DOT has
shown substantial progress in each management agenda area.
Initiative
Status
Progress
Human
Capital — DOT has not yet achieved the majority of its
measurable results-driven outcomes. DOT’s progress score
reflects completion of a detailed Department-wide human capital
strategy with timelines and specific deliverables, such as the
establishment of a Departmental Human Capital Planning Council.
•
•
Competitive
Sourcing — DOT did not meet the President’s annual
competitive sourcing goal for 2002 but did develop a comprehensive
plan that identifies the positions to be evaluated for outsourcing.
DOT will begin subjecting positions to competition to the private
sector by late 2003.
•
•
Financial
Performance — DOT’s current financial management
systems do not meet Federal financial system requirements. DOT
is in the process of implementing a new accounting system –
Delphi – which will be set up by the Spring of 2003. DOT
received a clean audit opinion in February 2002. In addition,
DOT is implementing a recovery auditing program to collect and
reduce erroneous contract payments.
•
•
Enhancing
E-Government —
DOT developed an IT security program to decrease cyber vulnerabilities
by 75%. However, DOT remains red in status because major DOT IT
projects remain over-budget and behind schedule, and it has yet
to complete a department-wide IT enterprise architecture.
•
•
Budget/Performance
Integration — DOT issued performance-based 2004 Budget
justifications for a number of agencies, and senior management
has started using performance data in allocating resources. DOT
is continuing to refine its measures to better connect spending
to outcomes. Its mission will change significantly with the migration
of components to DHS.
•
•
Program
Assessments
Programs
reviewed perform above average, in large part because DOT’s programs
have meaningful performance measures and real data. Results vary among
programs, however. The analyses reveal that management weaknesses across
programs need addressing.