STATEMENT OF
G. EDWARD DESEVE
ACTING DEPUTY DIRECTOR FOR MANAGEMENT
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
BEFORE THE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT REFORM AND
OVERSIGHT
SUBCOMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT MANAGEMENT,
INFORMATION AND TECHNOLOGY
AUGUST 6, 1998
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:
I am before you today to discuss H.R. 4244. I would like to address
three matters in particular:
(1) performance measurement and acquisition workforce training; (2) the
Government's
acquisition of commercial support services; and (3) the proposed moratorium
on the application
of the CAS to FEHBP contracts.
Performance Measurement and Acquisition Workforce
Training
Let me begin by addressing the provisions on performance measurement and
acquisition
workforce training. While the Administration shares the Committee's goal
of ensuring the
quality and professionalism of the Government's acquisition workforce and
measuring the
performance of procurement operations, the Administration opposes those
sections of H.R. 4244
that would establish a new statutory basis for measuring progress in
procurement performance
and would require reporting by agencies that allocate greater than 50
percent of their budget to
procurement programs. Section 6 of the Office of Federal Procurement
Policy (OFPP) Act
already assigns the development of government wide procurement system
standards to OFPP.
Working with OFPP, the President's Management Council commissioned the
Procurement
Executives' Working Group to develop agency procurement system performance
measures. A
menu of 54 measures was established. Agencies selected measures from the
list based on their
individual missions, organizational structures, types of procurement, and
availability of data
collection systems. OMB has made increased use of performance based
service contracting a
priority management objective requiring regular progress reports from the
20 agencies that award
the most service contracts. OMB also is committed to working with the
agencies to determine
whether other core performance measures should be required. In addition,
certain agencies
submit specific performance measurement information as part of their annual
performance plans
under the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA).
Thus, we believe that the performance measurement sections of proposed
H.R. 4244 would
duplicate existing requirements for the establishment of government wide
procurement system
standards already contained in both the OFPP Act and GPRA, and would impose
potentially
burdensome and duplicative reporting requirements.
The Administration also opposes those sections of H.R. 4244 which
address the Government's
acquisition workforce. The Administration shares the goal of ensuring the
quality and
professionalism of the Government's acquisition workforce. Rather than
reflecting an emphasis
on the goals of flexibility and streamlining of personnel policies, these
sections would instead
impose rigid and inflexible personnel, training, and associated budgetary
policies upon agencies.
This would detract, rather than enhance, their ability to manage and train
their acquisition
workforce. These sections would also drain limited training funds from the
various agencies in
order to enhance the budget of the Federal Acquisition Institute (FAI), a
small subdivision of the
General Services Administration. Proposals to increase funding for FAI
should instead be
addressed through the regular budget process. The bill would also assign
to OFPP, an
operational role in the funding and direction of FAI. This is not an
appropriate role for an office
whose primary mission is to develop and oversee broad procurement policies.
The
Administration believes that the issues raised in the acquisition workforce
sections of H.R. 4244
are better handled by administrative action tailored to each agency's
specific needs, rather than
through inflexible statutory requirements.
In addition to these basic concerns about the acquisition workforce
provisions of H.R. 4244, the
Administration also notes that neither FAI nor the Federal Acquisition
Regulatory Council has
the expertise to determine functional training requirements for members of
the Government's
acquisition workforce beyond contracting personnel. H.R. 4244 would also
upset many of the
Administration's recent initiatives designed to improve the education and
training of the
Government's contracting workforce, including activities sponsored by the
Department of
Defense, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and OFPP.
The Federal Activities Inventory Reform Act
I would now like to discuss the provisions of Title II of H.R. 4244,
entitled the "Federal
Activities Inventory Reform Act of 1998" or the "FAIR Act." As you know,
the Government's
acquisition of commercial support services has been the topic of extensive
discussions involving
the House and the Senate, the Administration, the private sector and the
unions who represent
Federal employees. The Administration has urged the Congress to ensure
that any legislative
initiative in this area contributes to the process of expanding
opportunities for public-private
competitions.
As a part of these discussion, we developed a set of fundamental
principles for the development
of legislation in this area. First, the legislation needs to promote
competition to achieve the best
deal for the taxpayer - not simply to outsource. Second, the legislation
needs to establish the
principle that it would not increase the level of judicial involvement in
the Government's
management decisions as to whether or not to outsource or how that
comparison is conducted.
Third, the legislation must recognize that current and extensive OMB
Circular A-76 guidance to
promote a level playing field is already in place. Any changes to the
management
documentation, employee participation, costing and source selection rules
for the competitions
must be well understood so as to be enforceable and remain impartial.
Fourth, the legislation
must recognize the complexities of public-public and public-private
competitions. Fifth, the
legislation must be fair and equitable to all interested parties. One-way
competition is
unacceptable. Sixth, the legislation must view public-public and
public-private competition in
the context of our larger reinvention effort. Outsourcing is only one
management tool to reinvent
and improve Government performance. We must not treat competition as a
variable independent
from our other reinvention and management improvement efforts. And
finally, it would be
inappropriate and may, in fact, be detrimental, if the legislation were to
require the head of each
agency to undertake competitions in accordance with a schedule mandated in
law. Such
schedules are likely to be extremely administratively burdensome and may
preclude a mix of
reinvention, re-engineering, consolidation, privatization, and cost
comparison efforts.
The FAIR Act provisions do not violate these principles. In our view,
the FAIR Act provisions
serve to reinforce ongoing efforts to improve the identification and review
of support activities
that are commercial or subject to contract. Agencies are already reviewing
which support
activities are: (1) inherently governmental and cannot be
contracted out any time, any place or
for any reason; (2) commercial and subject to contract, but
are specifically exempt from the cost
comparison requirements of the Circular A-76 for reasons of, for example,
the national defense,
patient care, or other specified reasons; (3) commercial and which should
be competed with
public and private sector offerors on the basis of quality and cost; and
(4) commercial, but must
be retained in-house -- for now -- for reasons that need to be explained
by the agency, including
the involvement of that function in a larger re-engineering, reinvention,
consolidation or
privatization review.
In essence, the FAIR Act preserves our ability to increase opportunities
for public-private
competitions and permits us to achieve the quality improvements and cost
reductions we all seek
in the acquisition of commercial support activities. Accordingly, the
Administration would not
object to passage of the FAIR Act provisions.
Proposed Moratorium on the Application of CAS to FEHBP
Contracts
Turning to the third issue, the Administration opposes those provisions
of H.R. 4244 that would
preclude the application of Cost Accounting Standards (CAS) to experience
rated contracts
awarded under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP).
Various provisions of
CAS have applied to FEHBP contracts since the 1980s. Recently, the Blue
Cross and Blue
Shield Association has sought to stem application of certain CAS provisions
to their FEHBP
contracts. CAS, and its underlying cost accounting principles, are applied
to all contractors
(including FEHBP contractors) that perform under negotiated, cost-based
pricing arrangements
with the Federal Government in order to ensure that costs are properly
allocated to the Federal
Government, and, in the case of the FEHBP, to the Federal employees and
annuitants who pay
more than one-quarter of the premium costs.
Congress has already provided in statute for a formal waiver process
that appropriately considers
circumstances that are so unique as to make the application of CAS
inappropriate. For this
reason, the Administration would also oppose any language imposing a
temporary moratorium
on application of CAS to FEHBP carriers pending future action to be taken
by the CAS Board
Review Panel. CAS waivers and exemptions should only be granted upon a
thorough
investigation and evaluation of the factual and technical merits of a
specific accounting situation
by the CAS Board. The proposed statutory CAS exemption for FEHBP
contractors does not
meet this important criterion.
Mr. Chairman, this concludes my remarks. I will be pleased to answer
any questions that you or
the other Subcommittee Members may have.