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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, U.S. 
Senate: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 9:30 a.m. EDT:
Thursday, June 28, 2011: 

U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

More Effective Management and Performance Can Help Implementation of 
the Farm Bill: 

Statement of Lisa Shames, Director,
Natural Resources and Environment: 

GAO-11-779T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-779T, a testimony before the Committee on 
Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, United States Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The current fiscal environment, ongoing deliberations for the next 
Farm Bill, and the public’s expectations for a high-performing and 
efficient government underscore the need for the U.S. Department of 
Agriculture (USDA) to focus on program results and customer needs, 
work across organizational lines to help minimize any overlap and 
duplication, and build its internal capacity. USDA comprises 15 
agencies in seven mission areas that are responsible for, among other 
things, assisting farmers and rural communities, overseeing meat and 
poultry safety, providing access to nutritious food for low-income 
families, and protecting the nation’s forests. For fiscal year 2010, 
USDA estimated that its 15 agencies would have total outlays of $129 
billion. 

This testimony highlights examples from GAO’s previous work that 
illustrate how USDA can address challenges it faces in three key 
areas: (1) the performance and accountability of USDA programs, (2) 
coordination within USDA and between USDA and other agencies to 
minimize duplication and overlap, and (3) the sufficiency of USDA 
management capacity. This testimony is based on GAO’s extensive body 
of work on USDA programs authorized under the Farm Bill and issued 
from September 2005 through May 2011. 

What GAO Found: 

USDA must ensure that its programs are being implemented efficiently 
and services are being delivered effectively, which requires it to 
review the progress it and its agencies have made in achieving program 
goals and developing strategies to improve performance and 
accountability. GAO’s work notes cases in which USDA programs have 
either met or fallen short of meeting program goals. In April 2010, 
GAO reported on domestic food assistance programs-—an area where three 
federal agencies administered 18 programs consisting of more than $90 
billion in spending in fiscal year 2010. GAO suggested that not enough 
is known about the effectiveness of these programs. Research GAO 
reviewed suggested that participation in seven USDA food assistance 
programs it examined, including four of the five largest, is 
associated with positive health and nutrition outcomes consistent with 
the programs’ goals; these goals include raising the level of 
nutrition among low-income households, safeguarding the health and 
well-being of the nation’s children, and strengthening the agriculture 
economy. Little, however, is known about the effectiveness of the 
remaining 11 programs—-9 of which are USDA programs-—because they have 
not been well studied. GAO suggested that USDA consider which of the 
lesser-studied programs need further research. 

To achieve its missions, USDA must effectively coordinate with many 
groups both within and outside the agency. GAO’s work provides 
instances of where improving coordination within USDA or across 
agencies has contributed or could contribute to improved performance 
of USDA programs. For example, in September 2005, GAO reported on USDA’
s need to improve coordination, including information-sharing and 
communication, between its Risk Management Agency (RMA) and Farm 
Service Agency (FSA) on potential fraud, waste, and abuse in the 
federal crop insurance program. For example, FSA offices in nine 
states did not conduct any of the field inspections RMA requested of 
farmers’ fields in cases of anomalous crop insurance losses or when 
farmers were suspected of poor farming practices in 1 or more of the 
years in GAO’s review. Also, RMA did not share with FSA information on 
the nature of the suspected poor farming practices or the results of 
follow-up inspections. GAO recommended actions to both agencies to 
more effectively conduct field inspections. 

USDA must have sufficient internal management capacity in the areas of 
financial management, human capital management, and information 
technology to effectively and efficiently fulfill its multiple 
missions. GAO has reported on USDA programs where improvements are 
needed in these areas. For example, GAO reported in October 2008 that 
USDA provided farm program payments to thousands of individuals with 
incomes exceeding income eligibility caps. GAO recommended that USDA 
work with the Internal Revenue Service to develop a system for 
verifying the income eligibility for recipients of all farm program 
payments, which the agencies subsequently did. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-779T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Lisa Shames at (202) 512-
3841 or shamesl@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Chairwoman Stabenow, Ranking Member Roberts, and Members of the 
Committee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss performance and management 
challenges and opportunities facing the U.S. Department of Agriculture 
(USDA). The current fiscal environment; ongoing deliberations for the 
next Farm Bill, such as this oversight hearing; and the public's 
expectations for a high-performing and efficient government underscore 
the necessity for USDA to focus on program results and customer needs, 
work across organizational boundaries to help minimize any overlap and 
duplication, and build its internal capacity. As you know, the breadth 
of USDA's responsibilities span seven broad mission areas that, among 
other things, are to assist farmers and rural communities, oversee the 
safety of meat and poultry, provide access to nutritious food for low- 
income families, and protect the nation's forests. For fiscal year 
2010, USDA reported that its 15 agencies had total outlays of $129 
billion. About 80 percent of these outlays ($103 billion) are 
associated with mandatory spending programs, including the majority of 
programs related to nutrition assistance, farm commodities, export 
promotion, and conservation. The remaining 20 percent of outlays ($26 
billion) are associated with discretionary spending programs that, in 
part, support rural development loans and grants; manage national 
forests and other Forest Service activities; address pest and disease 
threats; conduct research and education; and provide technical as well 
as domestic and international marketing assistance. 

In May 2011, the Secretary of Agriculture testified before this 
Committee, laying out an ambitious agenda for USDA as it seeks to 
address its current performance and management issues and take 
advantage of emerging opportunities. Achieving this agenda will 
require USDA to tackle several challenges as it works to carry out its 
multifaceted mission and, more immediately, to meet the mandates in 
the next Farm Bill. Our work across the federal government has 
highlighted challenges agencies face as they focus on desired 
outcomes. Congress has put in place a statutory framework that 
addresses long-standing management problems that undermined the 
federal government's efficiency and effectiveness and provide greater 
accountability for results. This framework is to improve the federal 
government's effectiveness, accountability, and service delivery and 
enhance congressional decision making. Specifically, the Government 
Performance and Results Act Modernization Act of 2010 (GPRAMA) offers 
important opportunities for USDA, as well as other agencies, to focus 
attention on successfully improving the effectiveness of their 
programs and operations. For example, GPRAMA significantly enhances 
requirements for agencies to consult with Congress when establishing 
or adjusting governmentwide and agency goals. Through these 
consultations, Congress can identify performance and management issues 
that USDA needs to address and consider this information as it drafts 
the Farm Bill and oversees its implementation. 

My testimony today highlights examples drawn from our previous work 
that illustrate how USDA can address challenges it faces in the 
following three key areas: (1) the performance and accountability of 
USDA programs, (2) coordination within USDA and between USDA and other 
agencies to minimize overlap and duplication, and (3) the sufficiency 
of USDA management capacity. I will also highlight in my statement 
opportunities where GPRAMA, which the administration recently began 
implementing, can help USDA address some of these challenges. This 
statement is based on our extensive body of work on USDA programs 
authorized under the Farm Bill and issued from September 2005 through 
May 2011. We conducted the performance audit work that supports this 
statement in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Additional information on our scope and methodology is 
available in each issued product. 

Performance and Accountability of USDA Programs: 

USDA must ensure that its programs are being implemented efficiently 
and services are being delivered effectively. To do so, USDA must 
review the progress it has made in achieving program goals and 
developing strategies to address any gaps in performance and 
accountability. To help USDA, and other agencies, address the 
challenge of improving the performance and accountability of their 
programs, GPRAMA creates several new leadership structures and 
responsibilities aimed at sustaining attention on improvement efforts. 
For example, the act designates the deputy head of each agency as 
Chief Operating Officer (COO), who has overall responsibility for 
improving the performance and management of the agency. The act also 
requires each agency to designate a senior executive as Performance 
Improvement Officer (PIO) to support the COO. 

USDA, along with other agencies, is to continue to develop annual 
performance goals that will lead to the accomplishment of its 
strategic goals. In addition, the head of each agency must now 
identify priority goals. These goals must (1) reflect the priorities 
of the agency and be informed by the federal government's priority 
goals and consultations with Congress; (2) have ambitious targets that 
can be achieved within 2 years; (3) have a goal leader responsible for 
achieving each goal; and (4) have quarterly performance targets and 
milestones. In addition, at least quarterly, the agency head, COO, and 
PIO are to coordinate with relevant personnel who contribute to 
achieving the goal, from within and outside the agency; assess whether 
relevant organizations, program activities, regulations, policies, and 
other activities are contributing as planned to achieving the goal; 
categorize goals by their risk of not being achieved; and, for those 
at greatest risk, identify strategies to improve performance. 

Our recent work has identified challenges to be met in improving 
program performance and accountability in the Forest Service and 
domestic food assistance programs. 

* Forest Service. In March 2011, we testified that the Forest Service 
had not fully resolved performance accountability concerns that we 
raised in a 2009 testimony.[Footnote 1] As we noted, the agency's long-
standing performance accountability problems include an inability to 
link planning, budgeting, and results reporting. In other words, the 
Forest Service could not meaningfully compare its cost information 
with its performance measures. We also testified that while the Forest 
Service, along with Interior agencies that have responsibilities for 
fighting wildland fires, had taken steps to help contain wildland fire 
costs, they had not yet clearly defined their cost-containment goals 
or developed a strategy for achieving these goals--steps we first 
recommended in 2007.[Footnote 2] Agency officials identified several 
agency documents that they stated clearly define goals and objectives 
and that make up their strategy to contain costs. However, these 
documents lacked the clarity and specificity needed by officials in 
the field to help manage and contain wildland fire costs. We therefore 
continue to believe that the Forest Service will be challenged in 
managing its cost containment efforts and in improving its ability to 
contain wildland fire costs until the agency clearly defines its cost- 
containment goals and strategy for achieving them. 

* Domestic food assistance programs. Our work on domestic food 
assistance programs--an area where three federal agencies administer 
18 programs, consisting of more than $90 billion in spending in fiscal 
year 2010--suggests not enough is known about the effectiveness of 
these programs.[Footnote 3] Research we reviewed suggests that 
participation in seven of the USDA food assistance programs we 
examined, including four of the five largest--Special Supplemental 
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children; the National 
School Lunch Program; the School Breakfast Program; and the 
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program--is associated with positive 
health and nutrition outcomes consistent with the programs' goals. 
These goals include raising the level of nutrition among low-income 
households, safeguarding the health and well-being of the nation's 
children, and strengthening the agriculture economy. However, little 
is known about the effectiveness of the remaining 11 programs--9 of 
which are USDA programs--because they have not been well studied. GAO 
suggested that USDA consider which of the lesser-studied programs need 
further research, and USDA agreed to consider the value of examining 
potential inefficiencies and overlap among smaller programs. 

Coordination within USDA and between USDA and Other Agencies to Help 
Minimize Overlap and Duplication: 

USDA must effectively coordinate with many groups within and outside 
of the agency to achieve its missions. GPRAMA establishes a new 
framework aimed at taking a more crosscutting and integrated approach 
to focusing on results and improving performance--within agencies and 
across the federal government. At the governmentwide level, the act 
requires the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), in 
coordination with executive branch agencies, to develop--every 4 
years--long-term, outcome-oriented goals for a limited number of 
crosscutting policy areas. On an annual basis, the Director of OMB is 
to provide information on how these long-term goals will be achieved, 
and agencies are to describe how they are working with each other to 
achieve the crosscutting goals. 

Additional GPRAMA requirements could lead to improved coordination and 
collaboration for achieving agency-level goals as well. For example, 
the act requires each agency to identify the various organizations and 
program activities--within and external to the agency--that contribute 
to each of its goals. Also, as described earlier, GPRAMA requires top 
leadership and program officials to be involved in quarterly reviews, 
and to assess whether these organizations and program activities are 
contributing as planned to the agency's priority goals. 

Based on our prior work, we have identified the following examples 
that illustrate how improving coordination within USDA or across 
agencies has contributed or could contribute to the improved 
performance of USDA programs. 

* Farm program agencies. In September 2005, we reported on the need 
for improved coordination, including information-sharing and 
communication, between the Risk Management Agency (RMA) and Farm 
Service Agency (FSA).[Footnote 4] Under USDA guidance, RMA is to 
provide FSA with a list of farmers who have had anomalous crop 
insurance losses or who are suspected of poor farming practices. Staff 
in FSA county offices review these cases for potential fraud, waste, 
and abuse by inspecting the farmers' fields and then referring the 
results of these inspections to RMA. However, we found FSA conducted 
about 64 percent of the inspections RMA requested, and FSA offices in 
nine states did not conduct any of the field inspections RMA requested 
in 1 or more of the years in our review. We also found that FSA may 
not be as effective as possible in conducting field inspections 
because RMA does not share with FSA information on the nature of 
anomalous crop insurance losses and suspected poor farming practices, 
or the results of follow-up inspections. In addition, FSA state 
officials told us that inspectors are reluctant to conduct field 
inspections because they believe RMA and insurance companies that 
administer the crop insurance program do not use the information to 
deny claims for farmers who do not employ good farming practices. In 
view of these weaknesses, we made a number of recommendations to RMA 
and FSA to improve the effectiveness of field inspections. In 
response, RMA implemented most of our recommendations, but FSA stated 
that it does not have sufficient resources to complete all field 
inspections. We expect to report in fiscal year 2012 on the results of 
our work currently under way in this area examining whether 
coordination between the agencies has improved. 

* Veterinarian workforce. Our past work has indicated that problems 
with USDA's management of its veterinarian workforce have contributed 
to competition among USDA agencies for these staff. Veterinarians play 
a vital role in the defense against animal diseases--whether naturally 
or intentionally introduced--and these diseases can have serious 
repercussions for the health of animals and humans, and for the 
nation's economy. However, there is a growing shortage of 
veterinarians nationwide--particularly those veterinarians who care 
for animals raised for food, serve in rural communities, and are 
trained in public health. We reported in February 2009 that this 
shortage has the potential to place human health, the economy, and 
nation's food supply at risk.[Footnote 5] Specifically, we found that 
USDA had not assessed the sufficiency of its veterinarian workforce 
departmentwide, despite the fact that its agencies that employed 
mission-critical veterinarians were currently experiencing shortages 
or anticipating shortages in the future. As a result, USDA agencies 
competed against one another for veterinarians instead of following a 
departmentwide strategy to balance the needs of these agencies. In 
particular, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) was 
attracting veterinarians away from the Food Safety Inspection Service 
because the work at APHIS was more appealing, opportunities for 
advancement were greater, and the salaries were higher. Moreover, USDA 
was not fully aware of the status of its veterinarian workforce at its 
agencies and, therefore, could not strategically plan for future 
veterinarian needs. 

We recommended, among other things, that USDA conduct an assessment of 
its veterinarian workforce to identify current and future workforce 
needs while also taking into consideration training and employee 
development needs and that a governmentwide approach be considered to 
address shortcomings. In response, the Office of Personnel Management-
-whose mission is to ensure the federal government has an effective 
civilian workforce--and relevant federal agencies, including USDA, 
created an interagency forum and developed a strategic workforce plan 
to obtain a governmentwide understanding of the current status and 
future needs of the federal veterinarian workforce. This is a positive 
step, but more work remains. For example, USDA still needs to complete 
a departmentwide assessment of its veterinarian workforce and create 
shared solutions to agency problems, which according to a senior 
agency official, it plans to do by the end of July 2011. Moreover, 
steps are still necessary to understand the veterinarian workforce 
needed during a potential catastrophic event--whether a pandemic or an 
attack on the food supply. 

* Rural economic development. Our past work indicates that in failing 
to find ways to collaborate more, USDA and the Small Business 
Administration (SBA) are missing opportunities to leverage each 
other's unique strengths to more effectively promote rural economic 
development and that they may fail to use taxpayer dollars in the most 
efficient manner. For example, we reported in September 2008 that the 
main causes for limited agency collaboration between these agencies 
include few incentives to collaborate and an absence of reliable 
guidance on consistent and effective collaboration.[Footnote 6] We 
found that SBA and USDA appear to have taken actions to implement some 
collaborative practices, such as defining and articulating common 
outcomes, for some of their related programs. However, the agencies 
have offered little evidence so far that they have taken steps to 
develop compatible policies or procedures or to search for 
opportunities to leverage physical and administrative resources with 
their federal partners. Moreover, we found that most of the 
collaborative efforts performed by program staff in the field that we 
have been able to assess to date have occurred only on a case-by-case 
basis. As a result, it appears that USDA and SBA do not consistently 
monitor or evaluate these collaborative efforts in a way that allows 
them to identify areas for improvement. 

* Genetically engineered (GE) crops. GE crops--crops that are 
engineered to resist pests or tolerate herbicides--are widespread in 
the United States and around the world. USDA, the Environmental 
Protection Agency (EPA), and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 
regulate GE crops to ensure that they are safe. However, critics of GE 
crops want them to be labeled as GE crops and kept separate from non-
GD crops. Unauthorized releases of GE crops into food, animal feed, or 
the environment beyond farm fields have occurred, and it is likely 
that such incidents will occur again. As we reported in November 2008, 
[Footnote 7] USDA, EPA, and FDA routinely coordinate their oversight 
and regulation of GE crops in many respects but could improve their 
efforts. For example, the agencies do not have a coordinated program 
for monitoring the use of marketed GE crops to determine whether the 
spread of genetic traits is causing undesirable effects on the 
environment, non-GE segments of agriculture, or food safety--actions 
that the National Research Council and others have recommended. 

To help ensure that unintended consequences arising from the marketing 
of GE crops are detected and minimized, we recommended in 2008 that 
the agencies develop a coordinated strategy for monitoring marketed GE 
crops and use the results to inform their oversight of these crops. 
Such a strategy should adopt a risk-based approach to identify the 
types of marketed GE crops that warrant monitoring, such as those with 
the greatest potential for affecting the environment or non-GE 
segments of agriculture or those that might threaten food safety 
through the unintentional introduction of pharmaceutical or industrial 
compounds into the food supply. The strategy should also identify 
criteria for determining when monitoring is no longer needed. To date, 
the agencies have not implemented this recommendation. 

Sufficiency of USDA Management Capacity: 

USDA must have sufficient internal management capacity to effectively 
and efficiently fulfill its multiple missions. As part of the new 
governmentwide framework created by GPRAMA, the Director of OMB is 
required to develop long-term goals to improve management functions 
across the government in various areas, and agencies, including USDA, 
are required to describe how their efforts contribute to these goals. 
Among these areas are (1) financial management, (2) human capital 
management, and (3) information technology. The following are 
examples, drawn from our work, of USDA programs where improvements are 
needed in these areas: 

* Financial management. We reported in March 2011 that improper 
payment estimates for USDA have increased by about $1 billion--from 
approximately $4 billion to a little more than $5 billion from 2009 to 
2010.[Footnote 8] Some USDA programs or activities experienced 
increases in improper payments, while others decreased. For example, 
the level of estimated improper payments associated with the Federal 
Crop Insurance Corporation Program Fund more than doubled during this 
time, from $205 million in fiscal year 2009 to $525 million in fiscal 
year 2010. On the other hand, in April 2011, we noted that USDA 
reported a decrease in estimated improper payments for the Marketing 
Assistance Loan program from $85 million to $35 million.[Footnote 9] 
USDA reported that corrective actions taken to reduce improper 
payments included providing additional training and instruction on 
improper payment control procedures, and integrating employees' 
individual performance results related to reducing improper payments 
into their annual performance ratings. 

Our past work has also highlighted other areas where USDA needs to 
strengthen management controls to prevent improper payments. For 
example, we reported in October 2008 that USDA provided farm program 
payments to thousands of individuals with incomes exceeding income 
eligibility caps.[Footnote 10] We recommended that USDA work with the 
Internal Revenue Service to develop a system for verifying the income 
eligibility for all recipients of farm program payments, which the 
agencies subsequently did. We also reported in July 2007 that USDA 
paid $1.1 billion in such payments to more than 170,000 deceased 
individuals during the period 1999 through 2005.[Footnote 11] Because 
USDA generally was unaware that these individuals were deceased, it 
did not have assurance that these payments were proper. We made 
recommendations to address this problem and, in response, USDA revised 
and strengthened guidance to its field offices for reviewing the 
eligibility of these individuals' estates to continue to receive 
payments. The agency also completed implementation of a data-matching 
and review process between its payment files and the Social Security 
Administration's master file of deceased individuals to identify 
program payment recipients who are deceased. 

* Human capital. We have also reported on issues related to problems 
in USDA's civil rights program. For decades, there have been 
allegations of discrimination in USDA programs and in its workforce. 
Numerous federal reports have described serious weaknesses in USDA's 
civil rights program--particularly in resolving discrimination 
complaints and in providing minority farmers with access to programs. 
In 2002, Congress authorized the position of Assistant Secretary for 
Civil Rights at USDA to provide leadership for resolving these long-
standing problems. In October 2008, we reported that the Office of the 
Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights had not achieved its goal of 
preventing backlogs of complaints and that this goal was undermined by 
the office's faulty reporting of, and disparities in, its data. Also, 
some steps the office took to speed up its work may have adversely 
affected the quality of that work. 

Because of these concerns, we recommended that the Secretary of 
Agriculture implement plans to improve how USDA resolves 
discrimination complaints and ensure the reliability of the office's 
databases on customer and employee complaints.[Footnote 12] We also 
recommended that USDA obtain an independent legal examination of a 
sample of USDA's prior investigations and decisions on civil rights 
complaints. In addition, we reported that the office's strategic 
planning does not address key steps needed to ensure USDA provides 
fair and equitable services to all customers and upholds the civil 
rights of its employees. We further recommended that the Secretary of 
Agriculture develop a strategic plan for civil rights at USDA that 
unifies USDA's departmental approach with that of the Office of the 
Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights and that is transparent about 
USDA's efforts to address the concerns of stakeholders. In April 2009, 
we reported that difficulties persisted in the Office of the Assistant 
Secretary for Civil Rights in resolving discrimination complaints. 
[Footnote 13] 

As recently as March 2011, an extensive assessment of civil rights at 
USDA raised issues related to many of our 2008 recommendations and 
made recommendations consistent with them.[Footnote 14] This 
assessment included a total of 234 recommendations to help USDA 
improve its performance on civil rights issues. The administration has 
committed to giving priority attention to USDA's civil rights 
problems, and the agency has pointed to progress made in recent years. 
However, USDA has been addressing allegations of discrimination for 
decades and receiving recommendations for improving its civil rights 
functions without achieving fundamental improvements. 

* Information technology. In recent reports, we have raised concerns 
about the overall security of USDA's computerized information systems. 
USDA relies on these systems to carry out its financial and mission- 
related operations. Effective information security controls are 
required to ensure that financial and sensitive information is 
adequately protected from inadvertent or deliberate misuse; fraudulent 
use; and improper disclosure, modification, or destruction. 
Ineffective controls can also impair the accuracy, completeness, and 
timeliness of information used by management. Our analysis of our 
reports and USDA's Office of Inspector General (OIG) reports regarding 
the security of these systems shows that USDA has not consistently 
implemented effective controls, such as those intended to prevent, 
limit, and detect unauthorized access to its systems or manage the 
configuration of network devices to prevent unauthorized access and 
ensure system integrity. For example, in March and November 2010, we 
reported on the need for federal agencies, including USDA, to improve 
implementation of information security controls such as those for 
configuring desktop computers and wireless communication devices. 
[Footnote 15] The OIG identified information technology security as a 
significant management challenge for fiscal year 2010. The need for 
effective information security is further underscored by the evolving 
and growing cyber threats to federal systems and the dramatic increase 
in the number of security incidents reported by federal agencies, 
including USDA. From fiscal year 2007 to fiscal year 2010, the number 
of incidents reported by USDA to the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness 
Team, based in the Department of Homeland Security,[Footnote 16] 
increased by more than 330 percent. 

In summary, as deliberations on reauthorizing the Farm Bill begin, 
GPRAMA provides USDA and Congress with new tools to identify and 
oversee the most important performance issues and program areas 
warranting review. In light of the nation's long-term fiscal 
challenge, this reexamination of the contributions that federal 
programs, including USDA programs, make to achieving outcomes for the 
American people is critical. GAO stands ready to help Congress in its 
application of GPRAMA tools to its oversight of USDA programs and its 
deliberations on Farm Bill reauthorization. 

Madam Chairwoman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be 
pleased to respond to any questions that you or other Members of the 
Committee may have. 

Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Contact points for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public 
Affairs may be found on the last page of this statement. For further 
information about this testimony, please contact Lisa Shames, 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment, (202) 512-3841 or 
ShamesL@gao.gov. Key contributors to this statement were James R. 
Jones, Jr., Assistant Director; Kevin Bray; Gary Brown; Mallory Barg 
Bulman; Ross Campbell; Tom Cook; Larry Crosland; Mary Denigan-
Macauley; Andrew Finkel; Steve Gaty; Sandra Kerr; Kathy Larin; 
Benjamin Licht; Paula Moore; Ken Rupar; Linda Sanders; Carol 
Herrnstadt Shulman; Nico Sloss; Kiki Theodoropoulus; and Lisa Turner. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Forest Service: Continued Work Needed to Address Persistent 
Management Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-423T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 10, 
2011) and Forest Service: Emerging Issues Highlight the Need to 
Address Persistent Management Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-443T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 11, 
2009). 

[2] GAO, Wildland Fire Management: Lack of Clear Goals or a Strategy 
Hinders Federal Agencies' Efforts to Contain the Costs of Fighting 
Fires, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-655] 
(Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2007). 

[3] GAO, Managing for Results: GPRA Modernization Act Implementation 
Provides Important Opportunities to Address Government Challenges, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-617T] (Washington, 
D.C.: May 10, 2011), and Domestic Food Assistance: Complex System 
Benefits Millions, but Additional Efforts Could Address Potential 
Inefficiency and Overlap among Smaller Programs, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-346], (Washington, D.C.: April 15, 
2010). 

[4] GAO, Crop Insurance: Actions Needed to Reduce Program's 
Vulnerability to Fraud, Waste, and Abuse, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-528] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 30, 
2005). 

[5] GAO, Veterinarian Workforce: Actions Are Needed to Ensure 
Sufficient Capacity for Protecting Public and Animal Health, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-178] (Washington, D.C.: 
Feb. 4, 2009). 

[6] GAO, Rural Economic Development: Collaboration between SBA and 
USDA Could Be Improved, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1123] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 18, 
2008). 

[7] GAO, Genetically Engineered Crops: Agencies Are Proposing Changes 
to Improve Oversight, but Could Take Additional Steps to Enhance 
Coordination and Monitoring, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-60] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 5, 
2008). 

[8] GAO, Status of Fiscal Year 2010 Federal Improper Payments 
Reporting, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-443R] 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 25, 2011). 

[9] GAO, Improper Payments: Recent Efforts to Address Improper 
Payments and Remaining Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-575T] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 15, 
2011). 

[10] GAO, Federal Farm Programs: USDA Needs to Strengthen Controls to 
Prevent Payments to Individuals Who Exceed Income Eligibility Limits, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-67] (Washington, D.C.: 
Oct. 24, 2008). 

[11] Federal Farm Programs: USDA Needs to Strengthen Controls to 
Prevent Improper Payments to Estates and Deceased Individuals, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-818], July 9, 2007. 

[12] GAO, U.S. Department of Agriculture: Recommendations and Options 
to Address Management Deficiencies in the Office of the Assistant 
Secretary for Civil Rights, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-62] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 22, 
2008). 

[13] GAO, U.S. Department of Agriculture: Recommendations and Options 
Available to the New Administration and Congress to Address Long- 
Standing Civil Rights Issues, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-650T] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 29, 
2009). 

[14] Jackson Lewis LLP, "United States Department of Agriculture: 
Independent Assessment of the Delivery of Technical and Financial 
Assistance," (Mar. 31, 2011). 

[15] GAO, Information Security: Agencies Need to Implement Federal 
Desktop Core Configuration Requirements, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-202] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 12, 
2010). GAO, Information Security: Federal Agencies Have Taken Steps to 
Secure Wireless Networks, but Further Actions Can Mitigate Risk, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-43] (Washington, D.C.: 
Nov. 30, 2010). 

[16] When incidents occur, agencies are to notify the federal 
information security incident center--(US-CERT). 

[End of section] 

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