CIO visibility into agency IT spending is clouded, GAO finds

A new GAO study finds acquisition chiefs and CIOs aren't always connecting on IT spending.

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Agency CIOs are supposed to have total visibility into IT spending under the Federal IT Acquisition Reform Act, but in practice that's not always the case, potentially causing duplicative or poorly conceived IT contracts, according to a new study from the Government Accountability Office.

The lengthy and detailed Jan. 10 GAO report shows federal agencies consistently underreport or miss IT projects under the Office of Management and Budget's relatively recent FITARA guidance.

Agencies tracked for the study identified 78,249 IT-related contracts, to which those agencies obligated $14.7 billion in fiscal year 2016.

However, the GAO identified 31,493 additional contracts that generated $4.5 billion in obligations, which jacked up the total amount obligated to the selected IT contracts in fiscal year 2016 to at least $19.2 billion.

In addition to not identifying all IT contracts, 14 of the 22 selected agencies GAO monitored for the study didn't fully satisfy OMB's requirement for CIO review and approval of IT acquisition plans or strategies.  Only 11 of 96 randomly selected IT contracts across 10 agencies under evaluation were CIO-reviewed and approved as required by OMB's guidance.

FITARA rules laid out by Congress in 2014 were meant to help agencies keep better track of IT investments and their performance by having chief acquisition officers tag consequential IT contracts that would require CIO review and approval.

The new report from GAO indicates that there may be a disconnect between CAOs and CIOs.

GAO made almost 40 recommendations in the new report to ensure more coordination on IT buying, including making sure agency acquisition officers are involved in identifying IT and issue-related guidance and ensuring IT acquisitions are reviewed per OMB guidance.