Guns Or Butter? (Who controls the military?)
The
Pentagon's Doctored Ledgers Conceal Epic Waste
By
Scot J. Paltrow
November
19, 2013 "Information
Clearing House -
"Reuters" -- -
LETTERKENNY ARMY DEPOT, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania - Linda Woodford
spent the last 15 years of her career inserting phony numbers in the
U.S. Department of Defense's accounts.
Every month until she
retired in 2011, she says, the day came when the Navy would start
dumping numbers on the Cleveland, Ohio, office of the Defense Finance
and Accounting Service, the Pentagon's main accounting agency. Using
the data they received, Woodford and her fellow DFAS accountants
there set about preparing monthly reports to square the Navy's books
with the U.S. Treasury's - a balancing-the-checkbook maneuver
required of all the military services and other Pentagon
agencies.
And every month, they encountered the same problem.
Numbers were missing. Numbers were clearly wrong. Numbers came with
no explanation of how the money had been spent or which congressional
appropriation it came from. "A lot of times there were issues of
numbers being inaccurate," Woodford says. "We didn't have
the detail … for a lot of it."
The data flooded in just
two days before deadline. As the clock ticked down, Woodford says,
staff were able to resolve a lot of the false entries through hurried
calls and emails to Navy personnel, but many mystery numbers
remained. For those, Woodford and her colleagues were told by
superiors to take "unsubstantiated change actions" - in
other words, enter false numbers, commonly called "plugs,"
to make the Navy's totals match the Treasury's.
Jeff Yokel,
who spent 17 years in senior positions in DFAS's Cleveland office
before retiring in 2009, says supervisors were required to approve
every "plug" - thousands a month. "If the amounts
didn't balance, Treasury would hit it back to you," he
says.
After the monthly reports were sent to the Treasury, the
accountants continued to seek accurate information to correct the
entries. In some instances, they succeeded. In others, they didn't,
and the unresolved numbers stood on the books.
STANDARD
PROCEDURE
At the DFAS offices that handle accounting for the
Army, Navy, Air Force and other defense agencies, fudging the
accounts with false entries is standard operating procedure, Reuters
has found. And plugging isn't confined to DFAS (pronounced DEE-fass).
Former military service officials say record-keeping at the
operational level throughout the services is rife with made-up
numbers to cover lost or missing information.
A review of
multiple reports from oversight agencies in recent years shows that
the Pentagon also has systematically ignored warnings about its
accounting practices. "These types of adjustments, made without
supporting documentation … can mask much larger problems in the
original accounting data," the Government Accountability Office,
the investigative arm of Congress, said in a December 2011
report.
Plugs also are symptomatic of one very large problem:
the Pentagon's chronic failure to keep track of its money - how much
it has, how much it pays out and how much is wasted or stolen.
This
is the second installment in a series in which Reuters delves into
the Defense Department's inability to account for itself. The first
article examined how the Pentagon's record-keeping dysfunction
results in widespread pay errors that inflict financial hardship on
soldiers and sap morale. This account is based on interviews with
scores of current and former Defense Department officials, as well as
Reuters analyses of Pentagon logistics practices, bookkeeping
methods, court cases and reports by federal agencies.
As the
use of plugs indicates, pay errors are only a small part of the sums
that annually disappear into the vast bureaucracy that manages more
than half of all annual government outlays approved by Congress. The
Defense Department's 2012 budget totaled $565.8 billion, more than
the annual defense budgets of the 10 next largest military spenders
combined, including Russia and China. How much of that money is spent
as intended is impossible to determine.
In its investigation,
Reuters has found that the Pentagon is largely incapable of keeping
track of its vast stores of weapons, ammunition and other supplies;
thus it continues to spend money on new supplies it doesn't need and
on storing others long out of date. It has amassed a backlog of more
than half a trillion dollars in unaudited contracts with outside
vendors; how much of that money paid for actual goods and services
delivered isn't known. And it repeatedly falls prey to fraud and
theft that can go undiscovered for years, often eventually detected
by external law enforcement agencies.
The consequences aren't
only financial; bad bookkeeping can affect the nation's defense. In
one example of many, the Army lost track of $5.8 billion of supplies
between 2003 and 2011 as it shuffled equipment between reserve and
regular units. Affected units "may experience equipment
shortages that could hinder their ability to train soldiers and
respond to emergencies," the Pentagon inspector general said in
a September 2012 report.
Because of its persistent inability
to tally its accounts, the Pentagon is the only federal agency that
has not complied with a law that requires annual audits of all
government departments. That means that the $8.5 trillion in taxpayer
money doled out by Congress to the Pentagon since 1996, the first
year it was supposed to be audited, has never been accounted for.
That sum exceeds the value of China's economic output last
year.
Congress in 2009 passed a law requiring that the Defense
Department be audit-ready by 2017. Then-Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta in 2011 tightened the screws when ordered that the department
make a key part of its books audit-ready in 2014.
Reuters has
found that the Pentagon probably won't meet its deadlines. (See
related article [ID:nL2N0J00PX].) The main reason is rooted in the
Pentagon's continuing reliance on a tangle of thousands of disparate,
obsolete, largely incompatible accounting and business-management
systems. Many of these systems were built in the 1970s and use
outmoded computer languages such as COBOL on old mainframes. They use
antiquated file systems that make it difficult or impossible to
search for data. Much of their data is corrupted and
erroneous.
"It's like if every electrical socket in the
Pentagon had a different shape and voltage," says a former
defense official who until recently led efforts to modernize defense
accounting.
"AMALGAM OF FIEFDOMS"
No one can
even agree on how many of these accounting and business systems are
in use. The Pentagon itself puts the number at 2,200 spread
throughout the military services and other defense agencies. A
January 2012 report by a task force of the Defense Business Board, an
advisory group of business leaders appointed by the secretary of
defense, put the number at around 5,000.
"There are
thousands and thousands of systems," former Deputy Secretary of
Defense Gordon England said in an interview. "I'm not sure
anybody knows how many systems there are."
In a May 2011
speech, then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates described the
Pentagon's business operations as "an amalgam of fiefdoms
without centralized mechanisms to allocate resources, track
expenditures, and measure results. ... My staff and I learned that it
was nearly impossible to get accurate information and answers to
questions such as ‘How much money did you spend' and ‘How many
people do you have?' "
The Pentagon has spent tens of
billions of dollars to upgrade to new, more efficient technology in
order to become audit-ready. But many of these new systems have
failed, either unable to perform all the jobs they were meant to do
or scrapped altogether - only adding to the waste they were meant to
stop.
Mired in a mess largely of its own making, the Pentagon
is left to make do with old technology and plugs - lots of them. In
the Cleveland DFAS office where Woodford worked, for example,
"unsupported adjustments" to "make balances agree"
totaled $1.03 billion in 2010 alone, according to a December 2011 GAO
report.
In its annual report of department-wide finances for
2012, the Pentagon reported $9.22 billion in "reconciling
amounts" to make its own numbers match the Treasury's, up from
$7.41 billion a year earlier. It said that $585.6 million of the 2012
figure was attributable to missing records. The remaining $8
billion-plus represented what Pentagon officials say are legitimate
discrepancies. However, a source with knowledge of the Pentagon's
accounting processes said that because the report and others like it
aren't audited, they may conceal large amounts of additional plugs
and other accounting problems.
The secretary of defense's
office and the heads of the military and DFAS have for years
knowingly signed off on false entries. "I don't think they're
lying and cheating and stealing necessarily, but it's not the right
thing to do," Pentagon Comptroller Robert Hale said in an
interview. "We've got to fix the processes so we don't have to
do that."
Congress has been much more lenient on the
Defense Department than on publicly traded corporations. The
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, a response to the Enron Corp and other
turn-of-the-century accounting scandals, imposes criminal penalties
on corporate managers who certify false financial reports. "The
concept of Sarbanes-Oxley is completely foreign" to the
Pentagon, says Mike Young, a former Air Force logistics officer who
for years has been a consultant on, and written about, Defense
Department logistics.
Defense officials point out that most
plugs represent pending transactions - like checks waiting to clear
with a bank - and other legitimate maneuvers, many of which are
eventually resolved. The dollar amounts, too, don't necessarily
represent actual money lost, but multiple accounting entries for
money in and money out, often duplicated across several ledgers.
That's how, for example, a single DFAS office in Columbus, Ohio, made
at least $1.59 trillion - yes, trillion - in errors, including $538
billion in plugs, in financial reports for the Air Force in 2009,
according to a December 2011 Pentagon inspector general report. Those
amounts far exceeded the Air Force's total budget for that
year.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel declined to comment for
this article. In an August 2013 video message to the entire Defense
Department, he said: "The Department of Defense is the only
federal agency that has not produced audit-ready financial
statements, which are required by law. That's unacceptable."
DFAS
Director Teresa McKay declined to be interviewed for this
article.
In an email response to questions from Reuters, a
Treasury spokesman said: "The Department of Defense is
continuing to take steps to strengthen its financial reporting. ...
We're supportive of those efforts and will continue to work with DOD
as they make additional progress." While the Treasury knowingly
accepts false entries, it rejects accounts containing blank spaces
for unknown numbers and totals that don't match its own.
Senators
Tom Coburn, an Oklahoma Republican, and Joe Manchin, a West Virginia
Democrat, introduced legislation earlier this year that would
penalize the Pentagon if it isn't audit-ready by 2017. Under the
proposed Audit the Pentagon Act of 2013, failure to meet the deadline
will result in restrictions on funding for new acquisition programs,
prohibit purchases of any information-technology systems that would
take more than three years to install, and transfer all DFAS
functions to the Treasury.
"The Pentagon can't manage
what it can't measure, and Congress can't effectively perform its
constitutional oversight role if it doesn't know how the Pentagon is
spending taxpayer dollars," Coburn said in an email response to
questions. "Until the Pentagon produces a viable financial
audit, it won't be able to effectively prioritize its spending, and
it will continue to violate the Constitution and put our national
security at risk."
TOO MUCH STUFF
The practical
impact of the Pentagon's accounting dysfunction is evident at the
Defense Logistics Agency, which buys, stores and ships much of the
Defense Department's supplies - everything from airplane parts to
zippers for uniforms.
It has way too much stuff.
"We
have about $14 billion of inventory for lots of reasons, and probably
half of that is excess to what we need," Navy Vice Admiral Mark
Harnitchek, the director of the DLA, said at an August 7, 2013,
meeting with aviation industry executives, as reported on the
agency's web site.
And the DLA keeps buying more of what it
already has too much of. A document the Pentagon supplied to Congress
shows that as of September 30, 2012, the DLA and the military
services had $733 million worth of supplies and equipment on order
that was already stocked in excess amounts on warehouse shelves. That
figure was up 21% from $609 million a year earlier. The Defense
Department defines "excess inventory" as anything more than
a three-year supply.
Consider the "vehicular control
arm," part of the front suspension on the military's ubiquitous
High Mobility Multipurpose Vehicles, or Humvees. As of November 2008,
the DLA had 15,000 of the parts in stock, equal to a 14-year supply,
according to an April 2013 Pentagon inspector general's report.
And
yet, from 2010 through 2012, the agency bought 7,437 more of them -
at prices considerably higher than it paid for the thousands sitting
on its shelves. The DLA was making the new purchases as demand
plunged by nearly half with the winding down of the Iraq and
Afghanistan wars. The inspector general's report said the DLA's
buyers hadn't checked current inventory when they signed a contract
to acquire more.
Just outside Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the
DLA operates its Eastern Distribution Center, the Defense
Department's biggest storage facility. In one of its warehouses,
millions of small replacement parts for military equipment and other
supplies are stored in hundreds of thousands of breadbox-size bins,
stacked floor to ceiling on metal shelves in the 1.7
million-square-foot building.
Sonya Gish, director of the
DLA's process and planning directorate, works at the complex. She
says no system tracks whether newly received items are put in the
correct bins, and she confirmed that because of the vast quantities
of material stored, comprehensive inventories are impossible. The DLA
makes do with intermittent sampling to see if items are missing or
stored in the wrong place. Gish also says the distribution center
does not attempt to track or estimate losses from employee
theft.
The Pentagon in 2004 ordered the entire Defense
Department to adopt a modern labeling system that would allow all the
military branches to see quickly and accurately what supplies are on
hand at the DLA and each of the services. To date, the DLA has
ignored the directive to use the system. William Budden, deputy
director of distribution, said in an interview that the cost would
have exceeded the potential benefits, and that the DLA's existing
systems are adequate.
A "Clean Out the Attic"
program to jettison obsolete inventory is making progress, DLA
Director Harnitchek said in an interview. But the effort is hindered
because the lack of reliable information on what's in storage makes
it hard to figure out what can be thrown out.
The DLA also has
run into resistance among warehouse supervisors who for years have
been in charge of a handful of warehouse aisles and jealously husband
their inventory. "I believe that the biggest challenge is
helping item managers identify things we have in our warehouses that
they can just let go of," Budden said in an interview published
in an undated in-house DLA magazine.
OLD AND DANGEROUS
A
few miles away, amid the gently rolling hills of south central
Pennsylvania, a series of 14 explosions interrupt the stillness of a
spring afternoon, shooting fountains of dirt more than 100 feet into
the air. Staff at the Letterkenny Army Depot - one of eight Army
Joint Munitions Command depots in the United States - are disposing
of 480 pounds of C4 plastic explosive manufactured in 1979 and at
risk of becoming dangerously unstable.
If Woody Pike could
have his way, the soldiers would be destroying a lot more of the old,
unused munitions stored in scores of turf-covered concrete "igloos"
ranged across the Letterkenny compound.
There are runway
flares from the 1940s, and warheads for Sparrow missiles that the
military hasn't fielded since the 1990s. Most irksome, because they
take up a lot of space, are rocket-launch systems that were retired
in the 1980s. "It will be years before they're gone," says
Pike, a logistics management specialist and planner at
Letterkenny.
More than one-third of the weapons and munitions
the Joint Munitions Command stores at Letterkenny and its other
depots are obsolete, according to Stephen Abney, command spokesman.
Keeping all those useless bullets, explosives, missiles, rifles,
rocket launchers and other munitions costs tens of millions of
dollars a year.
The munitions sit, year after year, because in
the short term, "it's cheaper for the military to store it than
to get rid of it," said Keith Byers, Letterkenny's ammunition
manager. "What's counterproductive is that what you're looking
at is stocks that are going to be destroyed eventually
anyway."
Also, an Army spokesman said, the Pentagon
requires the Army to store munitions reserves free of charge for the
other military services, which thus have no incentive to pay for
destroying useless stock.
To access ammunition and other
inventory still in use, depot staff often must move old explosives,
much of which is stored in flimsy, thin-slatted crates. "Continuing
to store unneeded ammunition creates potential safety, security and
environmental concerns," Brigadier General Gustave Perna said in
a 2012 military logistics newsletter, when he was in charge of the
Joint Munitions Command. The cost and danger of storing old munitions
"frustrates me as a taxpayer," he said. Perna declined
requests for an interview.
Sometimes the danger leads to
action, as when the C4 was detonated. And the depot recently received
funding to destroy 15,000 recoilless rifles last used during World
War II, Pike says.
Yet, on the day of the C4 blasts, piles of
Phoenix air-to-air missiles - used on Navy F-14 fighter jets that
last flew for the U.S. in 2006 - had just been offloaded from rail
cars and were waiting to be put into storage.
In 2010, as part
of the Defense Department's modernization effort , the Joint
Munitions Command scrapped a computer system that kept track of
inventory and automatically generated required shipping documents. It
was replaced with one that Pike says doesn't do either.
His
staff now must guess how much inventory and space Letterkenny has.
The Army built at additional cost a second system to create shipping
documents and an interface between the two systems. "We're
having problems with the interface," Pike says.
COSTLY
REPAIRS
Media reports of Defense Department waste tend to
focus on outrageous line items: $604 toilet seats for the Navy,
$7,600 coffee makers for the Air Force. These headline-grabbing
outliers amount to little next to the billions the Pentagon has spent
on repeated efforts to fix its bookkeeping, with little to show for
it.
The Air Force's Expeditionary Combat Support System was
intended to provide for the first time a single system to oversee
transportation, supplies, maintenance and acquisitions, replacing
scores of costly legacy systems. Work got under way in 2005. Delays
and costs mounted. In late 2012, the Air Force conducted a test run.
The data that poured out was mostly gibberish. The Air Force killed
the project.
The system "has cost $1.03 billion … and
has not yielded any significant military capability," the Air
Force said in a November 2012 announcement.
Fixing the system
would cost an additional $1.1 billion, it said, and even then, it
would do only about a quarter of the tasks originally intended, and
not until 2020.
The Air Force blamed the failure on the main
contractor, Virginia-based Computer Sciences Corp, saying the company
was unable to handle the job.
Computer Sciences spokesman
Marcel Goldstein said that the company provided the Air Force with
important "capabilities," and that "the progress we
made, jointly with the Air Force, and the software we have delivered
could be the foundation for the next effort to develop and deploy a
logistics system for the Air Force."
David Scott Norton,
an expert in accounting systems who worked for CSC on the Air Force
contract, said the project employed too many people, making
coordination and efficiency impossible. "There were probably
thousands of people, both Air Force and contractors, on it," he
says. High turnover among both Air Force and contractor staff hurt,
too, he says; many of the people who worked on it weren't the people
who had conceived and designed it.
More than $1 billion was
wasted when the Pentagon in 2010 ditched the Defense Integrated
Military Human Resources System, launched in 2003 as a single,
department-wide pay and personnel system that would eliminate pay
errors. Interagency squabbles and demands for thousands of changes
eventually sank it.
The Air Force's Defense Enterprise
Accounting and Management System was supposed to take over the Air
Force's basic accounting functions in 2010. To date, $466 million has
been spent on DEAMS, with a projected total cost of $1.77 billion to
build and operate it, an Air Force spokeswoman said. The system lacks
"critical functional capabilities," and its "data
lacks validity and reliability," according to a September 2012
Defense Department inspector general report. It now isn't expected to
be fully operational until 2017.
The Army's General Fund
Enterprise Business System is often held up as an example of rare
success. Up and running in 2012, GFEBS is now used in Army posts all
over the world to handle basic accounting functions.
Some
things it does well, but the inspector general said in March last
year that the system didn't provide department management with
required information and may not resolve "longstanding
weaknesses" in the Army's financial management, "despite
costing the Army $630.4 million as of October 2011."
In
2000, the Navy began work on four separate projects to handle
finances, supplies, maintenance of equipment and contracting.
Instead, the systems took on overlapping duties that each performed
in different ways, using different formats for the same data. Five
years later, the GAO said: "These efforts were failures. ... $1
billion was largely wasted."
The Navy started again in
2004 with the Navy Enterprise Resources Planning project to handle
all Navy accounting - at first. The Navy later decided on a system
design that would cover only about half of the service's budget
because a single, service-wide system would be too difficult and
time-consuming, according to former Navy personnel who worked on the
project. Accounting for property and other physical assets was
dropped, too.
Now in use, the Navy ERP relies on data fed to
it from 44 old systems it was meant to replace. "Navy officials
spent $870 million ... and still did not correct" the system's
inability to account for $416 billion in equipment, the Pentagon
inspector general said in a July 2013 report.
The Navy
declined to comment.
Even an effort to coordinate all these
projects ended in failure. In 2006, Deputy Secretary of Defense
Gordon England established the Business Transformation Agency to
force the military branches and other agencies to upgrade their
business operations, adhere to common standards and make the
department audit-ready.
Three years later, the Center for
Strategic and International Studies said that while the Defense
Department was spending "in excess of $10 billion per year on
business systems modernization and maintenance, (o)verall the result
is close to business as usual."
Defense Secretary Gates
shut it down in 2011 - after the Pentagon had spent $700 million on
it. England declined to comment on the episode.
Former BTA
officials blamed the failure on their lack of authority to enforce
their decisions and resistance from the individual
services.
CONTRACT HITS
Over the past 10 years, the
Defense Department has signed contracts for the provision of more
than $3 trillion in goods and services. How much of that money is
wasted in overpayments to contractors, or was never spent and never
remitted to the Treasury, is a mystery. That's because of a massive
backlog of "closeouts" - audits meant to ensure that a
contract was fulfilled and the money ended up in the right
place.
The Defense Contract Management Agency handles audits
of fixed-price contracts, which are relatively problem-free. It's the
Defense Contract Audit Agency that handles closeouts for
department-wide contracts that pay the company or individual for
expenses incurred. At the end of fiscal 2011, the agency's backlog
totaled 24,722 contracts worth $573.3 billion, according to DCAA
figures. Some of them date as far back as 1996.
The individual
military services close out their own contracts, and the backlogs
have piled up there, too. The Army's backlog was 450,000 contracts,
the GAO said in a December 2012 report. The Navy and Air Force did
not have estimates of their backlogs.
"This backlog
represents hundreds of billions of dollars in unsettled costs,"
the GAO report said. Timely closeouts also reduce the government's
financial risk by avoiding interest on late payments to
contractors.
To trim its backlog, the DCAA last year raised to
$250 million from $15 million the threshold value at which a contract
is automatically audited. DCAA says that by concentrating its
auditors on the biggest contracts, it will recoup the largest sums of
money, and that it will conduct selective audits of smaller
contracts, based on perceived risk and other factors. Still, hundreds
of thousands of contracts that would eventually have been audited now
won't be.
"Having billions of dollars of open, unaudited
contracts stretching back to the 1990s is clearly unacceptable, and
places taxpayer dollars at risk of misuse and mismanagement,"
Senator Thomas Carper, a Delaware Democrat and chairman of the
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said in an
email response to questions. "We must make sure that the
Department of Defense is actively assessing risks and making sure
that contractors who fall underneath the threshold remain accountable
for their work."
Spotty monitoring of contracts is one
reason Pentagon personnel and contractors are able to siphon off
taxpayer dollars through fraud and theft - amounting to billions of
dollars in losses, according to numerous GAO reports. In many cases,
Reuters found, the perpetrators were caught only after outside
law-enforcement agencies stumbled onto them, or outsiders brought
them to the attention of prosecutors.
In May this year, Ralph
Mariano, who worked as a civilian Navy employee for 38 years, pleaded
guilty in federal court in Rhode Island to charges of conspiracy and
theft of government funds related to a kickback scheme that cost the
Navy $18 million from 1996 to 2011. Mariano was sentenced November 1
to 10 years in prison and fined $18 million.
Mariano admitted
that as an engineer at the Naval Undersea Warfare Center in Newport,
Rhode Island, he added money to contracts held by Advanced Solutions
for Tomorrow. The Georgia-based company then paid kickbacks to
Mariano and others, including friends and relatives.
Mariano
was charged more than five years after the allegations against him
first emerged in a 2006 civil whistleblower lawsuit in federal court
in Georgia that had been kept under seal. Court documents suggest one
reason why the conspiracy went undetected for so long: The Navy not
only gave Mariano authority to award money to contractors; it also
put him in charge of confirming that the contractors did the work.
The Navy never audited any of the contracts until after Mariano was
arrested, a Navy spokeswoman confirmed.
On the opposite side
of the country, federal prosecutors in San Diego, California, in 2009
accused Gary Alexander, a Navy civilian employee, of arranging with
subcontractors to have them bill the Defense Department for services
never performed and then pay him kickbacks from money the
subcontractors received. Alexander masterminded the scheme while he
was head of the Air Surveillance and Reconnaissance Branch of the
Navy's Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center, based in San
Diego.
Alexander in 2010 pleaded guilty to defrauding the Navy
and filing false tax returns. He was sentenced to 75 months in prison
and was required to pay restitution and forfeitures totaling more
than $500,000.
Robert Ciaffa, a federal prosecutor assigned to
the case, said the bills were easily padded because DFAS didn't
require detailed invoices. The case came to light, he said, only
after "a woman friend" of one of Alexander's associates
went to prosecutors in 2008 with information about the fraud.
A
Navy spokeswoman said that Navy Secretary Ray Mabus has taken steps
to avert such fraud, including creating a contract review board,
requiring closer oversight of employees who manage contracts and
establishing antifraud units within Navy contracting
services.
Ciaffa said the Alexander case prompted his office
in 2009 to set up a toll-free fraud tip line that has so far have
yielded at least six cases. One led to guilty pleas in March 2012 by
four civilian employees of the North Island Naval Air Station, near
San Diego, after they were accused of receiving $1 million in
kickbacks from contractors.
PLUGGING ALONG
In its 2007
audit-readiness plan, the Defense Department called on DFAS to
eliminate plugs by June 2008. That hasn't happened.
In its
financial report for 2012, the Army said each month it "adjusts
its Fund Balance With Treasury to agree with the U.S. Treasury
accounts." In its 2012 annual report, the Defense Logistics
Agency said it does the same. "On a monthly basis, DLA's (Fund
Balance With Treasury) is adjusted to agree with the U.S. Treasury
accounts."
The Navy, in a footnote in its 2012 financial
report, "acknowledges that it has a material internal control
weakness in that it does not reconcile its" numbers with the
Treasury's. The footnote said the Navy inserts inaccurate numbers in
its monthly reports so that they agree with the Treasury's. It said
it is working with DFAS to try to eliminate the problems.
The
Treasury says it requires the monthly reports from Pentagon agencies
to ensure that it is "providing accurate financial information
to Congress and the general public." The reports verify that the
military is using money for its intended purposes; spending money on
things other than what it was appropriated for is, with rare
exceptions, a violation of the Antideficiency Act, which forbids
anyone but Congress to appropriate money. The law carries penalties
for individuals involved in violating it.
Because of the lack
of accurate accounting, a 2012 GAO report said, "the Department
of the Navy is at increased risk of Antideficiency Act
violations."
Without a functioning, unified bookkeeping
system, the Pentagon's accountants have no option but to continue
taking that risk.
Woodford, the former accountant in DFAS's
Cleveland office, says that in the frenzy to complete the Navy's
monthly financial reports to the Treasury, much of the blame rested
with the "old antiquated systems" the Pentagon used. A
common reason for inserting plugs was that "you knew what the
numbers were, but you didn't have the supporting documents."
The
Navy data, pouring in through dozens of jury-rigged pipelines into
similarly disparate systems, required many "manual workarounds"
- typing data from one system into another, which only added to the
potential for errors.
"They do so much manual work, it's
just ridiculous," says Toni Medley, who retired five years ago
after 30 years doing an assortment of jobs at the same DFAS office.
It's tedious work, she says, and the people doing it "make a lot
of mistakes."
The Navy declined to comment.
Yokel,
the retired official at the DFAS Cleveland office, worked as a
consultant on the Navy Enterprise Resource Planning project, the new
accounting system that fell short of expectations. He says that in
recent years, the new system has managed to reduce the number of
plugs, though they still can add up to a lot in dollar terms. And
nearly half the Navy's budget isn't covered by the system.
(Edited
by John Blanton)
Copyright - Reuters.com