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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related 
Agencies, Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 1:00 p.m. EST:
Tuesday, March 1, 2011: 

Forest Service: 

Continued Work Needed to Address Persistent Management Challenges: 

Statement of Anu K. Mittal, Director:
Natural Resources and Environment: 

GAO-11-423T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-423T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, Committee on 
Appropriations, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Forest Service, within the Department of Agriculture, manages over 
190 million acres of national forest and grasslands. The agency is 
responsible for managing its lands for various purposes—-including 
recreation, grazing, timber harvesting, and others-—while ensuring 
that such activities do not impair the lands’ long-term productivity. 
Numerous GAO reports examining different aspects of Forest Service 
programs-—including a testimony before this Subcommittee in 2009-—have 
identified persistent management challenges facing the agency. In 
light of the federal deficit and long-term fiscal challenges facing 
the nation, the Forest Service cannot ensure that it is spending its 
limited budget effectively and efficiently without addressing these 
challenges. 

This testimony highlights some of the management challenges facing the 
Forest Service today and is based on recent reports GAO has issued on 
a variety of the agency’s activities. 

What GAO Found: 

In 2009, GAO highlighted management challenges that the Forest Service 
faced in three key areas—wildland fire management, data on program 
activities and costs, and financial and performance accountability. 
The Forest Service has made some improvements, but challenges persist 
in each of these three areas. In addition, recent GAO reports have 
identified additional challenges related to program oversight and 
strategic planning. 

Strategies are still needed to ensure effective use of wildland fire 
management funds. In numerous previous reports, GAO has highlighted 
the challenges the Forest Service faces in protecting the nation 
against the threat of wildland fire. The agency continues to take 
steps to improve its approach, but it has yet to take several key 
steps—including developing a cohesive wildland fire strategy that 
identifies potential long-term options for reducing hazardous fuels 
and responding to fires—that, if completed, would substantially 
strengthen wildland fire management. 

Incomplete data on program activities remain a concern. In 2009, GAO 
concluded that long-standing data problems plagued the Forest Service, 
hampering its ability to manage its programs and account for its 
costs. While GAO has not comprehensively reviewed the quality of all 
Forest Service data, shortcomings identified during several recent 
reviews reinforce these concerns. For example, GAO recently identified 
data gaps in the agency’s system for tracking appeals and litigation 
of Forest Service projects and in the number of abandoned hardrock 
mines on its lands. 

Even with improvements, financial and performance accountability 
shortcomings persist. Although its financial accountability has 
improved, the Forest Service continues to struggle to implement 
adequate internal controls over its funds and to demonstrate how its 
expenditures relate to the goals in the agency’s strategic plan. For 
example, in 2010 Agriculture reported that the agency needed to 
improve controls over its expenditures for wildland fire management 
and identified the wildland fire suppression program as susceptible to 
significant improper payments. 

Additional challenges related to program oversight and strategic 
planning have been identified. Several recent GAO reviews have 
identified additional challenges facing the Forest Service, which the 
agency must address if it is to effectively and efficiently fulfill 
its mission. Specifically, the agency has yet to develop a national 
land tenure strategy that would protect the public’s interest in land 
exchanges and return fair value to taxpayers from such exchanges. In 
addition, it has yet to take recommended steps to align its workforce 
planning with its strategic plan, which may compromise its ability to 
carry out its mission; for example, it has not adequately planned for 
the likely retirement of firefighters, which may reduce the agency’s 
ability to protect the safety of both people and property. Finally, 
the Forest Service needs a more systematic, risk-based approach to 
allocate its law-enforcement resources. Without such an approach it 
cannot be assured that it is deploying its resources effectively 
against illegal activities on the lands it manages. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO has made a number of recommendations intended to improve the 
Forest Service’s management of wildland fires, strengthen its 
collection of data, increase accountability, and improve program 
management. The Forest Service has taken steps to implement many of 
these recommendations, but additional action is needed if the agency 
is to make further progress in rectifying identified shortcomings. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-423T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Anu K.Mittal at (202) 512-
3841 or mittala@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

Thank you for the opportunity to be here today to discuss management 
challenges facing the Forest Service. As the steward of more than 190 
million acres of national forest and grassland, the Forest Service, 
within the Department of Agriculture, is responsible for managing its 
lands for various purposes--including recreation, rangeland, timber, 
wilderness, and the protection of watersheds and wildlife--while 
ensuring that the agency's management of the lands does not impair 
their long-term productivity. In managing its lands in accordance with 
these purposes, the agency provides a variety of goods and services. 
Goods include timber, natural gas, oil, minerals, and range for 
livestock to graze. Watersheds on Forest Service lands provide 
drinking water to thousands of communities, and the national forests 
and grasslands themselves offer the public recreational opportunities, 
such as camping, hiking, and rafting. To carry out its 
responsibilities, the Forest Service employs about 30,000 permanent 
full-time employees and maintains hundreds of regional, forest, and 
ranger district offices nationwide, as well as a network of research 
facilities. Appropriations for the agency totaled $6.2 billion in 
fiscal year 2010. 

My testimony today updates our 2009 testimony before this Subcommittee 
on Forest Service management challenges[Footnote 1] and is based 
primarily on findings from several reports we have recently issued on 
the agency's activities.[Footnote 2] Specifically, I will focus on 
management challenges in three key areas we identified in our 2009 
testimony--wildland fire management, data on program activities and 
costs, and financial and performance accountability--as well as on 
additional challenges related to program oversight and strategic 
planning. As we stated in 2009, in light of the federal deficit and 
long-term fiscal challenges facing the nation, it is important for the 
Forest Service to address these management challenges to ensure that 
its limited budget is effectively and efficiently spent. 

Strategies Are Still Needed to Ensure Effective Use of Wildland Fire 
Management Funds: 

In our 2009 testimony, we reported that the Forest Service, working 
with the Department of the Interior, had taken steps to help manage 
perhaps the agency's most daunting challenge--protecting lives, 
private property, and federal resources from the threat of wildland 
fire--but that it continued to lack key strategies needed to use its 
wildland fire funds effectively. Over the past decade, our nation's 
wildland fire problem has worsened dramatically. Since 2000, wildland 
fires burned more than double the acres annually, on average, than 
during the 1990s, and the Forest Service's wildland fire-related 
appropriations have also grown substantially, averaging approximately 
$2.3 billion over the past 5 years, up from about $722 million in 
fiscal year 1999. As we have previously reported, a number of factors 
have contributed to worsening fire seasons and increased firefighting 
expenditures, including an accumulation of flammable vegetation due to 
past land management practices; drought and other stresses, in part 
related to climate change; and increased human development in or near 
wildlands. The Forest Service shares federal responsibility for 
wildland fire management with four Interior agencies--the Bureau of 
Indian Affairs, Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, 
and National Park Service. 

In our 2009 testimony we noted four primary areas we believed the 
Forest Service, in conjunction with Interior, needed to address to 
better respond to the nation's wildland fire problems. The agencies 
have taken steps to improve these areas, but work remains to be done 
in each.[Footnote 3] As a result, we continue to believe that these 
areas remain major management challenges for the Forest Service: 

* Developing a cohesive strategy that identifies options and 
associated funding to reduce potentially hazardous vegetation and 
address wildland fire problems. In a series of reports dating to 1999, 
we have recommended that the Forest Service and Interior agencies 
develop a cohesive wildland fire strategy identifying potential long-
term options for reducing fuels and responding to fires, as well as 
the funding requirements associated with the various options. By 
laying out various potential approaches, their estimated costs, and 
the accompanying trade-offs, we reported that such a strategy would 
help Congress and the agencies make informed decisions about effective 
and affordable long-term approaches to addressing the nation's 
wildland fire problems. Congress echoed our call for a cohesive 
strategy in the Federal Land Assistance, Management, and Enhancement 
Act of 2009, which requires the agencies to produce a cohesive 
strategy consistent with our recommendations.[Footnote 4] 

In response, the agencies have prepared "Phase I" of the cohesive 
strategy, which, according to a Forest Service official, provides a 
general description of the agencies' approach to the wildland fire 
problem and establishes a framework for collecting and analyzing the 
information needed to assess the problem and make decisions about how 
to address it. The Phase I document has not yet been made final or 
formally submitted to Congress, even though the act requires the 
strategy to be submitted within 1 year of the act's 2009 passage. Once 
the document has been made final, according to this official, the 
agencies expect to begin drafting Phase II of the strategy, which will 
involve actual collection and analysis of data and assessment of 
different options. 

* Establishing clear goals and a strategy to help contain wildland 
fire costs. The agencies have taken steps intended to help contain 
wildland fire costs, but they have not yet clearly defined their cost- 
containment goals or developed a strategy for achieving those goals-- 
steps we first recommended in 2007.[Footnote 5] Without such 
fundamental steps, we continue to believe that the agencies cannot be 
assured that they are taking the most important steps first, nor can 
they be certain of whether or to what extent the steps they are taking 
will help contain costs. Agency officials identified several agency 
documents that they stated clearly define goals and objectives and 
that make up their strategy to contain costs. However, these documents 
lack the clarity and specificity needed by officials in the field to 
help manage and contain wildland fire costs. We therefore continue to 
believe that the agencies will be challenged in managing their cost- 
containment efforts and improving their ability to contain wildland 
fire costs. 

* Continuing to improve processes for allocating fuel reduction funds 
and selecting fuel reduction projects. The Forest Service has 
continued to improve its processes for allocating funds to reduce 
fuels and select fuel reduction projects but has yet to fully 
implement the steps we recommended in 2007.[Footnote 6] These 
improvements, which we reported on in 2009 and which the agency has 
continued to build upon, include (1) the use of a computer model to 
assist in making allocation decisions, rather than relying primarily 
on historical funding patterns and professional judgment, and (2) 
taking into consideration when making allocation decisions information 
on wildland fire risk and the effectiveness of fuel treatments. 
[Footnote 7] Even with these improvements, we believe the Forest 
Service will continue to face challenges in more effectively using its 
limited fuel reduction dollars unless it takes the additional steps 
that we have previously recommended. The agency, for example, still 
lacks a measure of the effectiveness of fuel reduction treatments and 
therefore lacks information needed to ensure that fuel reduction funds 
are directed to the areas where they can best minimize risk to 
communities and natural and cultural resources. And while Forest 
Service officials told us that they, in conjunction with Interior, had 
begun a comprehensive effort to evaluate the effectiveness of 
different types of fuel treatments, including the longevity of those 
treatments and their effects on ecosystems and natural resources, this 
endeavor is likely to be a long term effort and require considerable 
research investment. 

* Taking steps to improve the use of an interagency budgeting and 
planning tool. Since 2008, we have been concerned about the Forest 
Service's and Interior's development of a planning tool known as fire 
program analysis, or FPA.[Footnote 8] FPA is designed to allow the 
agencies to analyze potential combinations of firefighting assets, and 
potential strategies for reducing fuels and fighting fires, to 
identify the most cost-effective among them. By identifying cost-
effective combinations of assets and strategies within the agencies, 
FPA was also designed to help the agencies develop their wildland fire 
budget requests and allocate resources across the country. FPA's 
development continues to be characterized by delays and revisions, 
however, and the agencies are several years behind their initially 
projected timeline for using it to help develop their budget requests. 
The agencies collected nationwide data on available assets and 
strategies in fiscal years 2009 and 2010, but in neither case did the 
agencies have sufficient confidence in the quality of the data to use 
them to help develop their budget requests. FPA program officials told 
us that they are currently analyzing data collected early in fiscal 
year 2011 to determine the extent to which the data can be used to 
help develop the agencies' fiscal year 2013 budget requests. The 
officials also told us they expect an independent external peer review 
of the science underlying FPA--a step we recommended in our 2008 
report--to begin in May 2011. The agencies continue to take steps to 
improve FPA, but it is not clear how effective these steps will be in 
correcting the problems we have identified, and therefore we believe 
that the agencies will continue to face challenges in this area. 

Incomplete Data on Program Activities Remain a Concern: 

Our 2009 testimony noted shortcomings in the completeness and accuracy 
of Forest Service data on activities and costs. Although we have not 
comprehensively reviewed the quality of all Forest Service data, we 
have encountered shortcomings during several recent reviews that 
reinforce our concerns. For example, during our review of appeals and 
litigation of Forest Service decisions related to fuel reduction 
projects,[Footnote 9] we sought to use the agency's Planning, Appeals, 
and Litigation System, which was designed to track planning, appeals, 
and litigation information for all Forest Service decisions. During 
our review, however, we determined that the system did not contain all 
the information we believed was pertinent to decisions that had been 
appealed or litigated and that the information the system did contain 
was not always complete or accurate. As a result, we conducted our own 
survey of Forest Service field unit employees. Likewise, during our 
recent testimony on hardrock mining, we noted that the Forest Service 
had difficulty determining the number of abandoned hardrock mines on 
its land, and we were concerned about the accuracy of the data that 
the agency maintained.[Footnote 10] Further, we recently reported that 
the Forest Service does not track all costs associated with activities 
under its land exchange program[Footnote 11]--another area of concern 
in our 2009 testimony. 

One area that is expected to see improvements in the future is the 
completeness and accuracy of cost data, because in 2012 Agriculture is 
scheduled to replace its current Foundation Financial Information 
System with a new Financial Management Modernization Initiative system 
that includes managerial cost-accounting capabilities. Managerial cost 
accounting, rather than measuring only the cost of "inputs" such as 
labor and materials, integrates financial and nonfinancial data, such 
as the number of hours worked or number of acres treated, to measure 
the cost of outputs and the activities that produce them. Such an 
approach allows managers to routinely analyze cost information and use 
it in making decisions about agency operations and supports a focus on 
managing costs, rather than simply managing budgets. Such information 
is crucial for the Forest Service, as for all federal agencies, to 
make difficult funding decisions in this era of limited budgets and 
competing program priorities. According to Agriculture's 2010 
Performance and Accountability Report, the Forest Service has assessed 
its managerial cost accounting needs, and the cost-accounting module 
in the new system should allow the Forest Service to collect more-
relevant managerial cost-accounting information.[Footnote 12] 

Even with Improvements, Some Financial and Performance Accountability 
Shortcomings Persist: 

In 2009, we testified that the Forest Service had made sufficient 
progress resolving problems we identified with its financial 
management for us to remove the agency from our high-risk list in 2005 
but that concerns about financial accountability remained.[Footnote 
13] While we have not reexamined these issues in detail since that 
time, recent reports from Agriculture, including from the Office of 
the Inspector General, continue to identify concerns in this area. For 
example, in 2010 Agriculture's Office of Inspector General reported 
six significant deficiencies--including poor coordination of efforts 
to address financial reporting requirements and weaknesses in internal 
controls for revenue-related transactions--although it did not find 
any of the deficiencies to be material weaknesses.[Footnote 14] 
Echoing these concerns about internal control weaknesses, Agriculture 
reported in its 2010 Performance and Accountability Report that the 
Forest Service needed to improve controls over its expenditures for 
wildland fire management and identified the wildland fire suppression 
program as susceptible to significant improper payments.[Footnote 15] 

The Forest Service likewise has not fully resolved the performance 
accountability concerns that we raised in our 2009 testimony. As we 
noted at that time, the agency's long-standing performance 
accountability problems included an inability to link planning, 
budgeting, and results reporting. This concern was also raised by a 
2010 Inspector General report, which stated that the major goals cited 
in the agency's strategic plan did not match the categories in its 
Foundation Financial Information System. In other words, the Forest 
Service could not meaningfully compare its cost information with its 
performance measures.[Footnote 16] 

The Forest Service Faces Additional Challenges Related to Program 
Oversight and Strategic Planning: 

In addition to the management challenges we discussed in our 2009 
testimony, several of our recent reviews have identified additional 
challenges facing the Forest Service--challenges that highlight the 
need for more effective program oversight and better strategic 
planning. In light of potential funding constraints resulting from our 
nation's long-term fiscal condition, it is essential that the Forest 
Service be able to maximize the impact of its limited budget resources 
by exercising effective program oversight and appropriate strategic 
planning. Some recent concerns we have noted in this area include the 
following: 

* Oversight of the land exchange process. As part of its land 
management responsibilities, the Forest Service acquires and disposes 
of lands through land exchanges--trading federal lands for lands owned 
by willing private entities, individuals, or state or local 
governments. In the past, we and others identified problems in the 
Forest Service's land exchange program and made recommendations to 
correct them. However, in our 2009 report on the Forest Service's land 
exchange program, we found that, although the agency had taken action 
to address most of the problems we had previously identified, it 
needed to take additional action to better oversee and manage the land 
exchange process so as to ensure that land exchanges serve the public 
interest and return fair value to taxpayers.[Footnote 17] In that 
report we made recommendations for the agency to, among other things, 
strengthen its oversight of the land exchange process, develop a 
national land tenure strategy, track costs, make certain training 
mandatory, and develop a formal system to track staff training. The 
Forest Service generally agreed with our recommendations, but as of 
October 2010, the agency had yet to develop a national land tenure 
strategy, track land exchange costs, require specific training for 
staff working on land exchanges, or fully implement a system to track 
attendance at training. 

* Workforce planning. In recent reports, we and Agriculture's 
Inspector General have raised concerns about the Forest Service's 
ability to maintain an effective workforce through strategic workforce 
planning. In a 2010 report, we noted that the Forest Service (like 
Interior and the Environmental Protection Agency) had fallen short 
with respect to two of the six leading principles that we and others 
have identified as important to effective workforce planning: (1) 
aligning the agency's workforce plan with its strategic plan and (2) 
monitoring and evaluating its workforce-planning efforts.[Footnote 18] 
Without more clearly aligning its workforce plans with its strategic 
plan, and monitoring and evaluating its progress in workforce 
planning, as we recommended in that report, the Forest Service remains 
at risk of not having the appropriately skilled workforce it needs to 
effectively achieve its mission. In addition, we reported that the 
Forest Service developed and issued annual workforce plans containing 
information on emerging workforce issues and that the agency had 
identified recommendations to address these issues but did not 
communicate its recommendations, nor assign responsibility for 
implementing recommendations. For the Forest Service to further 
capitalize on its existing workforce-planning efforts, we recommended 
that the agency communicate its recommendations in its annual 5-year 
workforce plan, assign responsibility and establish time frames for 
implementing the recommendations, and track implementation progress. 
As of November 2010, the Forest Service had begun several actions to 
address our recommendations, although they had not yet been fully 
implemented. 

Workforce planning is of particular concern in the area of wildland 
firefighting. In March 2010, Agriculture's Inspector General reported 
that the Forest Service lacked a workforce plan specific to 
firefighters, despite the relatively high number of staff eligible to 
retire among those in positions critical to firefighting and the 
agency's own expectations of an increase in the size and number of 
fires it will be responsible for suppressing.[Footnote 19] As the 
Inspector General noted, a lack of qualified firefighters due to 
retirements and inadequate planning could jeopardize the Forest 
Service's ability to accomplish its wildland fire suppression mission, 
resulting in the loss of more property and natural resources and 
increased safety risks to fire suppression personnel. 

* Strategic approaches for protecting and securing federal lands. In 
2010, we issued reports examining different aspects of the Forest 
Service's response to illegal activities occurring on the lands it 
manages, including human and drug smuggling into the United States. 
For example, we reported that the Forest Service, like other federal 
land management agencies, lacks a risk-based approach to managing its 
law enforcement resources and concluded that without a more systematic 
method to assess risks posed by illegal activities, the Forest Service 
could not be assured that it was allocating scarce resources 
effectively.[Footnote 20] For federal lands along the United States 
border, we reported that communication and coordination between Border 
Patrol and federal land management agencies, including the Forest 
Service, had not been effective in certain areas, including the 
sharing of intelligence and threat information, deployment plans, and 
radio communications between the agencies.[Footnote 21] In light of 
these shortcomings, and to better protect resources and the public, we 
recommended that the Forest Service adopt a risk-based approach to 
better manage its law enforcement resources and, in conjunction with 
the Department of the Interior and the Department of Homeland 
Security, take steps to improve communication and coordination between 
the agencies. The Forest Service concurred with our recommendations. 

* Management strategies for the use of off-highway vehicles (OHV). 
Over the past few decades, the use of OHVs on federal lands has become 
a popular form of recreation, although questions have been raised 
about the effects of OHV use on natural resources and on other 
visitors. In 2009, we reported that the Forest Service's plans for OHV 
management lacked key elements of strategic planning, such as results-
oriented goals, strategies to achieve the goals, time frames for 
implementing strategies, and performance measures to monitor 
incremental progress.[Footnote 22] We recommended that the Forest 
Service take a number of steps to provide quality OHV recreational 
opportunities while protecting natural and cultural resources on 
federal lands, including identifying additional strategies to improve 
OHV management, time frames for carrying out the strategies, and 
performance measures for monitoring progress. As of June 2010, the 
Forest Service had several actions under way to address our 
recommendations, but none were yet complete. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased 
to answer any questions that you or other Members of the Subcommittee 
may have at this time. 

GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

For further information about this testimony, please contact me at 
(202) 512-3841 or mittala@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this statement. Key contributors to this testimony include 
Steve Gaty, Assistant Director; Andrea Wamstad Brown; Ellen W. Chu; 
Jonathan Dent; Griffin Glatt-Dowd; and Richard P. Johnson. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Federal Lands: Adopting a Formal, Risk-Based Approach Could Help Land 
Management Agencies Better Manage Their Law Enforcement Resources. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-144]. Washington, D.C.: 
December 17, 2010. 

Border Security: Additional Actions Needed to Better Ensure a 
Coordinated Federal Response to Illegal Activity on Federal Lands. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-177]. Washington, D.C.: 
November 18, 2010. 

Workforce Planning: Interior, EPA, and the Forest Service Should 
Strengthen Linkages to Their Strategic Plans and Improve Evaluation. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-413]. Washington, D.C.: 
March 31, 2010. 

Forest Service: Information on Appeals, Objections, and Litigation 
Involving Fuel Reduction Activities, Fiscal Years 2006 through 2008. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-337]. Washington, D.C: 
March 4, 2010. 

Wildland Fire Management: Federal Agencies Have Taken Important Steps 
Forward, but Additional, Strategic Action Is Needed to Capitalize on 
Those Steps. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-877]. 
Washington, D.C.: September 9, 2009. 

Hardrock Mining: Information on State Royalties and the Number of 
Abandoned Mine Sites and Hazards. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-854T]. Washington, D.C: July 14, 
2009. 

Federal Lands: Enhanced Planning Could Assist Agencies in Managing 
Increased Use of Off-Highway Vehicles. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-509]. Washington, D.C.: June 30, 
2009. 

Federal Land Management: BLM and the Forest Service Have Improved 
Oversight of the Land Exchange Process, but Additional Actions Are 
Needed. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-611]. 
Washington, D.C: June 12, 2009. 

Forest Service: Emerging Issues Highlight the Need to Address 
Persistent Management Challenges. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-443T]. Washington, D.C: March 11, 
2009. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Forest Service: Emerging Issues Highlight the Need to Address 
Persistent Management Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-443T] (Washington, D.C: Mar. 11, 
2009). 

[2] See the list of related GAO products at the end of this statement, 
which were generally conducted in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards. Additional information on the scope and 
methodology used for this body of work is provided in each issued 
product. 

[3] GAO has issued dozens of reports and recommended more than 50 
actions the Forest Service and Interior agencies could take to improve 
wildland fire management. For more information on the agencies' 
efforts over the previous decade to improve their management of 
wildland fire, see GAO, Wildland Fire Management: Federal Agencies 
Have Taken Important Steps Forward, but Additional, Strategic Action 
Is Needed to Capitalize on Those Steps, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-877] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 9, 
2009). 

[4] Pub. L. No. 111-88 § 503, 123 Stat. 2971 (2009). 

[5] GAO, Wildland Fire Management: Lack of Clear Goals or a Strategy 
Hinders Federal Agencies' Efforts to Contain the Costs of Fighting 
Fires, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-655] 
(Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2007). 

[6] GAO, Wildland Fire Management: Better Information and a Systematic 
Process Could Improve Agencies' Approach to Allocating Fuel Reduction 
Funds and Selecting Projects, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1168] (Washington, D.C: Sept. 28, 
2007). 

[7] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-877]. 

[8] GAO, Wildland Fire Management: Interagency Budget Tool Needs 
Further Development to Fully Meet Key Objectives, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-68] (Washington, D.C: Nov. 24, 
2008). 

[9] GAO, Forest Service: Information on Appeals, Objections, and 
Litigation Involving Fuel Reduction Activities, Fiscal Years 2006 
through 2008, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-337] 
(Washington, D.C: Mar. 4, 2010). 

[10] GAO, Hardrock Mining: Information on State Royalties and the 
Number of Abandoned Mine Sites and Hazards, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-854T] (Washington, D.C: July 14, 
2009). 

[11] GAO, Federal Land Management: BLM and the Forest Service Have 
Improved Oversight of the Land Exchange Process, but Additional 
Actions Are Needed, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-611] (Washington, D.C: June 12, 
2009). 

[12] U.S. Department of Agriculture, Fiscal Year (FY) 2010 Performance 
and Accountability Report (Washington, D.C., November 2010). 

[13] We included the Forest Service on our high-risk list from 1999 
through 2004 because of long-standing concerns over its financial 
accountability, citing "a continuing pattern of unfavorable 
conclusions about the Forest Service's financial statements." 

[14] Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General, Audit 
Report: Forest Service's Financial Statements for Fiscal Years 2010 
and 2009, 08401-11-FM (Washington, D.C., November 2010). 

[15] Department of Agriculture, 2010 Performance and Accountability 
Report. 

[16] 08401-11-FM. 

[17] GAO, Federal Land Management: BLM and the Forest Service Have 
Improved Oversight of the Land Exchange Process, but Additional 
Actions Are Needed, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-611] (Washington, D.C.: June 12, 
2009). 

[18] GAO, Workforce Planning: Interior, EPA, and the Forest Service 
Should Strengthen Linkages to Their Strategic Plans and Improve 
Evaluation, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-413] 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 31, 2010). 

[19] U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General, 
Forest Service's Firefighting Succession Planning Process, Audit 
Report 08601-54-SF (Washington, D.C., March 2010). 

[20] GAO, Federal Lands: Adopting a Formal, Risk-Based Approach Could 
Help Land Management Agencies Better Manage Their Law Enforcement 
Resources, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-144] 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 17, 2010). 

[21] GAO, Border Security: Additional Actions Needed to Better Ensure 
a Coordinated Federal Response to Illegal Activity on Federal Lands, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-177] (Washington, D.C.: 
Nov. 18, 2010). 

[22] GAO, Federal Lands: Enhanced Planning Could Assist Agencies in 
Managing Increased Use of Off-Highway Vehicles, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-509] (Washington, D.C.: June 30, 
2009). This report also examined OHV management at two Interior 
agencies, the Bureau of Land Management and the National Park Service. 

[End of section] 

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