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Weaknesses in DOD's Management of Professional and Management Support 
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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

November 2009: 

Defense Acquisitions: 

Further Actions Needed to Address Weaknesses in DOD's Management of 
Professional and Management Support Contracts: 

GAO-10-39: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-39, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

In fiscal year 2008, the DOD obligated $200 billion on services 
contracts, including $42 billion for professional and management 
services. GAO previously identified weaknesses in DOD’s management and 
oversight of services contracts, contributing to DOD contract 
management being on GAO’s high-risk list. 

For selected professional and management support contracts, GAO was 
asked to examine (1) the extent to which DOD considered the risks of 
contractors closely supporting inherently governmental functions at key 
decision points, (2) how DOD implemented performance-based practices, 
(3) the extent to which DOD designated trained surveillance personnel, 
and (4) whether a new review process may improve DOD’s management of 
such contracts. 

GAO reviewed federal regulations, agency policies and guidance, and 
analyzed seven acquisitions approved from 2004 to 2007 and 64 related 
task orders for services. 

What GAO Found: 

DOD policies do not require assessments of the risks associated with 
contractors closely supporting inherently governmental functions as 
part of its management reviews of acquisition strategies nor when task 
orders are issued for professional and management services. Such risks 
include the potential loss of government control over and 
accountability for mission-related policy and program decisions. Though 
all seven acquisitions and more than 75 percent of the task orders GAO 
reviewed provided for such services, GAO found no evidence that these 
risks were among those considered in the documentation reviewed. DOD 
guidance issued after these acquisitions were approved requires that 
consideration be given to using civilian personnel rather than 
contractors when the activities closely support inherently governmental 
functions. This guidance, however, does not require DOD personnel to 
consider and document risks posed when contractors perform these 
activities. Further, DOD personnel were unaware of the need to provide 
enhanced oversight when contracting for such services. 

DOD faces challenges in defining requirements and outcome-based 
measures when acquiring professional and management services. DOD 
personnel generally expressed task order requirements in terms of a 
broad range of activities that contractors may perform, but used 
standards and measures that were not always well-suited to assess 
outcomes. DOD made more use of objective measures to assess cost and 
schedule performance, but generally relied on subjective measures to 
assess the quality of the contractors’ work. For example, DOD often 
measured quality based on the number of complaints lodged against the 
contractor, which provided little detail into how desired outcomes were 
achieved. DOD also missed opportunities to include objective measures 
that may have been better suited to assess outcomes. DOD officials 
stated that developing outcome-based, objective measures is 
challenging, but noted that initiatives are under way to better utilize 
such approaches. 

DOD has made progress in ensuring that trained surveillance personnel 
are assigned to monitor contract performance. Surveillance personnel 
were assigned to all 64 of the task orders GAO reviewed, and all but 3 
had received required training. GAO identified, however, 3 instances of 
surveillance personnel who were not assigned before the contractor 
began work on a task order and 20 instances of personnel who did not 
receive training prior to beginning surveillance duties. 

In September 2008, DOD implemented a new peer review process that is 
tasked to address, among other issues, contractors closely supporting 
inherently governmental functions, the use of performance-based 
practices, and contractor surveillance. As of October 2009, four pre-
award reviews and one post-award review of professional and management 
support contracts have been conducted and it is too early to tell 
whether such reviews will encourage DOD personnel to address these 
issues across the range of DOD’s services contracts. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that DOD consider and document how contractors closely 
support inherently governmental functions during management reviews and 
to mitigate related risks before issuing task orders, provide 
additional guidance on enhanced oversight techniques, and better 
monitor the designation of trained surveillance personnel. DOD 
concurred with each of the recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-39] or key 
components. For more information, contact John P. Hutton at (202) 512-
4841 or huttonj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

DOD Policies Do Not Require an Assessment of Risk of Contractors 
Closely Supporting Inherently Governmental Functions at Key Acquisition 
Decision Points: 

DOD Faces Challenges In Implementing Performance-Based Practices on 
Professional and Management Support Task Orders: 

DOD Efforts to Designate Trained Surveillance Personnel Show Progress, 
but Concerns Remain: 

Recent Initiative May Improve DOD's Insight into Issues Affecting 
Professional and Management Support Contracts: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Examples of Inherently Governmental and Approaching 
Inherently Governmental Functions: 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: DOD Acquisition Workforce--Military and Civilian Personnel for 
Fiscal Years 2001 and 2008: 

Table 2: Range of Contracted Services and Related Risk Level: 

Table 3: Examples of Performance Requirements in DOD's Guidebook for 
Performance-Based Services Acquisition in the Department of Defense: 

Table 4: Principal Measures Used to Assess Selected Performance 
Objectives: 

Table 5: Focus Areas of the Peer Review Process: 

Table 6: Award of Contracts and Issuance of Task Orders from Fiscal 
Years 2004 through 2008 Subsequent to the Military Departments' 
Approval of Acquisition Strategies: 

Table 7: Reviewed Services Acquisitions and Total Task Orders Issued 
and Obligations from Fiscal Year 2004 through 2008: 

Table 8: Examples of Inherently Governmental Functions: 

Table 9: Examples of Services That May Approach Being Inherently 
Governmental Functions: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Comparison of DPAP's Peer Reviews and Management Reviews for 
Services Acquisitions for Acquisitions Estimated to be Valued at $1 
Billion or More: 

Abbreviations: 

DAU: Defense Acquisition University: 

DFARS: Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

DPAP: Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy: 

FAR: Federal Acquisition Regulation: 

OFPP: Office of Federal Procurement Policy: 

USD(AT&L): Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, And 
Logistics: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

November 20, 2009: 

The Honorable Evan Bayh: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Richard Burr: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Readiness and Management Support: 
Committee on Armed Services:
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Daniel K. Akaka: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable John Thune: 
United States Senate: 

The Department of Defense (DOD) is the federal government's largest 
purchaser of contractor-provided services, obligating more than $200 
billion on services contracts in fiscal year 2008. DOD obligated $42 
billion (21 percent) of its 2008 obligations for services on 
professional, administrative, and management support. Examples of such 
services include budget and program management and contracting support. 
Often these services are procured through performance-based acquisition 
approaches, which encourage the private sector to develop innovative 
solutions to meet DOD's needs. 

DOD's reliance on contracted services to support its missions makes 
effective management and oversight of these contracts essential. Our 
work over the past several years, however, has identified weaknesses in 
DOD's management and oversight. For example, in 2005, we found that 
DOD's surveillance of service contractors needed improvement as staff 
responsible for assessing contractor performance were not always 
appointed or trained.[Footnote 1] In 2006, we found that DOD's approach 
to managing services acquisitions did not put the department in a 
position to determine whether its investments in services were 
achieving the desired outcomes.[Footnote 2] These shortfalls stemmed, 
in part, from the limitations of the management reviews DOD established 
to review and approve high-dollar services acquisitions.[Footnote 3] 
Additionally, our recent work has shown that reliance on contractors, 
including professional and management support contractors, to support 
core missions can place the government at risk of transferring 
government responsibilities to contractors.[Footnote 4] Collectively, 
such issues continue to place DOD at high risk of fraud, waste, abuse, 
and mismanagement and result in DOD contract management being on our 
high-risk list.[Footnote 5] 

In response to your interest in whether DOD's policies and actions to 
improve the management of services contracts addressed issues affecting 
professional and management support contracts, we examined (1) the 
extent to which DOD considered the risks associated with contractors 
closely supporting inherently governmental functions at key acquisition 
decision points; (2) how DOD was implementing performance-based 
acquisition practices, such as identifying requirements in terms of 
expected and measurable outcomes; (3) the extent to which DOD 
designated trained surveillance personnel; and (4) whether recent 
actions to implement a peer review process may improve DOD's management 
and use of such contracts. 

To assess the extent to which DOD's management reviews and policies 
addressed the risks associated with contractors closely supporting 
inherently governmental functions at key acquisition points, we 
reviewed DOD's May 2002 and October 2006 guidance that established its 
processes for reviewing and approving proposed acquisitions to obtain 
contractor support. To assess how these risks were addressed during 
reviews of specific services acquisitions, we reviewed a DOD-provided 
list of 102 services acquisitions approved by the Air Force, Army, or 
Navy from fiscal years 2004 through 2007. Using contract data from the 
Federal Procurement Data System-Next Generation,[Footnote 6] we 
determined that 32 of these acquisitions, with almost $15 billion in 
total combined obligations from fiscal years 2004 through 2008, 
included contracts for the purchase of professional, administrative, 
and management support. From these 32 acquisitions, we selected 7 for 
our review based on the percentage of total obligations that went 
towards professional, administrative, and management support services; 
the specific types of services acquired; and the military department 
responsible for the acquisition. We also determined that the military 
departments obligated over $4.3 billion on 1,874 task orders from these 
7 acquisitions from fiscal years 2004 through 2008. We randomly 
selected and reviewed 64 task orders that had obligations of $500,000 
or more and were issued during fiscal years 2004 through 2007 from 
these acquisitions to assess how such risks were addressed prior to 
DOD's decision to award a contract or issue a task order for 
professional and management support contracts. We did not review 
acquisitions approved after fiscal year 2007 since our analysis 
indicated that it was often a year or more from the time that the 
acquisition strategy was approved to the time when task orders were 
actually issued. We reviewed the acquisition strategy, base contract, 
task order, statements of work, and other documentation supporting the 
need to acquire contract support and any risk assessments prepared. We 
also interviewed officials who managed these acquisitions to obtain 
information on why these services were purchased, the risks that were 
considered, and any steps taken for enhanced contractor oversight. 

We assessed the reliability of the Federal Procurement Data System-Next 
Generation to identify acquisitions and to select task orders that were 
within the scope of our review by verifying (1) the contract and task 
order identification numbers, (2) the contract award date, (3) that the 
task orders associated with the acquisitions were for professional and 
management support services, and (4) that the task orders had 
obligations exceeding $500,000. On the basis of this assessment, we 
determined that the data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of 
this review. 

To assess how DOD was implementing performance-based acquisitions 
practices on professional and management support contracts, we reviewed 
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) requirements and DOD guidance on 
developing performance work statements and specifically on how to 
identify contract requirements in terms of expected and measurable 
outcomes. We then reviewed performance work statements for the 64 task 
orders to assess whether contract requirements were measurable and 
outcome based. We interviewed contracting and program officials who 
managed these task orders to identify how requirements and performance 
measures were developed and analyzed documentation to determine how 
contractor performance was measured. 

To assess the extent to which DOD designated trained surveillance 
personnel[Footnote 7] on professional and management support contracts, 
we reviewed the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement 
(DFARS) and DOD policies and procedures to identify the department's 
surveillance and training requirements. We analyzed surveillance 
personnel appointment and training documentation associated with each 
of the 64 task orders to determine whether these requirements were met. 

To identify how recent actions to implement a new peer review process 
may improve DOD's management and use of professional and management 
support contracts, we reviewed relevant legislation and the 
department's implementation policy and guidance to identify the scope 
and content of these reviews. We also interviewed officials from the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics' 
(USD(AT&L)) Office of Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy (DPAP) 
and the military departments and reviewed memoranda summarizing the 
findings and recommendations of reviews performed on professional and 
management support services contracts. Additional information on our 
scope and methodology may be found in appendix I. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2008 through November 
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: 

DOD Obligations and Workforce Trends: 

From fiscal years 2001 through 2008, DOD's reported obligations on 
contracts for services, when measured in real terms, more than doubled--
from roughly $92 billion to slightly over $200 billion. These 
obligations accounted for over half of the department's total contract 
obligations in fiscal year 2008. Over that same time period, DOD's 
obligations on professional, administrative, and management support 
contracts nearly tripled from $14.2 billion to $42 billion. These 
services represented about 15 percent of DOD's total obligations on 
services contracts in 2001 and 21 percent in 2008. As we have reported 
in the past, this increased use of contractor-provided services has 
been the result of thousands of individual decisions, not the result of 
strategic, comprehensive planning for the whole department in which the 
volume and composition of contracted services have been measured 
outcomes.[Footnote 8] We also noted that the absence of well-defined 
requirements, sound contracting arrangements, or effective management 
and oversight has contributed to schedule delays, cost overruns, and 
unmet expectations. 

Despite substantial increases in spending on both goods and services 
from fiscal year 2001 through 2008, DOD's acquisition workforce has 
declined by 2.6 percent (see table 1). Without an adequate workforce to 
manage DOD's billion-dollar acquisitions, there is an increased risk of 
poor acquisition outcomes and vulnerability to fraud, waste, and abuse. 
We reported in March 2009 that DOD lacked critical, departmentwide 
information needed to ensure that its acquisition workforce was 
sufficient to meet its national security mission.[Footnote 9] We found, 
for example, that DOD did not collect or track information on 
contractor personnel, despite the fact that those personnel providing 
professional and management support services make up a key segment of 
the total acquisition workforce. Additionally, DOD lacked complete 
information on the reasons personnel are contracted, thus limiting its 
ability to determine whether decisions to augment the in-house 
acquisition workforce with contractors were appropriate. 

Table 1: DOD Acquisition Workforce--Military and Civilian Personnel for 
Fiscal Years 2001 and 2008: 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Program Management; 
Fiscal year 2001: 14,031; 
Fiscal year 2008: 12,781; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -8.9%. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Contracting; 
Fiscal year 2001: 25,413; 
Fiscal year 2008: 26,680; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: 1.1. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Industrial/Contract 
Property Management; 
Fiscal year 2001: 620; 
Fiscal year 2008: 451; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -27.3. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Purchasing; 
Fiscal year 2001: 4,121; 
Fiscal year 2008: 1,196; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -71.0. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Facilities 
Engineering; 
Fiscal year 2001: 0; 
Fiscal year 2008: 4,920; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: n/a. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Production Quality 
and Manufacturing; 
Fiscal year 2001: 10,547; 
Fiscal year 2008: 9,138; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -13.4. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Business, Cost 
Estimating, and Financial Management; 
Fiscal year 2001: 10,279; 
Fiscal year 2008: 7,085; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -31.1. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Life Cycle Logistics; 
Fiscal year 2001: 11,060; 
Fiscal year 2008: 13,361; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: 20.8. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Information 
Technology; 
Fiscal year 2001: 5,612; 
Fiscal year 2008: 3,934; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -29.9. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: System Planning, 
Research, Development, and Engineering--Systems Engineering; 
Fiscal year 2001: 34,899; 
Fiscal year 2008: 34,537; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -1.0. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: System Planning, 
Research, Development, and Engineering--Science and Technology Manager; 
Fiscal year 2001: 0; 
Fiscal year 2008: 480; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: n/a. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Test and Evaluation; 
Fiscal year 2001: 5,113; 
Fiscal year 2008: 7,420; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: 45.1. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Auditing; 
Fiscal year 2001: 3,457; 
Fiscal year 2008: 3,638; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: 5.2. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Unknown/Other; 
Fiscal year 2001: 4,097; 
Fiscal year 2008: 1,258; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -69.3. 

Acquisition workforce by functional career field: Total; 
Fiscal year 2001: 129,249; 
Fiscal year 2008: 125,879; 
Percentage change fiscal years 2001 to 2008: -2.6%. 

Source: DOD data. 

[End of table] 

Risks of Contractors Closely Supporting Inherently Governmental 
Functions: 

Federal agencies acquire basic services, such as custodial and 
landscaping, to more complex professional and management support 
services, which may closely support the performance of inherently 
governmental functions. Tasks that require discretion in applying 
government authority or value judgments in making decisions for the 
government are defined by the FAR as inherently governmental functions; 
as such they are required to be performed by government employees, not 
private contractors.[Footnote 10] The FAR provides 20 examples of such 
work functions, including determining agency policy or federal program 
budget request priorities; directing and controlling federal employees; 
and awarding, administering or terminating federal contracts.[Footnote 
11] 

The FAR also provides examples of functions that, while not inherently 
governmental, approach the category due to the nature of the function, 
the manner in which a contractor performs the task, or methods used by 
the government to administer performance under a contract (see app. 
II).[Footnote 12] Services that closely support inherently governmental 
functions include professional and management support services, such as 
those that involve or relate to supporting budget preparation; program 
planning; acquisition planning; technical evaluation for contract 
proposals or source selections; and development of statements of work. 

The decision to turn to contractors can, in some cases, create risks 
that the government needs to consider and manage. Of key concern is the 
loss of government control over and accountability for mission-related 
policy and program decisions when contractors provide services that 
closely support inherently governmental functions. The closer 
contractor services come to supporting inherently governmental 
functions, the greater the risk of their influencing the government's 
control over and accountability for decisions that may be based, in 
part, on contractor work. This may result in decisions that are not in 
the best interest of the government and may increase vulnerability to 
waste, fraud, and abuse. Given this risk, the FAR and Office of Federal 
Procurement Policy (OFPP) guidance state that a greater scrutiny and an 
enhanced degree of management oversight is required when contracting 
for functions that closely support the performance of inherently 
governmental functions.[Footnote 13] Additionally, the Ronald W. Reagan 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2005 required, among 
other things, that prior to entering into a contract for performance of 
acquisition functions that closely support inherently governmental 
functions, DOD must ensure that its personnel cannot reasonably be made 
available to perform these activities, that appropriate DOD personnel 
supervise contractor performance and perform all inherently 
governmental functions, and that DOD address any potential 
organizational conflict of interest of the contractor when performing 
these tasks.[Footnote 14] Table 2 provides examples of contracted 
services and their relative risk of influencing government decision 
making. 

Table 2: Range of Contracted Services and Related Risk Level: 

Basic services (Risk level: low): 
* Custodial; 
* Food; 
* Landscaping; 
* Snow removal; 
* Storage; 
* Trash collection. 

Professional and management support services that do not closely 
support inherently governmental functions (Risk level: medium): 
* Advertising; 
* Banking; 
* Parking; 
* Records maintenance. 

Professional and management support services that closely support 
inherently governmental functions (Risk level: high): 
* Acquisition support; 
* Contracting support; 
* Budget preparation; 
* Developing or interpreting regulations; 
* Engineering and technical services; 
* Intelligence services; 
* Policy development; 
* Reorganization and planning. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of table] 

Our previous work has identified that the use of contractors for 
services that closely support inherently governmental functions 
introduces other risks due to a potential loss of government control 
over program decisions.[Footnote 15] Such concerns include an increased 
potential for conflicts of interest, both organizational and personal; 
the potential for improper use of personal services contracts, which 
the FAR generally prohibits because of the employer-employee 
relationship they create between the government and contractor 
personnel; and the potential additional cost to the government of 
hiring contractors rather than government personnel. 

DOD Management and Peer Reviews: 

The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002 required 
the Secretary of Defense to establish a review process for the approval 
of DOD services acquisitions.[Footnote 16] USD(AT&L) issued guidance in 
May 2002 establishing its management reviews, intending to ensure that 
DOD's services acquisitions are based on clear, performance-based 
requirements with measurable outcomes and that acquisitions are planned 
and administered to achieve intended results.[Footnote 17] Under this 
initial guidance USD(AT&L) was to review all proposed services 
acquisitions with an estimated value of $2 billion or more, and 
military department and other defense component officials were to 
review those below that threshold. The military departments each 
subsequently developed their own management review processes for 
acquisitions that contained several of the same elements. Chief among 
these was the requirement that written acquisition strategies must be 
reviewed and approved by senior officials before contracts may be 
awarded. The content of these strategies included, among other things, 
information on contract requirements, risks, and business 
arrangements.[Footnote 18] Once the acquisition strategies are 
approved, DOD contracting offices may continue the acquisition process, 
including soliciting bids for proposed work and subsequently awarding 
contracts. 

Based on further requirements in the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2006,[Footnote 19] in October 2006, USD(AT&L) issued a 
memorandum updating DOD's acquisition of services policy.[Footnote 20] 
Under the updated policy, all proposed services acquisitions with a 
value estimated at more than $1 billion or designated as "special 
interest" should be referred to USD(AT&L) for review. The dollar 
threshold for military department reviews was also lowered. While the 
substance of the management reviews remained largely unchanged from the 
2002 policy, it did incorporate a few additional, specific, acquisition 
strategy requirements concerning inclusion of any required waivers and 
top-level discussion of source selection processes. 

In 2006, we reported that although DOD had established formal 
management reviews for the approval of services acquisitions, issues 
with services contracts at the strategic and transactional level 
remained.[Footnote 21] We reported that DOD's approach to managing 
services acquisitions tended to be reactive and that it had not 
developed a means for gauging whether ongoing and planned efforts were 
achieving intended results. At the transactional level, DOD focused 
primarily on elements associated with awarding contracts, with much 
less attention paid to requirements or the assessment of the actual 
delivery of contracted services. Moreover, the results of individual 
acquisitions were generally not used to inform or adjust strategic 
direction. We recommended that, among other actions, DOD take steps to 
determine areas of specific risk that were inherent in acquiring 
services and that should be managed with greater attention. DOD agreed 
with this recommendation and has identified actions under way to 
address our concerns. 

In response to a requirement in Section 808 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008, USD(AT&L) established a 
multiphased, pre-and post-contract award independent management review, 
or peer review, process for services acquisitions.[Footnote 22] In 
December 2008, DOD Instruction 5000.02, Operation of the Defense 
Acquisition System, was revised and incorporated these peer reviews as 
well as the management reviews and dollar thresholds established in the 
October 2006 acquisition of services policy. 

DOD Policies Do Not Require an Assessment of Risk of Contractors 
Closely Supporting Inherently Governmental Functions at Key Acquisition 
Decision Points: 

DOD and the military departments are to assess a number of risks when 
developing an acquisition strategy for services, but DOD policy does 
not require an assessment of risks associated with contractors closely 
supporting inherently governmental functions at two key decision 
points--when approving acquisition strategies or issuing task orders. 
All 7 of the proposed acquisitions for professional, administrative, 
and management services and more than 75 percent of the 64 related task 
orders we reviewed required the contractor to provide services that 
closely supported inherently governmental functions. A DOD instruction 
issued after the approval of the acquisition strategies we reviewed 
requires that consideration be given to using civilian personnel rather 
than contractors, specifically when the activities to be performed 
cannot be separated or distinguished from inherently governmental 
functions. However, once the decision to rely on contractors is made, 
DOD personnel are not required to identify and document risks posed 
when contractors are given responsibility for closely supporting 
inherently governmental functions or take steps to mitigate those 
risks. 

Risks Associated with Contractors Closely Supporting Inherently 
Governmental Functions Are Not among Those Assessed in Acquisition 
Strategies Submitted for Management Reviews: 

DPAP representatives we met with noted that the acquisition strategy is 
a "big picture" document that examines whether the proposed methods for 
acquiring services are sound and how the acquisition compares with 
previous acquisitions. The strategy is developed, in part, with the 
assistance of both program office representatives, who identify the 
requirements, and contracting personnel, who will develop the basic 
contracts and subsequently issue task orders. Agency personnel are 
required to document in the acquisition strategy their assessment of 
current and potential technical, cost, schedule, and performance risks; 
the level of those risks; and a mitigation plan. As part of the 
acquisition strategy, this assessment is subsequently reviewed by 
senior DOD officials during management reviews. Documentation for all 
seven acquisition strategies we reviewed included a discussion of these 
risks as well as methods to mitigate their impact, as required in 
policy. 

DOD policy, however, does not require the military departments to 
consider and document in their acquisition strategies the extent to 
which the proposed services will be used to closely support inherently 
governmental functions. As a result, none of the acquisition strategies 
or related risk assessment documentation reviewed under DOD's 
management reviews that we analyzed identified such concerns or any 
related mitigation strategies. The acquisition strategies and 
supporting documentation we reviewed included broad descriptions of the 
services to be provided over the course of the acquisition, which 
included acquisition, contracting, and policy development support 
services. Each of these services are identified in the FAR as examples 
of those that closely support inherently governmental functions. 
[Footnote 23] 

DOD and military department officials we spoke with indicated that, to 
some degree, DOD's management review is not well suited to assess the 
risks of contractors closely supporting inherently governmental 
functions. These officials noted that the acquisition strategies 
generally described requirements in broad terms and that the timing of 
the review--often months before DOD actually solicits bids from the 
contractors or awards contracts and issues task orders for specific 
services--makes it challenging to know what specific risks might be 
encountered or whether a mitigation strategy is warranted. These 
officials indicated that identifying such risks would be more 
appropriate during the planning for the subsequent award of contracts 
or issuance of task orders, when the program offices have more clearly 
defined their specific needs and requirements. 

In most cases, however, the military departments had prior knowledge 
about their expected use of contractors to provide such services. For 
example, all of the acquisition strategies and supporting documentation 
we reviewed justified the need to obtain contractor support to perform 
these functions due to a lack of government resources needed to meet 
daily mission requirements. These documents and contracting officials 
indicated that the offices supported by these acquisitions have long 
relied, in some cases for over a decade, on contractor support to 
augment the government workforce and perform tasks that closely support 
inherently governmental functions. For example, although the 
Professional Acquisition Support Services strategy that supports the 
Air Force's Electronic Systems Center was approved in 2006, the center 
has contracted for similar acquisition support services continuously 
since 1984. Likewise, the acquisition management services provided to 
the Air Force's Air Combat Command through the Technical Acquisition 
Management Support 3 acquisition have been obtained through previous 
acquisitions dating back to 1989. Although officials stated that 
documentation explaining the need to contract for these services in the 
past was often unavailable, contracting officers and program officials 
indicated that reductions in government personnel have led to the 
increased use of contractors to perform activities government personnel 
would have performed in the past. 

Program and contracting officials stated that they would now prefer to 
use government personnel to perform these activities, but they noted 
the length of time it takes to hire federal employees and the lack of 
available personnel funds or positions necessitates them to use 
contractor support. Program and contract officials also informed us 
that the decision not to pursue additional federal employees instead of 
contractors was made by the supported programs before these officials 
became involved with the acquisition process. Further, they indicated 
they were not provided with the analyses used to support these 
decisions. We did not find any analysis or discussion of how these 
decisions were made in the acquisition strategies or supporting 
documentation submitted for the management review. 

Risks of Contractors Closely Supporting Inherently Governmental 
Functions Are Not Considered and Documented by DOD Personnel When 
Awarding Contracts or Issuing Task Orders: 

According to DOD officials, personnel are not required to consider and 
document the risks associated with contractors closely supporting 
inherently governmental functions when awarding contracts or issuing 
task orders. Forty-nine of the 64 task orders we reviewed included 
services that, as described in the FAR, are examples of activities that 
closely support inherently governmental functions, including support 
for developing statements of work or contract documents; or budget 
preparation.[Footnote 24] Program managers and contracting officers we 
spoke with acknowledged that contractors closely supported inherently 
government functions, but none of the contract files identified them as 
such or indicated if any steps were taken to address related risks. 

The associated contract files for each of the task orders we reviewed 
included provisions specifically prohibiting the contractor from 
performing inherently governmental functions. Program managers and 
contracting officers informed us that they were aware of the importance 
of preventing contractors from performing inherently governmental 
functions as required by the FAR.[Footnote 25] These officials 
acknowledged that without contractor support, fulfilling mission 
requirements or conducting certain program activities could not 
continue and some recognized that the close working relationships that 
develop between government and contractor support personnel increase 
the risks of contractors performing inherently governmental functions. 
To prevent contractors from performing such tasks, program and 
contracting officials indicated that they reviewed task order 
requirements to ensure that they are within the scope of the 
acquisition and do not require contractors to perform tasks that should 
be left only to government employees. Officials further stated that 
when developing performance work statements they emphasize that the 
contractors' role is to provide assistance to the government rather 
than make program decisions. 

Program and contract personnel that we interviewed who were responsible 
for overseeing the work done under the task orders were unaware, 
however, of the FAR requirement to provide greater scrutiny and an 
enhanced degree of management oversight and surveillance when 
contracting for services that closely support inherently governmental 
functions.[Footnote 26] Additionally, federal internal control 
standards require that agencies conduct an assessment of risks, such as 
risks that result from heavy reliance on contractors to perform 
critical agency operations.[Footnote 27] According to DOD officials, 
however, no specific guidance has been provided by DOD that defines how 
contracting and program officials should conduct such enhanced 
oversight. DPAP officials noted that additional information on how to 
oversee contractors that closely support inherently governmental 
functions would be useful to the military departments, but acknowledged 
that they have no ongoing efforts do so. 

Recent Guidance Requires DOD to Consider Using Civilian or Military 
Employees to Perform Activities That Closely Support Inherently 
Governmental Functions: 

In May 2009, DOD issued guidance[Footnote 28] in response to 
legislation requiring DOD to devise and implement guidelines and 
procedures to ensure that consideration is given to converting, or in- 
sourcing, functions currently performed by contractors to DOD civilian 
personnel.[Footnote 29] This in-sourcing guidance instructs DOD 
personnel to prioritize the conversion of any currently contracted 
services to DOD civilian performance if the functions: are valid and 
enduring mission requirements; are inherently governmental functions; 
are exempted functions;[Footnote 30] are unauthorized personal 
services; have problems with contract administration; or are services 
that require "special consideration" for in-sourcing. Under the law and 
the guidance, one of the categories of services that should be given 
"special consideration" for in-sourcing is services that closely 
support inherently governmental functions. 

The May 2009 guidance also states that when making certain in-sourcing 
decisions, agency personnel should consult workforce management 
officials, as specified in DOD's Guidance for Determining Workforce 
Mix.[Footnote 31] This instruction requires DOD personnel to pay 
particular attention when contracting for activities that closely 
support inherently governmental functions. If an activity is so closely 
associated with an inherently governmental function that it cannot be 
separated or distinguished from it, the instruction requires that the 
function be identified as inherently governmental and precluded from 
private sector performance. This safeguard is intended to prevent the 
transferring of governmental authority, responsibility, or 
accountability to the private sector. However, neither the May 2009 in- 
sourcing guidance nor DOD's Guidance for Determining Workforce Mix 
require DOD contracting and program personnel to identify, document, or 
mitigate risks posed when contractors will be relied on to closely 
support inherently governmental functions. 

Further, under the May 2009 in-sourcing guidance, the conversion of 
services that require "special consideration" to government performance 
is to be based solely on cost and not risk; that is, these services may 
be in-sourced only if a cost analysis shows that performance by DOD 
civilian employees is more cost-effective. Officials from the Office of 
the Director for Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation[Footnote 32] 
stated that guidance for standardizing how these cost analyses should 
be performed was expected to be issued by December 2009. The May 2009 
in-sourcing guidance also requires that when cost analyses indicate 
that the private sector is the more cost-effective provider of 
services, a written confirmation should be provided to contracting 
officers. Further, the guidance states that all documents leading to 
the decision to contract for such services should be retained in 
contract files. DPAP and military department officials stated that cost 
analyses are not required to be submitted in the documentation 
supporting management reviews. 

DOD Faces Challenges In Implementing Performance-Based Practices on 
Professional and Management Support Task Orders: 

DOD faces challenges in defining requirements and outcome-based 
measures when using a performance-based approach to acquire 
professional and management support services. DOD personnel generally 
expressed task order requirements in terms of a broad range of services 
that the contractors might be required to perform and used a mix of 
objective and subjective measures to determine whether the contractor 
achieved assigned tasks within expected cost, schedule, and quality 
parameters. For example, 63 percent of the task orders that assessed 
contractor cost performance principally used objective performance 
measures, while two-thirds of the task orders that assessed the quality 
of contractor performance principally used subjective measures. We 
found objective measures generally provided more discrete information 
to assess contractor performance. In contrast, subjective measures, 
especially those to assess the quality of contractor work, tended to 
rely on customer feedback, such as the number of complaints lodged 
against the contractor. In several instances, DOD missed opportunities 
to include objective performance measures that may have been better 
suited to assess contract outcomes, in part because DOD personnel used 
the performance measures established in the base contract rather than 
attempt to measure the specific services being provided under the task 
order. DOD officials acknowledged there are challenges in developing 
measures that assess the outcomes of professional and management 
support contracts and noted recent actions to improve existing 
guidance. 

FAR and DOD Guidance Established Preference for Performance-Based 
Services Acquisition: 

In 2000, Congress established performance-based approaches as the 
preferred acquisition method for acquiring most services.[Footnote 33] 
Under the FAR, all performance-based acquisitions should include: 

* a performance work statement that describes outcome-oriented 
requirements in terms of results required rather than the methods of 
performance of the work; 

* measurable performance standards describing how to measure contractor 
performance in terms of quality, timeliness, and quantity; and: 

* the method of assessing contract performance against performance 
standards, commonly accomplished through the use of a quality assurance 
surveillance plan.[Footnote 34] 

DOD issued its Guidebook for Performance-Based Services Acquisition in 
the Department of Defense in December 2000 to educate DOD personnel on, 
and promote the use of, performance-based practices. The guidebook 
suggests that personnel develop performance objectives that encompass 
at a top level all the tasks that must be completed to arrive at the 
desired outcome. The guidebook states that performance standards should 
be identified for the performance objectives so personnel will know if 
the desired outcome was satisfactorily achieved. It further states that 
determining an appropriate performance standard is a judgment call 
based on the needs of the mission and available expertise. DOD's 
guidance also identifies that surveillance personnel may use various 
measures to assess the contractor's performance, such as random or 
periodic sampling of the contractor's work as well as customer 
feedback. The guidebook indicates, however, that customer feedback 
should be used prudently as it is subjective and does not always relate 
to the requirements of the contract. Lastly, the guidebook provides 
examples of performance objectives with corresponding standards and 
measures for various services and activities, but not specifically for 
professional and management support services (see table 3). 

Table 3: Examples of Performance Requirements in DOD's Guidebook for 
Performance-Based Services Acquisition in the Department of Defense: 

Type of service: Call center operations; 
Performance objective: Maintain all equipment and materials; 
Performance standard: Equipment failures, non-availability, or 
maintenance shall not interfere with operations for more than x minutes 
during a month (day, etc.); 
Assessment methods: Random inspection; audit or review by third party. 

Type of service: Call center operations; 
Performance objective: Assure customers are satisfied with quality of 
service; 
Performance standard: At least x percent of customers contacted must be 
satisfied with service; 
Assessment methods: Review and validate customer surveys; conduct 
independent surveys. 

Type of service: Reporting to the government; 
Performance objective: Deliver required reports; 
Performance standard: No more than x (or x percent) of the reports to 
appropriate government contact may be later than the specified time 
period; 
Assessment methods: Review reports and logs. 

Type of service: Satellite control center service; 
Performance objective: Conduct an effective position certification 
program to ensure qualified personnel are provided for orbital 
analysis; 
Performance standard: 95 percent of personnel certified within x 
timelines per year; 
Assessment methods: Not specified. 

Source: DOD's Guidebook for Performance-Based Services Acquisition in 
the Department of Defense, 2000. 

[End of table] 

Performance Standards and Measures Were Not Always Well Suited to 
Assess the Outcomes of the Broad Range of Contracted Services: 

While DOD identified as performance-based all but one of the task 
orders we reviewed, we found that almost all of the task orders had 
broadly defined requirements that listed various categories of services 
and related activities the contractor may be required to perform over 
the course of the order rather than expected results. The task orders 
we reviewed were issued from base contracts that identified the 
categories of support services a contractor may be required to perform. 
The task orders then identified a broad range of activities that the 
contractor may be required to perform based on the customer program 
office's needs. For example, the base contract for one task order 
identified four different categories of support services: acquisition, 
financial management, contracting, and administrative and human 
resources support. In turn, the task order identified several 
activities the contractor could perform, such as preparing acquisition- 
related documents, updating commanders on policies and procedures, 
tracking and analyzing funds, maintaining contract files, and preparing 
travel orders. 

DOD generally grouped contractor performance into a number of different 
performance objectives, including cost, schedule, and quality, and set 
standards that the contractor had to meet. These performance objectives 
required the contractor to, among other things, maintain control of 
costs by completing work within an acceptable range of projected costs, 
adhere to the government's schedule by delivering products on time, and 
provide the government with high-quality work products. DOD personnel 
used a mix of objective and subjective measures to assess the 
contractors' performance against the cost, schedule, and quality 
standards in 54 of the 64 task orders we reviewed; not all task orders 
established performance measures in all three categories (see table 4). 
The measures used varied depending on the area of performance assessed. 
For example, 63 percent of the task orders that assessed the 
contractor's cost performance principally used objective performance 
measures, while two-thirds of the task orders that assessed the quality 
of the contractor's performance principally used subjective measures. 

Table 4: Principal Measures Used to Assess Selected Performance 
Objectives: 

Performance objective: Maintain cost control; 
Performance standard measured objectively: 34; 
Performance standard measured subjectively: 20; 
Performance objective not included or assessed[A]: 10. 

Performance objective: Meet schedule requirements; 
Performance standard measured objectively: 29; 
Performance standard measured subjectively: 25; 
Performance objective not included or assessed[A]: 10. 

Performance objective: Provide high-quality services; 
Performance standard measured objectively: 20; 
Performance standard measured subjectively: 40; 
Performance objective not included or assessed[A]: 4. 

Source: GAO analysis of 64 selected task orders. 

[A] In lieu of measuring cost, schedule, or performance, contractors 
were assessed in such areas as maintaining good business relations with 
the government and how well the contractor retained and replaced its 
personnel. 

[End of table] 

We found that the objective performance measures yielded better 
information on how well the contractor met desired cost and schedule 
contract outcomes than subjective measures. For example, the objective 
performance standards in one task order required the contractor to 
remain within projected costs and perform tasks within schedule 97 
percent of the time. In this instance, the surveillance personnel 
maintained a database of the contractor's cost and periodically 
contacted customers to identify if the contractor's work was completed 
on time. The other task orders that included cost and schedule 
performance standards were assessed subjectively, based on the number 
of complaints lodged against the contractor. According to task order 
documentation and surveillance personnel we spoke with, a customer 
complaint is generated when a contractor fails to meet performance 
requirements. Ten of these task orders required the contractor to 
provide accurate cost forecasts and accomplish tasks with minimum delay 
to program mission objectives. None of these task orders, however, 
identified what would constitute a level of performance that would 
result in a valid customer complaint. Contractor performance 
documentation we reviewed for these task orders indicated that DOD 
assessed the contractor as having met performance requirements, but 
provided little to no information on what the contractor accomplished. 

Both the subjective and objective performance measures used to assess 
the quality of the contractors' services provided little insight into 
the outcomes of the contractors' work. DOD personnel relied on 
subjective measures to assess the quality of contractor services 
provided in 40 of the 64 task orders we reviewed. For example, 30 of 
these tasks orders directed surveillance personnel to assess quality 
based on the number of customer complaints a contractor received. 
Surveillance personnel we spoke with indicated that they regularly 
contacted government customers to inquire about their overall 
satisfaction with the contractor's performance. Some surveillance 
personnel explained that it was difficult to determine if the 
contractor met or exceeded performance standards because guidance on 
making these determinations was not available. Consequently, they 
generally documented the contractor's performance as acceptable if the 
customer said they were satisfied with the contractor's performance. We 
found that when the contractor's performance was rated as meeting 
requirements, surveillance personnel documented little detail about the 
quality of the contractor's work because such descriptions were often 
required only when the contractor either exceeded or did not meet 
expectations. In another 10 task orders involving the purchase of 
engineering, technical, business, and acquisition support services, 
such as helping to identify the program office's contracting 
requirements and assisting with developing requests for proposals and 
statements of work to fill those requirements, quality performance 
standards required the contractor to complete task order activities 
with little rework and with few minor and no significant problems at 
least 80 percent of the time. According to the documentation we 
reviewed, surveillance personnel indicated they periodically sampled 
the contractor's work to verify the percentage that was redone and 
often rated the quality of the work as exceptional because little 
rework was reported. 

On four task orders for translation services in Afghanistan, Cuba, and 
other areas, DOD personnel did not attempt to measure the quality of 
the contractor's services. In these cases, the task orders' 
requirements included that the contractor deploy translators in 
response to mission requirements. The corresponding performance 
standard required the contractor to meet staffing requirements[Footnote 
35] no less than 95 percent of the time, which was measured and 
documented by surveillance personnel. The task orders, however, did not 
include a performance objective for obtaining high-quality translation 
services. Contracting and program officials explained that they did not 
try to measure the quality of the translations provided because DOD 
lacks the personnel with translation skills necessary to make such an 
assessment. These officials stated that ensuring qualified personnel 
are provided in a timely manner is the best alternative to determining 
if the translations provided are of high quality. 

The military departments may have missed opportunities to include and 
use objective performance measures that were better suited to assess 
contract outcomes in several of the task orders we reviewed. In part, 
this occurred because DOD personnel used the general performance 
measures that were established in the base contract rather than develop 
measures that were tailored for the specific work required in the task 
orders in more than 80 percent of the task orders we reviewed. 
Consequently, in each of the following examples, the quality of the 
contractor's performance was measured based on the number of validated 
complaints submitted by government personnel. 

* Four task orders issued for acquisition, financial management, 
contracting, and administrative support required contractors to 
indicate at the end of each contract year at least two lessons learned, 
best practices, or improvements it made to the government's processes 
in areas including acquisition and program management. The requirements 
did not, however, identify at the outset of the task order the type or 
extent of the improvements that DOD desired, such as reductions in the 
time required to complete activities or costs savings. 

* In a $1.8 million task order for information and project management 
support, the contractor was required to identify and reduce the 
government's unliquidated obligations by 25 percent in 6 months and by 
50 percent in a year when measured against an identified baseline. 
Nevertheless, the task order did not include any performance measures 
that were directly related to whether the contractor met the reduction 
targets. The official responsible for assessing the contractor's 
performance noted, however, that he considered the contractor's efforts 
to reduce unliquidated obligations when he assessed the contractor's 
performance. 

* In four other task orders for acquisition and information management 
support, the contractor was required to review technical proposals and 
validate prices submitted by other contractors and make recommendations 
on the acceptance or rejection of these proposals as part of the 
support it provided to the program office's pre-award activities. The 
task orders, however, did not include objective performance measures to 
assess the contractor's performance, such as whether the contracting 
officer returned the contractor's work to correct deficiencies or 
whether the reviews resulted in reducing the government's costs. 

DOD Officials Identified Challenges in Developing Objective, Outcome- 
Oriented Measures: 

Our previous work at the Department of Homeland Security noted that 
defining outcome-oriented requirements and measurable performance 
standards may be challenging for professional and management support 
services.[Footnote 36] We found similar concerns expressed by the DOD 
contracting, program, and surveillance officials we interviewed. These 
officials acknowledged that they find it difficult to identify and 
objectively measure the outcomes of professional and management support 
services contracts due to the broad range of support provided. They 
stated that these task orders encompassed a range of activities which, 
while not inherently governmental, would typically be performed by 
federal employees. Consequently, officials stated the performance work 
statements needed to be written broadly to provide the flexibility to 
obtain specific support as needed and that contractors were often 
viewed as simply augmenting the government's workforce. Further, these 
officials noted that it was often not practical to measure the work 
contractors performed and that subjective measures, such as the number 
of customer complaints received, are frequently used as an alternative 
to assess whether the contractor met the government's requirements. As 
a result, they generally considered the outcome of these task orders to 
be obtaining qualified people rather than a specific result the 
contractor was required to achieve. 

To address the challenges of developing performance-based requirements 
and measures for professional and management support, a Defense 
Acquisition University (DAU) official noted that DAU was reviewing 
performance work statements and surveillance plans from professional 
and management support contracts across DOD to identify good examples 
of outcome-based performance objectives, standards, and measures. DAU 
plans to launch a Web site in January 2010 that includes templates 
derived from these examples for contracting and program officials 
across DOD to tailor to their own needs. Additionally, this official 
noted that since January 2009, DAU has offered a 4-day services 
acquisition workshop tailored to individual acquisitions developed by 
program offices across DOD. According to the DAU official, the workshop 
brings together key acquisition personnel, from contracting officers to 
customers, to support the development of new acquisition strategies 
before they are reviewed by the military departments. The official 
added that by the end of the workshop, the requiring activity has a 
draft performance work statement and a quality assurance surveillance 
plan that meets performance-based requirements. 

DOD Efforts to Designate Trained Surveillance Personnel Show Progress, 
but Concerns Remain: 

DOD's efforts to ensure that trained surveillance personnel are 
assigned to monitor contractor performance on services contracts have 
shown progress, though on a number of task orders personnel were not 
always designated or trained in a timely fashion. Surveillance 
personnel are required to be qualified by training and designated in 
writing.[Footnote 37] In response to our and inspector general reports 
on continued shortcomings in DOD's contract surveillance 
practices,[Footnote 38] DOD issued guidance on December 6, 2006, 
requiring that surveillance personnel be properly trained and 
designated before contract performance begins, and that properly 
trained surveillance personnel are identified on active contracts for 
services.[Footnote 39] 

At the time of our review, trained surveillance personnel were 
designated to all 64 task orders. DOD personnel responsible for five of 
the seven acquisitions we reviewed, however, did not maintain 
documentation on all surveillance personnel assigned over the task 
orders' entire period of performance. DOD officials stated that in some 
cases additional personnel may have been designated to the task orders, 
and that some personnel may have received surveillance training on a 
date earlier than was indicated in the contract files, but were unable 
to provide documentation. 

In most cases, DOD was able to provide documentation of the first 
person designated to conduct surveillance and the person assigned at 
the time of our review. On the basis of this information, we found that 
surveillance personnel were designated after contract performance began 
on 3 of the 37 task orders awarded after the issuance of the December 
2006 guidance.[Footnote 40] In 1 of these 3 cases, the person was 
designated more than 90 days after performance began on the task order. 

We also found that 61 of the 64 surveillance personnel designated on 
the task orders we reviewed had received training. For 1 of the 3 
instances where personnel were not trained, a program official 
explained that the person was recently assigned and had been notified 
of the training requirements, but had not completed the training. In 
the 2 other instances, DOD officials were not able to identify a reason 
for the lack of training. For the 61 task orders with trained personnel 
assigned, 20 personnel had not received training prior to beginning 
their assignments. Furthermore, in 3 of these cases, surveillance 
personnel did not receive the required training until at least a year 
after they were assigned to monitor a contractor's performance. 

The training that surveillance personnel received varied across and 
within the military departments, ranging in duration from 2 hours to 1 
week, and included, among other things, reviewing training slides, 
completing an on-line course offered through DAU's Web site, and 
completing an in-class course tailored by the program office 
responsible for the acquisition. There are no DOD-wide requirements for 
the content of surveillance training and personnel we spoke with 
provided mixed feedback on how well their training prepared them to 
conduct surveillance. Surveillance personnel noted that training 
provided an adequate basis for conducting their duties, but did not 
always provide enough instruction on how to effectively oversee 
contractors, especially for those who had little to no previous 
experience with assessing contractor performance. Several personnel 
stated that the most useful information that training provided was the 
contact information for personnel in the contracting offices that 
surveillance personnel could speak with if they had questions. DPAP 
officials acknowledged that the type and content of the training 
surveillance personnel receive varied and indicated that DOD is 
considering a certification system for these personnel that may include 
both training and experience requirements. 

Surveillance personnel identified a number of challenges that may 
affect their surveillance duties, such as numerous contractors to 
oversee in multiple locations and surveillance responsibilities being 
secondary to primary duties. For example, on one task order for 
translation services in Afghanistan, surveillance personnel were each 
responsible for monitoring over 1,000 contractors dispersed throughout 
the country. An official who oversaw this task order stated the ratio 
of surveillance personnel to contractors was so large that it affected 
the government's ability to assess contractor performance.[Footnote 41] 
For a task order for translation services in Cuba, the contracting 
officer's letter of designation to the contracting officer's 
representative stressed the importance of on-site surveillance. 
Nevertheless, we found that there was an 8-month period during which 
surveillance personnel were absent from the site of contractor 
performance. Despite the absence of on-site surveillance personnel, 
contracting officials determined that the contractor should receive the 
full award fee based upon performance reports submitted before and 
after this 8-month period. Several personnel from other commands we 
visited told us they did not have sufficient time to focus on their 
surveillance responsibilities in addition to their primary duties. 
Finally, surveillance personnel at many of the commands we visited 
stated that they were unaware of requirements to provide enhanced 
oversight of contractors that closely support inherently governmental 
functions. 

Recent Initiative May Improve DOD's Insight into Issues Affecting 
Professional and Management Support Contracts: 

DOD is in the process of implementing additional processes to review 
services contracts both prior to and after contract award, which may 
provide additional insight into DOD's management and oversight of 
professional and management support contracts. These reviews are 
intended to assess a number of issues that are not currently addressed 
by DOD's management review, including contractors that closely support 
inherently governmental functions, implementation of performance-based 
practices, and proper surveillance of contractors. 

The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 required 
DOD to issue guidance to implement an independent management review of 
services contracts.[Footnote 42] In response, the Director of DPAP 
issued memorandums in September 2008 outlining pre-and post-award peer 
reviews and in February 2009 detailing criteria for the peer reviews 
for services acquisitions with estimated values of $1 billion or more, 
consistent with the threshold for reviewing proposed services 
acquisitions.[Footnote 43] To do so, DOD convenes peer review teams 
that consist of senior contracting leaders from across DOD as well as 
legal counsel to work closely with the offices responsible for 
developing acquisition strategies. This policy also required the 
military departments to establish their own procedures to conduct peer 
reviews for service acquisitions valued at less than $1 billion. As of 
October 2009, DPAP conducted 48 pre-award peer reviews on 31 different 
proposed supplies and services acquisitions. DPAP also conducted three 
post-award reviews on approved and ongoing services acquisitions, which 
included a review of task order documents. Of the 51 reviews conducted 
by DPAP, four pre-award reviews and one post-award review were 
conducted on three different professional and management support 
services acquisitions.[Footnote 44] 

The peer review process differs from DOD's management reviews in a 
number of areas that may provide opportunities for the department to 
address key aspects of managing and overseeing professional and 
management support contracts. Whereas the premise of the management 
review is to assess and approve proposed acquisition strategies, the 
peer reviews are conducted after strategies have been approved and are 
intended to be advisory in nature. Peer reviews are designed to help: 

* ensure that contracting officers across DOD implement policy and 
regulations in a consistent and appropriate manner; 

* improve the quality of DOD's contracting processes; and: 

* facilitate cross-sharing of best practices and lessons learned. 

Currently, a peer review team summarizes the results of its review in a 
memorandum provided to both the contracting office responsible for the 
acquisition and DPAP. According to DPAP officials, DOD is still 
determining how to share best practices and lessons learned from these 
reviews with the department's acquisition community. 

While both the peer reviews and the management reviews contain pre- 
award components, the multiple phases of the peer reviews provide DOD 
the opportunity to address additional issues and examine documents not 
available during the management review (see fig. 1). For example, the 
pre-award management review of proposed services acquisitions occurs 
before performance work statements and quality assurance surveillance 
plans are developed. As a result, the management reviews do not include 
an assessment of how performance-based practices are implemented and 
whether proper contractor surveillance is conducted. Further, as 
previously noted, DOD's management review guidance does not require 
department personnel to identify whether the services to be provided 
closely support inherently governmental functions or how the risks 
associated with contractors providing such services will be addressed. 
In contrast, the pre-award peer reviews occur later in the acquisition 
cycle and include the review of additional documents that may provide 
reviewers an opportunity to recommend improvements to performance work 
statements and surveillance plans. 

Figure 1: Comparison of DPAP's Peer Reviews and Management Reviews for 
Services Acquisitions for Acquisitions Estimated to be Valued at $1 
Billion or More: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table] 

Peer review: 

Phase 1: Prior to issuance of the solicitation: Documents typically 
reviewed: performance work statement, quality assurance surveillance 
plan, request for proposal, and source selection plan. 
Milestone for service acquisition: 
Development of acquisition strategy and supporting documentation 
begins. 

Phase 2: Prior to request for final proposal revisions:Documents 
typically reviewed: instructions for proposals and proposal evaluation 
criteria, source selection evaluation guide, source selection plan, and 
evaluations of contractor proposals. 
Milestone for service acquisition: 
Solicitation issued. 

Phase 3: Prior to contract award: Documents typically reviewed: 
proposal analysis reportand selection decision document. 
Milestone for service acquisition: 
Final request for proposals issued. 

Phase 4: Post-award review: Documentstypically reviewed: any 
documentation related to the program, such as task orders, award fee 
plan, and performance assessments. 
Milestone for service acquisition: 
Contract awarded. 

One year after contract award: 
Management review: 
Acquisition strategy review and approval: Documents typically reviewed: 
draft acquisition strategy, instructions for proposals, and proposal 
evaluation criteria. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD policy and guidance. 

[End of figure] 

Additionally, the peer review process provides for a post-award phase 
for services that expands upon the management review requirements. The 
post-award peer review has eight metrics that provide criteria that 
reviewers use to evaluate ongoing acquisitions in terms of how 
contractor performance is assessed, including the use of objective 
criteria; whether surveillance personnel are appropriately staffed; and 
the extent of reliance on contractors to perform tasks closely 
associated with inherently government functions. Table 5 shows the 
various areas of focus of the peer reviews. 

Table 5: Focus Areas of the Peer Review Process: 

Before contract award: 
* Clearly defined requirements; 
* Contractors performing functions closely associated with inherently 
governmental functions; 
* Contractor conflicts of interest; 
* Utilization of performance-based characteristics; 
* Contract surveillance. 

After contract award: 
* Contractor cost, schedule, and performance assessments; 
* Maintaining competition; 
* Contractor's management of subcontractors; 
* Contract surveillance; 
* Pass-through charges[A]; 
* Contractors performing certain functions closely associated with 
inherently governmental functions; 
* Contractor conflicts of interest; 
* Objective criteria for contracts with award or incentive fee. 

Source: GAO analysis based on DOD policy. 

[A] Pass-through charges are contractor charges for the costs 
associated with subcontracting work. 

[End of table] 

Our review of the summary memoranda for the five peer reviews conducted 
on professional and management support contracts found that while the 
memoranda generally focused on business aspects, some memoranda made 
recommendations related to performance-based approaches and 
surveillance issues specific to the individual acquisition. For 
example, a pre-award peer review team recommended that the contracting 
office work with DAU to develop performance-based statements of work. 
The peer review team for the one post-award review recommended that the 
program office identify objective performance measures and present them 
to the contractor. Another pre-award peer review team recommended that 
the contracting office appoint surveillance personnel prior to the 
award of a contract. None of the memoranda we reviewed noted issues 
with contractors closely supporting inherently governmental functions. 
DOD officials stated that these issues were discussed, but that none 
appeared to warrant inclusion in the memoranda. 

While DPAP has completed peer reviews on 34 individual supplies and 
services acquisitions since September 2008, developing an approach that 
will lead to the achievement of the peer review's objectives 
enterprisewide may prove challenging given the nature and volume of 
service contract activity. Nearly 1,900 task orders were issued under 
the seven professional and management support services acquisitions we 
reviewed, all of which required a contractor to perform multiple and 
varying tasks. Furthermore, we identified thousands of individual task 
orders associated with the professional and management support services 
acquisition strategies approved by the military departments from fiscal 
years 2004 through 2007, all of which require management and oversight 
by the department. These numbers are even greater when looking at all 
services acquisition strategies approved by the military departments in 
that same time period (see table 6). 

Table 6: Award of Contracts and Issuance of Task Orders from Fiscal 
Years 2004 through 2008 Subsequent to the Military Departments' 
Approval of Acquisition Strategies: 

Type of contract: Professional and management support services[B]; 
Acquisitions approved[A]: 32; 
Base contracts awarded: 192; 
Task orders issued: 8,817; 
Total obligations: $15.0 billion. 

Type of contract: All services; 
Acquisitions approved[A]: 91[C]; 
Base contracts awarded: 361; 
Task orders issued: 13,650; 
Total obligations: $27.3 billion. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOD contract data reported in the Federal 
Procurement Data System-Next Generation. 

[A] These acquisitions were approved by DOD during fiscal years 2004 
through 2007. 

[B] Other services may have been purchased in these contracts and tasks 
orders. 

[C] An additional 11 acquisitions were approved during fiscal years 
2004 through 2007, but had not awarded any contracts during the period 
covered by our review. 

[End of table] 

Conclusions: 

DOD's reliance upon contractor-provided professional, administrative, 
and management services to support its missions makes effective 
management and oversight of these contracts critical. Certain 
activities such as budget preparation, acquisition planning, and policy 
development can create risks that the government needs to consider and 
effectively manage. Of key concern is the loss of government control 
over and accountability for policy and program decisions. Nevertheless, 
DOD's policies do not require that DOD personnel include an assessment 
of these risks when their proposals for contractor support are 
submitted for approval under DOD's management review process. While 
recent legislation and DOD's implementing guidance require that DOD 
consider whether to continue the use of contractors for critical 
services, including conducting a cost analysis if the situation 
warrants, these determinations and analyses are largely disconnected 
from the acquisition review process. Consequently, senior DOD 
leadership does not have the benefit of such analyses when making 
strategic decisions on obtaining long-term, high-dollar-value 
professional and management support. 

Similarly, key decisions at the transactional level--such as to award a 
contract or to issue a task order--are made with the recognition that 
DOD is dependent on contractors to support its missions and operations. 
Despite this dependency, DOD officials generally did not consider 
whether contractors may be unduly or inappropriately influencing 
government decision making. Further, while these services were often 
acquired through performance-based approaches, such efforts were 
hindered by DOD's use of broad statements of work and the use of 
performance measures established in the base contract rather than 
attempting to measure the specific services being provided under the 
task order. Within DOD's acquisition community, there is widespread 
recognition that developing outcome-oriented measures is particularly 
difficult for professional and management support contracts. DOD has 
efforts under way to help develop better outcome-oriented measures for 
professional and management support contracts, but it is too soon to 
know whether this effort will prove successful. Perhaps the most 
critical tool in assessing contractor performance is having properly 
trained personnel in sufficient numbers to effectively monitor 
contractor performance. While improvements were evident, lapses in 
designating such personnel, in particular during the initial stages of 
the contract, continue to expose DOD to an increased risk of poor 
contractor performance. 

DOD consideration, at both the strategic and transactional levels, of 
the risks of using contractors to closely support inherently 
governmental functions can help improve the context for successful 
professional and management support outcomes. DOD's peer review process 
is beginning to assess this issue just prior to and then after contract 
award, but with only a handful of reviews performed on such contracts, 
it is too early to gauge whether the process will be successful in 
encouraging DOD personnel to address these issues across the range of 
DOD's services contracts. Having similar information provided at a 
level of detail appropriate for when senior DOD and military department 
leadership review proposed acquisition strategies would inform decision 
makers and engender more proactive consideration earlier in the 
acquisition cycle. As DOD gets closer to awarding contracts or issuing 
task orders for specific services, risks move from potential to the 
more tangible. Reducing the possibility that DOD would enter into a 
contractual arrangement that exposes it to unintentional and undesired 
consequences requires that DOD personnel consider--based on the facts 
and circumstances of a particular acquisition--whether such risks are 
present and, if so, how best to mitigate them. The fact that DOD 
program and contracting personnel we contacted were generally unaware 
of the long-standing requirement to provide greater scrutiny and 
enhanced oversight on services closely supporting inherently 
governmental functions underscores the need to address these problems 
at multiple levels and manners. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To better inform acquisition decisions, assist DOD personnel in 
performing their management oversight responsibilities, and improve 
DOD's surveillance of services contracts, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Defense take the following four actions: 

* revise documentation requirements for DOD's current management review 
to include information on the extent to which services to be provided 
will closely support inherently governmental functions as well as the 
consideration given to using DOD civilian employees to perform such 
functions; 

* require before the award of any contract or issuance of task order 
for services closely supporting inherently governmental functions that 
program and contracting officials consider and document their 
assessment of the unique risks of these services and the steps that 
have been taken to mitigate such risks; 

* develop guidance to identify approaches that DOD should take to 
enhance management oversight when contractors provide services that 
closely support inherently governmental functions; and: 

* direct the military departments to review their procedures to ensure 
that properly trained surveillance personnel have been assigned prior 
to and throughout a contract's period of performance. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

DOD provided written comments on a draft of this report. DOD concurred 
with the four recommendations and also identified a number of actions 
that would be taken to address them. DOD acknowledged the need to 
continually refine its policies and procedures regarding the management 
of support contracts. DOD noted that while it intended to decrease 
funding for contracted support and scale back the use of contractors, 
DOD will continue to rely on service contracts to support its mission, 
making the effective management of professional, administrative, and 
management support contracts critical. DOD also provided technical 
comments, which were incorporated as appropriate. DOD's comments are 
reprinted in appendix III. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Defense; the 
Secretaries of the Air Force, Army, and Navy; the Administrator of the 
Office of Federal Procurement Policy; and interested congressional 
committees. In addition, the report will be made available at no charge 
on GAO's Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-4841. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions to this 
report are listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

John P. Hutton: 
Director Acquisition and Sourcing Management: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To determine whether the Department of Defense's (DOD) policies and 
actions to improve its management of services contracts addressed 
issues affecting professional and management support contracts, we 
examined (1) the extent to which DOD considered the risks associated 
with contractors closely supporting inherently governmental functions 
at key acquisition decision points;(2) how DOD was implementing 
performance-based acquisitions practices, such as identifying 
requirements in terms of expected and measurable outcomes; (3) the 
extent to which DOD designated trained surveillance personnel; and (4) 
whether recent actions to implement a peer review process may improve 
DOD's management and use of such contracts. 

To assess the extent to which DOD considered the risks associated with 
contractors closely supporting inherently governmental functions at key 
acquisition decision points, we reviewed relevant provisions of the 
National Defense Authorization Acts for fiscal years 2002 through 2009 
that pertained to DOD's acquisition of services. We also reviewed 
guidance issued by DOD in May 2002 and October 2006, as well as DOD 
Instruction 5000.02, Operation of the Defense Acquisition System, 
reissued in December 2008, which collectively established DOD's 
management review processes to identify the risks that should be 
considered during these reviews. Further, we reviewed Office of Federal 
Procurement Policy Letter 93-1, Management and Oversight of Service 
Contracting and Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) requirements for 
the management and oversight of contractors that closely support 
inherently governmental functions. We also reviewed DOD Instruction 
1100.22, Guidance for Determining Workforce Mix and DOD's May 2009 in- 
sourcing guidance, In-Sourcing Contracted Services--Implementation 
Guidance, to determine how personnel should consider and document the 
risks of contractors performing activities that closely support 
inherently governmental functions and assess the appropriate mix of DOD 
civilian, military, and contractor personnel. We interviewed 
representatives from the Office of Defense Procurement and Acquisition 
Policy (DPAP), and representatives from each of the military 
departments that are responsible for implementing these policies, 
guidance, and reviews to identify how these risks are accounted for 
prior to approval of the proposed acquisition strategy. 

To assess how these risks were addressed under DOD's management review 
for specific services acquisitions, we reviewed a DOD-provided list of 
102 services acquisition strategies that were reviewed and approved by 
the Air Force, Army, or Navy from fiscal years 2004 through 2007. We 
obtained information from the military departments on the contracts 
that had been awarded after these 102 strategies had been approved. 
Using this information and data derived from the Federal Procurement 
Data System-Next Generation,[Footnote 45] we determined that the 
military departments had awarded 361 contracts and issued 13,650 task 
orders from these 102 acquisitions during fiscal years 2004 through 
2007. We then identified product service codes associated with these 
contracts and used the Federal Procurement Data System-Next Generation 
to determine the number of contract actions and obligations for 
professional and management support services. We found that 32 of these 
acquisitions, with almost $15 billion in total combined obligations 
from fiscal years 2004 through 2008, included contracts for 
professional and management support. From these 32 acquisitions, we 
selected 7 acquisitions based on such factors as the percentage of 
obligations that were made for professional and management support 
services, the specific types of services acquired, and the agency 
awarding the contract.[Footnote 46] The 7 acquisitions we selected had 
over $4.3 billion in total combined obligations from fiscal years 2004 
through 2008 (see table 7 for more information on these acquisitions). 

Table 7: Reviewed Services Acquisitions and Total Task Orders Issued 
and Obligations from Fiscal Year 2004 through 2008: 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: 
Consolidated Acquisition of Professional Services (2005); 
Air Force, Aeronautical Systems Center, Wright-Patterson Air Force 
Base, Ohio; 
Total task orders: 317; 
Total obligations: $290,059,894; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 10; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $19,129,251. 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: Global 
Engineering Integration and Technical Assistance 5 (2004); 
Air Force, Center for Engineering and the Environment, Brooks City Air 
Force Base, Texas; 
Total task orders: 974; 
Total obligations: $377,343,260; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 10; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $12,786,624. 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: 
Professional Acquisition Support Services (2006); 
Air Force, Electronic Systems Center, Hanscom Air Force Base, 
Massachusetts; 
Total task orders: 48; 
Total obligations: $167,184,450; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 10; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $19,147,786. 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: Technical 
and Acquisition Management Support 3 (2004); 
Air Force, Material Command, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; 
Total task orders: 75[B]; 
Total obligations: $97,136,450; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 10[B]; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $32,889,624. 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: AMCOM 
Express (2003); 
Army, Aviation and Missile Command, Redstone Arsenal Army Base, 
Alabama; 
Total task orders: 272; 
Total obligations: $2,468,630,948; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 10; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $121,247,457. 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: INSCOM 
Linguistics [Part 2] (2006); 
Army, Intelligence and Security Command, Fort Belvoir, Virginia; 
Total task orders: 66; 
Total obligations: $826,095,932; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 4[C]; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $247,618,693. 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: Systems 
Engineering and Technical Assistance (2005); 
Navy, Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center, New Orleans, Louisiana; 
Total task orders: 122; 
Total obligations: $83,440,664; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 10; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $11,959,827. 

Services acquisition (year approved) and supported command: Total; 
Total task orders: 1,874; 
Total obligations: $4,309,891,598; 
Total number of task orders reviewed[A]: 64; 
Total obligations for task orders reviewed: $464,779,262. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] The task orders we reviewed were issued during fiscal years 2004 
through 2007 and had obligations over $500,000. 

[B] Task orders were not issued from the contracts awarded for services 
purchased under Technical and Acquisition Management Support 3. The 
program office used contract modifications, which it referred to as 
tasks, to purchase services and provided us a list of these tasks. For 
the purposes of our review, we randomly selected 10 contract 
modifications or tasks that met our selection criteria and are 
referring to these as task orders. 

[C] At the time of our review, the Army Intelligence and Security 
Command had issued only four task orders with total obligations over 
$500,000 during fiscal years 2004 through 2007. 

[End of table] 

The seven acquisition strategies we reviewed were approved under DOD's 
May 2002 acquisition of services policy, which required the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics to 
review acquisitions with an expected value of over $2 billion and for 
each of the DOD components, which includes the military departments, to 
review those acquisitions that were under that threshold. None of the 
acquisition strategies we selected were approved after DOD issued its 
October 2006 acquisition of services policy, which lowered the dollar 
thresholds for management reviews. The substance of the management 
reviews remained largely unchanged, incorporating a few additional, 
specific, acquisition strategy requirements, such as the inclusion of 
any required waivers and top-level discussion of source selection 
processes that were not significant to the objectives of our review. 

To assess how such risks were addressed at the contract or task order 
level, we used data from the Federal Procurement Data System-Next 
Generation to determine the number of task orders that had obligations 
of $500,000 or more that were issued from fiscal years 2004 through 
2007 from each of these seven acquisitions. From that list, we randomly 
select 10 task orders for each acquisition, with the exception of the 
INSCOM Linguistics Part 2 acquisition for which we selected all four 
task orders that had been issued as of September 2007 that exceeded 
this threshold. Overall, we selected 64 task orders, which ranged from 
$530,000 to $227 million in obligations, for review. We did not review 
acquisitions approved after fiscal year 2007 since our analysis 
indicated that it was often a year or more from the time that the 
acquisition strategy was approved to the time when task orders were 
actually issued. For each of the task orders, we reviewed the 
acquisition strategy, base contract, task orders, statements of work, 
and other documentation supporting the need to acquire contract support 
and any risk assessments prepared. We also interviewed program and 
contracting officials who managed these acquisitions to obtain 
information concerning why these services were contracted for, the 
risks that were considered, and any additional steps that had been 
taken to enhance oversight of the contractors. 

We assessed the reliability of the Federal Procurement Data System-Next 
Generation to identify acquisitions and to select task orders that were 
within the scope of our review by verifying (1) the contract and task 
order identification numbers; (2) the contract award date; (3) that the 
task orders associated with the acquisitions were for professional and 
management support services; and (4) that the task orders had 
obligations exceeding $500,000. On the basis of this assessment we 
determined that the data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of 
this review. 

To assess how DOD implemented performance-based acquisitions practices 
on contracts for professional and management support, we reviewed 
relevant provisions in the FAR and DOD guidance. We interviewed DOD and 
military department officials responsible for reviewing and approving 
services acquisitions to identify how these reviews addressed the 
implementation of performance-based practices. We reviewed performance 
work statements from each of the 64 task orders to assess whether 
contract requirements and performance measures were consistent with 
performance-based guidance, such as whether contract requirements were 
measurable and outcome based. We also analyzed documentation to 
determine how contractor performance was measured. We interviewed 
contracting and program officials associated with these acquisitions to 
identify how contract requirements and performance measures were 
developed. Finally, we interviewed DPAP officials and a representative 
from the Defense Acquisition University to obtain information on 
efforts to develop additional DOD guidance for implementing performance-
based services acquisitions. 

To assess the extent to which DOD designated trained surveillance 
personnel, we reviewed the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation 
Supplement and DOD policies and procedures to identify the department's 
surveillance and training requirements. We then analyzed surveillance 
personnel appointment letters and training documentation associated 
with each of the 64 task orders to determine whether these requirements 
were met. We also interviewed DOD officials who were designated as 
surveillance personnel on one or more of the task orders we reviewed to 
obtain information on their training and responsibilities. 

To identify how actions to implement additional reviews of services 
acquisitions may improve DOD's management and use of services 
contracts, we reviewed provisions contained in the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 that required DOD to establish 
an independent management review process. We review memoranda issued by 
DOD in September 2008 and February 2009 that provided guidance on the 
scope of these reviews, which DOD refers to as peer reviews. To obtain 
information on how peer reviews differ from the management reviews, we 
spoke with officials from DPAP and the military departments responsible 
for these reviews. We also obtained copies of the memoranda summarizing 
the findings and recommendations of the five peer reviews performed on 
professional and management support contracts as of September 2009. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2008 through November 
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. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Examples of Inherently Governmental and Approaching 
Inherently Governmental Functions: 

[End of section] 

Federal Acquisition Regulation section 7.503 provides examples of 
inherently governmental functions as well as services or actions that 
are not inherently governmental, but may approach being inherently 
governmental functions based on the nature of the function, the manner 
in which the contractor performs the contract, or the manner in which 
the government administers contractor performance. These examples are 
listed in tables 8 and 9 below. 

Table 8: Examples of Inherently Governmental Functions: 

1. Directly conduct criminal investigations. 

2. Control prosecutions and performance of adjudicatory functions other 
than those relating to arbitration. 

3. Command military forces. 

4. Conduct foreign relations and determine foreign policy. 

5. Determine agency policy, including regulations. 

6. Determine federal program priorities for budget requests. 

7. Direct and control federal employees. 

8. Direct and control intelligence and counterintelligence operations. 

9. Select or interview individuals for federal government employment. 

10. Approve position descriptions and performance standards for federal 
employees. 

11. Determine the disposal of government property. 

12. In federal procurement activities with respect to prime contracts: 
Determine the supplies or services acquired by the government; 
participate as a voting member on any source selection boards; approve 
contractual documents, including documents defining requirements, 
incentive plans, and evaluation criteria; award contracts; administer 
contracts; terminate contracts; determine whether contract costs are 
reasonable, allocable, and allowable; and participate as a voting 
member on performance evaluation boards. 

13. Approve agency responses to Freedom of Information Act requests. 

14. Conduct administrative hearings to determine eligibility for 
security clearances, or that affect personal reputation or eligibility 
to participate in government programs. 

15. Approve federal licensing actions and inspections. 

16. Determine budget policy, guidance, and strategy. 

17. Collect, control, and disburse public funds, unless authorized by 
statute. Does not include the collection of public charges to mess 
halls, national parks, and similar entities and routine voucher and 
invoice examination. 

18. Control treasury accounts. 

19. Administer public trusts. 

20. Draft congressional testimony, responses to congressional 
correspondence, or agency responses to audit reports. 

Source: GAO analysis of Federal Acquisition Regulation section 
7.503(c). 

[End of table] 

Table 9: Examples of Services That May Approach Being Inherently 
Governmental Functions: 

1. Involve or relate to budget preparation. 

2. Involve or relate to reorganization and planning activities. 

3. Involve or relate to analyses, feasibility studies, and strategy 
options to be used in developing policy. 

4. Involve or relate to developing regulations. 

5. Involve or relate to evaluating another contractor's performance. 

6. Support acquisition planning. 

7. Assist in contract management. 

8. Provide technical evaluation of contract proposals. 

9. Assist in developing statements of work. 

10. Support the preparation of responses to Freedom of Information Act 
requests. 

11. Work in situations that may permit access to confidential business 
information. 

12. Provide information regarding agency policies or regulations. 

13. Participate in situations where contractors may be assumed to be 
agency employees or representatives. 

14. Participate as technical advisors to source selection boards or as 
members of a source evaluation board. 

15. Serve as arbitrators or provide alternative methods of dispute 
resolution. 

16. Construct buildings intended to be secure. 

17. Provide inspection services. 

18. Provide legal advice and interpret regulations and statutes for 
government officials. 

19. Provide non-law enforcement security activities that do not 
directly involve criminal investigations. 

Source: GAO analysis of Federal Acquisition Regulation section 
7.503(d). 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Office Of The Under Secretary Of Defense: 
Acquisition, Technology	And Logistics: 
3000 Defense Pentagon: 
Washington, DC 20301-3000: 

November 20, 2009: 
	
Mr. John Hutton: 
Director, Acquisition and Sourcing Management: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Hutton: 

This is the Department of Defense (DoD) response to the GAO Draft 
Report, GAO-10-39, "Defense Acquisitions: Further Actions Needed to 
Address Weaknesses in DoD's Management of Professional and Management 
Support Contracts," dated October 20, 2009 (GAO Code 120745). Detailed 
comments on the report recommendations are enclosed. 

The Department appreciates the work of the GAO in this important area. 
Your report underscores the need for continued refinement of our 
policies and procedures regarding the management of support contracts. 
Despite the fact the Department is currently implementing a Total Force 
Management strategy that involves decreased funding for contracted 
support and a scaled back role for contractors performing support 
services in favor of in-sourcing new civilian manpower authorizations, 
the Department will continue to rely on service contracts to support 
the mission. Therefore, our effective management of these contracts, 
particularly the professional, administrative and management support 
service contracts, remains critical. 

Finally, in reviewing the draft, we identified a few items to call to 
your attention. We provided informal feedback to your staff on these 
technical points of clarification. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Shay D. Assad: 
Director, Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy: 

Enclosure: As stated: 

[End of letter] 

GAO Draft Report Dated October 20, 2009: 
GAO-10-39 (GAO Code 120745): 

"Defense Acquisitions: Further Actions Needed To Address Weaknesses In 
DOD'S Management Of Professional And Management Support Contracts" 

Department Of Defense Comments To The Gao Recommendations: 

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
revise documentation requirements for DoD's current management review 
to include information on the extent to which services to be provided 
will closely support inherently governmental functions as well as the 
consideration given to using DoD civilian employees to perform such 
functions. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Department will revise documentation 
requirements for management reviews to ensure consideration is given to 
address the extent to which contracted services support functions that 
closely support inherently governmental functions. Furthermore, revised 
documentation will account for consideration given to the use of DoD 
civilian employees to perform such functions. 

Recommendation 2: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
require before the award of any contract or issuance of task order for 
services closely supporting inherently governmental functions that 
program and contracting officials consider and document their 
assessment of the unique risks of these services and the steps that 
have been taken to mitigate such risks. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Department will institute a required 
procedure to consider and document an assessment of unique risks 
associated with contracts and task orders for services closely 
supporting inherently governmental functions. [Currently, DoD 
Instruction 1100.22, Guidance for Determining Workforce Mix (paragraph 
5.3.3), requires the Heads of DoD Components to "ensure that guidance 
in this Instruction is considered before contracting for support 
services so that activities that are inherently governmental or exempt 
from private sector performance are not contracted." Defense Federal 
Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS), Subpart 207.5 requires a 
written determination that none of the functions to be performed by 
contract are inherently governmental.] 

Recommendation 3: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
develop guidance to identify approaches that DoD should take to enhance 
management oversight when contractors provide services that closely 
support inherently governmental functions. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Department will develop guidance to identify 
approaches that can be taken to enhance management oversight of 
contractors that closely support inherently governmental functions. 
This guidance will be developed in conjunction with guidance that is 
being developed to address issues relating to personal services as 
required by the Fiscal Year 2009 National Defense Authorization Act, 
section 831. 

Recommendation 4: The GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense 
direct the military departments to review their procedures to ensure 
that properly trained surveillance personnel have been assigned prior 
to and throughout a contract's period of performance. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Department will direct military departments 
to review procedures to ensure that properly trained surveillance 
personnel have been assigned prior to and throughout the period of 
performance of a given contract. This matter will be addressed in 
conjunction with policy direction currently in development to institute 
contracting officer representative (COR) standard training and 
certification requirements. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

John P. Hutton, (202) 512-4841 or huttonj@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, key contributors to this 
report were Timothy DiNapoli, Assistant Director; Gary Guggolz; Justin 
Jaynes; Christopher Mulkins; Thomas Twambly; Richard Winsor; Arthur 
James, Jr.; Julia Kennon; Susan Neil; and Noah Bleicher. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Contract Management: Opportunities to Improve Surveillance on 
Department of Defense Service Contracts, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-274] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 17, 
2005). 

[2] GAO, Defense Acquisitions: Tailored Approach Needed to Improve 
Service Acquisition Outcomes, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-20] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 9, 
2006). 

[3] The National Defense Authorization Acts for Fiscal Years 2002 and 
2006, respectively, required DOD to establish and implement a 
management structure to review its procurement of services. For the 
purposes of this report, we use the term management review to 
collectively refer to the review and approval procedures established by 
DOD and the military departments pursuant to this legislation. 

[4] GAO, Defense Management: DOD Needs to Reexamine its Extensive 
Reliance on Contractors and Continue to Improve Management and 
Oversight, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-572T] 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 11, 2008); and DOD's High Risk Areas: Actions 
Needed to Reduce Vulnerabilities and Improve Business Outcomes, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-460T] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 12, 2009). Inherently governmental functions are defined by the 
Federal Acquisition Regulation as those functions that are so 
intimately related to public interest that they must be performed by 
government employees. 

[5] GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-271] (Washington, D.C.: January 
2009). 

[6] The Federal Procurement Data System-Next Generation is the federal 
government's current system for tracking information on contracting 
actions. 

[7] The military departments, including the contracting offices we 
visited during this review, use different terms to describe personnel 
involved in contractor surveillance including: Quality Assurance 
Personnel, Contracting Officer's Representative, Functional Area 
Evaluator, and Task Order Contracting Officer's Representative. For 
purposes of this report, we refer to all these positions as 
surveillance personnel. 

[8] GAO, Defense Acquisitions: Actions Needed to Ensure Value for 
Service Contracts, GAO-09-643T (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 23, 2009) and 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-20]. 

[9] GAO, Department of Defense: Additional Actions and Data are Needed 
to Manage and Oversee DOD's Acquisition Workforce, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-342] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 25, 
2009). 

[10] FAR § 7.503(a). 

[11] FAR § 7.503(c). 

[12] FAR § 7.503(d). 

[13] FAR § 37.114 and OFPP Policy Letter 93-1, Management Oversight of 
Service Contracting, May 18, 1994. 

[14] Section 804 of Public Law 108-375 added section 2383 to Title 10, 
U.S. Code, which placed limitations on when defense agencies may enter 
into contracts for the performance of acquisition functions that 
closely support inherently governmental functions. 

[15] GAO, Department of Homeland Security: Improved Assessment and 
Oversight Needed to Manage Risk of Contracting for Selected Services, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-990] (Washington, D.C.: 
Sept. 17, 2007) and Defense Contracting: Army Case Study Delineates 
Concerns with Use of Contractors as Contract Specialists, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-360] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 26, 
2008). 

[16] Pub. L. No. 107-107, § 801 (2001). See 10 U.S.C. § 2330 (2002). 

[17] Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology, and Logistics, Acquisition of Services, May 31, 2002. 

[18] According to the FAR, acquisition planning is a process by which 
the efforts of all personnel responsible for an acquisition are 
coordinated and integrated through a comprehensive plan for fulfilling 
the agency need in a timely manner and at a reasonable cost. It 
includes developing the overall strategy for managing the acquisition. 
FAR Subpart 2.1. Acquisition planning is required for all acquisitions, 
and the FAR includes general procedures and content requirements for 
written acquisition plans or strategies. 

[19] Pub. L. No. 109-163, § 812, rewriting 10 U.S.C. § 2330 (2006). 

[20] Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology, and Logistics, Acquisition of Services Policy, October 2, 
2006. 

[21] The strategic level is where the enterprise--DOD--sets a direction 
for what it needs, captures knowledge to make informed management 
decisions, ensures that departmentwide goals and objectives are 
achieved, and assesses the resources it has to achieve desired 
outcomes. The strategic level sets the context for the transactional 
level, where the focus is on making sound decisions on individual 
service acquisitions using valid and well-defined requirements, 
appropriate business arrangements, and adequate management of 
contractor performance. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-20]. 

[22] Pub. L. No. 110-181 § 808 (2008). 

[23] FAR § 7.503(d). 

[24] FAR Subpart 7.5. 

[25] FAR Subpart 7.5. 

[26] FAR Part 37.114 states that the government must provide greater 
scrutiny and enhanced oversight of contractor activities that closely 
support inherently governmental functions in order to ensure that 
contractors do not actually perform the inherently government functions 
and that government officials properly exercise their authority. OFPP 
Policy Letter 93-1 also requires that agency officials provide an 
enhanced degree of management controls and oversight when contracting 
for such services. 

[27] GAO, Internal Control: Standards for Internal Control in the 
Federal Government, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] (Washington, D.C.: 
November 1999) supplemented by GAO, Internal Control Standards: 
Internal Control Management and Evaluation Tool, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-131G] (Washington, D.C.: February 
2001). 

[28] Deputy Secretary of Defense, In-Sourcing Contracted Services-- 
Implementation Guidance, May 28, 2009. 

[29] Pub. L. No. 110-181, § 324. See 10 U.S.C. § 2463. 

[30] Certain commercial functions are exempted from private sector 
performance by law, Executive Order, treaty, or international agreement 
and should be performed by DOD civilian or military personnel. 

[31] Department of Defense Instruction 1100.22, Guidance for 
Determining Workforce Mix, April 6, 2007. 

[32] This office was previously known as the Office of the Director for 
Program Analysis and Evaluation. 

[33] Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2001, Pub. L. No. 106-398, § 821(a) (2000), required that the FAR be 
revised to establish a preference for the use of a performance-based 
approach in the acquisition of services. The requirement was 
implemented in FAR § 37.102(a). 

[34] FAR Subpart 37.6. 

[35] According to the performance standards in the task orders we 
reviewed, translators were to arrive at a designated place of duty with 
all required documentation, equipment, training, logistical support, 
and information required to begin work not later than the time and date 
specified on movement and deployment orders. 

[36] GAO, Department of Homeland Security: Better Planning and 
Assessment Needed to Improve Outcomes for Complex Service Acquisitions, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-263] (Washington, D.C.: 
Apr. 22, 2008). 

[37] DFARS Subpart 201.6 requires that a contracting officer's 
representative (COR) be qualified by training and experience 
commensurate with the responsibilities delegated and the COR 
designation must be in writing. Senior DOD officials stated that when 
DOD regulations use the term "COR", that such policy applies to all 
surveillance personnel throughout DOD. 

[38] For example, in 2005, we found that DOD's surveillance personnel 
were not designated on 15 of the 90 services contracts reviewed, and 
that 13 of the 104 surveillance personnel did not receive the required 
training before beginning their assignments. See GAO-05-274. 

[39] Office of the Secretary of Defense, Designation of Contracting 
Officer's Representatives on Contracts for Services in Support of 
Department of Defense Requirements (Dec. 6, 2006). 

[40] We found that 7 of the 27 task orders that were issued prior to 
the issuance of the December 2006 guidance also lacked designated 
surveillance personnel before work was to begin. 

[41] We and the DOD Inspector General have previously reported on the 
challenges in providing contract oversight during contingency 
operations. See GAO, Military Operations: DOD Needs to Address Contract 
Oversight and Quality Assurance Issues for Contracts Used to Support 
Contingency Operations, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1087] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 26, 
2008) and Office of the Inspector General, Department of Defense, 
Logistics Support Contracting for the United States Special Operations 
Command, D-2009-083 (May 28, 2009). 

[42] Pub. L. No. 110-181, § 808. The Act also requires GAO to report on 
DOD's implementation guidance, which we will do under a separate 
engagement. 

[43] Office of the Under Secretary of Defense, Peer Reviews of 
Contracts for Supplies and Services (Sept. 29, 2008) and Office of the 
Under Secretary of Defense, Review Criteria for the Acquisition of 
Services (Feb. 18, 2009). 

[44] As of October 2009, the Air Force and Navy have established 
policies for conducting pre-and post-award peer reviews. The Army has 
established policies for conducting pre-award peer reviews but has not 
yet done so for post-award peer reviews. 

[45] Federal Procurement Data System-Next Generation is the federal 
government's current system for tracking information on contracting 
actions. 

[46] We used the following product service codes in the Federal 
Procurement Data System-Next Generation to identify acquisitions for 
professional, administrative, and management support services: R408 for 
Program Management/Support Services; R706 for Management Services/ 
Logistics Support; R707 for Management Services/Contract and 
Procurement Support; R425 for Engineering and Technical Services; R799 
for Other Management Support Services; and AD25 for Services 
(Operational). 

[End of section] 

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