identifying and Overseeing High Risk Projects.
GAO-06-647. Washington, D.C.: June 15, 2006.
Information Technology: OMB Can Make More Effective Use of Its
Investment Reviews. GAO-05-276. Washington, D.C.: April 15, 2005.
For additional information about this area, contact David A. Powner at Area Contact
(202) 512-9286 or pownerd@gao.gov.
Page 233 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Increasing Electronic Filing of Individual
Income Tax Returns Could Reduce IRS’s
Processing Costs and Ultimately Increase
Enforcement Revenue
Increasing Electronic Filing of Individual Income Tax
Returns Could Reduce IRS’s Processing Costs and
Ultimately Increase Enforcement Revenue
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) received more than 130 million
individual income tax returns during the 2010 filing season. The
percentage of returns filed electronically has increased from 52 percent in
2005 to 71 percent in 2010. However, in 2010, IRS still processed 40 million
tax returns filed on paper—some of which must be filed on paper due to
their complexity or required supplemental documentation. Electronic
filing benefits taxpayers by reducing processing errors and expediting
their refunds. It also benefits IRS because no transcription of tax data is
necessary, unlike for returns filed on paper.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Increasing electronic filing would reduce IRS’s return processing costs and
increase revenue by facilitating enforcement. As noted in GAO’s December
2010 report, IRS estimated savings of $3.10 per return for returns filed
electronically versus paper in fiscal year 2009. Millions of dollars in
processing costs could therefore be avoided by encouraging electronic
filing. Based on GAO’s prior reports from 2007 to 2010, IRS has three
opportunities to increase electronic filing of individual income tax returns:
Require tax software identification numbers: As noted in GAO’s
February 2009 report, having a more complete software identification
number would allow IRS to better target its research of ways to promote
electronic filing. IRS now requires software identification numbers for
returns prepared using software and then printed and submitted on paper,
but does not have plans to transcribe this information. More
comprehensive information about tax software versions used to prepare
both electronically-filed and paper returns would help inform research
into how the pricing and attributes of different software products affect
taxpayers’ willingness to use software and file electronically.
Prevent rejects of electronically filed returns: As noted in GAO’s
September 2009 report, IRS could also increase electronic filing by
working with taxpayers and their representatives to reduce the number of
rejected returns. As tax returns are received electronically, IRS begins a
series of automated checks to verify basic information (such as Social
Security numbers) and then rejects returns containing errors. If a return is
rejected, IRS sends an electronic notice with one or more error codes
explaining why the return was rejected, and how the error can be
corrected and the return resubmitted. However, some codes are very
general and cover multiple issues, while others are so narrow that they are
rarely used. Frustrated taxpayers may simply print and mail their returns
to IRS without making corrections leaving IRS to identify and correct the
Page 234 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Increasing Electronic Filing of Individual
Income Tax Returns Could Reduce IRS’s
Processing Costs and Ultimately Increase
Enforcement Revenue
errors and process the paper returns, thereby losing the benefits of
electronic filing.
Require bar coding: As noted in GAO’s November 2007 report, IRS could
require that tax software vendors encode relevant information in a bar
code that would be embedded on all paper returns printed from tax
software and mailed, as several states already do. IRS could then scan the
bar code to obtain electronic information such as a taxpayer’s Social
Security number and address from the return. While not as beneficial as
electronic filing, bar coding would still provide efficiencies over data
transcription and enable more information to be available electronically.
In December 2010, IRS reported that it is reviewing options to enhance
current systems with bar code capabilities and developing detailed
requirements and timetables.
In keeping with efforts to increase the availability of electronic tax data for
enforcement purposes, IRS could also increase the amount of tax data
available electronically by increasing the amount of data from paper tax
returns it transcribes into its computer databases. Currently, to control
data-entry costs, IRS does not transcribe all data from paper tax returns
into its computer databases, thus limiting information available
electronically for enforcement purposes. As noted in GAO’s November
2007 report, transcribing more or all return information, thus having it
available electronically, could help IRS target audits on noncompliant
taxpayers, avoid burdening compliant taxpayers with unnecessary audits,
and make more productive use of IRS’s audit resources. For example, in
2007 officials from one of IRS’s enforcement programs (Automated
Underreporter) estimated that having all tax return information available
electronically would increase tax revenue annually by $175 million.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
IRS generally agreed with GAO’s prior recommendation to require a more
complete software identification number, and said that it would do so by
the 2010 filing season. IRS has taken some actions such as requiring a
software identification number on printed returns but does not plan to
transcribe this information. GAO continues to believe that if IRS were to
collect more information via expanded software identification numbers on
tax returns, such information could support research into how software
affects electronic filing. GAO recognizes that there would be some
offsetting costs. However, increasing electronic filing could lower total tax
return processing costs by switching costly paper filing to more
economical electronic filing.
Page 235 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Increasing Electronic Filing of Individual
Income Tax Returns Could Reduce IRS’s
Processing Costs and Ultimately Increase
Enforcement Revenue
IRS agreed with GAO’s prior recommendations to develop a reject
prevention strategy, include external stakeholders in its reject working
group, develop an action plan for that group, and provide clearer
descriptions of why returns are being rejected. IRS has taken significant
action to address these recommendations in conjunction with its ongoing
research into advancing electronic filing.
IRS agreed with GAO’s prior recommendations that it should determine
actions needed to require software vendors to include bar codes on
printed individual income tax returns and the cost of those actions. While
bar coded paper returns are still more expensive to process than
electronically filed returns, states that require bar coding of returns report
that greater electronic access to return data has allowed them to more
easily verify information and improve enforcement. GAO continues to
believe that bar coding of printed returns has the potential to reduce
processing costs, facilitate access to taxpayer information, and improve
compliance. IRS has conducted further research on the burden to IRS and
software providers of requiring bar codes on printed returns as part of its
ongoing studies to promote electronic filing.
Finally, IRS agreed with GAO’s prior recommendation that more
comprehensive and easily accessible electronic return information would
facilitate enforcement efforts and thus increase revenue collected from
noncompliant taxpayers, and IRS is taking steps to study the issue. For
example, IRS recently identified options to increase electronic filing, but
has yet to define an overall strategy for doing so. As noted above, having
more tax return information available electronically could increase
revenues by at least hundreds of millions of dollars.
GAO expects to continue assessing IRS’s progress in addressing these
issues.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below and GAO’s work following up on the
Analysis recommendations from those products.
2010 Tax Filing Season: IRS’s Performance Improved in Some Key Related GAO
Areas, but Efficiency Gains Are Possible in Others. GAO-11-111.
Products Washington, D.C.: December 16, 2010.
Page 236 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Increasing Electronic Filing of Individual
Income Tax Returns Could Reduce IRS’s
Processing Costs and Ultimately Increase
Enforcement Revenue
Tax Administration: Opportunities Exist for IRS to Enhance Taxpayer
Service and Enforcement for the 2010 Filing Season. GAO-09-1026.
Washington, D.C.: September 23, 2009.
Tax Administration: Many Taxpayers Rely on Tax Software and IRS
Needs to Assess Associated Risks. GAO-09-297. Washington, D.C.:
February 25, 2009.
Tax Administration: 2007 Filing Season Continues Trend of
Improvement, but Opportunities to Reduce Costs and Increase Tax
Compliance Should be Evaluated. GAO-08-38. Washington, D.C.:
November 15, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 237 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Using Return on Investment Information to
Better Focus IRS Enforcement Could Increase
Tax Compliance and Revenues
Using Return on Investment Information to Better
Focus IRS Enforcement Could Increase Tax
Compliance and Revenues
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Taxpayers paid more than $2.3 trillion in federal taxes in fiscal year 2009.
However, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimates that taxpayers
failed to pay an additional $290 billion (based on a 2001 estimate—the
most recent available). Experts believe the current tax gap, or the
difference between the amount of taxes owed and the amount paid
voluntarily and timely, may be larger. IRS seeks to allocate its
approximately $12 billion budget over several service and enforcement
programs to maximize taxpayer compliance. IRS taxpayer services range
from telephone, Web site, and in-person assistance to collaboration with
paid tax preparers and tax software companies. Enforcement includes
audits, a variety of computerized checks, as well as efforts targeting
specific industries or types of taxpayers, such as those with offshore bank
accounts. However, IRS has little information about either the relative
effectiveness or costs of its service and enforcement programs. IRS has
begun to estimate return on investment (ROI), which compares revenues
collected as a result of such enforcement actions with the cost of
collecting them, but use of ROI has been limited.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Increasing IRS’s use of ROI and similar information, including developing
actual ROI information after an enforcement program is implemented and
comparing it to IRS’s initial revenue projections, would provide a powerful
tool for Congress and other budget decision makers, by identifying both
cost savings within IRS and opportunities to cost-effectively reallocate
resources to improve compliance and thereby bring in additional revenue
for the federal government.
Beginning in fiscal year 2008, IRS has provided ROI information about the
projected costs and potential revenues of new enforcement initiatives in
its budget justification. For example, in its fiscal year 2011 justification,
IRS reported that its proposed new initiatives would cost $237 million and
increase revenue collected from noncompliant taxpayers by a projected $2
billion. However, IRS provides projected ROI information for only its new
enforcement initiatives—accounting for less than 2 percent of the IRS’s
fiscal year 2011 budget request. Further, although guidance from the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB), GAO, and the Government
Performance and Results Act of 1993 suggest the use of ROI information,
IRS does not provide projected ROI information for any of its existing
enforcement or service programs that would continue to be funded under
the budget request. IRS also does not estimate the ROI actually realized by
its programs.
Page 238 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Using Return on Investment Information to
Better Focus IRS Enforcement Could Increase
Tax Compliance and Revenues
Citing GAO’s June 2009 ROI recommendation in its fiscal year 2011
committee report, the Senate Committee on Appropriations directed IRS
to provide detailed information about actual costs, revenues, and ROI for
its new enforcement initiatives. IRS officials have been considering
options to collect actual ROI data to compare with projections, however,
actual ROI data have as yet to be produced. ROI information is challenging
to develop and should be supplemented with information on compliance
costs for taxpayers and others. Further, it is difficult to isolate the effects
of a particular program on taxpayer compliance and IRS lacks some data
needed to make complete ROI estimates. However, even limited ROI
information could help identify programs that are not justifying their cost
or opportunities to reallocate resources to programs that have larger tax
compliance and revenue impact per dollar spent.
Similarly, IRS’s fiscal year 2011 budget justification included 24 legislative
proposals from the Department of the Treasury aimed at reducing the tax
gap and generating nearly $26 billion in additional revenue over the next
10 years. For example, two legislative proposals suggest increased
information reporting requirements, which are estimated to result in more
than $12 million in revenues, but there were no estimates of the upfront
costs of these proposals, such as the cost of purchasing or modernizing
information technology or training staff or increased costs to the private
sector. OMB guidance suggest that agencies should provide estimates of
the implementation costs associated with any proposed legislation in their
budget justifications, but IRS has provided no such estimates for its
proposals. As a result, it is difficult to determine whether the potential
benefits of IRS’s legislative proposals are worth the costs, or how long it
will take for the agency to recoup any initial investments.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
To help Congress and other budget decision makers better determine
whether IRS’s resources could be reallocated to collect more revenue and
identify possible cost savings, and building on earlier recommendations,
GAO believes that IRS should continue to increase its use of ROI
information. IRS recognizes that this will require additional research to
identify the impacts of specific programs including the effect on voluntary
compliance by taxpayers. Once actual ROI statistics are developed for
programs, and supplemented with compliance cost information, IRS could
then compare results across programs. Actual ROI information could also
be compared to initial ROI projections for a program to determine whether
the anticipated results were actually achieved. The potential for cost
savings and increased revenue that could result from more use of ROI
information is significant. For example, if more effective utilization of
Page 239 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Using Return on Investment Information to
Better Focus IRS Enforcement Could Increase
Tax Compliance and Revenues
IRS’s existing resources reduced the tax gap by 1 percent, the additional
tax revenue would be about $3 billion.
Also, as GAO has previously recommended, IRS should also coordinate
with the Department of the Treasury to provide Congress with preliminary
cost estimates or descriptions of resource needs for legislative proposals
in future budget justifications. Even though many of the 24 legislative
proposals IRS submitted to Congress in its fiscal year 2011 budget
justification are conceptual—and therefore developing precise cost
estimates for them may be difficult—providing approximate costs or other
information such as whether the proposal would involve significant
systems, staff, or training expenses could help Congress evaluate the
proposals. Without such information, Congress is left at a disadvantage
when weighing the costs and benefits of competing proposals aimed at
increasing the amount of federal tax revenue collected.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below and additional work following up on the
Analysis recommendations from those products.
Related GAO
Products
Internal Revenue Service: Assessment of Budget Justification for Fiscal
Year 2011 Identified Opportunities to Enhance Transparency.
GAO-10-687R. Washington, D.C.: May 26, 2010.
Tax Administration: Opportunities Exist for IRS to Enhance Taxpayer
Service and Enforcement for the 2010 Filing Season. GAO-09-1026.
Washington, D.C.: September 23, 2009.
Internal Revenue Service: Review of the Fiscal Year 2010 Budget
Request. GAO-09-754. Washington, D.C.: June 3, 2009.
Internal Revenue Service: Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Request and Interim
Performance Results of IRS’s 2008 Tax Filing Season. GAO-08-567.
Washington, D.C.: March 13, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 240 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Management of IRS Debt Collection
May Reduce Costs and Increase the Amount
of Tax Revenue Collected from Individuals
Better Management of IRS Debt Collection May Reduce
Costs and Increase the Amount of Tax Revenue
Collected from Individuals
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has recognized that each year
individuals do not pay billions of dollars of their acknowledged tax debts,
which include tax assessments as well as related penalty and interest
charges that build up over the years. It is important for the IRS to pursue
collection of unpaid tax debt to help ensure compliance and confidence in
the tax system as well as to provide needed revenue for government
operations.
IRS has a three-phase strategy for resolving billions of dollars of
individuals’ unpaid tax debt. The first phase—referred to as the notice
phase—involves mailing tax due notices to the taxpayers. The second and
third phases—the telephone and in-person contact phases—are more
labor intensive and expensive.
Used well, notices can help IRS collect or otherwise resolve many tax
debts at relatively low cost while generating significant revenue. IRS
generally sends up to four notices to solicit payment before taking other
collection steps.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
The notice phase of IRS’s three-phase tax collection approach is the least
costly, and achieves billions in results annually but many billions more
remain uncollected at the end of the phase. During fiscal year 2008, IRS
sent approximately 22 million notices to individuals to try to collect
around $129 billion in tax debts that had accumulated over the years.
Through the use of notices, IRS obtained full or partial payments of close
to $6 billion and moved about $41 billion of unpaid debts to the other,
more costly collection phases during fiscal year 2008.
Having clear program objectives linked with performance measures can
help agencies identify risks to achieving a program’s purpose and, if
possible, improve program performance. Given that IRS relies on
individual taxpayers to respond to its notices, being clear about what IRS
expects and what outcomes are being achieved is especially important in
order to gain insights on how to maximize performance.
However, whether the notice phase is achieving optimum results is
unclear because of the lack of objectives and performance measures for
gauging its effectiveness. IRS has not documented its objectives or
developed related measures to indicate how well the notice phase is
performing. Nor has IRS documented clear responsibility for reviewing
this performance compared to targets. IRS also lacks information on the
full costs of collection notices.
Page 241 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Management of IRS Debt Collection
May Reduce Costs and Increase the Amount
of Tax Revenue Collected from Individuals
To make the best use of collection resources, IRS has developed business
rules to dictate actions to be taken on individual tax debts. Based on
certain dollar thresholds and other characteristics of individual tax debt
cases, the business rules can vary the number and types of notices sent to
taxpayers and determine whether unresolved cases will be sent for further
collection action or further action will be deferred. However, IRS has not
documented the business rules that govern notices sent to individuals. For
its major rules, IRS lacks basic information on the rationale when the rules
were established, how the rules are to work, and whether the rules work
as intended.
Without such information, IRS does not know whether its business rules
are working as originally designed or achieve IRS’s desired collection
results at the least cost. With such controls over the notices sent to
individuals that have federal tax debts, IRS would be better able to assure
Congress and the taxpayers that it is using this collection phase to the
greatest benefit.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
As GAO recommended in September 2009, IRS needs to establish
objectives and performance measures for the notice phase of its collection
process for individual taxpayers as well as management responsibility for
reviewing the performance of the notice phase. In addition, IRS needs to
better document the business rules and their rationales, and periodically
evaluate how well they are working.
IRS has started to implement all of these actions. IRS has made the most
progress in assigning responsibility for reviewing performance and
documenting rationales for the business rules for some of the frequently
issued collection notices. However, IRS must ensure that those with the
responsibility for reviewing performance of the collection notice phase
use outcome-focused performance measures that are clearly linked to
documented objectives. Further, as GAO previously recommended, IRS
must ensure that the business rules are not only better documented but
are also periodically evaluated on how well they are doing what they were
intended to do. GAO expects to evaluate IRS’s progress in implementing
all these actions.
Better data and a more justifiable basis for sending notices or deciding to
implement other enforcement actions will produce better decisions that
avoid waste and possibly collect more tax debts sooner. Although data are
not now readily available to estimate the revenue to be gained from taking
these steps, improved performance in collecting more tax debts sooner
Page 242 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Management of IRS Debt Collection
May Reduce Costs and Increase the Amount
of Tax Revenue Collected from Individuals
could help reduce the tens of billions of dollars that are annually sent to
the two more expensive tax debt collection phases; this amount was about
$41 billion for fiscal year 2008.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Tax Debt Collection: IRS Needs to Better Manage the Collection Notices Related GAO
Sent to Individuals. GAO-09-976. Washington, D.C.: September 30, 2009.
Products
Tax Debt Collection: IRS Has a Complex Process to Attempt to Collect
Billions of Dollars in Unpaid Tax Debts. GAO-08-728. Washington, D.C.:
June 13, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov.
Page 243 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Broadening IRS’s Authority to Correct Simple
Tax Return Errors Could Facilitate Correct
Tax Payments and Help IRS Avoid Costly,
Burdensome Audits
Broadening IRS’s Authority to Correct Simple Tax
Return Errors Could Facilitate Correct Tax Payments
and Help IRS Avoid Costly, Burdensome Audits
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
In 2009, IRS sent out more than 12 million math error notices. Math error
notices result from cases of mathematical or other simple tax return errors
where Congress has granted the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) math
error authority (MEA), or the ability to assess tax or take other actions to
correct such errors in limited circumstances. For example, when a
taxpayer claims a credit amount exceeding a statutory limit, IRS uses MEA
to fix the error during return processing.
For almost a century, Congress has been expanding IRS’s MEA on a case-
by-case basis. However, because IRS can use MEA only in specifically
authorized situations, it has been unable to timely use MEA in several
notable instances where substantial numbers of taxpayers made similar
easily correctable errors.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
IRS’s use of recent additions to MEA have efficiently corrected hundreds
of thousands of taxpayer errors and ensured proper payments of tax. For
example, in September 2009, GAO suggested that Congress consider
providing IRS with additional MEA to help IRS enforce compliance with
the First-Time Homebuyer Credit (FTHBC). In November 2009, after
learning about compliance problems with this tax credit that froze refunds
and prompted civil and criminal investigations, Congress extended MEA to
cover certain eligibility requirements for the FTHBC. As of July 2010, more
than 3 million taxpayers have made more than $23 billion in FTHBC
claims. Broader MEA has given IRS the ability to automatically verify
those claims, correct errors where necessary, and deny approximately
350,000 erroneous claims in 2010 alone, thus saving tax revenue and
enabling IRS to use resources elsewhere.
Similarly, in 2009, after finding more than $600 million of inappropriately
claimed Hope credits for higher education (currently called the American
Opportunity tax credit), both GAO and the Treasury Inspector General for
Tax Administration suggested that Congress give IRS broader MEA.
Specifically, GAO suggested that broader MEA be provided so IRS could
use prior years’ tax return information to automatically verify taxpayers’
compliance with the limit on the number of years the Hope credit can be
claimed. In the absence of this authority, IRS relies on audits to ensure
compliance. However, audits may not be effective because they are labor-
intensive, costly, and often do not yield high revenues. Consequently, IRS
does relatively few audits on the millions of credits claimed.
When using MEA, IRS need not follow its standard deficiency procedures,
which allow taxpayers an appeal and petition to the Tax Court. Instead,
Page 244 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Broadening IRS’s Authority to Correct Simple
Tax Return Errors Could Facilitate Correct
Tax Payments and Help IRS Avoid Costly,
Burdensome Audits
IRS must only notify the taxpayer that it has identified the error and has
made a change. While MEA helps IRS avoid costly audits, which are
burdensome to taxpayers, the National Taxpayer Advocate and some in
Congress are concerned that not following standard deficiency procedures
might undermine taxpayer rights because IRS might use broad authority in
situations where it does not know with a high degree of certainty that the
taxpayer made an error. However, as discussed below, other steps could
be taken to address this concern.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
To ensure the proper amount of taxes are paid and help IRS avoid costly,
burdensome audits, Congress many want to consider granting IRS broader
math error authority, with appropriate safeguards against misuse of that
authority, to correct errors during tax return processing. With broader
MEA granted by Congress, IRS could take the steps necessary to ensure
proper payment of taxes in many situations. Although the amount of
increased revenues would depend on the nature of future MEA use,
revenue increases could be substantial based on past uses. Such authority
could also reduce taxpayers’ burdens by giving IRS an alternative to more
intrusive enforcement actions. Broader authority could take several forms.
For instance, it could be granted for newly created or revised refundable
credits. Refundable credits, which provide cash payments to taxpayers
irrespective of the amount of their tax liabilities, are growing in popularity,
and automatic authority could enable IRS to monitor low-dollar amounts
on individual returns that would be too labor intensive and costly to audit.
Or, authority could be granted for any situation where IRS could check for
obvious noncompliance. Had such authority existed, IRS could have
addressed FTHBC compliance issues more quickly.
Controls may be needed to ensure MEA is properly used. For example, as
GAO has previously reported, Congress could require IRS to submit a
report on each proposed new use of MEA. The report could include how
such use would meet Congress’s standards or criteria for MEA use. The
report could also describe IRS’s or the National Taxpayer Advocate’s
assessment of any potential effect on taxpayer rights. Or, Congress could
require a more informal procedure whereby IRS simply notifies a
committee, such as the Joint Committee on Taxation, of its proposed MEA
use and submits a report after such use is under way.
Authorizing the use of MEA on a broader basis could have several benefits
for IRS and taxpayers. It could
Page 245 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Broadening IRS’s Authority to Correct Simple
Tax Return Errors Could Facilitate Correct
Tax Payments and Help IRS Avoid Costly,
Burdensome Audits
• enable IRS to correct all or nearly all returns with types of
noncompliance for which IRS identifies with virtual certainty the
noncompliance and the needed correction, not just those it can address
through other enforcement means;
• be low cost and less intrusive and burdensome to taxpayers than
audits;
• ensure that taxpayers who are noncompliant on a particular issue are
more often treated alike, that is, that a greater portion of them are
brought into compliance, not just those that IRS could otherwise
address;
• provide a taxpayer service as it would generally allow noncompliant
taxpayers to receive their refunds faster than if IRS had to address the
error through some other compliance mechanism, have their returns
corrected without penalty and before interest is accrued, and avoid
time-consuming interaction with IRS under its other programs for
resolving noncompliance;
• help ensure taxpayers receive the tax benefits for which they are
eligible by identifying taxpayers underclaiming a tax benefit;
• free up IRS resources to pursue other forms of noncompliance; and
• allow IRS to quickly address provisions arising from new and quickly
moving initiatives, such as the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009, without waiting for new MEA to go through the legislative
process.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related products Framework for
listed below and additional work following up on the recommendations
Analysis from those products.
Tax Administration: Usage and Selected Analyses of the First-Time Related GAO
Homebuyer Credit. GAO-10-1025R. Washington, D.C.: September 2, 2010.
Products
Recovery Act: IRS Quickly Implemented Tax Provisions, but Reporting
and Enforcement Improvements Are Needed. GAO-10-349. Washington,
D.C.: February 10, 2010.
Page 246 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Broadening IRS’s Authority to Correct Simple
Tax Return Errors Could Facilitate Correct
Tax Payments and Help IRS Avoid Costly,
Burdensome Audits
2009 Tax Filing Season: IRS Met Many 2009 Goals, but Telephone Access
Remained Low and Taxpayer Service and Enforcement Could Be
Improved. GAO-10-225. Washington, D.C.: December 10, 2009.
First-Time Homebuyer Tax Credit: Taxpayers’ Use of the Credit and
Implementation and Compliance Challenges. GAO-10-166T. Washington,
D.C.: October 22, 2009.
Tax Administration: Opportunities Exist for IRS to Enhance Taxpayer
Service and Enforcement for the 2010 Filing Season. GAO-09-1026.
Washington, D.C.: September 23, 2009.
Tax Administration: IRS’s 2008 Filing Season Generally Successful
Despite Challenges, although IRS Could Expand Enforcement during
Returns Processing. GAO-09-146. Washington, D.C.: December 12, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek or Area Contact
James White at (202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 247 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Enhancing Mortgage Interest Information
Reporting Could Improve Tax Compliance
Enhancing Mortgage Interest Information Reporting
Could Improve Tax Compliance
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Joint Committee on Taxation estimated that individual taxpayers’
deductions of home mortgage interest reduced federal revenue by about
$80 billion in 2009. Also, in its most recently completed comprehensive
study of individual taxpayer compliance for 2001, the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) found that 12 percent to 14 percent of individual taxpayers
deducting mortgage interest misreported deducted amounts. About half of
taxpayers underreported the deduction while about half overreported.
Subject to various limitations, taxpayers may deduct interest on home
mortgages or mortgage refinancings. Additionally, taxpayers with rental
real estate are ordinarily allowed to deduct mortgage interest expenses for
their rental properties from their rental income.
Lending institutions and other third parties are required to report to
taxpayers and IRS on a Form 1098 Mortgage Interest Statement the amount
of mortgage interest taxpayers paid during the year, if more than $600.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
IRS has the opportunity to collect additional information about taxpayers’
mortgages to help it determine whether taxpayers are deducting correct
amounts of mortgage interest and identify the most productive cases to
examine. Requiring expanded information on mortgage interest could also
improve voluntary compliance, as taxpayers tend to more accurately report
items that third parties report on information returns, such as Form 1098.
Lending institutions are generally required to report on Form 1098 the
amounts of mortgage interest taxpayers paid during the year, but the form
does not include other items, such as (1) the address of the property
secured by the mortgage to which the interest on the form relates, (2)
outstanding mortgage debt balances on the property, and (3) an indicator
of whether the mortgage interest is for a loan that was refinanced during
the current year.
Because a property address is not currently required on Form 1098, IRS
cannot use an automated process to determine whether a taxpayer’s
deducted mortgage interest corresponds to a residence that is eligible for
the deduction. For example, IRS cannot automatically determine if
addresses reported on Form 1098 match the addresses that taxpayers list
on their tax returns. Also, IRS is less able to determine if the interest
reported on Form 1098 is for a property used for rental or personal
purposes.
Page 248 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Enhancing Mortgage Interest Information
Reporting Could Improve Tax Compliance
Because Form 1098 shows the dollar amount of interest a taxpayer paid in
a year but not the mortgage balance, IRS’s computer-matching program
comparing Form 1098 to tax returns cannot be used by itself to determine
whether taxpayers claimed interest on mortgages in excess of the legal
limitations. For example, taxpayers generally cannot deduct interest on
mortgage debt exceeding $1.1 million. Also, because Form 1098 does not
show whether interest paid is from a refinanced mortgage, IRS cannot
readily tell whether taxpayers are complying with rules specific to
refinancing, such as the rule to amortize certain types of prepaid interest,
or points.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
To provide additional information that could further IRS efforts to identify
taxpayers improperly deducting mortgage interest, GAO recommended in
July 2009 that IRS revise Form 1098 to include information on the address
of a property securing a mortgage, mortgage balances, and an indicator of
whether the mortgage is for a current year refinancing. GAO also
recommended, in August 2010, requiring mortgage-secured property
addresses to be reported on other forms to help IRS detect taxpayers who
fail to pay taxes on certain forgiven mortgage debt. With this additional
information, IRS could check for noncompliance through its automated
document-matching process, which is generally a less expensive
enforcement action than conducting examinations. Additional information
would also help IRS better select returns to examine. IRS agreed to study
collecting additional information on Form 1098, stating it currently does
not have enough data to support revisions. Because IRS has acknowledged
it does not have information about taxpayers’ mortgage debts to easily
detect noncompliance, GAO believes that the recommended revisions to
Form 1098 would be cost-effective ways to provide IRS with additional
useful information to help it detect noncompliance.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Tax Administration: Expanded Information Reporting Could Help IRS Related GAO
Address Compliance Challenges with Forgiven Mortgage Debt.
Products GAO-10-997. Washington, D.C.: August 31, 2010.
Page 249 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Enhancing Mortgage Interest Information
Reporting Could Improve Tax Compliance
Home Mortgage Interest Deduction: Despite Challenges Presented by
Complex Tax Rules, IRS Could Enhance Enforcement and Guidance.
GAO-09-769. Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2009.
Tax Gap: Actions That Could Improve Rental Real Estate Reporting
Compliance. GAO-08-956. Washington, D.C.: August 28, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 250 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Information on the Types and Uses of
Canceled Debt Could Help IRS Limit Revenue
Losses on Forgiven Mortgage Debt
More Information on the Types and Uses of Canceled
Debt Could Help IRS Limit Revenue Losses on Forgiven
Mortgage Debt
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The housing market downturn is resulting in billions of dollars of forgiven
mortgage debt. In tax year 2008 (the most current data available), the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimates that individual taxpayers
excluded $6.4 billion to $11.8 billion in forgiven mortgage debts on
principal residences. While most forgiven debt is treated as a financial gain
and included in taxable income, forgiven mortgage debt is, according to
complex rules, sometimes excluded from taxable income.
Through 2012, taxpayers may exclude forgiven mortgage debts from
taxable income if the mortgage proceeds were used to buy, build, or
substantially improve a principal residence. Forgiven mortgage amounts
used for other purposes, including purchases of vacation or investment
properties, would generally still be considered taxable income unless the
taxpayer is bankrupt or insolvent.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Housing market data show the potential for significant revenue losses from
failure to pay taxes on certain forgiven mortgage debt, but IRS is not
collecting enough information to assess compliance. Complex rules
governing forgiven mortgage debt may lead individual taxpayers to exclude
such debt erroneously from taxable income. For example, only forgiven
mortgage debts that were used to buy, build, or substantially improve a
principal residence may be excluded from taxable income. However, in
recent years many taxpayers cashed out equity from their primary
residences and used the proceeds for personal consumption or to
consolidate other debts—not to buy, build, or improve the home. In
addition, taxpayers losing investment or vacation homes through
foreclosure are still liable for taxes on forgiven mortgages secured by these
properties. Vacation home and investment property purchases are estimated
to be well over a quarter of all house purchases in recent years. Despite the
financial hardship that leads to forgiven debt, recent housing market
analyses suggest that thousands of taxpayers with forgiven mortgage debt
not eligible for exclusion (debt forgiven on second homes or investment
property) may be able to pay the taxes legally due on such debt.
Current forms used to collect information from lenders and taxpayers on
forgiven debts do not provide adequate information for IRS to assess
compliance with the mortgage debt forgiveness provision. For example,
neither lenders nor taxpayers are required to disclose the address of the
secured property—potentially a key source of information for determining
whether the property is the taxpayer’s principal residence. Also, taxpayers
with multiple forgiven debts only need to indicate the types of forgiven
debts and the total amount to be excluded from income, but not the
Page 251 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Information on the Types and Uses of
Canceled Debt Could Help IRS Limit Revenue
Losses on Forgiven Mortgage Debt
individual amounts of each forgiven debt. Without this information, it is
difficult for the IRS to estimate the extent of noncompliance and
determine whether additional resources for compliance are needed.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
GAO, in its August 2010 report cited the need to obtain better information
to determine the revenue losses due to incorrectly excluded mortgage
debts, and recommended that IRS modify existing forms to capture more
information from taxpayers and lenders about forgiven debt and any
securing property. IRS initially agreed with most of GAO’s
recommendations but, after further analysis, indicated that making
changes to the forms would not generate benefits that exceed the costs of
doing so. However, GAO continues to believe that without first revising
the associated forms, any review of a sample of tax returns using only
currently available data risks understating the benefits of additional
information reporting. GAO continues to recommend that by taking some
relatively low-cost steps, including revising the associated forms,
collecting more information from taxpayers and lenders, and using third-
party data to determine whether taxpayers are correctly excluding
mortgage debt from taxable income, IRS could determine how much
additional revenue could be gained from refocusing its enforcement
efforts. Since lenders already maintain property address records, reporting
this additional information to IRS is not expected to impose significant
burdens on lenders. Further, as GAO previously recommended, IRS should
also determine if other available data would allow it to identify taxpayers
with multiple homes.
The potential for increased revenue from increased IRS enforcement
related to forgiven mortgage debt is uncertain because IRS does not know
the extent of noncompliance with the complex rules. Nonetheless, given
the billions in forgiven mortgage debt annually, if only a small portion of
the excluded amount is improperly avoiding taxation, the impact on
revenue could be significant.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Page 252 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Information on the Types and Uses of
Canceled Debt Could Help IRS Limit Revenue
Losses on Forgiven Mortgage Debt
Related GAO
Products
Tax Administration: Expanded Information Reporting Could Help IRS
Address Compliance Challenges with Forgiven Mortgage Debt.
GAO-10-997. Washington, D.C.: August 31, 2010.
Home Mortgage Interest Deduction: Despite Challenges Presented by
Complex Tax Rules, IRS Could Enhance Enforcement and Guidance.
GAO-09-769. Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2009.
Tax Gap: Actions That Could Improve Rental Real Estate Reporting
Compliance. GAO-08-956. Washington, D.C.: August 28, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 253 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Information and Outreach Could Help
Reduce Revenue Losses Due to Overstated
Real Estate Tax Deductions
Better Information and Outreach Could Help Reduce
Revenue Losses Due to Overstated Real Estate Tax
Deductions
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimated most recently for tax year
2001 that 9 million taxpayers misreported their federal deductions for
local real estate taxes paid. Average overstated real estate tax deductions
are small—$85 per overstatement in 2001—but the net overstatement,
which generally would reduce taxes owed, was about $2.5 billion. IRS has
not estimated how much these overstated deductions improperly reduced
tax liabilities, but the annual total loss could be substantial.
GAO first reported 17 years ago that taxpayers overstated the real estate
tax deduction because real estate tax bills did not distinguish between
deductible taxes and nondeductible user fees, and IRS education and
enforcement activities were inadequate. GAO conducted a follow-up study
in 2009 to determine whether taxpayers were continuing to overstate the
deduction.
IRS can take several steps to help improve individual taxpayer compliance What GAO Has Found
with the itemized deduction for real estate taxes and thus reduce
Indicating Potential associated revenue losses. Individuals who wish to comply in claiming a
real estate tax deduction face challenges. The rules for deductibility can for Enhancing
be complex as illustrated below.
Revenue
Determining What Qualifies As Deductible Is Complex
Deductible
Nondeductible
Yes
NoNo
Yes
General
public welfare
Local benefits that tend to
increase the value of the
propertya
Is the tax
levied by a
state, local,
or foreign
government?
Is the tax
imposed on an
interest in real
property?
For what
purpose is the
tax levied?
Increasing level of effort and knowledge may be
required to determine deductibility of charges
Source: GAO analysis of Internal Revenue Code provisions.
aCharges for the repair or maintenance of local benefits and associated interest are deductible.
GAO estimated in 2009 that almost half of local governments nationwide
included charges in 2007 on their real estate tax bills that were generally
nondeductible (e.g., fees for trash and garbage pickup). About 78 percent
of those local governments did not label such charges in a way that would
alert individuals that their real estate tax bill might have nondeductible
charges. GAO also estimated that taxpayers in Alameda, California, and
Page 254 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Information and Outreach Could Help
Reduce Revenue Losses Due to Overstated
Real Estate Tax Deductions
Hennepin, Minnesota, counties1 collectively overstated their 2006 real
estate tax deductions between $23 million and $46 million depending on
the assumptions used in the estimation methodology.
Local governments generally do not identify for taxpayers which charges
on real estate tax bills are deductible because local collectors lack the
expertise to identify which charges are federally deductible. Further,
taxpayers with mortgages may receive information on real estate tax
payments made on their behalf by mortgage servicers, but it does not
identify deductible amounts.
Tax preparation software and assistance from paid return preparers may
not be sufficient to help taxpayers deduct qualified real estate taxes. Two
of the three most frequently used tax preparation software programs for
2008 did not alert taxpayers that some charges on real estate tax bills may
not be deductible.2 Paid tax return preparers invested limited time
ensuring that taxpayers deducted qualified real estate taxes.
IRS instructions and guidance for taxpayers on claiming the real estate tax
deduction had explained the types of charges that can be deducted.
However, they had not adequately informed taxpayers that they should
check both real estate tax bills and local government resources to collect
information about specific bill charges, which is needed to determine
deductibility.
When IRS examiners do audit the real estate tax deduction they usually do
not focus on deductibility because they believe the effort required does
not justify the likely small changes to taxes that may be due. Rather, they
focus on whether the amounts deducted were actually paid. IRS’s
guidance to examiners does not require them to verify that the entire real
estate tax deduction amount is deductible. Examiners are authorized to
review many documents, but most of these documents verify whether
payment was made rather than whether all of a payment is deductible.
1GAO initially selected 5 of the 41 counties with the largest property revenue for its review
based on criteria such as the presence of generally nondeductible items on their tax bills.
However, GAO limited its analysis to 2 of the 5 counties due to practical limitations with
the data from the counties.
2These software firms did make changes to their programs to better inform taxpayers what
qualifies as deductible real estate taxes in response to discussions with GAO for its May
2009 report.
Page 255 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Information and Outreach Could Help
Reduce Revenue Losses Due to Overstated
Real Estate Tax Deductions
Finally, IRS does not know which local governments have large
nondeductible charges on their real estate tax bills.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
To help individual taxpayers comply in claiming the real estate tax
deduction, GAO recommended in May 2009 that IRS instructions and
guidance need to be strengthened and spotlight for taxpayers that the real
estate tax bill may include nondeductible charges and that taxpayers need
to check for such charges. GAO also recommended that IRS provide
guidance on how to get information about which charges are
nondeductible. IRS took steps in 2009 to improve its guidance in response
to the recommendations, but the effects of the changes remain to be seen.
To help individual taxpayers get the best information and assistance from
third parties, GAO recommended that IRS reach out to local governments,
mortgage servicers, and the tax preparation industry about clarifying
information they provide to individual taxpayers on what is deductible,
and/or providing alerts and disclaimers about nondeductible charges that
are or may be on their real estate tax bill. In response to GAO’s
recommendations, IRS created a brochure in 2010 for distribution to such
third parties with information on what they can do to help clarify for
taxpayers what is and is not deductible.
As of December 2010, IRS still needs to take actions on other
recommendations included in GAO’s May 2009 report. For example:
• To improve IRS examinations of the real estate tax deduction,
examination guidance needs to clarify the type of evidence for verifying
deductibility and to require examiners to ask taxpayers to substantiate
deductions that appear to include nondeductible charges that are large,
unusual, or questionable.
• To support targeted efforts to improve compliance, IRS needs to
develop a cost-effective means of identifying local governments with
potentially large nondeductible charges on their real estate tax bills.
IRS then should work with these local governments to identify charges
that are nondeductible and work with the localities and other third
parties to help taxpayers correctly claim the deduction. IRS should also
use the information to target examinations covering the real estate tax
deduction.
Although no precise estimate is available of the potential increased
revenues these actions might generate, a relatively modest reduction in
Page 256 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Information and Outreach Could Help
Reduce Revenue Losses Due to Overstated
Real Estate Tax Deductions
total overstated deductions could generate tens or hundreds of millions of
dollars annually.3
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Real Estate Tax Deduction: Taxpayers Face Challenges in Determining Related GAO
What Qualifies; Better Information Could Improve Compliance.
Products GAO-09-521. Washington, D.C.: May 13, 2009.
Tax Administration: Overstated Real Estate Tax Deductions Need to Be
Reduced. GAO/GGD-93-43. Washington, D.C.: January 19, 1993.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov.
3For example, IRS’s most recent estimate for 2001 indicated that 5.5 million taxpayers
overstated their deductions collectively by $5 billion. A 1-percent to 10-percent reduction in
this amount would have reduced overstatements by $50 million to $500 million. The
resulting actual tax revenue savings would be much less depending on factors such as the
tax rate for these noncompliant taxpayers.
Page 257 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Revisions to Content and Use of Form 1098-T
Could Help IRS Enforce Higher Education
Requirements and Increase Revenues
Revisions to Content and Use of Form 1098-T Could
Help IRS Enforce Higher Education Requirements and
Increase Revenues
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) faces challenges ensuring compliance
with the eligibility requirements of the Hope and Lifetime Learning tax
credits. Millions of taxpayers claim the credits to offset qualified
postsecondary education expenses. For fiscal years 2009 through 2013,
taxpayers are estimated to claim Hope and Lifetime Learning credits
totaling $27 billion and $13 billion respectively. These tax provisions are
complicated and may lead taxpayers to claim either more or fewer
benefits than they are entitled.
IRS requires educational institutions to report on Form 1098-T information
about qualifying educational expenses to taxpayers and IRS. However, the
information reported by educational institutions and sent to the IRS and
taxpayers (on Form 1098-T) is not easily comprehensible to taxpayers, nor
is this information fully used by IRS in its compliance programs.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
IRS does not make full use of information reported by educational
institutions to taxpayers and IRS on Form 1098-T to identify and correct
noncompliance with higher education tax benefits. In addition, revising
the form to provide more complete information on qualified expenses
could make it easier for taxpayers to use, which could also reduce
noncompliance. IRS requires institutions to report on Form 1098-T either
(1) the amount of payments received or (2) the amount billed for qualified
expenses. Many institutions report the amount billed and do not report
payments, but the amount billed may not equal the amount that can be
claimed as a credit. For example, the amount billed may not account for
all scholarships or grants the student received. In such cases, the Form
1098-T may overstate the amount that can be claimed as a credit,
confusing taxpayers. Conversely, if institutions are not providing
information on other eligible items, such as books or equipment, taxpayers
might be understating their claims.
Because the amount billed may not be the amount taxpayers are eligible to
claim as a credit, IRS does not compare tuition statement information to
information reported on a tax return. However, IRS is missing
opportunities to use some of the more basic information (for example, a
student’s Social Security number and a school’s location) to verify
eligibility for the credit. Using IRS’s compliance computer-matching
systems to automatically compare information on statements to taxpayers’
claims could be a low-cost enforcement tool for IRS to verify certain
aspects of taxpayers’ eligibility for higher education credits. While
changing the requirements for how higher educational institutions report
qualified expenses on tuition statements would likely impose some burden
Page 258 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Revisions to Content and Use of Form 1098-T
Could Help IRS Enforce Higher Education
Requirements and Increase Revenues
on those institutions, the additional burden could be low because the
institutions are already required to complete Form 1098-T.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
Given that every year millions of taxpayers claim billions of dollars of
credits for post-secondary education tuition expenses, even a small
increase in compliance could increase revenue. To reduce taxpayer
confusion and enhance compliance with the eligibility requirements for
higher education benefits, GAO recommended in December 2009 that IRS
(1) determine the feasibility of using current information reported on
Form 1098-T in its compliance computer matching systems; and (2) revise
Form 1098-T to improve the usefulness of information on qualifying
education expenses. IRS agreed to consider the feasibility of using current
information on Form 1098-T in its compliance programs, and develop a
plan to address possible changes to that form but these actions have yet to
be completed. GAO continues to believe these actions are needed since
automatically matching readily available information has been a proven,
low-cost way to improve compliance.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below and GAO’s work following up on the
Analysis recommendations from that product.
2009 Tax Filing Season: IRS Met Many 2009 Goals, but Telephone Access Related GAO Product
Remained Low, and Taxpayer Service and Enforcement Could Be
Improved. GAO-10-225. Washington, D.C.: December 10, 2009.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 259 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Many Options Could Improve the Tax
Compliance of Sole Proprietors and Increase
Revenues
Many Options Could Improve the Tax Compliance of
Sole Proprietors and Increase Revenues
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimates that $68 billion of the $345
billion gross tax gap for 2001 was due to underreporting of federal income
tax liabilities by self-employed owners of unincorporated businesses—also
known as sole proprietors. An additional part of the tax gap was due to the
noncompliance of some sole proprietors with employment tax laws. The
federal tax gap is the difference between the amount of income and other
federal taxes owed and the amount that is voluntarily and timely paid. The
gap arises from taxpayers underreporting taxable income, underpaying
known tax liabilities, and not filing required tax returns.
Unlike wage and some investment income, sole proprietors’ income is not
subject to tax withholding and only a portion is subject to independent
verification through third-party information reporting, such as those who
pay sole proprietors for services rendered.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Because the sole proprietor tax gap is so large, successful efforts to
reduce it could result in significant revenue increases. Key reasons for the
sole proprietor tax gap are well known. Their income is not subject to
withholding, and only a portion of it is subject to third-party information
reporting. When used, third-party reports on payments made give IRS a
powerful tool for verifying the tax compliance of payment recipients.
A principal IRS compliance program—the Automated Underreporter
Program (AUR)—has limited reach over sole proprietors. Under AUR, IRS
computers match these third-party reports on payments made to taxpayers
with the taxpayer’s tax return in order to verify taxpayer compliance in
reporting those payments as income. Currently, information reporting
covers only about a quarter of sole proprietors’ business gross receipts
and very little of their expenses because of limited information reporting
by third parties. Expanding information returns coverage would require
IRS to identify other types of third parties who could file information
reports about payments made to sole proprietors without imposing
unacceptable burdens.
IRS’s other compliance program for a sole proprietor—the examination
(audit) program—also has limited reach. Because most of sole proprietors’
understated tax was in small amounts—half of the understatements were
for about $900 or less—IRS examinations of their tax returns generally
have yielded less revenue per IRS staff hour than those covering other
categories of taxpayers, such as larger businesses. IRS spent substantial
time on sole proprietor examinations in 2008, but examined about only 1
percent of the estimated noncompliant population.
Page 260 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Many Options Could Improve the Tax
Compliance of Sole Proprietors and Increase
Revenues
Without either examinations or AUR, IRS can not easily tell whether sole
proprietors are reporting legitimate business losses that can be used to
offset other taxable income. In a study for tax year 2001 only, IRS
estimated that 25 percent of all sole proprietors reported losses with an
estimated 70 percent of those losses being fully or partially noncompliant
with tax laws. Since examinations of sole proprietor tax returns are costly
for IRS, require experienced IRS examiners to conduct, and are
burdensome for the businesses, additional options need to be considered
to improve sole proprietor tax compliance.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
Because of the variety of challenges to addressing the sole proprietor tax
gap, there is no single solution. However, a variety of actions are likely to
help reduce that tax gap.
GAO recommended in July 2007 that the Department of the Treasury’s tax
gap strategy cover sole proprietor compliance in detail while coordinating
it with broader tax gap reduction efforts. Such a strategy could include a
mix of numerous options. These options recognize that some solutions,
such as a large increase in audits, are not likely to be cost-effective given
the large number of sole proprietors and the relatively small amounts of
noncompliance on average. Also, many of the options involve tradeoffs,
both for sole proprietors and for IRS. The list of options includes helping:
• sole proprietors keep better records of their income and expenses by,
for example, requiring business bank accounts to be separated from
personal accounts or targeting tax assistance on new businesses;
• third parties comply with current information return filing
requirements by, for example, providing an online portal for
submissions or exempting first-time filers from penalties for being late;
• IRS identify more unreported income and more overstated expense
deductions through more detailed reporting of gross receipts on tax
returns or matching of expense deductions claimed by a business with
the information returns filed by the same business;
• IRS collect unpaid taxes from sole proprietors through expanded
withholding or denial of federal benefits to delinquent sole proprietors;
and
• IRS more efficiently manage its limited resources through more
automated audit selection processes, assessing additional data sharing
Page 261 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Many Options Could Improve the Tax
Compliance of Sole Proprietors and Increase
Revenues
with states, more targeted use of notices to taxpayers about
compliance issues, and clearer policies on when to apply penalties.
Furthermore, as GAO also recommended in September 2009, IRS should
use its ongoing research efforts to develop a better understanding of the
nature of sole proprietor noncompliance, including sole proprietors
improperly claiming business losses. The high rate of noncompliance
associated with claims of sole proprietor business losses suggests that
limiting the ability of sole proprietors to use losses to offset tax on other
income could present another option for reducing the sole proprietor tax
gap. However, an indicator to target noncompliant losses without
including compliant losses has not been identified. Absent such targeting,
any policy change to limit all business losses would inevitably limit some
legitimate businesses losses.
IRS has taken actions to implement some of these options. As of January
2011, IRS has initiated, but not completed, studies on: compliance with
third-party information reporting requirements, additional data sharing
with the states, and identifying the extent of noncompliant sole proprietor
losses. These studies are scheduled for completion through 2015.
Following completion, IRS will assess the study results and identify
whether changes should be recommended and made. GAO expects to
assess IRS’s progress in completing these actions.
Because sole proprietors are responsible for almost one-fifth of the tax
gap, the potential for raising substantial amounts of revenue by taking
such incremental actions to improve sole proprietor tax compliance is
significant. However, the revenue potential related to any of these actions
has not been estimated.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Tax Gap: Limiting Sole Proprietor Loss Deductions Could Improve Related GAO
Compliance but Would Also Limit Some Legitimate Losses. GAO-09-815.
Products Washington, D.C.: September 10, 2009.
Tax Compliance: Opportunities Exist to Improve Tax Compliance of
Applicants for State Business Licenses. GAO-09-569. Washington, D.C.:
June 15, 2009.
Page 262 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Many Options Could Improve the Tax
Compliance of Sole Proprietors and Increase
Revenues
Tax Gap: IRS Could Do More to Promote Compliance by Third Parties
with Miscellaneous Income Reporting Requirements. GAO-09-238.
Washington, D.C.: January 28, 2009.
Tax Gap: A Strategy for Reducing the Gap Should Include Options for
Addressing Sole Proprietor Noncompliance. GAO-07-1014. Washington,
D.C.: July 13, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 263 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS Should Do More Evaluation and Use More
Third-Party Data to Find Businesses Not
Filing Tax Returns
IRS Should Do More Evaluation and Use More Third-
Party Data to Find Businesses Not Filing Tax Returns
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Historically, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has identified several
million businesses each year that may have failed to file tax returns—more
than it can thoroughly investigate. IRS has had difficulty determining if
these businesses that IRS identified are still active and thus required to file
a tax return. As a result, IRS has pursued many inactive businesses, which
has not been a productive use of its resources. In addition, IRS has had no
estimate of the nonfiler population. Given the lack of data, IRS has neither
a clear estimate of the revenue loss from businesses not filing required tax
returns nor a clear basis for allocating resources to addressing this type of
noncompliance.
Recently, IRS has begun to use third-party information about payments
between businesses and other available data as indicators of business
activity. The intent is to prioritize cases with the most revenue potential,
using just the third-party information that IRS already possesses.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
IRS has the potential to increase the revenue it collects from noncompliant
taxpayers by increasing the effectiveness of its business nonfiler program,
but the efficiency and productivity of IRS’s efforts to ensure compliance
by business nonfilers have been hampered by a lack of data. IRS cannot
develop a comprehensive estimate of the business nonfiling rate and
associated revenue loss because it lacks sufficient data on the population
of businesses. Absent such an estimate, IRS will have no basis to know
what priority to give its business nonfiler program and whether resources
should be reallocated from other enforcement efforts.
IRS has not used private sector data that it could obtain to verify taxpayer
statements about whether a business is active and a tax return should have
been filed. A number of private companies maintain business activity data,
such as data on a business’s gross sales and number of employees, which
could aid IRS in making these determinations. Dun and Bradstreet is one
provider of such data. Its databases include information on business name,
address, amount of sales, and number of employees. GAO’s analysis of
Dun and Bradstreet data showed they could be used to identify business
activity that IRS was not aware of. For two states, GAO analyzed 2007 data
on the businesses that IRS initially identified as potential nonfilers but
later determined were not liable to file returns. Of these, GAO found 7,688
businesses where IRS data indicated little or no business activity, but Dun
and Bradstreet data showed business activity as measured by sales
totaling $4.1 billion.
Page 264 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS Should Do More Evaluation and Use More
Third-Party Data to Find Businesses Not
Filing Tax Returns
GAO also performed a similar analysis using data on federal contractors.
GAO found 13,852 businesses listed on the federal contractor registry—
indicating likely business activity—even though IRS had determined they
had no filing obligation. GAO did not determine which non-IRS data would
be most useful nor did it examine the capacity of IRS’s systems to use such
data on a large scale.
Until recently IRS also has not had a way to prioritize cases in its
inventory. IRS modernized its business nonfiler program in 2009 by
incorporating income and other data in its records indicating business
activity. Active businesses, for example those with sales or employees,
generally have an obligation to file a return. IRS’s Business Master File
Case Creation Nonfiler Identification Process now assigns each case a
code based on these data. IRS uses the code to select cases to work with
the goal of securing tax returns from nonfilers and collecting additional
revenue. This is a significant modernization, but IRS lacks a formal plan to
evaluate how well the codes are working. Absent evaluation, IRS will not
know to what extent the initiative is successful and whether it has resulted
in a better allocation of enforcement resources.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
While potentially significant, the revenue gains that may be available
through IRS actions to identify and pursue more business nonfilers cannot
be quantified due to the lack of data on the size of the business nonfiler
problem and the effectiveness of IRS’s new process. As GAO
recommended in its August 2010 report, to better allocate and use its
enforcement resources, IRS should develop at least a partial estimate for
the business nonfiler rate based on its existing inventory of cases. In
addition, IRS should
• set a deadline for developing performance data on its business nonfiler
efforts;
• develop a plan for evaluating its new initiative including codes for
selecting nonfiler cases to pursue;
• better use income data and selection codes in verifying taxpayer
statements about their filing requirements; and
• study the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of using non-IRS, private
data to verify taxpayer statements.
Page 265 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS Should Do More Evaluation and Use More
Third-Party Data to Find Businesses Not
Filing Tax Returns
IRS has agreed to start reviewing or implementing these actions. As of
December 2010, IRS has laid out planned implementation steps up through
January 2013. The scope of GAO’s recent work did not extend to analyzing
IRS’s capability to meet these implementation plans. The potential revenue
significance merits GAO tracking of IRS’s progress over the next few
years.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product below.
Analysis
Tax Gap: IRS Has Modernized Its Business Nonfiler Program but Could Related GAO Product
Benefit from More Evaluation and Use of Third-Party Data. GAO-10-950.
Washington, D.C.: August 31, 2010.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 266 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Congress and IRS Can Help S Corporations
and Their Shareholders Be More Tax
Compliant
Congress and IRS Can Help S Corporations and Their
Shareholders Be More Tax Compliant
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The number of S corporations—corporations with no more than 100
shareholders that meet certain other requirements—has grown steadily in
recent years, reaching around 4 million with over $400 billion in total net
income. S corporation status provides liability protection to shareholders.
S corporations’ income gains and losses “pass through” to shareholders
who are to report these passed-through amounts on their individual
income tax returns. Shareholders are allowed to claim S corporation pass-
through losses up to the amount of their basis in an S corporation (value
of their investment). Shareholders are to track basis changes, which can
arise from their actions, like new investments in the corporation, or S
corporation actions, like reinvesting profits.
S corporations can pay shareholders wages and make nonwage
distributions, like dividends, but employment taxation only applies to the
wages. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) requires S corporations to pay
reasonable wages to shareholders who perform services, and if they do
not, employment taxes can be improperly avoided.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
According to IRS’s most recent research, for tax years 2003 and 2004, 68
percent of S corporation returns misreported net income. As a result, S
corporations passed through an estimated $85 billion less taxable income
to their shareholders than should have occurred. IRS’s research did not
cover how the shareholders treated this misreported S corporation income
on their individual tax returns. However, applying the lowest individual
income tax rate of 10 percent to this S corporation misreported amount
suggests that S corporation shareholders could have underpaid their
income taxes by $8.5 billion over those 2 years. IRS does not know the
reasons for this misreporting, which could be intentional attempts to
improperly lower tax liability for individual shareholders or unintentional
errors due to confusion over what to report.
Shareholders of S corporations are required to track their basis, but have
made mistakes in that area. For fiscal years 2006 through 2008, IRS
examiners found that shareholders, on average, claimed about $21,600 in
losses that exceeded their basis in the S corporation. These overclaimed
losses could reduce taxes on the taxpayers’ other income. IRS views basis
as a common issue on shareholder returns. In particular, shareholders of
new S corporations are less likely to understand the requirement to track
and calculate basis. One factor contributing to basis noncompliance is that
S corporations are not required to calculate shareholder basis and report it
to shareholders and IRS, even though S corporations have information that
Page 267 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Congress and IRS Can Help S Corporations
and Their Shareholders Be More Tax
Compliant
shareholders could use to calculate basis. In addition, IRS does not send
new S corporations and their shareholders information alerting them to
the necessary record-keeping requirements
Unlike other businesses, S corporations can improperly lower employment
tax liabilities by paying shareholders who perform services less in wages
and more through other means, like profit distributions. For tax years 2003
and 2004, IRS estimated that 13 percent of S corporations underpaid a net
of $23.6 billion in wages. To illustrate the potential loss of revenue to the
government, applying the maximum Federal Insurance Contributions Act
tax rate of 15.3 percent to the net underpayment amount roughly equates
to $3 billion in employment tax losses. The vagueness of federal tax law as
well as IRS and Department of the Treasury guidance on determining
adequate shareholder wages make employment tax evasion difficult to
control. Nearly all of the stakeholder representatives GAO interviewed
indicated that having clear and specific IRS guidance would be helpful for
taxpayers and preparers. IRS has some training materials for its examiners
that go beyond published guidance, but those materials are not available
for S corporations.
IRS examinations of S corporations’ wage payments could be more
effective. In the sample that GAO reviewed, when IRS examiners used
tools like Bureau of Labor Statistics data on compensation, they tended to
more frequently identify underpayment of wage income. IRS does not
require use of such tools nor does IRS require its examiners to document
the analysis done to support their compensation determinations or why an
analysis was not done.
Paid preparers had little impact on S corporation compliance as the
overall misreporting rate was about the same whether or not an S
corporation used a paid preparer. Some stakeholders GAO interviewed
thought some preparers lacked the expertise needed to address S
corporation tax issues. IRS has begun regulating all paid tax return
preparers and could begin requiring preparers to pass competency
examinations. This may be a way to improve preparers’ ability to
adequately handle S corporation returns.
As GAO reported in December 2009, to improve basis compliance, Actions Needed and
Congress could require S corporations to use information already available
Potential Revenue to them to calculate shareholders’ basis as completely as possible and
report it to shareholders and IRS.
Page 268 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Congress and IRS Can Help S Corporations
and Their Shareholders Be More Tax
Compliant
Furthermore, GAO recommended in December 2009 that IRS require
examiners to document their compensation analyses and their use of
comparable salary data when determining adequate shareholder
compensation. IRS took steps by publishing an article in August 2010
reminding examiners of the importance of addressing adequate
shareholder compensation and the need to document such analysis.
As of December 2010, IRS is considering or taking action on other
recommendations included in GAO’s December 2009 report, but none of
them have been implemented. GAO recommended that IRS should
evaluate options for improving paid tax return preparer performance, send
additional guidance on S corporation requirements such as on basis
calculations and adequate wage determinations to new S corporations,
and provide more guidance to shareholders and tax preparers on
determining adequate shareholder compensation. The effect of
implementations should be improved tax compliance by S corporations
and their shareholders. Although an estimate of potential revenue
increases from improved compliance is not available, a small decrease in
the billions of dollars of income and wage underreporting could increase
tax revenues by hundreds of millions of dollars each year.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below.
Analysis
Tax Gap: Actions Needed to Address Noncompliance with S Corporation Related GAO Product
Tax Rules. GAO-10-195. Washington, D.C.: December 15, 2009.
For additional information about this area, contact Mike Brostek at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov.
Page 269 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS Needs an Agencywide Approach for
Addressing Tax Evasion by Networks of
Businesses and Related Entities
IRS Needs an Agencywide Approach for Addressing Tax
Evasion by Networks of Businesses and Related
Entities
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
At least 1 million networks involving partnerships, trusts, corporations,
and similar entities existed in the United States in tax year 2008. These
networks can serve a variety of legitimate business purposes. However,
transactions made among related entities within networks also can be
used in tax evasion schemes to hide taxable income or shift expenses.
Such schemes—such as the one described in the text box below—result in
lost tax revenue and are difficult for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to
identify, due to data limitations.
IRS recognizes the risk from network-related tax evasion and is
developing new tools and programs to better identify such evasion. These
IRS efforts are in various stages of development, but their potential
effectiveness in terms of cost savings or added revenue, is not known.
However, GAO has identified the need for additional efforts to strengthen
enforcement in the networks area and to assess progress.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
IRS knows that many questionable tax shelters and abusive transactions
rely on the links among commonly owned entities in a network, but it does
not have estimates of the associated revenue loss in part because data do
not exist on the population of networks. IRS generally addresses network-
related tax evasion through its examination (audit) programs. These
programs traditionally involve identifying a single return from a single tax
year and routing the return to the IRS division that specializes in auditing
that type of return. From a single return, examiners may branch out to
review other entities if information on the original return appears
suspicious. However, this traditional approach does not align well with
how network tax evasion schemes work. Such schemes can cross multiple
IRS divisions or require time and expertise that IRS may not have
allocated at the start of an examination. A case of network tax evasion
also may not be evident without looking at multiple tax years.
Network Scheme Example: Installment Sale Bogus Optional Basis
Transaction (iBOB)
An iBOB is an example of a network-related tax evasion scheme that shows
how networks pose enforcement challenges for IRS. In an iBOB, a taxpayer
uses multiple entities, all owned or controlled by the taxpayer, to artificially
adjust the basis of an asset to evade capital gains taxes. The scheme can
involve multiple transactions and take place over many tax years, making it
difficult for IRS to detect. A short video illustrating the iBOB is available at
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-968.
Page 270 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS Needs an Agencywide Approach for
Addressing Tax Evasion by Networks of
Businesses and Related Entities
IRS is developing programs and tools that more directly address network
tax evasion. One, called Global High Wealth Industry, selects certain high-
income individuals and examines their network of entities as a whole to
look for tax evasion. Another, yK-1, is a computerized visualization tool
that shows the links between entities in a network. These efforts show
promise. They represent new analytical approaches, have upper-
management support, and cut across divisions and database boundaries.
However, there are opportunities for more progress. For example, IRS has
no agencywide strategy or goals for coordinating its network efforts. A
strategy would include assessing of IRS’s network tools and determining
the value of incorporating more data into its network programs and
tools—neither of which IRS has done. Without a strategy and assessments,
IRS risks duplicating efforts and managers will not have information about
the effectiveness of the new programs and tools that could inform
resource allocation decisions.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
GAO recommended in its September 2010 report that IRS create an
agencywide strategy with goals to coordinate and plan its enforcement
efforts on network tax evasion. The strategy should include assessing the
effectiveness of network analysis tools to ensure that resources are being
devoted to those that provide the largest return on investment;
determining whether to increase access to IRS data or collect new data for
network analysis; developing network analysis tools on a specific time
schedule; and deciding how to manage network efforts across IRS. IRS
should ensure that its staff understand the network tools and establish
formal ways for users to interact with tool programmers and analysts to
ensure that the network tools are easy to use and achieve goals. IRS
agreed with GAO’s recommendations and said it would make plans to take
actions on them but it is too early to determine IRS’s progress.
Estimates are not available on the potential for increased tax revenues
because IRS has not measured the potential impact of its network efforts
on reducing tax noncompliance due to data limitations, but these efforts
have significant potential, based on the number of networks that exist.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below.
Analysis
Page 271 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS Needs an Agencywide Approach for
Addressing Tax Evasion by Networks of
Businesses and Related Entities
Tax Gap: IRS Could Improve Efforts to Address Tax Evasion by Related GAO Product
Networks of Business and Related Entities. GAO-10-968. Washington,
D.C.: September 24, 2010.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 272 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Opportunities Exist to Improve the Targeting
of the Research Tax Credit and Make It More
Cost-Effective
Opportunities Exist to Improve the Targeting of the
Research Tax Credit and Make It More Cost-Effective
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Since 1981, the research tax credit has provided significant subsidies (an
estimated $6 billion for fiscal year 2011) to encourage business to invest in
research and development. The credit, which has been a temporary
provision since its inception, was most recently renewed at the end of
2010 and is scheduled to expire after December 31, 2011. The Department
of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service play key roles in issuing
guidance to clarify what types of spending qualify and ensuring that
taxpayers adequately support their credit claims.
Two factors—the definition of research expenses that qualify for the credit
and the credit’s design—are important in targeting the subsidy in a manner
that increases the social benefits stimulated per dollar of tax revenue
foregone. (This ratio of benefits to forgone revenue is a key measure of
credit’s cost-effectiveness.) The research credit has always been an
incremental subsidy, meaning that taxpayers earn the credit only for
qualified spending that exceeds a defined threshold, known as the base
spending amount. The credit’s design is most cost-effective when the base
spending amount accurately reflects the amount of spending that a
taxpayer would have done anyway (in the absence of the credit).
The figure below compares the effects of a hypothetical incremental credit
with a perfectly accurate base to a flat credit, which has no base spending
amount. The flat credit gives the taxpayer 20 cents for every research
dollar spent, while the incremental credit gives 20 percent for only the
amount of spending above what the taxpayer would have done anyway.
A Comparison of an Incremental Credit with a Flat Credit
Qualified research spending
A 20% flat credit (with no base)
Taxpayer’s marginal
spending
Spending on research
that taxpayer would
have done anywayRevenue cost: $220 Revenue cost: $20
$100
$1,000
$100
$1,000
$20
$20
Marginal
incentive
(20% of $100)
Marginal
incentive
(20% of $100)
Windfall
credit
(20% of $1,000)
$20
0
Windfall
credit
An incremental 20% credit
with a $1,000 base
$100
$1,000
Source: GAO.
Page 273 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Opportunities Exist to Improve the Targeting
of the Research Tax Credit and Make It More
Cost-Effective
Both types of tax credit provide the same 20 percent reward for each
additional dollar of qualified spending (referred to as “marginal
incentive”). In each case that incentive encourages the taxpayer to
increase spending for research by $100. However, the flat credit is less
cost-effective for the government because it also gives the taxpayer a $200
windfall for conducting research that would have been done anyway.
The difficulty in designing an incremental credit to be as cost-effective as
the one in the figure is to develop rules for computing the base spending
amount so that the base accurately represents what the taxpayer would
have spent anyway. GAO testified as early as 1995 that the computation
method in place at that time had grown inaccurate and should be updated.
An alternative approach for computing base spending (the alternative
simplified credit) has been added but, the older computation option—
commonly known as the regular credit—still has not been updated.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
Cost Saving
The research tax credit, as currently designed, distributes incentives
unevenly across taxpayers and provides many recipients with windfall
benefits, earned for spending that they would have done anyway. The
disparities in incentives can lead to an inefficient allocation of investment
resources across businesses and the windfall benefits represent foregone
tax revenue that does not contribute to the credit’s objective.
In November 2009 GAO estimated that, due to shortcomings in the
computation of base spending, the research tax credit has provided some
taxpayers with more than a 10 percent reduction in the cost of additional
research, while providing other research-performing taxpayers with a
disincentive to increase their research in the current year. Moreover, some
taxpayers earned credits on as much as 50 percent of their total research
spending, even though the most favorable empirical estimates of the
credit’s stimulative effects suggest that less than 15 percent of that
spending was actually new spending that they would not have done in the
absence of the credit.
An important cause of these problems is that, as GAO has previously
reported, the base spending amount for the regular version of the credit is
extrapolated from the amount of research spending that taxpayers did as
long ago as the early 1980s. That base is a poor measure of the spending
that a taxpayer would be doing now in the absence of the credit. The
alternative credit option uses a more current spending history for
computing the incremental credit, but it provides lower incentives for new
Page 274 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Opportunities Exist to Improve the Targeting
of the Research Tax Credit and Make It More
Cost-Effective
research, even as some taxpayers can receive larger windfalls than they
would get from the regular credit.1
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Based on analyses of numerous design alternatives in its 2009 study, GAO
found that the targeting of the research tax credit could be improved by
eliminating the regular credit and adding a minimum base amount (equal
to 50 percent of a taxpayer’s current spending) to the method for
computing the alternative credit. GAO found that an alternative simplified
credit with this modification could provide the same average incentive to
taxpayers as the current version of that credit, but at a lower revenue cost
by reducing windfalls. Cost reductions exceeded 3 percent under most of
the alternative assumptions GAO used in its 2009 analyses and exceeded
1.4 percent under all assumptions that GAO considered likely.
The elimination of the regular credit not only would improve targeting, it
would also significantly reduce compliance and administrative costs by
eliminating the need for taxpayers to keep (and for IRS to review) records
dating back to the 1980s.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related products Framework for
below.
Analysis
Tax Policy: The Research Tax Credit’s Design and Administration Can Related GAO
Be Improved. GAO-10-136. Washington, D.C.: November 6, 2009.
Products
Tax Policy: Additional Information on the Research Tax Credit.
GAO/T-GGD-95-161. Washington, D.C.: May 10, 1995.
For additional information about this area, contact James White at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.
1As the figure comparing basic hypothetical credit designs above illustrates, the rate of
incentive and the amount of windfall a credit provides are independent of each other.
Page 275 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Converting the New Markets Tax Credit to a
Grant Program May Increase Program
Efficiency and Reduce the Overall Cost of the
Program
Converting the New Markets Tax Credit to a Grant
Program May Increase Program Efficiency and Reduce
the Overall Cost of the Program
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Federal tax revenue losses for the New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC) were
over $700 million for 2010 according to the Department of the Treasury.
Congress enacted the NMTC in 2000 as part of an ongoing effort to
revitalize impoverished, low-income communities. The Treasury
Department’s Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI)
Fund awards tax credits to Community Development Entities (CDE), who
sell the credits to investors to raise funds. Investors can claim a tax credit
over 7 years totaling 39 percent of their investment in a CDE. Through
fiscal year 2008, CDE reported investing about $12 billion in 2,111 projects
located in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. In
December 2010, Congress extended the NMTC for tax year 2010 and 2011.
However, the complexity of NMTC transaction structures appears to make
it difficult to complete smaller projects and often results in less equity
ending up in low-income community businesses—the beneficiaries of
NMTC financing—than would be the case if the program were simplified.
An alternative to the NMTC could be the use of a grant program,
recognizing that Congress has turned to grant programs in similar cases.
Such grants would eliminate the program’s dependence on the market for
tax credits and could reduce transaction costs.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving and
Increasing Revenue
Replacing the tax credit with a grant likely would increase the equity that
could be placed in low-income businesses and make the federal subsidy
more cost-effective. When CDE sell credits to investors to raise additional
funds, the price investors pay for the credits reflects market conditions
and the investors’ attitudes toward risk. According to CDE representatives
GAO interviewed in 2009, when the demand for NMTCs was highest,
before the housing market collapse and 2008 credit crisis, the tax credits
sold for $0.75 to $0.80 per dollar. Therefore, the federal subsidy intended
to assist low-income businesses was reduced by 20 percent to 25 percent
before any funds were made available to CDE. Representatives from CDE
GAO interviewed also noted that with low demand for the tax credits, as
was the case when GAO conducted its work during 2009, the credits
generally sold for about $0.65 to $0.70 and have sold for as little as $0.50 or
less. After accounting for CDE and other third-party fees, such as asset
management and legal fees, about 50 percent to 65 percent of the federal
subsidy generally reaches low-income businesses.
In a grant program, these up-front reductions in the federal subsidy could
be largely avoided. If the grant program is well designed and at least as
effective as the credit in attracting private investment, it could save a
Page 276 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Converting the New Markets Tax Credit to a
Grant Program May Increase Program
Efficiency and Reduce the Overall Cost of the
Program
significant portion of the estimated $3.8 billion five-year revenue cost of
the current program.
Congress has turned to grant programs in other cases where tax credits
had formerly been used. For example, to fill funding gaps in Low-Income
Housing Tax Credit projects, under the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009, Congress offered the option of allowing state
housing finance agencies to exchange Low-Income Housing Tax Credits
for federal grants to subsidize low-income rental housing.
However, CDFI officials were concerned that a grant may not channel a
greater portion of the federal subsidy to intended recipients than the tax
credit and a grant program could have administrative costs or other effects
that would reduce its desirability.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings and
Revenue
As stated in its January 2010 report, GAO continues to believe that
Congress should consider offering grants in lieu of credits to CDE if it
extends the program again. Doing so would help ensure that the maximum
amount of capital ends up in low-income community businesses. If it does
so, Congress should require Treasury to gather appropriate data to assess
whether and to what extent the grant program increases the amount of
federal subsidy provided to low-income community businesses compared
to the NMTC; how costs for administering the program incurred by the
CDFI Fund, CDE, and investors would change; and whether the grant
program otherwise affects the success of efforts to assist low-income
communities. One option would be for Congress to set aside a portion of
funds to be used as grants and a portion to be used as tax credit allocation
authority under the current structure of the program to facilitate
comparison of the two program structures. Such a study could help
resolve uncertainties about the relative effectiveness of grants and the tax
credit in promoting economic development. Although eliminating the tax
credit would increase federal revenues, replacing the NMTC with a grant
would introduce outlay costs. However, given that the federal subsidy to
low-income community businesses was reduced by 20 percent to 25
percent up front even when the price paid by investors to claim NMTC was
at its highest and transaction costs due to the credit’s structure can be
substantial, the grant could result in a similar amount of investment in
low-income communities at a lower overall cost to the federal
government.
Page 277 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Converting the New Markets Tax Credit to a
Grant Program May Increase Program
Efficiency and Reduce the Overall Cost of the
Program
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below.
Analysis
New Markets Tax Credit: The Credit Helps Fund a Variety of Projects in Related GAO Product
Low-Income Communities, but Could be Simplified. GAO-10-334.
Washington, D.C.: January 29, 2010.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov.
Page 278 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Limiting the Tax-Exempt Status of Certain
Governmental Bonds Could Yield Revenue
Limiting the Tax-Exempt Status of Certain
Governmental Bonds Could Yield Revenue
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Federal tax revenue losses for state and local tax-exempt bonds were
about $28 billion in 2010, according to GAO’s analysis of the Department
of the Treasury’s estimates. The loss occurs because taxpayers can
exclude the bond interest from their federal taxable income.
For federal tax purposes, tax-exempt bonds are classified as either
governmental bonds or private activity bonds. In general, governmental
bonds are used to build public capital facilities like roads and serve the
general public interest. Private activity bonds, which can be either taxable
or nontaxable depending on their purpose, provide financing to private
businesses and are subject to restrictions that do not apply to
governmental bonds. State and local governments have issued
governmental bonds for facilities, such as sports stadiums, that are
generally considered to be for private use but may serve some broader
public purpose.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Tax-exempt bonds are sometimes used to fund facilities or activities that
are private in nature, costing the federal government revenue losses for
purposes that may not merit federal subsidies. State and local
governments have broad discretion in deciding which activities and
facilities to finance using tax-exempt bonds. When they issue
governmental bonds for facilities and activities that are essentially private,
such as for hotels and golf courses, they may indicate that the bonds serve
a broader public purpose. For example, they may indicate there are
benefits to the community that extend beyond the purpose of the facility
being financed by the bonds or that the facilities provide certain services
to those who would not otherwise be able to use them. GAO was asked to
identify hotels and municipal golf courses funded with tax-exempt bonds
and found 18 hotels financed from 2002 through 2006 and six golf courses
that opened in 2005 that GAO could confirm had some tax-exempt bond
financing. However, it is not clear whether facilities like hotels and golf
courses always provide public benefits to federal taxpayers that extend
beyond the purposes of the facilities. Since GAO’s 2008 report, applicable
laws that would limit the use of tax-exempt bond financing have not been
changed.
Members of Congress have recently shown interest in whether certain
facilities providing benefits that are essentially private in nature, such as
stadiums, should be financed with tax-exempt governmental bonds.
However, similar attention has not been given to other types of facilities.
Page 279 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Limiting the Tax-Exempt Status of Certain
Governmental Bonds Could Yield Revenue
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
GAO continues to believe, as indicated in its February 2008 report, that as
Congress considers whether tax-exempt governmental bonds should be
used for professional sports stadiums that are generally privately used, it
also should consider whether other privately used facilities, including
hotels and golf courses, should continue to be financed with such bonds.
How much additional federal revenue would be gained would depend on
how broadly Congress applies new limitations. For instance, because
wider-ranging limitations on governmental bonds would reduce the
purposes for which such bonds may be issued, limitations that applied
only to sports stadiums would raise less revenue than limitations that
applied more broadly to include additional types of facilities, such as
hotels and golf courses.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below and updated data on the amount of lost federal
Analysis revenue each year.
Tax Policy: Tax-Exempt Status of Certain Bonds Merits Related GAO Product
Reconsideration, and Apparent Noncompliance with Issuance Cost
Limitations Should Be Addressed. GAO-08-364. Washington, D.C.:
February 15, 2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov.
Page 280 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Adjusting Civil Tax Penalties for Inflation
Could Help Increase Collections and Deter
Noncompliance
Adjusting Civil Tax Penalties for Inflation Could Help
Increase Collections and Deter Noncompliance
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Internal Revenue Code has over 150 civil penalties that potentially
deter taxpayer noncompliance. A number of civil tax penalties have fixed
dollar amounts—either a specific dollar amount, or a minimum or
maximum amount—that are not indexed for inflation. Over time, the lack
of indexing can decrease the real value of Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
assessments and collections significantly. Further, not adjusting the fixed
penalties also means they are not maintained at the level Congress initially
believed was appropriate to deter noncompliance. Finally, not adjusting
these penalties for inflation may lead to inconsistent treatment of
otherwise equal taxpayers over time because taxpayers who were
penalized when the amounts were originally set could effectively pay a
higher penalty than taxpayers who were penalized many years later.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
GAO has long recommended the periodic adjustment of civil tax penalties
for inflation and previously identified that almost all of the increased
revenues from inflation-adjusting penalties would have come from 4 of the
22 penalties it reviewed. In recent years Congress has adjusted some
penalties, but has not inflation-adjusted the majority of penalties GAO
studied and has rarely required IRS to inflation-adjust penalties going
forward. In resetting penalties since GAO’s report, Congress has generally
fully restored their value but one fell well below a full adjustment. GAO
continues to believe that adjusting civil penalties for inflation could increase
collections, help deter noncompliance, and better ensure consistent
treatment of taxpayers over time.
GAO found in August 2007 that adjusting civil tax penalty fixed-dollar
amounts for inflation from 2000 to 2005 would have increased IRS
collections by an estimated $38 million to $61 million per year based on a
limited number of penalties GAO reviewed (see table below). Almost all of
the estimated increase in collections would have been generated by four
penalties:
• failure to file tax returns,
• failure to file correct information returns,
• various penalties on returns by exempt organizations and by certain
trusts, and
• failure to file partnership returns.
Page 281 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Adjusting Civil Tax Penalties for Inflation
Could Help Increase Collections and Deter
Noncompliance
Estimated Increase in IRS Collections from Inflation-Adjusting of Penalties
Assessed, 2000-2005
Dollars in millions
Increased collections after
Assessment year penalty adjustment
2000 $38.2
2001 42.1
2002 47.9
2003 53.2
2004 61.0
2005 60.3
Source: GAO analysis of IRS data.
These increases would have resulted because some of the penalties were
set decades earlier and had decreased significantly in real value—in some
cases by over one-half. For example, by 2007, the failure-to-file-tax-returns
penalty decreased in real value by 53 percent since it had been set in 1982,
and the failure-to-file-partnership-returns penalty decreased in real value
by 64 percent since it had been set in 1979.
Since August 2007, Congress has increased the amount of five fixed
penalties, three of which—failure to file correct information returns, failure
to file partnership returns, and failure to file tax returns—were among the
four penalties GAO had previously found would increase IRS collections the
most if they were inflation-adjusted. The adjustment to one of the five—
failure to file tax returns—was about two-thirds short of the level needed to
fully adjust for inflation since the penalty was set in 1982. The 2008
adjustment to the failure-to-file-tax-returns penalty moved it from $100 to
$135 whereas a full adjustment would have been to $225. Recently, in 2010,
Congress did act to require IRS to periodically inflation-adjust two
penalties—one of which—the failure to file correct information returns—
Congress had increased since 2007 and one—intentional failure to file a
certain information return form—it had not. Those more recent
requirements for inflation-adjusting were consistent with the intent of
GAO’s previously stated position that Congress should consider requiring
IRS to periodically adjust fixed-penalty amounts for inflation. However,
many fixed penalties have not been adjusted at all and only the two will be
periodically inflation-adjusted in the future.
According to GAO interviews with officials in the IRS offices that would
be involved, the likely administrative burden associated with adjusting the
Page 282 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Adjusting Civil Tax Penalties for Inflation
Could Help Increase Collections and Deter
Noncompliance
fixed-dollar amounts of civil tax penalties for inflation on a regular basis
would not be significant for IRS. Officials from the Office of Penalties,
which has only a few staff, thought some additional staff might be needed
to coordinate the necessary changes to forms, training materials,
computer systems, and guidance, but not a significant increase. According
to interviews with 28 tax practitioners associated with four professional
organizations, periodic inflation adjustments to civil penalties likely would
not place a significant burden on practitioners.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
In its August 2007 report, GAO said that Congress may want to consider
requiring IRS to periodically adjust for inflation, and round appropriately,
the fixed-dollar amounts of the civil penalties to account for the decrease
in real value over time and so that penalties for the same infraction are
consistent over time. Although Congress has increased the amount of
some fixed penalties since GAO’s report, only two penalties are to be
adjusted for inflation on a periodic basis. Consequently, GAO continues to
believe Congress should consider requiring IRS to periodically adjust all
fixed penalties for inflation. Increased revenues potentially could be in the
tens of millions of dollars per year, not counting any revenues that may
result from maintaining the penalties’ deterrent effect.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below and additional GAO work from January 2008 through
Analysis January 2011 to follow up on any actions taken pursuant to that report.
Tax Compliance: Inflation Has Significantly Decreased the Real Value of Related GAO Product
Some Penalties. GAO-07-1062. Washington, D.C.: August 23, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek or Area Contact
James White at (202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov or whitej@gao.gov.
Page 283 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS May Be Able to Systematically Identify
Nonresident Aliens Reporting Unallowed
Deductions or Credits
IRS May Be Able to Systematically Identify Nonresident
Aliens Reporting Unallowed Deductions or Credits
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Every year, the United States receives millions of legal visits by foreign
individuals, some of whom have income from a U.S. source or are engaged
in a U.S. trade or business. Individuals who are neither U.S. citizens nor
residents are known as nonresident aliens for tax purposes and may be
required to file federal income tax returns to report their U.S.-source
income. For 2007, individuals filed about 634,000 nonresident alien income
tax returns, reporting about $12.8 billion in income and $2.5 billion in tax.
Nonresident aliens’ failure to comply with their tax requirements can
contribute to the tax gap, which is the difference between the amount of
taxes owed and the amount paid voluntarily and timely and was last
estimated to be $345 billion. As it is for U.S. citizens and residents, the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is responsible for ensuring that
nonresident aliens comply with their tax obligations. IRS has not
developed estimates for the extent of nonresident alien tax noncompliance
because it often lacks information to distinguish between nonresident
aliens and other filers.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
IRS may be missing an opportunity to identify more potentially
noncompliant nonresident alien taxpayers because it does not
systematically identify nonresidents filing the incorrect type of tax return.
Nonresidents who file the individual tax return for U.S. citizens and
residents (Form 1040) instead of the return for nonresidents (Form
1040NR) may claim credits or take deductions to which they are not
entitled, such as the earned income credit, which may lead to reduced tax
revenue. IRS has generally conducted face-to-face examinations of
nonresident aliens through special projects that focus on particular types
of taxpayers, such as individuals employed by foreign embassies or
consulates and international organizations in the United States. Through
its examinations, IRS has found that some nonresidents improperly file
Form 1040 instead of Form 1040NR. However, IRS does not have a
program to automatically identify taxpayers who may have made this type
of error.
IRS may be able to systematically identify nonresidents who improperly
file Form 1040 instead of 1040NR. As with U.S. citizens and residents,
nonresidents must have a taxpayer identification number in order to file a
tax return. Nonresidents who do not qualify for a Social Security number
but have a valid filing requirement may apply to IRS for a 9-digit individual
tax identification number to use in lieu of a Social Security number in
filing a tax return and are to indicate if they are resident or nonresident
aliens, or a spouse or dependent of either, on their applications.
Page 284 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
IRS May Be Able to Systematically Identify
Nonresident Aliens Reporting Unallowed
Deductions or Credits
If IRS were able to identify taxpayers who should have filed Form 1040NR
instead of Form 1040 by identifying tax returns filed with an individual tax
identification number and using information from individual tax
identification number applications, it may be able to cost-effectively
address this form of noncompliance for some taxpayers and increase tax
revenue. For example, IRS may be able to examine potentially
noncompliant taxpayers through correspondence, which would be less
time consuming, complex, and costly than the face-to-face examinations
IRS has traditionally conducted for nonresident aliens. Without further
study, IRS cannot know if systematically identifying and addressing
nonresidents who filed an incorrect type of tax return would be cost-
effective.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
GAO recommended in April 2010 that IRS determine if creating an
automated program to identify nonresident aliens who may have
improperly filed Form 1040 instead of Form 1040NR would be a cost-
effective means to improve compliance. IRS has formed a team to study
the feasibility of such a program, which it plans to complete by December
2011. GAO plans to follow up on this issue to assess progress in
completing the study as well as to identify potential revenue increases.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below.
Analysis
Tax Compliance: IRS May Be Able to Improve Compliance for Related GAO Product
Nonresident Aliens and Updating Requirements Could Reduce Their
Compliance Burden. GAO-10-429. Washington, D.C.: April 14, 2010.
For additional information about this area, contact Michael Brostek at Area Contact
(202) 512-9110 or brostekm@gao.gov.
Page 285 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Tracking Undisbursed Balances in Expired
Grant Accounts Could Facilitate the
Reallocation of Scarce Resources or the
Return of Funding to the Treasury
Tracking Undisbursed Balances in Expired Grant
Accounts Could Facilitate the Reallocation of Scarce
Resources or the Return of Funding to the Treasury
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
According to Office of Management and Budget (OMB) estimates, federal
grant awards to nonfederal entities, such as states and nonprofit
organizations, increased from $300 billion in 2000 to over $500 billion in
2009. If even a small fraction of the federal government’s total grant
funding is not spent in a prudent and timely fashion, it can prevent the
reallocation of scarce resources or the return of funding to the United
States Treasury.
Undisbursed funding is funding the federal government has obligated
through a grant agreement, but which the grantee has not entirely spent.
An expired grant account is an agency-level account for which the period
of availability to the grantee has ended.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
The existence of unspent funds can hinder the achievement of national
objectives in various ways, such as leaving projects incomplete or making
federal funds more susceptible to improper spending or accounting as
monitoring diminishes over time. Closeout procedures help ensure
grantees have met all financial requirements, provided final reports, and
that unused funds are de-obligated. However, past audits of federal
agencies by GAO and Inspectors General, and agencies’ annual
performance reports have suggested grant management challenges,
including failure to conduct grant closeouts and undisbursed balances, are
a long-standing problem. The audits generally attributed the problems to
inadequacies in awarding agencies’ grant management processes,
including regarding closeouts as a low management priority, inconsistent
closeout procedures, poorly timed communications with grantees, or
insufficient compliance or enforcement.
GAO found that when federal agencies took corrective actions, there were
improvements in grant closeouts and resolution of undisbursed funding.
Using federal payment systems to track undisbursed funding in expired
grant accounts and including the status of grant closeouts in annual
performance reports could raise the visibility of the problem both within
the agency and governmentwide, and lead to improvements in grant
closeouts and reduce undisbursed balances.
In August 2008, GAO reported that during calendar year 2006, about $1
billion in undisbursed funding remained in expired grant accounts in the
Department of Health and Human Services’ Payment Management System
(PMS)—the largest civilian grant payment system. In 2006, PMS made
payments for about 70 percent of all federal grants awarded by nine
federal departments and three other federal entities. The expired but still
Page 286 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Tracking Undisbursed Balances in Expired
Grant Accounts Could Facilitate the
Reallocation of Scarce Resources or the
Return of Funding to the Treasury
open grant accounts found in PMS were associated with thousands of
grantees and over 325 different federal programs. While GAO has not
updated this figure, it illustrates the potential financial benefits to be
gained by improving oversight of undisbursed grant funding. Better
tracking of grant accounts maintained in all federal payment systems
could identify the expired grants with undisbursed balances and make
funds available for other assistance projects or facilitate the return of
these funds to the Treasury. GAO recommended that the Director of OMB
instruct executive departments and independent agencies to annually
track the amount of undisbursed grant funding remaining in expired grant
accounts and report on the status and resolution of such funding in their
annual performance plans and Performance and Accountability Reports
(PAR). As of January 13, 2011, OMB had not issued governmentwide
guidance regarding undisbursed balances in expired grant accounts.
As an example of how agencies could be instructed to provide this
information, section 537 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2010
(Public Law 111-117), signed into law on December 16, 2009, required that
the Director of OMB instruct departments, agencies, and other entities
receiving funds under the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies
Act of 2010 to track undisbursed balances in expired grant accounts and
include in its annual PARs details on the (1) actions the department, agency,
or instrumentality will take to resolve such balances; (2) methods used to
track such balances; (3) identification of balances that may be returned to
the U.S. Treasury; and (4) the number of such accounts for the preceding 3
years. In October 2010, OMB issued the instructions to the federal entities
funded by this appropriations act, as required. GAO reviewed available
fiscal year 2010 PARs and found three entities reported they had
undisbursed and/or unobligated balances remaining in expired grant
accounts over the last 3 or 4 years. The most recent balances that these
agencies reported were as follows: Department of Justice, fiscal year 2010—
$2.9 million; National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), fiscal
year 2009—$58 million; and National Science Foundation, fiscal year 2010—
$1.7 billion. Of these three agencies, only NASA grant accounts were
included in the total undisbursed balances GAO reported in 2008.
In a recent example of how to identify, resolve, and quantify the savings
resulting from resolving undisbursed funding in expired grant accounts,
the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Office of Inspector General reported
in 2009 that the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) did not timely de-
obligate unused funds from 32 of 121 cooperative agreements that expired
in fiscal years 2005 and 2006. The inspector general cited GAO in
recommending that the ARS de-obligate the $2.75 million remaining on the
Page 287 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Tracking Undisbursed Balances in Expired
Grant Accounts Could Facilitate the
Reallocation of Scarce Resources or the
Return of Funding to the Treasury
32 expired agreements to make the funds available for other research
projects and prevent the potential misuse of funds. The ARS reported to
the inspector general, in April 2009, that it had de-obligated the $2.75
million, as recommended.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Better tracking of grant accounts maintained in all federal payment
systems could identify the expired grants with undisbursed balances.
Ongoing, systematic resolution of these undisbursed grant balances could
potentially make these funds available for other assistance programs or
facilitate the return of these funds to the Treasury. In August 2008, GAO
recommended that OMB instruct all executive departments and
independent agencies to track undisbursed balances in expired grant
accounts and report on the resolution of this funding in their annual
performance plan and PARs. While OMB has not issued governmentwide
guidance regarding undisbursed balances in expired grant accounts, GAO
continues to believe its recommendations should be implemented.
The analysis above was based on a prior GAO product, GAO-08-432, listed Framework for
below.
Analysis
Telecommunications: Long-Term Strategic Vision Would Help Ensure Related GAO
Targeting of E-rate Funds to Highest-Priority Uses. GAO-09-253.
Products Washington, D.C.: March 27, 2009.
Grants Management: Attention Needed to Address Undisbursed Balances
in Expired Grant Accounts. GAO-08-432. Washington, D.C.: August 29,
2008.
For additional information about this area, contact Stanley J. Czerwinski Area Contact
at (202) 512-6520 or czerwinskis@gao.gov.
Page 288 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Preventing Billions in Medicaid Improper
Payments Requires Sustained Attention and
Action by the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services
Preventing Billions in Medicaid Improper Payments
Requires Sustained Attention and Action by the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
In fiscal year 2009, the Medicaid program covered over 65 million people at
a cost to the federal government and states, which share the cost of the
program, of an estimated $381 billion. Medicaid is a federal-state program
that consists of more than 50 distinct state-based programs that cover acute
health care and long-term care services for certain low-income individuals,
including children and persons who are aged or disabled. The Congressional
Budget Office has estimated that, under the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, enacted in 2010, the cost of the Medicaid expansion
will exceed $430 billion from 2010 to 2019, with the federal government
responsible for paying over 90 percent of these increased costs.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) in the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) is responsible for overseeing the
program at the federal level. States administer their respective programs’
day-to-day operations, including processing and paying claims submitted
by health care providers for services provided to Medicaid beneficiaries.
Due to the size, growth, and diversity of the Medicaid program, rigorous
fiscal oversight is necessary to prevent improper payments.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Improper payments to Medicaid providers that submit inappropriate claims
can result in substantial financial losses to states and the federal
government. The amount of improper payments in the Medicaid program is
among the largest of all government programs. For fiscal year 2010, HHS
estimated that 9.4 percent of Medicaid payments were improper,
representing $22.5 billion in federal expenditures. Medicaid payments can
be improper for various reasons, including payments made for which
required documentation is missing or inadequate or payments on claims
with errors. Improper payments also include payments for people who are
not eligible for Medicaid or to providers who are barred from participating
in the program. For example, in 2009, GAO found that Medicaid
beneficiaries and providers were involved in potentially wasteful or abusive
purchases of controlled substances in five selected states. For example,
GAO found that Medicaid paid over $2 million in controlled substance
prescriptions during fiscal years 2006 and 2007 that were written or filled by
65 medical practitioners and pharmacies that were barred, excluded, or
both from federal health care programs, including Medicaid.
State efforts to maximize federal reimbursement also can increase the risk
of improper federal payments to states, to the extent states’ efforts may
inappropriately shift state costs to the federal government. In 2005, GAO
reported that a growing number of states were using contingency-fee
consultants—consultants employed under contracts whereby payments
Page 289 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Preventing Billions in Medicaid Improper
Payments Requires Sustained Attention and
Action by the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services
were contingent upon the consultant’s performance—to maximize federal
Medicaid reimbursement. States may employ consultants to serve valid
Medicaid-related roles, such as adding needed staff or a particular
expertise. However, in two states reviewed, GAO identified certain claims
for federal funding from contingency-fee projects in five categories of
Medicaid services that were problematic because they appeared to be
inconsistent with CMS policy, were inconsistent with federal law, or
undermined Medicaid fiscal integrity. GAO also found that CMS and state
oversight of claims associated with contingency-fee projects was limited
and recommended that CMS routinely require states to identify claims or
projects developed by contingency-fee consultants. CMS recognizes that
claims resulting from consultant revenue maximization projects are at
higher risk of being inconsistent with certain federal Medicaid
requirements, but as of the end of 2010 it had not established processes to
routinely collect information enabling it to identify claims or projects
developed by contingency-fee consultants to maximize federal
reimbursement. Without adequate controls over improper payments and
state maximization efforts, tens of billions of additional federal dollars are
at risk as program expenditures grow.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
Sustained agency attention is needed to implement and oversee processes
to prevent, identify, and recover improper payments and to reduce the
billions of dollars that are annually lost to improper Medicaid payments.
Both the executive branch and Congress have acted to curtail improper
Medicaid payments, but challenges in preventing such payments remain.
The issuance of Presidential Memoranda and a 2009 Executive Order,
Reducing Improper Payments, along with enactment of the Improper
Payments Elimination and Recovery Act of 2010 (IPERA), are positive
steps toward improving transparency and reducing improper payments.
However, it is too soon to determine whether the activities called for in the
Presidential Memoranda, Executive Order, and IPERA will achieve their
goals of reducing improper payments. Further, the magnitude of the
program’s payment errors indicates that CMS and the states face
significant challenges to address the program’s vulnerabilities. In its 2009
report on top management and performance challenges facing HHS, the
HHS Office of Inspector General reported multiple priorities related to
Medicaid, including the need to ensure the integrity of payments to
providers by ensuring they are appropriately enrolled and eligible to
receive payments. CMS has taken steps to strengthen its financial
oversight of Medicaid, but the agency can do more to address gaps in its
oversight and financial management.
Page 290 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Preventing Billions in Medicaid Improper
Payments Requires Sustained Attention and
Action by the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services
GAO recommended in 2009 that CMS issue guidance to states to
implement processes that better prevent payment of improper claims for
controlled substances in Medicaid. CMS generally agreed with GAO’s
recommendations; however, guidance had not been issued as of the end of
2010. With regard to Medicaid claims related to state efforts to maximize
federal reimbursements, GAO recommended that CMS improve its
oversight of projects developed by consultants on a contingency-fee basis,
in part by routinely requesting information on these projects and
associated claims. CMS stated in 2010 that it was committed to fully
assessing the basis for all claims, but indicated it did not plan to routinely
request this information. GAO maintains that the high-risk nature of
consultant-led maximization projects to shift state costs to the federal
government by submitting claims for federal matching funds that are
inconsistent with federal law or CMS policy, warrants their identification
and close oversight.
The information contained in this analysis is based on work GAO has Framework for
conducted over the past 5 years, ongoing work examining the federal
Analysis government efforts to curtail improper payments, and recent work to
update the status of recommendations.
Related GAO
Products
Medicaid: Fraud and Abuse Related to Controlled Substances Identified
in Selected States. GAO-09-957. Washington, D.C.: September 9, 2009.
Improper Payments: Progress Made but Challenges Remain in
Estimating and Reducing Improper Payments. GAO-09-628T.
Washington, D.C.: April 22, 2009.
Improper Payments: Status of Agencies’ Efforts to Address Improper
Payment and Recovery Auditing Requirements. GAO-08-438T.
Washington, D.C.: January 31, 2008.
Improper Payments: Federal Executive Branch Agencies’ Fiscal Year
2007 Improper Payment Estimate Reporting. GAO-08-377R. Washington,
D.C.: January 23, 2008.
Medicaid Financial Management: Steps Taken to Improve Federal
Oversight but Other Actions Needed to Sustain Efforts. GAO-06-705.
Washington, D.C.: June 22, 2006.
Page 291 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Preventing Billions in Medicaid Improper
Payments Requires Sustained Attention and
Action by the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services
Medicaid Financing: States’ Use of Contingency-Fee Consultants to
Maximize Federal Reimbursements Highlights Need for Improved
Federal Oversight. GAO-05-748. Washington, D.C.: June 28, 2005.
For additional information about this area, contact Katherine Iritani at Area Contact
(202) 512-7114 or iritanik@gao.gov.
Page 292 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Federal Oversight over Medicaid
Supplemental Payments Needs Improvement
Federal Oversight over Medicaid Supplemental
Payments Needs Improvement
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Strong federal oversight of Medicaid is warranted as the program
continues to grow in size and cost, and GAO has had long-standing
concern with the adequacy of federal oversight of state Medicaid
supplemental payments. Each state administers a Medicaid program and
covers a variety of health care services for low-income individuals. The
federal government oversees states’ Medicaid programs and, by a formula
established in law, pays from half to more than three-fourths of each
state’s Medicaid expenditures. Subject to certain requirements, states
establish Medicaid payment rates for providers and may make
supplemental payments to providers, which are separate from and in
addition to standard state Medicaid payment rates. States make two
general types of supplemental payments. First, Disproportionate Share
Hospital (DSH) payments are required under federal law to be made to
hospitals that serve a large number of low-income individuals and are
designed to help offset hospitals’ uncompensated costs for serving
Medicaid and uninsured low-income individuals. Second, states often
make non-DSH Medicaid supplemental payments, which are also funded in
part with federal dollars, for example to help offset the costs of care
provided to individuals covered by Medicaid.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Varied financing arrangements that states use to make Medicaid
supplemental payments can inappropriately increase federal Medicaid
matching payments. GAO found that, under certain financing
arrangements, some states paid state or local government providers
supplemental payments that greatly exceeded standard Medicaid rates,
resulting in large matching payments from the federal government. Some
states required providers to return most, or all, of the large supplemental
payments to the state, which the states then used for other purposes. Such
financing arrangements threaten the fiscal integrity of Medicaid’s federal
and state partnership because they effectively increase the federal
Medicaid share above what is established by law, and there is no
assurance that federal Medicaid funds are used for Medicaid purposes.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) within the
Department of Health and Human Services—the agency that oversees
Medicaid at the federal level—has taken action to curb inappropriate
payments, but gaps in oversight remain. For example, in 2003, CMS began
an initiative to closely review supplemental payment arrangements and
required states to end those it found inappropriate; however, in 2008, GAO
reported that CMS had not reviewed all arrangements to ensure that
payments were appropriate and used for Medicaid purposes. In 2009, GAO
found that ongoing federal oversight of supplemental payments was
Page 293 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Federal Oversight over Medicaid
Supplemental Payments Needs Improvement
warranted, in part because in two of the four states reviewed the states did
not comply with federal requirements to account for all Medicaid
payments when calculating DSH payment limits for uncompensated
hospital care. States calculate these limits to provide assurances that DSH
payments to hospitals do not exceed individual hospitals’ actual costs of
providing services. For a small number of hospitals, the state calculation
errors resulted in payments in excess of hospital limits. In two states, a
state-operated hospital received combined Medicaid supplemental and
standard Medicaid payments that exceeded the hospital’s total operating
costs by 3 percent in one case and 6 percent in another.
In 2011, under federal regulations, improved transparency and
accountability requirements will become effective for state DSH payments,
including standards for state calculations of DSH payment limits. Also,
states will be required to report DSH payments on a facility basis and to
obtain independent audits for their DSH payment reports and calculations.
Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, reductions in
federal DSH expenditures will occur in future years. At the same time,
similar requirements are not in place for non-DSH payments, which appear
to be increasing. In 2006 states reported making $6.3 billion in non-DSH
supplemental Medicaid payments, of which the federal share was $3.7
billion, but not all states were reporting their payments. By 2010, this
amount had grown to $14 billion, with a federal share $9.6 billion,
however, according to CMS officials reporting was likely incomplete.
Requirements for DSH supplemental payments, such as standards for
calculating the amount of the payments and reporting of payments on a
facility specific basis, do not apply to non-DSH supplemental payments.
Further, processes have not been implemented to ensure that all
supplemental payment arrangements are reviewed.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
In light of the magnitude of Medicaid supplemental payments and recent
reported growth of non-DSH supplemental payments, along with past
concerns about the inappropriateness of some supplemental payments,
further action by CMS is warranted to ensure that these payments are
appropriate and used for Medicaid purposes. Some key prior GAO
recommendations aimed at improving federal oversight of supplemental
payments have not been implemented. In particular, GAO has
recommended that CMS establish uniform guidance for states that sets
acceptable methods for calculating non-DSH payment amounts, require
facility specific reporting of non-DSH supplemental payments, and develop
a strategy to ensure all state supplemental payment arrangements have
been reviewed by CMS.
Page 294 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Federal Oversight over Medicaid
Supplemental Payments Needs Improvement
Given concerns associated with Medicaid supplemental payments, strong
and sustained CMS oversight is necessary. Ensuring that the federal
government provides matching funds only for appropriate supplemental
payments could result in substantial costs savings.
The information contained in this analysis is based on work GAO has Framework for
conducted over the past 15 years and recent work to update the status of
Analysis prior recommendations and payment amounts.
Related GAO
Products
Medicaid: Ongoing Federal Oversight of Payments to Offset
Uncompensated Hospital Care Costs Is Warranted. GAO-10-69.
Washington D.C.: November 20, 2009.
Medicaid: CMS Needs More Information on the Billions of Dollars Spent
on Supplemental Payments. GAO-08-614. Washington, D.C.: May 30, 2008.
Medicaid Financing: Long-standing Concerns about Inappropriate State
Arrangements Support Need for Improved Federal Oversight.
GAO-08-650T. Washington D.C.: April 3, 2008.
Medicaid Financing: Long-standing Concerns about Inappropriate State
Arrangements Support Need for Improved Federal Oversight.
GAO-08-255T. Washington D.C.: November 1, 2007.
Medicaid Financing: Federal Oversight Initiative Is Consistent with
Medicaid Payment Principles but Needs Greater Transparency.
GAO-07-214. Washington, D.C.: March 30, 2007.
Medicaid: State Financing Schemes Again Drive Up Federal Payments.
GAO/T-HEHS-00-193. Washington D.C.: September 6, 2000.
Medicaid: States Use Illusory Approaches to Shift Program Costs to
Federal Government. GAO/HEHS-94-133. Washington D.C.: August 1, 1994.
For additional information about this area, contact Katherine Iritani at Area Contact
(202) 512-7114 or iritanik@gao.gov.
Page 295 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Targeting of Medicare’s Claims Review
Could Reduce Improper Payments
Better Targeting of Medicare’s Claims Review Could
Reduce Improper Payments
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)—the agency that
administers Medicare—has estimated that improper payments for
Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) were $34.3 billion in fiscal year 2010.
Because the program’s complexity and size make it vulnerable to billions
of dollars in improper payments—over- and underpayments that should
not have been made—GAO has designated it as a high-risk program. CMS
and its contractors conduct activities to identify improper payments,
including reviewing claims before and after payment. CMS contractors are
also responsible for processing and paying approximately 4.5 million
claims per work day, which makes the volume and cost to review the
claims challenging.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Aspects of the Medicare program’s design make it susceptible to improper
payments and effective use of payment controls can help ensure that these
improper payments are minimized. GAO found that improving automated
review and better targeting of claims to review manually could help
prevent improper payments.
Medicare is designed to pay claims promptly and the number of claims it
receives limits the amount of possible review. CMS is generally required to
pay electronic claims between 14 and 30 days from the date of receipt and
the program now pays 4.5 million claims each work day. The amount of
program payments that are made with minimal review has made Medicare
a target for fraud, waste, and abuse that can result in improper payments.
Medicare requires that covered services be reasonable and medically
necessary—and of course, be provided as claimed. Since it was first
estimated in 1996, Medicare’s improper payment rate has been in the
billions of dollars each year, although efforts to improve the methodology
used for the estimate have made current year estimates noncomparable to
any made before 2009. Prior to 1996, CMS had controls in place to try to
minimize improper payments and beginning in fiscal year 1997, Congress
provided funds specifically for CMS activities designed to ensure that
claims are paid correctly. CMS allocates these funds to contractors that
conduct a number of activities, including a limited amount of claims
review, to help prevent or identify and address improper payments.
Despite agency efforts, CMS still faces challenges in designing and
implementing internal controls to effectively prevent or recoup improper
payments and to prevent fraud, waste, and abuse. Previous GAO products
identified some specific weaknesses in the area of claims review and made
recommendations to implement key strategies related to automating and
targeting claims review that are particularly important to helping prevent
Page 296 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Targeting of Medicare’s Claims Review
Could Reduce Improper Payments
fraud, waste, and abuse, and ultimately, to reducing improper payments.
The claims review weaknesses identified include:
Prepayment review of claims did not identify atypical billing associated
with fraud. Overall, less than 1 percent of Medicare’s claims are subject to a
medical record review by trained personnel—so having robust automated
payment controls in place that can deny inappropriate claims or flag them
for further review is critical. However, GAO has found weaknesses in this
area. Specifically, in 2007, GAO found that contractors responsible for
reviewing claims from suppliers of durable medical equipment, prosthetics,
orthotics, and supplies did not have automated prepayment controls in
place to identify questionable claims that might suggest fraud, such as those
associated with atypically rapid increases in billing or for items unlikely to
be prescribed in the course of routine quality medical care.
Postpayment claims review was not focused on most vulnerable areas.
Postpayment reviews are critical to identifying payment errors, recouping
overpayments, or repaying underpayments. CMS’s contractors have
conducted limited postpayment reviews—for example, GAO reported in
2009 that the contractors paying claims for home health care conducted
postpayment reviews on fewer than 700 of the more than 8.7 million
claims that they paid in fiscal year 2007. Further, GAO found they were not
using evidence, such as findings from prepayment review, to target their
postpayment review resources on providers with a demonstrated high risk
of improper payments.
Regular cross-checking of claims for home health services with the
physicians listed as prescribing them was not always done. CMS does
not routinely provide physicians responsible for authorizing home health
care with information that would enable them to determine whether a
home health agency (HHA) was billing for unauthorized care. In one
instance, a CMS contractor identified overpayments in excess of $9 million
after interviewing physicians whose names and signatures appeared on
referrals for beneficiaries with high home health costs. Some physicians
indicated their signatures had been forged or they had not realized the
amount of care they had authorized.
CMS’s new national recovery audit contracting program, begun in
March 2009, added to postpayment efforts; but not for fraud-prone
claims. Recovery audit contractors (RAC) review claims after payment,
with reimbursement to them contingent on the improper over- and
underpayments identified. According to CMS, because RACs are paid fees
contingent on the dollar value of the improper payments identified, RACs
Page 297 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Targeting of Medicare’s Claims Review
Could Reduce Improper Payments
have focused on high-dollar claims from inpatient hospital stays, not other
services prone to improper payment, such as home health services.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
More targeted claims review could help reduce improper payments. While
the potential for savings exists, the extent of savings realized would
depend on the efforts taken to address weaknesses in the review process.
GAO continues to believe that CMS should address these previously made
recommendations:
• In 2007, GAO recommended that CMS require its contractors to
develop thresholds for unexplained increases in billing and use them to
develop automated prepayment controls. CMS agreed with this
recommendation in its comments on the report, but has not
implemented it. The agency has added other prepayment controls to
flag claims for services that were unlikely to be provided in the normal
course of medical care. However, implementing GAO’s
recommendation and adding additional prepayment controls could
enhance identification of improper claims before they are paid.
• In 2009, GAO’s report on home health services recommended that
postpayment reviews be conducted on claims submitted by HHAs with
high rates of improper billing identified through prepayment review.
CMS did not indicate that it agreed or disagreed with this
recommendation and has not implemented it. The agency stated that its
contractors conduct pre- and postpayment reviews for HHAs with high
utilization as resources allow. However, this might not lead to
postpayment review of claims by HHAs with high rates of improper
prepayment billing and GAO continues to believe that such reviews
would be valuable.
• The 2009 home health report also recommended that CMS require that
physicians receive a statement of home health services beneficiaries
received based on the physicians’ certification. The agency agreed to
consider this recommendation, but has not taken action. Such action
could also be beneficial for other items and services susceptible to fraud
and abuse that are often not directly billed by physicians, such as high-
cost durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies.
CMS indicated in 2010 that the Affordable Care Act included a section
requiring a physician (or nonphysician working for or in collaboration
with a physician) to document that a face-to-face encounter with the
physician occurred before home health services can be implemented.
Page 298 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Better Targeting of Medicare’s Claims Review
Could Reduce Improper Payments
However, the actual services provided could differ from what the initial
ordering physician intended, and the initial documentation of a face-to
face encounter would not address that issue.
In addition, as GAO pointed out in 2010 testimony on Medicare fraud,
waste, and abuse, because the RACs are focusing on review of hospitals,
other contractors’ postpayment review activities could be more valuable if
CMS directed these contractors to focus on services where RACs are not
expected to focus their reviews, and where improper payments are known
to be high, specifically home health services.
The amount that could be saved from taking these actions has not been
estimated and would depend on how they were implemented.
The information contained in this analysis is based on findings from the Framework for
GAO reports listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Medicare Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: Challenges and Strategies for
Preventing Improper Payments. GAO-10-844T. Washington, D.C.:
June 15, 2010.
Medicare Recovery Audit Contracting: Weaknesses Remain in
Addressing Vulnerabilities to Improper Payments, Although
Improvements Made to Contractor Oversight. GAO-10-143. Washington,
D.C.: March 31, 2010.
Improper Payments: Progress Made but Challenges Remain in
Estimating and Reducing Improper Payments. GAO-09-628T.
Washington, D.C.: April 22, 2009.
Medicare: Improvements Needed to Address Improper Payments in
Home Health. GAO-09-185. Washington, D.C.: February 27, 2009.
Medicare: Improvements Needed to Address Improper Payments for
Medical Equipment and Supplies. GAO-07-59. Washington, D.C.:
January 31, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact Kathleen King at Area Contact
(202) 512-7114 or kingk@gao.gov.
Page 299 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Potential Savings in Medicare s Payments for
Health Care
’Potential Savings in Medicare’s Payments for
Health Care
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
Medicare expenditures are growing faster than the overall economy and
are expected to continue to do so, leading to concerns about the program’s
long-term sustainability. Furthermore, it is widely recognized that
Medicare’s contribution to the nation’s long-term fiscal shortfall is
considerable.
The primary drivers of increased Medicare spending are growth in the
volume of services (the number of services provided per beneficiary) and
the intensity of services (services’ complexity and costliness). The
behavior of physicians is particularly critical to attempts to control these
increases, because physicians not only provide services, but also order
services such as imaging studies and home oxygen.
Medicare, which is administered by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS), an agency of the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS), helps pay for hospital, physician, and other inpatient and
outpatient services for about 38.7 million aged and 7.6 million disabled
beneficiaries. According to the 2010 Medicare Trustees Report, about $336
billion was spent on health care (excluding Medicare’s managed care and
prescription drug spending for beneficiaries in those programs) in 2009.
Medicare is funded primarily by tax revenues and beneficiaries’ premiums.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
Some Medicare spending for services provided and ordered by physicians
may not be warranted, and Medicare’s review of claims is not always
sufficiently targeted and systematic. For example, the wide geographic
variation in Medicare spending per beneficiary—unrelated to health status
or outcomes—suggests that health needs alone do not determine
spending. In other cases, such as home oxygen, Medicare simply overpays.
Additionally, Medicare pays for portions of some services twice because it
fails to take into account the extent to which services that are commonly
furnished together overlap.
GAO has reviewed four specific areas in which a potential for savings
exists:
• Physician practice patterns. Some private and public health care
purchasers have initiated programs to identify inefficient physicians—
that is, physicians who provide and order a level of services that is
excessive, given the patient’s health status—and to encourage patients
to receive their care from other, more efficient physicians. GAO
profiled Medicare generalist physicians and identified those whose
practices included a higher proportion of overly expensive patients
Page 300 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Potential Savings in Medicare’s Payments for
Health Care
(after adjusting for health status) than would occur by chance. GAO
concluded that these physicians were likely to practice medicine
inefficiently. GAO also profiled Medicare physicians in four
specialties—cardiology, diagnostic radiology, internal medicine, and
orthopedic surgery—and showed that expenditures for institutional
services grew as the level of resource use increased.
• Imaging services. From 2000 through 2006, expenditures for imaging
services paid under the Medicare physician fee schedule more than
doubled in nominal terms, increasing to about $14 billion. Spending on
advanced imaging services such as CT scans, MRIs, and nuclear
medicine, rose faster—17 percent per year—than spending on less
complex services, such as ultrasound or X-ray. Although overall
spending on imaging declined to $12.1 billion in 2007—primarily due to
a cap imposed on certain imaging fees by the Deficit Reduction Act of
2005—utilization continued to increase. While much of this growth may
be appropriate, several other trends—including a shift toward
provision of imaging services in physicians’ offices where there is less
oversight, broader use of imaging by nonradiologists, and an almost
eight-fold geographic variation in spending on in-office imaging in
2006—raise concerns that imaging services may be over utilized.
• Home oxygen. In 2009, Medicare spent $2.15 billion to provide home
oxygen for beneficiaries with conditions such as chronic pulmonary
disease. GAO reported more than a decade ago that Medicare payment
rates for home oxygen were significantly higher than those of the
Department of Veterans Affairs, and the HHS Office of Inspector
General has reported several times that oxygen payment rates were
excessive. Congress has reduced or limited payments several times—
most recently in 2009. However, according to GAO’s analysis, payment
rates remain higher than those of some other national payers.
Additionally, the average monthly Medicare payment for home oxygen
per beneficiary in 2009 was up to 44 percent higher than suppliers’
overall costs. Nearly all beneficiaries who receive home oxygen use a
stationary oxygen concentrator and about two-thirds also use portable
oxygen equipment. Although portable oxygen equipment typically
requires refills, stationary concentrators do not.1 However, Medicare’s
bundled payment for stationary concentrators includes a payment for
1Stationary oxygen concentrators are electrically powered machines that extract oxygen
from the air.
Page 301 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Potential Savings in Medicare’s Payments for
Health Care
oxygen refills. Consequently, in 2008, in about one-third of instances in
which Medicare paid for a stationary concentrator, it was also paying
for oxygen refills that were not provided.
• Physician payments. Medicare’s physician fees may not always reflect
efficiencies that occur when services are commonly furnished together.
For example, certain portions of practice expenses such as a nurse’s
time preparing a patient for a medical procedure or a technician’s time
setting up the required equipment are incurred only once when services
are provided together; and certain portions of physician work
activities—such as reviewing the patient’s medical record—occur only
once when services are provided together, yet payment for these
overlapping portions is generally included in the fee for each service,
resulting in excessive payments by Medicare. CMS has implemented a
multiple procedure payment reduction (MPPR) for certain imaging and
surgical services when two or more related services are furnished
together. Under the MPPR, the full fee is paid for the highest-price
service and a reduced fee is paid for each subsequent service, but the
policy has not been systematically applied to services commonly
furnished together. Looking only at those services that had the greatest
impact on Medicare expenditures, GAO identified areas, such as
physical therapy, in which efficiencies for services commonly
furnished together were not taken into account.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
GAO has reported that significant potential for savings exists by profiling
physician practice patterns to encourage more efficient provision of health
care services, introducing prior approval requirements and other front-end
approaches to better manage the use of imaging services, reducing and
restructuring payments for home oxygen, and reforming payments for
physician services so that when two services overlap, only one payment is
made for the overlapping portion.
• Profiling physicians’ practice patterns. GAO recommended in April
2007 that CMS develop a profiling system to identify individual
physicians with inefficient practice patterns and use the results to
improve the efficiency of care financed by Medicare. Physicians play a
central role in the generation of health care expenditures. About 20
percent of services are provided by physicians. However, they
influence up to 90 percent of spending by, for instance, referring
patients to other physicians; admitting patients to hospitals, skilled
nursing facilities, and hospices; and ordering services delivered by
other health care providers, such as imaging studies, laboratory tests,
Page 302 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
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Health Care
and home health services. GAO found that providing feedback to
physicians on their practice patterns is a promising step toward
encouraging efficiency in Medicare. However, GAO noted that CMS
would likely have to seek legislative changes to maximize the
usefulness of profiling—for example, changes that would allow CMS to
incentivize beneficiaries to select efficient providers. The Medicare
Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 directed the
Secretary of HHS to establish a confidential physician feedback
program. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act2 expanded
the program and also requires the Secretary of HHS to adjust payments
to those physicians whose practice patterns promote both high-quality
and the efficient use of health care services. The feedback program is
in its early stages and potential savings to the $336 billion Medicare
program will depend on implementation details.
• Better management of imaging services. GAO recommended in June
2008 that CMS examine the feasibility of adding more front-end
management approaches, such as prior authorization, for imaging
services. In this way, CMS might be able to improve its efforts to be a
prudent purchaser of imaging services, which cost Medicare over $12
billion in 2008. However, the Secretary of HHS has not implemented or
examined the feasibility of these practices, saying in 2008 that it is
concerned about administrative burden as well as the advisability of
prior authorization for the Medicare program. It also questioned how
prior authorization would fit within its current postpayment review
program. Specific savings estimates are not available and would
depend on the number of Medicare imaging services deemed
inappropriate by additional front-end approaches. However, GAO
continues to believe that additional front-end management would help
Medicare become a more prudent purchaser of imaging services and
could generate savings.
• Reducing payments for home oxygen. GAO suggested in January 2011
that Congress consider reducing Medicare home oxygen rates to align
them more closely with the costs of supplying home oxygen. Congress
has required the Secretary of HHS to institute competitive bidding for
home oxygen and other durable medical equipment. Prices from the
first round of competitive bidding took effect in nine geographic areas
2The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was signed by the President in
March 2010.
Page 303 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Potential Savings in Medicare’s Payments for
Health Care
in January 2011. According to CMS, the bid prices for home oxygen and
other durable medical equipment for 2011 are 32 percent less than
Medicare paid in 2010. However, this payment reduction will result in a
payment reduction only in the nine geographic areas. In 2011, the
process to expand competitive bidding to an additional 91 areas is
expected to begin. Eventually competitive bidding is expected to
expand beyond these first 100 areas. Certain geographic areas, such as
rural areas, are exempt from competitive bidding until 2015. It will be
several years before competitive bids affect Medicare payments for
home oxygen nationwide. Therefore, GAO continues to believe it
would be appropriate for Congress to consider reducing Medicare
home oxygen payment rates.
• Reducing payments for overlapping physician services. In a July 2009
report, GAO recommended that CMS systematically review services
commonly furnished together and implement a MPPR to capture
efficiencies, where appropriate, for these services, focusing on those
services that have the greatest impact on Medicare spending. GAO
identified several areas, including physical therapy, where an MPPR
could be applied to reflect efficiencies in overlapping services. GAO
also recommended in this report that CMS expand the scope of its
MPPR by applying it to nonsurgical and nonimaging services, such as
physical therapy, thereby saving an estimated $500 million. Further,
GAO recommended that the MPPR be applied to the part of the
payment that covers a physician’s work; according to GAO’s estimates,
if that were done only for imaging it would result in savings of $175
million. CMS has taken some steps to implement GAO’s
recommendations, but GAO cannot estimate the full extent of savings if
CMS were to systematically review services commonly furnished
together and eliminate duplicate payments. Under a Medicare budget
neutrality provision, savings obtained from any significant change in
physician payments for a particular service or set of services are added
to the total amount available for paying physicians and are
redistributed. Therefore, GAO also suggested in this report that
Congress exempt savings attributable to the implementation of policies
that reflect efficiencies occurring when services are furnished together
from the budget neutrality requirement.
In summary, GAO has identified numerous opportunities for savings in
Medicare, and CMS has taken actions to address several of them.
However, many actions remain to be taken, which could increase
efficiencies and reduce Medicare’s spending. Increased congressional
attention may be warranted in these areas.
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Potential Savings in Medicare’s Payments for
Health Care
The information contained in this analysis is based primarily on the Framework for
following related GAO products, supplemented by the 2010 Medicare
Analysis Trustees Report, the 2011 Proposed Rule for Medicare Physician Payment,
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and data from CMS’s Web
site.
Related GAO
Products
Medicare Home Oxygen: Refining Payment Methodology Has Potential
to Lower Program and Beneficiary Spending. GAO-11-56. Washington,
D.C.: January 21, 2011.
Medicare: Per Capita Method Can Be Used to Profile Physicians and
Provide Feedback on Resource Use. GAO-09-802. Washington, D.C.:
September 25, 2009.
Medicare Physician Payments: Fees Could Better Reflect Efficiencies
Achieved When Services Are Provided Together. GAO-09-647. Washington,
D.C.: July 31, 2009.
Medicare: Trends in Fees, Utilization, and Expenditures for Imaging
Services before and after Implementation of the Deficit Reduction Act of
2005. GAO-08-1102R. Washington, D.C.: September 26, 2008.
Medicare Part B Imaging Services: Rapid Spending Growth and Shift to
Physician Offices Indicate Need for CMS to Consider Additional
Management Practices. GAO-08-452. Washington, D.C.: June 13, 2008.
Medicare: Providing Systematic Feedback to Physicians on their
Practice Patterns is a Promising Step Toward Encouraging Program
Efficiency. GAO-07-862T. Washington, D.C.: May 10, 2007.
Medicare: Focus on Physician Practice Patterns Can Lead to Greater
Program Efficiency. GAO-07-307. Washington, D.C.: April 30, 2007.
For additional information about this area, contact James C. Cosgrove at Area Contact
(202) 512-7114 or cosgrovej@gao.gov.
Page 305 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Department of Homeland Security’s
Management of Acquisitions Could Be
Strengthened to Reduce Cost Overruns and
Schedule and Performance Shortfalls
Department of Homeland Security’s Management of
Acquisitions Could Be Strengthened to Reduce Cost
Overruns and Schedule and Performance Shortfalls
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), established in 2003 through
the consolidation of 22 agencies with disparate missions, has obligated
billions of dollars annually to meet its expansive homeland security
mission. DHS acquisitions represent hundreds of billions of dollars in
lifecycle costs and support a wide range of missions and investments
including Coast Guard ships and aircraft, border surveillance and
screening equipment, nuclear detection equipment, and systems to track
the department’s financial and human resources. DHS has not effectively
developed, acquired, and provided oversight of its complex investments,
such as programs for securing the border and the nation’s transportation
systems, with many programs experiencing cost overruns and schedule
and performance shortfalls.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
DHS faces significant challenges in managing its acquisitions, including
programs not meeting their cost, schedule, and performance expectations.
Strengthening its acquisition management process would help DHS to
deliver critical mission capabilities that meet identified needs on time and
within budget, including helping to reduce the cost overruns and schedule
delays that DHS continues to experience in many of the major acquisition
programs GAO has reviewed.
DHS acquisition spending has increased by 66 percent since fiscal year
2004—from $8.5 billion in fiscal year 2004 to $14.2 billion in fiscal year
2009—and DHS’s portfolio of complex acquisitions continues to expand.
DHS has made progress in strengthening its acquisition management by,
for example, implementing a revised acquisition management directive
that includes more detailed guidance for programs to use in informing
component and departmental decision making. However, most acquisition
programs GAO has reviewed at the department have not met cost,
schedule, and performance expectations.1 In particular, most DHS
acquisition programs reported cost growth from initial estimates. Further,
most programs GAO reviewed experienced estimated or actual schedule
delays in delivery of initial operating capability of an average of 12 months.
As GAO reported in June 2010, weaknesses in the department’s acquisition
management process continue to hinder the department’s ability to
provide needed capabilities on time and within budget. For example:
1GAO reviewed 15 DHS major acquisition programs for which cost, schedule, and
performance data were available.
Page 306 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Department of Homeland Security’s
Management of Acquisitions Could Be
Strengthened to Reduce Cost Overruns and
Schedule and Performance Shortfalls
• DHS’s senior-level Acquisition Review Board had not reviewed most of
its major acquisition programs by the end of fiscal year 2009 and
programs that had been reviewed had not consistently implemented
action items identified as part of the review by established deadlines.
GAO’s prior work has shown that when these types of reviews are
skipped or not fully implemented, programs move forward with little, if
any, early department-level assessment of the programs’ costs and
feasibility, which contributes to poor cost, schedule, and performance
outcomes. DHS acquisition oversight officials said that funding and
staffing levels have limited the number of programs they can review.
GAO recommended that DHS identify and align sufficient management
resources to implement oversight reviews in a timely manner. DHS
generally concurred with the recommendation, and, as of January 2011,
has reported taking action to address it. For example, DHS reported
that it has increased its acquisition management staffing, and plans to
hire more staff to develop cost estimates. DHS also reported that it
held 35 Acquisition Review Board meetings in fiscal year 2010 and
plans to hold between 36 and 40 in fiscal year 2011. In addition, DHS
reported making progress in tracking and closing action items. These
planned actions are positive steps and, if implemented effectively,
could help strengthen DHS’s acquisition review process. However, it is
too early to tell what impact these planned actions will have on the
department’s review process.
• DHS’s acquisition review process has not informed DHS’s annual
budget process for funding major programs, and many major programs
received funding without validation of mission needs and requirements,
largely because department-level reviews were seldom conducted.
DHS’s Joint Requirements Council, which was responsible for
validating program requirements, stopped meeting in 2006. GAO
recommended that the department ensure that budget decisions are
informed by the results of investment reviews including approved
acquisition information and cost estimates and reinstate the Joint
Requirements Council or establish another departmental oversight
board to perform this function. DHS concurred with this
recommendation and, as of January 2011, was planning to establish a
council to analyze DHS mission and strategic requirements. DHS also
reported it plans to better link the development of requirements to
resource allocation and program management. Until these efforts are
fully and effectively implemented, DHS may continue to experience
difficulties in ensuring that resources are allocated to acquisition
programs commensurate with their requirements.
Page 307 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Department of Homeland Security’s
Management of Acquisitions Could Be
Strengthened to Reduce Cost Overruns and
Schedule and Performance Shortfalls
• DHS has not developed accurate cost estimates for most of its major
acquisition programs. For example, the Coast Guard’s Rescue 21
search and rescue system has experienced significant cost growth—by
131 percent since the department’s initial cost estimate in 2003—due
to, among other things, underestimation of costs for program
management, deployment, and operations and maintenance. GAO’s
work has shown that accurate cost estimates are critical to making
funding decisions, evaluating resource requirements, and developing
performance measurement baselines. DHS has reported that the
department is working to address this concern by assisting programs in
developing cost estimates and obtaining independent cost estimates for
some high-risk programs. While these are positive steps, until accurate
cost estimates are in place, DHS will be challenged in making informed
funding decisions and assessing program performance.
• Over half of the 15 programs GAO reviewed awarded contracts to
initiate acquisition activities without component or department
approval of documents essential to planning acquisitions, setting
operational requirements, and establishing acquisition program
baselines. For example, the Secure Flight program for comparing air
passengers’ information to terrorist watch lists did not have an
approved program baseline until over 4 years after initiation of the
acquisition, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s program to
modernize its computer application for disseminating data to support
port-of-entry inspections did not have a component or department-
approved baseline after more than 6 years. Further, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency has not yet approved an acquisition
program baseline or other key program documents for its Integrated
Public Alert and Warning System, which was initiated in 2004, and DHS
did not develop its lifecycle cost estimates until 2009. GAO’s prior work
has noted that without the development, review, and approval of these
key documents, agencies are at risk of having poorly defined
requirements that can negatively affect program performance and
contribute to increased costs. In January 2011, DHS reported that it has
begun to implement an initiative to assist programs with completing
departmental approval of acquisition program baselines. However, it is
too early to fully assess the impact of this planned initiative.
GAO’s work has highlighted the need for the department to improve its Actions Needed and
acquisition portfolio management and adhere to key acquisition
Potential Savings management processes to help improve the department’s ability to deliver
major acquisition programs to meet critical mission needs on time and
Page 308 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Department of Homeland Security’s
Management of Acquisitions Could Be
Strengthened to Reduce Cost Overruns and
Schedule and Performance Shortfalls
within budget. Ensuring that requirements and cost estimates are well
defined upfront could help DHS make sure there is a more accurate
picture of the total costs and needs for a program. Further, establishing
and measuring performance against department-approved baselines and
indicators would help ensure that the acquisition program is on track with
regard to performance, schedule, and cost. As GAO has recommended,
DHS needs to ensure that its investment decisions are transparent and
documented; ensure that budget decisions are informed by the results of
acquisition investment reviews, including acquisition information and cost
estimates; identify and align sufficient management resources, such as
acquisition staff, to implement oversight reviews in a timely manner; and
review and validate acquisition programs’ requirements. These actions, if
implemented effectively, should help DHS identify and avoid the cost
overruns and schedule delays that DHS acquisition programs have
experienced.
DHS is planning to address these challenges by, among other things,
establishing an Investment Review Board to oversee activities of the
Acquisition Review Board and the status of all acquisition investments;
expanding its Acquisition Corps to provide trained procurement and
program management professionals to manage DHS’s most critical
acquisition programs; and developing a tool to track programs’ cost,
schedule, and performance indicators. However, it is too early to tell what
effect these planned changes will have on DHS’s acquisition management.
In addition, due to previously mentioned concerns about the accuracy of
current cost estimates and DHS challenges in measuring against cost,
schedule, and performance baselines, GAO is unable to quantify future
savings at this time. Success in reducing acquisition cost overruns will
depend on DHS’s further implementation of key actions GAO has
recommended for strengthening the department’s acquisition
management.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Department of Homeland Security: Assessments of Selected Complex Related GAO
Acquisitions. GAO-10-588SP. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Products
Aviation Security: TSA Is Increasing Procurement and Deployment of
the Advanced Imaging Technology, but Challenges to This Effort and
Page 309 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Department of Homeland Security’s
Management of Acquisitions Could Be
Strengthened to Reduce Cost Overruns and
Schedule and Performance Shortfalls
Other Areas of Aviation Security Remain. GAO-10-484T. Washington,
D.C.: March 17, 2010.
Homeland Security: Despite Progress, DHS Continues to Be Challenged
in Managing Its Multi-Billion Dollar Annual Investment in Large-Scale
Information Technology Systems. GAO-09-1002T. Washington, D.C.:
September 15, 2009.
Department of Homeland Security: A Strategic Approach Is Needed to
Better Ensure the Acquisition Workforce Can Meet Mission Needs.
GAO-09-30. Washington, D.C.: November 19, 2008.
Department of Homeland Security: Billions Invested in Major Programs
Lack Appropriate Oversight. GAO-09-29. Washington, D.C.: November 18,
2008.
For additional information about this area, contact David Maurer at Area Contact
(202) 512-9627 or maurerd@gao.gov; John Hutton at (202) 512-7773 or
huttonj@gao.gov; or David Powner at (202) 512-9286 or pownerd@gao.gov.
Page 310 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improvements in Managing Research and
Development Could Help Reduce
Inefficiencies and Costs for Homeland
Security
Improvements in Managing Research and Development
Could Help Reduce Inefficiencies and Costs for
Homeland Security
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The federal government allocates billions of dollars for researching,
developing, and testing technologies and other countermeasures to
address chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, and other threats
facing the nation. The Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Science
and Technology Directorate (S&T) conducts research and development
efforts to improve homeland security by, among other things, providing its
federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial emergency responder customers
with technology to help them achieve their missions. DHS’s Domestic
Nuclear Detection Office (DNDO) is charged with developing, acquiring,
and deploying equipment to detect nuclear and radiological materials,
supporting the efforts of DHS and other federal agencies. According to
DHS documents, the total budget authority for S&T and DNDO was over
$5.8 billion for fiscal years 2007 through 2010. 1 DHS has experienced
challenges in managing its multibillion dollar research and development
efforts, and GAO has identified problems with its testing and cost-benefit
analyses efforts in this area.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
In managing its multibillion dollar research and development efforts, DHS
has experienced cost overruns and delays in the procurement and
deployment of technologies and systems needed to meet critical homeland
security needs. DHS could help reduce inefficiencies and costs in its
research and development program by completing testing efforts before
making acquisition decisions and including cost-benefit analyses in its
research and development efforts.
DHS has made acquisition decisions without completing testing efforts to
ensure that the systems purchased met program requirements. GAO’s prior
work has shown that failure to resolve problems discovered during testing
can sometimes lead to costly redesign and rework at a later date.
Addressing such problems during the testing phase before moving to the
acquisition phase can help agencies avoid future cost overruns.
• In September 2010, GAO reported that DNDO was simultaneously
engaged in the research and development phase while planning for the
acquisition phase of its cargo advanced automated radiography system
to detect certain nuclear materials in vehicles and containers at ports.
1GAO determined total budget authority for S&T and DNDO based on DHS’s Monthly
Budget Execution Reports for fiscal years 2007 through 2010. GAO has not independently
verified amounts in the reports.
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Improvements in Managing Research and
Development Could Help Reduce
Inefficiencies and Costs for Homeland
Security
DNDO pursued the deployment of the cargo advanced automated
radiography system without fully understanding that it would not fit
within existing inspection lanes at ports of entry and would slow down
the flow of commerce through these lanes, causing significant delays.
DHS spent $113 million on the program since 2005. DHS cancelled the
acquisition phase of the program in 2007.
• In June 2010, GAO reported that three Coast Guard programs—the
Maritime Patrol Aircraft, Response Boat-Medium, and Sentinel Class
Patrol Boat—placed orders for or received significant numbers of units
prior to completing testing, placing the Coast Guard at risk for needing
to make expensive changes to the design of these vessels after
production had begun if significant problems were identified during
testing. Acquisition cost estimates for these three programs together
totaled about $6.8 billion, according to Coast Guard data.
• In October 2009, GAO reported that the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA), within DHS, deployed explosives trace portals, a
technology for detecting traces of explosives on passengers at airport
checkpoints, even though TSA officials were aware that tests
conducted during 2004 and 2005 on earlier models of the portals
suggested the portals did not demonstrate reliable performance in an
airport environment. TSA also lacked assurance that the portals would
meet functional requirements in airports within estimated costs. In
June 2006, TSA halted deployment of the explosives trace portals
because of performance problems, and the machines were more
expensive to install and maintain than expected. GAO recommended
that TSA ensure that tests are completed before deploying checkpoint
screening technologies to airports. The agency concurred with the
recommendation and has taken action to address it. For example, TSA
has required more recent passenger checkpoint technologies to
complete both laboratory tests and operational tests prior to their
deployment.
In addition, GAO’s prior work has shown that cost-benefit analyses help
congressional and agency decision makers assess and prioritize resource
investments and consider potentially more cost-effective alternatives.
However, DHS has not included cost-benefit analyses in its testing efforts
and acquisition decision making.
• In 2006, GAO recommended that DHS’s decision to deploy next
generation radiation detection equipment, or advanced spectroscopic
portals, used to detect smuggled nuclear or radiological materials, be
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Improvements in Managing Research and
Development Could Help Reduce
Inefficiencies and Costs for Homeland
Security
based on an analysis of both the benefits and costs—which GAO later
estimated at over $2 billion—and a determination of whether any
additional detection capability provided by the portals was worth their
additional cost. DHS subsequently issued a cost-benefit analysis, but
GAO reported that this analysis did not provide a sound analytical basis
for DHS’s decision to deploy the portals. In June 2009 GAO reported
that an updated cost-benefit analysis might show that DNDO’s plan to
replace existing equipment with advanced spectroscopic portals was
not justified, particularly given the marginal improvement in detection
of certain nuclear materials required of advanced spectroscopic portals
and the potential to improve the current-generation portal monitors’
sensitivity to nuclear materials, most likely at a lower cost. After
spending more than $200 million on the program, in February 2010 DHS
announced that it was scaling back its plans for development and use
of the portals technology.
• In October 2009 GAO reported that TSA had not yet completed a cost-
benefit analysis to prioritize and fund its technology investments for
screening passengers at airport checkpoints. One reason that TSA had
difficulty developing a cost-benefit analysis was that it had not yet
developed lifecycle cost estimates for its various screening
technologies. GAO reported that this information was important
because it would help decision makers determine, given the cost of
various technologies, which technology provided the greatest
mitigation of risk for the resources that were available. GAO
recommended that TSA develop a cost-benefit analysis. The agency has
completed a lifecycle cost estimate and collected information for its
checkpoint technologies, but has not yet completed any cost-benefit
analysis.
In January 2011, DHS reported that it plans to take additional actions to
strengthen its research and development efforts. For example, DHS
reported that it plans to establish a new model for managing
departmentwide investments across their life cycles. DHS reported that
S&T will be involved in each phase of the investment life cycle and will
participate in new entities DHS is planning to create to help ensure that
test and evaluation methods are appropriately considered as part of DHS’s
overall research and development investment strategies. According to
DHS, S&T will help ensure that new technologies are properly scoped,
developed, and tested before being implemented. In addition, DHS
reported that the new entities it is planning to establish to strengthen
management of the department’s acquisition and investment review
process will be responsible for, among other things, making decisions on
Page 313 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improvements in Managing Research and
Development Could Help Reduce
Inefficiencies and Costs for Homeland
Security
research and development initiatives based on factors such as viability and
affordability, and overseeing key acquisition decisions for major programs
using baseline and actual data.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
GAO’s work has highlighted the need for the department to strengthen its
research and development efforts by ensuring that (1) testing efforts are
completed before making acquisition decisions and (2) cost-benefit
analyses are conducted to reduce research and development inefficiencies
and costs. The planned actions DHS reports it is taking or has under way
to address management of its research and development programs are
positive steps and, if implemented effectively, could help the department
address many of these challenges. However, it is too early to fully assess
the impact of these actions.
GAO has reported that DHS could take further actions to improve its
management of research and development efforts and reduce costs in
procuring and deploying programs that have not been fully tested. For
example, rigorously testing devices using actual agency operational tactics
before making decisions on acquisition would help DHS reduce
inefficiencies and costs. Further, conducting cost-benefit analyses as part
of research, development, and testing efforts would help DHS and
congressional decision makers better assess and prioritize investment
decisions, including assessing possible program alternatives that could be
more cost-effective.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below. GAO has ongoing work for the Senate Committee
Analysis on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs reviewing the role that
S&T has in conducting testing and evaluation of major acquisitions
programs prior to implementation.
Related GAO
Products
Combating Nuclear Smuggling: Inadequate Communication and
Oversight Hampered DHS Efforts to Develop an Advanced Radiography
System to Detect Nuclear Materials. GAO-10-1041T. Washington D.C.:
September 15, 2010.
Combating Nuclear Smuggling: DHS Has Made Some Progress but Not
Yet Completed a Strategic Plan for Its Global Nuclear Detection Efforts or
Closed Identified Gaps. GAO-10-883T. Washington D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Page 314 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Improvements in Managing Research and
Development Could Help Reduce
Inefficiencies and Costs for Homeland
Security
Department of Homeland Security: Assessments of Selected Complex
Acquisitions. GAO-10-588SP. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Aviation Security: DHS and TSA Have Researched, Developed, and
Begun Deploying Passenger Checkpoint Screening Technologies, but
Continue to Face Challenges. GAO-10-128. Washington, D.C.: October 7,
2009.
Combating Nuclear Smuggling: Lessons Learned from DHS Testing of
Advanced Radiation Detection Portal Monitors. GAO-09-804T.
Washington, D.C.: June 25, 2009.
Combating Nuclear Smuggling: DHS Improved Testing of Advanced
Radiation Detection Portal Monitors, but Preliminary Results Show
Limits of the New Technology. GAO-09-655. Washington D.C.: May 21,
2009.
For additional information about this area, contact David Maurer at Area Contact
(202) 512-9627 or maurerd@gao.gov.
Page 315 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Validation of TSA’s Behavior-Based Screening
Program Is Needed to Justify Funding or
Expansion
Validation of TSA’s Behavior-Based Screening Program
Is Needed to Justify Funding or Expansion
Why GAO Is Focusing
on this Area
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, highlighted the need to
improve security within the nation’s civil aviation system to deter persons
seeking to repeat similar attacks on the nation’s critical infrastructure. To
enhance aviation security, the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS)
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) began testing in October
2003 of its Screening of Passengers by Observation Techniques (SPOT)
program to identify persons who may pose a risk to aviation security. In
fiscal year 2010, about 3,000 Behavior Detection Officers were deployed to
161 airports at an annual cost of over $200 million. As highlighted in GAO’s
May 2010 report, TSA did not validate the science supporting the program
or determine if behavior detection techniques could be successfully used
across the aviation system to detect threats before deploying the SPOT
program.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
TSA has implemented and now seeks to expand a behavior screening
program, which has not yet been validated. A validation study is
underway, but questions exist regarding whether the study’s methodology
is sufficiently comprehensive to validate the SPOT program. The results of
an independent assessment are needed to determine whether current
validation efforts are sufficiently comprehensive to validate the program.
After operationally testing behavioral detection screening started in
October 2003, TSA created separate Behavior Detection Officer positions
as part of the SPOT program beginning in fiscal year 2007. TSA designed
SPOT to provide these officers with a means of identifying persons who
may pose a potential security risk at TSA-regulated airports by focusing on
behaviors and appearances that deviate from an established baseline, and
that may be indicative of stress, fear, or deception. Behavior Detection
Officers have been selectively deployed to 161 of the 462 TSA-regulated
airports in the United States. The conference report accompanying the
fiscal year 2010 DHS appropriations act provided that $211.9 million was
for the SPOT program.1 The administration has requested $232 million for
SPOT for fiscal year 2011, a $20.2 million (9.5 percent) increase over the
current funding level. This increase would support a workforce increase
from about 3,000 to 3,350 Behavior Detection Officers.
As discussed in GAO’s May 2010 report, TSA deployed SPOT nationwide
before first determining whether there was a scientifically valid basis for
1H.R. Rep. 111-298, at 77 (2009) (Conf. Rep.).
Page 316 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Validation of TSA’s Behavior-Based Screening
Program Is Needed to Justify Funding or
Expansion
using behavior and appearance indicators as a means for reliably
identifying passengers who may pose a risk to the U.S. aviation system.
According to TSA, SPOT was deployed before a scientific validation of the
program was completed in response to the need to address potential
threats, but was based upon scientific research available at the time
regarding human behaviors. TSA officials also stated that no other large-
scale U.S. or international screening program incorporating behavior- and
appearance-based indicators has ever been rigorously scientifically
validated.
However, a 2008 report issued by the National Research Council of the
National Academy of Sciences noted that an information-based program,
such as a behavior detection program, should first determine if a scientific
foundation exists and use scientifically valid criteria to evaluate its
effectiveness before going forward. The report added that programs
should have a sound experimental basis and that the documentation on
the program’s effectiveness should be reviewed by an independent entity
capable of evaluating the supporting scientific evidence.2 Thus, and as
recommended in GAO’s May 2010 report, an independent panel of experts
could help DHS develop a comprehensive methodology to determine if the
SPOT program is based on valid scientific principles that can be effectively
applied in an airport environment for counterterrorism purposes.
Specifically, GAO’s May 2010 report recommended that the Secretary of
Homeland Security convene an independent panel of experts to review the
methodology of a validation study on the SPOT program being conducted
by DHS’s Science and Technology Directorate to determine whether the
study’s methodology is sufficiently comprehensive to validate the SPOT
program. GAO recommended that this assessment include appropriate
input from other federal agencies with expertise in behavior detection and
relevant subject matter experts. DHS concurred and stated that its current
validation study includes an independent review of the program that will
include input from other federal agencies and relevant experts. According
to DHS, this independent review is expected to be completed in February
2011.
2A study performed by the JASON program office raised similar concerns. The JASON
program office is an independent scientific advisory group that provides consulting
services to the U.S. government on matters of defense science and technology.
Page 317 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Validation of TSA’s Behavior-Based Screening
Program Is Needed to Justify Funding or
Expansion
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
As discussed in GAO’s May 2010 report, DHS has contracted with the
American Institutes for Research to conduct its validation study. However,
DHS’s response to GAO’s report did not describe how the review currently
planned is designed to determine whether the study’s methodology is
sufficiently comprehensive to validate the SPOT program. As GAO noted
in its report, research on other issues, such as determining the number of
individuals needed to observe a given number of passengers moving at a
given rate per day in an airport environment or the duration that such
observation can be conducted by Behavior Detection Officers before
observation fatigue affects effectiveness, could provide additional
information on the extent to which SPOT can be effectively implemented
in airports. Additional research could also help determine the need for
periodic refresher training since research has not yet determined whether
behavior detection is easily forgotten or can be potentially degraded with
time or lack of use. Because such questions exist, using an independent
panel of experts to assess the methodology of the study could provide
DHS with additional assurance regarding whether the study’s methodology
is sufficiently comprehensive to validate the SPOT program. DHS stated
that the ongoing independent review is being conducted by an
independent panel of experts that includes a broad range of operational
agencies and academia and will include, among other things,
recommended additional studies that should be undertaken to more fully
validate the science underlying the SPOT screening process. Moreover,
DHS stated that its current effort to validate the science underlying SPOT
includes three years of operational SPOT referral data and preliminary
results indicate that it is supportive of SPOT. However, in May 2010, GAO
reported weaknesses in TSA’s process for maintaining operational data
from the SPOT program database. Because of these data-related issues,
GAO reported that meaningful analyses could not be conducted to
determine if there is an association between certain behaviors and the
likelihood that a person displaying certain behaviors would be referred to
a law enforcement officer or whether any behavior or combination of
behaviors could be used to distinguish deceptive from nondeceptive
individuals.
Congress may wish to consider limiting program funding pending receipt
of an independent assessment of TSA’s SPOT program. GAO identified
potential budget savings of about $20 million per year if funding were
frozen at current levels until validation efforts are complete. Specifically,
in the near term, Congress could consider freezing appropriation levels for
the SPOT program at the 2010 level until the validation effort is completed.
Assuming that TSA is planning to expand the program at a similar rate
each year, this action could result in possible savings of about $20 million
Page 318 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Validation of TSA’s Behavior-Based Screening
Program Is Needed to Justify Funding or
Expansion
per year, since TSA is seeking about a $20 million increase for SPOT in
fiscal year 2011. Upon completion of the validation effort, Congress may
also wish to consider the study’s results—including the program’s
effectiveness in using behavior-based screening techniques to detect
terrorists in the aviation environment—in making future funding decisions
regarding the program.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
product listed below.
Analysis
Aviation Security: Efforts to Validate TSA’s Passenger Screening Related GAO Product
Behavior Detection Program Underway, but Opportunities Exist to
Strengthen Validation and Addresses Operational Challenges.
GAO-10-763. Washington, D.C.: May 2010.
For additional information about this area, contact Steve Lord at Area Contact
(202) 512-4379 or lords@gao.gov.
Page 319 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Efficient Baggage Screening Systems
Could Result in Substantial Reduction in
Personnel Costs
More Efficient Baggage Screening Systems Could
Result in Substantial Reduction in Personnel Costs
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) Electronic Baggage
Screening Program—which facilitates the development and deployment of
checked baggage screening systems—is one of the largest acquisition
programs in the Department of Homeland Security. According to TSA,
over $8 billion has been made available for enhancing the screening of
checked baggage transported on passenger aircraft since fiscal year 2001.
In fiscal year 2010, over $1 billion was made available to procure and
install screening equipment. The Department of Homeland Security’s fiscal
year 2011 request amounts to $624 million for procurement and
installation in fiscal year 2011.1
Through the Electronic Baggage Screening Program, TSA deploys baggage
screening systems to best fit security needs and infrastructure at the 462
airports at which TSA performs or oversees screening activities. TSA
generally deploys equipment for screening checked baggage in one of two
ways: (1) in-line baggage screening systems, which are integrated into the
conveyor systems that sort and transport baggage for loading onto an aircraft
and (2) stand-alone machines that are typically situated in airport lobbies.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
GAO estimates that TSA could achieve up to $470 million in net savings
based on reduced TSA staffing costs through the replacement or
modification of existing systems with more efficient baggage screening
systems at airports over the next 5 years, assuming that funding for
procurement and installation under the Electronic Baggage Screening
Program continues at TSA-projected levels.2
In March 2005, GAO reported that airports benefit from the installation of
more efficient systems, such as in-line baggage screening systems, because
these systems reduce the time needed for baggage screening and allow
airports and TSA to streamline their operations. Moreover, a 2006 Aviation
Security Advisory Committee study reported that modifying or replacing
existing systems with more efficient systems could reduce the number of
1From this amount, TSA also plans to support its Security Technology Integrated Program,
Advanced Surveillance Program, and other programs related to the operation and
integration of security technologies.
2Net savings account for differences in acquisition, modification, installation, and operation
and maintenance costs between existing systems replaced with more efficient systems at
airports.
Page 320 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Efficient Baggage Screening Systems
Could Result in Substantial Reduction in
Personnel Costs
screener personnel required to operate these systems.3 In 2005, GAO also
reported that TSA had not conducted a systematic, prospective analysis to
determine at which airports it could achieve long-term savings and
enhance efficiencies and security by installing more efficient in-line
systems. GAO recommended, among other things, that TSA identify and
prioritize the airports where the cost-savings benefits of optimizing
baggage screening operations by replacing existing baggage screening
systems with more efficient in-line systems are likely to exceed the
estimated up-front investment costs of installing the systems, or where the
systems are needed to address security risks. TSA concurred with this
recommendation and published a plan to deploy more efficient systems
for 250 airports. As of January 2011, TSA plans to complete its efforts to
replace or modify systems at these airports by 2024. TSA officials have not
provided GAO with information on its plans at the remaining airports.
Replacing or modifying existing systems with more efficient systems
results in net personnel cost savings to the extent all other costs, except
for personnel—acquisition, installation, modification, and operations and
maintenance costs—are relatively equal over time. Using TSA data on its
planned average annual program budget rate of $448 million and estimated
screener personnel costs, GAO estimates that if TSA continues to replace
or modify older systems with more efficient systems, including in-line
screening systems, it could reduce full-time equivalent baggage screener
positions as a result of investments made in fiscal years 2011 through 2015.
This reduction in personnel could result in up to $470 million in estimated
3The committee, comprised of government and private sector representatives, examines
areas of civil aviation security to develop recommendations for improving aviation security
methods, equipment, and procedures.
Page 321 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Efficient Baggage Screening Systems
Could Result in Substantial Reduction in
Personnel Costs
net cost savings.4 These estimates are based on airport planning and
acquisition costs for 250 airports provided by TSA that are subject to
change but are illustrative of the potential magnitude of federal cost
savings that could be achieved. More precise estimates could be developed
as these plans are further developed and refined.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
By continuing to replace or modify older systems with more efficient
solutions, including in-line screening systems, at its planned average annual
program budget rate of $448 million,5 TSA could continue to eliminate
baggage screener positions achieving up to $470 million in estimated net
costs savings over the next 5 years.6 TSA agreed that the deployment of
more efficient systems offers potential cost savings to the federal
government. GAO will continue to assess these issues as part of its ongoing
work examining more efficient checked baggage screening systems for the
4GAO estimates that these cost savings are equivalent to up to approximately 10,400
cumulative full-time equivalent screener positions resulting from investments for fiscal years
2011 through 2015. To calculate these estimated cost savings, GAO computed an average
return on investment by determining the projected 5-year savings TSA could realize by
replacing or modifying baggage systems at individual airports in 2009 and comparing the
savings to funding made available to TSA in fiscal year 2009 for procurement and installation
of the systems. First, GAO calculated the present value of estimated full-time equivalent
savings across a 5-year period (i.e., fiscal years 2009 through 2013) which totaled about $117
million in fiscal year 2009. The $117 million assumes differences in acquisition, modification,
installation, and operation and maintenance costs between existing systems, and more
efficient systems at airports continue to be relatively equal. This assumption is based on
TSA’s analysis conducted in 2004 and 2005, which was the most recent analysis available.
GAO reviewed and reported on this analysis in its March 2005 report. Second, GAO divided
the cost savings by the $544 million in funding made available for procurement and
installation in fiscal year 2009 (excluding any carry-over balances from prior fiscal years and
funds appropriated through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act). Thus, the average
return on TSA’s investment or the ratio of cost savings as a share of investment is $117/$544
million, or about 0.21. GAO multiplied this ratio (0.21) by TSA’s planned future program
budget for replacing or modifying baggage systems for fiscal year 2011 through fiscal year
2015 (assuming TSA receives funding at anticipated levels) to estimate the resulting net cost
savings. However, the 0.21 ratio may not necessarily continue into the future depending on
changing costs and circumstances. To calculate the average annual program budget, GAO
used information TSA provided on its planned annual program budget on acquisition and
planning costs for fiscal years 2011 through 2014. GAO did not have information on TSA’s
planned annual program budget for fiscal year 2015.
5TSA’s Office of Security Technology, Acquisition Review Board presentation,
November 5, 2009.
6Anticipated cost savings may be reduced as TSA diverts funding to, for example,
recapitalize existing baggage screening systems for sustained operations.
Page 322 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
More Efficient Baggage Screening Systems
Could Result in Substantial Reduction in
Personnel Costs
Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. GAO plans to
report on the final results of this review in 2011.
Framework for
Analysis
This analysis is based on GAO’s preliminary observations from its ongoing
work as well as information contained in the related GAO products listed
below. To develop GAO’s preliminary observations, GAO reviewed available
documentation on TSA’s checked baggage screening program, including
TSA’s estimated cost data for full-time equivalent screeners from fiscal year
2009 to fiscal year 2013; TSA’s planned program budget data for continued
installation of more efficient systems; and modification costs from fiscal
years 2009 to fiscal years 2010. GAO could not independently verify the
reliability of all of this information, but it compared this information with
other supporting documents, when available, to determine data consistency
and reasonableness. On the basis of these efforts, GAO concluded that the
data were sufficiently reliable for its purposes.
Related GAO
Products
Department of Homeland Security: Assessments of Selected Complex
Acquisitions. GAO-10-588SP. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2010.
Airport Finance: Observations on Planned Airport Development Costs
and Funding Levels and the Administration’s Proposed Changes in the
Airport Improvement Program. GAO-07-885. Washington, D.C.:
June 29, 2007.
Aviation Security: Cost Estimates Related to TSA Funding of Checked
Baggage Screening Systems at Los Angeles and Ontario Airports.
GAO-07-445. Washington, D.C.: March 30, 2007.
Aviation Security: TSA Has Strengthened Efforts to Plan for the Optimal
Deployment of Checked Baggage Screening Systems, but Funding
Uncertainties Remain. GAO-06-875T. Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2006.
Aviation Security: Enhancements Made in Passenger and Checked
Baggage Screening, but Challenges Remain. GAO-06-371T. Washington,
D.C.: April 4, 2006.
Aviation Security: Systematic Planning Needed to Optimize the
Deployment of Checked Baggage Screening Systems. GAO-05-365.
Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2005.
For additional information about this area, contact Steve Lord at Area Contact
(202) 512-4379 or lords@gao.gov.
Page 323 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Clarifying Availability of Certain Customs
Fee Collections Could Produce Savings
Clarifying Availability of Certain Customs Fee
Collections Could Produce Savings
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) collects user fees to
recover certain costs incurred for processing, among other things, air and
sea passengers; and various private and commercial land, sea, air, and rail
carriers and shipments. These fees were created by the Consolidated
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA) and are deposited
into the Customs User Fee Account. CBP also receives appropriations,
including a Salaries and Expenses appropriation. To pay for certain
expenses, it reimburses its salaries and expenses appropriation from its
COBRA collections.
GAO discovered that CBP has a $639.4 million unobligated balance in its
Customs User Fee Account as a result of excess collections from a
temporary fee increase and elimination of North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) country exemptions from January 1, 1994, to
September 30, 1997.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Clarifying the availability of unobligated balances in CBP’s Customs User
Fee Account could enable Congress to revise the agency’s future
appropriations, thereby producing a one-time savings of up to $640
million. When the NAFTA Implementation Act was amended in 1993, in
addition to authorizing a temporary increase in the COBRA user fees
charged to passengers arriving in the United States from abroad on
commercial vessels or aircraft from $5 to $6.50, the amendment also
temporarily lifted the exemption for passengers arriving from Mexico,
Canada and adjacent islands, and U.S. territories (other than Puerto Rico).
The additional amounts collected due to these temporary adjustments,
which expired in 1997, were deposited in the Customs User Fee Account
and were available for reimbursement of inspection costs, including those
related to passenger processing. These funds, which accumulated from
January 1, 1994, to September 30, 1997, remain unobligated in the account.
GAO first identified these unobligated balances in 2008. CBP officials
stated at that time that although they formerly believed they needed
additional authorization to spend these balances, it later appeared that the
funds may be used as authorized by law. However, when GAO discussed
these unobligated balances again in 2009 and 2010, CBP officials said they
provided information on the excess collections to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) and requested OMB’s assistance multiple
times to clarify the availability of these funds. They said OMB has not
responded to their request.
Page 324 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Clarifying Availability of Certain Customs
Fee Collections Could Produce Savings
GAO believes this is an issue that Congress may wish to address since Actions Needed and
these unobligated balances have remained in CBP’s Customs User Fee
Potential Revenue account for more than 10 years. Congress could clarify the purposes for
which the $640 million in unobligated balances is available and take action
as appropriate.
Framework for
Analysis
This analysis is based on reviews of CBP’s user fee accounts, which were
provided to Congress as technical advice in a Budget Justification Review
in the context of GAO’s annual review of the President’s annual budget
request. GAO conducted that work in accordance with all sections of
GAO’s Quality Assurance Framework that were relevant to its objectives.
The framework requires that GAO plan and perform the engagement to
obtain sufficient and appropriate evidence to meet its stated objectives
and to discuss any limitations in its work. GAO believes that the
information and data obtained, and the analysis conducted, provide a
reasonable basis for any findings and conclusions.
There are no publicly available products related to this analysis. Related GAO
Products
For additional information about this area, contact Susan Irving at Area Contact
(202) 512-8288 or irvings@gao.gov.
Page 325 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Social Security Needs Data on Pensions from
Noncovered Earnings to Better Enforce
Offsets and Ensure Benefit Fairness
Social Security Needs Data on Pensions from
Noncovered Earnings to Better Enforce Offsets and
Ensure Benefit Fairness
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
The Social Security Administration (SSA) needs accurate information from
state and local governments on retirees who receive pensions from
employment not covered under Social Security. SSA needs this
information to fairly and accurately apply the Government Pension Offset
(GPO), which generally applies to spouse and survivor benefits, and the
Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP), which applies to retired worker
benefits. Information on receipt of pensions from noncovered employment
is not available to SSA for many state and local pension benefits, even
though it is for federal pension benefits from the federal Office of
Personnel Management. The resulting disparity in the application of the
provisions is a continuing source of confusion and frustration for affected
workers. Providing information on the receipt of state and local
noncovered pension benefits to SSA via tax data could help the agency
more accurately and fairly administer the GPO and WEP and could save
nearly $3 billion over 10 years, according to estimates by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Social Security covers about 96 percent of all U.S. workers; the vast
majority of the remaining 4 percent are public employees who work for
federal, state, and local government. In the case of state and local
government employees, about one-fourth, or about 7 million, have jobs
that are not covered by Social Security. Although these workers do not pay
Social Security taxes on their noncovered government earnings, they may
still be eligible for Social Security benefits through their spouses’ or their
own earnings from other jobs that Social Security does cover. Social
Security’s GPO and WEP provisions attempt to take noncovered
employment into account when calculating the Social Security benefits.
However, these provisions have been difficult to administer because SSA
does not have the pension data it needs to perform these calculations
accurately.
One of Social Security’s most fundamental principles is that benefits
reflect the earnings on which workers have paid Social Security taxes. At
the same time, Social Security helps ensure that its beneficiaries have
adequate incomes. Social Security’s benefit provisions redistribute income
in a variety of ways—from those with higher lifetime earnings to those
with lower ones and from those without dependents to those with
dependents. Such distributional effects depend, to a great extent, on the
universal and compulsory nature of the program. Noncovered employment
has unintended effects on these distributional outcomes. Accordingly,
Social Security uses the GPO and WEP to take noncovered employment
into account.
Page 326 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Social Security Needs Data on Pensions from
Noncovered Earnings to Better Enforce
Offsets and Ensure Benefit Fairness
The GPO provides an offset for spouses with noncovered earnings that is
similar to an offset that applies, in effect, to spouses with covered
earnings. Under Social Security’s benefit provisions, workers may be
entitled to (1) retired worker benefits based on their own covered earnings
or to (2) spouse or survivor benefits based on their spouses’ covered
earnings. However, they are not entitled to receive both, only the higher of
the two. In effect, spouses with covered earnings are subject to an offset
equal to 100 percent of their spouse or survivor benefits if their retired
worker benefits are higher. Similarly, the GPO reduces the Social Security
spousal benefit for workers who also receive a worker’s pension from
noncovered employment.
The WEP provides an offset to retired worker benefits and accounts for
the fact that workers with noncovered pensions have higher lifetime
earnings than the covered earnings on which their benefits are calculated.
Social Security’s benefit formula replaces a relatively higher proportion of
wages for low earners than for high earners, which helps ensure adequate
retirement incomes. Workers with lengthy careers in noncovered
employment appear on SSA’s records as low earners even when they are
not because those records do not reflect noncovered earnings. Without the
WEP, Congress was concerned that the design of the Social Security
benefit formula provided unintended windfall benefits to workers who had
spent most of their careers in noncovered employment.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Cost Saving
In an April 1998 report, GAO found that SSA did not have the information
it needed on beneficiaries’ receipt of state and local noncovered pensions,
even though it did have such information for federal pension benefits. As a
result, a disparity in the application of the provisions existed. GAO
recommended that SSA work with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to
revise the reporting of pension information on IRS Form 1099R, so that
SSA would be able to identify people receiving a pension from noncovered
employment, especially in state and local governments. However, IRS did
not believe it could make the recommended change without new
legislative authority. In May 2003, June 2005, and November 2007, GAO
suggested that Congress consider giving IRS the authority to collect the
information that SSA needs on government pension income. The Senate
Finance Committee proposed a version of the Social Security Protection
Act of 2004 that contained such a provision, but this provision was not
included when the final version of the bill was passed and signed into law.
Critics of the GPO and WEP contend that the provisions are inaccurate
and often unfair. For example, critics of the GPO contend that the
Page 327 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Social Security Needs Data on Pensions from
Noncovered Earnings to Better Enforce
Offsets and Ensure Benefit Fairness
reduction is imprecise and could be based on a more rigorous formula.
According to an analysis conducted by the Congressional Research
Service, the GPO formula slightly overestimates the benefit reduction that
some individuals (particularly higher earners) would otherwise receive if
they worked in Social Security-covered employment, and greatly
underestimates the reduction that others (particularly lower earners)
would receive. In the case of the WEP, opponents argue that the formula
adjustment is an arbitrary and inaccurate way to estimate the value of the
windfall and causes a relatively larger benefit reduction for lower-paid
workers. However, accounting for such effects of differences in lifetime
earnings would involve having complete records of noncovered earnings,
which SSA does not have. In contrast, to implement the current
provisions, SSA only needs to determine whether a beneficiary is receiving
a pension based on noncovered earnings.
Extending mandatory coverage for all state and local workers has been
proposed among other options for addressing Social Security’s long-term
financial deficit. While this would eventually make the GPO and WEP
offsets obsolete, they would still be needed for many years to come for
existing employees and beneficiaries.
Actions Needed and
Potential Savings
GAO continues to believe that it is important to apply these laws
consistently and equitably. Specifically, GAO continues to suggest that
Congress consider giving IRS the authority to collect the information that
SSA needs on government pension income to administer the GPO and
WEP provisions accurately and fairly.
The President’s 2011 budget’s proposals for terminations, reductions, and
savings contains a provision that would address the need for more
complete and accurate information on noncovered state and local
pensions, and it estimates savings of $2.9 billion over 10 years. The
Congressional Budget Office’s 2009 Budget Options, Volume 2, has a
similar provision and estimates savings of $2.4 billion over 10 years.
The information contained in this analysis is based on the related GAO Framework for
products listed below.
Analysis
Page 328 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Social Security Needs Data on Pensions from
Noncovered Earnings to Better Enforce
Offsets and Ensure Benefit Fairness
Related GAO
Products
Social Security Administration: Management Oversight Needed to
Ensure Accurate Treatment of State and Local Government Employees.
GAO-10-938. Washington, D.C.: September 29, 2010.
Social Security: Issues Regarding the Coverage of Public Employees.
GAO-08-248T. Washington, D.C.: November 6, 2007.
Social Security: Coverage of Public Employees and Implications for
Reform. GAO-05-786T. Washington, D.C.: June 9, 2005.
Social Security Reform: Answers to Key Questions. GAO-05-193SP.
Washington, D.C.: May 2, 2005.
Social Security: Issues Relating to Noncoverage of Public Employees.
GAO-03-710T. Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2003.
Social Security: Congress Should Consider Revising the Government
Pension Offset “Loophole.” GAO-03-498T. Washington, D.C.: February 27,
2003.
Social Security: Implications of Extending Mandatory Coverage to State
and Local Employees. GAO/HEHS-98-196. Washington, D.C.: August 18,
1998.
Social Security: Better Payment Controls for Benefit Reduction
Provisions Could Save Millions. GAO/HEHS-98-76. Washington, D.C.:
April 30, 1998.
Federal Workforce: Effects of Public Pension Offset on Social Security
Benefits of Federal Retirees. GAO/GGD-88-73. Washington, D.C.: April 27,
1988.
For additional information about this area, contact Charles Jeszeck at Area Contact
(202) 512-7215 or jeszeckc@gao.gov.
Page 329 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Congress Could Pursue Several Options to
Improve Collection of Antidumping and
Countervailing Duties
Congress Could Pursue Several Options to Improve
Collection of Antidumping and Countervailing Duties
Why GAO Is Focusing
on This Area
In March 2008 GAO reported that, as of September 2007, U.S. Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) has been unable to collect more than $600
million owed in antidumping and countervailing duties imposed to remedy
injurious unfair foreign trade practices. These include duties imposed on
products exported to the United States at unfairly low prices (i.e.,
dumped) and duties on products exported to the United States that were
subsidized by foreign governments. In addition to the substantial amount
of lost revenue, the uncollected duties cause concern that the U.S.
government has not fully remedied the unfair trade practices.
What GAO Has Found
Indicating Potential
for Enhancing
Revenue
Since 2005 GAO has reported several times on the U.S. government’s
inability to collect substantial amounts of antidumping and countervailing
duties and in 2008 proposed a variety of options for improving the system
for collecting these duties. Two key components of the antidumping and
countervailing duty system have received particular attention. One key
component of the system is its retrospective nature, which means that—
though importers pay estimated duties at the time of importation—final
duties are not assessed until after products enter the country. Another
component is the “new shipper” review process that allows new
manufacturers or exporters to petition for their own separate antidumping
and countervailing duty rate. Despite other efforts by Congress and CBP,
these components of the system have not been addressed and the
collection of antidumping and countervailing duties remains a problem.
While there are a variety of factors that affect the amount of antidumping
and countervailing duties assessed, in 2008 GAO comprehensively
reviewed the $613 million in uncollected antidumping and countervailing
duties and identified the key factors contributing to the collections
problems, including:
• Retrospective component of the antidumping and countervailing
duty system. Under the current retrospective system, importers pay
the estimated amount of antidumping and countervailing duties when
products enter the United States, but the final amount of duties owed is
not determined until later. This creates a risk that the government will
be unable to collect the full amount owed, which can be substantially
more than the original estimate. In 2008 GAO reported that when they
increased—because of some large increases—duty rates rose an
average of 62 percentage points, and some increases exceeded 200
percentage points. The long time lags between the initial entry of a
product and the final assessment of duties heightens the risk that the
government will be unable to collect the full amount owed. In 2008
GAO found that, on average, this process took more than 3 years,
Page 330 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Congress Could Pursue Several Options to
Improve Collection of Antidumping and
Countervailing Duties
though in one instance it took more than 18 years. During this time,
importers may disappear, cease business operations, or declare
bankruptcy, which creates challenges to the government’s ability to
collect antidumping and countervailing duties owed.
• ”New shipper” reviews. Under current law, “new shippers”
(manufacturers/exporters whose costs were not previously reviewed)
can request that the government conduct a review to establish an
individual antidumping and countervailing duty rate. However, U.S. law
does not specify a minimum amount of exports or number of
transactions that a company must make to be eligible for a new shipper
review, and according to Department of Commerce (Commerce)
officials, they do not have the legislative authority to create any such
requirement. As a result, a shipper can be assigned an individual duty
rate based on a very minimal amount of exports, and can intentionally
set a high price for this small amount of initial exports. This creates the
possibility that companies may be able to get a low (or 0 percent)
initial antidumping duty rate, which will subsequently rise when the
exporter lowers its price, and puts the government in the position of
having to collect additional duties. In 2008 GAO found that importers
purchasing from companies undergoing “new shipper reviews”
accounted for approximately 40 percent of the uncollected
antidumping and countervailing duties as of fiscal year 2007.
Actions Needed and
Potential Revenue
In March 2008 GAO identified several options for Congress to consider for
improving the collection of antidumping and countervailing duties. GAO
also indicated that these options have both potential advantages and
disadvantages. By adjusting features of the antidumping or countervailing
duty system that create the risk that companies can evade paying duties,
Congress could further protect government revenue, while also minimizing
incentives for companies to pursue unfair trade practices. For example,
Congress could:
• Eliminate the retrospective component of the U.S. antidumping and
countervailing duty system. U.S. law could be changed to eliminate
the retrospective component of the U.S. antidumping and
countervailing duty system and, instead, treat the antidumping and
countervailing duties assessed at the time the product enters the
country as final. If the antidumping or countervailing duty rate is
changed, it is applied only to future imports and has no effect on the
amount of duties owed for previous imports. Other countries GAO
reviewed did not determine their final antidumping and countervailing
Page 331 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Congress Could Pursue Several Options to
Improve Collection of Antidumping and
Countervailing Duties
duties by calculating actual amount of duties owed after products enter
the country. In 2008 GAO found that while each country’s antidumping
and countervailing duty system operates differently, major U.S. trading
partners such as Canada, Australia, and the European Union have
antidumping and countervailing duty systems that are not
retrospective.
• Adjust requirements for new shipper reviews. Congress could choose
to provide Commerce the discretion to require companies applying for
a new shipper review to have a greater volume of imports before
establishing an individual antidumping and countervailing duty rate.
According to Commerce officials, this could help mitigate the risks
posed by establishing an antidumping and countervailing duty rate
based on one shipment.
Following GAO’s 2008 report, Congress mandated that the Department of
Commerce review the relative advantages and disadvantages of
prospective and retrospective antidumping and countervailing duty
systems. In November 2010 Commerce released its report which, in
addition to discussing the likely effects of each type of system on duty
collection, also highlighted the administrative burden the current
retrospective system places on both Commerce and CBP. This suggests
the continuing need for action to reform the system for the collection of
antidumping and countervailing duties.
The information contained in this analysis is based on findings from the Framework for
GAO reports listed below.
Analysis
Related GAO
Products
Agencies Believe Strengthening International Agreements to Improve
Collection of Antidumping and Countervailing Duties Would Be
Difficult and Ineffective. GAO-08-876R. Washington, D.C.: July 24, 2008.
Antidumping and Countervailing Duties: Congress and Agencies Should
Take Additional Steps to Reduce Substantial Shortfalls in Duty
Collection. GAO-08-391. Washington, D.C.: March 26, 2008.
International Trade: Customs’ Revised Bonding Policy Reduces Risk of
Uncollected Duties, but Concerns about Uneven Implementation and
Effects Remain. GAO-07-50. Washington, D.C.: Oct.18, 2006.
Page 332 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Congress Could Pursue Several Options to
Improve Collection of Antidumping and
Countervailing Duties
International Trade: Issues and Effects of Implementing the Continued
Dumping and Subsidy Offset Act. GAO-05-979. Washington, D.C.: Sept. 26,
2005.
For additional information about this area, contact Loren Yager at Area Contact
(202) 512-4347 or YagerL@gao.gov.
Page 333 GAO-11-318SP Section II: Other Cost Savings and Revenue Enhancements
Appendix I: List of Congressional Addressees
Appendix I: List of Congressional Addressees
The Honorable Daniel K. Inouye
Chairman
The Honorable Thad Cochran
Vice Chairman
Committee on Appropriations
United States Senate
The Honorable Kent Conrad
Chairman
The Honorable Jeff Sessions
Ranking Member
Committee on the Budget
United States Senate
The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman
Chairman
The Honorable Susan M. Collins
Ranking Member
Committee on Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs
United States Senate
The Honorable Harold Rogers
Chairman
The Honorable Norman D. Dicks
Ranking Member
Committee on Appropriations
House of Representatives
The Honorable Paul Ryan
Chairman
The Honorable Chris Van Hollen
Ranking Member
Committee on the Budget
House of Representatives
The Honorable Darrell Issa
Chairman
The Honorable Elijah E. Cummings
Ranking Member
Committee on Oversight
and Government Reform
House of Representatives
Page 334 GAO-11-318SP Appendix I: List of Congressional Addressees
Appendix I: List of Congressional Addressees
The Honorable Scott Brown
United States Senate
The Honorable Tom Coburn
United States Senate
The Honorable Claire McCaskill
United States Senate
The Honorable Mark R. Warner
United States Senate
Page 335 GAO-11-318SP Appendix I: List of Congressional Addressees
Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology
Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology
Section 21 of Public Law 111-139, enacted in February 2010, requires GAO
to conduct routine investigations to identify federal programs, agencies,
offices, and initiatives with duplicative goals and activities within
departments and governmentwide. This provision also requires GAO to
report annually to Congress on its findings, including the cost of such
duplication, and recommendations for consolidation and elimination to
reduce duplication and specific rescissions (legislation canceling
previously enacted budget authority) that Congress may wish to consider.
As agreed with the key congressional committees, our objectives in this
report are to (1) identify federal programs or functional areas where
unnecessary duplication, overlap, or fragmentation exists, the actions
needed to address such conditions, and the potential financial and other
benefits of doing so; and (2) highlight opportunities for additional
potential savings or increased revenues.1
For the purposes of our analysis, we considered “duplication” to occur
when two or more agencies or programs are engaged in the same activities
or provide the same services to the same beneficiaries. We used the term
“overlap” when multiple agencies or programs have similar goals, engage
in similar activities or strategies to achieve them, or target similar
beneficiaries. We used the term “fragmentation” to refer to those
circumstances in which more than one federal agency (or more than one
organization within an agency) is involved in the same broad area of
national need. The presence of fragmentation and overlap can suggest the
need to look closer at the potential for unnecessary duplication. However,
determining whether and to what extent programs are actually duplicative
requires programmatic information that is often not readily available. In
certain instances in this report, we use the term “potential duplication” to
include duplication, overlap, or fragmentation.
To identify federal programs or functional areas where unnecessary
duplication, overlap, or fragmentation exists, we reviewed GAO’s ongoing
and previously completed work. In some instances, issues related to
potential for duplication, overlap, or fragmentation were identified from
GAO’s body of work2 specifically examining these issues across
1To date, this work has not identified a basis for proposing specific funding rescissions.
2For example, see GAO, Managing for Results: Using the Results Act to Address Mission
Fragmentation and Program Overlap, GAO-AIMD-97-146 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 29,
1997); Managing for Results: Barriers to Interagency Coordination, GAO/GGD-00-106
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 29, 2000); and 21st Century Challenges: Reexamining the Base of
the Federal Government, GAO-05-325SP (Washington, D.C.: February 2005).
Page 336 GAO-11-318SP Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology
Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology
government. This body of work included GAO’s reviews of a variety of
federal programs, such as those related to training, employment, and
education and social services. In other instances, we drew examples of
potential duplication, overlap, or fragmentation from our ongoing audits
and evaluations not specifically focused on these issues but where they
were identified as challenges to the efficient and effective operation of
certain federal programs or activities we reviewed. While our report
includes examples where duplication, overlap, or fragmentation can
hinder program performance and cause inefficiencies, we recognize that
there could be instances where some degree of program duplication,
overlap, or fragmentation may be warranted due to the nature or
magnitude of the federal effort.
We also considered the work of other agencies such as the Office of
Management and Budget and the Congressional Budget Office. While the
work of other agencies informed our selection of specific areas for this
year’s report, we only included issues where we had current work or could
update prior work within our reporting time frames. Therefore, this report
is not a comprehensive survey of all government programs where
unnecessary duplication, overlap, or fragmentation may exist. Rather, this
report highlights a number of federal programs and activities where GAO’s
work indicates these issues exist. Each issue area contained in Sections I
and II of this report lists the relevant GAO reports and publications upon
which it is based. Those prior reports contain additional information on
GAO’s supporting work and methodologies. For issues based on GAO
work that has not yet been published or those that update prior GAO
work, we provide additional information on the methodologies used in
that ongoing work or update in the Framework for Analysis section of the
issue area.
To identify the actions needed to address unnecessary duplication,
overlap, or fragmentation, we reviewed and updated prior GAO work and
recommendations and in some cases completed ongoing work or
conducted new work to identify what additional actions agencies may
need to take and Congress may wish to consider. In some instances, the
long-standing nature or significance of certain issues, especially those that
transcended more than one agency, led us to suggest the potential need for
heightened congressional oversight. To identify the potential financial and
other benefits that might result from actions addressing duplication,
overlap, or fragmentation, we reviewed and updated prior GAO work and
conducted ongoing work with a specific focus on the potential for cost
savings. In some cases, we had sufficient information to show that if
actions are taken to address the individual issues summarized in this
Page 337 GAO-11-318SP Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology
Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology
report, opportunities for financial benefits ranging from the tens of
millions to several billion dollars annually might be realized. Estimating
the benefits that could result from eliminating unnecessary duplication,
overlap, or fragmentation was not possible in some cases because
information about the extent of unnecessary duplication among certain
programs is not available. Further, the financial benefits that can be
achieved from eliminating duplication, overlap, or fragmentation were not
always quantifiable in advance of congressional and executive branch
decision making, and information was not readily available on program
performance, the level of funding devoted to overlapping programs, or the
implementation costs and time frames that might be associated with
program consolidations or terminations.
In light of the long-term fiscal imbalances that the federal government
faces, we highlighted other opportunities for potential cost saving or
revenue enhancements in addition to those associated with duplication,
overlap, or fragmentation. Specifically, we reviewed and updated the
existing groupings of major cost-saving opportunities that had previously
been identified and summarized on GAO’s Web site,3 drawn from our past
reviews of government programs at high risk of fraud, waste, abuse, and
mismanagement or in need of restructuring. Similar to the duplication,
overlap, and fragmentation work, we also reviewed our ongoing and
recently completed work to determine whether the existing areas could be
updated within the reporting time frames for this report, and we identified
additional opportunities for consideration in areas where we had updated
information available. We provided estimates of the cost savings or
revenue enhancements, where available. At the beginning of each section,
we include tables listing the areas for consideration, including information
on the agencies and programs4 involved and cost savings or revenue
enhancements, if available.
We will continue to examine issues related to duplication, overlap, and
fragmentation in our ongoing work. In our future mandated annual
reports, we will look at additional federal programs to identify further
instances of duplication, overlap, or fragmentation as well as highlight
additional opportunities to reduce the cost of government operations or
increase revenues to the government. Likewise, we will continue to
3See http://www.gao.gov/highrisk/opportunities/.
4To provide the most current information, we cited only those programs that were
identified in GAO reports published in 2008 or later.
Page 338 GAO-11-318SP Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology
Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology
monitor developments in the areas we have already identified. Issues of
duplication, overlap, or fragmentation also may be addressed in our
routine audit work during the year and will be summarized in our
mandated annual reports as appropriate.
This report is based substantially upon ongoing audits and previously
completed GAO products, which were conducted in accordance with
generally accepted government auditing standards (GAGAS), or with
GAO’s Quality Assurance Framework, as appropriate. Those standards
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate
evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions
based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained
provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our
audit objectives. In one instance GAGAS did not apply to the work we did
to identify the revenue enhancement opportunity pertaining to unobligated
balances in the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Customs User Fee
Account. This work reviewed the agency’s justification for certain
estimates in the President’s annual budget request to Congress rather than
an audit and was performed in accordance with all relevant sections of
GAO’s Quality Assurance Framework. The framework requires that we
plan and perform the engagement to obtain sufficient and appropriate
evidence to meet our stated objectives and to discuss any limitations in
our work. We believe that the information and data obtained, and the
analysis conducted, provide a reasonable basis for any findings and
conclusions in this product. For issues being reported on for the first time,
GAO sought comments from the agencies involved and incorporated their
comments, as appropriate. We briefed the Office of Management and
Budget on a draft of this report. We conducted the work for the overall
report from February 2010 through February 2011.
Page 339 GAO-11-318SP Appendix II: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology
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