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entitled 'Army Working Capital Fund: Actions Needed to Reduce Carryover 
at Army Depots' which was released on July 8, 2008. 

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Report to the Subcommittee on Readiness and Management Support, 
Committee on Armed Services, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

July 2008: 

Army Working Capital Fund: 

Actions Needed to Reduce Carryover at Army Depots: 

Army Working Capital Fund: 

GAO-08-714: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-08-714, a report to the Subcommittee on Readiness and 
Management Support, Committee on Armed Services, U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The five Army depot maintenance activities support combat readiness by 
providing services to keep Army units operating worldwide. From fiscal 
years 2004 through 2007, the amount of new orders received to perform 
work increased 100 percent from $2.6 billion to $5.2 billion. The 
number of new orders is a factor in the amount of work the depots carry 
over from one fiscal year to the next. While past congressional defense 
committees recognize the need for carryover, the committees have raised 
concerns that carryover may be more than needed. GAO was asked to 
determine (1) the growth in reported total carryover from fiscal years 
2004 through 2007 and the actions the Army is taking to reduce the 
carryover, (2) whether reported carryover amounts exceeded carryover 
ceilings for fiscal years 2006 and 2007 and adjustments made to reduce 
those amounts, and (3) the primary reasons for the increased carryover 
at the five Army depots. GAO analyzed reported carryover and related 
data at the five depots. 

What GAO Found: 

From fiscal years 2004 through 2007, the Army depots’ total carryover 
significantly increased from $1.1 billion to $2.7 billion—about 7.6 
months of work. The amount of carryover increased because new orders 
received (about $9.5 billion) by the depots significantly outpaced the 
work performed (about $7.8 billion) in fiscal years 2006 and 2007. GAO 
analysis of the Army’s plan to reduce carryover showed that the depots 
performed $293 million more work in the first 3 months of fiscal year 
2008 than they performed during the same period a year earlier, but the 
depots missed their planned goal by $173 million. 

Figure: Analysis of Increases in New Orders and Revenue on Army Depot 
Maintenance Carryover: 

This is figure is a multiple line graph showing analysis of increases 
in new orders and revenue on army depot maintenance carryover. The 
lines represent revenue (work performed), new orders, and carryover. 
The X axis represents the fiscal year, and the Y axis represents 
dollars in billions. 

Revenue; 
Fiscal Year 2004: $2.7; 
Fiscal Year 2005: $3.5; 
Fiscal Year 2006: $3.7; 
Fiscal Year 2007: $4.2. 

New Orders; 
Fiscal Year 2004: $2.6; 
Fiscal Year 2005: $3.4; 
Fiscal Year 2006: $4.2; 
Fiscal Year 2007: $5.3. 

Carryover; 
Fiscal Year 2004: $1.2; 
Fiscal Year 2005: $1.0; 
Fiscal Year 2006: $1.6; 
Fiscal Year 2007: $2.7. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD data. 

[End of figure] 

The Army depots reported that they were under the carryover ceiling by 
$67 million in fiscal year 2006 but over the ceiling by $96.8 million 
in fiscal year 2007. GAO identified two factors that affected reported 
carryover amounts. First, the Army Materiel Command directed the 
Tobyhanna Army Depot to deobligate $30 million at the end of fiscal 
year 2006 and reobligate the same amount at the beginning of the next 
fiscal year, which artificially lowered reported carryover and was not 
in accordance with existing DOD policy. Second, the Army excluded about 
$299.7 million in fiscal year 2007 orders from the carryover 
calculations. The exemptions for fourth quarter orders from other 
services and long lead time material did not provide the right 
incentives for DOD to resolve long-standing problems. 

GAO analysis of reports and discussions with Army officials identified 
four primary reasons for growth in carryover: (1) the Army depot 
maintenance budget underestimated the amount of new orders during 
fiscal years 2006 and 2007 by about $1.7 billion and $1.5 billion, 
respectively; (2) the depots accepted orders late in the fiscal year 
that generally could not be completed by the end of the fiscal year; 
(3) the depots experienced parts shortages; and (4) the depots did not 
receive assets that had been scheduled for repair. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO makes eight recommendations to the Department of Defense (DOD) that 
are aimed at (1) improving the reliability of carryover information and 
(2) reducing carryover associated with Army depot maintenance 
activities. DOD concurred with six recommendations and partially 
concurred with two. DOD commented that it is taking actions on all 
eight recommendations. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-714]. For more information, 
contact Paula M. Rascona at (202) 512-9095 or rasconap@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Army Depots' Carryover Significantly Increased: 

Reported Carryover Amounts for Fiscal Years 2006 and 2007 Were 
Artificially Lowered: 

Four Primary Reasons for Significant Growth in Fiscal Years 2006 and 
2007 Carryover: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Appendix III: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Fiscal Year-end Actual Reported Carryover from Fiscal Year 
1996 through 2001 Consistently Exceeded DOD's 3-Month Standard: 

Table 2: Dollar Amounts of Reported Actual Carryover for Fiscal Years 
2002 and 2003 Exceeded Allowable Amounts: 

Figure: 

Figure 1: Analysis of Increases in New Orders and Revenue on Army Depot 
Maintenance Carryover: 

Abbreviations: 

DLA: Defense Logistics Agency: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

HMMWV: High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle: 

OUSD: Office of the Under Secretary of Defense: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

Washington, DC 20548: 

July 8, 2008: 

The Honorable Daniel K. Akaka: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable John Thune: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Readiness and Management Support: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
United States Senate: 

The five Army depot maintenance activities[Footnote 1] support combat 
readiness by providing services necessary to keep Army units operating 
worldwide. From fiscal year 2004 through fiscal year 2007, the amount 
of new orders received to perform work increased from approximately 
$2.6 billion to $5.2 billion--about a 100 percent increase. These 
orders were to repair and overhaul a wide range of assets, including 
helicopters, such as the Apache and Blackhawk; combat vehicles such as 
the Abrams tank; air defense systems, such as the Patriot missile; 
electronics; and inventory items for the Army, other military services, 
and foreign governments. Many of these weapons systems are used to 
support the Army's current effort in Iraq and Afghanistan. To perform 
the work needed in support of the Global War on Terrorism, the number 
of employees at the five depots increased from 12,983 to 15,717--a 21 
percent increase--from fiscal year 2004 to fiscal year 2007 and the 
number of direct labor hours of work increased from about 16.3 million 
in fiscal year 2004 to 24 million for fiscal year 2007--a 47 percent 
increase. 

The five Army depots operate under the working capital fund concept, 
where customers are to be charged for the anticipated full cost of 
goods and services. To the extent that the depots do not complete work 
at year-end, the funded work will be carried into the next fiscal year. 
Carryover is the reported dollar value of work that has been ordered 
and funded (obligated) by customers but not completed by working 
capital fund activities at the end of the fiscal year. The 
congressional defense committees recognize that some carryover is 
needed to ensure a smooth flow of work during the transition from one 
fiscal year to the next. However, past congressional defense committee 
reports raised concerns that the level of carryover may be more than is 
needed. Excessive amounts of carryover financed with customer 
appropriations are subject to reductions by the Department of Defense 
(DOD) and the congressional defense committees during the budget review 
process. Congress reduced the Army's budgets in fiscal years 2003 and 
2006 because of concerns about excess carryover. 

As requested and agreed to with your office, our objectives were to 
determine (1) the growth in reported total carryover from fiscal year 
2004 through fiscal year 2007 and the actions the Army is taking to 
reduce the carryover, (2) whether reported carryover amounts exceeded 
carryover ceilings[Footnote 2] for fiscal years 2006 and 2007 and 
adjustments made to reduce those amounts, and (3) the primary reasons 
for the increased carryover at the five Army depots. We conducted this 
performance audit from July 2007 through July 2008 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit 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 provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions 
based on our audit objectives. Most of the financial information in 
this report was obtained from official Army budget documents and 
accounting reports. To assess the reliability of the data, we (1) 
reviewed and analyzed the factors used in calculating carryover, (2) 
interviewed Army officials knowledgeable about the carryover data, (3) 
reviewed GAO reports on Army depot maintenance activities, and (4) 
reviewed orders customers submitted to the depots to determine if they 
were adequately supported by documentation. Further details on our 
scope and methodology are provided in appendix I. We requested comments 
on a draft of this report from the Secretary of Defense or his 
designee. Written comments from the Under Secretary of Defense (Deputy 
Comptroller) are reprinted in appendix II. 

Results in Brief: 

Our analysis of Army financial reports showed that the five Army 
depots' total carryover significantly increased from about $1.1 billion 
to $2.7 billion (about 7.6 months of work) from fiscal years 2004 
through 2007--a $1.6 billion increase. The dollar amount of new orders 
received in fiscal years 2006 and 2007 by the depots (about $9.5 
billion) significantly exceeded the dollar amount of work performed 
(about $7.8 billion) by the depots during those same years. To reduce 
the depots' carryover, the Army developed a plan to perform more work 
in fiscal year 2008. Our analysis of Army documents showed that the 
Army depots performed $293 million more work in the first 3 months of 
fiscal year 2008 than they performed during the same period a year 
earlier, but the work performed was $173 million below the goal set by 
the Army in its plan. We also found that visibility over these growing 
carryover balances in the Army Working Capital Fund budgets to Congress 
was significantly decreased when the Army consolidated the depot 
maintenance and ordnance activity groups under a single activity group 
called the Industrial Operations activity group in fiscal year 2005. 
This reduces the information available to Congress for making informed 
decisions about the appropriate size of the Army depot maintenance 
budget and whether or not the depots are making significant progress in 
reducing their carryover. 

In fiscal year 2006, the Army depot maintenance activities' reported 
that carryover was under the carryover ceiling by $67 million. A factor 
that reduced the reported carryover in fiscal year 2006 was that the 
Army Materiel Command directed the Tobyhanna Army Depot (Tobyhanna) to 
deobligate orders totaling $30 million at year-end and then reobligate 
these funds at the beginning of the next fiscal year. This action 
served to artificially lower reported carryover. As we have previously 
reported,[Footnote 3] the reliability of carryover data and their 
usefulness as a management tool are significantly reduced by the 
manipulation of customer order balances in an attempt to reduce 
reported carryover amounts. For fiscal year 2007, the depots exceeded 
the carryover ceiling by $96.8 million. However, the Office of the 
Under Secretary of Defense (OUSD) (Comptroller) approved about $299.7 
million in carryover exemptions from the carryover calculations for the 
five Army depots that were not excluded in previous years. DOD's 
actions to grant these exemptions for (1) fourth quarter orders from 
other services and (2) long lead time material did not provide the 
right incentives for DOD components to resolve long-standing problems. 
Without the exemptions, the depots would have exceeded the fiscal year 
2007 carryover ceiling by $251.2 million. 

Our analysis of fiscal years 2006 and 2007 Army depot reports and 
discussions with depot officials identified four primary reasons for 
the significant growth in carryover. While some of these reasons are 
under the control of other DOD activities, such as customers not 
sending assets needing repair to the depots as planned, other reasons 
are within the depots' control. 

* First, the Army depot maintenance budget significantly underestimated 
the amount of new orders received from customers by about $1.7 billion 
and $1.5 billion for fiscal years 2006 and 2007, respectively. While 
the depots performed more work than budgeted during fiscal years 2006 
and 2007, they could not keep pace with the increases in new orders. 

* Second, the depots accepted new orders late in fiscal years 2006 and 
2007 that could not reasonably be completed (and in some cases were not 
even started) prior to the end of the fiscal year. 

* Third, our analysis of depot data and interviews with depot officials 
found that the depots experienced shortages in parts needed to perform 
their work in fiscal years 2006 and 2007. 

* Fourth, based on our review of selected depot production reports on 
the status of work and discussions with depot officials, we determined 
that unserviceable assets (assets requiring repair) were not sent to 
the depots for repair as planned. Army officials informed us that in 
some cases the assets remained in-theatre (such as Iraq) for longer 
periods than planned. 

We are making eight recommendations to DOD to (1) improve the 
reliability of the carryover amounts reported to Congress and DOD 
decision makers and (2) reduce carryover associated with the Army depot 
maintenance working capital fund activities. DOD concurred with six of 
the eight recommendations and partially concurred with the other two 
recommendations. While DOD partially concurred with two 
recommendations, DOD cited actions under way, or planned, with respect 
to all eight recommendations. 

Background: 

A working capital fund relies on sales revenue rather than direct 
appropriations to finance its continuing operations. A working capital 
fund is intended to (1) generate sufficient resources to cover the full 
costs of its operations and (2) operate on a break-even basis over 
time--that is, neither make a gain nor incur a loss. Customers use 
appropriated funds, primarily operations and maintenance 
appropriations, to finance orders placed with the working capital fund. 
According to the Army's fiscal year 2008/2009 budget, the Army Working 
Capital Fund will earn about $15.3 billion in revenue during fiscal 
year 2008. The Army Working Capital Fund includes an industrial 
operations activity group that provides the Army with the in-house 
industrial capability to conduct depot-level maintenance, repair, and 
upgrade; produce quality munitions and large-caliber weapons; and 
store, maintain, and demilitarize material for all branches of DOD. For 
example, the Anniston Army Depot (Anniston) repairs tanks for the 
Marine Corps. The industrial operations activity group consists of 13 
activities--five maintenance depots, three arsenals, two munitions 
production facilities, and three storage sites. The preponderance of 
the industrial operations workload and budget estimates relate to the 
depot-level maintenance work. Information on the five Army depots 
follows. 

* Anniston performs maintenance on both heavy-and light-tracked combat 
vehicles and their components, such as the M1 Abrams tank. 

* Corpus Christi Army Depot (Corpus Christi) overhauls, repairs, 
modifies, tests, and modernizes helicopters, engines, and components 
for all services and foreign military customers. 

* Letterkenny Army Depot (Letterkenny) has tactical missile repair 
capabilities supporting a variety of DOD missile systems including the 
Patriot and its ground support and radar equipment. In response to the 
Global War on Terrorism, Letterkenny is rebuilding the High Mobility 
Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV) that are returning from theater 
and is rebuilding them to a configuration that will support add-on 
armor. 

* Red River Army Depot (Red River) performs maintenance, certification, 
and related support services on ground combat systems, air defense 
systems, and tactical wheeled vehicles. Systems supported include the 
Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle, Multiple Launch Rocket System, Small 
Emplacement Excavator, 5-ton dump truck, and HMMWVs. 

* Tobyhanna uses advanced technologies to ensure the readiness of U.S. 
armed forces and is a full-service repair, overhaul, and fabrication 
facility for communications-electronics systems, and equipment and 
select missile guidance systems. 

Carryover is the reported dollar value of work that has been ordered 
and funded (obligated) by customers but not completed by working 
capital fund activities at the end of the fiscal year. Carryover 
consists of both the unfinished portion of work started but not 
completed, as well as requested work that has not yet begun. Some 
carryover is necessary at the end of the fiscal year if working capital 
funds are to operate efficiently and effectively. For example, if 
customers do not receive new appropriations at the beginning of the 
fiscal year, carryover is necessary to ensure that the working capital 
fund activities have enough work to ensure a smooth transition between 
fiscal years. Too little carryover could result in some personnel not 
having work to perform at the beginning of the fiscal year. On the 
other hand, too much carryover could result in an activity group 
receiving funds from customers in one fiscal year but not performing 
the work until well into the next fiscal year or subsequent years. By 
optimizing the amount of carryover, DOD can use its resources in the 
most effective manner and minimize the "banking" of funds for work and 
programs to be performed in subsequent years. 

In 1996, DOD established a 3-month carryover standard for working 
capital fund activities. In May 2001, we reported[Footnote 4] that DOD 
did not have a basis for its carryover standard and recommended that 
DOD determine the appropriate carryover standard for depot maintenance, 
ordnance, and research and development activity groups. DOD included 
its revised carryover policy in DOD Financial Management Regulation 
7000.14-R, volume 2B, chapter 9. Under the new policy, the allowable 
amount of carryover is based on the outlay rate[Footnote 5] of the 
customers' appropriations financing the work. According to the DOD 
regulation, this carryover metric allows for an analytical-based 
approach that holds working capital fund activities to the same 
standard as general fund execution and allows for meaningful budget 
execution analysis. 

In accordance with DOD policy, (1) nonfederal orders, (2) non-DOD 
orders, (3) foreign military sales, and (4) work related to base 
realignment and closure are excluded from the carryover calculation. 
Further, the Army has requested and OUSD (Comptroller) has approved an 
exemption of crash and battle damaged aircraft from the carryover 
ceilings during wartime operations for the past few years. This has 
resulted in tens of millions of dollars of orders and carryover being 
excluded from the carryover calculation. The reported actual carryover 
(net of exclusions) is then compared to the amount of allowable 
carryover using the above-described outlay rate method to determine if 
the reported actual amount is over or under the allowable carryover 
amount. 

In 2005, we reported[Footnote 6] that the Army depot maintenance 
activities consistently exceeded the carryover ceiling from fiscal 
years 1996 through 2003. Tables 1 and 2 show that the Army depot 
maintenance activities' actual reported carryover (1) consistently 
exceeded DOD's 3-month carryover standard from fiscal year 1996 through 
fiscal year 2001 and (2) continued to exceed the allowable amount of 
carryover as calculated under DOD's revised carryover policy for fiscal 
years 2002 and 2003. 

Table 1: Fiscal Year-end Actual Reported Carryover from Fiscal Year 
1996 through 2001 Consistently Exceeded DOD's 3-Month Standard: 

Fiscal year: 1996; 
Reported actual months of carryover: 3.6. 

Fiscal year: 1997; 
Reported actual months of carryover: 3.2. 

Fiscal year: 1998; 
Reported actual months of carryover: 3.4. 

Fiscal year: 1999; 
Reported actual months of carryover: 4.4. 

Fiscal year: 2000; 
Reported actual months of carryover: 4.2. 

Fiscal year: 2001; 
Reported actual months of carryover: 3.4. 

Source: Army Working Capital Fund budgets. 

[End of table] 

Table 2: Dollar Amounts of Reported Actual Carryover for Fiscal Years 
2002 and 2003 Exceeded Allowable Amounts: 

Dollars in millions. 

Allowable carryover; 
Fiscal year 2002: $548.2; 
Fiscal year 2003: $854.4. 

Reported actual carryover; 
Fiscal year 2002: 584.3; 
Fiscal year 2003: 981.5. 

Carryover above allowable amount; 
Fiscal year 2002: $36.1; 
Fiscal year 2003: $127.1. 

Source: Army Working Capital Fund budgets. 

[End of table] 

Decision makers, including OUSD (Comptroller) and congressional defense 
committees, use reported carryover information to make decisions 
concerning whether working capital fund activities, such as the Army 
depots, have too much carryover. If the Army depots have too much 
carryover, the decision makers may reduce the customers' budgets and 
use these resources for other purposes. For example, Congress has 
reduced the services' budgets because of excessive carryover, including 
a reduction in the Army's fiscal years 2003 and 2006 operation and 
maintenance appropriations by $48 million and $94.7 million, 
respectively. 

Army Depots' Carryover Significantly Increased: 

The Army depots' total carryover significantly increased from $1.1 
billion in fiscal year 2004 to $2.7 billion in fiscal year 2007--a $1.6 
billion increase. In order to reduce the fiscal year 2007 carryover, 
the Army developed a plan to perform $5.5 billion of work in fiscal 
year 2008--$1.4 billion more than the Army depots performed in fiscal 
year 2007. Our analysis of the plan and first quarter fiscal years 2007 
and 2008 execution data show that the depots performed significantly 
more work than they performed during the same period in the prior year 
but the depots missed their goal by $173 million at the end of December 
2007. Further, while the Army depot maintenance carryover amount had 
more than doubled over the past 4 years, this increase has not been 
specifically identified in the Army Working Capital Fund budgets to 
Congress because the Army consolidated the depot maintenance and 
ordnance activity groups under a single activity group called the 
Industrial Operations activity group in fiscal year 2005. 

Army Depots' Carryover Significantly Increased in Fiscal Years 2006 and 
2007: 

From fiscal years 2004 through 2007, the Army depots' total carryover 
significantly increased from $1.1 billion to $2.7 billion. The dollar 
amount of new orders received in fiscal years 2006 and 2007 (about $9.5 
billion) by the depots significantly exceeded the dollar amount of work 
performed (about $7.8 billion) by the depots during those same years. 
The depots carried over about 7.6 months of work into fiscal year 2008. 
Figure 1 illustrates how changes in fiscal years 2004 through 2007 new 
orders and work performed (revenue) have affected depot carryover. 

Figure 1: Analysis of Increases in New Orders and Revenue on Army Depot 
Maintenance Carryover: 

This is figure is a multiple line graph showing analysis of increases 
in new orders and revenue on army depot maintenance carryover. The 
lines represent revenue (work performed), new orders, and carryover. 
The X axis represents the fiscal year, and the Y axis represents 
dollars in billions. 

Revenue; 
Fiscal Year 2004: $2.7; 
Fiscal Year 2005: $3.5; 
Fiscal Year 2006: $3.7; 
Fiscal Year 2007: $4.2. 

New Orders; 
Fiscal Year 2004: $2.6; 
Fiscal Year 2005: $3.4; 
Fiscal Year 2006: $4.2; 
Fiscal Year 2007: $5.3. 

Carryover; 
Fiscal Year 2004: $1.2; 
Fiscal Year 2005: $1.0; 
Fiscal Year 2006: $1.6; 
Fiscal Year 2007: $2.7. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD data. 

[End of figure] 

As shown in figure 1, the new orders and work performed (revenue) 
increased from fiscal year 2004 through fiscal year 2007. However, the 
dollar amount of new orders increased at a greater pace than the dollar 
amount of work performed (revenue). New orders increased from about 
$2.6 billion to about $5.2 billion (about 100 percent increase) while 
the amount of revenue earned increased from $2.7 billion to about $4.2 
billion (56 percent increase). 

Army Developed a Plan in Fiscal Year 2008 to Reduce Carryover: 

In the first quarter of fiscal year 2008, the Army developed a plan to 
reduce the level of carryover at the Army depots. According to the 
plan, the Army depots would perform $5.5 billion of work in fiscal year 
2008--$1.4 billion more than the Army depots performed in fiscal year 
2007. In order to meet the revenue increases, the depots plan to take a 
number of actions, including hiring additional maintenance personnel 
and requiring maintenance personnel to work overtime. Our analysis of 
the five Army depots' revenue for the first quarter of fiscal years 
2007 and 2008 showed that the depots increased their revenue by about 
$293 million in the first quarter of fiscal year 2008 (about $1.1 
billion) compared to the same quarter the prior year ($817 million). 
Even though the depots increased their revenue, the depots missed their 
fiscal year 2008 first quarter revenue targets by about $173 million 
($1.282 billion target less $1.109 billion actual revenue). By missing 
the first quarter target, the Army is at risk of not meeting the 
carryover reduction plan goals for fiscal year 2008. 

In January and February 2008, we met with officials at the five Army 
depots to determine why some of the depots missed their revenue targets 
for the first quarter of fiscal year 2008. For the depots that missed 
their revenue targets, the officials stated that (1) the depots 
performed a different mix of workload than originally planned, 
generating less revenue; (2) unserviceable assets did not arrive as 
planned and the depots could not perform the planned workload; and (3) 
spare parts were not available to perform the planned workload. Even 
though several of the depots missed their first quarter revenue 
targets, officials at all but one of the depots--Anniston--stated that 
they expected to meet their end of fiscal year 2008 revenue targets. 
Anniston officials stated that they believed they would miss their 
revenue target by about $200 million, but they were attempting to 
identify additional work they could perform to increase revenue in 
fiscal year 2008. While officials at four of the five depots believed 
that they would meet their revenue targets and thus reduce carryover by 
the end of fiscal year 2008, the reduction of the carryover amount will 
largely depend on the amount of new orders accepted by the depots in 
fiscal year 2008 and the ability of the depots to perform their fiscal 
year 2008 workloads as planned. 

Army Depot Maintenance Activities' Carryover Is Not Separately 
Identified in Budgets to Congress: 

Although the Army depot maintenance carryover amount had more than 
doubled over the past 4 years, this increase in Army depot maintenance 
activities' carryover amount has not been specifically identified in 
the Army's Working Capital Fund budgets to Congress because the Army 
consolidated the depot maintenance and ordnance activity groups under a 
single activity group called the Industrial Operations activity group 
in fiscal year 2005. Prior to the consolidation, the Army Working 
Capital Fund budgets provided carryover information, such as the dollar 
amount of carryover and the carryover ceiling for the depot maintenance 
activities. Without detailed data on the Army depot maintenance 
activity groups' carryover, Congress cannot make informed decisions 
about the appropriate size of the Army depot maintenance budget and 
whether the depots are making significant progress in reducing their 
carryover amounts. In light of the significant increase in new orders 
and carryover at the Army depots because of ongoing wartime operations, 
it is even more important for the Army to report carryover information 
to Congress separately to provide visibility of the Army depot 
maintenance activities. 

Reported Carryover Amounts for Fiscal Years 2006 and 2007 Were 
Artificially Lowered: 

Reported Army depot maintenance activities' carryover was reduced by 
tens of million of dollars by (1) funds being deobligated at the end of 
fiscal year 2006 and then reobligated in the beginning of fiscal year 
2007 and (2) amounts that were exempted from carryover calculations in 
fiscal year 2007. The deobligations of funds at the end of fiscal year 
2006 and the fiscal year 2007 exemptions affected the amount of 
reported carryover as well as the amount of carryover that was over/ 
under the carryover ceiling for fiscal years 2006 and 2007. 

Deobligating Selected Orders Reduced Reported Carryover Amounts for 
Fiscal Year 2006: 

In fiscal year 2006, the Army depot maintenance activities reported 
that carryover work and related funding was under the ceiling by $67 
million. In order to reduce the Army's Industrial Operations fiscal 
year 2006 carryover, the Army Materiel Command directed Army activities 
to deobligate selected procurement-funded orders totaling $83 million. 
Specifically, Tobyhanna was directed to deobligate $30 million, and an 
Army ordnance activity (Pine Bluff Arsenal) was directed to deobligate 
$53 million by September 29, 2006, for work that they still planned to 
perform. The guidance stated that the orders would be reobligated on 
October 2, 2006. Further, the guidance stated that (1) the Industrial 
Operations carryover estimate increased by $388 million since the 
summer budget submission to OUSD (Comptroller) and (2) the Army did not 
want to exceed its carryover ceiling and give OUSD (Comptroller) "an 
excuse to doubt our ability to execute the fiscal year 2007 or fiscal 
year 2008 supplemental funding." Our review of Tobyhanna records showed 
that customers deobligated $30 million against six orders on September 
28 and September 29, 2006. The funds were then reobligated within the 
next 2 weeks.[Footnote 7] 

The action directed by the Army Materiel Command artificially lowered 
the reported carryover balances for Army's Industrial Operations and 
more specifically the Army depot maintenance activities in fiscal year 
2006. As discussed previously, congressional decision makers receive an 
aggregated report on carryover balances that covers the Army's 
Industrial Operations activities. We have previously reported[Footnote 
8] on a similar year-end deobligation problem related to Navy research 
and development activities. In response to our recommendation on this 
issue, OUSD (Comptroller) issued guidance on July 28, 2003, to the 
military services and DOD components prohibiting the manipulation of 
customer order balances in an attempt to reduce reported carryover. The 
guidance directed components to conduct internal reviews of accounting 
procedures currently in use, to include year-end adjustments, to ensure 
that this type of manipulation of carryover levels is not occurring. 

Exemptions Reduced Reported Carryover Amounts for Fiscal Year 2007: 

For fiscal year 2007, OUSD (Comptroller) approved about $299.7 million 
in additional exemptions from the carryover calculations that were not 
excluded in previous years. Without the exemptions, the depots would 
have exceeded the carryover ceiling by $251.2 million. However, with 
the exemptions, the depots exceeded the carryover ceiling by $96.8 
million. These exemptions were for (1) a public-private partnership 
involving Anniston ($194.2 million); (2) fourth quarter orders received 
by Anniston, Corpus Christi, and Tobyhanna from other services ($77.4 
million); and (3) long lead time material at Anniston ($28.1 million). 
In discussing the exemptions with OUSD (Comptroller) officials, the 
officials stated that they approved all carryover exemptions requested 
by the depots for orders received from other services in the fourth 
quarter of fiscal year 2007 and the public-private partnership 
arrangement involving Anniston. The officials stated that they denied 
some of the depots' carryover exemption requests for long lead time 
material. Further, the officials stated that the exemption requests 
that were granted for fiscal year 2007 carryover and their associated 
new orders resulted from the large increase in supplemental funding 
provided to the depots in support of ongoing wartime operations. The 
officials stated that the Army would have to request the exemptions 
next year if similar circumstances exist. 

Based on our review of the Army's exemption request and our findings in 
prior reports,[Footnote 9] as well as discussions with OUSD 
(Comptroller) and Army officials, we found that these exemptions do not 
provide the right incentives to the depots, customers, Defense 
Logistics Agency (DLA), and Army Supply to correct long-standing 
problems with receiving orders from other services late in the fiscal 
year and program delays caused by long lead time material. Because 
these issues are exempted, they are not subject to the level of 
scrutiny and possible corrective actions that would be provided if 
these problem areas were reflected in higher reported carryover 
balances. We reported in May 2001 and again in June 2005 that Army 
depots exceeded their carryover ceiling because some depots received 
and accepted work late in the fiscal year, and some depots could not 
obtain the material needed in a timely manner so that less work was 
performed than planned. As discussed in the next section, our current 
review found similar problems with late year orders and the lack of 
spare parts available for repair. 

Four Primary Reasons for Significant Growth in Fiscal Years 2006 and 
2007 Carryover: 

Our analysis of depot reports and discussions with Army officials 
identified four primary reasons for the growth in carryover. First, 
during fiscal years 2006 and 2007, the Army depot maintenance budget 
significantly underestimated the amount of new orders actually received 
from customers. While the depots performed more work than budgeted, 
they could not keep pace with the increases in new orders. Second, we 
found that the depots accepted orders late in the fiscal year that 
reasonably could not be completed, and in some cases could not even be 
started, prior to the end of the fiscal year. Third, we found that 
parts shortages prevented work from being performed. Fourth, 
unserviceable assets (assets that need to be repaired) scheduled for 
repair did not arrive at the depots as planned. While some of these 
reasons are under the control of other DOD activities, such as 
customers not sending assets needing repair to the depots as planned, 
other reasons are within the depots' control. 

Army's Budget Underestimated Significant Growth in New Orders: 

For fiscal years 2006 and 2007, the Army depot maintenance budget 
significantly underestimated the amount of new orders actually received 
from customers by about $1.7 billion and $1.5 billion, respectively. 
For example, while the budget shows that the depots expected to receive 
about $3.7 billion in new orders and perform about $3.8 billion of work 
(revenue) in fiscal year 2007, the depots actually received about $5.2 
billion in new orders and performed $4.2 billion of work. To perform 
more work during fiscal year 2007, the depots increased the number of 
employees and the direct labor hours performed by 630 employees and 
about 2.8 million direct labor hours over their fiscal year 2006 
totals. However, while the work performed by the depots (revenue) 
increased from fiscal year 2006 to fiscal year 2007, it did not 
increase at the pace of the orders received from customers, resulting 
in the large growth of carryover. 

Our analysis of the Army budget guidance for fiscal year 2006 showed 
that the Army assumed that the fiscal year 2006 new orders would amount 
to approximately 50 percent of the fiscal year 2005 operation and 
maintenance budget, Army supplemental workload. For fiscal year 2007, 
the Army assumed that the fiscal year 2007 orders would be 
approximately 25 percent less than the fiscal year 2006 program. These 
budget assumptions resulted in the reported actual orders significantly 
exceeding budgeted orders for fiscal years 2006 and 2007. For example, 
at Anniston, our analysis showed that the depot originally budgeted to 
receive about $1.1 billion of new orders for fiscal year 2007. During 
the midyear review in March 2007, Anniston revised its estimate to 
about $1.4 billion. However, the depot actually received about $1.5 
billion of new orders for fiscal year 2007--a difference of about $400 
million or 36 percent from the original amount budgeted. 

In discussing this matter with Army headquarters officials, they told 
us that budgeting for new orders was affected by the continuing Global 
War on Terrorism and the anticipated supplemental appropriations to 
finance the war. Army headquarters officials said that the Army 
underestimated the amount of new orders received by the depots because 
(1) the Army did not have any historical information on the amount of 
funds the depots would receive in the supplemental appropriations for 
depot maintenance work and (2) of the uncertainty related to the amount 
of funds the Army would receive in the supplemental appropriations for 
this depot maintenance work. Without reliable budget estimates, the 
Army depots cannot make the necessary adjustments to their manpower and 
material to ensure that the depots can meet the Army's maintenance 
requirements. 

Carryover Increased Because of Army Depots Receiving Orders Late in the 
Fiscal Year: 

In June 2006, we reported[Footnote 10] that carryover is greatly 
affected by orders accepted late in the fiscal year that generally 
cannot be completed, and in some cases cannot even be started, prior to 
the end of the fiscal year. As a result, almost all orders accepted 
late in the fiscal year increase the amount of carryover. DOD Financial 
Management Regulation 7000.14-R, volume 11A, chapters 2 and 3, 
prescribes regulations governing the use of orders placed with working 
capital fund activities. The DOD regulation identifies a number of 
requirements before a working capital fund activity accepts an order. 
For example, work to be performed under the order shall be expected to 
begin within a reasonable amount of time after the order is accepted by 
the performing DOD activity. As a minimum requirement, it should be 
documented that when an order is accepted, the work is expected to (1) 
begin without delay (usually within 90 days) and (2) be completed 
within the normal production period for the specific work ordered. Our 
analysis of fiscal years 2006 and 2007 orders showed that orders 
received in the fourth quarter continued to be a problem. For example, 
two of the five depots accepted more than 20 percent of their new 
fiscal year 2006 orders in the last 3 months of the fiscal year. The 
following examples illustrate orders that were accepted by Army depot 
maintenance activities late in fiscal year 2006. 

* In September 2006, Tobyhanna accepted an order from Tinker Air Force 
Base totaling approximately $3.3 million financed with operation and 
maintenance funds that would expire on September 30, 2006. The order 
was for the overhaul of an Air Force landing control radar that was 
located at Ramstein Air Base, Germany. According to an Air Force 
official and documentation, the Air Force identified the maintenance 
requirement in March 2006; however, funds were not made available until 
the end of fiscal year 2006, when additional funds were identified from 
other programs. As a result, the depot carried over the entire $3.3 
million into fiscal year 2007. In addition, depot officials stated that 
the depot experienced several delays in performing the work on the 
radar because of the initial unavailability of the asset (2-month 
delay), reconfiguration and resheltering of the asset, and the 
unavailability of long lead time parts. Because of these problems, the 
depot carried over approximately $1.8 million from fiscal year 2007 
into fiscal year 2008 and expects to complete the overhaul of the 
landing control radar on January 30, 2009. 

* In August 2006, Letterkenny accepted an order totaling about $8.4 
million that was financed with operation and maintenance funds for the 
repair of 15 Patriot launching stations. According to the production 
controller, the initial inspection and teardown work on the Patriot 
launching stations began when the order was accepted. Since repair work 
on the Patriot launching stations did not begin until August 2006, 
about $7.1 million of funded workload was carried over into fiscal year 
2007. According to the production controller, if the repair work for 
the Patriot launching stations was funded earlier in the fiscal year, 
then the carryover amount would have been a lot lower. All of the 
repair work for the 15 Patriot launching stations was completed by 
February 2007. 

Depots Could Not Obtain Parts Needed to Perform Repair Work as 
Scheduled: 

Our analysis of depot data and interviews with depot officials found 
that the depots experienced shortages of parts needed to perform their 
repair work in fiscal years 2006 and 2007. Our analysis of data in the 
critical maintenance repair parts reactive system[Footnote 11] at four 
depots showed that in 733 and 605 instances, repair parts shortages 
resulted in work stoppage in fiscal years 2006 and 2007, respectively. 
DLA and to a lesser extent Army Supply were the sources of supply for 
most of the repair parts. DLA officials told us that a major difficulty 
DLA faces as a supplier is forecasting the amount of repair parts 
needed when the depots' types and numbers of repairs keep changing. 
Having a firm requirement (quantity of items to be repaired) early in 
the process is critical if DLA is to provide the spare parts to the 
depots when they need them. However, this has not always been the case. 
For example, as discussed later in this report, in November 2006, Red 
River accepted an order to overhaul 200 HMMWVs. Over the next 4 months, 
the order was amended first to decrease the quantity to 106 and then 
increase the quantity to 344. According to DLA officials, changing 
requirements, similar to this example, make it extremely difficult to 
forecast the spare parts needed for repairs. If DLA waits to buy the 
parts until the depot has a firm requirement, the parts might not be 
available when the depot needs them. On the other hand, if DLA buys the 
parts before the requirement is firm, DLA is at risk for excess 
inventory of parts when requirements for parts are significantly 
reduced. 

In order to perform the required repair work and help minimize the 
impact of parts shortages on depot operations, the depots have taken a 
number of actions to obtain parts when they were not available, 
including using parts from other assets, commonly referred to as 
robbing parts; fabricating the parts; and obtaining parts through the 
use of their local procurement authority, including the government 
purchase card. The following are examples of actions taken by the 
depots. 

* In October 2006, Anniston accepted a $5.6 million order financed with 
fiscal year 2007 operation and maintenance appropriated funds to 
overhaul 1,200 M2 machine guns. The work was originally scheduled to 
begin in March 2007. Because of the lack of parts, the work did not 
begin until July 2007 which resulted in more carryover than originally 
planned. About $5.4 million of the $5.6 million carried over from 
fiscal year 2007 into fiscal year 2008. 

* Because of the Global War on Terrorism and the surge in production of 
the M2s, Anniston had problems with obtaining parts to overhaul the 
machine guns since 2004. Because the depot could not get the needed 
parts from DLA or Army Supply, it used parts from other M2 machine 
guns. Some of these parts included the barrels, buffer body assemble, 
bolt, barrel extensions, breech locks, and receivers. Since the depot 
used parts from these 1,200 machine guns to repair machine guns in 
previous years, these 1,200 machine guns were missing parts. By the 
time the depot overhauled the 1,200 M2 machine guns, about half of the 
M2s had been totally stripped of their parts. An Army official stated 
that the machine guns going through overhaul were the "worst of the 
worst." To perform the work, the depot had to buy new parts and have 
the Picatinny Arsenal fabricate barrel extensions in order to obtain 
the parts needed to complete the overhaul. This extra work increased 
the costs to about $10.4 million and the work was completed in December 
2007. 

* In November 2005, Tobyhanna accepted an order totaling about $18.4 
million to produce 3,954 light sets for the Army Communications- 
Electronics Life Cycle Management Command. The light sets are used to 
illuminate temporary facilities, such as tents and buildings. In order 
to produce the 3,954 light sets, the depot had to assemble almost 1 
million new parts. According to depot officials and documentation, the 
order was originally expected to be completed by September 30, 2006, 
but the completion date was delayed by approximately 13 months because 
of problems obtaining parts from DLA. In order to meet the parts 
requirement, DLA ordered the parts from its suppliers with 
approximately 2 years delivery. Since the expected delivery dates did 
not meet the customer's delivery requirements, the depot canceled its 
order with DLA and ordered the parts directly from vendors to meet its 
production schedule. However, the vendor that produces approximately 80 
percent of the parts could only provide enough parts for the production 
of 300 light sets a month. As a result, the depot carried over 
approximately $16 million from fiscal year 2006 into fiscal year 2007 
and $1 million from fiscal year 2007 into fiscal year 2008. 

In October 2006, the depot accepted another order from the Army 
Communications-Electronics Life Cycle Management Command totaling about 
$5.9 million for an additional 1,069 light sets. Because of the 
unavailability of a sufficient quantity of parts from the vendor to 
satisfy the fiscal years 2006 and 2007 orders, the depot could not 
begin work on the October 2006 order until August 2007--approximately 
10 months after the order was accepted. As noted previously, the DOD 
Financial Management Regulation includes requirements for accepting an 
order, including limiting acceptances to those orders that are expected 
to begin without delay (usually within 90 days). The depot carried over 
$5.4 million from fiscal year 2007 into fiscal year 2008. As of 
February 2008, the depot expected to complete the order by March 2008. 

* In November 2006, Red River accepted an order totaling approximately 
$24.8 million to overhaul 200 M1114 up armor HMMWVs from the Army TACOM 
Life Cycle Management Command. The order was financed with fiscal year 
2007 operation and maintenance appropriated funds and was modified 
twice. In January 2007, the order was reduced to overhaul 106 HMMWVs 
for about $13.1 million. Two months later in March 2007, the order was 
increased to 344 HMMWVs for about $56.1 million. In performing this 
work, the depot encountered two problems. First, the HMMWVs were not 
always available, resulting in changes to scheduling the performance of 
work. Second, the depot encountered problems in obtaining the material 
it needed to perform the repairs. For example, in May 2007, there was a 
shortage or potential parts shortage of 45 different parts to perform 
this work. To obtain the parts needed to perform the work, depot 
officials stated that they used parts from other vehicles at the depot 
or purchased parts via local procurement, including using government 
purchase cards. In August 2007, there was a shortage or potential parts 
shortage of 30 different parts. Since most of the work was not 
completed in fiscal year 2007, about $37.5 million carried over into 
fiscal year 2008. As of December 2007, documents showed that the depot 
anticipated completing work on this order in April 2008. 

In discussing the M1114 up armor HMMWV work with Red River officials, 
they told us that the problems encountered in performing the fiscal 
year 2007 work also occurred in the previous fiscal year. First, the 
quantity to be repaired kept changing. Specifically, in January 2006 
they accepted an order to repair 37 HMMWVs. In March 2006, the order 
was amended to 108 HMMWVs. Then in July 2006 the order was amended to 
repair 58 HMMWVs. Finally, in August, 2006, the order was amended back 
to 108 HMMWVs. Second, the depot also encountered problems on obtaining 
parts to perform the work. According to depot officials, because the 
last amendment increasing the order to 108 HMMWVs occurred in August 
2006 and the HMMWVs to be repaired were in poor condition, the 
carryover amount was high. The amount of work that carried over from 
fiscal year 2006 into fiscal year 2007 was $8.6 million of this $18.9 
million order. 

Army and DLA officials stated that in order to improve parts 
availability and reduce parts shortages, the Army and DLA are taking a 
number of actions. First, the Army depots and DLA are using a new tool 
that allows them to forecast spare parts requirements earlier in the 
process. Thus, they can better predict spare parts shortages and 
resolve them before the spare parts problems result in costly work- 
arounds or work stoppages at the depots. Second, DLA is establishing a 
greater presence at the depots to provide the depots and DLA greater 
visibility of spare parts requirements and to improve overall support 
to the depots. For example, DLA has added or is in the process of 
adding between two to eight personnel at each of the five depots to 
improve the forecasting of spare parts requirements and to expedite 
procurement of DLA-managed parts needed to meet the depots' immediate 
production requirements. Finally, DLA is working with its suppliers to 
identify alternative procurement sources and expedite parts delivery to 
avoid parts shortages at the depots.[Footnote 12] While these are good 
first steps to help resolve the spare parts problems, it is too early 
to determine if they will succeed. Furthermore, the Army does not have 
quantifiable measures, such as comparing information in the critical 
maintenance repair parts reactive system from one period to another 
period, to determine the effectiveness of its actions to reduce the 
depots' critical spare parts problems. 

Unserviceable Assets Scheduled for Repair Did Not Arrive at the Depots 
as Planned: 

One of the reasons cited in depot reports and by depot officials for 
carryover is that unserviceable assets (assets that need to be 
repaired) scheduled for repair did not arrive at the depots as planned. 
Our review of 53 depot reports issued in fiscal years 2006 and 2007 
found that over two-thirds of the reports from the five depots cited 
deficiencies related to the lack of unserviceable assets for repair. 
For example, a Letterkenny report cited 115 fiscal year 2007 projects 
that were either delayed or canceled because of the lack of 
unserviceable assets for repair. In some cases, the lack of 
unserviceable assets either stopped or delayed depot production 
operations, resulting in increased carryover. The scope of our work did 
not include researching the customers' reasons for not sending the 
assets for repair as planned. However, Army officials informed us that 
in some cases the assets remained in-theatre (for example, in Iraq) for 
longer periods than planned. 

While the depots have taken a number of actions to minimize production 
delays and carryover associated with the lack of unserviceable assets, 
the depots continue to report a lack of unserviceable assets. The 
following examples illustrate the impact on carryover when work was not 
performed because assets did not arrive at the depots as scheduled. 

* In November 2005, Anniston accepted an order to overhaul 7 M1 tanks 
totaling about $6.4 million, which was financed with fiscal year 2006 
Marine Corps Operations and Maintenance appropriated funds. The order 
was amended 9 times, increasing the quantity to 88 M1 tanks and 
increasing the amount of the order to about $86.6 million. During 
fiscal year 2006, the depot ordered about $8.8 million of material for 
this order with the first order for material occurring in April 2006. 
However, the first tank was not available for induction into the depot 
until December 2006, or 3 months into fiscal year 2007.[Footnote 13] 
Our analysis of production documents on this order showed that the 
production schedule for performing the tank work continuously changed. 
Specifically, during fiscal years 2006 and 2007, depot production 
documents show that the production schedule changed 10 times because of 
customer requirements changing or the tanks not arriving at the depot 
as scheduled. Because the tanks were not available until fiscal year 
2007, about $77.8 million of work (the amount of the order--$86.6 
million--less the amount of material--$8.8 million) was carried over 
into fiscal year 2007. Although all the work was originally scheduled 
to be completed during fiscal year 2007, 17 tanks were not available 
for the depot to begin work on until fiscal year 2008, which resulted 
in almost $6.9 million being carried over into fiscal year 2008. 

The problem of production schedules changing that Anniston experienced 
in performing the tank work on the fiscal year 2006 order continued on 
a fiscal year 2007 order. In November 2006, the depot accepted another 
order totaling about $39 million, which was financed with fiscal year 
2007 Marine Corps Operations and Maintenance appropriated funds to 
overhaul 36 M1 tanks. The order was amended five times during fiscal 
year 2007 increasing the quantity to 75 M1 tanks and increasing the 
amount of the order to about $81.4 million. The amendments increased 
the quantities of tanks to be overhauled from 36 to 75 and amount of 
funding from $39 million to $81.4 million. To perform work on this 
order, during fiscal year 2007, the depot ordered material with the 
first order for material occurring in January 2007. However, the first 
tank was not available to be inducted into the depot until September 
2007--the last month of the fiscal year. Our analysis of production 
documents on this tank order showed that the production schedule 
changed five times because of customer requirements changing or the 
tanks not arriving at the depot as scheduled. Because work on the tanks 
did not begin until the end of fiscal year 2007, about $71.3 million of 
work was carried over into fiscal year 2008. As of January 2008, the 
work is scheduled to be completed in May 2008 on this fiscal year 2007 
order received in November 2006. 

* In March 2006, Letterkenny accepted an order totaling about $12.3 
million that was financed with fiscal year 2006 Army procurement 
aircraft funds for the repair of 100 aviation ground power units. 
Initially, the Aviation and Missile Life Cycle Management Command 
programmed the repair of the 100 aviation ground power units in fiscal 
year 2006. However, in March, April, and May 2006, the depot had 
received only 5 of the 100 unserviceable assets. The production 
controller stated that the power units were shipped to the depot in 
small quantities from many locations all over the world, which delayed 
the receipt of all 100 units. Thus, the depot production department 
revised its repair scheduled to complete 10 power units a month through 
March 2007. According to the production controller, many of the power 
units were not repaired in accordance with the revised schedule because 
(1) not all of the power units were received in time to meet the 
revised production schedule and (2) there was a lack of power units in 
inventory to exchange with the deploying units. As a result, about $6.3 
million and $1.1 million carried over into fiscal years 2007 and 2008, 
respectively. 

* In February 2004, Anniston accepted three orders totaling about 
$296,000 that were financed with fiscal year 2004 Procurement of 
Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles appropriated funds to overhaul 39 
hydraulic cylinders on each order. Although the work was originally 
scheduled to be completed in June 2004, the work was not completed 
because some of the unserviceable assets did not arrive at the depot. 
As of August 2007, or about 3.5 years later, 36 hydraulic cylinders had 
not arrived at the depot for repair.[Footnote 14] Consequently, about 
$83,000 of the $296,000 carried over into fiscal year 2008 on work that 
was originally planned to be completed in fiscal year 2004. In 
discussing this matter with the customer, TACOM Life Cycle Management 
Command, we asked them why it had not canceled the order since the 
depot did not receive some of the hydraulic cylinders after the 
appropriation financing the order had expired. Officials said that they 
did not want to cancel the order because they would lose the funds. 
After our discussion, the depot received 25 cylinder heads for two of 
the orders in the December 2007 and January 2008 time frame, and the 
depot completed the work on those assets in December 2007 or January 
2008. As of January 2008, the depot has still not received 11 cylinder 
heads on this fiscal year 2004 order. 

* In October 2006, Corpus Christi accepted an order from the Army 
Aviation and Missile Life Cycle Management Command to repair 150 T700 
engine cold section modules totaling about $15.6 million. A depot 
official stated that the depot planned to complete the order by the end 
of October 2007. The depot initially expected to carryover 15 T700 
engine cold section modules from fiscal year 2007 into fiscal year 2008 
at an estimated value of approximately $1.6 million. However, primarily 
because of the lack of unserviceable assets to repair, the depot 
carried over 46 T700 engine cold section modules at an estimated value 
of $4.7 million--an increase in the depot's carryover of approximately 
$3.1 million. The depot completed the order in December 2007. 

In order to manage unserviceable assets and minimize carryover, the 
depots took a number of actions on a daily, weekly, monthly, and 
quarterly basis. For example, on a daily basis, (1) programs were 
reviewed for asset availability and (2) if it was determined that there 
was a shortage of assets, the item manager was notified. On a weekly 
basis, schedules were adjusted based on requirements and asset 
availability. On a quarterly basis, in-process reviews were held with 
the depots and the life cycle management commands, and issues affecting 
production were discussed. 

Conclusions: 

Continuing problems in the Army depot maintenance group's ability to 
control the growth of carryover has resulted in excess carryover 
amounts that tie up customer appropriations for long periods of time. 
Further, we noted the lack of transparency with the level of detail of 
carryover data reported to Congress for oversight purposes. Without 
increased management attention, Army depot maintenance carryover 
amounts will continue to escalate, as illustrated by the significant 
growth in carryover in fiscal years 2006 and 2007. Much of the growth 
in carryover results from the growth in new orders brought on by 
increased federal expenditures related to the war effort in Iraq and 
Afghanistan. Nonetheless, some of the factors that led to increased 
carryover are, in part, within DOD's and, more specifically, the Army 
depots' control. Most notably, the Army depots have not started orders 
within a few months of acceptance and completed them in a timely 
manner. While the Army's initial actions in fiscal year 2008 to reduce 
carryover at the Army depots resulted in some improvement, these 
actions have not yet fully met the goals included in its carryover 
reduction plan. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

In order to (1) improve the reliability and level of detail of 
carryover amounts reported to Congress and DOD decision makers and (2) 
reduce carryover associated with the Army depot maintenance working 
capital fund activities, we are making eight recommendations to the 
Secretary of Defense. 

We recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Under Secretary 
of Defense (Comptroller) to take the following actions: 

* Establish a mechanism to monitor whether activities are not following 
the existing July 2003 policy that prohibits the deobligating and 
reobligating of funds at year-end for the sole purpose of reducing 
carryover balances and take appropriate actions, such as reducing 
future funding designated for these activities, if they do not follow 
the policy. 

* Establish procedures requiring evaluations of future exemption 
requests on carryover to consider the impact these requests have on the 
actual carryover balances reported to Congress and whether granting 
such exemptions substantially reduces the visibility over and financial 
incentive to resolve long-standing issues, such as spare parts 
problems. 

We recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Secretary of the 
Army to take the following actions: 

* Direct the Army headquarters budget office to compare the amounts 
contained in the Army's carryover reduction plan to reported actual 
execution data on a monthly basis to determine (1) if the depots met 
established targets and (2) if the overall plan's execution has the 
desired effect of reducing fiscal year 2008 year-end carryover, and 
work with the Army Materiel Command and the Army depots to identify 
ways to further reduce fiscal year 2008 carryover if monthly revenue 
goals are not met. 

* Establish procedures for separately identifying the allowable and 
reported actual amounts of carryover for the Army depot maintenance 
activities in the Army's annual budget to Congress (as was done prior 
to fiscal year 2005). 

* Issue guidance, in accordance with existing DOD-wide guidance, that 
prohibits the Army Industrial Operations activity group from 
deobligating reimbursable customer orders at the end of the fiscal year 
and reobligating them in the next fiscal year for the sole purpose of 
reducing carryover balances that are ultimately reported to Congress. 

* Develop a mechanism to monitor the Army depot maintenance activities' 
compliance with the requirements in DOD Financial Management Regulation 
7000.14-R governing acceptance of orders, particularly when work is not 
expected to (1) begin without delay (usually within 90 days of 
acceptance) and (2) be completed within the normal production period 
for the specific work ordered. 

* Establish procedures requiring Army headquarters and Army Materiel 
Command to compare budgeted orders to actual orders that the depots 
received from customers and consider these trends in developing the 
following year's budget estimates on new orders to be received from 
customers. 

* Develop quantifiable measures to determine the effectiveness of 
actions taken by the Army and DLA to resolve spare parts shortages, 
such as analyzing the information on customer orders with insufficient 
spare parts in the critical maintenance repair parts reactive system at 
the end of fiscal year 2008 and comparing the results to those of prior 
fiscal years. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

DOD provided written comments on a draft of this report. DOD concurred 
with six recommendations and partially concurred with the specific 
aspects of recommended actions for two. However, in its response, DOD 
cited actions under way, or planned, related to all eight 
recommendations, including: 

* establishing an Army program to monitor carryover information 
throughout the fiscal year; 

* providing separate carryover rates for depot maintenance and ordnance 
in upcoming budgets of the President; 

* issuing an Army memorandum emphasizing the department's policy 
prohibiting the deobligating of funds late in the fiscal year and then 
reobligating the same funds in the following fiscal year in order to 
reduce carryover amounts; and: 

* developing a method that will identify the amount of carryover 
resulting from spare parts shortages. 

DOD partially concurred with two of our recommendations with respect to 
whether (1) it can establish a mechanism to detect manipulation of 
carryover balances and (2) that additional procedures are required to 
ensure that evaluations of future exemption requests consider the 
impact of granting such requests will have on congressional reporting. 

DOD agreed that the Army must comply with the departmental financial 
policy that prohibits deobligating and reobligating funds at year-end 
to reduce carryover balances, but stated that there is no cost- 
effective method to detect non-compliance. DOD stated it plans to 
reiterate its existing policy and re-instruct the components to verify 
compliance with this policy as part of their internal control reviews. 
It stated the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) 
will require the Army to certify compliance with DOD regulations and 
will evaluate and take appropriate actions on any future violations of 
the regulations. These additional planned DOD actions are consistent 
with the intent of our recommendation to establish an oversight 
mechanism. 

On DOD's partial concurrence with our recommendation to establish 
procedures requiring evaluations of future exemptions requests on 
carryover and to consider the impact these requests have on actual 
carryover balances, DOD stated that it partially concurred because it 
already has procedures in place. It stated that exemptions are given on 
a case-by-case basis and only for limited periods. In addition, DOD 
stated it plans to monitor and take appropriate actions on the Army's 
efforts to reduce carryover caused by parts shortages. However, as 
discussed in our draft report, the exemptions do not provide the right 
incentives to correct long-standing problems associated with receiving 
orders from other services late in the fiscal year and program delays 
caused by long lead time material. Consequently, we continue to believe 
that DOD should direct the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) to 
establish procedures requiring carryover-reporting exemption-request 
evaluations to consider the impact of granting such requests will have 
on carryover amounts reported to the Congress. 

Finally, exceeding the annual carryover ceilings has been a long- 
standing problem at DOD. The department and the services have policies, 
procedures, and regulations that, in our view, adequately establish 
carryover ceilings and how to stay within those limits. Effective 
service implementation and timely DOD monitoring of service action 
shortly before, immediately after, and throughout each fiscal year are 
key to achieving compliance with established carryover policies and 
procedures. Unless DOD implements effective controls to monitor the 
services' actions, the Congress can not be assured that the department 
is truly committed to reducing the growth of excessive carryover. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Chairmen and Ranking 
Members of the Senate Committee on Armed Services; the Subcommittee on 
Defense, Senate Committee on Appropriations; the House Committee on 
Armed Services; the Subcommittee on Readiness, House Committee on Armed 
Services; the House Committee on Appropriations; and the Subcommittee 
on Defense, House Committee on Appropriations. We are also sending 
copies to the Secretary of Defense, Secretary of the Army, and other 
interested parties. Copies will be made available to others upon 
request. In addition, the report will be available at no charge on the 
GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

Should you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, 
please contact Paula M. Rascona at (202) 512-9095 or rasconap@gao.gov 
or William M. Solis at (202) 512-8365 or solisw@gao.gov. Contact points 
for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be 
found on the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report 
are listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Paula M. Rascona: 

Director, Financial Management and Assurance: 

Signed by: 

William M. Solis: 

Director, Defense Capabilities and Management: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To determine the growth in reported total carryover from fiscal year 
2004 through fiscal year 2007 and the actions the Army is taking to 
reduce the carryover, we obtained and analyzed Army depot maintenance 
reports that contained information on new order, revenue, and carryover 
data for the 4-year period. We also met with Army officials to discuss 
its plans for reducing carryover in fiscal year 2008 and obtained and 
analyzed the Army's plans for reducing carryover. Further, we analyzed 
the Army's plan and first quarter fiscal years 2007 and 2008 execution 
data to determine if the depots met their first quarter fiscal year 
2008 targets. Finally, we met with officials at the five Army depots to 
determine (1) what specific actions the depots took to reduce carryover 
in the first quarter of fiscal year 2008; (2) if the depots did not 
meet the planned targets for the first quarter of fiscal year 2008, the 
reasons for missing the targets; and (3) whether the depots' officials 
believe that they will meet production targets for the fiscal year. 

To determine whether reported carryover amounts exceeded carryover 
ceilings for fiscal years 2006 and 2007 and adjustments made to reduce 
those amounts, we obtained and analyzed the allowable amount of 
carryover and reported actual year-end carryover for those years. We 
focused on fiscal years 2006 and 2007 because this is the time period 
when the carryover significantly increased. We also identified and 
analyzed the amount of carryover the Army exempted from its carryover 
calculation that was approved by the Office of the Under Secretary of 
Defense (Comptroller) for fiscal years 2006 and 2007. When the reported 
actual carryover exceeded the carryover ceiling, we met with 
responsible officials at the Army depots, the Army Materiel Command, 
and Army headquarters to ascertain why the depots exceeded the ceiling. 
We reviewed our prior reports (GAO-01-559, GAO-05-441, and GAO-06-530) 
on carryover, which provided information on the allowable amount of 
carryover as well as reported actual year-end carryover data. Finally, 
we identified year-end transactions that reduced the dollar amount of 
reported actual carryover in September 2006 and reobligated these funds 
in the beginning of October. 

To determine the primary reasons for the increased carryover at the 
five Army depots, we met with Army headquarters budget officials and 
responsible budgeting, accounting, or production officials at the Army 
depots. Based on those discussions, we obtained information that 
affected carryover. First, we analyzed budgeted and reported actual new 
orders to determine if the Army underestimated the depots' fiscal years 
2006 and 2007 workloads. When large differences occurred between 
budgeted and reported actual new orders, we met with Army headquarters 
officials to determine the reasons for these differences. Second, we 
identified orders received by the depots late in the fiscal year to 
determine if these orders were contributing to the carryover. Third, we 
analyzed reports and data files that provide information on the status 
of production work at the depots to determine if there were parts 
shortages resulting in carryover. In performing this work, we met with 
Defense Logistics Agency officials at the depots to discuss problems 
with the Defense Logistics Agency providing spare parts to the depots. 
Fourth, we analyzed reports that provide information on the status of 
production work at the depots to determine if the lack of unserviceable 
assets to be repaired at the depots contributed to carryover. 

We performed our work at the headquarters of the Office of the Under 
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) and the Office of the Secretary of 
the Army, Washington, D.C; Army Materiel Command, Fort Belvoir, 
Virginia; the Tobyhanna Army Depot, Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania; the 
Letterkenny Army Depot, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania; the Corpus Christi 
Army Depot, Corpus Christi, Texas; the Anniston Army Depot, Anniston, 
Alabama; and the Red River Army Depot, Texarkana, Texas. We conducted 
this performance audit from July 2007 through July 2008 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit 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 provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions 
based on our audit objectives. Most of the financial information in 
this report was obtained from official Army budget documents and 
accounting reports. To assess the reliability of the data, we (1) 
reviewed and analyzed the factors used in calculating carryover, (2) 
interviewed Army officials knowledgeable about the carryover data, (3) 
reviewed GAO reports on Army depot maintenance activities, and (4) 
reviewed orders customers submitted to the depots to determine if they 
were adequately supported by documentation. We requested comments on a 
draft of this report from the Secretary of Defense or his designee. The 
Under Secretary of Defense (Deputy Comptroller) provided written 
comments, which are presented in the Agency Comments and Our Evaluation 
section of this report and are reprinted in appendix II. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Office Of The Under Secretary Of Defense: 
1100 Defense Pentagon: 
Washington, DC 20301-1100: 

Comptroller: 

June 24, 2008: 

Ms. Paula M. Rascona: 
Director: 
Financial Management and Assurance: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W.: 
Washington, DC 20548:  

Dear Ms. Rascona: 

This is the Department of Defense response to the Government 
Accountability Office Draft Report 08-714, "Army Working Capital Fund: 
Actions Needed to Reduce Carryover at Army Depots" dated May 14, 2008, 
(GAO Code 195119). 

Actions to decrease carryover at the Army depots noted in the draft 
report are underway. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

John P. Roth: 

GAO Draft Report Dated May 14, 2008 GAO-08-714 (GAO Code 195119): 

"Army Working Capital Fund: Actions Needed To Reduce Carryover At Army 
Depots":  

Department Of Defense Comments To The Gao Recommendations:  

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommends that the Under Secretary of 
Defense (Comptroller) establish a mechanism to monitor whether. 
activities are not following the existing July 2003 policy that 
prohibits the de-obligating and' re-obligating of funds at year end for 
the sole purpose of reducing carryover balances and take appropriate 
actions such as reducing future funding designated for these activities 
if they do not follow the policy. (p. 32/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Partially concur. The Department agrees that the Army 
must comply with Department financial policies and regulations. 
However, there is no cost- effective method to detect non-compliance. 
To meet the intent of the recommendation, the Office of the Under 
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) (OUSD(C)) will reiterate its current 
policy prohibiting the manipulation of customer order balances in an 
attempt to reduce reported carryover level. Furthermore, OUSD(C) will 
re-instruct Components to verify compliance with this policy as part of 
the required Internal Control Reviews. The OUSD(C) will direct the Army 
to certify compliance with Department Financial Management Regulations 
for FY 2008 and OUSD(Comptroller) will evaluate future carryover 
violations and take appropriate actions as warranted. 

Recommendation 2: The GAO recommends that the Under Secretary of 
Defense (Comptroller) establish procedures requiring evaluations of 
future exemption requests on carryover to consider the impact these 
requests have on the actual carryover balances reported to Congress and 
whether granting such exemptions substantially reduces the visibility 
over and financial incentive to resolve long-standing issues, such as 
spare parts problems. (p. 32/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Partially concur. The Department already has procedures 
in place that govern the evaluation of exemption requests regarding the 
carryover ceiling. Since the start of the current war, Components have 
presented written justification explaining the need to exempt certain 
workload from the carryover calculation. The OUSD(C) staff reviews the 
request and considers wartime requirements, production capability, and 
the efficiency and effectiveness of the depots before determining if 
approval will be given for a carryover exemption. Exemptions are given 
on a case-by-case basis and are usually only for limited periods. The 
OUSD(C) recognizes the importance of maintaining a proper level of 
carryover, remaining vigilant on the amount of carryover actually 
reported, and the forecasted carryover amount. The OUSD(C) will monitor 
Army's efforts to reduce carryover caused by parts shortages and take 
action as required. 

Recommendation 3: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Army 
direct the Army headquarters budget office to compare the amounts 
contained in the Army's carryover reduction plan to reported actual 
execution data on a monthly basis to determine (1) if the depots met 
established targets and (2) if the overall plan's execution has the 
desired effect of reducing FY 2008 year end carryover, and work with 
the Army Materiel Command and the Army depots to identify ways to 
further reduce FY 2008 carryover if monthly revenue goals are not met. 
(p. 33/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Concur. The Secretary of the Army has initiated a program 
to monitor carryover information throughout the fiscal year. The Army 
has established a Depot Maintenance Execution Council that meets 
monthly to discuss the actual versus planned carryover amounts and the 
impact of new orders on the estimated carryover amount. 

Recommendation 4: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Army 
establish procedures for separately identifying the allowable and 
reported actual amounts of carryover for the Army depot maintenance 
activities in the Army's annual budget to Congress (as was done prior 
to FY 2003). (p. 33/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Concur. Because Army Depot Maintenance has a basic repair 
mission, a Reset mission associated with the Global War on Terror, and 
a Recapitalization mission, while Ordnance has a manufacturing and a 
storage mission, a separate carryover rate for Depot Maintenance and a 
carryover rate for Ordnance will be proposed in the upcoming 
President's Budget. 

Recommendation 5: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Army 
issue guidance, in accordance with existing DoD-wide guidance, that 
prohibits the Army Industrial Operations activity group from de-
obligating reimbursable customer orders at fiscal year end and re-
obligating them in the next fiscal year for the sole purpose of 
reducing carryover balances that are ultimately reported to Congress. 
(p. 33/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Concur. The Secretary of the Army will issue a memorandum 
emphasizing the Department's policy prohibiting the de-obligating of 
funds late in the fiscal year and then re-obligating the same funds in 
the following fiscal year in order to reduce the reported carryover 
amount. The Army will also conduct spot checks at the depots to ensure 
compliance. 

Recommendation 6: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Army 
develop a mechanism to monitor the Army depot maintenance activities' 
compliance with the requirements in the DoD Financial Management 
Regulation 7000.14-R governing acceptance of orders, particularly when 
work is not expected to (1) begin without delay (usually within 90 days 
of acceptance) and (2) he completed within the normal production period 
for the specific work ordered. (p. 33/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Concur. The DoD Financial Management Regulation, Volume 
11A, Chapter 2 (Project Orders) and 3 (Economy Act Orders), clearly 
specifies the criteria that governs the issuance and acceptance of 
Project Orders and Economy Act orders. The Secretary of the Army will 
issue additional guidance reiterating the conditions that must be 
followed when accepting Project or Economy Act Orders. 

Recommendation 7: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Army 
establish procedures requiring Army headquarters and Army Materiel 
Command to compare budgeted to actual orders the depots received from 
customers and the consideration of these trends in developing the 
following year's budget estimates on new orders to be received from 
customers. (p. 34/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Concur. The Secretary of the Army has established 
procedures that will compare forecasted customer orders contained in 
the budget to actual orders received from customers during the fiscal 
year. This comparison will provide trend analysis to be applied in the 
budget development process which will improve the accuracy and validity 
of forecasted customer orders in the President's Budget. 

Recommendation 8: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Army 
develop quantifiable measures to determine the effectiveness of actions 
taken by Army and Defense Logistics Agency to resolve spare parts 
shortages, such as analyzing the information on customer orders with 
insufficient spare parts in the critical maintenance repair parts 
reactive system at the of FY 2008 and comparing the results to prior 
fiscal years. (p. 34/GAO Draft Report) 

DOD Response: Concur. The Secretary of the Army has developed 
quantifiable measures to monitor the effectiveness of actions taken by 
the Army and the Defense Logistics Agency regarding the shortage of 
spare parts. The Army has a stock availability metric that measures the 
percentage of stock on hand to fill immediate requirements. The Defense 
Logistics Agency has an acceptance rate which measures the percentage 
of orders that DLA can fill. In addition, the Army will develop a 
method that will identify the amount of carryover resulting from spare 
parts shortages. This will allow the Army to initiate actions with the 
Army Supply business activity or DLA to correct these problems. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Paula M. Rascona, (202) 512-9095 or rasconap@gao.gov: 

William M. Solis, (202) 512-8365 or solisw@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contacts named above, Greg Pugnetti, Assistant 
Director; Richard Cambosos; Francine DelVecchio; Steve Donahue; Keith 
McDaniel; and Hal Santarelli made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] The five depots are the Tobyhanna Army Depot, Tobyhanna, 
Pennsylvania; the Letterkenny Army Depot, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania; 
the Corpus Christi Army Depot, Corpus Christi, Texas; the Anniston Army 
Depot, Anniston, Alabama; and the Red River Army Depot, Texarkana, 
Texas. 

[2] DOD Financial Management Regulation 7000.14-R, vol. 2B, ch. 9, 
establishes a ceiling for the amount of work that can be carried over 
from one fiscal year to the next. 

[3] GAO, Navy Working Capital Fund: Backlog of Funded Work at the Space 
and Naval Warfare Systems Command Was Consistently Understated, GAO-03-
668 (Washington, D.C.: July 1, 2003) and GAO, Navy Working Capital 
Fund: Management Action Needed to Improve Reliability of the Naval Air 
Warfare Center's Reported Carryover Amounts, GAO-07-643 (Washington, 
D.C.: June 26, 2007). 

[4] GAO, Defense Working Capital Fund: Improvements Needed for Managing 
the Backlog of Funded Work, GAO-01-559 (Washington, D.C.: May 30, 
2001). 

[5] The amount of allowable carryover using the outlay rate is shown in 
the following example. Customers order $100 of work, which is financed 
with a specific appropriation. If the outlay rate for this 
appropriation at the appropriation level is 60 percent, then this would 
result in the working capital fund activity group being allowed to 
carry over $40 ($100 - $60 [$100 x 60 percent] = $40). 

[6] GAO, Army Depot Maintenance: Ineffective Oversight of Depot 
Maintenance Operations and System Implementation Efforts, GAO-05-441 
(Washington, D.C.: June 30, 2005). 

[7] The 3-year procurement funds had not expired when they were 
reobligated. 

[8] GAO-03-668 and GAO-07-643. 

[9] GAO-01-559 and GAO-05-441. 

[10] GAO, Defense Working Capital Fund: Military Services Did Not 
Calculate and Report Carryover Amounts Correctly, GAO-06-530 
(Washington D.C.: June 27, 2006). 

[11] The critical maintenance repair parts reactive system provides 
data on parts shortages or potential parts shortages that have or will 
cause the depots to resort to "work-around" methods to try to prevent 
work stoppages. 

[12] Our report, GAO, Military Base Realignments and Closure: Transfer 
of Supply, Storage, and Distribution Functions from Military Services 
to Defense Logistics Agency, GAO-08-121R (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 26, 
2007), discussed DLA's ability to provide supplies to depots. 

[13] We did not assess whether the fiscal year 2006 order, as amended, 
reflected a bona fide need of that fiscal year. 

[14] We did not assess whether the fiscal year 2004 orders reflected a 
bona fide need of the fiscal years for which the procurement funds were 
available. 

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