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entitled 'Coast Guard: Non-Homeland Security Performance Measures Are 
Generally Sound, but Opportunities for Improvement Exist' which was 
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Report to the Subcommittee on Fisheries and Coast Guard, Committee on 
Commerce, Science, and Transportation, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

August 2006: 

Coast Guard: 

Non-Homeland Security Performance Measures Are Generally Sound, but 
Opportunities for Improvement Exist: 

Coast Guard: 

GAO-06-816: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-816, a report to the Subcommittee on Fisheries and 
Coast Guard, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, U.S. 
Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Using performance measures, the Coast Guard explains how well its 
programs are performing. To do so, it reports one “primary” measure for 
each program (such as percent of mariners rescued) and maintains data 
on other, “secondary” measures (such as percent of property saved). 
Concerns have been raised about whether measures for non-homeland 
security programs accurately reflect performance, that is, they did not 
rise or fall as resources were added or reduced. For the six non-
homeland security programs, GAO used established criteria to assess the 
soundness of the primary measures—that is, whether measures cover key 
activities; are clearly stated; and are objective, measurable, and 
quantifiable—and the reliability of data used to calculate them. GAO 
also used these criteria to assess the soundness of 23 selected 
secondary measures. Finally, through interviews and report review, GAO 
assessed challenges in using measures to link resources to results. 

What GAO Found: 

While some opportunities for improvement exist, the primary measures 
for the Coast Guard’s six non-homeland security programs are generally 
sound, and the data used to calculate them are generally reliable. All 
six measures cover key program activities and are objective, 
measurable, and quantifiable, but three are not completely clear—that 
is, they do not consistently provide clear and specific descriptions of 
the data, events, or geographic areas they include. Also, the processes 
used to enter and review the Coast Guard’s own internal data are likely 
to produce reliable data; however, neither the Department of Homeland 
Security (DHS) nor the Coast Guard have policies or procedures for 
reviewing or verifying data from external sources, such as other 
federal agencies. Currently, the review processes vary from source to 
source, and for the primary measure covering marine environmental 
protection (which concerns oil and chemical spills), the processes are 
insufficient. 

Of the 23 secondary performance measures GAO assessed, 9 are generally 
sound, with weaknesses existing in the remaining 14. These weaknesses 
include (1) a lack of measurable performance targets, (2) a lack of 
agencywide criteria or guidance to ensure objectivity, and (3) unclear 
descriptions of the measures. 

Two main challenges exist with using primary measures to link resources 
to results. In one case, the challenge is comprehensiveness—that is, 
although each primary measure captures a major segment of program 
activity, no one measure captures all program activities and thereby 
accounts for all program resources. The other challenge involves 
external factors, some of which are outside the Coast Guard’s control, 
that affect performance. For example, weather conditions can affect the 
amount of ice that must be cleared, the number of aids to navigation 
that need repair, or mariners that must be rescued. As a result, 
linking resources and results is difficult, and although the Coast 
Guard has a range of ongoing initiatives to do so, it is still too 
early to assess the agency’s ability to successfully provide this link. 

Table: Soundness of Primary Measures and Reliability of Data Used to 
Calculate the Primary Measure for the Coast Guard's Non-Homeland 
Security Programs: 

Program: Aids to navigation; 
Is the Primary Measure sound?: Yes; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: Yes. 

Program: Ice operations; 
Is the Primary Measure sound?: weaknesses identified; Are the data used 
to calculate the measure reliable?: Yes. 

Program: Living marine resources; 
Is the Primary Measure sound?: Weaknesses identified; Are the data used 
to calculate the measure reliable?: Yes. 

Program: Marine environmental protection; Is the Primary Measure 
sound?: Yes; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: Weaknesses 
identified. 

Program: Marine safety; 
Is the Primary Measure sound?: Yes; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: Yes. 

Program: Search and rescue; 
Is the Primary Measure sound?: Weaknesses identified; Are the data used 
to calculate the measure reliable?: Yes. 

Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard primary performance measures. 

[End of Table] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO made recommendations to clarify, develop targets, establish 
criteria, and review external data for certain performance measures and 
improve the Coast Guard’s overall reporting of results. DHS and the 
Coast Guard generally agreed with the recommendations in this report. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-816]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Stephen L. Caldwell at 
(202) 512-9610 or caldwells@gao.gov. 

[End of Section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Non-Homeland Security Primary Performance Measures Are Generally Sound 
and Data Are Generally Reliable, but Weaknesses Exist: 

More than a Third of the Secondary Performance Measures Assessed Are 
Generally Sound, and the Remainder Have Weaknesses: 

Challenges Exist in Using Measures to Link Resources to Results, but 
the Coast Guard Is Working on Ways to Address Them: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Secondary Performance Measures: 

Appendix III: Ongoing Coast Guard Initiatives to Link Resources Used to 
Results Achieved: 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Coast Guard's Non-Homeland Security Programs: 

Table 2: Soundness of Primary Measures and Reliability of Data Used to 
Calculate the Primary Measures for the Coast Guard's Non-Homeland 
Security Programs: 

Table 3: Source of Data Used to Calculate Non-Homeland Security Primary 
Performance Measures: 

Table 4: Soundness of Selected Non-Homeland Security Secondary 
Performance Measures: 

Table 5: Soundness of Secondary Measures for Coast Guard's Non-Homeland 
Security Programs: 

Table 6: Coast Guard Non-Homeland Security Secondary Performance 
Measures Not Assessed: 

Table 7: Ongoing Coast Guard Initiatives to Link Resources Used to 
Results Achieved: 

Abbreviations: 

Corps: United States Army Corps of Engineers: 
BARD: Boating Accident Reporting Database: 
DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 
GPRA: Government Performance and Results Act of 1993: 
OMB: Office of Management and Budget: 
PART: Program Assessment Rating Tool: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

August 16, 2006: 

The Honorable Olympia J. Snowe: 
Chair: 
The Honorable Maria Cantwell: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on Fisheries and Coast Guard: 
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation: 
United States Senate: 

Recent years have seen a marked shift in the Coast Guard's 
responsibilities. The events of September 11, 2001, shifted the Coast 
Guard's priorities and focus toward homeland security responsibilities, 
such as protecting the nation's network of ports and waterways. At the 
same time, however, the agency's traditional non-homeland security 
programs, such as rescuing people at sea and directing oil spill 
cleanup efforts, remain an integral part of its operations. In all, the 
Coast Guard has six non-homeland security programs (see table 1), and 
collectively, the effort that goes into them constitutes 50 percent of 
the Coast Guard's fiscal year 2006 enacted budget.[Footnote 1] 

Table 1: Coast Guard's Non-Homeland Security Programs: 

Program[A]: Aids to navigation; 
Brief description: Managing U.S. waterways through maintaining 
navigation aids and monitoring marine traffic. 

Program[A]: Ice operations; 
Brief description: Conducting domestic and polar icebreaking and 
international ice monitoring. 

Program[A]: Living marine resources; 
Brief description: Ensuring compliance with domestic living marine 
resources laws and regulations within the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone 
by fishermen through at-sea enforcement[B]. 

Program[A]: Marine environmental protection; 
Brief description: Preventing and responding to oil and chemical 
spills; prevention of invasive aquatic nuisance species; and preventing 
illegal dumping of plastics and garbage in U.S. waters. 

Program[A]: Marine safety; 
Brief description: Setting safety standards and inspecting commercial 
and passenger vessels; partnering with states and organizations to 
reduce recreational boating deaths. 

Program[A]: Search and rescue; 
Brief description: Conducting operations to find and assist mariners in 
distress. 

Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard documents. 

[A] Starting with the fiscal year 2007 budget, OMB has designated the 
Coast Guard's drug interdiction and other law enforcement programs as 
non-homeland security missions for budgetary purposes. However, at the 
time of our review, Coast Guard officials told us that, in terms of 
measuring performance, the agency still categorized these programs as 
homeland security missions as delineated under section 888 of the 
Homeland Security Act of 2002, 6 U.S.C. § 468. 

[B] The U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone is defined as an area within 200 
miles of U.S shores in which U.S. citizens have primary harvesting 
rights to fish stocks. 

[End of table] 

Since the changes that increased the Coast Guard's homeland security 
responsibilities, Congress has paid renewed attention to the Coast 
Guard's ability to carry out its non-homeland security programs. To 
help gauge its performance in these areas, the Coast Guard collects 
data on 45 performance measures, such as the percentage of mariners 
successfully rescued from imminent danger and the number of oil spills 
and chemical discharges. When reporting its performance, the Coast 
Guard follows the instructions of its parent agency, the Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS), and reports one measure for each program. For 
example, for the ice operations program, the Coast Guard reports on the 
annual number of days certain waterways are closed because of ice, and 
for the aids to navigation program, the Coast Guard reports on the 
number of collisions, allisions, and groundings.[Footnote 2] These 
performance measures, which we call "primary measures" in this report, 
are intended to communicate Coast Guard performance and provide 
information for the budgeting process to Congress, other policymakers, 
and taxpayers. Beyond the six primary performance measures, the Coast 
Guard also uses a variety of other performance measures to manage its 
programs, called "secondary measures" in this report. There are three 
key publications that DHS and the Coast Guard use to report the Coast 
Guard's non-homeland security primary performance measures--the DHS 
Performance and Accountability Report, the DHS fiscal year budget 
request, and the Coast Guard's fiscal year Budget-in-Brief. 

Our recent analyses have raised concerns about whether the primary 
measures accurately reflect what the Coast Guard is accomplishing with 
the resources it expends. In April 2004, we testified that despite 
substantial changes in the distribution of resources among programs, 
performance results appeared largely unaffected, and the Coast Guard 
had limited data and no systematic approach to explain the lack of a 
clear relationship between resources expended and performance results 
achieved.[Footnote 3] You asked us to consider whether shortcomings in 
the primary measures might explain why there was no apparent connection 
between resources expended and results achieved for the non-homeland 
security programs. In response, we evaluated the primary measures for 
the Coast Guard's six non-homeland security programs with regard to two 
key characteristics: (1) their soundness--that is, whether the measures 
cover the key activities of the program, are clearly stated and 
described, and are objective, measurable, and quantifiable--including 
having annual targets--and (2) the reliability of the data used to 
calculate the measures--that is, whether controls are in place to 
ensure the timeliness, completeness, accuracy, and consistency of the 
data.[Footnote 4] You also asked us to provide information on some of 
the secondary measures that are used in the Coast Guard's six non- 
homeland security programs. Our report addresses three questions: 

* Are the primary performance measures for the Coast Guard's six non- 
homeland security programs sound, and are the data used to calculate 
them reliable? 

* Are selected secondary performance measures for four of the Coast 
Guard's non-homeland security programs sound? 

* What challenges, if any, are present in trying to use the primary 
measures to link resources expended and results achieved? 

To conduct our analysis of the soundness of the primary performance 
measures, we relied primarily on a set of criteria that we had 
previously developed.[Footnote 5] These criteria were developed based 
on the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 (GPRA) and Office 
of Management and Budget (OMB) guidelines for agency performance 
measures.[Footnote 6] We used our judgment to assess whether these 
measures met our criteria. We also reviewed the fiscal years 2005 and 
2006 DHS Performance and Accountability Report, the fiscal years 2006 
and 2007 DHS budget requests, and the Coast Guard's fiscal years 2006 
and 2007 Budget-in-Brief. To conduct our reliability analysis, we 
relied primarily on comparisons of Coast Guard data collection methods 
and internal control processes with GPRA and the Reports Consolidation 
Act of 2000 requirements, as well as commonly accepted standards and 
practices.[Footnote 7] Our reliability analysis assessed only the 
specific data fields used to collect and report data for the six non- 
homeland security primary performance measures, and not the relevant 
databases as a whole. We reviewed and analyzed information collected 
and assembled at Coast Guard headquarters as well as at four Coast 
Guard field locations.[Footnote 8] To the extent possible, we also 
reviewed secondary measures for four of the six non-homeland security 
programs.[Footnote 9] To identify and assess the challenges in trying 
to use the primary measures to link resources expended and results 
achieved we interviewed Coast Guard officials at agency headquarters to 
discuss how measures are used in resource and budget allocation 
decisions and reviewed previous GAO reports on performance measures, 
performance reporting, and the link between the Coast Guard's resources 
used and results achieved. We conducted our work from July 2005 to 
August 2006 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. More details about the scope and methodology of our work are 
presented in appendix I. 

Results in Brief: 

Although some opportunities for improvement exist, the Coast Guard's 
primary performance measures for its six non-homeland security programs 
are generally sound, and the data used to calculate them are generally 
reliable. All six measures are generally sound in that they cover key 
program activities and are objective, measurable, and quantifiable, but 
three are not completely clear, that is, they do not consistently 
provide clear and specific descriptions of the data, events, or 
geographic areas they include. For example, the primary performance 
measure for ice operations, "domestic icebreaking--annual number of 
waterway closure days," actually only reflects closures for certain 
waterways within the Great Lakes region. Although these waterways are 
the main location for domestic icebreaking, icebreaking also takes 
place on the East Coast. While this caveat is included in some 
accompanying text, the description is inconsistent across department 
and agency publications. For instance, the DHS fiscal year 2005 
Performance and Accountability Report notes that the measure is made up 
of nine critical waterways, but the DHS fiscal year 2007 budget request 
reports that the measure consists of seven critical waterways, while 
the Coast Guard's fiscal year 2007 Budget-in-Brief does not mention the 
number of waterways included in the measure. With regard to data 
reliability, although the processes the Coast Guard uses to enter and 
review its own internal data are likely to produce reliable data for 
the performance measures we reviewed, we identified weaknesses with 
processes used to review the reliability of data gathered from external 
sources. Specifically, we found that neither DHS nor the Coast Guard 
has policies requiring review or consistent verification processes for 
these data. Instead, the processes vary for different data sources. For 
example, the Coast Guard tests the reliability of state-provided data 
used for its marine safety program's primary measure, but does not test 
the reliability of Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) data or review the 
Corps' data reliability procedures for data used for its marine 
environmental protection program's primary measure. While, according to 
a Corps official, the Corps does have some controls in place, without, 
at a minimum, familiarity with the internal controls used by the Corps 
to ensure the reliability of these data, the Coast Guard cannot provide 
assurance that the data are reliable. 

For the four non-homeland security programs we assessed, more than a 
third of the secondary performance measures are generally sound (9 of 
the 23), while opportunities for improvement exist for the remainder 
(14 of the 23). More specifically, for the 14 secondary measures, we 
found (1) the Coast Guard does not have measurable targets to assess 
whether program and agency goals and objectives are being achieved for 
12 measures, (2) the Coast Guard does not have agencywide criteria or 
guidance to accurately reflect program results and ensure objectivity 
for 1 measure, and (3) the Coast Guard does not clearly state or 
describe the data or events included in 1 measure. For example, a 
secondary measure for the search and rescue program, "percent of lives 
saved after Coast Guard notification," does not clearly state that it 
excludes incidents in which 11 or more lives were saved or lost in a 
single case. While including such large incidents in performance 
measures would skew annual performance results, it is important for the 
Coast Guard to identify these exclusions, either through a footnote or 
accompanying text, to ensure that events such the rescues of Hurricane 
Katrina--when the agency rescued more than 33,500 people within a few 
weeks--are recognized; otherwise, performance results could be 
misinterpreted or misleading to users. 

Although the primary performance measures are generally sound and data 
used to calculate them are generally reliable, even sound performance 
measures have limits to how much they can explain about the 
relationship between resources expended and results achieved. 
Specifically, we identified two challenges that stand in the way of 
establishing a clear link between resources and results. One challenge 
involves the difficulty of capturing an entire program such as ice 
operations or marine environmental protection in a single performance 
measure. The Coast Guard follows DHS guidance in reporting a single 
measure per program, which is consistent with our prior work on 
agencies that were successful in measuring performance and implementing 
GPRA.[Footnote 10] However, reporting some secondary measures or 
additional data in venues, such as the Coast Guard's annual Budget-in- 
Brief or program-specific publications, could provide additional 
context and help to more clearly articulate to stakeholders and 
decision makers the relationship between resources expended and results 
achieved. For instance, reporting data on the annual number of search 
and rescue cases in the search and rescue program, in addition to its 
primary measure, "the percent of mariners in imminent danger who are 
rescued," can provide greater context for the program's activity level. 
This is important because while the percentage of mariners saved may 
remain consistent from year-to-year, the number of cases, number of 
lives saved, and the resources used to achieve this result can vary. 
The second challenge involves the Coast Guard's ability to account for 
factors other than resources that can affect program results. Some of 
these factors are external to the agency--and perhaps outside of its 
ability to influence. Because of the potentially large number of 
external factors, and their sometimes unpredictable or often unknown 
effect on performance, it may be difficult to account for how they--and 
not the resources expended on the program--affect results. For example, 
a change in fishery regulations reduced the number of search and rescue 
cases in Alaska because it provided greater flexibility for fishermen 
to choose when they would fish for certain fish stocks--this 
flexibility allowed them to choose different timeframes and therefore 
safer weather conditions for their fishing activities. Developing a 
system or model that could realistically take all such factors into 
account may not be achievable, but, the challenge is to develop enough 
sophistication about each program's context so the Coast Guard can more 
systematically consider these factors, and then explain their influence 
on resource decisions and performance results. Recognizing these 
limitations, and responding to recommendations we have made in past 
reports, the Coast Guard has developed a range of initiatives that 
agency officials believe will help explain the effects of these factors 
and decide where resources are best spent.[Footnote 11] Some of these 
initiatives have been ongoing for several years, and according to 
agency officials, the extent and complexity of the effort, together 
with challenges presented in integrating them into a data-driven and 
comprehensive strategy, requires additional time to complete. 
Currently, the Coast Guard does not expect to fully implement many of 
the initiatives until 2010, and thus it is not possible to assess their 
likely impact in linking resources and results until they are further 
developed and operational. 

To improve the quality of program performance reporting and to more 
efficiently and effectively assess progress toward achieving the goals 
or objectives stated in agency plans, we are recommending that the 
Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security direct the Commandant 
of the Coast Guard to take steps to further improve the soundness of 
the 3 primary measures and 14 secondary measures we found to have 
weaknesses, develop and implement a policy to review the reliability of 
all external data that is used in calculating performance measures, and 
report additional information--besides the one primary performance 
measure--in appropriate venues to better inform stakeholders and 
decision makers about the relationship between resources expended and 
results achieved. In commenting on this draft, DHS and Coast Guard 
officials generally agreed with our findings and recommendations, and 
provided technical comments that we incorporated. 

Background: 

The Coast Guard has responsibilities divided into 11 programs that fall 
under two broad missions--homeland security and non-homeland security-
-which are recognized in the Homeland Security Act. To accomplish its 
wide range of responsibilities, the Coast Guard is organized into two 
major commands that are responsible for overall mission execution--one 
in the Pacific area and the other in the Atlantic area. These commands 
are divided into nine districts, which in turn are organized into 35 
sectors that unify command and control of field units and resources, 
such as multimission stations and patrol boats. In fiscal year 2005, 
the Coast Guard had over 46,000 full-time positions--about 39,000 
military and 7,000 civilians. In addition, the agency had about 8,100 
reservists who support the national military strategy or provide 
additional operational support and surge capacity during times of 
emergency, such as natural disasters. Furthermore, the Coast Guard also 
had about 31,000 volunteer auxiliary personnel help with a wide array 
of activities, ranging from search and rescue to boating safety 
education. 

For each of its six non-homeland security programs, the Coast Guard has 
developed a primary performance measure to communicate agency 
performance and provide information for the budgeting process to 
Congress, other policymakers, and taxpayers. The Coast Guard has also 
developed 39 secondary measures that it uses to manage these six 
programs. The Coast Guard selected and developed the six primary 
measures based on a number of criteria, including GPRA, DHS, and OMB 
guidance as well as legislative, department, and agency priorities. 
When viewed as a suite of measures, the primary and secondary measures 
combined are intended to provide Coast Guard officials with a more 
comprehensive view of program performance than just the program's 
primary measure. Some of these secondary measures are closely related 
to the primary measures; for example, a secondary measure for the 
marine environmental protection program, "annual number of oil spills 
greater than 100 gallons and chemical discharges per 100 million tons 
shipped," is closely related to the program's primary measure, "5-year 
average annual number of oil spills greater than 100 gallons and 
chemical discharges per 100 million tons shipped." However, other 
secondary measures reflect activities and priorities that are not 
reflected in the primary performance measures. For example, a secondary 
measure in the search and rescue program, "percent of property saved," 
reflects activities not captured in the program's primary measure, 
"percent of mariners in imminent danger who are rescued." 

In 2004, we compared trends in performance results, as reported by the 
Coast Guard's primary performance measures, with the agency's use of 
resources and found that the relationship between results achieved and 
resources used was not always what might be expected--that is, 
resources expended and performance results achieved did not have 
consistent direction of movement and sometimes bore an opposite 
relationship.[Footnote 12] We reported that disconnects between 
resources expended and performance results achieved have important 
implications for resource management and accountability, especially 
given the Coast Guard's limited ability to explain them. In particular, 
these disconnects prompted a question as to why, despite substantial 
changes in a number of programs' resource hours used over the period we 
examined, the corresponding performance results for these programs were 
not necessarily affected in a similar manner--that is, they did not 
rise or fall along with changes in resources.[Footnote 13] At that 
time, the Coast Guard could not say with any assurance why this 
occurred. For example, while resource hours for the search and rescue 
program dropped by 22 percent in fiscal year 2003 when compared to the 
program's pre-September 11, 2001 baseline, the performance results for 
the program remained stable for the same period. These results suggest 
that performance was likely affected by factors other than resource 
hours. One set of factors cited by the Coast Guard as helping to keep 
performance steady despite resource decreases involved strategies such 
as the use of new technology, better operational tactics, improved 
intelligence, and stronger partnering efforts. Coast Guard officials 
also pointed to another set of factors, largely beyond the agency's 
control (such as severe weather conditions), to explain performance 
results that did not improve despite resource increases. At the time of 
our 2004 report, the Coast Guard did not have a systematic approach to 
effectively link resources to results. However, the Coast Guard had 
begun some initiatives to better track resource usage and manage 
program results, but many of these initiatives were still in early 
stages of development and some did not have a time frame for 
completion. 

Like other federal agencies, DHS is subject to the performance- 
reporting requirements of GPRA. GPRA requires agencies to publish a 
performance report that includes performance measures and results. 
These reports are intended to provide important information to agency 
managers, policymakers, and the public on what each agency accomplished 
with the resources it was given. The three key annual publications that 
DHS and the Coast Guard use to report the Coast Guard's non-homeland 
security primary performance measures are the DHS Performance and 
Accountability Report, the DHS fiscal year budget request, and the 
Coast Guard's fiscal year Budget-in-Brief. The DHS Performance and 
Accountability Report provides financial and performance information to 
the President, Congress and the public for assessing the effectiveness 
of the department's mission performance and stewardship of resources. 
The DHS annual budget request to Congress identifies the resources 
needed for meeting the department's missions. The Coast Guard's annual 
Budget-in-Brief reports performance information to assess the 
effectiveness of the agency's performance as well as a summary of the 
agency's most recent budget request. These documents report the primary 
performance measures for each of the Coast Guard's non-homeland 
security programs, as well as descriptions of the measures and 
explanations of performance results. While these documents report 
performance results from some secondary measures, DHS and the Coast 
Guard do not report most of the Coast Guard's secondary measures in 
these documents. 

GPRA also requires agencies to establish goals and targets to define 
the level of performance to be achieved by a program and express such 
goals in an objective, quantifiable, and measurable form. In passing 
GPRA, Congress emphasized that the usefulness of agency performance 
information depends to a large degree on the reliability of performance 
data. To be useful in reporting to Congress on the fulfillment of GPRA 
requirements and in improving program results, the data must be 
reliable--that is, they must be seen by potential users to be of 
sufficient quality to be trustworthy. While no data are perfect, 
agencies need to have sufficiently reliable performance data to provide 
transparency of government operations so that Congress, program 
managers, and other decision makers can use the information. In 
establishing a system to set goals for federal program performance and 
to measure results, GPRA requires that agencies describe the means to 
be used to validate and verify measured values to improve congressional 
decision making by providing objective, complete, accurate and 
consistent information on achieving statutory objectives, and on the 
relative effectiveness and efficiency of federal programs and 
spending.[Footnote 14] In addition, to improve the quality of agency 
performance management information, the Reports Consolidation Act of 
2000 requires an assessment of the reliability of performance data used 
in the agency's program performance report.[Footnote 15] 

OMB's Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) is designed to strengthen 
and reinforce performance measurement under GPRA by encouraging careful 
development of outcome-oriented performance measures.[Footnote 16] 
Between 2002 and 2005, OMB reviewed each of the Coast Guard's six non- 
homeland security programs.[Footnote 17] OMB found that four programs-
-ice operations, living marine resources, marine environmental 
protection, and marine safety--were performing adequately or better, 
and two programs--aids to navigation and search and rescue--did not 
demonstrate results. OMB recommended that for the aids to navigation 
program, the Coast Guard develop and implement a better primary 
performance measure that allows program managers to understand how 
their actions produce results. Specifically, OMB recommended using an 
outcome-based measure, the number of collisions, allisions, and 
groundings, as a measure for the program, instead of the measure that 
was being used--aid availability. For the search and rescue program, 
OMB recommended that the Coast Guard develop achievable long-term goals 
for the program. Since these reviews, the Coast Guard has implemented a 
new primary performance measure for the aids to navigation program, "5- 
year average annual number of distinct collisions, allisions, and 
groundings," and developed new long-term goals for the search and 
rescue program's primary performance measure, that is rescuing between 
85 and 88 percent of mariners in imminent danger each year from fiscal 
year 2002 through 2010. 

Non-Homeland Security Primary Performance Measures Are Generally Sound 
and Data Are Generally Reliable, but Weaknesses Exist: 

While the six non-homeland security primary performance measures are 
generally sound, and the data used to calculate these measures are 
generally reliable, we found weaknesses with the soundness of three 
measures and the reliability of the data used in one measure (see table 
2). All six measures cover key program activities and are objective, 
measurable, and quantifiable, but three are not completely clear, that 
is, they do not consistently provide clear and specific descriptions of 
the data, events, or geographic areas they include. The Coast Guard's 
processes for entering and reviewing its own internal data are likely 
to produce reliable data. However, processes for reviewing or verifying 
data gathered from external sources vary from source to source, and for 
the marine environmental protection measure, the processes are 
insufficient. 

Table 2: Soundness of Primary Measures and Reliability of Data Used to 
Calculate the Primary Measures for the Coast Guard's Non-Homeland 
Security Programs: 

Program: Aids to navigation; 
Primary measure: 5-year average annual number of distinct collisions, 
allisions, and groundings; 
Is the measure sound?: yes; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: yes. 

Program: Ice operations; 
Primary measure: Domestic icebreaking--annual number of waterway 
closure days; 
Is the measure sound?: Weaknesses identified; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: yes. 

Program: Living marine resources; 
Primary measure: Percent of fishermen in compliance with regulations; 
Is the measure sound?: Weaknesses identified; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: Yes. 

Program: Marine environmental protection; 
Primary measure: 5-year average annual number of oil spills greater 
than 100 gallons and chemical discharges per 100 million tons shipped; 
Is the measure sound?: Yes; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: Weaknesses 
identified. 

Program: Marine safety; 
Primary measure: 5-year average annual number of deaths and injuries of 
recreational boaters, mariners, and passengers; 
Is the measure sound?: Yes; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: Yes. 

Program: Search and rescue; 
Primary measure: Percent of mariners in imminent danger who are 
rescued; 
Is the measure sound?: Weaknesses identified; 
Are the data used to calculate the measure reliable?: yes. 

Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard primary performance measures. 

[End of table] 

Although the Six Primary Measures Are Generally Sound, Three Have 
Weaknesses: 

While the six primary performance measures are generally sound--in that 
the measures cover key activities of the program, and are objective, 
measurable, and quantifiable--three of the measures are not completely 
clear. The primary performance measures for the ice operations, living 
marine resources, and search and rescue programs do not consistently 
provide clear and specific descriptions of the data, events, or 
geographic areas they include. It is possible these weaknesses could 
lead to decisions or judgments based on inaccurate, incomplete, or 
misreported data. The three programs with primary measures that are not 
completely clear are as follows: 

* Ice operations. Further clarity and consistency in reporting the 
geographic areas included in the ice operations primary performance 
measure, "domestic ice breaking--annual number of waterway closure 
days," would provide users additional context to discern the full scope 
of the measure. Despite its broad title, the measure does not reflect 
the annual number of closure days for all waterways across the United 
States, but rather reflects only the annual number of closure days in 
the Great Lakes region, although the Coast Guard breaks ice in many 
East Coast ports and waterways. According to Coast Guard officials, the 
measure focuses on the Great Lakes region because it is a large 
commerce hub where the icebreaking season tends to be longer and where 
ice has a greater impact on maritime transportation. While this 
limitation is included in accompanying text in some documents, the 
description of the limitation is inconsistent across department and 
agency publications. The DHS fiscal year 2005 Performance and 
Accountability Report notes that the measure is made up of nine 
critical waterways within the region, but the DHS fiscal year 2007 
budget request reports that it consists of seven critical waterways, 
while the Coast Guard's fiscal year 2007 Budget-in-Brief does not 
mention the number of waterways included in the measure. In addition, 
Coast Guard program officials said that the measure only reflects 
closures in one critical waterway--the St. Mary's River. Coast Guard 
program officials at agency headquarters said that they are in the 
early stages of developing a new primary performance measure that will 
incorporate domestic icebreaking activities in areas beyond the Great 
Lakes. However, until a better measure is developed, the description of 
the current measure can confuse users and might cause them to think 
performance was better or worse than it actually was. 

* Search and rescue. While the primary performance measure for the 
search and rescue program, "percent of mariners in imminent danger who 
are rescued," reflects the program's priority of saving lives, it 
excludes those incidents in which 11 or more lives were saved or lost. 
According to Coast Guard officials, an agency analysis in fiscal year 
2005 showed that 98 percent of search and rescue cases involved 10 or 
fewer people that were saved or lost. Coast Guard officials added that 
large cases involving 11 or more people are data anomalies and by 
excluding these cases the agency is better able to assess the program's 
performance on a year-to-year basis. While we understand the Coast 
Guard's desire to assess program performance on a year-to-year basis, 
and to not skew the data, in some instances this type of exclusion may 
represent a significant level of activity that is not factored into the 
measure. For example, during Hurricane Katrina, the Coast Guard rescued 
more than 33,500 people. While including such large incidents in the 
performance measure would skew annual performance results, it is 
important for the Coast Guard to recognize these incidents, either 
through a footnote or accompanying text in department and agency 
publications. Not clearly defining the measure and recognizing such 
incidents may cause internal managers and external stakeholders to 
think performance was better or worse than it actually was. 

* Living marine resources. Similar to the ice operations primary 
measure, the living marine resources primary performance measure, 
"percent of fishermen in compliance with regulations," is not 
consistently and clearly defined in all department and agency 
publications. The Coast Guard enforces federal regulations, similar to 
agencies across law enforcement, not by checking fishing vessels at 
random, but instead by targeting those entities that are most likely to 
be in violation of fishery regulations, such as vessels operating in 
areas that are closed to fishing. Because the Coast Guard targets 
vessels, the primary measure does not reflect the compliance rate of 
all fishermen in those areas patrolled by the Coast Guard, as could be 
inferred by the description, but rather is an observed compliance rate, 
that is, the compliance rate of only those fishing vessels boarded by 
Coast Guard personnel. The description of this performance measure is 
inconsistent across department and agency publications. For example, in 
the DHS fiscal year 2005 Performance and Accountability Report and the 
Coast Guard's Budget-in-Brief, this measure is described as an observed 
compliance rate, but the DHS fiscal year 2007 budget request does not 
clarify that this measure represents an observed compliance rate rather 
than the compliance rate of all fishermen in those areas patrolled by 
the Coast Guard. A measure that is not consistently and clearly stated 
may affect the validity of managers' and stakeholders' assessments of 
program performance, possibly leading to a misinterpretation of 
results. 

Existing Procedures Help Ensure Reliable Internal Data, but Procedures 
Do Not Exist to Check Reliability of All External Data: 

While the Coast Guard has controls in place to ensure the timeliness, 
completeness, accuracy, and consistency of internal data it creates-- 
that is, original data that Coast Guard personnel collect and enter 
into its data systems--the agency does not have controls in place to 
verify or review the completeness and accuracy of data obtained from 
all external sources that it uses in calculating some of the primary 
performance measures. The internal data used to calculate the six 
primary performance measures are generally reliable--in that the Coast 
Guard has processes in place to ensure the data's timeliness, 
completeness, accuracy, and consistency. These controls include data 
fields, such as pick lists and drop-down lists, that allow for 
standardized data entry, mandatory data fields to ensure all required 
data are entered, access controls that allow only authorized users to 
enter and edit data, requirements for entering data in a timely manner, 
and multiple levels of review across the agency. To ensure data 
consistency across the Coast Guard, each of the six non-homeland 
security programs has published definitions or criteria to define the 
data used for the primary measures. However, the Coast Guard 
acknowledges that in some instances these criteria may be open to 
subjective interpretation, such as with the search and rescue program. 
For example, when entering data to record the events of a search and 
rescue incident, rescuers must identify the outcome of the event by 
listing whether lives were "lost," "saved," or "assisted." While 
program criteria define a life that is lost, saved, or assisted, there 
is potential for subjective interpretation in some incidents.[Footnote 
18] Through reviews at the sector, district, and headquarters levels 
the Coast Guard attempts to remedy any inconsistencies from 
interpretations of these criteria. 

While the Coast Guard uses internal data for all six of its non- 
homeland security primary performance measures, it also uses external 
data to calculate the primary performance measures for two programs-- 
marine safety and marine environmental protection (see table 3). The 
Coast Guard's procedures for reviewing external data are inconsistent 
across these two programs. For example, while the Coast Guard has 
developed better processes and controls for external data used in the 
marine safety program's primary performance measure--such as using a 
news clipping service that gathers media articles on recreational 
boating accidents and fatalities and using a database that gathers 
recreational boating injury data from hospitals--the agency does not 
have processes to test the reliability of external data used in the 
marine environmental protection program's primary performance measure. 
The extent to which controls are used to verify external data for the 
marine safety and marine environmental protection primary measures is 
described below. 

Table 3: Source of Data Used to Calculate Non-Homeland Security Primary 
Performance Measures: 

Program: Aids to navigation; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard Marine Information Safety and Law 
Enforcement database[A]: check; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard District 9 icebreaking reports[B]: 
[Empty]; 
External Data Sources: [Empty]. 

Program: Ice operations; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard Marine Information Safety and Law 
Enforcement database[A]: [Empty]; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard District 9 icebreaking reports[B]: 
check; 
External Data Sources: [Empty]. 

Program: Living marine resources; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard Marine Information Safety and Law 
Enforcement database[A]: check; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard District 9 icebreaking reports[B]: 
[Empty]; 
External Data Sources: [Empty]. 

Program: Marine environmental protection; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard Marine Information Safety and Law 
Enforcement database[A]: check; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard District 9 icebreaking reports[B]: 
[Empty]; 
External Data Sources: check[C]. 

Program: Marine safety; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard Marine Information Safety and Law 
Enforcement database[A]: check; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard District 9 icebreaking reports[B]: 
[Empty]; 
External Data Sources: check[D]. 

Program: Search and rescue; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard Marine Information Safety and Law 
Enforcement database[A]: check; 
Internal Data Sources: Coast Guard District 9 icebreaking reports[B]: 
[Empty]; 
External Data Sources: [Empty]. 

Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard data. 

[A] The Marine Information Safety and Law Enforcement database is a Web-
based database used to track marine safety and law enforcement 
activities involving commercial and recreational vessels. The system 
provides query, reporting, and file-downloading capabilities to the 
Coast Guard marine safety and law enforcement operating programs. 

[B] Coast Guard District 9 (headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio) develops 
weekly icebreaking reports by compiling information from icebreaking 
cutters operating within the district. Information in these reports 
includes data on the number of vessels beset in ice that were assisted, 
the number of waterways closed because of ice, the duration of any 
waterway closures, and the number of vessel transits through critical 
waterways. These reports are sent directly from the cutters to the 
district office and compiled into an annual report that is sent to 
Coast Guard headquarters. 

[C] To calculate the marine environmental protection primary 
performance measure, the Coast Guard uses data from the Army Corps of 
Engineers on the amount of oil and chemicals shipped in the United 
States. 

[D] To calculate the marine safety primary performance measure, the 
Coast Guard uses state data on recreational boating deaths and 
injuries. 

[End of table] 

* Marine safety. To calculate the marine safety program's primary 
performance measure, "5-year average annual number of deaths and 
injuries of recreational boaters, mariners, and passengers," the Coast 
Guard uses internal data on deaths and injuries for mariners and 
passengers, as well as external data on recreational boating deaths and 
injuries from the Boating Accident Reporting Database (BARD)--a Coast 
Guard managed database--that relies on data collected and entered by 
the states. In 2000, the Department of Transportation Office of 
Inspector General reported that recreational boating fatality data 
collected from the states consistently understated the number of 
fatalities, in part because a precise definition of a recreational 
boating fatality did not exist.[Footnote 19] To improve the reliability 
and consistency of the data, the Coast Guard created a more precise 
definition and clarified reporting criteria by providing each state 
with a data dictionary that describes the definitions for all required 
data fields. In addition, to improve the timeliness of incident 
reporting, the Coast Guard created a Web-based version of BARD for 
electronic submission of recreational boating accident data. According 
to Coast Guard officials, this system allows Coast Guard staff to 
verify, validate, and corroborate data with each state for accuracy and 
completeness prior to inclusion in the measure. 

According to Coast Guard officials, a recent Coast Guard analysis 
showed that these efforts have improved the error rate from an average 
of about 6 percent to about 1 percent annually. However, despite these 
improvements, the Coast Guard acknowledges that some incidents may 
still never be reported, some incidents may be inaccurately reported, 
and some duplicate incidents may be included. Coast Guard officials 
told us that the agency continues to work to reduce these errors by 
developing additional steps to validate data. These recent steps 
include using a news clipping service that gathers all media articles 
concerning recreational boating accidents and fatalities and using a 
database that gathers recreational boating injury data from hospitals. 

* Marine environmental protection. In contrast, the Coast Guard does 
not have processes to validate the reliability of external data used in 
the marine environmental protection program's primary performance 
measure, "5-year average annual number of oil spills greater than 100 
gallons and chemical discharges per 100 million tons shipped." Each 
year the Coast Guard uses internal data on oil spills and chemical 
discharges, as well as external data from the Corps on the amount of 
oil and chemicals shipped annually in the United States to calculate 
this measure. However, the Coast Guard does not review the Corps' data 
for completeness or accuracy, nor does it review the data reliability 
procedures the Corps uses to test the data for completeness or 
accuracy. Coast Guard officials said that they did not take these steps 
because they had thought the Corps performed its own internal 
assessments, but they were also unaware of what these assessments were 
or whether the Corps actually performed them. While, according to a 
Corps official, the Corps does have some controls in place, an official 
at the Coast Guard agreed that the Coast Guard would benefit from 
having, at a minimum, some familiarity with the internal controls used 
by the Corps. 

More than a Third of the Secondary Performance Measures Assessed Are 
Generally Sound, and the Remainder Have Weaknesses: 

More than a third (9 of the 23) of the secondary performance measures 
assessed are generally sound--that is, they are clearly stated and 
described; cover key activities of the program; and are objective, 
measurable, and quantifiable (see table 4). However, as described 
below, weaknesses exist for the other 14 of these 23 measures. More 
specifically, for the 14 secondary measures, we found (1) the Coast 
Guard does not have measurable targets to assess whether program and 
agency goals and objectives are being achieved for 12 measures, (2) the 
Coast Guard does not have agencywide criteria or guidance to accurately 
reflect program results and ensure objectivity for 1 measure, and (3) 
the Coast Guard does not clearly state or describe the data or events 
included in 1 measure. These weaknesses do not allow the Coast Guard to 
provide assurance that these performance measures do not lead to 
decisions or judgments based on inaccurate, incomplete, or misreported 
information. More detail on all of the secondary measures we assessed 
is in appendix II. 

Table 4: Soundness of Selected Non-Homeland Security Secondary 
Performance Measures: 

Program: Aids to navigation; 
Number of measures that are sound: 3; 
Number of measures with weaknesses: 0. 

Program: Living marine resources; 
Number of measures that are sound: 0; 
Number of measures with weaknesses: 11. 

Program: Marine environmental protection; 
Number of measures that are sound: 6; 
Number of measures with weaknesses: 1. 

Program: Search and rescue; 
Number of measures that are sound: 0; 
Number of measures with weaknesses: 2. 

Program: Total; 
Number of measures that are sound: 9; 
Number of measures with weaknesses: 14. 

Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard secondary performance measures. 

[End of table] 

* Measures without measurable targets. Twelve secondary measures--11 
living marine resources measures and 1 marine environmental protection 
measure--do not have annual targets to assess whether program and 
agency goals and objectives are being achieved.[Footnote 20] According 
to Coast Guard officials, these measures do not have targets because 
the focus of the program is on the primary performance measures, and 
not the inputs and outputs reflected in these secondary measures. 
However, without any quantifiable, numeric targets, it is difficult for 
the Coast Guard to know the extent to which program and agency goals 
and objectives are being achieved. 

* Measure without criteria or guidance to accurately reflect program 
results and ensure objectivity. One of the search and rescue program's 
secondary performance measures that we analyzed, "percent of property 
saved," does not have criteria or guidance for agency personnel to 
objectively and consistently determine the value of saved property. 
Despite this lack of criteria on how to consistently and objectively 
determine property values, data from this measure are reported in both 
the Coast Guard's annual Budget-in-Brief and the DHS fiscal year 
Performance and Accountability Report. Coast Guard officials said it 
would be difficult to develop such criteria because of the large number 
of boats and vessels and their varying values. Officials added that 
Coast Guard personnel generally do not have access to, and do not 
follow up to obtain, insurance or damage estimates for saved property. 
In addition, we found that Coast Guard units do not consistently record 
property values across the agency. For example, some units do not 
record property values at all, other units record property values only 
when the actual value can be determined, and other units estimate 
property values using a $1,000-per-foot-of-vessel-length rule of thumb. 
Without any criteria or guidance to determine property values, the 
Coast Guard cannot provide assurance that agency personnel are 
consistently and objectively making these determinations across the 
agency, and whether the measure accurately reflects program results. 

* Measure not completely clear. Similar to the primary performance 
measure for the search and rescue program, one of the search and rescue 
program's secondary measures we analyzed, "percent of lives saved after 
Coast Guard notification," reflects the program's priority of saving 
lives, but excludes those incidents in which 11 or more lives were 
saved or lost in a single case. As with the primary measure, including 
such large incidents in performance measures would skew annual 
performance results, and thus it may be appropriate to exclude them. 
However, it is important for the Coast Guard to recognize, either 
through a footnote or accompanying text, the exclusion of these 
incidents--such as during Hurricane Katrina, in which the agency 
rescued more than 33,500 people--because otherwise, performance results 
could be misinterpreted or misleading to users. 

Challenges Exist in Using Measures to Link Resources to Results, but 
the Coast Guard Is Working on Ways to Address Them: 

While the primary measures for the Coast Guard's six non-homeland 
security programs are generally sound and use reliable data, challenges 
exist with using the primary measures to assess the link between 
resources expended and results achieved. Ideally, a performance measure 
not only tells decision makers what a program is accomplishing, but it 
also gives them a way to affect these results through the decisions 
they make about resources--for example, by providing additional 
resources with a degree of confidence that doing so will translate into 
better results. Even sound performance measures, however, may have 
limits to how much they can explain about the relationship between 
resources expended and results achieved. For the Coast Guard, these 
limits involve (1) the difficulty of fully reflecting an entire program 
such as ice operations or marine environmental protection in a single 
performance measure and (2) the ability to account for the many 
factors, other than resources, that can affect program results. 
Recognizing these limitations, and responding to recommendations we 
have made in past reports, Coast Guard officials have been working on a 
wide range of initiatives they believe will help in understanding the 
effects of these other factors and deciding where resources can best be 
spent. According to Coast Guard officials, although the agency has been 
working on some of these initiatives for several years, the extent and 
complexity of the effort, together with the challenges presented in 
integrating a multitude of initiatives into a data-driven and 
comprehensive strategy, requires additional time to complete. At this 
time, the Coast Guard does not expect many of the initiatives to be 
implemented until 2010. Until these initiatives are developed and 
operational, it is not possible to fully assess the overall success the 
agency is likely to have in establishing clear explanations for how its 
resources and results are linked. 

Primary Performance Measures Cover a Key Activity, but Not Every 
Activity Conducted under a Program: 

Performance measures are one important tool to communicate what a 
program has accomplished and provide information for budget decisions. 
It is desirable for these measures to be as effective as possible in 
helping to explain the relationship between resources expended and 
results achieved, because agencies that understand this linkage are 
better positioned to allocate and manage their resources effectively. 
The Coast Guard follows DHS guidance in reporting a single measure per 
program, and doing so is consistent with our prior work on agencies 
that were successful in measuring performance and implementing 
GPRA.[Footnote 21] Previously, we found that agencies successful in 
measuring performance and meeting GPRA's goal-setting and performance 
measurement requirements limited their measures to covering core 
program activities essential for producing data for decision making and 
not all program activities. Each of the Coast Guard's primary measures 
for its six non-homeland security programs meets our criteria of 
covering a key activity. None of them, however, is comprehensive enough 
to capture all of the activities performed within the program that 
could affect results. For example, the primary performance measure for 
the marine environmental protection program relates to preventing oil 
and chemical spills. This is a key program activity, but under this 
program the Coast Guard also takes steps to prevent other marine debris 
and pollutants (such as plastics and garbage), protect against the 
introduction of invasive aquatic nuisance species, and respond to and 
mitigate oil and chemical spills that actually do occur. As such, 
resources applied to these other activities would not be reflected in 
the program's primary measure, and thus, a clear and direct 
relationship between total program resources and program results is 
blurred. 

In some cases, it may be possible to identify or develop a performance 
measure that fully encapsulates all the activities within a program, 
but in many cases the range of activities is too broad, resulting in a 
measure that would be too nebulous to be of real use. Coast Guard 
officials told us that developing primary measures that incorporate all 
of the diverse activities within some programs, as well as reflect the 
total resources used within the program would be difficult, and that 
such a measure would likely be too broad to provide any value for 
assessing overall program performance. As such, officials added that 
performance measures provide a better assessment of program performance 
and resource use when all of a program's measures--both primary and 
secondary--are viewed in conjunction as a suite of measures. 

Performance Results Can Be Affected by Factors Other than Resources: 

A second challenge in establishing a clearer relationship between 
resources expended and results achieved is that many other factors can 
affect performance and blur such a relationship. Some of these factors 
can be external to an agency--and perhaps outside an agency's ability 
to influence. At the time of our 2004 report, Coast Guard officials 
also pointed to these external factors outside of the agency's control 
to explain performance results that did not improve despite resource 
increases. Because of the potentially large number of external factors, 
and their sometimes unpredictable or often unknown effect on 
performance, it may be difficult to account for how they--and not the 
resources expended on the program--affect performance results. 

Such factors are prevalent in the Coast Guard's non-homeland security 
programs, according to Coast Guard officials. They cited such examples 
as the following: 

* Changes in fishing policies off the coast of Alaska had an effect on 
performance results in the search and rescue program. For many years, 
commercial sablefish and halibut fishermen were allowed to fish only 
during a 2-week period each year. Given the limited window of 
opportunity that this system provided, these fishermen had a strong 
incentive to go out to sea regardless of weather conditions, thereby 
affecting the number of the Coast Guard's search and rescue cases that 
occurred. In 1994, these regulations were changed; in place of a 2-week 
fishing season with no limits on the amount of fish any permitted 
fisherman could harvest, the regulations set a longer season with 
quotas. This change allowed fishermen more flexibility and more 
opportunity to exercise caution about when they should fish rather than 
driving them to go out in adverse weather conditions. Following the 
change in regulations, Coast Guard statistics show that search and 
rescue cases decreased in halibut and sablefish fisheries by more than 
50 percent, from 33 in 1994 to 15 in 1995. However, Coast Guard 
officials said that because of the large number of search and rescue 
cases in the district during these two years--more than 1,000 annually-
-this policy change only had a minimal impact on the amount of 
resources the district used for search and rescue cases. 

* Vagaries of weather can also affect a number of non-homeland security 
missions. Unusually severe weather, such as Hurricane Katrina, for 
example, can affect the success rates for search and rescue or cause 
navigational aids to be out of service. Even good weather on a holiday 
weekend, can increase the need for search and rescue operations--and 
consequently affect performance results--because such weather tends to 
encourage large numbers of recreational boaters to be out on the water. 
Harsh winter weather can also affect performance results for the ice 
operations program. 

* Results for the marine environmental protection primary performance 
measure, "the 5-year average annual number of oil spills greater than 
100 gallons and chemical discharges per 100 million tons shipped" can 
be affected by policies and activities that are not part of the marine 
environmental protection program. For example, according to Coast Guard 
officials, a foreign country's decision to institute a more aggressive 
vessel inspection program could reduce spills caused by accidents in 
U.S. waters, if the inspections uncovered mechanical problems that were 
corrected before those vessels arrived in the United States. While not 
captured in the primary performance measure, the Coast Guard tracks 
such information through a secondary measure, "the Tokyo and Paris 
memorandums of understanding port state control reports."[Footnote 22] 

This small set of examples demonstrates that, in some situations, other 
factors beyond resources expended may influence performance results. 
Developing a system or model that could realistically take all of these 
other factors into account is perhaps impossible, and it would be a 
mistake to view this second challenge as a need to do so. Rather, the 
challenge is to develop enough sophistication about each program's 
context so that the Coast Guard can more systematically consider such 
factors, and then explain the influence of these factors on resource 
decisions and performance results. 

Coast Guard Has Developed a Range of Initiatives to Forge Better Links 
between Resources and Results: 

The Coast Guard is actively seeking to address such challenges, as 
those discussed above, through efforts, some of which have been under 
way for several years. In 2004, we reported that several initiatives 
had already begun, and we recommended that the Coast Guard ensure that 
its strategic planning process and associated documents include a 
strategy for identifying intervening factors that may affect 
performance and systematically assess the relationship among these 
factors, resources expended, and results achieved. Shortly thereafter 
the Coast Guard chartered a working group to investigate its then more 
than 50 ongoing initiatives to make recommendations on their value, 
contribution, and practicality, and to influence agency decisions on 
the integration, investment, and institutionalization of these 
initiatives. The working group's product was a "road map" that clearly 
defined executable segments, sequencing, and priorities. These results 
were then documented in a January 2005 Coast Guard internal report that 
summarized these priorities.[Footnote 23] Agency documents indicate 
that the Coast Guard later reduced these 50 original initiatives to the 
25 initiatives considered to be the most critical and immediate by 
evaluating and categorizing all 50 initiatives based on their ability 
to contribute to the agency's missions. These 25 initiatives, listed 
along with their status in appendix III, involve a broad range of 
activities that fall into seven main areas, as follows: 

* Measurement. Five initiatives are intended to improve the agency's 
data collection, including efforts to quantify input, output, and 
performance to enhance analysis and fact-based decision making. 

* Analysis. Eight initiatives are intended to transform data into 
information and knowledge to answer questions and enhance decision 
making on issues such as performance, program management, cause-and- 
effect relationships, and costs. 

* Knowledge management. Three ongoing initiatives are intended to 
capture, evaluate, and share employee knowledge, experiences, ideas, 
and skills. 

* Alignment. Three initiatives are intended to improve the consistency 
and alignment of agency planning, resource decisions, and analysis 
across all Coast Guard programs. 

* Access. Two initiatives relate to making data, information, and 
knowledge transparent and available to employees. 

* Policy and doctrine. Three initiatives are intended to develop new 
and maintain current Coast Guard management policies. 

* Communication and outreach. One initiative is intended to assist and 
guide program managers and staff to understand and align all aspects of 
the Coast Guard's overall management strategy. 

We found that one of the initiatives that the working group deemed 
important and included among the most critical and immediate 
initiatives, relates, in part, to the first challenge we discussed-- 
that is, developing new measures and improving the breadth of old 
measures to better manage Coast Guard programs and achieve agency 
goals. Coast Guard efforts have been ongoing in this regard, and our 
current work has identified several performance measures that were 
recently improved, and others that are currently under development. For 
example, to provide a more comprehensive measure of search and rescue 
program performance, the Coast Guard is improving its ability to track 
lives-unaccounted-for--that is, those persons who at the end of a 
search and rescue response remain missing. According to Coast Guard 
officials, the agency is working on and anticipates being able to 
eventually include data on lives-unaccounted-for in the primary 
performance measure. Also, the Coast Guard began including data on the 
number of recreational boating injuries, along with the data on mariner 
and passenger deaths and injuries and recreational boater deaths, which 
can help provide a more comprehensive primary measure for the marine 
safety program. In addition, recently, OMB guidance began requiring 
efficiency measures as part of performance management, and in response, 
the Coast Guard has started developing such efficiency measures. The 
Coast Guard is also developing a variety of performance measures to 
capture agency performance related to other activities, such as the 
prevention of invasive aquatic nuisance species (marine environmental 
protection), maritime mobility (aids to navigation), and domestic and 
polar icebreaking (ice operations). 

Many of the Coast Guard's other ongoing initiatives are aimed at the 
second challenge--that is, developing a better understanding of the 
various factors that affect the relationship between resources and 
results. This is a substantial undertaking, and in 2005, upon the 
recommendation of the working group, the Coast Guard created an office 
to conduct and coordinate these efforts.[Footnote 24] This office has 
taken the lead in developing, aligning, implementing, and managing all 
of the initiatives. Together, the activities cover such steps as (1) 
improving measurement, with comprehensive data on activities, 
resources, and performance; (2) improving agency analysis and 
understanding of cause-and-effect relationships, such as the 
relationship between external factors and agency performance; and (3) 
providing better planning and decision making across the agency. Coast 
Guard officials expect that once these initiatives are completed, the 
Coast Guard will have a more systematic approach to link resources to 
results. 

The Coast Guard has already been at this effort for several years but 
does not anticipate implementation of many of these initiatives until 
at least fiscal year 2010. The amount of time that has already elapsed 
since our 2004 report may raise some concerns about whether progress is 
being made. However, as described in the examples below, many of these 
are complex data-driven initiatives that make up a larger comprehensive 
strategy to better link resources to results, and as such, we think the 
lengthy time frame reflects the complexity of the task. According to 
Coast Guard officials, the agency is proceeding carefully and is still 
learning about how these initiatives can best be developed and 
implemented. Three key efforts help show the extent of, and 
interrelationships among, the various components of the effort: 

* Standardized reporting. The Coast Guard is currently developing an 
activities dictionary to standardize the names and definitions for all 
Coast Guard activities across the agency. According to Coast Guard 
officials, this activities dictionary is a critical step in continuing 
to develop, implement, and integrate these initiatives. Officials added 
that standardizing the names and definitions of all Coast Guard 
activities will create more consistent data collection throughout the 
agency, which is important because these data will be used to support 
many other initiatives. 

* Measurement of readiness. Another initiative, the Readiness 
Management System, is a tool being developed and implemented to track 
the agency's readiness capabilities by providing up-to-date information 
on resource levels at each Coast Guard unit as well as the 
certification and skills of all Coast Guard uniformed personnel. This 
information can directly affect outcomes and performance measures by 
providing unit commanders with information to reconfigure resources for 
a broad range of missions. Tracking this information, for example, 
should allow the unit's commanding officer to determine what resources 
and personnel skills are needed to help ensure the unit has the skills 
and resources necessary to accomplish its key activities, or for new 
programs or activities. Coast Guard officials told us that the 
Readiness Management System is in the early stages of being implemented 
across the agency. 

* Framework for analyzing risk, readiness, and performance. According 
to Coast Guard officials, the information from the Readiness Management 
System will be integrated with another initiative currently under 
development, the Uniform Performance Logic Model. This initiative is 
intended to illustrate the causal relationships among risk, readiness 
management, and agency performance. Coast Guard officials said that by 
accounting for these many factors, the model will help decision makers 
understand why events and outcomes occur, and how these events and 
outcomes are related to resources. For example, the model will provide 
the Coast Guard with an analysis tool to assist management with 
decisions regarding the allocation of resources. 

The Coast Guard currently anticipates that many of the 25 initiatives 
will initially be implemented by fiscal year 2010 and expects further 
refinements to extend beyond this time frame. While the Coast Guard 
appears to be moving in the right direction and has neared completion 
of some initiatives, until all of the agency's efforts are complete, it 
remains too soon to determine how effective it will be at clearly 
linking resources to performance results. 

Conclusions: 

It is important for the Coast Guard to have sound performance measures 
that are clearly stated and described; cover key program activities; 
are objective, measurable, and quantifiable--including having annual 
targets; and using reliable data. This type of information would help 
Coast Guard management and stakeholders, such as Congress, make 
decisions about how to fund and improve program performance. We found 
that the Coast Guard's non-homeland security performance measures 
satisfy many of the criteria and use data that are generally reliable. 
The weaknesses and limitations we did find do not mean that the 
measures are not useful but rather represent opportunities for 
improvement. However, if these weaknesses are not addressed--that is, 
if measures are not clearly stated and well-defined, do not have 
measurable performance targets, or do not have criteria to objectively 
and consistently report data, or processes in place to ensure external 
data are reliable--the information reported through these measures 
could be misinterpreted, misleading, or inaccurate. For example, 
without either processes in place to review the reliability of external 
data used in performance measures, or a familiarity with the controls 
used by external parties to verify and validate these data, the Coast 
Guard cannot ensure the completeness or accuracy of all of its 
performance results. 

While the Coast Guard's measures are generally sound, even sound 
performance measures have limits as to how much they can explain about 
the relationship between resources expended and results achieved. The 
Coast Guard continues to work to overcome these limitations by 
developing a number of different initiatives, including but not limited 
to developing and refining the agency's performance measures. Although 
the agency appears to be moving in the right direction, until all of 
the Coast Guard's efforts are complete, we will be unable to determine 
how effective these initiatives are at linking resources to results. In 
the interim, an additional step the Coast Guard can take to further 
demonstrate the relationship between resources and results is to 
provide additional information or measures in some of its annual 
publications--aside from the one primary measure used in department 
publications--where doing so would help provide context or provide 
additional perspective. For example, this could be done in other 
venues--such as the Coast Guard's annual Budget-in-Brief, or any 
program-specific publications--where reporting some secondary measures 
or additional data could provide more context or perspective on 
programs, and could help to more fully articulate to stakeholders and 
decision makers the relationship between resources expended and results 
achieved. Reporting supplemental information on such things as the 
percentage of aids to navigation available and in need of maintenance, 
the annual number of search and rescue cases, and icebreaking 
activities beyond the Great Lakes region would provide additional 
information on the annual levels of activity that constitute the aids 
to navigation, search and rescue, and ice operations programs; 
information that external decision makers, in particular, might find 
helpful. Reporting these measures would be useful to provide additional 
information to Congress on activities being conducted that may require 
more or less funding while the Coast Guard continues its work on the 
many initiatives it has ongoing aimed at better linking its performance 
results with resources expended. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To improve the quality of program performance reporting and to more 
efficiently and effectively assess progress toward achieving the goals 
or objectives stated in agency plans, we recommend that the Secretary 
of Homeland Security direct the Commandant of the Coast Guard to: 

* Refine certain Coast Guard primary and secondary performance measures 
by: 

- further clarifying the ice operations primary measure by clearly and 
consistently describing the geographic area and number of waterways 
included in the measure; the living marine resources primary measure by 
clearly and consistently reporting the scope of the measure; and the 
search and rescue primary measure and the search and rescue "percent of 
lives saved after Coast Guard notification" secondary measure by 
reporting those incidents or data that are not included in the 
measures; 

- developing measurable performance targets to facilitate assessments 
of whether program and agency goals and objectives are being achieved 
for the 11 living marine resources secondary measures and the 1 marine 
environmental protection secondary measure, "Tokyo and Paris 
memorandums of understanding port state control reports," that lack 
annual targets; and: 

- establishing agencywide criteria or guidance to help ensure the 
objectivity and consistency of the search and rescue program's "percent 
of property saved" secondary performance measure. 

* Develop and implement a policy to review external data provided by 
third parties that is used in calculating performance measures to, at a 
minimum, be familiar with the internal controls external parties use to 
determine the reliability of their data. 

* Report additional information--besides the one primary measure--in 
appropriate agency publications or documents where doing so would help 
provide greater context or perspective on the relationship between 
resources expended and program results achieved. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Department of Homeland 
Security, including the Coast Guard, for their review and comment. The 
Department of Homeland Security and the Coast Guard generally agreed 
with the findings and recommendations of the draft and provided 
technical comments, which we incorporated to ensure the accuracy of our 
report. The Department of Homeland Security's written comments are 
reprinted in appendix IV. 

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution of it until 30 
days from the date of this letter. We will then send copies to the 
Secretary of Homeland Security; the Commandant of the Coast Guard; the 
Director, Office of Management and Budget; and make copies available to 
other interested parties who request them. In addition, the report will 
be available at no charge on GAO's Web site at [Hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you have any questions about this report, please contact me at 
CaldwellS@gao.gov or (202) 512-9610. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions to this 
report are listed in appendix IV. 

Signed by: 

Stephen L. Caldwell: 
Acting Director, Homeland Security and Justice Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

For our first objective--whether the primary performance measure for 
the Coast Guard's six non-homeland security programs are sound, and the 
data used to calculate them are reliable--we used previously 
established GAO criteria to determine the soundness of the primary 
performance measures.[Footnote 25] Specifically, we used our judgment 
to assess whether the measures are (1) clearly stated and described; 
(2) cover a key program activity and represent mission goals and 
priorities; (3) objective, that is whether they are open to bias or 
subjective interpretation; (4) measurable, that is, represent 
observable events; and (5) quantifiable, that is, are countable events 
or outcomes. A measure should be clearly stated and described so that 
it is consistent with the methodology used to calculate it and can be 
understood by stakeholders both internally and externally. Measures 
should also cover key program activities and represent program and 
agency goals and priorities to help identify those activities that 
contribute to the goals and priorities. To the greatest extent 
possible, measures should be objective, that is, reasonably free of 
bias or manipulation that would distort an accurate assessment of 
performance. When appropriate, measures should be measurable and 
quantifiable, including having annual targets, to facilitate future 
assessments of whether goals or objectives were achieved, because 
comparisons can be easily made between projected performance and actual 
results. 

In addition, to further assess the soundness of the primary performance 
measures, we interviewed program officials from each non-homeland 
security program and reviewed planning and performance documentation 
from each program office at the headquarters, district, and sector 
levels. Program officials we spoke with included headquarters officials 
responsible for developing and implementing performance measures in 
each program, as well as officials at the district and sector levels 
responsible for collecting and entering performance data. We reviewed 
documentation on Coast Guard policies and manuals for performance 
measures, Coast Guard annual performance plans and reports, commandant 
instructions, prior GAO reports, Office of Management and Budget 
Program Assessment Rating Tool reviews for each program, and Department 
of Homeland Security annual reports. 

To determine the reliability of data used in the primary measures, we 
assessed whether processes and controls were in place to ensure that 
the data used in the measures are timely, complete, accurate, and 
consistent, and appear reasonable. We reviewed legislative requirements 
for data reliability in both the Government Performance and 
Accountability Act of 1993 and the Reports Consolidation Act of 2000 
and reviewed Coast Guard standards and procedures for collecting 
performance data and calculating results. In addition, we interviewed 
agency officials at Coast Guard headquarters, as well as at the 
district and sector levels, regarding standardized agencywide data 
collection, entry, verification, and reporting policies, and inquired 
as to if and how these procedures differed across programs and at each 
level of the organization. We observed data entry for the Marine 
Information Safety and Law Enforcement database at Coast Guard district 
and sector offices in Boston, Massachusetts; Miami, Florida; and 
Seattle, Washington; a district office in Cleveland, Ohio; as well as 
at an air station in Miami, Florida; and a marine safety office in 
Cleveland, Ohio, to check for inconsistencies and discrepancies in how 
data are collected and maintained throughout the agency. We selected 
these field locations because of the number and types of non-homeland 
security programs that are performed at these locations. We also spoke 
with information technology officials responsible for maintaining the 
Marine Information Safety and Law Enforcement database. 

For our second objective--whether selected secondary performance 
measures for four of the Coast Guard's non-homeland security programs 
are sound--we selected measures in addition to the primary performance 
measures for the aids to navigation, living marine resources, marine 
environmental protection, and search and rescue programs. We selected 
these programs because they had the largest budget increases between 
the fiscal year 2005 budget and the Coast Guard's fiscal year 2006 
budget request, and are programs of particular interest because of 
events surrounding Hurricane Katrina. In addition, we did not assess 
any of the secondary measures that were in development at the time of 
our report. For these four programs, we assessed the soundness of only 
those other performance measures that Coast Guard officials said were 
high level, strategic measures used for performance budgeting, budget 
projections, management decisions, and external reporting. The 23 
secondary measures we assessed for these four programs represent more 
than half of the 39 high-level, strategic secondary measures used to 
manage the six non-homeland security programs. To assess the soundness 
of the selected 23 secondary measures, we used the same GAO criteria 
and followed the same steps that we used to determine the soundness of 
the primary performance measures. 

For our third objective--the challenges, if any, that are present in 
trying to use these measures to link resources expended to results 
achieved--we interviewed Coast Guard budget officials at agency 
headquarters to discuss how performance measures are used in resource 
and budget allocation decision making processes. We reviewed previous 
GAO reports on performance measures, performance reporting, and the 
link between the Coast Guard's resources expended and results achieved. 
We also interviewed program officials at Coast Guard headquarters about 
ongoing initiatives the agency is developing and implementing to link 
resources expended to results achieved. 

We conducted our work from July 2005 to August 2006 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Secondary Performance Measures: 

Appendix II provides our findings for the soundness of the high-level, 
strategic secondary measures we assessed (see table 5), as well as a 
list of those high-level, strategic secondary measures we did not 
assess (see table 6). Because of the large number of secondary measures 
for the Coast Guard's six non-homeland security programs, we assessed 
the soundness of secondary measures for the aids to navigation, living 
marine resources, marine environmental protection, and search and 
rescue programs, and we did not assess the soundness of secondary 
measures for the ice operations and marine safety programs. 

Table 5: Soundness of Secondary Measures for Coast Guard's Non-Homeland 
Security Programs: 

Program and measure: Aids to navigation: Annual number of distinct 
collision, allision, and grounding events[A]; 
Is measure sound?: yes. 

Program and measure: Aids to navigation: Aid availability; 
Is measure sound?: yes. 

Program and measure: Aids to navigation: Aids overdue for servicing; 
Is measure sound?: yes. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Percent of Marine Affairs 
graduates in Marine Affairs-coded billets; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Number of domestic 
fisheries enforcement resource hours; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Number of active 
commercial fishing vessels by major fishery; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Number of domestic 
boardings by major fishery; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Boardings per active 
commercial fishing vessels by major fishery; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Number of significant 
violations by major fishery; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Number of significant 
violations per domestic resource hours; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Status of fish stocks; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Number of Coast Guard 
members trained at Regional Fishing Training Centers; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Cost per Coast Guard 
member trained at Regional Fishing Training Centers; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Living marine resources: Number of Marine Affairs 
graduates on active duty; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Marine environmental protection: Annual number of 
oil spills greater than 100 gallons and chemical discharges per 100 
million tons shipped; 
Is measure sound?: Yes. 

Program and measure: Marine environmental protection: Annual volume of 
oil spilled; 
Is measure sound?: yes. 

Program and measure: Marine environmental protection: 5-year average 
annual volume of oil spilled; 
Is measure sound?: yes. 

Program and measure: Marine environmental protection: 5-year average 
annual number of distinct collision, allision, and grounding events[B]; 
Is measure sound?: Yes. 

Program and measure: Marine environmental protection: Port state annual 
detention ratio[A]; 
Is measure sound?: Yes. 

Program and measure: Marine environmental protection: Port state 3-year 
average detention ratio[A]; 
Is measure sound?: yes. 

Program and measure: Marine environmental protection: Tokyo and Paris 
memorandums of understanding port state control reports[A]; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Search and rescue: Percent of lives saved after 
Coast Guard notification; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Program and measure: Search and rescue: Percent of property saved; 
Is measure sound?: Weaknesses identified. 

Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard secondary performance measures. 

[A] Four secondary measures--(1) port state annual detention ratio; (2) 
port state 3-year average detention ratio; (3) Tokyo and Paris 
memorandums of understanding port state control reports; and (4) annual 
number of distinct collision, allision, and grounding events--are each 
used by the aids to navigation, marine environmental protection, and 
marine safety programs. 

[B] The marine environmental protection program secondary measure, 5- 
year average annual number of distinct collision, allision, and 
grounding events, is also the primary performance measure for the aids 
to navigation program. 

[End of table] 

Table 6: Coast Guard Non-Homeland Security Secondary Performance 
Measures Not Assessed: 

Program and measure: Ice operations: Ensure that ferry service to 
isolated communities is not interrupted for more than 2 days annually. 

Program and measure: Ice operations: Annually respond to all Army Corps 
of Engineers requests to assist in relieving ice jams to prevent 
potential flooding. 

Program and measure: Ice operations: Annually during ice season ensure 
that 95 percent of vessels transiting during light winters, 90 percent 
of vessels transiting during normal winters, and 70 percent of vessels 
transiting during severe winters are able to maintain an average track 
speed of 3 knots. 

Program and measure: Ice operations: With adequate advanced notice, 
annually provide all necessary icebreaking services to allow product 
delivery. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual observed wear rate of 
personal flotation devices. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of voluntary Vessel 
Safety Exams. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of boating operators 
receiving boating education (by state). 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of recreational 
boating safety boardings by states. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of recreational 
boating safety boardings by Coast Guard. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of citations issued 
for improper carriage of safety equipment. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of boatings under the 
influence (by state). 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of commercial vessel 
safety-related mariner deaths. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of commercial vessel 
safety-related passenger deaths. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of commercial vessel 
safety-related mariner injuries. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: Annual number of commercial vessel 
safety-related passenger injuries. 

Program and measure: Marine safety: 5-year average number of passenger 
and maritime worker casualties and recreational boating deaths divided 
by the ratio of the current period to the prior period 5-year average 
operating expense authority for marine safety. 

Source: Coast Guard. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Ongoing Coast Guard Initiatives to Link Resources Used to 
Results Achieved: 

Appendix III provides a list of the Coast Guard's ongoing initiatives 
to improve the agency's planning, resource management, and decision 
support systems to more closely align performance with resources. (See 
table 7.) 

Table 7: Ongoing Coast Guard Initiatives to Link Resources Used to 
Results Achieved: 

Type of initiative: Measurement initiatives; 
Purpose: Measurement initiatives are being developed to provide 
numerical facts and data to quantify input, output, and performance 
dimensions of processes, products, services, and overall organizational 
outcomes; 
Initiative: Readiness Management System; 
Status: Operational in fiscal year 2005. 

Type of initiative: Measurement initiatives; 
Purpose: Measurement initiatives are being developed to provide 
numerical facts and data to quantify input, output, and performance 
dimensions of processes, products, services, and overall organizational 
outcomes; 
Initiative: Risk-Based Decision Making; 
Status: Estimated to be completed in fiscal year 2010. 

Type of initiative: Measurement initiatives; 
Purpose: Measurement initiatives are being developed to provide 
numerical facts and data to quantify input, output, and performance 
dimensions of processes, products, services, and overall organizational 
outcomes; 
Initiative: Operational Transactional Systems; 
Status: These systems are currently operational. 

Type of initiative: Measurement initiatives; 
Purpose: Measurement initiatives are being developed to provide 
numerical facts and data to quantify input, output, and performance 
dimensions of processes, products, services, and overall organizational 
outcomes; 
Initiative: Logistics; 
Status: Estimated to be completed in fiscal year 2010. 

Type of initiative: Measurement initiatives; 
Purpose: Measurement initiatives are being developed to provide 
numerical facts and data to quantify input, output, and performance 
dimensions of processes, products, services, and overall organizational 
outcomes; Initiative: Performance Measures and Scorecards; 
Status: Measures and scorecards are currently used, but efforts to 
improve are ongoing. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: Activity-Based Management; 
Status: Estimated to be completed in fiscal year 2010. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: Mission Cost Model; 
Status: Operational in fiscal year 1999. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: Modeling and Simulation; 
Status: Estimated to be completed in fiscal year 2010. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: Force/Asset Requirements; 
Status: Operational in fiscal year 2003 but efforts to improve are 
ongoing. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: Risk Assessments and Profiles; 
Status: These assessments are currently used, but efforts to improve 
are ongoing. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: Maritime Homeland Security Operations Planning System; 
Status: Began a pilot project in fiscal year 2004. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: Competency Assessments; 
Status: Initially performed in fiscal year 2004, but efforts continue 
to be ongoing. 

Type of initiative: Analysis initiatives; 
Purpose: Analysis initiatives are being developed to examine and 
transform numerical facts and data into information and knowledge for 
effective decision making. Analyses are conducted to answer questions 
about performance, program management, cause-and-effect relationships, 
costs, strategy, and, in general, overall Coast Guard management; 
Initiative: G-Organizational Assessments; 
Status: These assessments are performed annually. 

Type of initiative: Knowledge management initiatives; Purpose: 
Knowledge management initiatives are being developed to accumulate, 
evaluate, and share enterprise information assets--that is, management 
strategies, methods, and knowledge possessed by employees in the form 
of information, ideas, learning, understanding, memory, insights, 
cognitive and technical skills, and capabilities; 
Initiative: Evergreen Strategic Renewal Process; 
Status: This strategic process is conducted every 4 years. 

Type of initiative: Knowledge management initiatives; Purpose: 
Knowledge management initiatives are being developed to accumulate, 
evaluate, and share enterprise information assets--that is, management 
strategies, methods, and knowledge possessed by employees in the form 
of information, ideas, learning, understanding, memory, insights, 
cognitive and technical skills, and capabilities; 
Initiative: Risk-based Performance Management; 
Status: Currently undergoing testing as a pilot project; estimated to 
be completed in fiscal year 2010. 

Type of initiative: Knowledge management initiatives; Purpose: 
Knowledge management initiatives are being developed to accumulate, 
evaluate, and share enterprise information assets--that is, management 
strategies, methods, and knowledge possessed by employees in the form 
of information, ideas, learning, understanding, memory, insights, 
cognitive and technical skills, and capabilities; 
Initiative: Capital Asset Management; 
Status: Estimated to be completed in fiscal year 2010. 

Type of initiative: Alignment initiatives; 
Purpose: Alignment initiatives are being developed to improve 
consistency of plans, processes, actions, information, resource 
decisions, results, analyses, and learning to support key 
organizationwide goals; 
Initiative: Unified Performance Logic Model; 
Status: Estimated to be completed in fiscal year 2010. 

Type of initiative: Alignment initiatives; 
Purpose: Alignment initiatives are being developed to improve 
consistency of plans, processes, actions, information, resource 
decisions, results, analyses, and learning to support key 
organizationwide goals; 
Initiative: Activities Dictionary, Product and Services Catalog, and 
Enterprise lexicon; 
Status: Partially completed; estimated to be completed in fiscal year 
2010. 

Type of initiative: Alignment initiatives; 
Purpose: Alignment initiatives are being developed to improve 
consistency of plans, processes, actions, information, resource 
decisions, results, analyses, and learning to support key 
organizationwide goals; 
Initiative: Enterprise Architecture; 
Status: Ongoing; began development in fiscal year 2004. 

Type of initiative: Access initiatives; 
Purpose: Access initiatives are being developed to provide enterprise-
wide right of entry to organizational information and knowledge to 
promote visibility, transparency, and use of valid, reliable, and 
consistent data and information to know, compare, benchmark, and 
improve organizational performance; 
Initiative: Coast Guard Central; 
Status: Operational in fiscal year 2005, but efforts to improve are 
ongoing. 

Type of initiative: Access initiatives; 
Purpose: Access initiatives are being developed to provide enterprise-
wide right of entry to organizational information and knowledge to 
promote visibility, transparency, and use of valid, reliable, and 
consistent data and information to know, compare, benchmark, and 
improve organizational performance; 
Initiative: Enterprise Data Warehouse; 
Status: This is an ongoing effort to merge Coast Guard data sources. 

Type of initiative: Policy and doctrine initiatives; 
Purpose: Policy and doctrine initiatives are being developed to 
maintain current, and develop new, Coast Guard management policies; 
Initiative: Commandant's Performance Excellence Criteria; 
Status: Ongoing; performed on annual and biennial basis. 

Type of initiative: Policy and doctrine initiatives; 
Purpose: Policy and doctrine initiatives are being developed to 
maintain current, and develop new, Coast Guard management policies; 
Initiative: Innovation Process and Recognition Program; 
Status: Ongoing; performed on annual basis. 

Type of initiative: Policy and doctrine initiatives; 
Purpose: Policy and doctrine initiatives are being developed to 
maintain current, and develop new, Coast Guard management policies; 
Initiative: Measurement; 
Status: Ongoing, initially implemented in fiscal year 1995. 

Type of initiative: Communication and outreach initiative; 
Purpose: This communication and outreach initiative is being developed 
to assist and guide commands and staffs in understanding and aligning 
with all aspects of the Coast Guard; 
Initiative: Organizational Performance Consultants Field Guide; 
Status: Completed. 

Source: Coast Guard. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Homeland Security: 

August 11, 2006: 

Mr. Stephen L. Caldwell: 
Acting Director: 
Homeland Security and Justice Issues: 
U.S. Government Accountability:  
Office 441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Caldwell: 

RE: Draft Report GAO-06-816, Coast Guard: Non-Homeland Security 
Performance Measures Are Generally Sound, but Opportunities for 
Improvement Exist (GAO Job Code 440432): 

The Department of Homeland Security appreciates the opportunity to 
review and comment on the draft report. The Government Accountability 
Office (GAO) recommends that the Coast Guard refine particular primary 
and secondary performance measures, develop and implement a policy to 
review external data provided by third parties used in calculating 
Coast Guard performance measures, and report additional information in 
appropriate publications or documents. We generally agree with the 
recommendations which essentially recognize that performance measures 
are in place and meet Government Performance and Results Act 
requirements, but can be improved upon or refined. 

The report acknowledges Coast Guard successful efforts to address prior 
GAO and Office of Management and Budget recommendations designed to 
improve performance measures. During this engagement, GAO found that 
primary performance measures were generally sound and the data used to 
calculate them reliable and correctly noted that even sound performance 
measures have limits to how much they can explain the relationship 
between resources expended and results achieved. Coast Guard has 
developed a range of initiatives that we believe will help explain the 
effects of external factors on program results other than resources 
expended. Some of these initiatives, due to their complexity, will 
require additional time to complete. The report overall reflects Coast 
Guard's focus on continuous improvement. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by:  

Steven J. Pecinovsky:  
Director: 
Departmental GAO/OIG Liaison Office: 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Stephen L. Caldwell, Acting Director, Homeland Security and Justice 
Issues, (202) 512-9610, or CaldwellS@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Billy Commons, Christine 
Davis, Michele Fejfar, Dawn Hoff, Allen Lomax, Josh Margraf, Dominic 
Nadarski, Jason Schwartz, and Stan Stenersen made key contributions to 
this report. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Coast Guard: Station Readiness Improving, but Resource Challenges and 
Management Concerns Remain. GAO-05-161. Washington, D.C.: January 31, 
2005. 

Coast Guard: Relationship between Resources Used and Results Achieved 
Needs to Be Clearer. GAO-04-432. Washington, D.C.: March 22, 2004. 

Coast Guard: Comprehensive Blueprint Needed to Balance and Monitor 
Resource Use and Measure Performance for All Missions. GAO-03-544T. 
Washington, D.C.: March 12, 2003. 

Performance Reporting: Few Agencies Reported on the Completeness and 
Reliability of Performance Data. GAO-02-372. Washington, D.C.: April 
26, 2002. 

Coast Guard: Budget and Management Challenges for 2003 and Beyond. GAO- 
02-538TU. Washington, D.C.: March 19, 2002. 

Coast Guard: Update on Marine Information for Safety and Law 
Enforcement System. GAO-02-11. Washington, D.C.: October 17, 2001. 

Tax Administration: IRS Needs to Further Refine Its Tax Filing 
Performance Measures. GAO-03-143. Washington, D.C.: November 22, 2002. 

The Results Act: An Evaluator's Guide to Assessing Agency Performance 
Plans. GAO/GGD-10-1.20. Washington, D.C.: April 1998. 

Agencies' Annual Performance Plans under the Results Act: An Assessment 
Guide to Facilitate Congressional Decision Making. GAO-GGD/AIMD- 
10.1.18. Washington, D.C.: February 1998. 

Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government Performance 
and Results Act. GAO/GGD-96-118. Washington, D.C.: June 1996. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] The Coast Guard's six non-homeland security programs account for 
about $4.2 billion of the Coast Guard's $8.4 billion fiscal year 2006 
enacted budget. The remaining $4.2 billion is for its five homeland 
security programs--ports, waterways, and coastal security; illegal drug 
interdiction; defense readiness; undocumented migrant interdiction; and 
other law enforcement activities, including U.S. Exclusive Economic 
Zone enforcement. 

[2] The Coast Guard defines an "allision" as a collision between a 
vessel and a fixed object. 

[3] GAO, Coast Guard: Key Management and Budget Challenges for Fiscal 
Year 2005 and Beyond, GAO-04-636T (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 7, 2004); and 
Coast Guard: Relationship between Resources Used and Results Achieved 
Needs to Be Clearer, GAO-04-432 (Washington, D.C.: March 2004). 

[4] The criteria for assessing soundness are not equal, and failure to 
meet a particular criterion does not necessarily preclude that measure 
from being useful; rather, it may indicate an opportunity for further 
refinement. 

[5] GAO, The Results Act: An Evaluator's Guide to Assessing Agency 
Performance Plans, GAO/GGD-10-1.20 (Washington, D.C.: April 1998). 

[6] GPRA, Pub. L. No. 103-62, 107 Stat. 285 (1993). 

[7] The Reports Consolidation Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-531, 114 
Stat. 2537. 

[8] The field locations we selected were District 1 (Boston, 
Massachusetts); District 7 (Miami, Florida); District 9 (Cleveland, 
Ohio); and District 13 (Seattle, Washington). We selected these field 
locations because of the number and types of non-homeland security 
programs that are performed at these locations. We reviewed activities 
at multiple offices or units at each location. 

[9] The four programs we selected were aids to navigation, living 
marine resources, marine environmental protection, and search and 
rescue. We selected these programs because they had the largest budget 
increases of the six non-homeland security programs (as reflected in 
the fiscal year 2005 budget and the Coast Guard's fiscal year 2006 
budget request) and because they are programs of particular interest 
because of events surrounding Hurricane Katrina. Further, we selected 
only those measures that Coast Guard officials said were high-level, 
strategic measures used in performance budgeting, budget projections, 
and management decisions. In addition, we did not assess any of the 
secondary measures that were in development at the time of our report. 
The 23 secondary measures we assessed for these four programs represent 
more than half of the 39 high-level, strategic secondary measures used 
to manage the six non-homeland security programs. 

[10] GAO, Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government 
Performance and Results Act, GAO/GGD-96-118 (Washington, D.C.: June 
1996); and Tax Administration: IRS Needs to Further Refine Its Tax 
Filing Season Performance Measures, GAO-03-143 (Washington, D.C.: 
November. 2002). 

[11] In 2004, we recommended that the Coast Guard identify the 
intervening factors that may affect performance and systematically 
assess the relationship among these factors, resources used, and 
results achieved. GAO-04-432. 

[12] GAO-04-432. 

[13] The Coast Guard maintains information on how assets, such as 
cutters, patrol boats, and aircraft are used. Each hour that these 
resources are used is called a resource hour. Resource hours do not 
include such things as the time that the asset stands idle or the time 
that is spent maintaining it. 

[14] GPRA, Pub. L. No. 103-62, 107 Stat. 285 (1993). 

[15] The Reports Consolidation Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-531, § 5, 
114 Stat. 2537, 2539-40. 

[16] OMB's PART review is a systematic method of assessing the 
performance of program activities across the federal government used by 
OMB to review federal agency programs. The PART review is a series of 
questions that assess different aspects of program performance in which 
agencies under review must answer; responses must be evidenced-based. 
Agencies must clearly explain their answers and include relevant 
supporting evidence such as agency performance information, independent 
evaluations, and financial information. PART reviews provide an overall 
rating for each program that includes effective (the program is well 
managed), moderately effective (the program is well managed but needs 
improvements), adequate (the program needs to improve accountability), 
ineffective (the program is unable to achieve results), results not 
demonstrated (the program does not have acceptable performance goals or 
targets). 

[17] OMB reviewed the aids to navigation and search and rescue programs 
in 2002, the living marine resources and marine environmental 
protection programs in 2003, the ice operations program in 2004, and 
the marine safety program in 2005. 

[18] The U.S. Coast Guard Addendum to the United States National Search 
and Rescue Supplement defines lives lost, saved, and assisted. A life 
saved is defined as a life that would have been lost had the rescue 
action not been taken, including actually pulling a person from a 
position of distress or removing them from a situation that would 
likely have resulted in their death had the action not been taken. A 
life assisted is defined as those persons who are provided assistance 
that did not meet the criteria for lives saved but did receive some 
assistance, however, persons merely onboard a vessel that is provided 
assistance directed at the vessel (such as providing repairs or fuel) 
are not necessarily assisted. To count a life as lost there must be a 
body recovered; otherwise it is considered a life-unaccounted-for. 
Lives lost before notification are those lives lost, which to the best 
of the reporting unit's knowledge, occurred before notification of the 
incident was made to the Coast Guard and lives lost after notification 
are those lives lost that occurred after notification was made to the 
Coast Guard. 

[19] Department of Transportation Office of Inspector General, Audit of 
the Performance Measure for the Recreational Boating System, MA-2000- 
084 (Washington, D.C.: April 2000). 

[20] The 11 living marine resources performance measures without 
measurable targets are the (1) number of domestic fisheries enforcement 
resource hours, (2) number of active commercial fishing vessels by 
major fishery, (3) number of domestic boardings by major fishery, (4) 
boardings per active commercial fishing vessels by major fishery, (5) 
number of significant violations by major fishery, (6) number of 
significant violations per domestic resource hour, (7) status of fish 
stocks, (8) number of Coast Guard members trained at Regional Fishing 
Training Centers, (9) cost per Coast Guard member trained at Regional 
Fishing Training Centers, (10) number of Marine Affairs graduates on 
active duty and, (11) percent of Marine Affairs graduates in Marine 
Affairs-coded billets. The one marine environmental protection 
performance measure is the Tokyo and Paris memorandum of understanding 
port state control reports measure. 

[21] GAO/GGD-96-118; and GAO-03-143. 

[22] The Tokyo and Paris memorandums of understanding are agreements 
between the U.S. and other countries to promote maritime safety and 
environmental protection, and eliminate sub-standard shipping through 
port controls that include enforcing applicable treaties. These 
treaties include various construction, design, equipment, operating, 
and training requirements related to maritime safety, environmental 
protection, and security. The Tokyo memorandum of understanding 
includes 19 countries and the Paris memorandum of understanding 
includes 22 countries. 

[23] U.S. Coast Guard, Institutional Research Road Map (Washington, 
D.C.: January 2005). 

[24] The Office of Performance Management and Decision Support was 
established by the Coast Guard Chief of Staff on August 11, 2005. 

[25] GAO/GGD-10-1.20. 

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