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Embassy Construction: Process for Determining Staffing Requirements Needs Improvement

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Report Type Reports and Testimonies
Report Date April 7, 2003
Report No. GAO-03-411
Subject
Summary:

The 1998 terrorist attacks on two U.S. embassies in Africa highlighted security deficiencies in diplomatic facilities, leading the Department of State to embark on an estimated $16 billion embassy construction program. The program's key objective is to provide safe, secure, and cost-effective buildings for employees overseas. Given that the size and cost of new facilities are directly related to agencies' anticipated staffing needs, it is imperative that future requirements be projected as accurately as possible. GAO was asked to (1) assess whether State and other federal agencies have adopted a disciplined process for determining future staffing requirements and (2) review cost-sharing proposals for agencies with overseas staff.

U.S. agencies' staffing projections for new embassy compounds are developed without a systematic approach or comprehensive rightsizing analyses. State's headquarters gave embassies little guidance on factors to consider in developing projections, and thus U.S. agencies did not take a consistent or systematic approach to determining long-term staffing needs. Officials from each of the 14 posts GAO contacted reported that their headquarters bureaus had not provided specific, formal guidance on important factors to consider when developing staffing projections. The process was further complicated by the frequent turnover of embassy personnel who did not maintain documentation on projection exercises. Finally, staffing projections were not consistently vetted with all other agencies' headquarters. Because of these deficiencies, the government could construct wrong-sized buildings. In fact, officials at two embassies GAO visited said that due to poor projections, their sites may be inadequate almost immediately after staff move onto the new compound. State has proposed a cost-sharing plan that would require federal agencies to help fund new embassy construction. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is leading an interagency committee to develop a cost-sharing mechanism that would provide more discipline when determining overseas staffing needs and encourage agencies to think more carefully before posting personnel overseas. Numerous issues will need to be resolved for such a program to be successful, including how to structure the program and how payments will be made.

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