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Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security, 
Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. Senate:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:15 p.m., EDT Wednesday, September 
3, 2003:

Homeland Security:

Reforming Federal Grants to Better Meet Outstanding Needs:

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

GAO-03-1146T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-1146T, a report to Subcommittee on Terrorism, 
Technology and Homeland Security, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. 
Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The challenges posed in strengthening homeland security exceed the 
capacity and authority of any one level of government. Protecting the 
nation calls for a truly integrated approach bringing together the 
resources of all levels of government. The Council on Foreign 
Relations study—Emergency Responders: Drastically Underfunded, 
Dangerously Unprepared—states that in the aftermath of the September 
11 attacks, the United States must prepare based on the assumption 
that terrorists will strike again. Although it acknowledges the 
nation’s preparedness has improved, the Council’s report highlights 
gaps in preparedness including shortfalls in personnel, equipment, 
communications, and other critical capabilities. Given the many needs 
and high stakes, it is critical that the design of federal grants be 
geared to fund the highest priority projects with the greatest 
potential impact for improving homeland security. This testimony 
discusses possible ways in which the grant system for first responders 
might be reformed.

What GAO Found:

The federal grant system for first responders is highly fragmented, 
which can complicate coordination and integration of services and 
planning at state and local levels. In light of the events of 
September 11, 2001 and the establishment of the Department of Homeland 
Security, the 108th Congress faces the challenge of redesigning the 
homeland security grant system. 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. Given scarce federal 
resources, appropriate accountability and targeting features need to 
be designed into grants to ensure that the funds provided have the 
best chance of enhancing preparedness. 

Addressing the underlying fragmentation of grant programs remains a 
challenge for our federal system in the homeland security area. 
Several alternatives might be employed to overcome problems fostered 
by fragmentation in the federal aid structure, including consolidating 
grant programs through block grants, establishing performance 
partnerships, and streamlining planning and administrative 
requirements. Grant programs might be consolidated using a block grant 
approach, in which state and local officials bear the primary 
responsibility for monitoring and overseeing the planning, management, 
and implementation of activities financed with federal grant funds. 
While block grants devolve authority for decisions, they can be 
designed to facilitate accountability for national goals and 
objectives. 

Congress could also choose to take a more hybrid approach that would 
consolidate a number of narrowly focused categorical programs while 
retaining strong standards and accountability for discrete federal 
performance goals. One example of this model involves establishing 
performance partnerships, exemplified by the initiative of the 
Environmental Protection Agency in which states may voluntarily enter 
into performance agreements with the agency’s regional offices 
covering the major federal environmental grant programs. Another 
option would be to simplify and streamline planning and administrative 
requirements for the grant programs. Whatever approach is chosen, it 
is important that grants be designed to target funds to states and 
localities with the greatest need, discourage the replacement of state 
and local funds with federal funds, and strike the appropriate balance 
between accountability and flexibility.
  
What GAO Recommends:

We do not make recommendations in this testimony; however, if Congress 
chooses to reform the grant system we have provide options including 
consolidating grant programs through block grants, establishing 
performance partnerships, and streamlining planning and administrative 
requirements.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-1146T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact Paul L. 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 
critical to successful federal leadership of, assistance to, and 
partnership with state and local governments to enhance homeland 
security. As you know, the challenges posed in strengthening homeland 
security exceed the capacity and authority of any one level of 
government. Protecting the nation against these unique threats calls 
for a truly integrated approach, bringing together the resources of all 
levels of government.

There is a great deal of room for improvement in how the federal 
government provides assistance to state and local governments to 
enhance their levels of preparedness for terrorist acts. We testified 
earlier this year that the federal grant system for first responders is 
highly fragmented and that the fragmented delivery of federal 
assistance can complicate coordination and integration of services and 
planning at state and local levels.[Footnote 1]

The Council on Foreign Relations report rightly points out that in the 
aftermath of the September 11 attacks, the United States must plan and 
prepare on the assumption that terrorists will strike again.[Footnote 
2] Given the many needs and high stakes involved, it is all the more 
important that the structure and design of federal grants be geared to 
fund the highest priority projects with the greatest potential impact 
for improving homeland security. Sustaining support for the necessary 
funding over the longer term will ultimately depend on rationalizing 
our grant system to streamline and simplify overlapping programs, 
promote appropriate targeting, and ensure accountability for the 
results achieved with scarce federal resources. Accountability needs to 
be built in on the front end, not after the funds are expended. Now is 
the time for policymakers to step back and rationalize the structure 
and design of first responder grant programs to improve their potential 
effectiveness.

Today, I would like to start by providing a perspective on the 
Council's report on the preparedness of first responders throughout the 
nation. I will then focus on the system of homeland security grants and 
explain how the system continues to be highly fragmented, potentially 
resulting in duplication and overlap among federal programs. Finally, I 
would like to focus on grants design options to improve targeting, 
fiscal accountability, and results through the intergovernmental 
homeland security partnership.

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.

Background:

The Council on Foreign Relations study sets the stage for rethinking 
the federal role in assisting communities prepare for homeland 
security. Although acknowledging that the nation's preparedness has 
improved, the Council's report highlights some of the significant gaps 
in preparedness including shortfalls in personnel, equipment, 
communications, and other critical capabilities in local services.

The Council's report attempts to fill a void by estimating unmet needs 
for emergency responders. The Council's 5-year estimate of 
approximately $98 billion across all levels of government was developed 
in concert with The Concord Coalition and the Center for Strategic and 
Budgetary Assessments. It was based on data made available by 
professional associations and others in the areas of fire service, 
urban search and rescue, hospital preparedness, public health, 
emergency 911 systems, interoperable communications, emergency 
operations centers, animal/agricultural emergency response, emergency 
medical services systems, emergency management planning and 
coordination, and emergency response regional exercises. However, the 
report clearly states that it does not include estimates for certain 
costs such as overtime for training and other estimated needs in 
several critical mission areas, such as the needs of police forces, 
because national police organizations were unable to provide the 
information.

The total estimate is characterized in the report as being very 
preliminary and imprecise given the absence of comprehensive national 
preparedness standards. As the report itself acknowledges, the analysis 
is intended to foster national debate by focusing on the baseline of 
preparedness and steps needed to promote higher levels of readiness.

The report performs a service in beginning an important dialogue on 
defining standards to assess readiness and recommends the development 
of a better framework and procedures to develop more precise estimates 
of national requirements and needs. The report concludes that the basis 
for funding decisions would be improved by agreement on a more detailed 
and systematic methodology to determine national requirements grounded 
in national standards defining emergency preparedness.

We at GAO have not evaluated the methodology used in the Council's 
report. However, we have issued a report evaluating needs assessments 
performed by other agencies in the area of public infrastructure. That 
report highlights best practices that may prove useful if used by the 
Department of Homeland Security or other public or private entities in 
analyzing homeland security preparedness needs in the future.[Footnote 
3] The practices used by these agencies to estimate funding needs 
varied widely, but we were able to benchmark their assessments against 
best practices used by leading public and private organizations. They 
also reflect requirements that the Congress and the Office of 
Management and Budget have placed on federal agencies that are aimed at 
improving capital decisionmaking practices.

Among these best practices for infrastructure, there are several that 
might be considered useful and relevant when conducting homeland 
security capability assessments. For example, some agencies' 
assessments focus on resources needed to meet the underlying missions 
and performance goals. This type of results-oriented assessment is 
based on the actions needed to attain specific outcomes, rather than 
being simply a compilation of all unmet needs regardless of their 
contribution to underlying outcomes and goals. Assessments might also 
consider alternative approaches to meeting needs for cost effectiveness 
such as reengineering existing processes and improving collaboration 
with other governments and the private sector. Best-practice agencies 
use cost-benefit analysis to include only those needs for which 
benefits exceed costs; in cases where benefits are difficult to 
quantify, assessments could include an analysis that compares 
alternatives and recommends the most cost-effective (least-cost) option 
for achieving the goal. Some agencies also rank projects based on 
established criteria such as cost-effectiveness, relative risk, and 
potential contribution to program goals. Finally, we found that best-
practice agencies have a process to independently review the quality of 
data used to derive estimates.

Fragmentation in Homeland Security Grants for First Responders:

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 4] 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. Such a proliferation of 
programs leads to administrative complexities that can confuse state 
and local grant recipients. Like GAO, Congress is aware of the 
challenges facing grantees in the world of federal grants management. 
In 1999, it passed the Federal Financial Assistance Management 
Improvement Act (P.L. 106-107), with the goal of improving the 
effectiveness and performance of federal financial assistance programs, 
simplify federal financial assistance application and reporting 
requirements, and improve the delivery of services to the public.

The 108TH Congress faces the challenge to redesign the nation's 
homeland security grant programs in light of the events of September 
11, 2001 and the establishment of the Department of Homeland Security 
(DHS). 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. At the same time, we need to design and build in 
appropriate accountability and targeting features to ensure that the 
funds provided have the best chance of enhancing preparedness.

Funding increases for combating terrorism have been dramatic and 
reflect the high priority that the administration and Congress place on 
this mission. As the Council's report observes, continuing gaps in 
preparedness may prompt additional funds to be provided. The critical 
national goals underlying these funding increases bring a 
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 has testified before on the development of counter-terrorism 
programs for state and local governments that were similar and 
potentially duplicative.[Footnote 6] Table 1 shows many of the 
different grant programs that can be used by first responders to 
address the nation's homeland security.[Footnote 7] To illustrate the 
level of fragmentation across homeland security programs, we have shown 
in table 1 the significant features for selected major assistance 
programs targeted to first responders. 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 while at least 
one goes to state emergency management agencies and another directly to 
state fire marshals. The allocation methods differ as well--some are 
formula grants while the 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: Characteristics of Selected Homeland Security Grant Programs:

Grant: State Homeland Security Grant Program; Federal Agency: ODP/ DHS; 
Grantee: State and local units of government; MATCH: No; MOE: 
No; 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 D.C. and 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: Emergency Management Performance Grants; Federal Agency: FEMA/
DHS; Grantee: State and local units of government; MATCH: Yes; MOE: 
No; 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: Urban Areas Security Initiative; Federal Agency: ODP/DHS; 
Grantee: Selected cities and states chosen by the Secretary of DHS; 
MATCH: No; MOE: No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing 
Provisions: Funds distributed according to formula--a combination of 
current threat estimates, critical assets within the urban area, 
population and population density--that is a weighted combination of 
each factor, the results for which are ranked and used to calculate the 
proportional allocation of resources.

Grant: Urban Areas Security Initiative -Transit System Security Grant 
Program; Federal Agency: ODP/DHS; Grantee: Selected mass transit 
systems chosen by the Secretary of DHS; MATCH: No; MOE: No; 
Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: Non-supplanting 
certification required.

Grant: Urban Areas Security Initiative - Port Security Grant Program; 
Federal Agency: ODP/DHS; Grantee: State and local government entities 
and commercial companies to enhance security at selected ports; MATCH: 
No; MOE: No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
Non-supplanting certification required.

Grant: First Responder Counter-Terrorism Assistance; Federal Agency: 
FEMA/DHS; Grantee: Fire and emergency first responders; law enforcement 
personnel with operational and/or incident management 
responsibilities; MATCH: No; MOE: No; 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: No; MOE: No; 
Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: None.

Grant: Hazardous Materials Assistance Program; Federal Agency: FEMA/
DHS; Grantee: States, locals, tribes, territories, State Emergency 
Response Committees, and Local Emergency Planning Commissions; MATCH: 
No; MOE: No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
None.

Grant: Hazardous Material Training Program; Federal Agency: FEMA/DHS; 
Grantee: Tribal government; MATCH: Yes; MOE: No; Funding Formulas 
And Cost Sharing Provisions: Matching requirement of 20 percent can be 
satisfied with cash or third party in-kind contribution.

Grant: Assistance to Firefighters Grant; Federal Agency: FEMA/DHS; 
Grantee: Fire departments in the states. An Emergency Management 
Services unit can apply if the unit is under the auspices of a fire 
department.; 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 Assistance 
(Byrne Formula Grant Program); Federal Agency: Bureau of Justice 
Assistance in the Office of Justice Programs, Department of Justice 
(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 $500,000 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, statewide 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: Local Law Enforcement Block Grants 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: 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: 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: No; 
Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: Some grants, such as for 
hiring and the Schools Grant Program, require no local percentage 
match. Other awards generally are made for 75 percent of allowable 
project costs.

Grant: Law Enforcement Assistance - FBI Field Police Training; Federal 
Agency: FBI/DOJ; Grantee: All authorized municipal, county, local and 
state criminal justice personnel; MATCH: No; MOE: No; Funding 
Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: None.

Grant: State and Local Anti-Terrorism Training; Federal Agency: Bureau 
of Justice Assistance in the Office of Justice Programs, DOJ; Grantee: 
State and local law enforcement and prosecution authorities; MATCH: 
No; MOE: No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
None.

Grant: Emergency Management Institute --Resident Educational Program; 
Federal Agency: FEMA/DHS; Grantee: Individuals who need emergency 
management training and are assigned to an emergency management 
position in State, local, or tribal government; MATCH: No; MOE: 
No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: None.

Grant: Emergency Operations Centers; Federal Agency: FEMA/DHS; Grantee: 
States, D.C. and territories. Local governments may receive assistance 
as subgrantees to the state; MATCH: Yes; MOE: No; Funding Formulas 
And Cost Sharing Provisions: Funds awarded in two phases. In Phase 1, 
each state will be allocated $50,000 with no matching for an initial 
assessment of hazards, vulnerabilities and risk. Phase 2 grants used to 
address the most immediate deficiencies including modification, new 
construction and retrofitting facilities has a 50 percent nonfederal 
matching.

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: No; MOE: No; 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: 
No; MOE: No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: 
None.

Grant: Interoperable Communications Equipment; Federal Agency: 
Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate/DHS; Grantee: Local 
governments nominated by state or territory government.; MATCH: Yes; 
MOE: No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: Grant awards 
required a 25 percent nonfederal matching. The match does not need to 
be a cash match.

Grant: Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT); Federal Agency: FEMA/
DHS; Grantee: States, D.C. and territories. Local governments may 
receive assistance as subgrantees to the state.; MATCH: No; MOE: 
No; Funding Formulas And Cost Sharing Provisions: States 
(including D.C. and Puerto Rico) and territories will be allocated a 
base amount of .75 percent and .25 percent respectively of the total 
amount available. The remaining funds will be allocated according to 
population and added to the base.

Source: Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance, August 2003; 
Congressional Research Service reports.

[End of table]

Table 2 shows that considerable potential overlap exists in the 
activities that these programs support--for example, funding for 
training is provided by most grants in the table and several provide 
for all four types of needs.

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

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

Grant: Emergency Management Performance Grants (EMPG); Equipment: 
No; Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Urban Areas Security Initiative; Equipment: Yes; Training: Yes; 
Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Urban Areas Security Initiative - Transit System; Equipment: 
Yes; Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Urban Areas Security Initiative - Port Security Grant Program; 
Equipment: Yes; Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; Planning: No.

Grant: First Responder Counter-Terrorism Assistance; Equipment: 
No; Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning.

Grant: State Fire Training Systems Grants (National Fire Academy 
Training Grants); Equipment: No; Training: Yes; Exercises: No; 
Planning: No.

Grant: Hazardous Materials Assistance Program; Equipment: No; 
Training: Yes; Exercises: Yes; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Hazardous Material Training Program; Equipment: No; 
Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Grant: Assistance to Firefighters Grant; Equipment: Yes; 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: Local Law Enforcement Block Grants Program (LLEBG); Equipment: 
Yes; Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning: Yes.

Grant: Public Safety Partnership and Community Policing Grants (COPS); 
Equipment: No; Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Grant: Law Enforcement Assistance - FBI Field Police Training; 
Equipment: No; Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Grant: State and Local Anti-Terrorism Training; Equipment: No; 
Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Grant: Emergency Management Institute Resident Educational Program; 
Equipment: No; Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Grant: Emergency Operations Centers; (Facilities grant to encourage 
development/retrofitting of centers); Equipment: No; Training: 
No; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Grant: Centers for Disease Control - Investigations & Technical 
Assistance; Equipment: No; Training: No; Exercises: No; 
Planning: Yes.

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

Grant: Interoperable Communications Equipment; Equipment: Yes; Training: 
No; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Grant: Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT); Equipment: Yes; 
Training: Yes; Exercises: No; Planning: No.

Source: Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance, August 2003; 
Congressional Research Service reports.

[End of table]

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 strategy issued 
by the administration last summer recognizes, preparing the nation to 
address the new threats from terrorism calls for partnerships of many 
disparate actors at many levels in our system.[Footnote 8] 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. Our previous work suggests that the complex web of 
federal grants used to allocate federal aid to different players at the 
state and local level 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 constrain 
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 9]

Rationalizing the First Responder Grant System:

Using grants as a policy tool, the federal government can engage and 
involve other levels of government and the private sector in enhancing 
homeland security while still having a say in recipients' performance 
and accountability. The structure and design of these grants will play 
a vital role in determining success and ensuring that scarce federal 
dollars are used to achieve critical national goals.

Consolidating Grants:

Addressing the underlying fragmentation of grant programs remains a 
challenge for our federal system in the homeland security area. 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 
streamlining planning and administrative requirements.

Block grants are one way 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.[Footnote 10]

Given the compelling national concerns and goals for homeland security, 
Congress may conclude that the traditional devolution of responsibility 
found in a pure block grant may not be the most appropriate approach. 
Congress might instead choose a hybrid approach--what we might call a 
"consolidated categorical" grant which would consolidate a number of 
narrower categorical programs while retaining strong standards and 
accountability for discrete federal performance goals. 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 EPA regional offices 
covering the major federal environmental grant programs. States can 
propose to use grants more flexibly by shifting federal funds across 
programs but they are held accountable for discrete or negotiated 
measures of performance addressing EPA's national performance goals. 
This approach has allowed states to use federal funds more flexibly and 
support innovative projects while increasing the focus on results and 
effectiveness. However, in 1999 we reported that the initiative had 
been 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.[Footnote 11]

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. The 
absence of such measures and outcomes at the national level will 
undermine any effort to establish performance based grant agreements 
with states. The Council on Foreign Relations report recommends 
establishing clearly defined national standards and guidelines in 
consultation with first responders and other state and local officials.

Another alternative to overcome grant fragmentation is the 
simplification and streamlining of administrative and planning 
requirements. In June 2003, the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee 
passed a bill (S. 1245, The Homeland Security Grant Enhancement Act of 
2003) intended to better coordinate and simplify homeland security 
grants. The bill would establish an interagency committee to coordinate 
and streamline homeland security grant programs by advising the 
Secretary of DHS on the multiple programs administered by federal 
agencies. The interagency committee would identify all redundant and 
duplicative requirements to the appropriate committees of Congress and 
the agencies represented in the interagency committee. The bill also 
establishes a clearinghouse function within the Office for State and 
Local Government Coordination for grant information that would gather 
and disseminate information regarding successful state and local 
homeland security programs and practices. The bill seeks to streamline 
the application process for federal assistance and to rationalize and 
better coordinate the state and local planning requirements. The bill 
provides for a comprehensive state plan to address the broad range of 
emergency preparedness functions currently funded from separate 
programs with their own separate planning requirements.

A statewide plan can be used as a tool to promote coordination among 
federal first responder programs that continue to exist as separate 
funding streams. One option could be to require recipients of federal 
grants for homeland security within each state to obtain review and 
comment by the central state homeland security agency to attest to 
consistency with the statewide plan.

Whatever approach is chosen, it is important that grants be designed to 
(1) target the funds to states and localities with the greatest need, 
(2) discourage the replacement of state and local funds with federal 
funds, commonly referred to as "supplantation," with a maintenance-of-
effort requirement that recipients maintain their level of previous 
funding, and (3) strike a balance between accountability and 
flexibility.[Footnote 12]

Targeting:

As Congress goes forward to consider how to design a grant system to 
promote a stronger federal, state, local and regional partnership to 
improve homeland security, it faces some of the traditional dilemmas in 
federal grant design. One is targeting. How do you concentrate funds in 
the places with the highest risks? A proclivity to spread money around, 
unfortunately, may provide less additional net protection while 
actually placing additional burdens on state and local governments. 
Given the significant needs and limited federal resources, it will be 
important to target to areas of greatest need. The formula for the 
distribution of any new grant could be based on several considerations, 
including relative threats and vulnerabilities faced by states and 
communities as well as the state or local government's capacity to 
respond to a disaster. The Council on Foreign Relations report 
recommends that Congress establish a system for allocating scarce 
resources based on addressing identified threats and vulnerabilities. 
The report goes on to say that the federal government should consider 
factors such as population and population density, vulnerability 
assessments, and the presence of critical infrastructure within each 
state as the basis for fund distribution.

By comparing three of the grants listed in table 2, one can see 
differences in the way funds have been allocated thus far. For example, 
under the State Homeland Security Grant Program allocations are 
determined by using a base amount of .75 percent of the total 
allocation to each state (including the District of Columbia and Puerto 
Rico) and .25 percent of the total to the territories. The balance of 
the funds goes to recipients on a population-share basis. In contrast, 
the Urban Area Security Initiative funds are distributed according to a 
formula from the Department of Homeland Security as being a combination 
of weighted factors including current threat estimates, critical assets 
within the urban area, population and population density--the results 
of which are ranked and used to calculate the proportional allocation 
of resources. For Byrne Grants, each participant state receives a base 
amount of $500,000 or .25 percent of the amount available for the 
program, whichever is greater, with the remaining funds allocated to 
each state based on the state's relative share of the total U.S. 
population.

Supplantation and Sustainability:

A second dilemma in federal grant design involves preventing fiscal 
substitution or supplantation. In earlier work, we found that 
substitution is to be expected in any grant and, on average, every 
additional federal grant dollar results in about 60 cents of 
supplantion.[Footnote 13] We found that supplantation is particularly 
likely for block grants supporting areas with prior state and local 
involvement. However, our work on the Temporary Assistance to Needy 
Families block grant found that a strong maintenance of effort 
provision can limit states' ability to supplant[Footnote 14] since 
recipients can be penalized for not meeting a maintenance of effort 
requirement.

It seems obvious to say that grant recipients should maintain the 
effort they were making prior to receiving the grant and use the grant 
to add to, rather than replace, their own contribution. However, since 
September 11, 2001, many local jurisdictions have taken it upon 
themselves to take the initiative to dramatically increase their own-
source funding in an effort to enhance security. Should the federal 
grant system now penalize them by locking in their increased spending 
levels and at the same time reward state and local governments that 
have taken a "wait and see" attitude concerning enhancing security? 
This is one of the design dilemmas that Congress will need to address 
to ensure that scarce federal resources in fact are used to promote 
increased capability.

A third challenge is sustainability. Local governments think of 
sustainability as keeping the federal spigot permanently turned on. 
They may argue that the urgent needs they face will drive out the 
important needs of enhanced homeland security without continued federal 
aid. However, from a broader, national perspective there is an 
expectation that the responsibility for sustaining homeland security 
responsibility would at least be shared by all levels of government 
since state, local, and regional governments receive benefits from 
these grants in addition to the national benefit of improving homeland 
security.

Several options can be considered to further shared fiscal 
responsibility. A state and local match could be considered to reflect 
both the benefits received by state and local taxpayers from 
preparedness as well as to encourage the kind of discipline and 
responsibility that can be elicited when a government's own funds are 
at stake. An additional option--the "seed money" approach--could be to 
lower the federal match over time to encourage ownership, support, and 
long term sustainability at the state and local level for funded 
activities. However, at their best grants can stimulate state and local 
governments to enhance their preparedness to address the unique threats 
posed by terrorism. Ideally, grants should stimulate higher levels of 
preparedness and avoid simply subsidizing local functions that are 
traditionally state or local responsibilities. The literature on 
intergovernmental management suggests that federal money can succeed in 
institutionalizing a commitment to aided goals and purposes over time 
within states and communities, as professional administrators and 
clients of these programs take root and gain influence within local 
political circles.[Footnote 15]

Accountability and Flexibility:

Ultimately, the sustainability of government funding can be promoted by 
accountability provisions that provide clear and transparent 
information on results achieved from the intergovernmental partnership. 
At the federal level, experience with block grants shows that grant 
programs are sustainable if they are accompanied by sufficient 
performance and accountability information on national outcomes to 
enable them to compete for funding in the congressional appropriations 
process. Accountability can be performance and results oriented to 
provide focus on national goals across state and local governments 
while providing for greater flexibility for those governments in 
deciding how best to meet those goals.

Last summer, the Administration released a national strategy for 
homeland security that placed emphasis on security as a shared national 
responsibility involving close cooperation among all levels of 
government. We noted at the time that the national strategy's 
initiatives often did not provide a baseline set of performance goals 
and measures for homeland security.[Footnote 16] Then and now--over a 
year later--the nation does not have a comprehensive set of performance 
goals and measures against which to assess and upon which to improve 
prevention efforts, vulnerability reduction, and responsiveness to 
damage and recovery needs at all levels of government. We still hold 
that given the need for a highly integrated approach to the homeland 
security challenge, national performance goals and measures for 
strategy initiatives that involve both federal and nonfederal actors 
may best be developed in a collaborative way involving all levels of 
government and the private sector. At this point, there are few 
national or federal performance standards that can be defined, given 
the differences among states and lack of understanding of what levels 
of preparedness are appropriate given a jurisdiction's risk factors. 
The Council on Foreign Relations recommended that national standards be 
established by federal agencies in such areas as training, 
communications, and response equipment, in consultation with 
intergovernmental partners.

Communications is an example of an area for which standards have not 
yet been developed, but various emergency managers and other first 
responders have highlighted that standards are needed. State and local 
government officials often report that there are deficiencies in their 
communications capabilities, including the lack of interoperable 
systems. The national strategy recognizes that it is crucial for 
response personnel to have and use equipment, systems, and procedures 
that allow them to communicate. Therefore, the strategy calls for a 
national communication plan to establish protocols (who needs to talk 
to whom), processes, and national standards for technology acquisition.

Need for Integrated Approaches from State and Local Partners:

Just as the federal government needs to rationalize its grant system 
for first responders, state and local governments are also challenged 
to streamline and better coordinate their efforts. As pointed out in 
the recent report from the Century Foundation,[Footnote 17] ultimately 
the nation's homeland defense will be critically dependent on the 
ability of state and local governments to act to overcome barriers to 
coordination and integration. The scale of homeland security threat 
spills over conventional boundaries of political jurisdictions and 
agencies. Effective response calls on local governments to reach across 
boundaries to obtain support and cooperation throughout an entire 
region or state.

Promoting partnerships among key players within each state and even 
across states is vital to addressing the challenge. States and local 
governments need to work together to reduce and eliminate barriers to 
achieving this coordination and regional integration. The federal 
government is, of course, a key player in promoting effective 
preparedness and can offer state and local governments assistance 
beyond grant funds in such areas as risk management and intelligence 
sharing. The Office for State and Local Government Coordination has 
been established within DHS to facilitate close coordination with state 
and local first responders, emergency services and governments. In 
turn, state and local governments have much to offer in terms of 
knowledge of local vulnerabilities and resources, such as local law 
enforcement personnel, available to respond to threats in their 
communities.

Local officials emphasized the importance of regional coordination. 
Regional resources, such as equipment and expertise, are essential 
because of proximity, which allows for quick deployment, and experience 
in working within the region. Large-scale or labor-intensive incidents 
quickly deplete a given locality's supply of trained responders. Some 
cities have spread training and equipment to neighboring municipal 
areas so that their mutual aid partners can help. We found in our work 
last year that to facilitate emergency planning and coordination among 
cities in metropolitan areas officials have joined together to create 
task forces, terrorism working groups, advisory committees and Mayors' 
caucuses. Cities and counties have used mutual aid agreements to share 
emergency resources in their metropolitan areas. These agreements may 
include fire, police, emergency medical services, and hospitals and may 
be formal or informal. These partnerships afford economies of scale 
across a region. In events that require a quick response, such as a 
chemical attack, regional agreements take on greater importance because 
many local officials do not think that federal and state resources can 
arrive in sufficient time to help.

Forging regional arrangements for coordination is not an easy process 
at the local level. The federal government may be able to provide 
incentives through the grant system to encourage regional planning and 
coordination for homeland security. Transportation planning offers one 
potential model for federal influence that could be considered. Under 
federal law, Metropolitan Planning Organizations are established to 
develop regionally based transportation plans from which, generally, 
projects that are to be federally funded must be selected.

Conclusion:

Improving the partnership among federal and nonfederal officials is 
vital to achieving important national goals. The task facing the nation 
is daunting and federal grants will be a central vehicle to improve and 
sustain preparedness in communities throughout the nation. While 
funding increases for combating terrorism have been dramatic, the 
Council's report reflects concerns that many have about the adequacy of 
current grant programs to address the homeland security needs.

Ultimately, the "bottom line" question is: What impact will the grant 
system have in protecting the nation and its communities against 
terrorism? At this time, it is difficult to know since we do not have 
clearly defined national standards or criteria defining existing or 
desired levels of preparedness across the country. Our grant structure 
is not well suited to provide assurance that scarce federal funds are 
in fact enhancing the nation's preparedness in the places most at risk. 
There is a fundamental need to rethink the structure and design of 
assistance programs, to streamline and simplify programs, improve 
targeting, and enhance accountability for results. Federal, state, and 
local governments alike have a stake in improving the grant system to 
reduce burden and tensions and promote the level of security that can 
only be achieved through effective partnerships. The sustainability and 
continued support for homeland security initiatives will rest in no 
small part on our ability to demonstrate to the public that scarce 
public funds are in fact improving security in the most effective and 
efficient manner.

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.

(450255):

FOOTNOTES

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, Federal Assistance: Grant System 
Continues to Be Highly Fragmented , GAO-03-718T (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 
29, 2003).

[2] Report of an Independent Task Force Sponsored by the Council on 
Foreign Relations, Emergency Responders: Drastically Underfunded, 
Dangerously Unprepared (New York, NY: 2003).

[3] U.S. General Accounting Office, U.S. Infrastructure: Agencies' 
Approaches to Developing Investment Estimates Vary, GAO-01-835 
(Washington, D.C.: July 20, 2001).

[4] 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).

[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] U.S. General Accounting Office, Combating Terrorism: 
Intergovernmental Partnership in a National Strategy to Enhance State 
and Local Preparedness, GAO-02-547T (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 22, 2002).

[7] While the selected grant programs listed in table 1 could be placed 
into the categories used in the Council's report, we have not reviewed 
the methodology used by the Council to make its budgetary estimates.

[8] The White House, Office of Homeland Security, National Strategy for 
Homeland Security (Washington, D.C.: July 16, 2002).

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

[10] 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).

[11] 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).

[12] The Rockefeller Institute of Government, The Role of "Home" in 
Homeland Security: The Federalism Challenge--The Challenge for State 
and Local Governments, Symposium Series Number 2 (Albany, New York: 
March 24, 2003).

[13] U.S. General Accounting Office, Federal Grants: Design 
Improvements Could Help Federal Resources Go Further, GAO-AIMD-97-7 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 18, 1996).

[14] U.S. General Accounting Office, Welfare Reform: Challenges in 
Maintaining a Federal-State Fiscal Partnership, GAO-01-828 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 10, 2001).

[15] See Paul Peterson, Barry Rabe, and Kenneth Wong, When Federalism 
Works (Washington, D.C., Brookings Institution, 1985).

[16] U.S. General Accounting Office, Homeland Security: Effective 
Intergovernmental Coordination is Key to Success, GAO-02-1013T 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 23, 2002).

[17] Kettl, Donald F., The States and Homeland Security: Building the 
Missing Link, The Century Foundation's Homeland Security Project 
Working Group on Federalism Challenges, (New York, New York: 2003).