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Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity, Committee on 
Veterans' Affairs, House of Representatives:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT:

Thursday, May 12, 2005:

Veterans' Employment and Training Service:

Preliminary Observations on Changes to Veterans' Employment Programs:

Statement of Sigurd R. Nilsen, Director, 
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues:

GAO-05-662T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-662T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Economic Opportunity, Committee on Veterans' Affairs, House of 
Representatives:

Why GAO Did This Study:

The Department of Labor's Veterans' Employment and Training Service 
(VETS) administers two programs designed to assist the roughly 700,000 
veterans who are unemployed in any given month. These two programs, the 
Disabled Veterans' Outreach Program (DVOP) and the Local Veterans' 
Employment Representative (LVER) program, fund employment, training, 
and job placement services to veterans. In 2002, Congress passed the 
Jobs for Veterans Act (JVA), which redefined the roles of DVOP and LVER 
staff and required that VETS establish a new performance accountability 
system.

This testimony is based on GAO's ongoing work in this area and focuses 
on three aspects: (1) the separation of DVOP's and LVER's roles and 
responsibilities; (2) VETS' performance accountability system for DVOP 
and LVER staff; and (3) VETS' system for monitoring DVOP and LVER 
performance.

What GAO Found:

VETS has established separate roles for DVOP and LVER staff and has 
provided policy guidance and training to states explaining these 
changes. Under JVA, states now determine how many DVOP and LVER staff 
they hire, where to place them within the local workforce areas, and 23 
states are planning to use some part-time DVOP staff. There are 
indications that integrating DVOP and LVER staff into the local 
workforce offices remains challenging. While VETS has issued guidance 
on an incentive program to encourage improved performance, state 
implementation of the program has varied, and 11 states do not plan to 
participate.

VETS has implemented employment measures for DVOP and LVER staff, but a 
minimum standard that all states must meet for veterans entering 
employment will not be available before 2007. VETS reported meeting 
Labor's goal of achieving a 58-percent employment rate for all veteran 
job seekers during program year 2003, but fell somewhat short of 
reaching a 60-percent employment goal for disabled veterans. Assessing 
how well DVOP and LVER programs are serving veterans may continue to be 
difficult due to ongoing concerns about data reliability.

VETS implemented a monitoring system in program year 2004 that relies 
primarily on state self-assessments of performance in conjunction with 
on-site reviews. It is unclear, however, how VETS staff at the state, 
regional, and national levels will use this information consistently to 
guide or improve the DVOP and LVER programs. VETS is working with other 
Labor agencies to coordinate monitoring and enforcement efforts.

Summary of Performance Outcomes for the DVOP and LVER Programs, Program 
Year 2003:

Outcome measure; 
All veterans and eligible persons: Actual; 
All veterans and eligible persons: Goal; 
Disabled veterans: Actual; 
Disabled veterans: Goal.

Entered employment rate; 
All veterans and eligible persons: 58 percent; 
All veterans and eligible persons: 58 percent; 
Disabled veterans: 53 percent; 
Disabled veterans: 60 percent.

Rate of retention in employment at 6 months; 
All veterans and eligible persons: 79 percent; 
All veterans and eligible persons: 72 percent; 
Disabled veterans: 77 percent; 
Disabled veterans: 65 percent.

Source: Fiscal year 2004 Performance Budget for VETS and VETS 200 
report.

[End of table]

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-662T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Sigurd Nilsen at (202) 
512-7215 or nilsens@gao.gov.

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

I am pleased to be here today to talk about our preliminary 
observations on the status of implementation of some key provisions of 
the Jobs for Veterans Act (JVA).[Footnote 1] This legislation was 
passed in 2002 to improve various aspects of employment, training, and 
placement services provided to veterans. The need for such services is 
growing, given that roughly 700,000 veterans are unemployed in any 
given month and the number of service members leaving active duty--
estimated by the Department of Labor (Labor) at 200,000 yearly--is 
anticipated to rise with more troops returning to civilian life. 
Viewing employment services for veterans as a national responsibility, 
Congress established the Veterans' Employment and Training Service 
(VETS) within Labor to carry out national policy that veterans receive 
priority in employment and training opportunities.

Among the programs that VETS administers as part of its 
responsibilities to help veterans find employment are the Disabled 
Veterans' Outreach Program (DVOP) and the Local Veterans' Employment 
Representative (LVER) program. Nationwide, there are more than 2,000 
DVOP and LVER staff. The DVOP staff are responsible for providing 
outreach to veterans needing VETS employment services and in offering 
them a variety of intensive services, such as career guidance and 
provision of job development contacts. The DVOP staff are to give 
priority of service to veterans who are disabled. The LVER staff are 
focused on establishing relationships with area employers and on 
facilitating employment, training, and placement services for veterans. 
The DVOP and LVER staff are also mandatory partners in the one-stop 
center system created in 1998 by the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) 
where services provided by numerous employment and training programs 
are made available through a single network.

My testimony today addresses the current implementation status of three 
aspects of the DVOP and LVER programs that have changed as a result of 
JVA: (1) The separation of DVOP's and LVER's roles and 
responsibilities; (2) VETS performance accountability system for DVOP 
and LVER staff; and (3) VETS system for monitoring DVOP and LVER 
performance. My testimony is based on our past reports and ongoing work 
for this subcommittee and other congressional committees. We will 
report on our ongoing work at the end of the year, as mandated.

We recently held discussions with national and regional VETS officials 
and visited two judgmentally selected states, Washington and Colorado. 
In Colorado, we interviewed state VETS officials, and visited the 
National Veterans' Training Institute (NVTI) where we interviewed NVTI 
officials as well as DVOP and LVER staff from 24 states who were 
attending training classes. We also met with officials from various 
veterans' service organizations and the National Association of State 
Workforce Agencies. We started this work in January 2005, and it is 
ongoing. Our work is being conducted in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards.

In summary, VETS has established newly defined roles for DVOP and LVER 
staff and has provided this information by issuing policy guidance 
letters and conducting ongoing training at NVTI. States have been using 
the flexibility that these programs now provide, such as being able to 
determine how many DVOP and LVER staff are sufficient to meet their 
needs, where to place them within the local workforce area, and how to 
more effectively use them to serve local veteran job seekers. Almost 
half of the states plan to use JVA's authority to assign DVOP staff on 
a part-time basis. However, integrating DVOP and LVER staff into one-
stop centers remains a long-standing challenge. While VETS has issued 
guidance on the new incentive program to recognize exemplary service 
delivery by DVOPs and LVER staff, 11 states do not plan to participate 
due to reasons such as state laws or other policies that prevent 
individuals from receiving awards.

VETS has implemented employment measures for DVOP and LVER staff. 
However, VETS estimated that it will be at least until 2007 before it 
has the trend data needed to establish the minimum standard that all 
states must meet for the rate at which veterans enter employment. Using 
goals negotiated with the states in the interim, VETS reported that 
DVOP and LVER programs, as a whole, met Labor's goal of achieving a 58-
percent employment rate for all veteran job seekers during program year 
2003, although the programs fell somewhat short in reaching a 60-
percent employment goal for disabled veterans. However, assessing how 
well DVOP and LVER programs are serving veterans may continue to be 
difficult due to VETS' ongoing concerns about the reliability of 
service-related data.

VETS has implemented changes to its system for monitoring state 
compliance with the DVOP and LVER programs, and work continues to 
determine how best to use the monitoring information to improve program 
performance. VETS staff completed their first round of reviewing state 
plans and self-assessments of performance in program year 2004. In 
addition, VETS staff performed their first round of on-site reviews. It 
is unclear, however, how VETS staff at the state, regional, and 
national levels will use this information to consistently guide or 
improve the DVOP and LVER programs. VETS and the Employment and 
Training Administration (ETA) are working together to coordinate 
monitoring and enforcement efforts.

Background:

VETS administers national programs to (1) ensure that veterans receive 
priority in employment and training opportunities from the employment 
service; (2) assist veterans, reservists, and National Guard members in 
securing employment; and (3) protect veterans' employment rights and 
benefits. VETS carries out its responsibilities through a nationwide 
network that includes representation in each of Labor's 10 regions and 
staff in each state. The Office of the Assistant Secretary for VETS 
administers the agency's activities through regional administrators and 
a VETS director in each state. The state VETS directors are the link 
between VETS and the states' employment service system, to whom the 
DVOP and LVER staff--as state employees--directly report, and which is 
overseen by Labor's ETA. In fiscal year 2005, VETS requested $220.6 
million for all its programs, including $162.4 million for the DVOP and 
LVER programs. States plan to use this funding to support more than 
2,100 DVOP and LVER positions.

In September 2001, we identified some key areas in which VETS could 
better serve its clients by providing more flexibility and 
accountability in its programs.[Footnote 2] With its passage in 
November 2002, JVA amended the legislation that governs the DVOP and 
LVER programs by addressing many of the concerns we raised in our prior 
work. For example, JVA clarified the roles of DVOP and LVER staff, and 
gave states greater flexibility in determining how the staff are used. 
Under VETS guidance, the DVOP staff's duties now focus on providing 
intensive services--with priority given to disabled veterans--
including assessing the veterans' special needs and skills, developing 
a plan of action, and coordinating any needed supportive services, such 
as training and job referrals. The DVOP staff also provide outreach 
activities to locate candidates who could benefit from intensive 
services, such as homeless veterans. As stated in VETS guidance, the 
LVER staff's duties now include developing regular contact with 
employers to promote employment and training for veterans, developing 
relationships with community leaders to further promote veterans' 
employment, and promoting and monitoring the participation of veterans 
in federally funded programs.

The JVA legislation required states to develop plans that include 
details of the specific duties required of the DVOP and LVER positions 
and the strategy for their integration into the one-stop system. The 
legislation also required the establishment of a comprehensive 
performance accountability system to measure performance of the DVOP 
and LVER staff, using performance measures consistent with those of 
WIA.[Footnote 3] In addition, JVA established an incentive program to 
recognize eligible employees for excellence in providing veterans 
services and to encourage the improvement of services, with 1 percent 
of each state's annual grant allocation to be designated for incentive 
funding. In addition, JVA required VETS to establish a minimum standard 
for the rate at which veterans enter employment, a standard which all 
states are required to meet. The JVA legislation further required 
annual performance reviews of veterans' services, which VETS uses to 
monitor the DVOP and LVER programs to ensure proper accountability.

VETS Has Implemented Changes to DVOP and LVER Roles and 
Responsibilities, but One-Stop Integration Issues Remain:

VETS has taken action to implement the changes to the DVOP and LVER 
programs. VETS has issued policy guidance and conducted training on the 
DVOP and LVER staff's new roles and responsibilities. In addition, 
nearly half the states are taking advantage of JVA's flexibility to 
employ part-time DVOP staff. Although VETS has issued guidance on the 
performance incentive program to recognize exemplary staff as required 
by JVA, states have implemented this program differently, and 11 states 
do not plan to implement the incentive program because sometimes it 
conflicts with the state's policy if awards are given to individuals. 
In addition, integrating DVOP and LVER staff into one-stop centers 
continues to be challenging.

VETS Has Provided Guidance and Training to Distinguish DVOP from LVER 
Staff Duties and Many States Plan to Use Part-Time DVOP Staff:

Through its policy guidance letters, VETS has clarified the DVOP and 
LVER staff's new functions, along with new staffing and reporting 
requirements, including the use of part-time positions for DVOPs. In 
addition, shortly after JVA was enacted, NVTI held a series of 
implementation seminars covering DVOP and LVER staff's new roles and 
responsibilities that were attended by representatives from all states. 
NVTI also conducts case management training aimed at DVOP staff. At the 
end of its first training year in October 2004 following passage of 
JVA, NVTI reported training 282 DVOPs and estimated that an additional 
144 would be trained each year in the future. Similarly, NVTI conducts 
employer outreach training focused on LVERs. Because this class is new, 
NVTI estimates that it will train 264 LVERs by October 2005, and 
projects that an additional 240 LVERs would be trained each year.

One of the key changes in the new law gives states the flexibility to 
establish part-time DVOP and LVER positions, though this was already 
permitted to some extent for LVERs. According to their fiscal year 2005 
state plans, 23 states planned to use the new flexibility under JVA to 
employ both full-and part-time DVOPs, while 34 states planned to use 
the long-standing authority to employ both full-and part-time LVERs. As 
shown in table 1, part-time DVOP positions would comprise about 18 
percent of the total DVOP staff and about 44 percent of the total LVER 
staff.

Table 1: Full-Time and Part-Time DVOP and LVER Positions, Fiscal Year 
2005:

Type of position: Full-time; 
Total DVOP staff (percentage): 1,139 (82 percent); 
Total LVER staff (percentage): 871 (56 percent).

Type of position: Half-time; 
Total DVOP staff (percentage): 241 (18 percent); 
Total LVER staff (percentage): 675 (44 percent).

Type of position: Total; 
Total DVOP staff (percentage): 1,380 (100 percent); 
Total LVER staff (percentage): 1,522 (100 percent).

Source: GAO analysis of state plans.

Note: Figures include the District of Columbia and exclude Puerto Rico 
and the Virgin Islands.

[End of table]

Some states plan to use part-time DVOPs and LVERs extensively. For 
example, two states, Maine and Washington, planned to use part-time 
LVERs exclusively. In addition, South Dakota plans on having 87 percent 
of its DVOPs be part-time, and Vermont plans to have 91 percent of 
LVERs be part-time. By contrast, in New Jersey, only 5 percent of DVOPs 
are to be part-time and, in Indiana, 6 percent of LVERs are to be part-
time.

Not All States Plan to Use Incentive Awards:

VETS has implemented JVA's requirement to establish a performance 
incentive awards program by issuing policy guidance that lays out 
criteria and monetary as well as nonmonetary awards for states to 
consider in developing an awards program. According to fiscal year 2005 
state plans, 11 states did not plan to use the incentive program due to 
reasons such as conflicts with state law or other policies if the 
awards are given to individuals. The remaining 40 states planned to 
implement the incentive program in various ways. For example, in one 
state, two DVOPs were awarded a one-time maximum award of $1,000. In 
another state, however, top performing DVOP and LVER staff were given a 
one-time cash award for as little as $16. Regardless of their current 
approach to implementing incentives, some VETS officials said they 
would like to see award eligibility criteria expanded beyond 
individuals to include entire units.

Challenges Continue with Integrating DVOP and LVER Staff into One-Stop 
Centers:

Labor officials acknowledge that integration of DVOP and LVER staff 
into the one-stop centers has been a persistent challenge. The extent 
that implementing changes under JVA will assist in breaking down the 
barriers and entrenched cultures that have precluded integration in the 
one-stop centers will likely take years. According to the DVOP and LVER 
staff we interviewed, integration still varied widely among local 
areas, depending on the level of support provided by the one-stop 
manager for the DVOP and LVER programs. For example, one DVOP staff 
told us that the veterans program is highly integrated with the WIA 
program in her local one-stop, with both sharing case management 
responsibilities. In addition, she participates in regular meetings 
with the one-stop partners and attributed this cohesion to the 
commitment by her one-stop manager to work cooperatively with all the 
partners. In contrast, a DVOP from another state told us that he was 
assigned to tasks that prevented him from serving as many veterans as 
he would have liked.

In cases where there was poor integration, several reasons were cited 
by DVOP and LVER staff we interviewed from various states. One reason 
was that other one-stop staff were not educated or trained on serving 
veterans. An NVTI official told us that the institute has provided 
training to states that have requested it, but was concerned that the 
states that were struggling with providing veterans' services were the 
very ones that did not request training. Other reasons included the 
perception among DVOP and LVER staff we interviewed that there is 
little coordination between VETS and ETA to ensure integration among 
all partner programs, adopt uniform definitions of eligible veterans, 
and consistently give veterans priority of service regardless of 
program.[Footnote 4]

New Performance System Implemented for DVOPs and LVERs, but Too Early 
to Link Changes to Veterans' Employment Outcomes:

VETS has implemented some JVA changes to the accountability system 
related to the measures used for assessing DVOP and LVER performance, 
but it estimates that it will be at least 2007 before it can implement 
a minimum standard for veterans entering employment that all states 
will be expected to meet. Until the standard becomes available, VETS 
has used historically based outcomes in negotiating performance goals 
with states. In addition, Labor has established an entered-employment 
goal of 58 percent for veterans served through the DVOP and LVER 
programs. While VETS reported that the DVOP and LVER programs met 
Labor's program year 2003 goals for some measures, concerns about data 
reliability remain, preventing an accurate assessment of how well DVOP 
and LVER staff are performing.

Performance Measures Implemented, but More Time Needed to Establish 
Minimum Standard:

The performance measurement system for the DVOP and LVER programs has 
been in transition over the last several years. Prior to JVA, 
performance measures placed more emphasis on process-oriented measures-
-measures that simply tracked services provided to veterans, not on the 
employment outcomes veterans achieved. In addition, states used 
different data sources to report employment-related outcomes, resulting 
in performance that was not comparable across states. According to VETS 
officials, VETS adopted performance measures, beginning July 1, 2003, 
that are consistent with those of WIA, but has not yet specified when 
it will implement a system for weighting the measures to provide 
special consideration for such groups as disabled veterans, in 
accordance with JVA's requirements. Another fundamental change was the 
use of Unemployment Insurance (UI) wage records to identify veterans 
who get jobs rather than the use of time-consuming follow-up 
procedures. The current performance standards for the DVOP and LVER 
programs apply to various veterans populations, including disabled 
veterans. Three measures are based on WIA: (1) veterans that entered 
employment; (2) retention in employment at 6 months; and (3) job seeker 
satisfaction. In addition, VETS tracks entered employment following 
receipt of staff-assisted services and entered employment following 
receipt of case management.[Footnote 5]

VETS officials told us, however, that the measures will change again on 
July 1, 2005, when VETS will adopt the Office of Management and 
Budget's new common measures.[Footnote 6] VETS will retain several 
existing measures that track employment following services provided by 
DVOP and LVER staff. While the new common measures afford some 
advantages over existing measures, the frequent shifts in focus have 
made it difficult to collect comparable data that can be used to 
establish a pattern of performance for the DVOP and LVER programs and 
compare outcomes across different time periods. As such, VETS 
anticipates that it will take at least until 2007 to collect the 
necessary trend data to establish the minimum standard for the entered-
employment rate that all states will be expected to meet. In the 
interim, states are required to meet performance goals that they 
negotiate annually with VETS based on historic outcome levels. For 
example, according to VETS, states' program year 2004 negotiated goals 
for entered employment ranged from 46 percent to 67 percent for 
veterans, and from 41 percent to 65 percent for disabled veterans.

VETS Reports Meeting Goals, but Data Reliability Concerns Remain:

Nationwide, VETS reported that the DVOP and LVER programs met Labor's 
goals for the entered employment rate (58 percent) for all eligible 
veterans in program year 2003, while they fell short of their 60-
percent target entered employment rate for disabled veterans (see table 
2). Similarly, VETS reported that the programs exceeded goals for the 
rate at which veterans retained employment 6 months later.

Table 2: Summary of Performance Outcomes for DVOP and LVER Programs, 
Program Year 2003:

Outcome measure: Entered employment rate; 
All veterans and eligible persons: Actual: 58 percent; 
All veterans and eligible persons: Goal: 58 percent; 
Disabled veterans: Actual: 53 percent; 
Disabled veterans: Goal: 60 percent.

Outcome measure: Rate of retention in employment at 6 months; 
All veterans and eligible persons: Actual: 79 percent; 
All veterans and eligible persons: Goal: 72 percent; 
Disabled veterans: Actual: 77 percent; 
Disabled veterans: Goal: 65 percent.

Source: Fiscal year 2004 Performance Budget for VETS and VETS 200 
report.

[End of table]

Even after the new measures will be adopted, VETS officials remain 
concerned about the reliability of data used to assess performance. 
VETS officials attribute their concerns about service-related data 
reliability to DVOP and LVER staff not understanding the new 
definitions of the performance measures, lacking training on entering 
data into an automated system, inconsistent registration policies, or 
simply inputting erroneous data. In addition, VETS officials told us 
that some states have known data reliability issues with their 
management information systems. While Labor has established data 
validation procedures, the reliability of performance data is an issue 
that is not fully addressed by Labor's current validation procedures. 
For example, all states must certify that their data are correct using 
validation software that cross-checks the totals they report to VETS. 
However, validation does not extend to the case file level to ensure 
that DVOP and LVER staff accurately collect and report data at the 
point of service delivery. In comparing the reliability of data on 
services to those on employment outcomes, VETS officials believe that 
outcome data are more reliable because they are based on Unemployment 
Insurance (UI) wage records. However, as we have noted in past work, 
while UI wage records are reliable, they suffer from significant time 
lags, resulting in at least an approximately 1½-year wait to obtain 
information on outcomes.[Footnote 7]

Monitoring Systems Evolving to Strengthen Program Accountability:

In response to JVA's requirement to monitor the DVOP and LVER programs, 
VETS has shifted greater responsibility for monitoring program 
performance to the state level, and VETS' monitoring role continues to 
evolve from enforcer to partner in achieving state goals. VETS staff 
completed their first review of annual state self-assessments in 
program year 2004 and have completed their first round of site visits 
to a random sample of local offices. However, the extent that this new 
approach to monitoring DVOP and LVER performance strengthens program 
accountability may require several years of state and VETS experience 
collecting, reporting, and using information to improve services to 
veterans.

First Round of Reviews Completed:

Beginning in program year 2004, VETS began reviewing all the state 
plans for compliance with program requirements and, for any 
deficiencies noted during the review, required states to correct the 
relevant section of the plan. In addition, VETS requires states to 
submit annual self-assessments to identify best practices, ensure the 
approved state plan is being effectively implemented, determine the 
state's progress toward meeting its performance goals, and identify 
areas for technical assistance and training.

Besides conducting reviews of the state plans and self-assessments, 
VETS also conducts annual on-site monitoring reviews of 20 percent of 
local offices within each state, and all local offices must be visited 
at least once in 5 years. While we do not know how many offices have 
DVOP or LVER staff, there are an estimated 1,900 comprehensive one-stop 
centers and about 1,600 affiliate one-stop centers around the nation. 
The on-site reviews include interviewing personnel who are involved in 
providing services to veterans, observing the flow of customers in the 
lobby, and reviewing local guidance and plans.

VETS Still Working to Determine How Best to Use Monitoring Information:

Now that VETS has completed its first year under the new performance 
accountability system, it is unclear how it will use its monitoring 
results to improve DVOP and LVER program performance. At the national 
level, VETS has developed a system to track corrective actions needed 
in states' plans, but has not yet developed a strategy to best meld 
performance information from its other monitoring efforts to improve 
program performance at the local, state, and regional levels. For 
example, VETS officials in two states we visited told us that they use 
the site visit results to identify local offices needing targeted 
technical assistance. However, one state VETS official told us that 
because local offices varied considerably in their performance, he was 
uncertain whether the 20-percent sample used for site visits would 
accurately capture areas most in need of technical assistance. While 
information on DVOP and LVER performance is also available through 
local office reporting, VETS officials have not provided a consistent 
methodology to incorporate and analyze relative performance among the 
local offices, states, and regional offices. VETS and ETA continue to 
work on issues related to sharing the results of monitoring efforts, 
coordinating corrective actions, and taking a joint approach to 
enforcement.

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared remarks. I will be pleased to 
answer any questions you or other members of the subcommittee may have. 
Our remaining work will examine these and other issues in greater depth 
to meet our mandated reporting date at the end of the year.

Contact and Acknowledgments:

For further information regarding this testimony, please contact me at 
(202) 512-7215. Key contributors to this testimony were Lacinda Ayers, 
Jeremy Cox, Meeta Engle, Emily Pickrell, and Stanley Stenersen.

[End of section]

Related GAO Products:

Workforce Investment Act: States and Local Areas Have Developed 
Strategies to Assess Performance, but Labor Could Do More to Help. GAO-
04-657. Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2004.

Veterans' Employment and Training Service: Flexibility and 
Accountability Needed to Improve Service to Veterans. GAO-01-928. 
Washington, D.C.: September 12, 2001.

Veterans' Employment and Training Service: Proposed Performance 
Measurement System Improved, But Further Changes Needed. GAO-01-580. 
Washington, D.C.: May 15, 2001.

Veterans' Employment and Training Service: Strategic and Performance 
Plans Lack Vision and Clarity. GAO/T-HEHS-99-177. Washington, D.C.: 
July 29, 1999.

Veterans' Employment and Training Service: Assessment of the Fiscal 
Year 1999 Performance Plan. GAO/HEHS-98-240R. Washington, D.C.: 
September 30, 1998.

Veterans' Employment and Training: Services Provided by Labor 
Department Programs. GAO/HEHS-98-7. Washington, D.C.: October 17, 1997.

FOOTNOTES

[1] Pub. L. No. 107-288 (2002).

[2] GAO, Veterans' Employment and Training Service: Flexibility and 
Accountability Needed to Improve Service to Veterans, GAO-01-928 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 12, 2001). 

[3] The WIA performance measures include entered employment, retention 
at 6 months, and customer satisfaction.

[4] ETA has issued guidance on implementing JVA's requirement to 
provide priority of service to veterans eligible veterans as it relates 
to 20 Labor-funded programs that are affected by the requirement. See 
U.S. Department of Labor, Training and Employment Guidance Letter No. 5-
03, (Washington, D.C.: 2003). ETA officials told us that they also plan 
to raise awareness of priority of service through such efforts as 
promotion campaigns at one-stop centers.

[5] This measure applies only to the DVOP program.

[6] The Office of Management and Budget established a set of common 
measures to be applied to all federal employment and training programs 
administered by the departments of Labor, Education, Health and Human 
Services, Veterans Affairs, Interior, and Housing and Urban 
Development. This set of measures will allow Labor to sum outcomes 
across all its programs and provide a more uniform picture of outcomes 
achieved. Three common measures apply to programs serving adults: (1) 
entered employment; (2) employment retention; and (3) earnings 
increase. Although program efficiency was one of the measures in 
earlier ETA guidance, the policy has been revised and states will no 
longer be required to report on this measure. Instead, ETA will use 
existing program management data to report program efficiency at a 
national level.

[7] GAO, Workforce Investment Act: States and Local Areas Have 
Developed Strategies to Assess Performance, but Labor Could Do More to 
Help, GAO-04-657 (Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2004).