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Administration on Aging: Operations Have Been Strengthened but Weaknesses Remain

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Report Type Reports and Testimonies
Report Date June 11, 1992
Report No. PEMD-92-27
Subject
Summary:

Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) officials announced in April 1991 that the status of the Administration on Aging (AOA) had been elevated within the Department's organizational structure. As a result, AOA is now responsible for many administrative duties in addition to its existing programmatic functions. AOA's enhanced status means that the Commissioner on Aging is theoretically on an equal footing with other HHS division heads and that AOA's role as an advocate for the elderly should be strengthened. To assist with its new responsibilities, AOA received additional full-time staff for fiscal year 1992. AOA has also received substantial travel funds, has filled many key positions long vacant, and plans to beef up its program expertise. At the same time, however, AOA's oversight abilities remain questionable, its expertise in the regions has not been enhanced, and its plans to address program responsibilities may be inadequate. Further, the need persists to harmonize AOA's responsibilities, its program funds, and the demands of the elderly. GAO summarized this report in testimony before Congress; see: Administration on Aging: Autonomy Has Increased but Harmonization of Mission and Resources Is Still Needed, by Robert L. York, Director of Program Evaluation in Human Services Areas, before the Subcommittee on Human Resources, House Committee on Education and Labor. GAO/T-PEMD-92-9, June 11, 1992 (15 pages).

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