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How Regional Collaboration Efforts Build Preparedness Capabilities' 
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Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

July 2009: 

Urban Area Security Initiative: 

FEMA Lacks Measures to Assess How Regional Collaboration Efforts Build 
Preparedness Capabilities: 

GAO-09-651: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-651, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

From fiscal year 2003 through fiscal year 2009, the Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS) allocated about $5 billion for the Urban Area 
Security Initiative (UASI) grant program to enhance regional 
preparedness capabilities in the nation's highest risk urban areas 
(UASI regions). The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) 
administers this program. The Implementing Recommendations of the 9/11 
Commission Act of 2007 (9/11 Act) required FEMA to change the size of 
the geographical areas used to assess UASI regions’ risk. The 
conference report accompanying the Consolidated Appropriations Act for 
fiscal year 2008 directed GAO to assess FEMA’s efforts to build 
regional preparedness through the UASI program, and determine how the 
9/11 Act change affected UASI regions. This report addresses (1) the 
extent to which FEMA assesses how UASI regions’ collaborative efforts 
build preparedness capabilities, and (2) how UASI officials described 
their collaboration efforts and changes resulting from the 9/11 Act. 
GAO surveyed all 49 UASI regions that received funding prior to the 
9/11 Act change, and visited 6 regions selected based on factors such 
as length of participation. GAO also reviewed FEMA’s grant guidance and 
monitoring systems. 

What GAO Found: 

Although FEMA has gathered and summarized data on UASI regions’ funding 
for specific projects and related preparedness priorities and 
capabilities, it does not have measures to assess how UASI regions’ 
collaborative efforts have built preparedness capabilities. An 
executive directive, Departmental policy, and agency guidance all 
require that preparedness priorities and capabilities be measurable so 
that FEMA can determine current capabilities, gaps, and assess national 
resource needs. To report on the performance of the UASI program, FEMA 
has gathered data on UASI regions’ funding for projects and the goals 
and objectives those projects support, including the National Priority 
to Expand Regional Collaboration. However, FEMA’s assessments do not 
provide a means to measure the effect UASI regions’ projects have on 
building regional preparedness capabilities—the goal of the UASI 
program. FEMA acknowledged a lack of specific measures that define how 
or whether national priorities—including expanding regional 
collaboration—are achieved. In the absence of measures, FEMA directed 
states to describe their collaborative activities. However, these state 
activities do not provide a means to assess how regional collaboration 
activities help build preparedness capabilities. FEMA has an effort 
underway to establish a comprehensive assessment system to appraise the 
nation’s preparedness capabilities. FEMA could build upon its current 
efforts to assess overall preparedness by developing and including 
measures related to the collaboration efforts of UASI regions and their 
effect on building regional preparedness. This could provide FEMA with 
more meaningful information on the return on investment of the $5 
billion it has allocated to the UASI program to date. 

UASI officials described program activities that they said greatly or 
somewhat helped support regional collaboration, reflecting factors GAO 
identified that can enhance and sustain collaboration, and also 
described a variety of actions taken in response to the 9/11 Act change 
to assess risk. Regarding program activities that support regional 
collaboration, of the 49 UASI regions GAO surveyed, 46 said they have 
active mutual aid agreements in part to share resources among 
jurisdictions, and 44 described training and exercises as activities 
they use to build regional preparedness capabilities. Some UASI regions 
reported changes in membership in response to FEMA’s change in the size 
of the geographical areas used to assess UASI regions’ risk. For 
example, of the 49 regions GAO surveyed, 27 reported that additional 
jurisdictions were included within the geographical area FEMA used to 
assess risk that were not included in the region’s membership. However, 
17 of these regions reported that they had assessed and evaluated the 
need to include these new jurisdictions in their membership and 3 UASI 
regions said they plans to do this, while 7 UASI regions said they had 
no plans to do this. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that FEMA develop performance measures to assess how 
regional collaboration efforts funded by UASI grants build 
preparedness. FEMA concurred with our recommendation. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-651] or key 
components. For more information, contact William O. Jenkins, Jr. (202) 
512-8777, jenkinswo@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

FEMA Gathers Data and Reports on Funding for Regional Collaboration 
Efforts, but Does Not Assess How UASI Regions' Collaborative Efforts 
Enhance Regional Preparedness: 

UASI Officials Described Program Features That Support Regional 
Collaboration but Cited Continuing Challenges; Some UASI Regions 
Increased their Membership in Response to Changes in the 9/11 Act: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: DHS's Target Capabilities List: 

Appendix II: Results of GAO's Telephone Survey of 49 UASI Regions: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: UASI Grant Program: Funds Allocated for Fiscal Years 2003 
through 2009: 

Table 2: National Preparedness Guidelines' List of National Priorities: 

Table 3: Factors That Characterize Effective Regional Coordination of 
Federally Supported Efforts: 

Table 4: Collaborative Practices Reflected in the UASI Program: 

Table 5: DHS's Target Capabilities List: 

Figure: 

Figure 1: UASI Projects Related to Regional Collaboration: Top Six 
Preparedness Capabilities (in dollars for Fiscal Years 2006 through 
2008): 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 2, 2009: 

The Honorable Robert C. Byrd: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Thad Cochran: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Homeland Security: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable David E. Price: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Harold Rodgers: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Homeland Security: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
House of Representatives: 

The November 2008 Mumbai attacks, where members of a terrorist group 
attacked multiple locations, including transportation, commercial, and 
religious facilities, illustrated the propensity of terrorists to 
strike high-profile urban targets. To prepare for and respond to such 
acts of terrorism, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) provides 
grants administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) 
to state, local, tribal jurisdictions, and urban areas to build and 
sustain national preparedness capabilities. From its inception in 
fiscal year 2003 through fiscal year 2009, Congress has appropriated 
about $5 billion for the Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) to 
support regional preparedness in the nation's highest risk urban 
areas.[Footnote 1] The UASI grant program is designed to distribute 
federal funding to an urban region composed of multiple local 
governments and first responder agencies rather than a single city. The 
purpose of the UASI program is to support regional collaboration among 
local jurisdictions and emergency response organizations in order to 
build and sustain regional preparedness capabilities necessary to 
prevent, protect, respond to, and recover from acts of terrorism. 

Reflecting the requirements of the Implementing Recommendations of the 
9/11 Commission Act of 2007 (9/11 Act),[Footnote 2] FEMA changed the 
way it assessed risk for urban areas in allocating grant funds in 2008. 
Previously, FEMA measured the relative risk of UASI regions' using a 10 
mile radius around the center city's boundaries. The 9/11 Act required 
FEMA to use the boundaries of metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) for 
the 100 largest (by population) areas in determining its 2008 UASI 
grant allocations.[Footnote 3] Although the 9/11 Act did not specify 
the intent of the change to MSAs, we concluded in June 2008 that using 
MSAs provided a more standardized and generally accepted approach to 
defining an urban area.[Footnote 4] 

In the conference report accompanying the Consolidated Appropriations 
Act for fiscal year 2008, Congress directed that GAO assess how DHS is 
implementing a regional approach to preparedness through the UASI 
program and what changes to this approach resulted from the relevant 9/ 
11 Act provisions.[Footnote 5] We conducted this review to answer the 
following questions: 

* To what extent has FEMA assessed how UASI regions' collaborative 
efforts build regional preparedness capabilities? 

* How did UASI officials describe their regional collaboration efforts 
and changes, if any, resulting from the 9/11 Act? 

To determine the extent to which FEMA has assessed how UASI regions' 
collaborative efforts build regional preparedness capabilities, we 
reviewed DHS strategic policies and guidance such as the National 
Preparedness Guidelines and the Target Capabilities List, as well as 
FEMA's UASI program policies and guidance.[Footnote 6] Specifically, we 
reviewed guidance from the Homeland Security Grant Program that 
requires grantees to report on project progress and costs and use 
metrics and/or narrative discussions to indicate project progress/ 
success.[Footnote 7] The guidance also describes how grantees are to 
structure their UASI programs, membership and management, and processes 
for developing, submitting, and implementing proposed grant projects. 
We reviewed FEMA's January 2009 Federal Preparedness Report, and the 
information FEMA submitted for OMB's 2008 Program Assessment Rating 
Tool (PART) on the UASI program. [Footnote 8] We observed 
demonstrations of two systems FEMA uses to monitor and report on the 
status and progress of the use of homeland security grants (the Grant 
Reporting Tool and Grant Monitoring Tool), and reviewed documents 
supporting another system being developed by FEMA to help grant 
recipients assess and prioritize grant project proposals (the Cost To 
Capability Initiative). In addition, we analyzed project data submitted 
by UASI grantees to FEMA. FEMA maintains this information in its Grant 
Reporting Tool, which includes information on the kinds of projects 
UASI applicants proposed, how these projects were associated with the 
National Priority to Expand Regional Collaboration, and the types of 
preparedness capabilities UASI grant recipients anticipated would be 
increased as a result of these projects. We reviewed all those projects 
that supported the National Priority to Expand Regional Collaboration--
446 projects from the total 2,847 UASI grant projects funded under the 
program during this time period. We assessed the reliability of these 
data by questioning agency officials about the steps they take to 
ensure the integrity of the data, including efforts taken during site 
monitoring visits. We also compared the results from our analyses to 
other information provided by FEMA. From these efforts we believe that 
the data used in our analyses were sufficiently reliable for the 
purposes of this report. Finally, we interviewed FEMA officials 
responsible for implementing, measuring, and monitoring the UASI 
program. In addition to the National Preparedness Guidelines and UASI 
program guidance, we reviewed the Post-Katrina Emergency Management 
Reform Act and Homeland Security Presidential Directive 8, which also 
require measures and assessments of national preparedness. 

To determine how UASI officials described their regional collaboration 
efforts and the changes, if any, resulting from the 9/11 Act, we 
surveyed by telephone all 49 UASI regions that were recipients of UASI 
grant funding in fiscal years 2008 and in at least 1 fiscal year prior 
to 2008. We based our survey questions in part on our prior work 
including best practices for collaboration, factors that support 
regional collaboration, and challenges to interagency coordination. 
[Footnote 9] We conducted pretests by telephone with representatives of 
3 UASI regions to refine our questions, develop new questions, clarify 
any ambiguous portions of the questionnaire, and identify any 
potentially biased questions. We obtained a 100 percent response rate 
to our telephone survey. Because our survey included all 49 UASI 
regions that received grant funding as described above, there are no 
sampling errors. We also selected a nonprobability sample of 6 UASI 
regions to visit.[Footnote 10] We selected these UASI regions based on 
several factors, including the length of time the region had 
participated in the program, its relative risk ranking (Tier 1--those 
at highest risk--or Tier 2), the amount of grant funding received, the 
change in geographic footprint resulting from the switch to MSAs, and 
geographical diversity. While the results of these site visits cannot 
be generalized to all UASI regions, we believe that the observations 
obtained from these visits provided us with a general understanding of 
the differing extents to which UASI program managers felt their 
programs were achieving regional collaboration and what steps, if any, 
they took in response to FEMA's change in the definition of a UASI 
region for its risk allocation methodology. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2008 through June 2009, 
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. 

Background: 

UASI Grant Program Designed to Build Preparedness Capabilities within 
Urban Areas and Support Regional Collaboration: 

FEMA created the Grant Programs Directorate on April 1, 2007, in 
accordance with the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act (Post- 
Katrina Act), to consolidate the management of emergency preparedness 
grants, including the UASI grants. The Grant Programs Directorate's 
subject-matter experts are to provide on-site programmatic monitoring 
and technical assistance to grantees, while analyzing, evaluating, and 
ensuring accountability and program effectiveness. Similarly, FEMA 
created the National Preparedness Directorate to carry out key elements 
of the national preparedness system, in coordination with other 
federal, state, local, tribal, nonprofit, and private-sector 
organizations.[Footnote 11] The Directorate includes the National 
Integration Center and the Office of Preparedness Policy, Planning, and 
Analysis. The Office of Preparedness Policy, Planning, and Analysis is 
responsible for developing tools and measures for assessing national 
preparedness nationwide. 

Since its inception in fiscal year 2003, the purpose of the UASI 
program has been to provide federal assistance to build and sustain 
regional preparedness capabilities necessary to prevent, protect, 
respond to, and recover from acts of terrorism in the nation's highest 
risk urban areas, such as information gathering, search and rescue, and 
citizen evacuation.[Footnote 12] To administer the UASI program, FEMA 
estimates the risk relative to selected urban areas, considering 
threat, vulnerability, and consequences. On the basis of this analysis, 
it ranks the UASI areas and identifies urban areas as eligible to apply 
for UASI funding. DHS and FEMA have increased the number of regions 
receiving UASI grant funds from the original 7 areas identified for 
funding by DHS in 2003 which received $96.5 million, to 62 areas 
designated by FEMA that received $798.6 million in funding in 2009, as 
shown in table 1. 

Table 1: UASI Grant Program: Funds Allocated for Fiscal Years 2003 
through 2009: 

Amount allocated; ($ in millions): 
2003: $96. 5; 
2003 Supplemental: $593.3; 
2004: $675; 
2005: $829.7; 
2006: $710; 
2007: $747; 
2008: $781.6; 
2009: $798.6. 

# UASI regions; 
2003: 7; 
2003 Supplemental: 30; 
2004: 50; 
2005: 43; 
2006: 46; 
2007: 46; 
2008: 60; 
2009: 62. 

Source: GAO analysis of UASI grant guidance for fiscal years 2003 
through 2009. 

[End of table] 

As required by the 9/11 Act, FEMA changed the definition it used to 
identify the UASI regions included in its risk analysis model. 
Specifically, FEMA used this risk analysis model to determine its 2008 
UASI grant allocations and changed the definition of UASI regions 
included in the model from one that includes a 10-mile radius around an 
urban area's center city boundary to Metropolitan Statistical Areas 
(MSAs) as defined by the Census Bureau. In July 2008, we reported on 
the effect of this change on FEMA's risk analysis model and risk-based 
allocation methodology for determining risk and distributing UASI grant 
funds and found the methodology reasonable.[Footnote 13] In addition, 
although the 9/11 Act did not specify the intent of the change to MSAs, 
we concluded that using MSAs provided a more standardized and generally 
accepted approach to defining an urban area. FEMA did not require UASI 
grantees to change the number of jurisdictions participating in the 
governance of the UASI region as a result of this change, but 
recommended in grant guidance that UASI regions expand their efforts to 
involve regional preparedness partners (for example, contiguous 
jurisdictions, port authorities, rail and transit authorities, campus 
law enforcement, and state agencies) in their program activities. 

UASI regions' members include local government policymakers, officials 
from first responder agencies, and officials from quasi-governmental 
authorities like ports and transit agencies. All of these officials are 
collectively responsible for coordinating development and 
implementation of the projects and programs being conducted with UASI 
grant funds. Each UASI region is to develop a charter or other form of 
standard operating procedures that addresses such issues as membership, 
governance structure, voting rights, grant management and 
administration responsibilities, and funding allocation method. The 
charter must also outline how decisions made in UASI meetings for that 
region will be documented and shared with UASI members. FEMA requires 
each UASI region to create its own regional working group, which FEMA's 
grant guidance refers to as an urban area working group. UASI grant 
guidance requires that membership of a region must include 
representation from the jurisdictions and response disciplines that 
comprise the region as defined by the urban area's working group. 
Beginning in fiscal year 2008, UASI grant guidance recommended to urban 
areas that they consider for UASI working group membership those 
counties within which the cities included in the UASI region reside, 
contiguous jurisdictions, and jurisdictions within the region's MSA. 

Each year FEMA issues UASI grant guidance that describes the priorities 
and requirements for the annual grant cycle. FEMA requires each UASI 
region to develop and submit a strategic plan that outlines the 
region's common goals, objectives, and steps for implementation of 
projects and programs to enhance regional preparedness. This strategy, 
known as the Urban Area Homeland Security Strategy, is intended to 
provide each UASI region with direction for enhancing regional 
capabilities. UASI regions must use their strategy as the basis for 
requesting funds, and FEMA's grant guidance states that there must be a 
clear correlation between the goals, objectives, and priorities 
identified in the Urban Area Homeland Security Strategy and UASI 
program activities. Once FEMA allocates grant funds, UASI regions are 
responsible for coordinating development and implementation of 
preparedness projects under the grant program. After funds are awarded, 
grantees are required to report every 6 months on progress as part of 
the regular grant reporting process. Performance data submitted through 
grant reporting are to be reviewed and validated through program 
monitoring by FEMA. 

National Preparedness Guidelines and Preparedness Capabilities: 

In December 2003, the President issued Homeland Security Presidential 
Directive-8 (HSPD-8), which called on the Secretary of Homeland 
Security to carry out and coordinate preparedness activities with 
public, private, and nonprofit organizations involved in such 
activities, and directed that DHS establish measurable readiness 
priorities and targets.[Footnote 14] In addition, the Post-Katrina Act 
requires FEMA to develop specific, flexible, and measurable guidelines 
to define risk-based preparedness (i.e., target) capabilities and to 
establish preparedness priorities that reflect an appropriate balance 
between the relative risks and resources associated with all 
hazards.[Footnote 15] DHS published the National Preparedness 
Guidelines in September 2007. Specifically, the purposes of the 
Guidelines are to: 

* organize and synchronize national--including federal, state, local, 
tribal, and territorial--efforts to strengthen national preparedness; 

* guide national investments in national preparedness; 

* incorporate lessons learned from past disasters into national 
preparedness priorities; 

* facilitate a capability-based and risk-based investment planning 
process; and: 

* establish readiness metrics to measure progress and a system for 
assessing the nation's overall preparedness capability to respond to 
major events, especially those involving acts of terrorism. 

The Guidelines describe eight national priorities that are intended to 
guide preparedness efforts, as presented in table 2. 

Table 2: National Preparedness Guidelines' List of National Priorities: 

National Priorities: 

* Expand Regional Collaboration. 

* Implement the National Incident Management Systems and the National 
Response Plan. 

* Implement the National Infrastructure Protection Plan. 

* Strengthen Information Sharing and Collaboration Capabilities. 

* Strengthen Interoperable and Operable Communications Capabilities. 

* Strengthen Chemical/Biological/Radiological/Nuclear and/or Explosive 
(CBRNE) Detection, Response and Decontamination Capabilities. 

* Strengthen Medical Surge and Mass Prophylaxis Capabilities. 

* Strengthen Planning and Citizen Preparedness Capabilities. 

Source: Department of Homeland Security, National Preparedness 
Guidelines, Sept. 2007. 

[End of table] 

The National Preparedness Guidelines also define 37 specific 
preparedness capabilities that communities, the private sector, and all 
levels of government should collectively possess in order to respond 
effectively to disasters.[Footnote 16] These preparedness capabilities 
cover a broad range of activities to prevent, protect against, respond 
to, and recover from man-made or natural disasters, and include such 
things as information gathering, search and rescue, citizen evacuation, 
and structural damages assessment. A complete list of the 37 
preparedness capabilities is provided in appendix 1. FEMA requires 
grant recipients to demonstrate how their progress in meeting these 
priorities is supported by projects to develop specific preparedness 
capabilities. According to FEMA, with its focus on enhancing regional 
preparedness through the collaborative efforts of multiple 
jurisdictions throughout urban areas, the UASI program directly 
supports the national priority to expand regional collaboration. 

Prior GAO Work on Assessing Preparedness Capabilities: 

In March 2008 we testified that, although FEMA has taken some steps to 
establish goals, gather information, and measure progress, its 
monitoring of homeland security grant expenditures did not provide a 
means to measure the achievement of desired program outcomes.[Footnote 
17] We further reported that FEMA's efforts did not provide information 
on the effectiveness of those funds in improving the nation's 
capabilities or reducing risk. 

To address these concerns, FEMA is developing two new systems to gather 
data on preparedness capabilities. Specifically, as we reported in 
December 2008 and April 2009, respectively, FEMA is developing a Cost- 
to-Capability (C2C) initiative and a Comprehensive Assessment System. 
[Footnote 18] In December 2008, we reported that to help state and 
local stakeholders make better investment decisions for preparedness, 
FEMA's Grant Programs Directorate is developing the C2C initiative to 
help assess a jurisdiction's capabilities. However, according to FEMA 
officials, the C2C results--as designed--would not directly measure 
preparedness, and grantees' use of the C2C tool will not be mandatory. 
In April 2009, we reported that FEMA is developing a comprehensive 
assessment system in response to a Post-Katrina Act requirement to 
assess the nation's capabilities and overall preparedness for 
preventing, responding to, and recovering from natural and man-made 
disasters. We reported that FEMA faces methodological and coordination 
challenges in developing and completing its proposed Comprehensive 
Assessment System and reporting on its results. Among other things, we 
recommended that FEMA enhance its project management plan to include 
milestone dates, an assessment of risk, and related mitigation 
strategies for comprehensively collecting and reporting on disparate 
information sources, developing quantifiable metrics for preparedness 
capabilities that are to be used to collect and report preparedness 
information, and reporting on the results of preparedness assessments 
to help inform homeland security resource allocation decisions. FEMA 
agreed with our recommendations. 

In prior reviews, we examined effective regional coordination in 
emergency preparedness efforts and collaboration among federal agencies 
to identify common approaches and practices.[Footnote 19] For example, 
in September 2004 we reviewed coordination practices in various 
metropolitan areas to identify regional programs with lessons learned 
that could be applied in the National Capital Region and elsewhere and 
identified four factors that enhance regional coordination efforts--a 
collaborative regional organization, flexibility in the membership and 
geographic area, a strategic plan with measurable goals and objectives, 
and funding at a regional level. (see table 3).[Footnote 20] 

Table 3: Factors That Characterize Effective Regional Coordination of 
Federally Supported Efforts: 

Factors: Collaborative regional organization; 
Definition: A collaborative regional organization includes 
representation from many different jurisdictions and different 
disciplines such as fire, police, and emergency medical organizations. 

Factors: Flexibility in membership and geographic area; 
Definition: When regional civic and political traditions foster 
interjurisdictional coordination, allowing localities to choose their 
membership and geographic area of the regional organization can enhance 
collaborative activities. 

Factors: Strategic planning; 
Definition: A strategic plan with measurable goals and objectives helps 
focus resources and efforts to address problems. 

Factors: Regional funding; 
Definition: Funding at a regional level provides incentives for 
regional organizations' collaborative planning activities. 

Source: GAO-04-1009. 

[End of table] 

In 2005, we examined challenges that federal agencies face in 
coordinating their efforts and identified key practices that can 
enhance and sustain their collaborative efforts by among other things: 

* defining and articulating a common outcome(s); 

* establishing mutually reinforcing or joint strategies to achieve the 
outcome; 

* identifying and addressing needs by leveraging resources; 

* achieving mutual agreement(s) on agency roles and responsibilities; 

* establishing compatible policies, procedures, and other means to 
operate across agency boundaries; 

* developing mechanisms to monitor, evaluate, and report the results of 
collaborative efforts; and: 

* reinforcing agency accountability for collaborative efforts through 
agency plans and reports.[Footnote 21] 

In March 2000, we reported that agencies can encounter a range of 
barriers when they attempt to collaborate. These include such 
challenges as missions that are not mutually reinforcing or that may 
even conflict, agencies' concerns about protecting jurisdiction over 
missions and control over resources, and incompatible procedures, 
processes, data, and computer systems--making reaching a consensus on 
strategies and priorities difficult.[Footnote 22] 

In September 2004, we also reported that the short history of regional 
collaboration for homeland security is characterized by attempts of 
federal, state, and local governments to overcome a fragmented federal 
grant system and local jurisdictional barriers to assess needs, fill 
gaps, and plan for effective prevention and emergency response. 
[Footnote 23] In July 2002, the President issued the National Strategy 
for Homeland Security, which emphasized a shared responsibility for 
security involving close cooperation among all levels of government. To 
enhance emergency preparedness, the strategy called for systems that 
avoid duplication and increase collaboration to better align public and 
private resources for homeland security. We have consistently called 
for the development of a national, rather than purely federal, strategy 
that involves partners from all levels, including federal, state, and 
local organizations. For example, in testimony given in 2003, we 
highlighted multiple barriers to addressing one basic area of 
preparedness--interoperable communications systems--including the lack 
of effective, collaborative, interdisciplinary, and intergovernmental 
planning.[Footnote 24] In another study of bioterrorism preparedness, 
we reported that although progress had been made in local planning, 
regional planning involving multiple municipalities, counties, or 
jurisdictions in neighboring states lagged.[Footnote 25] We found that 
the autonomy of local jurisdictions and competing priorities within and 
among them can make regional coordination difficult and that efforts 
that seek to overcome these challenges to coordinate regionally must 
take into account the different operational structures and civic 
traditions of states and municipalities. 

FEMA Gathers Data and Reports on Funding for Regional Collaboration 
Efforts, but Does Not Assess How UASI Regions' Collaborative Efforts 
Enhance Regional Preparedness: 

FEMA uses two grant administration tools--the Grant Reporting Tool and 
the Grant Monitoring Tool--to gather information on projects funded and 
progress made by UASI grantees to expand regional collaboration and to 
report on UASI program performance. However, FEMA has not assessed how 
UASI regions' collaboration efforts have helped build regional 
preparedness capabilities. 

FEMA Uses Grant Administration Tools to Gather Data and Report On UASI 
Program Performance: 

FEMA uses two grant administration tools to gather information on 
projects funded and progress made by UASI grantees; and the agency used 
this information to help produce the first Federal Preparedness Report 
in January 2009, which provided an overall assessment of the nation's 
preparedness to prevent, protect, respond to, and recover from natural 
and man-made disasters.[Footnote 26] UASI region officials use FEMA's 
Grant Reporting Tool to, among other things, report on project funding 
plans and collect and record grant expenditures over the life of grant 
projects. FEMA program analysts use another system, the Grant 
Monitoring Tool, to record the results of their monitoring visits at 
each UASI region once every 2 years. FEMA also used information from 
the Grant Monitoring Tool to report on UASI program performance in 
OMB's 2008 Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART). 

Grantees use FEMA's Grant Reporting Tool to report twice a year on 
planned and actual grant obligations and progress made on grant 
projects. According to annual grant guidance, recipients must account 
for all grant funds and the funds must be linked to one or more 
projects that support specific goals and objectives in a state's 
homeland security strategy and the corresponding urban area's security 
strategy. The Grant Reporting Tool is updated by the grantee primarily 
with the dollar amounts associated with specific grant projects, 
national priorities associated with each project, and the preparedness 
capabilities recipients believe will be enhanced by each proposed 
project. The Grant Reporting Tool also contains data on the funds 
allocated to specific categories of activities--planning, organization, 
equipment, training, and exercises. For each project, UASI grantees are 
to identify at least one of the national priorities to be addressed by 
the project as well as the primary capability to be developed. However, 
they can also identify additional national priorities and capabilities 
they intend to improve as a result of the proposed project. 

We analyzed data from FEMA's Grant Reporting Tool from fiscal year 2006 
through fiscal year 2008 to determine the types of preparedness 
capabilities that UASI regions associated with their projects that 
supported the National Priority to Expand Regional Collaboration. Of 
the 2,847 UASI grant projects funded under the UASI program during this 
time period, we reviewed all those projects that supported the National 
Priority to Expand Regional Collaboration--a total of 446 such 
projects. Of these 446 projects, 303 projects funded a single 
preparedness capability. (The remaining 143 projects funded multiple 
capabilities.) In terms of funding, of the 37 preparedness 
capabilities, these projects primarily sought to develop six: (1) 
Planning, (2) Communications, (3) Intelligence and Information Sharing 
and Dissemination, (4) Emergency Operations Center Management, (5) 
Counter-Terror Investigation and Law Enforcement, and (6) Chemical/ 
Biological/Radiological/Nuclear and/or Explosive (CBRNE) Detection (See 
fig. 1). For example, one UASI project to expand regional collaboration 
through the planning capability was intended to "develop/enhance plans, 
procedures, and protocols." According to the project description, the 
specific activities the UASI region planned to fund included conducting 
a business impact threat assessment that will drive the development of 
plans to ensure continuity of operations for critical information 
technology infrastructure and applications. Another project--to provide 
funding to purchase interoperable systems and establish an emergency 
operations center--was intended to expand regional collaboration 
through the communications preparedness capability. 

Figure 1: UASI Projects Related to Regional Collaboration: Top Six 
Preparedness Capabilities (in dollars for Fiscal Years 2006 through 
2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Target capability: Planning; 
Dollars: $57.7 million. 

Target capability: Communications; 
Dollars: $23.2 million. 

Target capability: Intelligence and information sharing and 
dissemination; 
Dollars: $10.5 million. 

Target capability: Emergency operations center management; 
Dollars: $10.2 million. 

Target capability: Counter-terror investigation and law enforcement; 
Dollars: $9.9 million. 

Target capability: CBRNE detection; 
Dollars: $9.7 million. 

Source: GAO analysis of FEMA Grant Reporting Tool data as of December 
2008. 

Note: The dollar amounts represent funding allocated to 303 UASI 
regions' projects that (1) supported the National Priority to Expand 
Regional Collaboration, and (2) identified a single preparedness 
capability to be funded. CBRNE stands for Chemical/Biological/ 
Radiological/Nuclear and/or Explosive. 

[End of figure] 

According to FEMA officials, the agency used data from the Grant 
Reporting Tool to publish the first Federal Preparedness Report in 
January 2009. In summarizing the achievement of the UASI grant program, 
the report noted that 64 percent of UASI grant recipients reported 
progress in implementing their UASI strategies' program goals and 
objectives. The report assessed the achievement of the National 
Priority to Expand Regional Collaboration in terms of the funding 
allocated to this priority--noting that states and urban areas had 
allocated nearly $1.1 billion in homeland security grant funds from 
fiscal year 2004 to fiscal year 2007 to projects that were intended to 
improve regional collaboration. FEMA also reported that states and UASI 
regions have supported regional preparedness through "plans, 
initiatives, and other programs." 

FEMA uses the Grant Monitoring Tool primarily to record the results of 
program analysts' visits to UASI regions. On a 2-year cycle, FEMA 
officials visit each UASI region to interview officials and use the 
system to document their observations regarding grant activities. The 
Grant Monitoring Tool contains a series of questions about UASI 
regions' progress in achieving their goals and objectives as well as 
national priorities, and FEMA program analysts are to discuss the 
priorities with grantees to measure their progress in implementing each 
national priority. FEMA uses data from this tool to report on the 
overall performance of the UASI program in OMB's Program Assessment 
Rating Tool (PART). In 2008, FEMA measured the UASI program's overall 
performance against three long-term measures as reported by UASI 
officials:[Footnote 27] 

* percent of significant progress made toward implementation of the 
National Priorities--70 percent; 

* percent of grantees reporting significant progress toward the goals 
and objectives identified in their state homeland security strategies--
67 percent; and: 

* percent of analyzed capabilities performed acceptably in exercises-- 
79 percent. 

FEMA Does Not Assess How Collaborative Efforts Help Build UASI Regional 
Preparedness Capabilities: 

While executive, departmental, and agency guidance all direct FEMA to 
assess how regional collaboration builds national preparedness 
capabilities, FEMA has not yet established measures to do so. 
Specifically: 

* Homeland Security Presidential Directive 8 requires that the national 
preparedness policy establish measurable priorities (such as the 
national priority to expand regional collaboration) and targets and 
include metrics that support the national preparedness goal, including 
standards for preparedness assessments and a system for assessing the 
nation's overall preparedness. 

* DHS's National Preparedness Guidelines, the national preparedness 
policy, state that regional collaboration is critical to national 
preparedness, identify the need to expand regional collaboration as a 
national priority, and establish the need to develop measurable 
capability objectives, assess current levels of capabilities, and find 
ways to close any gaps. 

* FEMA's UASI grant guidance identifies the need to tie together the 
established priorities and objectives of the National Preparedness 
Guidelines, including the national priority to expand regional 
collaboration, with efforts to establish preparedness capabilities, 
conduct capability assessments, and make adjustments to better ensure 
that the national investment yields measurable improvements in the 
nation's preparedness. 

Moreover, leading management practices recognize the importance of 
establishing performance measures in achieving results.[Footnote 28] 
When designed effectively, performance measures help managers (1) 
determine how well a program is performing, (2) identify gaps in 
performance, and (3) determine where to focus resources to improve 
results. However, FEMA has no measures in place to assess the extent to 
which the funds appropriated by Congress--approximately $5 billion for 
the UASI program since 2003--have achieved the goal to build regional 
preparedness through collaboration efforts. 

The National Preparedness Guidelines state that, because major events 
often have regional impact, it is vital to enhance collaborative 
efforts by federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial entities to 
communicate and coordinate with one another, the private sector, 
nongovernmental organizations, and individual citizens. However, the 
Guidelines do not identify any means of assessing regional 
collaboration outputs and activities, or the connection between 
regional collaboration activities and the achievement of regional 
preparedness capabilities. In addition, none of FEMA's other 
strategies, guidance, and policies--such as FEMA's Grant Programs 
Directorate Strategy for 2009-2011 and FEMA's agencywide strategy for 
2008-2013--provide output or outcome measures to assess the effect of 
UASI regions' collaborative efforts on preparedness capabilities. 
[Footnote 29] 

FEMA's Federal Preparedness Report acknowledges this limitation, citing 
a lack of specific targets that define how or whether national 
priorities--including the National Priority to Expand Regional 
Collaboration--are achieved. The report does not identify or 
specifically discuss the effects of collaborative efforts or how they 
contributed to improvements in regional preparedness capabilities 
associated with UASI grant program investments. In gathering data from 
states, FEMA directed states to describe their current capability under 
the National Priority to Expand Regional Collaboration, but this was 
limited to a general description of factors related to collaboration. 
[Footnote 30] While these factors are related to states' and urban 
areas' efforts to enhance regional collaboration, they do not provide a 
means to assess how regional collaboration activities help build 
preparedness capabilities. 

In accordance with the Post-Katrina Act, FEMA has an effort underway to 
establish a comprehensive assessment system to assess the nation's 
capabilities and overall preparedness for preventing, responding to, 
and recovering from natural and man-made disasters. As part of this 
effort, FEMA is to collect information on state capability levels and 
report on federal preparedness to Congress, including the results of 
the Comprehensive Assessment System. Moreover, FEMA is currently 
working to develop measurable targets related to each of the 37 
preparedness capabilities. While we previously reported challenges FEMA 
faces in developing and implementing the comprehensive assessment 
system, FEMA could build upon its current efforts to assess overall 
preparedness by developing and including measures related to the 
collaboration efforts of UASI regions and their effect on building 
regional preparedness. FEMA officials cited the National Preparedness 
Guidelines, which note that the challenge for government officials is 
to determine the best way to build capabilities for bolstering 
preparedness and achieving the guidelines, and that the "best way" to 
do so will vary across the nation. According to the Guidelines, the 
results of national preparedness assessments will be used to refine 
strategies and update the national priorities, and FEMA officials said 
that the agency is considering updating the National Preparedness 
Guidelines in 2010. FEMA officials stated that their current efforts to 
develop measurable preparedness capabilities will determine progress in 
building preparedness, but officials said that there are no program 
plans to develop measures to assess how UASI collaborative efforts 
build preparedness. We recognize the challenges associated with 
establishing a single set of measures related to collaboration 
activities for the UASI program, such as deciding how information and 
data from different sources will be used to inform any such measures, 
and coordinating with numerous federal, state, and local stakeholders 
during this process. However, developing measures to assess how UASI 
regions' collaborative efforts enhance regional preparedness 
capabilities could provide FEMA with more meaningful information on the 
national return on investment for the approximately $5 billion in grant 
expenditures for regional collaboration through the UASI program to 
date. 

UASI Officials Described Program Features That Support Regional 
Collaboration but Cited Continuing Challenges; Some UASI Regions 
Increased their Membership in Response to Changes in the 9/11 Act: 

UASI program officials described program features that support regional 
collaboration, many of which reflect practices we have identified that 
can enhance and sustain collaboration. UASI officials also described a 
number of continuing challenges they faced in their efforts to expand 
regional collaboration, which mirror collaboration challenges we 
identified in earlier work examining coordination among federal 
agencies.[Footnote 31] In addition, some UASI regions reported changes 
in membership planned or undertaken in response to FEMA's use of 
metropolitan statistical areas to assess risk, as called for in the 
9/11 Act. 

UASI Program Features Demonstrate Practices That Support Regional 
Collaboration: 

Certain UASI program features reflect practices we have identified that 
can enhance and sustain collaboration. For example, the UASI program 
requires that each UASI region develop and maintain a strategy and 
define its membership and governance structure. The program 
requirements also include the need for written charters and mutual aid 
agreements between local governments and agencies, as well as biannual 
reporting--the types of practices we have reported that agencies 
perform to enhance and sustain their collaborative efforts, as 
summarized in table 4. Monitoring, evaluating, and reporting the 
results of collaborative efforts--one of the leading practices we 
identified--could be strengthened if FEMA develops measures to assess 
how UASI regions' collaborative efforts enhance regional preparedness 
capabilities. 

Table 4: Collaborative Practices Reflected in the UASI Program: 

Collaborative practice: Defines and articulates a common outcome(s); 
UASI program feature: 
* Urban Area Homeland Security Strategy. 

Collaborative practice: Establishes mutually reinforcing or joint 
strategies to achieve the outcome; 
UASI program feature: 
* Urban Area Homeland Security Strategy. 

Collaborative practice: Achieves mutual agreement(s) on agency roles 
and responsibilities; 
UASI program feature: 
* UASI program membership and governance requirements; 
* Urban Area Working Group; 
* UASI Charter; 
* Mutual Aid Agreements. 

Collaborative practice: Establishes compatible policies, procedures, 
and other means to operate across agency boundaries; 
UASI program feature: 
* UASI program membership and governance requirements; 
* Urban Area Working Group; 
* UASI Charter; 
* Mutual Aid Agreements. 

Collaborative practice: Identifies and addresses needs by leveraging 
resources; 
UASI program feature: 
* UASI program membership and governance requirements; 
* Urban Area Working Group; 
* UASI Charter; 
* Mutual Aid Agreements. 

Collaborative practice: Develops mechanisms to monitor, evaluate, and 
report the results of collaborative efforts; 
UASI program feature: 
* UASI grant program reporting; this feature could be strengthened if 
FEMA develops measures to assess how UASI regions' collaborative 
efforts enhance regional preparedness capabilities. 

Collaborative practice: Reinforces agency accountability for 
collaborative efforts through agency reports; 
* UASI grant program reporting; this feature could be strengthened if 
FEMA develops measures to assess how UASI regions' collaborative 
efforts enhance regional preparedness capabilities. 

Source: GAO analysis of UASI Program Requirements and GAO-06-15. 

[End of table] 

Additionally, in our survey of UASI participants and during our site 
visits, UASI officials described various program features that they 
said greatly or somewhat helped support regional collaboration, and 
their responses generally reflect factors related to organization, 
flexibility, planning, and funding that we have found support effective 
regional collaboration in preparedness efforts. The results of our 
survey can be found in appendix II. 

Collaborative regional organization: In September 2004, we reported 
that a collaborative regional organization enhances preparedness and 
includes representation from many different jurisdictions and 
disciplines.[Footnote 32] Moreover, our prior work on key practices to 
enhance and sustain collaboration identified the establishment of 
mutually reinforcing or joint strategies and the mutual agreement of 
roles and responsibilities as important elements. In the UASI program, 
mutual aid agreements are one way jurisdictions and agencies within 
UASI regions define organizational roles and responsibilities during 
those times when one locality needs the resources of nearby localities. 
Of the 49 UASI regions we surveyed, 46 said they have active mutual aid 
agreements, of which 38 identified that such an agreement either 
"greatly helps" or "somewhat helps" measure regional capability- 
building. Mutual aid agreements promote collaboration across 
governments or agencies when they explicitly identify how certain 
regional response efforts are to be accomplished and by whom. In 
addition, 39 UASI regions stated that agreements such as charters and 
bylaws are a UASI-wide program feature, of which 26 said that this 
either "greatly helps" or "somewhat helps" measure regional capability- 
building (15 and 11 respectively). 

Officials in all six UASI regions we visited said that their UASI 
regional organization included representation from many jurisdictions 
and disciplines. UASI region officials in our site visits stated that 
they rely on subcommittees within their organization to develop 
proposed projects for their grant application. These subcommittees, for 
example, can be organized based on a particular project (e.g., 
communications, exercises, and training, etc.) or based on a response 
discipline (e.g., all fire departments) across the urban area. 
According to UASI officials, grant project proposals are then provided 
to the voting officials of the UASI region for approval. This 
structured approach helps subcommittee officials focus on operational 
planning while UASI officials can focus on strategic planning, 
according to UASI officials from 2 sites we visited. 

Flexibility in membership and geographic area: In our prior work, we 
reported that when the membership and geographic area of the regional 
organization is flexible it fosters interjurisdictional coordination 
and enhances regional preparedness.[Footnote 33] Further, we reported 
addressing needs by leveraging resources as a leading practice for 
effective collaboration. Officials from three UASI regions we visited 
in California--Los Angeles/Long Beach, Anaheim/Santa Ana, and 
Riverside--described a long-standing tradition of flexibility in 
working among response disciplines, leveraging the expertise of diverse 
members such as fire and public health departments across jurisdictions 
to prepare and respond to actual events such as frequent wildfires and 
periodic earthquakes. Officials from jurisdictions in these three UASI 
regions used this expertise to develop and refine California's incident 
management system, which became the foundation for the National 
Incident Management System (NIMS).[Footnote 34] UASI region officials 
in Miami and Ft. Lauderdale, Florida said that NIMS, in turn, has been 
very useful for expanding regional collaboration as the system 
integrates first responders under a commonly understood incident 
command structure. Similarly, all 49 UASI regions we surveyed reported 
that they use NIMS compliance for first responders to build regional 
capabilities. 

Training and exercise activities can be developed to provide flexible 
opportunities to bring in as many or as few multidisciplinary and 
multijurisdictional stakeholders within the region, as needed, to learn 
and test organizational preparedness responsibilities. All UASI regions 
we visited identified training and exercises as key activities that 
help bring together jurisdictions and first responders. In addition, 44 
of the 49 UASI regions we surveyed reported that their UASI-wide 
training and exercises are an activity they use regionwide that builds 
regional capabilities. 

Strategic planning: Our prior work found that planning activities can 
enhance regional preparedness and collaboration.[Footnote 35] All but 
one of the 49 UASI regions we surveyed identified their strategic 
planning activities as building their urban areas' regional 
capabilities. In addition, officials at all six of the UASI regions we 
visited said the annual UASI grant planning process required by FEMA 
enhances regional collaboration because the process establishes an 
annual, organized effort to identify a region's needs based on its 
strategic plans and preparedness capabilities.[Footnote 36] UASI region 
officials said that FEMA requires UASI regions to develop and submit 
their Urban Area Homeland Security Strategy--along with the UASI 
region's grant program proposals--as the basis for requesting funds. 
The evaluation of needs and identification of gaps in capabilities are 
important steps for UASI regions in their development of a homeland 
security strategy and annual grant proposals. 

Regional funding: Our 2004 report found that funding regional 
organizations provides incentives for collaborative planning activities 
to enhance preparedness regionwide.[Footnote 37] A number of UASI 
regions have used the grant program as a means to consolidate 
administrative functions and procurement activities regionally. For 
example, 42 of 49 UASI regions we surveyed said that they use UASI-wide 
cost-sharing activities across jurisdictions--such as purchasing larger 
quantities of equipment at lower overall costs in order to take 
advantage of economies of scale. Also, 33 UASI regions said that they 
work with their state to take advantage of economies of scale. 
Leveraging federal funds across grant programs is another collaboration 
activity that 44 UASI regions reported in our survey. One example where 
DHS grant funds--UASI and State Homeland Security Grant funds--are 
leveraged to build regional capabilities is in Florida, where the Miami 
and Fort Lauderdale UASI programs are both in the same state-designated 
region for security planning purposes. According to officials, both 
UASI regions work with the state to coordinate the sources of project 
funding. Miami or Fort Lauderdale UASI regions pool a part of their 
funds each year to make them available for their state-designated 
security region's needs, regardless of whether the jurisdiction in need 
is the Miami or Fort Lauderdale UASI region. For example, the Fort 
Lauderdale UASI region provided a portion of its UASI funding to 
support training for a local government within the Miami UASI region 
area. 

UASI Officials Described Continuing Challenges Including Conflicting 
Missions, Jurisdictional Concerns, and Incompatible Systems to Their 
Efforts to Collaborate: 

In addition to the positive impact of a variety of program features on 
regional collaboration described above, UASI officials also described a 
number of continuing challenges they faced to expand regional 
collaboration reflecting those challenges we previously identified that 
federal agencies may encounter when they attempt regional 
collaboration.[Footnote 38] These challenges include conflicting 
missions, concerns regarding jurisdiction and control over resources, 
and incompatible processes or systems that can make reaching a 
consensus on strategies and priorities difficult. Specifically: 

Conflicting missions: As we reported in 2000, one challenge concerns 
missions that are not mutually reinforcing or that may even conflict, 
making reaching a consensus on strategies and priorities difficult. As 
part of our survey, we posed a series of possible challenges, based in 
part on our prior work, which may occur between UASI regions' goals and 
objectives and the goals and objectives of FEMA and other related 
federal programs. In response, 30 of the 46 surveyed UASI regions 
reported that "changing federal homeland security goals and objectives" 
presented a regional challenge for their urban area. Of these, 28 UASI 
regions cited this as a challenge that "greatly" or "somewhat" impairs 
regional collaboration (4 and 24 respectively). In addition, 19 UASI 
regions identified "unclear federal homeland security goals and 
objectives" as a regional challenge, with 18 of these UASI regions 
saying that this "greatly" or "somewhat" impairs regional collaboration 
(5 and 13 respectively). 

According to the National Preparedness Guidelines, FEMA is committed to 
working with its homeland security partners in updating and maintaining 
the Guidelines and related documents as part of a unified National 
Preparedness System, which should help ensure coordinated strategies, 
plans, procedures, policies, training, and capabilities at all levels 
of government. For example, in January 2009, FEMA reported the results 
of its discussions with state and local emergency management and 
homeland security agencies from 20 states (that included 15 UASI 
regions), finding the most significant challenges the agencies 
identified to be "balancing the varied, and often competing, interests 
(i.e. missions, goals and objectives) from the full spectrum of 
stakeholders on the design and management of preparedness programs." 
[Footnote 39] The report notes that these challenges are common to the 
management and coordination of homeland security preparedness 
initiatives but that the resulting recommendations will help to 
overcome those challenges, noting, for example, that "efforts are 
already underway in updating policy, and coordinating preparedness 
assistance." Moreover, as FEMA implements the recommendations from our 
report on the National Preparedness System to improve development of 
policies and plans, national capability assessments, and strategic 
planning--all of which contain preparedness goals and objectives-- 
should help better align local, state, regional, and federal missions. 
[Footnote 40] 

Jurisdictional concerns: Another significant barrier to collaboration 
our prior work identified related to concerns about protecting 
jurisdiction over federal missions.[Footnote 41] Our survey found, for 
example, that 22 UASI regions identified the lack of written authority 
and agreements as a regional challenge. Eighteen of these UASI regions 
cited this as a challenge that "greatly" or "somewhat impairs" regional 
collaboration (4 and 14 respectively). However, 31 UASI regions said 
that "difficulty in reaching consensus in decision making among 
jurisdictions" was not a challenge that they face within their region. 
Further, 36 UASI regions said that "difficulty in reaching consensus in 
decision making among response disciplines (e.g. police, fire, EMS, 
etc.)" was not a challenge within their urban area; although 13 of 49 
UASI regions said this was a challenge, none of these 13 UASI regions 
said this challenge greatly impairs regional collaboration, 10 regions 
said this challenge somewhat impairs regional collaboration, while the 
remaining 3 cited no impairment. Although our survey found some UASI 
regions facing challenges over jurisdiction, fewer UASI regions 
reported issues related to control and access to resources within the 
region. The Grant Programs Directorate's Cost-to-Capability initiative, 
currently under development, is intended to help FEMA and localities 
better target their use of federal grant funds and enable comparisons 
across jurisdictions in evaluating grant proposals, which should help 
UASI regions in their efforts to reach consensus in decision making 
among jurisdictions. 

Incompatible systems: Another barrier to effective collaboration, which 
we reported in 2000, is the lack of consistent data collected and 
shared by different agencies, which prevents the federal government 
from achieving interagency goals and objectives.[Footnote 42] For a 
UASI region, this collaboration barrier can occur as a part of its 
efforts to establish or sustain fusion centers.[Footnote 43] As we 
reported in 2007, almost all states and several local governments have 
established or are in the process of establishing fusion centers to 
collaborate and share information across federal, state, and local 
governments and agencies and address gaps in information sharing. 
[Footnote 44] Our survey found, for example, that intelligence sharing 
activities are a part of 41 UASI regions; while the remaining 8 UASI 
regions reported that they are in the process of building this 
capability. In addition, 34 UASI regions reported no regional 
challenges related to sharing intelligence. Of those 14 UASI regions we 
surveyed that cited conflicts about intelligence sharing as a regional 
challenge, 13 reported that this either greatly or somewhat impaired 
regional collaboration (5 and 8 respectively; 1 response was "don't 
know"). As we stated in the 2007 report, DHS, recognizing the 
importance of fusion centers in information sharing, has efforts under 
way to address challenges fusion center officials identified in 
establishing and operating their centers. DHS concurred with our 
recommendation that the federal government should determine its long- 
term fusion center role and whether it expects to provide resources to 
centers to help ensure their sustainability, and said it was reviewing 
strategies to sustain fusion centers as part of the work plan of the 
National Fusion Center Coordination Group. In September 2008, officials 
in DHS's Office of Intelligence and Analysis reported that DHS has 
committed to dedicating resources to support and develop the state and 
local fusion center network and will continue to deploy personnel and 
resources to centers to augment their capabilities. Specifically, 
officials reported that DHS continues to provide personnel to certain 
fusion centers, has augmented training and technical assistance 
efforts, and has provided additional centers with networks and systems 
for information sharing. In December 2008, DHS issued additional 
guidance for interaction with fusion centers. While these efforts 
address DHS's efforts to define its role in fusion centers, the efforts 
are ongoing and specific questions regarding the timing and amount of 
these resources have yet to be determined. 

Similarly, interoperable communications has been both a common need 
across all urban areas, and a long-standing barrier. According to FEMA, 
interoperable communications is the ability of public safety agencies 
(police, fire, EMS) and service agencies (public works, transportation, 
hospitals, etc.) to talk within and across agencies and jurisdictions 
via radio and associated communications systems. According to FEMA, it 
is essential that public safety agencies have the intra-agency 
operability they need, and that they build its systems toward 
interoperability. Of the 49 UASI regions we surveyed, 27 UASI regions 
reported that interoperable communications between first responders 
present a regional challenge within their UASI region, with 21 of these 
regions reporting that this "greatly" or "somewhat" impairs regional 
collaboration (6 and 15 respectively). However, 6 of the 27 UASI 
regions said it does not impair regional collaboration. FEMA's Federal 
Preparedness Report reported on the extent that urban areas were 
achieving interoperable communications. In 2007 DHS assessed which of 
these regions were in one of four stages of implementation--"Early" 
through "Advanced."[Footnote 45] DHS has several programs designed to 
help build national interoperable communications capabilities in 
varying stages of implementation.[Footnote 46] 

UASI Officials Described Program Activities Such as Exercises and 
Training That Helped Them Assess Their Collaborative Efforts: 

In response to our survey and at all 6 of the UASI regions we visited, 
officials described their views of what constituted effective regional 
collaboration and how they assess their collaborative efforts. Many 
UASI regions identified program activities and processes that helped 
them build regional capabilities and assess their performance as a 
region. For example, according to our survey: 

* Thirty-seven UASI regions said a needs assessment or analysis of gaps 
in preparedness capabilities is a UASI-wide program feature. All 37 
UASI regions said that this either "greatly helps" or "somewhat helps" 
measure regional capability-building (27 and 10 respectively). In 
addition, 35 of these 37 UASI regions also said that this feature 
either "greatly helps" or "somewhat helps" them measure regional 
performance (24 and 11 respectively). 

* Thirty-one UASI regions identified operational planning as an 
activity they use to build regional collaboration. 

* Sixteen UASI regions said that their regional operations plan greatly 
or somewhat helps measure regional performance (8 and 8 respectively). 

* Thirty-six UASI regions identified tactical planning as a regional 
activity they use to build regional collaboration.[Footnote 47] 

* Thirty-nine UASI regions reported that they have a UASI-wide exercise 
plan. Thirty-six of these said that this exercise plan either "greatly 
helps" or "somewhat helps" measure regional capability-building (24 and 
12 respectively), and 37 of these 39 UASI regions said that this 
feature either "greatly helps" or "somewhat helps" them measure 
regional performance (25 and 12 respectively). 

Some UASI Regions Reported Changes in Membership Planned or Undertaken 
in Response to FEMA's Use of MSAs to Assess Risk: 

A provision within the 9/11 Act required FEMA to perform a risk 
assessment for the 100 largest MSAs by population, beginning in fiscal 
year 2008. In response, FEMA's fiscal year 2008 grant program guidance 
stated that, while UASI officials were not required to expand or 
contract existing urban area participation to conform to MSAs, UASI 
regions were encouraged to involve regional preparedness partners (for 
example, contiguous jurisdictions, mutual aid partners, port 
authorities, rail and transit authorities, campus law enforcement, and 
state agencies) in their 2008 UASI program activities. Of the 49 UASI 
regions we surveyed, 27 said that there were jurisdictions within the 
MSA that were not part of their UASI region; the remaining 22 UASI 
regions responded that their UASI included all jurisdictions within the 
MSA. 

In our survey, 27 UASI regions had jurisdictions within the MSA that 
were not part of their UASI region, and we asked them to describe the 
actions, if any, they planned to take or had taken in response to 
FEMA's use of MSAs for its risk calculations. UASI officials' responses 
to the grant guidance varied. Of the 27 UASI regions that said there 
were jurisdictions within the MSA that weren't part of their UASI 
region: 

* Twenty-two said that they either had taken or had plans to take some 
action(s) in response to FEMA's risk calculation change; 5 UASI regions 
said they had not taken and did not plan to take any of the actions 
cited (e,g., initiating a dialogue and assessing the need to include 
new jurisdictions) to expand their membership. 

* Seventeen UASI regions reported that they already assessed and 
evaluated the need to include new jurisdictions and 3 UASI regions said 
they plan to do this, while 7 UASI regions said they had no plans to 
assess and evaluate the need to include new jurisdictions. 

* Twelve UASI regions said they have already initiated dialogue to 
collaborate with new jurisdictions and 3 UASI regions have reported 
that they plan to do this, while 12 UASI regions said they had no plans 
to initiate dialog with new jurisdictions. 

* Seven UASI regions reported that they have already included new 
jurisdictions in advisory committees and 4 UASI regions reported that 
they plan to do this, while 16 UASI regions said they have no plans to 
include any new jurisdictions in advisory committees. 

* Six UASI regions reported that they have plans to increase the number 
of jurisdictions in their UASI region urban area working group and 1 
UASI region reported that it had already done so, while 20 UASI regions 
said they have no plans to do this. 

In a follow-up question to these 27 UASI regions, we asked whether 
there were specific reasons why some jurisdictions are not included in 
their UASI region, e.g., because other jurisdictions were not a 
possible provider of prevention, medical surge, resources, or 
evacuation capabilities. Overall, 11 of the 27 UASI regions reported at 
least one of the possible issues we posed within our survey as a reason 
why some jurisdictions were not part of their UASI region. 
Specifically, 5 UASI regions reported that excluding a jurisdiction was 
due to that outside jurisdiction's lack of capacity to provide, for 
example, first responder support or medical surge capabilities, and 4 
UASI regions reported excluding a jurisdiction because that 
jurisdiction was not a provider of support for recovery efforts or 
evacuation efforts. Two UASI regions also cited the lack of mutual aid 
agreements as a reason for not including a new jurisdiction. UASI 
officials from 14 regions provided additional comments stating that the 
reason why additional jurisdictions were not included in the UASI 
region was that their UASI region was either part of an existing state- 
defined region developed for strategic planning and response purposes, 
or their UASI region's composition was based on existing regional 
bodies such as councils of governments or regional planning 
commissions. Another common reason cited by officials in 10 UASI 
regions who provided additional comments was that these other 
jurisdictions were remote and not adjacent to the urban area, and 
lacking in population or critical infrastructure. 

Conclusions: 

Natural and man-made disasters often have a regional impact, affecting 
multiple jurisdictions; therefore it is vital to ensure that federal, 
state, local, tribal, and territorial entities collaborate effectively 
in the protection, prevention of, response to, and recovery from a 
disaster. The UASI program is intended to enhance regional preparedness 
through expanded regional collaboration. However, FEMA currently has no 
measures to determine the impact of the UASI regions' collaborative 
efforts on regional preparedness. With such measures, FEMA would be 
better positioned to determine the national return on investment for 
the more than $5 billion awarded in UASI grant funds to date. 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

We recommend that the FEMA Administrator develop and implement measures 
to assess how regional collaboration efforts funded by UASI grants 
build preparedness capabilities. 

Agency Comments: 

We requested comments on a draft of this report from FEMA. FEMA did not 
provide official written comments to include in our report. However, in 
e-mails received June 26, 2009, the DHS liaison stated that FEMA 
concurred with our recommendation and will work toward addressing it. 
DHS also provided technical comments which we incorporated into our 
report, as appropriate. 

We are providing copies of this report to interested congressional 
committees, the FEMA Administrator, and the Secretary of Homeland 
Security. This report will also be available at no charge on the GAO 
Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-8757 or e-mail at jenkinswo@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: 

William O. Jenkins, Jr. 
Director Homeland Security & Justice Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: DHS's Target Capabilities List: 

As we noted in 2005, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) developed 
the National Preparedness Guidelines to comply with HSPD-8.[Footnote 
48] The National Preparedness Guidelines are intended to generally 
define "how well" all levels of governments and first responders are to 
prepare for all-hazards, through a capabilities-based preparedness 
planning process based on common tools and processes of preparedness 
including the Target Capabilities List. The purpose of this approach is 
to provide capabilities suitable for a wide range of threats and 
hazards. 

According to DHS, the Target Capabilities List is a comprehensive 
catalog of capabilities to perform homeland security missions. In July 
2005, we reported that the application of this capabilities-based 
preparedness process involves three stages: (1) defining target levels 
of capability, (2) achieving target levels of capability, and (3) 
assessing preparedness.[Footnote 49] As of September 2007, the list 
identified 37 capabilities needed to perform critical tasks across all 
events--prevention, protection, response, and recovery. The Target 
Capabilities List also provides guidance on each specific preparedness 
capability and levels of capability that federal, state, local, and 
tribal first responders will be expected to develop and maintain. 

Table 5: DHS's Target Capabilities List: 

Common Mission Area: 
1. Communications. 
2. Community Preparedness and Participation. 
3. Planning. 
4. Risk Management. 
5. Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination. 

Prevent Mission Area: 
6. Chemical/Biological/Radiological/Nuclear/Explosive (CBRNE) 
Detection. 
7. Information Gathering and Recognition of Indicators and Warnings. 
8. Intelligence Analysis and Production. 
9. Counter-Terror Investigations and Law Enforcement. 

Protect Mission Area: 
10. Critical Infrastructure Protection. 
11. Epidemiological Surveillance and Investigation. 
12. Food and Agriculture Safety and Defense. 
13. Laboratory Testing. 
14. Onsite Incident Management. 
15. Emergency Public Safety and Security Response. 
16. Responder Safety and Health. 
17. Emergency Triage and Pre-Hospital Treatment. 
18. Search and Rescue (Land-Based). 
19. Volunteer Management and Donations. 
20. WMD/Hazardous Materials Response and Decontamination. 

Respond Mission Area: 

21. Animal Disease Emergency Support.
22. Citizen Evacuation and Shelter-in-Place.
23. Critical Resource Logistics and Distribution.
24. Emergency Operations Center Management.
25. Emergency Public Information and Warning.
26. Environmental Health.
27. Explosive Device Response Operations.
28. Fatality Management.
29. Fire Incident Response Support.
30. Isolation and Quarantine.
31. Mass Care (Sheltering, Feeding, and Related Services).
32. Mass Prophylaxis.
33. Medical Supplies Management and Distribution.
34. Medical Surge. 

Recover Mission Area: 
35. Economic and Community Recovery.
36. Restoration of Lifelines.
37. Structural Damage Assessment. 

Source: Department of Homeland Security - Target Capabilities List, as 
of September 2007. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Results of GAO's Telephone Survey of 49 UASI Regions: 

In the absence of objective measures to determine the impact of the 
Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) regions' collaboration efforts on 
regional preparedness, we surveyed UASI regions to solicit officials' 
views on the impact of program activities on regional collaboration and 
challenges they faced to support regional collaboration. We surveyed by 
telephone all 49 UASI regions that were recipients of UASI grant 
funding in fiscal years 2008 and in at least one fiscal year prior to 
2008. We based our survey questions in part on our prior work including 
best practices for collaboration, factors that support regional 
collaboration, and challenges to interagency coordination.[Footnote 50] 
Our questions were designed to collect information on (1) activities 
that are incorporated into the UASI regions' collaboration efforts and 
those features that help UASI regions measure their regional capability-
building and performance, (2) whether UASI regions face certain 
regional challenges and if so, whether those challenges impair the 
efficiency and effectiveness of their regional collaboration and 
preparedness efforts, and (3) whether respondents have or plan to make 
changes in response to FEMA's change to Metropolitan Statistical Areas 
(MSAs) for risk calculation. We conducted pretests by telephone with 
representatives of 3 UASI regions to refine our questions, develop new 
questions, clarify any ambiguous portions of the questionnaire, and 
identify any potentially biased questions. We obtained a 100 percent 
response rate to our telephone survey. Because our survey included all 
49 UASI regions that received grant funding as described above, there 
are no sampling errors. The information below represents responses 
provided by UASI regions to our close-ended survey questions. 

Q1. Are any of the following activities a part of, or in progress of 
being a part of, your UASI area? (Check one box each row.) 

a. Intrastate mutual aid agreements; 
Yes, a part of: 43; 
In progress: 3; 
No: 3; 
Don't know: 0. 

b. Interstate mutual aid agreements; 
Yes, a part of: 23; 
In progress: 4; 
No: 22; 
Don't know: 0. 

c. International mutual aid agreements; 
Yes, a part of: 3; 
In progress: 4; 
No: 40; 
Don't know: 2. 

d. Intelligence sharing; 
Yes, a part of: 41; 
In progress: 8; 
No: 0; 
Don't know: 0. 

e. Leveraging federal funds across grant programs (e.g., Health and 
Human Services (HHS), the Department of Transportation (DOT), other DHS 
grants, etc.); 
Yes, a part of: 44; 
In progress: 2; 
No: 3; 
Don't know: 0. 

f. UASI-wide cost-sharing to take advantage of economies of scale with 
your state (e.g., purchasing larger quantities of sophisticated 
equipment at lower overall costs); 
Yes, a part of: 33; 
In progress: 1; 
No: 15; 
Don't know: 0. 

g. UASI-wide cost-sharing to take advantage of economies of scale 
across jurisdictions (i.e., cities, counties, and special districts 
including port or transit authorities); 
Yes, a part of: 42; 
In progress: 2; 
No: 5; 
Don't know: 0. 

h. Centralization of administrative grant functions; 
Yes, a part of: 36; 
In progress: 0; 
No: 13; 
Don't know: 0. 

i. Centralization of administrative planning; 
Yes, a part of: 41; 
In progress: 1; 
No: 7; 
Don't know: 0. 

Q2. Does your UASI area face any of the following regional challenges? 

Q3. How much, if at all, does this regional challenge impair the 
effectiveness of regional collaboration in your preparedness efforts? 

a. Lack of written authority and agreements; 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 22; 
No: 27; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 4; 
Somewhat impairs: 14; 
Does not impair at all: 4; 
Don't Know: 0. 

b. Conflicts about sharing intelligence; 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 14; 
No: 34; 
Don't know:1; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 5; 
Somewhat impairs: 8; 
Does not impair at all: 1; 
Don't Know: 0. 

c. Interoperable communications between first responders; 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 27; 
No: 22; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 6; 
Somewhat impairs: 15; 
Does not impair at all: 6; 
Don't Know: 0. 

d. Conflicts about sharing existing resources, (e.g., equipment, 
personnel, tactical teams, technology); 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 11; 
No: 38; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 2; 
Somewhat impairs: 7; 
Does not impair at all: 2; 
Don't Know: 0. 

e. Difficulty in reaching consensus in decision-making among 
jurisdictions (e.g., for funding); 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 18; 
No: 31; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 4; 
Somewhat impairs: 10; 
Does not impair at all: 4; 
Don't Know: 0. 

f. Difficulty in reaching consensus in decision-making among response 
disciplines (e.g., police, fire, EMS, etc.); 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 13; 
No: 36; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much: impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 0; 
Somewhat impairs: 10; 
Does not impair at all: 3; 
Don't Know: 0. 

g. Applicability of federal homeland security requirements; 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 20; 
No: 28; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 6; 
Somewhat impairs: 12; 
Does not impair at all: 2; 
Don't Know: 0. 

h. Unclear federal homeland security goals and objectives; 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 19; 
No: 30; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 5; 
Somewhat impairs: 13; 
Does not impair at all: 1; 
Don't Know: 0. 

i. Changing federal homeland security goals and objectives; 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 30; 
No: 19; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much: impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 4; 
Somewhat impairs: 24; 
Does not impair at all: 2; 
Don't Know: 0. 

j. Conflicting goals and objectives between federal agencies or 
programs, (e.g., DHS, HHS, Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), etc.); 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 18; 
No: 29; 
Don't know: 2; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much: impairs regional collaboration? 
Greatly impairs: 4; 
Somewhat impairs: 13; 
Does not impair at all: 1; 
Don't Know: 0. 

k. Conflicting goals and objectives between your UASI and your State 
Administrative Agent (SAA); 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 23; 
No: 26; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration?
Greatly impairs: 12; 
Somewhat impairs: 9; 
Does not impair at all: 2; 
Don't Know: 0. 

l. Changing UASI boundaries to Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) 
from center-city plus 10 miles; 
Q2: Is regional challenge for UASI? 
Yes: 20; 
No: 28; 
Q3: How much impairs regional collaboration? 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q2: 
Greatly impairs: 2; 
Somewhat impairs: 14; 
Does not impair at all: 3; 
Don't Know: 1. 

[End of table] 

Q4. Are there are any jurisdictions within your MSA that are not a part 
of the UASI area?
Yes: 27; 
No: 22; If "No," go to question 8. 

Q5. In response to FEMA's change to MSAs for risk calculation, has your 
UASI area done, have plans to do, or have no plans to do any of the 
following with the jurisdictions in your geographic area? (Check one 
box in each row.) 

a. Assess/Evaluate need to include new jurisdictions; 
Have done this: 17; 
Have plans to do this: 3; 
Have no plans to do this: 7; 
Don't Know: 0. 

b. Initiate dialogue with new jurisdictions; 
Have done this: 12; 
Have plans to do this: 3; 
Have no plans to do this: 12; 
Don't Know: 0. 

c. Solicit input from new jurisdictions; 
Have done this: 11; 
Have plans to do this: 4; 
Have no plans to do this: 12; 
Don't Know: 0. 

d. Solicit proposals from new jurisdictions; 
Have done this: 6; 
Have plans to do this: 4; 
Have no plans to do this: 17; 
Don't Know: 0. 

e. Include new jurisdictions in Advisory; Committees; 
Have done this: 7; 
Have plans to do this: 4; 
Have no plans to do this: 16; 
Don't Know: 0. 

f. Increase the number of jurisdictions in Urban Area Working Group 
(UAWG) (e.g, your Executive or Steering committee); 
Have done this: 1; 
Have plans to do this: 6; 
Have no plans to do this: 20; 
Don't Know: 0. 

Q6. Is each of the statements listed below a reason why there are some 
jurisdictions that are not part of your UASI area? 

Q7. (For each item in Q6 with a "Yes," ask:) Does your UASI intend to 
enter into this kind of relationship with all, some, or none of these 
jurisdictions? 

a. No mutual aid agreement existing; 
Q6: Reason why not part of UASI area? 
Yes: 2; 
No: 25; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q6: 
Q7: Intend to enter relationship? 
All: 0; 
Some: 0; 
None: 2; 
Don't know: 0. 

b. Not a part of prevention activities (e.g., fusion center/information 
sharing; see TCL); 
Q6: Reason why not part of UASI area?
Yes: 3; 
No: 23; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q6: 
Q7: Intend to enter relationship? 
All: 0; 
Some: 0; 
None: 1; 
Don't know: 2. 

c. Not a provider of emergency response support (see TCL); 
Q6: Reason why not part of UASI area? 
Yes: 5; 
No: 22; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q6: 
Q7: Intend to enter relationship? 
All: 0; 
Some: 1; 
None: 3; 
Don't know: 1. 

d. Not a provider of surge capabilities (e.g., first responders, 
medical surge; see TCL); 
Q6: Reason why not part of UASI area? 
Yes: 5; 
No: 21; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q6: 
Q7: Intend to enter relationship? 
All: 0; 
Some: 1; 
None: 2; 
Don't know: 2. 

e. Not a provider of resource capabilities; (see TCL); 
Q6: Reason why not part of UASI area? 
Yes: 6; 
No: 20; 
Don't know:1; 
If "Yes" to Q6: 
Q7: Intend to enter relationship? 
All: 0; 
Some: 1; 
None: 3; 
Don't know: 2. 

f. Not a part of interoperable communications system; 
Q6: Reason why not part of UASI area? 
Yes: 4; 
No: 23; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q6: 
Q7: Intend to enter relationship? 
All: 0; 
Some: 1; 
None: 2; 
Don't know: 1. 

g. Not a provider of support for recovery or evacuation efforts (see 
TCL); 
Q6: Reason why not part of UASI area? 
Yes: 4; 
No: 23; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q6: 
Q7: Intend to enter relationship? 
All: 0; 
Some: 0; 
None: 2; 
Don't know: 2. 

Q8. In addition to your UASI's Homeland Security Strategy, does your 
UASI possess the following program features? 

Q9. (For each item in Q8 with a "Yes", ask:) How much, if at all, does 
this program feature help your UASI measure its regional capability- 
building? 

Q10. (For each item in Q8 with a "Yes", ask:) How much, if at all, does 
each of the following program features help your UASI measure its 
performance? 

a. Charter and bylaws; 
Q8: Has program feature? 
Yes: 39; 
No: 10; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q8: 
Q9: How much helps measure regional capability-building? 
Greatly: helps: 15; 
Somewhat helps: 11; 
Does not help at all: 11; 
Don't know: 2; 
Q10: How much helps measure regional performance? 
Greatly helps: 7; 
Somewhat helps: 5; 
Does not help at all: 23; 
Don't know: 4. 

b. Regional Concept of Operations (ConOps); 
Q8: Has program feature? 
Yes: 23; 
No: 26; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q8: 
Q9: How much helps measure regional capability-building? 
Greatly helps: 15; 
Somewhat helps: 8; 
Does not help at all: 0; 
Don't know: 0; 
Q10: How much helps measure regional performance? 
Greatly helps: 8; 
Somewhat helps: 8; 
Does not help at all: 5; 
Don't know: 2. 

c. Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) (e.g., tactical operational 
procedures); 
Q8: Has program feature? 
Yes: 28; 
No: 21; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q8: 
Q9: How much helps measure regional capability-building? 
Greatly helps: 14; 
Somewhat helps: 9; 
Does not help at all: 2; 
Don't know: 3; 
Q10: How much helps measure regional performance? 
Greatly helps: 11; 
Somewhat helps: 9; 
Does not help at all: 4; 
Don't know: 4. 

d. Active mutual aid agreements, MOUs, or Intergovernmental Agreements; 
Q8: Has program feature? 
Yes: 46; 
No: 3; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q8: 
Q9: How much helps measure regional capability-building?
Greatly helps: 27; 
Somewhat helps: 11; 
Does not help at all: 7; 
Don't know: 1;
Q10: How much helps measure regional performance? 
Greatly helps: 19; 
Somewhat helps: 12; 
Does not help at all: 13; 
Don't know: 2. 

e. Needs assessment, evaluation, or gap analysis; 
Q8: Has program feature? 
Yes: 37; 
No: 12; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q8: 
Q9: How much helps measure regional capability-building? 
Greatly helps: 27; 
Somewhat helps: 10; 
Does not help at all: 0; 
Don't know: 0; 
Q10: How much helps measure regional performance? 
Greatly helps: 24; 
Somewhat helps: 11; 
Does not help at all: 2; 
Don't know: 0. 

f. Exercise plan; 
Q8: Has program feature? 
Yes: 39; 
No: 10; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q8: 
Q9: How much helps measure regional capability-building? 
Greatly helps: 24; 
Somewhat helps: 12; 
Does not help at all: 2; 
Don't know: 1; 
Q10: How much helps measure regional performance? 
Greatly helps: 25; 
Somewhat helps: 12; 
Does not help at all: 0; 
Don't know: 2. 

Q11. Does your UASI area use any of the following activities to build 
regional capabilities? 

Q12. (For each item in Q11 with a "Yes," ask:) Has your UASI area 
defined performance measures for this activity? 

a. Strategic planning (e.g., homeland security strategic plan); 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities?
Yes:48; 
No: 0; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 35; 
No: 12; 
Don't know: 1. 

b. Operational planning (e.g., Continuity of Operations (COOP) and 
Continuity of Government (COG); 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 31; 
No: 17; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 17; 
No: 9; 
Don't know: 5. 

c. UASI-wide tactical planning; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 36; 
No: 12; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 18; 
No: 11; 
Don't know: 7. 

d. UASI-wide exercises & training; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities?
Yes: 44;
No: 4; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 32; 
No: 8; 
Don't know: 4. 

e. After-action reporting (for exercises and actual events); 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 47; 
No: 2; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 37; 
No: 8; 
Don't know: 2. 

f. Corrective action/improvement programs (for exercises and actual 
events); 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 45; 
No: 4; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 35; 
No: 7; 
Don't know: 3. 

g. Fusion centers for information sharing; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 38; 
No: 11; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 18; 
No: 12; 
Don't know: 8. 

h. NIMS compliance for first responders within the UASI; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 49; 
No: 0; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 46; 
No: 2; 
Don't know: 1. 

i. Regional tactical interoperable communications plan (TICP) - based 
on the SAFECOM continuum; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 47; 
No: 1; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 44; 
No: 1; 
Don't know: 2. 

j. Alerts/warning and notification system; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities?
Yes: 35; 
No: 13; 
Don't know: 1; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 21; 
No: 10; 
Don't know: 4. 

k. Command and control (e.g., UASI-wide emergency operations center); 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 29; 
No: 20; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 18; 
No: 6; 
Don't know: 5. 

l. Certification or credentialing system for first responders and 
volunteers; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 18; 
No: 28; 
Don't know: 3; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 10; 
No: 8; 
Don't know: 0. 

m. Resource typing; 
Q11: Builds regional capabilities? 
Yes: 29; 
No: 20; 
Don't know: 0; 
If "Yes" to Q11: 
Q12: Has defined performance measures? 
Yes: 22; 
No: 5; 
Don't know: 2. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

William O. Jenkins Jr., (202) 512-8757 or jenkinswo@gao.gov. 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Chris Keisling (Assistant 
Director), John Vocino (Analyst-in-Charge), Orlando Copeland, Perry 
Lusk, Adam Vogt, Linda Miller, David Alexander, Grant Mallie, and 
Tracey King made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] FEMA uses a risk-based methodology that considers threat, 
consequences, and vulnerability to identify the urban areas eligible 
for grants, and couples this methodology with the Urban Area's 
anticipated effectiveness (as assessed through peer review ) to 
determine the amount of funds urban areas receive. 

[2] Pub. L. No. 110-53, § 101, 121 Stat. 266, 271-293 (2007). 

[3] Metropolitan statistical areas are geographic entities defined by 
the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for use by federal 
statistical agencies in collecting, tabulating, and publishing federal 
statistics. Currently defined metropolitan statistical areas are based 
on application of 2000 standards (which appeared in the Federal 
Register on December 27, 2000) to 2000 decennial census data. Current 
metropolitan statistical area definitions were announced by OMB 
effective June 6, 2003. 

[4] [4] GAO, Homeland Security: DHS Risk-Based Grant Methodology Is 
Reasonable, But Current Version's Measure Of Vulnerability Is Limited, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-852] (Washington, D.C.: 
June 27, 2008). 

[5] H.R. Rep. No. 110-259, at 289, 294 (2007) (Conf. Rep.). 

[6] The National Preparedness Guidelines describe the tasks needed to 
prepare for national emergencies, such as a terrorist event or natural 
disaster, and establish readiness priorities, targets, and metrics to 
align the efforts of federal, state, local, tribal, private-sector, and 
nongovernmental entities. The Target Capabilities List provides 
guidance on building and maintaining capabilities that support the 
National Preparedness Guidelines. 

[7] FEMA distributes federal funding to states and urban areas through 
its Homeland Security Grant Program for planning, equipment, and 
training to enhance the nation's capabilities to prevent, protect 
against, respond to, and recover from acts of terrorism or other 
catastrophic events. 

[8] The Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) was developed to assess 
and improve program performance so that the federal government can 
achieve better results. A PART review was designed to identify a 
program's strengths and weaknesses to inform funding and management 
decisions aimed at making the program more effective. According to OMB, 
the PART looks at all factors that affect and reflect program 
performance including program purpose and design; performance 
measurement, evaluations, and strategic planning; program management; 
and program results. 

[9] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005); Managing for Results: Barriers to Interagency Coordination, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GGD-00-106], (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 29, 2000); and Homeland Security: Effective Regional Coordination 
Can Enhance Emergency Preparedness, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 15, 
2004). 

[10] Nonprobability sampling is a method of sampling where observations 
are selected in a manner that is not completely random, usually using 
specific characteristics of the population as criteria. Results from 
nonprobability samples cannot be used to make inferences about a 
population because in a nonprobability sample, some elements of the 
population being studied have no chance or an unknown chance of being 
selected as part of the sample. 

[11] DHS has defined the national preparedness system as a continuous 
cycle that involves four main elements: (1) policy and doctrine, (2) 
planning and resource allocation, (3) training and exercises, and (4) 
an assessment of capabilities and reporting. 

[12] The program was originally authorized by the Emergency Wartime 
Supplemental Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2003. Pub. L. No. 108- 
11, 117 Stat. 559, 583 (2003). 

[13] [16] GAO, Homeland Security: DHS Risk-Based Grant Methodology Is 
Reasonable, But Current Version's Measure Of Vulnerability Is Limited, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-852] (Washington, D.C.: 
June 27, 2008). 

[14] Homeland Security Presidential Directive (HSPD) 8--National 
Preparedness (Dec.17, 2003). 

[15] Pub. L. No. 109-295, § 646, 120 Stat. 1355, 1426 (2006) (codified 
at 6 U.S.C. § 746). 

[16] Department of Homeland Security, National Preparedness Guidelines 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 2007). 

[17] GAO Homeland Security: DHS Improved its Risk-Based Grant Programs' 
Allocation and Management Methods, But Measuring Programs' Impact on 
National Capabilities Remains a Challenge, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-488T], (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 11, 
2008). 

[18] GAO National Preparedness: FEMA Has Made Progress, but Needs to 
Complete and Integrate Planning, Exercise, and Assessment Efforts, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-369] (Washington, D.C.: 
Apr. 30, 2009); Homeland Security Grant Program Risk-Based Distribution 
Methods: Presentation to Congressional Committees - November 14, 2008 
and December 15, 2008, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-168R] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 23, 
2008). 

[19] For the purposes of this report we will hereafter use the term 
"collaboration" to discuss regional coordination efforts. 

[20] GAO Homeland Security: Effective Regional Coordination Can Enhance 
Emergency Preparedness, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 15, 
2004). 

[21] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005). 

[22] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-00-106]. 

[23] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009]. 

[24] GAO, Homeland Security: Challenges in Achieving Interoperable 
Communications for First Responders, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-231T] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 6, 
2003). 

[25] GAO, Bioterrorism: Preparedness Varied across State and Local 
Jurisdictions, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-373] 
(Washington, D.C.: Apr. 7, 2003). 

[26] FEMA's Grant Programs Directorate provides administrative 
oversight on federal grant funding efforts, while FEMA's National 
Preparedness Directorate has responsibility for measuring national 
preparedness. 

[27] The first two measures are gathered through FEMA's Grant Programs 
Directorate's monitoring activities; the third measure is gathered 
through FEMA's National Preparedness Directorate's capability 
activities, according to FEMA officials. FEMA defines "significant 
progress" as a 2 percent increase in the average progress toward (1) 
all national priorities or (2) all objectives in the grantees strategy 
from one fiscal year to the next based on discussions with UASI region 
officials. Regarding exercises, "performed acceptably" is based on the 
results of exercises reported as acceptable, partially acceptable, or 
unacceptable in after-action reports submitted by UASI regions. 

[28] GAO, Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government 
Performance and Results Act, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-118] (Washington, D.C.: June 
1996). 

[29] Outputs describe the level of activity that will be provided over 
a period of time, including a description of the characteristics (e.g., 
timeliness) established as standards for the activity. Outputs refer to 
the internal activities of a program (i.e., the products and services 
delivered). Outcomes describe the intended result of carrying out a 
program or activity. They define an event or condition that is external 
to the program or activity and that is of direct importance to the 
intended beneficiaries and/or the public. For a tornado warning system, 
outcomes could be the number of lives saved and property damage 
averted. While performance measures must distinguish between outcomes 
and outputs, there must be a reasonable connection between them, with 
outputs supporting (i.e., leading to) outcomes in a logical fashion. 

[30] These factors include: (1) governance structures, committees, and 
partnerships; (2) regional coordination of expenditures; (3) formalized 
mutual aid agreements; and (4) exercises testing mutual aid agreements. 

[31] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-00-106]. 

[32] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009]. 

[33] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009]. 

[34] The National Incident Management System establishes standardized 
incident management processes, protocols, and procedures that all 
federal, state, tribal, and local responders are to use to coordinate 
and conduct response actions. NIMS has become the national standard for 
incident management. 

[35] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009]. 

[36] As we noted in June 2008, DHS adopted an effectiveness assessment 
for fiscal year 2006 to determine the anticipated effectiveness of the 
various risk mitigation investments proposed by urban areas, which 
affected the final amount of funds awarded to eligible areas. See 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-852]. 

[37] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009]. 

[38] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-00-106]. 

[39] Federal Emergency Management Agency, Analysis of State and Local 
Officials' Views on Federal Preparedness Requirements (Washington, 
D.C.: January 2009). 

[40] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-369]. 

[41] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-00-106]. 

[42] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-00-106]. 

[43] According to the Global Justice Information Sharing Initiative, a 
fusion center is generally "a collaborative effort of two or more 
agencies that provide resources, expertise, and information to the 
center with the goal of maximizing their ability to detect, prevent, 
investigate, and respond to criminal and terrorist activity." Fusion 
centers may include a range of federal, state, tribal and local 
entities and collect and analyze and disseminate information related to 
homeland security, terrorism, and law enforcement. 

[44] GAO, Homeland Security: Federal Efforts Are Helping to Alleviate 
Some Challenges Encountered by State and Local Information Fusion 
Centers, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-35] 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 30, 2007). 

[45] Department of Homeland Security, Tactical Interoperable 
Communications Scorecards: Summary Report and Findings (Washington, 
D.C.: January 2007). 

[46] GAO, Radio Communications: Congressional Action Needed to Ensure 
Agencies Collaborate to Develop a Joint Solution, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-133] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 12, 
2008); Homeland Security: Federal Leadership and Intergovernmental 
Cooperation Required to Achieve First Responder Interoperable 
Communications, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-740] 
(Washington, D.C.: July 20, 2004). 

[47] Tactical plans identify individual tasks, actions, and objectives 
tailored to specific situations and fact patterns at an operational 
level. Tactical planning is meant to support and achieve the objectives 
of the operations plan. 

[48] [1] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-652]. 

[49] [2] GAO Homeland Security: DHS' Efforts to Enhance First 
Responders' All-Hazards Capabilities Continue to Evolve [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-652] (Washington, D.C.: July 11, 
2005). 

[50] [1] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help 
Enhance and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005); Managing for Results: Barriers to Interagency Coordination, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GGD-00-106] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 29, 2000); and Homeland Security: Effective Regional Coordination 
Can Enhance Emergency Preparedness [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1009] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 15, 
2004). 

[End of section] 

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