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Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on Government Management, Finance, and 
Accountability, Committee on Government Reform, House of 
Representatives:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2 p.m. EST:

Wednesday, March 16, 2005:

Army National Guard:

Inefficient, Error-Prone Process Results in Travel Reimbursement 
Problems for Mobilized Soldiers:

Statement of Gregory D. Kutz, Director Financial Management and 
Assurance John J. Ryan, Assistant Director Office of Special 
Investigations:

GAO-05-400T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-400T,a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Government Management, Finance, and Accountability, Committee on 
Government Reform, House of Representatives


Why GAO Did This Study:

This testimony outlines (1) the impact of the recent increased 
operational tempo on the process used to reimburse Army Guard soldiers 
for travel expenses and the effect that travel reimbursement problems 
have had on soldiers and their families; (2) the adequacy of the 
overall design of controls over the processes, human capital, and 
automated systems relied on for Army Guard travel reimbursements; (3) 
whether the Department of Defense’s (DOD) current efforts to automate 
its travel reimbursement process will resolve the problems identified; 
and (4) other DOD actions to improve the accuracy and timeliness of 
Army Guard travel reimbursements.

What GAO Found:

Mobilized Army Guard soldiers have experienced significant problems 
getting accurate, timely, and consistent reimbursements for out-of-
pocket travel expenses. These weaknesses were more glaring in light of 
the sustained increase in mobilized Guard soldiers following the 
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. To its credit, the Defense 
Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS) hired over 200 new personnel to 
address travel voucher processing backlogs and recently upgraded their 
training. However, Guard soldiers in our case study units reported a 
number of problems they and their families endured due to delayed or 
unpaid travel reimbursements, including debts on their personal credit 
cards, trouble paying their monthly bills, and inability to make child 
support payments.

Examples of Problems Encountered by Case Study Units: 

Army Guard unit: Maryland 115th Military Police; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 107 of 107; 
Problems encountered and status: Soldiers housed off-post were denied 
per diem authorization. Some paid for meals out of pocket while others 
hitchhiked and rode bicycles 3.5 miles to post dining facility. Unpaid. 

Army Guard unit: Mississippi 20th Special Forces; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 75 of 75; 
Problems encountered and status: Soldiers were erroneously required to 
pay to eat government provided meals at mess hall. Partially paid. 

Army Guard unit: Mississippi 114th Military Police; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 76 of 76; 
Problems encountered and status: Soldiers were denied authorization for 
proportional meal rate for meal expenses that we estimated to be about 
$6,000 each. Unpaid. 

Army Guard unit: Pennsylvania 876th Engineer Battalion; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 36 of 37; 
Problems encountered and status: Despite filing identical monthly 
vouchers, soldiers were paid amounts ranging from $0 to $1,718. 
Adjustments caused overpayments of $200 to about $1,350, resulting in 
debts to soldiers. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table]

The soldier bears primary responsibility for travel voucher 
preparation, including obtaining paper copies of various types of 
authorizations. DFAS data indicate that it rejected and asked soldiers 
to resubmit about 18 percent of vouchers during fiscal year 2004—a 
churning process that added to delays and frustration. Also, existing 
guidance did not clearly address the sometimes complex travel 
situations of mobilized Army Guard soldiers, who were often housed off-
post due to overcrowding on military installations. Further, DOD 
continued to be noncompliant with a law that requires payment of late 
payment interest and fees when soldiers’ travel reimbursements are not 
timely. With respect to human capital, GAO found a lack of oversight 
and accountability and inadequate training. Automated systems problems, 
such as nonintegration of key systems involved in authorizing and 
paying travel expenses and failure to automate key processes, also 
contributed to the inefficient, error-prone process. DOD has been 
developing and implementing the Defense Travel System (DTS) to resolve 
travel-related deficiencies. However, DTS will not address some of the 
key systems flaws. For example, DTS is currently not able to process 
mobilized soldier travel authorizations and vouchers and identify and 
calculate late payment interest and fees.

What GAO Recommends:

GAO’s related report (GAO-05-79) makes 23 recommendations to address 
Army Guard travel reimbursement weaknesses in the areas of process, 
human capital, and systems. GAO also recommends that DOD ensure that 
its longer term system improvement efforts include complete and lasting 
solutions to the identified weaknesses.

DOD concurred with 21 recommendations and described actions to correct 
noted deficiencies. DOD partially concurred with 2 recommendations 
regarding automated systems fixes for meal cost authorizations and 
requirements to pay soldiers interest on late reimbursements.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-400T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Gregory D. Kutz at (202) 
512-9095 or kutz@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

Thank you for the opportunity to discuss controls over travel 
reimbursement payments to mobilized Army National Guard (Army Guard) 
soldiers. In October 2002, we reported[Footnote 1] that the Defense 
Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS) did not have systems in place to 
identify late travel reimbursements and could not identify the soldiers 
who were not paid within 30 days of submission of an approved travel 
voucher and who should have been paid late payment interest and fees 
required pursuant to the Travel and Transportation Reform Act of 1998 
(TTRA).[Footnote 2] This affected numerous soldiers whose vouchers were 
paid late. Further, during our audits of Army Guard and Army Reserve 
military payroll controls,[Footnote 3] soldiers told us about problems 
with delayed and inaccurate travel cost reimbursements and meal cost 
authorizations and entitlements. Because of the severity of these 
complaints, this Committee, as well as other requesters, asked us to 
examine the effectiveness of the process used to reimburse Army Guard 
soldiers for travel expenses and the effect that travel reimbursement 
problems have had on soldiers and their families. Today, I will 
highlight the results of our review for which our detailed report is 
being released at this hearing.[Footnote 4]

Since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the operational tempo 
for the military services has greatly increased, with corresponding 
increases in the basic administrative tasks necessary to keep soldiers 
paid, fed, and housed. Over 186,500 Army Guard soldiers[Footnote 5] 
were mobilized from September 14, 2001, through September 30, 2004, to 
serve in Operations Noble Eagle, Enduring Freedom, and Iraqi Freedom. 
Army Guard soldiers called to active service are entitled to be 
reimbursed for authorized travel expenses incurred. The Department of 
Defense (DOD) is to provide a Guard soldier traveling on official 
business with transportation, lodging, and food, or to reimburse the 
soldier for reasonable and necessary authorized expenses if the soldier 
purchases them.[Footnote 6] In short, the soldier is to be made whole 
for authorized out-of-pocket expenses, with timely and accurate 
reimbursements for travel expenses.

Within the United States, Army Guard soldiers have guarded the 
Pentagon, airports, nuclear power plants, and domestic water supplies 
as part of the homeland security effort. Overseas, they continue to 
perform highly dangerous peacekeeping missions and force protection 
operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other countries. When government- 
provided meals and housing were not available to some Guard soldiers, 
they lived off the local economy--purchased food at restaurants and 
groceries, and housing at hotels--and later submitted requests to the 
Army for reimbursement of their out-of-pocket expenses.

Because our preliminary assessment determined that the current 
authorization, request, review, and approval processes used to pay 
travel reimbursements to active service Army Guard soldiers relied 
extensively on paper-intensive, nonintegrated systems, and error-prone 
manual transaction entry that did not provide an adequate audit trail 
or a reliable population of transactions, we could not effectively 
statistically test current processes and controls. Instead, we 
systematically assessed the effectiveness of the overall design of 
controls at work in the key areas of processes, people (human capital), 
and automated systems through case studies of 10 selected units of Army 
Guard soldiers mobilized to active service in support of Operations 
Iraqi Freedom, Noble Eagle, and Enduring Freedom during the period from 
October 2001 through November 2003. In addition, we audited a 
nonrepresentative selection of individual travel vouchers that were 
paid 120 days or more from the date the travel ended and travel 
vouchers selected from the unit case studies. We used this approach to 
provide a more detailed perspective on the design of controls and the 
nature of deficiencies in the three phases of the travel and 
reimbursement process: (1) authorization; (2) travel voucher 
preparation, unit review, and transmission; and (3) computation office 
review and payment. Further details on our scope and methodology and 
the results of the case studies can be found in our related report.

Today, I will summarize the results of our work with respect to (1) the 
impact of the recent increased operational tempo on the effectiveness 
of the process used to reimburse Army Guard soldiers for travel 
expenses and the effect that travel reimbursement problems have had on 
soldiers and their families; (2) the adequacy of the overall design of 
controls over the processes, human capital, and automated systems 
relied on to provide timely travel cost reimbursements and accurate 
meal authorizations and entitlements to mobilized[Footnote 7] Army 
Guard soldiers; (3) whether DOD's current efforts to automate its 
travel reimbursement process will resolve the problems identified; and 
(4) DOD actions to improve the accuracy and timeliness of mobilized 
Army Guard travel reimbursements.

Summary:

The current inefficient, paper-intensive, error-prone travel 
reimbursement process has resulted in inaccurate, delayed, and denied 
travel payments for mobilized Army Guard soldiers. Our case study units 
experienced a broad range of reimbursement problems that included 
disputed amounts for meals that we estimated to be as high as about 
$6,000 for each of 76 soldiers in one case study that remained unpaid 
by the end of our review. Other problems included vouchers that were 
submitted 5 or more times before being paid and thousands of dollars in 
debts levied on soldiers, some in excess of $10,000, when the approval 
for the meal component of their per diem reimbursement was rescinded 
after the vouchers had been paid.

Until DOD improves the antiquated process that requires Army Guard 
soldiers to accumulate, retain, and submit numerous paper documents, 
reimbursement problems and inefficiencies will likely continue. For 
example, reports prepared by DFAS' Contingency Travel Operations Office 
(DFAS CTO) indicated that the percentage of unpaid travel claims 
returned to soldiers increased from 11 percent in fiscal year 2002 to 
18 percent in fiscal year 2004. Of approximately 930,000 travel 
vouchers received during this period, DFAS CTO rejected and returned 
about 139,000 to soldiers for additional paper documentation or to 
correct other processing deficiencies. This repeated churning of 
vouchers frustrated soldiers and added to the volume of claims to be 
processed, which, in turn, overwhelmed DFAS CTO's resources and 
contributed to reimbursement problems.

The lack of clear, complete, and accurate policies and procedures--the 
foundation of the process for authorizing travel entitlements and 
reimbursements--also contributed to inaccurate, delayed, and denied 
travel reimbursements. Specifically, existing guidance did not clearly 
address the sometimes complex travel situations of Army Guard soldiers 
who have been called from their civilian lives to military service 
since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. For example, as 
military activity increased for Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Army 
Guard, Army Reserve, and active Army soldiers were preparing for duty, 
some of the installations to which Army Guard soldiers were assigned 
did not have available government housing. As a result, the soldiers 
were housed off-post in commercial hotels or apartments. This created 
novel situations that were not specifically addressed in regulations.

Further, inappropriate policy and guidance on how to identify and pay 
soldiers entitled to late payment interest and fees because of late 
travel reimbursement meant that DOD continued to be noncompliant with 
TTRA. As a result, although DOD paid no late payment interest or fees 
to Army Guard soldiers through April 2004, we found a number of cases 
in which soldiers should have been paid interest and indications that 
thousands more may be entitled to TTRA payments.

With respect to human capital, we found weaknesses, including (1) a 
lack of leadership and oversight and (2) a lack of adequate training 
provided to Army Guard soldiers and DFAS CTO voucher examiners. The 
lack of leadership and oversight over the travel reimbursement process 
precluded the development of strong overarching internal controls. 
Specifically, the Army is not using performance metrics to identify and 
correct systemic problems or to measure performance. The Army Guard 
soldiers with whom we spoke told us that they had received either 
inadequate or no training on travel voucher preparation and review. 
DFAS officials told us that during early 2003, about 200 voucher 
examiners were hired and received on-the-job training that proved to be 
inadequate to respond to the number and complexity of the travel 
vouchers submitted during this period.

The lack of automation also hampered oversight and service to soldiers 
trying to cope with the travel reimbursement process. The key DOD 
processes involved in authorizing and reimbursing travel expenses to 
mobilized Army Guard soldiers are "stove-piped" and not automatically 
integrated, resulting in a process that is dependent on paper 
production. These problems are also a major factor in the churning 
issue discussed previously--the thousands of vouchers that are rejected 
and returned for missing documentation. Specifically, the Army does not 
have automated systems for some critical travel process functions for 
the Army Guard, such as preparation of travel vouchers, statements of 
non-availability (SNA), and temporary change of station orders.

DOD recognizes it needs to improve the paper-intensive, manual travel 
and reimbursement process and has been developing and implementing the 
Defense Travel System (DTS) to resolve these deficiencies. However, 
deployment of DTS will not resolve all of the problems we found in 
reimbursement of travel expenses to mobilized Army Guard soldiers. For 
example, DTS is currently not able to process travel authorizations and 
vouchers for mobilized Army Guard soldiers. Given that the effort has 
been under way for about 8 years and will not address key issues 
specific to mobilized Army Guard soldiers, it is likely that the 
department will be relying on the existing paper-intensive, manual, 
error-prone system for the foreseeable future.

The report we are releasing at today's hearing includes 23 
recommendations to correct deficiencies we identified regarding the 
processes, human capital, and automated systems relied on to provide 
timely travel cost reimbursements and accurate meal authorizations and 
entitlements to mobilized Army Guard soldiers. In its comments on a 
draft of this report, DOD agreed with 21 of our 23 recommendations and 
outlined its actions to address the deficiencies noted in our report, 
including steps to clarify circumstances where Army Guard soldiers were 
entitled to per diem for meals:

DOD partially agreed with two recommendations regarding the need for an 
automated, centralized system for SNAs and the need for DTS to include 
capabilities to identify, calculate, and pay late payment interest and 
fees required pursuant to TTRA. Due to the financial burdens on the 
affected soldiers documented in this report, we continue to believe 
that DOD should implement measures to resolve these matters both on an 
interim and long-term basis.

Weaknesses in Error-Prone, Manual Travel Reimbursement Process Were 
Exacerbated by Increased Operational Tempo:

The paper-intensive process used by DOD to reimburse Army Guard 
soldiers for their travel expenses was not designed to handle the 
dramatic increase in travel vouchers since the terrorist attacks of 
September 11, 2001, and the subsequent military activity. The increased 
operational tempo resulted in backlogs in travel voucher processing as 
DFAS CTO struggled to keep up with both the increased volume and 
complexity of the travel vouchers submitted. For example, the monthly 
volume of travel vouchers being submitted to DFAS CTO increased from 
less than 3,200 in October 2001 to over 50,000 in July 2003 and 
remained at levels over 30,000 through September 2004. To its credit, 
to address the large volume of vouchers received and the unprocessed 
backlog, DFAS increased its staffing by over 200 new personnel and 
reported an average processing time of 8 days for its part of the 
process in September 2004.

Increased Operational Tempo Initially Overwhelmed Process:

While the inefficient, manual travel and reimbursement process may have 
offered some capability to process travel vouchers during periods of 
low activity when relatively few Army Guard members were mobilized, the 
current increased operational tempo has strained the process beyond its 
limits. As shown in figure 1, the monthly travel voucher volume has 
remained above 30,000 since the July 2003 peak.

Figure 1: Number of Army Guard and Reserve Travel Vouchers Received by 
DFAS CTO from October 2001 to September 2004:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

In addition to the rising volume, the increased complexity of the 
vouchers received further slowed down the process. As military activity 
increased for Operation Iraqi Freedom and Army Guard, Army Reserve, and 
active Army soldiers were preparing for duty, not all of the 
installations to which Army Guard soldiers were assigned had available 
government housing. As a result, the soldiers were housed off-post in 
commercial hotels or apartments. This created a number of novel 
situations that were not specifically addressed in regulations, as 
discussed later.

During this time frame, DFAS CTO staffing levels were not keeping pace 
with the rising volume of vouchers. However, while DFAS CTO employed 
less than 50 personnel in October 2001, this number more than doubled 
by February 2003 and was increased further to about 240 in June 2003, 
including 83 Army Guard and Army Reserve soldiers, as shown in figure 2.

Figure 2: Staffing Levels at DFAS CTO from October 2001 to September 
2004:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

A DFAS CTO official told us that the office was not properly staffed to 
process travel vouchers at the beginning of 2003 when the volume 
started to increase. Inadequate staffing and the time necessary to 
train new staff created a backlog of travel vouchers at DFAS CTO, 
ballooning to over 18,000 vouchers in March 2003.

Impact That Travel Reimbursement Problems Have Had on Army Guard 
Soldiers and Their Families:

The majority of soldiers in our 10 case study units reported problems 
related to reimbursements for meal expenses that included late 
payments, underpayments, and overpayments resulting in debts to some 
soldiers in excess of $10,000. For example, we estimated that about 
$324,000 was paid more than a year late to 120 soldiers for meal 
expenses based on the proportional meal rate for their locality. One 
individual responsible for submitting his unit's vouchers to DFAS CTO 
told us that he called the process "the travel voucher lottery" because 
"you never knew whether, or how much, you might get paid." These issues 
were caused by weaknesses in the process used to pay Army Guard travel 
reimbursements; the human capital practices in this area, including the 
lack of adequate training; and nonintegrated automated systems. Table 1 
summarizes the experiences of Army Guard soldiers in 10 units. Further 
details on our case studies are included in our companion report.

Table 1: Examples of Problems Encountered by Case Study Units:

Army Guard unit: Alabama 20th Special Forces; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 6 of 209; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: DOD rescission of 
authorized reimbursement of meal expenses resulted in debts for 
soldiers.[A]. 

Army Guard unit: California 19th Special Forces; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 30 of 66; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers' travel vouchers 
were initially rejected because split locations on vouchers did not 
coincide with information on travel orders. Partially paid. 

Army Guard unit: California 185th Armor; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 58 of 85; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers were underpaid 
per diem due to DFAS CTO errors and soldiers' lack of supporting 
documentation. Soldiers eventually received reimbursement, ranging from 
$20 to over $3,000. Paid up to 4 months late. 

Army Guard unit: Georgia 190th Military Police; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 32 of 101; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers incurred over 
$200,000 of debt due to confusion over rules concerning commuting areas 
and per diem for meals.[A]. 

Army Guard unit: Louisiana 239th Military Police; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 124 of 124; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers were required to 
pay to eat government-provided meals at mess hall. Paid 6 months late. 

Army Guard unit: Maryland 115th Military Police; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 107 of 107; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers housed off-post 
were denied per diem authorization for meals. Some paid for meals out 
of pocket while others hitchhiked and rode bicycles 3.5 miles to post 
dining facility. Unpaid. 

Army Guard unit: Mississippi 20th Special Forces; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 75 of 75; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers were required to 
pay to eat government-provided meals at mess hall. Partially paid. 

Army Guard unit: Mississippi 114th Military Police (first 
mobilization); 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 120 of 120; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers were frustrated 
by process to obtain authorization for proportional meal rate for meal 
expenses that we estimated to be about $2,700 each. Paid 14 months 
late. 

Army Guard unit: Mississippi 114th Military Police (second 
mobilization); 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 76 of 76; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Under similar 
circumstances, soldiers were denied authorization for proportional meal 
rate for meal expenses that we estimated to be about $6,000 each. 
Unpaid. 

Army Guard unit: Pennsylvania 876th Engineer Battalion; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 36 of 37; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers were deployed to 
Germany, and all were entitled to same monthly reimbursement. Despite 
filing identical vouchers with proper documentation, the soldiers were 
paid varying amounts, ranging from $0 to $1,718 for 1 month. 
Adjustments caused overpayments of $200 to about $1,350, resulting in 
debts to soldiers.[A]. 

Army Guard unit: Virginia 20th Special Forces; 
Number of affected soldiers in unit: 51 of 65; 
Examples of problems encountered and status: Soldiers were paid varying 
amounts for meal reimbursements due to inconsistent interpretation of 
SNA documentation at DFAS CTO. Partially paid. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] The soldiers' wages are generally garnished to repay debts, unless 
a waiver is granted. 

[End of table]

During our audit of selected travel vouchers, we identified some that 
were paid as much as 16 months after travel ended. Table 2 shows 
examples of the extent of delays experienced by soldiers in obtaining 
payment for travel expenses.

Table 2: Problems with Late Payments:

Table 3: Problems with Late Payments: 

Soldier rank and state: Corporal, California; 
Amount of voucher: $779; 
Days from submission to payment of voucher: 493; 
Problems encountered: Soldier was paid about 1½ years after submitting 
voucher eight times. 

Soldier rank and state: Sergeant, Utah; 
Amount of voucher: $1,269; 
Days from submission to payment of voucher: 237; 
Problems encountered: Soldier received partial payment in September 
2003 after submitting voucher five times since October 2002. 

Soldier rank and state: Sergeant First Class, Colorado; 
Amount of voucher: $1,387; 
Days from submission to payment of voucher: 481; 
Problems encountered: National Guard authorization for reimbursement 
was not promptly provided, which soldier claims affected his ability to 
maintain child support payments. 

Soldier rank and state: Sergeant, Texas; 
Amount of voucher: $682; 
Days from submission to payment of voucher: 82; 
Problems encountered: Soldier's command did not file travel voucher 
when promised. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of table]

In another instance, Army Guard soldiers called to federal duty to 
provide security at the Denver International Airport in early 2002 
experienced significant delays in getting reimbursed for travel 
expenditures. The soldiers were provided lodging but not meals and were 
not authorized per diem for meals on their orders. More than a year 
elapsed during which the Army Guard Adjutant General with authority 
over the respective soldiers and Army National Guard Bureau officials 
worked to obtain and provide the proper authorization to reimburse all 
the soldiers' travel expenses. In the interim, Army Guard soldiers 
experienced financial hardships. For example, one soldier's family had 
to rely on the spouse's salary to pay bills, and another's child 
support payments were late or less than the minimum required payments.

Travel and Reimbursement Process, Human Capital, and Systems 
Deficiencies:

Deficiencies in three key areas--process, human capital, and systems-- 
were at the core of the travel and reimbursement problems we 
identified. Policies and guidance, the foundation of the process for 
authorizing travel entitlements and reimbursements, were not always 
known by the mobilized soldiers nor were they well understood by local 
base personnel, and the authorizations were not documented on their 
mobilization orders or travel orders. Human capital weaknesses included 
a lack of leadership and oversight in addition to inadequate training. 
Further, the lack of systems integration and automation along with 
other systems deficiencies contributed significantly to the travel 
reimbursement problems we identified.

Process Deficiencies:

The lack of clear procedural guidance contributed to the inaccurate, 
delayed, and denied travel reimbursements we identified and created 
problems not only for Army Guard soldiers but for numerous other 
personnel involved with authorizing travel entitlements. Prior to 
September 11, 2001, most travel guidance addressed relatively routine 
travel for brief periods and was not always clearly applicable to 
situations Army Guard soldiers encountered, particularly when they 
could not avail themselves of government-provided meals due to the 
nature of their duty assignments. In October 2001, although the Army 
issued new guidance that was intended to address travel entitlements 
unique to Army and Army Guard soldiers mobilized for the war on 
terrorism, it was not well-understood. Furthermore, inappropriate 
policy and guidance on how to identify and pay soldiers entitled to 
late payment interest and fees because of late travel reimbursement 
meant that DOD continued to be noncompliant with TTRA. We found a 
number of cases in which soldiers should have been paid late payment 
interest and indications that thousands more may be entitled to late 
payment interest.

Lack of Clear Guidance on Travel Entitlements, Including Late Payment 
Interest and Fees:

We found that a key factor contributing to delays and denials of Army 
Guard reimbursements for out-of-pocket meal expenses was a lack of 
clearly defined guidance. We noted that the existing guidance (1) 
provided unclear eligibility criteria for reimbursement of out-of- 
pocket meal expenses, (2) lacked instructions for including meal 
entitlements on mobilization orders, and (3) contained inadequate 
instructions for preparing and issuing SNAs.

Two primary sources of guidance used by both Army Guard soldiers and 
travel computation office personnel for information on travel 
entitlements were (1) the Army's personnel policy guidance (PPG) for 
military personnel mobilized for Operations Iraqi Freedom, Enduring 
Freedom, and Noble Eagle; and (2) DOD's Joint Federal Travel Regulation 
(JFTR). We found that both Army Guard soldiers and travel computation 
personnel had difficulty using these sources to find the information 
necessary about the rules regarding travel-related entitlements.

Table 3 shows the sources of common problems related to meal expense 
reimbursements experienced by soldiers in our case studies.

Table 3: Sources of Problems Experienced by Army Guard Case Study Units 
in Obtaining Reimbursements for Meal Expenses:

Case study units: Alabama 20th Special Forces; 
Source of problem: Unclear eligibility criteria for reimbursement of 
out-of-pocket meal expenses. 

Case study units: California 19th Special Forces; 
Source of problem: Lack of specific entitlements on orders. 

Case study units: California 185th Armor; 
Source of problem: Confusing nonstandard SNAs. 

Case study units: Georgia 190th Military Police; 
Source of problem: Unclear eligibility criteria for reimbursement of 
out-of-pocket meal expenses. 

Case study units: Louisiana 239th Military Police; 
Source of problem: Unclear eligibility criteria for reimbursement of 
out-of-pocket meal expenses; 
Source of problem: Lack of specific entitlements on orders. 

Case study units: Maryland 115th Military Police; 
Source of problem: Unclear eligibility criteria for reimbursement of 
out-of-pocket meal expenses; 
Source of problem: Lack of specific entitlements on orders. 

Case study units: Mississippi 20th Special Forces; 
Source of problem: Unclear eligibility criteria for reimbursement of 
out-of-pocket meal expenses; 
Source of problem: Lack of specific entitlements on orders; 
Source of problem: Confusing nonstandard SNAs. 

Case study units: Mississippi 114th Military Police; 
Source of problem: Unclear eligibility criteria for reimbursement of 
out-of-pocket meal expenses; 
Source of problem: Lack of specific entitlements on orders. 

Case study units: Pennsylvania 876th Engineers; 
Source of problem: Confusing nonstandard SNAs. 

Case study units: Virginia 20th Special Forces; 
Source of problem: Confusing nonstandard SNAs. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table]

Unclear eligibility criteria. We found that guidance did not adequately 
address some significant conditions that entitled a soldier to 
reimbursement of authorized meal expenses. For example, although the 
JFTR entitled soldiers to reimbursement for meal expenses when 
transportation was not reasonably available between government meal 
facilities and place of lodging,[Footnote 8] the term "reasonably 
available" was not defined. The PPG directed the maximum use of 
installation facilities, and if not feasible, then "multi-passenger 
vehicles[Footnote 9] should be used" to transport soldiers to 
installation facilities. However, the PPG is silent regarding what 
constitutes adequate transportation, particularly when transportation 
to government meal facilities is necessary for Army Guard soldiers who 
cannot be housed in government facilities. As discussed in our 
companion report, we found disagreements between the soldiers and their 
command officials about the adequacy of transportation to government 
meal facilities and their entitlement to get reimbursed for eating at 
commercial facilities closer to their lodgings. Without clear guidance 
on these issues, Army decisions will continue to appear arbitrary and 
unfair to soldiers.

Lack of specific entitlements on orders. Army and Army Guard policies 
and procedures do not provide for mobilization orders issued to Army 
Guard soldiers to clearly state that these soldiers should not be 
required to pay for meals provided to them at government dining 
facilities. As a result, we noted instances in which mobilized soldiers 
arrived at government mess halls carrying mobilization orders that did 
not specifically state that the soldiers could eat free of charge and 
were inappropriately required to pay for their meals. Consequently, 
many Guard soldiers were unable to obtain reimbursement for their out- 
of-pocket costs in a timely manner.

The PPG states, "TCS soldiers who are on government installations with 
dining facilities are directed to use mess facilities. These soldiers 
are not required to pay for their meals."[Footnote 10] In addition, the 
PPG states, "Basic Allowance for Subsistence[Footnote 11] will not be 
reduced when government mess is used for soldiers in a contingency 
operation."[Footnote 12] As such, an Army Guard soldier called to 
active service is entitled to eat at a government mess hall without 
charge and concurrently entitled to receive BAS as part of his military 
pay.[Footnote 13] However, the PPG does not provide guidance addressing 
the content of mobilization orders for Army Guard soldiers with respect 
to meal entitlements.

In response to questions we posed to officials representing the 
Mississippi Adjutant General's office regarding why mobilization orders 
did not include adequate provisions about food entitlements, they 
explained that the individual mobilization orders that are prepared by 
the Adjutant General's staff are very basic and include only the travel 
allowances and actions that are necessary to get the individual from 
the home station to the mobilization station. The Adjutant General 
office received no guidance on what should be stated in the orders with 
respect to soldiers eating free of charge at government installations 
or any other conditions that may entitle Army Guard soldiers to per 
diem to compensate them for their out-of-pocket meal costs. In 
addition, our companion report provides examples where Army officials 
were not always aware that Army Guard soldiers called to active duty 
were entitled to BAS in addition to meal entitlements while they were 
serving under mobilization orders or temporary change of station (TCS) 
orders.

Confusing, nonstandard SNAs. Lack of standardization and changing 
guidance has resulted in SNAs of various form and content, signed by 
officials at different levels of authority. Consequently, travel 
computation office reviewers were unable to consistently determine the 
validity of SNAs. Our work identified travel computation office 
reviewers who rejected soldiers' requests for reimbursements even 
though they were supported by valid SNAs.

The most recent PPG guidance authorizes the installation commander to 
determine whether to issue an SNA[Footnote 14] based on each unit's 
situation and the availability of government housing.[Footnote 15] The 
guidance states that when government or government-contracted quarters 
are not available, soldiers will be provided certificates or SNAs for 
both lodging and meals to authorize per diem. However, the guidance 
does not specify the form and content of the SNAs. Consequently, we 
found that the form of the SNA and the content of the information on 
the form varied at the discretion of the issuing command.

For example, one installation stamped the soldiers' orders and 
handwrote an SNA identification number in a block provided by the 
stamp. Another location provided a written memo that stated that the 
meal component of per diem was authorized because there were no food 
facilities at the government installation. Another provided a single 
SNA with a roster attached that listed the names of the soldiers who 
were authorized per diem. The variety of SNA formats can cause 
confusion for the soldier, who does not know what documentation is 
needed for reimbursement and whether the travel computation office will 
accept it. The travel computation office personnel can also be confused 
about the criteria for a valid SNA.

Our work found instances in which installation commands denied 
soldiers' requests for SNAs. In response to our inquiries, we found 
that commands do not generally document their rationale for denying 
SNAs and there is no requirement for them to do so. This lack of 
documentation can leave soldiers even more confused and frustrated when 
seeking answers as to why their requests for per diem were denied. 
GAO's Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government require 
the maintenance of related records and appropriate documentation that 
provide evidence of execution of control activities.

Late Payment Interest and Fees Guidance Thwarts Intent of the Law:

Inappropriate policy and guidance, issued by DFAS Indianapolis, 
combined with the lack of systems or processes designed to identify and 
pay late payment interest and fees, leave DOD in continued 
noncompliance with TTRA. As a result, through at least April 2004, DFAS 
Indianapolis had made no required payments of late payment interest 
and/or late payment fees to soldiers for travel reimbursements paid 
later than 30 days after the submission of a proper voucher. For 
example, of 139 individual vouchers we selected to determine why these 
took a long time to process, we identified 75 vouchers that were 
properly submitted by Army Guard soldiers that should have received 
late payment interest totaling about $1,400.

In addition, DFAS data showed indications that thousands of other 
soldiers may be due late payment interest. For example, during the 
period October 1, 2001, through November 30, 2003, dates in the DFAS 
Operational Data Store showed that about 85,000 vouchers filed by 
mobilized Army Guard soldiers were paid more than 60 days after the 
date travel ended. If the dates on these vouchers were correct, the 
soldiers who submitted proper vouchers within 5 days of the date travel 
ended would be entitled to late payment interest if they were not paid 
within the 30-day limit.

TTRA and federal travel regulations[Footnote 16] require the payment of 
a late payment fee consisting of (1) late payment interest, generally 
equivalent to the Prompt Payment Act Interest Rate; plus (2) a late 
payment fee equivalent to the late payment charge that could have been 
charged by the government travel card contractor. Late payment interest 
and fees are to be paid to soldiers if their reimbursements are not 
paid within 30 days of the submission of a proper voucher.

Although DFAS issued guidance related to TTRA in April 2003, 
interpretation of the guidance limited the payment of late payment 
interest and fees to only the final settlement travel voucher[Footnote 
17] for all travel under a particular travel order. This practice 
contributed to continued noncompliance with the law because it 
effectively excluded large numbers of monthly or accrual 
vouchers[Footnote 18] from consideration of late payment interest and 
fees.

As a result of our work, in May 2004 DFAS clarified that all travel 
voucher reimbursements are subject to late payment interest and fees. 
However, subsequent to DFAS's dissemination of its May 2004 
clarification guidance, we found late vouchers for which DFAS did not 
pay late payment interest and fees. For example, the final vouchers for 
63 soldiers with the Georgia Army National Guard's 190th Military 
Police Company were processed late in April 2004 without payment of 
late payment interest or fees, even though they were covered by DFAS 
guidance issued in 2003. The payments were made a total of 81 days 
after the supervisory signatures, thus making the payments 51 days over 
the 30 days allowed for payment. We notified DFAS officials of the 
oversight and they subsequently made the interest payments.

Human Capital Issues:

With respect to human capital, we found weaknesses including (1) a lack 
of leadership and oversight and (2) a lack of adequate training 
provided to Army Guard soldiers and travel computation office 
examiners. GAO's Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government state that effective human capital practices are critical to 
establishing and maintaining a strong internal control environment. 
Specifically, management should take steps to ensure that its 
organization can promptly identify problems and respond to changing 
needs, and that appropriate human capital practices are in place and 
operating effectively. Without an overall leadership structure in 
place, neither the Army nor the Army Guard had developed and 
implemented processwide monitoring and performance metrics necessary to 
promptly identify and resolve problems causing late-paid travel 
vouchers. We also found that lack of adequate training for soldiers and 
newly hired DFAS CTO personnel was a contributing factor to some travel 
voucher processing deficiencies.

Lack of Leadership and Oversight:

No one office or individual was responsible for the end-to-end Army 
Guard travel reimbursement process. The lack of overall leadership and 
fragmented accountability precluded the development of strong 
overarching internal controls, particularly in the area of program 
monitoring. Neither the Army nor the Army Guard were systematically 
using performance metrics to gain agencywide insight into the nature 
and extent of the delays to measure performance and to identify and 
correct systemic problems. Our Standards for Internal Control in the 
Federal Government require agencies to have internal control procedures 
that include top-level reviews by management that compare actual 
performance to expected results and analyze significant differences.

As shown in figure 3, internal reports prepared by DFAS CTO show that 
missing travel orders was the primary reason why it did not accept 
vouchers for payment. DFAS CTO reported that it rejected about 104,000, 
or approximately 17 percent, of 609,000 vouchers during the period July 
2003 through September 2004, with missing travel authorizations 
accounting for over half of the rejected vouchers. While this churning 
process appeared to be a primary factor in payment delays and soldier 
frustration, DFAS CTO, Army, or Army Guard offices had not performed 
additional research to determine the root cause of this and other 
voucher deficiencies.

Figure 3: Army Reserve and Army Guard Travel Vouchers Returned by DFAS 
CTO from July 2003 through September 2004:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Similarly, our analysis of a selection of individual travel vouchers 
also disclosed that some vouchers were returned to soldiers because of 
missing documentation or the lack of required signatures. However, 
neither DOD management officials nor we could determine the root cause 
of all instances of missing information. Some soldiers told us that 
DFAS CTO lost documentation that they had submitted. DFAS CTO also 
experienced problems with faxed vouchers, which caused vouchers and 
supporting documentation not to be printed and processed in some cases. 
According to a DFAS CTO official, DFAS was unaware that faxed vouchers 
were not printing until a soldier complained that DFAS was not 
receiving his faxes. DFAS did not monitor incoming faxes, even though 
it reported that faxed travel vouchers account for approximately 60 
percent of the total mobilized Army Guard and Reserve travel vouchers 
it received. These problems obstructed the normal handling of a number 
of those vouchers. In an effort to resolve this problem, DFAS CTO, in 
March 2004, ceased relying on an automatic print function of the fax 
system software and began manually printing vouchers.

As shown in figure 4, our audit of a nonrepresentative selection of 139 
travel vouchers (69 computed by DFAS CTO and 70 by USPFOs) found 
significant delays occurred between the date of the reviewer's 
signature and the date that the travel computation office accepted the 
voucher. Some of these delays were caused by the time needed to correct 
vouchers that were deficient and resubmit them to DFAS CTO or another 
USPFO travel computation office.

Figure 4: Time Intervals between Reviewer Approval and Travel 
Computation Office Acceptance for 139 Selected Travel Vouchers:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

We determined that the travel computation office rejected 32 of the 72 
travel vouchers delayed for more than 3 days because of missing 
documentation or the lack of required signatures and sent them back to 
the soldiers for corrections. A lack of documentation or other 
information prevented us from determining the reason for delays of more 
than 3 days for the remaining travel vouchers.

The Army's lack of processwide oversight, including monitoring of the 
rejection and return of vouchers by DFAS CTO and other travel 
computation offices, resulted in undetected delays in reimbursement, 
leading to unnecessary frustration with the Army's travel and 
reimbursement process and potential financial difficulty for the 
soldier. Further, without establishing and monitoring program metrics, 
management had no assurance that it had identified where the breakdowns 
were occurring and could not take the appropriate steps to resolve any 
identified problems. For example, although the Army relied on the 
individual unit reviewer for assurance that travel vouchers were 
properly reviewed and transmitted promptly to the travel computation 
offices, the Army did not establish and monitor performance metrics to 
hold these reviewers accountable for their critical role in the process.

Further, although metrics were available on the average time DFAS CTO 
took to pay travel vouchers after receipt, the Army did not have 
statistical data on supplemental vouchers that could help provide 
additional insight into the extent and cause of processing errors or 
omissions by voucher examiners, unit reviewers, or Army Guard soldiers. 
Several of our case studies indicate that accuracy may be an important 
issue. For example, one method DFAS CTO uses to correct a voucher error 
or omission is to process a supplemental voucher.[Footnote 19] 
According to DFAS data, DFAS CTO processed about 251,000 vouchers 
related to Army Guard soldiers mobilized during the period October 1, 
2001, through November 30, 2003, of which over 10,600 were supplemental 
vouchers. However, DFAS CTO officials could not tell us how many of 
these were due to errors or omissions by DFAS examiners or other 
factors. Our audit of 69 supplemental vouchers for the California 185th 
case study unit showed that 41 were due to DFAS CTO errors and the 
remaining 28 were due to errors or omissions on the part of the 
soldiers.

Finally, we noted that although DFAS CTO established a toll-free number 
(1-888-332-7366) for questions related to Army Guard and Reserve 
contingency travel, DFAS did not have performance metrics to identify 
problem areas or gauge the effectiveness of this customer service 
effort. For example, DFAS did not systematically record the nature of 
the calls to the toll-free number. According to DFAS data, this number, 
staffed by 30 DFAS employees, received over 15,000 calls in June 2004. 
By monitoring the types of calls and the nature of the problems 
reported, important information could have been developed to help 
target areas where training or improved guidance may be warranted. 
Further, DFAS had not established performance metrics for its call 
takers in terms of the effectiveness of resolved cases or overall 
customer service.

Inadequate Training Results in Late or Inaccurate Reimbursements:

Although Army regulations specify the responsibilities of soldiers, 
they do not require that soldiers be trained on travel entitlements and 
their role in the travel reimbursement process. Some of the Army Guard 
soldiers that we spoke with told us that they had received either 
inadequate or no training on travel voucher preparation and review. In 
addition, a DFAS CTO official told us that the on-the-job-training 
provided to its new personnel in early 2003 initially proved to be 
inadequate. Army Guard soldiers in our case studies told us that they 
asked DFAS representatives or used the Internet in attempts to find, 
interpret, and apply DFAS guidance, which by itself proved to be 
insufficient and required many trial-and-error attempts to properly 
prepare travel vouchers. As a result, many soldiers did not receive 
their travel payments on time.

Army Guard soldiers. Army Guard soldiers in our case studies told us 
that they were confused about their responsibilities in the travel 
voucher reimbursement process because they had not been sufficiently 
trained in travel voucher processes related to mobilization. For 
example, prior to September 11, 2001, most travel guidance addressed 
the criteria for single trips or sequential trips and was not always 
clearly applicable to situations in which Army Guard soldiers could be 
authorized short intervals of travel for temporary duty at different 
locations within their longer term mobilization. This "overlapping 
travel" proved to be problematic for Army Guard soldiers trying to 
understand their travel voucher filing requirements and travel 
computation office examiners responsible for reviewing travel vouchers.

In addition, we found indications that some soldiers were not aware of 
DOD's requirement to complete a travel voucher within 5 days of the end 
of travel or the end of every 30-day period in cases of extended 
travel. For example, as shown in figure 5, in our selection of 139 
vouchers, 99 (71 percent) of the Army Guard soldiers did not meet the 5-
day requirement. Fifty-two Army Guard soldiers submitted their vouchers 
more than 1 year late.

Figure 5: Timing from the End of Travel to Soldier Submissions for 139 
Selected Travel Vouchers:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Of the 59 Army Guard soldiers that we could locate and interview, 23 
said that they lacked understanding about procedures, or lacked 
knowledge or training about the filing requirements. Eight Army Guard 
soldiers said that they procrastinated or forgot to file their travel 
vouchers on time. The remaining 28 said that they could not remember 
anything about the specific voucher we asked about or did not respond 
to our inquiries.

DFAS CTO personnel. DFAS CTO also had challenges training its examiner 
staff. The increase in mobilizations since September 11, 2001, and 
resulting increase in travel voucher submissions put a strain on DFAS 
CTO's ability to make prompt and accurate travel reimbursements to Army 
Guard soldiers. As discussed previously, DFAS CTO hired more than 200 
staff from October 2001 through July 2003, which brought the total 
number of staff to approximately 240. The training of these new 
employees was delivered on-the-job. Training time depended on the 
individual and type of work. For example, according to a DFAS CTO 
official, it took from 1 to 3 months for a voucher examiner to reach 
established standards. The DFAS CTO official told us that, in some 
cases, on-the-job training proved to be inadequate and contributed to 
travel reimbursement errors during this period.

Our work indicated that mistakes by DFAS CTO contributed to 
reimbursement problems. For example, our California case study 
indicated that 33 soldiers were initially underpaid a total of almost 
$25,000 for meals, lodging, and incidental expenses when personnel at 
DFAS CTO based travel cost calculations on an incorrect duty location 
and a corresponding incorrect per diem rate. Although these soldiers 
eventually received the amounts they were due, the corrections took 
months to resolve.

System Problems:

The lack of integrated and automated systems results in the existing 
inefficient, paper-intensive, and error-prone travel reimbursement 
process. Specifically, the Army does not have automated systems for 
some critical Army Guard travel process functions, such as preparation 
of travel vouchers, SNAs, and TCS orders, which precludes the 
electronic sharing of data by the various travel computation offices. 
In addition, system design flaws impede management's ability to comply 
with TTRA, analyze timeliness of travel reimbursements, and take 
corrective action as necessary.

Lack of Integrated Systems:

The DOD Task Force to Reengineer Travel stated in a January 1995 
report[Footnote 20] that the travel process was inefficient because 
systems involved with travel authorizations were not integrated with 
systems involved with travel reimbursements. Similarly, as we have 
reported and testified,[Footnote 21] decades-old financial management 
problems related to the proliferation of systems, due in part to DOD 
components receiving and controlling their own information technology 
investment funding, result in the current fragmented, nonstandardized 
systems.

Lacking either an integrated or effectively interfaced set of travel 
authorization, voucher preparation, and reimbursement systems, the Army 
Guard must rely on a time-consuming collection of source documents and 
error-prone manual entry of data into a travel voucher computation 
system, as shown in figure 6. For example, if the system that created 
the mobilization order, the Automated Fund Control Order System 
(AFCOS), interfaced with the travel voucher computation system, a paper 
copy of the mobilization order would not be necessary because it would 
be electronically available. In turn, a portion of Army Guard and Army 
Reserve vouchers returned by DFAS CTO to soldiers because of these 
missing orders--a significant problem as discussed previously--could 
have been eliminated.

Figure 6: Overview of the Design of Systems and Travel Applications 
Used for Army Guard Travel:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Further, the lack of an integrated travel system and consequent 
"workarounds" increase the risk of errors and create the current 
inefficient process. As noted previously, several separate WINIATS 
systems at DFAS and the USPFOs can process travel vouchers for 
mobilized Army Guard soldiers. These databases operate on separate 
local area networks that do not exchange or share data with other 
travel computation offices to ensure travel reimbursements have not 
already been paid. Instead, as shown in figure 6, multiple WINIATS 
systems transmit data to the DFAS Operational Data Store (ODS)--a 
separate database that stores disbursement transactions. As a result, 
when a soldier submits a voucher, voucher examiners must resort to 
extraction and manual review of data from ODS. Next, voucher examiners 
research and calculate previous payments--advances or interim payments-
-made by other Army WINIATS systems. This information is then manually 
entered into WINIATS for it to compute the correct travel reimbursement 
for the current claim. In addition to being time consuming, this manual 
workaround can also lead to mistakes. For example, a Michigan soldier 
was overpaid $1,384 when two travel computation offices paid him for 
travel expenses incurred during the same period in August and September 
2002. This overpayment was detected by DFAS CTO when the soldier filed 
his final voucher in August 2003.

Lack of Automated Systems:

DOD lacks an automated system for preparing travel vouchers, which 
hinders the travel reimbursement process. As shown in figure 6, 
soldiers manually prepare their paper travel vouchers and attach many 
paper travel authorizations and receipts and distribute them via mail, 
fax, or e-mail to one of the travel computation offices. The lack of an 
integrated automated system increases the risk of missing documents in 
voucher submissions, which results in an increased number of vouchers 
rejected and returned by DFAS CTO. In addition, the Army currently 
lacks an automated centralized system to issue uniquely numbered and 
standard formatted SNAs regarding housing and dining facilities for 
mobilized soldiers. The lack of automated centralized standard data 
precludes electronic linking with any voucher computation system and 
the reduction of paperwork for individual soldiers, as they must obtain 
and accumulate various paper authorizations to submit with their 
vouchers.

Further, the Army lacks an automated system for producing TCS orders. 
As illustrated at the top of figure 6, the various mobilization 
stations use a word processing program to type and print each 
individual TCS order to move a soldier to such places as Afghanistan 
and Iraq. Similar to the process for SNAs, mobilization stations 
maintain separate document files for each TCS order issued. The absence 
of a standard automated system used by each of the mobilization 
stations prevents the Army from electronically sharing TCS data with 
other systems, such as a voucher computation system. Consequently, the 
process will remain vulnerable to delays for returned voucher 
submissions as mobilized Army Guard soldiers continue to receive paper 
SNAs and TCS orders. Finally, even if the Army automates the TCS, SNA, 
and voucher preparation processes, as discussed previously, these new 
automated systems would need to be either integrated or interfaced with 
a voucher computation system to decrease the amount of time from 
initiation of travel to final settlement of travel expenses.

Other System Problems:

We found that many Army Guard USPFOs did not populate key data fields 
in WINIATS as directed by DFAS Indianapolis. As a result, complete and 
accurate information was not available for a variety of management 
needs. For example, dates such as the voucher preparation date, 
supervisor review date, and the travel computation office receipt date, 
are key in providing DOD management with the information necessary to 
comply with TTRA, which requires DOD to reimburse soldiers for interest 
and fees when travel vouchers are paid late. In addition, these dates 
are essential in providing management with performance information that 
can help DOD improve its travel reimbursement process. Our analysis of 
622,821 Army Guard travel voucher transactions filed from October 1, 
2001, through November 30, 2003, and processed by DFAS CTO and the 
USPFOs found that at least one of these key dates was not recorded in 
ODS for 453,351, or approximately 73 percent, of the transactions.

In cases in which the key dates necessary to perform the evaluation 
were being captured, incorrect entries were not detected. A WINIATS 
representative told us that the system was not designed with certain 
edit checks to detect data anomalies such as those caused by erroneous 
data entry. We found that 52 of 191 in our nonrepresentative selection 
of travel vouchers filed by soldiers had incorrect dates recorded in 
ODS (e.g., the date of supervisory review predated the date of travel 
ended by nearly a year) and that these data entry errors were not 
detected. Without system edit checks to detect data anomalies, the 
accuracy and reliability of the data are questionable, and 
consequently, management cannot carry out its oversight duties.

Defense Travel System Deficiencies:

Although DOD recognized the need to improve the travel reimbursement 
process in the 1990s and has been developing and implementing DTS, this 
system is currently not able to process mobilized travel authorizations 
(e.g., mobilization orders, TCS orders, and SNAs) and vouchers and, 
therefore, does not provide an end-to-end solution for paying mobilized 
Army Guard soldiers for travel entitlements. Furthermore, DFAS auditors 
have reported additional problems with DTS. Given DOD's past failed 
attempts at developing and implementing systems on time, within budget, 
and with the promised capability, and that the effort has already been 
under way for about 8 years, it is likely that the department will be 
relying on the existing paper-intensive, manual system for the 
foreseeable future.

At the end of fiscal year 2003, DOD reported investing about $288 
million in DTS. In 2003, Program Management Office-Defense Travel 
System (PMO-DTS) estimated an additional $251 million was needed for 
DTS to be fully operational at the end of fiscal year 2006, resulting 
in an estimated total development and production cost of over 10 years 
and $539 million. This cost estimate does not include deploying DTS to 
the majority of the Army Guard USPFOs. Although the Army Guard supplies 
most of the mobilized soldiers in support of the global war on 
terrorism, DTS deployment to the 54 USPFOs is not scheduled to begin 
until fiscal year 2006. The Army is expected to fund the majority of 
the costs to field the program to the USPFOs, where mobilized Army 
Guard travel begins. The DTS total life cycle cost estimate, including 
the military service and Defense agencies, is $4.39 billion.[Footnote 
22]

DTS Is Not an End-to-End Solution for Paying Mobilized Army Guard 
Soldiers' Travel Entitlements:

While DTS purports to integrate the travel authorization, voucher 
preparation, and approval and payment process for temporary duty (TDY) 
travel, it does not integrate travel authorizations and reimbursements 
for mobilized Army Guard soldiers. DOD officials have stated that 
currently DTS cannot process mobilized Army Guard travel reimbursements 
involving various consecutive and/or overlapping travel authorizations. 
DOD officials acknowledged that DTS would not produce the various 
travel authorizations related to mobilization travel, because DOD is 
presently designing a pay and personnel system, the Defense Integrated 
Military Human Resources System (DIMHRS), which will accomplish this 
task. DOD's current strategy is for DTS to electronically capture the 
travel authorization information from DIMHRS, after which a soldier 
would use DTS to prepare and submit a travel voucher. This would 
require that DIMHRS have the capability to electronically capture the 
various authorizations applicable to Army Guard travel, such as 
mobilization and temporary change of station orders, and that SNAs are 
generated from a standard, automated system that can effectively 
interface with DTS. DOD officials do not plan to implement DIMHRS at 
the Army Guard until March 2006. As a result, the timing and ability of 
the Army Guard to process mobilization travel vouchers through DTS 
appears to hinge on the successful development and implementation of 
DIMHRS and its interface with DTS.

DTS Does Not Compute Late Payment Interest and Fees:

DTS is not being designed to identify and calculate travelers' late 
payment interest and fees in accordance with TTRA. As discussed earlier 
in this statement, DOD's current travel computation system does not 
automatically identify and calculate the TTRA late payment interest and 
fees. Furthermore, no controls are in place to ensure that the manual 
calculation is performed and that the interest and fee amounts are 
entered into the system for payment. According to DTS officials, DOD 
has not directed that DTS be designed to include such a feature. As a 
result, as currently designed, DTS provides no assurance that late 
payment interest and fees will be paid to travelers as required 
pursuant to TTRA.

Other Auditors Identify Problems with DTS:

A DFAS Kansas City Statistical Operations and Review Branch 
report[Footnote 23] identified several significant problems with the 
current DFAS implementation. Specifically, for the first quarter of 
fiscal year 2004, DFAS reported a 14 percent inaccuracy rate in DTS 
travel payments of airfare, lodging, and meals and incidental expenses. 
This report cited causes similar to those we identified in the areas of 
traveler preparation of claims and official review of claims. In 
addition to these deficiencies, DFAS noted errors in DTS calculations 
for meals and incidental expenses.

Another DFAS Internal Review report,[Footnote 24] dated June 15, 2004, 
indicated that improvements were needed in DTS access controls to 
prevent or detect unauthorized access to sensitive files. DFAS Internal 
Review reported that because PMO-DTS had not established standard user 
account review and maintenance procedures, DTS is vulnerable to 
unauthorized individuals gaining access to the system and confidential 
information, resulting in potential losses to DOD employees and the 
government. The report also noted that DTS was not adequately retaining 
an audit trail of administrative and security data, leaving management 
unable to investigate suspicious activities or research problem 
transactions.

Actions to Improve Accuracy and Timeliness of Mobilized Army Guard 
Travel Reimbursements:

DOD, the Army, the National Guard Bureau, and DFAS reported several 
positive actions during the course of our work that, if implemented as 
reported, should improve the accuracy and timeliness of travel 
reimbursements to Army Guard soldiers. Because these actions were 
relatively recent, we could not evaluate their effectiveness.

For example, DFAS officials also told us that they have taken several 
steps to reduce the number of vouchers being returned to the soldiers 
due to missing signatures and missing mobilization orders. DFAS and the 
National Guard Financial Services Center--a field operating agency of 
the Chief, National Guard Bureau, that performs selected financial 
services--entered into a Memorandum of Agreement effective February 
2004 whereby DFAS will obtain the assistance of the National Guard to 
address problems with certain vouchers that would otherwise be returned 
to soldiers. According to DFAS CTO data, since the implementation of 
the agreement through the end of fiscal year 2004, 13,523 travel 
vouchers were coordinated with the National Guard in this manner rather 
than initially being sent back to the soldiers for correction.

In the human capital area, DFAS CTO enhanced its training program for 
voucher examiners. For example, DFAS CTO used computer-based training 
to provide new personnel an initial overview of WINIATS and voucher 
computation procedures. In addition, a DFAS CTO official told us that a 
40-hour course, which was designed specifically to address the types of 
vouchers received by DFAS CTO, has been established to train new 
employees.

In addition, to help ensure that the Army Guard receives timely and 
accurate travel reimbursements, other immediate steps are needed to 
mitigate the most serious problems we identified. Accordingly, in our 
related report (GAO-05-79), we made 19 short-term recommendations to 
the Secretary of Defense to address weaknesses we identified that 
included the need for (1) mobilization and related travel orders to 
clearly state meal entitlements, (2) standardization of the form and 
content of SNAs for contingency operations, and (3) appointment of an 
ombudsman with accountability for resolving problems Army Guard 
soldiers encounter at any point in the travel authorization and 
reimbursement process. We also made 4 recommendations as part of longer 
term initiatives to reform travel, pay, and personnel systems, 
including the need to integrate or interface automated travel vouchers, 
SNAs, TCS orders, mobilization orders, and other relevant systems. In 
its comments on a draft of our companion report, DOD agreed with 21 of 
our 23 recommendations and outlined its actions to address the 
deficiencies noted in our report. DOD partially concurred with 2 
recommendations regarding the need for an automated, centralized system 
for SNA per diem authorizations and the need for DTS to include 
capabilities to identify, calculate, and pay late payment interest and 
fees required pursuant to TTRA. Due to the financial burdens on the 
affected soldiers documented in our report, we continue to believe that 
DOD should implement measures to resolve these matters both on an 
interim and long-term basis.

Conclusions:

As Army Guard soldiers heed the call to duty and serve our country in 
vital and dangerous missions both at home and abroad, they deserve 
nothing less than full, accurate, and timely reimbursements for their 
out-of-pocket travel expenses. However, just as we recently reported 
for Army Guard and Reserve pay, our soldiers are more often than not 
forced to contend with the costly and time-consuming "war on paper" to 
ensure that they are properly reimbursed. The process, human capital, 
and automated systems problems we identified related to Army Guard 
travel reimbursement are additional examples of the broader, long- 
standing financial management and business transformation challenges 
faced by DOD. Similar to our previously reported findings for numerous 
other DOD business operations, the travel reimbursement process has 
evolved over years into the stove-piped, paper-intensive process that 
exists today and was ill-prepared to respond to the current large and 
sustained mobilizations. Without systematic oversight of key program 
metrics, breakdowns in the process remain unidentified and effective 
controls cannot be established and monitored.

Finally, DOD's long-standing inability to develop and implement systems 
solutions on time, within budget, and with the promised capability 
appears to be a critical impediment in this area. The problems we 
identified with DOD's longer term automated systems initiatives--DIMHRS 
and DTS--raise serious questions of whether and when mobilized 
soldiers' travel reimbursement problems will be resolved.

Contact and Acknowledgments:

For further information about this testimony, please contact Gregory D. 
Kutz at (202) 512-9095 or kutzg@gao.gov. Staff making key contributions 
to this report include Paul S. Begnaud, Norman M. Burrell, Mary Ellen 
Chervenic, Francine M. DelVecchio, Lauren S. Fassler, Dennis B. Fauber, 
Wilfred B. Holloway, Patty P. Hsieh, Charles R. Hodge, Jason M. Kelly, 
Stephen Lipscomb, Julia C. Matta, Sheila D. Miller, John Ryan, Bennett 
E. Severson, Robert A. Sharpe, Patrick S. Tobo, and Jenniffer F. Wilson.

FOOTNOTES

[1] GAO, Travel Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave Army Vulnerable to 
Potential Fraud and Abuse, GAO-03-169 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 11, 2002).

[2] Pub. L. No. 105-264, 112 Stat. 2350 (Oct. 19, 1998).

[3] GAO, Military Pay: Army National Guard Personnel Mobilized to 
Active Duty Experienced Significant Pay Problems, GAO-04-89 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 13, 2003), and Military Pay: Army Reserve 
Soldiers Mobilized to Active Duty Experienced Significant Pay Problems, 
GAO-04-911 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 20, 2004).

[4] GAO, Army National Guard: Inefficient, Error-Prone Process Results 
in Travel Reimbursement Problems for Mobilized Soldiers, GAO-05-79 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 31, 2005).

[5] Total numbers include Army Guard soldiers mobilized more than once.

[6] Joint Federal Travel Regulation (JFTR)/Joint Travel Regulation 
(JTR), app. O, para. T4020.B.2, change 203/457, November 1, 2003.

[7] In this report, the terms "mobilized" or "mobilized to active 
service" refer to soldiers called to duty under the authority of Title 
10 or Title 32, United States Code. 

[8] JFTR, ch. 4, para. U4400-B3c, change 193, January 1, 2003.

[9] PPG (reformatted April 2004), ch. 8-2,a, (6) (c).

[10] PPG, ch. 8-2a(5).

[11] BAS is included in the Army Guard soldier's compensation and is 
not a travel entitlement. For example, BAS is a continuation of the 
military tradition of providing room and board (or rations) as part of 
a service member's pay. The monthly BAS rate is based on the price of 
food and is readjusted yearly based upon the increase of the price of 
food as measured by the Department of Agriculture food cost index. As 
of January 2004, BAS ranged from $175.23 a month for officers to 
$262.50 a month for enlisted service members. 

[12] PPG, ch. 8-2a(5).

[13] PPG, para. 8-2.a.(5) (reformatted April 2004). See also 37 U.S.C. 
§ 1009(d), which provides that a soldier's BAS is not to be reduced 
when the soldier is temporarily assigned to duty away from the 
soldier's permanent duty station.

[14] PPG, ch. 8-2, .a, (5).

[15] PPG, ch. 8-2, .a, (6) (c).

[16] FTR, 41 C.F.R. § 301 71.210.

[17] A settlement voucher is the final travel voucher submitted at the 
end of a period of travel, including an extended period of travel. 

[18] An accrual travel voucher is a claim for partial payment of travel 
expenses that can be filed by travelers whose travel time extends 
beyond 30 days. The traveler should file an accrual travel voucher 
within 5 working days after the end of every 30 calendar-day period.

[19] The term "supplemental voucher" as used in this context refers to 
travel vouchers processed for the purpose of correcting an error in a 
previous partial or accrual travel voucher submitted and paid prior to 
the completion of an extended period of travel.

[20] U.S. Department of Defense, Report of the Department of Defense 
Task Force to Reengineer Travel (Washington, D.C.: January 1995).

[21] GAO, DOD Business Systems Modernization: Billions Continue to Be 
Invested with Inadequate Management Oversight and Accountability, GAO- 
04-615 (Washington, D.C.: May 27, 2004), and Department of Defense: 
Long-standing Problems Continue to Impede Financial and Business 
Management Transformation, GAO-04-907T (Washington, D.C.: July 7, 2004).

[22] The life cycle cost estimate is the cost estimate for fiscal years 
1996 through 2016 for the DOD business travel function expressed in 
constant fiscal year 2003 dollars. It includes investment costs for 
fiscal years 1996 through 2006, operations costs for fiscal years 2003 
through 2016, and alternate system (status quo) phase-out costs for 
fiscal years 1996 through 2006.

[23] Defense Finance and Accounting Service, Statistical Operations and 
Review Branch, Military & Civilian Pay Services Defense Travel System: 
Results of Post Payment Reviews, 1st Quarter, FY 2004 (Kansas City, 
Mo.: undated).

[24] Defense Finance and Accounting Service Internal Review, Review of 
the Defense Travel System (DTS) (Arlington, Va.: June 15, 2004).