Improved Financial Performance
All agencies meet accelerated November 15th deadline for audited financial statements
Receive clean opinion on all audited financial statements
GAO audit of government-wide financial statements
Resolve auditor-identified and Integrity Act material weaknesses in internal control
Agency funds are disbursed in strict compliance with appropriations law
Financial systems are integrated and provide timely and reliable financial information
Financial and performance information is routinely considered during operational evaluation and decision-making
Monthly financial performance metrics reported, tracked vs. goals, and available on line at agency and government-wide levels
Streamline and achieve greater transparency in the grants management process
Eliminate investments in redundant Financial Management Systems via migration to standardized core software
Substantially reduce erroneous payments
Consolidate payroll providers government-wide (est. savings of $1.2 billion in next 10 years)
Goals for July 1, 2004
Owner: Linda Springer
Owner: Linda Springer
Overall: | 25% | 35% | Note: Bullets indicate % of agencies (and/or attainments) that Initiative Owner believes will have achieved the bolded goal by July 2004 |
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- 100% of agencies will be on track for FY 2004
- 50% of all agencies will have met deadline in 2003, one year ahead of schedule
- 95% (all but DoD) of all agencies in both FY 2003 and FY 2004
- Will be on track for at least a civilian-only audit in FY 2004
- 80% of all agencies will have achieved 50% reduction in auditor and Integrity Act Sec. 2 weaknesses
- 95% of all agencies will have achieved 50% reduction in Integrity Act Sec. 4 weaknesses
- No more than 10% of all agencies will have no anti-deficiency act violations
- 50% of all agencies will have systems that comply with FFMIA
- 25% of all agencies
- 100% of agencies will have reported and provided analysis of results using new reporting tool
- Maximize grant applicants' use of e-grants to find and apply for grants
- Document administrative and supplies cost savings and reduced processing time
- 100% of all grant making agencies will have met the unique identifier requirement
- Conversion/migration strategy will have been put in place; agencies identified for initial migration
- All agencies will have measured, determined causes, and taken remedial actions to address
- $3 - 5 billion less in improper payments from current $35 billion baseline will have been achieved
- Initial group of 8 agencies will have completed migration
- Balance will be on track for November 2004 migration
- If IRS had additional resources ($140 million) with which to reduce erroneous EITC payments, government-wide erroneous payments could be reduced by an additional $1.4 billion.
- If DoD produced auditable financial statements by FY 2004, GAO could complete a government-wide - not just civilian - financial statement audit.
Key Milestones - What the Initiative Owner will do:
All agencies meet accelerated November 15th deadline for audited financial statements | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Q3/2003 |
|
Ongoing |
|
Receive clean opinion on all audited financial statements | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Q2/2004 |
|
Ongoing |
|
GAO audit of government-wide financial statements | |
Q4/2003 |
|
Q4/2003 |
|
Q2/2004 |
|
Q4/2004 |
|
Resolve auditor-identified and Integrity Act material weaknesses in internal control | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Q2/2004 |
|
Agency funds are disbursed in strict compliance with appropriations law | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Financial systems are integrated and provide timely and reliable financial information | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Financial and performance information is routinely considered during operational evaluation and decision-making | |
Q2/2003 |
|
Monthly financial performance metrics reported, tracked vs. goals, and available on line at agency and government-wide levels | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Q4/2003 |
|
Streamline and achieve greater transparency in the grants management process | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Q4/2003 |
|
Q1/2004 |
|
Eliminate investments in redundant Financial Management Systems via migration to standardized core software | |
Q4/2003 |
|
Q4/2003 |
|
Q2/2004 |
|
Substantially reduce erroneous payments | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Q3/2003 |
|
Q3-4/2003 |
|
Consolidate payroll providers government-wide (est. savings of $1.2 billion in next 10 years) | |
Q3/2003 |
|
Q1/2004 |
|
What it means to be green
- Agency receives an unqualified audit opinion on its annual financial statements.
- Agency meets financial statement reporting deadlines.
- Agency reports in its audited annual financial statements that its systems are in compliance with the Federal Financial Management Improvement Act.
- Agency produces accurate financial information on demand.
- Agency routinely assesses performance and financial information which its managers use to make day-to-day decisions.
- Agency has no Anti-Deficiency Act Violations.
- Agency has no material auditor-reported internal control weaknesses.
- Agency has no material non-compliance with laws or regulations; agency head provides an unqualified statement of assurance in its annual accountability report.
What it means to be yellow
- Agency produces accurate financial information on demand. OR
- Agency routinely assesses performance and financial information which its managers use to make day-to-day decisions.
- Agency reports in its audited annual financial statements that its systems are in compliance with the Federal Financial Management Improvement Act.
- Agency has no Anti-Deficiency Act Violations.
- Agency has no repeat material auditor-reported internal control weaknesses; auditor expresses an opinion on the annual financial statements; agency meets financial reporting deadlines; agency has no material non-compliance with laws or regulations.
- Agency head provides an unqualified statement of assurance in its annual accountability report.