Government Accountability and Transparency (GAT) Board to finish testing spending oversight tools this summer

Editor’s Note:  Effectiveness in federal contract management and oversight is essential for securing federal cyber defenses.

From: FederalNewsRadio.com 1500AM

By Jason Miller

Agencies are conducting a series of pilot programs to improve the oversight and  processing of grants, contracts, loans and other spending data.

The test programs are part of how the Government Accountability and Transparency  (GAT) Board is implementing three broad-based recommendations.

President Barack Obama created the GAT Board in June 2011 in an executive order.  Just last week, the President announced Richard Ginman, the director of  Defense Department procurement policy, will be the chairman of the board. In  that role, he replaced Earl Devaney, who retired on Dec. 31.

“[T] he GATB has been working closely with the Recovery Accountability and  Transparency Board, which established a new benchmark for how we should collect,  display and oversee federal spending data under the Recovery Act through  Recovery.gov and its innovative Recovery Operations Center,” wrote Danny Werfel,  the Office of Management and Budget’s controller, in a blog postMonday. “Together with the Recovery Board, federal  agencies, OMB and others, the GATB is a critical driver of continued progress in  our forthcoming efforts to make federal spending data more complete, more  transparent, and more reliable.”

Agencies testing tools

The board made three recommendations to Obama in December, and since then  have been implementing each one of them on a pilot basis.

For instance, the Defense Department and the Department of Health and Human  Services are conducting an interagency review of how best to standardize spending  data.

“This review involves formulating recommendations for standardizing grant and  contract-award data elements and is under consideration by the Federal Acquisition  Regulatory Council and the Council on Financial Assistance Reform,” the board  wrote in a reportto the President. “DoD  is implementing a set of data standards for contracts as well as a contract number  index standard for improving data integrity. HHS identified standard data elements  for grants that may be adaptable to this data standardization effort.”

Another set of pilots is giving agency inspector generals access to the Recovery  Operations Center and FederalAccountability.gov systems to evaluate risk and  prevent and detect waste, fraud and abuse.

IGs also are testing the Recovery Board’s FastAlert tool, which gives them  immediate access to review data on potential awardees.

“Any searches submitted by application users that appear to match those in  FastAlert receive additional internal research conducted by ROC analysts before  transmitting the information to the requestor,” the board stated.

OMB aims for transparency

Along with these ongoing pilots, OMB and agencies are preparing other tests.

Werfel said OMB is developing a new Statement of Spending. The administration  hopes it will make information about where and how agencies spend money more  transparent as part of their annual audited financial statements.

“We will be piloting this new statement with a number of agencies in their  financial reports that will be submitted in November of this year,” he said.

The Recovery Board also is working with the Treasury Department to include an  universal award identification (UAID) number in its payment system.

The board stated the UAID would ensure uniformity and consistency of data, enable  more efficient reviews and audits and improve transparency.

“The Recovery Board will engage with Treasury along with OMB to provide agencies  and recipients of funds the ability to link Treasury payments to specific awards,”  the board stated. “The Recovery Board will also work to develop an implementation  strategy and high-level design for a central repository.”

The GAT Board expects the results of these pilots later this summer and will  submit another report to the President in December.

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