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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Training, 
Committee on Education and the Workforce, House of Representatives: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:
Wednesday, May 11, 2011: 

Employment and Training Programs: 

Providing Information on Colocating Services and Consolidating 
Administrative Structures: 

Statement of Andrew Sherrill, Director: 
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 

GAO-11-645T: 

Chairwoman Foxx, Ranking Member Hinojosa, and Members of the 
Subcommittee: 

Thank you for inviting me here today to discuss the findings from our 
recent work on federal employment and training programs and our prior 
work on the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (WIA).[Footnote 1] As you 
know, GAO has recently identified 47 federally-funded employment and 
training programs for fiscal year 2009, defining them as programs that 
are specifically designed to enhance the job skills of individuals in 
order to increase their employability, identify job opportunities, 
and/or help job seekers obtain employment.[Footnote 2] These programs, 
which are administered by nine separate federal agencies--including 
the Departments of Labor, Education, and Health and Human Services 
(HHS)--spent about $18 billion dollars in fiscal year 2009 to provide 
services such as job search assistance and job counseling to program 
participants.[Footnote 3] Seven programs accounted for about three- 
fourths of this spending, and two--Wagner-Peyser funded Employment 
Service (ES) and WIA Adult--together reported serving over 18 million 
individuals, or about 77 percent of the total number of participants 
served across all programs.[Footnote 4] Forty-four of the 47 programs 
we identified, including those with broader missions such as 
multipurpose block grants, overlap with at least one other program in 
that they provide at least one similar service to a similar 
population. However, differences may exist in eligibility, objectives, 
and service delivery. 

Almost all of the 47 programs tracked multiple outcome measures 
related to employment and training, and the most frequently tracked 
outcome measure was "entered employment." However, little is known 
about the effectiveness of employment and training programs because, 
since 2004, only 5 reported conducting an impact study, and about half 
of all the remaining programs have not had a performance review of any 
kind.[Footnote 5] 

The multiplicity of employment and training programs combined with the 
limited information regarding impact raise concerns about the extent 
to which the federally-funded employment and training system is 
performing as efficiently and effectively as it should. As early as 
the 1990s we issued a series of reports that raised questions about 
the efficiency and effectiveness of the federally-funded employment 
and training system, and we concluded that a structural overhaul and 
consolidation of these programs was needed. Partly in response to such 
concerns, 13 years ago Congress passed WIA. 

My testimony today will focus on two areas where we have identified 
opportunities to promote greater efficiencies: colocating services and 
consolidating administrative structures. In preparing this statement 
we relied on our previous work in these areas (please see the related 
GAO products section). These products contain detailed overviews of 
the scope and methodology we used. The work on which this statement is 
based was performed in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform 
audits to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a 
reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit 
objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provided a 
reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit 
objectives. 

In summary, increasing colocation of services at a single site, as 
well as consolidating state workforce and welfare administrative 
agencies, could increase efficiencies, and several states and 
localities have undertaken such initiatives. However, implementation 
may pose challenges and little information is available about the 
strategies and results of these initiatives. To facilitate further 
progress in increasing administrative efficiencies, we have previously 
recommended that the Secretaries of Labor and HHS work together to 
develop and disseminate information about such efforts. Sustained 
congressional oversight is pivotal in promoting further efficiencies. 
Specifically, Congress could explore opportunities to foster state and 
local innovation in integrating services and consolidating 
administrative structures. 

Greater Colocation of Services at One-Stop Centers May Increase 
Efficiencies: 

Congress passed WIA partly in response to concerns about fragmentation 
and inefficiencies in federal employment and training programs. 
[Footnote 6] WIA authorized several employment and training programs--
including Job Corps and programs for Native Americans, migrant and 
seasonal farmworkers, and veterans--as well as the Adult Education and 
Literacy program.[Footnote 7] WIA replaced the Job Training 
Partnership Act (JTPA)[Footnote 8] programs for economically 
disadvantaged adults and youths and dislocated workers with three new 
programs--WIA Adult, WIA Dislocated Worker, and WIA Youth.[Footnote 9] 
These programs provide a range of services, including occupational 
training and job search assistance. Beyond authorizing these programs, 
WIA also required the establishment of one-stop centers in all local 
areas[Footnote 10] and mandated that many federal employment and 
training programs, including the ES and WIA Adult programs, provide 
services through the centers.[Footnote 11] 

Under WIA, sixteen different categories of programs, administered by 
four federal agencies, must provide services through the one-stop 
system, according to Labor officials.[Footnote 12] Thirteen of these 
categories include programs that meet our definition of an employment 
and training program, and three categories do not, but offer other 
services to jobseekers who need them (see fig. 1). These 13 program 
categories represent about 40 percent of the federal appropriations 
for employment and training programs in fiscal year 2010.[Footnote 13] 

Figure 1: Categories of Programs Required to Provide Services through 
the One-Stop System and Related Federal Agencies: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

One-Stop Center: 

Department of Labor: 
* WIA Adult, Youth, and Dislocated Worker; 
* Employment Service; 
* Trade Adjustment Assistance; 
* Veterans’ employment and training; 
* Unemployment Insurance[A]; 
* Job Corps; 
* Senior Community Service Employment Program; 
* Employment and training for Native Americans and migrant farm 
workers. 

Department of Education: 
* Vocational Rehabilitation Program; 
* Adult Education and Literacy[A]; 
* Vocational Education (Perkins Act). 

Department of Health & Human Services: 
* Community Services Block Grant. 

Department of Housing & Urban Development: 
* HUD-administered employment programs[A]. 

Source: Agency documents. 

Note: Vocational Education (Perkins Act) programs include the Career 
and Technical Education - Basic Grants to States and Tech-Prep 
Education programs. HUD-administered employment programs include the 
Community Development Block Grant and Housing Choice Voucher Family 
Self-Sufficiency programs. 

[A] Program did not meet our definition of an employment and training 
program in our recent study of multiple employment and training 
programs. 

[End of figure] 

One-stop centers serve as the key access point for a range of services 
that help unemployed workers re-enter the workforce--including job 
search assistance, skill assessment and case management, occupational 
skills and on-the-job training, basic education and literacy training, 
as well as access to Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits and other 
supportive services--and they also assist employers in finding 
workers. Any person visiting a one-stop center may look for a job, 
receive career development services, and gain access to a range of 
vocational education programs. In our 2007 study, we found that a 
typical one-stop center in many states offered services for eight or 
nine required programs on-site.[Footnote 14] 

In addition to required programs, one-stop centers have the 
flexibility to include other, optional programs in the one-stop 
system, such as the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) 
Program, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) 
Employment and Training Program, or other community-based programs, 
which help them better meet specific state and local workforce 
development needs. The Dayton, Ohio, one-stop center, for example, 
boasts over 40 programs on-site at the 8-1/2 acre facility, including 
an organization that provides free business attire to job seekers who 
need it, an alternative high school program that assists students in 
obtaining a diploma, and organizations providing parenting and self-
sufficiency classes. Nationwide, services may also be provided at 
affiliated sites--designated locations that provide access to at least 
one employment and training program. 

While WIA requires certain programs to provide services through the 
one-stop system, it does not provide additional funds to operate one- 
stop systems and support one-stop infrastructure. As a result, 
required programs are expected to share the costs of developing and 
operating one-stop centers. In 2007, we reported that WIA programs and 
the ES program were the largest funding sources states used to support 
the infrastructure--or nonpersonnel costs--of their comprehensive one-
stop centers.[Footnote 15] To help cover operational costs and expand 
services, some one-stop centers that we visited for a study of 
promising practices raised additional funds to support the 
infrastructure through fee-based services, grants, or contributions 
from partner programs and state or local governments. For example, one-
stop operators in Clarksville, Tennessee, reported that they raised 
$750,000 in one year through a combination of business consulting, 
drug testing, and drivers' education services. In addition, the one-
stop center in Kansas City, Missouri, had a full-time staff person 
dedicated to researching and applying for grants. The one-stop 
generated two-thirds of an entire program year's operating budget of 
$21 million through competitive grants available from the federal 
government as well as from private foundations.[Footnote 16] 

One-stop centers required under WIA provide an opportunity for a broad 
array of federal employment and training programs--both required and 
optional programs--to coordinate their services and avoid duplication. 
Although WIA does not require that programs be colocated within the 
one-stop center, this is one option that programs may use to provide 
services within the one-stop structure. Labor's policy is to encourage 
colocation of all required programs to the extent possible; however, 
officials acknowledged that colocation is one of multiple means for 
achieving service integration. We have previously reported that 
colocating services can result in improved communication among 
programs, improved delivery of services for clients, and elimination 
of duplication.[Footnote 17] While colocating services does not 
guarantee efficiency improvements, it affords the potential for 
sharing resources and cross-training staff, and may lead, in some 
cases, to the consolidation of administrative systems, such as 
information technology systems. Our early study of promising one-stop 
practices found that the centers nominated as exemplary did just that--
they cross-trained program staff, consolidated case management and 
intake procedures across multiple programs, and developed shared data 
systems.[Footnote 18] More broadly, these promising practices 
streamline services for job seekers, engage the employer community, 
and build a solid one-stop infrastructure. Other types of linkages 
between programs, such as electronic linkages or referrals, may not 
result in the same types of efficiency improvements, but they may 
still present opportunities to streamline services. 

Although the potential benefits of colocation are recognized, 
implementation may pose challenges. WIA Adult and the Employment 
Service are generally colocated in one-stop centers, but TANF 
employment and training services are colocated in one-stops to a 
lesser extent. In our 2007 report, we found that 30 states provided 
the TANF program on site at a typical comprehensive one-stop center. 
These states accounted for 57 percent of the comprehensive one-stop 
centers nationwide. Some previous efforts to reauthorize WIA have 
included proposals to make TANF a mandatory one-stop partner.[Footnote 
19] Increasing colocation, however, could prove difficult due to 
issues such as limited available office space, differences in client 
needs and the programs' client service philosophies, and the need for 
programs to help fund the operating costs of the one-stop centers. HHS 
officials noted, that when TANF employment and training services are 
not colocated in one-stop centers, they are typically colocated with 
other services for low-income families, such as SNAP, formerly known 
as the Food Stamp Program, and Medicaid. Officials acknowledged that 
colocating TANF employment and training services in one-stop centers 
may mean that they are no longer colocated with these other services, 
although Florida, Texas, and Utah provide SNAP services through one- 
stops along with TANF services, and Utah also provides Medicaid 
through one-stops. Officials said that in states where this is not the 
case, the potential trade-off would need to be considered. 

Consolidating Administrative Structures May Also Increase Efficiencies: 

Given that the purpose of WIA, in part, was to transform the 
fragmented employment and training system into a coherent one, our 
work suggests that greater efficiencies could be achieved. Three of 
the largest employment and training programs, the TANF, ES, and WIA 
Adult programs, provide some of the same employment and training 
services to low-income individuals, despite differences between the 
programs (see figure 2). While the TANF program serves low-income 
families with children, the ES and WIA Adult programs serve all 
adults, including low-income individuals. Specifically, the WIA Adult 
program gives priority for intensive and training services to 
recipients of public assistance and other low-income individuals when 
program funds are limited. All three programs share a common goal of 
helping individuals secure employment, and the TANF and WIA Adult 
programs also aim to reduce welfare dependency. However, employment is 
only one aspect of the TANF program, which has other broad social 
service goals, and as a result, TANF provides a wide range of other 
services beyond employment and training, including cash assistance. 

Figure 2: Employment and Training Services Provided by the TANF, 
Employment Service and WIA Adult Programs, Fiscal Year 2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table] 

Program name: Employment Service/Wagner-Peyser Funded Activities (DOL); 
Employment counseling and assessment: Secondary service; 
General Equivalency Diploma assistance: [Empty]; 
Development of job opportunities: Primary service; 
Job readiness skills training: Primary service; 
Job referrals: Primary service; 
Job retention training: [Empty]; 
Job search or job placement activities: Primary service; 
Occupational or vocational training: [Empty]; 
On-the-job training: [Empty]; 
Remedial academic, English language skills, or basic adult literacy: 
[Empty]; 
Work experience: [Empty]; 
Other: Primary service[A]. 

Program name: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (HHS); 
Employment counseling and assessment: Secondary service; 
General Equivalency Diploma assistance: Secondary service; 
Development of job opportunities: Primary service; 
Job readiness skills training: Secondary service; 
Job referrals: Secondary service; 
Job retention training: [Empty]; 
Job search or job placement activities: Secondary service; 
Occupational or vocational training: Secondary service; 
On-the-job training: Secondary service; 
Remedial academic, English language skills, or basic adult literacy: 
Secondary service; 
Work experience: Secondary service; 
Other: Primary service[B]. 

Program name: WIA Adult Program (DOL); 
Employment counseling and assessment: Primary service; 
General Equivalency Diploma assistance: Primary service; 
Development of job opportunities: Primary service; 
Job readiness skills training: Primary service; 
Job referrals: Primary service; 
Job retention training: Secondary service; 
Job search or job placement activities: Primary service; 
Occupational or vocational training: Primary service; 
On-the-job training: Primary service; 
Remedial academic, English language skills, or basic adult literacy: 
Secondary service; 
Work experience: Primary service; 
Other: [Empty]. 

Source: GAO survey of agency officials. 

[A] Job search workshops. 

[B] Subsidized employment. 

[End of figure] 

The TANF, ES, and WIA Adult programs maintain separate administrative 
structures to provide some of the same services to low-income 
individuals. At the federal level, the TANF program is administered by 
HHS, and the ES and WIA Adult programs are administered by Labor. At 
the state level, the TANF program is typically administered by the 
state human services or welfare agency, and the ES and WIA Adult 
programs are typically administered by the state workforce agency. By 
regulation, ES services must be provided by state employees.[Footnote 
20] At the local level, WIA regulations require at least one 
comprehensive one-stop center to be located in every local workforce 
investment area. These areas may have the same boundaries as counties, 
may be multicounty, or may be within or across county lines.[Footnote 
21] Similarly, every county typically has a TANF office. TANF 
employment and training services may be delivered at TANF offices, in 
one-stop centers, or through contracts with for-profit or nonprofit 
organizations, according to HHS officials. In one-stop centers, ES 
staff provide job search and other services to ES customers, while WIA 
staff provide job search and other services to WIA Adult customers. 

Florida, Texas, and Utah have consolidated the state workforce and 
welfare agencies that administer the TANF, ES, and WIA Adult programs, 
among other programs.[Footnote 22] In Utah, the workforce agency 
administers the TANF program in its entirety. In Florida and Texas, 
the workforce agencies administer only that part of TANF related to 
employment and training services. In all three states, the one-stop 
centers serve as portals to a range of social services, including 
TANF. Officials from these three states told us that consolidating 
agencies led to cost savings through the reduction of staff and 
facilities. For example, a Utah official said that the state reduced 
the number of buildings in which employment and training services were 
provided from 104 to 34. According to a Texas official, Texas also 
privatized 3,000 full-time staff equivalents (FTE) at the local level, 
which reduced the pension, retirement, and insurance costs that had 
previously been associated with these state positions. Officials in 
the three states, however, could not provide a dollar figure for the 
cost savings that resulted from consolidation. 

State officials also told us that consolidation improved the quality 
of services for participants in the WIA Adult and TANF programs. An 
official in Utah noted the consolidation allowed job seekers to apply 
for assistance they had not considered in the past, allowed employment 
counselors to cluster services that made sense for the client, and 
allowed clients to experience seamless service delivery. These 
benefits reflected what the official said was one of the visions of 
consolidation: having one employment plan per client, rather than 
multiple employment plans for clients served by multiple programs. 
While Florida officials acknowledged that a subset of TANF clients 
have significant barriers to employment--such as mental health issues--
that one-stop centers may not be well equipped to address, officials 
said that the one-stops in their state are able to address the 
employment and training needs of the majority of TANF clients. When 
asked about the quality of the TANF and workforce programs in Florida, 
Texas, and Utah, Labor officials were not aware of any performance 
problems in these programs and added that they view all three states 
as forerunners in program improvement efforts. That said, they noted 
that Utah may not be representative of other states, due to its 
relatively small and homogenous population. In addition, officials 
from the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP) said that Texas and 
Florida may place more of an emphasis on quickly finding work for TANF 
clients than other states. 

Even with the benefits identified by state officials, consolidation 
may have its challenges. An official in Utah noted that the 
reorganization of state agencies and staff was time-consuming and 
costly, and it took several years before any cost savings were 
realized. For example, developing a shared database across programs 
increased costs temporarily. In addition, when states consolidate 
their agencies, they must still adhere to separate program 
requirements for TANF and WIA. A 2004 article on service integration 
by authors from CLASP and the Hudson Institute concluded that options 
were available for states to make significant progress in integrating 
TANF and WIA services, but it also noted the difficulty in 
administering separate programs with different requirements.[Footnote 
23] The article specifically noted differences in work requirements, 
program performance measures, and reporting requirements, among 
others. A Utah official said that it was important for program 
administrators to be knowledgeable about these separate reporting 
requirements and processes across the multiple federal agencies that 
oversee these programs. Similarly, this official said that direct 
service staff needed to be knowledgeable about multiple programs and 
how to allocate costs across these programs. For states that have not 
consolidated their workforce and welfare agencies, not knowing what 
actions are allowable under the law may present a challenge to 
consolidation. According to the article on service integration, states 
face some legal barriers to fully integrating TANF and WIA services, 
but if they do not know what is allowable under the law, they may not 
always exercise the full range of options available to them. 

In conclusion, understanding how well the one-stop system is reducing 
fragmentation through coordinated service delivery would be useful in 
deciding where efficiencies could be achieved, but no study has been 
undertaken to evaluate the effectiveness of the one-stop system 
approach. While a few program impact studies have been done or are 
underway, these studies largely take a program-by-program approach 
rather than focusing on understanding which approaches are most 
effective in streamlining service delivery and improving one-stop 
efficiency. In addition, Labor's efforts to collaborate with other 
agencies to assess the effects of different strategies to integrate 
job-seeker services have been limited. We previously recommended that 
Labor collaborate with Education, HHS, and the Department of Housing 
and Urban Development (HUD) to develop a research agenda that examines 
the impacts of various approaches to program integration on job seeker 
and employer satisfaction and outcomes.[Footnote 24] Labor has 
committed to collaborating with other agencies and has involved them 
in developing inter-agency initiatives for certain targeted 
activities, but has not yet evaluated the effectiveness of the one-
stop system. 

While states and localities have undertaken some potentially promising 
initiatives to achieve greater administrative efficiencies, little 
information is available about the strategies and results of these 
initiatives; therefore, it is unclear the extent to which practices in 
these states could serve as models for others. Moreover, little is 
known about the incentives states and localities have to undertake 
such initiatives and whether additional incentives may be needed. We 
recently recommended that the Secretaries of Labor and HHS work 
together to develop and disseminate information that could inform such 
efforts, including information on state initiatives to consolidate 
program administrative structures and state and local efforts to 
colocate additional programs at one-stop centers. As part of this 
effort, we recommended that Labor and HHS examine the incentives for 
states and localities to undertake such initiatives and, as warranted, 
identify options for increasing them. In their responses, Labor and 
HHS agreed with our recommendations. However, HHS noted that it lacks 
legal authority to mandate increased TANF-WIA coordination or to 
create incentives for such efforts.[Footnote 25] 

Increasing efficiencies among federal employment and training programs 
is clearly challenging. These are difficult issues to address because 
they may require agencies and Congress to re-examine within and across 
various mission areas the fundamental structure, operation, funding, 
and performance of a number of long-standing federal programs and 
activities. As the nation rises to meet its current fiscal challenges, 
GAO will continue to assist Congress and federal agencies in 
identifying actions needed to address these issues. 

Chairwoman Foxx, Ranking Member Hinojosa, and Members of the 
Subcommittee, this completes my prepared statement. I would be happy 
to respond to any questions you may have at this time. 

GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

For further information regarding this testimony, please contact me at 
(202) 512-7215 or sherrilla@gao.gov. Individuals making key 
contributions to this testimony include Dianne Blank, Pamela Davidson, 
Patrick Dibattista, Alex Galuten, Jennifer Gregory, Isabella Johnson, 
and Sheila McCoy. 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Federally Funded Employment and Training Programs by 
Agency, Fiscal Year 2009: 

Department of Labor: 
* Community-Based Job Training Grants; 
* Disabled Veterans' Outreach Program; 
* Employment Service/Wagner-Peyser Funded Activities; 
* H-1B Job Training Grants;	
* Homeless Veterans' Reintegration Project; 
* Job Corps; 
* Local Veterans' Employment Representative Program; 
* National Farmworker Jobs Program; 
* Native American Employment and Training; 
* Registered Apprenticeship and Other Training; 
* Reintegration of Ex-Offenders; 
* Senior Community Service Employment Program; 
* Trade Adjustment Assistance; 
* Transition Assistance Program; 
* Veterans' Workforce Investment Program; 
* WIA Adult Program; 
* WIA Youth Activities; 
* WIA Dislocated Workers; 
* WIA National Emergency Grants; 
* WANTO; 
* YouthBuild. 

Department of Education: 
* American Indian Vocational Rehabilitation Services; 
* Career and Technical Education — Basic Grants to States; 
* Career and Technical Education — Indian Set-aside; 
* Grants to States for Workplace and Community Transition Training for 
Incarcerated Individuals; 
* Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers Program; 
* Native Hawaiian Career and Technical Education; 
* Projects with Industry; 
* Rehabilitation Services — Vocational Rehabilitation Grants to States; 
* State-Supported Employment Services Program; 
* Tech-Prep Education; 
* Tribally Controlled Postsecondary Career and Technical Institutions. 

Department of Health and Human Services: 
* Community Services Block Grant
* Refugee and Entrant Assistance — Voluntary Agency Matching Grant 
Program; 
* Refugee and Entrant Assistance — Targeted Assistance Grants; 
* Refugee and Entrant Assistance — Social Services Program; 
* Refugee and Entrant Assistance — Targeted Assistance Discretionary 
Program; 
* Temporary Assistance for Needy Families; 
* Tribal Work Grants[A]. 

Department of the Interior: 
* Conservation Activities by Youth Service Organizations[B]; 
* Indian Employment Assistance
* Indian Vocational Training — United Tribes Technical College. 

Department of Agriculture: 
* SNAP Employment and Training Program. 

Department of Defense: 
* National Guard Youth Challenge Program. 

Environmental Protection Agency: 
* Brownfield Job Training Cooperative Agreements. 

Department of Justice: 
* Second Chance Act Prisoner Reentry Initiative. 

Department of Veterans Affairs: 
* Vocational Rehabilitation for Disabled Veterans[C]. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Employment and Training Programs: Opportunities Exist for Improving 
Efficiency. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-506T]. 
Washington, D.C.: April 7, 2011. 

Opportunities to Reduce Fragmentation, Overlap, and Potential 
Duplication in Federal Teacher Quality and Employment and Training 
Programs. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-509T]. 
Washington, D.C.: April 6, 2011. 

Opportunities to Reduce Potential Duplication in Government Programs, 
Save Tax Dollars, and Enhance Revenue.[hyperlink, 
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2011. 

Opportunities to Reduce Potential Duplication in Government Programs, 
Save Tax Dollars, and Enhance Revenue. [hyperlink, 
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Multiple Employment and Training Programs: Providing Information on 
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Workforce Investment Act: Labor Has Made Progress in Addressing Areas 
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Workforce Development: Community Colleges and One-Stop Centers 
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Workforce Investment Act: One-Stop System Infrastructure Continues to 
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Workforce Investment Act: Additional Actions Would Further Improve the 
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Workforce Investment Act: Substantial Funds Are Used for Training, but 
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Workforce Investment Act: States and Local Areas Have Developed 
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Workforce Investment Act: One-Stop Centers Implemented Strategies to 
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Multiple Employment Training Programs: Major Overhaul Needed to Reduce 
Costs, Streamline the Bureaucracy, and Improve Results. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-HEHS-95-53]. Washington, D.C.: 
January 10, 1995. 

Multiple Employment Training Programs: Overlap Among Programs Raises 
Questions About Efficiency. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/HEHS-94-193]. Washington, D.C.: July 
11, 1994. 

Multiple Employment Training Programs: Conflicting Requirements 
Underscore Need for Change. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-HEHS-94-120]. Washington, D.C.: 
March 10, 1994. 

Multiple Employment and Training Programs: Major Overhaul is Needed. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-HEHS-94-109]. 
Washington, D.C.: March 3, 1994. 

Multiple Employment Training Programs: Overlapping Programs Can Add 
Unnecessary Administrative Costs. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/HEHS-94-80]. Washington, D.C.: January 
28, 1994. 

Multiple Employment Training Programs: Conflicting Requirements Hamper 
Delivery of Services. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Pub. L. No. 105-220, 112 Stat. 936. 

[2] See GAO, Multiple Employment and Training Programs: Providing 
Information on Colocating Services and Consolidating Administrative 
Structures Could Promote Efficiencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-92] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 13, 
2011). 

[3] For a list of programs and agencies, see appendix I. 

[4] For information on the amount each program reported spending on 
employment and training services in fiscal year 2009, and the 
estimated amount spent in fiscal year 2010, see GAO-11-92, appendixes 
II and III. 

[5] Impact studies, which many researchers consider to be the best 
method for determining the extent to which a program is causing 
participant outcomes, can be difficult and expensive to conduct, as 
they take steps to examine what would have happened in the absence of 
a program to isolate its impact from other factors. 

[6] Pub. L. No. 105-220, 112 Stat. 936 (1998). 

[7] David H. Bradley, The Workforce Investment Act and the One-Stop 
Delivery System, a report prepared for the Congressional Research 
Service (Washington, D.C.: Jan.10, 2011). According to CRS, WIA also 
amended the Wagner-Peyser Act of 1933, which establishes the 
Employment Service, to make the Employment Service an integral part of 
the one-stop system. 

[8] Pub. L. No. 97-300, 96 Stat. 1322 (1982). 

[9] For the repeal of JTPA, see Pub. L. No. 105-220 § 199(b)(2), 
(c)(2)(B), 112 Stat. 936, 1059. For the new WIA Adult and Dislocated 
Worker programs, see § 131 et seq., 112 Stat. 936, 982. For the new 
WIA Youth Program, see § 126 et seq., 112 Stat. 936, 971. 

[10] Pub. L. No. 105-220 §134(c), 112 Stat. 936, 992. WIA required 
that one-stop centers be established in local workforce investment 
areas in all participating states. States are responsible for 
designating local workforce investment areas, and each state must have 
one or more local areas. As of April 2007, we found that the number of 
local areas in each state ranged from 1 to 50. 

[11] Pub. L. No. 105-220 §134(c)(2)(A), 112 Stat. 936, 993. 

[12] According to Labor officials, although WIA required 17 categories 
of programs to participate in the one-stop system, the Welfare-to-Work 
program has been discontinued, reducing the total to 16 categories of 
required programs. For the purposes of this testimony, we refer to 
these 16 categories of programs as "required programs." 

[13] Fiscal year 2010 appropriations were reported by federal agency 
officials in GAO's 2010 survey of employment and training programs. 
Because the TANF program is not required to provide services through 
the one-stop system, the appropriations represented by these 13 
program categories do not include appropriations for the TANF program. 

[14] See GAO, Workforce Investment Act: One-Stop System Infrastructure 
Continues to Evolve, but Labor Should Take Action to Require That All 
Employment Service Offices Are Part of the System, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1096] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 4, 
2007). 

[15] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1096]. We 
defined infrastructure costs as the nonpersonnel costs necessary for 
the general operation of a one-stop center, including the rental costs 
of the facilities, costs of utilities and maintenance, and equipment 
(including adaptive technology for individuals with disabilities). 

[16] See GAO, Workforce Investment Act: One-Stop Centers Implemented 
Strategies to Strengthen Services and Partnerships, but More Research 
and Information Sharing Is Needed, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-725] (Washington, D.C.: June 18, 
2003). As part of this study, we visited 14 one-stop centers that were 
identified as exemplary by government officials and workforce 
development experts. 

[17] Specifically, we reported that colocating community college staff 
at one-stop centers can result in these benefits. See GAO, Workforce 
Development: Community Colleges and One-Stop Centers Collaborate to 
Meet 21st Century Workforce Needs, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-547] (Washington, D.C.: May 15, 
2008). 

[18] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-725]. 

[19] See, for example, H.R. 27 and S.1021 from the 109TH Congress. 

[20] 20 C.F.R. § 652.215. 

[21] 20 C.F.R. § 662.100(c). 

[22] In 2000, Florida consolidated its state workforce programs and 
the employment and training part of the TANF program under its new 
Agency for Workforce Innovation. In 1995, Texas consolidated 28 
employment and training programs from 10 agencies into one agency, the 
Texas Workforce Commission, including the employment and training 
services under the TANF program. In 1997, Utah consolidated six 
agencies that were administering 23 employment and training programs 
into the state Department of Workforce Services. We chose to interview 
officials in these three states since they are considered to be the 
furthest along in their efforts to consolidate agencies. We did not 
conduct a legal analysis of state programs. 

[23] See Mark Greenberg and Jennifer L. Noyes, "The Opportunities for 
Service Integration Under Current Law," Focus, Vol. 23, No. 2, Summer 
2004. This article summarized a 2004 CLASP analysis of the legal 
issues related to integrating TANF employment services with WIA 
programs. The article defined a fully integrated workforce development 
system as one where all unemployed and employed workers could seek 
employment assistance from a universal system, and states and 
localities could structure service strategies based on individualized 
assessments and needs instead of on federal rules specifying 
particular approaches for particular categories of claimants. 

[24] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-725]. 

[25] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-92]. 

[End of section] 

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