Evaluating the Defense Contract Auditing Process, Part 2

Wednesday, 12 April 2017 00:00 Nick Sanders
Print

Continuing our discussion of recent testimony before the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. Part 1 of this two-part discussion focused on DCAA Director Bale's testimony, in which we asserted that DCAA continues to be in denial that its management decisions over the past decade have in any way led to a problematic status quo in desperate need of change. Instead, DCAA continued its hoary tradition of requesting more—more budget, more auditors—to meet the workload that it has already significantly reduced through bureaucratic tricks, such as pushing work that it used to perform to the Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA), as well as arbitrarily deciding which assignments it will actually audit and which assignments it will not.

In this Part 2, we are going to discuss testimony from three industry representatives, one from the Professional Services Council (PSC), one from Finance Executives International (FEI), and the other from the National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA). Their written testimony painted an entirely different picture of DCAA than Ms. Bale’s written testimony did—a picture in which significant reforms were urgently needed to address the mess that DCAA mismanagement has gotten the defense acquisition system into.

Let’s start with David Berteau, President and CEO of the PSC. His written testimony can be found here. He offered some thoughts and recommendations regarding DCAA, including—

As one of our member companies characterized it, DCAA should focus on being an auditing agency, not a collection agency. This is reflected, in part, in DCAA’s annual Report to Congress on its Fiscal Year 2015 Activities which focuses on its ‘return on investment’ – for every dollar spent by DCAA, some significant amount of government spending was avoided and a portion of contractor spending was ‘questioned’ – leaving the impression that the agency’s work is essential to fiscal responsibility. While it is easy for an auditor to ‘question’ a contractor’s cost, as we see time and time again, ‘questioned’ costs never equal ‘sustained’ costs. Contractors will even agree to a ‘sustained’ cost number simply because it is too expensive to continue to dispute it and to forego additional, undisputed payments on invoices for work already performed. … PSC believes that we need to restore the authority and confidence of the contracting officers and program managers to make the decisions that they believe are in the best interest of the government, based on the advice they receive from the multiple resources available to them, including DCAA.

(As always, we are adding emphasis unless otherwise noted.)

With respect to DCAA’s recent initiatives to perform “incurred cost” audits more quickly, Mr. Berteau testified that—

For too many of our member companies, including those who have DCAA resident auditors in their facilities, auditing of multiple years has only multiplied the annual request by the number of years to be covered. Rather than drawing a single sample from three years, for example, DCAA has been drawing the same sample size for each of the three years. It should not be surprising that such an approach is not yielding any acceleration in the audit or the closing of open years. But it does add significantly to the amount of ‘questioned costs’ because of the cumulative effect of the multi-year review. PSC believes that DCAA could dramatically streamline and accelerate their multi-year reviews, and we’d be happy to work with them on ways to do that.

He also attempted to smooth any ruffled feathers by stating—

There is a concern raised by some that using the private sector to help reduce the backlog of incurred costs means that DCAA workload will drop and that auditors might have to be terminated. PSC does not share that view; we have no objective of reducing the size of the DCAA audit workforce. Given other backlogs and of the vital nature of making the right initial contract award decisions, we believe there are other areas of work where these experienced incumbent DCAA auditors can be used. As we noted earlier, these experienced staff can be assigned to high visibility proposal audits or to the more complex cases. They can also supervise and mentor junior DCAA staff and manage the work being performed by third parties.

In essence, then, he told Congress that if DCAA were properly managed and the workload had been properly prioritized, then DCAA’s workload could be handled with available staff—leaving senior staff available to both supervise and mentor the junior staff. This would be especially true if DCAA focused its attentions on where it could add value to the acquisition lifecycle, and allowed independent third-parties to perform some of the existing workload. He testified that—

In our view, expanding third-party audits will do more than free up experienced staff for more important functions. It will also help the government become a smarter buyer and will improve acquisition outcomes. No one benefits from unnecessary delays in any phase of the acquisition lifecycle. …

It makes good sense to expand the appropriate use of independent auditors, as an effective and efficient solution that can be implemented quickly and seamlessly to address not only the current incurred cost audit backlog, but also other aspects of government accounting. Here are some of those other aspects. PSC remains concerned regarding the workforce turnover at DCAA, and the stability, experience, and morale of the workforce as a result. … Private sector contract support can help address the demand for timely incurred cost reviews and contract closeouts without hiring, training and increasing federal staff. A benefit to using a strong independent contractor base is the ability to increase or decrease staff levels to address spikes and shortfalls and to respond quickly to auditing needs. Contractors can dial up as needed and dial down once the issue is addressed; many well-seasoned government accounting firms have an experienced and available workforce – often former DCAA staff – that can respond quickly. This way, the government only pays for what it needs, not for a permanent workforce.

Next, we’ll discuss the testimony of Mr. James Thomas, Assistant Vice President of Policy, NDIA. His testimony was consistent with that offered by Mr. Bertreau, so we’ll focus on the “nuggets” that leapt out at us. (All points that follow are exact quotes from written testimony.) He wrote—

Mr. Thomas concluded by making specific, actionable, recommendations that were summarized in one concluding sentence: “DCAA should place greater emphasis on improving its customer service role, and be held accountable to improve the quality and timeliness of its audit services for the benefit of government procurement and the warfighter.” We couldn’t agree more.

Turning now to the written testimony of Mr. John Panetta, National Secretary of FEI and member of FEI’s Committee on Government Business (CGB) (and Sr. Director of Government Accounting for Raytheon) (and a former boss of mine—Hi John!), we find many of the same themes as expressed by the other two industry representatives. However, we were struck by the clarity, detail, and knowledge expressed by his testimony. We urge readers to download and review it in its entirety. As with Mr. Thomas’ testimony, we’ll pull some bullet points out and quote them, adding emphasis as we think appropriate.

Mr. Panetta concluded by telling the HASC Subcommittee—

CGB supports initiatives to utilize independent public accounting firms to supplement performance of contract audit requirements, as is currently being done in other Government agencies (e.g., NASA and DOE). These public accounting firms can assist in the elimination of the significant backlog of open incurred cost proposals and ensure that the Government is able to remain current in their required audit activities. CGB also believes that use of independent public accounting firms for the evaluation of contractor business systems will introduce additional efficiencies into the acquisition process and provide an alternative for contractors and Contracting Officers who are currently awaiting DCAA audits. Furthermore, CGB believes that the introduction of competition to perform audit services regarding Government contract costs will serve as a catalyst to motivate DCAA to evolve from a culture of ‘risk avoidance’ to one of ‘risk management’ so that DCAA can fulfill its role as a member of the acquisition team.

Okay, let’s wrap this up. In Part 1, we discussed the written testimony of Ms. Bales, who said things were fine and improving, and nothing needed to change except for adding more auditors because, otherwise, things would go to hell again. In Part 2, we discussed industry’s contrasting viewpoints, in which representatives asserted that things were not fine, that improvement was incremental at best and illusory at worst—but that current initiatives were unsustainable in the long run. They asserted that no more auditors were necessary; and, in fact, with proper resource management and reliance on independent third-party auditors where appropriate, DCAA had sufficient auditors already in place to take care of their workload and even devote senior resources to mentorship and employee development efforts.

So which point of view will the HASC Subcommittee believe? What will the members of Congress (and their staffs) take away from the contradictory viewpoints? That remains to be seen. But given the current anti-regulation, anti-bureaucracy mood within The Beltway, we think the smart money would be on the industry viewpoints.

Here is a link to a video of the testimony:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3F5-CQ0e3A&feature=youtu.be