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Likely Unless Management Addresses Key Challenges' which was released 
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Report to the Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health, Committee on 
Resources, House of Representatives:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

May 2003:

Forest Service:

Little Progress on Performance Accountability Likely Unless Management 
Addresses Key Challenges:

GAO-03-503:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-503, a report to the Subcommittee on Forests and 
Forest Health, Committee on Resources, House of Representatives 


Why GAO Did This Study:

Historically, the Forest Service has not been able to provide Congress 
or the public with a clear understanding of what the Forest Service’s 
30,000 employees accomplish with the approximately $5 billion the 
agency receives every year.  Since 1990, GAO has reported 7 times on 
performance accountability weaknesses at the Forest Service, including 
its inability to systematically link planning, budgeting, and results 
reporting.  This report reviews the recent progress the Forest Service 
has made in resolving previously identified performance accountability 
problems and identifies key challenges the Forest Service must 
overcome to resolve these problems.  

What GAO Found:

The Forest Service has made little real progress in resolving its long-
standing performance accountability problems and, based on the status 
of its current efforts, remains years away from implementing a 
credible performance accountability system.  Since June 2000, when we 
last reported on performance accountability at the Forest Service, the 
agency has continued to study the issue but has made little real 
progress.  For example, in March 2002, the agency initiated a study of 
how several other federal agencies implemented their performance 
accountability systems and, by September 2002, had devised a draft 
plan for implementing a system of its own.  However, broad support 
within the agency for implementing this plan could not be achieved, 
and an executive steering team was recently established to restudy the 
issue.  While the agency continues to study and restudy the issue, 
opportunities to establish key linkages among components of a 
performance accountability system have been missed.  For example, in 
April 2000, the agency began considering a new budget system and, in 
August 2001, a new work-plan system—two critical components that 
should be part of a performance accountability system.  However, the 
Forest Service has yet to develop clear linkages between these new 
systems and its strategic goals and performance results.  Without 
these linkages, the agency will be unable to report in an integrated, 
results-oriented way on what activities it completed, how much they 
cost, and what they accomplished—key elements of an effective 
performance accountability system.  While we recognize that developing 
a performance accountability system is a complex, time-consuming 
process, other federal agencies with land management responsibilities 
have developed and implemented performance accountability systems and 
believe that their systems have produced multiple benefits. 

The Forest Service faces three key challenges that it must meet if it 
is to make more progress.  First, the agency needs to establish clear 
lines of authority and responsibility for developing and implementing 
a performance accountability system.  Currently, various senior 
executives have responsibilities for components of performance 
accountability; however, no one has overall responsibility and 
authority for ensuring these components are developed and properly 
linked.  Second, the Forest Service needs to address its culture of 
consensus decision-making, which has made it difficult for the Forest 
Service to agree on how to develop and implement an integrated 
performance accountability system.  Third, top agency leadership needs 
to give sufficient emphasis and priority to establishing a performance 
accountability system.  The agency is currently giving greater 
emphasis to other priorities, like financial accountability.  GAO 
recognizes the importance of, and need for, addressing the Forest 
Service’s long-standing financial accountability problems, but 
believes more can and should be done to address the agency’s 
performance accountability problems so that both performance and 
financial accountability can work in concert to assess and, 
ultimately, to improve the agency’s overall performance.

What GAO Recommends:

The Secretary of Agriculture should direct that the Chief of the 
Forest Service appoint a senior executive to develop a comprehensive 
plan with milestones to ensure the timely implementation of an 
effective performance accountability system.  The Chief should also 
report, beginning in 2004, on (1) the agency’s progress in 
implementing a performance accountability system in the agency’s 
annual performance plans and (2) its accomplishments in implementing 
its performance accountability system in its annual performance report 
to the Congress.  In commenting on a draft of this report, the Forest 
Service agreed with these recommendations. 

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

Forest Service Has Made Little Progress in Resolving Known Performance 
Accountability Problems, unlike Other Federal Land Management Agencies:

Forest Service's Inability to Address Organizational, Cultural, and 
Leadership Challenges Continues to Impede Its Progress on Performance 
Accountability:

Conclusions:

Recommendations for Executive Action:

Agency Comments:

Scope and Methodology:

Appendix I: Forest Service's Progress on GAO-Reported 
Performance Accountability Problems:

Appendix II: Detailed Forest Service Organizational Chart:

Appendix III: Comments from the Forest Service:

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

Related GAO Products:

Figures:

Figure 1: Forest Service's Organizational Structure:

Figure 2: The Linkage among Components in GPRA Legislative Framework:

Abbreviations:

BLM: Bureau of Land Management:

BFES: Budget Formulation and Execution System:

GPRA: Government Performance and Results Act:

NRCS: Natural Resources and Conservation Service:

OMB: Office of Management and Budget:

PART: Program Assessment Rating Tool:

USDA: Department of Agriculture:

6United States General Accounting Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

May 1, 2003:

The Honorable Scott McInnis
Chairman
The Honorable Jay Inslee
Ranking Minority Member
Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health
Committee on Resources
House of Representatives:

For 10 years, Congress and the administration have focused on making 
federal agencies more accountable for what they accomplish with the 
dollars they receive. To this end, the Congress mandated in legislation 
that federal agencies undertake a number of major management reforms 
that, together, constitute a statutory framework for linking plans, 
budgets, and results.[Footnote 1] Over this period, GAO has reviewed 
agencies' efforts to achieve the accountability for financial 
management and performance envisioned by this framework. Since 1999, in 
a series of reports identifying agencies with major management 
challenges and at high risk of waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement, 
GAO has consistently reported serious financial and performance 
accountability weaknesses at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's 
(USDA's) Forest Service. As a result of these weaknesses, the Forest 
Service has not been able to provide Congress and the public with a 
clear understanding of what its 30,000 employees accomplish with the 
approximately $5 billion it receives every year.

The Forest Service has an enormous stewardship responsibility: to 
maintain the health, productivity, and diversity of the nation's 
forests and grasslands for current and future generations of Americans. 
The agency manages 192 million acres of land, including a national 
forest system that comprises 155 national forests, 20 national 
grasslands, and 17 recreation areas. On these lands, the Forest 
Service, among other things, supports recreation; sells timber; 
provides rangeland for grazing; maintains and protects watersheds, 
wilderness, fish and wildlife; and works with other federal agencies to 
prevent and suppress wildfires. In addition, the Forest Service 
provides financial and program support for state and private forests 
and undertakes research activities. The Forest Service, headed by a 
Chief, conducts these activities through three levels of field 
management---9 regional offices, 123 forest offices, and about 600 
district offices. The managers of these field offices have considerable 
discretion in interpreting and applying the agency's policies and 
directions. The Chief of the Forest Service reports to the Under 
Secretary of Agriculture for Natural Resources and Environment.

In our previous reports, dating back to 1991, we noted that the 
agency's lack of performance accountability in recent years occurred, 
at least in part, because it had not developed a performance 
accountability system that links its budget and organizational 
structures, planning processes, and resource allocations with its 
strategic goals, objectives, and performance measures. We also reported 
that the agency had difficulty in developing good performance measures 
and monitoring progress, both of which are critical to ensuring 
accountability. Furthermore, while the agency had made numerous 
commitments in recent years to provide the Congress and the public with 
a better understanding of what it accomplishes with appropriated funds, 
it did not appear to be fully committed to establishing the key 
linkages, measures, monitoring, and coordination needed for 
accountability. We reported that the Forest Service has studied options 
to address performance accountability but has done little else. In 
addition, we determined that the Forest Service has found it difficult 
to develop a performance accountability system because responsibilities 
for accountability have been fragmented among organizational components 
and because the agency's culture allows field managers significant 
independence in deciding whether to implement headquarters' guidance.

You asked us to (1) review the progress the Forest Service is making in 
resolving known performance accountability problems and (2) identify 
key challenges impeding the Forest Service's ability to resolve its 
performance accountability problems. This report updates our reviews of 
the Forest Service since we last testified before your Subcommittee in 
June 2000.[Footnote 2]

Results in Brief:

The Forest Service has made little progress in resolving its long-
standing performance accountability problems and, based on the status 
of its current efforts, remains years away from establishing a credible 
performance accountability system. Nearly 2 years after we testified on 
the agency's performance accountability problems in June 2000, the 
Forest Service once again began to study its options. In March 2002, it 
initiated a study of other federal agencies' performance accountability 
systems to learn how to develop, evaluate, and implement a performance 
accountability system, and by September 2002, the Forest Service had 
formulated a draft plan for implementing one of its own. However, the 
draft plan never received broad support within the agency, and the 
agency established an executive steering team to restudy the issue. 
However, this team was not appointed until December 2002, nearly 2½ 
years since we last testified on this issue and more than 11 years 
after we first reported on it. While the agency continues to study and 
restudy the issue, opportunities to establish key linkages among 
components of a performance accountability system have been missed. For 
example, the Forest Service is developing two systems that should be 
integral to a performance accountability system--budget and work-plan 
systems. However, the Forest Service has not developed clear linkages 
between these new systems and its strategic goals and performance 
results. Without these linkages, the agency will not be able to report 
in an integrated, results-oriented way on what activities it completed, 
how much they cost, and what they accomplished--key elements of any 
effective performance accountability system. While we recognize that 
developing a performance accountability system is a complex, time-
consuming process, we found that other federal agencies with land 
management responsibilities have developed and implemented performance 
accountability systems and believe that their systems have produced 
multiple benefits.

The Forest Service faces three key challenges that it must meet if it 
is to implement a credible performance accountability system: (1) 
establishing clear authority and responsibility within the current 
organizational structure, (2) making and implementing decisions in an 
agency culture that relies heavily on consensus, and (3) establishing 
sufficient leadership emphasis and making performance accountability a 
higher priority. With respect to the first challenge, several senior 
executives have been assigned responsibilities for components of 
performance accountability. However, none of these executives has 
overall responsibility and authority for ensuring these components are 
properly linked, and effective coordination continues to be difficult 
within the Forest Service's existing organizational structure. Second, 
the Forest Service's culture of making major decisions by agencywide 
consensus serves as a major impediment to more concerted action on this 
front. Currently, the Forest Service cannot agree on an integrated 
approach to creating a performance accountability system, and without 
this agreement the agency's progress is essentially stalemated. 
Finally, top agency leadership has not given sufficient emphasis and 
priority to establishing a performance accountability system. According 
to the Under Secretary of Agriculture for Natural Resources and 
Environment and the Chief of the Forest Service, the agency is focusing 
its efforts on achieving financial accountability before addressing its 
performance accountability needs. While we recognize the importance of, 
and the need for, addressing the Forest Service's long-standing 
financial accountability problems, we believe that more can and should 
be done to also address its performance accountability problems so that 
both performance and financial accountability can work in concert to 
assess and, ultimately, to improve the agency's overall performance.

GAO is recommending a series of steps to ensure that the Forest Service 
makes substantive progress towards developing and implementing a 
performance accountability system. The Forest Service commented on a 
draft of this report and agreed with our findings and recommendations.

Background:

The Forest Service is organized into six areas, each headed by a deputy 
chief, who reports directly to the Chief of the Forest Service. These 
deputy chiefs are responsible for the National Forest System; State and 
Private Forestry; Research and Development; Budget and Finance; 
Programs, Legislation and Communications; and Business Operations, as 
shown in figure 1.

Figure 1: Forest Service's Organizational Structure:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Other Federal Agencies Have Land Management Responsibilities:

The Forest Service is one of four federal agencies that manage public 
lands. The other three are the National Park Service, the Bureau of 
Land Management (BLM), and the Fish and Wildlife Service, within the 
Department of the Interior (Interior). The Natural Resources and 
Conservation Service (NRCS), within USDA, provides land management 
assistance to the owners of private lands. The Forest Service and the 
three agencies within Interior manage 95 percent of all federal lands, 
while NRCS is primarily responsible for conserving and protecting 
natural resources on private lands, which constitute about 75 percent 
of all acreage in the contiguous United States. NRCS has a budget of 
approximately $1 billion and 11,500 employees. BLM is responsible for 
administering more public lands than any other federal agency, with a 
budget of approximately $1.7 billion and 10,900 employees. Although 
somewhat smaller than the Forest Service, NRCS and BLM have important 
land management responsibilities.

Statutory and Administrative Framework for Performance Accountability:

Over the past decade, Congress and the executive branch have sought to 
improve federal management by focusing more on results. The Congress 
enacted several laws to create a statutory framework for results-
oriented management. The Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 
(GPRA) is a key element of this statutory framework. GPRA requires 
agencies to develop strategic plans that have outcome-related goals and 
objectives. Agencies must also develop annual performance plans that 
establish goals for program activities and that create performance 
measures to assess program outcomes and to provide a basis for linking 
program results with established goals. The strategic plan must 
describe how the annual performance goals relate to the strategic 
plan's goals and objectives. Finally, GPRA requires agencies to report 
annually on their results--that is, the extent to which their annual 
performance goals have been met. Figure 2 illustrates the relationship 
of the different components of this legislative framework.

Figure 2: The Linkage among Components in GPRA Legislative Framework:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]


Implementation of the legislative framework is evolving. Currently, for 
example, improving the integration of budget and performance is a high-
priority initiative in the President's Management Agenda.[Footnote 3] 
The Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) Program Assessment Rating 
Tool (PART) is central to this initiative. This diagnostic tool is 
intended to provide a consistent approach to reviewing program design, 
planning, and goal development as well as program management and 
results. OMB has begun using PART to assess 20 percent of programs 
annually, beginning with the fiscal year 2004 President's budget 
request to the Congress.

Prior GAO Reports Document Long-Standing Performance Accountability 
Problems:

GAO has documented the Forest Service's struggles with achieving 
performance accountability for over a decade. (See Related GAO 
Products.) GAO concluded that the agency's lack of performance 
accountability occurred, at least in part, because it had not developed 
a performance accountability system that linked its budget and 
organizational structures, planning processes, and resource 
allocations with its strategic goals, objectives, and performance 
measures.

Adequate performance measures are key to linking components of a 
performance accountability system. However, as we reported, the Forest 
Service had not established objective and verifiable performance 
measures. Nor had it established specific and quantifiable objectives 
that link its strategic goals with its annual performance measures. We 
reported that the agency had difficulty establishing these linkages 
because the authority for these components was fragmented among three 
different deputy chiefs, with no method for resolving differences on 
how to best link these components. This lack of coordination at 
headquarters undermined performance accountability.

Finally, we reported that the agency's leadership had failed to 
credibly emphasize performance management at either the headquarters or 
field levels. We reported that in 1991 the Chief of the Forest Service 
had formed a task force to review performance accountability. The task 
force found that the agency had consistently promised to take 
corrective actions recommended by GAO and USDA's Inspector General, but 
had most often failed to do so and that there was "compelling" evidence 
of a need for increased accountability. As a result, the task force 
recommended that the Forest Service (1) institutionalize accountability 
in managers' performance contracts, (2) accelerate cultural change in 
the agency, and (3) monitor and track accountability through indicators 
or benchmarks.[Footnote 4] The agency's leadership team adopted these 
concepts and distributed them agencywide. However, as we reported in 
1997, agency leadership did not follow up with actions to implement 
these concepts and, as a result, the task force's recommendations were 
never carried out.

Forest Service Has Made Little Progress in Resolving Known Performance 
Accountability Problems, unlike Other Federal Land Management Agencies:

The Forest Service has made little progress in resolving previously 
identified performance accountability problems and remains years away 
from implementing a credible performance accountability system. Rather 
than developing and implementing a functioning performance 
accountability system like other federal land management agencies, the 
Forest Service, for the most part, continues to study its options, as 
it has for the last 11 years. The agency is developing or has 
implemented two systems that should be important components of a 
performance accountability system--a budget formulation and execution 
system and a work-planning system--but neither was originally designed 
to be part of a performance accountability system, nor has the Forest 
Service developed the clear linkages needed between these new systems 
and its strategic goal-setting and results-reporting functions.

The Forest Service Continues to Study Performance Accountability:

To understand how other agencies have established clear linkages among 
key components of a performance accountability system, the Forest 
Service initiated a benchmarking study of other agencies' performance 
accountability systems in March 2002, including USDA's NRCS and 
Interior's BLM and National Park Service.[Footnote 5] This study 
reports on lessons learned for successfully developing, evaluating, and 
implementing a performance accountability system. In particular, a good 
performance accountability system, among other things, should include:

* senior leadership commitment to performance accountability;

* clear delineation of organizational responsibilities for performance 
measurement, budget integration, performance evaluation, and 
reporting;

* close coordination of performance accountability activities;

* national performance measures;

* linkages from the strategic plan to annual performance measures to 
budget activities; and:

* the ability to track total costs and tie those costs to desired 
outcomes.

Not until July 2002 did the Chief of the Forest Service emphasize his 
intention to "get started" on studying how performance accountability 
could be implemented at the Forest Service. In September 2002, in 
response to the Chief's direction, the strategic planning and budget 
staffs completed a draft plan for an agencywide performance 
accountability system that incorporated the lessons learned from their 
benchmarking study. The Forest Service's Draft Performance 
Accountability System Implementation Plan provides a conceptual 
framework and time frames for developing a performance accountability 
system. It is designed to develop the critical links among performance 
accountability components: the strategic plan, annual performance plan, 
project planning, budget, and annual reporting of results. The plan 
also explains how existing Forest Service databases, such as those for 
formulating the budget and the annual work plans, could be used to 
provide the information needed for performance accountability. Although 
the Chief endorsed the concept of performance accountability outlined 
in the plan, it did not receive broad support throughout the agency. As 
a result, the Chief decided to further assess performance 
accountability options through an executive steering team, rather than 
adopt the system envisioned in the draft implementation plan.

The executive steering team, chaired by the Deputy Chief for Programs, 
Legislation, and Communications, comprises nine senior executives in 
key agency positions.[Footnote 6] This team is to study the Forest 
Service's own processes and systems and further consider options 
available for implementing a Forest Service performance accountability 
system and to report to the Chief by June 2003 on the viability of 
these options. However, this team was not appointed until December 
2002, nearly 2½ years after we last testified on this issue and more 11 
years after we first reported on it. As a result, the Forest Service 
has made little progress since 1991, when it first formed a task force 
to review performance accountability.

Forest Service Has Developed Two Systems That Should Be Part of a 
Performance Accountability System, but It Has Not Established Clear 
Linkages between These Systems and Its Strategic Goals and Performance 
Results:

The Forest Service began considering new budget and work-planning 
systems in April 2000 and August 2001, respectively, long before the 
Chief emphasized his intention to "get started" on performance 
accountability in July 2002. These new systems should be integral parts 
of a performance accountability system, but the Forest Service has not 
developed clear linkages between these new systems' main outputs--
budgets and work activities--and its strategic goals and performance 
results. Without these linkages, the agency will not be able to report 
in an integrated, results-oriented way on what activities it completed, 
how much they cost, and what they accomplished--key elements of any 
effective performance accountability system.

In June 2000, the House Committee on Appropriations reported it was 
concerned that the agency devoted too much of its funding to 
headquarters initiatives and special projects, to the detriment of 
conservation and public service activities the Committee believed to be 
important. As a result, the Committee directed the Forest Service to 
better link its budget formulation and allocation systems to the actual 
work planned for the nation's forests.

The Forest Service developed such a system--the Budget Formulation and 
Execution System (BFES)--and in March 2001 began using it to formulate 
its fiscal year 2003 budget. The agency viewed BFES as an answer to the 
Committee's concerns, but not necessarily part of any effort to achieve 
performance accountability. The Forest Service designed BFES to allow 
field units to have more input into the budget formulation process, to 
plan activities and their associated funding throughout the annual 
budget development process, and to serve as a basis for subsequent 
field unit allocations. If BFES accomplishes these goals, according to 
senior officials in the budget office, it could allow field units to 
estimate their ability to carry out program activities in light of the 
agency's strategic goals, headquarters priorities, and local 
priorities. Furthermore, according to these officials, BFES's potential 
to establish such linkages could make it integral to the agency's 
recent attempt to develop a performance accountability system. However, 
as of May 2003--more than 3 years after the Forest Service began work 
on BFES and 2 years after its first use--only a portion of the agency's 
budget is included in the system.

Despite the expectations for BFES to link the agency's strategic goals 
with headquarters and local priorities, the Forest Service has not 
established clear linkages between its strategic goals and field units' 
local priorities, which makes it harder for the Forest Service to 
achieve performance accountability. In particular, budget instructions 
for fiscal years 2003 and 2004 attempted to guide field units on how to 
make these linkages. According to these instructions, as field units 
planned their activities and associated funding, they were to weigh the 
agency's strategic goals in making budgetary trade-offs between 
competing local priorities. In fiscal year 2003, field units found it 
impossible to deal effectively with the large number of priorities--50-
-headquarters identified. For fiscal year 2004, the agency's guidance 
did not provide a formal process to document such linkages. Field 
managers used their "professional judgment" to draw these linkages. 
Consequently, for both fiscal years 2003 and 2004, field units used 
BFES estimates to set local priorities based on incremental adjustments 
to their previous year's funding. Such a process does not meet the 
criteria for performance accountability because it is not clearly based 
on the strategic plan and associated outcomes. However, according to 
senior budget officials, the BFES approach to budget formulation for 
these years represents an improvement over the Forest Service's 
previous process, a more arbitrary practice based almost entirely on 
the previous year's funding.

Although the Forest Service's budget formulation effort for fiscal year 
2005 is an improvement over the budget formulation process for the 
prior 2 fiscal years, it once again falls short of establishing clear 
linkages between the agency's strategic goals and field unit 
priorities. In December 2002, the National Leadership Team--60 senior 
executives in the agency--reviewed a set of draft management 
objectives[Footnote 7] developed by the planning staff and tentatively 
approved 11 of them for field units to consider in developing their 
fiscal year 2005 budget submissions. Field units have been instructed 
to use these management objectives in integrating local forest plan 
priorities with agency objectives. Agency officials reported this 
initial step was intended to have field staff become "comfortable" in 
seeing budget and strategic goals together and to begin linking 
performance goals to the budget. However, staff in the planning office 
as well as some senior executives questioned the extent to which the 
fiscal year 2005 management objectives mirrored strategic goals, 
primarily because National Leadership Team members did not have 
sufficient time to carefully review the draft management objectives.

The Forest Service decided to replace its work-planning system in 
August 2001, when conversion to new computer hardware caused the 
existing work-planning system to lose some of its usefulness. The 
agency sought a national work-planning system to, among other things, 
help field units plan and manage work activities at the project level. 
According to agency officials, the new work-planning system--called 
WorkPlan--will be completed and implemented in two phases. The first 
phase is scheduled to be completed by May 1, 2003, but it will include 
only a planning component. WorkPlan should be available to field units 
in time to help them develop their fiscal year 2004 work plans. The 
agency expects to complete the second phase in October 2003, which is 
to add tracking completed activities and reporting accomplishments to 
WorkPlan's capabilities. According to the draft performance 
accountability system implementation plan, WorkPlan may eventually link 
field units' work activities to Forest Service planning, budgeting, and 
results reporting functions. These linkages, if established, could 
assist program managers in, among other things, reporting 
accomplishments and their related expenditures and integrating these 
functions with the Forest Service's strategic goals--key functions in a 
performance accountability system.

However, it is not clear whether the agency will be able to establish 
the necessary linkages that would enable WorkPlan to meet these 
expectations. For example, it is unclear how accurately the Forest 
Service will be able to report on the actual costs of individual work 
activities. Currently, the agency's financial information system 
reports actual expenditures only at the budget line item level, while 
WorkPlan is being designed to provide the planned costs of individual 
work activities at the project level. The Forest Service is planning to 
develop linkages to bridge this discrepancy between levels of reporting 
and thus to provide estimates of project activities' actual costs. 
Forest Service officials believe that such estimates could provide 
sufficient detail and clarity to adequately address performance 
accountability concerns. However, until such linkages are, in fact, 
established and evaluated, it is uncertain that the agency will ever be 
able to accurately report the actual cost of project activities.

WorkPlan's future ability to report accomplishments depends heavily on 
the Forest Service making significantly more progress on developing 
outcome performance measures for all of its goals and objectives. While 
we understand the difficulty in developing meaningful performance 
measures, the Forest Service is in the process of developing such 
measures only for its wildfire program. For example, in Forest 
Service's fiscal year 2005 draft Performance Management Plan, the 
measure for reducing hazardous fuels is expressed in terms of how much 
the risk of catastrophic fire has been reduced, an outcome-based 
performance measure. However, officials from the wildfire, wildlife and 
fish, engineering, and water and air programs told us that relating 
work activities, such as those that will likely be reported in 
WorkPlan, to achieving results requires systematic monitoring of the 
changing conditions in the forests over time in order to validate the 
effects of these different work activities. These program officials 
told us that with the exception of the wildfire program, currently they 
do not have plans to undertake this systematic monitoring for their 
other programs.

Other Federal Land Management Agencies Have Implemented Performance 
Accountability Systems:

Other federal agencies with land management responsibilities have made 
more progress in developing and implementing performance accountability 
systems. The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the 
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) have developed Web-based performance 
accountability systems that link planning, budgeting, and results. Both 
agencies continue to improve their systems and processes, and the 
Department of the Interior plans to implement BLM's system 
departmentwide as part of Interior's vision for effective program 
management.

According to NRCS and BLM officials, the primary factor driving the 
development and implementation of their performance accountability 
systems was a strong desire to report accurately on what they had 
accomplished with the dollars they received. Furthermore, strong 
leadership commitment enabled the agencies to develop and begin 
implementing their systems with existing resources within a few years-
-4 years for NRCS and 3 years for BLM. Finally, several other factors 
also contributed to the agencies' success: taking the risk of investing 
time and resources into developing a performance accountability system, 
using the strategic plan to guide their efforts, and having an 
implementation plan with time frames for completing steps throughout 
the development and implementation phases.

Both NRCS and BLM believe that their accountability systems have 
produced multiple benefits. Specifically, managers can make more 
informed decisions on resource allocation because the systems align 
actual costs with program work. For example, BLM officials report they 
can track actual costs to projects and tasks. In addition, their budget 
can show how these tasks and associated costs link with the agency's 
strategic plan. NRCS officials can also report on the actual costs of 
the agency's programs as well as how workload and time frames will 
change as resources change. Both agencies also told us that their Web-
based systems enable them to know what they are accomplishing with the 
money they spend at any given moment. As a result, BLM officials report 
that they can reallocate dollars as priorities shift because it is easy 
to determine where dollars are available. At both agencies, transparent 
data promoted competition among units in the agency to improve 
performance because performance data can be viewed by anyone in the 
agency.

Forest Service's Inability to Address Organizational, Cultural, and 
Leadership Challenges Continues to Impede Its Progress on Performance 
Accountability:

Three key challenges continue to keep the Forest Service from resolving 
its performance accountability problems: (1) establishing clear 
authority and responsibility within the current organizational 
structure, (2) making and implementing decisions in an agency culture 
that relies on consensus, and (3) establishing sufficient leadership 
emphasis and making performance accountability a higher priority.

Organizationally, several senior executives have been assigned 
responsibilities for components of performance accountability, but none 
of them has overall responsibility and authority for ensuring that 
these components are properly linked or that the agency achieves 
performance accountability. For example, the Deputy Chief for Programs, 
Legislation, and Communications is in charge of the strategic planning 
component, while the Deputy Chief for Budget and Finance is responsible 
for the budget and finance components. The agency will find it 
difficult to make progress in achieving performance accountability if 
the decisions and activities of the separate staffs responsible for the 
various accountability system components are not effectively 
coordinated. However, effective coordination continues to be a 
challenge within the Forest Service's existing organizational 
structure. The fact that the agency's efforts since our last report 
have not resulted in an approved performance accountability plan 
underscores the importance of addressing the issue of fragmentation and 
the need for more effective coordination.

Culturally, the Forest Service makes and implements major decisions by 
obtaining consensus throughout all levels of the agency--headquarters, 
regions, and local units. At times, this approach slows the agency's 
ability to make progress on important issues. According to senior 
Forest Service officials, the agency has a collaborative leadership 
management style--senior managers from all levels moving forward 
together--so that progress depends on a collective acceptance of any 
new proposal. These officials added that progress on new proposals 
could slow or even stop if consensus cannot be achieved in the 
developmental process. The Forest Service has been unable to develop 
and implement a performance accountability system, largely because it 
cannot agree on an integrated approach. The executive steering team's 
current effort to study available options for a performance 
accountability system is an indication that the draft plan for 
implementing such a system does not have broad support throughout the 
agency. According to one deputy chief, the executive steering team must 
build support throughout the agency in order to make progress toward 
implementing a performance accountability system.

Finally, agency leadership has not given the emphasis and priority to 
performance accountability that is needed to overcome the Forest 
Service's organizational and cultural challenges. Currently, the Chief 
and the Under Secretary of Agriculture for Natural Resources and 
Environment, who both have held their positions for less than 2 years, 
are emphasizing other priorities. The Chief is focusing on achieving 
financial accountability, while the Under Secretary counts performance 
accountability as his third priority, behind improvements to the 
agency's decision-making process and financial accountability. 
Furthermore, the Under Secretary stated that, without progress on the 
first two priorities, performance accountability would be meaningless. 
Both the Chief and the Under Secretary acknowledge that the emphasis on 
performance accountability has lagged behind other priorities. However, 
the Chief told us that he intends to review GAO and USDA Inspector 
General's recommendations to see whether the agency had taken actions 
as promised and also intends to include accountability for results in 
agency managers' contracts.

Conclusions:

Our analysis of the Forest Service's actions with respect to 
performance accountability shows that the agency is essentially in the 
same position it was more than a decade ago--studying how it might 
achieve performance accountability. By establishing another task force 
to again "review options" for implementing a performance accountability 
system, the agency has delayed any real action on this important front. 
Moreover, the Chief's intentions--to review GAO and Inspector General 
reports to see if the agency had taken promised actions and to consider 
incorporating performance accountability into the managers' contracts-
-are not new. The 1994 task force performed the same review and made 
the same recommendation on making performance accountability part of 
senior managers' contracts.

We understand that the Forest Service has important competing 
priorities--improving financial and performance accountability as well 
as its decision-making process--but we do not believe that these 
priorities need to be addressed sequentially. To the contrary, progress 
on these priorities is interdependent and can be and should be achieved 
concurrently so that both may be used to assess the overall performance 
of the agency. Accountability requires not only accurately informing 
Congress and the public on expenditures but also reporting the results 
of these expenditures. Without senior leadership's placing sufficient 
emphasis, however, we believe that the Forest Service will continue to 
take only small, slow steps, if any, toward achieving performance 
accountability.

If the future is to be different than the past, the challenges we 
identified have to be addressed aggressively. The Chief and the senior 
leadership have to decide to make performance accountability a reality, 
not a subject of continued study. To achieve more progress, the Forest 
Service will need to assign overall authority and responsibility for a 
performance accountability system to one official and then hold that 
person accountable for the effort. It is also crucial for Congress to 
monitor the Forest Service's progress in developing a performance 
accountability system. Unlike other land management agencies that have 
developed and implemented performance accountability systems within the 
last 3 years, the Forest Service has yet to come to this commitment on 
its own.

Recommendations for Executive Action:

To ensure progress in achieving performance accountability, we 
recommend that the Secretary of Agriculture direct the Chief of the 
Forest Service to appoint a senior executive with decision-making 
authority and responsibility for developing a comprehensive plan, with 
milestones, to ensure the timely implementation of an effective 
performance accountability system. This executive should be held 
accountable for:

* ensuring that the Forest Service's performance accountability system 
clearly links the key components needed to manage for results--plans, 
performance measures, budgets, work activities, expenditures, and 
accomplishments;

* meeting specific milestones for implementing the system; and:

* ensuring full implementation of the performance accountability system 
throughout all levels of the agency.

The Secretary of Agriculture should also direct the Chief of the Forest 
Service to report, beginning in 2004, on the agency's (1) progress in 
implementing a performance accountability system and the additional 
milestones to be accomplished in the agency's annual performance plans 
and (2) accomplishments in implementing its performance accountability 
system in its annual performance report to the Congress.

Agency Comments:

We provided a draft of this report to USDA for its review and comment. 
In response, the Forest Service stated that it agrees with the report's 
findings and recommendations. Specifically, the Forest Service stated 
that it would propose a comprehensive plan by May 30, 2003, to ensure 
the timely implementation of an effective performance accountability 
system.

The Forest Service's written comments are presented in appendix III.

Scope and Methodology:

To assess the progress the Forest Service has made in addressing 
previously identified performance accountability problems and key 
challenges impeding its ability to resolve these problems, we 
interviewed the Chief of the Forest Service, members of the executive 
steering team, and officials in various offices, including the Office 
of Budget and Program Analysis, the Office of Strategic Planning and 
Resource Assessment, and selected field offices. The Office of 
Strategic Planning and Resource Assessment and the Office of Budget and 
Program Analysis are responsible for designing and implementing the 
agency's performance accountability system. The Office of Budget and 
Program Analysis and selected field offices are responsible for the 
budget formulation and execution system, and work-planning system. We 
also reviewed reports, planning documents, USDA OIG audits, and other 
documents on past performance accountability problems in the Forest 
Service and on the status of the development and implementation of the 
agency's efforts to improve its planning, budgeting, performance 
measurement, and accomplishment reporting processes. Additionally, we 
interviewed officials at NRCS and BLM about their efforts to develop 
and implement Web-based accountability systems and reviewed related 
documents. Finally, we reviewed recent OMB directives related to agency 
performance management and budgeting and their recent PART analysis of 
two Forest Service programs.

We conducted our review from August 2002 through March 2003 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce its contents 
earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report for 30 days 
after the date of this letter. At that time, copies of this report will 
be sent to the:

congressional committees with jurisdiction over the Forest Service and 
its activities; the Honorable Ann Veneman, Secretary of Agriculture; 
and the Honorable Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr., Director, Office of 
Management and Budget. This report will also be available at no charge 
on GAO's home page at http://www.gao.gov.

If you have any questions about this report, please contact me at (202) 
512-3841. Key contributors to this report are listed in appendix V.

Barry T. Hill
Director, Natural Resources and Environment:

Signed by Barry T. Hill:

[End of section]

Appendix I: Forest Service's Progress on GAO-Reported Performance 
Accountability Problems:

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Forest Service budgets and allocates appropriated funds on the 
basis of historic funding levels; Date(s) reported: June 29, 2000; 
October 13, 1999; Forest Service's progress as of April 1, 2003: Forest 
Service's Budget Formulation and Execution System partially addresses 
this problem; Related key: challenges: Leadership; Organization.

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Forest Service also budgets and allocates funds on the basis 
of its programs, many of which are not linked to the agency's strategic 
plan or how work is actually done in the national forests; Date(s) 
reported: June 29, 2000; February 16, 2000; April 26, 1994; Forest 
Service's progress as of April 1, 2003: Forest Service attempted to 
link budget formulation and the agency's strategic plan with the FY05 
budget instructions. Forest Service is developing a national work-
planning system for national forests to plan work; Related key: 
challenges: Leadership; Organization.

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Forest Service intends for forest plans to serve as the basis 
of future budgets, but it is unclear how national forests will blend 
agencywide goals with local priorities; Date(s) reported: June 29, 
2000; October 13, 1999; Forest Service's progress as of April 1, 2003: 
No progress has been made to link forest plans to budgets. The Forest 
Service attempted to blend agency-wide goals with local priorities for 
its fiscal year 2005 budget; Related key: challenges: Leadership; 
Organization.

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Forest Service relies on performance measures that are not 
always clearly linked to strategic goals and objectives because they do 
not always assess outputs, service levels, and outcomes the agency 
intends to achieve; Date(s) reported: June 29, 2000; February 16, 
2000; October 13, 1999; Forest Service's progress as of April 1, 2003: 
Forest Service is developing performance measures it believes better 
link to the agency's strategic goals. However, the performance measures 
still need improvement; Related key: challenges: Culture; Leadership.

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Forest Service is working to refine its performance measures 
so they better reflect strategic goals, but the agency has not 
determined how long it will take to gather and analyze the needed 
data; Date(s) reported: February 16, 2000; Forest Service's progress 
as of April 1, 2003: No progress in this area; Related key: 
challenges: Culture; Leadership.

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Forest Service's line managers cannot be held accountable for 
achieving strategic goals and objectives because of poor performance 
measures; Date(s) reported: October 13, 1999; March 26, 1998; April 
26, 1994; Forest Service's progress as of April 1, 2003: No progress in 
this area; Related key: challenges: Culture; Leadership; Organization.

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Even when performance accountability improvements are adopted 
by Forest Service management, implementation is often left to field 
units which often leaves uneven and mixed results; Date(s) reported: 
March 26, 1998; Forest Service's progress as of April 1, 2003: No 
progress in this area; Related key: challenges: Culture; Leadership; 
Organization.

GAO's reported performance accountability problems at the Forest 
Service: Agreement does not exist within the Forest Service on its 
long-term strategic goals. This is the result of broader disagreement 
over the agency's priorities under its multiple-use and sustained-yield 
mandate; Date(s) reported: April 29, 1997; Forest Service's progress 
as of April 1, 2003: The National Leadership Team is discussing long-
term goals for the Forest Service's Strategic and Performance 
Management Plans; Related key: challenges: Culture; Leadership.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix II: Detailed Forest Service Organizational Chart:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

[End of section]

Appendix III: Comments from the Forest Service:

United States Forest Service		
Department of Agriculture		
Washington Office
14th & Independence SW:
P.O. Box 96090:
Washington, DC 20090-6090:

File Code:	1310/1930:

Date:	APR 22 2003:

Mr. Barry T. Hill:

Director, Natural Resources and Environment U.S. General Accounting 
Office:

441 G Street, N. W. Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Hill:

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on the draft 
General Accounting Office (GAO) Report GAO-03-503, "Forest Service: 
Little Progress on Performance Accountability Likely Unless Management 
Addresses Key Challenges.":

We agree with the findings of the report and propose to consult with 
the Secretary of Agriculture to aggressively implement the GAO's 
recommendations. Specifically, the agency will propose a comprehensive 
plan by May 30, 2003, with milestones, due dates, and assigned 
accountability to ensure the timely implementation of an effective 
performance accountability system with the functionality envisioned in 
the Recommendations for Executive Action section of the GAO Report.

Sincerely,

Dale N. Bosworth

Signed for Dale N. Bosworth:

cc: Hank Kashdan, Paul Brouha, Sandy T Coleman, Susan Dreiband, William 
Bradshaw, Susan Yontsshepard:

[End of section]

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Andrea Wamstad Brown, (202) 512-3319
Eugene W. Wisnoski (202) 512-6545
:

Acknowledgments:

In addition to those named above Chester M. Joy, Carol Herrnstadt 
Shulman, and Kelli Ann Walther made key contributions to this report.
:

[End of section]

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Wildland Fire Management: Reducing the Threat of Wildland Fires 
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Major Management Challenges and Program Risks: Department of 
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Natural Resources Conservation Service: Additional Actions Needed to 
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Forest Service: Status of Efforts to Improve Accountability. GAO/T-
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Forest Service: A Framework for Improving Accountability. GAO/RCED/
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Western National Forests: A Cohesive Strategy is Needed to Address 
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Major Management Challenges and Program Risks: Department of 
Agriculture. OCG-99-2. Washington, D.C.: January 1, 1999.

Managing for Results: The Statutory Framework for Performance-Based 
Management and Accountability. GGD/AIMD-98-52. Washington, 
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Forest Service Decision-Making: A Framework for Improving Performance. 
GAO/RCED-97-71. Washington, D.C.: April 29, 1997.

Forest Service: Status of Efforts to Achieve Cost Efficiency. GAO/RCED-
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Performance Measurement: An Important Tool in Managing for Results. T-
GGD-92-35. Washington, D.C.: May 5, 1992.

Wilderness Management: Accountability for Forest Service Funds Needs 
Improvement. GAO/RCED-92-33. Washington, D.C.: November 4, 1991.

FOOTNOTES

[1] The Government Performance and Results Act of 1993, as well as 
certain other laws, comprise this statutory framework. In particular, 
the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990 was designed to bring more 
effective general and financial management practices to federal 
agencies; the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 was intended to ensure 
that information technology is managed to improve the performance of 
agencies; and the Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996 requires agencies to 
establish goals for improving agency operations through the effective 
use of information technology. The framework also includes the Federal 
Managers Financial Integrity Act and the Inspector General Act.

[2] U.S. General Accounting Office, Forest Service: Actions Needed for 
the Agency to Become More Accountable for Its Performance, GAO/
T-RCED-00-236 (Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2000).

[3] The President's Management Agenda seeks to improve the management 
and performance of the federal government by focusing on 14 targeted 
areas--5 governmentwide goals and 9 program initiatives.

[4] Forest Service, Individual and Organizational Accountability in the 
Forest Service: Successful Management of Work Agreements, (Washington, 
D.C.: Forest Service, 1994).

[5] Forest Service, Budget and Performance Integration: Benchmarking of 
Other Organizational Approaches--Initial Report, (Washington, D.C.: 
Forest Service, 2002). Two other agencies studied were the U.S. Coast 
Guard and the U.S. Air Force.

[6] Deputy Chief for Programs, Legislation, and Communications (Chair); 
Deputy Chief for Business Operations; Chief Financial Officer; Deputy 
Chief for the National Forest System; Chief Information Officer; 
Regional Forester (region 10); Station Director, Pacific Northwest; 
Deputy Regional Forester for State and Private Forestry (region 8); and 
Director of Strategic Planning and Resource Assessment, serves as the 
non-voting executive secretary to the team.

[7] Management objectives define intermediate outcomes toward strategic 
goals. They are tangible objectives against which progress toward 
strategic goals can be measured.

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