Federal Real Property: GSA Should Improve Accuracy, Completeness, and Usefulness of Public Data
Fast Facts
The General Services Administration created a publicly available database of federal buildings, structures, and land. People can search the database for any reason, such as finding property to lease for a cell tower site.
We found numerous issues with the database which reduce its benefit. For example, 67% of addresses are incorrectly formatted or incomplete, making it hard to locate specific buildings when searching.
Lack of reliable data on federal assets is one of the main reasons Federal Real Property Management remains on our High Risk list. We made 6 recommendations to improve database accuracy, completeness, and usefulness.
Water towers misidentified in the database as office buildings
Three water towers
Highlights
What GAO Found
The General Services Administration (GSA) has worked in recent years to improve reliability of the Federal Real Property Profile (FRPP), which tracks federal real property assets. However, numerous errors in the database were carried into the public version. GSA extracted data from the FRPP's 398,000 civilian federal assets to create a public database to be used, for example, by researchers and real estate developers. However, GSA's data verification process did not address key errors. GAO found that 67 percent of the street addresses in the public database were incomplete or incorrectly formatted. For example, the database lists “Greenbelt Road” as the address for over 200 buildings at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, but the road stretches over 6.3 miles, thereby reducing a user's ability to locate specific buildings.
Challenges Mapping Incomplete “Greenbelt Road” Street Address
The public database is not complete because GSA and selected agencies decided not to provide certain useful information. Specifically, GSA withheld assets' information without consulting those agencies managing the assets and allowed agencies to withhold information that is already publicly available. For example, GSA withheld the name “Goddard Space Flight Center” from the public database, but NASA's website lists this name and the Center's location. Unnecessarily withholding information limits the database's utility and undermines analysis.
The public database's usefulness is further limited by how GSA presents the information. Because the database does not identify if an asset is part of a secure installation, the public does not know if assets, such as the unnamed buildings at Goddard, are accessible to the public. Unless GSA improves the public database's accuracy, completeness, and usefulness, its benefits may not be realized.
Why GAO Did This Study
The lack of reliable data on federal assets is one of the main reasons Federal Real Property Management remains on GAO's high risk list. In 2016, legislation required GSA to publish a single, comprehensive, and descriptive database of federal real property that would be available to the public. The database could be used for research and other potential applications. GAO was asked to study the public database. This report assesses (1) GSA's efforts to improve the reliability of FRPP's data and the public database, (2) the public database's completeness, and (3) the presentation of the data in the public database.
GAO reviewed federal laws, documents, and data, including GSA's fiscal years 2017 and 2018 FRPP and public databases. GAO interviewed officials at GSA and from six federal agencies selected in locations with enough questionable data in the public database to analyze, among other things, and studied assets in Washington, D.C., Illinois, and New Mexico. GAO also interviewed selected stakeholders involved in federal real property management, such as real estate brokers.
Recommendations
GAO is making six recommendations to GSA, including improving the accuracy of the database, consulting with agencies on assets' information withheld from the database, and improving the public database's presentation. GSA agreed with five of the recommendations. GAO clarified the recommendation on withholding information on agencies' assets, to address GSA's comments.
Recommendations for Executive Action
Agency Affected | Recommendation | Status |
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General Services Administration |
Priority Rec.
The Administrator of GSA should coordinate with agencies to ensure that street address information in the public database is complete and correctly formatted. (Recommendation 1)
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GSA agreed with the recommendation. As of March 2024, GSA officials said that they continue to coordinate with OMB and the Federal Real Property Council (FRPC)-made up of real property officials from federal agencies-to improve the quality of address data. For example, GSA officials said that the agency is implementing a phased action plan that requires commitments from FRPC member agencies and assists them in accurately reporting geographic data elements. In addition, the FRPC created an agency scorecard for federal agencies that tracks five metrics related to data reliability. It shows that numerous agencies continue to struggle with aspects of ensuring the quality of their real property data. According to GSA officials, its effort to flag anomalous location data improved the ability to map building locations by 13 percent in the most recent data from 2023. In addition, GSA officials said that they continue to collaborate with OMB to issue implementing guidance regarding OMB's requirements for agencies to establish a data quality improvement program and conduct a third party review every three years. According to the officials, this guidance further details the FRPC's process and guidance for agencies to comply with OMB's required third party data validation review. To fully implement this recommendation, GSA needs to continue to work closely with OMB and FRPC member agencies to complete its efforts to improve real property data. Improving the reliability of this data would increase its usefulness to the public, such as for users who may be interested in acquiring or leasing assets.
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General Services Administration | The Administrator of GSA should coordinate with agencies to review V&V anomaly categories to better target incorrect data. (Recommendation 2) |
The lack of reliable data federal property data to support decision making is one of the main reasons Federal Real Property Management remains on GAO's high-risk list. GAO has repeatedly identified reliability issues with the Federal Real Property Profile (FRPP), which is the most comprehensive database of federal real property holdings. GSA has taken actions to improve the reliability of FRPP data but must ultimately rely on agencies to submit correct data. Specifically, in 2016, GSA established its FRPP validation and verification (V&V) process, where GSA provides an annual list of data anomalies to the agencies that entered the data. Agencies have 10 months to research each anomaly and correct errors or validate that the data are correct. GAO selected six federal agencies because they were located in areas with enough questionable data in FRPP to analyze. In 2020, GAO reported that while GSA has identified close to 30,000 potential errors in the FRPP database over the first 2 years of the V&V process, agencies confirmed only 5 percent as errors (1,291 of 28,572). Agencies validated the remaining 27,281 anomalies as correct or left them unresolved. The low number of errors being identified indicates that GSA's V&V process was not efficiently identifying errors in the data, either in terms of the anomaly categories themselves or the thresholds at which GSA flags data as an anomaly. This situation could ultimately mean that agencies spent time researching correct information that was flagged as potentially erroneous or not fully actually researching anomalies and allowing mistakes to remain uncorrected. GAO also found that agencies identified no anomalies as errors for five of GSA's 16 anomaly categories in 2017, raising questions about the anomaly categories GSA has identified. Thresholds lead to a large number of data elements flagged, which can challenge the resources of affected agencies. Officials at two of GAO's selected agencies said that the number of anomalies that the V&V process produced annually overwhelmed their ability to validate the data. The large number of unresolved V&V anomalies appears to support this conclusion. Officials who are responsible for resolving anomalies at two selected agencies said that more realistic anomaly categories or thresholds could reduce the number of anomalies and better target actual errors, an approach that could help agencies better prioritize their resources when researching anomalies. GSA officials said they had not reviewed the anomaly categories or their thresholds to see if they consistently capture incorrect data. In the absence of better information about the validity of categories and thresholds, the current process is taking up limited agency resources without efficiently correcting errors in the data. Therefore, GAO recommended that GSA coordinate with agencies to review Validation and Verification Process' anomaly categories to better target incorrect data. In August 2024, GAO verified that GSA eliminated 10 anomaly categories and narrowed 4 others. GSA agency officials said that they took these actions in response to GAO's recommendation to better target incorrect data. The reduction in the number of anomaly categories will also reduce the number of anomalies that agencies must annually research and help ensure limited agency resources are efficiently spent correcting errors in the data, leading to more reliable real property data to support decision making thereby fulfilling the intent of the recommendation.
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General Services Administration | The Administrator of GSA should work in consultation with agencies to determine which, if any, data should be withheld from public release. (Recommendation 3) |
The Federal Assets Sale and Transfer Act of 2016 (FASTA) required the GSA to publish a single, comprehensive, and descriptive database of federal real property that would be available to the public. The database could be used for research and other potential applications. In 2020, GAO reported that the resulting public database was not complete in part because GSA decided to withhold 15 categories of data from the public database for all agencies. FASTA authorized the withholding of information from the public database for national security or procurement-related issues. GSA officials who manage the Federal Real Property Profile (FRPP) said that GSA does not have the security or intelligence expertise to issue guidance on national security issues. As a result, they sought input on what information to withhold from the Interagency Security Committee (ISC), which developed physical security policies and standards. ISC reviewed the security risks of FRPP data and provided written recommendations in a memo to GSA in November 2017. Specifically, ISC recommended that certain categories of data on assets be withheld from the public database because of the security risk that they could pose individually or in combination. GSA chose to withhold 15 FRPP data categories, including property name, annual operating costs, annual maintenance costs, and replacement value categories for all assets from the public database. GSA did this without consulting the relevant agencies on this decision, considering the specific sensitivity of these categories for all assets, or assessing the effect withholding them would have on the database. As a result, the public database was incomplete in ways that adversely affected users and limited agencies' public accountability for reporting accurate information. For example, identifying assets in the public database is difficult without the property's name-one of the data categories GSA withheld. Property names are often already in the public sphere and four stakeholders considered it one of the most important data categories for analyzing federal real property. ISC officials acknowledged that the memo that they prepared for GSA could have been clearer as to ISC's intent that departments and agencies should consider the recommendations in making a final determination. According to ISC officials, they believed that implementation would involve GSA communicating these recommendations and leaving decisions on what to withhold to officials within individual departments and agencies who control real property assets. ICS further recommended that GSA not withhold from the public database information already in the public sphere. Therefore, GAO recommended that GSA consult with agencies to determine which, if any, data should be withheld from public release. In August 2024, GSA said that they had consulted with the federal agencies to reassess what data, if any, should be withheld from the public database. GSA officials said that agencies agreed to start including many of the categories in the public database because they were not necessary for national security and were often available to the public through other sources. GAO verified that the property name, annual operating costs, annual maintenance costs, and replacement value categories are now included in the 2023 version of the public database. These additions fulfill the intent of GAO's recommendation by making the public database more complete and useful without compromising national security.
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General Services Administration | The Administrator of GSA should instruct each agency to apply a consistent, risk-based approach in determining which, if any, assets or asset-specific information should be withheld from public release. (Recommendation 4) |
In 2016, the Federal Assets Sale and Transfer Act (FASTA) directed GSA to publish a single, comprehensive, and descriptive database of federal real property that would be available to the public, while allowing it to exclude assets for reasons of national security. The database could be used for research and other potential applications. In 2020, GAO reported that the public database GSA published-a version of the Federal Real Property Profile database-was not complete because agencies decided not to provide certain useful information. For example, FCC withheld all its real property assets even though FCC's own website and regulations list the locations and functions of FCC offices. In addition, the U.S. Coast Guard withheld information on its public-recruiting offices and lighthouses that it advertises on its public website. Interagency Security Committee (ISC), consisting of 60 federal departments and agencies, officials told GAO that this was appropriate for GSA to withhold agency real property data because individual departments and agencies that control real property assets should determine what information to withhold. GSA provided agencies instructing agencies to consult ISC's mission criticality criteria and any additional internal agency criteria in determining what information to withhold from public release. ISC's criteria provided a one-page list of uses of real property assets that warrant consideration for national security exclusion but did not provide other instructions for agencies to consult while making decisions on what to withhold. OMB Circular-Management of Reporting and Data Integrity Risk further instructed agencies take a risk-based approach toward meeting reporting objectives. ISC recommended that GSA not withhold from the public database information already in the public sphere. GSA's instructions to agencies at the time lacked specifics to help agencies apply a consistent, risk-based approach in determining which, if any, assets or asset-specific information should be withheld from public release. Withholding information that is already publicly available unnecessarily reduces the completeness and utility of the public database that FASTA indicated should be comprehensive. Therefore, GAO recommended that GSA should instruct each agency to apply a consistent, risk-based approach in determining which, if any, assets or asset-specific information should be withheld from public release. In August 2024, GAO confirmed that GSA had worked with ISC to clarify what information agencies should withhold from the public. The resulting ISC memo clarified how agencies should decide what data they withhold from the public by recommending that agencies take a consistent, risk-based approach by considering, among other things, if the facility or installation was closed to the public and if the information is already available in the public. GSA then included these instructions in its updated user guide for the Federal Real Property Profile database in 2021. Clarifying these instructions will help agencies make more consistent, risk-based decisions that can increase the completeness and usefulness of the data consistent with FASTA, which meets the intent of GAO's recommendation.
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General Services Administration | The Administrator of GSA should allow agencies to provide summary data for secure installations. (Recommendation 5) |
The Federal Assets Sale and Transfer Act of 2016 (FASTA) required the General Services Administration (GSA) to publish a single, comprehensive, and descriptive database of federal real property that would be available to the public. The database could be used for research and other potential applications. In 2020, GAO reported that the resulting public database GSA published was not complete, in part, because federal agencies decided not to provide certain useful information. FASTA required GSA to develop a comprehensive database and provide the public with database access, but recognized the importance of protecting national security. In that respect, a key organizational issue faced by GSA and agencies is how to present data for reporting assets on campuses that are not accessible to the public. While non-disclosure is permitted, such actions to withhold this information may reduce the usefulness of the public database as a whole. In 2020, GAO reported that it was difficult for a user of the public database to determine when assets were located on a secure installation that the public cannot access. For example, assets located at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center are listed individually, with no indication that the assets are all located on a secure installation. The public database lists all 215 assets at the same location-Greenbelt Road in Greenbelt, MD, but provides no further indication that the assets are part of a larger, secure facility. GSA requires civilian agencies to report individual assets, including those on secure installations. Detailed, asset-specific information could be useful for government decision makers, and GSA applied this approach to the public database. However, listing assets individually could prompt fruitless public interest in inaccessible secure facilities. According to officials on a secure installation GAO visited, reporting individual buildings does not make sense because there are few, if any, legitimate reasons for public interest in the individual assets on a secure installation. The Department of Defense (DOD) takes a different approach for its secure military bases in the public database. According to GSA officials, DOD submits a separate summary-level report for public release. This summary-level information shields sensitive information and alerts users that those assets are not accessible or of use to private-sector interests. Civilian agencies' assets located on closed federal installations are similar to those on DOD bases in that the public may have less interest in or reason for knowing about assets that are not available to the public. Officials from NASA and two DHS bureaus said that the installation-level approach to reporting would be more appropriate for their circumstances than the asset-level reporting currently applied to civilian agencies and would likely allow them to release more information to the public. Therefore, GAO recommended that GSA allow agencies to provide summary data for secure installations. GSA officials said that they allowed agencies to provide summary data for secure installations and started reporting that summary level data for 12,757 installations to the public on August 14, 2024. GAO independently verified that this summary level data is now available to the public. Adding this summary level data to the public fulfills this recommendation by making the data more complete and useful.
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General Services Administration | The Administrator of GSA should link all of GSA's publicly available realproperty data sources. (Recommendation 6) |
In 2016, legislation required GSA to publish a single, comprehensive, and descriptive database of federal real property that would be available to the public. In response to the legislation, GSA created a public database-a subset of the Federal Real Property Profile's 398,000 real property assets-and made it publicly available in 2017. In 2020, GAO reported, however, that six of the 14 private sector stakeholders GAO interviewed were not aware of the public database, including a stakeholder who confused it with GSA's Lease Inventory database. Several selected stakeholders-regardless of whether or not they had used the database-cited concerns about the usefulness of the data. The lack of a single location on GSA's website that contains information about all of GSA's real property databases may contribute to the awareness, confusion, and usefulness issues expressed by these stakeholders. Specifically, the public access points to the public database, GSA's Lease Inventory database, and two other publicly available real-property databases were located in four different places on GSA's website. GSA officials agreed that there could be clearer links and said that they planned to add them based on GAO's findings. Without a consolidated webpage or clear links showing how the databases relate to each other and how to access each database, users of the various databases may not be aware of what databases do exist to search for assets that could be available to the public. Therefore, GAO recommended that GSA link all of its publicly available real property data sources. In November 2020, GAO confirmed that GSA had created a single entry point for its real property data. As a result, GSA has enhanced public access to the agency's real property databases that, in turn, should improve their usefulness and public awareness.
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