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Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public 
Building and Emergency Management, House Committee on Transportation 
and Infrastructure:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 12:00 p.m. EDT:

Thursday, May 13, 2004:

EMERGENCY PREPAReDNESS:

Federal Funds for First Responders:

Statement of William O. Jenkins, Jr., Director, 
Homeland Security and Justice Issues:

GAO-04-788T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-788T, a report to Subcommittee on Economic 
Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management, House 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, highlighted the critical 
role first responders play at the state and local level when a disaster 
or emergency strikes. In fiscal years 2002 and 2003, Congress 
appropriated approximately $13.9 billion for domestic preparedness. A 
large portion of these funds were for the nation’s first responders to 
enhance their ability to address future emergencies, including 
potential terrorist attacks. These funds are primarily to assist with 
planning, equipment purchases, training and exercises, and 
administrative costs. They are available to first responders mainly 
through the State Homeland Security Grant Programs and Urban Area 
Security Initiative grants. Both programs are administered through the 
Department of Homeland Security’s Office for Domestic Preparedness.

In this testimony, GAO addressed the need to balance expeditious 
distribution of first responder funds to states and localities with 
accountability for effective use of those funds and summarized major 
findings related to funding distribution delays and delays involving 
funds received by local governments, as presented in reports issued by 
the Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General and the 
House Select Committee on Homeland Security. The testimony incorporated 
supporting evidence on first-responder funding issues based on ongoing 
GAO work in selected states.

What GAO Found:

The reports of the Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector 
General (OIG) and the House Select Committee on Homeland Security 
examined the distribution of funds to states and localities. Both 
reports found that although there have been delays in getting federal 
first-responder funds to local governments and first-responder 
agencies, the grant management requirements, procedures, and processes 
of the Office for Domestic Preparedness (ODP) were not the principal 
cause. According to the OIG’s report, in fiscal years 2002 and 2003, 
ODP reduced the time required to provide on-line grant application 
guidance to states, process grant applications, and make grant awards. 
For example, for fiscal year 2002 grants, it took 292 days, on average, 
from the time the grant legislation was enacted to the awarding of 
grants to states. For fiscal year 2003 grants, the total cycle was 
reduced to 77 days, on average.

According to the reports, most states met deadlines for subgranting 
first-responder funds to local jurisdictions. The fiscal year 2003 
State Homeland Security Grant Programs and Urban Area Security 
Initiative required states to transfer 80 percent of first-responder 
grant funds to local jurisdictions within 45 days of the funds being 
awarded by ODP. Most states met that deadline by counting funds as 
transferred when states agreed to allocate a specific amount of the 
grant to a local jurisdiction, the OIG’s report found. The House Select 
Committee staff concurred. And in the three states GAO examined, states 
certified they had allocated funds to local jurisdictions within the 
45-day period.

Delays in allocating grant funds to first responder agencies are 
frequently due to local legal and procedural requirements, the OIG’s 
report found. State and local governments sometimes delayed delivery of 
fiscal year 2002 grant funds, for example, because governing and 
political bodies within the states and local jurisdictions had to 
approve and accept the grant funds. GAO’s work indicated a similar 
finding. In one state GAO reviewed, roughly four months elapsed from 
the date the city was notified that grant funds were available to the 
date when the city council voted to accept the funds.

Both reports GAO reviewed found that state and local procurement 
processes have, in some cases, been affected by delays resulting from 
specific procurement requirements. While some states purchase first-
responder equipment centrally for all jurisdictions, in some instances, 
those purchases are made locally and procurement may be delayed by 
competitive bidding rules, among other things.

It is important to note that those who manage homeland security grants 
to states and local governments must balance two sometimes competing 
goals: (1) getting funds to states and localities expeditiously and (2) 
assuring that there is appropriate planning and accountability for the 
effective use of the funds.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-788T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Wiiliam O. Jenkins, Jr. 
at (202) 512-8777 or jenkinswo@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

I am pleased to be here today to discuss federal funding for first 
responders. The events of September 11, 2001, spotlighted the critical 
role that the nation's first responders play in responding to and 
mitigating the effects of a terrorist attack. In fiscal years 2002 and 
2003, Congress appropriated nearly $13.9 billion for domestic 
preparedness programs. The largest sources of federal funds for first 
responders were the State Homeland Security Grant Programs (in fiscal 
year 2002 called the State Domestic Preparedness Program), distributed 
to states[Footnote 1] using a formula that provides each state a base 
amount plus additional funds based on population, and the Urban Area 
Security Initiative Grants, distributed to selected urban areas based 
on such factors as population density, critical infrastructure, and 
potential threats. These monies were generally available for planning, 
equipment, exercises, training, and administrative costs.

My statement provides:

* A brief discussion of some basic issues associated with using first 
responder funds effectively.

* The major findings reported recently by the Department of Homeland 
Security (DHS) Office of Inspector General[Footnote 2] (OIG) and the 
House Select Committee on Homeland Security[Footnote 3] (House Select 
Committee) on the reasons for delays in distributing first responder 
funds to local governments and delays in using those funds once 
received.

* Some examples from our work in three states that support the findings 
in these two reports. Our work to date has provided no information that 
would contradict the major findings of these two reports.

Scope and Methodology:

GAO is currently conducting several reviews related to first responder 
grants. One of these reviews, to be published within the next few 
weeks, addresses issues of coordinated planning and the use of federal 
grant funds for first responders in the National Capitol Region, which 
encompasses the District of Columbia and 11 surrounding jurisdictions. 
Another effort is focused on intergovernmental efforts to manage fiscal 
year 2002 and 2003 grants administered by the Office for Domestic 
Preparedness (ODP) within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Because much of our work in this area is ongoing and our findings 
remain preliminary, my testimony today will focus principally on the 
major findings of the reports on preparedness funding issued by the DHS 
OIG and the House Select Committee, supplemented by some examples from 
our work in four selected locations in three states. Our analysis 
focused on three ODP grant programs: the State Domestic Preparedness 
Grant Program of fiscal year 2002, with $315,440,000 in appropriations, 
and the fiscal year 2003 State Homeland Security Grant Programs, Parts 
I and II, with appropriations of $566,295,000 and $1,500,000,000, 
respectively. The purpose of this work was to document the flow of 
selected fiscal year 2002 and 2003 grant monies from ODP to local 
governments and the time required to complete each step in the process. 
In doing this work, we met with state and local officials in each state 
and obtained and reviewed federal, state, and local documentation. We 
did this work between December 2003 and February 2004 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards.

Background:

In recent months, the Conference of Mayors, members of Congress, and 
others have expressed understandable concerns about delays in the 
process by which congressional appropriations for first responders 
reach the local fire fighter, police officer, or other first responder. 
The reports by DHS OIG and the House Select Committee examined the 
distribution of homeland security grant funding to states and local 
governments to understand what obstacles--if any--prevent the 
expeditious flow of grant funding from the federal government to state 
and local governments.

In March 2003, ODP was moved from the Department of Justice to the DHS. 
In fiscal years 2002 and 2003, ODP managed about $3.5 billion under 16 
separate grant programs. Generally, states and local grant recipients 
could use these funds for some combination of training, new equipment, 
exercise planning and execution, general planning efforts, and 
administration. The largest of these grants were the State Homeland 
Security Grant Programs and the Urban Area Security Initiative grants. 
In both grant programs, states may retain 20 percent of total state 
grant funding but must distribute the remaining 80 percent to local 
governments within the state.

Issues Associated With Using First Responder Funds Effectively:

Before discussing some of the issues that have been raised about the 
distribution of federal grant funds to first responders, I would like 
briefly to discuss some basic issues associated with using those funds 
effectively.

A key goal of first responder funding should be developing and 
maintaining the capacity and ability of first responders to respond 
effectively to and mitigate incidents that require the coordinated 
actions of first responders. These incidents encompass a wide range of 
possibilities, including daily auto accidents, truck spills, and fires; 
major natural disasters such as floods, hurricanes, and earthquakes; or 
a terrorist attack that involves thousands of injuries. Effectively 
responding to such incidents requires well-planned, well-coordinated 
efforts by all participants. Major events, such as natural disasters or 
terrorist attacks, may require the coordinated response of first 
responders from multiple jurisdictions within a region, throughout a 
state or among states. Thus, it follows that developing a coordinated 
plan for such events should generally involve participants from the 
multiple jurisdictions that would be involved in responding to the 
event. However, a major challenge in administering first responder 
grants is balancing two goals: (1) minimizing the time it takes to 
distribute grant funds to state and local first responders and (2) 
ensuring appropriate planning and accountability for effective use of 
the funds.

In fiscal years 2002 and 2003, at least 16 federal grants were 
available for first responders, each with somewhat different 
requirements. Previously, we have noted 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.[Footnote 4] 
Such a proliferation of programs leads to administrative complexities 
that can confuse state and local grant recipients. Congress is aware of 
the challenges facing grantees and is considering several bills that 
would restructure first responder grants.

Basic Steps in Distributing State Homeland Security Grant Funds:

Much of the concern about delays in distributing federal grant funds to 
local first responders has involved the State Homeland Security grants 
which are distributed to states on the basis of a formula. Each state 
received 0.75 percent of the total grant appropriation, with the 
remaining funds distributed according to state population.

There are a number of sequential steps common to the distribution of 
ODP State Homeland Security Grants from ODP to the states and from the 
states to local governments. They include the following:

1. Congress appropriates funds.

2. ODP issues grant guidance to states.

3. State submits application, including spending plans, to ODP.

4. ODP makes award to states noting any special conditions that must be 
cleared before the funds can be used.

5. State meets and ODP lifts special conditions, if applicable.

6. State subgrants at least 80 percent of its funds to local 
governments.

7. Local governments purchase equipment directly or through the state.

8. Local governments submit receipts to the state for reimbursement.

9. State draws down grant funds to reimburse local governments.

The total time required to complete these steps is dependent upon ODP 
requirements and state and local laws, requirements, regulations, and 
procedures. Generally, the DHS OIG report and the report of the House 
Select Committee on Homeland Security found similar causes of delays in 
getting funds to local governments and first responder agencies. These 
included delays in completing state and local planning requirements and 
budgets; legal requirements for the procedures to be used by local 
governments in accepting state grant allocations; the need to establish 
procedures for the use of the funds, such as authority to buy equipment 
and receive reimbursement later; and procurement requirements, such as 
bidding procedures. Generally, neither the IG report nor the House 
Select Committee report found that the delays were principally due to 
ODP's grant management procedures and processes.

ODP Grant Awards to the States:

Both the DHS OIG report and the House Select Committee report found 
that ODP's grant applicant process was not a major factor in delaying 
the distribution of funds to states. The DHS OIG found that in fiscal 
years 2002 and 2003, ODP reduced the time it took to make on-line grant 
application guidance and applications available to states, process 
grant applications, and award the grants to states after applications 
were submitted. The DHS OIG found that the total number of days from 
grant legislation enacted to award of grants to states declined from on 
average 292 days for fiscal year 2002 grants to on average 77 days for 
fiscal year 2003 grants. For the three states we examined, we found 
that the time between the enactment of the appropriation and ODP's 
award of the grant to these states declined from 8 months in fiscal 
year 2002 to 3 months for fiscal year 2003 State Homeland Security 
Grant Program, Part I, and 2 months for fiscal year 2003 State Homeland 
Security Grant Program, Part II.

One factor that did delay the states' ability to use ODP grant funds 
was the imposition of special conditions. In fiscal years 2002 and 
2003, ODP imposed special conditions for the state homeland security 
formula grants if the state had failed to adequately complete one of 
the requirements of the grant application. For example, in fiscal years 
2002 and 2003, to receive funding states had to submit detailed budget 
worksheets to identify how grant funds would be used for equipment, 
training, and exercises. To accelerate the grant distribution process, 
ODP would award funds to states that had not completed the budget 
detail worksheets, with the special condition that states and locals 
would be essentially unable to use the funds until the required budgets 
were submitted and approved. Thus, the time it took to lift the special 
conditions was largely dependent upon the time it took state and local 
governments to submit the required documentation. States could not 
begin to draw down on the grant funds until the special conditions were 
met. In one state we reviewed, ODP notified the state of the special 
conditions on May 28, 2003, and the conditions were removed on August 
6, 2003, after the state had met those conditions. In another state, 
ODP notified the state of the special conditions on September 13, 2002, 
and the conditions were removed on March 18, 2003.

ODP imposed special conditions on both the fiscal year 2002 State 
Domestic Preparedness Grant Program and the fiscal year 2003 State 
Homeland Security Grant Program, Part I, but not on the State Homeland 
Security Grant Program, Part II.

State Awards to Local Governments:

After ODP makes its initial award, the state must subgrant at least 80 
percent of its grant award to local units of government. In fiscal year 
2003, the states had to certify to ODP within 45 days that they had 
made these subgrants.[Footnote 5] The subgrant entities and procedures 
can vary with each state, making it hard to generalize about this phase 
of the distribution process. In our work, we found that some states 
subgranted the funds to the county level, while another subgranted to 
regional task forces composed of several counties. Subgrantees also 
varied in their procedures to distribute funds to local governments. 
Some subgrantees managed the grant process themselves, while others 
chose to pass funds further down, to a county or city within the 
jurisdictional area.

Most States Met Deadline for Subgranting Funds But Some Local 
Jurisdictions Were Not Prepared to Spend Funds:

As reported by the DHS OIG, Congress adopted appropriation language for 
the fiscal year 2003 State Homeland Security Grant, Part II, that 
required states to transfer 80 percent of first responder grant funds 
to local jurisdictions within 45 days of the funds being awarded by 
ODP. This requirement was included in the appropriation bill to ensure 
that states pass funds down to local jurisdictions quickly, and ODP 
incorporated this requirement into its grant application guidance. 
However, according to the DHS OIG report, this action had a limited 
effect because most states met the 45-day deadline by counting funds as 
transferred when the states agreed to allocate a specific amount of the 
grant to a local jurisdiction, even if the state had not determined how 
the funds would be spent or when contracts for goods and services would 
be let. Additionally, many states and local jurisdictions delayed 
spending of prior year grant funds in order to meet the fiscal year 
2003 requirement. The House Select Committee staff also reported that 
nearly all states met this 45-day requirement with respect to 2003 
funding as of February 2004, but noted that this may not reflect the 
actual availability of funds for expenditures by local jurisdictions. 
The committee report cited the example of Seattle, Washington. While it 
had been awarded $30 million in May 2003, Seattle received 
authorization to spend these funds only shortly before the April 2004 
release of the committee's report. In the three states we examined, we 
also found that states had certified they had allocated funds to local 
jurisdictions within the required 45-day period.

Various Local Legal and Procedural Requirements Took Time:

According to the DHS OIG, state and local governments were sometimes 
responsible for delaying the delivery of fiscal year 2002 grant funds 
to first responders because various governing and political bodies 
within the states and local jurisdictions had to approve and accept the 
grant funds. Six out of the 10 states included in the DHS OIG's sample 
reported that their own state's review and approval process was one of 
the top three reasons that the funds had not been spent by the time the 
report was published. For example, one of three states for which data 
were available took 22 days to accept ODP's award and 51 days to award 
a subgrant to one of its local jurisdictions; the local jurisdiction 
did not accept the grant for another 92 days. Another state took 25 
days to accept ODP's grant award and up to 161 days to award the funds 
to its local jurisdictions. Local jurisdictions then took up to 50 days 
to accept the awards.

Our work showed similar results. One city was notified on July 17, 2003 
that grant funds were available for use, but the city council did not 
vote to accept the funds until November 7, 2003.

The House Select Committee reported that, in over half of the states 
they reviewed, local jurisdictions had not submitted detailed spending 
plans to the states prior to the time the states had transferred grant 
funds to them. Specifically, they found that often times, even though a 
reasonable estimate of the available award amount was available months 
earlier, many local jurisdictions waited to initiate their planning 
efforts until they were officially notified of their grant awards. 
Because ODP imposed special conditions in some grant years, these local 
jurisdictions, therefore, could not begin to draw down funds until they 
provided the detailed budget documentation, outlining how the funds 
would be spent, as required by ODP.

For the fiscal year 2002 statewide homeland security grants, local 
jurisdictions and state agencies were required to prepare, submit, and 
receive approval of detailed budget work sheets that specifically 
accounted for all grant funds provided. This specific detailing of 
items included not only individual equipment items traditionally 
accounted for as long-term capital equipment, but also all other items 
ordinarily recorded in accounting records as consumable items, such as 
disposable plastic gloves, that usually need not be accounted for 
individually. Preparing this detailed budget information took time on 
the part of local jurisdictions to prepare and for the states and ODP 
to review and approve.

Since the first round of fiscal year 2003 state homeland security 
grants, ODP has not linked the submission and approval of detailed 
budget information to the release of grant funds. ODP required the 
submission and approval of the same detailed budget worksheets for the 
fiscal year 2003 statewide grants, but did not condition the release of 
funds on their submission and approval. For the fiscal year 2004 
grants, ODP still requires the submission of detailed budget work 
sheets by local jurisdictions to the state, but not to ODP, for its 
approval.

The DHS OIG also found that there were numerous reasons for delays in 
spending grant funds. Some were unavoidable and others they found to be 
remediable. In general, the DHS OIG found identifying the highest 
priority for spending grant funds to be a difficult task. Most states 
the DHS OIG visited were not satisfied with the needs analysis that 
they had done prior to September 11, 2001. Some states took the time to 
update their homeland security strategies, and one state delayed fiscal 
year 2002 grant spending until it had completed a new strategy using 
ODP's fiscal year 2003 needs assessment tool. The DHS OIG also found 
little consistency in how the states manage the grant process. The 
states used various methods for identifying and prioritizing needs and 
allocating grant funds. States may rely on the work of regional task 
forces, statewide committees, county governments, mutual aid groups, or 
local fire and police organizations to identify and prioritize grant 
spending.

Both the DHS OIG report and House Select Committee report noted that 
state and local procurements have, in some cases, been affected by 
delays resulting from specific procurement requirements. Some states 
purchase equipment centrally for all jurisdictions, while others sub-
grant funds to local jurisdictions that make their own purchases. In 
these latter instances, local procurement regulations can affect the 
issuance of equipment purchase orders. The House Select Committee 
report discussed how state and local procurement processes and 
regulations could slow the expenditure of grant funds. For example, in 
Kentucky, an effort was taken to organize bidding processes for 
localities and to provide them with pre-approved equipment and services 
lists. However, state and local laws require competitive bidding for 
any purchases above $20,000, a requirement that can delay actual 
procurements. Moreover, if bids had been requested for a proposal and 
those bid specifications were not met, then the bidding process must 
start over again. As Kentucky's Emergency Managing Director explained, 
"There is a process and procedure that must be gone through before 
localities can actually spend the funds, and the state has not 
identified funds that are exempt from these local rules of procedure 
that are in place.":

In one of the jurisdictions for which we obtained documentation, we 
also found that procurement regulations may require that funds be 
available prior to the issuance of equipment purchase orders. This 
requirement took from June 18, 2003 to September 4, 2003 before 
purchase orders could be issued. In the individual jurisdictions in the 
three states for which we obtained documentation we also found that 
some apparent delays in obligating grant funds resulted from the time 
normally required by local jurisdictions to purchase and contract for 
items, to prepare requests for proposals, evaluate them once received, 
and have purchase orders approved by legal departments and governing 
councils and boards. In one case, the time between the city 
controller's release of funds to the issuance of the first purchase 
order was about 3 months, from September 4, 2003, to December 15, 2003.

Conclusion:

The reports by the DHS OIG and by the Select Committee, as well as the 
preliminary work we have undertaken, support the conclusion that local 
first responders may not have anticipated the natural delays that 
should have been expected in the complex process of distributing 
dramatically increased funding through multiple governmental levels 
while maintaining procedures to ensure proper standards of 
accountability at each level. The evidence available suggests that the 
process is becoming more efficient and that all levels of government 
are discovering and institutionalizing ways to streamline the grant 
distribution system. These increased efficiencies, however, will not 
continue to occur unless federal, state, and local government each 
continue to examine their processes for ways to expedite funding for 
the equipment and training needed by the nation's first responders. At 
the same time, it is important that the quest for speed in distributing 
funds does not hamper the planning and accountability needed to ensure 
that the funds are spent on the basis of a comprehensive, well-
coordinated plan to provide first responders with the equipment, 
skills, and training needed to be able to respond quickly and 
effectively to a range of emergencies, including, where appropriate, 
major natural disasters and terrorist attacks.

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my statement. I would be pleased to answer 
any questions that you or other members of the subcommittee may have.

FOOTNOTES

[1] Funds are also distributed to the District of Columbia, Puerto 
Rico, and the four territories.

[2] Department of Homeland Security: Office of Inspector General, An 
Audit of Distributing and Spending "First Responder" Grant Funds, OIG-
04-15 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 2004).

[3] House Select Committee On Homeland Security, An Analysis of First 
Responder Grant Funding, (Washington, D.C.: April 2004).

[4] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Homeland Security: Reforming 
Federal Grants to Better Meet Outstanding Needs, GAO-03-1146T 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 3, 2003).

[5] For fiscal year 2004 grants, states were allowed 60 days.