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Report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging 

Threats, and International Relations, Committee on Government Reform, 

House of Representatives:



United States General Accounting Office:



GAO:



April 2003:



Embassy Construction:



Process for Determining Staffing Requirements Needs Improvement:



Linking Staffing Needs to Embassy Construction:



GAO-03-411:



GAO Highlights:



Highlights of GAO-03-411, a report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on 

National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations, House 

Committee on Government Reform 



Why GAO Did This Study:



The 1998 terrorist attacks on two U.S. embassies in Africa highlighted 

security deficiencies in diplomatic facilities, leading the Department 

of State to embark on an estimated $16 billion embassy construction 

program. The program’s key objective is to provide safe, secure, and 

cost-effective buildings for employees overseas. Given that the size 

and cost of new facilities are directly related to agencies’ 

anticipated staffing needs, it is imperative that future requirements 

be projected as accurately as possible.



GAO was asked to (1) assess whether State and other federal agencies 

have adopted a disciplined process for determining future staffing 

requirements and (2) review cost-sharing proposals for agencies with 

overseas staff.



What GAO Found:



U.S. agencies’ staffing projections for new embassy compounds are 

developed without a systematic approach or comprehensive rightsizing 

analyses. State’s headquarters gave embassies little guidance on 

factors to consider in developing projections, and thus U.S. agencies 

did not take a consistent or systematic approach to determining 

long-term staffing needs. Officials from each of the 14 posts GAO 

contacted reported that their headquarters bureaus had not provided 

specific, formal guidance on important factors to consider when 

developing staffing projections. The process was further complicated by 

the frequent turnover of embassy personnel who did not maintain 

documentation on projection exercises. Finally, staffing projections 

were not consistently vetted with all other agencies’ headquarters. 

Because of these deficiencies, the government could construct 

wrong-sized buildings. In fact, officials at two embassies GAO visited 

said that due to poor projections, their sites may be inadequate almost 

immediately after staff move onto the new compound.



State has proposed a cost-sharing plan that would require federal 

agencies to help fund new embassy construction. The Office of 

Management and Budget (OMB) is leading an interagency committee to 

develop a cost-sharing mechanism that would provide more discipline 

when determining overseas staffing needs and encourage agencies to 

think more carefully before posting personnel overseas. Numerous issues

will need to be resolved for such a program to be successful, including 

how to structure the program and how payments will be made.



What GAO Recommends:



GAO recommends that the Department of State (1) develop standard and 

comprehensive guidance for projecting staffing requirements, (2) 

require the retention of documentation on how embassies determined 

these requirements, and (3) ensure that all staffing projections have 

been validated. 



We received comments from State, OMB, and the U.S. Agency for 

International Development, all of which generally agreed with our 

conclusions and recommendations.



www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-411.

To view the full report, including the scope and methodology, click 

on the link above. For more information, contact Jess T. Ford at 

(202) 512-4128 or fordj@gao.gov.



[End of section]



Contents:



Letter:



Results in Brief:



Background:



Systematic Effort to Project Staffing Needs for New Embassies Is 

Lacking:



Government Aims to Distribute Costs of Overseas Facilities among Users:



Conclusions:



Recommendations for Executive Action:



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



Scope and Methodology:



Appendix I: Standard Embassy Compound Design:



Appendix II: Comments from the Department of State:



Appendix III: Comments from the U.S. Agency for International 

Development:



Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:



GAO Contact:



Staff Acknowledgments:



Table:



Table 1: Notional Distribution of Costs under State’s Capital Security 

Cost-sharing Proposal Based on a May 2001 Overseas Personnel Survey:



Figures:



Figure 1: Map of New Embassy Compound Construction Projects, Fiscal 

Years 1999 through 2004 Funding:



Figure 2: Major Milestones in Planning for a New Embassy Compound 

Scheduled for Fiscal Year 2007 Funding:



Figure 3: Components of OBO’s Staffing Projection Process:



Figure 4: Standard Design for New Embassy Compounds:



Abbreviations:



ICASS: International Cooperative Administrative Support Services

OBO: Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations 

OMB: Office of Management and Budget 

OPAP: Overseas Presence Advisory Panel

USAID: U.S. Agency for International Development:



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this material separately.



United States General Accounting Office:



Washington, DC 20548:



April 7, 2003:



The Honorable Christopher Shays

Chairman, Subcommittee on National Security,

 Emerging Threats, and International Relations

Committee on Government Reform

House of Representatives:



Dear Mr. Chairman:



As a result of the 1998 terrorist attacks on two U.S. embassies in 

Africa, which highlighted the security deficiencies in U.S. diplomatic 

facilities, the Department of State has embarked on an estimated $16 

billion embassy construction program, the largest program of its kind 

in the department’s history. The program’s key objective is to provide 

safe, secure, and cost-effective buildings for employees working 

overseas. Given that the size and cost of new facilities are directly 

related to anticipated staffing requirements for these posts, it is 

imperative that future staffing needs be projected as accurately as 

possible.



In August 2001, the President identified rightsizing[Footnote 1] of 

embassies and consulates as one of his management priorities.[Footnote 

2] One of the goals of this initiative is to develop accurate staffing 

projections for new overseas construction. In July 2002, we developed a 

framework for assessing embassy staff levels to help support 

rightsizing initiatives for existing facilities.[Footnote 3] However, 

developing staffing requirements for a new embassy is much more 

difficult than for an existing facility because it requires managers to 

project staffing needs 5 to 7 years in the future.



In response to your concerns, we assessed whether State and other 

federal agencies have adopted a disciplined process for determining 

staffing requirements for new embassies and consulates. We also 

reviewed cost-sharing proposals for agencies with overseas staff. To 

meet these objectives, we collected documentation from and conducted 

interviews with executive branch agencies in Washington, D.C., 

including the Departments of State, Defense, Justice, and others, 

regarding future staffing requirements, the projection process, and the 

extent to which cost considerations were factored into the decision-

making process. To assess agencies’ actions in developing staffing 

requirements, we visited seven U.S. posts and contacted seven 

additional embassies in a range of geographic regions, all of which are 

slated for new compounds. These posts represent about 16 percent of the 

new embassy compound projects in State’s construction plan for fiscal 

years 2002 through 2007, and 23 percent of these projects are expected 

to be funded by fiscal year 2005.



Results in Brief:



U.S. agencies’ staffing projections for new embassy compounds are 

developed without a systematic approach or comprehensive rightsizing 

analyses. Officials at the embassies we visited approached the process 

in different ways. For example, some embassies solicited input from all 

agencies and held several meetings to discuss future needs, while 

others developed requirements without serious effort or review. 

Although embassies play a key role in the projection process, State 

Department headquarters officials provide chiefs of mission[Footnote 4] 

with little formal guidance on factors to consider when setting 

requirements, nor do they stress the importance of accurate 

projections. Moreover, at each of the seven posts we visited, we found 

little or no documentation to show that staff had completed a 

comprehensive assessment of the number and types of people they would 

need in the year that their embassy would be completed. In fact, a 

failure to account for recent growth in current staffing levels at one 

embassy we visited led to final projections that were too low and may 

result in significant overcrowding in the new facility. In addition, 

State’s geographic bureaus[Footnote 5] are not consistently reviewing 

and validating projections to ensure that they accurately reflect 

future requirements. Finally, additional factors complicate the 

projection process, including the frequent turnover of embassy 

personnel and other breakdowns in communication among multiple agencies 

with differing requirements on new embassy compounds. Building secure 

and modern facilities for U.S. government employees working overseas is 

extremely important and will require a significant investment. However, 

without a systematic process, the U.S. government risks building wrong-

sized facilities, which could lead to security concerns, additional 

costs, and other work inefficiencies.



The State Department has proposed the Capital Security Cost-sharing 

Plan that would require federal agencies to help fund its embassy 

construction program. Currently, other U.S. agencies are not required 

to fund capital improvements to overseas facilities. The Office of 

Management and Budget (OMB) is working with State and other agencies 

through an interagency committee to develop a cost-sharing mechanism 

that would provide more discipline when determining U.S. government 

overseas staffing needs. The administration has committed to 

implementing greater cost sharing among agencies that use overseas 

facilities because it believes that if agencies are required to pay a 

greater share of the costs associated with their overseas presence, 

they will weigh cost considerations more carefully before posting 

personnel overseas. The interagency committee will consider State’s and 

others’ proposals when developing a new cost-sharing mechanism. There 

are numerous issues that will need to be resolved for a cost-sharing 

program to be successful, such as how best to structure the program, 

how charges will be determined, and how payments will be made.



This report contains recommendations to the Secretary of State that the 

department (1) develop standard and comprehensive guidance for 

projecting staffing requirements for new embassy compounds, (2) require 

the retention of documentation on how agencies and embassies determined 

these requirements and the rationales for the decisions, and (3) ensure 

chiefs of mission and State’s geographic bureaus certify that the 

projections have been reviewed and vetted before they are submitted to 

State’s Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations (OBO).



We received written comments from State and the U.S. Agency for 

International Development (USAID), which we have reprinted in 

appendixes II and III. We also received oral comments from OMB, which 

we have summarized at the end of this report. All three agencies agreed 

with our findings, conclusions, and recommendations.



Background:



The 1998 terrorist bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania 

highlighted the compelling need for safe and secure overseas 

facilities. Following the bombings, two high-level independent groups 

cited problems at U.S. overseas facilities. In January 1999, the 

chairman of the Accountability Review Boards,[Footnote 6] formed to 

investigate the bombings, reported that unless security vulnerabilities 

associated with U.S. overseas facilities were addressed, “U.S. 

Government employees and the public in many of our facilities abroad” 

would be at continued risk from further terrorist bombings.[Footnote 7] 

Later that year, the Overseas Presence Advisory Panel (OPAP)[Footnote 

8] concluded that many U.S. overseas facilities are unsafe, 

overcrowded, deteriorating, and “shockingly shabby” and recommended 

major capital improvements and more accountability for security. In 

addition, the panel recommended that the United States consider 

rightsizing its overseas presence to reduce security vulnerabilities. 

In January 2001, we recommended that State develop a long-term capital 

construction plan to guide the multibillion dollar program to build new 

secure facilities.[Footnote 9] We also reported in July 2002 on a 

rightsizing framework we developed to facilitate the use of a common 

set of criteria for making staff assessments and adjustments at 

overseas posts, which included consideration of security, mission 

priorities and requirements, and costs. We recommended that OMB use the 

framework as a basis for assessing staffing levels at existing overseas 

posts.[Footnote 10]



Figure 1 illustrates the locations worldwide for which State has 

received funding for new embassy compound construction in fiscal years 

1999 through 2003 and for which it has requested funding for projects 

in fiscal year 2004.



Figure 1: Map of New Embassy Compound Construction Projects, Fiscal 

Years 1999 through 2004 Funding:



[See PDF for image]



Note: The facilities in Cape Town, Istanbul, and Surabaya are U.S. 

consulates. We did not include other projects, such as the construction 

of new annex buildings on existing compounds, for which State has 

received or requested funding during this period.



[A] Indicates projects for which State has requested funding in fiscal 

year 2004.



[End of figure]:



In July 2001, State published its first Long-Range Overseas Building 

Plan, a planning document that outlines the U.S. government’s overseas 

facilities requirements and guides implementation of State’s expansive 

and unprecedented overseas construction program. This program aims to 

provide safe, secure, and cost-effective buildings for the thousands of 

U.S. employees working overseas. State identified the projects with the 

most compelling case for replacement and ranked them in the plan, which 

OBO plans to update annually as compounds are completed and new 

projects are added to the priority list.[Footnote 11] The current long-

range plan describes building new embassy compounds at more than 70 

locations during fiscal years 2002 through 2007.[Footnote 12] State 

estimates this will cost more than $6.2 billion.[Footnote 13] 

Additional funding will be needed after this time to continue the 

program.



State’s construction program of the late 1980s encountered lengthy 

delays and cost overruns in part because of a lack of coordinated 

planning of post requirements prior to approval and budgeting for 

construction projects. As we reported in 1991, meaningful planning 

began only after project budgets had been authorized and funded. As 

real needs were determined, changes in scope and increases in costs 

followed.[Footnote 14] OBO now requires that all staffing projections 

for new embassy compounds be finalized prior to submitting funding 

requests, which are sent to the Congress as part of State’s annual 

budget request each February. To accomplish this task, OBO requires 

that final staffing projections be submitted the previous spring. 

Figure 2 outlines the major milestones and highlights key dates in the 

planning and construction process for a new embassy compound scheduled 

for 2007 funding. As Figure 2 depicts, OBO will receive final staffing 

projections for fiscal year 2007 projects in spring 2005. Between 

spring 2005 and February 2006, OBO will develop more firm cost 

estimates for the project, vet the resulting funding requirements 

through OMB, and submit the funding request to the Congress. 

Appropriations for these fiscal year 2007 projects will not be secured 

until at least October 2006--18 months after final projections are 

submitted--and construction may not begin for another 6 months. In 

total, OBO estimates that, in some cases, it could take 2 to 3 years 

from the time projections are finalized to actually begin construction 

of a new compound, which could take another 2 to 3 years to complete.



Figure 2: Major Milestones in Planning for a New Embassy Compound 

Scheduled for Fiscal Year 2007 Funding:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]





To ensure that projects in the long-range plan proceed on schedule and 

at cost, OBO will not request additional funding to accommodate changes 

made after funding requests are submitted to the Congress. Once OBO 

receives appropriations for construction projects, it moves immediately 

to complete the design of a new compound and secure a contracting firm 

for the project. Changes to staffing projections after this point may 

result in redesign and could lead to lengthy delays and additional 

costs, according to an OBO official. For example, large changes 

generally require that materials already purchased for the project be 

replaced with new materials. According to OBO, there is little room for 

flexibility after the budget is submitted given budgetary and 

construction time frames. However, OBO does include a margin of error 

in the designs for all new embassy compounds, which typically allows 

for a 5-10 percent increase in building size to accommodate some 

additional growth.



A key component of the planning process outlined in figure 2 is the 

development of staffing projections for new embassy compounds. Staffing 

projections present the number of staff likely to work in the facility 

and the type of work they will perform. These are the two primary 

drivers of the size and cost of new facilities. Individual embassies 

and consulates, in consultation with headquarters bureaus and offices, 

are responsible for developing the staffing projections, which OBO then 

uses to design the new compounds and prepare funding requests. As the 

government’s overseas real property manager, OBO must rely on the other 

bureaus in the State Department and other U.S. agencies for policy and 

staffing decisions. OBO is not in a position to independently validate 

the projections once the geographic bureaus have given their approval.



To help ensure that new compounds are designed as accurately as 

possible, OBO designed a system for collecting future staffing 

requirements, as shown in figure 3, that encourages the active 

participation of embassy personnel, officials in State’s geographic 

bureaus, and officials from all other relevant federal 

agencies.[Footnote 15] This process also calls upon embassy management 

and geographic bureaus to review and validate all projections before 

submitting them to OBO. OBO generally gives embassies and geographic 

bureaus the opportunity to submit staffing projections several times 

before they are finalized.



Figure 3: Components of OBO’s Staffing Projection Process:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]





Finally, it should be noted that while OBO takes the lead in designing 

and constructing all buildings on new embassy compounds, OBO is not 

always responsible for securing funding for all compound buildings. 

Pursuant to an informal agreement between OBO and USAID, USAID will 

secure funding for a separate annex in a compound when it requires desk 

space for 50 or more employees. However, if USAID projects it will need 

fewer than 50 desks, its offices will be in the chancery building in 

the compound, which State would fund, as it would for all U.S. 

government agencies in the chancery. According to OBO and USAID 

headquarters officials, there is some flexibility in the maximum number 

of USAID desk spaces allowed in a chancery, and this issue is handled 

on a case-by-case basis.



Systematic Effort to Project Staffing Needs for New Embassies Is 

Lacking:



Although OBO has designed a reasonable approach to developing staffing 

projections, we found that it was not adopted uniformly across all of 

the embassies and geographic bureaus that we studied. While some of the 

embassies we examined have conducted relatively thorough analyses of 

their future needs, in other cases the process has been managed poorly, 

both in the field and at headquarters offices, thus raising concerns 

about the validity of the projected requirements. For example, with few 

exceptions, officials at the posts we visited did not appreciate the 

seriousness of the staffing projection process as it relates to the 

size and cost of new diplomatic facilities. Moreover, none of the 

embassies we contacted received formal, detailed guidance on how to 

develop projections. In addition, they had no systematic approach, such 

as the one presented in our framework, to conducting rightsizing 

analyses that would ensure that projected needs are the minimum 

necessary to support U.S. national security interests. In general, for 

the embassies we contacted, rightsizing exercises were largely limited 

to predictions of future workload, priorities, and funding levels, and 

did not include analyses of other factors, such as operational costs. 

Moreover, none of the embassies we contacted conducted a rightsizing 

analysis of existing staffing levels prior to projecting future 

requirements. We also found that posts did not maintain documentation 

of the assessments they conducted when completing staffing projections, 

and that State’s geographic bureaus did not consistently vet posts’ 

projections prior to submitting them to OBO. Finally, the process was 

further complicated by other factors, such as frequent personnel 

turnover and breakdowns in communication among multiple agencies.



Efforts to Develop Staffing Projections Vary Significantly across 

Embassies and Geographic Bureaus:



We found that staffing projection exercises were not consistent across 

all of the embassies we contacted, and, indeed, State officials 

acknowledged that efforts to develop and validate projections were 

informal and undisciplined. Some embassy management teams were more 

engaged in the projection process than others. For instance, at several 

of the U.S. embassies we contacted, chiefs of mission or deputy chiefs 

of mission led interagency, or country team, meetings to discuss the 

embassy’s long-term priorities and the staffing implications. In 

addition, management followed up with agency representatives in one-on-

one meetings to discuss each agency’s projected requirements. However, 

management teams at other embassies we contacted, such as the U.S. 

embassies in Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro, and Tbilisi, Georgia, 

were less engaged and had relied mainly on administrative officers to 

collect information from each agency informally. In Belgrade, officials 

acknowledged that the projection exercise was not taken seriously and 

that projections were not developed using a disciplined approach. In 

Tbilisi, a failure to document recent growth in current staffing levels 

led to final projections that were too low. OBO has had to meet 

immediate additional requirements by using all of the growth space it 

built into the original compound design and reducing the amount of 

common space, such as conference rooms, to accommodate additional 

offices. Therefore, the new facility may be overcrowded upon opening, 

embassy officials said. If embassy or headquarters officials 

communicated earlier to OBO the likelihood of large staffing increases 

by the time construction was completed, OBO might have been able to 

better accommodate these needs in its plans.



In addition to inconsistencies in the field, we found that officials in 

the geographic bureaus in Washington, D.C., whose staff are responsible 

for working most closely with embassies and consulates, also have 

varied levels of involvement in the projection process. Officials with 

whom we spoke in State’s geographic bureaus acknowledged that there is 

no mechanism to ensure the full participation of all relevant parties. 

When these officials were more involved, we have more confidence in the 

accuracy of the projections submitted to OBO. For example, officials 

from the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, China, said that representatives from 

their geographic bureau in Washington, D.C., have been very involved in 

developing their projections. They reported that the geographic bureau 

contacted all federal agencies that might be tenants at the new 

embassy--even agencies that currently have no staff in the country--to 

determine their projected staffing needs. Conversely, officials at 

Embassy Belgrade said State’s geographic bureau did not request any 

justifications for or provide any input into the final projections 

submitted to OBO. Officials in the geographic bureau acknowledged that 

the bureau does not require formal justification for embassies’ 

projected staffing requirements for new compounds. Given the weaknesses 

in how staffing projections were developed in Embassy Belgrade, State 

has little assurance that the planned compound will be the right size.



Embassies Do Not Receive Consistent, Formal Guidance on Staffing 

Projection Process and Importance of Rightsizing:



Our analysis indicates that the State Department is not providing 

embassies with sufficient formal guidance on important time lines in 

the projection process or factors to consider when developing staffing 

projections for new embassy compounds. Officials from each of the 14 

posts we contacted reported that their headquarters bureaus had not 

provided specific, formal guidance on important factors to consider 

when developing staffing projections. One geographic bureau provided 

its embassies with a brief primer on the process by which State 

determines priorities for new embassy compounds that broadly described 

the projection process and OBO’s long-range plan. However, we found 

that State generally did not advise embassies to consider factors such 

as (1) anticipated changes in funding levels, (2) the likelihood that 

policy changes could result in additional or fewer work requirements, 

(3) linkages between agencies’ annual operating costs and the 

achievement of embassy goals, (4) costs associated with their presence 

in a new facility, or (5) alternative ways to consolidate certain 

positions among neighboring embassies, among others. Absent such 

guidance from Washington, D.C., we found that factors that embassy 

officials considered when developing projections varied on a case-by-

case basis. Officials at Embassy Sarajevo, for example, conducted a 

relatively thorough analysis of their future needs, including 

consulting World Bank indicators for Bosnia-Herzegovina to determine 

the likelihood of increased U.S. investment in the region and link 

future staffing needs accordingly. In addition, a consular affairs 

officer analyzed the likelihood that new security requirements for 

consular sections, which may allow only American consular officers to 

screen visa applicants, would boost that section’s staffing 

requirements.



Other embassies we contacted conducted less thorough analyses of future 

needs. For example, officials from several of the other embassies we 

contacted reported that they largely relied on information from annual 

Mission Performance Plans[Footnote 16] to justify future staffing needs 

in a new compound. Although the performance plan links staffing to 

budgets and performance, and may include goals related to improving 

diplomatic facilities, it is a near-term tool. For example, performance 

plans for fiscal year 2004 identify goals and strategies only for that 

fiscal year. For a project scheduled for 2004 funding, an embassy may 

go through two or three additional performance planning cycles before 

embassy staff move onto a new compound. The performance plan, while a 

reasonable starting point, is not directly linked to long-term staffing 

requirements and by itself is not sufficient to justify staffing 

decisions for new compounds.



Indeed, an official from one geographic bureau said that while the 

bureau works with the embassies in developing staffing projections, it 

generally does not send out additional or separate formal guidance to 

all relevant embassies. Although OBO informed the geographic bureaus 

that final projections for fiscal year 2004 funding would be due in 

spring 2002, officials at some of the embassies we examined were 

unaware of this deadline. For example, officials at the U.S. Embassy in 

Harare, Zimbabwe, said they lacked information on the major time frames 

in the funding process for their new compound. Officials at the Embassy 

Belgrade said they were unaware that the projections they submitted to 

OBO in spring 2002 would be their final chance to project future 

staffing needs, and that the results would be used as the basis for the 

new compound’s design. In other words, they did not know that 

additional requirements they might submit would not result in a larger-

sized building.



Use of Rightsizing Exercises:



According to OBO, individual embassies should have conducted 

rightsizing exercises before submitting the staffing projections used 

to develop the July 2001 version of the long-range plan. In addition, 

in January 2002, OBO advised all geographic bureaus that staffing 

projections should incorporate formalized rightsizing initiatives 

early in the process so that building designs would accurately reflect 

the embassies’ needs. However, OBO is not in a position to know what 

processes the geographic bureaus use when developing staffing 

projections. Indeed, OBO officials stated that they cannot hold the 

geographic bureaus accountable for policy-related decisions and can 

only assume that rightsizing exercises have been incorporated into the 

projection process.



The degree to which each geographic bureau stressed the importance of 

rightsizing staffing projections differed across the embassies we 

studied. We found that agencies at the posts we examined were not 

consistently considering the three critical elements of diplomatic 

operations outlined in our rightsizing frameworkæphysical security of 

facilities, mission priorities and responsibilities, and operational 

costs--when determining future staffing requirements. In general, for 

these posts, rightsizing exercises were largely limited to predictions 

of future funding levels and likely workloads. For example, officials 

at each of the seven posts we visited reported that staffing 

projections were, in large part, linked to anticipated funding levels. 

In Skopje, for example, USAID officials estimated that funding levels 

for some programs, such as the democracy and governance program, could 

decline significantly over the next 5 years and could result in a 

reduction in staff assigned to these areas.



Although these embassies had considered mission requirements as part of 

the projection process, they did not consistently consider other 

factors that are mentioned above, such as options for relocating 

certain positions to regional centers or consolidating other positions 

among neighboring embassies. Moreover, decision makers at these 

embassies used current staffing levels as the basis for projecting 

future requirements. None of the posts we contacted conducted a 

rightsizing analysis of existing staffing levels prior to projecting 

future requirements. In addition, we found that most agencies with 

staff overseas are not consistently considering operational costs when 

developing their staffing projections. The President’s rightsizing 

initiative has emphasized cost as a critical factor in determining 

overseas staffing levels. However, during our fieldwork, only USAID 

officials consistently reported that they considered the implications 

of anticipated program funding on staffing levels and the resulting 

operational costs. Furthermore, we found only one instance where an 

agency, the U.S. Commercial Service, reported that as part of its 

overseas staffing process, it compares operating costs of field offices 

with the performance of those offices.



Little Documentation of Comprehensive Assessments of Long-term Staffing 

Needs:



At each of the seven posts we visited, we found little or no 

documentation to show that staff had completed a comprehensive 

assessment of the number and types of people they would need in the 

year that their new embassy would be completed. As part of our prior 

work on rightsizing, we developed examples of key questions that may be 

useful for embassy managers in making staffing decisions. These 

include, but are not limited to the following questions:



* Is there adequate justification for the number of employees from each 

agency compared to the agency’s mission?



* What are the operating costs for each agency at the embassy?



* To what extent could agency program and/or routine administrative 

functions (procurement, logistics, and financial management functions) 

be handled from a regional center or other locations?

:



However, we did not find evidence of these types of analyses at the 

posts we visited. Officials from several embassies told us they had 

considered these factors; yet, they did not consistently document their 

analyses or the rationales for their decisions. Although officials at 

the embassies we visited said that these types of considerations are 

included as part of their annual Mission Performance Plan process, 

there was little evidence of analyses of long-term needs. Moreover, we 

found little or no documentation explaining how previous projections 

were developed or the justifications for these decisions. For example, 

by the time the new embassy compound is completed in Yerevan, Armenia, 

the embassy will be four administrative officers removed from the 

person who developed the original staffing requirements, and current 

embassy officials had no documentation on previous projection exercises 

or the decision-making processes. Thus, there was generally no 

institutional memory of and accountability for previous iterations of 

staffing projections. As a result, future management teams will not 

have accurate information on how or why previous decisions were made 

when they embark on efforts to update and finalize staffing 

projections.



Staffing Projections Are Not Vetted Consistently by Geographic Bureaus:



According to OBO, the relevant geographic bureaus are expected to 

review and verify the staffing projections developed by individual 

embassies and confirm these numbers with other agencies’ headquarters 

before they are submitted to OBO. However, we found that the degree to 

which the staffing projections were reviewed varied. For example, 

officials at Embassy Belgrade reported that their geographic bureau was 

not an active participant in projection exercises. But officials at 

Embassy Sarajevo reported that officials from the same geographic 

bureau were involved in the projection process and often requested 

justifications for some decisions. In addition, we found little 

evidence to show that staffing projections were consistently vetted 

with all other agencies’ headquarters to ensure that the projections 

were as accurate as possible. Indeed, State officials acknowledged that 

(1) State and other agencies’ headquarters offices are not held 

accountable for conducting formal vetting exercises once projections 

are received from the embassies; (2) there is no formal vetting 

process; and, (3) the geographic bureaus expect that officials in the 

field consult with all relevant agencies; therefore, the bureaus rarely 

contact agency headquarters officials.



Additional Factors Complicate Staffing Projection Process:



We found additional factors that further complicate the staffing 

projection process. First, frequent turnover of embassy personnel 

responsible for developing staffing projections results in a lack of 

continuity in the projection process. This turnover and the lack of 

formal documentation may prevent subsequent embassy personnel from 

building upon the work of their predecessors. Second, we found that 

coordinating the projected needs of all agencies could be problematic. 

For example, some agencies may decide not to be located in the new 

compound, while others, such as USAID, may have different requirements 

in the new compound. However, we found that these issues were not 

always communicated to embassy management in a timely fashion, early in 

the projection process.



Lack of Continuity in Projection Process:



Frequent turnover in embassy personnel can contribute to problems 

obtaining accurate staffing projections. Embassy staff may be assigned 

to a location for only 2 years, and at some locations, the assignment 

may be shorter. For instance, the U.S. Office in Pristina, Kosovo, and 

the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, have only a 1-year assignment 

requirement. Given that personnel responsible for developing the 

projections could change from year to year, and that posts may go 

through several updates before the numbers are finalized, the 

continuity of the projection process is disrupted each year as 

knowledgeable staff are transferred to new assignments. Officials in 

Kosovo reported that the frequent turnover of administrative personnel 

has forced incoming staff to rebuild institutional knowledge of the 

projection process each year.



Breakdowns in Communication among Multiple Agencies:



Part of the complexity of the projection process is the difficulty in 

coordinating staffing requirements for multiple agencies in a given 

location. Agencies’ space needs in the main office building may 

differ--for instance, some may require classified space, which is more 

expensive to construct and thus has different implications for the 

design and cost of a new building than unclassified space. However, 

agencies requesting office space may not currently be situated in the 

country in question and, thus, communication between them and embassy 

managers is difficult. For example, embassy management in Yerevan, 

Armenia, stated that one agency without personnel currently in Armenia 

did not notify the ambassador that it planned to request controlled 

access space in the new embassy. Embassy officials stated they learned 

of this only when floor plans for the new chancery were first 

delivered. These kinds of issues should be communicated to embassy 

managers in the early stages of the projection process so that the 

final projections are based on the most accurate information available. 

Embassy officials in Rangoon, Burma, for example, reported that close 

interaction among agencies at post and OBO during the staff projection 

process, under the leadership of the deputy chief of mission and the 

administrative officer, kept OBO apprised of changes to requirements 

early enough in the process that it was before the budget proposal was 

submitted to the Congress and the projections were locked.



Failure to Provide Timely Requests for Co-location Waivers:



Following the 1998 embassy bombings, a law was passed requiring that 

all U.S. agencies working at posts slated for new construction be 

located on the new embassy compounds unless they are granted a special 

co-location waiver.[Footnote 17] However, agencies are not required to 

submit these waiver requests prior to submitting their final staffing 

projections to OBO. To ensure that OBO has the most accurate 

projections, it is imperative that waiver requests be incorporated 

early in the staffing projection process so that OBO is not designing 

and funding buildings that are too large or too small. In Yerevan, for 

example, the Department of Agriculture office projected the need for 26 

desks in the new chancery, yet officials in Yerevan plan to use only 13 

of these desks and to house the remaining personnel in their current 

office space. However, Agriculture has not yet requested a waiver. If 

Agriculture receives a waiver and proceeds according to current plans, 

OBO will have designed space and requested funding for 13 extra desks 

for Agriculture staff. We found other instances where agencies had not 

requested a waiver before submitting final projections. In Sarajevo, 

for example, the Departments of the Defense, Treasury, and Justice have 

staff in host country ministries they advise. However, officials at 

Embassy Sarajevo, including the regional security officer, were 

uncertain about which agencies would be requesting a waiver for the new 

compound. Embassy officials acknowledged that these decisions must be 

made before the staffing projections are finalized.



Separate Funding for USAID Annexes Could Complicate the Projection 

Process:



In compounds where USAID is likely to require desk space for more than 

50 employees, it is required to secure funding in its own 

appropriations for an annex building on the compound. However, 

officials from at least two of the embassies we examined had trouble 

determining where USAID would be located, and this kind of problem 

could delay planning and disrupt OBO’s overall plan for concurrent 

construction of the USAID annex with the rest of the compound. For 

example, at Embassy Yerevan, confusion among USAID officials in 

Washington and the field over whether USAID would fund a separate annex 

has caused construction and funding on the annex to fall behind 

schedule. Therefore, USAID staff will not move to the new site 

concurrent with the rest of the embassy’s staff. Rather, USAID may be 

forced to remain at the current, insecure facilityæat an additional 

costæuntil completion of its annex, unless alternative arrangements can 

be made.



We also found a related problem in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, where 

USAID officials were concerned about having to build a separate annex. 

Current staffing levels and projections exceed the 50-desk level, which 

will require USAID to fund the construction of an annex on the 

compound. However, the assistance program may be declining 

significantly soon after the completion of the new compound and, as a 

result, the office may need far fewer staff. Thus, USAID may be 

constructing an annex that is oversized or unnecessary by the time 

construction is completed or soon after. USAID officials in Sarajevo 

acknowledged they would need to coordinate with embassy management and 

their headquarters offices regarding the decision to build a separate 

annex so that OBO has the most accurate projections possible.



The issue of USAID annex construction is further complicated by 

difficulty coordinating funding schedules. One of the key assumptions 

of the long-range plan is that where USAID requires a separate annex, 

construction will coincide with the State-funded construction projects. 

However, annual funding levels for USAID construction have been 

insufficient to keep chancery and USAID annex construction on the same 

track in some countries. In Tbilisi, Georgia, for example, funding for 

the USAID annex has fallen behind State Department funding by 2 to 3 

fiscal years. According to USAID officials in Washington, D.C., two-

track construction could lead to security concerns, work 

inefficiencies, and additional costs. Because USAID is required to 

secure funding for its annexes separate from State’s funding for new 

compounds, it is imperative that decisions regarding the future 

location of USAID personnel be made early in the staffing projection 

process to avoid additional security or financial risks.



Government Aims to Distribute Costs of Overseas Facilities among Users:



The State Department, which historically has been responsible for 

funding the construction and maintenance of U.S. embassies and 

consulates, recently proposed a capital security cost-sharing plan that 

would require federal agencies to help fund its embassy construction 

program. Traditionally, U.S. government agencies other than State have 

not been required to help fund capital improvements of U.S. embassies 

and consulates. OMB is examining State’s and other cost-sharing 

proposals designed to create more discipline in the process for 

determining overseas staffing requirements. The administration 

believes that if agencies were required to pay a greater portion of the 

total costs associated with operating overseas facilities, they would 

think more carefully before posting personnel overseas. In spring 2003, 

OMB will lead an interagency committee to develop a cost-sharing 

mechanism that would be implemented in fiscal year 2005. This new 

mechanism could require agencies to help fund the construction of new 

embassies and consulates. While it may be reasonable to expect that 

agencies should pay full costs associated with their overseas presence, 

many factors and questions must be addressed prior to implementing an 

effective and equitable cost-sharing mechanism.



State’s Proposed Capital Security Cost-sharing Plan:



The State Department has presented a capital security cost-sharing plan 

to OMB that would require agencies to help fund State’s capital 

construction program. State’s proposal calls for each agency to pay a 

proportion of the total construction program costs based on its total 

overseas staffing levels.[Footnote 18] Agencies would be charged 

different costs based on whether their staff are located in classified 

or nonclassified access areas.[Footnote 19] Agencies would be assessed 

a fee each year, which would be updated annually, until the building 

program is completed. An added benefit of such a program, State 

believes, is it would provide incentive for agencies to place greater 

consideration of the total costs associated with their presence abroad, 

which in turn, would lead to greater efforts to rightsize overseas 

presence. Table 1 shows an estimated distribution of costs for each 

agency once the program is fully implemented, based on State’s May 2001 

survey data.



Table 1: Notional Distribution of Costs under State’s Capital Security 

Cost-sharing Proposal Based on a May 2001 Overseas Personnel Survey:



Agency: Department of State; Annual cost: $775,324,345; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 55.38.



Agency: United States Agency for International Development; Annual 

cost: 187,627,814; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 13.40.



Agency: Department of Defense; Annual cost: 183,889,473; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 13.13.



Agency: Department of Justice; Annual cost: 77,458,156; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 5.53.



Agency: Department of Commerce; Annual cost: 48,000,356; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 3.43.



Agency: Department of the Treasury; Annual cost: 26,956,128; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 1.93.



Agency: Department of Agriculture; Annual cost: 24,016,819; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 1.72.



Agency: International Broadcasting Bureau; Annual cost: 19,156,184; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 1.37.



Agency: Department of Health and Human Services; Annual cost: 

13,383,305; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.96.



Agency: Foreign Broadcast Information Service; Annual cost: 8,914,998; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.64.



Agency: Library of Congress; Annual cost: 8,008,619; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.57.



Agency: North Atlantic Treaty Organization; Annual cost: 7,274,495; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.52.



Agency: Department of Veterans Affairs; Annual cost: 5,973,095; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.43.



Agency: Department of Transportation; Annual cost: 5,579,943; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.40.



Agency: American Battle Monuments Commission; Annual cost: 4,004,309; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.29.



Agency: National Aeronautics and Space Administration; Annual cost: 

1,148,350; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.08.



Agency: United States Trade Representative; Annual cost: 1,023,823; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.07.



Agency: Department of Energy; Annual cost: 795,083; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.06.



Agency: Department of the Interior; Annual cost: 667,385; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.05.



Agency: National Science Foundation; Annual cost: 241,601; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.02.



Agency: Environmental Protection Agency; Annual cost: 166,846; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.01.



Agency: Federal Emergency Management Agency; Annual cost: 141,493; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.01.



Agency: General Services Administration; Annual cost: 100,108; 

Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.01.



Agency: Department of Labor; Annual cost: 80,534; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.01.



Agency: Department of Housing and Urban Development; Annual cost: 

66,738; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 0.00.



Agency: Total; Annual cost: $1,400,000,000; Percentage

 of cost[A]: 100.00.



Source: Department of State.



[A] The percentage of cost reflects the proportion of all overseas 

employees from a particular agency and the type of space occupied by 

its staff. Space for State Department personnel associated with the 

International Cooperative Administrative Support Services (ICASS) 

system and for Marine Security Guards would not be charged to State or 

to the Marine Corps. Rather, these costs would be distributed among all 

agencies at post because all agencies benefit from the services 

provided by ICASS and the Marines.



[End of table]



Efforts by OMB to Develop a Cost-sharing Mechanism:



As part of the President’s Management Agenda, OMB is leading an effort 

to develop a cost-sharing mechanism that would require users of U.S. 

overseas facilities to share the costs associated with those facilities 

to a greater extent than currently required.[Footnote 20] OMB and the 

administration believe that such a requirement would provide agencies 

with an incentive to scrutinize long-term staffing more thoroughly when 

assessing their overseas presence. OMB officials also believe greater 

cost sharing could provide a clear linkage between the costs of new 

facilities that result directly from agencies’ presence.



In its November 1999 report, the Overseas Presence Advisory Panel 

(OPAP) noted a lack of cost sharing among agencies that use overseas 

facilities, particularly as it related to capital improvements and 

maintenance of sites. As a result, OPAP recommended that agencies be 

required to pay rent in government-owned buildings in foreign countries 

to cover current operating and maintenance costs. In effect, agencies 

would pay for space in overseas facilities just as they would for 

domestic office space operated by the General Services Administration. 

In response to the OPAP recommendation, a working group consisting of 

staff from the Departments of Commerce, Defense, Justice, State, and 

Transportation; the Central Intelligence Agency; OMB; and USAID was 

created to develop a mechanism by which agencies would be charged for 

the use of overseas facilities. In summer 2000, the working group 

recommended to the Interagency Subcommittee on Overseas Facilities that 

agencies be assessed a surcharge based on the space they actually use 

in overseas facilities.[Footnote 21] Like State’s more recent proposal, 

the working group’s plan was designed to help fund construction of new 

embassy compounds, but the plan was not implemented.



In January 2003, OMB notified each federal agency with overseas staff 

how State’s capital cost-sharing proposal would affect the agencies’ 

respective budgets in fiscal year 2004. Because the State proposal and 

OMB assessment were completed after the budget submission deadline, OMB 

told agencies that they would not be charged in 2004; however, OMB did 

say that a capital construction surcharge would be phased in over 5 

years beginning in 2005. In addition, agencies were invited to 

participate in an interagency working group charged with developing an 

equitable cost-sharing program this year. Also during 2003, OMB is 

requiring that agencies complete a census of all current overseas 

positions and an assessment of agencies’ future staffing plans as part 

of their budget requests for 2005. The results of this census will 

become the baseline for how future cost-sharing charges are determined.



Factors to Consider When Developing a Capital Cost-sharing Mechanism:



The impact of agencies’ staffing levels on the costs associated with 

maintaining and improving the physical infrastructure of overseas 

facilities is an important factor agencies should consider when placing 

staff overseas. However, agency personnel in Washington and in the 

field, and embassy management teams with whom we spoke, expressed 

concerns over many factors involved in implementing a new cost-sharing 

arrangement. Therefore, as OMB and the interagency committee work to 

develop a new cost-sharing mechanism, they also need to develop 

consensus on many issues, including:



* how the cost-sharing mechanism would be structured--for example, as 

capital reimbursement for new embassy compounds, or as a rent surcharge 

applied to all embassy occupants worldwide or just those at new embassy 

compounds;



* the basis for fees--such as full reimbursement of capital costs in a 

year or amortized over time, or rent based on local market rates, an 

average of market rates within a region, or one flat rate applied 

worldwide;



* how charges would be assessed--based on the amount of space an agency 

uses or on its per capita presence--and whether charges would be 

applied on a worldwide level, at the post level, or just for posts 

receiving new facilities;



* whether different rates would be applied to staff requiring 

controlled access rather than noncontrolled access space;



* whether agencies would be charged for staff not located within 

facilities operated by the State Department--for example, USAID staff 

working in USAID-owned facilities outside an embassy compound or staff 

who work in office space at host country ministries and departments;



* if and how costs associated with staff providing shared services 

would be offset, and whether costs associated with Marine and other 

security services would be covered;



* how fees would be paid and who would collect the payments--whether 

through an interagency transfer of funds or through an existing 

structure such as ICASS; and:



* whether potential legal barriers exist and, if so, what legislation 

would be necessary to eliminate them.



In addition, the interagency committee must develop consensus on the 

underlying purpose of capital cost sharing, demonstrate how such a 

mechanism would benefit users of overseas facilities, and determine how 

the mechanism can be implemented with the greatest fairness and equity. 

Finally, the committee must figure out how to minimize the management 

burden of whatever mechanism it develops.



Conclusions:



The State Department has embarked on an expansive capital construction 

program designed to provide safe, secure, and cost-effective buildings 

for employees working overseas. This program will require a substantial 

investment of resources. Given that the size and cost of new facilities 

are directly related to anticipated staffing requirements for these 

posts, it is imperative that future staffing needs be projected as 

accurately as possible. Developing staffing projections is a difficult 

exercise that requires a serious effort by all U.S. agencies to 

determine their requirements 5 to 7 years in the future. However, we 

found that efforts to develop these projections at the embassies we 

studied were undisciplined and did not follow a systematic approach. 

Therefore, the U.S. government risks building new facilities that are 

designed for the wrong number of staff. We believe that additional, 

formal guidance and the consistent involvement of the geographic 

bureaus would help mitigate the cost and security risks associated with 

wrong-sized embassies. Although any staffing requirements could be 

affected by changing world events and circumstances, we believe a 

systematic process would help ensure that the construction of new 

embassies is based on the best projections possible and most accurate 

information.



Costs associated with the physical infrastructure of facilities are 

important factors that agencies need to consider when deciding whether 

to assign staff to overseas locations. Recent proposals to implement a 

new cost-sharing mechanism may help add greater discipline to the 

staffing projection and rightsizing processes. However, in deciding how 

costs will be shared, decision makers will need to address issues such 

as fairness and equity, while designing a system that is relatively 

easy to administer.



Recommendations for Executive Action:



To ensure that U.S. agencies are conducting systematic staffing 

projection exercises, we recommend that the Secretary of State provide 

embassies with formal, standard, and comprehensive guidance on 

developing staffing projections for new embassy compounds. This 

guidance should address factors to consider when developing 

projections, encourage embassywide discussions, present potential 

options for rightsizing, and identify important deadlines in the 

projection process, including planning, funding, and construction time 

lines. To ensure continuity in the process, we also recommend that the 

Secretary of State require that chiefs of mission maintain 

documentation on the decision-making process including justifications 

for these staffing projections. Finally, we recommend that the 

Secretary require all chiefs of mission and geographic bureaus to 

certify that the projections have been reviewed and vetted before they 

are submitted to OBO.



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



State and USAID provided written comments on a draft of this report 

(see apps. II and III). OMB provided oral comments. State agreed with 

our conclusion that it is essential that staffing projections for new 

embassy compounds be as accurate as possible. State also said it plans 

to implement our recommendations fully by creating a standard and 

comprehensive guide for developing staffing projections, which it 

anticipates completing by late April 2003. State said this guide would 

provide posts and geographic bureaus with a complete set of required 

steps, the timelines involved, and the factors to consider when 

developing staffing projections. Moreover, State agreed with our 

recommendations that posts should retain documentation on the processes 

they used to develop staffing projections, and that chiefs of mission 

and geographic bureaus should certify staffing projections. State 

provided technical comments related to our cost-sharing discussion, 

which were incorporated into the text, where appropriate.



USAID also agreed that U.S. agencies do not take a consistent approach 

to determining long-term staffing needs for new embassy compounds. 

Specifically, USAID supported the recommendation calling for standard 

and comprehensive guidance to assist posts when developing staffing 

projections. USAID also expressed deep concerns about the security and 

cost implications that result from delayed funding for their facilities 

on new embassy compounds. Indeed, USAID acknowledged that its employees 

will continue to work in facilities at two overseas locations that do 

not meet minimal physical security standards even though other agencies 

have been moved to new embassy compounds. USAID said that the lack of 

funding has prevented USAID and State from coordinating the 

construction of new facilities.



In oral comments, OMB said it agrees with our conclusions regarding 

both the staffing projection process and cost sharing, and with our 

three recommendations to the Secretary of State. In addition, OMB 

suggested it would be useful to have an independent body review the 

vetted staffing projections prior to their submission to OBO, to 

augment the guidance developed by State, and ensure that agencies and 

embassy management examine rightsizing options. OMB intends to address 

this issue with the interagency cost-sharing committee. OMB also stated 

it is concerned about the security and cost implications that can 

result from funding delays for USAID annexes, and it is studying ways 

to overcome this problem. OMB also provided technical comments, which 

we addressed in the text, as appropriate.



Scope and Methodology:



To determine how U.S. agencies are developing staffing projections for 

new embassy compounds, we analyzed the State Department’s Long-Range 

Overseas Buildings Plan and interviewed State Department officials from 

OBO, the Office of Management Policy, and the six geographic bureaus. 

We also interviewed headquarters officials from agencies with overseas 

personnel, including officials from the Departments of Agriculture, 

Commerce, Defense, Justice, and the Treasury, and officials from USAID 

and the Peace Corps. In addition, we reviewed reports on embassy 

security and overseas staffing issues, including those of the 

Accountability Review Boards and OPAP, and we met with officials from 

OMB to discuss how they are implementing the overseas presence 

initiatives in the President’s Management Agenda.



To further assess agencies’ efforts to develop long-term staffing 

projections and the extent to which agencies were conducting 

rightsizing exercises as part of the projection process, we visited 

seven posts in State’s Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs--

Yerevan, Armenia; Baku, Azerbaijan; Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina; 

Tbilisi, Georgia; Pristina, Kosovo; Skopje, Macedonia; and Belgrade, 

Serbia and Montenegro--where State is planning to construct new 

compounds from fiscal years 2002 through 2007. We selected these two 

groups of neighboring posts--the Balkans and Caucasus posts--because 

State is planning to complete a significant number of construction 

projects in these subregions. By focusing on these subregions within 

Europe and Eurasia, we were able to assess the extent to which these 

posts considered combining services or positions when developing 

staffing projections for their new compounds. At each post, we 

interviewed management teams (ambassadors/chiefs of mission, deputy 

chiefs of mission, and administrative officers), representatives of 

U.S. agencies, and other personnel who participated in the staffing 

projection process. To examine the staffing projection process at 

embassies in other geographic bureaus, we also conducted structured 

telephone interviews with administrative officers or deputy chiefs of 

mission from seven other embassies slated for new compounds--Rangoon, 

Burma; Beijing, China; Quito, Ecuador; Accra, Ghana; Beirut, Lebanon; 

Panama City, Panama; and Harare, Zimbabwe. These embassies would have 

just recently completed or were about to complete their staffing 

projection process. In all, the posts we contacted represent about 16 

percent of the new embassy compound construction projects in OBO’s 

Long-Range Overseas Buildings Plan for 2002 through 2007, and 23 

percent of those construction projects in the plan expected to be 

funded by fiscal year 2005.[Footnote 22] We also reviewed planning 

documents, staffing patterns, staffing projections for the new 

building, and other documentation provided by the posts.



To examine the issue of capital cost sharing for construction of new 

diplomatic facilities, we solicited the views of agency headquarters 

staff and the management teams of our case study posts to determine the 

extent to which cost considerations were factored into the decision-

making process. We also solicited the views of agency headquarters 

staff and the management teams of our case study posts to determine the 

potential advantages and disadvantages of different capital cost-

sharing programs. In particular, we interviewed OBO officials and 

reviewed documentation supporting its capital security cost-sharing 

proposal. We also held discussions with OMB officials on their plans 

for developing and implementing an equitable cost-sharing program and 

on potential issues for the planned interagency working group. Finally, 

we attended meetings of OBO’s Industry Advisory Panel where cost 

sharing was discussed by private sector and industry professionals. We 

also interviewed staff from the International Facility Management 

Association on how cost sharing is implemented within the private 

sector.



We conducted our work between May 2002 and February 2003 in accordance 

with generally accepted government auditing standards.



We are sending copies of this report to other interested Members of 

Congress. We are also providing copies of this report to the Secretary 

of State and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget. We 

will also make copies available to others upon request. In addition, 

this report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 

http://www.gao.gov.



If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 

contact me on (202) 512-4128. Another GAO contact and staff 

acknowledgments are listed in appendix IV.



Sincerely yours,



Jess T. Ford

Director, International Affairs and Trade:



Signed by Jess T. Ford:



[End of section]



Appendix I: Standard Embassy Compound Design:



Figure 4 depicts the elements of a new embassy compound. State’s Bureau 

of Overseas Buildings Operations is purchasing parcels of land large 

enough to accommodate these elements and the department’s security 

standards, which include the placement of all buildings at least 30 

meters from a perimeter wall.



Figure 4: Standard Design for New Embassy Compounds:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



[End of section]



Appendix II: Comments from the Department of State:



United States Department of State:



Washington, D.C. 20520:



Dear Ms. Westin:



We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, “EMBASSY 

CONSTRUCTION: Process for Determining Staffing Requirements Needs 

Improvement,” GAO-03-411, GAO Job Code 320124.



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 Jay 

Anania, Office of Management Policy, at (202) 647-1368:



Christopher B. Burnham



Assistant Secretary for Resource Management and 

Chief Financial Officer:



Signed by Christopher B. Burnham:



Enclosure:



As stated.



cc: State/M - Mr. Grant Green State/H - Mr. Paul Kelly State/OIG - Mr. 

Luther Atkins GAO/IAT - Mr. John Brummet:



Ms. Susan S. Westin, Managing Director, International Affairs and 

Trade, U.S. General Accounting Office.



Department of State Comments on GAO Draft Report EMBASSY CONSTRUCTION: 

Process for Determining Staffing Requirements Needs Improvement (GAO 

03-411, GAO Job Code 320124):



The Department of State welcomes GAO’s work looking at how staffing 

projections are developed for New Embassy Complex (NEC) construction 

projects.



The Department agrees completely with the statement in the GAO report 

that: “Given that the size and cost of new facilities are directly 

related to anticipated staffing requirements for these posts, it is 

imperative that future staffing needs be projected as accurately as 

possible.” As GAO also points out, however, it is difficult to project 

staffing needs five to seven years in the future. Even the most 

thorough and well-documented staffing review can become obsolete in the 

face of changing international circumstances and emerging foreign 

policy priorities. A current example is the as yet unclear impact of 

new Homeland Security staffing requirements on overseas staffing.



In order to ensure more consistency and completeness in staffing 

projections for posts slated for new construction projects, the 

Department of State is now preparing a “Guide to Developing Staffing 

Projections.” We anticipate completing and clearing the guide within 

State by the end of April 2003.



Specifically, we agree that such a guide needs to be standard and 

comprehensive so that posts preparing NEC staffing projections and the 

regional bureaus understand the importance of the task, the complete 

set of required steps, the timelines involved, and the factors to 

consider (such as those laid out in the GAO “mission - security - cost” 

rightsizing framework). We agree that posts need to retain 

documentation of their staffing projection process so that new 

personnel understand what has previously occurred. (The Bureau of 

Overseas Buildings Operation (OBO) retains complete documentation of 

all projects, but this does not negate the desirability of having posts 

track their own projects.) We agree that, as part of the process, 

Chiefs of Mission (COMs) and the regional bureaus should certify 

staffing projections, which themselves have the explicit concurrence of 

all USG agencies with a presence - current or planned - at a particular 

post, before submitting them to OBO.



GAO’s rightsizing framework is a useful contribution. It lays out a 

common-sense approach that asks the kinds of questions COMs and other 

decision-makers have always routinely addressed through formal and 

informal processes when considering staffing issues. Among the three 

elements of the framework, we strongly believe that the first priority 

is without question Mission. The first question that must be answered 

before all others is whether the United States has a compelling reason 

to be in a particular location. If the answer is “Yes,” then it may be 

necessary to place personnel there, even in the face of serious 

security concerns or excessive costs (e.g., the opening of the U.S. 

Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan). If the answer is “No,” the question of 

whether personnel can be securely or economically located there is 

irrelevant.



We endorse GAO’s definition of rightsizing:



Rightsizing [is] aligning the number and location of staff assigned 

overseas with foreign policy priorities and security and other 

constraints. Rightsizing may result in the addition or reduction of 

staff, or a change in the mix of staff at a given embassy or consulate. 

(GAO-02-780 Overseas Presence: Framework for Assessing Embassy Staff 

Levels Can Support Rightsizing Initiatives, p. l, July 2002):



We look forward to continuing to work with GAO and the Office of 

Management and Budget on rightsizing.



[End of section]



Appendix III: Comments from the U.S. Agency for International 

Development:



USAID:



U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT:



MAR 11 2003 

Mr. Jess T. Ford 

Director 

International Affairs and Trade U.S. General 

Accounting office 441 G Street, N.W.



Washington, D.C. 20548:



Dear Mr. Ford:



I am pleased to provide the U.S. Agency for International Development’s 

(USAID) formal response on the draft GAO report entitled “EMBASSY 

CONSTRUCTION, Process for Determining Staffing Requirements Needs 

Improvement” (March 31, 2003).



USAID agrees with the GAO finding that U.S. agencies overseas did not 

take a consistent approach to determining long-term staffing needs.



USAID, for example, develops staffing projections as part of each 5-

year Country Strategic Plan. Strategic Plans are vetted through Chiefs 

of Missions and project the number of staff and the professional skills 

required in each of the technical, program, and administrative support 

units to achieve the mission’s development objectives in each 

respective country. The projections are reviewed and updated as part of 

each USAID mission’s Annual Report to reflect the actual staff on board 

as of a date specific and to include future “out” year projections.



To some extent, USAID and other agencies may have relied on current 

projections without fully considering such projections in the context 

of a New Embassy Compound. USAID supports the recommendation that 

standard and comprehensive guidance be developed that will allow each 

agency to project staffing requirements or revise existing projections 

to ensure the construction of buildings and compounds that are 

conducive to the achievement of the objectives of each agency in 

support of broader foreign policy objectives.



The resources required to post an employee overseas are significant. 

These costs are carefully considered by USAID in the formulation of 

budgets and in the design of development programs with achievable 

results. USAID’s decision to post an employee overseas in support of a 

strategic objective or the overall program is not made lightly. USAID 

recognizes that additional costs imposed through a cost-sharing 

program, as with any additional costs, would be likewise considered in 

this programmatic context.



USAID remains committed, first and foremost, to the security of its 

personnel. The approval of funding of facilities for USAID personnel 

has lagged behind that of the State Department and USAID personnel 

stationed overseas are increasingly vulnerable as a result.	The Secure 

Embassy and Counterterrorism Act of 1999 mandated the construction of 

secure facilities and the collocation of employees on secure Embassy 

compounds. USAID recognizes the critical nature of this requirement and 

fully supports this objective.



The delayed, or in some cases failed, passage of appropriations has 

complicated planning efforts and compromised the security of USAID 

employees. The lack of funding has prevented the coordination of 

construction efforts with the State Department Office of Overseas 

Buildings Operations (OBO) at significant financial cost to both 

agencies.



Yerevan is representative of this unfortunate situation. The request 

for appropriated funds for the construction of the USAID annex remains 

in pending status and the opportunity to economize through efficient 

scheduling of the project has been lost. Although uncertainty 

surrounding the status of the funding request did complicate planning 

efforts and may have contributed to a sense of confusion, delays in 

construction were simply due to the lack of funding itself. This 

situation has been repeated at other locations. USAID requests for the 

funding of building construction have remained in “pending” status for 

months or even years following the approval of funding for State 

Department facilities on the same compounds. At two locations, USAID 

employees continue to work in facilities that do not meet minimal 

standards for physical security even though counterparts from other 

agencies have been moved to new Secure Embassy Compounds. Three 

additional Secure Embassy Compounds are scheduled for construction this 

year. To date, funds have not been appropriated to include USAID on 

these secure compounds.



USAID has large programs and a corresponding presence in many countries 

and OBO does not have the ability to fund separate annexes for USAID. 

The security driven legal requirement, which USAID endorses, to co-

locate USAID facilities on Secure Embassy Compounds involves 

considerable cost. An estimated $406 million will be needed to fund the 

construction of USAID facilities between now and FY 2006. To be 

successful, a practical approach to the administration of U.S. foreign 

assistance programs must include an integrated discussion of how we 

provide all employees with adequate facilities in which to work. The 

Capital Cost Sharing Security Program considers the cost requirements 

for most buildings overseas but does not include an integrated staffing 

methodology or a solution to funding the construction of required USAID 

annexes. This cannot be done in the current fiscal environment.



It is critical that any system used to project staffing levels reflects 

a consideration of all foreign policy issues that require federal 

agencies to have presence overseas. This holistic approach needs to 

incorporate input from entities beyond the Department of State and the 

Chiefs of Missions to ensure that projections of other Agency staff are 

adequate to maintain their program management and oversight 

responsibilities. Construction overseas is very expensive and space is 

in short supply. The increase in terrorist activity worldwide has made 

it painfully obvious that there is an urgent requirement for secure 

facilities. All agencies should have adequate opportunity to provide 

meaningful input and to address the issues. Above all, staff of all 

agencies should be assured that the physical security of their 

workplace will receive the attention it deserves in an increasingly 

dangerous world. USAID welcomes the opportunity to contribute to the 

development of improved systems for determining staffing requirements 

and a funding solution that ensures secure facilities for all U.S. 

Government employees overseas.



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,



John Marshall:



Assistant Administrator Bureau for Management:



Signed by John Marshall:



[End of section]



Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:



GAO Contact:



John Brummet (202) 512-5260:



Staff Acknowledgments:



In addition to the individual named above, David G. Bernet, Janey 

Cohen, Martin de Alteriis, David Dornisch, Kathryn Hartsburg, Edward 

Kennedy, and James Strus made key contributions to this report.



FOOTNOTES



[1] We define rightsizing as aligning the number and location of staff 

at U.S. embassies and consulates with foreign policy goals. See U.S. 

General Accounting Office, Overseas Presence: Framework for Assessing 

Embassy Staff Levels Can Support Rightsizing Initiatives, GAO-02-780 

(Washington, D.C.: July 26, 2002).



[2] Office of Management and Budget, The President’s Management Agenda, 

Fiscal Year 2002 (Washington, D.C.: August 2001).



[3] GAO-02-780.



[4] According to the Foreign Service Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-465), as 

amended, “chiefs of mission” are principal officers in charge of 

diplomatic missions of the United States or of a U.S. office abroad, 

such as U.S. ambassadors, who are responsible for the direction, 

coordination, and supervision of all government executive branch 

employees in a given foreign country (except employees under a military 

commander).



[5] There are six geographically defined bureaus that report to the 

Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs--bureaus for Africa, East 

Asia and the Pacific, Europe and Eurasia, the Near East, South Asia, 

and the Western Hemisphere. The Assistant Secretaries of the geographic 

bureaus advise the Undersecretary and guide the operation of the U.S. 

diplomatic missions within their regional jurisdiction. They are 

assisted by Deputy Assistant Secretaries, office directors, post 

management officers, and country desk officers. These officials work 

closely with U.S. embassies and consulates and with foreign embassies 

in Washington, D.C.  



[6] Secretary of State Madeline Albright appointed the Accountability 

Review Boards to investigate the facts and circumstances surrounding 

the 1998 embassy bombings. Department of State, Report of the 

Accountability Review Boards on the Embassy Bombings in Nairobi and Dar 

Es Salaam (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 1999).



[7] Admiral William J. Crowe, Press Briefing on the Report of the 

Accountability Review Boards on the Embassy Bombings in Nairobi and Dar 

Es Salaam (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 8, 1999).



[8] Secretary of State Albright established the Overseas Presence 

Advisory Panel following the 1998 embassy bombings in Africa to 

consider the organization and condition of U.S. embassies. Department 

of State, America’s Overseas Presence in the 21st Century, The Report 

of the Overseas Presence Advisory Panel (Washington, D.C.: November 

1999).



[9] U.S. General Accounting Office, Embassy Construction: Long-Term 

Planning Will Enhance Program Decision-making, GAO-01-11 (Washington, 

D.C.: Jan. 22, 2001).



[10] GAO-02-780.



[11] Pursuant to the Secure Embassy Construction and Counterterrorism 

Act of 1999 (P.L. 106-113), the State Department is required to 

identify embassies for replacement or major security enhancements. The 

first report was due to the Congress by February 1, 2000, as is each 

subsequent update through 2004. 



[12] According to State officials, OBO expects to issue an updated 

building plan for fiscal years 2003 through 2008 in late April 2003.



[13] In total, there are about 260 diplomatic posts worldwide, 

including embassies, consulates, and other special missions and 

offices, such as the U.S. Mission to the European Union and the U.S. 

Office of the High Commissioner in Bosnia-Herzegovina. 



[14] U.S. General Accounting Office, State Department: Management 

Weaknesses in the Security Construction Program, GAO/NSIAD-92-2 

(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 29, 1991).



[15] As the Overseas Presence Advisory Panel (OPAP) reported in 1999, 

there are more than 30 federal departments or agencies operating 

overseas, including the Departments of State and Defense, as well as 

agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. 

Commercial Service, and the Foreign Agricultural Service.



[16] Mission Performance Plans are annual embassy plans that link 

performance goals and objectives to staffing and budgetary resources 

needed to accomplish them in the given fiscal year. 



[17] 22 U.S.C. § 4865 requires the Secretary of State, in selecting 

sites for new U.S. diplomatic facilities abroad, to ensure that all 

U.S. personnel under chief of mission authority be located on the site. 

However, the Secretary of State may waive this requirement if the 

Secretary, together with the heads of those agencies with personnel who 

would be located off site, determines that security considerations 

permit off site location and that it is in the U.S. national interests.



[18] Each agency’s proportion was based on a May 2001 State Department 

survey of U.S. government employees working overseas under the 

authority of chiefs of mission. 



[19] Based on data from State’s May 2001 survey, the total construction 

costs for controlled access, or classified, areas are about 40 percent 

per desk more than the total costs for construction of noncontrolled 

access, or unclassified, areas.



[20] Agencies contribute funding to support the ICASS system, which 

funds common administrative support functions, such as travel, mail and 

messenger, vouchering, and telephone services, that all agencies at a 

post may use.



[21] This subcommittee was part of the Interagency Overseas Presence 

Board, which was formed to implement OPAP’s recommendations.



[22] Includes new embassy compounds in the security capital and regular 

capital programs outlined in the long-range buildings plan and excludes 

construction of annexes on existing compounds. The U.S. embassies in 

Yerevan, Armenia, and Accra, Ghana, are also excluded. Embassy Yerevan 

was funded in fiscal year 2001 and, thus, was not in the long-range 

plan for 2002 through 2007. Embassy Accra was not initially in the 

long-range plan, but was subsequently added.



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