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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, Government 
Information, and International Security, Senate Committee on Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery: 

Expected at 10:00 a.m. CST Monday, February 6, 2006: 

Federal Real Property: 

Excess and Underutilized Property Is an Ongoing Problem: 

Statement of Mark L. Goldstein, Director, Physical Infrastructure 
Issues: 

GAO-06-248T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-248T, a report to the Subcommittee on Federal 
Financial Management, Government Information, and International 
Security, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. 
Senate: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

In January 2003, GAO designated federal real property a high-risk area 
and issued an update in January 2005. GAO identified excess and 
underutilized property as one of the major reasons for the high-risk 
designation. This testimony discusses GAO’s designation of federal real 
property as a high-risk area, focusing on excess and underutilized 
property and describes various efforts to address the problem and what 
more needs to be done. 

What GAO Found: 

The conditions that led to GAO’s January 2003 high-risk designation 
still exist. The government’s vast and diverse portfolio of real 
property reflects an infrastructure based on the business model and 
technological environment of the 1950s. Many assets are no longer 
effectively aligned with, or responsive to, agencies’ changing missions 
and are therefore no longer needed. GAO’s high-risk reports, updated 
most recently in January 2005, highlighted problems with excess and 
underutilized property at several agencies, including the Departments 
of Defense and Veterans Affairs, the U.S. Postal Service, and the 
General Services Administration. Furthermore, many assets are in an 
alarming state of deterioration; agencies have estimated restoration 
and repair needs to be in the tens of billions of dollars. These 
problems have been exacerbated by underlying obstacles that include 
competing stakeholder interests in real property decisions, various 
legal and budget-related disincentives to businesslike outcomes, and 
the need for better capital planning by agencies. 

The administration has acknowledged the problems in this area; in 
February 2004, the President added the Federal Asset Management 
Initiative to the President’s Management Agenda and signed an executive 
order on real property reform. These and other efforts at the agency 
level are positive steps. However, despite the progress that has been 
made, GAO still believes that current structures and processes may not 
be adequate to fully address the problems. The breadth and complexity 
of the issues involved and the long-standing nature of the problems and 
their underlying causes will likely continue to hamper agencies’ 
efforts to realign their real property assets to their missions. 

Example of Vacant Federal Property: The Former Main Post Office in 
Chicago: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO is not making any new recommendations in this testimony. However, 
GAO continues to believe, as stated in the high-risk series reports, 
that the overall risk to the government and taxpayers could be 
substantially reduced if an effective transformation strategy is 
developed and successfully implemented and real property-holding 
agencies effectively implement current and planned initiatives. Solving 
the problems in this area will require a reconsideration of funding 
priorities at a time when budget constraints will be pervasive. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-248T. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Mark Goldstein at (202) 
512-2834 or GoldsteinM@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

Thank you for the opportunity to testify today on our work related to 
federal real property and, in particular, the problem with excess and 
underutilized property. As you know, at the start of each new Congress 
since 1999, we have issued a special series of reports entitled the 
Performance and Accountability Series: Major Management Challenges and 
Program Risks. In January 2003, we designated federal real property a 
high-risk area as part of this series, and we issued an update on this 
area in January 2005.[Footnote 1] We identified excess and 
underutilized property as one of the major reasons for the high-risk 
designation. Other reasons included deteriorated property, unreliable 
real property data, over-reliance on costly leasing, and the challenges 
associated with protecting these assets from terrorism. My testimony 
today will (1) discuss our designation of federal real property as a 
high-risk area, focusing on excess and underutilized property; and (2) 
describe various efforts to address the problem and what more needs to 
be done. My testimony today will highlight the following points: 

* The conditions that led to our January 2003 high-risk designation 
still exist. Many of the assets in the government's vast and diverse 
portfolio of real property are not effectively aligned with, or 
responsive to, agencies' changing missions and are therefore no longer 
needed. Furthermore, many assets are in an alarming state of 
deterioration; agencies have estimated restoration and repair needs to 
be in the tens of billions of dollars. Additionally, a heavy reliance 
on costly leasing, instead of ownership, to meet new needs is a 
pervasive and ongoing problem. These problems have been exacerbated by 
underlying obstacles that include competing stakeholder interests in 
real property decisions, various legal and budget-related disincentives 
to businesslike outcomes, and the need for better capital planning by 
real property-holding agencies. 

* The administration has acknowledged the problems in this area; in 
February 2004, the President added the Federal Asset Management 
Initiative to the President's Management Agenda and signed an executive 
order on real property management reform.[Footnote 2] These and other 
efforts at the agency level are positive steps. However, the breadth 
and complexity of the issues involved and the long-standing nature of 
the problems and their underlying causes will likely continue to hamper 
agencies' efforts to realign their real property assets to their 
missions. As a result, we continue to believe that a comprehensive and 
integrated transformation strategy is needed to address the 
aforementioned underlying obstacles. As an example, the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) and other stakeholders could look to the 
U.S. Postal Service (USPS) Transformation Plan and related progress 
reports, which GAO has supported for guiding postal reform. 

The Federal Government Has Many Real Property Assets It Does Not Need: 

Over 30 federal agencies control hundreds of thousands of real property 
assets--including both facilities and land--in the United States and 
abroad. According to available data, the government owns or leases 
about 3.3 billion square feet of building floor area worldwide in 
roughly a half-million buildings. About 380 million square feet of this 
space is leased. These assets are worth hundreds of billions of 
dollars. However, much of this vast and valuable asset portfolio 
presents significant management challenges and reflects an 
infrastructure based on the business model and technological 
environment of the 1950s. Many assets are no longer effectively aligned 
with, or responsive to, agencies' changing missions and are therefore 
no longer needed. Our high-risk reports, updated most recently in 
January 2005, highlighted problems with excess and underutilized 
property at several agencies, including the Departments of Defense 
(DOD), Veterans Affairs (VA), Energy, and State; USPS; and the General 
Services Administration (GSA). Furthermore, many assets are in an 
alarming state of deterioration; agencies have estimated restoration, 
repair, and maintenance needs to be in the tens of billions of dollars. 
Compounding these problems are the lack of reliable governmentwide data 
for strategic asset management, a heavy reliance on costly leasing 
instead of ownership to meet new space needs, and the cost and 
challenge of protecting these assets against potential terrorism. 
Regarding the federal government's reliance on costly leasing, we 
testified on this issue before this Subcommittee in October 
2005.[Footnote 3] Building ownership options through construction or 
purchase and lease-purchase are generally less costly than using 
operating leases to meet long-term space needs. However, as GAO 
reported over the last decade, GSA relies heavily on operating leases 
to meet new long-term space needs because it lacks funds to pursue 
ownership. 

The excess and underutilized property problem was, and continues to be, 
a major reason the real property area remains high risk. In the last 
decade alone, the federal government has reduced its workforce by 
several hundred thousand personnel, and several federal agencies have 
had major mission changes. With these personnel reductions and mission 
changes, the need for existing space, including general-purpose office 
space, has declined overall and necessitated the need for different 
kinds of space. At the same time, technological advances have changed 
workplace needs, and many of the older buildings are not configured to 
accommodate new technologies. The advent of electronic government is 
starting to change how the public interacts with the federal 
government. These changes will have significant implications for the 
type and location of property needed in the 21st century. Furthermore, 
changes in the overall domestic security environment have presented an 
additional range of challenges to real property management that must be 
addressed. For example, agencies are employing such measures as 
searching vehicles that enter federal facilities, restricting parking, 
and installing concrete barriers. 

The experiences of several of the major real property-holding agencies 
illustrate how mission changes have affected agencies' real property 
needs. For example, after the Cold War, DOD reduced its force structure 
by 36 percent. Despite several rounds of base closures, DOD projected 
that it still had considerably more property than it needed. The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002 gave DOD the 
authority for another round of base realignments and military 
installation closures in 2005. The results of the 2005 BRAC process, 
which will be discussed in more detail later, became final in November 
2005. For USPS, various factors may significantly reduce its need for 
some of the real property it holds. These factors include new 
technologies, additional delivery options, and the opportunity for 
greater use of partnerships and retail co-location arrangements. A July 
2003 Presidential Commission report on USPS stated, among other things, 
that USPS had vacant and underutilized facilities that added little, if 
any, value to the modern-day delivery of the nation's mail.[Footnote 4] 
In April 2005, we reported that USPS faces future financial challenges 
due to its declining First-Class Mail business and has excess capacity 
in its current infrastructure that impedes efficiency gains.[Footnote 
5] USPS has stated that one way to increase efficiency is to realign 
its processing and distribution infrastructure. 

The former main post office building in Chicago, near the Sears Tower, 
is an example of a vacant USPS-owned property (see fig.1). USPS is 
currently incurring about $2 million in annual holding costs for this 
property, which was replaced by a new facility and vacated in 1997. 
Redevelopment of this property has taken several years because, 
according to USPS, the real estate market was weak and the City of 
Chicago and the developer have been unable to agree on terms. According 
to USPS, the property buyer is currently in negotiations with the City 
of Chicago regarding the property's redevelopment and the granting of 
certain tax exemptions from the City. 

Figure 1: Example of Vacant USPS-Owned Property--the Former Main Post 
Office in downtown Chicago, Illinois: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

In the mid-1990s, VA began shifting its role from being a traditional 
hospital-based provider of medical services to an integrated delivery 
system that emphasizes a full continuum of care with a significant 
shift from inpatient to outpatient services. Subsequently, VA has 
struggled to reduce its large inventory of buildings, many of which are 
underutilized or vacant. In August 2003, we reported that VA had 577 
vacant and underutilized properties. Figure 2 shows an example of a 
vacant VA-owned property in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 

Figure 2: Example of Vacant VA-Owned Property--The Former Main Hospital 
Building on the Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Health Facility Campus: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

The L. Mendel Rivers Federal Building in Charleston, South Carolina is 
an example of a vacant, highly visible federal building owned by GSA 
(see fig. 3). This property, which is contaminated with asbestos, has 
been unoccupied since it sustained damage from Hurricane Floyd in 1999. 
In the last 10 years, GSA has unsuccessfully explored various options 
for disposal or reuse. Currently, GSA is planning, under existing 
authority, to exchange this building with a property owned by the City 
that would suit the federal government's needs. 

Figure 3: Example of Vacant GSA-Owned Property--The L. Mendel Rivers 
Federal Building in Charleston, South Carolina: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

The magnitude of the problem with underutilized or excess federal 
property puts the government at significant risk for wasting taxpayers' 
money and missing opportunities to benefit taxpayers. First, 
underutilized or excess property is costly to maintain. In our 2003 
high-risk report, we reported that DOD estimated that it was spending 
$3 billion to $4 billion each year maintaining facilities that were not 
needed. It is likely that other agencies that continue to hold excess 
or underutilized property are also incurring significant costs for 
staff time spent managing the properties and on maintenance, utilities, 
security, and other building needs. Second, in addition to day-to-day 
operational costs, holding these properties is costly for the 
government, because these buildings and land could be put to more cost- 
beneficial uses, exchanged for other needed property, or sold to 
generate revenue for the government. Continuing to hold property that 
is unneeded does not present a positive image of the federal government 
in local communities. Instead, it presents an image of waste and 
inefficiency that erodes taxpayers' confidence in government. Finally, 
it also can have a negative impact on local economies if the property 
is occupying a valuable location and is not used for other purposes, 
sold, or used in a public-private partnership. 

The excess and underutilized property problem, as well as the other 
problems that led to our high-risk designation, has been exacerbated by 
a number of factors that inhibit the government's ability to 
efficiently dispose of or reuse excess and underutilized property. 
These include competing stakeholder interests in real property 
decisions, various legal and budget-related disincentives to 
businesslike outcomes, and the need for better capital planning by real 
property-holding agencies. More specifically: 

* Competing Stakeholder Interests - In addition to Congress, OMB, and 
the real property-holding agencies themselves, several other 
stakeholders have an interest in how the federal government carries out 
its real property acquisition, management, and disposal practices. 
These include foreign and local governments; business interests in the 
communities where the assets are located; private sector construction 
and leasing firms; historic preservation organizations; various 
advocacy groups; and the public in general, which often views the 
facilities as the physical face of the federal government in local 
communities. As a result of competing stakeholder interests, decisions 
about real property often do not reflect the most cost-effective or 
efficient alternative that is in the interests of the agency or the 
government as a whole, but instead reflect other priorities. 

* Legal and Budgetary Disincentives -The complex legal and budgetary 
environment in which real property managers operate has a significant 
impact on real property decisionmaking and often does not lead to 
economically rational and businesslike outcomes. For example, GSA does 
not have the authority to enter into public-private partnerships to 
redevelop property. We have reported that public-private partnerships 
might be a viable option for redeveloping obsolete federal property 
when they provide the best economic value for the government, compared 
with other options, such as federal financing through appropriations or 
sale of the property. Furthermore, resource limitations, in general, 
often prevent agencies from addressing real property needs from a 
strategic perspective. When available funds for capital investment are 
limited, Congress must weigh the need for new, modern facilities with 
the need for renovation, maintenance, and disposal of existing 
facilities, the latter of which often gets deferred. In disposing of 
excess property, agencies also need to consider a range of laws 
intended to address other objectives--such as historic preservation and 
environmental remediation. 

* Need for Improved Capital Planning - Over the years, we have reported 
that prudent capital planning can help agencies to make the most of 
limited resources, and failure to make timely and effective capital 
acquisitions can result in increased long-term costs. GAO, Congress, 
and OMB have identified the need to improve federal decisionmaking 
regarding capital investment. Our Executive Guide,[Footnote 6] OMB's 
Capital Programming Guide, and OMB's revisions to Circular A- 
11[Footnote 7] have attempted to provide guidance to agencies for 
making capital investment decisions. However, agencies are not required 
to use the guidance. Furthermore, agencies have not always developed 
overall goals and strategies for implementing capital investment 
decisions, nor has the federal government generally planned or budgeted 
for capital assets over the long term. 

Various Efforts Initiated, but a Transformation Strategy Is Still 
Needed: 

Since our designation of the federal real property area as high-risk in 
January 2003, the administration and executive agencies have initiated 
some important efforts to address these problems, including the 
addition of the Federal Asset Management Initiative to the President's 
Management Agenda and an executive order on real property management 
reform which led to the development of guiding principles for real 
property asset management. The executive order requires the 
establishment of senior real property officers at specified executive 
branch departments and agencies who, among other things, prioritize 
actions needed to improve the operational and financial management of 
the agency's real property inventory.[Footnote 8] The order also 
established a Federal Real Property Council, with representation from 
major real property-holding agencies. The council has developed guiding 
principles for real property asset management, and is also developing 
performance measures, a real property inventory database, and an agency 
asset management planning process. Related to the excess and 
underutilized property problem, the administration has set a goal of 
reducing the value of the federally owned property inventory by 5 
percent, or $15 billion, by 2009. The executive order and related 
initiatives are clearly positive steps. However, they have not been 
fully implemented and further actions--which will be discussed later--
are necessary to address the underlying obstacles to reform. 

In addition to the administration's efforts, the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2005, Public Law 108-447, gave GSA 
the authority to retain the net proceeds from the disposal of federal 
property for fiscal year 2005 and to use such proceeds for GSA's real 
property capital needs. However, this provision was not included in the 
GSA appropriation act for Fiscal Year 2006.[Footnote 9] Also, the 
Veterans Health Programs Improvement Act of 2004, Public Law 108-422, 
established a capital asset fund and gave VA the authority to retain 
the proceeds from the disposal of its real property for the use of 
certain capital asset needs such as demolition, environmental clean-up, 
and major repairs. Overall, agencies such as DOD, VA, and GSA have made 
progress in addressing long-standing federal real property problems. 
For example: 

VA has established a process called Capital Asset Realignment for 
Enhanced Services (CARES) to address its aging and obsolete portfolio 
of health care facilities. In March 2005, we reported that through 
CARES, VA identified 136 locations for evaluation of alternative ways 
to align inpatient services--99 facilities had potential duplication of 
services with another nearby facility or low acute patient workload. VA 
made decisions to realign inpatient health care services at 30 of these 
locations. For example, it will close all inpatient services at 5 
facilities. VA's decisions on inpatient alignment and plans for further 
study of its capital asset needs are tangible steps in improving 
management of its capital assets and enhancing health care. 
Accomplishing its goals, however, will depend on VA's success in 
completing its evaluations and implementing its CARES decisions to 
ensure that resources now spent on unneeded capital assets are 
redirected to health care. 

In DOD's support infrastructure management area, which we identified as 
high-risk in 1997, DOD has made progress and expects to continue making 
improvements. In May 2005, we testified that DOD implemented the 
recommendations from the previous four Base Realignment and Closure 
(BRAC) [Footnote 10] rounds within the 6-year period mandated by law 
and work on a 5th, 2005 BRAC, was underway.[Footnote 11] DOD estimated 
that it had reduced its domestic infrastructure by about 20 percent 
from the four prior rounds, as measured by the estimated cost to 
replace the property; about 90 percent of unneeded BRAC property is now 
available for reuse. DOD has realized substantial net savings from 
those four rounds over time. Recommendations approved by the 2005 BRAC 
round are expected to further reduce DOD's infrastructure but by a much 
smaller margin than initially expected, although it expects to make a 
significant reduction in leased space in implementing the BRAC 
recommendations. DOD also expects to use BRAC to further transformation 
and related efforts, such as restationing troops from overseas as well 
as joint basing among the military services. The President concurred 
with and sent the 2005 BRAC report to Congress in September 2005, and 
absent congressional action to reject the recommendations within the 45 
days provided by law, they became final in November 2005. Planning is 
now underway to implement those recommendations. 

GSA has recognized in recent years that it has many buildings that are 
not financially self-sustaining and/or for which there is not a 
substantial long-term federal purpose. To address this problem, GSA 
began its Portfolio Restructuring in 2001. This effort seeks to 
eliminate non-performing or obsolete properties from the GSA inventory. 
In January 2006, GSA told us that since fiscal year 2002, it had 
identified 204 buildings as excess and demolished 50 others. We have 
not evaluated this initiative. 

Despite the progress that has been made, we still believe that current 
structures and processes may not be adequate to fully address the 
federal real property problems. The breadth and complexity of the 
issues involved and the long-standing nature of the problems and their 
underlying causes will likely continue to hamper agencies' efforts to 
realign their real property assets to their missions. This is of 
particular concern for civilian agencies that do not have an 
independent decision-making apparatus like BRAC. Given this, we 
concluded in our high-risk report and in our update in January 2005, 
and still believe, that a comprehensive and integrated transformation 
strategy for federal real property is needed. Such a strategy could 
build upon the executive order by providing decisionmakers with a road 
map of actions for addressing the underlying obstacles, assessing 
progress governmentwide, and enhancing accountability for related 
actions. Using input from agencies, the private sector, and other 
interested groups, the strategy could comprehensively address these 
long-standing problems with specific proposals on how best to: 

* realign the federal infrastructure and dispose of unneeded property, 
taking into account mission requirements, changes in technology, 
security needs, costs, and how the government conducts business in the 
21st century; 

* address the significant repair and restoration needs of the federal 
portfolio; 

* ensure that reliable governmentwide and agency-specific real property 
data--both financial and program related--are available for informed 
decisionmaking; 

* resolve the problem of heavy reliance on costly leasing; and: 

* consider the impact that the threat of terrorism will have on real 
property needs and challenges, including how to balance public access 
with safety. 

To be effective in addressing these problems, it would be important for 
the strategy to focus on the underlying obstacles by: 

* minimizing the negative effects associated with competing stakeholder 
interests in real property decisionmaking; 

* providing agencies with appropriate tools and incentives that will 
facilitate businesslike decisions--for example, consideration should be 
given to what financing options should be available; how disposal 
proceeds should be handled; what process would permit comparisons 
between rehabilitation/renovation and replacement and among 
construction, purchase, lease-purchase, and operating lease; and how 
public-private partnerships should be evaluated; 

* addressing federal human capital issues related to real property by 
recognizing that real property conditions affect the productivity and 
morale of employees and the federal government's ability to attract and 
retain high-performing individuals; 

* improving real property capital planning in the federal government by 
helping agencies to better integrate agency mission considerations into 
the capital decision-making process, make businesslike decisions when 
evaluating and selecting capital assets, evaluate and select capital 
assets by using an investment approach, evaluate results on an ongoing 
basis, and develop long-term capital plans; and: 

* ensuring credible, rational, long-term budget planning for facility 
sustainment, modernization, or recapitalization. 

As an example, OMB and other stakeholders could look to the USPS 
Strategic Transformation Plan and related progress reports, which GAO 
has supported for guiding postal reform.[Footnote 12] Also, the 
transformation strategy should reflect the lessons learned and leading 
practices of organizations in the public and private sectors that have 
attempted to reform their real property practices. Over the past 
decade, leading organizations in both the public and private sectors 
have been recognizing the impact that real property decisions have on 
their overall success. Better management of real property assets in the 
current environment calls for a significant departure from the 
traditional way of doing business. Solutions should not only correct 
the long-standing problems we have identified but also respond to and 
support agencies' changing missions, security concerns, and 
technological needs in the 21st century. If actions resulting from the 
transformation strategy comprehensively address the problems and are 
effectively implemented, agencies will be better positioned to recover 
asset values, reduce operating costs, improve facility conditions, 
enhance safety and security, recruit and retain employees, and achieve 
mission effectiveness. 

Solving the problems in this area will undeniably require a 
reconsideration of funding priorities at a time when budget constraints 
will be pervasive. Without effective incentives and tools; top 
management accountability, leadership, and commitment; adequate 
funding; full transparency with regard to the government's real 
property activities; and an effective system to measure results, long- 
standing real property problems will continue and likely worsen. 
However, the overall risk to the government and taxpayers could be 
substantially reduced if an effective transformation strategy is 
developed and successfully implemented, reforms are made, and property- 
holding agencies effectively implement current and planned initiatives. 
OMB has informed us that it has taken additional steps to address the 
federal government's problems in the real property area. Specifically, 
it has developed an action plan for addressing these long-standing 
issues in relation to the President's Management Agenda and the 
executive order. To assist OMB with its efforts, we have agreed to meet 
regularly to discuss progress and have provided OMB with specific 
suggestions on the types of actions and results that could be helpful 
in justifying the removal of real property from the high-risk list. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be happy to 
respond to any questions you or other Members of the Committee may have 
at this time. 

Scope and Methodology: 

We conducted our work for this testimony from October 2005 to January 
2006 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. The work is based on our past reports on federal real 
property and, specifically, excess and underutilized property issues. 

Contacts and Acknowledgments: 

For further information on this testimony, please contact Mark L. 
Goldstein on (202) 512-2834 or at GoldsteinM@gao.gov. Key contributions 
to this testimony were made by Kieran McCarthy, Susan Michal-Smith, and 
David Sausville. 

(543154): 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] GAO, High-Risk Series: Federal Real Property, GAO-03-122 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2003); GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, GAO-05-
207 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2005). 

[2] Presidential Executive Order 13327, Feb. 4, 2004. 

[3] GAO, Reliance on Costly Leasing to Meet New Space Needs Is an 
Ongoing Problem, GAO-06-136T, (Washington, D.C.: October 6, 2005). 

[4] President's Commission on the United States Postal Service, 
Embracing the Future: Making the Tough Choices to Preserve Universal 
Mail Service (Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2003). 

[5] GAO, U.S. Postal Service: Despite Recent Progress, Postal Reform 
Legislation Is Still Needed GAO-05-453T, (Washington, D.C.: April 14, 
2005). 

[6] GAO, Executive Guide: Leading Practices in Capital Decision-making, 
GAO/AIMD-99-32 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 1998). 

[7] OMB, Circular No. A-11, Appendix B. 

[8] See 31 USC §901 (b)(1) and (b)(2) for a list of executive branch 
departments and agencies that are required to establish a senior real 
property officer. 

[9] Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, the 
Judiciary, District of Columbia and Independent Agencies Appropriations 
Act, 2006, Pub. L. 109-115, 119 Stat. 2396 (2005). 

[10] BRAC is the process DOD has previously used to reorganize its 
installation infrastructure to more efficiently and effectively support 
its forces and increase operational readiness. 

[11] GAO, Military Base Closures: Observations on Prior and Current 
BRAC Rounds, GAO-05-614 (Washington, D.C.: May 3, 2005). 

[12] U.S. Postal Service, Strategic Transformation Plan (Washington, 
D.C.: Sept. 2005); U.S. Postal Service, Progress Report (Washington, 
D.C.: Nov. 2004).