Membership Login Required

Forest Service: Emerging Issues Highlight the Need to Address Persistent Management Challenges

Summary

While the Forest Service has made improvements in many areas GAO has reported on in recent years, certain management challenges persist--with the agency struggling to manage a worsening wildland fire problem and spiraling fire costs, collect data on its activities and their costs, and demonstrate financial and performance accountability to Congress and the public. Several emerging issues facing the agency underscore the urgency of addressing these challenges. The Forest Service continues to lack strategies for using its wildland fire management funds effectively. In numerous reports over the past decade, GAO has highlighted the challenges the Forest Service faces in protecting the nation against the threat of wildland fires. While the agency has taken important steps to improve its wildland fire management, other key steps remain. Specifically, the agency needs to (1) develop a cohesive strategy laying out various potential long-term approaches for addressing wildland fire, the estimated costs associated with each approach, and the trade-offs involved; (2) establish clear goals and a strategy to help contain increasing wildland fire costs; (3) continue improving its processes for allocating funds and selecting projects to reduce potentially hazardous vegetation; and (4) take steps to improve its use of a new interagency budgeting and planning tool. Program management suffers from lack of data on activities and costs. GAO's work over the years points to a persistent shortcoming in the Forest Service's management of its activities: the lack of adequate data on program activities and costs. This shortcoming spans multiple land management programs, including programs for selling timber and rehabilitating and reforesting lands that have been burned, as well as administrative functions such as the competitive sourcing program, which aims to increase competition between federal entities and private sector organizations. Inadequate data have hindered field managers in carrying out their duties and prevented the agency from understanding how much its activities are costing. Financial and performance accountability have been inadequate. The Forest Service has struggled to implement adequate internal controls over its funds, generate accurate financial information, and provide clear measures of what it accomplishes with the appropriations it receives every year. GAO's concerns about these issues date back to the 1990s but have yet to be fully addressed. Several emerging issues underscore the need for the Forest Service to improve its management. The evolving effects of climate change, increasing development in and near wildlands, the aging of the federal workforce, and our nation's long-term fiscal condition likely will have profound implications for the agency and magnify the urgency of addressing these challenges.

This contains a statement given by Robin M. Nazzaro of the Government Accountability Office (GAO) before a Congressional Subcommittee on March 11, 2009.

 

Forestd09443t.pdf
 
 

Latest News

  • Join NCPP and Peter Hoontis with the School of Public Affairs and Administration at Rutgers University for an informative, 3-part webinar series on the latest issues affecting the Nonprofit Community. Please click here for more details and quick registration.

  • If you are interested in contributing a blog post – to share a recent experience with or findings from a study on performance measurement and reporting – please This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

    To receive word when a new blog post is up, please subscribe to our RSS feed.

  • Registration is now closed for the next course - PPM 500.  

    If you are considering registering for all five modules (for the full certificate) with PPM 500 as your first module, please hold-off. Instead, we encourage you to register for and take the entire certificate of modules beginning with PPM 100, which will begin later this winter. We will post more information on this shortly.