Skip to main content

Grants Management: Agency Action Required to Ensure Grantees Identify Federal Contribution Amounts

GAO-19-282 Published: Mar 14, 2019. Publicly Released: Mar 14, 2019.
Jump To:

Fast Facts

Former Senator Ted Stevens once said that taxpayers "ought to be informed how much money comes from federal sources in any program, project, or grant activity." To that end, people who receive grants from the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education are required to publicly disclose the amount of their federal grant program funding.

We found that most Department offices didn't manage grantee compliance with the disclosure requirement—except for Labor's Employment and Training Administration (whose grants comprise over 95% of Labor's total grant dollars).

We recommended that HHS, Education, and the rest of Labor do so.

U.S. Capitol Building

U.S. Capitol Building

Skip to Highlights

Highlights

What GAO Found

The Stevens Amendment is an appropriations provision that requires grantees of the Departments of Labor (DOL), Health and Human Services (HHS), and Education (Education) to disclose for a grant program the percent of the costs financed with federal funds, the federal dollar amount, and the percentage and dollar amount financed by nongovernmental funds. The provision requires that recipients of grants funded by DOL, HHS, and Education make certain funding disclosures when issuing statements, press releases, bid solicitations, and other documents describing their grant project or program. DOL, HHS, and Education generally provide written guidance to grantees with the exact text of the Stevens Amendment or a paraphrased equivalent. In addition, a number of operating divisions within HHS referenced the HHS Grants Policy Statement, which includes language equivalent to the Stevens Amendment, as a way to instruct grantees. One HHS operating division, the Health Resources and Services Administration, provided grantees with additional guidance in the form of a web page that contained examples of funding disclosure statements and frequently asked questions intended to clarify the Stevens Amendment's requirements.

One DOL subagency, the Employment and Training Administration (ETA), whose active grants represented more than 95 percent of DOL's total grant dollars, had processes for managing grantees' compliance that were able to identify instances of grantee noncompliance with Stevens Amendment requirements. ETA's operating plan for grant oversight targets 26 percent of its active grants for risk-based monitoring each fiscal year, representing approximately 2,100 grants in fiscal year 2019. The other DOL subagencies either stated that they did not monitor grantees for compliance with Stevens Amendment requirements or did not have processes in place for managing grantee compliance with the requirements of the Stevens Amendment. Most HHS operating divisions said they did not review grantees for Stevens Amendment compliance. Education also did not monitor for grantee compliance with the Stevens Amendment's requirements. Regulations governing federal agencies' management of grants require federal agencies to manage and administer the federal award in a manner that ensures that programs are implemented in full accordance with U.S. statutory and public policy requirements. Without processes for managing compliance, some DOL subagencies, HHS operating divisions, and Education are unable to ensure that grant programs are being implemented by grantees in full accordance with the statutory requirements of the Stevens Amendment.

Most of the subagencies and operating divisions monitoring compliance did not gather information from grantees about how the grantees calculate the dollar amounts and percentages in their Stevens Amendment funding disclosures. For example, DOL's ETA officials said that they do not know how the dollar amounts reported by grantees were calculated, and have not inquired about the level of detail factored into indirect costs involving the grantee organization's structure and the percentage of funds spent on salaries. Similarly, officials from HHS's National Institutes of Health operating division noted that calculations can be difficult given that a research program can have multiple funding streams that feed into a grant project and grantees' research portfolios are now more complex than they have been in the past.

Why GAO Did This Study

Since 1989, an appropriations provision, colloquially known as the “Stevens Amendment,” has reflected Congress's longstanding effort to ensure transparency and accountability in federal grant spending. GAO was asked to review agency guidance and grantee compliance related to the Stevens Amendment. This report (1) describes the guidance DOL, HHS, and Education provide to grantees regarding the Stevens Amendment; (2) examines the extent to which DOL, HHS, and Education are managing grantees' compliance with the Stevens Amendment; and (3) describes what is known about how grantees calculate the dollar amounts and percentages of their federal and nongovernmental funding disclosures. GAO asked for agency guidance documents, reviewed monitoring reports, interviewed officials on agencies' Stevens Amendment oversight efforts, and asked agencies how grantees calculate funding amounts.

Recommendations

GAO recommends that DOL subagencies (other than ETA), HHS operating divisions, and Education design and implement processes to manage grantees' compliance with the Stevens Amendment. In responding to the report, DOL, one DOL subagency, and HHS agreed with GAO's recommendation. Education disagreed with GAO's recommendation, citing limited monitoring resources and other reasons. GAO believes the recommendation should be fully implemented, as discussed in the report.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status Sort descending
Department of Labor The Secretary of Labor should direct its subagencies, other than ETA, to design and implement a process to manage and administer grantees' compliance with the Stevens Amendment, including determining to what extent to provide guidance to grantees on calculations. (Recommendation 1)
Closed – Implemented
In responding to the report, DOL stated that it concurred with the recommendation. DOL's subagency, OSHA, provided written comments and stated that it generally agreed with GAO's recommendation. In February 2021, we received an update from the Department stating that OSHA had provided application instructions and funding opportunity announcements in federal fiscal year 2020 that included additional monitoring language for program managers and grantees on the Stevens Amendment. OSHA also incorporated Stevens Amendment language in its On-Site Consultation Program Regional Annual Consultation Evaluation Report guidance. Implementation of annual monitoring and periodic monitoring for compliance with the Stevens Amendment will be conducted to ensure that recipients are in compliance.
Department of Health and Human Services The Secretary of Health and Human Services should direct its operating divisions to design and implement processes to manage and administer grantees' compliance with the Stevens Amendment, including determining to what extent to provide guidance to grantees on calculations. (Recommendation 2)
Closed – Implemented
In responding to the report, HHS stated it concurred with our recommendation and would implement the recommendation to the fullest extent feasible. In December 2019, the HHS Office of Grants issued an Action Transmittal to HHS Grants and Cooperative Agreements Awarding Agencies that updated guidance on the acknowledgement of federal funding in accordance with the Stevens Amendment (OG AT 2019-06). The Transmittal provided "updated policy guidance on instructions to recipients for the acknowledgement and disclosure of federal funding in public communications." Based on this detailed guidance, GAO considers this recommendation as implemented.
Department of Education The Secretary of Education should design and implement a process to manage and administer grantees' compliance with the Stevens Amendment, including determining to what extent to provide guidance to grantees on calculations. (Recommendation 3)
Closed – Implemented
In a subsequent response to the report, Education stated that it concurred with GAO's recommendation and was considering enhancing its approach to overseeing compliance with the Stevens Amendment through post-award monitoring activities. In July 2020, the Department of Education issued a Departmental Directive titled "Handbook for the Discretionary Grant Process," which required that grantors review grantees' post award documentation to ensure they were disclosing the percent of the costs financed with federal funds for their grant project , the federal dollar amount, and the percentage and dollar amount financed by nongovernmental funds when issuing statements, press releases, bid solicitations, and other documents describing their grant project. Grantors are also required to remind grantees that they must document the equation used to determine the federal and nongovernmental dollar amounts and percentages and maintain this documentation with their grant file in the event the Department of Education requests to review their documentation.

Full Report

GAO Contacts

Office of Public Affairs

Topics

AppropriationsFederal agenciesFederal awardsFederal fundsFederal grantsGrant administrationGrant awardsGrant managementGrant monitoringGrant programsInformation disclosureInternal controls