2005 03 Sar
2005 03 Sar
2005 03 Sar
WPr!p fJI
,r
OF INSPECTOR
C -
NT O
F COMMERCE
I G's
Semiannual Report
to Congress
March 2005
I.
S ,,V
P^ OF
March 2005
I am pleased to provide you with the Inspector General's Semiannual Report to Congress for the fi rst half of fiscal year
2005. The Inspector General Act requires that we twice annually prepare this repo rt summarizing our assessments of
Commerce activities and operations and that you transmit it, with any comments you may wish to add, to Congress within
30 days of receiving it.
This is the first semiannual repo rt we have prepared under your watch as Commerce Secretary. You will find that it contains
the outcome of much of the work I briefed you on in our initial meeting sho rt ly after your confirmation. My purpose with
each semiannual is to offer you a concise, ready source of insight into the strengths and weaknesses of departmental
operations and to highlight any improvements we believe are necessary to correct deficiencies. The ultimate goal in this and
of all our reporting and other communications is to ensure this Department fulfills its many cri tical roles as e ffectively as
possible. I view Com merce's success in this endeavor as very much a partnership between us, and I am confident that under
your leadership th e Depart ment will continue to make stri des toward resolving the management challenges an d any other
issues my of fi ce identifies.
In fact, during the past 6 months, we have noted significant progress on several key challenge areas, as evidenced by the
Department's development of a plan to eliminate its information secu ri ty mate ri al weakness, steps to strengthen acquisition
planning and management, and actions to further enhance the export control process. In work currently under way, I am
pleased to report s tr ong focus on the part of your senior officials in addressing other crucial issues—emergency prepared-
ness, th e 2010 decennial, and marine resource management, to name a few. At the same ti me, Commerce continues to face
considerable cha ll enges in addressing these issues and a number of other fundamental areas such as improving performance
measurement throughout the Department and enhancing human resource operations at USPTO.
Secretary Gutierrez, I trust that you will find this and future semiannual reports useful in your efforts to guide this Depart-
ment. I again welcome you to Commerce, and I look forward to working with you.
Sincerely,
1
OAFVC$OF NSPFc. ro CFA
Johnnie E. Frazier
o '
O^`p
aRTMr 7
'
Of. COMMERC-
Contents
IG's Message to Congress ...................................................................................................................................................................... I
orChallen
M
aj g es for the Department .................................................................................................................................................. 3
Monitor the Effectiveness of NOAA's Ocean and Living Marine Resources Stewardship .............................................................. 6
Enhance Emergency Preparedness, Safety, and Security of Commerce Facilities and Personnel .................................................... 8
Continue to Improve the Department's Strategic Planning and Performance Measurement in Accordance with GPRA ................ 9
Agency Overviews
TechnologyAdministration ............................................................................................................................................................. 31
Re
p ortin g
Re
q uirements ...................................................................................................................................................................51
P.--
Inspector General's
Message to Congress
I am pleased to submit the Office of Inspector General's semian- ness and began discussions with the units on ways to strengthen
nual report covering our work from October 1, 2004, through their C&A packages. We plan to work closely with the Department's
March 31, 2005—our first semiannual report for the 109th Con- Chief Information Officer and other officials until the security sta-
gress and the new Secretary of Commerce, the Honorable Carlos tus of all Commerce IT systems and data has improved.
Gutierrez, as well as the first to reflect the priorities set out in our
draft FY 2005-2007 work plan. We look forward to working with Securing technologies and technical information that have poten-
you, Secretary Gutierrez, and Department officials to address the tial military applications was another key focus of our work: pur-
management challenges that face Conunerce and respond to the suant to the National Defense Authorization Act, we assessed the
President's Management Agenda. Bureau of Industry and Security's (BIS') licensing process for
During the past 6 months, we identified savings for the Depart- chemical and biological commodities as our part in the annual
ment of more than $20 million in just 23 audits. Our investiga- interagency review of U.S. licensing processes. Enhancing export
tions have recovered significant taxpayer dollars as well, and re- controls for dual-use commodities to ensure they do not fall into
sulted in a number of criminal convictions. We have made numer- the hands of countries and entities of concern remains a critical
ous recommendations that, when implemented, will improve management challenge for the Department. I am pleased to report
Commerce's acquisition management, strengthen security over its that BIS' licensing operations are generally sound, and the agency
critical data, enhance program delivery, and promote operational was receptive to our recommendations for further improvement.
efficiency.
With regard to our investigative activities, we concluded several
For example, we audited several task orders issued under a Cen- key cases during the reporting period—one involving the convic-
sus Bureau contract that to date has paid out some $63 million. In tion of the last of four local officials in connection with the fraudu-
one case, we recommended that $2.3 million of the $5.8 million lent use of federal grant funds. This individual was ordered to pay
billed under the task order be disallowed. In another, we identi- $723,553 to the government, including $145,221 that will be re-
fied approximately $1.7 million in unsupported billings and more turned to Conunerce's Economic Development Administration,
than $3 million in unapproved subcontract costs. and sentenced to 41 months in prison. He will also be debarred
from receiving future federal contracts or awards.
We continued our focus on information security with efforts to
help the Department eliminate the material weakness we identi- Over the course of the coming months, as we pursue other prior-
fied in our FY 2004 evaluation, performed under the Federal In- ity areas, we will keep you apprised of our findings as well as
formation Security Management Act (FISMA). This is the fourth Commerce's progress at meeting the management challenges we
consecutive year that our FISMA work has reported deficiencies have identified. This communication and our partnership with you
serious enough to warrant a material weakness finding because of and departmental officials are essential to ensuring that Commerce
certification and accreditation (C&A) problems in many Commerce not only effectively fulfills its stated mission but also reaches its
operating units. During this reporting period, we provided com- potential for promoting the public good. I look forward to our
ment on the Department's plan for eliminating the material weak- continued collaboration toward that end.
Challenge 4
CONTROL THE COST AND
I MPROVE THE ACCURACY OF
CENSUS 2010
Commerce is at the midpoint of its decade-long preparations for
the 2010 decennial. With estimated costs of more than $9 bil-
lion, 4 this decennial census is one of the most costly operations—
and among the most critical—the Department undertakes.
The Census Bureau's plans and activities for the upcoming de-
cennial remain a major focus of our work, as we monitor its at-
tempts to capitalize on new technologies. Our assessment of the
USPTO's new headquarters in Alexandria, VA. 2004 census test found that handheld computers and related auto-
Source: USPTO. mation are promising replacements for paper-based processes, and
that the enumerator workforce was able to use the devices. This
was the first of two scheduled site tests of concepts, systems, and
Our recent work on patent examiner production goals, performance
procedures being evaluated for the 2010 census. (See September
appraisal plans, and awards; USPTO's new headquarters complex;
2004 Semiannual Report, page 20.) But we noted problems with
and its Office of Human Resources identified problems that could
data transmissions, technical field support, enumerator training,
potentially undercut its efficiency as a performance-based organi-
testing of revised group quarters definitions, and various manage-
zation. (See September 2004 Semiannual Report, pages 38-40.)
ment and administrative activities. These must be resolved for the
To improve examiner production, we recommended that USPTO
bureau to meet accuracy and cost-containment goals.
consider revising patent examiner goals to reflect efficiencies in
automated work processes and evaluate its patent examiner award
system to determine whether a more effective way of increasing
production exists. USPTO concurred with our recommendations
and agreed to reassess the current patent examiner goals, perfor-
mance, performance appraisal plans, and award system.
We will soon begin work on the 2006 census test, which will in-
clude follow-up on issues identified in our report on the 2004 test NOAA has been removing thousands of tons of debris, contaminated soil,
(Improving Our Measure of'America: What the 2004 Census lest and inactive landfills in the Pribilof Islands Environmental Restoration
Project. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Vessel PENQU1N ii. seen here
Can Teach Us in Planning for the 2010 Decennial Census, OIC-
off a cobblestone beach in the Pribilof Islands, supplies everything needed
16949/September 2004). by the Aleuts who live there.
Source: NOAA photo li brary.
U.S. Department of Commerce Office of Inspector General, A Better Strategy I s e The U.S. antidumping statute is designed to prevent foreign firms from selling a
Needed for Managing the Nation's Master Address File, Report Number OSE- good in the United States at prices below those at which the good is sold in their
12065/September 2000. home market. or, in some limited instances, below the cost of production.
trativc reviews determine the final duty rates on imports from a NDAA Reviews
specific country that have been found previously to be dumped in
U.S. markets. We found, among other things, that the agency needs The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year
to strengthen its policies, procedures, and standards for conduct- 2000, as amended, directed the inspectors general of Commerce,
ing these reviews and improve several administrative practices (see Defense, Energy, and State, in consultation with the directors of
page 21). Central Intelligence and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, to
report to Congress annually (through 2007) on the adequacy of
In upcoming reporting periods, we plan to assess the Department's export controls and counterintelligence measures in preventing
efforts to expand U.S. market opportunities and overcome trade the acquisition of sensitive U.S. technology and information by
barriers in some of the most difficult and potentially rewarding countries and entities of concern.
foreign markets—China, Russia, and perhaps some SouthAtneri-
can countries. We will continue to monitor the effectiveness of To meet NDAA's FY 2005 requirement, we assessed BIS' licens-
overseas posts and domestic U.S. export assistance centers in help- ing process for chemical and biological commodities to determine
ing U.S. companies compete for market share abroad, assess cus- whether the process is timely, complies with statutory and regula-
tomer satisfaction with ITA products and services, and evaluate tory requirements, and considers the cumulative effect of prior
ITA's export success reporting—one of its key performance mea- technology transfers to end users. We also assessed information
sures. Our inspections of post activities in Turkey, Greece, and sharing among the various agencies involved in reviewing licenses,
India and our reviews of export assistance centers in Chicago, the their process for resolving disputes, and BIS' procedures for re-
Pacific Northwest, and Philadelphia identified problems with ex- vising the Commerce Control List. (See page 11.)
port success reporting, including inaccurate and overstated U.S.
value and unverifiable success stories (see March and September
2004 Semiannual Reports, pages 24 and 25, respectively). In re- EXAMPLES OF DUAL-USE TECHNOLOGIES
sponse, ITA has taken a number of steps to improve quality con-
trols, oversight, and management accountability for the accuracy Technologies I Civilian Use I Military Use
and integrity of export success reports. We will continue to moni-
tor these areas, including ITA's financial controls and resource
Remote sensing Earth observation `Spy' satellites for
management, and will report on the Department's efforts to re-
(optical radar) satellites for weather combat intelligence,
solve issues we identify. forecasting, arms control
mapping, etc. verification, etc.
We also intend to build on our survey work at the Import Admin-
istration by looking at the verification process for antidumping
Advanced Space transportation ICBMs
cases, and to assess ITA's new Manufacturing and Services Unit
ballistics and systems (launchers); (Intercontinental
and its efforts to enhance competitiveness of U.S. manufacturers missiles sounding rockets Ballistic Missiles);
and industry. (for microgravity short range surface-
experiments) to-surface missiles
Commerce must balance the nation's economic interests in in- Source: www.futuraspace.com/Dual_Usefactsheet.htm.
creasing trade with the realities of national security by controlling
the export of technology and materials that have both civilian and
military applications. The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) NDAA for FY 2001 requires the IGs to also report on the status of
oversees the federal government's export licensing and enforce- recommendations made in prior-year reviews. This year's follow-
ment system for these dual-use commodities, and we devote con- up covered reviews conducted from 2001 through 2004 (no rcc-
siderable, ongoing attention to its efforts. Rogue countries and onnnendations remain outstanding from our FY 2000 report). We
terrorist groups pose great threats to U.S. national security and were pleased to find that Commerce made progress on a number
foreign policy goals. A strong, effective export control system is of outstanding issues, but some key recommendations remain
essential to keeping sensitive items and technology from those unresolved (see page 13).
seeking weapons of mass destruction.
Challenge 8
ENHANCE EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS, SAFETY, AND
SECURITY OF COMMERCE
FACILITIES AND PERSONNEL The Department has assembled and equipped teams of volunteer em-
ployees at its facilities to implement evacuation procedures in case of an
Tense international conditions have increased America's need to emergency.
prepare for physical threats to U.S. government facilities and per- Source: 01G.
sonnel. For Commerce—with more than 35,000 employees in
hundreds of facilities worldwide—the task of safeguarding de- departmental guidance on implementing effective preparedness pro-
partmental personnel and property is daunting. After our April grams and insufficient oversight of bureau compliance with estab-
2002 report on the status of Commerce's emergency prepared- lished policies and procedures, which may undercut its efforts. We
ness and security programs identified signilicant vulnerabilities, will report the final results of this review in our next semiannual.
we added this issue to our list of top management challenges.
EXCERPT: Dec. 21, 2004, Transmittal Letter for Circular mcnt programming and spending. Performance budgeting—as
No. A-1 23, Revised, from the Office of Management and implemented by OMB—is based on a similar assumption: that by
Budget putting performance information alongside budget amounts, fund-
ing choices focus on program results and budget decision-making
Actions Required. Agencies and individual federal managers improves. The success of either approach relies on the quality of
must take systematic and proactive measures to (i) develop reported data.
and implement appropriate, cost-effective internal control for
results-oriented management; (ii) assess the adequacy of
internal control in federal programs and operations; (iii) Though the Department has strengthened its performance report-
separately assess and document internal control over financial ing under GPRA, our audits of six Commerce operating units con-
reporting consistent with the process defined in Appendix A; tinuc to identify the need for enhanced internal controls to ensure
(iv) identify needed improvements; (v) take corresponding that performance measures are appropriate and understandable,
corrective action; and (vi) report annually on internal control
through management assurance statements. and reported data is accurate and reliable for making funding de-
cisions.
Federal law requires agencies to prepare and disseminate finan- The Department is reviewing its performance and data validation
cial information, including audit reports on their financial state- processes in response to our findings and recommendations. It
ments, to enable Congress, agency executives, and the public to has developed a new quarterly monitoring process that examines
assess an agency's operational and program management and to performance data and the measures themselves. The process re-
determine whether its financial management systems comply with quires bureau under secretaries to attest to the validity of data and
legislative mandates. But reliable financial reporting and effec- verify that the measures and reported information accurately re-
tive, efficient program operations depend on strong internal con- flect a bureau's accomplishments.
trols. And beginning in FY 2006 under the revised OMB Circular
A-123, agencies must assess internal controls over financial re- We are now conducting our ninth audit specifically aimed at per-
porting, document those controls and the assessment process, and formance measurement and reporting—this time at the Minority
provide an assurance statement on the effectiveness of internal Business Development Agency (MBDA). Our earlier reviews of
control over financial reporting in their annual Perforinance & MBDA grant recipients found varying degrees of noncompliance
Accountability Report. with performance guidance and inadequate management controls
for ensuring that claimed performance is accurate, properly docu-
We will continue to monitor a range of financial management is- mented, and occurs within specified time frames. We have initi-
sues, including the Department's efforts to implement the new A- ated a follow-up review of our prior audits to (1) assess bureau
123 requirements, improve internal controls, and achieve other and departmental efforts to address identified deficiencies and
operating efficiencies identified in the annual audit management strengthen performance measurement, and (2) determine whether
letter. We will also continue to monitor the International Trade additional efforts are needed to ensure that reported performance
Administration's progress toward complying with OMB Circular results are reliable and meaningful.
A-25 requirements for fully recovering the costs of products and
services it provides, and the use of Commerce Business Systems
to conduct financial and budgeting operations. EXCERPT: Government Performance Results Act of 1993
_ r y
I - v _
_
j
k
i '
4
T
PPS b1EN OF CO
BUREAU OF INDUSTRY
mG ^^, AND SECURITY
OF^^DUSTRY ^'^O5
Executive Order 12981 and the Export Administration Regulations do not set explicit time requirements for the completion
of license applications approved by the interagency group, but not escalated. The executive order and the regulations only provide time
frames for escalated cases after the initial interagency refer r al process is completed. Currently, licensing officers have no time require-
ment for processing license applications once they are returned from interagency review. Setting internal BIS processing time frames
could encourage timelier disposition of undisputed license applications.
Export Control Follow-up 'All recommendations from our March 2000 review, Improvements Are Needed in
Review Identifies Open Programs Designed to Protect Against the Transfer of Sensitive Technologies to
Countries of Concern (IPE-12454), have been addressed. Open recommendations
Recommendations remain in the following reports: March 2001, Management of the Commerce Con-
trol List and Related Processes Should Be Improved (IPE- 13744); February 2002,
The National Defense Authorization Act requires the Office of BXA Needs to Strengthen its ECASS Modernization Effbrts to Ensure Long-Term
Success of the Project (IPE-14270); March 2002, interagency Review of Federal
Inspector General to report annually to Congress on the status of
Automated Fxport Licensing Systems (D-2002-074); March 2003, Improvements
export control recommendations made in prior-year OIG reviews. Are Needed to Better Enforce Dual-Use Export Control Laws (IPE-15155); March
This year's follow-up covered annual reviews dating hack to 2000.' 2004, Deemed Export Controls May Not Stop the Transfer of Sensitive Technology
We noted that the Department has made progress on a number of to Foreign Nationals in the U.S. (1PE-16176).
outstanding issues. However, recommendations remain open in
all but the March 2000 report, for a total of 30 open items.
In response to our finding concerning the valuation, the recipient provided additional documentation th at fully supported the $218,000
value of donated products. As a result, we recommended that EDA ensure the grantee adequately documents its matching share in the
future, as required by OMB Circular A-87. (Denver Regional Office offudits: DEN-] 7065)
of industry.
assembles data from other government sources, prepares and distributes it
to the public,
Bureau of Economic Analysis prepares,
and designs
develops, and interprets the national
infortnation
income and product accounts `I_iY_^.e,^ t - -ray. ^.,,, a—. & -
products. In FY
(summarized by the gross domestic A
2004, STAT-USA
product), as well as aggregate
generated $1.5 Inil-
measures of international,
lion in sales. During the
regional, and state economic
same period, BEA gener-
activiry. ^iur..f.6nrnu.^.,..rrr uc r er.. . ..0 .uSt r,..c,e Iw onr.,
ated about $182,000 from •
j' z^... w^sro.rmw....rn.rm.r.x.a..y^.a+
Public Law 103-317, 108 Stat. 1744 (August 26, 1994) provided that "the Secretary of Commerce is authoi7ed to disseminate economic and statistical data products .. .
and ... charge fees necessary to recover the full costs incurred in their production.”
OMB M-95-2 (the "Rivlin Memorandum") was issued to provide agencies with guidance on reviewing their information dissemination practices for compliance with
OMB Circular A- 130.
Our audit sought to identify the agencies' reimbursable and Fee-funded Our audit showed that the
services and products, and assess whether these activities are consis- bureau's reimbursable ac- Census
tent with their statutory missions and comply with applicable laws tivity and product sales are Mission Statement
and regulations. We also examined whether the agencies had appro- consistent with its mission.
priate and effective management controls over these activities. Census fully documents its
The Census Bureau serves
cost estimates for reim-
as the leading source of qual-
Reimbursable agreements. To recover the full costs of services b urnable projects and re-
ity data about the nation's
provided to other federal agencies through reimbursable agree- covers all costs for the
people and economy. We
ments, BEA and ESA bill customers for the direct costs incurred worn it performs.
honor privacy, protect confi-
and use an overhead rate to recover indirect. costs. Commerce re- dentiality, share our expertise
quires that agencies review and document the charges they assess, However, 13 of the 43 re-
globally, and conduct our
but neither agency had reviewed or revised their overhead rates in work openly.
imbursable agreements
3 years, and neither maintained documentation to justify the rates. we reviewed, which had
In addition, one of the six BEA agreements we reviewed did not estimated costs of about
contain the proper authorization to begin work, which could have $132 million, either were not signed by an authorized official prior
jeopardized the agency's ability to recover its costs from the cus- to the initiation of work or did not have an accompanying tempo-
tomer. We recommended that both BEA and ESA develop proce- rary work agreement in place before any work was done. Census
dures to establish, document, review, and adjust overhead rates. In issues temporary agreements to authorize work within 30 days of
addition, BEA needs to ensure that it does not begin work for an- receiving a letter of intent from the federal customer. The customer
other agency until an interagency agreement is properly executed. then has up to 90 days to sign a formal agreement. For six projects
that had temporary agreements, Census failed to obtain a signed
Fee-funded activities. BEA establishes the price of RIMS prod- formal agreement from the customer within 90 days and thus al-
ucts on the basis of its labor costs (e.g., RIMS staff hourly salaries, lowed the temporary agreements to remain in effect beyond the al-
leave and benefits, customer service, preparation of distribution pack- lotted time period.
age) and overhead costs (management, administration, and space).
BEA had initially estimated the cost of producing a RIMS CD-ROM Census officials informed us that they have met with major fed-
for FY 200.5 at $283—which represented $160 for direct labor and eral customers to discuss the timeliness requirements for signing
$123 for overhead (43 percent of the total price). We could not de- interagency agreements, but we noted instances in which tempo-
termine how BEA arrived at this overhead amount or if it was rea- rary agreements were still being signed more than 30 days after
sonable. In response to our audit, BEA agreed that overhead costs receipt of letters of intent.
need closer scrutiny, reanalyzed its costs, and found that the FY
2004 CD cost was still appropriate and should be used in FY 2005. Legal review policy unclear. The Census Bureau's Policies and
Procedures Manual states that all reimbursable agreements require
For STAT-USA, ESA must recover the costs of labor, equipment,
legal review "unless specifically exempted," but does not specify
supplies, rent, utilities, and overhead associated with operating
what exemptions apply. None of the 43 reimbursable agreements
the service, but could not provide us with documentation of how it
in our audit sample had received legal review. Bureau officials
calculated these costs or the associated subscription fees.
informed us that agreements for certain special projects are ex-
empt from legal review. However, these exceptions were not in-
Agency Response cluded in the Policies and Procedures Manual. We recom mended
that clear guidance as to which reimbursable agreements require
The Under Secretary of Economic Affairs accepted our recom-
legal review be included in the Policies and Procedures Manual.
mendations and noted that some corrective actions had already
been taken. For example, both BEA and ESA have developed new
Database ineffective tool for monitoring and documentation.
procedures to establish, document, and apply overhead rates
Census's Acquisition Division maintains a database of reimburs-
charged to customers in reimbursable agreements, and the agency
able agreements but the information it contains is incomplete and
has recalculated these rates with the latest data. (Financial State-
its usefulness for monitoring reimbursable activity is limited.
ments and Accountability Division: FSD- 16824-5-0001)
In addition, the bureau does not maintain all required documenta-
Census Bureau tion pertaining to agreements in a centrally located official file
and has not assigned responsibility for maintaining such files to
During FY 2004, the Census Bureau earned total revenue of ap- any specific division.
proximately $246 million from reimbursable agreements with gov-
ernment agencies and roughly $2.9 million from product sales to Readily accessible and complete documentation is essential to
the public. effectively monitor reimbursable work. The director of the Cen-
ro•
U.S. Department of Commerce/Office of Inspector General
Economics and Statistics Administration
sus Bureau should ensure that official reimbursable agreement files Investigations
containing all required documentation are maintained.
Agency Response
Assignment of Fictitious Census
Contract Leads to Conspiracy
Census officials agreed that stronger management controls for re- Charge
imbursable agreements are warranted, particularly in the areas of
policy, monitoring, and official tiles. They provided a plan of ac- On February 2, 2005, a Louisiana businessman was charged in
tion to address issues such as late executions of interagency agree- U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana with con-
ments and have already corrected some problems (e.g., specifica- spiracy to commit bank fraud, based on evidence developed by a
tion of which reimbursable agreements require legal clearance). joint OIG/FBI investigation. To obtain a $6 million loan from a
(Financial Statements and Accountability Division: FSD-J6824- New Orleans hank, the defendant executed a security agreement
5-0002) that purported to pledge as collateral his company's interest in the
proceeds of an $18.5 million contract with the Census Bureau.
Our investigation disclosed, however, that documents submitted
to the bank to support the assignment were forged, and that no
such contract actually existed. If convicted on the felony charge,
Audit Questions $8.5 Million the defendant could face a substantial fine and up to 5 years' im-
Billed Under Census Contract prisonment. The trial is scheduled for April 2005. (Alexandria
for IT Services Resident Office)
In 1999 the Census Bureau awarded a Virginia IT services com- Former Census Employee
pany an indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract to provide
Sentenced for Theft of
up to $150 million worth of information technology services to
the bureau and all departmental operating units. The 1-year con-
Government Funds
tract was implemented through a series of task orders and included
In our September 2004 Semiannual Report (page 48), we reported
the option of 12-month extensions through April 2004.
the felony theft conviction of a Census employee, which resulted
from a joint investigation with the U.S. Department of Agricul-
During this semiannual period, we audited 3 of the 32 task or-
ture 01G. The investigation found that the defendant had falsely
ders awarded under the contract to determine whether costs billed
reported the amount of income she received as a Census employee
by the firm were reasonable, allowable, and allocable under con-
in order to qualify for and receive food stamps and child care
tract terms and conditions and federal regulations. After a series
benefits from USDA. On December 15, 2004, she was sentenced
of amendments, estimated total costs for the 3 orders were $17
in U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland to 3 years' su-
million.
pervised probation—including 6 months' home detention with
electronic monitorin —and 100 hours of community service, and
In all three audits, we found that the firm had failed to comply
was ordered to pay $39,446 in restitution. Prior to her sentencing,
with numerous contract and federal requirements, which caused
the defendant resigned from her position at Census. ( Washington
us to question slightly more than $8.5 million in direct labor and
Field Office)
reimbursable costs billed under the task orders. We recommended
that Census disallow and seek recovery of this entire amount, and
take various other actions to rectify the problems that permitted Census Contractor Arrested for
the noncompliance and resulting unallowable billings. Theft from Government
Agency Response On March 1, 2005, OIG agents, working with local police, ar-
rested a Census Bureau vendor in Elgin, Illinois, on state charges
The audit reports for the three task orders were provided to the that he stole approximately $20,000 from the bureau over a period
agency incrementally. The findings and recommendations identi- of approximately 8 months. Our investigation found that between
fied in the first report were common to all three. Census provided January and August 2004, the vendor had billed more than 20
an action plan in January 2005 that included specific steps to ad- fraudulent charges to a government purchase card account using
dress each of the findings. (Denver Regional Office ofAudits: DEN- online software. The theft went undetected for a period of time
16724-5-0001, 0002, and 0003) because the purchase card was routinely used to pay the vendor
for legitimate services rendered to the bureau, so similar charges At the time of his arrest, the defendant was charged with two counts
were initially overlooked when monthly statements were reviewed. of unauthorized use of a credit card in violation of state criminal
The fraudulent charges were identified as a result of routine ran- statutes. Further proceedings are pending.
dom audits conducted by the agency and were immediately re-
ported to 01G. The agency informed us that it has taken steps to reinforce the
need for monthly reconciliation of billing information. (Alexan-
dria Resident Office)
^QPQ^MENT Or Co^^i
I NTERNATIONAL TRADE
ADMINISTRATION
T
RADE PAM
Import Administration defends American industry against A 1993 OIG review found that 32 percent of the agency's admin-
injurious and unfair trade practices by administering the istrative reviews were late, but our recent survey found that the
antidumping and countervailing duty laws of the United agency was meeting its deadlines for reviewing antidumping cases
States and enforcing other trade laws and agreements most of the time. The agency extends statutory dates if deadlines
negotiated to address such trade practices. fall on weekends. According to agency management, deferring week-
end deadlines for case determinations to the next business day has
U.S. Commercial Service promotes the export of been an accepted practice for many years. But this is not an official
U.S. products and helps small and medium- policy. The agency's chief counsel's offi ce acknowledges that under a
sized businesses market their goods and strict interpretation of the statute, Import Administration does not have the
services abroad. It has 100 domestic flexibility to extend weekend deadlines.
offices and more than 150 overseas
posts in 84 countries. Import Administration has multiple management and administrative controls to
help it meet deadlines, such as the Case Management Database—the agency's pri-
mary system for calculating statutory deadlines and tracking progress toward meeting
them—and managers' weekly status reports, but these tools could be strengthened. The Case
Management Database, for example, contains some erroneous information. In addition, the data-
base does not record the actual dates of signature for determinations. Import Administration used
information generated by the database to report in the Department's FY 2004 Annual Performance Plan that
it met case deadlines 100 percent of the time in FY 2002. But the database does not reconcile statutory deadline dates or target dates
'' The U.S. antidumping statute is designed to prevent foreign firms from selling a good in the United States at prices below those at which the good is sold in their home
market, or in some limited instances below the cost of production.
against the actual dates that determinations are signed, so it is not which confirm IA's findings in an antidumping review, were mark-
really providing reliable information for the agency to use to de- edly different in content and format. This lack of standardization
termine whether it always completes cases on time. If Import Ad- produces reports of varying quality.
ministration wants to continue using the database to generate per-
formance information, the system must provide a report based on Though Import Administration does have an antidumping manual,
the determination's actual rather than target signature dates. it does not reflect current review practices. Published in 1998, the
manual has been outdated by several policy bulletins and court
Policies, procedures, and standards need decisions issued subsequently. The agency should develop an in-
i mprovement ternal operations handbook, and include in it a standard template
for the content and format of verification reports. IA also should
I mport Administration does not have adequate written guidance update its antidumping manual to reflect current review practices.
or an operations handbook that gives systematic instructions for
conducting administrative reviews, defines staff roles and respon- Management of official files needs attention
sibilities in the process, and details agency practices. We could
not find any document containing the necessary information in a I mport Administration is required to keep official files for 20 years
concise and easy-to-use format. In addition, verification reports, after a case is closed and to maintain the public version for 5 years
after case closure. 12 Files for cases challenged in court must be
kept indefinitely.
Apr 05, 2005
IA's official case files are inadequately maintained. Our review of
Separate Rates and Combination Rates in Antidumping Investi- a sample of official case tiles, which are stored primarily in the
gations involving Non-Market Economy Countries Department's Central Records Unit, found that many were incom-
Announcement of Change in Practice plete—devoid of Federal Register notices, decision memoranda,
and other required documentation. In addition, most electronic
Policy Bulletin 05.1 media files (e.g., data sets and margin calculations), which are
considered part of the official case documentation, were not main-
Mar 25, 2005
tained in the required location.
Superalloy Degassed Chromium from Japan
Initiation of Antidumping Investigation In addition, official files in the Central Records Unit at Commerce
headquarters are vulnerable to fire because the unit does not have
Factsheet
an automatic fire suppression system.
Mar 25, 2005
The agency hopes to resolve these issues and improve its compli-
Ishar UAE Scope Ruling on Whether Stainless Steel ance with records management requirements with the implemen-
Bar is Subject to the Scope of the Antidumping and tation of an electronic documents management system recently
Countervailing Duty Orders on Stainless Steel Wire
purchased by ITA. Import Administration estimates that phase I of
Rod from Subject Countries
the system will be operational by late 2005.
Final Scope Ruling (signed: February 7, 2005)
Computer support needs restructuring
Mar 16, 2005
Bottle-Grade Polyethylene Terephthalate Resin In August 2004, Import Administration completed a reorganiza-
from India, Indonesia, Taiwan, and Thailand tion of its antidumping and countervailing duty operations, but
Final Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Determinations left management of computer support staff unchanged. Previously,
each of the three Deputy Assistant Secretaries (DASs) for Opera-
Factsheet tions had a two-person computer support team that trained ana-
Mar 11, 2005 lysts to use statistical analysis software for calculating dumping
margins. Each team reported to a different office director who in
Steel Import Monitoring and Analysis System turn reported to one of the three Deputy Assistant Secretaries. Under
Interim Final Rule the reorganization, the office directors now report to only one
Deputy Assistant Secretary, but the three computer support staff
FR Notice Factsheet
teams are still separate. Having the computer support staff report
The Import Administration's antidumping and countervailing duty decisions
span a wide range of issues of great importance to American businesses.
'Based on ITA's records retention policy and National Archives and Records Ad-
Source: http://ia.ita.doc.gov/ia-highlights-and-news.html. ministration guidelines.
to one manager could help improve consistency in service and or legal holidays, establishing a standard process for vetting and
support and facilitate the best allocation of resources. resolving cases in a timely manner, drafting instructions to update
the case management database, and updating the Antidumping
Analyst training program should be improved Manual to reflect changes in IA practice. (Office of Inspections
and Program Evaluations: 1PE-16952)
I mport Administration offers three training modules for new ana-
lysts (new analyst training, verification, and statistical analysis
software training), but no formal training for existing analysts. New
analysts say they are overwhelmed by the amount of information
Investigations
given in the training classes. More experienced analysts complain
about a lack of continuing career development. Both situations
may negatively impact the agency's operations. Import Adminis- Multiple Arrests in Visa Fraud
tration should reassess its training program to ensure that it meets Investigation
the needs of new and existing analysts, particularly in light of the
large number of vacancies (87) it anticipated tilling at the time of In February 2004, the Diplomatic Security Service (DSS), U.S.
our review. Department of State, requested that OIG join an ongoing investi-
gation, which had disclosed the possible involvement of an ITA
employee in visa fraud. During the first week of March 2005, OIG
Agency Response
agents participated along with personnel from DSS and the Bu-
reau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the arrest of
Import Administration is taking steps to address the report's rec-
four foreign nationals, who will be held as material witnesses in
ommendations, such as publicly clarifying its practice of rolling
the case. (Seattle Resident Office)
to the next business day statutory deadlines that fall on weekends
_
s
It
!F
sGPNO 't
i+ OS
NATIONAL OCEANIC
AND ATMOSPHERIC
sF
° r
ADMINISTRATION
Recommendations in Consultant Study Lack
he ® Support for Changes at NOAA
National
Oceanic and In September 2003, NOAA contracted with the management consulting firm of Booz
Atmospheric Administration Allen Hamilton, Inc., for a comprehensive analysis of its finance and administra-
studies climate and global change; hk tive services. The purpose of the study was to evaluate the performance of these
ensures the protection of coastal oceans and functions, recommend cost-effective service improvements, and develop a
the management of marine resources: provides plan for implementing the recommended changes. We reviewed how NOAA
weather services; and manages worldwide is using the study's results and whether its findings, assumptions, con-
environmental data. NOAA does this through the clusions, and recommendations are adequately supported. Our audit did
following organizations: not assess whether the recommended functional management struc-
ture was an appropriate choice for NOAA.
National Weather Service reports the weather of
the United States and provides weather forecasts
and warnings to the general public. Validity of study's conclusions about costs,
savings, staffing, and organizational structure
National Ocean Service issues nautical charts; performs could not be verified
g
eodetic surveys; conducts research; and develops policies
on ocean mining and energy. Although Booz Allen's reports indicated extensive data gather-
ing and analyses, we concluded that the study's assumptions, find-
National Marine Fisheries Service conducts a program ings, and recommendations lacked support and should not serve
of management, research, and services related to the as the sole justification for specific action by NOAA.
protection and rational use of living marine resources.
The Booz Allen consultants who prepared the reports in the study
National Environmental Satellite, Data, and advised us that in their opinion the reports contained all the evi-
Information Service observes the environment by dence necessary to understand the basis for their recommendations,
operating a national satellite system. but we did not find that to be the case.
NOAA Research (Office of Oceamc and Atmospheric
We were unable, for example, to see how information reportedly gath-
Research) conducts research related to the oceans
ered in Booz Allen's interviews with NOAA and departmental offi-
and inland waters, the lower and upper atmosphere, p
cials supported the reports' findings and conclusions. Likewise, we could
the space environment, and the Earth.
not assess the validity of estimated costs and savings Booz Allen identi-
NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations tied because these reports lacked sufficient analysis supporting the formu-
operates NOAA's ships and aircraft and lation of those amounts. We could not reconcile the key cost and staffing fig-
provides NOAA programs with trained !F1 ures contained in the reports with other verifiable data, such as NOAA's audited
technical and management accounting records. In addition, we were unable to analyze Booz Allen's adjust-
personnel from the nation's ments to the activity based costing data produced by NOAA or to validate the produc-
seventh uniformed tivity gains Booz Allen assumed NOAA could achieve. Similarly, we could not assess the
service, validity of Booz Allen's decision to recommend a specific organizational structure because the
reports did not contain sufficient analysis supporting that decision or indicating why the structure
chosen suited NOAA better than any other option identified.
Our concerns persisted even after meeting with the Booz Allen consultants who prepared the reports and discussing the issues that
troubled us. As a result, we concluded that neither the findings nor recommendations contained in the Booz Allen reports should serve as
the sole justification for action by NOAA.
New processes and procedures exist for NOAA's chief administrative officer agreed with our rccommen-
appropriately preparing, reviewing, and dations. He noted that NOAA will ensure that current agreements
clearing interagency agreements are amended to comply with past and present regulations and that
future agreements comply with applicable laws, regulations, and
The Department recently issued policies. (Office of'Audits: BSD-16927)
the Interim Interagency and
Other Special Agreements Hand-
book to provide guidance for the
use, management, and oversight Pacific Coastal Salmon
of interagency agreements.
NESDIS issued its own manual
Recovery Fund
for interagency agreements, Re-
As detailed in our September 2004 Semiannual Report (pages 8
view and Clearance Procedures
and 31-32), OIG is auditing a series of projects operating under
for Agreements, on October 31,
the Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund—the multimillion dollar
2002. The NESDIS manual,
federal grant program administered by NOAA to enhance salmon
coupled with the requirements of
recovery in Alaska, California, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.
the departmental handbook and
Since the program's inception in FY 2000, these states and select
the specific authorizing legisla-
Indian tribes have received some $436 million to support local
tion, provides sufficient guidance
salmon conservation efforts. One Washington grantee—a Native
for preparing, reviewing, and
American commission—is using a 5-year, $27.3 million recovery
clearing interagency agreements.
fund award to finance salmon projects operated by its 20 member
tribes.
Source: www.nesdis.noaa.gov.
rect costs because the tribe failed to adhere to federal cost prin-
ciples and uniform administrative requirements. This tribe also
did not submit the required semiannual progress reports. (Seattle
Regional Office ofAudits: STL-16657-2 and -4)
f al
1 t a
an
rd _
__
P.AD I 0
D1VTS1ON
O Q,
^ ,AMENT OF
° \ NATIONAL
gNr^° ij1 TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND
I NFORMATION ADMINISTRATION
hi^nONS&INFOR^P
5 '
VI
TECHNOLOGY ADMINISTRATION
TECHNOLOGY
ADMINISTRATION
Inappropriate personnel and related indirect costs. Contrary to its own policies and federal cost prin-
ciples, the administrator charged NIST for overtime and vacation pay for employees working on other projects, gave staff
bonuses without NIST approval, and billed estimated rather than actual labor hours, all of which caused us to question $159,925 in
personnel and related costs.
The company disagreed with our findings but provided no docu- Our interim audit of this 9-month period questioned $294,495 of
mentation to change our conclusions. We recommended that NIST the costs claimed: the recipient had received $193,907 of this
disallow millions in questioned costs and recover the federal share, amount for costs billed by a subcontractor with which it had no
which includes imputed interest. (Atlanta Regional Office of Au- written contract, and the remaining $100,588 for unallowable
dits: AIL-16872) equipment purchases. In addition, the grantee had
• billed NIST for costs not yet invoiced, thus accumulating
grant funds before they were needed;
NIST's Advanced Technology Program • failed to develop written standards for employee conduct:
and
As part of its efforts to spur technological development, NIST • used grant funds to give an employee a large pay raise,
administers the Advanced Technology Program (ATP) to pro-
which may have reduced the amount available to cover
vide financial assistance through cooperative agreements,
agreed-upon costs or labor requirements.
with the goal of transferring cutting-edge technology to in-
dustrial uses. Between 1990 and September 2004, ATP
awarded $2.3 billion in funding to companies to develop We recommended that NIST disallow the total amount questioned,
promising, high-risk technologies. Industry has matched this recover excess federal funds of $221,971, and direct the recipient
funding with $2.3 billion in cost-sharing. to establish the required written standards for employee conduct.
We also advised NIST to take appropriate action should the salary
increase adversely affect the grantee's ability to achieve the award's
ATP Awards by Technology Area, 1990-2004 stated goals. (Denver Regional Office of Audits: DEN-16926)
n S 52
n $`W M
0 $449
M
Audit Confirms Cost-Share
Requirements Met by
Sim
M
0 $574
ATP Recipient
M
A Maryland engineering firm received an ATP award in Septem-
1 Manufadtrinrp n B oterttnoksgy her 2003 to mass produce a foil adhesive for bonding dissimilar
[] F;leorgriivdPF conics DAdvanced Msterialsi hemi*h'y
materials, such as metal and ceramic, without the use of hea t a
• information T+echnatopy
process with potentially wide application and benefit to the de-
Source: www.atp.nist.gov/eao/statistics/. fense and aerospace industries. Total estimated costs of the 2-year
project are $2.3 million, with the federal share for the first year
not to exceed $1,186,884, or 84 percent of allowable direct costs.
The firm claimed first-year project costs totaling $806,140 and
Questioned Costs of $294,495 received $615,000 in federal reimbursement.
in Audit of Michigan ATP
Grantee We conducted an interim financial audit of costs claimed and re-
imbursed for the project's initial 11 months (October 2003 through
In September 2003, NIST awarded a 3-yeurATP cooperative agree- August 2004), and found that the recipient had covered less than
ment to a Michigan engineering firm to develop enhanced manu- half of its share of direct costs for that period (7.24 percent versus
facturing assembly processes primarily for the automotive indus- the required 15.95 percent). In response to our draft report, the
try. Total estimated costs of the award are $2,117,299, with the firm provided documentation demonstrating that it had balanced
federal share not to exceed $1,987,927, or 94 percent of allowable the excess federal payments it had received during these 11 months
costs. During the project's first 9 months (October 2003 through by absorbing all project costs incurred during the month of Sep-
.J une 2004), the firm reported costs of $490,065 and received re- tember 2004 ($143,159). NIST confirmed that it had not reim-
imbursement of $389,478. bursed any of these costs. As a result, the recipient had actually
exceeded its first-year cost-share requirement, having covered
23.71 percent of direct costs. We therefore considered the matter
resolved. (Denver Regional Office of Audits: DEN-16983)
Found in Audit of California The review of IT controls against the six criteria outlined in GAO's
Joint Venture Federal Information System Controls Audit Manual 13 noted two
open findings remaining from FY 2003. The independent auditors
We audited the costs claimed by a member of a two-company joint identified one new finding and made four recommendations in the
venture that received an ATP cooperative agreement to develop areas of security planning and management, access control, and
high-speed optical switches for the telecommunications industry. service continuity. (Financial Statements and Accountability Di-
For the joint venture, total estimated costs of the 4-year project vision: FSD-16698 and 16699)
(October 2003 through September 2007) are $7.0 million, with
the federal share capped at roughly $3.5 million, or 50 percent.
The member's share of the total estimated costs is $4 million, with
federal reimbursement limited to $999,505, or about 25 percent. Audits Unresolved for
For the award's first year, the federal cost-share to the member
firm was capped at $231,602, or 22.47 percent. More than 6 Months
During the project's first 6 months, the member firm billed the Massachusetts MEP
joint venture administrator for costs of $352,080 and received
$30,961 in federal disbursements. We questioned $3,132 of these Our September 2004 Semiannual Report (page 37) detailed an audit
claimed costs, consisting of $1,592 in non-ATP payroll expenses of an MEP cooperative agreement as being unresolved for more
and fringe benefits, and $1,540 in related indirect costs. During than 6 months. Our audit had recommended that NIST disallow
the same time frame, the firm had not claimed eligible project questioned costs of $8,177,606, recover the federal share of
expenditures of $2,383. We therefore credited the firm for this $1,599,349, and require the recipient to implement improvements
amount, which reduced questioned costs to $749. to its financial reporting system. In its audit resolution proposal,
NIST disallowed $715,097 and reinstated $7,462,509 in costs ques-
Our audit also revealed that the member's accounting system did tioned in the audit report. In July 2004, after detailed analyses of
not comply with federal cost principles in that it did not have writ- NIST's audit resolution proposal and other documents provided
ten procedures for determining the reasonableness and allowability by NIST and the recipient, we advised NIST that we concurred
of costs. with its decision to disallow $715,097, but did not concur with
reinstatement of the remaining $7,462,509. We continue to work
We recommended that NIST disallow the questioned amount of with NIST to resolve this report.
$749, recover $168 in excess federal disbursements, and direct the
joint venture member to develop the required written financial
Computer Aided Surgery, Inc.,
management procedures. (Denver Regional Office of Audits: DEN-
16869)
New York
An OIG audit of this NIST cooperative agreement (sec September
2004 issue, page 35, ATL-16095) questioned costs totaling
$547,426 in inappropriately charged rent, utilities, and certain sal-
Audit of NTIS' FY 2004 ary, fringe benefit, and other expenses, because these costs were
Financial Statements unallowable, in excess of budgetary limits, or incorrectly catego-
rized. We have postponed NIST's submission of an audit resolu-
NTIS received an unqualified opinion on its FY 2004 financial tion proposal.
statements, and the independent auditors noted the agency has es-
tablished an internal control structure that supports reporting of
reliable financial and performance information. NTIS financial
statements showed no material weaknesses in internal control and "The six criteria are entitywide securit y program planning and management, ac-
fully complied with related financial management laws and regu- cess controls, application software development and change control, system soft-
lations. ware, segregation of duties, and service continuity.
at I
v ^
11'
1 L LAL Lk
7
PA1'ENT
OFFICE
<^^R l^OTAAUF ,MA, on
d ^
UNITED STATES PATENT AND
^¢,^^ TRADEMARK OFFICE
6 FT
' 1TES OF F^
Lr
ail
OF co,
e
^N ^^9^m DEPARTMENT-WIDE
ST MANAGEMEN
ATES OF P^
The Department has also established a Compliance with Laws and Regulations
Management Integration Goal that is equally
i mportant to all bureaus: Strengthen Compliance testing of the Department's financial management procedures
management at all levels. and systems showed improvement in one area and remaining deficiencies in
two others:
OMB Circular A-11, Preparation, Submission, and Execution of Budget. The Depart-
ment was noncompliant with the circular in one instance: although NOAA fully funded the 11
capital leases identified as underfunded in the 2003 audit, it identified another 65 leases that require
full funding. NOAA indicated that it has since reduced this number to 53 and plans to fully fund the
remaining leases in FY 2005.
Additional Concern. NOAA identified two reimbursable agreements with nonprofit entities that contained indemnification clauses,
which raised concerns about compliance with the Anti-Deficiency Act. NOAA amended the agreements in June and July 2004 to resolve
the concerns. At the request of the Office of General Counsel, NOAA initiated an investigation into whether execution of the two
agreements violated the act, and reported on October 8, 2004, that such violation did occur. The violations were reported to the President
and Congress, as required by 31 USC § 1351. (Financial Statements andAccountabilityAudits: FSD-16696 and16697)
FY FY FY FY FY FY FY F'
19'96 1987 1998 1' 99 2080 2001 2002 2003 2004
Fiscal Year
Repoi1N
oscorkd itiari ONlatofialY ak^aeas Nonfederal Audit Activities
Source: FY 1996-FY 2004 U.S. Department of Commerce financial statements audit In addition to undergoing OIG-performed audits, certain recipi-
reports. ents of Commerce financial assistance are periodically examined
by state and local government auditors or independent public ac-
countants. OMB Circular A-133, Audits of States, Local Gove rn -
ments, and Non-Profit Organizations, sets forth the audit require-
Preaward Financial Assistance ments for most of these audits. For-profit organizations that re-
Screening ceive Advanced Technology Program funds from NIST are au-
dited in accordance with GovernmentAuditing Standards and NIST
As part of our ongoing emphasis on preventing fraud, waste, and Program-Specific Audit Guidelines for ATP Cooperative Agree-
abuse, we continue to work with the Office of Acquisition Man- ments, issued by the Department.
agement, NOAA and NIST grant offices, and EDA program of-
fices to screen the Department's proposed grants and cooperative We examined 161 audit reports during this semiannual period to
agreements before they are awarded. Our screening serves two determine whether they contained any audit findings related to
functions: it provides information on whether the applicant has Commerce programs. For 105 of these reports, the Department
unresolved audit findings and recommendations on earlier awards, acts as oversight agency and monitors the audited entity's compli-
and it identifies any negative financial or investigative history on ance with OMB Circular A-133 or NIST's program-specific re-
individuals or organizations connected with a proposed award. porting requirements. The other 56 reports are from entities for
which other federal agencies have primary oversight responsibil-
On January 1, 2004, we implemented new policies and procedures ity. We identified 20 reports with findings related to the Depart-
for our preaward screening process. OIG and the Department de- ment of Commerce.
termined that there are several categories of recipients for whom
the costs and administrative burden of the screening process may AT
well outweigh the government's risk of financial loss. Our new OMB Program-
policies exempt from review recipients who (1) receive awards in A-133 Specific
amounts of $100,000 or less, (2) have received financial assis- Report Category Audits Audits Total
tance from the Department for 3 or more consecutive years with-
out any adverse program or audit findings, or (3) are units of a Pending (October 1, 2004) 17 72 89
state or local government.
Received 87 93 180
During this period we screened 100 proposed awards. For 6 of the
awards, we found significant deficiencies—such as poor financial Examined 94 67 161
condition, unresolved audit findings, or criminal history—that
could affect the ability of the prospective recipients to maintain Pending (March 31, 2005) 10 98 108
proper control over federal funds. On the basis of the information
we provided, the Department delayed 5 awards to resolve con-
cerns and established special conditions for I award. (Office of The following table shows a breakdown, by bureau, of the nearly
Audits) $249 million in Commerce funds audited.
Bureau Funds In most reports the subject programs were not considered major
programs: thus the audits involved limited transaction and com-
EDA $ 27,947,588
pliance testing against laws, regulations, and grant terms and con-
NIST* 125,932,093 ditions. The 20 reports with Commerce findings arc listed in Ap-
NOAA 15,102,095 pendix B-1. (Atlanta and Denver Regional Offices of Audits)
NTIA 1,165,587
MBDA 338,7.50
Multiagency 76,441,190
Agency not identified 1,978,342
Total $248,905,645
^"4 rL-
- rl, _:I
O^kICE OF INSPPCTOR
F^^R
Gs ^` OFFICE OF
OFA
1 I NSPECTOR GENERAL
^^^ E
^ T OF COMMFRCF
mission of All OIGs granted statutory law enforcement authority under the Homeland Security Act are
the Office of required by the Attorney General's Guidelines for such organizations to participate in a
Inspector General is to regular program of quality assessment review. Pursuant to this program, the investiga-
promote economy, efficiency, tive operations of each OIG are subject to a peer review by a fellow OIG every 3 years.
and effectiveness and detect and The results of these reviews are communicated to the Attorne y General and the re-
prevent waste, fraud, abuse, and viewed OIG, and are intended to ensure compliance with applicable guidelines
mismanagement in the programs and established by the President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency (PCIE) and the
operations of the U.S. Department of Attorney General, as well as to improve/facilitate substantive communications
Commerce. Through its audits, within the OIG investigative community regarding efficient procedures and best
•
inspections, performance evaluations, an( practices.
investigations, OIG proposes innovative
ideas and constructive solutions that lead During this semiannual period, the General Services Administration's OIG com-
to positive changes for the Department. pleted the quality assessment review of our Office of Investigations, and found
By providing timely, useful, and reliable our internal safeguards and management procedures in full compliance with the
information and advice to departmental qua li ty standards established by the PCIE and the Attorney General's Guide-
officials, the administration, and lines.
Congress, OIG's work helps improve
Commerce management and operations
as well as its delivery of services to
the public.
Update of Quality Standards
for Inspections Issued
In January 2005, the Commerce OIG disseminated a re-
J vised edition of the Quality Standards for Inspections (the
"Blue Book")—a pub li cation of the PCIE and the Executive
Council on Integrity and Efficiency (ECIE) originally issued in
1993.
Two of the 14 standards are new—"Performance Measurement" and "Working Relationships and Communication" These reflect the
government-wide focus on results—offices of inspector general should be able to document the impact of their work, like any other
Federal entity; and positive interactions with those they inspect make it more likely that recommended improvements will be accepted.
In revising the standards, the federal councils considered input ployces whose exemplary achievements have directly enhanced
from their membership and drew from the following sources: the operations of the Department or the well-being of the nation.
• The PCIE Quality Standards for Federal Offices of
Inspector General (the "Silver Book"). Inspector General Frazier stated that Blansitt was nominated for
the award for his leadership and management performance, for
• The Association of Inspectors General Principles and leading the senior staff in developing plans and budgets that re-
Standards for Offices of Inspector General. flect the office's most important priorities, and for improving the
• The Government Accountability Office's Government quality and impact of hundreds of performance audits, inspections,
Auditing Standards (the "Yellow Book"). and program evaluations reports. Blansitt has been deputy inspec-
tor general at Commerce since March 200(1.
The PCIE is an interagency group of inspectors general from cabi-
net-level departments and major federal agencies, who arc ap- OIG SILVER MEDAL WINNERS
pointed by the President of the United States.
OIG staff members Martin Trocki, Frederick Meny, Patricia
The interagency ECIE is comprised of inspectors general from Derr, and David C. Rose each received the Silver Medal—the
smaller federal agencies, who are appointed by their agency head. second highest honor bestowed by the Secretary of Commerce to
the select few whose work has significantly enhanced departmen-
tal operations. Trocki, Meny, and Derr were honored for their work
Special Awards on the Census Bureau's information technology modernization
plans for the 2010 decennial census. Rose received the Silver Medal
Assistant Inspector General Receives for his audits of the Department's performance reporting, which
Presidential Rank Award have significantly enhanced the quality of Commerce data reported
to Congress.
Each year, the President honors a small group of career senior
executives whose accomplishments are exceptional and long run-
ning, by conferring the Presidential Rank Award. This year, Jill
Gross, OIG's assistant inspector general for inspections and Other Activities of Note
program evaluations, was chosen to receive this prestigious honor.
As head of the inspections and evaluations office, Gross is respon- OIG Sponsors Federal Contracting
sible for planning and managing a critical OIG work program that Conference
has significantly improved Commerce operations, saved millions
of dollars for the Department and U.S. taxpayers, and ultimately OIG's Denver Regional Office held a successful 3-day conference
made government work better. She has also been a key force in on federal contracting February 7-9, 2005. "An Overview of Fed-
enhancing work processes and products throughout the entire IG eral Contracting," presented by former Air Force contracting of-
community via her involvement in the President's Council on In- ficer Gerald Francis, attracted 20 participating auditors interested
tegrity and Efficiency. Only about 5 percent of career executives in better oversight of federal contracts from the OIGs of the de-
receive the Presidential Rank award each year. partments of Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce,
and the National Science Foundation. Topics covered ranged from
According to Commerce IG Johnnie Frazier, the work produced un- acquisition planning and procurement requests to terminations,
der Gross's leadership has been instrumental in improving the qual- claims and disputes, and time and materials contracts.
ity of Commerce programs. "Ms. Gross's accomplishments since tak-
ing the helm of our Office of Inspections and Program Evaluations in I Gs Frazier, Tinsley Presenters at Alaska
1998 speak for themselves. She has consistently demonstrated an ex- Audit Forum
traordinary commitment to the OIG mission, and under her direction,
the impressive work of this office has prompted major improvements In October 2004, Commerce Inspector General Johnnie E. Frazier
in the operation of Commerce facilities both at home and abroad." gave a joint presentation with IG Nikki Tinsley (Environmental
Protection Agency) on the importance of federal, state, and local
Deputy IG Receives Department's collaboration in improving government programs and operations
Top Honor at the 2-day Pacific Northwest Intergovernmental Audit Forum in
Anchorage, Alaska. The forum brought together federal, state, and
Deputy Inspector General Edward L. Blansitt was recently municipal auditors as well as representatives from the Govern-
awarded a Gold Medal, the highest honor bestowed by the Secre- ment Accountability Office.
tary of Commerce. The Gold Medal award is given only to em-
Statistical Overview
TABLES PAGE
APPENDIXES
'Seven audit reports included in this table are also included among reports with recommendations that funds be put to better use (see table 5). However, the dollar
amounts do not overlap.
'In Category C, lines i and ii do not always equal the total on line C because resolution may result in values different than the original recommendations.
'Seven audit reports included in this table are also included in the reports with questioned cost (see table 4). However, the dollar amounts do not overlap.
'In Category C. lines i and ii do not always equal the total on line C because resolution may result in values different than the original recommendations.
Definitions of Terms Used merce management took action to implement and complete the
in the Tables recommendation, including (1) reductions in outlays; (2)
deobligation of funds from programs or operations; (3) withdrawal
Questioned cost: a cost questioned by OIG because of (1) an al- of interest subsidy costs on loans or loan guarantees, insurance, or
leged violation of a provision of a law, regulation, contract, grant, bonds; (4) costs not incurred by implementing recommended im-
cooperative agreement, or other agreement or document govern- provements related to Commerce, a contractor, or a grantee; (5)
ing the expenditure of funds; (2) a finding that, at the time of the avoidance of unnecessary expenditures identified in preaward re-
audit, such cost is not supported by adequate documentation; or views of contracts or grant agreements; or (6) any other savings
(3) a finding that an expenditure of funds for the intended purpose specifically identified.
is unnecessary or unreasonable.
Management decision: management's evaluation of the findings
Unsupported cost: a cost that, at the time of the audit, is not sup- and recommendations included in the audit report and the issu-
ported by adequate documentation. Questioned costs include un- ance of a final decision by management concerning its response to
supported costs. such findings and recommendations, including actions concluded
to be necessary.
Recommendation that funds be put to better use: an OIG rec-
ommendation that funds could be used more efficiently if Com-
Total 2.5
Funds to
Be Put to
Report Title Report Number Date Issued Better Use
Value of
Funds to Federal Federal
Date Be Put to Amount Amount
Report Title Report Number Issued Better Use Questioned Unsupported
Funds to Be
Put to
Report Title Report Number Date Issued Better Use
The Office of Inspector General reviewed and accepted 161 audit reports prepared by independent public accountants and local, state,
and other federal auditors. The reports processed with questioned costs, recommendations that funds be put to better use, and/or nonfi-
nancial recommendations are listed in Appendix B-1.
Agency Audits
Multiagency................................................................................................................................................................ 33
A
g encynot identified .................................................................................................................................................... 7
e
March 2005/Semiannual Report to Congress
Office of Inspector General
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
The Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended, specifies reporting requirements for semiannual reports. The requirements are listed
below and indexed to the applicable pages of this report.
5(a)(12) ....................................... Significant Management Decisions with which OIG Disagreed ............................................... 52
This section requires the inspector general of each agency to re- This section requires identification of each significant recommen-
view existing and proposed legislation and regulations relating to dation described in previous semiannual reports for which correc-
that agency's programs and operations. Based on this review, the tive action has not been completed. Section 5(h) requires that the
inspector general is required to make recommendations in the semi- Secretary transmit to Congress statistical tables showing the num-
annual report concerning the impact of such legislation or regula- ber and value of audit reports for which no final action has been
tions on the economy and efficiency of the management of pro- taken, plus an explanation of the reasons why recommended ac-
grams and operations administered or financed by the agency or tion has not occurred, except when the management decision was
on the prevention and detection of fraud and abuse in those pro- made within the preceding year. To include a list of all significant
grams and operations. Comments concerning legislative and regu- unimplemented recommendations in this report would be dupli-
latory initiatives affecting Commerce programs are discussed, as cative. Information on the status of any audit recommendations
appropriate, in relevant sections of the report. can be obtained through OIG's Office of Audits.
Sections 5(a)(5) and 6(b)(2): Information or period. Department Administrative Order 213-5, Audit Resolution
Assistance Refused and Follow-up, provides procedures for revising a management
decision. For performance audits, OIG must be consulted and must
These sections require a summary of each report to the Secretary approve in advance any modification to an audit action plan. There
when access, information, or assistance has been unreasonably were none for this period. For financial assistance audits. OIG must
refused or not provided. There were no instances during this semi- concur with any decision that would change the audit resolution
annual period and no reports to the Secretary. proposal in response to an appeal by the recipient. The decisions
issued on the six appeals of audit-related debts were finalized with
Section 5(a)(1 O): Prior Audit Reports the full participation and concurrence of OIG.
Unresolved
Section 5(a)(12): Significant Management
This section requires a summary of each audit report issued be- Decisions with which OIG Disagreed
fore the beginning of the reporting period for which no manage-
ment decision has been made by the end of the reporting period This section requires information concerning any significant man-
(including the date and title of each such report), an explanation agement decision with which the inspector general disagrees. De-
of why a decision has not been made, and a statement concerning partment Administrative Order 213-5 provides procedures for el-
the desired timetable for delivering a decision on each such re- evating unresolved audit recommendations to higher levels of
port. There were two NIST reports more than 6 months old. (See Department and OIG management, including their consideration
page 33.) by an Audit Resolution Council. During this period no audit is-
sues were referred to the council.
Section 5(a)(1 1): Significant Revised
Management Decisions
The various kinds of audits, evaluations, inspections, and investi- management's discussion and analysis presentations, and
gations at our disposal enable the IG's office to assess Commerce allowability and reasonableness of final grant and contract costs.
programs and operations from a range of perspectives. Thus we
are able to provide program managers with reviews and recom-
mendations that are either narrowly focused or comprehensive, as
needed, to aid them in ensuring the most efficient and effective I NSPECTIONS
use of taxpayer dollars.
Inspections are reviews of an activity, unit, or office, or a contractor
or other non federal entity that receives funds from the Department.
AUDITS They focus on an organization, not a whole program, and are often
designed to give agency managers timely and useful information about
Performance Audits address the efficiency, effectiveness, and
operations, including current and foreseeable problems.
economy of the Department's programs, activities, and informa-
tion technology systems. They may check a unit's compliance with
laws and regulations, and evaluate its success in achieving pro-
grain objectives. They may also involve reviewing the Department's EVALUATIONS
financial assistance awards by assessing an award recipient's com-
pliance with laws, regulations, and award terms; allowance of costs; Program Evaluations are in-depth reviews of specific manage-
and the degree to which projects achieved intended results. ment issues, policies, or programs.
Financial Audits determine whether (1) a reporting entity's fi- Systems Evaluations review system development, acquisitions,
nancial statements are presented fairly and in accordance with operations, and policy, focusing on computer systems and other
generally accepted accounting principles; (2) the entity has an technologies.
internal control structure that provides reasonable assurance of
achieving the control objectives set forth by OMB; and (3) the
entity complied with laws and regulations that could have a di-
rect and material effect on the financial statements, the Federal I NVESTIGATIONS
Financial Management Improvement Act, and other laws and
regulations. Investigations are conducted based on alleged or suspected wrong-
doing by Department employees, contractors, recipients of finan-
Attestation Engagements involve examining, reviewing, or per- cial assistance, and others responsible for handling federal re-
forming agreed-upon procedures on a subject matter or an asser- sources. Investigations that expose violations of Department rules
tion about a subject matter and reporting the results. Attestation and regulations or acts of fraud committed against the U.S. gov-
engagements can have a broad range of financial or nonfinancial ermnent can result in administrative sanctions and/or criminal or
focuses, such as an entity's compliance with laws and regulations, civil prosecution