Six agencies' e-government scores dropped in the latest status report on the President's Management Agenda. Bush administration officials attribute the downgraded scores to failures to meet project milestones, but some experts said the lower scores don't necessarily indicate a lack of progress.
The Office of Management and Budget's fourth-quarter report shows only four agencies receiving green scores for their e-government programs, down from seven agencies in the previous quarter. Green signifies successful, yellow denotes satisfactory, and red indicates a failing score.
The latest quarterly report shows nine agencies with red scores for e-government, compared with six last quarter. A year ago, eight agencies had green scores for e-government, and only seven had failing scores.
OMB officials evaluate agencies' current status and overall progress on President Bush's five management priorities, which are the federal workforce, competitive sourcing, financial performance, e-government, and budget and performance integration. OMB began tracking executive branch agencies' scores in 2002.
Federal agencies met about 97 percent of their e-government milestones in the quarter that ended Sept. 30, but a few missed goals dragged the scores down, said Clay Johnson, OMB's deputy director for management.
One agency did not deploy interoperable disaster management services as planned. Another agency failed to meet its goal of posting 25 percent of its discretionary grant application packages on the Grants.gov Web site. And many agencies are still not using an online system for federal rulemaking, Johnson said.
On the current status of e-government projects, the Environmental Protection Agency, the State Department and NASA dropped from green to yellow. A similar downturn occurred at the Interior and Justice departments and the U.S. Agency for International Development, whose e-government status scores fell from yellow to red.
Kim Nelson, the EPA's chief information officer, declined to discuss the scores, but spokeswoman Suzanne Ackerman said the agency showed overall progress on the President's Management Agenda. "Things go in phases, and we are confident we are moving forward," Ackerman said.
Scott Cameron, deputy assistant secretary for performance, accountability and human resources at Interior, called the downgraded score a temporary blip. He said the department was working hard to reach the five milestones it missed. Responding to Hurricane Katrina diverted Interior's resources and attention from e-government initiatives such as e-authentication, he added.