Managing Sensitive Information
DOE and DOD Could Improve Their Policies and Oversight
Gao ID: GAO-06-531T March 14, 2006
In the interest of national security and personal privacy and for other reasons, federal agencies place dissemination restrictions on information that is unclassified yet still sensitive. The Department of Energy (DOE) and the Department of Defense (DOD) have both issued policy guidance on how and when to protect sensitive information. DOE marks documents with this information as Official Use Only (OUO) while DOD uses the designation For Official Use Only (FOUO). GAO was asked to (1) identify and assess the policies, procedures, and criteria DOE and DOD employ to manage OUO and FOUO information; and (2) determine the extent to which DOE's and DOD's training and oversight programs assure that information is identified, marked, and protected according to established criteria.
As GAO reported earlier this month, both DOE and DOD base their programs on the premise that information designated as OUO or FOUO must (1) have the potential to cause foreseeable harm to governmental, commercial, or private interests if disseminated to the public or persons who do not need the information to perform their jobs; and (2) fall under at least one of eight Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) exemptions. While DOE and DOD have policies in place to manage their OUO or FOUO programs, our analysis of these policies showed a lack of clarity in key areas that could allow inconsistencies and errors to occur. For example, it is unclear which DOD office is responsible for the FOUO program, and whether personnel designating a document as FOUO should note the FOIA exemption used as the basis for the designation on the document. Also, both DOE's and DOD's policies are unclear regarding at what point a document should be marked as OUO or FOUO and what would be an inappropriate use of the OUO or FOUO designation. For example, OUO or FOUO designations should not be used to conceal agency mismanagement. In our view, this lack of clarity exists in both DOE and DOD because the agencies have put greater emphasis on managing classified information, which is more sensitive than OUO or FOUO. In addition, while both DOE and DOD offer training on their OUO and FOUO policies, neither DOE nor DOD has an agencywide requirement that employees be trained before they designate documents as OUO or FOUO. Moreover, neither agency conducts oversight to assure that information is appropriately identified and marked as OUO or FOUO. DOE and DOD officials told us that limited resources, and in the case of DOE, the newness of the program, have contributed to the lack of training requirements and oversight. Nonetheless, the lack of training requirements and oversight of the OUO and FOUO programs leaves DOE and DOD officials unable to assure that OUO and FOUO documents are marked and handled in a manner consistent with agency policies and may result in inconsistencies and errors in the application of the programs.
GAO-06-531T, Managing Sensitive Information: DOE and DOD Could Improve Their Policies and Oversight
This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-06-531T
entitled 'Managing Sensitive Information: DOE and DOD Could Improve
Their Policies and Oversight' which was released on March 14, 2006.
This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part
of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this
document to Webmaster@gao.gov.
This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this
material separately.
Testimony:
Before the Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats, and
International Relations, Committee on Government Reform, House of
Representatives:
United States Government Accountability Office:
GAO:
For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:00 p.m. EST:
Tuesday, March 14, 2006:
Managing Sensitive Information:
DOE and DOD Could Improve Their Policies and Oversight:
Statement of Davi M. D'Agostino, Director, Defense Capabilities and
Management, and Gene Aloise, Director, Natural Resources and
Environment:
GAO-06-531T:
GAO Highlights:
Highlights of GAO-06-531T, a testimony to the Chairman, Subcommittee on
National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations,
Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives:
Why GAO Did This Study:
In the interest of national security and personal privacy and for other
reasons, federal agencies place dissemination restrictions on
information that is unclassified yet still sensitive. The Department of
Energy (DOE) and the Department of Defense (DOD) have both issued
policy guidance on how and when to protect sensitive information. DOE
marks documents with this information as Official Use Only (OUO) while
DOD uses the designation For Official Use Only (FOUO). GAO was asked to
(1) identify and assess the policies, procedures, and criteria DOE and
DOD employ to manage OUO and FOUO information; and (2) determine the
extent to which DOE‘s and DOD‘s training and oversight programs assure
that information is identified, marked, and protected according to
established criteria.
What GAO Found:
As GAO reported earlier this month, both DOE and DOD base their
programs on the premise that information designated as OUO or FOUO must
(1) have the potential to cause foreseeable harm to governmental,
commercial, or private interests if disseminated to the public or
persons who do not need the information to perform their jobs; and (2)
fall under at least one of eight Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
exemptions. While DOE and DOD have policies in place to manage their
OUO or FOUO programs, our analysis of these policies showed a lack of
clarity in key areas that could allow inconsistencies and errors to
occur. For example, it is unclear which DOD office is responsible for
the FOUO program, and whether personnel designating a document as FOUO
should note the FOIA exemption used as the basis for the designation on
the document. Also, both DOE‘s and DOD‘s policies are unclear regarding
at what point a document should be marked as OUO or FOUO and what would
be an inappropriate use of the OUO or FOUO designation. For example,
OUO or FOUO designations should not be used to conceal agency
mismanagement. In our view, this lack of clarity exists in both DOE and
DOD because the agencies have put greater emphasis on managing
classified information, which is more sensitive than OUO or FOUO.
In addition, while both DOE and DOD offer training on their OUO and
FOUO policies, neither DOE nor DOD has an agencywide requirement that
employees be trained before they designate documents as OUO or FOUO.
Moreover, neither agency conducts oversight to assure that information
is appropriately identified and marked as OUO or FOUO. DOE and DOD
officials told us that limited resources, and in the case of DOE, the
newness of the program, have contributed to the lack of training
requirements and oversight. Nonetheless, the lack of training
requirements and oversight of the OUO and FOUO programs leaves DOE and
DOD officials unable to assure that OUO and FOUO documents are marked
and handled in a manner consistent with agency policies and may result
in inconsistencies and errors in the application of the programs.
What GAO Recommends:
In its report issued earlier this month, GAO made several
recommendations for DOE and DOD to clarify their policies to assure the
consistent application of OUO and FOUO designations and increase the
level of management oversight in their use. DOE and DOD agreed with
most of GAO‘s recommendations, but partially disagreed with its
recommendation to periodically review OUO or FOUO information. DOD also
disagreed that personnel designating a document as FOUO should mark it
with the applicable FOIA exemption.
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-531T.
To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on
the link above. For more information, contact Davi D'Agostino at (202)
512-5431 or Gene Aloise at (202) 512-3841.
[End of section]
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:
We are pleased to be here today to discuss our work on how the
Departments of Energy (DOE) and Defense (DOD) use the designations
Official Use Only (OUO) and For Official Use Only (FOUO), respectively,
to manage information that is unclassified but sensitive. My testimony
today is based on our report issued earlier this month entitled
Managing Sensitive Information: Departments of Energy and Defense
Policies and Oversight Could Be Improved (GAO-06-369). This report (1)
identified and assessed the policies, procedures, and criteria that DOE
and DOD employ to manage OUO and FOUO information; and (2) determined
the extent to which DOE's and DOD's training and oversight programs
assure that information is identified and marked according to
established criteria.
In summary, both DOE and DOD base their programs on the premise that
information designated as OUO or FOUO must (1) have the potential to
cause foreseeable harm to governmental, commercial, or private
interests if disseminated to the public or persons who do not need the
information to perform their jobs; and (2) fall under at least one of
eight Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) exemptions.[Footnote 1] (See
the appendix for a list and description of the exemptions of FOIA.)
Both agencies have policies in place to implement their programs.
However, our analysis of these policies showed a lack of clarity in key
areas that could allow inconsistencies and errors to occur.
Specifically:
* It is unclear which DOD office is responsible for the FOUO program,
and whether personnel designating a document as FOUO should note the
FOIA exemption used as the basis for the designation on the document.
* Both DOE's and DOD's policies are unclear regarding at what point a
document should be marked as OUO or FOUO and what would be an
inappropriate use of the OUO or FOUO designation. For example, OUO or
FOUO designations should not be used to conceal agency mismanagement.
In addition, while both DOE and DOD offer training on their OUO and
FOUO policies, neither DOE nor DOD has an agencywide requirement that
employees be trained before they designate documents as OUO or FOUO.
Moreover, neither agency conducts oversight to assure that information
is appropriately identified and marked as OUO or FOUO. This lack of
training requirements and oversight leaves DOE and DOD officials unable
to assure that OUO and FOUO documents are marked and handled in a
manner consistent with agency policies and may result in
inconsistencies and errors in the application of the programs.
We recommended that both agencies clarify their policies and guidance
to identify at what point a document should be marked as OUO or FOUO
and to define inappropriate uses of these designations. We also
recommended that DOD clarify its policies as to which office is
responsible for the FOUO program and that it require personnel
designating a document as FOUO also to note the FOIA exemption they
used to determine that the information should be restricted. With
regard to training and management oversight, we recommended that both
DOE and DOD require personnel to be trained before they can designate
information as OUO or FOUO, and that they develop a system to conduct
periodic oversight of OUO or FOUO designations to assure that their
policies are being followed.
In commenting on our draft report, DOE and DOD agreed with most of our
recommendations, but DOD disagreed that personnel designating a
document as FOUO should also mark the document with the FOIA exemption
used to determine that the information should be restricted. DOD
expressed concern that an individual may apply an incorrect or
inappropriate FOIA exemption and thus cause other documents that are
created from the original to also carry the incorrect FOIA exemption or
that the incorrect designation could cause problems if a denial is
litigated. However, we believe that citing the applicable FOIA
exemptions when marking a document will cause the employee to consider
the exemptions and make a thoughtful determination that the information
fits within the framework of the FOUO designation. Also, when the
public requests documents, before DOD releases or denies release of the
documents, FOIA experts review them, at which time an incorrect initial
designation should be corrected. Our recommendation was intended to
better assure appropriate consideration of the FOIA exemptions at the
beginning of the process and we continue to believe that this
recommendation has merit.
DOE and DOD Lack Clear OUO and FOUO Guidance in Key Aspects:
Both DOE and DOD have established offices, designated staff, and
promulgated policies to provide a framework for the OUO and FOUO
programs. However, their policies lack sufficient clarity in important
areas, which could result in inconsistencies and errors. DOE policy
clearly identifies the office responsible for the OUO program and
establishes a mechanism to mark the FOIA exemption used as the basis
for the OUO designation on a document. However, our analysis of DOD's
FOUO policies shows that it is unclear which DOD office is responsible
for the FOUO program, and whether personnel designating a document as
FOUO should note the FOIA exemption used as the basis for the
designation on the document. Also, both DOE's and DOD's policies are
unclear regarding at what point a document should be marked as OUO or
FOUO, and what would be an inappropriate use of the OUO or FOUO
designation. In our view, this lack of clarity exists in both DOE and
DOD because the agencies have put greater emphasis on managing
classified information, which is more sensitive than OUO or FOUO
information.
DOE's Office of Security issued an order, a manual, and a guide in
April 2003 to detail the requirements and responsibilities for DOE's
OUO program and to provide instructions for identifying, marking, and
protecting OUO information.[Footnote 2] DOE's order established the OUO
program and laid out, in general terms, how sensitive information
should be identified and marked, and who is responsible for doing so.
The guide and the manual supplement the order. The guide provides more
detailed information on the applicable FOIA exemptions to help staff
decide whether exemption(s) may apply, which exemption(s) may apply, or
both. The manual provides specific instructions for managing OUO
information, such as mandatory procedures and processes for properly
identifying and marking this information. For example, the employee
marking a document is required to place on the front page of the
document an OUO stamp that has a space for the employee to identify
which FOIA exemption is believed to apply; the employee's name and
organization; the date; and, if applicable, any guidance the employee
may have used in making this determination.[Footnote 3] According to
one senior DOE official, requiring the employee to cite a reason why a
document is designated as OUO is one of the purposes of the stamp, and
one means by which DOE's Office of Classification encourages practices
consistent with the order, guide, and manual throughout DOE. Figure 1
shows the DOE OUO stamp.
Figure 1: DOE's OUO Stamp:
[See PDF for image]
Source: DOE.
[End of figure]
With regard to DOD, its regulations are unclear regarding which DOD
office controls the FOUO program. Although responsibility for the FOUO
program shifted from the Director for Administration and Management to
the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense, Command, Control,
Communications, and Intelligence (now the Under Secretary of Defense,
Intelligence) in October 1998, this shift is not reflected in current
regulations. Guidance for DOD's FOUO program continues to be included
in regulations issued by both offices. As a result, which DOD office
has primary responsibility for the FOUO program is unclear. According
to a DOD official, on occasion this lack of clarity causes personnel
who have FOUO questions to contact the wrong office. A DOD official
said that the department began coordination of a revised Information
Security regulation covering the FOUO program at the end of January
2006. The new regulation will reflect the change in responsibilities
and place greater emphasis on the management of the FOUO program.
DOD currently has two regulations, issued by each of the offices
described above, containing similar guidance that addresses how
unclassified but sensitive information should be identified, marked,
handled, and stored.[Footnote 4] Once information in a document has
been identified as for official use only, it is to be marked FOUO.
However, unlike DOE, DOD has no departmentwide requirement to indicate
which FOIA exemption may apply to the information, except when it has
been determined to be releasable to a federal governmental entity
outside of DOD. We found, however, that one of the Army's subordinate
commands does train its personnel to put an exemption on any documents
that are marked as FOUO, but does not have this step as a requirement
in any policy. In our view, if DOD were to require employees to take
the extra step of marking the exemption that may be the reason for the
FOUO designation at the time of document creation, it would help assure
that the employee marking the document had at least considered the
exemptions and made a thoughtful determination that the information fit
within the framework of the FOUO designation. Including the FOIA
exemption on the document at the time it is marked would also
facilitate better agency oversight of the FOUO program, since it would
provide any reviewer/inspector with an indication of the basis for the
marking.
In addition, both DOE's and DOD's policies are unclear as to the point
at which the OUO or FOUO designation should actually be affixed to a
document. If a document might contain information that is OUO or FOUO
but it is not so marked when it is first created, the risk that the
document could be mishandled increases. DOE policy is vague about the
appropriate time to apply a marking. DOE officials in the Office of
Classification stated that their policy does not provide specific
guidance about at what point to mark a document because such decisions
are highly situational. Instead, according to these officials, the DOE
policy relies on the "good judgment" of DOE personnel in deciding the
appropriate time to mark a document. Similarly, DOD's current
Information Security regulation addressing the FOUO program does not
identify at what point a document should be marked. In contrast, DOD's
September 1998 FOIA regulation, in a chapter on FOUO, states that "the
marking of records at the time of their creation provides notice of
FOUO content and facilitates review when a record is requested under
the FOIA."[Footnote 5] In our view, a policy can provide flexibility to
address highly situational circumstances and also provide specific
guidance and examples of how to properly exercise this flexibility.
In addition, we found that both DOE's and DOD's OUO and FOUO programs
lack clear language identifying examples of inappropriate usage of OUO
or FOUO markings. Without such language, DOE and DOD cannot be
confident that their personnel will not use these markings to conceal
mismanagement, inefficiencies, or administrative errors, or to prevent
embarrassment to themselves or their agency.[Footnote 6]
Neither DOE nor DOD Requires Training or Conducts Oversight:
While both DOE and DOD offer training to staff on managing OUO and FOUO
information, neither agency requires any training of its employees
before they are allowed to identify and mark information as OUO or
FOUO, although some staff will eventually take OUO or FOUO training as
part of other mandatory training. In addition, neither agency has
implemented an oversight program to determine the extent to which
employees are complying with established policies and procedures.
OUO and FOUO Training Is Generally Not Required:
While many DOE units offer training on DOE's OUO policy, DOE does not
have a departmentwide policy that requires OUO training before an
employee is allowed to designate a document as OUO. As a result, some
DOE employees may be identifying and marking documents for restriction
from dissemination to the public or persons who do not need to know the
information to perform their jobs, and yet may not be fully informed as
to when it is appropriate to do so. At DOE, the level of training that
employees receive is not systematic and varies considerably by unit,
with some requiring OUO training at some point as a component of other
periodic employee training, and others having no requirements at all.
DOD similarly has no departmentwide training requirements before staff
are authorized to identify, mark, and protect information as FOUO. The
department relies on the individual services and field activities
within DOD to determine the extent of training that employees receive.
When training is provided, it is usually included as part of a unit's
overall security training, which is required for many but not all
employees. There is no requirement to track which employees received
FOUO training, nor is there a requirement for periodic refresher
training. Some DOD components, however, do provide FOUO training for
employees as part of their security awareness training.
Oversight of OUO and FOUO Programs Is Lacking:
Neither DOE nor DOD knows the level of compliance with OUO and FOUO
program policies and procedures because neither agency conducts any
oversight to determine whether the OUO and FOUO programs are being
managed well. According to a senior manager in DOE's Office of
Classification, the agency does not review OUO documents to assess
whether they are properly identified and marked. This condition appears
to contradict the DOE policy requiring the agency's senior officials to
assure that the OUO programs, policies, and procedures are effectively
implemented. Similarly, DOD does not routinely conduct oversight of its
FOUO program to assure that it is properly managed.
Without oversight, neither DOE nor DOD can assure that staff are
complying with agency policies. We are aware of at least one recent
case in which DOE's OUO policies were not followed. In 2005, several
stories appeared in the news about revised estimates of the cost and
length of the cleanup of high-level radioactive waste at DOE's Hanford
Site in southeastern Washington. This information was controversial
because this multibillion-dollar project has a history of delays and
cost overruns, and DOE was restricting a key document containing
recently revised cost and time estimates from being released to the
public. This document, which was produced by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers for DOE, was marked Business Sensitive by DOE. However,
according to a senior official in the DOE Office of Classification,
Business Sensitive is not a recognized marking in DOE. Therefore, there
is no DOE policy or guidance on how to handle or protect documents
marked with this designation. This official said that if information in
this document needed to be restricted from release to the public, then
the document should have been stamped OUO and the appropriate FOIA
exemption should have been marked on the document.
In closing, the lack of clear policies, effective training, and
oversight in DOE's and DOD's OUO and FOUO programs could result in both
over-and underprotection of unclassified yet sensitive government
documents. Having clear policies and procedures in place can mitigate
the risk of program mismanagement and can help DOE and DOD management
assure that OUO or FOUO information is appropriately marked and
handled. DOE and DOD have no systemic procedures in place to assure
that staff are adequately trained before designating documents OUO or
FOUO, nor do they have any means of knowing the extent to which
established policies and procedures for making these designations are
being complied with. These issues are important because they affect
DOE's and DOD's ability to assure that the OUO and FOUO programs are
identifying, marking, and safeguarding documents that truly need to be
protected in order to prevent potential damage to governmental,
commercial, or private interests.
Mr. Chairman, this concludes GAO's prepared statement. We would be
happy to respond to any questions that you or Members of the
Subcommittee may have.
GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:
For further information on this testimony, please contact either Davi
M. D'Agostino at (202) 512-5431 or dagostinod@gao.gov, or Gene Aloise
at (202) 512-3841 or aloisee@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last
page of this statement. Individuals making key contributions to this
testimony included Ann Borseth, David Keefer, Kevin Tarmann, and Ned
Woodward.
[End of section]
Appendix I: FOIA Exemptions:
Exemption: 1. Classified in accordance with an executive order[A];
Examples: Classified national defense or foreign policy information.
Exemption: 2. Related solely to internal personnel rules and practices
of an agency;
Examples: Routine internal personnel matters such as performance
standards and leave practices; internal matters the disclosure of which
would risk the circumvention of a statute or agency regulation, such as
law enforcement manuals.
Exemption: 3. Specifically exempted from disclosure by federal statute;
Examples: Nuclear weapons design (Atomic Energy Act); tax return
information (Internal Revenue Code).
Exemption: 4. Privileged or confidential trade secrets, commercial, or
financial information;
Examples: Scientific and manufacturing processes (trade secrets); sales
statistics, customer and supplier lists, profit and loss data, and
overhead and operating costs (commercial/financial information).
Exemption: 5. Interagency or intra-agency memoranda or letters that are
normally privileged in civil litigation;
Examples: Memoranda and other documents that contain advice, opinions,
or recommendations on decisions and policies (deliberative process);
documents prepared by an attorney in contemplation of litigation
(attorney work-product); confidential communications between an
attorney and a client (attorney- client).
Exemption: 6. Personnel, medical, and similar files the disclosure of
which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy;
Examples: Personal details about a federal employee such as date of
birth, marital status, and medical condition.
Exemption: 7. Records compiled for law enforcement purposes where
release either would or could harm those law enforcement efforts in one
or more ways listed in the statute;
Examples: Witness statements; information obtained in confidence in the
course of an investigation; identity of a confidential source.
Exemption: 8. Certain records and reports related to the regulation or
supervision of financial institutions;
Examples: Bank examination reports and related documents.
Exemption: 9. Geographical and geophysical information and data,
including maps, concerning wells;
Examples: Well information of a technical or scientific nature, such as
number, locations, and depths of proposed uranium exploration drill-
holes.
Sources: FOIA and GAO analysis.
[A] As noted earlier in this report, classified information is not
included in DOE's and DOD's OUO and FOUO programs.
[End of table]
FOOTNOTES
[1] Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. sec. 552). FOIA exemption 1
solely concerns classified information, which is governed by Executive
Order; DOE and DOD do not include this category in their OUO and FOUO
programs since the information is already restricted by each agency's
classified information procedures. In addition, exemption 3 addresses
information specifically exempted from disclosure by statute, which may
or may not be considered OUO or FOUO. Information that is classified or
controlled under a statute, such as Restricted Data or Formerly
Restricted Data under the Atomic Energy Act, is not also designated as
OUO or FOUO.
[2] DOE Order 471.3, Identifying and Protecting Official Use Only
Information, contains responsibilities and requirements; DOE Manual
471.3-1, Manual for Identifying and Protecting Official Use Only
Information, provides instructions for implementing requirements; and
DOE Guide 471.3-1, Guide to Identifying Official Use Only Information,
provides information to assist staff in deciding whether information
could be OUO.
[3] DOE classification guides used for managing classified information
sometimes include specific guidance on what information should be
protected and managed as OUO. When such specific guidance is available
to the employee, he or she is required to mark the document
accordingly.
[4] DOD 5400.7-R, DOD Freedom of Information Act Program (Sept. 4,
1998); DOD 5200.1-R, Information Security Program (Jan. 14, 1997); and
interim changes to DOD 5200.1-R, Information Security Regulation,
Appendix 3: Controlled Unclassified Information (Apr. 16, 2004).
[5] DOD 5400.7-R, C4.1.4, p.43.
[6] Similar language is included in DOD's policies regarding protection
of national security information (DOD 5200.1-R, Information Security
Program (Jan. 14, 1997), sec. C2.4.3.1). DOE's policy for protecting
national security information (DOE M 475.1-1A) makes reference to
Executive Order 12958, Classified National Security Information, as
amended, which also has similar language.