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Report to the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, U.S. 
Senate:

September 2003:

Small and Disadvantaged Businesses:

Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to the Required Management 
Level:

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-863] GAO-03-863:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-863, a report to the Committee on Small Business 
and Entrepreneurship, U.S. Senate

Why GAO Did This Study:

Section 15(k) of the Small Business Act requires that all federal 
agencies with procurement powers establish an Office of Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU). This law is one of many 
designed to enhance the participation of small and disadvantaged 
businesses in federal procurement. Section 15(k)(3) of the act 
requires that OSDBU directors, who are intended to be advocates for 
small and disadvantaged businesses, be responsible only to and report 
directly to agency heads or deputy agency heads. GAO was asked to 
determine compliance with section 15(k)(3) across the government, 
review to whom the OSDBU director at the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense has reported since the office was exempted from that 
provision, and determine whether section 15(k) applies to the Office 
of Administration (OA), which is the central procurement arm of the 
Executive Office of the President (EOP).

What GAO Found:

Almost half of the federal agencies that GAO reviewed were not in 
compliance with section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act. Thirteen 
of the 24 agencies were in compliance—that is, the OSDBU director 
reported directly to and was responsible only to the agency head or 
deputy head (see table). Eleven agencies were not in compliance with 
the provision. At these 11 agencies, the OSDBU director (1) reported 
to officials below the level of agency head or deputy head, (2) was 
not responsible only to the agency head or deputy head but also to a 
lower level agency official, or (3) had delegated the responsibilities 
of the OSDBU director to officials who did not report to the agency 
head or the deputy head.  

Since Congress granted the Office of the Secretary of Defense an 
exemption from the section 15(k)(3) reporting requirement in 1988, the 
organizational reporting level of the OSDBU director has changed twice—
in both cases to lower levels. From 1989–96, the director reported to 
officials on the Under Secretary of Defense level, one level below 
Deputy Secretary. Since 1996 (except in 1999), the director has 
reported to officials on the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense level, 
two reporting levels below Deputy Secretary. 

OA likely is a “Federal agency with procurement powers” subject to the 
OSDBU requirements of section 15(k) of the Small Business Act. OA has 
procurement powers deriving from its authority to contract on behalf 
of EOP. OA is a “federal agency” by virtue of its being an “agency” 
under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which the Small Business 
Act adopts by reference, and OA is an APA agency because it possesses 
the requisite “substantial independent authority.” 

What GAO Recommends:

GAO recommends that the heads of agencies that were found not to be in 
compliance with section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act take all of 
the necessary steps to comply with the requirement. In their comments, 
the agencies agreed with the report’s description of their OSDBU 
directors’ reporting relationships; however, most disagreed with our 
conclusion that the reporting relationships did not comply with the 
law.   

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-863.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact David G. Wood at 
(202) 512-8678 or woodd@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Almost Half of the Agencies We Reviewed Were Not Complying with Section 
15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act: 

Reporting Level of the OSDBU Director at the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense Has Changed Twice: 

OA Likely Is Subject to the OSDBU Requirements of Section 15(k) of the 
Small Business Act: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Twenty-four Agencies Covered by the Compliance Review: 

Appendix II: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix III: Legal Analysis of the Applicability of Section 15(k) of 
the Small Business Act to the EOP's Office of Administration: 

Introduction and Summary of Conclusions: 

Background: 

Analysis: 

Conclusion: 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Agriculture: 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Commerce: 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of Education: 

Appendix VII: Comments from the Department of Health and Human 
Services:

Appendix VIII: Comments from the Department of Justice: 

Appendix IX: Comments from the Department of State: 

Appendix X: Comments from the Department of the Interior: 

Appendix XI: Comments from the Department of the Treasury: 

Appendix XII: Comments from the Social Security Administration: 

Appendix XIII: Comments from the U.S. Agency for International 
Development: 

Appendix XIV: Comments from the Executive Office of the President, 
Office of Administration: 

Appendix XV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

Table:

Table 1:  Summary of Agency Compliance with Section 15(k)(3) of the 
Small Business Act: 

Figures:

Figure 1: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of the Interior: 

Figure 2: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Justice: 

Figure 3: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Social 
Security Administration: 

Figure 4: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Commerce: 

Figure 5: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Education: 

Figure 6: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the 
Environmental Protection Agency: 

Figure 7: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Health and Human Services before March 2003: 

Figure 8: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Agriculture: 

Figure 9: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of the Treasury: 

Figure 10: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of State: 

Figure 11: Timeline of the OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at 
the Office of the Secretary of Defense: 

Abbreviations:

APA: Administrative Procedure Act:

CFO: Chief Financial Officers:

CICA: Competition in Contracting Act:

DOD: Department of Defense:

EOP: Executive Office of the President:

EPA: Environmental Protection Agency:

FAR: Federal Acquisition Regulation:

FEMA: Federal Emergency Management Agency:

FOIA: Freedom of Information Act:

FRA: Federal Records Act:

GSA: General Services Administration:

HHS: Health and Human Services:

NAS: National Academy of Sciences:

NARA: National Archives and Records Administration:

OA: Office of Administration:

ONDCP: Office of National Drug Control Policy:

OSDBU: Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization:

OST: Office of Science and Technology:

JAG: Judge Advocate General of the Army: 

Letter September 4, 2003:

The Honorable Olympia J. Snowe 
Chair 
The Honorable John F. Kerry 
Ranking Minority Member 
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship 
United States Senate:

During the last 25 years, Congress has enacted several laws designed to 
enhance small business participation in procurement by federal 
agencies--a market that reached more than $250 billion in fiscal year 
2002. One of these laws--Public Law 95-507, enacted in 1978--amended 
section 15 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. § 644) to require all 
federal agencies with procurement powers to establish an Office of 
Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU). Under this act, 
the OSDBU is responsible for overseeing the agency's functions and 
duties related to the awarding of contracts and subcontracts to small 
and disadvantaged businesses. Congress intended that OSDBU directors 
serve in their respective agencies as advocates for small and 
disadvantaged businesses.

One specific provision of the act--section 15(k)(3)--requires that 
OSDBU directors be responsible only to agency heads or deputy heads, 
and that they report directly to these individuals. The purpose of this 
provision is to ensure that the OSDBU directors have immediate access 
to their agency's top decision-makers in order to advocate effectively 
for small and disadvantaged businesses. In 1988, Congress amended 
section 15(k)(3) and allowed the Department of Defense's (DOD) 
Secretary of Defense the discretion to designate the official to whom 
the Defense OSDBU director should report.[Footnote 1] The OSDBU 
director of the Office of the Secretary of Defense is the only director 
exempted from the reporting requirement in section 15(k)(3).[Footnote 
2]

The Executive Office of the President (EOP) is a group of offices that 
provide policy and administrative support to the President. Offices 
within EOP include the Council of Economic Advisers, the Council of 
Environmental Quality, the National Security Council, and the Office of 
Management and Budget. In addition, EOP includes the Office of 
Administration (OA), which is responsible for administrative support 
for all of EOP's offices.

As requested, we determined (1) whether the reporting relationships for 
the OSDBU directors at major federal agencies comply with section 
15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act, (2) to whom the OSDBU director at 
the Office of the Secretary of Defense has reported since 1988, and (3) 
whether section 15(k) of the Small Business Act applies to EOP's OA. As 
agreed with your staffs, we will provide you at a later date with an 
additional report describing OSDBU duties and functions at the major 
federal agencies.

To determine agency compliance with section 15(k)(3), we first 
identified the designated OSDBU director at each of the 24 federal 
agencies that procured $200 million or more in goods and services in 
fiscal year 2001 (see app. I).[Footnote 3] We determined that agencies 
were in compliance where the designated OSDBU director both exercised 
the OSDBU responsibilities set forth in section 15(k)(4)-(10) of the 
Small Business Act, and reported directly to and was responsible only 
to the agency head or agency head's deputy. To reach our 
determinations, we considered information provided by the designated 
directors and documentary evidence. Using a written questionnaire, we 
asked each designated director to identify the official(s) to whom he 
or she reported during the past year (March 2002 - March 2003) and to 
provide information characterizing the reporting relationship, such as 
the extent to which small business issues were discussed. In addition, 
we reviewed documentary evidence, including: organizational charts, 
OSDBU directors' performance appraisals and position descriptions, and 
memorandums or reports discussing the agencies' small business programs 
that were submitted to the agency head or the deputy head. We did not 
review the effectiveness of any agency's OSDBU or small business 
programs. To determine the reporting levels of officials to whom the 
OSDBU director within the Office of the Secretary of Defense has 
reported since 1988, we reviewed documentation from the Secretary's 
office and interviewed the appropriate officials. To determine whether 
section 15(k) applies to EOP's OA, we analyzed relevant laws, 
legislative history, and court cases. A more detailed description of 
our scope and methodology is discussed in appendix II. We conducted our 
work in Washington, D.C., between October 2002 and July 2003 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

Results in Brief:

The reporting relationships for OSDBU directors at 13 of the 24 
agencies that we reviewed complied with section 15(k)(3) of the Small 
Business Act--that is, the OSDBU director reported directly to and was 
responsible only to the agency head or deputy head (see table 1). The 
reporting relationships for OSDBU directors at 11 of the 24 agencies 
were not in compliance with section 15(k)(3).

Table 1: Summary of Agency Compliance with Section 15(k)(3) of the 
Small Business Act:

Agency in compliance (13): Defense Logistics Agency; Department of 
Energy; Department of Housing and Urban Development; Department of 
Labor; Department of the Air Force; Department of the Army; Department 
of the Navy; Department of Transportation; Department of Veterans 
Affairs; General Services Administration; National Aeronautics and 
Space Administration; Office of Personnel Management; U.S. Agency for 
International Development; 

Agency not in compliance (11): Department of 
Agriculture; Department of Commerce; Department of Education; 
Department of Health and Human Services; Department of Justice; 
Department of State; Department of the Interior; Department of the 
Treasury; Environmental Protection Agency; Federal Emergency 
Management Agency; Social Security Administration.

Source: GAO (analysis).

[End of table]

At the 13 complying agencies, the OSDBU directors stated that they 
reported directly to and were responsible only to the agency head or 
the deputy head. Further, agency documentation generally showed that 
relationship: the organizational chart showed a direct organizational 
link between the OSDBU and agency head or deputy head, the agency head 
or deputy head rated the OSDBU director's performance, the OSDBU 
director's position description identified one of the top agency 
officials as the director's supervisor, and the OSDBU director's 
memorandums or reports on small business contracting were provided to 
the agency head or deputy head. At the 11 agencies that were not in 
compliance, we found a variety of reporting arrangements. At 4 of the 
agencies, the OSDBU directors told us that they reported to a lower 
level official than the agency head or deputy head. Also, agency 
documents generally indicated that the OSDBUs were not organizationally 
linked to the agency head or deputy head and that a lower level 
official, such as an assistant secretary or a division director, 
evaluated the OSDBU director's performance. At another 4 of the 11 
agencies that were not in compliance, we found that the OSDBU directors 
were responsible not only to the agency head or the deputy head, but 
also were responsible to lower level officials. At these agencies, 
documentary evidence indicated that lower level officials had a 
supervisory relationship with the OSDBU director. At the remaining 3 
noncomplying agencies, we found that the designated OSDBU directors had 
delegated their responsibilities to others, generally lower level 
officials who did not report to either the agency head or the deputy 
head.

Since Congress granted the Office of the Secretary of Defense an 
exemption from the section 15(k)(3) reporting requirement in 1988, the 
organizational reporting level of the OSDBU director for the Office of 
the Secretary of Defense has changed twice--in both cases to lower 
levels. From 1989 through 1996, the OSDBU director reported to 
officials at the level of Under Secretary of Defense, the level 
immediately under the Deputy Secretary of Defense. Since 1996, with the 
exception of one year--1999--the OSDBU director has reported to 
officials at the level of Deputy Under Secretary of Defense, two 
reporting levels below the Deputy Secretary of Defense.

We believe OA is a "Federal agency with procurement powers" subject to 
the OSDBU requirements of section 15(k), although no court to date has 
directly addressed this issue. OA has procurement powers because of its 
authority to contract on behalf of EOP. We believe OA is a "Federal 
agency" by virtue of its being an "agency" under the Administrative 
Procedure Act (APA), which the Small Business Act adopts by reference. 
Several courts have implicitly found that OA is an "agency" under the 
APA. In addition, OA has a wide range of statutory and other 
significant responsibilities and, therefore, exercises the requisite 
"substantial independent authority" that is necessary to constitute an 
"agency" under the APA.

We are making recommendations to 10 of the 11 agencies that we found to 
be not in compliance with section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business 
Act.[Footnote 4] We recommend that the agency heads at these agencies 
take steps to ensure that the OSDBU directors are responsible only to 
and report directly to the head or deputy head of the agency.

We sent a draft of this report to all 24 agencies for their comments. 
All of the agencies that we concluded were not complying with section 
15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act provided us with comments. 
Generally, they agreed with the report's description of their OSDBU 
directors' reporting relationships, but most disagreed with our 
conclusion that the reporting relationships did not comply with section 
15(k)(3). However, none of the legal arguments that the agencies raised 
caused us to revise our conclusions or recommendations. In addition, we 
provided a draft of our legal opinion on the applicability of section 
15(k) of the Small Business Act to OA. OA declined to comment on the 
draft report. It also stated that its declination to comment did not 
indicate agreement with our conclusions, citing the court's decision in 
Haddon v. Walters, 43F.3d 1488 (D.C. Cir. 1995).

Background:

The U.S. government buys a myriad of goods and services through private 
contractors. In fiscal year 2002, the federal government awarded $250.2 
billion in contracts. It has been the government's long-standing policy 
to maximize procurement opportunities for small business, small 
disadvantaged business, and women-owned business. The Small Business 
Act has been amended several times to increase small business 
participation in the federal procurement marketplace. For example, the 
Business Opportunity Development Reform Act of 1988 amended the Small 
Business Act to require the President to establish an annual 
governmentwide goal of awarding not less than 20 percent of prime 
contract dollars to small businesses. The Small Business 
Reauthorization Act of 1997 further amended the Small Business Act to 
increase the goal to not less than 23 percent. The Small Business 
Administration assigns small business prime contract goals to federal 
agencies, which include all small 
business categories.[Footnote 5] Although the Small Business 
Administration is responsible for coordinating with executive branch 
agencies to ensure that the federal government meets the mandated goal, 
agency heads are responsible for achieving the small business goals 
within their agencies.

In 1978, Congress enacted Public Law 95-507, which amended section 
15(k) of the Small Business Act, by requiring each federal agency 
having procurement powers to establish an OSDBU and the agency head to 
appoint a director of the OSDBU. The purpose of the law was to create 
an advocate for small and disadvantaged businesses within each federal 
agency. A 1978 report by the Senate Select Committee on Small Business 
noted that officials who were responsible for advocating small business 
participation in federal government procurements often did not hold 
high enough positions in the agency to be effective. The law mandates a 
direct reporting relationship, whereby the OSDBU director is 
responsible only to and reports directly to the agency head or deputy 
head. In addition, the law specifies a number of duties and functions 
that the OSDBU director is responsible for carrying out. These include 
having supervisory authority over the OSDBU's staff; implementing and 
executing the functions and duties under sections 8, 15, and 31 of the 
Small Business Act; and identifying proposed solicitations that involve 
the bundling of contract requirements.[Footnote 6]

Before 1987, the OSDBU director at the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense reported to the Deputy Secretary of Defense. In 1987, Congress 
created the position of Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition at 
DOD, a position considered to be chief of procurement. In conjunction 
with the new position, Congress mandated that the OSDBU director report 
to the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition. One year later, 
Congress passed Public Law 100-656, which gave the Secretary of Defense 
the discretion to designate the individual to whom the OSDBU director 
would report. Section 15(k)(3) now reads, in relevant part, as follows:

"The management of each such office shall be vested in an officer or 
employee of such agency or employee of such agency who shall be 
responsible only to, and report directly to, the head of such agency or 
to the deputy of such head except that the director for the Office of 
the Secretary of Defense shall be responsible only to, and report 
directly to, such Secretary or the Secretary's designee.":

Almost Half of the Agencies We Reviewed Were Not Complying with Section 
15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act:

While 13 of the 24 agencies we reviewed were in compliance with section 
15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act, we found that almost half (or 11) 
were not in compliance because the OSDBU director did not directly 
report to and was not responsible only to the agency head or deputy 
agency head.

The OSDBU Directors Were Reporting to the Agency Head or Deputy Agency 
Head at 13 Agencies:

At each of the 13 complying agencies, the OSDBU director stated that he 
or she reports only to the agency head or the deputy head for the 
purposes of carrying out OSDBU duties and functions. All 13 agencies' 
organizational charts showed that the OSDBU was organizationally linked 
to the agency's top decision-makers. Other documents also demonstrated 
this relationship, as follows:

* At 11 of the 13 agencies (the Defense Logistics Agency, Department of 
the Air Force, Department of the Army, Department of Housing and Urban 
Development, Department of Labor,[Footnote 7] Department of the Navy, 
Department of Veterans Affairs,[Footnote 8] General Services 
Administration (GSA), National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 
Office of Personnel Management, and U.S. Agency for International 
Development), the OSDBU directors' position descriptions designate the 
agency head or the deputy head as the supervisor; the OSDBU directors' 
performance appraisals were signed by the agency head or the deputy; 
and documents showed that the OSDBU directors periodically provided 
information regarding the agency's small business programs, such as to 
the agency head or deputy.[Footnote 9]

* At 2 agencies (the Departments of Transportation and Energy), the 
documents we obtained indicated a direct reporting relationship; 
however, we could not obtain the OSDBU directors' performance 
appraisals that were signed by the agency head or deputy head for the 
following reasons:

* At Transportation, the Secretary of Transportation's Chief of Staff 
signed the director's performance appraisal.[Footnote 10] However, the 
OSDBU director's position description indicated that the Secretary was 
the OSDBU director's supervisor.

* At Energy, the OSDBU director is a Senate-confirmed presidential 
appointee. According to the OSDBU director, she does not receive 
written performance appraisals.

Eleven Agencies Were Not in Compliance with Section 15(k)(3):

Eleven agencies did not comply with section 15(k)(3) (see table 1). At 
these agencies, the OSDBU directors (1) reported to lower level 
officials than the agency head or deputy; (2) were not responsible only 
to the agency head or deputy head, but also were responsible to a lower 
level agency official; or (3) had delegated their OSDBU director 
responsibilities to officials who do not report to either the agency 
head or the deputy head. We believe these arrangements are contrary to 
the intent of the law, which is that the official carrying out the 
OSDBU function have direct access to the agency head or deputy head.

At Four Agencies, OSDBU Directors Did Not Directly Report to the Agency 
Head or Deputy Head:

At the Departments of the Interior and Justice, the Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA), and the Social Security Administration, the 
OSDBU directors did not report to the agency head or deputy head. At 
these agencies, the OSDBU director reported to a lower level official 
who oversaw the agency's management or finance division.

The Department of the Interior:

The OSDBU director at Interior reported to the Deputy Assistant 
Secretary for Budget and Finance for administrative matters and to the 
Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget and the Chief 
Financial Officer (CFO) for policy matters (see fig. 1). On the basis 
of Interior's organizational chart, the OSDBU is directly linked to the 
Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget and the CFO. The 
OSDBU director told us that he met with the Assistant Secretary for 
Policy, Management, and Budget and the CFO or the Deputy Assistant 
Secretary on small business contracting issues on a regular basis and 
on a key issue basis. Both the performance appraisal and the position 
description confirmed that the Assistant Secretary for Policy, 
Management, and Budget and the CFO was the OSDBU director's reporting 
official.

Figure 1: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of the Interior:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Department of Justice:

As shown in figure 2, the OSDBU director at Justice reported to the 
Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Policy, Management, and Planning. 
According to Justice's organizational chart, the OSDBU was located 
within the Justice Management Division, with the OSDBU director under 
the supervision of the Deputy Assistant Attorney General Policy, 
Management, and Planning. The OSDBU director told us that he did not 
report to the Attorney General or Deputy Attorney General (the agency 
head and deputy head, respectively) on any matters from March 2002 to 
2003, the time frame covered by our study. The Deputy Assistant 
Attorney General for Law and Policy[Footnote 11] evaluated the 
director's performance, and the Assistant Attorney General for 
Administration, who headed the Justice Management Division, reviewed 
the director's ratings. The reporting relationship between the OSDBU 
director and the Deputy Assistant Attorney General has been long-
standing. The OSDBU director's position description, dated 1981, 
identified the director's supervisor at the Deputy Assistant Attorney 
General level.

Figure 2: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Justice:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Federal Emergency Management Agency:

Before it was absorbed into the Department of Homeland Security, FEMA 
was not in compliance with section 15(k)(3). The OSDBU director 
position had been vacant for 2 years, and a FEMA employee in the 
Financial and Acquisition Management Division carried out the OSDBU 
functions on a part-time basis. This employee told us that she did not 
report directly to FEMA's top decision-makers. FEMA became part of the 
Department of Homeland Security in March 2003 and ceased to be an 
independent agency. According to the Department of Homeland Security's 
organizational chart, the agency has established an OSDBU that is 
organizationally linked to the Secretary.

The Social Security Administration:

Because the OSDBU director reports to neither the Social Security 
Administration's Commissioner nor the Deputy Commissioner, we concluded 
that the Social Security Administration is not complying with section 
15(k)(3). The Social Security Administration's OSDBU director reported 
to the Deputy Commissioner, Office of Finance, Assessment, and 
Management, who is one of a number of deputy commissioners managing 
various programs and operations (see fig. 3). The OSDBU director told 
us that he reports to the Deputy Commissioner, Office of Finance, 
Assessment, and Management. He does not report to the Commissioner or 
the Deputy Commissioner of the Social Security Administration. Both the 
OSDBU director's position description and performance appraisals were 
signed by the Deputy Commissioner, Office of Finance, Assessment, and 
Management.

Officials at the Social Security Administration advised us that, on the 
basis of a 1999 opinion of its Office of General Counsel, the agency is 
in compliance with section 15(k)(3). The primary argument underpinning 
the opinion is that the Deputy Commissioner of Finance, Assessment, and 
Management reports to the agency head, and that therefore the reporting 
relationship of the OSDBU director to the Deputy Commissioner of 
Finance, Assessment, and Management is appropriate. The opinion stated 
that the Small Business Act does not define what is meant by the term 
"deputy." At the Social Security Administration, each of the eight 
Deputy Commissioners, including the Deputy Commissioner of Finance, 
Assessment, and Management, as well as the General Counsel and the 
Chief Actuary, report directly to the Commissioner. According to the 
Social Security Administration's General Counsel Office, each of them 
could be considered to have the status of a "deputy" to the 
Commissioner, unless more is required by a specific statute or 
regulation. Thus, each of these individuals could be considered to have 
the status of deputy for purposes of section 15(k)(3).

We disagree with the Social Security Administration's legal analysis of 
section 15(k)(3) and conclude that the Social Security Administration 
is not complying with the provision. Section 15(k)(3) mandates that the 
OSDBU director report to the agency head or "the deputy of such head," 
that is, the second-in-command. The legislative history of section 
15(k)(3) supports this analysis. The conference report to the 1978 
legislation, establishing the OSDBU, stated that the office would be 
"directed by an employee of that agency, who would report to the head 
of the agency or his deputy (i.e., the second ranking person in that 
agency)."[Footnote 12] [Emphasis supplied.] Moreover, the Senate report 
to the legislation stated, "these directors would report directly to 
the agency head or an official not less than one level of 
responsibility lower than the agency head." [Footnote 13] [Emphasis 
supplied.]

The Social Security Administration has a Deputy Commissioner who has 
been designated as the second-in-command. The Social Security 
Administration's organizational manual states that the Deputy 
Commissioner of Social Security is to serve as the Acting Commissioner 
in the Commissioner's absence. The manual, in describing the functions 
of the Commissioner's Office, also states that both the Commissioner 
and the Deputy Commissioner of Social Security provide executive 
leadership to the Social Security Administration and exercise general 
supervision over its major components. Finally, according to the 
manual, the Deputy Commissioner of Social Security assists the 
Commissioner in carrying out his or her responsibilities and performs 
other duties as the Commissioner may prescribe.

Figure 3: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Social 
Security Administration:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

At Another Four Agencies, OSDBU Directors Are Not Responsible Only to 
the Agency Head or Deputy Head:

We found the Departments of Commerce, Education, and Health and Human 
Services (HHS) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) not to be 
in compliance with section 15(k)(3) because the OSDBU directors were 
not responsible only to the agency head and the deputy head. Although 
evidence indicated that the OSDBU directors at these agencies reported 
at times to the agency head or deputy, the position descriptions and 
the performance evaluations identified lower level agency officials as 
the OSDBU directors' supervisors.

The Department of Commerce:

The OSDBU director at Commerce told us that for administrative matters, 
such as budget, personnel, and space, he reported to a CFO/Assistant 
Secretary for Administration, but reported to the Deputy Secretary for 
small business policy matters. However, we found that Commerce's 
organizational chart directly linked the OSDBU to the CFO/Assistant 
Secretary for Administration, which is one level below the Deputy 
Secretary. Further, the performance appraisals showed that the CFO/
Assistant Secretary for Administration evaluated the OSDBU director, 
while the position description did not identify the director's 
supervisor. Also, according to a Commerce order that describes the 
functions of the OSDBU, the director is to appeal to the CFO/Assistant 
Secretary for Administration when internal disputes arise or when the 
director determines that the procuring or program area is not providing 
adequate opportunity to small and disadvantaged businesses (see fig. 
4).

Figure 4: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Commerce:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Department of Education:

The OSDBU director at Education was responsible not only to the 
Secretary or Deputy Secretary, but she also was responsible to the 
Deputy Secretary's Chief of Staff. The OSDBU director told us that she 
reported to the Deputy Secretary, and that her office is located within 
the Deputy Secretary's office. She told us that she met with the Deputy 
Secretary 3 to 4 times from March 2002 to March 2003. The Deputy 
Secretary's Chief of Staff told us that the OSDBU director can meet 
with the Deputy Secretary whenever she believes it necessary, even 
though the Deputy Secretary assigned the administrative aspects 
pertaining to the OSDBU director to the Chief of Staff. However, 
documentary evidence indicated that the OSDBU director was not always 
directly reporting to the Deputy Secretary and often went through the 
Deputy Secretary's Chief of Staff (see fig. 5). OSDBU employees, 
including the OSDBU director, told us that all of their reports and 
memorandums were sent through the Chief of Staff before going to the 
Deputy Secretary. Moreover, the Chief of Staff signed the OSDBU 
director's performance appraisal for the last 2 years. According to 
Education officials, evaluating the performance of the OSDBU director 
is part of the Chief of Staff's responsibilities.

Figure 5: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Education:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Environmental Protection Agency:

The OSDBU director at EPA is not responsible only to the Administrator 
or the Deputy Administrator (see fig. 6). The OSDBU director told us 
that she met with the Administrator approximately 4 times from March 
2002 to March 2003 to discuss small business contracting issues. Also, 
her position description, last updated in 1984, identified her 
supervisor as the Deputy Administrator, and EPA's organizational chart 
indicated that the OSDBU director was organizationally linked to the 
Administrator. However, the OSDBU director told us that she reported to 
the Deputy Chief of Staff for the day-to-day operations and all matters 
related to small business programs. Also, the performance appraisal 
indicated that the Administrator's Deputy Chief of Staff evaluated the 
OSDBU director's performance.

Figure 6: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the 
Environmental Protection Agency:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Department of Health and Human Services:

The OSDBU director at HHS informed us that she reported to the Deputy 
Secretary on high-level policy issues, such as small business 
procurement, goal setting and achievement, contract bundling, and 
overall support for the small business program. However, she advised us 
that she coordinated with the Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for 
Grants and Acquisition Management for at least some small business 
issues--what she categorized as the day-to-day issues affecting the 
small business community, as well as budget and personnel issues (see 
fig. 7). The HHS organization chart linked the OSDBU with the Assistant 
Secretary for Administration and Management. Further, the OSDBU 
director's position description and performance appraisal showed that a 
supervisory relationship existed between the Deputy Assistant Secretary 
for Grants and Acquisition Management and the OSDBU director. The only 
evidence we found that the OSDBU director had reported to the Deputy 
Secretary on small business issues was one statement from the OSDBU 
director--that is, between March 2002 and March 2003, she met with the 
Deputy Secretary once to discuss small business contracting issues. The 
agency did not provide us with any documentary information that 
indicated the OSDBU director reports to the Deputy Secretary on any 
matters.

Since March 2003, HHS has reorganized some of its components. As of 
June 19, 2003, the OSDBU director is located in the Office of the 
Director for Acquisition Management and Policy, which is located within 
the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration and 
Management.[Footnote 14] The notice in the Federal Register announcing 
HHS's reorganization stated that the OSDBU director reports directly to 
the Deputy Secretary, with the day-to-day operational support provided 
by the Office of Acquisition Management and Policy. However, as 
discussed in the agency comments section of this report, it is unclear 
whether the Deputy Secretary is the only official to whom the OSDBU 
director is responsible.

Figure 7: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Health and Human Services before March 2003:

[See PDF for image]

Note: This figure represents the reporting relationship during the 
period covered by our review (March 2002 to March 2003).

[End of figure]

Agriculture, the Treasury, and State Were Not in Compliance Because the 
OSDBU Directors Delegated Their OSDBU Responsibilities to Lower Level 
Officials:

We found that the Departments of Agriculture, the Treasury, and State 
were not complying with section 15(k)(3) because their designated OSDBU 
directors delegated all of their OSDBU director responsibilities to 
officials who do not directly report to either the Secretaries or 
Deputy Secretaries. At each agency, an Assistant Secretary who manages 
the agency's administrative functions was designated as the statutory 
OSDBU director. The Assistant Secretaries then delegated nearly all of 
their OSDBU responsibilities to lower ranking officials, who reported 
directly to the Assistant Secretaries. The lower ranking officials thus 
became the de facto OSDBU directors. These arrangements, whereby an 
Assistant Secretary for management or administration has delegated 
nearly all of the responsibilities of the OSDBU director to a lower 
level official, maintaining only the title of OSDBU director, defeats 
the purpose of section 15(k)(3). Congress assigned to the OSDBU 
director specific responsibilities to ensure that small and 
disadvantaged businesses received a fair portion of federal 
procurements. To ensure that these responsibilities were effectively 
implemented, Congress also mandated that the OSDBU director--that is, 
the person actually carrying out the responsibilities--have immediate 
access and be responsible only to the agency head or deputy head. 
Consistent with the explicitly specified reporting relationship, the 
legislative history of the reporting requirements reveals congressional 
frustration with a system that kept those whose principal job was the 
promotion of procurement opportunities for small and disadvantaged 
businesses in the lower echelons of federal agencies. As the Senate 
Select Committee on Small Business reported:

"[Many] small business officials…are located in the lower echelons of 
the bureaucracy and, therefore, are unable to advocate or effectively 
assist in the procurement of contracts for small businesses. The 
committee believes that the small business procurement officers must 
have direct access to top level agency policymakers to improve their 
effectiveness as small business advocates."[Footnote 15]

The reporting relationships at Agriculture, State, and Treasury, in 
which the official responsible for the OSDBU function has no direct 
access to the agency head or deputy head, is precisely the structure 
Congress intended to avoid.

The Department of Agriculture:

Agriculture designated the Assistant Secretary for Administration by 
the additional title of Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization, the statutory title mandated by section 15(k) for agency 
OSDBU directors. The Assistant Secretary reported to the Secretary and 
the Deputy Secretary of Agriculture[Footnote 16] (see fig. 8). On the 
basis of Agriculture's organizational chart, the Assistant Secretary 
was linked to the Secretary and the Deputy Secretary. However, the 
Assistant Secretary delegated nearly 100 percent of his OSDBU 
responsibilities to a lower level official whose title is very similar-
-that is, Director, Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization (hereafter Delegated Director)--and who reported to the 
Assistant Secretary.

Figure 8: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of Agriculture:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Assistant Secretary for Administration told us that he, along with 
an Associate Assistant Secretary and the Delegated Director, were 
responsible for the day-to-day implementation and execution of the 
functions and duties of the OSDBU. However, we found little evidence 
that the Assistant Secretary handled the day-to-day functions of the 
OSDBU. He told us that he spent 5 percent of his time on small business 
contracting issues, while spending the rest of his time on his other 
duties and responsibilities.[Footnote 17] On the basis of documents 
that the agency provided, the only task that the Assistant Secretary 
appeared to implement in terms of small business contracting was 
providing information to the Secretary. He advised us that he met at 
least weekly with the Secretary, and that small business contracting 
was one of the many issues discussed at these meetings. For these 
weekly meetings, he prepared reports on various administrative matters. 
We reviewed 15 of these weekly reports dated from January 28, 2003, 
through April 29, 2003, and found that 11 of them included some 
information on Agriculture's small business issues.

Other evidence showed that the Delegated Director carried out the day-
to-day implementation of Agriculture's OSDBU. The Delegated Director 
told us that he handled the day-to-day duties and functions of 
Agriculture's OSDBU, and that he spent 100 percent of his time on OSDBU 
duties and functions. Moreover, his position description indicated he 
was the official responsible for carrying out the duties and functions 
prescribed under section 15(k). The position description stated, among 
other things, that the Delegated Director is responsible for:

* establishing short-and long-range program objectives, time schedules, 
and courses of action for the accomplishment of small business goals;

* formulating, recommending, and implementing broad policies and 
procedures, which provide the structural framework for all OSDBU 
functions;

* keeping abreast of all OSDBU activities and initiating any corrective 
actions deemed necessary;

* developing, presenting, and justifying to higher level authorities 
recommendations for modifications of OSDBU operations, policies, and 
procedures to enhance the Office's effectiveness toward maximum 
satisfaction of functional requirements;

* representing Agriculture at conferences and meetings with Members of 
Congress and their key staff members and representatives of the Small 
Business Administration, the Office of Management and Budget, and other 
Executive departments; and:

* planning, initiating, directing, and coordinating a comprehensive 
evaluation system for review and analysis of budgets, program 
developments, progress, and performance.

The Delegated Director told us that he did not report to the Secretary 
or Deputy Secretary for any matters and his performance appraisals 
showed that the Assistant Secretary evaluated his performance.

The Department of the Treasury:

In December 2002, Treasury appointed the Acting Assistant Secretary for 
Management as Treasury's "Designated OSDBU Director." According to 
Treasury's Small Business Program Handbook, the Assistant Secretary for 
Management delegated the responsibility for the overall management of 
Treasury's small business programs to the Director of the Office of 
Small Business Development--an official who did not directly report to 
either the Secretary or the Deputy Secretary. We found little evidence 
that the Acting Assistant Secretary was involved with OSDBU functions 
or duties during the period covered by our review. She told us that she 
spent about 5 percent of her time on small business contracting issues 
and acknowledged that she was not responsible for the day-to-day 
implementation of OSDBU functions and duties. On the basis of 
interviews with Treasury officials, it appeared that her only 
responsibility in terms of small business contracting was to provide 
information to the Secretary or Deputy Secretary on Treasury's small 
business programs. Further, Treasury could not provide us with any 
documentary evidence that information related to the OSDBU was provided 
to the Secretary or the Deputy Secretary during the time frame covered 
by our study. The Acting Assistant Secretary acknowledged that from 
December 2002 to March 2003, she never met formally with the Secretary 
or Deputy Secretary to discuss small business contracting issues 
primarily because she had other Treasury matters that needed her 
attention.[Footnote 18]

Evidence from Treasury showed that the Director of the Office of Small 
Business Development carried out the day-to-day responsibilities under 
section 15(k). The Director of the Office of Small Business Development 
told us that he spent 100 percent of his time on OSDBU duties and 
functions from March 2002 to March 2003. On the basis of the position 
description, the Office of Small Business Development director's duties 
and responsibilities, among other things, are:

* planning, developing, issuing, and providing overall direction for 
policies and programs governing Treasury procurement and financial 
assistance action in accordance with the Small Business Act;

* directing Treasury's annual goal setting process;

* working with Treasury bureau heads to establish individual bureau 
goals, and developing and recommending for approval of the Assistant 
Secretary (Management) the appropriate Department goals for each of the 
small business categories; and:

* monitoring Treasury's small business goal accomplishments during the 
fiscal year.

The Director of the Office of the Small Business Development told us 
that he reported to the Acting Deputy Chief Financial Officer, who, in 
turn, reported to the Acting Assistant Secretary (see fig. 9). Treasury 
documents confirmed this statement. The Office of Small Business 
Development director's most recent performance appraisal showed that 
the Acting Deputy Chief Financial Officer rated the director on small 
business goals and the position description identified the Deputy 
Assistant Secretary (Management Operations) as the supervisor.

Figure 9: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the Department 
of the Treasury:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The Department of State:

Similar to Agriculture and Treasury, State was not in compliance with 
the reporting requirement of section 15(k) because its de facto OSDBU 
director--the Operations Director for the Office of the Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization--does not report to the Secretary or 
Deputy Secretary. The State Department designated the Assistant 
Secretary for Administration as its OSDBU director. The Assistant 
Secretary, who reports to the Under Secretary for Management, delegated 
his OSDBU responsibilities to the "Operations Director," who in turn 
reports to the Assistant Secretary (see fig. 10). The Assistant 
Secretary told us that he spends 5 percent of his time on OSDBU 
functions. However, we found little evidence that the Assistant 
Secretary handles any of the day-to-day functions of the OSDBU. On the 
basis of agency documents, the only task that the Assistant Secretary 
appeared to implement in terms of small business contracting was 
providing information to the Under Secretary for Management.

Figure 10: The OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at the 
Department of State:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The performance appraisal of the Assistant Secretary for 
Administration, the "designated OSDBU director," indicated that he was 
not evaluated on State's small business programs. However, the 
Operations Director's performance appraisal indicated that she was 
responsible for developing and implementing the goals and objectives of 
the OSDBU. In addition, she was responsible for, among other things,

* delegating and overseeing the duties to screen all new domestic 
contract actions over $100,000,

* reviewing subcontracting plans from those large prime contractors 
required to submit plans,

* helping small businesses that request assistance with late payments, 
and:

* helping small businesses in their efforts to do business with State.

It should also be noted that we found no evidence that the Assistant 
Secretary reported to the Secretary or the Deputy Secretary. The 
Assistant Secretary informed us that he reported to the Under Secretary 
for Management for all matters related to small business contracting, 
and agency documents confirmed his statement. The Under Secretary 
signed his performance appraisal. In addition, the Assistant Secretary 
prepared weekly reports on the agency's administrative matters, which 
include small business contracting. We reviewed several of the weekly 
reports and found that they were addressed to the Under Secretary for 
Management.

Reporting Level of the OSDBU Director at the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense Has Changed Twice:

Since Congress granted the Office of the Secretary of Defense an 
exemption from the 15 U.S.C. § 644(k)(3) reporting requirement in 1988, 
the organizational reporting level of the OSDBU director has changed 
twice, in both cases to lower levels. From 1989 until 1996, the 
director reported to officials on the Under Secretary of Defense level, 
immediately below the Deputy Secretary of Defense. Since then, except 
in 1999, the OSDBU director has reported to officials on the Deputy 
Under Secretary of Defense level, two reporting levels below the Deputy 
Secretary of Defense.

According to DOD Directive[Footnote 19] 5134.4, dated March 17, 1989, 
the Office of the Secretary of Defense's OSDBU director reported to the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, a subordinate of the Deputy 
Secretary of Defense. The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition 
was the senior acquisition executive for DOD and advised the Secretary 
and Deputy Secretary of Defense on all matters relating to DOD's 
acquisition system. In 1994, the title of Under Secretary of Defense 
for Acquisition was changed to the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition and Technology.

However, the title change did not affect the reporting level of the 
OSDBU director who continued reporting to the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition and Technology.[Footnote 20]

In 1996, another DOD directive[Footnote 21] changed the reporting 
relationship of the OSDBU director from the Under Secretary of Defense 
for Acquisition and Technology to the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense 
for International and Commercial Programs, two reporting levels below 
the Deputy Secretary. This arrangement lasted until 1999, when for 1 
year, the OSDBU director again reported[Footnote 22] to the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Technology. In 2000, the 
reporting relationship switched back to the Deputy Under Secretary 
level when the OSDBU director began reporting[Footnote 23] to the 
Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Technology, two 
levels below the Deputy Secretary. This reporting relationship remains 
in effect today (see fig. 11).

Figure 11: Timeline of the OSDBU Director's Reporting Relationship at 
the Office of the Secretary of Defense:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Shading indicates time period of each reporting relationship.

[End of figure]

OA Likely Is Subject to the OSDBU Requirements of Section 15(k) of the 
Small Business Act:

Although no court to date has directly addressed this issue, we believe 
OA is subject to the OSDBU requirements of section 15(k) of the Small 
Business Act, which applies to any "Federal agency with procurement 
powers." There is no dispute that OA has procurement powers because it 
serves as the central procurement office for the significant majority 
of EOP's procurements of goods and services. We believe that it is a 
"Federal agency" by virtue of its being an "agency" under the APA, 
which the Small Business Act adopts by reference, and it is an APA 
"agency" because it exercises the requisite "substantial independent 
authority." Several courts have implicitly found that OA is an "agency" 
subject to the APA. In addition, OA has a wide range of statutory and 
other significant responsibilities and, therefore, exercises the 
requisite "substantial independent authority" necessary to constitute 
an "agency" under the APA. See appendix III for our detailed legal 
analysis of the applicability of section 15(k) to EOP's OA.

OA Serves as the Central Procurement Office for the Significant 
Majority of EOP's Procurements:

OA has authority to contract on behalf of EOP and thus it clearly has 
procurement powers. OA officials told us that, historically, OA has 
served as a central procurement office for a significant portion of 
EOP, and that except for procurements for the EOP Office of National 
Drug Control Policy's antidrug campaign, OA manages the significant 
majority of EOP's procurements. OA officials also told us that OA 
currently has an OSDBU, headed by a director who also serves as Deputy 
Director of OA; in both capacities, this official reports to the 
Director of OA. According to these officials, the OA OSDBU works with 
the Small Business Administration to ensure that an appropriate 
procurement program is in place for small business, and much of EOP's 
small business procurement activity is concentrated within OA.

OA Has Substantial Independent Authority and Likely Constitutes a 
Federal Agency Under the Small Business Act:

The Small Business Act defines the term "Federal agency," with 
exclusions not relevant here, as "having the meaning given the term 
'agency' by Section 551(1) of title 5" of the APA. Section 551(1) of 
the APA defines "agency" in relevant part as "each authority of the 
Government of the United States, whether or not it is within or subject 
to review by another agency." Several courts have implicitly found that 
OA is an "agency" subject to the APA, and therefore is a "Federal 
agency" subject to the Small Business Act. In addition, OA exercises 
the type of "substantial independent authority" that courts have 
declared constitutes an "agency" under the APA. Finally, OA satisfies 
the broader Freedom of Information Act "agency" standards that courts 
have developed to address entities specifically within EOP.

OA exercises "substantial independent authority" on the basis of its 
wide range of significant responsibilities and functions performed 
across EOP. These responsibilities include (1) administration of 
significant statutory requirements under the Federal Records Act and 
the Presidential Records Act, similar to the functions performed by the 
National Archives and Records Administration; (2) serving as EOP's 
central procurement office with the authority to contract on behalf of 
EOP (of particular relevance to the OSDBU program); (3) oversight of 
EOP's annual budget submission and testimony on EOP's behalf at 
appropriations hearings; (4) provision of financial services, including 
budget formulation, execution and analysis, centralized accounting 
support, coordinated internal control reporting, and financial records 
maintenance; (5) provision of wide-ranging legal support services; (6) 
facilities management services similar to those performed by agencies 
such as GSA; and (7) human resources management services similar to 
those performed by agencies such as the Office of Personnel Management. 
We believe that these responsibilities constitute "substantial 
independent authority" as the courts have interpreted that term.

Conclusions:

Our review of 24 federal agencies showed that nearly half were not in 
compliance with section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act, a provision 
enacted by Congress to ensure that small business advocates within 
federal agencies have access to the highest agency levels. One of these 
noncomplying agencies--the Federal Emergency Management Agency--has 
been subsumed into the Department of Homeland Security, which has 
established an Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization 
with a director reporting to the highest agency levels. The remaining 
10 agencies--the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Education, 
Health and Human Services, Justice, State, the Interior, and the 
Treasury; the Environmental Protection Agency; and the Social Security 
Administration--are not in compliance with section 15(k)(3). Because 
the OSDBU directors at these agencies do not have a direct reporting 
relationship with their agencies' head or deputy, the reporting 
relationships potentially limit their role as an advocate for small and 
disadvantaged businesses.

Recommendations:

We recommend that the following agency heads take steps as necessary to 
comply with the requirement in section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business 
Act that the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization 
director be responsible only to and report directly to the head or 
deputy head of the agency:

* The Attorney General:

* The Commissioner of the Social Security Administration:

* The EPA Administrator:

* The Secretary of Agriculture:

* The Secretary of Commerce:

* The Secretary of Education:

* The Secretary of Health and Human Services:

* The Secretary of State:

* The Secretary of the Interior:

* The Secretary of the Treasury:

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

We sent drafts of this report to all 24 agencies for their comments. In 
addition, we sent to OA a draft of our legal opinion, appendix III of 
this report, on the applicability of section 15(k) of the Small 
Business Act. Of the agencies that we concluded were complying with 
section 15(k)(3), we received written comments only from the U.S. 
Agency for International Development, which concurred. Among the 
agencies that we concluded were not complying with section 15(k)(3), we 
received written comments from the Departments of Agriculture, 
Commerce, Education, Health and Human Services, the Interior, Justice, 
State, and the Treasury and the Social Security Administration. The 
written comments are reproduced in appendixes IV through XIII. EPA also 
provided us with E-mail comments on the draft, which we did not 
reproduce. We also received a written response from OA, which is 
reprinted in appendix XIV.

Generally, the commenting agencies agreed with the report's description 
of their OSDBU directors' reporting relationships. However, most of the 
agencies disagreed with our conclusion that the reporting relationships 
did not comply with section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act. None of 
the legal arguments that the agencies raised caused us to revise our 
conclusions or recommendations. The agencies' specific comments and our 
responses are summarized below.

* Agriculture agreed that the Assistant Secretary for Administration, 
as the designated OSDBU director (Designated Director), had delegated 
to the Director, Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization, the responsibilities of the OSDBU. However, Agriculture 
pointed out that section 15(k) does not contain an explicit prohibition 
on delegating this authority. It cites the case of Fleming v. Mohawk 
Wrecking & Lumber Co., 331 U.S. 111, 121 (1947), for the proposition 
that in the event that there is no statutory prohibition on the 
delegation, one cannot be presumed. We acknowledge Agriculture's 
statement. However, the lack of an express prohibition on delegation 
does not necessarily mean that delegation of authority is thereby 
permitted. The Fleming case recognizes that the delegation of authority 
may be withheld by implication, and we believe section 15(k)(3) does 
exactly that. Section 15(k) assigns specific duties to the OSDBU 
director. As pointed out in the report, to ensure that the OSDBU 
responsibilities are effectively implemented, the statute mandates that 
the OSDBU director (i.e., the person actually carrying out the 
responsibilities) have immediate access, and only be responsible, to 
the agency head or deputy. The legislative history reveals that the 
reason for this requirement is that Congress believed that too often, 
agency officials responsible for promoting procurements for small and 
disadvantaged businesses were relegated to positions too far down the 
chain of command to be effective. The reporting requirement of section 
15(k)(3) was intended to remedy that situation. Agriculture's reporting 
arrangement frustrates the purpose of the law. Agriculture also argues 
that section 15(k) does not require that the designated director 
personally perform all of the specific duties it outlines. We 
acknowledge that at some agencies, the OSDBU director may have a staff 
that carries out many of the duties listed under section 15(k). 
However, there is a difference between, on the one hand, having staff 
carry out the duties while retaining responsibility for the duties and, 
on the other, delegating responsibility for carrying out those duties 
to a lower official.

* Commerce stated that they believe its current OSDBU director 
reporting structure--whereby the OSDBU director reports directly to the 
Deputy Secretary on all legislative and policy issues and to the CFO/
Assistant Secretary for Administration on administrative matters such 
as personnel and budget--complied with the law. However, Commerce did 
not include any analysis or information demonstrating how the above 
mentioned reporting relationship fulfills the requirements of section 
15(k)(3). Moreover, the comments did not respond to any of the evidence 
we presented in the report showing that the OSDBU director reported to 
the CFO/Assistant Secretary. We continue to believe Commerce is not in 
compliance.

* Education disagreed with our conclusion that the OSDBU director is at 
least partly responsible to the Deputy Secretary's Chief of Staff. 
Their comments state that the OSDBU director reports to the Deputy 
Secretary, who is the deputy agency head, and cite (1) the director's 
position description and the agency's organizational chart, as evidence 
that the position of the OSDBU director is in the Office of the Deputy 
Secretary and (2) the functional statement of the Office of the Deputy 
Secretary, which states that the OSDBU director reports to the Deputy 
Secretary. Education disagreed with other factors that we used to 
assess compliance, such as the level of the official to whom the OSDBU 
director submits reports or who signs the director's performance 
appraisal--in this case, the Deputy Secretary's Chief of Staff. 
According to the comments, these factors are operating procedures 
reflecting the Deputy Secretary's managerial preferences and should not 
lead to a conclusion that the OSDBU director is not reporting to the 
Deputy Secretary. However, we continue to believe that Education is not 
in compliance with section 15(k)(3) because the OSDBU director is 
responsible not only to the Deputy Secretary, but also to the Deputy 
Secretary's Chief of Staff. Education's comments did not refute the 
factual information presented in the draft report. Further, Education's 
OSDBU staff told us that information on small business programs was 
submitted to the Chief of Staff before going to the Deputy Secretary. 
Education did not provide any evidence that the OSDBU director directly 
provided information on small business programs to the Deputy 
Secretary. The OSDBU director told us she was not sure what the Chief 
of Staff did with the information after she submitted it.

* According to the OSDBU director, EPA generally agreed with the 
report's findings, conclusions, and recommendations and told us that 
EPA would take action to comply with section 15(k)(3). According to the 
staff member, the OSDBU director will report to the Deputy 
Administrator and will meet regularly with the Deputy Administrator to 
discuss the overall program and the agency's performance.

* HHS stated that it believes it is in compliance with section 
15(k)(3). However, our draft report prompted HHS to clarify the 
reporting relationship of the OSDBU director and the Deputy Secretary. 
Specifically, HHS stated that the OSDBU director will report to the HHS 
Deputy Secretary on all policy matters and significant day-to-day 
issues affecting the OSDBU and will arrange for monthly meetings with 
the Deputy Secretary and/or prepare a monthly report for the Deputy 
Secretary on major issues facing the OSDBU. In addition, the Deputy 
Secretary will serve as the reviewing official for the OSDBU director's 
performance evaluations. We agree that by taking these actions, HHS is 
moving toward compliance with section 15(k)(3). However, the comment 
letter is not clear regarding the extent to which the OSDBU director 
will be reporting to the Assistant Secretary for Administration and 
Management's Office of Acquisition Management and Policy or others. The 
comments mentioned that the OSDBU director will report to the Deputy 
Secretary on certain--but not all--matters. In addition, the comments 
stated that the OSDBU director will continue to receive operational 
support from the Office of Acquisition Management and Policy but did 
not describe what areas were covered under operational support. Because 
we could not conclude on the basis of the comments that the OSDBU 
director would be responsible only to the Deputy Secretary, we did not 
revise the recommendation for HHS.

* Interior agreed that the OSDBU director reports to the Assistant 
Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget; rather, its comment 
letter stated that this reporting relationship has worked for the 
department as evidenced by its successful small business program. 
However, Interior stated that we mischaracterized the OSDBU director's 
reporting relationship. According to Interior's letter, the OSDBU 
director does not report to a lower level official within the 
department, but reports to the "the agency head" as defined in Subpart 
2.101 of the Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR). The letter added 
that the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget is the 
agency head for acquisition matters, in accordance with the FAR. In our 
draft report, we used the term "lower level official" to distinguish 
the Assistant Secretary from the two officials--the agency head or 
deputy agency head--that section 15(k)(3) designates as the permissible 
officials to whom an agency's OSDBU director may report. Interior's 
designation of the Assistant Secretary as its "agency head" for 
procurement powers does not mean that the person thereby becomes its 
agency head for purposes of section 15(k)(3).

* Justice acknowledged that its OSDBU resides within the Justice 
Management Division. But Justice also said that the OSDBU's placement 
in the division is for administrative purposes, and that the OSDBU 
director reports to the Deputy Attorney General on matters of substance 
requiring such attention. Justice's letter stated that the Office of 
the Deputy Attorney General fully supports the objectives of the OSDBU 
and has met with the director to discuss the office's work. According 
to a Justice official, the OSDBU director met with a representative of 
the Office of the Deputy Attorney General in May 2003. As our draft 
report stated, the OSDBU director told us that he did not report to the 
agency head or deputy head on any matters from March 2002 to March 
2003, the time frame covered by our study. Also, agency documentation 
did not show that the OSDBU director reported to the Deputy Attorney 
General in any manner. Furthermore, the May 2003 meeting does not 
provide any additional evidence on compliance, since the OSDBU director 
met with a representative of the office, not the Deputy Attorney 
General. Therefore, we did not revise our conclusion or recommendation.

* State wrote that it would not comment on our conclusions, since 
neither Justice nor the President's counsel has provided guidance on 
the matter. Most of State's comments focused on the effectiveness of 
its small business programs, including contracting awarded to 8(a) 
firms and to firms located in HUBZones. State's letter stated that as a 
practical matter, the Department of State believed that the 
organizational placement of its OSDBU was highly effective, and that if 
the organization was reorganized to ensure that the OSDBU director 
reported directly to the Secretary or the Deputy Secretary of State, 
the OSDBU director would be less effective in securing contracts for 
small and disadvantaged businesses. State's letter stated that given 
the broad range of urgent issues upon which the Secretary and the 
Deputy Secretary of State must focus, the OSDBU director would receive 
much less attention than the director enjoys in their present 
organizational location.

* The Social Security Administration disagreed with our conclusion that 
because its OSDBU director reported to the Deputy Commissioner of 
Finance, Assessment, and Management, the agency was not in compliance 
with section 15(k)(3). As it had previously indicated to us, the Social 
Security Administration again noted that its Deputy Commissioner of 
Finance, Assessment, and Management reported directly to the 
Commissioner, and that the Deputy Commissioner of Finance, Assessment, 
and Management was considered to have the status of "deputy" to the 
Commissioner. The Social Security Administration did not offer us any 
new information that would affect our overall conclusions and 
recommendation. We acknowledge that the Deputy Commissioner of Finance, 
Assessment, and Management reports directly to the Commissioner and is 
responsible for its programs and mission. However, as our draft report 
stated, this official is not second in command. The legislative history 
of section 15(k)(3) shows that Congress intended the deputy referred to 
in section 15(k)(3) to be the second ranking person in that agency. In 
the Social Security Administration, the second ranking person is the 
Deputy Commissioner. As our draft report noted, the Social Security 
Administration's organization manual states that the Deputy 
Commissioner of the Social Security Administration assists the 
Commissioner in carrying out his or her responsibilities and performs 
other duties as the Commissioner may prescribe. Furthermore, a Social 
Security Administration press release dated March 13, 2002, announcing 
the swearing-in of the Deputy Commissioner, referred to the Deputy 
Commissioner as the principal Deputy Commissioner.

* Like Agriculture, Treasury disagreed that section 15(k)(3) does not 
allow the delegation of OSDBU responsibilities to lower level 
officials. Treasury's letter stated that the statutory language or the 
legislative history does not suggest that an OSDBU director cannot 
delegate some of the OSDBU authority. The letter reiterated that the 
department's OSDBU director remained responsible for the OSDBU 
performance, whether the director personally performed the functions or 
delegated them. However, as previously discussed, we believe that 
section 15(k)(3) has an implied prohibition against delegating the 
OSDBU director's authority. Therefore, we continue to believe Treasury 
is not in compliance.

Agriculture, Commerce, Interior, State, and Treasury also commented on 
the effectiveness of their small business programs. As stated in the 
draft report, our review did not include an examination of the 
effectiveness of agencies' small business programs; rather, it focused 
only on agencies' compliance with section 15(k)(3) of the Small 
Business Act.

OA declined to comment on the draft report, including the report's 
discussion of the applicability of section 15(k) to OA. However, OA 
also stated that its declination to comment did not indicate agreement 
with our conclusions, citing the court's decision in Haddon v. Walters, 
43 F.3d 1488 (D.C. Cir. 1995). The Haddon decision does not affect our 
conclusions in any way. This case involved whether a unit other than 
OA--the Executive Residence of the President--was an "executive agency" 
covered by the employment discrimination prohibitions of Title VII of 
the Civil Rights Act of 1964. That act, in turn, adopts a second 
statute's definition of "independent establishment," and the court 
noted in passing that under a third statute, OA is expressly excluded 
as an "independent establishment." None of this dicta is relevant to 
the issue in our report--that is, whether OA is an "agency" under the 
Small Business Act or the APA--and thus does not change our conclusion 
that OA is covered under those statutes.

:

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly release its contents 
earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report until 30 days 
from its issuance date. At that time, we will send copies of this 
report to the Chairman and the Ranking Minority Member of the House 
Committee on Small Business. We will make copies available to others on 
request. In addition, this report will be available at no charge on the 
GAO Web site at [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov] http://www.gao.gov.

If you have any questions regarding this report, please contact me or 
Charles E. Wilson, Jr., Assistant Director, at (202) 512-8678. Key 
contributors to this report are listed in appendix XV.

Signed by: 

David G. Wood: 

Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment:

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Twenty-four Agencies Covered by the Compliance Review:

Defense Logistics Agency Department of Agriculture Department of 
Commerce Department of Education Department of Energy Department of 
Health and Human Services Department of Housing and Urban Development 
Department of Justice Department of Labor Department of State 
Department of the Air Force Department of the Army Department of the 
Interior Department of the Navy Department of the Treasury Department 
of Transportation Department of Veterans Affairs Environmental 
Protection Agency Federal Emergency Management Agency General Services 
Administration National Aeronautics and Space Administration Office of 
Personnel Management Social Security Administration U.S. Agency for 
International Development:

[End of section]

Appendix II: Scope and Methodology:

In assessing compliance with section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business 
Act, we reviewed 24 federal agencies (see app. I). We focused on 
agencies that procured $200 million or more in goods and services in 
fiscal year 2001 on the basis of data from the Federal Procurement Data 
System.[Footnote 24] Because the Department of Defense (DOD) has 
established separate Offices of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization (OSDBU) for its services and other command units, the 24 
agencies we reviewed include the Departments of the Air Force, Army, 
and Navy and the Defense Logistics Agency. These entities are 
responsible for a large portion of DOD's procurements. The Office of 
the Secretary at DOD was not included in our compliance review because 
the law allows the Secretary of Defense the discretion to designate the 
official to whom the OSDBU director should report. Agencies were 
determined to be in compliance where the OSDBU director reported 
directly to the agency head or agency head's deputy.

In making our determinations of compliance, we considered several 
factors, including the OSDBU directors' statements about their 
reporting relationships and documentary evidence that reflected the 
reporting relationships. To obtain this information, we administered to 
each of the 24 OSDBU directors a brief questionnaire regarding their 
reporting relationships and requested supporting documentation. The 
questionnaire consisted of 11 open-ended questions, including 1 that 
asked the OSDBU directors to confirm whether they reported to the 
agency head or deputy head. We reviewed organizational charts to 
identify where the OSDBU was located in relation to the agency head or 
deputy head; OSDBU directors' performance appraisals for the previous 2 
years to identify the agency official who evaluated the OSDBU 
director's performance; the most recent position description of the 
OSDBU director position to identify the OSDBU director's supervisor; 
and various other agency documents, such as reports and memorandums 
discussing the agency's small business programs that the OSDBU director 
prepared for the agency head or deputy head. In addition, we reviewed 
and analyzed section 15(k)(3). We did not review or analyze the 
effectiveness of any agency's OSDBU or small business programs.

To describe the reporting levels of the OSDBU director at the Office of 
the Secretary of Defense since 1988 when the Secretary of Defense was 
given discretion to designate the official to whom the OSDBU director 
should report, we reviewed a written timeline from the Office of the 
Secretary of Defense OSDBU. This timeline identified to whom OSDBU 
directors serving from 1979 to 2003 reported. We reviewed DOD 
directives from 1984 to 2000 pertaining to the reporting relationships 
of the OSDBU directors of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. We 
interviewed an official from the Office of the Secretary of Defense for 
clarification on the information included in the directives and the 
timeline. We reviewed section 15(k)(3), including the exemption for the 
Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the legislative history and 
congressional reports relating to the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense, OSDBU.

To determine the applicability of the section 15(k) of the Small 
Business Act to the Office of Administration (OA) within the Executive 
Office of President (EOP), we reviewed and analyzed relevant 
legislation, legislative history, and case law.

We conducted our work in Washington, D.C., between October 2002 and 
July 2003 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards.

[End of section]

Appendix III: Legal Analysis of the Applicability of Section 15(k) of 
the Small Business Act to the EOP's Office of Administration:

Introduction and Summary of Conclusions:

According to officials in the Office of Administration (OA) within the 
Executive Office of the President (EOP), OA serves, with one major 
exception, as the central procurement arm for the significant majority 
of EOP's procurements of goods and services.[Footnote 25] These 
officials also indicated that OA has an Office of Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU), but they declined to 
provide OA's legal position on whether it is subject to the OSDBU 
requirements of section 15(k) of the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 
§ 644(k). As discussed below, we conclude that section 15(k) likely 
applies to OA. The Small Business Act adopts the Administrative 
Procedure Act's (APA) definition of a covered "agency," and several 
courts have implicitly found that OA is an "agency" subject to the APA. 
In addition, under the relevant statutes, legislative history and case 
law, OA meets both the core APA "agency" standards and the broader 
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) "agency" standards that courts have 
developed to address entities specifically within EOP.

Background:

Section 15(k) of the Small Business Act:

Section 15(k) requires each "Federal agency having procurement powers" 
to establish an OSDBU. The establishment of OSDBUs "is central to the 
goal of the Small Business Act which directs that small businesses 
receive a fair portion of the Federal procurement through vigorous 
action on the part of Federal departments and agencies." S. Rep. No. 
1070, 95TH Cong., 2d Sess. 18 (1978); see 15 U.S.C. §§ 631(a), 644(a) 
(small businesses should receive "fair proportion" of federal 
government contracts for goods and services).

The Executive Office of the President and the Office of Administration:

By Reorganization Plans I and II of 1939 and Executive Order 8248 of 
September 8, 1939, President Roosevelt transferred the functions of 
several existing federal agencies into the Executive Office of the 
President, so that EOP would be organized "with functions and duties so 
prescribed and responsibilities so fixed that the President will have 
adequate machinery for the administrative management of the Executive 
branch of the Government." See E.O. 8248. As initially established, EOP 
had five principal divisions, with no division specifically designated 
as responsible for procurement.[Footnote 26] Since 1939, EOP has grown 
and undergone a number of organizational changes according to the aims 
of different administrations. EOP's total annual budget is now 
approximately $276 million and it employs approximately 1,760 
people.[Footnote 27] There are currently more than 15 separate units in 
EOP, including the Office of the President (known as the White House 
Office), the Office of Management and Budget, the Council on 
Environmental Quality, the Council of Economic Advisers, and the 
National Security Council.

In 1977, in order to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of EOP's 
operations, President Carter took the administrative support functions 
then being performed by individual EOP units and consolidated them into 
one central Office of Administration. See Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 
1977, 91 Stat. 1633; E.O. 12028 (Dec. 12, 1977). The mission of the 
newly created OA (originally to be called the Central Administrative 
Unit) was "to provide support in administrative services common to all 
EOP entities. It should be a separate EOP entity because of the need to 
assure equal access by all other units." See Message of the President 
to the Congress of the United States, transmitting Reorganization Plan 
No. 1 of 1977. After congressional hearings and debate on the 
President's Reorganization Plan, OA was officially 
established.[Footnote 28]

OA's functions today can be broadly defined as "all types of 
administrative support and services that may be used by, or useful to, 
[EOP] units" (although generally not the White House Office). See 
Message of the President Accompanying Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 
1977, Sec. III. These services include: (1) financial management; (2) 
information technology and records management; (3) procurement; (4) 
data processing; (5) research and other library services; (6) personnel 
management; (7) facilities management and security; and (8) office 
services and operations, including printing and duplication, mail, 
messenger, graphics, word processing, and supply services.[Footnote 29] 
With respect to financial management, for example, OA officials oversee 
submission of the annual EOP budget request to Congress and testify 
before congressional funding panels. With respect to records 
management, OA is responsible for administering the Federal Records Act 
and the Presidential Records Act throughout EOP.[Footnote 30] OA also 
administers, with respect to information it possesses, the requirements 
of FOIA, 5 U.S.C. § 552, the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, and other 
information-disclosure statutes applicable to federal agencies and 
entities. See 5 C.F.R. Parts 2500, 2502, 2504. At least one federal 
judge has recognized OA as a significant administrative resource in the 
federal government. See Meyer v. Bush, 981 F.2d 1288, 1304 n. 11 (Wald, 
J., dissenting).

OA is nominally headed by the President, but its day-to-day operations 
are managed by a Presidentially appointed Director. The Director serves 
as chief administrative officer, whose duties include "contract[ing] 
for supplies and services, and do[ing] all other things that the 
President, as head of [OA], might do." See E.O. 12028 § 4(a). In 
addition to its Director and associated staff, OA currently has an 
Office of the Deputy Director, Office of the General Counsel, and 
Office of the Executive Secretary, as well as six principal divisions, 
each headed by a director, and offices dedicated to equal employment 
opportunity, operations and legislative liaison, and security. See 5 
C.F.R. § 2502.3; United States Government Manual 2002-2003 at 95. The 
Director of OA does not have program or management responsibilities for 
the other EOP units; that authority is retained by the respective 
office heads. See E.O. 12028 § 4(d).

Finally, with respect to procurement responsibilities, OA officials 
told us that historically, OA has served as a central procurement 
office for a significant portion of EOP, and as noted above, except for 
procurements for the EOP Office of National Drug Control Policy's anti-
drug campaign, OA manages the significant majority of EOP's 
procurements.[Footnote 31] OA officials also told us that OA currently 
has an OSDBU, headed by a director who also serves as Deputy Director 
of OA; in both capacities, this official reports to the Director of OA. 
The OA OSDBU works with the Small Business Administration to ensure 
that an appropriate procurement program is in place for small business, 
and much of EOP's small business procurement activity is concentrated 
within OA.

Analysis:

In order to be subject to the OSDBU requirements of the Small Business 
Act, OA[Footnote 32] must both be a "Federal agency" and have 
"procurements powers." OA clearly has "procurement powers," a term 
presumed to have its common meaning of authority to make 
purchases.[Footnote 33] As to the requirement to be a "Federal agency," 
the Small Business Act defines this term, with exclusions not relevant 
here, as "hav[ing] the meaning given the term 'agency' by section 
551(1) of title 5" of the APA. See 15 U.S.C. § 632(b). Section 551(1) 
of the APA, in turn, with exclusions not relevant here, defines 
"agency" as: "each authority of the Government of the United States, 
whether or not it is within or subject to review by another agency. . 
.." 5 U.S.C. § 551(1). Thus, whether OA is covered by section 15(k) and 
required to have an OSDBU turns on whether it is an "agency" under the 
APA.[Footnote 34]

Although no court to date has addressed whether OA is a "Federal 
agency" under the Small Business Act, at least three courts have 
implicitly found that OA is an "agency" under the APA and, thus, a 
"Federal agency" under the Small Business Act. The courts determined 
that because the actions of OA and other federal entities did not 
comply with certain statutory requirements, their actions were 
"arbitrary and capricious" under the APA, and the decisions were 
necessarily premised on OA being an "agency" under the APA.[Footnote 
35]

We conclude that OA also is an APA agency under the standards set forth 
in the case law and legislative history. As the courts have recognized, 
"the law on the simple question of what is an [APA] agency is quite 
complex." Lee Constr. Co. v. Federal Reserve Bank, 558 F. Supp. 165, 
172 (D. Md. 1982). Likewise, the courts have acknowledged that "[a]ny 
general definition [of "agency" under the APA] can be of only limited 
utility . . . [when] confronted with one of the myriad organizational 
arrangements for getting the business of the government done. . . .The 
unavoidable fact is that each new arrangement must be examined anew and 
in its own context." Washington Research Project, Inc. v. HEW, 504 F.2d 
238, 245-46 (D.C. Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 421 U.S. 963 
(1975)(citations omitted).

The issue of whether an EOP unit in particular constitutes an APA 
"agency" is further complicated by the fact that virtually all cases 
analyzing EOP units' "agency" status are based not on the APA but on 
FOIA (or statutes adopting FOIA's "agency" definition), and FOIA's 
definition of "agency" has expanded over time. Until 1974, FOIA 
incorporated the APA "agency" definition without change, meaning that 
decisions interpreting FOIA were effectively decisions interpreting the 
APA. In 1974, Congress broadened the APA definition, for FOIA purposes 
only, to include entities "which perform governmental functions and 
control information of interest to the public" but which "might have 
eluded the APA's definition [of agency] in § 551(1). . .."[Footnote 36] 
Further, even though one of the EOP offices already had been held 
covered by the pre-1974 FOIA (APA) definition (see Soucie v. David, 448 
F. 2d 1067 (D.C. Cir. 1971), discussed below), EOP was specifically 
included in the entities added by the 1974 amendments, and the 
amendments' history shows Congress intended to codify the pre-1974 
Soucie analysis into FOIA.[Footnote 37] The net effect of these events 
is that although there are a number of post-1974 FOIA decisions 
addressing the "agency" status of various EOP offices, the decisions 
must be applied with care in determining whether a particular EOP 
entity is an "agency" under the APA, because the decisions typically do 
not specify which aspect of FOIA they are applying--the more stringent 
core APA "agency" definition or the potentially less stringent list of 
entities added by the 1974 amendments, including EOP. With that 
background, we examine how the courts have defined "agency" under the 
APA, including any relevant cases pertaining to offices within EOP.

Courts have taken somewhat different approaches to what constitutes an 
"agency" under the APA. The seminal case is Soucie v. David, above, 
which involved what was then called EOP's Office of Science and 
Technology (OST). Because the APA and FOIA definitions of "agency" were 
identical at the time of the lawsuit, the court looked to 
interpretations of the APA in determining whether OST was an "agency" 
under FOIA. The court found that while the meaning of "agency" under 
the APA was "not entirely clear," it "apparently confers agency status 
on any administrative unit with substantial independent authority in 
the exercise of specific functions." 448 F.2d at 1073 (emphasis added). 
Because OST's "sole function" was not limited to advising and assisting 
the President--OST also evaluated federal science programs previously 
evaluated by the National Science Foundation--the court found OST had 
"substantial independent authority" and "must be regarded as an agency 
subject to the APA and [FOIA]." Id. at 1075.

Applying the Soucie test, the court reached a different conclusion 
regarding the Judge Advocate General of the Army (JAG) in McKinney v. 
Caldera, 141 F. Supp. 2d 25 (D.D.C. 2001). JAG was found not to have 
"substantial independent authority," and thus not to be an APA agency, 
even though JAG supervised the Army's military justice system, 
performed appellate review of court martial trials, and furnished legal 
services. Notwithstanding that the APA contemplates an "agency" within 
an "agency," the court focused on the fact that JAG's duties flowed 
from the authority of the Secretary of the Army, suggesting that JAG's 
responsibilities were not sufficiently independent.[Footnote 38]

Other courts have framed the APA "agency" definition slightly 
differently, looking to whether an entity can take "final and binding 
action." This standard is based in part on the Soucie "substantial 
independent authority" test and the APA's legislative history 
indicating Congress intended covered agencies to have "final and 
binding" legal authority.[Footnote 39] In Dong v. Smithsonian 
Institution, 125 F.3d 877 (D.C. Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 524 U.S. 922 
(1998), for example, the court looked to whether the Smithsonian 
Institution was:

"a part of government which is generally independent in the exercise of 
[its] functions and. . .by law has authority to take final and binding 
action affecting the rights and obligations of individuals, 
particularly by the characteristic procedures of rule-making and 
adjudication.":

Id. at 881 (emphasis added). The court found that the Smithsonian was 
not an APA "agency" under this standard, because while it exercised 
authority, the authority was not sufficiently "substantial." Although 
the Smithsonian is closely linked with the federal government, receives 
federal funding, has certain police powers to protect its physical 
plant, and publishes regulations in the Code of Federal Regulations, 
the court noted that it does not make binding rules of general 
application, determine rights and duties through adjudications, issue 
orders, or perform regulatory functions.

Finally, courts have focused on whether an entity is one of the 
"centers of gravity" in the exercise of administrative power "where 
substantial 'powers to act' . . .are vested," see Lee Constr. Co., 
above, 558 F. Supp. at 173 (Federal Reserve Bank was APA agency based 
on its substantial delegated decision-making authority from Federal 
Reserve System's Board of Governors), or whether the entity has 
"authority in law to make decisions," see Washington Research Project, 
Inc. v. HEW, above, 504 F.2d at 248 (HEW peer review groups for grant 
applications were not APA agencies, because they only recommended 
grants to an NIH entity which in turn recommended to the HEW 
Secretary), or whether the "governmental unit has substantial authority 
to act with the sanction of the government behind it," see Conservation 
Law Foundation v. Harper, 587 F. Supp. 357, 364 (D. Mass. 
1984)(Property Review Board, created by Executive Order to review 
federal real property acquisition and disposal policies, advise GSA on 
same, and establish annual agency targets may be APA agency if it 
controls disposition of public property). Thus, the National Academy of 
Sciences (NAS) was held not to be an APA "agency," even though it was 
authorized to veto EPA's suspension of auto-emission standards. See 
Lombardo v. Handler, 397 F. Supp. 792 (D.D.C. 1975), aff'd, 546 F.2d 
1043 (D.C. Cir. 1976). As the Lombardo court explained, NAS is not the 
kind of "center of gravity in the exercise of administrative power" to 
which the APA refers. 397 F. Supp. at 796.

Applying these authorities, we conclude that OA possesses the requisite 
"substantial independent authority" to constitute an "agency" under the 
APA. In OA's administration of the significant requirements of the 
Federal Records Act and Presidential Records Act, for example, it 
issues statutorily required records disposition schedules and other 
directives for all EOP units. In this regard, OA serves a function 
similar to the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), and 
indeed, OA was embroiled in substantial APA-based litigation, along 
with the head of NARA (the Archivist of the United States), EOP, and 
the National Security Council, challenging the manner in which these 
parties carried out their statutory obligations.[Footnote 40] Another 
of OA's significant functions, of particular relevance to the OSDBU 
program, is serving as EOP's central procurement office with authority 
to contract on behalf of EOP. This procurement responsibility includes 
the authority to bind the United States government in contracts backed 
by the full faith and credit of the United States. See 41 Op. Atty. 
Gen. 403 (1959); White v. DOI, 639 F. Supp. 82 (M.D. Pa. 1986), affd, 
815 F.2d 697 (3RD Cir. 1987).

Other significant EOP-wide OA functions include the OA Director's 
oversight of submission of EOP's annual budget request and testimony on 
EOP's behalf at appropriations hearings,[Footnote 41] and the OA 
Financial Management Division's provision of financial services 
including budget formulation, execution and analysis; centralized 
accounting support; coordinated internal controls reporting; and 
financial records maintenance. See 2002 EOP Budget Hearings at 167-69. 
OA's Office of General Counsel also has significant responsibilities 
across EOP. The office "advises other EOP components in areas related 
to OA's administrative support mission, particularly in cases where EOP 
components do not have counsel with expertise in government agency 
law," for example, on matters involving "a wide range of substantive 
areas including general administrative law, ethics, federal 
procurement, employment law, legal aspects of budgetary and 
congressional matters, federal record keeping, and information 
technology management." Id. at 167. In the area of security, OA manages 
"personnel, computer and information security for the EOP complex," as 
well as overseeing access to the EOP complex. Id. OA directs background 
investigations for personnel, pre-screens candidates for employment 
based on security guidelines, and briefs employees on requirements and 
guidelines for handling classified materials.

Finally, with respect to facilities management and human resources 
management, OA carries out functions for EOP similar to the functions 
of agencies such as the General Services Administration and the Office 
of Personnel Management, respectively. Among other things, OA's 
Facilities Management Division manages "space use, rent allocation, 
repairs, and renovations in the White House complex." Id. at 168. OA's 
Human Resources Management Division manages "recruitment and placement, 
internal staffing, general employee and management advisory services, 
employee development and training, and position management" for all of 
EOP, as well as the automated management systems and the EOP Drug Free 
Workplace Program. Id.

In carrying out many of these functions and responsibilities, OA acts 
independently, and the nature of the delegation from the President to 
OA is extensive. According to the Executive Order establishing OA, "the 
primary responsibility for performing all administrative support and 
service functions of units within the Executive Office of the President 
shall be transferred to the Office of Administration." E.O. 12028 § 5. 
Although OA is nominally headed by the President, OA acts independently 
in contracting for and providing administrative supplies and services 
to the other EOP units. E.O. 12028 §§ 3(a), 4(a). In the words of 
Soucie, OA's "sole function" is not to advise and assist the President 
but rather it exercises "substantial independent authority.":

In addition to finding that OA is an "agency" under these core APA 
standards, we also find OA to be an "agency" under the so-called Meyer 
test, developed in Meyer v. Bush, 981 F. 2d 1288 (D.C. Cir. 1993). 
Meyer sets forth an interrelated three-factor test to determine when a 
component of EOP is an "agency" under the post-1974 FOIA 
definition:[Footnote 42] (1) how operationally close the entity is to 
the President; (2) what the nature is of the delegation from the 
President to the entity; and (3) whether the entity has a self-
contained structure. The first Meyer factor--the degree of operational 
closeness of the President--weighs in favor of OA being an 
"agency."[Footnote 43] Although the President is the nominal head of 
OA, its mission of providing common administrative support and services 
to all EOP units, developing and implementing guidance for them 
relating to records management and disposition, and carrying out 
facilities and human resources management are all accomplished without 
close continuing interaction with the President. The second Meyer 
factor--the nature of the delegation from the President--also weighs in 
favor of OA being an "agency." The nature of the delegation from the 
President to OA is extensive: the Executive Order creating OA assigned 
it primary responsibility for performing all administrative support and 
service functions for EOP. See E. O. 12028 § 5. Finally, the third 
Meyer factor--whether OA has a self-contained, firm structure--confirms 
that OA is an "agency." OA has such a structure: it is organized, under 
the direction of a Director, Deputy Director, General Counsel, and 
Executive Secretary, into a series of functional divisions, each headed 
by a director. See 5 C.F.R. § 2502.3; United States Government Manual 
2002-2003 at 94-96.

Our conclusion that OA is an agency under FOIA finds support in the 
fact that OA itself believes it is covered. As noted above, OA has 
promulgated regulations "implementing 5 U.S.C. 552" (FOIA), see 5 
C.F.R. § 2502.2, with respect to records possessed by OA. This 
conclusion also is consistent with the fact that OA has been subject to 
GAO's government procurement bid protest proceedings under the 
Competition in Contracting Act (CICA) applicable to "executive 
agencies," see 31 U.S.C. § 3551(3), in which this term is broadly 
defined in a manner similar to FOIA.[Footnote 44] OA has raised no 
objection to the jurisdiction of those proceedings.[Footnote 45] OA 
also raised no objection to GAO's evaluation of OA's acquisition of a 
software system under the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), with 
the FAR being applicable to "executive agencies" defined in a similarly 
broad, FOIA-like manner.[Footnote 46]

Finally, in determining whether OA should be considered an agency under 
the Small Business Act, we are guided by the overall remedial purpose 
of the statute. It is well settled that remedial statutes should be 
construed liberally to effectuate their purposes. See, e.g., United 
States v. Kayser-Roth Corp., 910 F.2d 24, 26 (1ST Cir. 1990) 
(interpreting environmental cleanup statute broadly to ensure 
protection of human health and environment). One of the central 
purposes of the Small Business Act is to ensure small businesses 
receive a "fair proportion" of federal government contracts, see 15 
U.S.C. §§ 631(a), 644(a), and Congress has amended the Act several 
times over the last 25 years to increase small business participation 
in federal procurement. The OSDBU amendments were enacted in 1978 to 
remedy the particular problem of small and disadvantaged businesses 
lacking effective advocates at high levels within agencies. Congress 
deemed these amendments to be necessary to ensure that the voice of 
these communities are heard. See S. Rep. No. 1070, 95TH Cong., 2d Sess. 
18 (1978) (OSDBU amendments); see also H.R. Rep. No. 460, 100TH Cong., 
1ST Sess. 40 (1987). Thus, any doubt about whether OA is an "agency" 
within the scope of the Small Business Act should be resolved in favor 
of coverage.

Conclusion:

In summary, we conclude that OA likely is a "Federal agency with 
procurement powers" subject to the OSDBU requirements of section 15(k) 
of the Small Business Act. OA clearly has procurement powers, and 
several courts have implicitly found that OA is an "agency" within the 
meaning of the APA and therefore a "Federal agency" within the meaning 
of the Small Business Act. In addition, OA meets both the core APA 
"agency" standards and the broader FOIA "agency" standards that courts 
have developed to address entities specifically within EOP.

[End of section]

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Agriculture:

USDA 

United States; AUG 1 9 2003.

Department of Agriculture; 

Mr. Charles E. Wilson, Jr.

Assistant Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment.

General Accounting Office.

441 G Street, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20548.

Dear Mr. Wilson:.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the proposed draft 
report entitled "Small 
and Disadvantaged Business: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not 
Report to Required Management Level." We found this report, which 
examines the reporting relationships for the Office of Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU) directors at major federal 
agencies, useful.

We agree with the General Accounting Office (GAO) assessment 
that the Assistant Secretary for Administration, as the designated 
Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (Designated 
Director), has delegated to the Director, Office of Small 
and Disadvantaged Business Utilization the responsibilities of the 
OSDBU. We disagree, however, with the GAO conclusion that the 
Department of Agriculture (USDA) does not comply with Section 15(k)(3) 
of the Small Business Act.

The GAO determined that compliance with Section 15(k)(3) requires the 
Designated Director to both exercise OSDBU responsibilities and 
report directly to and be responsible only to the Secretary or Deputy 
Secretary. At USDA, the Designated Director both supervises the 
Director, OSDBU, in implementing the responsibilities pursuant to 
the delegation of authority and, as the report notes, provides 
information to the Secretary and Deputy Secretary on small business 
issues. Significantly, Section 15(k) of the Small Business Act does 
not contain an express prohibition on delegation of authority or a 
requirement that the Designated Director personally perform all of the 
specific responsibilities it outlines. Absent an express limitation 
on redelegation, one cannot be presumed. 
Cf. Fleming v. Mohawk Wrecking & Lumber Co., 331 U.S. 111, 121 (1947).

Contrary to the assertion of the GAO, the Director, OSDBU, has 
not become the de facto Designated Director. The Secretary holds the 
Assistant Secretary for Administration responsible and accountable for 
the duties delegated to him as the Designated Director. We believe, 
therefore, that USDA's reporting structure is in compliance with 
Section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act.

Consistent with USDA's commitment that the small business 
program receive the priority Congress intended, the Director, OSDBU, 
is a full-time employee dedicated to guiding and implementing the 
small business program. Furthermore, the Director, OSDBU, position 
remains classified as a non-career, senior executive service position, 
appointed by and serving at the pleasure of the Secretary.

USDA has found its present OSDBU reporting structure to be effective. 
The most recent Congressional Report Card prepared by the House Small 
Business Committee Democratic Staff rates the DA small business program 
as the best among the 21 top Federal agencies. Also, Federal 
Procurement Data System reports show that since Fiscal Year 1997, the 
USDA small business prime contracting volume has grown from 33 percent 
of total procurements to over 48 percent in FY 2002. The Federal 
statutory goal for small business prime contracting is 23 percent 
annually. This evinces the USDA firm commitment to fostering 
opportunities for small and disadvantaged business, and we will 
continue to carry out that commitment effectively. Thank you for the 
opportunity to comment on this draft report.

Sincerely,



John Surina 

Acting Assistant Secretary for Administration:

Signed by John Surina: 

[End of section]

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Commerce:

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Chief Financial Officer:

Assistant Secretary for Administration Washington, D.C. 20230:

AUG 22 2003:

Mr. Charles E. Wilson, Jr. Assistant Director:

Financial Markets and Community Investment U.S. General Accounting 
Office:

441 G. Street, N. W., Room 2A32 Washington, D.C. 20548:

Dear Mr. Wilson:

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the draft General 
Accounting Office (GAO) report entitled, "Small and Disadvantaged 
Business: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to Required Management 
Level (GAO-03-863).":

The Director of the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization (OSDBU) reports directly to the Deputy Secretary on all 
legislative and policy issues and to the Chief Financial Officer and 
Assistant Secretary for Administration on administrative matters such 
as personnel and budget. I believe this organizational structure 
complies with the statute. Further, this organizational structure 
strengthens the role of OSDBU within the Department and focuses the 
Department's resources to create contracting opportunities for small 
businesses. In FY 2002, the Department had the highest percent among 
cabinet level agencies of total procurement dollars awarded to small 
businesses. The Department also exceeded its small business goals in 
the small disadvantaged, 8(a), and women-owned small business programs.

The Department of Commerce is deeply committed to the goals of the 
Small Business Act, and our record reflects our determination to 
increase business opportunities for small, small disadvantaged and 
women-owned small firms. As a result of our strong commitment, the 
Department is a leader in awarding Federal contracts to small business 
concerns.

If you have any further questions, please call me at (202) 482-4951.

Sincerely, 

Otto J. Wolff: 

Chief Financial Officer and Assistant Secretary for Administration:

Signed by Otto J. Wolff: 

[End of section]

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of Education:

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION:

THE DEPUTY SECRETARY:

August 15, 2003:

Mr. David G. Wood:

Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment General Accounting 
Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Wood:

This is in response to the draft GAO report, "Small and Disadvantaged 
Business: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to Required Management 
Level.":

The draft report lists the Department of Education as not in compliance 
with Section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act. I strongly disagree 
with that characterization. Section 15(k)(3) requires that the Director 
of the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization be 
responsible directly to agency heads or deputy agency heads. In the 
Department of Education, the OSDBU Director reports to the Deputy 
Secretary, who is the deputy agency head. The Director's position 
description and the official organizational chart both clearly show 
that the position of the director is in the Office of the Deputy 
Secretary. In addition, the Functional Statement of the Office of the 
Deputy Secretary states that the OSDBU reports to the Deputy Secretary.

GAO bases its conclusion on the following facts: that the OSDBU 
Director met with the Deputy Secretary's Chief of Staff, in addition to 
meeting with the Deputy Secretary; that the Director submitted reports 
through the Chief of Staff to the Deputy Secretary; and that the Chief 
of Staff signed the Director's performance appraisal. These operating 
procedures reflected the management preference of then-Deputy Secretary 
William Hansen, who opted to manage the significant workflow of his 
office in this way. These procedures in no way indicate a revision in 
the reporting relationship of the Director to the Deputy Secretary. As 
the Secretary is fully supportive of the goals of the Small Business 
Act and the activities of the OSDBU Director, it has not been necessary 
for the Deputy Secretary to closely oversee or monitor the Director's 
activities.

It is my hope that this information demonstrates that the Department is 
in fact fully in compliance with Section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business 
Act, and I request that the final report be revised accordingly.

Sincerely,

Eugene W. Hickok 
Acting Deputy Secretary:

Signed by Eugene W. Hickok: 


[End of section]

Appendix VII: Comments from the Department of Health and Human 
Services:

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES Office of Inspector General:

AUG 20 2003:

Mr. David G. Wood:

Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment United States 
General Accounting Office Washington, D.C. 20548:

Dear Mr. Wood:

Enclosed are the Department's comments on your draft report entitled, 
"Small and Disadvantaged Business: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not 
Report to Required Management Level." The comments represent the 
tentative position of the Department and are subject to reevaluation 
when the final version of this report is received.

The Department appreciates the opportunity to comment on this draft 
report before its publication.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

Dara Corrigan:

Acting Principal Deputy Inspector General:

Enclosure:

The Office of Inspector General (OIG) is transmitting the Department's 
response to this draft report in our capacity as the Department's 
designated focal point and coordinator for General Accounting Office 
reports. OIG has not conducted an independent assessment of these 
comments and therefore expresses no opinion on them.

Comments of the Department of Health and Human Services on the General 
Accounting Office's Draft Report, "Small and Disadvantaged Business: 
Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to Required Management Level" 
(GAO-03-863):

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has received and 
reviewed the draft report that examined the reporting relationships for 
the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSBDU) 
Directors at Federal agencies that procured $200 million or more in 
goods and services in FY 2001.

While the Department believes it has been in compliance with the law, 
your report has stimulated us to clarify and explicitly state certain 
arrangements as follows:

(1) The OSDBU Director will continue to report directly to the HHS 
Deputy Secretary on all policy issues and will also report on all 
significant day-to-day issues affecting the OSDBU.

(2) The OSDBU Director will arrange for monthly meetings with the HHS 
Deputy Secretary and/or prepare monthly reports for the HHS Deputy 
Secretary on major issues facing the OSDBU.

(3) The HHS Deputy Secretary will serve as the reviewing official on 
performance-evaluation documents for the OSDBU Director, with the 
Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management (ASAM) serving as 
the appraisal official.

(4) The OSDBU Director will continue to receive operational support 
from ASAM's Office of Acquisition Management and Policy.

We have enclosed the memorandum, dated August 11, 2003, from the HHS 
Deputy Secretary to the OSDBU Director, which delineates the changes 
discussed above.


THE DEPUTY SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES WASHINGTON. D.C. 
20201:

AUG 1 1 ONE:

MEMORANDUM:

TO: Debbie Ridgley, Director Office of Small and Disadvantaged 
Utilization (OSBDU) SUBJECT: OSBDU Reporting Relationship:

The purpose of this memo is to clarify OSBDU's reporting relationship 
to my office, and to affirm several important aspects of that 
relationship.

In accordance with Section 644 (k)(3) of the Small Business Act, you, 
as HHS's OSBDU Director, will continue to report directly to me as the 
Department's Deputy Secretary. Thus, all policy issues and all 
significant day-to-day issues affecting OSBDU should be brought to my 
attention. Additionally, you should arrange for monthly meetings and/or 
monthly reports to me on major issues facing OSBDU. As set out in the 
statement of organization and functions for the Office of the Assistant 
Secretary for Administration and Management (ASAM) published in the 
Federal Register on June 19, 2003, OSBDU will continue to receive 
operational support from ASAM's Office of Acquisition Management and 
Policy. I will serve as reviewing official on performance-evaluation 
documents for the OSBDU Director, with the Assistant Secretary for 
Administration and Management serving as appraising official.

Thank you for your continuing efforts on behalf of small, disadvantaged 
and women-owned businesses and HubZones in their dealings with the 
Department.

Signed by: 

Claude Allen: 

[End of section]

Appendix VIII: Comments from the Department of Justice:

U.S. Department of Justice:

Washington, D.C. 20530:

AUG 19 2003:

David G. Wood Director Financial Markets and Community Investment 
General Accounting Office:

441 G Street, NW Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Wood:

On August 1, 2003, you provided the Department with a copy of the 
General Accounting Office's draft report entitled SMALL AND 
DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to 
Required Management Level (GAO-03-863/250109) with a request for 
comments by August 19, 2003. We appreciate the opportunity to review 
and comment on the draft report.

While the Department agrees that organizationally the Office of Small 
and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU) resides within the 
Justice Management Division, this placement, initially made in 1981, 
has been consistently described as being for administrative purposes. 
The Department has previously advised both the GAO and the Congress 
that the Director, OSDBU reports to the Deputy Attorney General on 
matters of substance requiring his attention. We believe it is 
important for the GAO to recognize the commitment of the Deputy 
Attorney General to facilitate the participation of small and 
disadvantaged businesses as contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers 
for the Department. The Office of the Deputy Attorney General fully 
supports the objectives of the OSDBU and has met with the Director to 
discuss the office's work.

If you have any questions concerning the Department's comment in this 
matter, please feel free to contact Vickie L. Sloan, Audit Liaison 
Office, Justice Management Division on (202) 514-0469.

Sincerely,

Paul R. Corts:

Assistant Attorney General for Administration:

Signed by Paul R. Corts:

[End of section]

Appendix IX: Comments from the Department of State:

United States Department of State Washington, D. C.	20520:

AUG 25 2003:

Dear Mr. Wood:

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, "SMALL AND 
DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS: Some Agencies' Do Not Report to the Required 
Management Level," GAO-03-863, GAO Job Code 250109.

The enclosed Department of State comments are provided for 
incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report.

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact 
Durie White, Director, Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business, at 
(703) 875-6824.

Sincerely,

Sid L. Kaplan, Acting Assistant Secretary for Resource Management and 
Chief Financial Officer:

Signed by Sid L. Kaplan: 

Enclosure:

As stated.

cc: GAO - Charles Wilson, Jr. State/OIG - Luther Atkins State/A - 
William Eaton State/H - Paul Kelly:

Mr. David G. Wood Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment, 
U.S. General Accounting Office.

GAO Draft Report: Small and Disadvantaged Business: Some Agencies' 
Advocates Do Not Report to the Required Management Level (GAO-03-863):

The Department of State is pleased to have the opportunity to comment 
on the GAO's report regarding the organizational placement of federal 
agency Offices of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization. The 
report finds State Department as not in compliance with Section 
15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act. The report recommends that State 
Department and other agencies found not in compliance take steps to 
comply with the requirement of Section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business 
Act that OSDBU directors be responsible only to, and report directly 
to, the head or deputy head of the agency.

The facts concerning the organizational placement of the Office of 
Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization as stated in the draft 
report are accurate. The Department of State reserves comment on the 
legal conclusions in the draft report in the absence of authoritative 
guidance from the Department of Justice or the President's counsel. As 
a practical matter, the Department of State believes that the 
organizational placement of its Office of Small and Disadvantaged 
Business Utilization (OSDBU) is highly effective. The Department 
created the OSDBU in 1980. At the time, the OSDBU reported directly to 
the Secretary. The placement was not effective. The OSDBU Director did 
not meet with the Secretary of State, but dealt exclusively with the 
staff of the Executive Office of the Secretariat. The OSDBU had a 
skeletal staff of three and a small operational budget.	Since its 
reorganization into the Bureau of Administration in 1991, the OSDBU 
receives much more attention from senior management. Its staff has 
grown to six direct hires and one contract employee. Its budget has 
also grown. The office was relocated to larger space, the design of 
which presents a much more professional face to the small business 
public that it serves.

The Secretaries of State in both this Administration and the previous 
Administration have willingly given their support to OSDBU initiatives 
when asked to do so. Very early in his Administration (March 2001), 
Secretary Powell signed a Memorandum to All Department of State 
Employees reaffirming his support for the Department's Small Business 
Program. In November 2002, he gave opening remarks at the Department's 
first Veteran-Owned Business Small Business Exposition. He is serving 
on the Honorary Committee to commemorate the Small Business 
Administration's 50Th anniversary. He spoke at an event during last 
year's Department of Commerce Minority Enterprise Development Week and 
may do so again this year. In addition, former Secretary of State 
Albright signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Small Business 
Administration, committing the Department to redouble its efforts to 
assist women business owners.

The Department of State believes that the effectiveness of its OSDBU's 
organizational placement is borne out by the results of our program. We 
traditionally meet or exceed our small business goals. Normally, at 
least 40% of our domestically awarded contracts 
go to small businesses each fiscal year. We have done an extensive 
analysis of the FY 2002 performance of the twenty-three large federal 
agencies (those that awarded over 
$100 million in contracts) and note that there is no direct correlation 
between the OSDBUs' reporting level and the agencies' achievements. 
(See the attached booklet). State Department outperformed all the 
compliant agencies in the percentage of contract dollars awarded to 
small businesses. We ranked first among the twenty-three large agencies 
in the percentage of dollars awarded to 8(a) firms and second among the 
twenty-three in the percentage of dollars awarded to HUBZone firms. In 
fact, State Department was one of only two federal departments that 
achieved the statutory 3% minimum goal for awarding contracts to firms 
located in HUBZones during FY 2002. The Small Business Administration 
recently notified us that State Department's OSDBU staff has been 
selected to receive SBA's 2003 Gold Star Award. The award recognizes 
the exemplary performance of Federal personnel within the OSDBU who 
have primary responsibility for the goals and strategic initiatives 
that ensure small businesses have a role in the Federal marketplace.

State Department maintains that to reorganize its Office of Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization to report to the Secretary or his 
Deputy would result in its being less effective. Given the broad range 
of urgent issues upon which the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of State 
must focus, the OSDBU Director would receive much less attention than 
she enjoys in her present organizational location.	The OSDBU Director 
regularly meets with the Assistant Secretary for Administration, 
attends staff meetings, and has direct access whenever necessary. 
Whether the Director would enjoy the level of visibility and 
operational influence were she moved to the Secretary's level is 
questionable. If the objective of Section 15(k)(3) is to insure that 
the OSDBU program receives support from top management, the Department 
of State believes we have achieved that objective.
[End of section]

Appendix X: Comments from the Department of the Interior:

United States Department of the Interior:

OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY POLICY, MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET 
Washington, D.C. 20240:

AUG 27 2003:

Mr. Charles Wilson, Jr. Assistant Director General Accounting Office 
441 G Street, NW Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Wilson:

We are writing regarding the draft GAO report dated September 2003 
entitled, "Small and Disadvantaged Business, Some Agencies' Advocates 
Do Not Report to Required Management Level.":

The Assistant Secretary - Policy, Management and Budget is the agency 
head for acquisition matters, in accordance with the Federal 
Acquisition Regulation (FAR). Consequently, Interior's Office of Small 
and Disadvantaged Business Utilization's (OSDBU) Director reports to 
the "agency head" as defined in Subpart 2.101 of the FAR The Report 
seems to mischaracterize the situation when it states that the OSDBU 
reports to a "lower-level official within the Department" as indicated 
on page 9 of the draft report. This reporting relationship has worked 
well. Interior has led Federal cabinet agencies in small business 
achievements for a variety of categories in the present structure. 
(Over 50 percent of all procurement dollars for the past four fiscal 
years have been awarded to small business.) Secretarial support and 
autonomy that are critical for program success have been emphasized in 
the Department through the reporting relationship with the Assistant 
Secretary - Policy, Management and Budget.

If you have any additional questions regarding our comments, please 
contact Mr. Robert W. Faithful, IV, Director, Office of Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization at (202) 208-3493.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

P. Lynn Scarlett 

Assistant Secretary - Policy, Management and Budget:

[End of section]

Appendix XI: Comments from the Department of the Treasury:

ASSISTANT SECRETARY:

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY WASHINGTON:

AUG 20 2003:

David G. Wood:

Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment U.S. General 
Accounting Office:

441 G Street, N. W. Washington, D.C. 20548:

Dear Mr. Wood:

The Department of the Treasury is pleased to have the opportunity to 
comment on the U.S. General Accounting Office's (GAO) draft report 
entitled Small and Disadvantaged Business: Some Agencies 'Advocates Do 
Not Report to Required Management Level (GAO-03-863). This report 
reviews the organizational placement and reporting relationships of the 
position of Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization 
(OSDBU) at a number of agencies. The report concludes that Treasury, 
among other agencies, is not complying with § 15(k)(3) of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. §644(k)(3)) because, as GAO states, 
"[Agriculture, Treasury and State] designated OSDBU directors delegated 
all of their OSDBU director responsibilities to officials who do not 
directly report to either the secretary or deputy secretary." [Draft 
report, p. 19] The report states: "The lower ranking officials thus 
became the de facto OSDBU directors." [id.] The apparent view of the 
report is that Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization 
must, as a matter of law, be engaged essentially full-time in OSDBU 
functions.

Section 15(k)(3) of the Small Business Act makes the OSDBU directors 
responsible for the implementation and execution of the specific 
functions and duties assigned under sections 8 & 15 of the Small 
Business Act. The responsibilities are assigned, but there is no 
requirement that the director personally perform any specific 
functions. Counsel has advised me that there is no bar in the statutory 
language, and no explanation of that language in its legislative 
history that suggests a bar, to the Director's delegation of some of 
this authority. As Director, I remain responsible for OSDBU 
performance, whether I personally perform the functions or delegate 
portions of the OSDBU authority. I do report directly to the Secretary 
and Deputy Secretary.

We believe that Treasury's Office of Small Business Development (OSBD) 
has been particularly successful: Winning awards from the Small 
Business Administration (SBA); receiving approbation from small 
businesses themselves for our outreach efforts; leading Government 
agencies in our small business contracting; and serving in leadership 
roles in the Government's small business efforts.

The OSBD assists, counsels, and advises small businesses of all types 
on procedures for contracting with Treasury. Additionally, the OSBD 
works closely with each Treasury bureau to implement the Department's 
small business procurement assistance program.

Each bureau has appointed a Small Business Specialist, located within 
the procurement office, to coordinate the program.

We attribute our small business success to a number of critical 
factors. These include: senior management support, commitment, a team 
approach, outreach, information dissemination, training, mentor-
protege/subcontracting efforts, and recognizing that we are part of a 
larger network that makes up the small business community (senior 
management, small businesses, large business prime contractors, Small 
Business Administration, Treasury procurement/program/small business 
staff, other federal agency small business offices, and small business 
trade associations).

Sincerely,


Teresa Mullet Ressel 
Assistant Secretary for Management And Chief Financial Officer:

Signed for: Teresa Mullet Ressel

[End of section]

Appendix XII: Comments from the Social Security Administration:

SOCIAL SECURITY:

The Commissioner:

August 13, 2003:

Mr. David G. Wood Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment 
U.S. General Accounting Office Washington, D.C. 20548:

Dear Mr. Wood:

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on the draft report 
"Small and Disadvantaged Business: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not 
Report to Required Management Level" (GAO-03-863). Our comments on the 
report are enclosed.

If you have any questions, please have your staff contact Laura Bell at 
(410) 965-2636.

Sincerely,

Jo Anne B. Barnhart:

Signed by Jo Anne B. Barnhart:

Enclosure:

SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION BALTIMORE MD 21235-0001:

COMMENTS ON THE GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE (GAO) DRAFT REPORT "SMALL AND 
DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS: SOME AGENCIES' ADVOCATES DO NOT REPORT TO 
REQUIRED MANAGEMENT LEVEL" (GAO-03-863):

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on the draft 
report. The report accurately describes the reporting relationship of 
the Director of the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization (OSDBU) within the Social Security Administration (SSA). 
However, we do not agree with the conclusion that the reporting 
relationship of our OSDBU director does not comply with the requirement 
of Section 14(k)(3) of the Small Business Act (SBA). The rationale for 
our disagreement is provided below. Attached is a copy of the March 2, 
1999 General Counsel (GC) opinion (which was provided to the GAO 
auditors during the review) that supports our position.

Recommendation 1:

The Commissioner of SSA should take steps as necessary to comply with 
the requirement in Section 15(k)(3) of the SBA that the OSDBU director 
be responsible only to, and report directly to, the head or deputy head 
of the agency.

Comment:

On March 2, 1999, our GC issued an opinion specifically related to the 
OSDBU director position. In that opinion, the Associate General Counsel 
for General Law states that each of SSA's Deputy Commissioners, 
including the Deputy Commissioner for Finance, Assessment and 
Management (DCFAM), as well as the GC and the Chief Actuary report 
directly to the Commissioner. The GC concluded that each of them (i.e., 
the Deputy Commissioners) could be considered to have the status of a 
"deputy" to the Commissioner, unless more is required by a specific 
statute or regulation. Based on that opinion and the current direct 
reporting relationship of our Deputy Commissioners, including the 
DCFAM, to the Commissioner, we continue to believe we are in compliance 
with Section 15(k)(3) of the SBA.

Additionally, with respect to GAO's interpretation of the role of the 
Agency's "Deputy Commissioner" provided on page 13 in the second 
paragraph we offer the following: "While the Deputy Commissioner shares 
responsibility for providing executive leadership to the Social 
Security Administration, including acting for the Commissioner in her 
absence, each of the other Deputy Commissioners report directly to her. 
The DCFAM's functional statement in the SSA Organization Manual reads, 
"The Deputy Commissioner, Finance, Assessment and Management (S 1) is 
directly responsible to the Commissioner for carrying out the ODCFAM 
mission and providing general supervision to the major components of 
ODCFAM. The Deputy Commissioner also is the SSA Chief Financial Officer 
(SSACFO) and is directly responsible to the Commissioner for carrying 
out the SSACFO mission.":

SOCIAL SECURITY:

Office of the General Counsel:

MEMORANDUM:

DATE: March 2, 1999:

TO: Dale Sopper:

Assistant Deputy Commissioner for Finance, Assessment and Management:

FROM: Michael Hoover Associate General Counsel for General Law Division:

SUBJECT: Your Inquiry as to Who May Serve as SSA's Director of Office of 
Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization:

You requested our views as to the interpretation of language contained 
at 48 C.F.R. Chapter 1, Subpart 19.201(d), stating that each agency 
with contracting authority is required by the Small Business Act to:

... establish an Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization. Management of the office shall be the responsibility of an 
officer or employee of the agency who shall, in carrying out the 
purposed of the Act ... 3. Be responsible to and report directly to the 
agency head or the deputy to the agency head; ...

Specifically, you requested our opinion as to whether the language 
"deputy to the agency head," contained in this regulation, could be 
interpreted to mean the Deputy Commissioner for Finance, Assessment and 
Management.

The regulation which you cited implements section 15 of the Small 
Business Act, 15 U.S.C. § 644k, which states:

(k) Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization; Director. 
There is hereby established in each Federal agency having procurement 
powers an office to be known as the "Office of Small and Disadvantaged 
Business Utilization." The management of each such office shall be 
vested in an officer or employee of such agency who shall:

(1) be known as the "Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization" for such agency,

(2) be appointed by the head of such agency,

(3) be responsible only to, and report directly to, the head of such 
agency or to the deputy of such head, except that the director for the 
Office of the Secretary of Defense shall be responsible only to, and 
report directly to, such Secretary or the Secretary's designee,

(4) be responsible for the implementation and execution of the 
functions and duties under sections 8 and 15 of this Act [15 USCS § 637 
and this section] which relate to such agency, . . .

(5) identify proposed solicitations that involve significant bundling 
of contract requirements, and work with the agency acquisition 
officials and the Administration to revise the procurement strategies 
for such proposed solicitations where appropriate to increase the 
probability of participation by small businesses as prime contractors, 
or to facilitate small business participation as subcontractors and 
suppliers, if a solicitation for a bundled contract is to be issued;

(6) assist small business concerns to obtain payments, required late 
payment interest penalties, or information regarding payments due to 
such concerns from an executive agency or a contractor, in conformity 
with chapter 39 of title 31, United States Code [31 USCS §§ 3901 et 
seq.], or any other protection for contractors or subcontractors 
(including suppliers) that is included in the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation or any individual agency supplement to such Government-wide 
regulation,

(7) have supervisory authority over personnel of such agency to the 
extent that the functions and duties of such personnel relate to 
functions and duties under sections 8 and 15 of this Act [15 USCS § 637 
and this section],

(8) assign a small business technical adviser to each office to which 
the Administration has assigned a procurement center representative--:

(A) who shall be a full-time employee of the procuring activity and 
shall be well qualified, technically trained and familiar with the 
supplies or services purchased at the activity,

(B) whose principal duty shall be to assist the Administration 
procurement center representative in his duties and functions relating 
to section 8 and 15 of this Act [15 USCS § 637 and this section], and:

(9) cooperate, and consult on a regular basis, with the Administration 
with respect to carrying out the functions and duties described in 
paragraph (4) of this subsection; and:

(10) make recommendations to contracting officers as to whether a 
particular contract requirement should be awarded pursuant to 
subsection (a), or section 8(a) of this Act or section 2323 of title 
10, United States Code. Such recommendations shall be made with due 
regard to the requirements of subsection (m) and the failure of the 
contracting officer to accept any such recommendations shall be 
documented and included within the appropriate contract file.

The Small Business Act does not define what is meant by the term 
"deputy." Specifically, it does not require that a "deputy" be one 
whose appointment is subject to the advice and consent of the Senate. 
Generally, a deputy is one who reports directly to the official as 
whose deputy he serves. In SSA, each of the eight Deputy Commissioners, 
as well as the General Counsel and the Chief Actuary, report directly 
to the Commissioner. For this reason, each of them could be considered 
to have the status of a "deputy" to the Commissioner, unless more is 
required by a specific statute or regulation. Accordingly, we believe 
that where an agency has created an organizational structure which has 
more than one individual reporting directly to the agency head and has 
given each of these individuals the title "deputy," the Small Business 
Act does not create any statutory impediment to finding that an 
individual who reports directly to one of these individuals may serve 
as the Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization.

We note that several federal agencies have established organizational 
structures which have the Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization (SDBU) reporting to an individual who reports to the agency 
head, but who does not have the title of "deputy." For example, in the 
Department of State, the Director, SDBU reports to the Assistant 
Secretary of State for Administration. 48 C.F.R. § 619.201(c). In the 
Department of Labor, the Director, SDBU reports to the Assistant 
Secretary for Administration and Management for all substantive 
responsibilities under sections 8 and 15 of the Small Business Act, and 
on his own has an advisory role only. 48 C.F.R. §§ 2901.603-1(a), 
2901.603(f)(3), 2901.603(gx4).

Another approach, followed by the Department of Treasury, was to name 
its Assistant Secretary (Managenent)/CFO as the statutory Director, 
SDBU, and have an Office of Procurement which reported to him/her carry 
out the functions of the Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization 
program. 57 FR 32614, July 22, 1992, § 4.c.(1). ,

In our view, it would be legally defensible for the agency head either 
to name an official who reports directly to the Deputy Commissioner for 
Finance, Assessment and Management to serve as SSA's Director of Small 
and Disadvantaged Business Utilization, or to name the DCFAM as the 
Director, SDBU, and for the DCFAM to have the Office of Acquisition and 
Grants carry out the functions of the SDBU program.

Should you have any additional questions, I would be pleased to discuss 
this matter with you' further. Staff inquiries may be directed to Ms. 
Eileen Houghton who can be reached at extension 54816.

[End of section]

Appendix XIII: Comments from the U.S. Agency for International 
Development:

USAID:

AUG 14 2003:

U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT:

Mr. David G. Wood Director:

Financial Markets and Community Investment U.S. General Accounting 
Office:

441 G Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20548:

Dear Mr. Wood:

I am pleased to provide the U.S. Agency for International Development's 
(USAID's) formal response on the draft GAO report entitled "SMALL AND 
DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to 
Required Management Level (GAO-03-863).

Upon review of the draft, we concur with the conclusions as they apply 
to USAID, and therefore have no comment.

Thank you for the opportunity to respond to the GAO draft report and 
for the courtesies extended by your staff in the conduct of this 
review.

Sincerely,

Signed for: 

John Marshall 
Assistant Administrator Bureau for Management:

CLEARANCE PAGE FOR response on the draft GAO report entitled "'SMALL 
AND DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS: Some Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to 
Required Management Level (GAO-03-863):

Clearances:



[End of section]

Appendix XIV: Comments from the Executive Office of the President, 
Office of Administration:

EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT 
OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATION 
WASHINGTON, D. C. 20503:

August 15, 2003:

Ms. Susan Sawtelle 
Associate General Counsel 
U.S. General Accounting Office 
Washington, DC 20548:

VIA FAX: (202) 512-3445:

Dear Ms. Sawtelle:

This responds to the letter of July 31, 2003 from David G. Wood, 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment, transmitting 
GAO's draft report entitled "Small and Disadvantaged Business: Some 
Agencies' Advocates Do Not Report to Required Management Level.":

We do not plan to provide views or comments to GAO with respect to the 
views expressed by GAO in the draft report, including Appendix M's 
discussion of GAO's legal views on the applicability of Section 15(k) 
of the Small Business Act to the Office of Administration. However, 
this does not indicate our agreement with the views expressed in the 
report, see, e.g., Haddon v. Walters, 43 F.3d 1488 (D.C. Cir. 1995).

Sincerely,

Signed for: 

Adam F. Greenstone: 
[End of section]

Appendix XV GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

David G. Wood, (202) 512-8678 Charles E. Wilson, Jr., (202) 512-6891:

Staff Acknowledgments:

In addition to the individual names above, the following individuals 
made significant contributions to this report: Emily R. Chalmers, Nancy 
Eibeck, Edda Emmanuelli-Perez, Brodi Fontenot, Gregg J. Justice III, 
John T. McGrail, Marc Molino, and Susan D. Sawtelle.

:

(250109):

FOOTNOTES

[1] DOD does not have a single OSDBU director for the entire agency. 
The services (Departments of the Air Force, Army, and Navy) and other 
DOD command units have established separate OSDBUs, each of which is 
headed by a director. These organizational units carry out procurement 
for most of DOD. The DOD agencies refer to their offices as Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization, or SADBUs. For simplicity, we use 
the term OSDBU for all agencies in our study. 

[2] The Office of the Secretary of Defense is the principal staff 
element of the Secretary of Defense in the exercise of policy 
development, planning, resource management, and fiscal and program 
evaluation responsibilities.

[3] One agency--the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)--is no 
longer independent, having become part of the Department of Homeland 
Security in March 2003. Because FEMA was independent during the period 
of our review, we included it in our review and are reporting on it as 
an independent agency.

[4] We are not making a recommendation for FEMA because it no longer 
exists as an independent agency.

[5] The small business categories include small business; women-owned 
small business; section 8(a) business; small disadvantaged businesses; 
HUBZone small business; veteran-owned small business; and service-
disabled, veteran-owned small business.

[6] The Small Business Reauthorization Act of 1997 defines the bundling 
of contract requirements as the consolidation of two or more 
procurement requirements for goods or services previously provided or 
performed under separate, smaller contracts into a solicitation of 
offers for a single contract that is likely to be unsuitable for award 
to a small business concern.

[7] The OSDBU director position at Labor became vacant in April 2002; a 
new OSDBU director assumed his position on April 21, 2003.

[8] Although the director's position description, dated 1988, 
identified the supervisor as the Associate Deputy Administrator for 
Logistics, the OSDBU director's most recent performance appraisal 
indicated that the agency head evaluated the performance of the OSDBU 
director.

[9] GSA could not provide us with any formal reports because of the 
high turnover rate of the OSDBU director position since 2000. 

[10] In a memorandum dated January 25, 2001, the Chief of Staff is 
delegated with the authority, by the Secretary, to take personnel 
actions, including the authority to certify, on behalf of the 
Secretary, all personnel documents. 

[11] According to a Department of Justice staff member, in 2002, the 
title of Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Law and Policy was 
changed to the title of Deputy Assistant Attorney General Policy, 
Management, and Planning.

[12] H.R. Conf. Rep. No 1714, 95TH Cong. 2d Sess. 18 (1978).

[13] S. Rep. No. 1070, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 18 (1978).

[14] 68 Fed. Reg. 36811 (2003).

[15] S. Rept. No. 1070, 95TH Cong.2d Sess. 18 (1978). See also S. Rept. 
No. 1140, 95TH Cong., 9 (1978); H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 1714, 95TH Cong. 2d 
Sess. 27 (1978); and H.R. Rep. No. 460, 100TH Cong., 1ST Sess. 40 
(1987).

[16] The Assistant Secretary for Administration, who served as the 
OSDBU director during the period covered by our study, retired as of 
June 30, 2003. Subsequently, the Acting Assistant Secretary for 
Administration was appointed the OSDBU director. 

[17] The Assistant Secretary for Administration's additional 
responsibilities included human resources management, procurement and 
property management, facilities operations, conflict resolution, 
crisis planning and management, energy efficiency, ethics, and outreach 
programs.

[18] The Acting Assistant Secretary said that she was dealing with, 
among other things, the transfer of part of Treasury to the Department 
of Homeland Security. 

[19] DOD directives are broad policy documents containing what is 
required by legislation, the President, or the Secretary of Defense to 
regulate the actions of DOD components. DOD directives establish or 
describe policies, programs, and organizations; define missions; 
provide authority; and assign responsibilities. 

[20] DOD Directive 5134.1, dated June 8, 1994, implemented the position 
change of Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Technology. 
The directive added the responsibilities of advanced technology, 
economic security, environmental security, and atomic energy to the 
responsibilities of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition.

[21] DOD Directive 4205.1, September 11, 1996.

[22] DOD Directive 5134.1, September 17, 1999.

[23] DOD Directive 5134.13, May 25, 2000.

[24] The Federal Procurement Data Center is a unit of the General 
Services Administration that collects data on all federal contract 
actions.

[25] OA does not manage the roughly $200 million in annual procurements 
associated with the EOP Office of National Drug Control Policy's 
(ONDCP) National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, but does manage the 
"significant majority" of the remainder of EOP's procurements, which 
total roughly $50 million annually.

[26] These were the White House Office, the Bureau of the Budget, the 
National Resources Planning Board, the Liaison Office for Personnel 
Management, and the Office of Government Reports, with a sixth division 
authorized in the event of an actual or threatened emergency. 

[27] See Pub. L. No. 107-67, 115 Stat. 514 (2001); U.S. Office of 
Management and Budget, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal 
Year 2003 (Feb. 4, 2002).

[28] A reorganization plan proposed by the President can take effect 
only if neither house of Congress passes a resolution disapproving the 
plan within a certain time period. Resolutions disapproving of 
Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1977 were introduced in both the House and 
Senate, see S. Res. 222 (July 18, 1977)(introduced by Sen. Ribicoff); 
H. Res. 688 (July 18, 1977)(introduced by Rep. Brooks), but after 
hearings on the Plan, including acknowledgement of the proposed 
creation of OA, neither resolution passed. See generally S. Rep. No. 
465, 95TH Cong., 1ST Sess. (1977); H.R. Rep. No. 661, 95TH Cong., 1ST 
Sess. 4, 44-46, 56 (1977). 

[29] See E.O. 12028 § 3(b), as amended by E.O. 12122 (Feb. 26, 1979); 
E.O. 12134 (May 9, 1979); Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the 
Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, on Executive 
Office of the President and Funds Appropriated to the President and 
Independent Agencies, FY 2002 (hereafter 2002 EOP Budget Hearings).

[30] The Federal Records Act, a collection of statutes at 44 U.S.C. §§ 
2101-2118, 2901-2910, 3101-3107, 3301-3324, governs the creation, 
management, and disposal of federal records. The Presidential Records 
Act, 44 U.S.C. §§ 2201-2207, governs the creation, management, and 
disposal of Presidential records, which are documentary materials 
"created or received by the President, his immediate staff, or a unit 
or individual in [EOP] whose function is to advise and assist the 
President, in the course of conducting activities which relate to or 
have an effect upon the carrying out of the constitutional, statutory, 
or other official or ceremonial duties of the President." Id. § 
2201(2). 

[31] Since 1994, OA generally has contracted for EOP procurements over 
$25,000, with other EOP units making smaller procurements through 
purchase orders. See U.S. General Accounting Office, Executive Office 
of the President: Major Procurements for Calendar Years 1990 to 1993, 
GAO/GGD-94-138FS (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 16, 1994) at 1.

[32] Our congressional requesters asked us to analyze whether the 
statutory OSDBU requirements apply to EOP and its constituent offices. 
As agreed, we are responding to this question by focusing on OA as the 
centralized procurement arm of EOP. (We do not express an opinion on 
whether any EOP units other than OA, which manage the remainder of 
EOP's procurements, also may be "Federal agencies" under the Small 
Business Act.) We have not focused on EOP as a whole in light of the 
general practice of the courts, in litigation filed against the 
"Executive Office of the President," to look to the specific EOP office 
involved in determining whether there is an "agency" under the relevant 
statute. A number of recent suits against EOP under the Privacy Act, 
for example, which adopts the FOIA definition of "agency," have been 
resolved by examining the activities of the White House Office rather 
than EOP. See, e.g., Tripp v. EOP, 200 F.R.D. 140 (D.D.C. 2001), appeal 
dismissed, No. 01-5189, 2001 WL 1488614 (D.C. Cir. Oct. 17, 2001); Dale 
v. EOP, 164 F. Supp. 2d 22 (D.D.C. 2001); Falwell v. EOP, 113 F. Supp. 
2d 967 (W.D. Va. 2000); Barr v. EOP, No. 99-CV-1695, 2000 WL 33539396 
(D.D.C. 2000).

Several courts, however, have either allowed suit to proceed directly 
against EOP or suggested that EOP would be a proper party. See Public 
Citizen v. Carlin, 2 F. Supp. 2d 1, 8-9 (D.D.C. 1997), rev'd on other 
grounds, 184 F.3d 900 (D.C. Cir. 1999), cert. denied, 529 U.S. 1003 
(2000) (rejecting argument in APA/Federal Records Act suit against EOP, 
OA, and others that EOP should be dismissed on ground that it 
"functions simply as an 'umbrella' designation for various separately 
designated components which operate in close proximity to the 
President"); Armstrong v. EOP, 1 F.3d 1274, 1282 n. 4 (D.C. Cir. 
1993)(rejecting untimely argument in APA/Federal Records Act/
Presidential Records Act suit that EOP was improper party); United 
States v. Espy, 145 F.3d 1369, 1372-74 (D.C. Cir. 1998)(Independent 
Counsel argues EOP is "agency of the United States" under Criminal Code 
provision 18 U.S.C. § 6, defining "agency" to include any "authority . 
. .of the United States.").

[33] When statutes use unambiguous terms without providing a 
specialized technical meaning, the terms generally are deemed to have 
their ordinary, "plain" meaning. See, e.g., Cowart v. Nicklos Drilling 
Co., 505 U.S. 469, 475 (1992). 

[34] When Congress enacts a statute incorporating a section of another 
statute, Congress generally is presumed to have adopted the 
interpretations given to that other statute. Lorillard v. Pons, 434 
U.S. 575, 581 (1978). 

[35] In Carlin, footnote 8 above, the court ruled that the actions of 
OA, EOP and the Archivist of the United States violated the Federal 
Records Act and therefore also violated the APA as "arbitrary and 
capricious" actions. In Armstrong, footnote 8 above, the court found 
that OA's electronic records management guidelines violated the APA and 
thus the Federal Records Act. Finally, in Hartness v. Bush, 712 F.Supp. 
986 (D.D.C 1989), rev'd on other grounds, 919 F.2d 170 (D.C. Cir. 
1990), the court preliminarily enjoined OA and others, under the APA, 
from enforcing an EOP-wide plan under the Drug-Free Workplace statute. 

[36] Energy Research Foundation v. Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety 
Board, 917 F.2d 581, 583 (D.C. Cir. 1990). See also Meyer v. Bush, 
above, 981 F. 2d at 1304 (Wald, J. dissenting)(APA definition of agency 
is "less expansive than FOIA's"). As amended, FOIA's definition of 
"agency" now reads: "For purposes of this section, the term...'agency' 
as defined in section 551(1) of this title includes any executive 
department, military department, Government corporation, Government 
controlled corporation, or other establishment in the executive branch 
of the Government (including the Executive Office of the President), or 
any independent regulatory agency...." 5 U.S.C. § 552(f)(1) (emphasis 
added).

[37] See H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 1380, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 15 (1974) ("With 
respect to the meaning of the term 'Executive Office of the President,' 
the conferees intend the result reached in Soucie v. David. The term is 
not to be interpreted as including the President's immediate personal 
staff or units in the Executive Office whose sole function is to advise 
and assist the President."); S. Rep. No. 854, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 33 
(1974). 

[38] The court also was influenced by the fact that finding JAG to be 
an APA "agency" would "fundamentally alter the relationship between the 
civilian and military courts and would, in essence, defy the 
presumptions against civilian-court review of military-court 
decisions." McKinney, 141 F. Supp. 2d at 34.

[39] See Report on the Administrative Procedure Act, 79TH Cong., 1ST 
Sess. 13 (Comm. Print 1945).

[40] See Armstrong v. EOP, 810 F. Supp. 335 (D.D.C 1993); Armstrong v. 
EOP, 821 F. Supp. 761 (D.D.C. 1993), rev'd on other grounds, 1 F.3d 
1274 (D.C. Cir. 1993). See also Carlin, footnote 8 above (involving 
OA's Federal Records Act responsibilities).

[41] See, e.g., 2002 EOP Budget Hearings at 1; OA Web site at http://
www.whitehouse.gov/oa/ ("The Director of the agency [OA] oversees the 
submission of the annual EOP Budget Request and represents the agency 
before congressional funding panels.").

[42] While these factors are not strictly applicable in determining 
what is an "agency" under the APA, some courts have considered them in 
that context because they relate back to the pre-1974 APA/FOIA analysis 
in the Soucie decision. In Dong, above, for example, the court cited 
EOP FOIA "agency" cases in determining whether the Smithsonian was an 
"agency" under the APA. See Dong, 125 F.3d at 881, citing, in addition 
to Soucie, Armstrong v. EOP, 90 F.3d 553 (D.C. Cir. 1996)(National 
Security Agency not an "agency"); Meyer v. Bush, above, (Task Force on 
Regulatory Reform not an "agency"); Rushforth v. Council of Economic 
Advisers, 762 F. 2d 1038 (D.C. Cir. 1985) (CEA not an "agency"); 
Pacific Legal Foundation v. Council on Environmental Quality, 636 F.2d 
1259 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (CEQ is an "agency"). 

[43] As the court explained this factor in Armstrong v. EOP, 90 F. 3d 
553, 558 (D.C. Cir. 1996), "[t]he closer an entity is to the President, 
the more it is like the White House staff, which solely advises and 
assists the President, and the less it is like an agency to which 
substantial independent authority has been delegated."

[44] As relevant here, "executive agencies" is defined for purposes of 
CICA bid protest proceedings as "an executive department or independent 
establishment in the executive branch of the Government." 40 U.S.C. § 
102(4). 

[45] See, e.g., In re Stay Inc. Protective Services, 92-1 CPD ¶ 393, 
1992 WL 93059 (Apr. 24, 1992). 

[46] See U.S. General Accounting Office, White House: Acquisition of 
Automated Resume Processing System, GAO/GGD-93-117 (Washington, D.C.: 
June 17, 1993); U.S. General Accounting Office, White House: Follow-up 
on Acquisition of Automated Resume Processing, GAO/GGD-94-127 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 3, 1994). The FAR applies to "executive 
agencies," defined to mean "executive department[s] . . .or any 
independent establishment[s] within the meaning of 5 U.S.C. 101, 102, 
and 104(1). . .." See 48 C.F.R. §§ 1.101, 2.101(b). Those sections, in 
turn, contain a broad, FOIA-like definition of "agency." 

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