Clinger-Cohen cards incomplete

Although federal agencies are making progress with plans to rely better on chief information officers and manage information technology, they have not come far enough, according to a new congressional report.

Governmental Affairs Committee report

Although federal agencies are making progress with plans to rely better

on chief information officers and manage information technology, they have

not come far enough, according to a new congressional report.

The Clinger-Cohen Act, enacted in February 1996, created the CIO position

and put in place the basic guidelines for agencies to manage IT programs

and investments. But a report by Sen. Fred Thompson (R-Tenn.), chairman

of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, has found that after four

years, agencies are still not using most of the procedures directed by the

law.

Based on responses to letters sent in April with ranking committee member

Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.), Thompson's report found many problems,

including that federal CIOs are still too often on the outskirts of agencies'

key decision-making and that few agencies have enacted comprehensive IT

capital planning and investment programs.

Clinger-Cohen requires agencies to develop a capital plan, set IT performance

goals and measures, document IT architectures, assess the skills of the

IT workforce and agency executives, and develop hiring and training plans

for IT workers.

The focus is on the implementation issues, and that is where agencies

are having problems, said Paul Brubaker, deputy CIO at the Defense Department

and co-chairman of the CIO Council's Outreach Committee.

Thompson could not be reached to discuss what plans he may have for

more oversight on the issue.

Although all the pieces of Clinger- Cohen have yet to be connected,

agencies do have short- and long-term plans for the future. The Justice

Department, for example, identified four areas of "future effort" for its

IT capital planning and investment process, including formalizing an annual

assessment of how IT is improving the department's operations.

Some of the problems stem from a basic feature of the IT market: people

moving around, especially CIOs, according to the report. Ten of the 24 major

agencies questioned by Thompson and his committee have had three or four

CIOs since the enactment of Clinger-Cohen.

This turnover is not unusual because private-sector companies experience

the same problem, and in fact many federal CIOs now come from the private

sector, according to the report. But "it presents a management challenge

to agencies that are trying to maintain sustained focus in and momentum

for ongoing IT projects," the report states.

The spotty level of CIO involvement and erratic agency program planning

make it hard for agencies to function as they should, Thompson wrote. The

quality of the data for the assessments of major IT investments...is questionable

at most agencies."

Even without clear and consistent leadership from the top, agencies

must install the management processes that Clinger-Cohen details. Thompson

makes 12 recommendations for agencies to comply with the law, ranging from

providing all agency CIOs with clear roles, responsibilities and authority

to setting procedures for CIOs and program managers to tell agency administrators

about the status of major IT projects.

In responding, some agencies argue they cannot fully comply with Clinger-Cohen

because of the environment in which they work. The Defense Department, for

example, said there is no executive-level IT capital planning and investment

review group as suggested by the law "because of the size and complexity

of the department." Instead, DOD's CIO sits on three of the department's

four investment review boards.

The report highlights many of the same concerns that CIOs have raised

in the past, which could help push more agency administrators to take action,

said Roger Baker, CIO at the Commerce Department. However, the recommendations

in the report do not provide more guidance for what actions to take than

did past General Accounting Office reports on the subject, he said.

"We need more specific recommendations than the ones that people are

willing to give at this point," Baker said. "The people who worked on this

[report] are 100 percent trying to do the right thing.... But in the end

what I'd really like them to do is come out and say, "Here's exactly what

you need to do.'"