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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Railroads, Committee on Transportation and 
Infrastructure, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 9:30 a.m. EDT: 

Thursday, June 9, 2005: 

AMTRAK: 

Management and Accountability Issues Contribute to Unprofitability of 
Food and Beverage Service: 

Statement of JayEtta Hecker, Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues: 

GAO-05-761T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-05-761T, a report to Subcommittee on Railroads, 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of 
Representatives: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Amtrak has provided food and beverage service on its trains since it 
began operations in 1971. Amtrak has struggled since its inception to 
earn sufficient revenues and depends heavily on federal subsidies to 
remain solvent. While a small part of Amtrak’s overall expenditures, 
Amtrak’s food and beverage service illustrates concerns in Amtrak’s 
overall cost containment, management and accountability issues. 

This testimony is based on GAO’s work on Amtrak’s management and 
performance as well as additional information gained from Amtrak and 
other transportation providers. This testimony focuses on (1) the 
provisions written into Amtrak’s contract with Gate Gourmet to control 
costs, (2) the types of management controls Amtrak exercises to prevent 
overpayments, and (3) the information Amtrak collects and uses to 
monitor the service and to report to stakeholders such as its Board of 
Directors. 

What GAO Found: 

Amtrak’s financial records show that for every dollar Amtrak earns in 
food and beverage revenue, it spends about $2—a pattern that has held 
consistent for all 3 years GAO reviewed. In GAO’s estimation, Amtrak 
has lost a total of almost $245 million from fiscal year 2002 through 
fiscal year 2004 on food and beverage service. Since 1999, Amtrak has 
contracted out the responsibility to Gate Gourmet International (Gate 
Gourmet) for managing commissaries and for ordering and stocking all 
food and beverages and related items managing under a contract that 
expires in September 2006. 

Amtrak’s current cost reimbursable contract with Gate Gourmet creates, 
if anything, an incentive to increase Amtrak’s costs unless properly 
monitored. Gate Gourmet can charge Amtrak for the cost of the food and 
beverage items, as well as management, labor, and other expenses. 
Without defined controls and management, this type of contract 
structure provides little incentive for a contractor to reduce or 
contain costs to provide better value to its customer. 

GAO found five different management controls that Amtrak did not fully 
exercise regarding oversight of its food and beverage service. These 
controls include: (1) requiring an independently audited financial 
report, (2) auditing for all applicable rebates and discounts that Gate 
Gourmet could have applied to food and beverage items purchased for 
Amtrak, (3) adequately monitoring purchase price information for its 
food and beverage items, (4) not considering Amtrak’s food and beverage 
labor costs, as a part of product markups, and that (5) not utilizing 
Amtrak’s procurement department in negotiating the current contract. 

Information that could provide both internal and external 
accountability for the food and beverage function is limited. Amtrak 
does not include any information about its food and beverage expenses 
in any of its internal or external reports, including its monthly 
performance reports, its internal quarterly progress reports or its 
annual consolidated financial statements. This lack of information 
makes it difficult for internal and external stakeholders to gauge the 
profit or loss of the operation as well as to assign accountability. 

Amtrak food and beverage revenues and expenses, fiscal years 2002 to 
2004: 

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

What GAO Recommends: 

Since we did not have sufficient time to obtain Amtrak’s comments, as 
required by government auditing standards, prior to this hearing, GAO 
anticipates making recommendations to Amtrak to improve its food and 
beverage service at a later time. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-761T. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact JayEtta Z. Hecker, 202-
512-8984. 

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I appreciate the opportunity to testify on issues concerning the 
National Railroad Passenger Corporation's (or Amtrak) food and beverage 
service, which will clearly illustrate Amtrak's challenges in 
controlling its costs. Since Amtrak started operations in 1971, Amtrak 
has struggled financially, and has depended on a federal subsidy of 
more than $1 billion a year since fiscal year 2003 to remain solvent. 
For fiscal years 2002 through 2004, Amtrak's food and beverage expenses 
were about $487 million--or only about 5 percent of the company's total 
expenditures. However, during that same time period, Amtrak's food and 
beverage service earned about $243 million in revenue. This means that 
Amtrak spends about $2 to earn $1 in food and beverage revenue. Of 
Amtrak's total food and beverage expenditures, about 53 percent was for 
labor costs for Amtrak employees serving the food, about 38 percent was 
for food costs and fees to Gate Gourmet International (Gate Gourmet)-- 
the contractor for food and beverages and operation of Amtrak 
commissaries--and about 9 percent for other Amtrak costs. 

At your request, my statement today relates primarily to the 
contractor's portion of this expense, as well as Amtrak's oversight and 
control over its food and beverage service, and what Amtrak is doing to 
oversee and control contract costs. I will specifically address what we 
have learned in examining three major types of cost controls: (1) the 
provisions written into Amtrak's contract with Gate Gourmet[Footnote 1] 
to control costs, (2) the types of management controls Amtrak exercises 
to prevent improper payments, and (3) the information Amtrak collects 
and uses to monitor the service and to report to stakeholders such as 
its Board of Directors. We also talked with three other passenger 
transportation providers to get background and comparison information 
on their food and beverage services. The information I will present is 
based on completed work done in the course of our ongoing review of 
Amtrak's management and performance which we will report on later this 
year. We also collected supplemental information from Amtrak, and on 
the food and beverage operations of VIA Rail Canada (VIA Rail) and the 
Alaska Railroad, two other providers of intercity passenger rail, and 
two major U.S. air carriers--Northwest Airlines and American Airlines. 

In summary, we found that: 

* The provisions of the contract for food and beverage services provide 
little incentive for Gate Gourmet to reduce or contain the costs of 
food and beverages. The contract is a cost reimbursable contract, and 
under it, the contractor can charge for the costs of items purchased, 
in addition to management and other fees. Given the way Amtrak is 
managing the contract, none of the contractor's profit is tied to 
controlling costs. Although the contract included a discussion of 
performance standards, these standards and related measures were never 
created, even though they were required 45 days after the contract was 
signed in January 1999. Performance standards would have allowed for 
performance incentives and penalties. If these incentives had been 
developed, then they could have been used to pay Gate Gourmet based on 
such things as finding lower-priced food products of similar quality to 
what is being purchased now. 

* Amtrak is not fully exercising prudent management techniques to 
control its food and beverage costs and prevent potential improper 
payments. We found three examples of this mismanagement at Amtrak. 
First, Amtrak has never required the contractor to submit an annual 
report (which would be independently audited) of budget variances for 
key line items, even though the contract requires such a report. Such a 
report could detect improper payments by Amtrak to Gate Gourmet for 
food and beverage items. Second, Amtrak has never audited the 
contractor's purchase data--which is allowed under the contract--to 
ensure that the contractor is passing along any discounts or rebates 
the contractor receives on items purchased. For example, Gate Gourmet 
reported passing along about $550,000 in rebates and discounts on 
purchases for Amtrak totaling about $6.5 million out of $90 million 
total purchases for Amtrak from fiscal year 2002 through fiscal year 
2003.[Footnote 2] Finally, Amtrak does not adequately monitor purchase 
prices reported by the contractor to identify variances or products 
with high costs. To further test purchase data, we non-statistically 
selected 37 payment transactions and reviewed the underlying supporting 
documentation and found evidence of widely variable product prices. For 
example, Amtrak paid between $0.43 and $3.93 per 12-ounce bottle of 
Heineken beer. (See fig. 1.)

Figure 1: Amount Amtrak Paid for a 12-Ounce Beer, Fiscal Years 2002 and 
2003: 

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

* The level of information Amtrak collects and uses to monitor its food 
and beverage service and report results to external or internal 
stakeholders inhibits accountability for its performance. Externally, 
Amtrak does not report food and beverage expenditure information in its 
monthly performance reports or its annual consolidated financial 
statements. While Amtrak reports the combined revenue of its food and 
beverage services in its monthly performance reports, it does not do so 
for its food and beverage expenses. By combining revenue, it is 
difficult for managers to determine the amount of revenue attributable 
to food services compared to beverage services. By not reporting 
expenses, it is difficult to determine how much is spent on food and 
beverage service. This lack of information inhibits Amtrak's ability to 
assign accountability for performance internally or allow for any 
external accountability to key stakeholders. Other transportation 
companies we studied have a different accountability structure for 
their food and beverage service. Because VIA Rail has a fixed subsidy 
from the federal Canadian government, VIA Rail's management has an 
inherent incentive to control its costs in all areas of its operation, 
including its food and beverage service. The Alaska Railroad receives 
bi-weekly reports from its contractor detailing its labor and food 
costs that show, among other things, contractor performance against the 
contractual cost caps. 

Background: 

How Does Amtrak Operate Its Food and Beverage Service?

Food and beverages have been served onboard Amtrak trains since Amtrak 
was created. Amtrak's eleven commissaries are located around the 
country and are responsible for receiving, warehousing and stocking 
food, beverages, and other items for Amtrak's onboard dining and café 
service. Until January 1999, Amtrak ran these commissaries with its own 
employees. Since then, Amtrak has contracted out the responsibility for 
the commissaries and for ordering and stocking all food, beverages, and 
related items under a contract that expires in September 2006.[Footnote 
3] Gate Gourmet (the contractor), is also a supplier of food and 
beverages to several major airlines. During fiscal years 2002 through 
2004, the 3-year period we focused on in our audit work, Amtrak paid 
Gate Gourmet between $59 and $64 million a year in reimbursements and 
fees.[Footnote 4] Gate Gourmet personnel operate Amtrak-owned 
commissaries and order, receive, store, and stock trains with food, 
beverages, and other related items such as table linens and napkins. 
Food and beverage stock are charged to Amtrak employees who account for 
the food en route. When a train arrives at its final destination, all 
remaining stock items are returned to a commissary. Gate Gourmet 
charges Amtrak for the items used, as well as for labor, management, 
and other fees. The contract requires that Gate Gourmet provide Amtrak 
an independently audited annual report within 120 days following the 
expiration of each contract year. 

Amtrak's model for handling its food and beverage service is similar to 
other passenger transportation companies, with some important 
differences. Northwest Airlines has outsourced their kitchen and 
commissary operations and have food and beverages delivered to each 
airplane before each flight. VIA Rail Canada, Canada's national 
passenger railroad, serves food on most of its trains and owns and 
operates its own commissaries. Food and other items are delivered to 
each train, consumed during the train's run and restocked at the 
destination. The Alaska Railroad, however, has a private contractor 
that orders, stocks, delivers, prepares, and serves all of its food and 
beverages on its trains using their own labor force. With certain 
exceptions and limits, all food and beverage revenues and expenses are 
the responsibility of the contractor.[Footnote 5]

How Much Is Amtrak Losing on Food and Beverage Operations?

Amtrak's financial records show that for every dollar Amtrak earns in 
food and beverage revenue, it spends about $2--a pattern that has held 
consistent for all 3 years we reviewed. (See table 1 and fig. 2.) 
Amtrak's financial records also indicate that Amtrak has lost a total 
of almost $245 million for fiscal year 2002 through fiscal year 2004 on 
food and beverage service. Section 24305(c)(4) of Title 49, United 
States Code, states that Amtrak is not to operate a food and beverage 
service whose revenues do not exceed the cost of providing such 
service. About half of the total food and beverage expenditure is labor 
cost for Amtrak staff who prepare and serve the food aboard the trains. 
About 38 percent is reimbursements and fees to Gate Gourmet, 
representing the cost of food and other products in addition to other 
fees paid to Gate Gourmet. About 9 percent is for other Amtrak costs. 
While Amtrak's labor costs for its food and beverage service are 
significant, these costs are part of Amtrak's overall labor cost 
structure, and as such, are beyond the scope of work we did for this 
testimony. However, a recent Amtrak Inspector General report suggested 
that Amtrak could save money on its food and beverage labor if the cost 
of this labor was similar to that of the restaurant industry.[Footnote 
6]

Table 1: Amtrak's Estimated Food and Beverage Revenue and Expenses (by 
Major Category), Fiscal Years 2002 to 2004: 

Total food and beverage revenues[A]; 
2002: $84,100,000; 
2003: $78,400,000; 
2004[C]: $80,400,000; 
Total: $242,900,000. 

Expense Category: Amtrak Labor Costs; 
2002: $83,768,416; 
2003: $83,257,574; 
2004[C]: $89,162,529; 
Total: $256,188,519; 
Percent of Total Expense: 52.6%. 

Expense Category: Payments to Gate Gourmet; 
2002: $63,754,973; 
2003: $59,769,085; 
2004[C]: $61,893,852; 
Total: $182,422,910; 
Percent of Total Expense: 38.0%. 

Expense Category: All Other Amtrak Food and Beverage Expenses[B]; 
2002: $16,961,343; 
2003: $15,775,092; 
2004[C]: $13,123,348; 
Total: $45,859,910; 
Percent of Total Expense: 9.4%. 

Total Food and Beverage Expenses; 
2002: $164,489,732; 
2003: $158,801,751; 
2004[C]: $164,179,729; 
Total: $487,471,212; 
Percent of Total Expense: 100.0%. 

Profit or (Loss); 
2002: ($80,389,732); 
2003: ($80,401,751); 
2004[C]: ($83,779,729); 
Total: ($244,571,212). 

Source: GAO analysis of Amtrak data. 

Notes: 

[A] Revenues include a portion of first class ticket revenue dedicated 
toward food and beverage revenues. 

[B] "All Other" expenses include such items as utilities, office 
supplies, crew meals, and reusable support items such as crockery and 
glassware. 

[C] All 2004 figures are unaudited. 

[End of table]

Figure 2: Amtrak Food and Beverage Revenues and Expenses, Fiscal Years 
2002 to 2004: 

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Amtrak has responded to these continued losses with some incremental 
reductions in food and beverage service. On July 1, 2005, Amtrak plans 
to discontinue food and beverage service on its routes between New York 
City and Albany, New York, which would allow Amtrak to close its 
commissary in Albany. An official in Amtrak's Office of Inspector 
General stated that Amtrak lost between $6 to $8 per person on food 
service on those routes and that closing the commissary will save 
Amtrak about $1 million per year. However, achieving additional savings 
by closing commissaries could be limited, as Amtrak's other 
commissaries serve multiple Amtrak trains that would continue to offer 
food and beverage service. In other words, closing a commissary could 
affect multiple trains on multiple routes. According to an Amtrak 
procurement official, a team consisting of members of Amtrak's 
procurement, legal, financial and transportation departments is 
currently working to identify ways to reduce Amtrak's costs in its next 
commissary contract.[Footnote 7]

Other transportation companies have taken actions to better control 
their food and beverage costs in recent years. For example, Northwest 
Airlines officials stated that they pay particular attention to food 
and beverage expenses. Since 2002, Northwest has reduced its food costs 
by 4 percent. This has been achieved by reducing or eliminating 
complimentary food service for coach passengers on domestic flights 
(even to the point of eliminating pretzels on these flights), 
aggressive pricing of food products and flexible budgeting that adjusts 
each month to reflect increases or decreases in ridership.[Footnote 8] 
VIA Rail officials told us they have considerable flexibility in hiring 
its onboard service personnel to adjust its labor force to respond to 
peak and off-peak tourist seasons for its long-distance trains. In 
addition, VIA Rail officials said they have considerable flexibility in 
how onboard service staff are used; in essence, all onboard service 
staff can be used wherever and whenever needed. The Alaska Railroad 
restructured the contract with its food and beverage service provider 
to allow for food price fluctuation within defined limits. 

Current Contract Does Not Provide Incentives to Reduce or Contain 
Costs: 

One way to control costs is to build provisions into a contract that 
motivate a contractor to keep costs as low as possible. Amtrak's 
current cost reimbursable contract with Gate Gourmet creates, if 
anything, an incentive to increase Amtrak's costs unless properly 
monitored. Under the contract, Gate Gourmet receives a number of 
reimbursements, including commissary, labor, and insurance costs, in 
addition to an operating fee. The operating fee is defined in the 
contract as 5 percent of the total actual cost of the onboard food and 
beverage items. This fee is an incentive for the contractor to increase 
Amtrak's food and beverage costs. These costs can change in each yearly 
operating budget. This operating budget is subject to review by Amtrak 
and is mutually agreed to by both Amtrak and Gate Gourmet. 

Incentives can also be written into a cost reimbursable contract to 
control costs and enhance performance. Although the contract included a 
discussion of performance standards, these standards and related 
measures were never created, even though they were required 45 days 
after the contract was signed in January 1999. Performance standards 
would have allowed for performance incentives and penalties. If these 
incentives had been developed, then they could have been used to pay 
Gate Gourmet based on such things as finding lower-priced food products 
of similar quality to what is being purchased now, or identifying ways 
the food and beverage service could be operated more economically or 
efficiently. 

Other factors may not provide the needed incentives for Gate Gourmet to 
aggressively seek to reduce Amtrak's food costs. Under current contract 
provisions, Gate Gourmet can charge Amtrak for food prepared in Gate 
Gourmet facilities and delivered to Amtrak's commissaries. The contract 
provides considerable pricing flexibility to Gate Gourmet for these 
items with no detailed definitions or price caps. This makes it 
difficult to determine whether or not Amtrak is being charged a 
reasonable price. In addition, the contract also provides that Gate 
Gourmet deduct any trade or quantity discounts on items purchased for 
Amtrak either immediately from Amtrak's invoices or retroactively based 
on the proportion of Amtrak's purchases. Discounts applied 
retroactively are to be applied by Gate Gourmet in "good faith" and 
retroactive payments are "an approximation and that [Gate Gourmet] 
cannot guarantee exactness." The contract stipulates these payments are 
subject to an audit by Amtrak. However, these audits have never been 
conducted. 

In contrast, while Northwest Airlines has cost plus contracts with its 
largest food and beverage contractors (including Gate Gourmet), 
Northwest's management of them is different. Northwest's caterer 
contracts have labor and other rates specified in the contract. 
According to Northwest's food and beverage officials, they know quickly 
if they change their menu, how much their suppliers will charge them-- 
even to the addition or subtraction of a leaf of lettuce served as part 
of an entree. In addition, Northwest officials stated that each price 
charged by its contractors is checked and invoices are audited. 

Management Controls Over Food and Beverage Operations Not Fully 
Exercised: 

We identified five types of management controls that Amtrak did not 
fully exercise regarding oversight of its food and beverage service. 
These include the following: 

* Requirement for an annual report has never been enforced. Amtrak's 
contract requires Gate Gourmet to provide an independently audited 
annual report within 120 days following the expiration of each contract 
year; this report must also be certified by Gate Gourmet officials. 
This report is to provide actual and budgeted amounts for key line 
items and to provide a narrative explanation for any actual to budget 
variance greater than one percent in the aggregate for all 
commissaries. However, Gate Gourmet has not provided this report during 
the five completed years the contract has been in place. Amtrak food 
and beverage officials could not provide us with a reason as to why 
they had decided not to enforce this provision. They told us that they 
relied on contractor-provided monthly operating statements and on 
reports from Amtrak's Inspector General instead. Our review found that 
the monthly operating statements lacked critical information that was 
to be included in the annual report, were prepared by the party seeking 
reimbursement, and, perhaps more importantly, were not independently 
reviewed or audited. By contrast, the annual report was to be certified 
by contractor officials and audited by an independent certified public 
accountant. The Inspector General's reports, while providing management 
with information on some aspects of Amtrak's food and beverage service 
activities, should not be viewed as a substitute for a comprehensive 
audit and report. 

* Audits of discounts and rebates were not conducted. The contract 
provides that Amtrak audit Gate Gourmet's allocations of trade and 
quantity discounts received from purchases of food and beverages. 
However, Amtrak has never conducted an audit of the discounts credited 
to it, nor has it requested that the contractor certify that all of the 
discounts that Amtrak should receive have been credited to its account. 

Information we reviewed indicates that such audits may yield savings 
for Amtrak. For example, Amtrak officials advised us that discounts and 
rebates totaling over $550,000 for fiscal years 2002 and 2003 had been 
credited on gross purchases of about $6.5 million.[Footnote 9] However, 
total Gate Gourmet purchases exceeded $90 million for the 2-year 
period--roughly 13 times the amount of purchases the contractor 
reported as being subject to discounts and rebates. Because Amtrak did 
not require an independent audit or otherwise analyze the trade and 
quantity discounts received, Amtrak does not know whether or not it 
received all of the discounts and rebates to which it was entitled. 
Amtrak could not provide us with reasons supporting its decision or its 
consideration of this issue. 

* Adequate monitoring of purchase price information needs improvements. 
Amtrak did not adequately monitor its purchase price information for 
food and beverage items purchased by Gate Gourmet. Amtrak officials 
said they monitored contractor purchases using daily price reports that 
listed unit prices for purchases ordered the previous day and the price 
the last time the item was ordered. However, given the importance of 
purchase orders in a food and beverage operation, internal controls 
need to be developed to systematically monitor and analyze purchase 
information. These controls should then be monitored on a regular basis 
to assess the quality of performance over time.[Footnote 10] For 
example, controls should include processes to identify unit price 
variances over established or pre-set amounts and actions taken to 
document follow-up work performed. Although Amtrak had some processes 
that compare prices, the process was not robust enough to include a 
record of price trends or follow up actions taken such as corrections 
of amounts billed. Our testing of this control showed that if Amtrak 
had approached this review in a more rigorous manner, it may have 
identified discrepancies warranting further investigation. For example: 

* Monitoring of Purchase Order Pricing: Using data mining[Footnote 11] 
and other audit techniques, we selectively reviewed more than $80 
million of purchase order information for fiscal years 2002 and 2003 
and found that the contractor was generating purchase orders with 
significant variances in unit prices. For example, in 2003, the 
purchase order price of a 10-ounce strip steak ranged from $3.02 to 
$7.58. 

* Monitoring of Actual Product Price Charged by Gate Gourmet: When 
Amtrak officials told us that purchase order information did not always 
reflect actual amounts paid,[Footnote 12] we tested actual prices paid 
by Amtrak to Gate Gourmet. To test purchase order data, we 
nonstatistically selected 37 payment transactions and reviewed the 
underlying supporting documentation and found evidence of widely 
variable product prices. For instance, in fiscal years 2002 and 2003, 
payments of over $400,000 for 12-ounce Heineken beer varied from $0.43 
to $3.93 per bottle. 

* Amtrak product pricing excludes labor costs. Our work revealed that 
Amtrak's product price to the customer does not take into account over 
half of Amtrak's total food and beverage costs. Amtrak's target profit 
margin is 67 percent for prepared meals and 81 percent for controlled 
beverages. These target profit margins are expressed as a percentage of 
sales over the item product cost charged to Amtrak. However, these 
target profit margins do not take into account Amtrak's on-board labor 
costs, which our work has determined is estimated at over half of 
Amtrak's food and beverage total expenditures. Amtrak's current food 
and beverage product pricing seems to ensure that its food and beverage 
service will not be profitable. 

* Available procurement expertise not brought to bear. Finally, 
Amtrak's procurement department was not involved in the negotiation of 
the original contract.[Footnote 13] The current contract was signed by 
officials of Amtrak's now defunct Northeast Corridor Strategic Business 
Unit.[Footnote 14] The contract's initial period was for about 7 years 
(January 29, 1999, to September 30, 2006), with a 5-year extension 
option. In addition, another agreement to supply Amtrak's Acela train 
service for food and beverage items from Gate Gourmet's flight kitchens 
was made verbally between Amtrak's former president and the president 
of Gate Gourmet. Amtrak does not have any documentation for the 
contract terms for this service. 

In contrast to Amtrak, other transportation companies we interviewed 
closely monitor their invoices and contractor payments through periodic 
audits or have given the responsibility for costs and pricing to the 
contractor. For example, Northwest Airlines officials stated that they 
conduct regular audits of "every [food and beverage] price" they are 
charged from their contractors and have found errors in either prices 
or labor charges in their contractor invoices. VIA Rail selectively 
audits their food supplier invoices that are attached to every billing 
statement they receive. Finally, the Alaska Railroad food and beverage 
business model gives responsibility for food and labor costs to the 
contractor, subject to contractual limits. 

Information for Accountability Is Limited: 

Finally, information that would provide accountability over this 
service, both internally and externally, is limited. We noted that 
while Amtrak reports the combined revenue from its food and beverage 
services in its monthly performance reports, it does not identify for 
stakeholders the revenue attributable to each service. Amtrak also does 
not include any information about its food and beverage expenses in any 
of its internal or external reports, including its monthly performance 
reports, its internal quarterly progress reports, or its annual 
consolidated financial statements. Absent this information, it is 
difficult for internal and external stakeholders to determine the 
amount of expense attributable to the food and beverage service and to 
gauge the profit or loss of the operation. This hinders oversight and 
accountability. 

Other transportation companies we studied have a different 
accountability structure for their food and beverage service. Because 
VIA Rail has a fixed subsidy from the federal Canadian government, VIA 
Rail's management has an inherent incentive to control its costs in all 
areas of its operation, including its food and beverage service. VIA 
Rail controls its food and beverage costs in many different ways 
including fixed fee supplier contracts, item price reports, monitoring 
of supplier markups and item prices, and fixed food cost budgets to VIA 
Rail menu planners. Northwest Airlines has a flexible monthly food and 
beverage budget that increases or decreases with ridership levels. In 
addition, each supplier contract has established markups on product 
prices and its contracts with food preparation and delivery providers 
have detailed labor rates that are all audited for accuracy. The Alaska 
Railroad receives biweekly reports from its contractor detailing its 
labor and food costs that show, among other things, contractor 
performance against the contractual cost caps. In addition, the 
contractor and the Alaska Railroad will conduct annual audits of its 
contractor's performance under the contract. 

Conclusions: 

Amtrak's food and beverage service may represent a relatively small 
part of the company's operating budget, but it speaks volumes about 
Amtrak's need to get its operations in better order. In administering 
this contract, basic steps for good management have been ignored or 
otherwise set aside. Omissions include not completing agreed-upon 
provisions of the contract, not carrying through with basic oversight 
called for in the contract, and ensuring that the organization was 
getting products at the most reasonable price. Prudence requires a 
stronger effort, beginning with carrying out those steps that, under 
the contract, should have been taken all along. Amtrak needs to take 
such steps not only to curb the losses in this program, but to help 
convince the public that it is acting as a careful steward of the 
federal dollars that continue to keep it operating. 

Recommendations: 

Based on our work to date, we anticipate making recommendations to 
Amtrak to improve controls over its food and beverage operations. Since 
we did not have sufficient time to obtain Amtrak's comments, as 
required by government auditing standards prior to this hearing, the 
recommendations remain tentative until that process is complete. At 
that time, we anticipate making the following recommendations that 
Amtrak: 

1. Better contain its food and beverage costs through: 

* Following its own procedures for ensuring proper contracts and 
payments;

* Enforcing key provisions of the current Gate Gourmet contract 
including annual reports that are independently audited by an outside 
auditing firm and certified by Gate Gourmet officials and conduct 
regular audits of discount and rebates. 

2. Prepare a written contract for food and beverage service on Acela 
trains that specifies the service to be provided, includes incentives 
to ensure efficient and effective contractor performance, and includes 
regular annual reports and audits. 

3. Create separate revenue and expenditure reporting and other basic 
food service metrics to allow for internal and external accountability 
for its food and beverage service and create incentives to reduce costs 
and/or increase revenue. 

4. Comprehensively review the revenue and cost structure of its food 
and beverage service to determine the most cost effective solution that 
can increase the financial contribution of its food and beverage 
function. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my testimony. I would be happy to answer 
whatever questions you or the other members might have. 

Contacts and Acknowledgments: 

For further information, please contact JayEtta Z. Hecker at 
heckerj@gao.gov or at 202-512-2834. Individuals making key 
contributions to this statement include Greg Hanna, Heather Krause, 
Bert Japikse, Richard Jorgenson, Steven Martin, Robert Martin, Irvin 
McMasters, Robert Owens, and Randy Williamson. 

FOOTNOTES

[1] Gate Gourmet International was formerly known as Dobbs 
International prior to January 1, 2001. 

[2] Fiscal year 2004 audited financial information was not available 
when we conducted our analysis. 

[3] There is an option for a 5-year extension. 

[4] Gate Gourmet has contracts with food and non-alcoholic beverage 
suppliers for Amtrak's food and beverage service. Gate Gourmet 
purchases alcoholic beverages from distributors but Amtrak is directly 
billed as Amtrak holds the liquor license to serve alcohol on its 
trains. 

[5] Under the Alaska Railroad contract, the contractor is guaranteed a 
5 percent profit margin. If food and beverage sales do not provide this 
5 percent margin, then Alaska Railroad makes up the difference. If 
margins exceed 5 percent, then the contractor and Alaska Railroad split 
the excess amount. 

[6] Evaluation Report: Food and Beverage Financial Performance, Report 
E-05-03, Amtrak Inspector General. 

[7] The current contract expires on September 30, 2006. 

[8] Northwest officials noted that in lieu of complimentary food 
service for coach passengers they have instituted a "Buy On Board" 
program which offers certain food items for sale to passengers. 

[9] Audited 2004 financial information was not available during our 
analysis. 

[10] GAO, Internal Control Standards: Internal Control Management and 
Evaluation Tool, GAO-01-1008G (Washington, D.C.: Aug.1, 2001). 

[11] Data mining applies a search process to a data set, analyzing for 
trends, relationships, and interesting associations. For instance, it 
can be used to efficiently query transaction data for characteristics 
that may indicate potentially improper activity. 

[12] For example, a price change may have occurred between the time an 
item was ordered and when it was delivered. Record keeping errors may 
also have occurred and unit prices in the inventory system may, for 
example, be based on a different pack size than that received or from 
that used for the last purchase. 

[13] Since the original contract, Amtrak's procurement department plans 
to take the lead role in any future renewal, bidding and negotiating 
the next iteration of the outsourced commissary contract. 

[14] According to Amtrak, Strategic Business Units (or "SBU"s) were a 
method for better managing performances and differences in businesses 
or markets within a company and were designed to anticipate and 
facilitate rapid response to change, place decisionmaking close to the 
customer, and establish authority and accountability. Amtrak 
established 3 SBU's--Northeast Corridor, Intercity, and West. The SBU's 
were largely self-contained units that had their own chief executive 
officers, handled their own train service, procured their own materials 
and supplies, and handled their own financial management and planning.