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DATA Act: Initial Observations on Technical Implementation

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Report Type Reports and Testimonies
Report Date Aug. 3, 2016
Release Date Aug. 3, 2016
Report No. GAO-16-824R
Summary:

What GAO Found

GAO found that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the Department of the Treasury (Treasury) have taken steps to assure the quality of the federal spending data that will be made available to the public under the Digital Accountability and Transparency Act of 2014 (DATA Act). These steps include creating a broker system to (1) check that submitted data follow a standardized format that will allow for aggregation and comparison across government and (2) validate selected data elements to ensure that the data are accurate. See figure 1 for how the broker system operates. Treasury plans to release a full production broker system in the fall of 2016. According to Treasury documents, once fully implemented, the broker system will apply a series of format and formula checks to the budget and financial data submitted by the agencies to ensure that the data are in the required standard format and correctly calculated. The broker will also validate budget and financial data by comparing them to multiple sources. While the broker system is designed to extract and standardize the format of data from existing award reporting systems, it will not validate these data to ensure that they are accurate. GAO’s prior work has identified persistent challenges with the quality of these data. OMB has directed agencies to use existing quality assurance processes and controls to assure the quality of data reported under the DATA Act.

On April 29, 2016, Treasury released DATA Act Information Model Schema version 1.0—4 months later than originally planned. Federal enterprise resource planning vendors such as Oracle told GAO that they waited to start developing key software patches until a stable version of the schema was released. According to Treasury officials, the patches are needed by some agencies to facilitate agency data submissions from their existing financial management systems and are planned to be released no later than February 2017. They also noted that, beginning in the fall of 2015, Treasury officials regularly engaged with federal enterprise resource planning vendors to ensure they updated their products to be aligned with the schema version 1.0 in an effort to minimize implementation costs to federal agencies. It is unclear the extent to which agencies will need to test and customize these patches before they submit data to Treasury as required by the DATA Act by May 2017. GAO will continue to monitor this issue as part of its on-going work. 

Figure 1: Operation of the Data Act Broker System

Figure 1: Operation of the Data Act Broker System

aAccording to OMB staff and Treasury officials, although the data in these files are not validated by the broker they are subject to checks by their source systems.

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