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Redefining the Business of Grants Management

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Title: Redefining the Business of Grants Management


1
Redefining the Business of Grants Management
  • Greater Use of Performance Measures to
  • Evaluate and Manage Grants
  • Jonathan D. Breul
  • National Grants
    Management Association
  • Annual Conference - April
    28, 2004

2
Redefining the business of grants mgmt
  • NGMAs conference theme is Redefining the
    business of grants management.
  • A worthy challenge
  • - Make grants, and grants management, more
    performance and results-oriented.
  • How?
  • - Explore opportunities to use performance goals
    and outcome measures in working with grantees to
    deliver improved results to the public.

3
Background
  • From the first time grants were awarded debate
    raged about the appropriate role of federal vs.
    state, local and non-profit grantees.
  • The debate never stops.
  • Most federal agencies have long used goals and
    measures in their work with states and
    localities.
  • Developments in information technology
    dramatically reducing the costs of gathering,
    organizing, analyzing, and disseminating
    information suggest it is timely to assess how
    past management practices should be changed to
    take advantage of these developments.

4
Government Performance and Results Act
  • This years marks the 10th anniversary of GPRA.
  • Authors hoped that strategic and annual plans and
    reporting on performance outcomes would change
    the way government does business.
  • Intent was to encourage program managers,
    budgeters, and policy makers to increase the use
    of performance and outcome information in their
    decision making processes.
  • Requires federal agencies to provide annual data
    on the outcomes of each major federal program in
    annual performance plans and annual performance
    and accountability reports.
  • GPRA places the issue of performance squarely on
    the agenda of every federal program that depends
    heavily on grantees to accomplish its objectives.

5
Grant programs
  • A major issue debated during the drafting of GPRA
    was how to treat federal agencies that relied
    heavily on state, local and non-profit partners
    in implementing grant programs.
  • How could federal agencies set goals, measures
    and performance targets and beheld accountable
    by Congress for meeting them in policy areas
    where the federal government is only one or a
    range of players and sometimes not even the
    dominant player?
  • Sometimes federal laws actually prohibit agencies
    from setting or collecting performance measures
    (i.e., many block grants).
  • In some cases, federal agencies are constrained
    by law from taking action to improve state
    performance (such as mandating state motorcycle
    helmet laws).

6
Since then, what has happened?
  • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
    now requires outcome-based performance measures
    for employment training and welfare-to-work.
  • Workforce Investment Act requires States and
    local areas to measure the success of the
    Department of Labors WIA-authorized workforce
    development.
  • National Environmental Performance Partnership
    System (NEPPS) States and EPA jointly agree on
    measuring for assessing state performance and
    greatly increase public access to information
    about state environmental performance and their
    plans to improve it.
  • No Child Left Behind demands progress and
    achievement from all parties receiving federal
    funds from the Department of Education.

7
Also, a decade of procurement reform
  • Sweeping changes to the way government manages
    contracts.
  • Expanded use of performance-based contracting
  • Setting clear goals, using performance measures,
    and offering performance incentives, and
  • Decisions based on results to be achieved by
    procurement rather than activates funded in a
    contract.
  • Recently, Services Acquisition Reform Act (SARA)
    stronger procurement tools to save money while
    improving operations.
  • And now, Share-in-Savings contracts.

8
Four attributes of performance contracts
  • Requirements are described in terms of results
    rather than the methods of performance of the
    work.
  • Measurable performance standards are set.
  • The contractors performance is evaluated via a
    quality assurance plan.
  • Positive and negative incentives are defined.

9
The rules of the game are changing
  • The Volcker Commission continues the call for
    performance-driven public management.
  • The new Department of Homeland Security is
    required by statute to develop performance
    measures.
  • DHS and DoD are developing performance-based pay
    systems.

10
Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART)
  • In 2002, OMB introduced the PART.
  • Questionnaire to assess the management and
    program performance of every federal program over
    a five-year period.
  • Assesses each program on four components
    (purpose, planning, management, and results).
  • Gives a score for each of the component.
  • The scores are weighted with results carrying
    the greatest
  • (50 percent) of the overall score.

11
Overall scores in the FY 2005 Budget
Source Budget of the United States Government,
FY 2005
12
Scores by program type
13
Scores for grants in the FY 2005 Budget
  • 46 rated Results Not Demonstrated (43.2
    billion)
  • 2 rated Effective (5.4 billion)
  • 20 rated Moderately Effective (55.3 billion)
  • 22 rated Adequate (19.0 billion)
  • 10 rated Ineffective (10.3 billion)
  • Source Budget of the United States
    Government, FY 2005

14
Ratings of the largest five grant programs
  • DOT Highway Infrastructure (29.8 billion)
    Moderately Effective
  • HUD Housing Vouchers (12.5 billion)
    Moderately Effective
  • Education IDEA Grants to States (8.9 billion)
    Results Not Demonstrated
  • HHS Head Start (6.7 billion) Results Not
    Demonstrated
  • USDA National School Lunch (6.4 billion)
    Results Not Demonstrated

15
How are grant programs doing?
  • 100 of the programs assessed so far are primarily
    grants to states and local governments.
  • 46 percent received a rating of Results Not
    Demonstrated.
  • Higher than for all programs (which on average
    scored 37 percent).
  • Rating might be explained in part because of the
    breadth of the purpose of some grants, lack of
    agreement among grantees and federal parties on
    the purpose and performance measure(s), and
    therefore lack of focused planning to achieve
    common goals.
  • Grant programs may have to work harder than other
    program types to define results, achieve them,
    and demonstrate them.
  • Scores suggest a need for greater emphasis on
    grantee accountability for achieving overall
    program goals.

16
Old ways of doing business
  • Hyper-control and ruleboundedness.
  • Tight administrative and procedural restrictions
    (budget control, prior approvals, etc.).
  • Overly detailed and demanding application,
    planning, reporting and auditing requirements.
  • Focus on preventing wrongdoing.
  • Lack of attention to results.

17
New ways of doing business
  • Grants management attention shifts from
    activity-control to performance and results.
  • Cultural shift from command-and-control
    approaches to grantee management.
  • Grantees offered greater flexibility for how work
    is done in exchange for more accountability for
    outcomes and results.
  • Greater focus placed on outputs and outcomes.
  • Reporting requirements on processes and
    activities streamlined or replaced with
    mechanisms for performance review and evaluation.
  • Payments tied to milestones and accomplishments
    not simply level of effort.
  • Grantors and grantees share best practices.

18
Application to grants can be very difficult
  • Inadequate availability of adequate performance
    measures and data.
  • Many of the factors contributing to outcomes are
    beyond the control of grantees.
  • Ever present danger posed by perverse incentives
    resulting from improperly aligned performance
    measures.

19
Use by States and localities
  • Performance-based contracting seems to be more
    frequently used in State and local government
    contracting.
  • Service Effort and Accomplishment (SEA)
    accounting rules provide greater clarity as to
    what constitutes performance accountability.
  • State and local governments have greater freedom
    to experiment with performance-based contracting.

20
Pre-Award
  • Develop performance metrics based on program
    goals and outcomes.
  • Ensure the programs annual performance plans
    describe the relationship between the broad
    programmatic objectives in the Department/Agency
    strategic plan and the program outcomes.
  • Request applicants submit evaluation plans and
    metrics as part of the application and consider
    these plans in the review process.
  • Include metrics in solicitations and resulting
    awards.

21
Award decision making
  • Develop and implement policies for collection and
    use of grantee past performance.
  • Consider past performance in funding decisions
    and funding levels.
  • Look for ways to link them to a defined portion
    of an award fee or fixed price (performance-based)
    award.
  • Include clear program and project outcome
    statements in each award.

22
Post-Award
  • Require grantees to report progress against
    program performance outcome metrics instead of
    process and activity reporting.
  • Start holding grantees accountable for results.
  • Consider performance metrics in go/no-go and
    follow-on funding decisions (continuations,
    etc.).

23
Some questions for NGMA
  • Time to rethink and reform federal grants
    management?
  • Focus greater attention on performance and
    outcome measures to evaluate and manage federal
    grants?
  • Begin a dialogue among policy makers, recipients
    and legislators?
  • Role for NGMA as a agent for forward-looking
    innovation and change?
  • Lead an important cultural shift in the business
    of grants management?
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