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Testimony :

Before the Subcommittee on Technology, Information Policy, 
Intergovernmental Relations and the Census, Committee on Government 
Reform, House of Representatives:

For Release on Delivery 
Expected at 10 a.m. EDT
Tuesday, April 29, 2003:

FEDERAL ASSISTANCE:

Grant System Continues to Be Highly Fragmented:

Statement of Paul L. Posner, Managing Director
Federal Budget Issues and Intergovernmental Relations,
Strategic Issues:

GAO-03-718T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-718T, a report to the Subcommittee on Technology, 
Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and the Census, 
Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives

Why GAO Did This Study:

The Federal Financial Assistance Management Improvement Act of 1999 is 
one of the most recent in a series of efforts to reform the federal 
grants management system.  The act seeks to improve the effectiveness 
and performance of Federal financial assistance programs; simplify 
application and reporting requirements; improve delivery of services to 
the public; and facilitate greater coordination among those responsible 
for delivering such services.  GAO has a responsibility to evaluate the 
implementation of this Act by 2005 and will soon begin developing an 
approach and methodology for the study.  This testimony describes the 
problems fostered by proliferation and fragmentation, which the Act 
addresses indirectly. 


What GAO Found:


While the Federal Financial Assistance Management Improvement Act of 
1999 (FFAMIA) offers promising opportunities to improve the federal 
grant system, there remain over 600 different federal financial 
assistance programs to implement domestic policy.  Federal grant 
recipients must navigate through a myriad of federal grant programs in 
order to find the appropriate source of funds to finance projects that 
meet local needs and address local issues.  

Despite the process reforms initiated under FFAMIA, the federal grant 
system continues to be highly fragmented, potentially resulting in a 
high degree of duplication and overlap among federal programs.  Since 
the 1960s the number and dollar amount of federal grant programs has 
grown substantially (see figure below).  Growth in both the number of 
grant programs and the level of funding have created a high level of 
complexity in the system.  

While the act seeks to improve the effectiveness and performance of 
federal assistance programs by simplifying grant administration and 
facilitating coordination among grant recipients, Congress could also 
consider consolidating grants that have duplicative objectives and 
missions.  Consolidation can be achieved through a variety of ways 
including combining multiple programs into block grants, establishing 
performance partnerships, and providing for waiver authority of federal 
funding restrictions and program rules when requested and sufficiently 
justified by state or local governments.  Each of these alternatives 
has implications for accountability that Congress will face as it 
considers improvements to the federal grant system.

What GAO Recommends:

We do not make any recommendations in this testimony; however, if 
Congress chooses to address fragmentation in the federal grant system 
more directly we have provided several options.  Fragmentation of the 
grant system could be addressed through consolidation of programs with 
overlapping missions and objectives by (1) combining multiple programs 
into block grants, (2) establishing performance partnerships, and 
(3) providing for waiver authority of federal funding restrictions and 
program rules when requested and sufficiently justified by state or 
local governments.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-718T.

To view the full report, including the scope
and methodology, click on the link above.
For more information, contact Paul Posner at (202) 512-9573 or 
posnerp@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

I appreciate the opportunity to be here today to discuss issues 
relating to the management of the federal grant system. The Federal 
Financial Assistance Management Improvement Act of 1999 is one of the 
most recent in a series of efforts to reform the federal grants 
management system extending back to the mid-1960s. Like most of the 
earlier reforms, the act seeks to:

* Improve the effectiveness and performance of Federal financial 
assistance programs;

* Simplify federal financial assistance application and reporting 
requirements;

* Improve delivery of services to the public; and:

* Facilitate greater coordination among those responsible for 
delivering such services.

As such, the act seeks to address many of the administrative burdens 
that confound the nation's many grant recipients. As the 106TH Congress 
found, there are still more than 600 different federal financial 
assistance programs to implement domestic policy--in fact, OMB's latest 
count in 2001 found 668 different grant programs. On the one hand, the 
administration's efforts to implement the act seek to streamline the 
flow of information on the various grants and develop uniform 
application and reporting procedures. On the other hand, federal grant 
recipients must still navigate through a myriad of federal grant 
programs in order to find the appropriate source of funds to finance 
projects that meet local needs and address local issues. In many cases, 
numerous grants from several different agencies support similar 
purposes and activities, giving rise to the potential for fragmentation 
in service delivery.

In testimony this morning you may hear about the administration's 
efforts to implement this act. GAO has a responsibility to evaluate the 
implementation of the act by 2005 and will soon begin developing an 
approach and methodology for the study. This hearing provides valuable 
information to help us understand the progress made and helps us better 
understand congressional oversight interests. We look forward to 
working with your subcommittee as well as other congressional clients 
as we develop our approach and methodology for this study.

Today, I would like to provide a broader perspective on the structure 
of federal grants to state and local governments in general and the 
kinds of management and service delivery problems fostered by the 
proliferation of federal assistance programs and the fragmentation of 
responsibility among different federal departments and agencies. In my 
statement this morning, I would like to offer a short history of grant 
management reform efforts, describe the current profile of federal 
grants to states and local governments, and discuss GAO's recent work 
on these issues. Using the homeland security grants as an example, I 
will explain how the system continues to be highly fragmented, 
potentially resulting in a high degree of duplication and overlap among 
federal programs. Finally, I would like to suggest a range of 
alternatives available to Congress as it weighs reforms of the nation's 
homeland security grant programs.

This testimony draws upon our wide-ranging ongoing and completed work 
on federal grants management issues, grant reform efforts, homeland 
security, and performance management initiatives. We conducted our work 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

Trends in Federal Grants:

In 1862, Congress enacted the Morrill Act to help states establish and 
maintain land-grant colleges. The act carefully specified the grant's 
objectives, placed conditions on the use of revenue derived from the 
sale of the granted lands, and required annual reports. This 
established the pattern of categorical grants--providing needed 
resources for specific purposes in exchange for acceptance of minimum 
national standards. In the 1960s, the number and dollar amount of 
federal assistance programs grew substantially. (See fig. 1.) During 
this timeframe, major steps were taken to broaden elementary, 
secondary, and higher education opportunities; promote development in 
economically depressed areas; to help finance health services and 
medical care for the indigent; launch a war on poverty; and attempt a 
comprehensive physical, social, and economic program to transform slum 
and blight-ridden cities into model neighborhoods.

Figure 1: Total Outlays for Grants to State and Local Governments 
(Fiscal Years 1940-2008):

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Growth in the both the numbers of new grant programs and the level of 
funding created greater complexity. During the 1960s and into the 
1970s, various reforms were begun to address the complexity in the 
grant system. In 1968, Congress passed the Intergovernmental 
Cooperation Act of 1968 that sought to improve the cooperation and 
coordination of activities among levels of government. From 1969-1973, 
the President initiated the Federal Assistance Review--a government-
wide effort with a goal to streamline, simplify, and speed up the flow 
of federal assistance and improve the federal government's 
responsiveness to its state and local partners. In addition, Federal 
Management Circular 74-7, issued in 1974, provided for standardized 
administrative provisions across grant programs. The Joint Funding 
Simplification Act of 1974 permitted grantees to streamline federal 
assistance by enabling them to combine funding from several grants 
administered by one or more federal agencies.

As previous congressional committee reports have noted, these 
administrative simplification initiatives, while useful in addressing 
certain administrative burdens associated with grants, did not address 
the more fundamental challenges stemming from the fragmented nature of 
the grant system. For example, the House Government Operations 
Committee, the predecessor to the House Government Reform Committee, 
noted that the legislative consolidation of closely related categorical 
programs into broader purpose grants and the placement of similar 
programs in a single federal agency have more potential for 
significantly improving grant-in-aid administration.

Over the years, Congress at times has acted to improve the grant system 
through consolidation. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 
consolidated a number of social service programs into nine block grants 
which allowed for greater state and local autonomy and flexibility in 
the fashioning of local strategies to address federal objectives. More 
recently, in 1996 the 104TH Congress consolidated a number of welfare-
related programs into the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families block 
grant. Notwithstanding these efforts, as figure 2 shows, over the last 
20 years each period of consolidation was followed by a proliferation 
of new federal programs. Moreover, some of the block grants were later 
recategorized, as Congress added new set-asides and cost-ceilings to 
address national programmatic concerns, thereby limiting the grants' 
flexibility.

Figure 2: Trend in the Number of Federal Grant Programs to State and 
Local Governments 1980-2001:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

A sizable increase in the number of grant programs could be justified 
and simply be an indication that as society evolves the nation's needs 
also change and we need new tools--in the form of new programs--at our 
disposal to address those needs. As such, program proliferation may be 
an indication that there is heightened congressional interest in 
ensuring that federal funds are directed in such a way as to meet 
specific--more narrowly defined--national goals and objectives. 
Nonetheless, the problems associated with a proliferation of federal 
programs are compounded when multiple grants are available for the same 
or similar purposes, forcing grant recipients to package different 
programs with potentially conflicting requirements to address common 
problems.

Moreover, the total funds available for many of these programs are 
quite small. As figure 3 shows, the vast majority of available federal 
funds--78 percent--are concentrated in 20 large grant programs. Stated 
differently, Mr. Chairman, in 2001 169 federal grant programs were 
funded at less than $5 million. Cumulatively, these small programs 
receive less than 1 percent of all federal funds provided through the 
grant system.

Figure 3: Grant Fragmentation: Many Grants Were Funded At Less Than $5 
Million in 2001:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

As you can imagine, at the recipient level, the funds available can be 
quite small, particularly--as you may hear in the statements of members 
of the second panel--in relation to the administrative effort and costs 
incurred in applying for and managing the grant. For example, FEMA's 
Hazardous Materials Assistance program provided grants from "a few 
dollars to $20,000" per applicant, according to the Catalog of Federal 
Domestic Assistance. FEMA's State Fire Training Systems Grants ranged 
from only $25,000 to $30,000 per state. While these funds undoubtedly 
served important purposes, the question is whether the funds could have 
been provided through more efficient means.

Continuing Fragmentation in the Structure of Federal Grants:

Many of the same grants management challenges from the past are still 
with us today. GAO's work over the years has repeatedly shown that 
mission fragmentation and program overlap are widespread in the federal 
government and that crosscutting program efforts are not well 
coordinated. As far back as 1975, GAO reported that many of the 
fundamental problems in managing federal grants were the direct result 
of the proliferation of federal assistance programs and the 
fragmentation of responsibility among different federal departments and 
agencies.[Footnote 1] While we noted that the large number and variety 
of programs tended to ensure that a program is available to meet a 
defined need, we found that substantial problems occur when state and 
local governments attempt to identify, obtain, and use the fragmented 
grants-in-aid system to meet their needs.

More recently, GAO has addressed mission fragmentation through the 
framework provided under the Government Performance and Results Act 
(the Results Act). The Results Act's key stages include defining 
missions and outcomes, developing a strategy, measuring performance, 
and using performance information. For example, we reported in 2000 on 
the 50 programs for the homeless that were administered by 8 federal 
agencies. Housing services were provided under 23 programs operated by 
4 agencies, and food and nutrition services were under 26 programs 
administered by 6 agencies.[Footnote 2]

We recently identified 44 programs administered by 9 different federal 
agencies that provided a range of employment and training 
services.[Footnote 3] In the late 1990s, the Congress tried to bring 
some unity to this fragmented employment and training system by 
requiring states to provide most federally funded employment-related 
services through a centralized service delivery system--one-stop 
centers. Two years earlier, welfare reform legislation provided states 
with the flexibility to focus on helping needy adults with children 
find and maintain employment. Despite the similar focus, the welfare 
program was not required to be a part of the new workforce investment 
system. We recently reported[Footnote 4] that nearly all states report 
some coordination of their welfare and workforce systems services at 
the state and local level, but that several challenges remain. For 
example, different definitions of what constitutes work as well as 
complex reporting requirements under both programs hamper state and 
local coordination efforts. Though some states and localities have 
found creative ways to work around these issues, the differences remain 
barriers to coordination for many others. Each of these programs is 
operated out of a different federal agency; the welfare program is 
administered from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), 
and the Department of Labor (Labor) administers the workforce 
investment program. We found that HHS and Labor have not addressed 
differences in program definitions and reporting requirements.

Fragmentation in Homeland Security Grants for First Responders:

It falls to the 108TH Congress to redesign the nation's homeland 
security grant programs in light of the events of September 11, 2001. 
In so doing, Congress must balance the needs of our state and local 
partners in their call for both additional resources and more 
flexibility with the nation's goals of attaining the highest levels of 
preparedness. This goal is too important, and federal resources too 
scarce, to worry about holding our partners accountable after they have 
already spent the funds.

Funding increases for combating terrorism have been dramatic and 
reflect the high priority that the administration and Congress place on 
this mission. These increases bring an added responsibility to ensure 
that this large investment of taxpayer dollars is wisely applied. We 
recently reported on some of the management challenges that could stem 
from increased funding and noted that these challenges--including 
grants management--could impede the implementation of national 
strategies if not effectively addressed.[Footnote 5]

GAO testified before this subcommittee last year on the development of 
counter-terrorism programs for state and local governments that were 
similar and potentially duplicative. We have identified at least 16 
different grant programs that can be used by the nation's first 
responders to address the nation's homeland security. These grants are 
currently provided through two different directorates of the new 
Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Justice, and HHS and 
serve state governments, cities and localities, as well as counties and 
others. Multiple fragmented grant programs can create a confusing and 
administratively burdensome process for state and local officials 
seeking to use federal resources for pressing homeland security needs. 
This is illustrated in figure 4 which shows the complex delivery 
structure for these 16 preparedness grant programs.

Figure 4: Web of Federal Homeland Security Grant Programs:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

To illustrate the level of fragmentation across homeland security 
programs, we have shown in table 1 significant features for the major 
assistance programs targeted to first responders.[Footnote 6] As the 
table shows, substantial differences exist in the types of recipients 
and the allocation methods for grants addressing similar purposes. For 
example, some grants go directly to local first responders such as 
firefighters, others go to state emergency management agencies, and at 
least one goes to state fire marshals. The allocation methods differ as 
well--some are formula grants while others involve discretionary 
decisions by federal agency officials on a project basis. Grant 
requirements differ as well--DHS' Assistance to Firefighters Grant has 
a maintenance of effort requirement (MOE) while the State Fire Training 
Systems Grant has no similar requirement.

Table 1: Selected Characteristics of Homeland Security Grant Programs:

Grant: State Domestic Preparedness Equipment Support Program; Federal 
Agency: ODP/DHS; Grantee: State and local units of government; Match: 
[Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
The funds are allocated to the States on the basis of a formula that 
provides a base amount to each State, with the balance of the funds 
distributed on the basis of population.

Grant: Local Law Enforcement Block Grants Program (LLEBG); Federal 
Agency: Bureau of Justice Assistance in the Office of Justice Programs, 
DOJ; Grantee: Local units of government; Match: Yes; MOE: Yes; Funding 
Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: The federal funds may not exceed 
90 percent of the total costs of a program; Federal funds may not be 
used to supplant state and local funds.

Grant: Emergency Management Performance Grants (EMPG); Federal Agency: 
FEMA/DHS; Grantee: State and local units of government; Match: Yes; MOE: 
[Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: For each state, 
a target allocation is derived by calculating the same proportion of 
available funds as the State received the prior year; A matching 
requirement is calculated for each State. Each recipient's cost share 
percentage will increase by 1 percent over the prior year until the 50/
50 level is reached.

Grant: Edward Byrne Memorial State and Local Law Enforcement Assistance 
(Byrne Formula Grant Program); Federal Agency: Bureau of Justice 
Assistance in the Office of Justice Programs, DOJ; Grantee: State and 
local units of government; Match: Yes; MOE: Yes; Funding Formulas And 
Cost Sharing Provisions: Each participant state receives a base amount 
of $500,00 or .25 percent of the amount available for the program, 
whichever is greater, with the remaining funds allocated to each state 
on the basis of the state's relative share of total U.S. population; 
Match for the formula grant programs will be provided for on a project-
by-project basis, state-wide basis, unit-of-government basis, or a 
combination of the above; The Act restricts the use of funds for 
supplanting state and local funds and land acquisition.

Grant: State Homeland Security Grant Program (SHSGP); Federal Agency: 
ODP/DHS; Grantee: State and local units of government; Match: [Empty]; 
MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: FY2003 
allocations determined by using a base amount of .75 percent of the 
total allocation to the states (including DC and the Puerto Rico) and 
.25 percent of the total allocation for the territories, with the 
balance of funds being distributed on a population-share basis.

Grant: State and Local Domestic Preparedness Training Program; Federal 
Agency: ODP/DHS; Grantee: Providers of Training, States, and local 
units of government; Match: [Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And 
Cost Sharing Provisions: none.

Grant: State and Local Domestic Preparedness Exercise Support; Federal 
Agency: ODP/DHS; Grantee: Providers of Exercise Support, States, and 
local units of government; Match: [Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding 
Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: none.

Grant: State and Local Domestic Preparedness Technical Assistance; 
Federal Agency: ODP/DHS; Grantee: Providers of Techincal Assistance; 
Match: [Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing 
Provisions: none.

Grant: First Responder Counter-Terrorism Assistance; Federal Agency: 
FEMA/DHS; Grantee: Fire & emergency first responders; law enforcement 
personnel with operational and/or incident mgt responsibilities; Match: 
[Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
none.

Grant: State Fire Training Systems Grants (National Fire Academy 
Training Grants); Federal Agency: FEMA/DHS; Grantee: Representatives 
from the 50 State Fire Training Systems; Match: [Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; 
Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: none.

Grant: Hazardous Materials Assistance Program; Federal Agency: FEMA/
DHS; Grantee: States, locals, tribes, US territories, State Emergency 
Response Committees, and Local Emergency Planning Commissions; Match: 
[Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
none.

Grant: Assistance to Firefighters Grant; Federal Agency: FEMA/DHS; 
Grantee: Fire departments in the States. An EMS unit can apply if the 
unit is under the auspices of a fire department as defined above.; 
Match: Yes; MOE: Yes; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
Applicants who protect a population of 50,000 or less must provide a 
nonfederal cost-share of not less than 10 percent of the total award. 
Applicants who protect a population of 50,000 or more must provide a 
nonfederal cost-share of not less than 30 percent of the total award;  
This program also has a maintenance-of-effort requirement.

Grant: Edward Byrne Memorial State and Local Law Enforcement 
Discretionary Grants Program; Federal Agency: Bureau of Justice 
Assistance in the Office of Justice Programs, DOJ; Grantee: State and 
local public safety entities.; Match: [Empty]; MOE: Yes; Funding 
Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: Federal funds may not be used to 
supplant state and local funds.

Grant: Public Safety Partnership and Community Policing Grants (COPS); 
Federal Agency: Office of; Community Oriented Policing Services, DOJ; 
Grantee: State and local units of government; Match: Yes; MOE: [Empty]; 
Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: Some grants, such as for 
hiring and the Schools Grant Program, require no local percentage match 
required. Other awards generally are made for 75 percent of allowable 
project costs.

Grant: CDC - Investigations & Technical Assistance; Federal Agency: 
CDC/HHS; Grantee: States, political subdivisions of States, local 
health authorities, and organizations with specialized health interests 
may apply.; Match: [Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost 
Sharing Provisions: none.

Grant: Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund--Bioterrorism 
Hospital Preparedness Program; Federal Agency: Health Resources and 
Services Administration/; HHS; Grantee: Federal agencies, State and 
local governments, and other service providers in areas impacted.; 
Match: [Empty]; MOE: [Empty]; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing 
Provisions: none.

[End of table]

Source: Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance, December 2002.

Table 2 shows considerable overlap in the activities that these 
programs support--for example, funding from both the State and Local 
Domestic Preparedness Exercise Support Program and the State Domestic 
Preparedness Equipment Support Program can be used for planning and 
conducting exercises.

Table 2: Overlap and Duplication in Homeland Security Grant Programs:

Grant: State Domestic Preparedness Equipment Support Program; 
Equipment: Yes; Training: [Empty]; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Local Law Enforcement Block Grants Program (LLEBG); Equipment: 
Yes; Training: Yes; Exercises: [Empty]; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Emergency Management Performance Grants (EMPG); Equipment: 
[Empty]; Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Edward Byrne Memorial State and Local Law Enforcement Assistance 
(Byrne Formula Grant Program); Equipment: Yes; Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; 
Planning: Yes.

Grant: State Homeland Security Grant Program (SHSGP); Equipment: Yes; 
Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: State and Local Domestic Preparedness Training Program; 
Equipment: [Empty]; Training: Yes; Exercises: [Empty]; Planning: [Empty].

Grant: State and Local Domestic Preparedness Exercise Support; 
Equipment: [Empty]; Training: [Empty]; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: State and Local Domestic Preparedness Technical Assistance; 
Equipment: [Empty]; Training: [Empty]; Exercises: [Empty]; Planning: Yes.

Grant: First Responder Counter-Terrorism Assistance; Equipment: 
[Empty]; Training: Yes; Exercises: [Empty]; Planning: [Empty].

Grant: State Fire Training Systems Grants (National Fire Academy 
Training Grants); Equipment: [Empty]; Training: Yes; Exercises: [Empty]; 
Planning: [Empty].

Grant: Hazardous Materials Assistance Program; Equipment: [Empty]; 
Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Assistance to Firefighters Grant; Equipment: Yes; Training: Yes; 
Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Edward Byrne Memorial State and Local Law Enforcement 
Discretionary Grants Program; Equipment: Yes; Training: Yes; Exercises: 
Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Public Safety Partnership and Community Policing Grants (COPS); 
Equipment: [Empty]; Training: Yes; Exercises: [Empty]; Planning: [Empty].

Grant: CDC - Investigations & Technical Assistance; Equipment: [Empty]; 
Training: [Empty]; Exercises: [Empty]; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund--Bioterrorism 
Hospital Preparedness Program; Equipment: Yes; Training: Yes; Exercises: 
[Empty]; Planning: Yes.

[End of table]

Source: Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance, December 2002.

The fragmented delivery of federal assistance can complicate 
coordination and integration of services and planning at state and 
local levels. Homeland security is a complex mission requiring the 
coordinated participation of many federal, state, and local government 
entities as well as the private sector. As the National Homeland 
Security Strategy recognizes, preparing the nation to address the new 
threats from terrorism calls for partnerships across many disparate 
actors at many levels in our system. Within local areas, for example, 
the failure of local emergency communications systems to operate on an 
interoperable basis across neighboring jurisdictions reflects 
coordination problems within local regions. Local governments are 
starting to assess how to restructure relationships along contiguous 
local entities to take advantage of economies of scale, promote 
resource sharing, and improve coordination on a regional basis. The 
complex web of federal grants depicted in figure 4 suggests that by 
allocating federal aid to different players at the state and local 
level, federal grant programs may continue to reinforce state and local 
fragmentation.

Some have observed that federal grant restrictions constrain the 
flexibility state and local officials need to tailor multiple grants to 
address state and local needs and priorities. For example, some local 
officials have testified that rigid federal funding rules constrains 
their flexibility and cannot be used to fund activities that meet their 
needs. We have reported that overlap and fragmentation among homeland 
assistance programs fosters inefficiencies and concerns in first 
responder communities. State and local officials have repeatedly voiced 
frustration and confusion about the burdensome and inconsistent 
application processes among programs. We concluded that improved 
coordination at both federal and state and local levels would be 
promoted by consolidating some of these first responder assistance 
programs.[Footnote 7]

Potential Alternatives:

In addressing the fragmentation prompted by the current homeland 
security grant system, Congress has several alternatives available. 
Actions taken by federal agencies under the rubric of the Federal 
Financial Assistance Management Improvement Act of 1999 will help to 
streamline the process for obtaining aid across the myriad of programs 
and standardize administrative requirements. These initiatives promise 
to reduce administrative burdens at all levels and promote a more 
efficient grants management process in general.

Going beyond these initiatives to address the underlying fragmentation 
of grant programs remains a challenge for our federal system in the 
homeland security area, as well as across other program areas. Several 
alternatives have been pursued in the past to overcome problems 
fostered by fragmentation in the federal aid structure. I will discuss 
three briefly here--block grants, performance partnerships, and grant 
waivers.

Block grants are one option that Congress has chosen to consolidate 
related programs. Block grants currently are used to deliver assistance 
in such areas as welfare reform, community development, social 
services, law enforcement, public health and education. While such 
initiatives often involved the consolidation of categorical grants, 
block grants also typically devolve substantial authority for setting 
priorities to state or local governments. Under block grants, state and 
local officials bear the primary responsibility for monitoring and 
overseeing the planning, management, and implementation of activities 
financed with federal grant funds. Accordingly, block grant proposals 
generally call for Congress to make a fundamental decision about where 
power and authority to make decisions should rest in our federal system 
for a particular program area.

While block grants devolve authority for decisions, they can and have 
been designed to facilitate some accountability for national goals and 
objectives. Since federal funds are at stake, Congress typically wants 
to know how federal funds are spent and what state and local 
governments have accomplished. Indeed, the history of block grants 
suggests that the absence of national accountability and reporting for 
results can either undermine continued congressional support or prompt 
more prescriptive controls to ensure that national objectives are being 
achieved. For instance, the block grants enacted as part of the Omnibus 
Reconciliation Act of 1981 were not implemented in a manner that 
encouraged consistent reporting of program data. These block grants 
have been subject to at least 58 subsequent congressional actions, many 
of which served to recategorize the programs by tightening program 
requirements and limiting the grantees' flexibility.[Footnote 8]

The consolidation of categorical grants, however, need not be 
structured as a block grant. In fact, federal funding streams can be 
combined while retaining strong performance oriented accountability by 
state and local governments for discrete federal goals and objectives. 
State and local governments can be provided greater flexibility in 
using federal funds in exchange for more rigorous accountability for 
results. One example of this model involves what became known as 
"performance partnerships," exemplified by the initiative of the 
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Under this initiative, states 
may voluntarily enter Performance Partnership Agreements with their EPA 
regional offices which can include major federal environmental grant 
programs. These agreements delineate which problems would receive 
priority attention within a state and how the state's performance will 
be measured. Congress provided states with flexibility to use funds 
from two or more environmental program grants in a more flexible and 
streamlined manner.

The benefits of the EPA performance partnership system are ones that 
should also be helpful for other areas such as homeland security. EPA 
partnerships (1) allowed states to shift resources to address priority 
needs and fund crosscutting efforts that are difficult to support with 
traditional grants, (2) provided a way to support innovative or unique 
projects, (3) increased the focus on environmental results and program 
effectiveness, and (4) fostered reduced reporting burden and improved 
information management.

But we reported some significant implementation issues for the 
performance partnership approach as well. In 1999, we reported[Footnote 
9] that the initiative was hampered by an absence of baseline data 
against which environmental improvements could be measured and the 
inherent difficulty in quantifying certain results and linking them to 
program activities and the considerable resources needed for high-
quality performance measurement.

The challenge for developing performance partnerships for homeland 
security grants will be daunting because the administration has yet to 
develop clearly defined federal and national performance goals and 
measures. We have reported that the initiatives outlined in the 
National Strategy for Homeland Security often do not provide 
performance goals and measures to assess and improve preparedness at 
the federal or national levels. The strategy generally describes 
overarching objectives and priorities, but not measurable outcomes. 
Lacking such measures and outcomes at the national level will surely 
encumber the federal, state, and local partners' ability to establish 
agreements on what sort of goals are expected of our state and local 
partners, much less how they could be measured.

A third approach to overcoming fragmentation could be to provide in law 
for waivers of federal funding restrictions and program rules when 
requested and sufficiently justified by state or local governments. In 
the homeland security area, legislation has been introduced to provide 
waivers for states to use funds from one category of federal 
assistance, such as equipment, to support other homeland security 
activities such as training. This approach could help recipients adjust 
available federal funds to unique needs and conditions in each state. 
Unlike full grant consolidation--which is legislated--each waiver must 
be approved by federal agency officials before grantees could have the 
kind of flexibility they desire. Some might view the approval 
requirement as an additional administrative burden while others 
consider the federal role essential to ensuring accountability.

Conclusions:

Mr. Chairman, we are eager to work with your subcommittee and others to 
improve the efficiency and effectiveness of our federal grant system. 
Improving the grant partnership among federal and nonfederal officials 
is vital to achieving important national goals. The Federal Financial 
Assistance Management Improvement Act of 1999 offers promising 
opportunities to help those officials achieve their mutual goals 
through the use of federal assistance programs. We look forward to 
reviewing the activities undertaken pursuant to the Act with an eye 
toward both highlighting progress as well as identifying further 
improvements that can be made at all levels of our federal system. We 
are also ready to assist Congress in identifying the problems stemming 
from the underlying nature of the grant system and in sorting through 
the tradeoffs Congress will face in resolving these problems.

This concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased to answer any 
questions you or the members of the subcommittee may have at this time.

(450211):

FOOTNOTES

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, Fundamental Changes are Needed in 
Federal Assistance to State and Local Governments, GAO/GGD-75-75 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 19, 1975).

[2] U.S. General Accounting Office, Managing for Results: Continuing 
Challenges to Effective GPRA Implementation, GAO/T--GGD-00-178 
(Washington, D.C.: July 20, 2000).

[3] U.S. General Accounting Office: Multiple Employment and Training 
Programs: Funding and Performance Measures for Major Programs GAO-03-
589 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 18, 2003.)

[4] U.S. General Accounting Office, Workforce Investment Act: States 
and Localities Increasingly Coordinate Services for TANF Clients, but 
Better Information Needed on Effective Approaches, GAO-02-696 
(Washington D.C.: July 3, 2002).

[5] U.S. General Accounting Office, Combating Terrorism: Funding Data 
Reported to Congress Should Be Improved, GAO-03-170 (Washington, D.C., 
Nov. 26, 2002).

[6] This table is not meant to be all-inclusive; there are other--
broader purpose--grants which may also be used for first responder 
preparedness. 

[7] U.S. General Accounting Office, Combating Terrorism: Selected 
Challenges and Related Recommendations, GAO-01-822 (Washington, D.C., 
Sept. 20, 2001).

[8] U.S. General Accounting Office, Block Grants: Increases in Set-
Asides and Cost Ceilings Since 1982, GAO/HRD-92-58FS (Washington, D.C., 
July 27, 1992).

[9] U.S. General Accounting Office, Environmental Protection: 
Collaborative EPA-State Effort Needed to Improve New Performance 
Partnership System, GAO/RCED-99-171 (Washington, D.C.: June 21, 1999).