Thank you for your continued work and cooperation in this critical
effort. It is vital that we continue to work closely together on this problem
as January approaches.
Attachments
Attachment A
Status of (Department/Agency's) Year 2000
Efforts:
Quarterly Progress Report
Due August 13 and November 15,
1999
I. Progress on Mission Critical Systems.
A. Indicate whether you have completed work on all mission
critical systems. Please ensure that your report is consistent with the CIO
Council's best practices and GAO's assessment guide, "Year 2000
Computing Crisis: An Assessment Guide."
Total Number of Mission Critical Systems
|
Number Compliant |
Number to be Replaced |
Number to be Repaired |
Number to be Retired |
|
|
|
|
|
B. For those agencies with unfinished mission critical systems,
provide a list of all such systems, whether to be replaced, repaired, or
retired. 1 The list should
include:
- The name of the system.
- A brief description of its function.
- The date when the agency expects to make the system compliant. If
there has been a change since previous reports in the date when the system is
expected to be compliant, please explain.
- A brief description of the implications of the system not being
ready and whether there is a contingency plan in place. If there is no
contingency plan, indicate when one will be complete.
- The reason the system is not yet compliant.
II. Other Progress
A. Provide a description of progress to make non-mission critical
systems compliant, including measures that demonstrate that progress.
B. Provide a description of progress to make data exchanges
compliant with all entities external to your agency, including other Federal
agencies and the private sector. Include:
- The total number of data exchanges, the number that are compliant
on both sides, and the number which have been fixed on the Federal side.
- When you expect that all your data exchanges will be compliant.
- A brief description of any difficulties you have encountered in
making the exchanges compliant.
C. Provide a summary description of efforts to assure that
telecommunications systems and networks owned or managed by your agency are
compliant. Also provide a date by which you expect all telecommunications
systems and networks used by your agency to be compliant and describe any
difficulties you are encountering.
D. Provide a summary description of efforts to assure that buildings
owned or managed by your agency are compliant. Also provide a date by which you
expect all of the buildings used by your agency to be compliant.
E. Provide a summary description of progress to assure that other
systems or equipment, including biomedical equipment and laboratory devices and
any other products or devices using embedded chips that your agency uses are
compliant. Describe any difficulties you are encountering in ensuring that such
equipment is compliant.
F. Please include any additional information that demonstrates your
agency's progress.
III. Federally supported, State-run Programs. Describe
efforts to ensure that Federally supported, State-run programs (including those
programs run by territories and the District of Columbia) will be able to
provide services and benefits. In particular, Federal agencies should be
sensitive to programs that will have a direct and immediate affect on
individuals' health, safety, or well-being. Include a description of
efforts to assess the impact of the year 2000 problem and to assure that the
program will operate. In addition, the Department of Health and Human Services,
the Department of Labor, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture must provide
the following information for those programs listed in Attachment
D.
A. The date when each State's systems supporting the program
will be Y2K compliant. Compliant here indicates the date when the State has
determined when its systems will be able to provide services, whether directly
or indirectly, to beneficiaries.
B. A list of States, if any, for which the Y2K problem is likely to
cause significant difficulties in the State's operation of the program.
Also provide a list of States which are not likely to encounter significant
difficulties.
C. For those States likely to have significant difficulties, a brief
description of any action that the Department is taking to assure that the
program will operate.
D. For each program, provide an estimate by fiscal year of the
Federal share of State costs associated with efforts to achieve Y2K compliance
(report totals in millions and tenths):
Fiscal Year |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
1999 |
2000 |
Total |
Cost Estimate |
|
|
|
|
|
|
IV. High Impact Plans. For each of the 43 high impact
programs for which your agency is the lead, as listed in Attachment C, provide: 2
A. Key partners necessary to ensure that program benefits and
services will be delivered.
B. A brief description of the process to ensure that the program
will be ready, which may include internal testing, data exchanges, and
end-to-end testing, and provide a date when that process was or will be
complete.
C. A date or dates to inform the public of program readiness.
Include dates even if they have passed.
V. Change Management and Verification Efforts
A. Describe how and to what extent internal performance reports,
(i.e., compliance of systems repaired and replaced) are independently verified.
Provide a brief description of activities to assure independent verification
that systems are fixed and to assure that information reported is accurate.
Also identify who is providing verification services (for example, Inspectors
General or contractors).
B. Describe your agency's change management process to assure
that the effect on year 2000 readiness is considered prior to establishing new
requirements or changes to IT systems. 3
C. Describe any ongoing testing your agency is undertaking to ensure
readiness of systems, such as integration testing, end-to-end testing, and
retesting of key systems to further ensure readiness.
VI. Regulatory Review. Describe your agency's process
for reviewing regulations to consider the effect of the regulation on the Year
2000 readiness of regulated entities and to consider alternatives to minimize
that effect. 3
VII. Business Continuity and Contingency Plans (BCCPs).
Provide information on progress in developing and testing BCCPs in your agency.
4 Include:
A. Assurances that local and regional offices have developed and
tested business continuity and contingency plans in coordination with
headquarters. Also provide the total number of such offices which require BCCPs
and the number that have such plans in place.
B. Describe how your agency is coordinating its BCCP with its
Continuity of Operations (COOP) planning efforts.
VIII. Other Management Information.
A. Report your estimates of costs associated with year 2000
remediation, 5 including
both information technology 6 costs as well as costs associated with non-IT
systems. Report totals in millions of dollars. (For amounts under $10 million,
report to tenths of a million.)
Fiscal Year |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
1999 |
2000 |
Total |
Current Cost |
|
|
|
|
|
|
B. Please identify any costs within these estimates that are
not covered by base funds and/or emergency funds that have already been
released.
C. If there have been dramatic changes in cost, please explain.
D. Describe any concerns with availability of key personnel,
including ensuring that key staff will be available during the weeks before and
after the transition to the year 2000.
E. Describe any problems that are affecting progress.
Attachment B
Agencies
Department of Agriculture
Department of Commerce
Department of Defense
Department of Education
Department of Energy
Department of Health and Human Services
Department of Housing and Urban
Development
Department of the Interior
Department of Justice
Department of Labor
Department of State
Department of
Transportation
Department of the Treasury
Department of Veterans
Affairs
Environmental Protection Agency
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration
Social Security Administration
Agency for International
Development
Central Intelligence Agency
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
General Services Administration
National Science Foundation
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Office of Personnel Management
Small
Business Administration
African Development Foundation
Architectural
and Transportation Compliance Board
Armed Forces Retirement Home
Commodities Futures Trading Commission
Consumer Product Safety
Commission
Corporation for National and Community Services
District of
Columbia Courts
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Export/Import
Bank of the United States
Federal Communications Commission
Farm Credit
Administration
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Federal Election
Commission
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Federal Housing Finance
Board
Federal Labor Relations Authority
Federal Reserve Board
Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board
Federal Trade Commission
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Legal Services
Corporation
Marine Mammal Commission
National Archives and Records
Administration
National Capital Planning Commission
National Credit
Union Administration
National Gallery of Art
National Labor Relations
Board
National Mediation Board
National Transportation Safety Board
Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation
Office of Administration, EOP
Office of the Special Counsel
Office of the U.S. Trade Representative,
EOP
Overseas Private Investment Corporation
Peace Corps
Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation
Railroad Retirement Board
Securities and
Exchange Commission
Selective Service System
Smithsonian
Institution
Tennessee Valley Authority
U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Council
U.S. Information Agency
U.S. International Trade Commission
U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board
U.S. Postal Service
Attachment C
43 High Impact Federal Programs
Lead Agency |
Program |
Agriculture (USDA) |
Child Nutrition Programs |
USDA |
Food Safety Inspection |
USDA |
Food Stamps |
USDA |
Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and
Children |
Commerce (DOC) |
Patent and Trademark processing |
DOC |
Weather Service |
Defense (DOD) |
Military Hospitals |
DOD |
Military Retirement |
Education |
Student Aid |
Energy (DOE) |
Federal electric power generation and delivery |
Health and Human Services (HHS) |
Child Care |
HHS |
Child Support Enforcement |
HHS |
Child Welfare |
HHS |
Disease monitoring and the ability to issue warnings |
HHS |
Indian Health Services |
HHS |
Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program |
HHS |
Medicaid |
HHS |
Medicare |
HHS |
Organ transplants |
HHS |
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families |
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) |
Housing loans (GNMA) |
HUD |
Section 8 Rental Assistance |
HUD |
Public Housing |
HUD |
FHA Mortgage Insurance |
HUD |
Community Development Block Grants |
Interior (DOI) |
Bureau of Indian Affairs programs |
Justice (DOJ) |
Federal Prisons |
DOJ |
Immigration |
DOJ |
National Crime Information Center |
Labor (DOL) |
Unemployment Insurance |
State |
Passport Applications and Processing |
Transportation (DOT) |
Air Traffic Control System |
DOT |
Maritime Search and Rescue |
Treasury |
Cross-border Inspection Services |
Veterans Affairs (VA) |
Veteran's Benefits |
VA |
Veteran's Health Care |
Federal Emergency Management Agency |
Disaster relief |
Office of Personnel Management (OPM) |
Federal Employee Health Benefits |
OPM |
Federal Employee Life Insurance |
OPM |
Federal Employee Retirement Benefits |
Railroad Retirement Board |
Retired Rail Worker Benefits |
Social Security Administration |
Social Security Benefits |
U.S. Postal Service |
Mail Service |
Attachment D
Selected Federally-supported, State-run
Programs
Program |
|
Department |
1. |
Food Stamps |
USDA |
2. |
Medical Assistance Program |
HHS |
3. |
Unemployment Insurance |
DOL |
4. |
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families |
HHS |
5. |
Child Nutrition Programs |
USDA |
6. |
Child Support Enforcement |
HHS |
7. |
Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and
Children (WIC) |
UDSDA |
8. |
Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program |
HHS |
9. |
Child Care |
HHS |
10. |
Child Welfare |
HHS |
Footnotes:
1 This information is
to be provided on a monthly basis, but is to be included in the quarterly
reports of August and November in lieu of monthly reports.
2 OMB Memorandum 99-12,
"Assuring the Year 2000 Readiness of Federal High Impact Programs,"
March 26, 1999, asks agencies to report on the status of their programs
monthly until a public announcement is made. The requirement above is for
additional summary information to be included in the August and November
quarterly reports.
3 See OMB
Memorandum 99-17, Minimizing Regulatory and Information Technology
Requirements," May 14, 1999.
4 See OMB
Memorandum 99-16, "Business Continuity and Contengency Planning for the
Year 2000," May 13, 1999.
5 These estimates should include
the costs of information technology remediation as well as non-information
technology products and systems such as air conditioning and heating. Costs for
outreach activities to non-Federal entities should also be included. Agencies
should also include costs associated with business continuity and contingency
planning as well as the implementation of those plans. In addition to regular
appropriations, agency costs should include monies received by the agency for
Y2K from the contingent emergency Y2K fund appropriated in P.L. 105-277,
the Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency supplemental Appropriations Act, 1999.
However, agency cost estimates should not include any non-Y2K costs that were
funded from P.L. 105-277. Finally, these costs should not include upgrades
or replacements that would otherwise occur as part of the normal systems life
cycle. They should not include the Federal share of the costs for State
information systems that support Federal programs. DoD should report
obligattional authority requirements for business and weapons systems.
6 Information
technology costs to be included as described in Section 53 (formerly
section 42) of OMB Circular A-11. DoD should report obligational authority
requirements for business and weapons systems.