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Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Administration, House of Representatives

United States General Accounting Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10 a.m. EDT: 

Wednesday, April 28, 2004: 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 
 
Technological Changes Create Transformation Opportunities: 

Statement of Linda D. Koontz
Director, Information Management Issues

GAO-04-729T: 

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-729T, a testimony before the Committee on 
Administration, House of Representatives 

Why GAO Did This Study:

Advances in technology have led to more organizations making 
information available over the Internet and the World Wide Web rather 
than through print, significantly changing the nature of printing and 
information dissemination. Government Printing Office (GPO) management 
recognizes that the new environment in which it operates requires that 
the agency modernize and transform itself and the way it does business. 
To assist in this transformation, GAO has been performing a 
comprehensive review of government printing and information 
dissemination and of GPO’s operations. 

In this testimony, GAO summarizes the result of its work to date, for 
which GAO convened a panel of experts on printing and dissemination 
(assembled with the help of the National Academy of Sciences) to 
develop options for GPO to consider in its transformation, and surveyed 
executive branch customers regarding their practices and preferences 
for printing and dissemination, as well as on their interactions with 
GPO. The testimony reports on how changes in the technological 
environment are presenting challenges to GPO and on its progress in 
addressing actions that GAO’s work indicates could advance its 
transformation effort. 


What GAO Found:

The changing technological environment is creating challenges for GPO. 
Specifically, the agency has seen declines in its printing volumes, 
printing revenues, and document sales. At the same time, more and more 
government documents are being created and downloaded electronically, 
many from its Web site (GPO Access). The agency’s procured printing 
business, once self-sustaining, has experienced losses in 3 of the past 
5 years, showing a net loss of $15.8 million. The sales program lost 
$77.1 million over the same period. In addition, these changes are 
creating challenges for GPO’s longstanding structure for centralized 
printing and dissemination and its interactions with customer 
agencies. 

The Public Printer recognizes these challenges and in response has 
embarked upon an ambitious transformation effort. To assist in this 
effort, the panel of printing and dissemination experts GAO convened 
suggested that in its planning, GPO should focus on dissemination, 
rather than printing. The panel also provided specific options for it 
to consider as it transforms itself, presented in the table below. GPO 
officials welcomed the options presented, commenting that the panel’s 
suggestions dovetail well with their own assessments. In addition, 
these officials stated that they are using the results of the panel as 
a key part of the agency’s ongoing strategic planning process.
 
In addition, in October 2003, we reported that under the Public 
Printer’s direction, GPO had taken several steps that recognize the 
important role that strategic human capital management plays in its 
transformation, including establishing and filling the position of 
Chief Human Capital Officer. At that time, we made numerous 
recommendations on the further actions it could take to strengthen its 
human capital management. In response, GPO is beginning to address 
these recommendations. For example, it has reorganized its human 
resources office into teams responsible for each of its divisions, 
serving as a “one-stop shop” for all of a division’s human resource 
needs. It also plans to conduct a skills assessment of its workforce 
and is initiating a pay for performance pilot. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-729T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Linda Koontz at (202) 
512-6240 or koontzl@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee:

I am pleased to be here today to participate in this oversight hearing 
on the Government Printing Office (GPO). As you know, technological 
advances during the past decade have significantly changed the nature 
of printing and information dissemination. In response, the Public 
Printer has begun a multiyear effort to transform the agency to provide 
value in this changing environment. Subsequent decisions made over the 
next few years will significantly affect how government information is 
published and disseminated to the public.

To assist the Public Printer in this transformation effort, Senate 
Report 107-209 mandated that we perform a comprehensive review of the 
current state of printing and dissemination of government information 
and report on strategic options for GPO to enhance the efficiency, 
economy, and effectiveness of its printing and dissemination 
operations. In addition, the Chairman and Ranking Member of the 
Legislative Branch Subcommittee, Senate Committee on Appropriations, 
requested us to conduct a general management review of GPO's 
operations. As a result of our efforts to date on the mandate and 
request, we prepared a number of interim briefings, which we have 
presented to staff of this committee. We also issued a report in 
October 2003 on GPO's strategic human capital management.[Footnote 1] 
We are continuing our review of GPO's operations, and later this year, 
we intend to issue a final report to fully respond to the mandate and 
provide the results of the general management review.

In my testimony today, I will first describe how changes in the 
technological environment are presenting challenges to GPO. I will then 
summarize GPO's progress in addressing actions that our work to date 
indicates could advance its transformation effort.

In performing the work on which this testimony is based, we collected 
and analyzed key documents; interviewed officials from GPO and other 
agencies; surveyed GPO's customers in the executive branch; and 
contracted with the National Academy of Sciences to convene a panel of 
experts on printing and publishing technologies, information 
dissemination technologies, the printing industry, and trends in 
printing and dissemination. The panel discussed (1) trends in printing, 
publishing, and dissemination and (2) the future role of GPO. Our work 
on human capital management is based on our October 2003 report.

Further details of our scope and methodology are provided in attachment 
1.

Results in Brief:

The changing technological environment is creating challenges for GPO. 
Specifically, the agency has seen declines in its printing volumes, 
printing revenues, and document sales. At the same time, more and more 
government documents are being created and downloaded electronically, 
many from its Web site (GPO Access). The agency's procured printing 
business, once self-sustaining, has experienced losses in 3 of the past 
5 years, showing a net loss of $15.8 million. The sales program lost 
$77.1 million over the same period. In addition, these changes are 
creating challenges for GPO's longstanding structure for centralized 
printing and dissemination and its interactions with customer agencies.

The Public Printer recognized these challenges and in response has 
embarked upon an ambitious transformation effort. To assist in this 
effort, a panel of printing and dissemination experts we convened 
provided a number of suggestions for GPO to consider as it transforms 
itself. The panel suggested that GPO do the following:

* Develop a business plan focused on information dissemination as its 
primary goal, rather than printing.

* Collect data to demonstrate that the services it provides--printing 
and publishing as well as information dissemination to the public 
through its library system and Web site--add value.

* Establish partnerships with other agencies that disseminate 
information and enhance the partnerships that it already has.

* Ensure that its internal operations--including technology, how it 
does business with its customers, management information systems, and 
training--are adequate for efficient and effective management of core 
business functions and for service to its customers.

GPO officials have responded positively to these results, commenting 
that that the panel's suggestions dovetail well with their own 
assessments. In addition, these officials stated that they are using 
the results of the panel as a key part of the agency's ongoing 
strategic planning process.

In addition, in October 2003, we reported that under the Public 
Printer's direction, GPO had taken several steps that recognize the 
important role that strategic human capital management plays in its 
transformation, including establishing and filling the position of 
Chief Human Capital Officer. At that time, we made numerous 
recommendations to GPO on the further actions it could take to 
strengthen its human capital management. In response, GPO has taken or 
plans to take steps that address these recommendations, but these 
efforts are still in early stages. For example, it has reorganized its 
human resources office into teams responsible for each of its 
divisions, serving as a "one-stop shop" for all of a division's human 
resource needs. It also plans to conduct a skills assessment of its 
workforce, and is initiating a pay for performance pilot.

Finally, GPO is also taking steps to put greater emphasis on customer 
needs. Based on executive agencies' responses to our surveys, we 
provided observations and suggestions for action to GPO. For example, 
we suggested that the agency consider (1) addressing the few areas in 
which executive branch agencies rated its products, services, and 
performance as below average and (2) re-examining its marketing of 
electronic services to ensure that agencies are fully aware of them. 
GPO is responding through several initiatives including taking a new 
direction regarding sales. For example, it is establishing national 
account managers who work directly with customers to identify their 
needs and offer solutions.

Background:

GPO's mission includes both printing government documents and 
disseminating them to the public. Under 44 U.S.C. 501, it is the 
principal agent for printing for the federal government. All printing 
for the Congress, the executive branch, and the judiciary--except for 
the Supreme Court--is to be done or contracted by GPO except for 
authorized exemptions.[Footnote 2] The Superintendent of Documents, who 
heads GPO's Information Dissemination organization, disseminates these 
government products to the public through a system of 1,200 depository 
libraries nationwide (the Federal Depository Library Program), GPO's 
Web site (GPO Access), telephone and fax ordering, an online ordering 
site, and its bookstore in Washington, D.C. The Superintendent of 
Documents is also responsible for classification and bibliographic 
control of tangible and electronic government publications.

Printing and related services. In providing printing and binding 
services to the government, GPO generally dedicates its in-house 
printing equipment to congressional printing, contracting out most 
printing for the executive branch.[Footnote 3] Table 1 shows the costs 
of these services in fiscal year 2003, as well as the source of these 
printing services.

Table 1: Printing, Binding, and Related Services Provided to the 
Congress and Federal Agencies, Fiscal Year 2003:

Printing source: Produced at in-house printing plant; 
Cost of services for the Congress (millions): $72.6; 
Cost of services for federal agencies (millions): $94.9.

Printing source: Procured from private sector; 
Cost of services for the Congress (millions): $1.4; 
Cost of services for federal agencies (millions): $474.7.

Total; Cost of services for the Congress (millions): $74.0; 
Cost of services for federal agencies (millions): $569.6.

Source: GPO.

[End of table]

Printing and binding for the Congress are funded by appropriations; in 
fiscal year 2004, this appropriation was $90.6 million, and the amount 
requested for fiscal year 2005 is $88.8 million. Documents printed for 
the Congress include the Congressional Record, hearing transcripts, 
bills, resolutions, amendments, and committee reports, among other 
things. GPO also provides publishing support staff to the Congress; 
these support staff mainly perform print preparation activities, such 
as typing, scanning, proofreading, and preparation of electronic data 
for transmission to GPO.

In addition, GPO provides electronic copies of the Congressional Record 
and other documents to the Congress, the public, and the depository 
libraries in accordance with the Government Printing Office Electronic 
Information Access Enhancement Act of 1993.

GPO generally provides printing services to federal agencies through 
contracting. GPO procures about 83 percent of printing for federal 
agencies from private contractors and does the remaining 17 percent at 
its own plant facilities. Most of the procured printing jobs (85 
percent for the period from June 2002 to May 2003) were for under 
$2,500 each.

There is no appropriation to cover federal agency printing services. 
Instead, GPO levies a service charge to federal agency customers of its 
procurement services. The service charge is GPO's only authorized 
source of funds to pay for the services it provides to 
agencies.[Footnote 4]

The service charge is intended to cover the cost of specialized 
printing procurement services that GPO provides to agencies. These 
services include developing printing specifications and providing 
quality assurance functions, both of which require printing expertise 
that agencies often do not have. Procuring printing is more specialized 
than general procurement, because all printing jobs are custom: that 
is, printing cannot be bought "off the shelf," like furniture or office 
supplies. Developing printing specifications requires specialized 
knowledge of paper and ink qualities, printing presses, and printing 
processes, for example.

Besides printing, GPO provides a range of related services to agencies, 
including, for example, CD-ROM development and production, archiving/
storage, converting products to electronic format, Web hosting, and Web 
page design and development.

Dissemination of government information. The Superintendent of 
Documents is responsible for the acquisition, classification, 
dissemination, and bibliographic control of tangible and electronic 
government publications. Regardless of the printing source, Title 44 
requires that federal agencies make all their publications available to 
the Superintendent of Documents for cataloging and distribution.

The Superintendent of Documents manages a number of programs related to 
distribution, including the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP), 
which designates libraries across the country to receive copies of 
government publications for public use.[Footnote 5] Generally, 
documents distributed to the libraries are those that contain 
information regarding U.S. government activities or are important 
reference publications. GPO evaluates documents to determine whether 
they should be disseminated to the depository libraries. When documents 
are printed through GPO, it evaluates them at the time of printing; if 
documents are not printed through GPO, Title 44 requires agencies to 
notify it of these documents, so that it can evaluate them and arrange 
to receive any copies needed for distribution. A relatively small 
percentage of the items printed through GPO for the executive branch 
are designated as depository items.

Another distribution program under the Superintendent of Documents is 
the Document Sales Service, which purchases, warehouses, sells, and 
distributes government documents. Publications are sold by mail, 
telephone, and fax; through GPO's online bookstore; and at its 
bookstore in Washington, D.C.

The Superintendent of Documents is also responsible for GPO's Web site, 
GPO Access, which is one mechanism for electronic dissemination of 
government documents to the public through links to over 240,000 
individual titles on GPO's servers and other federal Web sites. More 
than 1.6 billion documents have been retrieved by the public from GPO 
Access since August 1994; almost 372 million downloads of government 
information from GPO Access were made in fiscal year 2002 alone. About 
two-thirds of new FDLP titles are available online.

Trends in Printing and Information Dissemination:

Current industry trends show that the total volume of printed material 
has been declining for the past few years and that this trend is 
expected to continue. A major factor in this declining volume is the 
use of electronic media options. More organizations are creating 
electronic documents for dissemination or publishing their information 
directly to the Web. The reason for the switch to electronic publishing 
and dissemination is that once a document is created electronically, 
the costs associated with reproducing and distributing paper copies of 
it are greater than the costs of providing online access to it. 
Therefore, many organizations are making information available 
electronically and printing fewer documents, moving away from print-
centric processes.

The move to electronic dissemination is the latest phase in the 
electronic publishing revolution that has transformed the printing 
industry in recent decades. This revolution was driven by the 
development of increasingly sophisticated electronic publishing (or 
"desktop publishing") software, run on personal computers, that allows 
users to design documents including both images and text, and the 
parallel development of electronic laser printer/copier technology with 
capabilities that approach those of high-end presses. These tools allow 
users to produce documents that formerly would have required hand work, 
professional printing expertise, and large printing systems.

These technologies have brought major economic and industrial changes 
to the printing industry. As electronic publishing software becomes 
increasingly sophisticated, user-friendly, and reliable, it approaches 
the ideal of the print customer being able to produce files that can be 
reproduced on the press with little or no intervention by printing 
professionals As the printing process is simplified, the customer can 
take responsibility for more of the work. Thus, the technologies 
diminish the value that printing organizations like GPO add to the 
printing process, particularly for simpler printing jobs. Nonetheless, 
professional expertise remains critical for many aspects of printing, 
and for many print jobs it is still not possible to bypass the printing 
professional altogether.

The advent of the Web and the Internet, however, permits the 
instantaneous distribution of the electronic documents produced by the 
new publishing processes, breaking the link between printing and 
dissemination. As the Web has become virtually ubiquitous, the 
electronic dissemination of information becomes not only practical, but 
more economical than dissemination on paper.

As a result, many organizations are changing from a print to an 
electronic focus. In the early stages of the electronic publishing 
revolution, organizations tended to prepare a document for printing and 
then convert the print layout to electronic form--in other words, 
focusing on printing rather than dissemination. Increasingly, however, 
organizations are changing their focus to providing information--not 
necessarily on paper. Today an organization may employ computers to 
generate plates used for printing as well as electronic files for 
dissemination. Tomorrow, the organization may create only an electronic 
representation of the information, which can be disseminated through 
various media, such as Web sites.[Footnote 6] A printed version would 
be produced only upon request.

GPO Has Begun to Restructure and Modernize in Response to the New 
Environment:

GPO's Public Printer--confirmed by the Senate in November 2002--has 
initiated efforts to modernize and prepare GPO for the 21st century. 
The Public Printer has initiated a reorganization with a chief 
executive officer (Public Printer), chief operating officer, and 
managing directors in addition to the Superintendent of Documents. The 
Public Printer and his management team also reorganized the agency into 
three customer-focused functional areas (Customer Services, 
Information Dissemination, and Plant Operations) and three support 
areas (Information Technology and Systems, Finance and Administration, 
and Human Resources).

According to GPO, this interim restructuring will be used during a 
2-year transitional phase. During this time, further decisions will be 
made about its future and organizational alignment.

According to GPO officials, the Public Printer has also initiated 
efforts to develop a strategic plan to guide its transformation 
efforts. These efforts include:

* conducting fact-finding activities to support plan development,

* convening meetings of top management to discuss and document the "as-
is" state of the organization, and:

* finalizing the plan by December 2004.

Technological Changes Present Challenges to GPO:

In keeping with overall industry trends, the volume of material 
provided to GPO to print has diminished in recent years and is creating 
financial challenges for the agency. According to GPO, its federal 
agency print jobs at one time generated close to $1 billion a year. In 
fiscal year 2003, the amount was just over half of that--$570 million. 
Federal agencies are publishing more items directly to the Web--without 
creating paper documents at all--and are doing more of their printing 
and dissemination of information without using GPO services. This 
reduction in demand has resulted in GPO's procured printing business, 
which was once financially self-sustaining, experiencing losses in 3 of 
the past 5 years, with a net loss of $15.8 million over that period.

Similar changes have affected its sales program. The introduction of 
GPO Access, which allows downloading and printing of documents at no 
cost, has contributed to major losses to the sales program in recent 
years. The availability of free government documents for downloading is 
a boon to the public, but it clearly affects GPO's ability to generate 
sales revenue.

According to the Superintendent of Documents, GPO sold 35,000 
subscriptions to the Federal Register 10 years ago and now sells 2,500; 
at the same time, over 4 million Federal Register documents are 
downloaded each month from GPO Access.[Footnote 7] The Superintendent 
also reported that the overall volume of sales has dropped from 24.3 
million copies sold in fiscal year 1993 to 4.4 million copies sold in 
fiscal year 2002.

The sales program has operated at a loss for the past 5 years, with a 
net loss of $77.1 million over that period, $20 million in fiscal year 
2003 alone. According to GPO, these losses are due to a downward trend 
in customer demand for printed publications that has significantly 
reduced program revenues.

Ongoing technological changes are also creating challenges for GPO's 
longstanding structure for centralized printing and dissemination. As 
mentioned earlier, the requirement in Title 44 that agencies notify GPO 
of their published documents (if they used other printing sources) 
allows it to review agency documents to determine whether the documents 
should be disseminated to the depository libraries. If they should be, 
GPO can then add a rider to the agency's print contract to obtain the 
number of copies that it needs for dissemination.[Footnote 8] However, 
if agencies do not notify it of their intent to print, these documents 
remain unknown, becoming "fugitive documents" which may not be 
available to the public through the depository library program.

In responding to our surveys, executive branch agencies reported that 
while printing requirements are declining, they are producing a 
significant portion of their total volume internally, generally on 
desktop publishing and reproduction equipment instead of large-scale 
printing equipment. In addition, while most agencies (16 of 21) 
reported that they have established procedures to ensure that documents 
that should be disseminated through the libraries are forwarded to GPO, 
5 of 21 did not have such procedures, thus potentially adding to the 
fugitive document problem.

Responding agencies also reported that although currently more 
government documents are still being printed than are being published 
electronically, publishing documents directly to the Web is increasing 
and expected to grow further in the future. Most agencies reported that 
documents currently published directly to the Web were not of the type 
that is required to be sent to GPO for dissemination. However, of the 5 
agencies that did publish eligible documents electronically, only 1 
said that it had submitted these documents to GPO. As electronic 
publishing continues to grow, such conditions may contribute further to 
the fugitive document problem.

Finally, the ongoing agency shift toward electronic publishing is also 
creating challenges for GPO's existing relationships with its executive 
branch customers. In responding to our surveys, executive branch 
agencies expressed overall satisfaction with GPO's products and 
services and expressed a desire to continue to use these services for 
at least part of their publishing needs. However, these agencies 
reported a few areas in which GPO could improve--for example, in the 
presentation of new products and services. Further, some agencies 
indicated that they were less familiar with and less likely to use 
GPO's electronic products and services. Specifically, these agencies 
were hardly or not at all familiar with services such as Web page 
design and development (8 of 28), Web hosting services (8 of 29), and 
electronic publishing services (5 of 28). As a consequence, these 
agencies were also less likely to use these services. With the expected 
growth in electronic publishing and other services, making customer 
agencies fully aware of its capabilities in these areas is important.

GPO Is Making Progress in Its Transformation:

The Public Printer and his leadership team recognize the challenges 
that they face in this changing environment and have embarked upon an 
ambitious effort to transform the agency. First and foremost, the 
Public Printer agrees with the need to reexamine the mission and focus 
of the agency within the context of technological change that is 
occurring. To assist in that process, our panel of printing and 
dissemination experts developed a series of options for GPO to consider 
in its planning. In summary, these options were as follows:

* Focus its mission on information dissemination as its primary goal, 
rather than printing. The panel suggested that GPO first needs to 
create a new vision of itself as a disseminator of information, not 
only a printer of documents. As one panel member put it, GPO should end 
up resembling a bank of information rather than a mint that stamps 
paper. Further, the panel suggested that GPO develop a business plan 
that emphasizes direct electronic dissemination methods over 
distribution of paper documents. The panel suggested that the plan also 
address (1) improving its Web site, GPO Access, (2) investigating 
methods to "push" information and documents into the hands of those 
that need them, (3) modernizing its production processes to publish 
electronically and print only when necessary, (4) promoting the use of 
metadata--descriptive information about the data provided--as a 
requirement for electronic publishing, and (5) providing increased 
support for the federal depository libraries' role in providing access 
to electronically disseminated government information.

* Demonstrate value to customers and the public. The panel agreed that 
while GPO appears to provide value to agencies because of its expertise 
in printing and dissemination, it is not clear that agencies and the 
general public realize this. Therefore, GPO needs to collect data to 
show that, in fact, it can provide value in printing documents, 
providing expert assistance in electronic dissemination, and 
disseminating information to the public.

* Establish partnerships with collaborating and customer agencies. 
According to the panel, GPO should establish partnerships with other 
information dissemination agencies to coordinate standards and best 
practices for digitizing documents and to archive documents in order to 
keep them permanently available to the public. In addition, the panel 
suggested that GPO improve and expand its partnerships with customer 
agencies. While most agencies recognize GPO as a resource for printing 
documents, it now has the capability to assist in the collection and 
dissemination of electronic information.

* Improve internal operations. The panel suggested that GPO would need 
to improve its internal operations to be successful in the very 
competitive printing and dissemination marketplace. For example, panel 
members suggested that GPO hire a chief technology officer (in addition 
to its chief information officer), who would focus on bringing in new 
printing and dissemination technologies while maintaining older 
technologies.

GPO officials responded positively to these results, commenting that 
that the panel's suggestions dovetail well with their own assessments. 
In addition, these officials stated that they are using the results of 
the panel as a key part of the agency's ongoing strategic planning 
process.

GPO also has taken a number of steps to address the issues raised by 
the expert panel. Specifically:

* GPO has established an Office of New Business Development that is to 
develop new products and service ideas that will result in increased 
revenues. GPO officials stated that they are using the results of the 
panel discussion to categorize and prioritize their initial compilation 
of ideas and, in this context, plan to assess how these ideas would 
improve operations and revenue.

* Regarding GPO's mission to disseminate information, GPO officials 
stated that its Office of Innovation and New Technology, established in 
early 2003, is leading an effort to transform GPO into an agency "at 
the cutting edge of multichannel information dissemination."[Footnote 
9] A major goal in this effort is to disseminate information while 
still addressing the need "to electronically preserve, authenticate, 
and version the documents of our democracy." In addition, the Public 
Printer has been added to the oversight committee of the National 
Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program, a national 
cooperative effort to archive and preserve digital information, led by 
the Library of Congress.

* Further, to address the adequacy of its internal functions, GPO's 
Deputy Chief of Staff stated that the agency is in the process of 
searching for a chief technology officer, with the intention that the 
current chief information officer will focus primarily on internal 
business processes, and the chief technology officer will focus on 
identifying the specific technology solutions needed to support its 
printing and dissemination mission.

These efforts are valuable first steps that, if properly followed 
through and implemented, should contribute to the success of GPO's 
transformation.

GPO Has Taken Steps to Improve Its Strategic Human Capital Management:

The Public Printer recognizes that to successfully transform, GPO will 
have to ensure that it strategically manages its people. At the center 
of any serious change management initiative are the people. Thus the 
key to a successful transformation is to recognize the people element 
and implement strategies to help individuals maximize their full 
potential in the organization.

In our October 2003 report, we stated that under the Public Printer's 
direction, GPO also had taken several steps that recognize the 
important role strategic human capital management plays in its 
transformation.[Footnote 10] For example, GPO established and filled 
the position of Chief Human Capital Officer (CHCO), shifted the focus 
of existing training, expanded opportunities for more staff to attend 
needed training, and enhanced recruitment strategies. We also made 
numerous recommendations to GPO on the steps it should take to 
strengthen its human capital management in support of its 
transformation. These recommendations focused on the following four 
interrelated areas:

* communicating the role of managers in GPO's transformation,

* strengthening the role of the human resources office,

* developing a strategic workforce plan to ensure GPO has the skills 
and knowledge it needs for the future, and:

* using a strategic performance management system to drive change.

GPO has taken or plans to take steps that address these 
recommendations. According to the CHCO, a performance element and 
standard is being added to all managers' performance plans to address 
their role as communicators within GPO. Managers are now required to 
meet with their employees at a minimum of once a month with key 
information from these meetings communicated to the CHCO.

In addition, according to the CHCO, the human resources office has been 
reorganized into teams responsible for a particular GPO division, 
serving as a "one-stop shop" for all of the divisions' human resource 
needs. The intention is to fully integrate human capital management 
throughout the agency's operational divisions. All human resources 
office employees will be trained as human resource generalists in the 
full range of human resources activities including change management, 
strategic human resource planning, position classification, 
recruitment and placement, benefits, performance management, career 
development, and labor/employee relations. Training will be provided by 
a combination of in-house talent and outside vendors to upgrade the 
skills of current human resources staff. Additionally, GPO has hired a 
Director of Workforce Development, Education, and Training to manage 
the expanding training program at GPO. The human resources office plans 
to survey GPO's operational divisions regarding their level of 
satisfaction with the new human resources office.

As a first step in GPO's strategic workforce plan, GPO's CHCO plans to 
conduct a skills assessment of its workforce within the next 6 months. 
GPO's newly hired Director of Workforce Development, Education, and 
Training has met with GPO's senior managers, union leaders, employees, 
and skills assessment consultants to determine the methodology that 
will be used for the skills assessment. The skills assessment will 
include a number of measurement tools and methods. Employees will be 
asked to participate in taking assessment inventories, skills tests, 
and electronic and paper-based surveys. While the skills assessments 
are being completed, GPO's leadership plans to identify the critical 
skills and competencies that GPO will need for its transformation. As 
an interim effort, GPO is in the process of surveying its managers to 
identify skills that are lacking for large groups of employees. For 
example, GPO's Chief Information Officer identified the need for staff 
to have enhanced project management skills, and the human resources 
office has worked to provide training to GPO staff to address this gap.

Finally, GPO's CHCO is initiating a pay for performance pilot program. 
The plan is to pilot the new system with Senior Level Service 
employees, and will offer three levels of bonus for employees who meet 
at least 80 percent of their goals. GPO officials have contacted other 
federal agencies to benchmark pay for performance systems, including 
us, and has examples of performance plans and goals from at least five 
federal agencies and from six business and educational institutions.

While GPO has made progress on human capital initiatives, significant 
challenges remain. For example, the restructuring and creation of many 
new positions within GPO produces a great deal of work for the human 
resource office. Developing position descriptions, posting new job 
opportunities, and vetting applications--all the while being 
reorganized and trained to do new tasks--will stretch the human 
resource office. Although the human resource office's culture is 
becoming more collaborative, program officials and human resource 
officials acknowledged that the cultural change is difficult and will 
take time. Given these challenges, continued top leadership commitment 
will be needed to reinforce and sustain the progress the human resource 
office is making to change its culture.

Effective integration and alignment of GPO's human capital approaches 
with its strategies for achieving mission and programmatic goals and 
results will be a key factor in successfully transforming GPO and 
sustaining high performance. As GPO moves forward to draft its 
strategic plan, it will have the opportunity to revisit its progress in 
human capital management and focus the human resource office's 
priorities on areas that contribute most to accomplishing the goals and 
objectives in the strategic plan. Developing a strategic workforce plan 
that is linked to the strategic plan will undoubtedly be a key activity 
for GPO as it moves forward in the second year of its transformation.

GPO Is Responding to Changing Customer Practices and Needs:

GPO is also taking steps to put greater emphasis on customer needs. 
Based on executive agencies' responses to our surveys, we provided 
observations and suggestions for action to GPO. Specifically, we 
suggested that the agency consider:

* working with executive branch agencies to examine the nature of their 
in-house printing and determine whether it could provide these services 
more economically;

* addressing the few areas in which executive branch agencies rated its 
products, services, and performance as below average,

* re-examining its marketing of electronic services to ensure that 
agencies are aware of them; and:

* using the results of the surveys to work with agencies to establish 
processes that will ensure that eligible documents (whether printed or 
electronic) are forwarded to GPO for dissemination to the public, as 
required by law.

GPO officials agreed with the issues identified by executive branch 
agencies and said they are already taking action to address them. 
According to these officials, GPO is:

* taking a new direction with its Office of Sales and Marketing, 
including hiring an outside expert and establishing nine National 
Account Managers, who spend most of their time in the field building 
relationships with key customers, analyzing their business processes, 
identifying current and future needs, and offering solutions;

* working with its largest agency customer, the Department of Defense, 
to determine how to work more closely with large in-house printing 
operations;

* evaluating recommendations received from the Depository Library 
Council; and:

* continuing to implement a Demonstration Print Procurement Project, 
jointly announced with the Office of Management and Budget on June 6, 
2003. This project is to provide a Web-based system that will be a one-
stop, integrated print ordering and invoicing system. The system is to 
allow agencies to order their own printing at reduced rates, with the 
option of buying additional printing procurement services from GPO. 
According to GPO, this project is also designed to address many of the 
issues identified through our executive branch surveys, particularly 
the depository library fugitive document problem.

Such actions, although still in their early stages, should assist GPO 
in determining how to better serve its customers and address issues 
such as those involving fugitive documents.

In summary, the new printing and dissemination environment at the 
beginning of the 21ST century has created significant challenges for 
GPO. Agency leadership recognizes these challenges and has made a 
commitment to transform the agency to function effectively within this 
changed environment. As part of this effort, the Public Printer has 
taken an important step by establishing a strategic planning process, 
which, in part, will consider changes to the agency's future mission 
and focus. Further, in realizing the importance of effective human 
capital management, he is establishing the foundation needed to 
successfully transform GPO. In addition, by placing new emphasis on its 
customers, the agency is focusing on a key characteristic of high-
performing organizations. Fulfilling this commitment, however, will 
require sustained attention from GPO leadership as well as clear-
sighted analysis of the challenges and the actions required in 
response. In the coming months, we plan to continue to work with these 
leaders cooperatively as they make further progress in their 
transformation.

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my statement. I would be pleased to answer 
any questions that you or other members of the committee may have at 
this time.

Contact and Acknowledgements:

For further information, please contact Linda D. Koontz at (202) 512-
6240 or by e-mail at koontzl@gao.gov. Other key contributors to this 
testimony were Barbara Collier, Ben Crawford, Tonia Johnson, Steven 
Lozano, William Reinsberg, and Warren Smith.

[End of section]

Attachment 1: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

Senate Report 107-209 mandated that we perform a comprehensive review 
of the current state of printing and dissemination of government 
information and report on strategic options for GPO to enhance the 
efficiency, economy, and effectiveness of its printing and 
dissemination operations. In addition, the Chairman of the Legislative 
Branch Subcommittee, Senate Committee on Appropriations, requested us 
to carry out a general management review of GPO's operations. As a 
result of our efforts on the mandate and request to date, we prepared 
interim briefings for the Legislative Branch Subcommittee, Senate 
Committee on Appropriations, which we presented to staff of this 
subcommittee on August 27, 2003, and April 1, 2004.

To help explore GPO's options for the future, we contracted with the 
National Academy of Sciences to convene a panel of experts to discuss 
(1) trends in printing, publishing, and dissemination and (2) the 
future role of GPO.

In working with the National Academy to develop an agenda for the panel 
sessions, we consulted with key officials at GPO, representatives of 
library associations including the Association of Research Libraries 
and the American Library Association, and other subject matter experts.

The National Academy assembled a panel of experts on printing and 
publishing technologies, information dissemination technologies, the 
printing industry, and trends in printing and dissemination. This panel 
met on December 8 and 9, 2003.

To obtain information on GPO's printing and dissemination activities--
including revenues and costs--we collected and analyzed key documents 
and data, including laws and regulations, studies of GPO operations, 
prior audits, historical trends for printing volumes and prices, 
financial reports and data, and budget and appropriations data. We also 
interviewed appropriate officials from GPO, the Library of Congress, 
and the Office of Management and Budget.

To determine how GPO collects and disseminates government information, 
we collected and analyzed documents and data on the depository 
libraries, the cataloging and indexing program, and the International 
Exchange Service program. We also interviewed appropriate officials 
from GPO.

To determine executive branch agencies' current reported printing 
expenditures, equipment inventories, and preferences; familiarity and 
level of satisfaction with services provided by GPO, and current 
methods for disseminating information to the public, we developed two 
surveys of GPO's customers in the executive branch:

We sent our first survey to executive agencies that are major users of 
GPO's printing programs and services. It contained questions relating 
to the department's or agency's (1) familiarity with these programs and 
services and (2) level of satisfaction with the customer service 
function. These major users, according to GPO, account for the majority 
of printing done through GPO. This survey was sent to 11 departments 
that manage printing centrally, 15 component agencies within 3 
departments that manage printing in a decentralized manner, and 7 
independent agencies. A total of 33 departments and agencies were 
surveyed. The response rate for the user survey was 91 percent (30 of 
33 departments and agencies).

We sent our second survey to print officers who manage printing 
services for departments and agencies. These print officers act as 
liaisons to GPO and manage in-house printing operations. This survey 
contained questions concerning the department's or agency's (1) level 
of satisfaction with GPO's procured printing and information 
dissemination functions; (2) printing preferences, equipment 
inventories, and expenditures; and (3) information dissemination 
processes. These agencies include those that were sent the user survey 
plus two others that do not use GPO services. We sent this survey to 11 
departments that manage printing centrally, 15 component agencies 
within 3 departments that manage printing in a decentralized manner, 
and 9 independent agencies. A total of 35 departments and agencies were 
surveyed. The response rate for the print officer survey was 83 percent 
(29 of 35 departments and agencies).

To develop these survey instruments, we researched executive agencies' 
printing and dissemination issues with the assistance of GPO Customer 
Services and Organizational Assistance Offices. We used this research 
to develop a series of questions designed to obtain and aggregate the 
information that we needed to answer our objectives.

After we developed the questions and created the two survey 
instruments, we shared them with GPO officials. We received feedback on 
the survey questions from a number of internal GPO organizations 
including Printing Procurement, Customer Services, Information 
Dissemination, and Organizational Assistance.

We pretested the executive branch surveys with the Department of 
Transportation and the Environmental Protection Agency. We chose these 
agencies because each had a long-term relationship with GPO, experience 
with agency printing, and familiarity with governmentwide printing and 
dissemination issues. Finally, we reviewed customer lists to determine 
the appropriate sample size for the executive branch surveys. We did 
not independently verify agencies' responses to the surveys.

Our work on strategic human capital management is based on our October 
2003 report on that topic.

FOOTNOTES

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, Government Printing Office: 
Advancing GPO's Transformation Effort through Strategic Human Capital 
Management, GAO-04-85 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 20, 2003).

[2] Departments, agencies, or their components may be exempted from the 
provisions of Title 44 by having (1) their own authorized printing 
plant approved by the Joint Committee on Printing, (2) a statutory 
exemption, or (3) a waiver to procure printing without going through 
GPO.

[3] Among the printing it performs in house for executive agencies is 
the Federal Register.

[4] The normal service charge is 7 percent of the cost of the job, plus 
a flat processing fee of $7.50. However, under a pilot program, the 
service charge for certain jobs is reduced to 3 percent. 

[5] Examples of other distribution-related programs are the 
International Exchange Service, which exchanges U.S. government 
publications for foreign government publications, which can then be 
made available to the public; the By-Law Distribution program, which 
supports the requirements of executive agencies and the Congress by 
providing publications prescribed by statute free of charge to 
authorized recipients; and Agency Distribution Services, which support 
the requirements of executive branch agencies for distribution of 
publications through the performance or procurement of mail list 
distribution or order-fulfillment services. 

[6] Using tools such as the Extensible Markup Language (XML), for 
example, an organization could prepare one document that would 
automatically be interpreted to display appropriately on a number of 
different display devices, including paper. For more information on 
XML, see U.S. General Accounting Office, Electronic Government: 
Challenges to Effective Adoption of the Extensible Markup Language, 
GAO-02-327 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 5, 2002).

[7] Judith C. Russell, U.S. Superintendent of Documents, "The Federal 
Depository Library Program: Current and Future Challenges of the 
Electronic Transition," presentation at the American Association of Law 
Libraries, Seattle (July 15, 2003). 

[8] Receiving these copies at the rate of the original order is much 
less expensive than arranging a separate print run.

[9] The mission of this office is to find new technologies that can 
help GPO with the challenges of acquiring, authenticating, versioning, 
disseminating, and preserving digital information. According to GPO, 
each of these related functions regarding digital asset management is 
crucial to its future.

[10] GAO-04-85.