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DOD Business Systems Modernization: Billions Continue to Be Invested with Inadequate Management Oversight and Accountability.


GAO-04-615 May 28, 2004

Despite its significant investment in business systems, the Department of Defense (DOD (1) (Dial On Demand) A feature that allows a device to automatically dial a telephone number. For example, an ISDN router with dial on demand will automatically dial up the ISP when it senses IP traffic destined for the Internet. ) continues to have long-standing financial and inventory management problems that prevent it from producing reliable and timely information for making decisions and for accurately reporting on its billions of dollars of inventory. GAO was asked to (1) identify DOD's fiscal year 2004 estimated funding for its business systems, (2) determine if DOD has effective control and accountability over its business systems investments, and (3) determine whether selected business systems will help resolve some of DOD's long-standing problems and whether they are being effectively managed.

DOD requested approximately $19 billion for fiscal year 2004 to operate, maintain, and modernize mod·ern·ize  
v. mo·dern·ized, mo·dern·iz·ing, mo·dern·iz·es

v.tr.
To make modern in appearance, style, or character; update.

v.intr.
To accept or adopt modern ways, ideas, or style.
 its reported 2,274 business systems. This stovepiped and duplicative systems environment evolved over time as DOD components--each with its own system funding--developed narrowly focused, parochial pa·ro·chi·al  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, supported by, or located in a parish.

2. Of or relating to parochial schools.

3.
 solutions to their business problems. As a result of this uncontrolled spending, DOD reported over 200 inventory systems and 450 personnel systems. DOD's fundamentally flawed business systems affect mission effectiveness and can contribute to the fraud, waste, and abuse that GAO continues to identify. Further, the number of business systems is likely understated in part because DOD does not have a central systems repository or a standard business system definition. DOD does not have an effective management structure for controlling business systems investments and the business domains' roles and responsibilities have not been defined. Further, DOD does not have reasonable assurance that it is in compliance with the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003, which requires the DOD Comptroller to determine that system improvements exceeding $1 million meet the criteria specified in the act. Based on limited information provided by DOD, system improvements with at least $479 million of obligations over $1 million were not reviewed by the DOD Comptroller. GAO's two case studies are examples of DOD spending hundreds of millions on business systems that will not result in corporate solutions to its longstanding inventory and related financial management problems. While these efforts should provide some improvement to the Defense Logistics Agency's and the Army's business operations Business operations are those activities involved in the running of a business for the purpose of producing value for the stakeholders. Compare business processes. The outcome of business operations is the harvesting of value from assets , implementation problems have resulted in schedule slippages, cost increases, and critical capabilities not being delivered. These issues can be attributed, in part, to the lack of disciplined processes in the areas of requirements management The administration and control of the information needs of users. In order to achieve business objectives within an organization via information systems, user requirements must be defined in a consistent manner, prioritized and monitored.  and testing. If not corrected, the problems will result in two more costly, nonintegrated systems that only marginally improve DOD business operations and further impede DOD's transformation as envisioned by the Secretary of Defense.
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Publication:General Accounting Office Reports & Testimony
Date:Aug 1, 2004
Words:418
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