This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-03-849T 
entitled 'NASA: Major Management Challenges and Program Risks' which 
was released on June 12, 2003.

This text file was formatted by the U.S. General Accounting Office 
(GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part of a 
longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every 
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed 
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic 
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail 
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this 
document to Webmaster@gao.gov.

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed 
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work 
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the 
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this 
material separately.

Testimony:

Before the Columbia Accident Investigation Board:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 9:00 a.m. EDT:

Thursday, June 12, 2003:

NASA:

Major Management Challenges and Program Risks:

Statement of Allen Li, Director Acquisition and Sourcing Management:

NASA Challenges and Risks:

GAO-03-849T:

Chairman Gehman and Members of the Columbia Accident Investigation 
Board:

Thank you for inviting me to discuss the challenges and risks facing 
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). You asked 
that we provide information concerning NASA, particularly the 
management of the Space Shuttle Program. We recognize the complexity 
and difficulty in establishing not only the cause of the Columbia 
accident, but also in understanding the agency's environment in which 
management decisions are made. We believe our body of work can help the 
Board in this area.

Since its inception, NASA has undertaken numerous programs that have 
greatly advanced scientific and technological knowledge. As you are 
aware, NASA's activities span a broad range of complex and technical 
endeavors. But the agency is at a critical juncture, and major 
management improvements are needed. In January of this year, we 
identified four challenges facing NASA.[Footnote 1]

* Strengthening strategic human capital management.

* Improving contract management.

* Controlling International Space Station costs.

* Reducing space launch costs.

Weak contract management and financial controls pose risks across the 
agency. Therefore, we have placed this area on our high-risk list.

Results in Brief:

In summary, these challenges affect NASA's ability to effectively run 
its largest programs. NASA's ultimate challenge will be in tackling the 
root problems impeding those programs. This will require (1) 
instituting a results-oriented culture that fosters knowledge sharing 
and empowers its workforce to accomplish programmatic goals; (2) 
ensuring that the agency adheres to management controls to prevent cost 
overruns and scheduling problems; (3) transforming the financial 
management organization so it better supports NASA's core mission; and 
(4) sustaining commitment to change.

Strengthening Strategic Human Capital Management:

An agency's most important organizational asset is its people--they 
define the agency's culture, drive its performance, and embody its 
knowledge base. Leading public organizations worldwide have found that 
strategic human capital management must be the centerpiece of any 
serious change management initiative. However, NASA, like many federal 
agencies, is facing substantial challenges in attracting and retaining 
a highly skilled workforce, thus putting the agency's missions at risk. 
While NASA is taking comprehensive steps to address this problem across 
all mission areas, implementing a strategic approach to marshal, 
manage, and maintain human capital has been a significant challenge.

In January 2001, we reported that NASA's shuttle workforce had declined 
significantly to the point of reducing NASA's ability to safely support 
the shuttle program.[Footnote 2] Many key areas were not sufficiently 
staffed by qualified workers, and the remaining workforce showed signs 
of overwork and fatigue. Recognizing the need to revitalize the shuttle 
program's workforce, NASA discontinued its downsizing plans in December 
1999 and initiated efforts to hire new staff. In September 2001, we 
testified that NASA was hiring approximately 200 full-time equivalent 
staff and that it had focused more attention on human capital in its 
annual performance plan by outlining an overall strategy to attract and 
retain skilled workers.[Footnote 3] However, considerable challenges 
remain, including the training of new staff and addressing the 
potential loss of key personnel through retirement.

As we reported in January 2003, these challenges have not been 
mitigated, and work climate indicators, such as forfeited leave and 
absences from training courses continue to reflect high levels of job 
stress. In addition, staffing shortages in many key skill areas of the 
shuttle program remain a problem, despite the recent hires. These areas 
include subsystems engineering, flight software engineering, 
electrical engineering, environmental control, and shuttle resources 
management. NASA's hiring posture for fiscal year 2003 has been to 
target areas where skill imbalances still exist in the shuttle program.

NASA believes that similar workforce problems affect the entire agency 
and that, as a result, its ability to perform future missions and 
manage its programs may be at risk. Currently, the average age of 
NASA's workforce is over 45, and 15 percent of NASA's science and 
engineering employees are eligible to retire; within 5 years, about 25 
percent will be retirement eligible. At the same time, the agency is 
finding it difficult to hire people with science, engineering, and 
information technology skills--fields critical to NASA's missions. 
Within the science and engineering workforce, the over-60 population 
currently outnumbers the under-30 population nearly 3 to 1. As the pool 
of scientists and engineers shrinks, competition for these workers 
intensifies. The agency also faces the loss of significant procurement 
expertise through 2007, according to NASA's Inspector General.[Footnote 
4] Coupled with these concerns, NASA has limited capability for 
personnel tracking and planning, particularly on an agencywide or 
programwide basis. Furthermore, NASA acknowledges that it needs to 
complete and submit to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) a 
transformation workforce restructuring plan, which it notes that, in 
conjunction with its strategic human capital plan, will be critical to 
ensuring that skill gaps or deficiencies do not exist in mission-
critical occupations.[Footnote 5]

NASA is taking steps to address its workforce challenges. For example:

* NASA is developing an agencywide integrated workforce planning and 
analysis system that aims to track the distribution of NASA's workforce 
across programs, capture critical competencies and skills, determine 
management and leadership depth, and facilitate gap analyses. NASA has 
completed a pilot of an interim competency management system to 
facilitate analyses of gaps in skills and competencies. NASA plans to 
implement the interim system agencywide in 2003 and integrate it with 
the new comprehensive workforce planning and analysis system in 2005. 
The new system should foster better management of the existing 
workforce and enable better strategic decisions about future workforce 
needs.

* NASA has developed a strategic human capital plan, which identifies 
human capital goals, problems, improvement initiatives, and intended 
outcomes and incorporates strategies and metrics to support the 
goals.[Footnote 6] The plan has been approved by OMB and the Office of 
Personnel Management (OPM). According to NASA, the plan is based on 
OMB's scorecard of human capital standards and OPM's scorecard of 
supporting human capital dimensions, as well as our own model, which we 
published in March 2002.[Footnote 7]

* NASA has renewed its attention to hiring applicants just out of 
college and intends to pursue this even more aggressively in coming 
years. The agency is undertaking a number of initiatives and activities 
aimed at acquiring and retaining critically needed skills, such as 
using the new Federal Career Intern Program to hire recent science and 
engineering graduates, supplementing the workforce with nonpermanent 
civil servants where it makes sense, and implementing a program to 
repay student loans to attract and retain employees in critical 
positions.

* Finally, NASA has included an objective in its most recently updated 
strategic plan[Footnote 8] and fiscal year 2004 performance 
plan[Footnote 9] to implement an integrated agencywide approach to 
human capital management. The plans state that this approach will 
attract and maintain a workforce that represents America's diversity 
and will include the competencies that NASA needs to deliver the 
sustained levels of high performance that the agency's challenging 
mission requires.

The 108th Congress is currently considering a series of legislative 
proposals developed by NASA to provide it with further flexibilities 
and authorities for attracting, retaining, developing, and reshaping a 
skilled workforce. These include a scholarship-for-service program; a 
streamlined hiring authority for certain scientific positions; larger 
and more flexible recruitment, relocation, and retention bonuses; 
noncompetitive conversions of term employees to permanent status; a 
more flexible critical pay authority; a more flexible limited-term 
appointment authority for the senior executive service; and greater 
flexibility in determining annual leave accrual rate for new hires.

We continue to monitor NASA's progress in resolving its human capital 
problems, including how well its human capital initiatives and reforms 
and any new and existing flexibilities and authorities are helping to 
strategically manage and reshape its workforce.

Correcting Weaknesses in Contract Management:

Much of NASA's success depends on the success of its contractors--who 
received more than 85 percent, or $13.3 billion, of NASA's funds in 
fiscal year 2002. However, since 1990, we have identified NASA's 
contract management function as an area at high risk because of its 
ineffective systems and processes for overseeing contractor activities. 
Specifically, NASA has lacked accurate and reliable information on 
contract spending and has placed little emphasis on end results, 
product performance, and cost control. NASA has addressed many of these 
acquisition-related weaknesses, but key tasks remain, including 
completing the design and implementation of a new integrated financial 
management system.

Since 1990, our reports and testimonies have repeatedly demonstrated 
just how debilitating these weaknesses in contract management and 
oversight have been. For example, our July 2002 report on the 
International Space Station found that NASA did not effectively control 
costs or technical and scheduling risks, provide adequate oversight 
review, or effectively coordinate efforts with its partners. In other 
examples, we found that NASA lacked effective systems and processes for 
overseeing contractor activities and did not emphasize 
controlling costs.

Center-level accounting systems and nonstandard cost-reporting 
capabilities have weakened NASA's ability to ensure that contracts are 
being efficiently and effectively implemented and that budgets are 
executed as planned. The agency's financial management environment 
is comprised of decentralized, nonintegrated systems with policies, 
procedures, and practices unique to each of its field centers. For the 
most part, data formats are not standardized, automated systems are not 
interfaced, and on-line financial information is not readily available 
to program managers. NASA's lack of a fully integrated financial 
management system also hurts its ability to collect, maintain, and 
report the full cost of its projects and programs. For example, in 
March 2002, we testified that NASA was unable to provide us with 
detailed support for amounts that it reported to the Congress as 
obligated against space station and related shuttle program cost 
limits,[Footnote 10] as required by the National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration Authorization Act of 2000.[Footnote 11]

In recent years, NASA made progress in addressing its contract 
management challenges. For example:

* In July 1998, we reported that NASA was developing systems to provide 
oversight and information needed to improve contract management and 
that it had made progress in evaluating its field centers' procurement 
activities on the basis of international quality standards and its own 
procurement surveys. In January 1999, we reported that NASA was 
implementing its new system for measuring procurement-related 
activities and had made progress in evaluating procurement functions in 
its field centers.

* NASA has also made progress reducing its use of undefinitized 
contract actions (UCA)[Footnote 12]--that is, unnegotiated, or 
uncosted, contract changes. In 2000, we reported that NASA's frequent 
use of undefinitized contract changes could result in contract cost 
overruns and cost growth in the International Space Station program. In 
March 2003, NASA's Office of Inspector General reported that NASA had 
significantly reduced both the number and dollar amount of 
undefinitized contract actions since we highlighted UCAs as one reason 
for designating NASA's contract management as a major management 
challenge.

* NASA has also recognized the urgency of implementing a fully 
integrated financial management system. We recently reported that NASA 
has estimated the life-cycle cost of this effort through 2008 to be 
$861 million.[Footnote 13], [Footnote 14] While this is NASA's third 
attempt at implementing a new financial management system (NASA's first 
two efforts covered 12 years and cost $180 million), this effort is 
expected to produce an integrated, NASA-wide financial management 
system through the acquisition and incremental implementation of 
commercial software packages and related hardware and software 
components.[Footnote 15] The core financial management module, which 
NASA considers to be the backbone of the Integrated Financial 
Management Program, is currently operating at 6 of NASA's 10 
centers[Footnote 16] and is expected to be fully operational in June 
2003. According to NASA's business case analysis for the system, the 
core financial module will provide NASA's financial and program 
managers with timely, consistent, and reliable cost and performance 
information for management decisions.

While NASA has made noteworthy progress in strengthening its contract 
oversight, much work remains. As NASA moves ahead in acquiring and 
implementing its new financial management system, NASA needs to ensure 
that its systems and processes provide the right data to oversee 
its programs and contractors--specifically, data to allow comparisons 
of actual costs to estimates, provide an early warning of cost overruns 
or other related difficulties, and monitor contract performance and 
make program requirement trade-off decisions. In addition, NASA must 
employ proven best practices, including (1) aligning its selection of 
commercial components of the system with a NASA-wide blueprint, or 
"enterprise architecture;" (2) analyzing and understanding the 
dependencies among the commercial components before acquiring and 
implementing them; (3) following an event-driven system acquisition 
strategy; (4) employing effective acquisition management processes, 
such as those governing requirements management, risk management, and 
test management; (5) ensuring that legacy system data are accurate to 
avoid loading and perpetuating data errors in the new system; and 
(6) proactively positioning NASA for the business process changes 
embedded in the new system, for example, by providing adequate formal 
and on-the-job training.

However, as we reported in April 2003, the core financial module is not 
being designed to accommodate much of the information needed by program 
managers and cost estimators.[Footnote 17] For example, to adequately 
oversee NASA's largest contracts, program managers need reliable 
contract cost data--both budgeted and actual--and the ability to 
integrate these data with contract schedule information to monitor 
progress on the contract. However, because program managers were not 
involved in defining system requirements or reengineering business 
processes, the core financial module is not being designed to integrate 
cost and schedule data needed by program managers. In addition, because 
NASA has embedded in the core financial module the same accounting code 
structure that it uses in its legacy reporting system, the core 
financial module is not being implemented to capture cost information 
at the same level of detail that it has received from NASA's 
contractors. Finally, because NASA has done little to reengineer its 
acquisition management processes to ensure that its contractors 
consistently provide the cost and performance information needed, the 
core financial module does not provide cost estimators with the 
detailed cost data needed to prepare credible cost estimates.

Because more work is needed to demonstrate substantial progress in 
resolving the root causes of NASA's contract management weaknesses, our 
2003 Performance and Accountability Series continued to report contract 
management as a major management challenge for NASA and a high-risk 
area. We are continuing to monitor NASA's progress in addressing 
contract management weaknesses. In response to a request from the 
Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee and the House 
Science Committee, we continue to assess the extent to which NASA's 
financial management system acquisition is in accordance with effective 
system acquisition practices and is designed to support NASA's 
decision-making needs and external reporting requirements.

Controlling International Space Station Costs:

The International Space Station represents an important effort to 
foster international cooperation in scientific research and space 
exploration. It is also considered one of the most challenging 
engineering feats ever attempted. The estimated cost of the space 
station has mushroomed, and expected completion has been pushed out 
several years. NASA is taking action to keep costs in check, but its 
success in this area still faces considerable challenges. In the 
meantime, NASA has had to make substantial cuts in the program, 
negatively impacting its credibility with the Congress, international 
partners, and the scientific community.

The grounding of the shuttle fleet following the Columbia accident has 
had a significant impact on the continued assembly and operation of the 
International Space Station. The shuttle is the primary vehicle for 
transferring crew and equipment to and from the station and is used to 
periodically reboost the station into a higher orbit. Although on-orbit 
assembly of the station has stopped, NASA must continue to address the 
challenges of developing and sustaining the station and conducting 
scientific experiments until shuttle flights resume. While controlling 
cost and schedule and retaining proper workforce levels have been 
difficult in the past, the shuttle grounding will likely exacerbate 
these challenges. Because the return-to-flight date for the shuttle 
fleet is unknown at this time and manifest changes are likely, the 
final cost and schedule impact on the station is undefined at this 
time.

NASA has had difficulty predicting and controlling costs and scheduling 
for the space station since the program's inception in 1984. In 
September 1997, we reported that the cost and schedule performance of 
its prime development contractor, which showed signs of deterioration 
in 1996, had continued to worsen and that the program's financial 
reserves for contingencies had all but evaporated. In our January 2001 
Performance and Accountability Series, we reported that the prime 
contract was initially expected to cost over $5.2 billion and that the 
assembly of the station was expected to be completed in June 2002. But 
by October 2000, the prime contractor's cost had grown to about 
$9 billion--$986 million of which was for cost overruns--and the 
current estimate is about $11 billion. Because of on-going negotiations 
with the international partners and uncertainty associated with the 
shuttle's return to flight, the station's final configuration and 
assembly date cannot be determined at this time. NASA's Office of 
Inspector General also reported cost overruns in a February 2000 audit 
report, and based on recommendations in that report, NASA agreed to 
take several actions, including discussing the prime contractor's cost 
performance at regularly scheduled meetings and preparing monthly 
reports to senior management on the overrun status. However, in July 
2002, we reported continued cost growth due to an inadequate definition 
of requirements, changes in program content, schedule delays, and 
inadequate program oversight.[Footnote 18] While NASA's controls should 
have alerted management to the growing cost problem and the need for 
action, they were largely ignored because NASA focused on fiscal year 
budget management rather than on total program cost management.

NASA is instituting a number of management and cost-estimating reforms, 
but significant challenges threaten their successful implementation. 
First, NASA's new life-cycle cost estimate for the program--which is 
based on a three-person crew instead of a seven-person crew, as 
originally planned--will now have to be revised because of changes to 
the program's baseline. The lack of an adequate financial management 
system for collecting space station cost data only exacerbates this 
challenge. Second, NASA must still determine how research can be 
maximized with only a limited crew. Last, NASA has yet to reach 
agreement with its international partners on an acceptable on-orbit 
configuration and sharing of research facilities and costs. As a 
result, the capacity and capabilities of the space station, the scope 
of research that can be accomplished, and the partners' share of 
operating costs are unknown at this time.

Ongoing cost and schedule weaknesses have profoundly affected the 
utility of the space station--with substantial cutbacks in 
construction, the number of crew members, and scientific research. As a 
part of the space station's restructuring, further work and funding for 
the habitation module and crew return vehicle have been deferred, which 
led to the on-orbit crew being reduced from seven to three members, 
limiting the crewmember hours that can be devoted to research. 
Additionally, the number of facilities available for research has been 
cut from 27 to 20. NASA's international partners and the scientific 
community are not satisfied with these and other reductions in 
capabilities and have raised concerns about the viability of the space 
station science program.

Reducing Space Launch Costs:

In our earlier identification of costs to build the International Space 
Station, we identified space shuttle launch costs as being a 
substantial cost component--almost $50 billion.[Footnote 19] NASA 
recognized the need to reduce such costs as it considered alternatives 
to the space shuttle. Indeed, a key goal of the agency's earlier effort 
to develop a reusable launch vehicle was to reduce launch costs from 
$10,000 per pound on the Space Shuttle to $1,000 through the use of 
such a vehicle. As we testified in June 2001, NASA's X-33 program--an 
attempt to develop and demonstrate advanced technologies needed for 
future reusable launch vehicles--ended when the agency chose not to 
fund continued development of the demonstrator vehicle in February 
2001.[Footnote 20]

Subsequently, until November 2002, NASA was pursuing its Space Launch 
Initiative (SLI)--a 5-year, $4.8 billion program to build a new 
generation of space vehicles to replace its aging space shuttle fleet. 
SLI was part of NASA's broader Integrated Space Transportation Plan, 
which involves operating the space shuttle program through 2020 as 
successive generations of space transportation vehicles are developed 
and deployed, beginning around 2011. The primary goals for SLI were to 
reduce the risk of crew loss as well as substantially lower the cost of 
space transportation so that more funds could be made available for 
scientific research, technology development, and exploration 
activities. Currently, NASA spends nearly one-third of its budget on 
space transportation.

In September 2002, we reported that SLI was a considerably complex and 
challenging endeavor for NASA--from both a technical and business 
standpoint.[Footnote 21] For example, SLI would require NASA to develop 
and advance new technologies for the new vehicle, including (1) new 
airframe technologies that will include robust, low-cost, low-
maintenance structure, tanks, and thermal protection systems, using 
advanced ceramic and metallic composite materials, and (2) new 
propulsion technologies, including main propulsion systems, orbital 
maneuvering systems, main engines, and propellant management. The 
program would also require NASA to carefully coordinate and communicate 
with industry and government partners in order to reach agreements on 
the basic capabilities of the new vehicle, the designs or architectures 
that should be pursued, the sharing of development costs, and 
individual partner responsibilities. Last, the SLI project would 
require careful oversight, especially in view of past difficulties NASA 
has had in developing the technologies for reusable launch vehicles to 
replace the space shuttle. These efforts did not achieve their goals 
primarily because NASA did not develop realistic requirements and, 
thus, cost estimates, timely acquisition and risk management plans, or 
adequate and realistic performance goals.

Most importantly, however, we reported that NASA was incurring a high 
level of risk in pursuing its plans to select potential designs for the 
new vehicle without first making other critical decisions, including 
defining the Department of Defense's (DOD) role in the program; 
determining the final configuration of the International Space Station; 
and identifying the overall direction of NASA's Integrated Space 
Transportation Plan. At the time, indications were that NASA and DOD 
differed on program priorities and requirements; NASA had yet to reach 
agreement with its international partners on issues that could 
dramatically impact SLI requirements, such as how many crew members 
would operate the station.

NASA agreed with our findings and, in October 2002, postponed its 
systems requirements review for SLI so that it could focus on defining 
DOD's role, determine the future requirements of the International 
Space Station, and firm up the agency's future space 
transportation needs. In November 2002, the administration submitted to 
the Congress an amendment to NASA's fiscal year 2003 budget request to 
implement a new Integrated Space Transportation Plan. The new plan 
makes investments to extend the space shuttle's operational life for 
continued safe operations and refocuses the SLI program on developing 
an orbital space plane--which provides a crew transfer capability to 
and from the space station--and next-generation launch technology. The 
Integrated Space Transportation Plan is an integral part of our ongoing 
work assessing NASA's plans to assure flight safety through space 
shuttle modernization through 2020.

As NASA proceeds with its revised plans, it will still be important for 
NASA to implement management controls that can effectively predict what 
the total costs of the program will be and minimize risks. These 
include cost estimates, controls designed to provide early warnings of 
cost and schedule overruns, and risk mitigation plans. With such 
controls in place, NASA would be better positioned to provide its 
managers and the Congress with the information needed to ensure that 
the program is on track and able to meet expectations.

Better Mechanisms Needed for Sharing Lessons Learned:

In addition to taking actions to address its management challenges, 
NASA uses various mechanisms to communicate lessons garnered from past 
programs and projects. In 1995, NASA established the Lessons Learned 
Information System (LLIS), a Web-based lessons database that managers 
are required to review on an ongoing basis. NASA uses several 
mechanisms to capture and communicate lessons learned--including 
training, program reviews, and periodic revisions to agency policies 
and guidelines--but LLIS is the principal source for sharing lessons 
agencywide. In January 2002, we reported that NASA had recognized the 
importance of learning from the past to ensure future mission success 
and had implemented mechanisms to capture and share lessons 
learned.[Footnote 22] However, spacecraft failures persist, and there 
is no assurance that lessons are being applied toward future mission 
success. We reported that insufficient risk assessment and planning, 
poor team communications, inadequate review process, and inadequate 
system engineering were often cited as major contributors to mishaps. 
(See table 1.):

Figure 1: Persistent Reasons for Spacecraft Failures:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

At that time, we also reported on a survey we conducted of NASA's 
program and project managers. The survey revealed that lessons are not 
routinely identified, collected, or shared by programs and project 
managers. The survey found that less than one-quarter of the 
respondents reported that they had submitted lessons to LLIS; almost 
one-third did not even know whether they had submitted lessons. In 
addition, most respondents could not identify helpful lessons for their 
program or project.

Furthermore, many respondents indicated that they were dissatisfied 
with NASA's lessons learned processes and systems. Managers also 
identified challenges or cultural barriers to the sharing of lessons 
learned, such as the lack of time to capture or submit lessons and a 
perception of intolerance for mistakes. They further offered 
suggestions for areas of improvement, including enhancements to LLIS 
and implementing mentoring and "storytelling," or after-action reviews, 
as additional mechanisms for lessons learning.

While NASA' s current knowledge management efforts should lead to some 
improvement in the sharing of agency lessons and knowledge, they lack 
ingredients that have been shown to be critical to the success of 
knowledge management at leading organizations. Cultural resistance to 
sharing knowledge and the lack of strong support from agency leaders 
often make it difficult to implement an effective lessons-learning and 
knowledge-sharing environment. We found that successful industry and 
government organizations had overcome barriers by making a strong 
management commitment to knowledge sharing, developing a well-defined 
business plan for implementing knowledge management, providing 
incentives to encourage knowledge sharing, and building technology 
systems to facilitate easier access to information. The application of 
these principles could increase opportunities for NASA to perform its 
basic mission of exploring space more effectively.

To fulfill its vision, NASA is taking on a major transformation aimed 
at becoming more integrated and results-oriented, and at reducing risks 
while working more economically and efficiently. However, to 
successfully implement its human capital, financial management, and 
other reforms, NASA will need sustained commitment from senior leaders. 
Given the high stakes involved, it is critical that NASA's leadership 
provide direction, oversight, and sustained attention to ensure that 
reforms stay on track. NASA's Administrator, who comes to the position 
with a strong management background and expertise in financial 
management, has made a personal commitment to change the way NASA does 
business and has appointed a chief operating officer to provide 
sustained management attention to strategic planning, organizational 
alignment, human capital strategy, performance management, and other 
elements necessary for transformation success. The challenge ahead for 
NASA will be to achieve the same level of commitment from managers at 
NASA centers so that NASA can effectively use existing and new 
authorities to manage its people strategically and quickly implement 
the tools needed to strengthen management and oversight.

Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

This testimony was drawn from the most recent[Footnote 23] in a series 
of GAO reports first issued in 1999 as well as additional reports that 
summarize numerous individual GAO reviews that identify important 
management, oversight, and workforce issues facing NASA. The purpose of 
the series is to help sustain congressional attention and an agency 
focus on continuing to make progress in addressing these issues. The 
individual reviews were conducted in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards.

Chairman Gehman, this concludes my statement. I will be happy to answer 
any questions you or members of the board may have.

Contacts and Acknowledgments For further information regarding this 
testimony, please contact Allen Li at (202) 512-4841. Individuals 
making key contributions to this testimony included Jerry Herley, 
Shirley Johnson, Charles Malphurs, and Karen Sloan.

FOOTNOTES

[1] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Major Management Challenges and 
Program Risks: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 
GAO-03-114 (Washington, D.C.: January 2003).

[2] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Major Management Challenges and 
Program Risks: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 
GAO-01-258 (Washington, D.C.: January 2001).

[3] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Space Shuttle Safety: Update on 
NASA's Progress in Revitalizing the Shuttle Workforce and Making Safety 
Upgrades GAO-01-1122T (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 6, 2001).

[4] See National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Audit Report: 
Procurement Workforce Planning, IG-01-041 (Washington, D.C.: September 
2001). 

[5] As stated in President's Management Agenda Action Plans for the 
National Aeronautics And Space Administration, (Washington, D.C.: May 
9, 2002). This document is an agreement between NASA and OMB on NASA's 
plans for addressing the governmentwide initiatives in The President's 
Management Agenda.

[6] NASA has also developed a companion strategic human capital 
implementation plan that contains detailed action plans for the 
improvement initiatives. 

[7] See U.S. General Accounting Office, A Model of Strategic Human 
Capital Management, GAO-02-373SP (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 15, 2002).

[8] See National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 2003 Strategic 
Plan (Washington, D.C.: 2003).

[9] NASA's fiscal year 2004 performance plan is integrated with its 
fiscal year 2004 budget request. 

[10] See U.S. General Accounting Office, National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration: Leadership and Systems Needed to Effect Financial 
Management Improvements, GAO-02-551T (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 20, 2002).

[11] Section 202 of P.L. 106-391.

[12] An undefinitized contract action means a unilateral or bilateral 
contract modification or delivery/task order in which the final price 
or estimated cost and fee have not been negotiated and mutually agreed 
to by NASA and the contractor. 48 C.F.R. 1843.7001.

[13] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Business Modernization: 
Improvements Needed in Management of NASA's Integrated Financial 
Management Program, GAO-03-507 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 30, 2003).

[14] For this estimate, NASA has defined life-cycle costs to include 
implementation efforts through fiscal year 2008 and major upgrades, 
plus operation and support costs for each system module for the first 2 
years after the module goes live.

[15] The system is to consist of nine modules: core financial 
management, resume management, travel management, position description 
management, human resource management, payroll, budget formulation, 
contract administration, and asset management.

[16] NASA is comprised of its headquarters offices, nine centers 
located throughout the country, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory is operated by the California Institute of 
Technology, but for the purpose of this testimony, we treat the Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory as a center.

[17] See GAO-03-507.

[18] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Space Station: Actions Under 
Way to Manage Cost, but Significant Challenges Remain, GAO-02-735 
(Washington, D.C.: July 17, 2002).

[19] U.S. General Accounting Office, International Space Station: U.S. 
Life-Cycle Funding Requirements, GAO/NSIAD-98-147 (Washington, D.C.: 
May 22, 1998).

[20] U.S. General Accounting Office, Space Transportation: Critical 
Areas NASA Needs to Address in Managing Its Reusable Launch Vehicle 
Program, GAO-01-826T (Washington, D.C.: June 20, 2001).

[21] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Space Transportation: 
Challenges Facing NASA's Space Launch Initiative, GAO-02-1020 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 17, 2002).

[22] See U.S. General Accounting Office, NASA: Better Mechanisms Needed 
for Sharing Lessons Learned, GAO-02-195 (Washington, D.C.: January 
2002).

[23] GAO-03-114.