What We Looked AtResearch and development (R&D) is vital to advancing technology that can improve vehicle safety. From fiscal years 2012 to 2016, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA), and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology (OST-R) awarded grants and cooperative agreements involving highway and vehicle safety R&D with a total maximum value of $501 million in Federal funds. In 2015, the Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act directed our office to review the Department of Transportation's (DOT) management and oversight of cooperative agreements and cooperative research and development agreements (CRADA), including R&D agreements between DOT and foreign governments. Our audit objective was to assess the Department's policies and procedures for selecting and overseeing its highway and vehicle safety R&D agreements, including grants, cooperative agreements, and CRADAs.What We FoundDOT can strengthen its policies and procedures for awarding and overseeing highway and vehicle safety R&D agreements. First, FHWA and NHTSA do not always follow DOT guidance or Governmentwide requirements for awarding R&D agreements with for-profit recipients, and the Agencies lack guidance which specifically addresses awarding R&D agreements with foreign recipients. Second, NHTSA did not follow DOT policy when it approved the award of cooperative agreements--worth a combined maximum total of $93.7 million--without full and open competition. Third, while FHWA, NHTSA, and OST-R have taken steps to strengthen their oversight of R&D agreements, some gaps remain. For example, OST-R does not routinely review support for grantee cost reimbursements; NHTSA lacks policies and procedures for managing high-dollar R&D agreements; and FHWA paid invoices that did not meet minimum requirements. Based on our findings and statistical projections, we identified $1.6 million in funds that could be put to better use. As a result of weaknesses in its policies and internal controls, DOT may not be able to ensure that it is receiving the best value when awarding new agreements and minimizing the risk of fraud, waste, or abuse of R&D funds.Our RecommendationsWe made 15 recommendations to the Department to improve its management of highway and vehicle safety R&D agreements, including one recommendation that could put $1.6 million to better use. The Department concurred with 13 recommendations and did not concur with 2.
Date Issued
Submitting OIG
Department of Transportation OIG
Other Participating OIGs
Department of Transportation OIG
Agencies Reviewed/Investigated
Department of Transportation
Components
Office of the Secretary of Transportation
Report Number
ZA2019051
Report Description
Report Type
Audit
Agency Wide
Yes
Number of Recommendations
0
Questioned Costs
$9,900
Funds for Better Use
$1,600,000
Open Recommendations
This report has 2 open recommendations.
Recommendation Number | Significant Recommendation | Recommended Questioned Costs | Recommended Funds for Better Use | Additional Details | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | Yes | $0 | $0 | ||
Revise DOT financial assistance policies to specify what officials are authorized to approve justifications for awarding financial assistance without full and open competition. | |||||
15 | Yes | $0 | $0 | ||
Develop and issue guidance to OAs for clearly identifying awards as R&D. |