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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to the Congress: 

June 2011: 

Recovery Act: 

Funding Used for Transportation Infrastructure Projects, but Some 
Requirements Proved Challenging: 

GAO-11-600: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-600, a report to the Congress. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

This report responds to two GAO mandates under the American Recovery 
and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). It is the latest report 
on the uses of and accountability for Recovery Act funds in selected 
states and localities, focusing on the $48.1 billion provided to the 
Department of Transportation (DOT) to invest in transportation 
infrastructure. This report also examines the quality of recipients’ 
reports about the jobs created and retained with Recovery Act 
transportation funds. 

This report addresses the (1) status, use, and outcomes of Recovery 
Act transportation funding nationwide and in selected states; (2) 
actions taken by federal, state, and other agencies to monitor and 
ensure accountability for those funds; (3) changes in the quality of 
jobs data reported by Recovery Act recipients of transportation funds 
over time; and (4) challenges faced and lessons learned from DOT and 
recipients. GAO analyzed DOT and recipient reported data; reviewed 
federal legislation, guidance, and reports; reviewed prior work and 
other studies; and interviewed DOT, state, and local officials. 

What GAO Found: 

As of May 31, 2011, nearly $45 billion (about 95 percent) of Recovery 
Act transportation funds had been obligated for over 15,000 projects 
nationwide, and more than $28 billion had been expended. Recipients 
continue to report using Recovery Act funds to improve the nation’s 
transportation infrastructure. Highway funds have been primarily used 
for pavement improvement projects, and transit funds have been 
primarily used to upgrade transit facilities and purchase buses. 
Recovery Act funds have also been used to rehabilitate airport runways 
and improve Amtrak’s infrastructure. The Recovery Act helped fund 
transportation jobs, but long-term benefits are unclear. For example, 
according to recipient reported data, transportation projects 
supported between approximately 31,460 and 65,110 full-time 
equivalents (FTE) quarterly from October 2009 through March 2011. 
Officials reported other benefits, including improved coordination 
among federal, state, and local officials. However, the impact of 
Recovery Act investments in transportation is unknown, and GAO has 
recommended that DOT determine the data needed to assess the impact of 
these investments. 

Federal, state, and local oversight entities continue their efforts to 
ensure the appropriate use of Recovery Act transportation funds, and 
recent reviews revealed no major concerns. The DOT Inspector General 
found that DOT generally complied with Recovery Act aviation, highway, 
and rail program requirements. Similarly, state and local oversight 
entities’ performance reviews and audits generally did not find 
problems with the use of Recovery Act transportation funds. 
GAO’s analysis of Recovery.gov data reported by transportation grant 
recipients showed that the number of FTEs reported, number of 
recipients filing reports, and portion of recipients reporting any 
FTEs decreased over the past two reporting quarters as an increasing 
number of projects approached completion or were awaiting financial 
closeout. The Federal Highway Administration performs automated checks 
to help ensure the validity of recipient reported data and observed 
fewer data quality issues than in previous quarters but does not plan 
to use the data internally. 

Certain Recovery Act provisions proved challenging. For example, DOT 
and states faced numerous challenges in implementing the maintenance-
of-effort requirement, which required states to maintain their planned 
level of spending or be ineligible to participate in the August 2011 
redistribution of obligation authority under the Federal-Aid Highway 
Program. In January 2011, DOT reported that 29 states met the 
requirement while 21 states did not because of reductions in dedicated 
revenues for transportation, among other reasons. The economically 
distressed area provision also proved difficult to implement because 
of changing economic conditions. With regard to the high speed 
intercity passenger rail and Transportation Investment Generating 
Economic Recovery (TIGER) grant programs, GAO found that while DOT 
generally followed recommended grant-making practices, DOT could have 
better documented its award decisions. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO updates the status of agencies’ efforts to implement its previous 
recommendations but is making no new recommendations in this report. 

DOT officials generally agreed with GAO’s findings and provided 
technical comments, which were incorporated as appropriate. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-600] or key 
components. For more information, contact Phil Herr at 202-512-2834 or 
herrp@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Most Recovery Act Transportation Funds Have Been Obligated and 
Expenditures for Infrastructure Continue to Increase, but Long-Term 
Outcomes Are Largely Unknown: 

Federal, State, and Local Auditors Continue to Review Use of Recovery 
Act Funds and No Major Issues Have Been Reported: 

Analysis of Seventh Round Recipient Reporting Data Shows Data Quality 
Remains Relatively Stable: 

Recovery Act Requirements Proved Challenging for DOT and Some States, 
Leading to Several Lessons Learned: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Status of Prior Open Recommendations and Matters for 
Congressional Consideration: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Status of Recovery Act Transportation Projects, Obligations, 
and Expenditures, as of May 31, 2011: 

Table 2: Selected Recommendations and Agency Actions from Recent DOT 
Office of Inspector General Reports, as of May 31, 2011: 

Table 3: Selected Single Audit Findings, Recommendations, and Agency 
Actions: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Recovery Act Funds Appropriated for DOT programs: 

Figure 2: Highway and Transit Obligations, by Project Type: 

Figure 3: Examples of Recovery Act Transportation Projects: 

Figure 4: FTEs Reported for Highways, Transit, and All Other 
Transportation Projects for Quarters Ending December 2009 through 
March 2011: 

Abbreviations: 

Caltrans: California Department of Transportation: 

DOT: Department of Transportation: 

FAA: Federal Aviation Administration: 

FHWA: Federal Highway Administration: 

FRA: Federal Railroad Administration: 

FTA: Federal Transit Authority: 

FTE: full-time equivalent: 

MARAD: Maritime Administration: 

MassDOT: Massachusetts Department of Transportation: 

OIG: Office of Inspector General: 

RADS: Recovery Act Data System: 

Recovery Act: American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009: 

TIGER: Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

June 29, 2011: 

Report to the Congress: 

The nation's transportation infrastructure plays a vital role in U.S. 
economic activity. In response to what is generally believed to be the 
country's worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, Congress 
enacted the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery 
Act).[Footnote 1] The Recovery Act seeks to, among other things, 
preserve and create jobs, promote economic recovery, and invest in 
transportation and other infrastructure to provide long-term economic 
benefits.[Footnote 2] We have noted that, given the nation's long-term 
fiscal challenges, an economic stimulus package should be timely, 
targeted, and temporary. The Recovery Act provided more than $48 
billion for transportation investments in early 2009 and stipulated 
that most funds be obligated by September 30, 2010. The act targeted 
the majority of those funds to be channeled through existing aviation, 
highway, rail, and transit programs. Some funds were provided for 
newly funded competitive grant programs, including the Federal 
Railroad Administration's (FRA) high speed intercity passenger rail 
program and the Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery 
(TIGER) grant program, which is administered by the Office of the 
Secretary of Transportation.[Footnote 3] 

The Recovery Act requires that we conduct bimonthly reviews of how 
Recovery Act funds are being used by selected states and localities. 
[Footnote 4] The Recovery Act also requires us to report and comment 
quarterly on estimates of job creation and retention as reported by 
recipients.[Footnote 5] In this report, we focus on the use of 
transportation funds and the quality of recipient reports.[Footnote 6] 
Specifically, we examined the (1) status, use, and outcomes of 
Recovery Act transportation funding nationwide and in selected states; 
(2) actions taken by federal, state, and other agencies to monitor and 
ensure accountability of Recovery Act transportation funds; (3) 
changes in the quality of jobs data reported by Recovery Act 
recipients of transportation funds over time; and (4) challenges faced 
and lessons learned from the Department of Transportation (DOT) and 
recipients. To address these objectives, we reviewed relevant federal 
laws and regulations, and federal agency guidance. We also analyzed 
DOT data on Recovery Act programs and expenditures as of May 31, 2011, 
and determined that the data were sufficiently reliable for our 
purposes. We interviewed program officials in DOT's Federal Aviation 
Administration (FAA), Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), Federal 
Transit Administration (FTA), and Maritime Administration (MARAD), and 
we drew on two of our recent reports that discuss the high speed 
intercity passenger rail and TIGER grant programs.[Footnote 7] We also 
conducted interviews with FHWA division offices and state officials, 
including representatives of state audit agencies, in California, 
Indiana, Massachusetts, Texas, Virginia, and Washington.[Footnote 8] 
We visited Recovery Act-funded projects in selected states. We chose 
these states based on a number of criteria, including whether we had 
followed them in our prior Recovery Act work, the total Recovery Act 
highway funding apportioned to those states, the average obligation 
amount per highway project, as well as highway project status in those 
states, and geographic dispersion.[Footnote 9] During meetings with 
federal, state, and local officials, we discussed expected outcomes 
from the expenditure of Recovery Act funds, and challenges and lessons 
learned based on their experiences implementing the Recovery Act. In 
addition, we assessed Recovery Act transportation grantees' recipient 
reports for the quarter ending March 31, 2011, for completeness and 
accuracy and found them sufficiently reliable for the purposes of this 
report. We also analyzed those transportation grantees' reported full-
time equivalent (FTE) jobs data from October 1, 2009, through March 
31, 2011. See appendix I for more information on our scope and 
methodology. 

Our oversight of programs funded by the Recovery Act has resulted in 
more than 100 related products with numerous recommendations since we 
began reporting on the Recovery Act.[Footnote 10] This report updates 
agency actions in response to recommendations from previous bimonthly 
and recipient reporting reviews that have not been fully implemented 
(referred to as open recommendations), including our prior 
recommendations regarding the use of Recovery Act transportation funds 
(see appendix II). 

We conducted this work from September 2010 through June 2011, 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: 

The vast majority of the Recovery Act funding for transportation 
programs went to FHWA, FRA, and FTA for highway, road, bridge, rail, 
and transit projects. More than half of all Recovery Act 
transportation funds were designated for the construction, 
rehabilitation, and repair of highways, roads, and bridges (see figure 
1). The remaining funds were allocated among other DOT operating 
administrations.[Footnote 11] 

Figure 1: Recovery Act Funds Appropriated for DOT programs: 

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart and associated data] 

Total DOT Recovery Act funding: $48.1 billion: 

Agency totals: Maritime Administration (MARAD): $100 million; 0.2%; 
Programs: Assistance to small shipyards: $100 million. 

Agency totals: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA): $1.3 billion; 
2.7%; 
Programs: Grants-in-aid for airport: $1.1 billion; FAA facilities and 
equipment: $200 million. 

Agency totals: Office of the Secretary of Transportation (OST): 
$1.5 billion; 3.1%; 
Programs: Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery 
(TIGER) grants: $1.5 billion. 

Agency totals: Federal Transit Administration (FTA): $8.4 billion; 
17.5%; 
Programs: Transit capital assistance program (TCAP):[A] $6.9 billion; 
Fixed guideway infrastructure: $750 million; Capital investment 
grants: $750 million. 

Agency totals: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA): $9.3 billion; 
19.3%; 
Programs: High speed and intercity passenger rail: $8.0 billion; 
Amtrak: $1.3 billion. 

Agency totals: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA): $27.5 billion; 
Programs: Highway infrastructure investment:[B[ $27.5 billion. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOT data. 

[A] TCAP includes nonurban and urban formula funds, tribal grants, 
funds transferred from FHWA, and Transit Investment for Greenhouse Gas 
and Energy Reduction grants. 

[B] Of the $27.5 billion the Recovery Act made available to FHWA, FHWA 
apportioned $26.6 billion to states for highway infrastructure 
investment and $105 million for the Puerto Rico highway program. Of 
the remaining funds, $550 million was allocated to Federal Lands and 
Indian Reservations, $20 million for Highway Surface Transportation 
Technical Training, $45 million for the Territorial Highway Program, 
and $60 million for the Ferry Boat Discretionary Program, among others. 

[End of figure] 

DOT administered most Recovery Act funds through existing 
transportation programs. For example, highway funds were distributed 
under rules governing the Federal-Aid Highway Program generally and 
the Surface Transportation Program in particular.[Footnote 12] As a 
result, officials at state departments of transportation were familiar 
with project eligibility and other federal requirements. Similarly, 
transit funds were primarily distributed through established transit 
programs, and project sponsors (typically transit agencies) were 
familiar with federal grant application processes. FAA distributed 
airport funds through the established Airport Improvement Program 
structure, and MARAD awarded grants through its existing Assistance to 
Small Shipyards Program. DOT established new grant processes to award 
high speed intercity passenger rail and TIGER grants. For these 
programs, DOT published selection criteria, solicited and reviewed 
applications, and awarded grants to applicants that it judged best met 
the criteria and complied with legislative and regulatory 
requirements.[Footnote 13] 

The Recovery Act provided 100 percent federal funding for most 
programs, which is a departure from the typical federally funded 
transportation programs.[Footnote 14] On the other hand, the Recovery 
Act did not alter the 75 percent of project cost the federal 
government would typically pay under the Assistance to Small Shipyards 
program administered by MARAD.[Footnote 15] 

The Recovery Act also included short deadlines for obligating most 
transportation funds, and it required preference be given to projects 
that could be started and completed expeditiously. Obligating funds in 
a timely manner is an important feature of the Recovery Act, as an 
economic stimulus package should, as we have previously reported, 
include projects that can be undertaken quickly enough to provide a 
timely stimulus to the economy.[Footnote 16] For example, Recovery Act 
highway and transit funds were to be obligated within 1 year of the 
date of apportionment and highway projects which could be completed 
within 3 years were to be given priority.[Footnote 17] After the March 
2010 1-year obligation deadline for highway funds, states requested 
that FHWA deobligate $1.25 million of these funds. We reported that 
deobligations from March 2 to June 7, 2010, were requested primarily 
because contracts were awarded for less than the original cost 
estimates.[Footnote 18] All of these funds were obligated by the 
September 2010 deadline. All TIGER funds must be obligated by 
September 30, 2011, and all high speed intercity passenger rail funds 
must be obligated by September 30, 2012. 

The Recovery Act also introduced new requirements for existing 
programs to help ensure that funds add to states' and localities' 
overall economic activity, and are targeted to areas of greatest need. 
For example, the Recovery Act required state governors to certify that 
their states would maintain their planned levels of spending for the 
types of transportation projects funded by the act, from the date of 
enactment--February 17, 2009--through September 30, 2010. The Recovery 
Act also required that states give priority to highway projects in 
economically distressed areas.[Footnote 19] 

State and local agencies, contractors, and others that receive 
Recovery Act funds are also required to submit quarterly reports on 
the number of jobs created or retained, among other data. These job 
calculations are based on the total hours worked divided by the number 
of hours in a full-time schedule, expressed in FTEs--but they do not 
account for the total employment arising from the expenditure of 
Recovery Act transportation funds. That is, the data recipients report 
do not include employment at suppliers (indirect jobs) or in the local 
community (induced jobs).[Footnote 20] In addition to reporting 
quarterly on the numbers of jobs created, states and other recipients 
are required to submit periodic reports on the amount of funds 
obligated and expended and the number of projects put out to bid, 
awarded, or for which work has begun or been completed, among other 
things. DOT is required to collect and compile this information for 
its reports to Congress that began in May 2009.[Footnote 21] Because 
it had not previously collected and reported this type of information, 
FHWA established the Recovery Act Data System (RADS) to allow for 
better oversight and tracking of Recovery Act transportation projects. 
FHWA uses RADS to compile data from states and existing DOT databases 
and generates reports to assist states in meeting their Recovery Act 
reporting requirements. 

Most Recovery Act Transportation Funds Have Been Obligated and 
Expenditures for Infrastructure Continue to Increase, but Long-Term 
Outcomes Are Largely Unknown: 

According to DOT data, as of May 31, 2011, DOT had obligated nearly 
$45 billion (about 95 percent) on over 15,000 projects and had 
expended more than $28 billion (about 63 percent) of the $48.1 billion 
it received under the Recovery Act (see table 1).[Footnote 22] More 
than 9,200 of the approximately 15,100 transportation projects have 
been completed, including more than 8,100 highway projects and most of 
the aviation projects. 

Table 1: Status of Recovery Act Transportation Projects, Obligations, 
and Expenditures, as of May 31, 2011: 

Federal Highway Administration: 

Program: Highway infrastructure investment[B]; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 12,931; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 8,124; 
Obligations: Amount: $26.335 billion; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 99.9%[C]; 
Expenditures: Amount: $19.550 billion; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 74.2%. 

Federal Railroad Administration: 

Program: High speed intercity passenger rail; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 78; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 0; 
Obligations: Amount: $5.671 billion; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 71.1%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $200 million; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 3.5%. 

Program: Amtrak; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 154; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 110; 
Obligations: Amount: $1.291 billion; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 100.0%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $1.291 billion; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 100.0%. 

Federal Transit Administration[D]: 

Program: Transit capital assistance program (TCAP)[E]; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 1,010; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 170; 
Obligations: Amount: $7.294 billion; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 100.0%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $4.567 billion; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 62.6%. 

Program: Fixed guideway infrastructure; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 51; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 24; 
Obligations: Amount: $743 million; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 100.0%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $468 million; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 63.0%. 

Program: Capital investment grants; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 11; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 11; 
Obligations: Amount: $743 million; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 100.0%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $743 million; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 100.0%. 

Office of the Secretary of Transportation: 

Program: TIGER grants; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 51; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 0; 
Obligations: Amount: $1.482 billion; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 98.8%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $104 million; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 7.0%. 

Federal Aviation Administration: 

Program: Grants-in-aid for airports; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 372; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 365; 
Obligations: Amount: $1.086 billion; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 98.9%[C]; 
Expenditures: Amount: $1.055 billion; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 97.1%. 

Program: FAA facilities and equipment; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 399; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 381; 
Obligations: Amount: $198 million; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 99.0%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $143 million; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 72.2%. 

Maritime Administration: 

Program: Assistance to small shipyards; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 70; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 36; 
Obligations: Amount: $98 million; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 100.0%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $79 million; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 80.6%. 

Programs: Total; 
Number of projects: Awarded: Federal Highway Administration: 15,127; 
Number of projects: Completed: Federal Highway Administration: 9,221; 
Obligations: Amount: $44.941 billion; 
Obligations: Percent obligated[A]: 95.0%; 
Expenditures: Amount: $28.200 billion; 
Expenditures: Percent reimbursed: 62.7%. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOT data. 

Notes: For information on total federal outlays for all programs 
administered by states and localities under the Recovery Act, see 
[hyperlink, http://gao.gov/recovery]. 

[A] The percentage obligated is not based on the total Recovery Act 
funds each agency received but on the amount agencies allotted for 
distribution to projects. In most cases, this amount was less than the 
total amount of Recovery Act funds the agency received because some 
funds were set aside for administrative and oversight expenses, as 
allowed by the act. 

[B] Includes Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C., but not federal lands 
projects. 

[C] FHWA and FAA initially obligated 100 percent of their Recovery Act 
funds for highway infrastructure investments and grants-in-aid for 
airports, respectively, but a small percentage of those funds have 
been deobligated due to cost underruns as projects have financially 
closed out. 

[D] Total transit obligations exceed the $8.4 billion apportionment 
because of state-requested transfers of highway funds to transit 
accounts. States have the option to request that FHWA transfer 
Recovery Act highway funds to FTA to address states' public transit 
priorities, just as they do under the regular Federal-Aid Highway 
Program. Generally, FHWA has the authority pursuant to 23 U.S.C. § 
104(k)(1) to transfer funds made available for transit projects to 
FTA. FTA data as of March 31, 2011, indicated that states had 
requested such transfers, totaling $443 million for 26 projects. 
Nearly 45 percent of the transferred funds had been expended. 

[E] The Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2009 allowed states to use 
up to 10 percent of their Recovery Act transit capital assistance 
funds to cover operating expenses in urbanized areas. According to FTA 
data, 181 recipients--or approximately 17 percent of Recovery Act 
transit recipients from state departments of transportation and 
transit agencies used about $193.2 million (about 2.2. percent) of 
Recovery Act transit capital assistance funds for operating expenses. 
Pub. L. No. 111-32, §1202, 123 Stat. 1859, 1908 (2009). 

[End of table] 

The rate of expenditure for Recovery Act transportation funds has 
varied among programs and states, for several reasons, according to 
federal and state officials: 

* First, obligation deadlines for newly funded competitive grant 
programs such as high speed intercity passenger rail and TIGER are 
later, so as of May 31, 2011, a much smaller percentage of those 
program funds had been obligated and expended. 

* Second, as we have previously reported, the obligation and 
subsequent expenditure of highway funds suballocated for metropolitan, 
regional, and local use have lagged behind rates for state projects in 
some states. FHWA data as of May 31, 2011, indicated that this trend 
continued for reimbursements in 24 states, including two of the states 
we visited--Virginia and Texas. According to federal and state 
transportation officials, federal reimbursement can only occur after 
costs are incurred; however, localities varied in their approach to 
billing for reimbursement. For example, in California some localities 
choose to seek reimbursement for project costs after project 
completion in an effort to reduce the administrative costs of frequent 
invoicing. In comparison, localities in Indiana and Washington State 
bill regularly as expenses are incurred. 

* Third, according to FHWA and state officials, northern states 
typically tend to have a reduced period of construction activity 
during the winter. 

* Finally, large or new infrastructure projects may require additional 
reviews, such as environmental clearances, prolonging project time 
frames. 

States and other recipients continue to report using Recovery Act 
funds to improve the condition of the nation's transportation 
infrastructure, as well as invest in new infrastructure. For example, 
according to DOT data, 68 percent of highway funds have been used for 
pavement improvement projects, such as resurfacing, reconstruction, 
and rehabilitation of existing roadways, and almost 75 percent of 
transit funds have been used for upgrading existing facilities and 
purchasing or rehabilitating buses (see figure 2). According to FAA 
officials, Recovery Act funding was used to rehabilitate and 
reconstruct airport runways and taxiways, as well as to upgrade or 
purchase air navigation infrastructure such as air traffic control 
towers, engine generators, back-up batteries, and circuit breakers. 
The Recovery Act grant provided to Amtrak has been used to make 
infrastructure improvements and return cars and locomotives to service. 

Figure 2: Highway and Transit Obligations, by Project Type: 

[Refer to PDF for image: 2 pie-charts] 

Highway obligations ($26.2 billion): 
Pavement improvement: reconstruction/rehabilitation ($7.1 billion): 
27%; 
Pavement improvement: resurface ($6.1 billion): 23%; 
Pavement widening ($4.7 billion): 18%; 
New construction ($1.8 billion): 7%; 
Bridge replacement ($1.4 billion): 5%; 
Bridge improvement ($1.2 billion): 5%; 
New bridge construction ($0.5 billion): 2%; 
Other ($3.3 billion): 13%. 

Transit obligations ($8.8 billion): 
Transit infrastructure ($4.5 billion): 51%; 
Vehicle purchase and rehab ($2.0 billion): 23%; 
Other capital expenses ($1.0 billion): 11%; 
Preventive maintenance ($0.8 billion): 9%; 
Rail car purchase and rehab ($0.3 billion): 4%; 
Operating assistance ($0.2 billion): 2%. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOT data. 

Notes: Percentages may not add to 100 because of rounding. 

The highway category "other" includes safety projects, such as 
improving safety at railroad grade crossings, engineering, right-of-
way purchases, and transportation enhancement projects, such as 
pedestrian and bicycle facilities. Highway data are as of June 3, 2011. 

Transit obligations include Recovery Act funds that were transferred 
from FHWA to FTA. "Transit infrastructure" includes engineering and 
design, acquisition, construction, and rehabilitation and renovation 
activities. "Other capital expenses" includes leases, training, 
finance costs, mobility management project administration, and other 
capital programs. Usually, operating assistance is not an eligible 
expense for transit agencies within urbanized areas with populations 
of 200,000 or more. Most recipients did not use as high a percentage 
of funds for operating expenses, in part, because funds had already 
been obligated to projects before the Supplemental Appropriations Act 
was enacted, according to FTA officials. Transit data are as of May 6, 
2011. 

[End of figure] 

The high speed intercity passenger rail and TIGER programs were newly 
funded grant programs, and the Recovery Act allowed additional time 
for DOT to develop criteria, publish notices of funding availability, 
and award grants. As a result, projects selected for high speed 
intercity passenger rail and TIGER were announced about a year after 
enactment, and DOT has been making progress obligating Recovery Act 
funds for these programs. For example, DOT selected one intercity 
passenger rail project to rehabilitate track and provide service from 
Portland to Brunswick, Maine, at speeds up to 70 miles per hour. 
Another project was selected to initiate the first part of 
California's high speed rail system, which envisions service at more 
than 200 miles per hour between Los Angeles, San Francisco, and the 
Central Valley, and eventually San Diego. DOT TIGER grants funded 
projects across different surface transportation modes, including 
highways, transit, rail, and ports. For example, the California Green 
Trade Corridor/Marine Highway Project is a collaborative effort of 
three regional ports in California to develop and use a marine highway 
system as an alternative to existing truck and rail infrastructure for 
transporting consumer goods and agricultural products. 

According to DOT data, a variety of Recovery Act projects have been 
completed. For example, FHWA reported that many of the completed 
highway projects involve pavement improvement. Completed transit 
projects generally included preventive maintenance activities, some 
bus purchases, and facility construction, according to FTA. Amtrak had 
also completed a variety of projects, including station upgrades, 
right-of-way improvements, communications and signaling systems 
installations, and aging bridge replacement projects, among other 
things. While no high speed intercity passenger rail projects had been 
completed as of May 31, 2011, 24 projects were under way, according to 
FRA. These projects, which represent more than 70 percent of the 
allotted funding, include track and signaling work to improve 
reliability and increase operating speeds, improvements to stations, 
and the environmental analysis and preliminary engineering required to 
advance projects to construction. 

States we visited provided numerous examples of infrastructure 
improvements and other projects funded by the Recovery Act (see figure 
3). 

Figure 3: Examples of Recovery Act Transportation Projects: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table with 4 photographs] 

Project: Highway infrastructure: Caldecott Tunnel expansion: 
Photograph: East entrance excavation of 4th bore; 
Location: Oakland, California; 
Description: Construction of a 990 meter tunnel (4th bore), which will 
include two 12-ft. traffic lanes with a 10-ft. shoulder in addition to 
the existing six traffic lanes in bores 1, 2, and 3; 
Cost and status: 
Recovery Act funds: $176 million (34% expended as of 3/31/11); 
Total project cost: $420 million; 
Status: Less than 50% complete; 
Benefits: The new tunnel will increase capacity and remove bottlenecks. 

Project: Transit: Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority system 
upgrades; 
Photograph: Silver Line bus stop with new benches, trash barrels, and 
heating elements; 
Location: Boston, Massachusetts; 
Description: Purchase paratransit vans; construct bicycle parking 
facilities at transit stations; provide bus stop/service enhancements; 
extend Silver Line bus rapid transit service to South Station, 
providing direct access to Amtrak, commuter rail, and subway service; 
improve ventilation at Back Bay Station and repair fencing along 
transit rights of way; 
Cost and status: 
Recovery Act funds: $26.7 million (51% expended as of 3/31/11); 
Total project cost: $26.7 million; 
Status: More than 50% complete; 
Benefits: The project will enhance services for customers by improving 
bus stop amenities; connecting bicycle, bus, and transit modes of 
transport; improving safety along transit lines; and providing more 
than 100 new paratransit vans. 

Project: Grants-in-aid for airports: Paine Field pavement improvements; 
Photograph: Northeast view of newly rehabilitated primary runway with 
tower in the background; 
Location: Everett, Washington; 
Description: Rehabilitation of runway 16R/34L and taxiway alpha; 
Cost and status: 
Recovery Act funds: $11 million (100% expended as of 12/31/10); 
Total project cost: $11 million; 
Status: Complete; 
Benefits: The rehabilitations will allow for safe use of the runway 
and taxiway by larger aircraft, such as Boeing’s new 747-8. 

Project: Assistance to small shipyards: Todd Pacific Shipyards[A] 
apprenticeship program implementation; 
Photograph: Icebreaker ship in dry dock for repairs; 
Location: Seattle, Washington; 
Description: Implementation of an apprenticeship program for 
boilermakers, pipefitters, machinists, electricians, and carpenters; 
Cost and status: 
Recovery Act funds: $1.9 million (100% expended as of 6/30/10); 
Total project cost: $1.9 million; 
Status: Complete; 
Benefits: The company’s apprenticeship participation increased from 4 
to 54 workers. 

Sources: GAO (photographs); Recovery.gov (information); and Caltrans, 
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, Paine Field,and Todd 
Pacific officials (information). 

[A] Since our visit, Todd Pacific Shipyards Corporation has been 
renamed Vigor Shipyards, Inc. 

[End of figure] 

The Recovery Act Helped Fund Transportation Jobs, but Long-Term 
Benefits Are Unclear: 

Recovery Act funds helped pay for jobs across various transportation 
modes. At a time when the construction industry was experiencing 
historically high unemployment and many states could not afford to 
maintain existing infrastructure, transportation officials we met with 
told us that the Recovery Act helped to keep the transportation 
industry in operation while allowing states to tackle some of their 
infrastructure maintenance priorities. According to data filed by 
recipients,[Footnote 23] Recovery Act transportation projects 
supported between 31,460 and 65,110 FTEs each reporting quarter from 
October 1, 2009, through March 31, 2011. Recipient-reported FTEs, 
however, cover only direct jobs funded by the Recovery Act. They do 
not include the employment impact of suppliers (indirect jobs) or on 
the local community (induced jobs).[Footnote 24] According to DOT 
officials, the full impact on indirect and induced employment is 
likely to be significant because of supply chain employment effects. 
In addition, a certain amount of a project's cost is typically for 
materials and equipment, and the remainder pays for labor, reported as 
FTEs.[Footnote 25] 

The number of transportation FTEs reported has declined over the past 
two reporting quarters as construction work on projects has been 
completed. On average, highway projects accounted for approximately 63 
percent of the transportation FTEs reported from October 1, 2009, 
through March 31, 2011. Transit and "other" transportation projects 
[Footnote 26] accounted for the remaining approximately 37 percent of 
transportation FTEs. However, the relatively low portion of FTEs 
reported for transportation projects other than highways and transit 
may increase in future quarters as more high speed intercity passenger 
rail and TIGER projects get under way. Transportation recipients 
reported the highest total FTE count during the quarter ending 
September 2010, owing to the large number of projects under way at 
that time (see figure 4). During the most recent reporting quarter, 
which ended March 31, 2011, the number of transportation FTEs reported 
reached its lowest point since recipient reporting began--at about 
31,460. 

Figure 4: FTEs Reported for Highway, Transit, and All Other 
Transportation Projects for Quarters Ending December 2009 through 
March 2011: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Reporting quarter and date: December 2009; 
Highways: 25,850; 
Transit: 9,910; 
Other: 3,720. 

Reporting quarter and date: March 2010; 
Highways: 16,600; 
Transit: 12,940; 
Other: 3,290. 

Reporting quarter and date: June 2010; 
Highways: 41,260; 
Transit: 14,130; 
Other: 4,890. 

Reporting quarter and date: September 2010; 
Highways: 46,360; 
Transit: 12,390; 
Other: 6,350. 

Reporting quarter and date: December 2010; 
Highways: 31,570; 
Transit: 11,650; 
Other: 4,980. 

Reporting quarter and date: March 2011; 
Highways: 18,170; 
Transit: 9,480; 
Other: 3,810. 

Source: GAO analysis of recipient reported data from Recovery.gov. 

Note: "Highways" includes FHWA projects funded for highway planning 
and construction. "Transit" includes FTA projects funded with capital 
investment grants, metropolitan transportation planning grants, 
formula grants (including grants for other than urbanized areas), and 
the capital assistance program for reducing energy consumption and 
greenhouse gas emissions. "Other" includes projects funded by FAA's 
grants-in-aid to airports; FRA's Amtrak grant and the high speed 
intercity passenger rail program; MARAD's Assistance to Small 
Shipyards Program; and the Office of the Secretary of Transportation's 
disadvantaged business bonding assistance program and TIGER grants. We 
did not include data from the first reporting quarter in 2009 due to 
concerns about comparability. 

[End of figure] 

In addition to the number of jobs funded by Recovery Act 
transportation funds, federal, state, and local officials describe the 
following other benefits: 

* Better coordination and streamlined processes: DOT officials told us 
that the Recovery Act encouraged more efficient ways of working 
together at the federal, state, and local levels to select projects. 
According to DOT officials, the TIGER competitive grant program 
brought together various modal operating administrations to evaluate 
grant applications and consider multimodal projects. Generally, state 
officials told us that their working relationships with FHWA division 
offices and localities have improved while implementing Recovery Act 
programs, as has states' and localities' understanding of federal 
requirements. Some states improved their internal operational 
efficiency, including shortening their project review and approval 
processes. For example, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation 
(MassDOT) streamlined its 26-step bid process from 120 days to 44 days 
by coordinating the review process through regular meetings of key 
stakeholders. 

* Innovative communication practices: DOT also implemented new ways to 
train and communicate with recipients. For instance, FHWA and FTA have 
used webinars to distribute guidance and host question-and-answer 
sessions to clarify program requirements. Officials said that the 
systems they developed to communicate with states have been used to 
disseminate guidance to states for non-Recovery Act programs and will 
continue to be used in the future. 

* Accelerated projects that might have otherwise gone unfunded: 
Transportation officials in several states we visited told us that 
Recovery Act funds helped reduce backlogs of "shovel-ready" projects. 
For example, California funded its entire list of shovel-ready 
projects and began work on new construction projects. Other states 
reported being able to complete projects that had been planned but 
lacked sufficient funding. Specifically, Virginia started construction 
of an interchange on the Fairfax County parkway at Fair Lakes--a 
project that has been planned since the 1980s when the parkway was 
first built; Massachusetts started construction of a bike and 
pedestrian footbridge that had been promised as part of the Big Dig 
project of the 1990s; and Washington State accelerated work to provide 
congestion relief on I-405 and extend a high-occupancy-vehicle lane on 
I-5 near Tacoma. 

However, the long-term impacts of Recovery Act investments in 
transportation are unknown at this point. Some states have efforts 
under way to report on Recovery Act benefits. For example, in 2011, 
state transportation officials in Washington produced a report that 
documented the agency's progress delivering Recovery Act projects 
since 2009; the Texas Department of Transportation commissioned a 
study by the University of Texas to assess the Recovery Act impacts; 
and MassDOT officials established an Office of Performance Management 
and Innovation to determine program goals; measure program performance 
against those goals; and report publicly on progress to improve the 
effectiveness of transportation design and construction, service 
delivery and policy decision making. However, federal and state 
officials told us that attributing transportation benefits to Recovery 
Act funds can be difficult, particularly when projects are funded from 
multiple sources and historic performance data are not available for 
particular projects. 

We recommended that DOT ensure that the results of Recovery Act 
projects are assessed and a determination is made about whether these 
projects produced long-term benefits, but DOT has not committed to 
assessing the long-term benefits of Recovery Act investments in 
transportation.[Footnote 27] Specifically, in the near term, we 
recommended that FHWA and FTA determine the types of data and 
performance measures needed to assess the impact of the Recovery Act 
and the specific authority they may need to collect data and report on 
these measures. DOT officials told us that they expect to be able to 
report on Recovery Act outputs, such as miles of roads paved, bridges 
built or repaired, and transit vehicles purchased, which will help 
assess the act's impact.[Footnote 28] However, they said that 
limitations in DOT's data systems, the costs associated with 
conducting such an analysis, and the fact that Recovery Act funds 
represented only about 1 year of additional funding for some 
transportation programs would make assessing the benefits of Recovery 
Act projects difficult. We continue to believe, however, that it is 
important for organizations to measure performance to understand the 
progress they are making toward their goals and to demonstrate 
results, particularly when the funding totals above $48 billion and 
most funds were to be spent relatively quickly. 

For the Recovery Act high speed intercity passenger rail and TIGER 
grant programs, DOT has set broad performance goals and required 
recipients to identify potential project benefits. Specifically, FRA 
has outlined goals for developing high speed intercity passenger rail 
service in its strategic plan and national rail plan and evaluated 
grant proposals based on the potential project benefits they listed in 
their applications.[Footnote 29] However, the identified goals are 
broad--such as improving transportation safety and economic 
competitiveness--and do not contain specific targets necessary to 
determine how or when FRA will realize intended benefits. DOT also 
incorporated performance measures tailored to each TIGER grant awardee 
based on the project design and the capacity of the recipient to 
collect and evaluate data. DOT is evaluating the best methods for 
measuring objectives and collecting data and is working 
collaboratively with applicants to weigh options for measuring 
performance. As many TIGER projects are just being initiated, the 
effectiveness of these measures will not be clear for several years. 

Federal, State, and Local Auditors Continue to Review Use of Recovery 
Act Funds and No Major Issues Have Been Reported: 

Federal, state, and local oversight entities have continued their 
efforts to ensure appropriate use of Recovery Act transportation 
funds, and recently published reviews have not revealed major 
concerns. Since September 2010, the DOT Office of Inspector General 
(OIG) has issued three reports on Recovery Act aviation, highway, and 
rail programs.[Footnote 30] These reports generally found that DOT had 
complied with Recovery Act requirements, and they identified several 
areas for improvement (see table 2 for selected OIG recommendations 
and DOT's response). The OIG has ongoing Recovery Act oversight work 
covering multiple transportation programs, including, for example, 
audits of the high speed intercity passenger rail and TIGER programs, 
as well as audits of transit and highway programs.[Footnote 31] 
Moreover, the OIG continues to investigate criminal and civil 
complaints related to Recovery Act transportation funds. As of March 
31, 2011, the OIG had 51 open Recovery Act investigations, including 
19 cases of false statements, claims, or certifications; 17 cases of 
disadvantaged business enterprise fraud; and 1 case of corruption, 
among other allegations. According to the Chairman of the Recovery 
Accountability and Transparency Board, there has been an extremely low 
level of fraud involving Recovery Act funds. For instance, in June 
2011, he noted that less than half a percent of all reported Recovery 
Act contracts, grants, and loans currently have open investigations, 
and to date there have been 144 convictions involving a little over 
$1.9 million of total Recovery Act funds for all programs, including 
those in the transportation sector.[Footnote 32] 

Table 2: Selected Recommendations and Agency Actions from Recent DOT 
Office of Inspector General Reports, as of May 31, 2011: 

Operating administration: FAA; 
Program: Grants-in-aid to airports; 
Selected OIG recommendation: Increase transparency by posting on its 
Recovery Act Web site specific justifications for why lower-scoring 
projects were selected. Comply with Office of Management and Budget 
(OMB) guidance by ensuring each Airport District Office applies 
sufficient oversight to high-risk grant recipients; 
Agency response to recommendations: To increase transparency, the FAA 
will post on its Web site additional information about project 
selection. FAA stated that it is already in compliance with this 
recommendation and will continue to provide enhanced oversight to 
Recovery Act projects. 

Operating administration: FHWA; 
Program: Highway infrastructure investments; 
Selected OIG recommendation: Improve national-level data analysis by 
using additional methods, such as content analysis, to help identify 
national trends and new risks; 
Agency response to recommendations: FHWA concurred and has been 
conducting tracking and analysis of National Review Team information. 

Operating administration: FRA; 
Program: Capital grants to Amtrak; 
Selected OIG recommendation: Amend the 2009 Recovery Act grant 
agreement to make the requirements for waiving the project completion 
deadlines less stringent; 
Agency response to recommendations: FRA concurred and amended Amtrak's 
grant agreement to ensure that Recovery Act funds are well spent, and 
not just expended to meet the February 17, 2011, deadline. 

Source: GAO analysis of DOT Office of Inspector General reports. 

[End of table] 

Reviews conducted by auditors in the states that we visited have, in 
most cases, reported few significant problems with the use of Recovery 
Act transportation funds. State auditors in Massachusetts, for 
example, found no material weaknesses at MassDOT in its 2010 Single 
Audit. However, in our review of Single Audit reports for selected 
states, we found that state auditors identified some inconsistencies 
with state oversight of subrecipients and some challenges ensuring 
that award documentation met federal requirements (see table 3). 
[Footnote 33] 

Table 3: Selected Single Audit Findings, Recommendations, and Agency 
Actions: 

State: California; 
Finding: California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) did not 
ensure that subrecipients submitted required audit reports and lacked 
procedures to impose sanctions; 
Recommendation and agency response: Caltrans should continue to 
implement policies and procedures to ensure that subrecipients 
promptly submit required audit reports and impose sanctions on those 
that do not. Caltrans concurred and had drafted new policies and 
procedures to ensure that such oversight takes place. 

State: Indiana; 
Finding: The audit found that the Indiana Department of Transportation 
reported in error, on two occasions, amounts of funds passed down to 
subrecipients for the Schedule of Federal Financial Assistance, but 
the errors had no effect on the department's Recovery Act funds for 
the 2009 fiscal year; 
Recommendation and agency response: The Indiana Department of 
Transportation should follow internal written procedures in preparing 
the Schedule of Federal Financial Assistance to help ensure accurate, 
current, and complete disclosure of financial results. The Indiana 
Department of Transportation did not agree with the finding because it 
noted that there was ambiguity surrounding the definition for 
subrecipients. However, the department did submit a plan to address 
the finding and prevent future reporting discrepancies. 

State: Texas; 
Finding: Texas Department of Transportation did not consistently 
comply with Recovery Act requirements with respect to subrecipients; 
Recommendation and agency response: The Texas Department of 
Transportation should ensure existing award documentation and award 
documentation templates with subrecipients include all required award 
notification and information according to federal requirements. The 
Texas Department of Transportation stated that current templates 
contain applicable compliance requirements and additional steps will 
be implemented to ensure that the most current version of each 
template is always used. 

State: Washington; 
Finding: Washington Department of Transportation does not have 
adequate controls to ensure that information the Recovery Act required 
to be reported for its highway program is accurate; 
Recommendation and agency response: The State Auditor recommended that 
the Washington Department of Transportation should establish periodic 
independent monitoring to ensure that the Recovery Act information is 
being reported accurately. The Washington Department of Transportation 
did not agree with the audit finding. The State Auditor will review 
the status during the next audit. 

Source: GAO analysis of selected 2010 Single Audit reports. 

[End of table] 

We also reviewed performance audit reports of Recovery Act 
transportation programs in the states that we visited, and these 
reviews, generally, focused on compliance with Recovery Act program 
requirements. For example: 

* The Massachusetts Office of the State Auditor published several 
reports that examined local transit agency controls over receipts and 
expenditures of Recovery Act funds and subrecipient monitoring to 
ensure compliance with reporting requirements.[Footnote 34] Based on 
these reviews, the State Auditor found that each transit authority was 
generally in compliance with applicable laws, rules, and regulations 
for the areas tested. 

* The California State Auditor's evaluation of the state's recipient 
reports on jobs created and retained found that the California 
Department of Transportation (Caltrans) did not ensure that complete 
jobs data were reported for the quarter ending June 30, 2010, and did 
not monitor its subrecipients to ensure that they reported the 
required data.[Footnote 35] Caltrans officials told us that it is a 
challenge to ensure that all local agencies report FTE data because of 
turnover at the local level and the challenges associated with 
training local staff on the reporting requirements. 

Finally, local auditors in states we visited that reviewed compliance 
with Recovery Act requirements did not find problems with city use of 
Recovery Act transportation funds. These reviews generally found that 
cities had taken various oversight actions to monitor the use of 
Recovery Act funds. For example, the city auditor of Dallas, Texas, 
reported in February 2011, that the city had taken action to implement 
internal control processes aimed at ensuring accountability and 
transparency of Recovery Act funds. Further, the Dallas city auditor 
found that although the recipients and uses of funds were reported 
clearly and in a timely manner, other federal requirements proved 
challenging for the city and reports were not always submitted 
accurately.[Footnote 36] The city auditor of Arlington, Texas, also 
found that the city had generally complied with Recovery Act quarterly 
reporting and accountability provisions and the city had accurately 
calculated jobs created.[Footnote 37] In Virginia, the city auditor of 
Virginia Beach examined the city's Recovery Act expenditures for 
supporting documentation and concluded that the sampled expenditures 
were properly supported, reasonable, and applicable to the purpose of 
the grants.[Footnote 38] Another performance audit published in 
September 2010 by the Los Angeles Office of the Controller found that 
the Los Angeles Department of Transportation made a good faith effort 
in establishing processes to help ensure it meets Recovery Act 
requirements, but noted areas that could be improved, such as 
streamlining contracting processes to ensure that projects are started 
as quickly as possible and improving processes for reporting and 
billing to Caltrans.[Footnote 39] 

Analysis of Seventh Round Recipient Reporting Data Shows Data Quality 
Remains Relatively Stable: 

To meet our mandate to comment on recipient reports, we continued to 
monitor recipient-reported data. For this report, we focused our 
review on the quality of data reported by transportation grant 
recipients and efforts made by FHWA to validate that data. Using 
transportation recipient data from the seventh reporting period, which 
ended March 31, 2011, we continued to check for errors or potential 
problems by repeating analyses and edit checks reported in previous 
reports. We reviewed data associated with 12,443 transportation 
recipient reports posted on Recovery.gov for the seventh reporting 
quarter.[Footnote 40] 

We found few inconsistencies, and we are generally satisfied with the 
stability of the data quality. Additionally, our analysis of the data 
showed that there was a decrease of 759 recipient reports, or about a 
5.7 percent drop from the previous quarter. Likewise, as described 
earlier, the total number of FTEs reported has also decreased over the 
past two reporting quarters. In the most recent quarter which ended 
March 31, 2011, for example, the percentage of prime recipients of 
highway funds reporting any FTEs dropped from approximately 51 percent 
to approximately 39 percent. DOT officials said that the decreases in 
the number of recipients reporting any FTEs is likely due to several 
factors, including projects being completed or functionally complete 
and awaiting financial closeout. DOT officials noted that decreases in 
FTEs could also be due to such factors as a winter shutdown of 
projects in colder climates. We also observed a variety of patterns in 
the quarterly reporting of FTEs, including consecutive quarters of no 
FTE reporting. For example, for the 2010 calendar year, approximately 
13.5 percent of the highway recipients and approximately 16.7 percent 
of the transit recipients that filed reports each quarter did not 
report any FTEs during the year. According to DOT officials, several 
additional factors that could extend reporting during periods of low 
job activity include projects awaiting final invoice from contractors, 
projects delayed in litigation, or recipients' withholding of final 
payments to cover periods of maintenance guarantees. They also noted 
that projects need to be considered on an individual basis and that 
recipients may use Recovery Act funds to purchase materials and use 
other funding sources to pay for labor. 

DOT Continues to Perform Automated Checks to Help Improve Data but Is 
Not Planning to Use Recipient-Reported Data Internally: 

Each quarter, FHWA performs quality assurance steps on the data that 
recipients provide to FederalReporting.gov and officials reported that 
the data quality continues to improve. Based on these reviews and 
their interactions with recipients, FHWA officials reported that 
recipients now understand the reporting process and each reporting 
period has gone better than the previous one. One measure of 
recipients' understanding of the reporting process is in the number of 
noncompliant recipients.[Footnote 41] According to information 
available on Recovery.gov, the number of DOT-related noncompliant 
recipients decreased from 37 in the quarter ending September 30, 2010, 
to 13 in the quarter ending December 31, 2010, but it increased in the 
most recent quarter to 19 noncompliant recipients.[Footnote 42] FHWA 
officials told us that they routinely check for noncompliance, notify 
noncompliant recipients of the projects that have not been reported, 
and follow up with noncompliant recipients to obtain corrective action 
plans and ensure that errors are corrected and subsequent reports are 
filed on time. 

As in previous quarters, FHWA performed a number of automated checks 
to help ensure quality of highway and rail recipients' Recovery Act 
data. To support recipients' data quality, FHWA asks recipients of 
highway and rail Recovery Act funds to report each month into FHWA's 
RADS system. FHWA officials conduct two data verification steps in 
RADS to assess the quality of data submitted by recipients, including 
automated data verification and validation reports. 

* The automated data verification tests occur when state departments 
of transportation upload monthly data into RADS. If a record does not 
satisfy one of FHWA's data verification rules, the state department of 
transportation is provided with a brief message listing the record and 
what data check failed. Data cannot be uploaded into RADS until the 
state department of transportation corrects the error. Examples of 
data verification rules include rules such as the federal project 
numbers must be entered without dashes or parentheses, and total cost 
estimates cannot be less than total Recovery Act estimates for the 
particular project. 

* The data validation report highlights projects or awards that fail 
certain verification rules, such as whether the federal project number 
is in FHWA's Financial Management Information System, but not in RADS. 
FHWA also applies data checks based on assumptions about expenditures 
reported and FTEs reported. 

FHWA officials reported they also check data quality for nearly 70 
data fields each quarter by comparing the data in each recipient 
report against the corresponding RADS data. According to FHWA 
guidance, data that do not correspond to the recipient report are 
flagged for comment and review. Specifically, RADS runs automated 
quality checks to ensure that data provided by states into RADS match 
what the states are providing to FederalReporting.gov.[Footnote 43] If 
inconsistencies are found, FHWA representatives work with state 
transportation officials to resolve discrepancies by requiring states 
to amend or justify state-reported data. Some state transportation 
officials told us that the number of errors detected in their reports 
decreased as the reporting system was refined and guidance issued. 

Finally, according to DOT officials, recipient-reported FTE data 
provide increased transparency on the use of transportation program 
funds, but DOT does not plan to use recipient-reported data internally 
for a variety of reasons. For example, recipient-reported data are 
only valid on a quarterly basis and cannot be used for monthly or 
cumulative analysis. In addition, agency officials told us that they 
prefer to use RADS data for most internal analysis because the RADS 
data are reported monthly and are more detailed than the recipient-
reported data. 

Recovery Act Requirements Proved Challenging for DOT and Some States, 
Leading to Several Lessons Learned: 

Federal, state, and local transportation officials we contacted 
reported that while Recovery Act transportation funds provided many 
positive outcomes, they also provided lessons learned that may be 
relevant as Congress considers the next surface transportation 
reauthorization. 

Maintenance-of-Effort and Economically Distressed Area Requirements 
Proved Challenging: 

Certain Recovery Act provisions not typically required under existing 
DOT programs proved challenging for some states to meet. Our ongoing 
and past work indicates that it may have been difficult for states to 
meet these requirements for a number of reasons, including rapidly 
changing state economic conditions and confusion about how to 
interpret and apply the new requirements. 

* Maintenance of effort. We have reported that there were numerous 
challenges for DOT and states in implementing the transportation 
maintenance-of-effort provision in the Recovery Act. This provision 
required the governor of each state to certify that the state would 
maintain its planned level of transportation spending from February 
17, 2009, through September 30, 2010, to help ensure that federal 
funds would be used in addition to, rather than in place of, state 
funds and, thus, increase overall spending. A January 2011 preliminary 
DOT report indicated that 29 states met their planned levels of 
expenditure, and 21 states did not. States had a monetary incentive to 
meet their certified planned level of spending in each transportation 
program area funded by the Recovery Act because those that fail would 
not be eligible to participate in the August 2011 redistribution of 
obligation authority under the Federal-Aid Highway Program.[Footnote 
44] States had until April 15, 2011, to verify their actual 
expenditures for transportation programs covered by the Recovery Act. 
DOT is reviewing this information to determine if any more states met 
their planned levels of spending. 

The DOT preliminary report summarized reasons states did not meet 
their certified planned spending levels, such as experiencing a 
reduction in dedicated revenues for transportation due to a decline in 
state revenues or a lower-than-expected level of approved 
transportation funding in the state budget.[Footnote 45] The 
preliminary report also identified a number of challenges DOT 
encountered in implementing the provision, such as insufficient 
statutory definitions of such terms as what constitutes "state 
funding" or how well DOT guidance on calculating planned expenditures 
would work in the many different contexts in which it would have to 
operate. As a result, many problems came to light only after DOT had 
issued initial guidance and states had submitted their first 
certifications. DOT issued guidance seven times during the first year 
after the act was signed to clarify how states were to calculate their 
planned or actual expenditures for their maintenance-of-effort 
certifications. The last guidance--issued February 9, 2010--
communicated DOT's decision that the maintenance-of-effort requirement 
would be applied to each of the program areas funded by the Recovery 
Act, rather than cumulatively for all the programs. The implication of 
this decision is that fewer states met the requirement. 

DOT invested a significant amount of time and work to ensure 
consistency across states on how compliance with the maintenance-of- 
effort provision would be certified and reported. As a result, DOT is 
well-positioned to understand lessons learned--what worked, what did 
not, and what could be improved in the future. DOT and state officials 
told us that while the maintenance-of-effort requirement can be useful 
for ensuring continued investment in transportation, more flexibility 
to allow for differences in states and programs, and to allow 
adjustments for unexpected changes to states' economic conditions, 
should be considered for future provisions. For example, for the 
education maintenance-of-effort requirement, the Recovery Act allows 
the Secretary of Education to waive state maintenance-of-effort 
requirements under certain circumstances and allows states to choose 
the basis they use to measure maintenance of effort.[Footnote 46] The 
maintenance-of-effort requirement for transportation programs proved 
difficult for states to apply across various transportation programs 
because of varying and complex revenue sources to fund the programs. 
Many states did not have an existing means to identify planned 
transportation expenditures for a specific period, and their financial 
and accounting systems did not capture that data. Therefore, according 
to DOT and some state officials, a more narrowly focused requirement 
applying only to programs administered by state DOTs or to programs 
that typically receive state funding could help address the 
maintenance-of-effort challenges. 

* Consideration of economically distressed areas. Our previous reports 
have identified challenges DOT faced in implementing the Recovery Act 
requirement that states give priority to highway projects located in 
economically distressed areas. For example, while an economically 
distressed area is statutorily defined, we found that there was 
substantial variation in how some states identified economically 
distressed areas and the extent to which some states prioritized 
projects in those areas. We reported instances of states developing 
their own eligibility requirements for economically distressed areas 
using data or criteria not specified in the Public Works and Economic 
Development Act.[Footnote 47] Three states--Arizona, California, and 
Illinois--developed their own eligibility requirements or interpreted 
the special-needs criterion in a way that overstated the number of 
eligible counties, and thus the amount of funds, directed to 
economically distressed areas.[Footnote 48] Officials in these three 
states told us that they did so to respond to rapidly changing 
economic conditions. In May 2010, we recommended that DOT advise 
states to correct their reporting on economically distressed area 
designations, and in July 2010 FHWA instructed its division offices to 
advise states with identified errors to revise their economically 
distressed area designations. In September 2010, we recommended that 
DOT make these data publicly available to ensure that Congress and the 
public have accurate information on the extent to which Recovery Act 
funds were directed to areas most severely affected by the recession 
and the extent to which states prioritized these areas in selecting 
projects for funding. In March 2011, DOT posted an accounting of the 
extent to which states directed Recovery Act transportation funds to 
projects located in economically distressed areas on its Web site, and 
we are in the process of assessing these data. 

According to officials in most states we visited, state transportation 
departments considered the requirement to prioritize projects in 
economically distressed areas in addition to other immediate and long- 
term transportation goals, as the Recovery Act required. For example, 
officials in Washington State said that they considered federally 
recognized economically distressed areas as one of several criteria 
when selecting projects. Other criteria included state economic data 
and projects that would be ready to proceed in a short amount of time. 
However, state officials were also uncertain what the economically 
distressed area requirement was intended to accomplish, such as 
whether it was intended to provide jobs to people living in those 
areas or to deliver new infrastructure to those areas. The 
economically distressed area provision proved difficult to implement 
because of changing economic conditions and the difficulty of 
targeting assistance to economically distressed areas, and it is 
unclear that it achieved its intended goal. 

Obligation Deadlines Ensured That Projects Were Identified Quickly, 
but Likely Influenced the Types of Projects Selected in Some States: 

We found that the Recovery Act requirement to obligate funds quickly 
likely influenced the types of projects selected for funding in some 
states. State and local officials we interviewed noted that the 
primary factor considered in project selection was to meet Recovery 
Act deadlines for obligating funds, which likely limited the types of 
projects that were selected for funding.[Footnote 49] Federal and 
state officials also noted the tension between the purposes of the 
Recovery Act, which included preserving and creating jobs and 
promoting economic recovery, and investing in infrastructure to 
provide long-term economic benefits, among other Recovery Act goals. 
For example, the Recovery Act provided a relatively quick infusion of 
federal funding for highway and transit programs, but as we noted 
earlier, the majority of projects selected for highway and transit 
funding were pavement rehabilitation and bus purchases. State and 
local officials told us that to meet the act's obligation deadlines 
they prioritized projects that had already progressed significantly 
through the project development and design process and could move to 
construction. In some cases, state officials told us that this 
prohibited other, potentially-higher priority projects from being 
selected for funding. As a result, many Recovery Act highway projects 
selected for funding did not require extensive environmental 
clearances, were quick to design, and were quickly obligated, bid, and 
completed. Several states told us that their mix of highway projects 
would likely have been different had the obligation deadlines been 
longer. For example, officials in California told us that had the 
Recovery Act timelines been longer they would have likely pursued more 
large-scale projects. According to Texas transportation officials, 
projects that had already progressed significantly through the project 
development process were preferred. However, transportation officials 
in Virginia and Washington State said that the Recovery Act funding 
allowed their states to select projects that would meet the obligation 
time frames while also addressing state priorities, such as investing 
in infrastructure with potential long-term economic impacts and 
addressing preservation and safety needs. 

Better Documentation Could Reduce Challenges to the Integrity of 
Selection Decisions for High Speed Intercity Passenger Rail and TIGER 
Grant Programs: 

We have reported that allocating federal funding for surface 
transportation based on performance in general, and directing some 
portion of federal funds on a competitive basis to projects of 
national or regional significance in particular, can more effectively 
address certain challenges facing the nation's surface transportation 
programs. In our recent reports on the high speed intercity passenger 
rail and TIGER programs, we found that while DOT generally followed 
recommended grantmaking practices, DOT could have documented more 
information about its award decisions.[Footnote 50] Both the high 
speed intercity passenger rail and TIGER programs represent important 
steps toward investing in projects of regional and national 
significance through a merit-based, competitive process. We noted a 
natural tension between providing funds based on merit and performance 
and providing funds on a formula basis to achieve equity among the 
states. A formula approach can potentially result in projects of 
national or regional significance that cross state lines and involve 
more than one transportation mode not competing well at the state 
level for funds. Given that the Recovery Act was intended to create 
and preserve jobs and promote economic recovery nationwide, Congress 
believed it important that TIGER grant funding be geographically 
dispersed. As we noted in our recent report discussing the TIGER grant 
program, when Congress considers future DOT discretionary grant 
programs, it may wish to consider balancing the goals of merit-based 
project selection with geographic distribution of funds and limit, as 
appropriate, the influence of geographic considerations. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to DOT for review and comment. DOT 
generally agreed with our findings and provided technical comments, 
which we incorporated as appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to congressional committees with 
responsibilities for transportation issues, the Secretary of 
Transportation, and the Director of the Office of Management and 
Budget. The report will also be available at no charge on the GAO Web 
site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-2834 or herrp@gao.gov. 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: 

Phillip R. Herr: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure: 

Congressional Committees: 

The Honorable Daniel K. Inouye:
Chairman:
The Honorable Thad Cochran:
Vice Chairman:
Committee on Appropriations:
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Harold Rogers:
Chairman:
The Honorable Norman D. Dicks:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Appropriations:
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman:
Chairman:
The Honorable Susan M. Collins:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs:
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Darrell E. Issa:
Chairman:
The Honorable Elijah Cummings:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform:
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Barbara Boxer:
Chairwoman:
The Honorable James M. Inhofe:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Environment and Public Works:
United States Senate: 

The Honorable John L. Mica:
Chairman:
The Honorable Nick J. Rahall:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure:
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

The objectives of this report were to determine the (1) status, use, 
and outcomes of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 
(Recovery Act)[Footnote 51] transportation funding nationwide and in 
selected states; (2) actions taken by federal, state, and local 
agencies to monitor and ensure accountability of Recovery Act 
transportation funds; (3) changes in the quality of jobs data reported 
by Recovery Act recipients of transportation funds over time; and (4) 
challenges faced and lessons learned from the Department of 
Transportation (DOT) and recipients. 

To address these objectives, we obtained and analyzed data provided to 
us from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Federal Highway 
Administration (FHWA), Federal Transit Administration (FTA), and 
Maritime Administration (MARAD), as well as data we obtained from the 
operating administrations' Recovery Act Web sites. For the highway and 
transit programs, these data included the amount of funds obligated 
and the amount reimbursed by FHWA and FTA through May 31, 2011. These 
data also included funds awarded by project type, outlays for all 
regular Federal-Aid Highway Program funds through September 2010, and 
maintenance-of-effort certification data. For the aviation programs, 
FAA provided a listing of airport improvement and facilities and 
equipment grants, including award data, project amount, project 
description, and project completion dates. For the small shipyard 
grants, MARAD provided us with data for each grant, including award 
amount, project description, amount obligated, and outlays to date. We 
assessed the reliability of the program data we used by reviewing DOT 
documentation and Inspector General reports on DOT's financial 
management system and interviewing knowledgeable DOT officials about 
the quality of the data and controls in place to ensure data accuracy. 
We determined the data were sufficiently reliable for our purposes. 

In addition, to familiarize ourselves with all the transportation 
programs and track their ongoing status, we reviewed program 
documentation, both publicly available online and internal documents 
provided by the agencies; reviewed prior GAO reports on the Recovery 
Act transportation programs; and reviewed reports published by the DOT 
Office of Inspector General (OIG). We also interviewed DOT officials 
from FAA, FHWA, FTA, MARAD, and the Office of the Secretary who were 
involved in managing Recovery Act programs. During these interviews, 
we discussed the status of expenditures, challenges facing states or 
recipients in spending the funds, and the expected impacts from the 
funds. We also met with representatives from the American Association 
of State Highway and Transportation Officials. 

We conducted site visits to six states: California, Indiana, 
Massachusetts, Texas, Virginia and Washington. In each of the states, 
we met with representatives of the FHWA division office, state 
department of transportation, and a local metropolitan planning 
organization. We also visited Recovery Act transportation projects in 
each state, except Virginia. In several of these states, we met with 
officials representing Governors' offices overseeing Recovery Act- 
funded programs. Our criteria for selecting these states included 
total FHWA funding available, number of projects selected and average 
obligation per project. Our selected states represent about 25 
percent, or $6.9 billion of the $27.5 billion, available to states for 
Recovery Act highway investments, and we selected states with a range 
of allotted funding, including four that were above the national 
average and two that were below it. We also considered the Recovery 
Act highway project status and selected states with a range of 
underway and completed projects. In selecting our state sample, we 
also considered geographic dispersion and a mix of more and less 
populous states, as well as obtaining a mixture of states GAO had 
previously tracked as part of our prior Recovery Act oversight 
(California, Massachusetts, and Texas) and states that we had not 
visited previously to discuss Recovery Act transportation issues 
(Indiana, Virginia, Washington). This selection of states enabled us 
to maintain continuity on issues that GAO had previously reported on, 
such as economically distressed areas, and to speak with 
transportation officials who were able to provide fresh perspectives 
on the lessons learned from the Recovery Act transportation experience 
in their state. 

To determine the actions, if any, federal, state, and local oversight 
entities were taking to monitor and ensure accountability of Recovery 
Act transportation funds, we reviewed OIG reports on various Recovery 
Act transportation topics and interviewed OIG staff to learn more 
about their findings and coordinate our audit work. In each of the six 
states we visited, we contacted state auditors to learn about any 
efforts at the state level to monitor Recovery Act transportation 
funding. In those states where the state auditor had conducted 
performance audits on Recovery Act transportation programs, we 
interviewed state audit representatives to better understand their 
ongoing oversight work, challenges faced by recipients in using funds 
and transportation-related audit findings, and any lessons learned. We 
also reviewed Single Audit reports for fiscal year 2010 in each of our 
six sample states. At the local level, we reviewed reports prepared by 
local government auditors for the six states we visited. We obtained 
these reports from the Association of Local Government Auditors' Web 
site. 

The recipient reporting section of this report responds to the 
Recovery Act's mandate that we comment on the estimates of jobs 
created or retained by direct recipients of Recovery Act funds. For 
our review of the seventh submission of recipient reports, covering 
the period January 1 to March 31, 2011, we continued our monitoring of 
errors or potential problems by repeating many of the analyses and 
edit checks reported in our six prior reviews covering the period 
February 2009 through December 31, 2010.[Footnote 52] To examine how 
the quality of jobs data reported by recipients of Recovery Act 
transportation funds has changed over time, we compared the seven 
quarters of recipient reporting data that were publicly available at 
Recovery.gov on April 30, 2011.[Footnote 53] We performed edit checks 
and other analyses on the transportation recipient-reported data which 
included matching DOT-provided funding data from the Financial 
Management Information System with recipient-reported funding data and 
reviewing FTE reporting patterns. Our match showed a high degree of 
agreement between DOT recipient funding information and the 
information reported by recipients directly to FederalReporting.gov. 

We also examined the reliability of recipient-reported data, and we 
reviewed FHWA's efforts to ensure reliability of the recipient-
reported data by comparing it with data contained in DOT's Recovery 
Act Data System (RADS). Our assessment activities included reviewing 
documentation of system processes, conducting logic tests for key 
variables, and assessing data for out-of-range values. We reviewed 
agency documentation for the RADS and FHWA's guidance for validating 
recipient-reported data in that system. We also reviewed a February 
2010 OIG report assessing the Recovery Act recipient data oversight at 
DOT and other agencies.[Footnote 54] In general, we consider the data 
used to be sufficiently reliable for purposes of this report. The 
results of our FTE analyses are limited to the transportation programs 
and time periods reviewed and are not generalizable to FTE reporting 
for any other program. 

To update the status of open recommendations from previous bimonthly 
and recipient report reviews, we obtained information from agency 
officials on actions taken in response to recommendations. 

We conducted this performance audit from September 2010 to June 2011 
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: Status of Prior Open Recommendations and Matters for 
Congressional Consideration: 

In this appendix, we update the status of agencies' efforts to 
implement the 26 open recommendations, and 2 newly implemented 
recommendations from our previous bimonthly and recipient reporting 
reviews.[Footnote 55] Recommendations that were listed as implemented 
or closed in a prior report are not repeated here. Lastly, we address 
the status of our Matters for Congressional Consideration. 

Department of Energy: 

Open Recommendations[Footnote 56] 

Given the concerns we have raised about whether program requirements 
were being met, we recommended in May 2010 that the Department of 
Energy (DOE), in conjunction with both state and local weatherization 
agencies, develop and clarify weatherization program guidance that: 

* clarifies the specific methodology for calculating the average cost 
per home weatherized to ensure that the maximum average cost limit is 
applied as intended. 

* accelerates current DOE efforts to develop national standards for 
weatherization training, certification, and accreditation, which is 
currently expected to take 2 years to complete. 

* develops a best practice guide for key internal controls that should 
be present at the local weatherization agency level to ensure 
compliance with key program requirements. 

* sets time frames for development and implementation of state 
monitoring programs. 

* revisits the various methodologies used in determining the 
weatherization work that should be performed based on the 
consideration of cost-effectiveness and develops standard 
methodologies that ensure that priority is given to the most cost-
effective weatherization work. To validate any methodologies created, 
this effort should include the development of standards for accurately 
measuring the long-term energy savings resulting from weatherization 
work conducted. 

In addition, given that state and local agencies have felt pressure to 
meet a large increase in production targets while effectively meeting 
program requirements and have experienced some confusion over 
production targets, funding obligations, and associated consequences 
for not meeting production and funding goals, we recommended that DOE 
clarify its production targets, funding deadlines, and associated 
consequences while providing a balanced emphasis on the importance of 
meeting program requirements. 

Agency Actions: 

DOE generally concurred with these recommendations and has made some 
progress on implementing them. For example, to clarify the methodology 
for calculating the average cost per home, DOE has developed draft 
guidance to help grantees develop consistency in their average cost 
per unit calculations. The guidance further clarifies the general cost 
categories that are included in the average cost per home. DOE 
anticipates issuance of the guidance in June 2011. 

DOE has also taken steps to address our recommendation that it develop 
and clarify guidance to generate a best practice guide for key 
internal controls. DOE distributed a memorandum dated May 13, 2011 to 
grantees reminding them of their responsibilities to ensure compliance 
with internal controls and the consequences of failing to do so. This 
memo is currently under internal review and DOE anticipates it will be 
released in May 2011. 

Open Recommendations[Footnote 57] 

To better ensure that Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant 
(EECBG) funds are used to meet Recovery Act and program goals, we 
recommended in April 2011 that DOE, take the following actions: 

* Explore a means to capture information on the monitoring processes 
of all recipients to make certain that recipients have effective 
monitoring practices. 

* Solicit information from recipients regarding the methodology they 
used to calculate their energy-related impact metrics and verify that 
recipients who use DOE's estimation tool use the most recent version 
when calculating these metrics. 

Agency Actions: 

DOE generally concurred with these recommendations, stating that 
"implementing the report's recommendations will help ensure that the 
Program continues to be well managed and executed." DOE also provided 
additional information on steps it has initiated or planned to 
implement. In particular, with respect to our first recommendation, 
DOE elaborated on additional monitoring practices it performs over 
high dollar value grant recipients, such as its reliance on audit 
results obtained in accordance with the Single Audit Act and its 
update to the EECBG program requirements in the Compliance Supplement 
to OMB Circular No. A-133. However, these monitoring practices only 
focus on larger grant recipients, and we believe that the program 
could be more effectively monitored if DOE captured information on the 
monitoring practices of all recipients. With respect to our second 
recommendation, DOE officials said that in order to provide a 
reasonable estimate of energy savings, the program currently reviews 
energy process and impact metrics submitted each quarter for 
reasonableness, works with grantees to correct unreasonable metrics, 
and works with grantees through closeout to refine metrics. In 
addition, DOE officials said that they plan to take a scientific 
approach to overall program evaluation during the formal evaluation 
process at the conclusion of the program, which will occur in December 
2012. However, DOE has not yet identified any specific plans to 
solicit information from recipients regarding the methodology they 
used to calculate their energy-related impact metrics or to verify 
that recipients who use DOE's estimation tool use the most recent 
version when calculating. 

Environmental Protection Agency: 

Newly Implemented Recommendation[Footnote 58]: 

We recommended that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 
Administrator work with the states to implement specific oversight 
procedures to monitor and ensure subrecipients' compliance with the 
provisions of the Recovery Act-funded Clean Water and Drinking Water 
State Revolving Fund (SRF) program. 

Agency Actions: 

In part in response to our recommendation, EPA provided additional 
guidance to the states regarding their oversight responsibilities, 
with an emphasis on enhancing site-specific inspections. Specifically, 
in June 2010, the agency developed and issued an oversight plan 
outline for Recovery Act projects that provides guidance on the 
frequency, content, and documentation related to regional reviews of 
state Recovery Act programs and regional and state reviews of specific 
Recovery Act projects. We found that EPA regions have reviewed all 50 
states' Clean and Drinking Water SRF programs at least once since the 
Recovery Act was enacted, and have generally carried out the oversight 
instructions in EPA's plan. For example, regional officials reviewed 
files with state documents and information to ensure proper controls 
over Davis-Bacon, Buy American, and other Recovery Act requirements. 
Regional staff also visited one drinking water project in every state, 
but did not meet this goal for clean water projects due to time and 
budget constraints. We also found that EPA headquarters officials have 
been reviewing the regions' performance evaluation reports for states, 
and the officials said that they implemented a 60-day time frame for 
completing these reports. In the nine states that we reviewed in this 
report, program officials described their site visits to projects and 
the use of the EPA inspection checklist (or state equivalent), 
according to EPA's oversight plan. State officials told us that they 
visit their Recovery Act projects at least once during construction 
and sometimes more frequently depending on the complexity of the 
project. We consider these agency actions to have addressed our 
recommendation. 

Department of Health and Human Services: Office of Head Start: 

Open Recommendation[Footnote 59]: 

To oversee the extent to which grantees are meeting the program goal 
of providing services to children and families and to better track the 
initiation of services under the Recovery Act, we recommended that the 
Director of the Office of Head Start (OHS) should collect data on the 
extent to which children and pregnant women actually receive services 
from Head Start and Early Head Start grantees. 

Agency Actions: 

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) disagreed with our 
recommendation. OHS officials stated that attendance data are 
adequately examined in triennial or yearly on-site reviews and in 
periodic risk management meetings. Because these reviews and meetings 
do not collect or report data on service provision, we continue to 
believe that tracking services to children and families is an 
important measure of the work undertaken by Head Start and Early Head 
Start service providers. 

Open Recommendation[Footnote 60]: 

To help ensure that grantees report consistent enrollment figures, we 
recommended that the Director of OHS should better communicate a 
consistent definition of "enrollment" to grantees for monthly and 
yearly reporting and begin verifying grantees' definition of 
"enrollment" during triennial reviews. 

Agency Actions: 

OHS issued informal guidance on its Web site clarifying monthly 
reporting requirements to make them consistent with annual enrollment 
reporting. While this guidance directs grantees to include in 
enrollment counts all children and pregnant mothers who have received 
a specified minimum of services, it could be further clarified by 
specifying that counts should include only those children and pregnant 
mothers. According to HHS officials, OHS is considering further 
regulatory clarification. 

Open Recommendation[Footnote 61]: 

To provide grantees consistent information on how and when they will 
be expected to obligate and expend federal funds, we recommended that 
the Director of OHS should clearly communicate its policy to grantees 
for carrying over or extending the use of Recovery Act funds from one 
fiscal year into the next. 

Agency Actions: 

HHS indicated that OHS will issue guidance to grantees on obligation 
and expenditure requirements, as well as improve efforts to 
effectively communicate the mechanisms in place for grantees to meet 
the requirements for obligation and expenditure of funds. 

Open Recommendation[Footnote 62]: 

To better consider known risks in scoping and staffing required 
reviews of Recovery Act grantees, we recommended that the Director of 
OHS should direct OHS regional offices to consistently perform and 
document Risk Management Meetings and incorporate known risks, 
including financial management risks, into the process for staffing 
and conducting reviews. 

Agency Actions: 

HHS reported that OHS is reviewing the risk management process to 
ensure it is consistently performed and documented in its centralized 
data system and that it has taken related steps, such as requiring the 
Grant Officer to identify known or suspected risks prior to an on-site 
review. 

Newly Implemented Recommendation[Footnote 63]: 

To facilitate understanding of whether regional decisions regarding 
waivers of the program's matching requirement are consistent with 
Recovery Act grantees' needs across regions, we recommended that the 
Director of OHS should regularly review waivers of the nonfederal 
matching requirement and associated justifications. 

Agency Actions: 

HHS reports that it has taken actions to address our recommendation. 
For example, HHS reports that OHS has conducted a review of waivers of 
the nonfederal matching requirement and tracked all waivers in the Web-
based data system. HHS further reports that OHS has determined that 
they are reasonably consistent across regions. 

Department of Housing and Urban Development: 

Open Recommendation[Footnote 64]: 

Because the absence of third-party investors reduces the amount of 
overall scrutiny Tax Credit Assistance Program (TCAP) projects would 
receive and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is 
currently not aware of how many projects lacked third-party investors, 
we recommended that HUD should develop a risk-based plan for its role 
in overseeing TCAP projects that recognizes the level of oversight 
provided by others. 

Agency Actions: 

HUD responded to our recommendation by saying it will identify 
projects that are not funded by the HOME Investment Partnerships 
Program (HOME) funds and projects that have a nominal tax credit 
award. However, HUD said it will not be able to identify these 
projects until it could access the data needed to perform the 
analysis, and it does not receive access to those data until after 
projects have been completed. HUD currently has not taken any action 
on this recommendation because it only has data on the small 
percentage of projects completed to date. It is too early in the 
process to be able to identify projects that lack third-party 
investors. The agency will take action once they are able to collect 
the necessary information from the project owners and the state 
housing finance agencies. 

Department of Labor: 

Open Recommendations[Footnote 65]: 

To enhance the Department of Labor's (Labor) ability to manage its 
Recovery Act and regular Workforce Investment Act (WIA) formula grants 
and to build on its efforts to improve the accuracy and consistency of 
financial reporting, we recommended that the Secretary of Labor take 
the following actions: 

* To determine the extent and nature of reporting inconsistencies 
across the states and better target technical assistance, conduct a 
one-time assessment of financial reports that examines whether each 
state's reported data on obligations meet Labor's requirements. 

* To enhance state accountability and to facilitate their progress in 
making reporting improvements, routinely review states' reporting on 
obligations during regular state comprehensive reviews. 

Agency Actions: 

Labor agreed with both of our recommendations and has begun to take 
some actions to implement them. To determine the extent of reporting 
inconsistencies, Labor awarded a contract in September 2010 to perform 
an assessment of state financial reports to determine if the data 
reported are accurate and reflect Labor's guidance on reporting of 
obligations and expenditures. Since then, Labor has completed 
interviews with all states and is preparing a report of the findings. 
To enhance states' accountability and facilitate their progress in 
making improvements in reporting, Labor has drafted guidance on the 
definitions of key financial terms such as "obligations," which is 
currently in final clearance. After the guidance is issued, Labor 
plans to conduct a systemwide webinar and interactive training on this 
topic to reinforce how accrued expenditures and obligations are to be 
reported. 

Open Recommendation[Footnote 66]: 

Our September 2009 bimonthly report identified a need for additional 
federal guidance in defining green jobs and we made the following 
recommendation to the Secretary of Labor: 

* To better support state and local efforts to provide youth with 
employment and training in green jobs, provide additional guidance 
about the nature of these jobs and the strategies that could be used 
to prepare youth for careers in green industries. 

Agency Actions: 

Labor agreed with our recommendation and has begun to take several 
actions to implement it. Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics has 
developed a definition of green jobs which was finalized and published 
in the Federal Register on September 21, 2010. In addition, Labor 
continues to host a Green Jobs Community of Practice, an online 
virtual community available to all interested parties. As part of this 
effort, in December 2010, Labor hosted its first Recovery Act Grantee 
Technical Assistance Institute, which focused on critical success 
factors for achieving the goals of the grants and sustaining the 
impact into the future. The department also hosted a symposium on 
April 28-29, 2011, with the green jobs state Labor Market Information 
Improvement grantees. Symposium participants shared recent research 
findings, including efforts to measure green jobs, occupations, and 
training in their states. In addition, the department released a new 
career exploration tool called "mynextmove" [hyperlink, 
http://www.mynextmove.gov] in February 2011. This Web site includes 
the Occupational Information Network (O*NET) green leaf symbol to 
highlight green occupations. Furthermore, Labor's implementation study 
of the Recovery Act-funded green jobs training grants is still 
ongoing. The interim report is expected in late 2011. 

Executive Office of the President: Office of Management and Budget: 

Open Recommendation: 

To leverage Single Audits as an effective oversight tool for Recovery 
Act programs, we recommended that the Director of the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB): 

1. provide more direct focus on Recovery Act programs through the 
Single Audit to help ensure that smaller programs with higher risk 
have audit coverage in the area of internal controls and compliance; 
[Footnote 67] 

2. take additional efforts to provide more timely reporting on 
internal controls for Recovery Act programs for 2010 and beyond; 
[Footnote 68] 

3. evaluate options for providing relief related to audit requirements 
for low-risk programs to balance new audit responsibilities associated 
with the Recovery Act;[Footnote 69] 

4. issue Single Audit guidance in a timely manner so that auditors can 
efficiently plan their audit work;[Footnote 70] 

5. issue the OMB Circular No. A-133 Compliance Supplement no later 
than March 31 of each year;[Footnote 71] 

6. explore alternatives to help ensure that federal awarding agencies 
provide their management decisions on the corrective action plans in a 
timely manner;[Footnote 72] and: 

7. shorten the timeframes required for issuing management decisions by 
federal agencies to grant recipients.[Footnote 73] 

Agency Actions: 

(1) To provide more direct focus on Recovery Act programs through the 
Single Audit to help ensure that smaller programs with higher risk 
have audit coverage in the area of internal controls and compliance, 
the OMB Circular No. A-133, Audits of States, Local Governments, and 
Non-Profit Organizations 2010 Compliance Supplement (Compliance 
Supplement) required all federal programs with expenditures of 
Recovery Act awards to be considered as programs with higher risk when 
performing standard risk-based tests for selecting programs to be 
audited.[Footnote 74] The auditor's determination of the programs to 
be audited is based upon an evaluation of the risks of noncompliance 
occurring that could be material to an individual major program. The 
Compliance Supplement has been the primary mechanism that OMB has used 
to provide Recovery Act requirements and guidance to auditors. 
[Footnote 75] One presumption underlying the guidance is that smaller 
programs with Recovery Act expenditures could be audited as major 
programs when using a risk-based audit approach. The most significant 
risks are associated with newer programs that may not yet have the 
internal controls and accounting systems in place to help ensure that 
Recovery Act funds are distributed and used in accordance with program 
regulations and objectives. Since Recovery Act spending is projected 
to continue through 2016, we believe that it is essential that OMB 
provide direction in Single Audit guidance to help to ensure that 
smaller programs with higher risk are not automatically excluded from 
receiving audit coverage based on their size and standard Single Audit 
Act requirements. 

In May 2011, we spoke with OMB officials and reemphasized our concern 
that future Single Audit guidance provide instruction that helps to 
ensure that smaller programs with higher risk have audit coverage in 
the area of internal controls and compliance. OMB officials agreed and 
stated that such guidance is included in the 2011 Compliance 
Supplement which was to be issued by March 31, 2011. On June 1, 2011, 
OMB issued the 2011 Compliance Supplement which contains language 
regarding the higher-risk status of Recovery Act programs, 
requirements for separate reporting of findings, and a list of 
Recovery Act programs to aid the auditors. We will continue to monitor 
OMB's efforts to provide more direct focus on Recovery Act programs 
through the Single Audit to help ensure that smaller programs with 
higher risk have audit coverage in the area of internal controls and 
compliance. 

(2) To address the recommendation for taking additional efforts to 
encourage more timely reporting on internal controls for Recovery Act 
programs for 2010 and beyond, OMB commenced a second voluntary Single 
Audit Internal Control Project (project) in August 2010 for states 
that received Recovery Act funds in fiscal year 2010.[Footnote 76] 
Fourteen states volunteered to participate in the second project. One 
of the project's goals is to achieve more timely communication of 
internal control deficiencies for higher-risk Recovery Act programs so 
that corrective action can be taken more quickly. Specifically, the 
project encourages participating auditors to identify and communicate 
deficiencies in internal control to program management 3 months sooner 
than the 9-month time frame currently required under OMB Circular No. 
A-133. Auditors were to communicate these through interim internal 
control reports by December 31, 2010. The project also requires that 
program management provide a corrective action plan aimed at 
correcting any deficiencies 2 months earlier than required under 
statute to the federal awarding agency. Upon receiving the corrective 
action plan, the federal awarding agency has 90 days to provide a 
written decision to the cognizant federal agency for audit detailing 
any concerns it may have with the plan. Each participating state was 
to select a minimum of four Recovery Act programs for inclusion in the 
project. 

We assessed the results of the first OMB Single Audit Internal Control 
Project for fiscal year 2009 and found that it was helpful in 
communicating internal control deficiencies earlier than required 
under statute. We reported that 16 states participated in the first 
project and that the states selected at least two Recovery Act 
programs for the project. We also reported that the project's 
dependence on voluntary participation limited its scope and coverage 
and that voluntary participation may also bias the project's results 
by excluding from analysis states or auditors with practices that 
cannot accommodate the project's requirement for early reporting of 
control deficiencies. Overall, we concluded that although the 
project's coverage could have been more comprehensive, the analysis of 
the project's results provided meaningful information to OMB for 
better oversight of the Recovery Act programs selected and information 
for making future improvements to the Single Audit guidance. 

OMB's second Single Audit Internal Control Project is in progress and 
its planned completion date is June 2011. OMB plans to assess the 
project's results after its completion date. The 14 participating 
states have met the milestones for submitting interim internal control 
reports by December 31, 2010 and their corrective action plans by 
January 31, 2011. By April 30, 2011, the federal awarding agencies 
were to provide their interim management decisions to the cognizant 
agency for audit. We discussed the preliminary status of these interim 
management decisions with OMB officials and, as of May 24, 2011, only 
1 of the 10 federal awarding agencies had submitted some management 
decisions on the auditees' corrective action plans as required by the 
project's guidelines. On May 24, 2011, officials from the cognizant 
agency for audit, HHS, reemphasized to the federal awarding agencies 
their responsibilities for providing management decisions in 
accordance with the project's due dates. In our review of the 2009 
project, we noted similar concerns that federal awarding agencies 
submitted management decisions on proposed corrective actions in an 
untimely manner and made recommendations in this area, which are 
discussed later in this report. We will continue to monitor the status 
of OMB's efforts to implement this recommendation and believe that OMB 
needs to continue taking steps to encourage timelier reporting on 
internal controls through Single Audits for Recovery Act programs. 

(3) We previously recommended that OMB evaluate options for providing 
relief related to audit requirements for low-risk programs to balance 
new audit responsibilities associated with the Recovery Act. OMB 
officials have stated that they are aware of the increase in workload 
for state auditors who perform Single Audits due to the additional 
funding to Recovery Act programs and corresponding increases in 
programs being subject to audit requirements. OMB officials stated 
that they solicited suggestions from state auditors to gain further 
insights to develop measures for providing audit relief. However, OMB 
has not yet put in place a viable alternative that would provide 
relief to all state auditors that conduct Single Audits. For state 
auditors that are participating in the second OMB Single Audit 
Internal Control Project, OMB has provided some audit relief by 
modifying the requirements under Circular No. A-133 to reduce the 
number of low-risk programs to be included in some project 
participants' risk assessment requirements. 

OMB is taking initiatives to examine the Single Audit process. OMB 
officials have stated that they have created a workgroup which 
combines the Executive Order 13520--Reducing Improper Payments Section 
4 (b) Single Audit Recommendations Workgroup (Single Audit Workgroup), 
and the Circular No. A-87--Cost Principles for State, Local, and 
Indian Tribal Governments Workgroup (Circular No. A-87 Workgroup). The 
Single Audit Workgroup is comprised of representatives from the 
federal audit community; federal agency management officials involved 
in overseeing the Single Audit process and programs subject to that 
process; representatives from the state audit community; and staff 
from OMB. OMB officials tasked the Single Audit Workgroup with 
developing recommendations to improve the effectiveness of Single 
Audits of nonfederal entities that expend federal funds in order to 
help identify and reduce improper payments. In June 2010, the Single 
Audit Workgroup developed recommendations, some of which are targeted 
toward providing audit relief to auditors who conduct audits of 
grantees and grants that are under the requirements of the Single 
Audit Act. OMB officials stated that the recommendations warrant 
further study and that the workgroup is continuing its work on the 
recommendations. OMB officials also stated that the Circular No. A-87 
Workgroup has also made recommendations which could impact Single 
Audits and that the workgroups have been collaborating to ensure that 
the recommendations relating to Single Audit improvements are 
compatible and could improve the Single Audit process. The combined 
workgroups plan to issue a report to OMB by August 29, 2011. We will 
continue to monitor OMB's progress to achieve this objective. 

(4)(5) With regard to issuing Single Audit guidance in a timely 
manner, and specifically the OMB Circular No. A-133 Compliance 
Supplement, we previously reported that OMB officials intended to 
issue the 2011 Compliance Supplement by March 31, 2011.[Footnote 77] 
In December 2010, OMB provided to the American Institute of Certified 
Public Accounts (AICPA) a draft of the 2011 Compliance Supplement 
which the AICPA published on its Web site. In January 2011, OMB 
officials reported that the production of the 2011 Compliance 
Supplement was on schedule for issuance by March 31, 2011. OMB issued 
the 2011 Compliance Supplement on June 1, 2011. We spoke with OMB 
officials regarding the reasons for the delay of this important 
guidance to auditors. OMB officials stated that its efforts were 
refocused toward priorities relating to the expiration of several 
continuing resolutions[Footnote 78] that temporarily funded the 
federal government for fiscal year 2011, and the Department Of Defense 
And Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011, which was passed by 
the Congress in April 2011, averting a governmentwide shutdown. OMB 
officials stated that, as a result, although they had taken steps to 
issue the 2011 Compliance Supplement by the end of March, such as 
starting the process earlier in 2010 and giving agencies strict 
deadlines for program submissions, they were only able to issue it on 
June 1, 2011. We will continue to monitor OMB's progress to achieve 
this objective. 

(6)(7) In October 2010, OMB officials stated that, based on their 
assessment of the results of the project, they had discussed 
alternatives for helping to ensure that federal awarding agencies 
provide their management decisions on the corrective action plans in a 
timely manner, including possibly shortening the time frames required 
for federal agencies to provide their management decisions to grant 
recipients.[Footnote 79] However, OMB officials have yet to decide on 
the course of action that they will pursue to implement this 
recommendation. OMB officials acknowledged that the results of the 
2009 OMB Single Audit Internal Control Project confirmed that this 
issue continues to be a challenge. They stated that they have met 
individually with several federal awarding agencies that were late in 
providing their management decisions in the 2009 project to discuss 
the measures that the agencies will take to improve the timeliness of 
their management decisions. Earlier in this report, we discussed that 
preliminary observations of the results of the second project have 
identified that several federal awarding agencies' management 
decisions on the corrective actions that were due April 30, 2011, have 
also not been issued in a timely manner. 

In March 2010, OMB issued guidance under memo M-10-14, item 7, 
[hyperlink, 
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/
m1014.pdf] that called for federal awarding agencies to review reports 
prepared by the Federal Audit Clearinghouse regarding Single Audit 
findings and submit summaries of the highest-risk audit findings by 
major Recovery Act program, as well as other relevant information on 
the federal awarding agency's actions regarding these areas. In May 
2011, we reviewed selected reports prepared by federal awarding 
agencies that were titled Use of Single Audit to Oversee Recipient's 
Recovery Act Funding. These reports were required by memo M-10-14 for 
reports from the Federal Audit Clearinghouse for fiscal year 2009. The 
reports were developed for entities where the auditor issued a 
qualified, adverse, or disclaimer audit opinion. The reports 
identified items such as (1) significant risks to the respective 
program that was audited; (2) material weaknesses, instances of 
noncompliance, and audit findings that put the program at risk; (3) 
actions taken by the agency; and (4) actions planned by the agency. 
OMB officials have stated that they plan to use this information to 
identify trends that may require clarification or additional guidance 
in the Compliance Supplement. 

OMB officials also stated that they are working on a metrics project 
with the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board to develop 
metrics for determining how federal awarding agencies are to use 
information available in the Single Audit and which can serve as 
performance measures. We attended a presentation of the OMB Workgroup 
that is working with the Recovery Accountability and Transparency 
Board in developing the metrics project in May 2011 and note that it 
is making progress. OMB officials have stated that the metrics could 
be applied at the agency level, by program, to allow for analysis of 
Single Audit findings, along with other uses to be determined. One 
goal of the metrics project is to increase the effectiveness and 
timeliness of federal awarding agencies' actions to resolve single 
audit findings. We will continue to monitor the progress of these 
efforts to determine the extent that they improve the timeliness of 
federal agencies' actions to resolve audit findings so that risks to 
Recovery Act funds are reduced and internal controls in Recovery Act 
programs are strengthened. 

Department of Transportation: 

Open Recommendations[Footnote 80]: 

To ensure that Congress and the public have accurate information on 
the extent to which the goals of the Recovery Act are being met, we 
recommended that the Secretary of Transportation direct FHWA to take 
the following two actions: 

* Develop additional rules and data checks in the Recovery Act Data 
System, so that these data will accurately identify contract 
milestones such as award dates and amounts, and provide guidance to 
states to revise existing contract data. 

* Make publicly available--within 60 days after the September 30, 
2010, obligation deadline--an accurate accounting and analysis of the 
extent to which states directed funds to economically distressed 
areas, including corrections to the data initially provided to 
Congress in December 2009. 

* Agency Actions: 

In its response, DOT stated that it implemented measures to further 
improve data quality in the Recovery Act Data System, including 
additional data quality checks, as well as providing states with 
additional training and guidance to improve the quality of data 
entered into the system. DOT also stated that as part of its efforts 
to respond to our draft September 2010 report in which we made this 
recommendation on economically distressed areas, it completed a 
comprehensive review of projects in these areas, which it provided to 
GAO for that report. DOT recently posted an accounting of the extent 
to which states directed Recovery Act transportation funds to projects 
located in economically distressed areas on its Web site, and we are 
in the process of assessing these data. 

Open Recommendation[Footnote 81]: 

To better understand the impact of Recovery Act investments in 
transportation, we believe that the Secretary of Transportation should 
ensure that the results of these projects are assessed and a 
determination made about whether these investments produced long-term 
benefits. Specifically, in the near term, we recommended that the 
Secretary direct FHWA and FTA to determine the types of data and 
performance measures they would need to assess the impact of the 
Recovery Act and the specific authority they may need to collect data 
and report on these measures. 

Agency Actions: 

In its response, DOT noted that it expected to be able to report on 
Recovery Act outputs, such as the miles of road paved, bridges 
repaired, and transit vehicles purchased, but not on outcomes, such as 
reductions in travel time, nor did it commit to assessing whether 
transportation investments produced long-term benefits. DOT further 
explained that limitations in its data systems, coupled with the 
magnitude of Recovery Act funds relative to overall annual federal 
investment in transportation, would make assessing the benefits of 
Recovery Act funds difficult. DOT indicated that, with these 
limitations in mind, it is examining its existing data availability 
and, as necessary, would seek additional data collection authority 
from Congress if it became apparent that such authority was needed. 
DOT plans to take some steps to assess its data needs, but it has not 
committed to assessing the long-term benefits of Recovery Act 
investments in transportation infrastructure. We are therefore keeping 
our recommendation on this matter open. 

Matters for Congressional Consideration: 

Matter[Footnote 82]: 

To the extent that appropriate adjustments to the Single Audit process 
are not accomplished under the current Single Audit structure, 
Congress should consider amending the Single Audit Act or enacting new 
legislation that provides for more timely internal control reporting, 
as well as audit coverage for smaller Recovery Act programs with high 
risk. 

We continue to believe that Congress should consider changes related 
to the Single Audit process. 

Matter[Footnote 83]: 

To the extent that additional coverage is needed to achieve 
accountability over Recovery Act programs, Congress should consider 
mechanisms to provide additional resources to support those charged 
with carrying out the Single Audit Act and related audits. 

We continue to believe that Congress should consider changes related 
to the Single Audit process. 

Matter[Footnote 84]: 

To provide housing finance agencies (HFA) with greater tools for 
enforcing program compliance, in the event the Section 1602 Program is 
extended for another year, Congress may want to consider directing the 
Department of the Treasury to permit HFAs the flexibility to disburse 
Section 1602 Program funds as interest-bearing loans that allow for 
repayment. 

We continue to believe that Congress should consider directing the 
Department of the Treasury to permit HFAs the flexibility to disburse 
Section 1602 Program funds as interest-bearing loans that allow for 
repayment. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Phillip R. Herr, (202) 512-2834 or herrp@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Thomas Beall, Jonathan Carver, 
Andrew Ching, John Healey, Sharon Hogan, Thomas James, Bert Japikse, 
Delwen Jones, Heather MacLeod, SaraAnn Moessbauer, Josh Ormond, Carol 
Patey, Beverly Ross, Jonathan Stehle, and Pamela Vines made key 
contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Pub. L. No. 111-5, 123 Stat. 115 (Feb. 17, 2009). 

[2] As of June 3, 2011, the Department of the Treasury had paid out 
$217.5 billion in Recovery Act funds for use in states and localities 
to promote economic recovery. For updates, see [hyperlink, 
http://gao.gov/recovery]. 

[3] Recovery Act, div. A, title XII, 123 Stat., 203. The high speed 
intercity passenger rail and TIGER grant programs are discretionary 
grant programs. Traditionally, federal surface transportation funding 
has been primarily delivered through formula grant programs based on 
distributions prescribed by federal statute. In a discretionary grant 
program, agency officials generally have the authority to determine 
which eligible grant applicant will receive awards and how much each 
will be awarded. 

[4] Recovery Act, div. A, title IX, § 901(a)(1), 123 Stat., 191. 

[5] Recovery Act, div. A, title XV, § 1512(e), 123 Stat., 287. The 
reports submitted quarterly by recipients are referred to as 
"recipient reports." 

[6] This month we are also reporting on the status and use of Recovery 
Act funds for the clean and drinking water state revolving fund 
programs (see GAO, Recovery Act: Funds Supported Many Water Projects, 
and Federal and State Monitoring Shows Few Compliance Problems, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-608] (Washington, D.C.: 
June 29, 2011). We last reported on the use of Recovery Act 
transportation funds in May 2011 and September 2010. See GAO, Recovery 
Act: Use of Transportation Funds, Outcomes, and Lessons Learned, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-610T] (Washington, 
D.C.: May 4, 2011) and Recovery Act: Opportunities to Improve 
Management and Strengthen Accountability over States' and Localities' 
Uses of Funds, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-999] 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 20, 2010). We continue, as in prior rounds, 
to perform edit checks and analyses on all prime recipient reports to 
assess data logic and consistency and identify unusual or atypical 
data. 

[7] GAO, Intercity Passenger Rail: Recording Clearer Reasons for 
Awards Decisions Would Improve Otherwise Good Grantmaking Practices, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-283] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 10, 2011) and Surface Transportation: Competitive Grant Programs 
Could Benefit from Increased Performance Focus and Better 
Documentation of Key Decisions, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-234] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 30, 
2011). 

[8] Previously, we examined the use of Recovery Act funds in 16 states 
and the District of Columbia. For this study, we selected 3 states 
that we had previously tracked--California, Massachusetts, and Texas--
and 3 states that we had not previously tracked--Indiana, Virginia, 
and Washington. These 6 states represent about 29 percent of the U.S. 
population and received approximately one-quarter of the highway funds 
made available through the Recovery Act. 

[9] While we assessed Recovery Act funds for all transportation 
programs, we chose to focus primarily on the status of Recovery Act 
highway funds because they represented about 57 percent of the total 
Recovery Act funding available to DOT. 

[10] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/recovery/related-products/] 
for related GAO products. 

[11] The total amount of Recovery Act funds allocated to each program 
does not equal the total funds distributed. Most operating 
administrations, as allowed by the Recovery Act, retained a small 
percentage of the funds for oversight and administrative costs, and 
some fund allocations included set asides for other programs or 
activities. The Recovery Act also provided $20 million for salaries 
and expenses at the DOT Office of Inspector General to monitor DOT's 
Recovery Act programs and $20 million for a bonding assistance program 
for disadvantaged business enterprises. 

[12] The majority of federal-aid highway infrastructure funding is 
distributed through seven major programs, often referred to as core 
highway programs. These programs are the Surface Transportation 
Program, National Highway System Program, Interstate Maintenance 
Program, Highway Bridge Program, Highway Safety Improvement Program, 
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program, and the 
Equity Bonus Program. 

[13] Another new competitive grant program was established to award 
funds to public transit agencies for capital investments to reduce 
either a transit system's greenhouse gas emissions or energy 
consumption. 

[14] For example, the maximum federal fund share under the existing 
Federal-Aid Highway Program is generally 80 percent, and the regular 
Airport Improvement Program requires recipients to provide a match 
ranging from 5 to 25 percent. 

[15] 46 U.S.C. § 54101(e)(1). 

[16] GAO, Physical Infrastructure: Challenges and Investment Options 
for the Nation's Infrastructure, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-763T] (Washington, D.C.: May 8, 
2008). 

[17] The Secretary of Transportation was to withdraw and redistribute 
to eligible states any amount that was not obligated by March 2, 2010, 
for highway infrastructure and by March 5, 2010, for public transit. 

[18] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-999]. 

[19] Economically distressed areas are defined by the Public Works and 
Economic Development Act of 1965, as amended. 42 U.S.C. § 3161. To 
qualify as an economically distressed area, the area must (1) have a 
per capita income of 80 percent or less of the national average; (2) 
have an average unemployment rate that is, for the most recent 24-
month period for which data are available, at least 1 percent greater 
than the national average; or (3) be an area the Secretary of Commerce 
determines has experienced or is about to experience a "special need" 
arising from actual or threatened severe unemployment or economic 
adjustment problems resulting from severe short-or long-term changes 
in economic conditions. 

[20] Therefore, both the data reported by recipients and other 
macroeconomic data and methods are necessary to gauge the overall 
employment effects of the stimulus. The employment effects in any 
state will vary with labor market stress and fiscal conditions. 

[21] DOT issued subsequent reports in September 2009 and May 2010. See 
DOT Secretary of Transportation, Section 1201 (c) 180-Day Report 
(Washington, D.C., Sept. 30, 2009) and DOT Secretary of 
Transportation, Section 1201 (c) One-Year Report (Washington, D.C., 
May 7, 2010). 

[22] Programs administered by DOT and funded by the Recovery Act 
typically required DOT review and approval of proposed projects 
submitted by the states or other applicants, resulting in an 
obligation of federal funds. States or other recipients then solicited 
and selected contractors to perform the work. Federal funds are 
expended when the state or other intended recipient submits invoices 
for completed work. 

[23] The reliability of recipient reported data and efforts taken by 
DOT and state officials to ensure data quality, as well as changes in 
the quality of recipient reported data over time, are discussed later 
in this report. 

[24] For further discussion of FTE data limitations, see GAO, Recovery 
Act: Recipient Reported Jobs Data Provide Some Insight Into Use of 
Recovery Act Funding, but Data Quality and Reporting Issues Need 
Attention, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-223] 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 19, 2009). For further discussion of Recovery 
Act contract and grant recipients' unpaid federal tax information, see 
GAO, Recovery Act: Thousands of Recovery Act Contract and Grant 
Recipients Owe Hundreds of Millions in Federal Taxes, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-485] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 28, 
2011). 

[25] For additional information on estimates of FTEs funded by the 
Recovery Act, see the Congressional Budget Office, Estimated Impact of 
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act on Employment and Economic 
Output from October 2010 Through December 2010 (Washington, D.C.: 
February 2011). 

[26] "Other" transportation projects include projects funded by FAA's 
grants-in-aid to airports; FRA's Amtrak grant and the high speed 
intercity passenger rail program; MARAD's Assistance to Small 
Shipyards Program; and the Office of the Secretary of Transportation's 
disadvantaged business bonding assistance program and TIGER grants. 

[27] GAO, Recovery Act: States' and Localities' Uses of Funds and 
Actions Needed to Address Implementation Challenges and Bolster 
Accountability, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604] 
(Washington, D.C.: May 26, 2010). 

[28] FHWA officials have begun developing a geospatial interface to 
integrate information from Recovery Act projects with information 
contained in its Highway Performance Monitoring System and its 
National Bridge Inventory, but they expected that this effort would 
take several years. 

[29] DOT, Vision for High-Speed Rail in America (Washington, D.C., 
Apr. 2009); FRA, Preliminary National Rail Plan (Washington, D.C., 
Oct. 2009); and FRA, National Rail Plan-Moving Forward: A Progress 
Report (Washington, D.C, Sept. 2010). 

[30] DOT, Office of Inspector General, FAA Fulfilled Most ARRA 
Requirements in Awarding Airport Grants, AV-2011-53 (Feb. 17, 2011); 
Amtrak Made Significant Improvements in Its Long-Term Capital Planning 
Process, CR-2011-036 (Jan. 27, 2011); and Actions Needed to Strengthen 
the Federal Highway Administration's National Review Teams, MH-2011-
027 (Jan. 6, 2011). 

[31] For additional information on the OIG's ongoing audits, see DOT, 
Office of Inspector General, Ensuring ARRA Funds Are Spent 
Appropriately to Maximize Program Goals, CC-2011-025 (May 4, 2011). 

[32] The Honorable Earl E. Devaney, Chairman, Recovery Accountability 
and Transparency Board, Testimony before the Committee on Oversight 
and Government Reform, U.S. House of Representatives, June 14, 2011. 

[33] Congress passed the Single Audit Act, as amended, 31 U.S.C. ch. 
75, in 1996 to promote, among other things, sound financial 
management, including effective internal controls, with respect to 
federal awards administered by nonfederal entities. A Single Audit 
consists of (1) an audit and opinion on the fair presentation of the 
financial statements and the Schedule of Expenditures of Federal 
Awards; (2) gaining an understanding of and testing internal control 
over financial reporting and the entity's compliance with laws, 
regulations, and contract or grant provisions that have a direct and 
material effect on certain federal programs; and (3) an audit and an 
opinion on compliance with applicable program requirements for certain 
federal programs. 

[34] Massachusetts Office of the State Auditor, Greater Attleboro 
Taunton Regional Transit Authority for the period July 1, 2009 through 
June 30, 2010, 2010-1007-3R (Mar. 18, 2011); Brockton Area Transit 
Authority for the period July 1, 2009 through September 30, 2010, 2010-
0881-3R (Mar. 18, 2011); Independent State Auditor's Report on the 
Montachusett Regional Transit Authority's Use of American Recovery and 
Reinvestment Act Funds, March 1, 2009 to March 31, 2010, 2010-1038-3R 
(Oct. 19, 2010). 

[35] California State Auditor, Bureau of State Audits, High Risk 
Update - American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009: The 
California Recovery Task Force and State Agencies Could Do More to 
Ensure the Accurate Reporting of Recovery Act Jobs, 2010-601 (Dec. 21, 
2010). 

[36] City of Dallas, Office of the City Auditor, Audit of American 
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009: October 1, 2009 to September 
30, 2010, 011-007 (Feb. 4, 2011). 

[37] City of Arlington, Tex, Office of the City Auditor, American 
Recovery and Reinvestment Act Audit, 10-08 (Dec. 17, 2010). 

[38] City of Virginia Beach, Office of the City Auditor, American 
Recovery and Reinvestment Act Expenditure Audit (Feb. 2, 2011). 

[39] City of Los Angeles, Office of the Controller, ARRA Performance 
and Financial Audit of the Department of Transportation (Sept. 16, 
2010). 

[40] According to Recovery.gov, recipients reported on 201,779 awards 
across multiple program areas, and the Recovery Act funded 
approximately 571,383 FTEs during the quarter beginning January 1, 
2011, and ending March 31, 2011. 

[41] Noncompliant recipients are those recipients of Recovery Act 
funds that have not complied with the act's requirement to report 
quarterly about the status of their awards. Each reporting quarter, a 
list of noncompliant recipients is provided to the Recovery 
Accountability and Transparency Board by the Office of Management and 
Budget and the list is certified by the federal agencies. 

[42] The number of repeat DOT-related noncompliant recipients--those 
that have not filed reports for at least two reporting quarters-- 
decreased from six in the quarter ending December 31, 2010, to zero in 
the quarter ending March 31, 2011. 

[43] FTA officials also provide guidance and technical assistance to 
prime recipients and run a series of about 50 automated data quality 
checks to ensure that data provided by recipients is accurate, 
complete, and timely. FTA officials said that recipient report 
completion rates have been near 100 percent each quarter. 

[44] As part of the Federal-Aid Highway Program, FHWA assesses the 
ability of each state to have its apportioned funds obligated by the 
end of the federal fiscal year (September 30) and adjusts the 
limitation on obligations for federal-aid highway and highway safety 
construction programs by reducing it for some states and increasing it 
for others. In fiscal year 2010, $1.3 billion of obligation limitation 
was available to states for redistribution. 

[45] As of February 17, 2009, many states did not yet have an enacted 
budget for fiscal year 2010 and in response to anticipated changes in 
available funding, state legislatures adopted reduced budgets. 

[46] See GAO, Recovery Act: Planned Efforts and Challenges in 
Evaluating Compliance with Maintenance of Effort and Similar 
Provisions, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-247] 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 30, 2009). 

[47] In response to a recommendation we made, FHWA, in consultation 
with the Department of Commerce, issued guidance on August 24, 2009, 
that provided criteria for states to use for designating special-need 
areas for the purpose of Recovery Act funding. The criteria align 
closely with special-need criteria used by the Department of 
Commerce's Economic Development Administration in its own grant 
programs, including factors such as actual or threatened business 
closures (including job loss thresholds), military base closures, and 
natural disasters or emergencies. FHWA issued "questions and answers" 
on November 12, 2009, to further address implementation questions. 

[48] As part of our Recovery Act oversight, we previously tracked the 
uses of and accountability for Recovery Act funds in 16 states, 
including Arizona, California, and Illinois, and the District of 
Columbia. 

[49] In addition to the deadlines for obligating Recovery Act 
transportation funds, states could also select projects to be funded 
using regularly appropriated or apportioned funds (i.e., funds from 
non-Recovery Act federal sources), which also were available to be 
obligated. 

[50] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-234] and 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-283]. 

[51] Pub. L. No. 111-5, 123 Stat. 115 (Feb. 17, 2009). 

[52] As with the prior rounds, these checks and analyses were 
performed on all prime recipient reports and were done to assess data 
logic and consistency and identify unusual or atypical data. For this 
seventh round of reporting, we continued to see similar results with 
minor variations in the number or percentage of reports appearing 
atypical or showing some form of data discrepancy. 

[53] We selected for analysis those prime recipients who entered the 
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance numbers for Recovery Act 
transportation programs. 

[54] DOT, Office of Inspector General, Recovery Act Data Quality: 
Errors in Recipient Reports Obscure Transparency (Washington, D.C., 
Feb. 23, 2010). 

[55] GAO, Recovery Act: As Initial Implementation Unfolds in States 
and Localities, Continued Attention to Accountability Issues Is 
Essential, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-580] 
(Washington, D.C.: Apr. 23, 2009); Recovery Act: States' and 
Localities' Current and Planned Uses of Funds While Facing Fiscal 
Stresses, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-829] 
(Washington, D.C.: July 8, 2009); Recovery Act: Funds Continue to 
Provide Fiscal Relief to States and Localities, While Accountability 
and Reporting Challenges Need to Be Fully Addressed, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-1016] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 23, 
2009); Recovery Act: Recipient Reported Jobs Data Provide Some Insight 
into Use of Recovery Act Funding, but Data Quality and Reporting 
Issues Need Attention, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-223] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 19, 
2009); Recovery Act: Status of States' and Localities' Use of Funds 
and Efforts to Ensure Accountability, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-231] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 10, 
2009); Recovery Act: One Year Later, States' and Localities' Uses of 
Funds and Opportunities to Strengthen Accountability, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-437] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 3, 
2010); Recovery Act: States' and Localities' Uses of Funds and Actions 
Needed to Address Implementation Challenges and Bolster 
Accountability, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604] 
(Washington, D.C.: May 26, 2010); Recovery Act: Opportunities to 
Improve Management and Strengthen Accountability over States' and 
Localities' Uses of Funds, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-999] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 20, 
2010); Recovery Act: Head Start Grantees Expand Services, but More 
Consistent Communication Could Improve Accountability and Decisions 
about Spending, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-166] 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 15, 2010); and Recovery Act: Energy Efficiency 
and Conservation Block Grant Recipients Face Challenges Meeting 
Legislative and Program Goals and Requirements, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-379] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 7, 
2011). 

[56] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-379], 48-50. 

[57] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-379], 36-47. 

[58] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 246-247. 

[59] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 184. 

[60] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-166], 39. 

[61] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-166], 39. 

[62] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-166], 39. 

[63] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 184. 

[64] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-999], 189. 

[65] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 244. 

[66] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-1016], 78. 

[67] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-829], 127. 

[68] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 247. 

[69] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-829], 127. 

[70] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 247. 

[71] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-999], 194. 

[72] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 247-248. 

[73] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-999], 194. 

[74] Congress passed the Single Audit Act, as amended, 31 U.S.C. ch. 
75, to promote, among other things, sound financial management, 
including effective internal controls, with respect to federal awards 
administered by nonfederal entities. The Single Audit Act requires 
states, local governments, and nonprofit organizations expending 
$500,000 or more in federal awards in a year to obtain an audit in 
accordance with the requirements set forth in the act. A Single Audit 
consists of (1) an audit and opinions on the fair presentation of the 
financial statements and the Schedule of Expenditures of Federal 
Awards; (2) gaining an understanding of and testing internal control 
over financial reporting and the entity's compliance with laws, 
regulations, and contract or grant provisions that have a direct and 
material effect on certain federal programs (i.e., the program 
requirements); and (3) an audit and an opinion on compliance with 
applicable program requirements for certain federal programs. 

[75] In addition to the annual edition of the Compliance Supplement, 
OMB may issue Compliance Supplement addendums during the year to 
update or provide further Recovery Act guidance. 

[76] OMB's second project is similar to its first Single Audit 
Internal Control project which started in October 2009. Sixteen states 
participated in the first project. We assessed the results of the 
project and reported them in GAO-10-999. 

[77] The Compliance Supplement is updated annually. The 2010 
Compliance Supplement was issued in July 2010 and is applicable to 
audits of fiscal years beginning after June 30, 2009. 

[78] Continuing resolutions (also known as "CRs") are appropriations 
acts that provide budget authority for federal agencies, specific 
activities, or both to continue in operation when Congress and the 
President have not completed action on the regular appropriations acts 
by the beginning of the fiscal year. A CR may be enacted for the full 
year, up to a specified date, or until regular appropriations are 
enacted. 

[79] The project's guidelines called for the federal awarding agencies 
to complete (1) performing a risk assessment of the internal control 
deficiency and identify those with the greatest risk to Recovery Act 
funding and (2) identifying corrective actions taken or planned by the 
auditee. OMB guidance requires this information to be included in a 
management decision that the federal agency was to have issued to the 
auditee's management, the auditor, and the cognizant agency for audit. 

[80] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-999], 187-188. 

[81] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 241-242. 

[82] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-829], 128. 

[83] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-829], 128. 

[84] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604], 251. 

[End of section] 

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