Paul Denett is on a campaign to clean up federal procurement data. Denett, administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP), said he will make chief acquisition officers responsible for improvements.
Denett outlined a series of steps that chief acquisition officers must take to ensure that procurement data is accurate, timely and useful to federal agencies and contractors for making business decisions.
Being in this business for over 35 years, its always been a pet peeve of mine, Denett said. The data too often has been not accurate.
Denetts clean up campaign began last week in a meeting with the executive committee of the Chief Acquisition Officers Council. Denett also met with Molly Wilkinson, the General Services Administrations new chief acquisition officer, to discuss the campaign. GSA administers the Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS) and has a large stake in obtaining reliable information.
Critics have said that FPDS has developed into a mush of bad procurement information, leaving the government without a reliable source of spending data. Denett said he wants FPDS to be an authoritative data source for agency managers, contractors and policy-makers. In a March 9 memo, Denett outlined the steps he expects agencies to take to overcome the bad reputation that FPDS has earned.
The Acquisition Advisory panel complained about the situation in a December 2006 draft report on recommendations for improving the federal acquisition process. From the outset of the panels work, we have been frustrated by the lack of data available to conduct a thorough analysis of interagency contracts and the orders placed under them, the panel wrote.
The Government Accountability Office wrote to then-Office of Management and Budget Director Joshua Bolten in 2005 that interviews with several users indicate a lack of confidence in the systems ability to provide timely and accurate data.
Denett said he intends to make FPDS reliable. This is our attempt to grab the leadership today and say, You know, lets fix this once and for all.
Annual certification He will require chief acquisition officers to validate and sign-off on the data that agencies submit to FPDS. Acquisition executives must establish a routine verification process and annually certify the datas accuracy to GSA.
Denett also said chief acquisition officers must assign clear responsibilities for verifying the data, adjust policies as necessary and offer training whenever it is needed. To put a little concrete around his memo, Denett said, the Federal Acquisition Councils will publish an interim Federal Acquisition Regulation rule on FPDS in the next 30 days.
Lawmakers are concerned Agencies have until May 16 to assign employees responsibility for data verification procedures and policies needed to ensure the quality of FPDS data.
FPDS data-quality problems have attracted lawmakers attention. The Federal Transparency and Accountability Act, which Congress passed in 2006, requires a public Web site listing the governments contracting and grant information to be operational by Jan. 1, 2008. OMB has published a preliminary Web page, Federalspending.gov.
The obligation to make federal spending data public will force OMB to improve the data, said an aide to Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), a co-sponsor and advocate for the legislation.
There is an inevitable institutional pressure here to keep things close to the vest, particularly how we spend taxpayers money,Obama said at a press conference on the transparency act.