Skip to main content

Overlap and Duplication: Federal Inspections of Entities Registered with the Select Agent Program

GAO-13-154 Published: Jan 31, 2013. Publicly Released: Mar 04, 2013.
Jump To:
Skip to Highlights

Highlights

What GAO Found

About 15 percent of entities registered to work with select agents were subject to inspection overlap (multiple federal agencies inspecting within a 2-year period). Entities experiencing overlap tended to be larger ones, with more laboratories, principal investigators, and staff. Although there was overlap between Department of Transportation (DOT) inspections and those of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), they were generally not duplicative because specific inspection activities tended to differ, according to GAO's survey of entities experiencing overlap. For example, DOT inspections tended to focus on transportation issues, such as checking hazardous materials and transportation security plans, rather than general biosafety issues. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Department of Defense (DOD) inspections, however, tended to be more duplicative with those of CDC and APHIS. For example, both review the same documents, require safety and security demonstrations, conduct inventory inspections and personnel interviews, and provide corrective action plans. While inspections are important for safety and compliance, there is no value added when federal agencies are expending resources to conduct the same work and, in some cases, reinspecting before entities have had time to respond to findings from a previous inspection.

The costs of overlapping federal inspections and effects on lab operations are difficult to quantify because agencies and entities generally do not track them and some costs are not quantifiable. Although GAO could not quantify the portion of federal and entity costs directly attributable to overlap, it could quantify the costs of inspections in general. According to agency data, the approximate overall federal cost for fiscal years 2010 and 2011 inspections was $2.1 million dollars. On average, the entity costs per inspection were nearly $15,000, and staff time per inspection was 380 hours, according to the GAO survey. While surveyed entities reported that inspections can help correct deficiencies and improve accountability, most reported moderate to significant nonquantifiable costs of inspections due to loss of productivity and delays in research. In addition, according to surveyed entities, overlapping inspections negatively affected lab productivity, staff morale, available time to complete research, and the research schedule. Because many of these entities are federal laboratories or are funded through federal grants, these costs are passed on to the federal government.

Actions to reduce the costs of overlapping and duplicative inspections include better coordination among federal agencies and greater consistency in the application of standards, according to various experts and surveyed entities. CDC has taken actions to better coordinate inspections with other agencies, for example, by increasing the use of joint inspections. But such actions, including joint inspections, do not fully address the negative effects of multiple inspections if agencies apply inconsistent standards and develop separate reports of findings. Well-trained inspectors, who apply consistent standards, are also needed. Collectively, these actions would reduce the negative effects of overlap and duplication and could increase agencies' acceptance of each other's inspection results.

Why GAO Did This Study

Between 2009 and 2011, there were roughly 374 entities across the United States conducting research with select agents such as anthrax, which have the potential to threaten health and safety. Inspections are one means of ensuring safety and compliance with regulations. However, several federal agencies--CDC, APHIS, DOT, DHS, and DOD--conduct such inspections, creating significant potential for overlap and duplication of effort. In this context, GAO was asked to assess (1) the extent of overlap and potential duplication in federal inspections of select agent entities, (2) the costs of such overlap and effects on laboratory operations, and (3) actions to reduce the costs and negative effects of any overlap. To answer these objectives, GAO analyzed agency data, surveyed entities, held focus groups with lab staff, and interviewed agency officials.

Recommendations

GAO recommends that CDC and APHIS work with DHS and DOD to coordinate inspections and ensure consistent application of inspection standards.

HHS, USDA, DHS, and DOD generally agreed with our recommendations and noted various actions they have already taken, or plan to take, to coordinate inspection efforts.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service In order to eliminate overlapping and potentially duplicative inspections, as well as reduce the burden of such overlap and duplication on select agent entities, CDC and APHIS, as the primary agencies with regulatory authority, should work with DHS and DOD to coordinate inspections of select agent entities.
Closed – Implemented
In accordance with Executive Order 13546 (Optimizing the Security of Biological Select Agents and Toxins in the United States), the Directors of the FSAP convened an interagency working group to execute sections 6(a) (Coordination of Federal Oversight for Biological Select Agents and Toxins (BSAT) Security and 8 (Sharing of Select Agent Program Information) of the executive order. This interagency working group, which includes representatives from the Department of Energy (DOE), Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Defense (DOD), and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), has developed procedures through Memoranda of Understanding to better coordinate the inspection of entities that are federally owned or federally funded.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention In order to eliminate overlapping and potentially duplicative inspections, as well as reduce the burden of such overlap and duplication on select agent entities, CDC and APHIS, as the primary agencies with regulatory authority, should work with DHS and DOD to coordinate inspections of select agent entities.
Closed – Implemented
In accordance with Executive Order 13546 (Optimizing the Security of Biological Select Agents and Toxins in the United States), the Directors of the FSAP convened an interagency working group to execute sections 6(a) (Coordination of Federal Oversight for Biological Select Agents and Toxins (BSAT) Security and 8 (Sharing of Select Agent Program Information) of the executive order. This interagency working group, which includes representatives from the Department of Energy (DOE), Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Defense (DOD), and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), has developed procedures through Memoranda of Understanding to better coordinate the inspection of entities that are federally owned or federally funded.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service In order to eliminate overlapping and potentially duplicative inspections, as well as reduce the burden of such overlap and duplication on select agent entities, CDC and APHIS, as the primary agencies with regulatory authority, should work with DHS and DOD to where possible, use mechanisms such as (a) joint inspections with a single report of findings, (b) acceptance of each other's inspection results rather than independent inspections, and (c) cross-agency training opportunities to ensure consistent application of biosafety, biosecurity, and biocontainment inspection standards.
Closed – Implemented
Since the initiation of the joint inspection program in fall 2010 through March, 2015, the Federal Select Agent Program (FSAP) has participated in forty-seven joint inspections with other members of the interagency working group. As a part of this joint inspection initiative, the FSAP has provided training to the interagency working group partners to provide the extramural inspectors with the same knowledge, skills and experience to that provided to FSAP inspectors. The working group has also addressed section 8 (Sharing of Select Agent and Toxin Program Information) of the executive order by improving information sharing of inspection data between departments and agencies. Memoranda of Understanding on the sharing of information have been executed between the FSAP and DHS, DOD, EPA, DOE, and Veterans Health Administration.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention In order to eliminate overlapping and potentially duplicative inspections, as well as reduce the burden of such overlap and duplication on select agent entities, CDC and APHIS, as the primary agencies with regulatory authority, should work with DHS and DOD to where possible, use mechanisms such as (a) joint inspections with a single report of findings, (b) acceptance of each other's inspection results rather than independent inspections, and (c) cross-agency training opportunities to ensure consistent application of biosafety, biosecurity, and biocontainment inspection standards.
Closed – Implemented
Since the initiation of the joint inspection program in fall 2010 through March, 2015, the FSAP has participated in forty-seven joint inspections with other members of the interagency working group. As a part of this joint inspection initiative, the FSAP has provided training to the interagency working group partners to provide the extramural inspectors with the same knowledge, skills and experience to that provided to FSAP inspectors. The working group has also addressed section 8 (Sharing of Select Agent and Toxin Program Information) of the executive order by improving information sharing of inspection data between departments and agencies. Memoranda of Understanding on the sharing of information have been executed between the FSAP and DHS, DOD, EPA, DOE, and Veterans Health Administration.

Full Report

GAO Contacts

Topics

Federal agenciesCommerceFederal laboratoriesFederal grantsHealth and safetyRedundancyHomeland securityAnthraxTransportation securityDisease control