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entitled 'Capitol Visitor Center: Effective Schedule Management and 
Updated Cost Information Are Needed' which was released on June 14, 
2005.

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Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on the Legislative Branch, Committee on 
Appropriations, U.S. Senate:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:30 a.m. EDT:

Tuesday, June 14, 2005:

Capitol Visitor Center:

Effective Schedule Management and Updated Cost Information Are Needed:

Statement of Bernard L. Ungar, Director: 
Terrell Dorn, Assistant Director: 
Physical Infrastructure Issues:

GAO-05-811T:

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

We are pleased to be here today to discuss GAO's ongoing work on the 
progress of the Capitol Visitor Center (CVC) project. As requested, we 
will focus our remarks today on the Architect of the Capitol's (AOC) 
progress in achieving selected project milestones and in managing the 
project's schedule since the Subcommittee's May 17 hearing on the 
project.[Footnote 1] We will also discuss the project's costs and 
funding, including the potential impact of schedule-related issues on 
the project's costs. Our observations today are based on our review of 
schedules and financial reports for the CVC project and related records 
maintained by AOC and its construction management contractor, Gilbane 
Building Company; our observations on the progress of work at the CVC 
construction site; and our discussions with CVC project staff, 
including AOC, its construction management contractor, and 
representatives of an AOC schedule consultant, McDonough Bolyard Peck 
(MBP). We did not perform an audit; rather we performed our work to 
assist Congress in conducting its oversight activities.

In summary, AOC's sequence 2 contractor, Manhattan Construction 
Company, has met 3 of 11 significant milestones scheduled for 
completion by today's hearing. The sequence 2 contractor missed the 
other 8 milestones for several reasons, such as unforeseen site 
conditions and a design problem. AOC does not expect these delays to 
affect the CVC project's scheduled September 2006 completion date 
because AOC believes that the contractor can recover the lost time. 
Furthermore, certain utility tunnel work is scheduled for completion 
about 5 months later than previously reported, but AOC does not expect 
this delay to postpone the project's completion date because AOC plans 
to use temporary equipment that will allow the project to move forward 
but will also increase its costs. However, largely because of past 
problems and risks and uncertainties that face the project, we continue 
to believe that the project is more likely to be completed in the 
December 2006 to March 2007 time frame than in September 2006, as shown 
in AOC's schedule. AOC and its construction management contractor have 
continued their efforts to address two of the areas we identified 
during the Subcommittee's May 17 CVC hearing as requiring priority 
attention--having a realistic, acceptable schedule and aggressively 
monitoring and managing adherence to the schedule. But AOC has not yet 
developed risk mitigation plans or, as the Subcommittee requested, 
prepared a master schedule that integrates the major steps needed to 
complete construction with the steps needed to prepare for operations. 
Until recently, AOC did not have funding to continue contractual 
support it had been receiving to help plan and prepare for CVC 
operations. We continue to believe that these areas require AOC's 
priority attention and that the project's estimated cost at completion 
will be between $522 million and $559 million, and that, as we 
indicated during the May 17 hearing, AOC will likely need as much as 
$37 million more than it has requested to cover risks and uncertainties 
to complete the project. We believe that most of these additional funds 
will be needed in fiscal years 2006 and 2007, although exactly how much 
will be needed at any one time is not clear. We are recommending that 
this fall AOC update its estimate of the cost to complete the project.

Schedule Milestones and Management:

AOC and its major construction contractors have made progress since the 
Subcommittee's May 17 hearing. As of May 31, the construction 
management contractor reported that the CVC project's construction was 
about 65 percent complete. The sequence 1 contractor, Centex 
Construction Company, which was responsible for the project's 
excavation and structural work, has continued to address punch-list 
items, such as stopping water leaks that continue to appear in 
perimeter walls. According to the construction management contractor, 
as of May 31, the sequence 1 contractor had completed almost all of the 
items on the punch list. AOC expects the sequence 1 contractor to be 
completely done with this list and off site by June 30, although the 
contractor may have to return later to address some issues. 
Furthermore, the sequence 2 contractor, which is responsible for the 
mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and finishing work, continued to make 
progress in these areas, including erecting masonry block, placing 
concrete, and installing finish stone, sheetrock and plaster, and 
granite pavers. The sequence 2 contractor also continued work on the 
utility tunnel.

As the Subcommittee requested, we worked with AOC on the selection of 
several sequence 2 milestones that the Subcommittee can use to help 
track the project's progress from the Subcommittee's May 17 hearing to 
July 31. These milestones are shown in appendix 1 and include 
activities on the project's critical path, as well as other activities 
that we and AOC believe are important for the project's timely 
completion.[Footnote 2] AOC's sequence 2 contractor completed 3 of the 
11 activities listed in appendix 1 as scheduled for completion by 
today. The 11 activities include certain stone work in the Great Hall, 
a portion of the masonry wall in the auditorium, and certain utility 
tunnel work. According to AOC, the delays in 8 of these activities were 
caused by a number of factors, such as unforeseen site conditions, a 
design problem, and delays in completing certain masonry work that had 
to be completed before other work could be done. AOC does not expect 
these delays to postpone the project's scheduled September 2006 
completion date because it believes that the sequence 2 contractor can 
recover the lost time.

Since the May 17 hearing, AOC learned that the utility tunnel, which 
was expected to be operational in October 2005, is not now likely to be 
operational until March 2006. According to AOC, this date slipped 
because of unforeseen site conditions and the need to do certain work 
earlier than originally anticipated. The sequence 2 contractor has 
indicated that the impact of this delay on the project's scheduled 
September 2006 completion date will be mitigated by the use of 
temporary dehumidification equipment. However, this mitigation approach 
will result in additional costs, as explained later in this statement. 
Also since the May 17 hearing, AOC's contractors have updated the 
project's master schedule, and the new schedule shows seven paths that 
are critical or are within 15 days of being critical. For example, the 
updated schedule shows millwork and finishing the auditorium to be 
within 10 days and 15 days, respectively, of being critical. Having so 
many critical or near-critical paths complicates schedule management 
and increases the risk of problems that could lead AOC to miss its 
scheduled completion date.

In our May 17 statement, we provided several observations on AOC's 
management of the project's schedules, including our view that problems 
in this area contributed to slippage in the project's scheduled 
completion date and additional project costs associated with delays. We 
also discussed recommendations we had already made to AOC to enhance 
its schedule management. AOC had agreed with these recommendations and 
had generally begun to implement them, but, it still needed, in our 
view, to give priority attention to them to keep the project on track 
and as close to budget as possible. A brief discussion follows of the 
issues that need AOC's priority attention and the current status of 
AOC's actions to address these issues.

* Having realistic time frames for completing work and obtaining fully 
acceptable schedules from contractors. Over the course of the project, 
AOC's schedules have shown dates for completing tasks that project 
personnel themselves considered unlikely to be met. In addition, the 
master project schedule ( prepared by AOC's construction management 
contractor) that AOC was using in May 2005 did not tie all interrelated 
activities together and did not identify the resources to be applied 
for all the activities, as AOC's contract requires. On June 10, the 
construction management contractor told us that it had reassessed the 
reasonableness of the activity durations and found that they reasonably 
reflected the time required to perform the activities. Last week, AOC 
provided us with a revised master schedule that the construction 
management contractor said (1) reflected significant improvement in the 
linkage of interrelated tasks and (2) provided sufficient information 
to manage the project's resources. AOC said that it planned to approve 
and accept this schedule subject to several conditions. Although our 
initial review of this revised schedule indicates that a number of 
improvements have been made, we have not yet had time to fully evaluate 
it. We will have a more complete assessment for the Subcommittee by its 
next CVC oversight hearing. Furthermore, as we said during the May 17 
hearing, we continue to believe that AOC's scheduled September 2006 
completion date is optimistic and that the project is more likely to be 
done in the December 2006 to March 2007 time frame, largely because of 
past problems, the risks to the schedule identified during our 
assessment of it in early 2004, and future risks and uncertainties 
facing the project. We plan to update our risk assessment for AOC's 
revised schedule and have our update completed in September 2005. Our 
update will include a review of activity durations.

* Aggressive monitoring and managing contractors' adherence to the 
schedule, including documenting and addressing the causes of delays, 
and reporting accurately to Congress on the status of the project's 
schedule. We noted in our May 17 testimony that neither AOC nor its 
construction management contractor had previously (1) adhered to 
contract provisions calling for monthly progress review meetings and 
schedule updates and revisions, (2) systematically tracked and 
documented delays and their causes as they occurred or apportioned 
their time and costs to the appropriate parties on an ongoing basis, 
and (3) always accurately reported on the status of the project's 
schedule. AOC and the construction management contractor have been 
working with the schedule consultant to develop a new, systematic 
process for tracking, analyzing, and documenting schedule progress and 
delays, addressing schedule issues, approving proposed schedule 
changes, and reporting on the schedule's status. On June 7, AOC, the 
construction management contractor, the sequence 2 contractor, and the 
schedule consultant conducted the first monthly schedule status review 
session using the newly developed approach. If effectively implemented 
and sustained, we believe that this new approach should generally 
resolve the schedule management concerns we previously raised, although 
it is not yet clear how delays will be handled on an ongoing basis. We 
believe that the successful implementation of this new approach, 
including the effective handling of delays, depends heavily on the CVC 
project team's continuous commitment of sufficient skilled resources to 
schedule management. On June 9, the construction management contractor 
told us that a project control engineer who had been assigned 
temporarily to help manage the project's schedule would be working full 
time on the project starting June 13. We plan to closely monitor the 
implementation of this new approach, including the resources devoted to 
it, the handling of delays, and the accuracy of the information 
provided to Congress.

* Developing and implementing risk mitigation plans. In the course of 
monitoring the CVC project, we have identified a number of risks and 
uncertainties that could have significant adverse effects on the 
project's schedule and costs. Some of these risks, such as underground 
obstructions and unforeseen conditions, have already materialized and 
have had the anticipated adverse effects. We believe the project 
continues to face risks and uncertainties, such as unforeseen 
conditions associated with the project's remaining tunnels and other 
work, scope gaps or other problems associated with the segmentation of 
the project between two major contractors, and shortages in the supply 
of stone and skilled stone workers. Although we have recommended that 
AOC develop and implement risk mitigation plans for these types of 
risks and uncertainties, AOC has not yet done so. AOC has agreed, 
however, to begin to do this shortly, and, according to AOC's CVC 
project executive, is exploring possible approaches.

* Preparing a master schedule that integrates the major steps needed to 
complete CVC construction and the steps necessary to prepare for 
operations. A number of activities, such as hiring and training staff, 
procuring supplies and services, and developing policies and 
procedures, need to be planned and carried out on a timely basis for 
CVC to open to the public when construction is complete. Although AOC 
has started to plan and prepare for CVC operations, as we indicated in 
our May 17 testimony, it has not yet developed a schedule that 
integrates the construction activities with those activities necessary 
to prepare for operations. The Subcommittee requested such a schedule 
during its April 13, 2005, hearing on AOC's fiscal year 2006 budget 
request. Because of a lack of funds, AOC had not been able to extend 
the work of a contractor that had been helping it plan and prepare for 
operations. Last week, AOC received the funding needed to re-engage 
this contractor, and AOC said that it would be working with the 
contractor to continue planning and preparing for CVC operations.

Project Costs and Funding:

As we said during the Subcommittee's May 17 hearing, we estimate that 
the cost to complete the construction of the CVC project, including 
proposed revisions to its scope, will range from about $522 million 
without provision for risks and uncertainties to about $559 million 
with provision for risks and uncertainties. As of June 10, 2005, about 
$483.7 million had been provided for CVC construction. In its fiscal 
year 2006 budget request, AOC asked Congress for an additional $36.9 
million for CVC construction. AOC believes this amount will be 
sufficient to complete construction and, if approved, will bring the 
total funding provided for the project's construction to $520.6 
million. Adding $1.7 million to this amount for additional work related 
to the air filtration system that we believe will likely be necessary 
brings the total funding needed to slightly more than the previously 
cited $522 million. AOC believes that it could obtain this $1.7 
million, if needed, from the Department of Defense. AOC's $36.9 million 
budget request includes $4.2 million for potential additions to the 
project's scope (e.g. congressional seals, an orientation film, and 
storage space for backpacks) that Congress will have to consider when 
deciding on AOC's fiscal year 2006 CVC budget request.

AOC has not asked Congress for the additional $37 million ($559 million 
minus $522 million) that we believe will likely be needed to address 
the risks and uncertainties that continue to face the project. These 
include, but are not limited to, shortages in the supply of stone and 
skilled stone workers, unforeseen conditions, scope gaps, further 
delays, possible additional requirements or time for life safety or 
security changes and commissioning, unknown operator requirements, and 
contractor coordination issues. These types of problems have been 
occurring, and as of June 1, 2005, AOC had received proposed sequence 2 
change orders with costs estimated to exceed the funding available in 
fiscal year 2005 for sequence 2 changes by about $400,000.[Footnote 3] 
AOC plans to help cover this potential shortfall by requesting approval 
from the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations to reprogram 
funds from other project elements that it does not believe will be 
needed for those elements. AOC can also request approval from these 
Committees to use part of $10.6 million that Congress approved for 
transfer to the CVC project from funds appropriated for Capitol 
Buildings operations and maintenance.[Footnote 4]

For several reasons, we believe that AOC may need additional funds for 
CVC construction in the next several months. These reasons include the 
pace at which AOC is receiving proposed change orders for sequence 2, 
the problems it is encountering and likely to encounter in finishing 
the project, and the uncertainties associated with how much AOC may 
have to pay for sequence 2 delays as well as when AOC will have fiscal 
year 2006 funds available to it. For example, AOC is likely to incur 
additional costs for dehumidification if the expected delay in the 
utility tunnel cannot be mitigated or AOC has to obtain temporary 
equipment to provide steam and chilled water to CVC. AOC may be able to 
meet this need as well as the other already identified needs by 
additional reprogramming of funds and by obtaining approval to use some 
of the previously discussed $10.6 million.[Footnote 5] However, these 
funds may not be sufficient to address the risks and uncertainties that 
may materialize from later this fiscal year through fiscal year 2007. 
Thus, while AOC may not need all of the remaining $37 million we have 
suggested be allowed for risks and uncertainties, we believe AOC is 
likely to need more funds in fiscal years 2006 and 2007 than it has 
already received and has requested to complete the construction of 
CVC's currently approved scope, although the exact amount and timing 
are not clear at this time. Effective implementation of our 
recommendations, including risk mitigation, could reduce AOC's funding 
needs.

Recommendation for Executive Action:

Given the development of a new project schedule, the pace at which 
sequence 2 change orders are being proposed, and the risks and 
uncertainties that continue to face the project, we recommend that, in 
the September to November 2005 time frame, the Architect of the Capitol 
update the estimated cost to complete the project. We believe that such 
information will be useful to Congress as it considers AOC's budget 
request for fiscal year 2007 as well as any other requests AOC may make 
for CVC funding. We expect to have our risk assessment of AOC's new 
project schedule done in September and believe that the information 
developed during this assessment will be important in estimating future 
costs. In addition, we believe that AOC will have more information on 
the possible costs of sequence 2 delays by that time. AOC has agreed to 
do this update.

Mr. Chairman, this completes our prepared statement. We would be happy 
to answer questions that you or other Subcommittee Members may have.

Contacts and Acknowledgments:

For further information about this testimony, please contact Bernard 
Ungar at (202) 512-4232 or Terrell Dorn at (202) 512-6923. Other key 
contributors to this testimony include Shirley Abel, Maria Edelstein, 
Elizabeth Eisenstadt, Brett Fallavolitta, Jeanette Franzel, Jackie 
Hamilton, Bradley James, Scott Riback, and Kris Trueblood.

[End of section]

Appendix I: Capitol Visitor Center Critical Construction Milestones May 
2005-July 2005:

Activity: Wall Stone Area 1; 
Location: Great Hall[A,B]; 
Scheduled completion: 5/11/05; 
Actual completion: 6/06/05.

Scheduled for completion between 5/17/05 and 6/14/05: 

Activity:  Wall Stone Area 3 Base Support; 
Location: Great Hall[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 5/20/05; 
Actual completion: 5/20/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Layout Area 4; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 5/20/05; 
Actual completion: 6/06/05.

Activity:  Saw Cut Road at 2nd Street; 
Location: Utility Tunnel[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 5/24/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Area 4 Base Support; 
Location: Great Hall[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 5/27/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Layout Area 5; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 5/27/05; 
Actual completion: 5/27/05.

Activity:  Masonry Wall Lower Level East; 
Location: Cong. Auditorium; 
Scheduled completion: 6/03/05; 
Actual completion: 5/25/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Area 5 Base Support; 
Location: Great Hall[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 6/06/05; 
Actual completion: 6/09/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Layout Area 6; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 6/06/05.

Activity:  Drill/Set Soldier Piles at 2nd Street; 
Location: Utility Tunnel[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 6/08/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Area 6 Base Support; 
Location: Great Hall[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 6/13/05.

Scheduled for completion between 6/15/05 and 7/31/05: 

Activity:  Wall Stone Layout Area 8; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 6/20/05.

Activity:  Masonry Wall; 
Location: Orientation Theater; 
Scheduled completion: 6/24/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Layout Area 9; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 6/24/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Area 9 Base Support; 
Location: Great Hall[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 7/05/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Installation Area 2; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 7/06/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Installation Area 3; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 7/06/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Installation Area 4; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 7/15/05.

Activity:  Wall Stone Area 9 Base; 
Location: Great Hall[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 7/15/05.

Activity:  Excavate/shore Station 0-1; 
Location: Utility Tunnel[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 7/21/05.

Activity:  Concrete Working Slab 2nd Street; 
Location: Utility Tunnel[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 7/26/05.

Activity:  Waterproof Working Slab Station 0-1; 
Location: Utility Tunnel[A]; 
Scheduled completion: 7/29/05.

Source: AOC's April 2005 CVC sequence 2 construction schedule for the 
scheduled completion dates and AOC and its construction management 
contractor for the actual completion dates.

Note: Actual completion information was obtained on June 9, and AOC did 
not expect that the wall stone area 6 base-support work in the Great 
Hall would be done by June 13; it is now expected to be done after June 
14.

[A] These activities are critical.

[B] This activity was scheduled for completion by the Subcommittee's 
May 17 hearing but was not done as of that date.

[End of table]

FOOTNOTES

[1] GAO, Capitol Visitor Center, Priority Attention Needed to Manage 
Schedules and Contracts, GAO-05-714T (Washington, D.C.: May 17, 2005).

[2] A critical path is a sequence of activities in a schedule that has 
the longest duration. There is no scheduling flexibility or slack time 
associated with the activities. This means that a delay in a critical 
path activity will delay the entire project unless a way is found to 
reduce the time required for other activities along the critical path. 
A schedule may have multiple critical paths simultaneously, and the 
critical path through a project can change as the project is updated 
and the time estimated to complete the tasks changes. Currently, AOC's 
schedule shows CVC's critical path running through wall stone and East 
Front stonework, and also shows other work elements, such as utility 
tunnel and millwork, as near critical (i.e. having little slack time).

[3] In our May 17 testimony, we reported that AOC had about $700,000 
remaining in its fiscal year 2005 funding for sequence 2 changes after 
deducting estimated costs for proposed changes it had received.

[4] Public Law 108-447, enacted in December 2004, provided that up to 
$10.6 million could be so transferred upon the approval of the House 
and Senate Committees on Appropriations. In March 2005, AOC requested 
that about $4 million of these funds be transferred to CVC, including 
some funds for construction-related work, such as design of the gift 
shop space. As of June 10, AOC had received approval to use about $2.8 
million of this $10.6 million. None of the $10.6 million was included 
in the $483.7 million above.

[5] AOC plans to fund anticipated additional costs for the House 
connector tunnel, the Jefferson Building connection to the Library of 
Congress tunnel, and certain security-related work by requesting 
approval to reprogram about $1.6 million from sequence 1 construction 
and the East Front Interface to these project elements.