Sunday, December 22, 2024

GAO: Effective Practices Have Improved Agencies’ FITARA Implementation

“Why GAO Did This Study

Congress has long recognized that IT has the potential to enable federal agencies to accomplish their missions more quickly, effectively, and economically. However, fully exploiting this potential has presented challenges to covered agencies, and the federal government’s management of IT has produced mixed results.

As part of its effort to reform the government-wide management of IT, in December 2014 Congress enacted FITARA. The law included specific requirements related to enhancing Chief Information Officers’ (CIO) authorities, improving the risk management of IT investments, reviewing agencies’ portfolio of IT investments, consolidating federal data centers, and purchasing software licenses. GAO has reported numerous times on agencies’ effectiveness in implementing the provisions of the law and highlighted agencies that have had success in implementing selected provisions…”

“What GAO Found

Nine selected agencies (the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Justice, and Veterans Affairs; the Agency for International Development; the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; and the General Services Administration) identified 12 practices that helped them to effectively implement one or more Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act provisions (commonly referred to as FITARA). The following figure identifies the 12 practices, including the four overarching ones, considered vital to implementing all provisions…” Read the full 33-page report here.

Source: Effective Practices Have Improved Agencies’ FITARA Implementation – April 29, 2019. GAO.gov.

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Jackie Gilbert
Jackie Gilbert
Jackie Gilbert is a Content Analyst for FedHealthIT and Author of 'Anything but COVID-19' on the Daily Take Newsletter for G2Xchange Health and FedCiv.

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