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Military Lodging: DOD Should Provide Congress with More Information on Army's Privatization and Better Guidance to the Military Services

GAO-21-214 Published: Jun 08, 2021. Publicly Released: Jun 08, 2021.
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Fast Facts

Army bases provide lodging for official travelers who pay for the rooms with their per diem allowance. In 2009, the Army began to privatize its on-base hotels with the goal of more quickly addressing the poor condition of the facilities.

Privatization included constructing new hotels, and it has improved on-base lodging. But improvements have taken longer than expected and plans have changed—information not included in reports to Congress. We also found Army estimates likely overstate how much this effort reduced costs.

We recommended that DOD provide key information to Congress and improve how it gathers lodging program data.

A new Candlewood Suites hotel replaced the lodging facility at Fort Meade, MD, as part of the Army’s privatization efforts

A Candlewood Suites sign and the hotel building in the foreground

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Highlights

What GAO Found

Since privatizing its domestic on-base hotels, referred to as lodging, the Army has made a variety of improvements, including the replacement of lodging facilities with newly constructed hotels (see fig.). However, improvements have taken longer than initially anticipated, development plans have changed, and the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) has not included key information about these delays and changes in reports to Congress. If OSD were to provide this additional information, Congress would be better able to determine whether the Privatized Army Lodging (PAL) program has achieved its intended objectives or fully consider whether the other military services should privatize their respective lodging programs.

Room at an Army Lodging Facility before Privatizing and Room at the New Candlewood Suites Hotel Built at Yuma Proving Ground, AZ, in 2013

Room at an Army Lodging Facility before Privatizing and Room at the New Candlewood Suites Hotel Built at Yuma Proving Ground, AZ, in 2013

The Army does not estimate cost savings from the PAL program, but instead produces an annual cost avoidance estimate to demonstrate some of the financial benefits resulting from the privatization of its lodging program. Army officials stated that they calculate cost avoidance by comparing the room rate it charges for its lodging—which is limited to 75 percent of the average local lodging per diem rate across its installations—to the maximum lodging per diem that could be charged for that location. However, by using this approach, the Army is likely overstating its cost avoidance, because off-base hotels do not always charge 100 percent of per diem. Until the Army evaluates the methodology it uses to calculate its cost avoidance, decision makers in the Department of Defense (DOD) and Congress cannot be sure that the reported financial benefits of privatization have actually been achieved.

OSD's oversight of lodging programs has been limited in some cases. First, OSD and the military services lack standardized data that would be useful for making informed decisions about the lodging programs. Second, DOD requires both servicemembers and civilian employees to stay in on-base lodging when on official travel, with some exceptions. Yet, according to OSD, many travelers are staying in off-base lodging, and OSD has not done the in-depth analysis needed to determine why and how much it is costing the government. Without an analysis that assesses the extent to which travelers are inappropriately using off-base lodging and why it is occurring, as well as a plan to address any issues identified, neither DOD nor Congress can be sure that the department is making the most cost-effective use of taxpayer funds.

Why GAO Did This Study

In 2009, the Army began to privatize its lodging with the goal of addressing the poor condition of facilities more quickly than could be achieved under continued Army operation. The Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force currently have no plans to privatize their lodging programs.

The Senate Armed Services Committee report accompanying a bill for the Fiscal Year 2020 National Defense Authorization Act included a provision for GAO to review improvements made to Army lodging, among other things. This report examines the extent to which (1) the Army has improved its lodging facilities since privatizing; (2) OSD reported complete information about the Army's development plans to Congress; (3) the Army has reliably determined any cost savings or cost avoidance as a result of its privatized lodging program; and (4) there are limitations in OSD's oversight of the military services' lodging programs. GAO reviewed policies and guidance; analyzed lodging program data for fiscal years 2017 through 2019 (the 3 most recent years of complete and available information); and interviewed DOD officials.

Recommendations

GAO is making four recommendations, including that DOD require OSD to include key information in reports to Congress, require the Army evaluate its cost avoidance methodology, establish consistent methodologies for lodging program data, and assess the extent to which off-base lodging is inappropriately used for official travel. DOD concurred with all four recommendations.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status Sort descending
Office of the Secretary of Defense The Secretary of Defense should ensure that the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness and the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Sustainment, in collaboration with the military services, establish consistent methodologies and clearly define the data that the military services are to report to the Office of the Secretary of the Defense on their respective lodging programs. (Recommendation 3)
Open
DOD concurred with this recommendation. In March 2022, DOD stated that the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness and ASD(EI&E), were working to complete this requirement in collaboration with the military services, and that the estimated completion date was September 2023 but, as of November 2023, we have not received an update on this effort. We will continue to monitor the department's efforts to address this recommendation and will update its status as more information becomes available.
Office of the Secretary of Defense The Secretary of Defense should ensure that the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, in collaboration with the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Sustainment, assesses by military service the extent to which DOD servicemembers and civilian employees are inappropriately using off-base lodging for official travel and why it is occurring, and develop a plan to address any issues identified. (Recommendation 4)
Open
DOD concurred with this recommendation. In March 2022, DOD stated that the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness was completing the recommended assessment and plan in collaboration with ASD(EI&E) and that the estimated completion date was December 2022. However, as of November 2023, we have not received an update on this effort. We will continue to monitor the department's efforts to address this recommendation and will update its status as more information becomes available.
Office of the Secretary of Defense The Secretary of Defense should ensure that the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Sustainment provides additional key information from the Army about the PAL program in its annual Military Housing Privatization Initiative program reports to Congress, including the status of improvements to its facilities, timeframes for completing improvements, and any significant changes to the development plan. (Recommendation 1)
Open
DOD concurred with this recommendation. In March 2022, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations and Environment (ASD(EI&E)) submitted the Fiscal Year 2019 MHPI report to Congress. This report included some additional information about the PAL program. However, it did not include the information we recommended, such as the timeframe for completing improvements. In November 2023, officials indicated that the forthcoming Fiscal Year 2020 MHPI report will include the additional information we recommended. We will continue to monitor DOD's efforts to address this recommendation and will update the status of this recommendation once the Fiscal Year 2020 MHPI report has been issued and we have an opportunity to review its content.
Office of the Secretary of Defense The Secretary of Defense should ensure that the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Sustainment requires the Army to evaluate the methodology and baseline it uses to calculate its cost avoidance estimate, to include a comparison of alternative scenarios against a different baseline in its calculations, and share the results of this evaluation with Congress. (Recommendation 2)
Closed – Implemented
DOD concurred with this recommendation. In March 2022, DOD stated that the Army completed the assessment and shared the results with Congress. In October 2023, the Office of the Secretary of Defense for Acquisitions and Sustainment (OUSD(A&S)) shared with us the report that the Army completed in January 2022, "Army Assessment of Annual Cost Avoidance Estimate for Privatized Army Lodging Program," as well as confirmed that Congress received this report in March 2022. The report evaluates the methodology and baseline the Army uses to calculate its cost avoidance estimate and compares it against alternative scenarios. With this completed report shared with Congress, this recommendation has been addressed.

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Topics

Appropriated fundsCivilian employeesConstructionCost savingsDefense infrastructureDefense travel systemEmployee transfersHousingInternal controlsLessons learnedLodging facilitiesMilitary housing privatizationMilitary housingMilitary readinessOccupancy ratesPrivatizationProgram evaluation