Skip to main content

Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act: Additional Steps Needed to Help States Collect Complete Enrollment Information

GAO-23-104830 Published: Nov 16, 2022. Publicly Released: Nov 16, 2022.
Jump To:

Fast Facts

The Departments of Labor and Education oversee 6 core workforce development programs that help job seekers find work and employers find qualified employees.

The departments require the programs to submit data on their participants, and have taken steps to help them do so. But the departments still don't have complete data on participants who are enrolled in multiple programs. For example, program data submitted to Labor didn't include co-enrollment information on up to 67% of participants.

We recommended addressing this so the departments can assess program effectiveness and determine whether enrollment in multiple programs helps participants.

Skip to Highlights

Highlights

What GAO Found

The U.S. Departments of Labor (DOL) and Education have created a common data structure that standardizes the information states are required to collect on the participants and performance of the six programs the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (the Act) identifies as core.

The Six Core Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act Programs Overseen by the U.S. Departments of Labor and Education

The Six Core Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act Programs Overseen by the U.S. Departments of Labor and Education

According to officials from both departments and stakeholder groups GAO interviewed, it can be challenging for the six core programs to collect data on participants' employment and education outcomes. Reasons they cited for these challenges included decentralized data and the need to protect the confidentiality of program participant information. The departments have provided guidance and technical assistance to address such challenges, including data sharing strategies to obtain this information from outside agencies in ways that help protect confidentiality.

However, GAO found both departments lack complete information on participants enrolled in multiple programs. This is known as co-enrollment and is one strategy for achieving coordinated service delivery, according to DOL. For example, DOL program data did not include co-enrollment information for up to 67 percent of participants who may have also been enrolled in Education's programs. Officials said that reliance on participant self-reported information and limited data sharing across programs contributed to incomplete co-enrollment information. More complete co-enrollment information would help the departments better identify whether participants receive services from multiple programs and if doing so results in positive employment outcomes. It would also help evaluate whether the Act is achieving its vision of aligned and coordinated service delivery.

Both departments have made progress implementing the Act's performance assessment process. They have negotiated interim performance targets with the core programs they oversee and DOL assessed the performance of the core programs it oversees against two final employment outcome targets. Both departments plan to fully implement the performance assessment process in the future.

Why GAO Did This Study

The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act supports coordination among various federally funded workforce development programs. It seeks to help job seekers find work and employers find qualified employees. It also envisions aligned and coordinated service delivery across programs and prescribes common indicators of program performance. GAO was asked to review how information on program participants and performance is collected, and how DOL and Education use this information to assess program performance.

This report examines (1) what is known about DOL and Education efforts to collect required information on the Act's core program participation and performance outcomes, and (2) the extent to which DOL and Education have established performance targets and assessed core programs against them.

GAO reviewed guidance, the Act and its relevant regulations, other relevant department and state-submitted documents, and program-level information for July 2020 through June 2021. GAO also interviewed DOL and Education officials. Finally, GAO interviewed stakeholders from 10 organizations selected for their multi-state perspectives or other expertise on the Act's performance information.

Recommendations

GAO is making two recommendations that DOL and Education each work together to better collect complete information on co-enrollment. Both departments agreed with these recommendations.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Sort descending Recommendation Status
Department of Education The Secretary of Education should work with the Secretary of Labor to determine how to better assist WIOA core programs in collecting complete information on co-enrollment, for example, by providing additional information or technical assistance to help states better share information on participants across programs. (Recommendation 2)
Open – Partially Addressed
Education has provided technical assistance to states to improve the accuracy and completeness of co-enrollment data. For example, in March 2023, Education and the Department of Labor (DOL) held a joint webinar with state programs on co-enrollment best practices, data collection and reporting. This webinar continues to be available on DOL's Workforce GPS website. In addition, Education reports it targeted technical assistance to specific states to help them more accurately collect data on co-enrollment and expects that all states will report co-enrollment data in Statewide Performance Reports due to the Department on October 1, 2023. Education also described future actions or improvements related to co-enrollment data, such as clarifying instructions for reporting co-enrollment in a data collection form to be revised in 2024. We will consider closing this recommendation once these actions have been completed and reflected in state reporting.
Department of Labor The Secretary of Labor should work with the Secretary of Education to determine how to better assist WIOA core programs in collecting complete information on co-enrollment, for example, by providing additional information or technical assistance to help states better share information on participants across programs. (Recommendation 1)
Open
The Department of Labor (DOL) agreed with this recommendation. As of December 2022, DOL stated that it will continue to partner with Education to emphasize the importance of collecting complete and accurate co-enrollment information and provide additional support to states. We will monitor the progress of these efforts.

Full Report

GAO Contacts

Office of Public Affairs

Topics

Adult educationEducation programsEmployment outcomesLabor forcePerformance measurementVocational rehabilitationWorkforce developmentYouth education programsYouth employment programsYouth programs