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Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, U.S. 
Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EST: 

November 8, 2007: 

Military Personnel: 

Federal Agencies Have Taken Actions to Address Servicemembers' 
Employment Rights, but a Single Entity Needs to Maintain Visibility to 
Improve Focus on Overall Program Results: 

Statement of Brenda S. Farrell, Director Defense Capabilities and 
Management: 

and: 

Statement of George H. Stalcup, Director Strategic Issues: 

GAO-08-254T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-08-254T, a testimony to Committee on Health, 
Education, Labor and Pensions, U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Since September 11, 2001, the Department of Defense (DOD) has mobilized 
more than 500,000 National Guard and Reserve members. As reservists 
return to civilian life, concerns exist about difficulties with their 
civilian employment. The Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment 
Rights Act (USERRA) of 1994 protects the employment rights of 
individuals, largely National Guard and Reserve members, as they 
transition back to their civilian employment. GAO has issued a number 
of reports on agency efforts to carry out their USERRA 
responsibilities. DOD, the Department of Labor (DOL), the Department of 
Justice (DOJ), and the Office of Special Counsel (OSC) have key 
responsibilities under the act. GAO was asked to discuss the overall 
process that the agencies use to implement USERRA. Specifically, this 
testimony addresses (1) organizational accountability in the 
implementation of USERRA and 

(2) actions that the agencies have taken to improve their processes to 
implement USERRA. For this testimony, GAO drew from its most recent 
reports on USERRA. 

What GAO Found: 

Depicted below are servicemembers’ options for obtaining federal 
assistance with their USERRA complaints. 

Figure: Servicemembers options for obtaining federal assistance with 
their USERRA complaints. 

This figure is a chart detailing servicemember's options for obtaining 
federal assistance with their USERRA complaints. If a servicemember 
cannot resolve an alleged USERRA violation directly with his or her 
employer, he or she can seek assistance from the Department of Defense, 
Department of Labor, or the Office of Special Counsel (Demonstration 
Project). 

If he or she goes to the Department of Defense, the DOD uses an 
ombudsman trained by the Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve 
organization to help resolve the problem through education and informal 
mediation. 

If he or she goes to the Office of Special Counsel (Demonstration 
Project), from February 8, 2005, to November 16, 2007, OSC will 
investigate USERRA complains from certain servicemembers who work for 
federal executive agencies. Complaints can come directly from 
servicemembers or be referred to OSC from DOL. 

If he or she goes to the Department of Labor, he or she can file a 
complaint with the DOL so that a Veterans' Employment and Training 
Services (VETS) investigator can try to resolve the situation through 
education and formal meditation. If not resolved, the servicemember can 
request a referral. Before complaints are referred, they are reviewed 
by a VETS regional office and DOL regional Office of the Solicitor. 

When a servicemember requests a referral, DOJ reviews the findings of 
DOL's VETS investigator and regional solicitor and then performs its 
own evaluation of the merits of the complaint, and obtains additional 
information as necessary. If DOJ determines the complaint has merit, it 
represents the servicemember against his or her private employer or 
state or local government employer in federal district court. If DOJ 
finds that the complaint has no merit, it notifies the claimant of his 
or her right to pursue a private course of action. 

When a servicemember requests a referral, OSC reviews the findings of 
DOL's VETS investigator and regional solicitor, then performs its own 
evaluation of the merits of the complaint, and obtains additional 
information as necessary. If OSC determines the complaint has merit, it 
represents the servicemember against his or her federal executive 
agency employer before the Merit Systems Protection Board. If OSC finds 
that the complaint has no merit, it notifies the claimant of his or her 
right to pursue a private cause of action. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO, Art Explosion. 

[End of figure] 

USERRA defines individual agency roles and responsibilities; however, 
it does not designate any single individual or office as accountable 
for maintaining visibility over the entire complaint resolution 
process. From the time informal complaints are filed with DOD’s 
Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve through final resolution of 
formal complaints at DOL, DOJ, or OSC, no one entity has visibility 
over the entire process. 

The four agencies have generally been responsive to GAO’s 
recommendations to improve the implementation of USERRA—on outreach to 
employers, data sharing and trend information, reporting to Congress, 
and the internal review of DOL’s investigators’ determinations of 
USERRA claims. 

What GAO Recommends: 

In October 2005 GAO suggested that Congress make a single entity 
accountable for maintaining visibility over the entire USERRA complaint 
resolution process. Designating one single entity would, in GAO’s view, 
enhance efforts to improve overall program results. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.GAO-08-254T]. For more information, contact 
Brenda Farrell at (202) 512-3604 or farrellb@gao.gov or George Stalcup 
at (202) 512-9490 or stalcupg@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman, Senator Enzi, and Members of the Committee: 

We are pleased to be here today to discuss four federal agencies' 
activities regarding the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment 
Rights Act (USERRA) of 1994.[Footnote 1] USERRA protects the employment 
and reemployment rights of millions of federal and nonfederal employees 
who leave their civilian employment to perform military or other 
uniformed service. USERRA also prohibits discrimination in employment 
against individuals because of their uniformed service, obligation to 
perform service, or membership or application for membership in the 
uniformed services. USERRA further prohibits employer retaliation 
against any individual who engages in protected activity under USERRA, 
regardless of whether the individual has performed service in the 
uniformed services. 

Mr. Chairman, in 2004 you recognized the issues associated with USERRA, 
particularly in light of the significant number of National Guard and 
Reserve members serving in Iraq and Afghanistan who would be 
demobilized, returned to their civilian jobs, and possibly called back 
to duty.[Footnote 2] Our testimony today is particularly relevant 
because more than 500,000 reservists have been called to duty since 
September 11, 2001. 

Our testimony is based on work that we have conducted for you and in 
response to congressional mandates. Since 2002, we have issued several 
reports on federal agency efforts to carry out USERRA responsibilities. 
The four agencies primarily responsible for assisting servicemembers 
under USERRA are the Department of Defense (DOD), the Department of 
Labor (DOL), the Department of Justice (DOJ), and the Office of Special 
Counsel (OSC).[Footnote 3] In our reports, we have made numerous 
recommendations to these agencies concerning the implementation of 
USERRA.[Footnote 4] 

Our testimony is based on our three most recent reports on USERRA and 
examining whether DOD, DOL, DOJ, and OSC have effectively carried out 
their USERRA responsibilities.[Footnote 5] Our testimony addresses (1) 
organizational accountability in the implementation of USERRA and (2) 
actions that the agencies have taken to improve their internal 
processes to implement USERRA. 

As noted, this testimony is based on our prior work. For that work, we 
reviewed applicable laws, guidance, regulations, and operations 
manuals. To assess how efficiently and effectively DOD, DOL, DOJ, and 
OSC address USERRA complaints, we collected, reviewed, and analyzed 
data from a wide variety of sources (including the four federal 
agencies) and interviewed responsible officials.[Footnote 6] We also 
reviewed DOD survey data and conducted original analysis on these data. 
To identify progress made by DOD in capturing employer information, we 
obtained and analyzed reporting compliance data from DOD and its 
reserve components. Further, we analyzed the number of disability 
complaints filed with DOD and DOL between fiscal years 2004 and 2006. 
We found DOD's civilian employment information and Employer Support of 
the Guard and Reserve (ESGR) databases to be of undeterminable 
reliability. 

In our October 2005 report, we compared data obtained from DOJ and OSC 
with those captured by DOL and, where available, we compared the 
information in DOL's USERRA Information Management System to 
information from hard copy complaint files for accuracy.[Footnote 7] 
For our July 2007 report, we assessed the reliability of selected data 
elements on federal employee complaints from DOL's USERRA database by 
tracing a statistically random sample of data to case files from 
February 8, 2005, through July 21, 2006.[Footnote 8] We determined that 
these data were sufficiently reliable, with the exception of certain 
data elements from DOL's USERRA database, which we note in this 
testimony. With respect to actions agencies have taken in response to 
our recommendations, we discussed the agencies' progress with 
knowledgeable officials from DOL, ESGR, and OSC. Our work on the above 
reports, as well as the work we conducted for this statement, was 
performed in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. 

Summary: 

Mr. Chairman, our main message today is that the four federal agencies 
have taken steps to better support and protect servicemembers' rights 
under USERRA in response to problems identified and recommendations 
made in our prior reports. However, no single agency is accountable for 
maintaining visibility over the entire complaint resolution process and 
therefore, it is difficult for the responsible agencies to effectively 
carry out their USERRA responsibilities. Designating one single entity 
would, in GAO's view, enhance efforts to improve overall program 
results. 

Background: 

The overall process used to implement USERRA is as follows. 

* Outreach and resolution of informal complaints. DOD and DOL share 
responsibility for outreach--the education of servicemembers and 
employers about their respective responsibilities under USERRA. Much of 
DOD's outreach is accomplished through ESGR, which performs most of its 
work through over 4,000 volunteers. DOL conducts outreach through its 
Veterans' Employment and Training Service (VETS) investigators, who are 
located nationwide. These investigators conduct briefings to educate 
employers and servicemembers about USERRA requirements and 
responsibilities and handle service-related employment and reemployment 
questions that are directed to their offices. 

Servicemembers who have USERRA-related issues with their employers can 
file informal complaints with DOD's ESGR. In our February 2007 report, 
we noted that nearly 10,000 informal complaints had been filed with 
ESGR in fiscal years 2004 and 2005. A subgroup of ESGR's specially 
trained volunteers serve as impartial ombudsmen who informally mediate 
USERRA issues that arise between servicemembers and their employers. 

* Formal complaints and prosecution. When ESGR ombudsmen cannot resolve 
complaints informally, they notify servicemembers about their options. 
Servicemembers can file a formal complaint with DOL or file complaints 
directly in court (if it involves nonfederal employers) or the Merit 
Systems Protection Board (if it involves federal executive branch 
employers). Under a federal sector demonstration project established by 
the Veterans Benefits Improvement Act of 2004,[Footnote 9] DOL 
investigates complaints against federal executive branch agencies for 
individuals whose social security numbers end in even numbers, and OSC 
is authorized to directly receive and investigate complaints and seek 
corrective action for individuals whose social security numbers end in 
odd numbers. 

When a servicemember files a formal complaint with DOL, one of VETS's 
115 investigators examines and attempts to resolve it.[Footnote 10] If 
VETS's investigators are unable to resolve servicemember complaints, 
DOL is to inform servicemembers that they may request to have their 
complaints referred to DOJ (for complaints against private sector 
employers or state and local governments) or to OSC (for complaints 
against federal executive branch agencies).[Footnote 11] Before 
complaints are sent to DOJ or OSC, they are reviewed by a VETS regional 
office for accuracy and sufficiency and by a DOL regional Office of the 
Solicitor, which assesses the legal basis for complaints and makes an 
independent recommendation. 

If DOJ or OSC determines that the complaint has merit, it will attempt 
to resolve the complaint without litigation and, if unsuccessful, 
represent the complainant in court (for those referred to DOJ) or 
before the Merit Systems Protection Board (for those referred to OSC). 

Figure 1 shows servicemembers' options for obtaining federal assistance 
with their USERRA complaints. 

Figure 1: Process to Resolve a USERRA Complaint Using Federal 
Assistance: 

This figure is a chart detailing servicemember's options for obtaining 
federal assistance with their USERRA complaints. If a servicemember 
cannot resolve an alleged USERRA violation directly with his or her 
employer, he or she can seek assistance from the Department of Defense, 
Department of Labor, or the Office of Special Counsel (Demonstration 
Project}. 

If he or she goes to the Department of Defense, the DOD uses an 
ombudsman trained by the Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve 
organization to help resolve the problem through education and informal 
mediation. 

If he or she goes to the Office of Special Counsel (Demonstration 
Project), from February 8, 2005, to November 16, 2007, OSC will 
investigate USERRA complains from certain servicemembers who work for 
federal executive agencies. Complaints can come directly from 
servicemembers or be referred to OSC from DOL. 

If he or she goes to the Department of Labor, he or she can file a 
complaint with the DOL so that a Veterans' Employment and Training 
Services (VETS) investigator can try to resolve the situation through 
education and formal meditation. If not resolved, the servicemember can 
request a referral. Before complaints are referred, they are reviewed 
by a VETS regional office and DOL regional Office of the Solicitor. 

When a servicemember requests a referral, DOJ reviews the findings of 
DOL's VETS investigator and regional solicitor and then performs its 
own evaluation of the merits of the complaint, and obtains additional 
information as necessary. If DOJ determines the complaint has merit, it 
represents the servicemember against his or her private employer or 
state or local government employer in federal district court. If DOJ 
finds that the complaint has no merit, it notifies the claimant of his 
or her right to pursue a private course of action. 

When a servicemember requests a referral, OSC reviews the findings of 
DOL's VETS investigator and regional solicitor, then performs its own 
evaluation of the merits of the complaint, and obtains additional 
information as necessary. If OSC determines the complaint has merit, it 
represents the servicemember against his or her federal executive 
agency employer before the Merit Systems Protection Board. If OSC finds 
that the complaint has no merit, it notifies the claimant of his or her 
right to pursue a private cause of action. 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: The demonstration project originally scheduled to end on 
September 30, 2007, was extended through November 16, 2007. Pub. L. No. 
110-92, §130 (2007). 

[End of figure] 

* Agency databases and reporting requirement. Each of the four federal 
agencies responsible for assisting servicemembers under USERRA 
maintains an automated database with complaint information. Both DOD 
and DOL have electronic complaint files that are stored in automated 
systems with query capabilities. 

The Secretary of Labor in consultation with the U.S. Attorney General 
and the Special Counsel prepares and transmits a USERRA annual report 
to Congress on, among other matters, the number of USERRA claims 
reviewed by DOL, and during the current demonstration project by OSC, 
along with the number of claims referred to DOJ or OSC. The annual 
report is also to address the nature and status of each claim, state 
whether there are any apparent patterns of violation of the USERRA 
provisions, and include any recommendations for administrative or 
legislative action that the Secretary of Labor, the U.S. Attorney 
General, or the Special Counsel consider necessary to effectively 
implement USERRA. 

No Single Agency Is Accountable for Maintaining Visibility over the 
Entire Complaint Resolution Process: 

Although USERRA defines individual agency roles and responsibilities, 
it does not make any single individual or office accountable for 
maintaining visibility over the entire complaint resolution process. In 
our October 2005 report, we noted that the ability of federal agencies 
to monitor the efficiency and effectiveness of the complaint process 
was hampered by a lack of visibility resulting, in part, from the 
segmentation of responsibility for addressing complaints among multiple 
agencies. Moreover, from the time informal complaints are filed with 
DOD's ESGR through final resolution of formal complaints at DOL, DOJ, 
or OSC, no one entity has visibility over the entire process. We found 
that the agency officials who are responsible for the complaints at 
various stages of the process generally have limited or no visibility 
over the other parts of the process. As a result, federal agencies have 
developed agency-specific output rather than cross-cutting goals 
directed toward resolving servicemembers' complaints. For example, 
agency goals address the complaint processing times of each stage of 
the process, rather than the entire time that elapses while 
servicemembers wait to have their complaints addressed. Meanwhile, the 
servicemember knows how much time is passing since the initial 
complaint was filed. In October 2005, we reported that more than 430 of 
the 10,061 formal complaints filed with DOL between October 1, 1996, 
and June 30, 2005, were closed and reopened and 52 complaints had been 
closed and reopened two or more times. Our analysis of those 52 
complaints showed that the processing times averaged about 3 to 4 
months but the total elapsed times that servicemembers waited to have 
their complaints fully addressed averaged about 20 to 21 months from 
the time they first filed their initial formal complaints with DOL 
until the time the complaints were fully addressed by DOL, DOJ, or 
OSC.[Footnote 12] 

We have previously suggested and continue to believe that Congress 
should consider designating a single individual or office to maintain 
visibility over the entire complaint resolution process from DOD 
through DOL, DOJ, and OSC. We believe this would encourage agencies to 
focus on overall results rather than agency-specific outputs and 
thereby improve federal responsiveness to servicemember complaints that 
are referred from one agency to another. In response to this matter, in 
our 2005 report, both DOL and OSC were supportive, and both agencies 
noted that they had the expertise to oversee the USERRA complaint 
resolution process. However, DOL stated that with the mandated 
demonstration project ongoing, it would be premature to make any 
suggestions or recommendations for congressional or legislative action 
until the project has been completed. DOD and DOJ did not provide 
comments on this matter. 

Agencies Have Taken Action to Improve Information on Employers and 
Assistance to Servicemembers Under USERRA: 

DOD, DOL, DOJ, and OSC have generally been responsive to the 
recommendations we have made in our prior reports. Following is the 
status of some of the improvements made thus far: 

Outreach: 

Integral to getting servicemembers the help they need is educating them 
and their employers on their respective responsibilities under USERRA. 
Since 2002, we have reported on DOD's need to obtain complete and 
accurate information on the civilian employers to better target its 
outreach efforts. Accurate, complete, and current civilian employer 
information is important to DOD to improve its ability to target 
outreach to employers, to make informed decisions concerning which 
reservists should be called for active duty to minimize the impact that 
mobilizations might have on occupations such as law enforcement, and to 
determine how businesses may be affected by reserve activation. As we 
recommended in our 2002 report, DOD implemented regulations that 
required the reporting and collection of employer information for 
reserve personnel. Additionally, DOD established compliance goals for 
these servicemembers. We noted in our February 2007 report that the 
percentage of servicemembers reporting employer information to DOD had 
increased, but most reserve components had still not reached their 
compliance goals. In addition, we found that employment data were not 
necessarily current because some reservists were not aware of 
requirements to update their employer information and the services had 
not established a formal mechanism to remind reservists to update this 
personnel information as necessary to reflect changes in their current 
employment. 

To improve the reporting of National Guard and Reserve employment 
information, we recommended that the Secretary of Defense direct the 
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs to 
establish specific time frames for reservists to report their 
employment data, set specific time frames for reserve components to 
achieve the established compliance reporting goals, and direct the 
service components to take action to ensure reporting compliance. In 
response to this recommendation, DOD indicated at the time of our 
report that its current policy on employer reporting established 
compliance goals. We noted in our report that DOD needed to establish a 
new deadline by which reservists must report their employer information 
to DOD and set specific time frames for reserve components to achieve 
the established compliance reporting goal. In addition, to encourage 
reservists to keep their employer data current, we recommended that DOD 
instruct all military departments to establish a formal review 
mechanism that would require all reservists to review and update at 
least annually their reported employment-related information. At the 
time of our February 2007 report, DOD was in the process of revising 
its policy on civilian employer reporting to require an annual review 
of reported employer information. 

DOD provides USERRA outreach and education to servicemembers using 
several mechanisms, including a toll-free information line and 
individual and group briefings. DOD monitors the extent to which it 
reaches this population and the occurrence of USERRA-related problems 
by including questions on these areas in its Status of the Forces 
survey, which is periodically conducted to identify issues that need to 
be addressed or monitored. We noted in our 2005 report that survey 
questions offer the potential to provide insight into compliance and 
employer support issues. However, questions on the surveys vary from 
year to year and have not always included those pertaining to USERRA 
compliance and employer support. To gauge the effectiveness of federal 
actions to support USERRA by identifying trends in compliance and 
employer support, we recommended that the Secretary of Defense direct 
the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to include 
questions in DOD's periodic Status of Forces Surveys to determine: 

* the extent to which servicemembers experience USERRA-related 
problems; 

* if they experience these problems, from whom they seek assistance; 

* if they do not seek assistance, why not; and: 

* the extent to which servicemembers' employers provide support beyond 
that required by the law. 

In response to this recommendation, DOD incorporated these additional 
USERRA-related questions in its June 2006 Status of the Forces survey. 

Data Sharing and Trend Identification: 

Because the resolution of servicemember complaints could involve 
multiple federal agencies, it is important that the agencies be able to 
effectively share and transfer information to efficiently process 
servicemember complaints. In October 2005, we found that the automated 
systems that DOD, DOL, DOJ, and OSC used to capture data about USERRA 
complaints were not compatible with each other.[Footnote 13] As a 
result, information collection efforts were sometimes duplicated, which 
slowed complaint processing times. To increase federal agency 
responsiveness to USERRA complaints, we recommended that DOD, DOL, DOJ, 
and OSC develop a system to allow the electronic transfer of complaint 
information. At the time of our report, DOL and OSC concurred with this 
recommendation, DOJ did not provide comments, and DOD deferred to the 
other agencies. We noted in our February 2007 report that DOL had 
implemented an enhancement to its USERRA database in October 2006 to 
enable the four USERRA coordinating agencies to electronically transfer 
case information between agencies. The database enhancement allowed 
DOD, DOL, DOJ, and OSC to access and update the status of cases using 
the Internet and produce a report containing aggregate USERRA complaint 
data on the cases over which they have jurisdiction. We further noted 
in this report that, despite these enhancements to the USERRA database 
to allow the electronic transfer of complaint information between 
agencies, DOD only had visibility over those cases that originated with 
informal complaints to DOD. Even though DOD shares responsibility with 
DOL for USERRA complaints, DOD did not have access to all USERRA 
complaint data, and we recommended that DOL provide these data to DOD's 
ESGR.[Footnote 14] In response to this recommendation, in October 2007, 
DOL provided DOD with the ability to view and download aggregate 
information on all USERRA cases in its database. 

In addition, in October 2005, we reported that when a complaint is 
referred from DOL to OSC or DOJ, the agencies are unable to efficiently 
process complaints because they are forced to create, maintain, copy, 
and mail paper files to other DOL offices and to OSC and DOJ. To reduce 
administrative burden and improve oversight of USERRA complaints 
processing, we recommended that DOL develop a plan to reduce reliance 
on paper files and fully adopt the agency's automated complaint file 
system. DOL concurred with this recommendation and, as a result, is 
developing an electronic case record system, scheduled for completion 
in October 2008, that will allow all agencies assigned to the case an 
opportunity to review documents and add investigative notes or records. 

To effectively identify trends in issues facing servicemembers, it is 
important in a segmented complaint resolution process that the 
complaint data generated by each of the federal agencies be 
sufficiently comparable. In our February 2007 report, we noted that the 
complaint categories used by each of the four agencies could not be 
uniformly categorized to reveal trends in USERRA complaints. In 
particular, we noted that the complaint data collected by DOD and DOL, 
the two agencies that see the highest volume of cases, were not 
categorized in a way that is conducive to meaningful comparison. 
Specifically, we found that the two agencies use different categories 
to identify reservists' USERRA complaints for issues such as being 
refused job reinstatement, denied an appropriate pay rate, or being 
denied vacation time. To allow for the analysis of trends in reporting 
USERRA complaints, we recommended that DOD and DOL adopt uniform 
complaint categories in the future that would allow aggregate trend 
analysis to be performed across the databases. At the time of our 
report, both DOD and DOL agreed with this recommendation. Since that 
time, DOD and DOL have collaborated to identify common complaint 
categories that will allow both agencies to match similar USERRA 
complaints. According to officials from both DOD and DOL, these 
complaint categories are expected to be pilot tested in fiscal year 
2008. 

As reservists continue to be exposed to serious injury in operations in 
Iraq and Afghanistan, the ability to identify disability reemployment 
complaints becomes more critical. However, we noted in our February 
2007 report that the four federal agencies responsible for assisting 
servicemembers with USERRA complaints could not systematically record 
and track disability-related complaints. Additionally, we found that 
these agencies do not distinguish disability-related complaints from 
other types of complaints for tracking and reporting purposes. For 
example, the servicemember must indicate that the case involves a 
disability for it to be classified as such, and these complaints may 
not be distinguishable from any other types of complaints because a 
single USERRA complaint may involve a number of issues that complicates 
the classification of the case by the agency. Further, disability- 
related complaints are not identified using consistent and compatible 
complaint categories. DOD classifies USERRA disability-related 
complaints within three categories including medical benefits, job 
placement, and time limits for reemployment, while DOL uses one 
category, reasonable accommodation and retraining for disabled, to 
classify USERRA disability-related complaints. To provide agencies with 
better information about disability-related employment complaints, we 
recommended that DOL develop a system for recording and tracking these 
complaints and share it with the other agencies that implement USERRA. 
DOL concurred with this recommendation at the time of this report. 
According to DOL officials, DOL's USERRA database identifies disability 
claims, and the agency has recently provided DOD, OSC, and DOJ with 
access to this system. 

Information Reported to Congress: 

As previously mentioned, the Secretary of Labor is required to provide 
an annual report to Congress that includes information on the number of 
USERRA complaints reviewed by DOL, along with the number of complaints 
referred to DOJ or OSC. We noted in our February 2007 report that DOL's 
report to Congress does not include information on informal complaints 
filed with ESGR. Therefore the complaint data that DOL reported to 
Congress for fiscal years 2004 and 2005 did not include 80 percent, or 
9,975 of the 12,421 total informal and formal USERRA complaints filed 
by reservists during that period. Without data from ESGR, Congress has 
limited visibility over the full range of USERRA issues that reservists 
face following deployment. Further, without these data, Congress may 
lack the information for its oversight of reserve employment matters. 
To gain a full perspective of the number and nature of USERRA 
complaints filed by reservists in gaining reemployment upon returning 
from active duty, we suggested that Congress consider amending the 
reporting requirement[Footnote 15] to require DOL to include data from 
DOD's ESGR in its annual report to Congress. In response to this matter 
for congressional consideration, Members of Congress are considering 
changes to the legislation.[Footnote 16] 

In addition to DOL's report to Congress not reflecting informal USERRA 
complaints, we identified data limitations in our July 2007 report that 
affected the quality of information reported to Congress that could 
adversely affect Congress's ability to assess how well federal sector 
USERRA complaints are processed and whether changes are 
needed.[Footnote 17] DOL provides information in its annual report to 
Congress on the number and percentage of complaints opened by type of 
employer, issues raised--such as discrimination or refusal to 
reinstate--outcome, and total time to resolve. We found that the number 
of federal sector complaints shown in DOL's USERRA database from 
February 8, 2005, through September 30, 2006, exceeded the number of 
unique claims it processed during the period of our review. Duplicate, 
reopened, and transferred complaints accounted for most of this 
difference. Also, in our review of a random sample of case files, we 
found: 

* the dates recorded for case closure in DOL's USERRA database did not 
reflect the dates on the closure letters in 22 of 52 sampled complaints 
and: 

* the closed code, which DOL uses to describe the outcomes of USERRA 
complaints (e.g., granted, settled, no merit, or withdrawn), was not 
sufficiently reliable for reporting specific outcomes of complaints. 

To ensure that accurate information on USERRA complaints' processing is 
available to DOL and to Congress, we recommended in our July 2007 
report that the Secretary of Labor direct the Assistant Secretary of 
Veterans' Employment and Training to establish a plan of intended 
actions with target dates for implementing internal controls to ensure 
that DOL's USERRA database accurately reflects the number of unique 
USERRA complaints filed annually against federal executive branch 
agencies, the dates those complaints were closed, and the outcomes of 
those complaints. In response to our recommendation, DOL issued a memo 
from the Assistant Secretary of Veterans' Employment and Training in 
July 2007 instructing investigators to ensure that the closed date 
entered into DOL's USERRA database match the date on the closure letter 
to the servicemember, and DOL conducted mandatory training on this memo 
beginning in August 2007. Further, DOL officials told us that DOL's 
fiscal year 2007 annual report will count reopened complaints as a 
single complaint if brought by the same individual, against the same 
employer, and on the same issue. 

Notification of Rights to Referral and Internal Reviews: 

We reported in July 2007 that in cases where servicemembers sought 
assistance from DOL and the agency could not resolve the complaints, 
DOL did not consistently notify servicemembers in writing of their 
right to have their unresolved complaints against federal executive 
branch agencies referred to OSC or to bring their claims directly to 
the Merit Systems Protection Board.[Footnote 18] Specifically, our 
review of a random sample of complaint files showed that DOL failed to 
notify servicemembers in writing in half of the unresolved complaints 
and notified others of only some of their options. In addition, we 
found that DOL's USERRA Operations Manual failed to provide clear 
guidance to its investigators on when to notify servicemembers of their 
rights and the content of the notifications. In July 2007, we also 
reported that DOL has no internal process to routinely review 
investigators' determinations before claimants are notified of them and 
noted that this lack of review could have caused DOL's inconsistent 
practice of notifying servicemembers for their rights to referral. We 
recommended that the Secretary of Labor direct the Assistant Secretary 
for Veterans' Employment and Training to (1) require VETS's 
investigators to undergo mandatory training on the procedures to be 
followed concerning notification of rights to referral, (2) incorporate 
into the formal update to DOL's USERRA Operations Manual guidance 
concerning the notification rights to referral, and (3) develop and 
implement an internal review mechanism for all unresolved complaints 
before servicemembers are notified of determinations and complaints are 
closed. 

Since that time, DOL has taken the following actions: 

* issued a memo in July 2007 from the Assistant Secretary for Veterans' 
Employment and Training to regional administrators, senior 
investigators, and directors concerning case closing procedure changes, 
including standard language to use to ensure that servicemembers 
(federal and nonfederal) are apprised of their rights; 

* began conducting mandatory training on the memo in August 2007; 

* incorporated the policy changes into the revised Manual, which 
according to DOL officials is expected to be released in January 2008; 
and: 

* according to DOL officials, beginning in January 2008, all claims are 
to be reviewed before the closure letter is sent to the claimant. 

These are positive steps. It is important for DOL to follow through 
with its plans to ensure that clear and uniform guidance is available 
to all involved in processing USERRA complaints. 

Mr. Chairman, Senator Enzi, and Members of the Committee, this 
concludes our remarks. We will be pleased to take questions at this 
time. 

For further information regarding this statement, please contact Brenda 
Farrell at 202-512-3604 or farrellb@gao.gov or George Stalcup at 202- 
512-9490 or stalcupg@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this testimony. Individuals making contributions to this 
testimony include Laura Durland, Assistant Director; Belva Martin, 
Assistant Director; James Ashley; Karin Fangman; K. Nicole Harms; Kenya 
Jones; Mae Jones; Ronald La Due Lake; Joseph Rutecki; Tamara F. 
Stenzel; and Kiki Theodoropoulos. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Pub. L. No. 103-353 (1994), as amended, codified at 38 U.S.C. §§ 
4301-4334. 

[2] The term reservists refers to the collective forces of the Army 
National Guard, Air National Guard, Army Reserve, Air Force Reserve, 
Navy Reserve, Marine Corps Reserve, and the Coast Guard Reserve. 

[3] The law also gives outreach responsibilities to the Secretary of 
Veterans Affairs, but we did not review actions of the Department of 
Veterans Affairs in supporting USERRA because its role is more limited. 

[4] GAO, Military Personnel: Improved Quality Controls Needed over 
Servicemembers' Employment Rights Claims at DOL, GAO-07-907 
(Washington, D.C.: July 20, 2007); GAO, Military Personnel: Additional 
Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of Reserve Employment Issues, GAO-
07-259 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 8, 2007); GAO, Military Personnel: 
Federal Management of Servicemember Employment Rights Can Be Further 
Improved, GAO-06-60 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 19, 2005); GAO, U.S. Office 
of Special Counsel's Role in Enforcing Law to Protect Reemployment 
Rights of Veterans and Reservists in Federal Employment, GAO-05-74R 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 6, 2004); GAO, Reserve Force: DOD Actions 
Needed to Better Manage Relations between Reservists and Their 
Employers, GAO-02-608 (Washington, D.C.: June 13, 2002). 

[5] We recently testified on issues related to our July 2007 report. 
GAO, Military Personnel: Considerations Related to Extending 
Demonstration Project on Servicemembers' Employment Rights Claims, GAO-
08-229T (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 31, 2007). 

[6] Federal agencies use a variety of terms to describe servicemember 
allegation of USERRA violations, including "complaints," "claims," 
"cases," "matters," and "referrals." For clarity and consistency 
throughout this testimony, we use the term complaint to describe these 
servicemember allegations. We refer to complaints to DOD as "informal 
complaints" and complaints to DOL, DOJ, and OSC as "formal complaints." 

[7] DOL's USERRA Information Management System is a Web-based case 
management and reporting tool implemented by DOL in October 1996 that 
allows for automated collection and investigator input of information 
regarding USERRA complaints and generation of reports for analysis of 
USERRA operations and outcomes. For purposes of this testimony, we 
refer to DOL's USERRA Information Management System as DOL's USERRA 
database. 

[8] For our July 2007 report, we also assessed the reliability of 
selected data elements on federal employee complaints from OSC's case 
tracking system for the same period. The data element that OSC uses to 
describe the outcomes of complaints was not sufficiently reliable for 
reporting specific outcomes. 

[9] The demonstration project began on February 8, 2005 and was 
originally scheduled to end on September 30, 2007. Pub. L. No. 108-454, 
§204 (2004), 38 U.S.C. § 4301 note. It was extended through November 
16, 2007. Pub. L. No. 110-92, §130 (2007). 

[10] Another 74 investigators include regional administrators and 
management authorized to investigate USERRA complaints but not assigned 
to any. 

[11] DOL is also to inform servicemembers that they may file their 
complaint directly in court (if it involves nonfederal employers) or 
with the Merit Systems Protection Board (if it involves federal 
executive branch employers). 

[12] Because dates in DOL's USERRA database did not always match the 
dates in the other agencies' systems and of the concerns raised in our 
July 2007 report about the investigation closed dates entered for 
federal sector complaints, discussed later in this statement, the 
processing and total elapsed times may not be accurate and the figures 
presented here are not precise reflections of processing or total 
elapsed times. For our 2005 report, we reviewed hard copy complaint 
files at the regional offices, tracked cases if they were referred to 
DOJ or OSC, and spoke with relevant investigators about these cases. We 
determined these data were sufficiently reliable for illustrating the 
differences between the agencies' focuses on outputs and the 
servicemembers' concern with the results. 

[13] GAO-06-60. 

[14] GAO-07-259. 

[15] 38 U.S.C. §4332. 

[16] H.R. 1632 was proposed on March 21, 2007, and was referred to the 
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. 

[17] GAO-07-907. 

[18] GAO-07-907. 

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