Reports & Testimonies
Recommendations Database
GAO’s recommendations database contains report recommendations that still need to be addressed. GAO’s priority recommendations are those that we believe warrant priority attention. We sent letters to the heads of key departments and agencies, urging them to continue focusing on these issues. Below you can search only priority recommendations, or search all recommendations.
Our recommendations help congressional and agency leaders prepare for appropriations and oversight activities, as well as help improve government operations. Moreover, when implemented, some of our priority recommendations can save large amounts of money, help Congress make decisions on major issues, and substantially improve or transform major government programs or agencies, among other benefits.
As of October 25, 2020, there are 4812 open recommendations, of which 473 are priority recommendations. Recommendations remain open until they are designated as Closed-implemented or Closed-not implemented.
Browse or Search Open Recommendations
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Results:
Subject Term: "Product recalls"
GAO-18-272, Mar 19, 2018
Phone: (202) 512-3841
Agency: Department of Agriculture: Food Safety and Inspection Service
Status: Open
Comments: As of September 2019, FSIS is drafting a document that will outline the agency's process for deciding which products to consider for new pathogen standards, including the basis on which such decisions should be made. FSIS estimates the document will be finalized in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2020. As of October 2020, FSIS has not completed this action.
Agency: Department of Agriculture: Food Safety and Inspection Service
Status: Open
Comments: In October 2019, FSIS proposed new pathogen reduction performance standards for Salmonella in raw ground beef and beef trimmings. FSIS told us the agency is developing performance standards for some pork products and plans to issue draft standards sometime in fiscal year 2020 but as of October 2020 has not completed this action.
Agency: Department of Agriculture: Food Safety and Inspection Service
Status: Open
Comments: As of September 2019, FSIS is revising its draft guidelines for controlling Salmonella in hogs. The agency plans to include in the guidelines available scientific information on the effectiveness of on-farm practices to reduce Salmonella. FSIS estimates it will complete its revision of the guidelines in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2020 but as of October 2020 has not completed this action.
Phone: (202) 512-2834
including 1 priority recommendation
Agency: Department of Transportation
Status: Open
Priority recommendation
Comments: In July 2018, DOT released an initial plan related to this recommendation in response to congressional direction. This plan outlines DOT's overall approach for managing policy and research issues related to automated vehicles across DOT's modal administrations. In January 2020, DOT and the National Science and Technology Council released Ensuring American Leadership in Automated Vehicle Technologies (AV 4.0), building on prior policies that DOT has identified as actions regarding its implementation of GAO's recommendation. DOT has yet to identify, for example, performance measures to monitor and gauge results. Without a comprehensive plan, it continues to be unclear whether DOT is adequately tackling automated vehicle challenges.
GAO-15-52, Nov 19, 2014
Phone: (202) 512-8678
Agency: Congress
Status: Open
Comments: This matter is an action identified in GAO's annual Duplication and Cost Savings reports. No legislative action identified. The Gun Look-Alike Case Act, H.R. 3224, which was introduced on July 27, 2015, in the 114th Congress, would transfer the authority to regulate the markings of toy, look-alike, and imitation firearms in section 5001 of title 15 of the U.S. Code from NIST to CPSC, as GAO suggested in November 2014. This bill was referred to the Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade of the Committee on Energy and Commerce in the United States House of Representatives, and did not pass out of committee. This bill was not reintroduced in the 115th Congress and, as of March 2020, has not been reintroduced by the 116th Congress. Continued regulation of the marking of toy and imitation firearms by NIST rather than CPSC does not leverage each agency's expertise and therefore may not be the most efficient use of scarce federal resources.
Agency: Congress
Status: Open
Comments: This matter is an action identified in GAO's annual Duplication and Cost Savings reports. As of March 2020, no legislation was identified that would establish a collaborative mechanism to facilitate communication across the relevant agencies and to help enable them to collectively address crosscutting issues, as GAO suggested in November 2014. Some of the agencies with direct regulatory oversight responsibilities for consumer product safety reported that they continue to collaborate to address specific consumer product safety topics. However, without a formal comprehensive oversight mechanism, the agencies risk missing opportunities to better leverage resources and address challenges, including those related to fragmentation and overlap.
GAO-13-306, Mar 11, 2013
Phone: (202) 512-8678
Agency: Consumer Product Safety Commission
Status: Open
Comments: The Commission has taken some steps to address this recommendation by making usability improvements to SaferProducts.gov that we identified in our consumer testing in our report. For example, in 2015, the Commission addressed issues identified with the search functionality of the website by improving the advanced search function to enable searches by injury, time period, and location. In August 2018, the Commission clarified the purpose of SaferProducts.gov by adding the tagline (brief text that gives users an immediate idea of what the site does) "Report. Search. Protect." to its website. As of August 2019, CPSC has explored further ways to improve the usability of SaferProducts.gov. Specifically, in February 2019, CPSC published a request for information from the public on how to improve SaferProducts.gov. In March 2019, CPSC held a public hearing to obtain a feedback on how the design of SaferProducts.gov and process of submitting safety reports could be improved. For example, two consumer groups recommended that CPSC further improve the website's search function to yield more relevant and streamlined results and that it be designed for better use on mobile devices. Based on this input, CPSC is in the process of developing a plan for re-designing SaferProducts.gov using modern web-design standards, which includes improving the website's layout and styling, search capabilities, and functionality on mobile devices. According to CPSC, its staff plans to explore cost-effective resources to assess usability and identify further improvements to the website, such as coordinating with the General Services Administration on the design aspects of SaferProducts.gov and using other federal best practices to inform this process. However, no such cost-effective changes have yet been made to the website. According to officials, CPSC plans to begin this re-design in 2019 or 2020 pending available future funding. Until the Commission fully addresses this recommendation, it remains open. We will continue to monitor the Commission's progress in implementing our recommendation.