Homeland Security
Efforts Under Way to Develop Enterprise Architecture, but Much Work Remains
Gao ID: GAO-04-777 August 6, 2004
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is attempting to integrate 22 federal agencies, each specializing in one or more interrelated aspects of homeland security. An enterprise architecture is a key tool for effectively and efficiently accomplishing this. In September 2003, DHS issued an initial version of its architecture. Since 2002, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has issued various components of the Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA), which is intended to be, among other things, a framework for informing the content of agencies' enterprise architectures. GAO was asked to determine whether the initial version of DHS's architecture (1) provides a foundation upon which to build and (2) is aligned with the FEA.
DHS's initial enterprise architecture provides a partial foundation upon which to build future versions. However, it is missing, either in part or in total, all of the key elements expected to be found in a well-defined architecture, such as descriptions of business processes, information flows among these processes, and security rules associated with these information flows, to name just a few. Moreover, the key elements that are at least partially present in the initial version were not derived in a manner consistent with best practices for architecture development. Instead, they are based on assumptions about a DHS or national corporate business strategy and, according to DHS, are largely the products of combining the existing architectures of several of the department's predecessor agencies, along with their respective portfolios of system investment projects. DHS officials agreed that their initial version is lacking key elements, and they stated that this version represents what could be done in the absence of a strategic plan, with limited resources, and in the 4 months that were available to meet an OMB deadline for submitting the department's fiscal year 2004 information technology budget request. In addition, they stated that the next version of the architecture, which is to be issued in September 2004, would have much more content. As a result, DHS does not yet have the necessary architectural blueprint to effectively guide and constrain its ongoing business transformation efforts and the hundreds of millions of dollars that it is investing in supporting information technology assets. Without this, DHS runs the risk that its efforts and investments will not be well integrated, will be duplicative, will be unnecessarily costly to maintain and interface, and will not optimize overall mission performance. The department's initial enterprise architecture can be traced semantically with the FEA, which means that similar terms and/or definitions of terms can be found in the respective architectures. However, traceability in terms of architecture structures and functions is not apparent. Because of this, it is not clear whether the substance and intent of the respective architectures are in fact aligned, meaning that, if both were implemented, they would produce similar outcomes. This is due at least in part to the fact that OMB has yet to clearly define what it expects the relationship between agencies' enterprise architectures and the FEA to be, including what it means by architectural alignment.
Recommendations
Our recommendations from this work are listed below with a Contact for more information. Status will change from "In process" to "Open," "Closed - implemented," or "Closed - not implemented" based on our follow up work.
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GAO-04-777, Homeland Security: Efforts Under Way to Develop Enterprise Architecture, but Much Work Remains
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Report to the Subcommittee on Technology, Information Policy,
Intergovernmental Relations and the Census, Committee on Government
Reform, House of Representatives:
August 2004:
HOMELAND SECURITY:
Efforts Under Way to Develop Enterprise Architecture, but Much Work
Remains:
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-777]:
GAO Highlights:
Highlights of GAO-04-777, a report to Chairman, Subcommittee on
Technology, Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and the
Census, Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives.
Why GAO Did This Study:
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is attempting to integrate 22
federal agencies, each specializing in one or more interrelated aspects
of homeland security. An enterprise architecture is a key tool for
effectively and efficiently accomplishing this. In September 2003, DHS
issued an initial version of its architecture. Since 2002, the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) has issued various components of the
Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA), which is intended to be, among
other things, a framework for informing the content of agencies‘
enterprise architectures. GAO was asked to determine whether the
initial version of DHS‘s architecture (1) provides a foundation upon
which to build and (2) is aligned with the FEA.
What GAO Found:
DHS‘s initial enterprise architecture provides a partial foundation
upon which to build future versions. However, it is missing, either in
part or in total, all of the key elements expected to be found in a
well-defined architecture, such as descriptions of business processes,
information flows among these processes, and security rules associated
with these information flows, to name just a few (see figure below for
a summary of key elements present). Moreover, the key elements that
are at least partially present in the initial version were not derived
in a manner consistent with best practices for architecture
development. Instead, they are based on assumptions about a DHS or
national corporate business strategy and, according to DHS, are largely
the products of combining the existing architectures of several of the
department‘s predecessor agencies, along with their respective
portfolios of system investment projects. DHS officials agreed that
their initial version is lacking key elements, and they stated that
this version represents what could be done in the absence of a
strategic plan, with limited resources, and in the 4 months that were
available to meet an OMB deadline for submitting the department‘s
fiscal year 2004 information technology budget request. In addition,
they stated that the next version of the architecture, which is to be
issued in September 2004, would have much more content. As a result,
DHS does not yet have the necessary architectural blueprint to
effectively guide and constrain its ongoing business transformation
efforts and the hundreds of millions of dollars that it is investing in
supporting information technology assets. Without this, DHS runs the
risk that its efforts and investments will not be well integrated, will
be duplicative, will be unnecessarily costly to maintain and interface,
and will not optimize overall mission performance.
The department‘s initial enterprise architecture can be traced
semantically with the FEA, which means that similar terms and/or
definitions of terms can be found in the respective architectures.
However, traceability in terms of architecture structures and functions
is not apparent. Because of this, it is not clear whether the substance
and intent of the respective architectures are in fact aligned, meaning
that, if both were implemented, they would produce similar outcomes.
This is due at least in part to the fact that OMB has yet to clearly
define what it expects the relationship between agencies‘ enterprise
architectures and the FEA to be, including what it means by
architectural alignment.
Summary of Extent to Which Version 1.0 Satisfies Key Elements Governing
Architectural Content:
[See PDF for image]
[End of figure]
What GAO Recommends:
GAO is making recommendations to the Secretary of Homeland Security
aimed at improving the department‘s architecture content and
development approach. GAO is also making a recommendation to the
Director of OMB to clarify the expected relationship between agencies‘
enterprise architectures and the FEA. In comments on this report, DHS
stated that it was not realistic for the initial version of its
architecture to satisfy all of the key elements recommended by GAO, but
that future versions would do so. OMB stated that it would address the
FEA and agency architecture relationship issues that GAO reported.
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-777.
To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on
the link above. For more information, contact Randolph C. Hite at (202)
512-3439 or hiter@gao.gov.
[End of section]
Contents:
Letter:
Results in Brief:
Background:
Initial Version of DHS's Architecture Provides a Partial Foundation
upon Which to Build, but Not a Sufficient Basis to Guide Investment
Decisions:
Initial Architecture Can Be Partially Traced to the Federal Enterprise
Architecture, but the Extent of Alignment Is Unclear:
Conclusions:
Recommendations for Executive Action:
Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:
Appendixes:
Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:
Appendix II: Detailed Results of GAO's Analyses of Version 1.0 of DHS's
"To Be" Architecture:
Appendix III: Detailed Results of GAO's Analyses of Version 1.0 of
DHS's Transition Plan:
Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:
GAO Comments:
Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:
GAO Contact:
Staff Acknowledgments:
Tables:
Table 1: Overview of Key DHS Component Organizations' Roles:
Table 2: Summary of Key Architecture Entities and Individuals and Their
Responsibilities:
Table 3: GAO's Framework for Enterprise Architecture Management
Maturity:
Table 4: Service Domains, the Capabilities That They Describe, and
Associated Service Types:
Figures:
Figure 1: Simplified Diagram of DHS Organizational Structure:
Figure 2: Summary of Extent to Which Version 1.0 Satisfies Key Elements
Governing Architectural Content:
Abbreviations:
CIO: chief information officer:
CURE: create, update, reference, and eliminate:
DHS: Department of Homeland Security:
DOD: Department of Defense:
EAI: enterprise application integration:
FEA: Federal Enterprise Architecture:
GIG: Global Information Grid:
IT: information technology:
OMB: Office of Management and Budget:
TRM: technical reference model:
Letter August 6, 2004:
The Honorable Adam H. Putnam:
Chairman, Subcommittee on Technology, Information Policy,
Intergovernmental Relations and the Census:
Committee on Government Reform:
House of Representatives:
Dear Mr. Chairman:
Following September 11, 2001, homeland security emerged as a more
prominent federal mission. To improve the federal government's ability
to fulfill this mission, Congress passed and the President signed the
Homeland Security Act of 2002. Among other things, this act created the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) by merging 22 separate agencies,
each specializing in one or more interrelated and interdependent
aspects of homeland security, such as intelligence analysis, law
enforcement, border security, transportation security, biological
research, critical infrastructure protection, and disaster recovery.
The effective interaction, integration, and synergy of these agencies
are critical to homeland security mission performance.
Because of the importance of the department's mission operations and
the enormity of the challenges associated with creating the federal
government's third largest department, we designated the implementation
and transformation of DHS as a high-risk area in January 2003.[Footnote
1] We also reported in June 2002 that DHS needed to, among other
things, develop and implement an enterprise architecture to aid in
optimizing departmentwide operations and its supporting systems
environments.[Footnote 2] As we have repeatedly reported,[Footnote 3] a
well-defined enterprise architecture is essential to an organization's
ability to transform its operations and supporting systems in a way
that eliminates duplication, promotes interoperability, reduces costs,
and optimizes mission performance.
Recognizing the pivotal role that an architecture will play in
successfully merging the diverse operating and systems environments
that the department inherited, DHS issued an initial version in
September 2003. The department also stated its intention to improve on
this initial version and issue a second version in September 2004. You
requested that we determine whether the initial version of the
architecture (1) provides a foundation upon which to build and (2) is
aligned with the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) Federal
Enterprise Architecture (FEA).[Footnote 4] We performed our work in
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.
Details on our objectives, scope, and methodology are in appendix I.
Results in Brief:
The department's initial enterprise architecture provides a partial
basis upon which to build future versions. However, it is missing most
of the content necessary to be considered a well-defined architecture.
Moreover, the content in this version was not systematically derived
from a DHS or a national corporate business strategy; rather, it was
more the result of an amalgamation of the existing architectures that
several of DHS's predecessor agencies already had, along with their
respective portfolios of system investment projects. Such a development
approach is not consistent with recognized architecture development
best practices. DHS officials agreed with our content assessment of
their initial architecture, stating that it is largely a reflection of
what could be done without a strategic plan to drive architectural
content and with limited resources and time. They also stated that the
primary purposes in developing this version were to meet an OMB
deadline for submitting the department's fiscal year 2004 information
technology (IT) budget request and to mature the department's
understanding of enterprise architecture and its ability to execute an
approach and methodology for developing and using the next version of
the architecture. Regardless, the fact remains that DHS does not yet
have the architectural content that it needs to effectively guide and
constrain its business transformation efforts and the hundreds of
millions of dollars it is investing in supporting systems. Without such
content, DHS runs the risk that its investments will not be well
integrated, will be duplicative, will be unnecessarily costly to
maintain and interface, and will not effectively optimize mission
performance. To their credit, the department's chief information
officer and senior architecture officials recognize the architecture's
limitations and are in the process of developing a new version.
DHS's initial enterprise architecture can be aligned semantically with
the FEA,[Footnote 5] that is, similar terms and/or definitions of terms
can be found in the respective architectures. However, alignment in
terms of architecture structures and functions is not apparent. Because
of this, it is not clear whether the substance and intent of each has
the same meaning and would produce similar outcomes if implemented.
This is at least in part due to the fact that OMB has yet to clearly
define what it expects the relationship to be between agencies'
enterprise architectures and the FEA, including what OMB means by the
term architectural alignment.
To assist DHS in developing a well-defined enterprise architecture, we
are recommending 41 actions aimed at having DHS's architecture
executive steering committee provide the resources necessary to add
needed architecture content and ensure that architecture development
best practices are employed. In addition, to assist DHS and other
agencies in developing and evolving their respective architectures, we
are making a recommendation to OMB to clarify the expected relationship
between the FEA and federal agencies' architectures.
In written comments on a draft of our report that was signed by the
Director, Bankcard Programs and GAO/OIG Liaison within the Office of
the Chief Financial Officer, DHS stated that it took exception to
several aspects of our report, including the appropriateness and prior
disclosure of the criteria that we used to evaluate the initial version
of its architecture and to the premature nature of our recommendations,
given the limited scope and intent of this initial version.
Nevertheless, DHS agreed with our position that much work remains to
develop an architecture that can support business and IT
transformation. Moreover, despite taking exception to the criteria and
our recommendations, the department also stated that it would ensure
that the criteria we used to evaluate the initial version, which we
reference in our recommendations, are addressed to the extent possible
in the next version of its architecture. While we do not agree with
DHS's view of the criteria we used and the recommendations we made--for
reasons discussed later in this report--or with other comments that DHS
provided stating that some of our facts about the content of the
initial version are not correct, we do agree with the department's
decision to address our recommendations incrementally. As we have long
held and reported, enterprise architecture development should be
incremental, with each version of the architecture adding more depth
and detail to an enterprisewide, business-driven foundation.
Accordingly, the intent of our recommendations is to provide DHS with a
constructive road map, grounded in explicit criteria, for incrementally
developing a mission-derived blueprint for business and technology
transformation.
In its oral comments on a draft of this report, OMB's Office of E-
Government and Information Technology and Office of General Counsel
stated that its continuing evolution of the FEA will clarify the FEA's
relationship with agencies' architectures and will address issues
raised in our report.
Background:
The creation of DHS in November 2002[Footnote 6] represents the most
significant transformation of the U.S. government since 1947, when the
various branches of the U.S. Armed Forces were combined into the
Department of Defense (DOD) to better coordinate the nation's defense
against military threats. In January 2003, we cited numerous management
and leadership challenges facing DHS as it attempted to merge 22
separate federal agencies, and we designated the department's
transformation as high risk.[Footnote 7] Shortly thereafter, the
department stated that it faced significant transformational
challenges, such as (1) developing new business processes, (2) unifying
multiple organizational structures, (3) integrating multiple border-
security and interior-enforcement functions, (4) integrating
information technology (application systems and infrastructures), and
(5) improving information sharing. The magnitude of these challenges is
enormous. For example, DHS reports that it has redundancies in such
business processes as human resources management, financial management,
and procurement--including about 300 application systems that support
inconsistent and duplicative processes. DHS also reports that it plans
to invest about $4.1 billion during fiscal year 2004 in IT for both new
and existing systems, to more effectively and efficiently support its
mission operations and business processes.
An enterprise architecture is a key tool for effectively and
efficiently overcoming the kinds of transformational challenges that
face DHS. In short, it is a business and technology blueprint that
links an organization's strategic plan to the program and supporting
system implementations that are needed to systematically move the
organization from how it operates today to how it intends to operate
tomorrow. As we have repeatedly reported,[Footnote 8] without an
enterprise architecture to guide and constrain IT investments, it is
unlikely that an organization will be able to transform its business
processes and modernize its supporting systems in a way that minimizes
overlap and duplication, and thus costs, and maximizes interoperability
and mission performance.
DHS's Mission and Organizational Structure: A Brief Description:
According to DHS's strategic plan, its mission is to lead a unified
national effort to secure America by preventing and deterring terrorist
attacks and protecting against and responding to threats and hazards to
the nation. DHS also is to ensure safe and secure borders, welcome
lawful immigrants and visitors, and promote the free flow of commerce.
As part of its responsibilities, the department must also coordinate
and facilitate the sharing of information both among its component
agencies and with other federal agencies, state and local governments,
the private sector, and other entities.
As illustrated in DHS's organizational structure (see fig. 1), to
accomplish its mission it has five under secretaries with
responsibility over the directorates or offices for management, science
and technology, information analysis and infrastructure protection,
border and transportation security, and emergency preparedness and
response. Each DHS directorate is responsible for leading its specific
homeland security mission area and coordinating relevant efforts with
other federal agencies and state and local governments. The department
is also composed of other component organizations, such as the U.S.
Coast Guard and the U.S. Secret Service. Table 1 describes the primary
roles of these five directorates and several of these component
organizations.
Figure 1: Simplified Diagram of DHS Organizational Structure:
[See PDF for image]
[End of figure]
Table 1: Overview of Key DHS Component Organizations' Roles:
Key organizations: Management;
Roles: Manages budgets, appropriations, expenditure of funds,
accounting and finance, procurement, human resources and personnel,
information technology, facilities, property, and equipment in support
of the other four directorates.
Key organizations: Science and technology;
Roles: Organizes scientific and technological resources to prevent or
mitigate the effects of catastrophic terrorism; unifies and coordinates
efforts to develop and implement scientific and technological
countermeasures; sponsors research and evaluates new vaccines,
antidotes, diagnostics, and therapies against biological and chemical
warfare agents.
Key organizations: Information analysis and infrastructure protection;
Roles: Analyzes intelligence and information obtained from other
agencies (including the Central Intelligence Agency, Federal Bureau of
Investigation, and National Security Agency) involving threats to
homeland security; evaluates vulnerabilities in the nation's
infrastructure; and works with stakeholders to develop and implement
an integrated national plan for the physical and cyberprotection of
critical infrastructures and key assets.
Key organizations: Border and transportation security;
Roles: Prevents the illegal entry of people or goods while facilitating
the unimpeded flow of lawful commerce and people across our borders,
secures our nation's transportation systems, and enforces immigration
laws.
Key organizations: Emergency preparedness and response;
Roles: Prepares for, mitigates the effects of, responds to, and
recovers from major domestic disasters, both natural and man-made,
including incidents of terrorism.
Key organizations: Coast Guard;
Roles: Protects the public, the environment, and U.S. economic and
security interests in international waters and America's coasts, ports,
and inland waterways.
Key organizations: Secret Service;
Roles: Protects the President and other government leaders, provides
security for designated national events, and preserves the integrity of
the nation's financial and critical infrastructures.
Key organizations: Citizenship and immigration services;
Roles: Administers services, such as immigrant and nonimmigrant
sponsorship, adjustment of status, work authorization and other
permits, naturalization of qualified applicants for U.S. citizenship,
and asylum or refugee processing.
Key organizations: Counter narcotics;
Roles: Coordinates policy and operations within the department and
between the department and other federal agencies with respect to
illegal drug trafficking and its terrorist-related ramifications;
facilitates the tracking and severing of connections between drug
trafficking and terrorism.
Key organizations: State and local coordination;
Roles: Facilitates and coordinates departmental programs that affect
state, local, territorial, and tribal governments.
Key organizations: National capital region coordination;
Roles: Oversees and coordinates federal programs and domestic
preparedness initiatives for state, local, and regional authorities in
the National Capital Region, including the District of Columbia,
Maryland, and Virginia.
Source: DHS.
[End of table]
Within the Management directorate is the DHS Office of the Chief
Information Officer (CIO), which has primary responsibility for
addressing departmentwide information technology integration issues.
According to the CIO, this office's responsibilities include developing
and facilitating the implementation of such integration enablers as
the department's IT strategic plan and its enterprise architecture. The
CIO released an initial version of the enterprise architecture in
September 2003 and plans to issue the next version in September 2004.
According to the CIO, updated releases of the architecture will be
issued on an annual basis. To provide the necessary leadership,
direction, and management to create the architecture, the CIO
established various entities and assigned specific responsibilities to
each. Table 2 describes the key architecture entities and individuals
involved in developing and maintaining the architecture, along with
their respective responsibilities.
Table 2: Summary of Key Architecture Entities and Individuals and Their
Responsibilities:
Entity/position: Office of Planning and Enterprise Architecture;
Responsibilities: Manages the department's architecture program and is
led by the chief architect, who oversees the development, verification,
and adoption of the architecture. Reports to the department's CIO.
Entity/position: Enterprise architecture executive steering committee
(also called the DHS Management Council);
Responsibilities: Is accountable and responsible for the enterprise
architecture. Makes decisions that affect the enterprise architecture
and the associated program; determines projects' compliance with the
architecture. Provides advice or guidance to the department's CIO.
Composed of senior executives from technical and business organizations
across the department (e.g., DHS CIO, Under Secretary for Border and
Transportation Security, the Commandant of the Coast Guard, and the
Director of the U.S. Secret Service).
Entity/position: Enterprise architecture core team;
Responsibilities: Trains users and core team members. Promotes and
evaluates the architecture program. Collects and analyzes performance
data on architecture activities. Provides consulting support to project
personnel to help achieve compliance with the architecture.
Entity/position: Enterprise architecture configuration control board
working group;
Responsibilities: Controls changes to architecture products and
processes in accordance with configuration management principles.
Establishes and oversees the processes for submitting, evaluating, and
implementing change requests, and is directed by the chief architect.
Source: DHS.
[End of table]
Enterprise Architecture: A Brief Description:
Effective use of enterprise architectures is a trademark of successful
public and private organizations. For a decade, we have promoted the
use of architectures to guide and constrain systems modernization,
recognizing them as a crucial means to a challenging goal: establishing
agency operational structures that are optimally defined in both
business and technological environments. Congress, OMB, and the federal
CIO Council have also recognized the importance of an architecture-
centric approach to modernization. The Clinger-Cohen Act of 1996
mandates that an agency's CIO develop, maintain, and facilitate the
implementation of an IT architecture. This should provide the means for
managing the integration of business processes and supporting systems.
Further, the E-Government Act of 2002[Footnote 9] requires OMB to
oversee the development of enterprise architectures within and across
agencies.
Generally speaking, an enterprise architecture connects an
organization's strategic plan with program and system solution
implementations by providing the fundamental information details needed
to guide and constrain implementable investments in a consistent,
coordinated, and integrated fashion. An enterprise architecture
provides a clear and comprehensive picture of an entity, whether it is
an organization (e.g., federal department) or a functional or mission
area that cuts across more than one organization (e.g., homeland
security). This picture consists of snapshots of both the enterprise's
current or "As Is" operational and technological environment and its
target or "To Be" environment, as well as a capital investment road map
for transitioning from the current to the target environment. These
snapshots further consist of "views," which are basically one or more
architecture products that provide conceptual or logical
representations of the enterprise.
The suite of products and their content that form a given entity's
enterprise architecture are largely governed by the framework used to
develop the architecture. Since the 1980s, various frameworks have
emerged and been applied. For example, John Zachman developed a
structure or framework for defining and capturing an
architecture.[Footnote 10] This framework provides for six windows from
which to view the enterprise, which Zachman calls "perspectives" on how
a given entity operates: the perspectives of (1) the strategic planner,
(2) the system user, (3) the system designer, (4) the system developer,
(5) the subcontractor, and (6) the system itself. Zachman also proposed
six abstractions or models that are associated with each of these
perspectives: these models cover (1) how the entity operates, (2) what
the entity uses to operate, (3) where the entity operates, (4) who
operates the entity, (5) when entity operations occur, and (6) why the
entity operates.
Other frameworks also exist. Each of these frameworks use somewhat
unique nomenclatures to define themselves. However, they all generally
provide for defining an enterprise's operations in both (1) logical
terms, such as interrelated business processes and business rules,
information needs and flows, and work locations and users and
(2) technical terms, such as hardware, software, data, communications,
and security attributes and performance standards. The frameworks also
provide for defining these perspectives for both the enterprise's
current or "As Is" environment and its target or "To Be" environment,
as well as a transition plan for moving from the "As Is" to the "To Be"
environment.
Our research and experience show that for major program investments,
such as the development of an enterprise architecture, successful
organizations approach product development in an incremental fashion,
meaning that they initially develop a foundational product that is
expanded and extended through a series of follow-on products that add
more capability and value. In doing so, these organizations can
effectively mitigate the enormous risk associated with trying to
deliver a large and complex product that requires the execution of many
activities over an extended period of time as a single monolithic
product. In effect, this incremental approach permits a large
undertaking to be broken into a series of smaller projects, or
incremental versions, that can be better controlled to provide
reasonable assurance that expectations are met.
The importance of developing, implementing, and maintaining an
enterprise architecture is a basic tenet of both organizational
transformation and IT management. Managed properly, an enterprise
architecture can clarify and help to optimize the interdependencies and
relationships among an organization's business operations and the
underlying IT infrastructure and applications that support these
operations. Employed in concert with other important management
controls--such as portfolio-based capital planning and investment
control practices--architectures can greatly increase the chances that
an organization's operational and IT environments will be configured to
optimize mission performance. Our experience with federal agencies has
shown that investing in IT without defining these investments in the
context of an architecture often results in systems that are
duplicative, not well integrated, and unnecessarily costly to maintain
and interface.[Footnote 11]
Our Prior Work Has Emphasized the Need for a DHS Enterprise
Architecture:
For the last 2 years, we have promoted the development and use of a
homeland security enterprise architecture. In June 2002, we
testified[Footnote 12] on the need to define the homeland security
mission and the information, technologies, and approaches necessary to
perform this mission in a way that is divorced from organizational
parochialism and cultural differences. At that time, we stressed that a
particularly critical function of a homeland security architecture
would be to establish processes and information/data protocols and
standards that could facilitate information collection and permit
sharing.
In January 2003, when we designated DHS's transformation as high risk,
we again emphasized the need to develop and implement an enterprise
architecture. In May 2003 testimony,[Footnote 13] we reiterated this
need, stating that, for DHS to be successful in addressing threats of
domestic terrorism, it would need to establish effective systems and
processes to facilitate information sharing among and between
government entities and the private sector. We stated that to
accomplish this the department would need to develop and implement an
enterprise architecture.
In August 2003,[Footnote 14] we reported that DHS had begun to develop
an enterprise architecture and that it planned to use this architecture
to assist its efforts to integrate and share information between
federal agencies and among federal agencies, state and city
governments, and the private sector. In November 2003,[Footnote 15] we
reported on DHS's progress in establishing key enterprise architecture
management capabilities, as described in our architecture management
maturity framework.[Footnote 16] This framework associates specific
architecture management capabilities with five hierarchical stages of
management maturity, starting with creating architecture awareness and
followed by building the architecture management foundation, developing
the architecture, completing the architecture, culminating in
leveraging the architecture to manage change (see table 3 for a more
detailed description of the stages).
Table 3: GAO's Framework for Enterprise Architecture Management
Maturity:
Maturity stage: Stage 1: Creating enterprise architecture awareness;
Description: Organization does not have plans to develop and use an
architecture or it has plans that do not demonstrate an awareness of
the value of having and using an architecture. While stage 1 agencies
may have initiated some architecture activity, these agencies' efforts
are ad hoc and unstructured, lack institutional leadership and
direction, and do not provide the management foundation that is
necessary for successful architecture development.
Maturity stage: Stage 2: Building the enterprise architecture
management foundation;
Description: Organization recognizes that the architecture is a
corporate asset by vesting accountability for it in an executive body
that represents the entire enterprise. At this stage, an organization
assigns architecture management roles and responsibilities and
establishes plans for developing enterprise architecture products and
for measuring program progress and product quality; it also commits
the resources necessary for developing an architecture--people,
processes, and tools.
Maturity stage: Stage 3: Developing the enterprise architecture;
Description: Organization focuses on developing architecture products
according to the selected framework, methodology, tool, and established
management plans. Roles and responsibilities assigned in the previous
stage are in place, and resources are being applied to develop actual
enterprise architecture products. The scope of the architecture has
been defined to encompass the entire enterprise, whether organization-
based or function-based.
Maturity stage: Stage 4: Completing the enterprise architecture;
Description: Organization has completed its enterprise architecture
products, meaning that the products have been approved by the
architecture steering committee or an investment review board and by
the CIO. Further, an independent agent has assessed the quality (i.e.,
completeness and accuracy) of the architecture products. Additionally,
evolution of the approved products is governed by a written
architecture maintenance policy approved by the head of the
organization.
Maturity stage: Stage 5: Leveraging the enterprise architecture to
manage change;
Description: Organization has secured senior leadership approval of
the enterprise architecture products and a written institutional
policy stating that IT investments must comply with the architecture
unless they are granted an explicit compliance waiver. Further,
decision makers are using the architecture to identify and address
ongoing and proposed IT investments that are conflicting, overlapping,
not strategically linked, or redundant. Also, the organization tracks
and measures architecture benefits or return on investment, and
adjustments are continuously made to both the architecture management
process and the enterprise architecture
products.
Source: GAO.
[End of table]
Based on information provided by DHS, we reported that the department
had established an architecture management foundation and was
developing architecture products, and we rated the department to be at
stage 3 of our maturity framework. In particular, we reported that it
had (1) established a program office responsible for developing and
maintaining the architecture; (2) assigned a chief architect to oversee
the program; (3) established plans for developing metrics for measuring
progress, quality, compliance, and return on investment; and (4) placed
the architecture products under configuration management. According to
our framework, effective architecture management is generally not
achieved until an enterprise has a completed and approved architecture
that is being effectively maintained and is being used to leverage
organizational change and support investment decision making. An
enterprise with these characteristics would need to satisfy all of the
requirements associated with stage 3 of our framework, and many of the
requirements of stages 4 and 5.
In addition, we reported in May 2004[Footnote 17] that DHS was in the
process of defining its strategic IT management framework for, among
other things, integrating its current and future systems and aligning
them with the department's strategic goals and mission. We also
reported that a key component of this initiative was the development of
the department's enterprise architecture. Accordingly, we recommended
that, until the framework was completed, the department limit its
spending on IT investments to cost-effective efforts that:
* are congressionally directed;
* take advantage of near-term, relatively small, low-risk opportunities
to leverage technology in satisfying a compelling homeland security
need;
* support operations and maintenance of existing systems that are
critical to DHS's mission;
* involve deploying an already developed and fully tested system; or:
* support establishment of a DHS strategic IT management framework,
including IT strategic planning, enterprise architecture, and
investment management.
Prior DHS Testimony Has Recognized the Importance of an Enterprise
Architecture for Departmental Transformation:
In May 2003,[Footnote 18] the department's CIO testified that
development of the homeland security enterprise architecture had begun
in July 2002 and that the department expected to complete the "As Is"
and "To Be" architectures by June and August 2003, respectively. The
CIO also stated that the department would develop a migration or
transition strategy and plan by fall 2003 in order to achieve its
target environment. Moreover, the CIO testified that DHS had
coordinated its architecture development efforts with other key federal
agencies (e.g., the Departments of Justice, Energy, and Defense), the
intelligence community, and the National Association of State and Local
CIOs.
In October 2003,[Footnote 19] DHS's CIO testified that the department
had completed the first version of its target architecture in September
2003 and was beginning to implement the objectives of its transition
strategy. The CIO stated that the department had designed and delivered
a comprehensive and immediately useful business-driven target
architecture in under 4 months and that the architecture was enabling
DHS to make IT investment decisions.
OMB's Federal Enterprise Architecture: A Brief Description:
On February 6, 2002, OMB established the FEA Program Management Office
and charged it with responsibility for developing the FEA. According to
OMB, the FEA is intended to provide a governmentwide framework to guide
and constrain federal agencies' enterprise architectures and IT
investments and is now being used by agencies to help develop their
budgets and to set strategic goals. The FEA is composed of five
reference models: Performance, Business, Service, Data, and Technical.
To date, versions of all but the data reference model have been
released for use by the agencies. More information on each reference
model follows.
Performance reference model. The performance reference model is
intended to describe a set of performance measures for major IT
initiatives and their contribution to program performance. According to
OMB, this model will help agencies produce enhanced performance
information; improve the alignment and better articulate the
contribution of inputs, such as technology, to outputs and outcomes;
and identify improvement opportunities that span traditional
organizational boundaries. Version 1.0 of the model was released in
September 2003.
Business reference model. The business reference model serves as the
foundation for the FEA. It is intended to describe the federal
government's businesses, independent of the agencies that perform them.
The model consists of four business areas: (1) services for citizens,
(2) mode of delivery, (3) support delivery of services, and
(4) management of government resources.
Thirty-nine lines of business, which together are composed of 153
subfunctions, make up the four business areas. Examples of lines of
business under the "services for citizens" business area are homeland
security, law enforcement, and economic development. Each of these
lines of business includes a number of subfunctions. For example, for
the homeland security line of business, a subfunction is border and
transportation security; for law enforcement, a subfunction is citizen
protection; and for economic development, a subfunction is financial
sector oversight.
Version 1.0 of the business reference model was released to agencies in
July 2002, and OMB reports that it was used in the fiscal year 2004
budget process. According to OMB, Version 1.0 helped to reveal that
many federal agencies were involved in each line of business and that
agencies' proposed IT investments for fiscal year 2004 offered
multibillion-dollar consolidation opportunities. In June 2003, OMB
released Version 2.0 which, according to OMB, addresses comments from
agencies and reflects changes to align the model as closely as possible
with other governmentwide management frameworks (e.g., budget function
codes[Footnote 20]) and improvement initiatives (e.g., the President's
Budget Performance Integration Initiative[Footnote 21]) without
compromising its intended purpose. OMB expects agencies to use the
model, as part of their capital planning and investment control
processes, to help identify opportunities to consolidate IT investments
across the federal government.
Service component reference model. The service component reference
model is intended to identify and classify IT service (i.e.,
application) components that support federal agencies and promote the
reuse of components across agencies. According to OMB, this model is
intended to provide the foundation for the reuse of applications,
application capabilities, components (defined as "a self-contained
business process or service with predetermined functionality that may
be exposed through a business or technology interface"), and business
services, and is organized as a hierarchy beginning with seven service
domains, as shown in table 4.
Table 4: Service Domains, the Capabilities That They Describe, and
Associated Service Types:
Service domain: Customer services;
Description: Interaction between the business and the customer and
customer-driven activities or functions (directly related to the end
customer);
Service types: Customer preferences, customer relationship management,
and customer-initiated assistance.
Service domain: Process automation services;
Description: Automation of process and activities that support managing
the business;
Service types: Tracking and workflow, and routing and automation.
Service domain: Business management services;
Description: Management and execution of business functions and
organizational activities that maintain continuity across the business
and value chain participants;
Service types: Management of process, organizational management, supply
chain management, and investment management.
Service domain: Digital asset services;
Description: Generation, management, and distribution of intellectual
capital and electronic media across the business and extended
enterprise;
Service types: Content management, knowledge management, document
management, and records management.
Service domain: Business analytical services;
Description: Extraction, aggregation, and presentation of information
to facilitate decision analysis and business evaluation;
Service types: Analysis and statistics, business intelligence,
visualization, and reporting.
Service domain: Back office services;
Description: Management of enterprise planning transactional-based
functions;
Service types: Data management, human resources, financial management,
assets/materials management, development and integration, and human
capital/workforce management.
Service domain: Support services;
Description: Cross-functional capabilities that can be leveraged
independent of service domain objective and mission;
Service types: Security management, systems management, forms,
communications, collaboration, and search.
Source: OMB.
[End of table]
These service domains are decomposed into 29 service types, which
together are further broken down into 168 components. For example, the
customer services domain is made up of 3 service types: customer
relationship management, customer preferences, and customer-initiated
assistance. Components of the customer relationship management service
type include call center management and customer analytics; components
of the customer preferences service type include personalization and
subscriptions; and components of the customer-initiated assistance
service type include online help and online tutorials.
Version 1.0 of the service component reference model was released in
June 2003. According to OMB, the model is a business-driven, functional
framework that classifies service components with respect to how they
support business and/or performance objectives. Further, the model is
structured across horizontal service areas that, independent of the
business functions, is intended to provide a leverageable foundation
for the reuse of applications, application capabilities, components,
and business services.
Data and information reference model. The data and information
reference model is intended to describe the types of data and
information that support program and business-line operations and the
relationships among these types. The model is intended to help describe
the types of interactions and information exchanges that occur between
the government and its customers. OMB officials told us that the
release of Version 1.0 is to occur imminently.
Technical reference model. The technical reference model is intended to
describe the standards, specifications, and technologies that
collectively support the secure delivery, exchange, and construction of
service components. OMB describes the model as being made up of the
following four core service areas:
Service access and delivery: the collection of standards and
specifications that support external access, exchange, and delivery of
service components.
Service platform and infrastructure: the delivery platforms and
infrastructure that support the construction, maintenance, and
availability of a service component or capability.
Component framework: the underlying foundation, technologies,
standards, and specifications by which service components are built,
exchanged, and deployed.
Service interface and integration: the collection of technologies,
methodologies, standards, and specifications that govern how agencies
will interface internally and externally with a service component.
Each of these service areas is made up of service categories, which
identify lower levels of technologies, standards, and specifications;
service standards, which define the standards and technologies that
support the service category; and the service specification, which
details the standard specification or the provider of the
specification. For example, within the first core service area (service
access and delivery), an example of a service category is access
channels, and examples of service standards are Web browsers and
wireless personal digital assistants. Examples of service
specifications for the Web browser service standard are Internet
Explorer and Netscape Navigator.
Version 1.0 of the technical reference model was released in January
2003, followed in August 2003 by Version 1.1, which reflected minor
revisions that were based, in part, on agencies' comments. Version 1.1
was used during the 2005 budget process. The model is intended to help
agencies define their target technical architectures.
In May 2004, we testified[Footnote 22] that, through the FEA, OMB is
attempting to provide federal agencies and other decision makers with a
common frame of reference or taxonomy for informing agencies'
individual enterprise architecture efforts and their planned and
ongoing investment activities and to do so in a way that, among other
things, identifies opportunities for avoiding duplication of effort and
launching initiatives to establish and implement common, reusable, and
interoperable solutions across agency boundaries. We testified that we
supported these goals. However, we also recognized that development and
use of the FEA is but the first step in a multistep process to realize
the promise of interagency solutions. In addition, because the FEA is
still maturing both in content and in use, we raised a number of
questions that we believed OMB needed to address in order to maximize
understanding about the tool and thus facilitate its advancement.
Specifically, we asked the following:
* Should the FEA be described as an enterprise architecture? As we
discussed earlier, a true enterprise architecture is intended to
provide a blueprint for optimizing an organization's business
operations and implementing the IT that supports them. Accordingly,
well-defined enterprise architectures describe, in meaningful models,
both the enterprise's "As Is" and "To Be" environments, along with the
plan for transitioning from the current to the target environment. To
be meaningful, these models should be inherently consistent with one
another, in view of the many interrelationships and interdependencies
among, for example, business functions, the information flows among the
functions, the security needs of this information, and the services and
applications that support these functions.
Our reading of the four available reference models does not demonstrate
to us that this kind of content exists in the FEA and thus we believe
that it is more akin to a point-in-time framework or classification
scheme for federal government operations. Accordingly, if agencies use
the FEA as a model for defining the depth and detail for their own
architectures, the agencies' enterprise architectures may not provide
sufficient content for driving the implementation of their systems.
* Is the expected relationship between agencies' enterprise
architectures and the FEA clearly articulated? Among other things, the
FEA is to inform agencies' enterprise architectures. For example, OMB
has stated that although it is not mandating that the business
reference model serve as the foundation for every agency's business
architecture, agencies should invest time mapping their respective
business architectures to the FEA. Similarly, OMB has stated that
agencies' alignment of their respective architectures to the services
component reference model and the technical reference model will enable
each agency to categorize its IT investments according to common
definitions.
In our view, such descriptions of the agency enterprise architecture/
FEA relationship are not clear, in part because definitions of such key
terms as alignment, mapping, and consistency are not apparent in the
FEA. As with any endeavor, the more ambiguity and uncertainty there is
in requirements and expectations, the greater the use of assumptions;
the more assumptions that are made, the higher the risk of deviation
from the intended course of action. This is particularly true in the
area of enterprise architecture.
* How will the security aspects of the FEA be addressed? Our work has
found that a well-defined enterprise architecture should include
explicit discussion of security, including descriptions of security
policies, procedures, rules, standards, services, and tools.[Footnote
23] Moreover, security is an element of the very fabric of architecture
artifacts and models and thus should be woven into them all. As our
experience in reviewing agency security practices and our research into
leading practices shows, security cannot be an afterthought when it
comes to engineering systems or enterprises.[Footnote 24]
OMB has stated that it plans to address security through what it refers
to as a "security profile" to be added to the FEA. However, OMB could
not comment on the profile's status or on development plans for it,
beyond stating that the CIO Council is taking the lead in developing
the profile.
Initial Version of DHS's Architecture Provides a Partial Foundation
upon Which to Build, but Not a Sufficient Basis to Guide Investment
Decisions:
The initial version of DHS's enterprise architecture is missing many of
the key elements[Footnote 25] of a well-defined architecture. Further,
those elements that are in the initial version are not based on the
department's strategic business plan, as architecture development best
practices advocate. Instead, the architecture is largely the result of
combining the architectures and ongoing IT investments that several of
the 22 agencies brought with them when the department was formed.
According to DHS senior architecture officials, including the chief
architect, Version 1.0 was developed in this manner because it pre-
dated completion of the department's first strategic plan, only had
limited staff assigned to it, and needed to be done in only 4 months in
order to meet OMB's deadline for submitting the department's fiscal
year 2004 IT budget. They also stated that this initial version was
intended to mature the department's approach and methodology for
developing the next version of the architecture, rather than to develop
a version of the architecture that could be acted on and implemented.
As a result, even though Version 1.0 provides a partial foundation upon
which to build a well-defined architecture, DHS has spent and continues
to spend large sums of money on IT investments without having such an
architecture to effectively guide and constrain these investments. Our
experience with federal agencies has shown that this often results in
systems that are duplicative, are not well integrated, are
unnecessarily costly to maintain and interface, and do not effectively
optimize mission performance.
Initial Version of Architecture Is Missing Important Content:
As previously discussed, the various frameworks used to develop
architectures consistently provide for describing a given enterprise in
both logical and technical terms, and for doing so for both the
enterprise's current or "As Is" environment and its target or "To Be"
environment; these frameworks also provide for defining a capital
investment sequencing plan to transition from the "As Is" to the
"To Be" environment. However, the frameworks do not prescribe the
degree to which the component parts should be described to be
considered correct, complete, understandable, and usable--essential
attributes of any architecture. This is because the depth and detail of
the descriptive content depend on what the architecture is to be used
for (i.e., its intended purpose).
DHS's stated intention is to use an architecture as the basis for
departmentwide and national operational transformation and supporting
systems modernization and evolution. The CIO stated that the department
was already using the architecture to help guide IT investment
decisions. This purpose necessitates that the architecture products
provide considerable depth and detail, as well as logical and rational
structuring and internal linkages. More specifically, it means that
these architecture products should contain sufficient scope and detail
so that, for example, (1) duplicative business operations and systems
are eliminated; (2) business operations are standardized and integrated
and supporting systems are interoperable; (3) use of enterprisewide
services is maximized; and (4) related shared solutions are aligned,
like OMB's e-government initiatives.[Footnote 26] Moreover, this scope
and detail should be accomplished in a way that (1) provides
flexibility in adapting to changes in the enterprise's internal and
external environments; (2) facilitates the architecture's usefulness
and comprehension from varying perspectives, users, or stakeholders;
and (3) provides for properly sequencing investments to recognize, for
example, the investments' respective dependencies and relative business
value.
While the initial version of the architecture does provide some content
that can be used to further develop it, it does not contain sufficient
breadth and depth of departmentwide operational and technical
requirements to effectively guide and constrain departmentwide business
transformation and systems modernization efforts. More specifically, we
found that DHS's "To Be" architecture products (Version 1.0) do not
satisfy 14 of 34 (41 percent) key elements and only partially satisfy
the remaining 20 (59 percent), and that its transition plan only
partially satisfies 3 of 5 elements (60 percent) and does not satisfy
the remaining 2 (40 percent) (see fig. 2.). This means that while
Version 1.0 does provide some of the foundational content that can be
used to extend and expand the architecture, it does not yet provide an
adequately defined frame of reference to effectively inform business
transformation and system acquisition and implementation decision
making. Our specific analysis of the "To Be" and transition plan
products follows.
Figure 2: Summary of Extent to Which Version 1.0 Satisfies Key Elements
Governing Architectural Content:
[See PDF for image]
[End of figure]
"To Be" Architecture: According to relevant guidance,[Footnote 27] a
"To Be" architecture should capture the vision of future business
operations and supporting technology. That is, it should describe the
desired capabilities, structures (e.g., entities, activities, and
roles), and relationships among these structures at a specified time
frame in the future. It should also describe, for example, future
business processes, information needs, and supporting infrastructure
characteristics, and it should be fiscally and technologically
achievable. More specifically, a well-defined "To Be" architecture
should provide, among other things, a description of:
* the enterprise's business strategy, including its desired future
concept of operations, its strategic goals and objectives, and the
strategic direction to be followed to achieve the desired future state;
* future business processes, functions, and activities that will be
performed to support the organization's mission, including the entities
that will perform them and the locations where they will be performed;
* a logical database model that identifies the primary data categories
and their relationships, which are needed to support business processes
and to guide the creation of the physical databases where information
will be stored;
* the systems to be acquired or developed and their relative importance
in supporting the business operations;
* the enterprise application systems and system components and their
interfaces;
* the policies, procedures, processes, and tools for selecting,
controlling, and evaluating application systems;
* the technical standards to be implemented and their anticipated life
cycles;
* the physical infrastructure (e.g., hardware and software) that will
be needed to support the business systems;
* common policies and procedures for developing infrastructure systems
throughout their life cycles;
* security and information assurance-related terms;
* the organizations that will be accountable for implementing security
and the tools to be used to secure and protect systems and data;
* a list of the protection mechanisms (e.g., firewalls and intrusion
detection software) that will be implemented to secure the department's
assets; and:
* the metrics that will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of
mission operations and supporting system performance in achieving
mission goals and objectives.
Architectures that include these elements can provide the necessary
frame of reference to enable the engineering of business solutions
(processes and systems) in a manner that optimally supports
departmentwide goals and objectives, such as information sharing.
Version 1.0 of the department's "To Be" architecture provides some of
the descriptive content mentioned above. For example, it contains (1) a
high-level business strategy that includes a vision statement and a
list of projects that may become future technology solutions; (2) a
list of systems to be acquired or developed; (3) a description of the
enterprise application systems and system components; (4) the technical
standards to be implemented; (5) a description of the physical
infrastructure (e.g., hardware and software) that will be needed to
support the business systems; (6) definitions of security and
information assurance-related terms; (7) a list of protection
mechanisms, such as firewalls; and (8) high-level performance metrics.
However, the business strategy does not define the desired future
concept of operations, the business-specific objectives to be achieved,
and the strategic direction to be followed. Such content is important
because the "To Be" architecture must be based on and driven by
business needs. In contrast to this, the DHS "To Be" architecture is
primarily focused on how to employ technology to improve current
mission operations and services, instead of on identifying and
addressing needed business changes through the use of technology. In
addition, the systems listed are not described in terms of their
relative importance to achieving the department's vision based on
business value and technical performance, and the application systems
and system components are not linked to the specific business processes
they will support. Further, the technical standards are incomplete
(e.g., do not specify standards that support narrowband wireless
access) and do not include the anticipated life cycle of each standard.
The physical infrastructure description is too high level (e.g., it
does not define networks and their configurations or relate the
technology platforms to specific applications and business functions).
The architecture also does not define certain security and information
assurance-related terms (e.g., security services) and, in some
instances, it defines other terms (e.g., authentication and
availability) differently than do the department's homeland security
partners. For example, DHS's definitions of authentication,
availability, confidentiality, and integrity differ from DOD's
definitions of these terms. In addition, the list of protection
mechanisms is neither complete, nor does it describe all of the
mechanisms shown and the interrelationships among them.
Other key elements that are not included are (1) a description of
future business processes, functions, and activities that will be
performed to support the organization's mission, including the entities
or people that will perform them and the locations where they will be
performed; (2) a logical database model; (3) the policies, procedures,
processes, and tools for selecting, controlling, and evaluating
application systems; (4) common policies and procedures for developing
infrastructure systems throughout their life cycles; (5) the
organizations that will be accountable for implementing security and
the tools to be used to secure and protect systems and data; and
(6) explicit metrics for the department's primary (e.g., identifying
threats and vulnerabilities and facilitating the flow of people and
goods) and mission-support (e.g., human resources and budget and
finance) business areas. Detailed results of our analysis are provided
in appendix II.
Transition Plan: According to relevant guidance and best
practices,[Footnote 28] the transition plan should provide a temporal
road map for moving from the "As Is" to the "To Be" environment. An
important step in the development of a well-defined transition plan is
a gap analysis--a comparison of the "As Is" and "To Be" architectures
to identify differences. Other important steps include analyses of
technology opportunities and marketplace trends, as well as assessments
of fiscal and budgetary realities and institutional acquisition and
development capabilities. Using such analyses and assessments, options
are explored and decisions are made regarding which legacy systems to
retain, modify, or retire and which new systems to introduce on a
tactical (temporary) basis or to pursue as strategic solutions.
Accordingly, transition plans identify legacy, migration, and new
systems and sequence them to show, for example, the phasing out and
termination of systems and capabilities and the timing of the
introduction of new systems and capabilities, and they do so in light
of resource constraints such as budget, people, acquisition/development
process maturity, and associated time frames.
Version 1.0 of DHS's transition plan generally does not possess any of
these attributes. Specifically, it does not (1) include a gap analysis
identifying the needed changes to current business processes and
systems; (2) identify the legacy systems that will not become part of
the "To Be" architecture or the time frames for phasing them out;
(3) show a time-based strategy for replacing legacy systems, including
identifying intermediate (i.e., migration) systems that may be
temporarily needed; or (4) define the resources (e.g., funding and
staff) needed to transition to the target environment. The result is
that DHS does not have a meaningful and reliable basis for managing the
disposition of its legacy systems or for sequencing the introduction of
modernized business operations and supporting systems. Detailed results
of our analysis are in appendix III.
A DHS contractor responsible for evaluating the quality of Version 1.0
reported weaknesses that are similar to ones that we identified. For
example, the contractor reported the following:
* The "To Be" architecture did not address the reality that the
department's systems would be a federated combination of legacy and new
systems for many years. Rather, it assumes that its systems will be
transformed into an ideal future state in the near term.
* The "To Be" architecture did not consistently address topics at the
same level of detail, and it contained inconsistencies (i.e., some
topics were addressed in more detail than others).
* The architecture did not sufficiently address security (i.e.,
network, data, physical, and information).
DHS's senior enterprise architecture officials, including the chief
architect, agreed with the results of our analysis and stated that
considerable work remained to adequately address all of the key
architectural elements. According to the CIO and these officials, this
initial version was prepared in 4 months, with limited resources (i.e.,
three DHS staff and minimal contractor support), based on the
information available at that time. Further, it was prepared primarily
to meet OMB's fiscal year 2004 IT budget submission deadline and to
help educate DHS's senior executives about the importance of this
architecture in the department's overall transformation effort. Senior
architecture officials also stated that a transition plan was not
intended to be part of the scope of Version 1.0, and that the
department's initial focus was on maturing its ability to execute an
approach and methodology for developing the next version of the
architecture.
Notwithstanding these reasons, constraints, and intentions, the fact
remains that Version 1.0 is missing important content and, without this
content, the department--as well as homeland security stakeholders in
other federal agencies, state and local governments, and the private
sector--will not have the sufficiently detailed, authoritative frame of
reference that is needed to provide a common understanding of future
homeland security operational, business, and supporting technology
needs. Such a frame of reference is important to effectively guide and
constrain the transformation of mission operations, business functions,
and associated IT investments. Without it, DHS and other homeland
security stakeholders will be challenged in their ability to
effectively leverage technology to affect the kind of logical and
systematic institutional change needed to optimize enterprisewide
mission performance.
Content of Initial Architecture Is Based on Strategic Business
Assumptions and Existing Agencies' Architectures Rather Than
Departmental Strategic Vision:
The various architecture frameworks and architecture management best
practices recognize the need to define the "To Be" environment using a
top-down, business-driven approach in which the content of the
organization's strategic plan (mission, goals, objectives, scope, and
outcomes) drives operational processes, functions, activities, and
associated information needs, which in turn drive system application
and services and supporting technology standards. The architecture
development methodology[Footnote 29] being employed by DHS also calls
for this top-down, mission-and business-driven approach, which engages
mission and business area subject matter experts. It specifically
states that an architecture should be based on a functional business
model that reflects the nature of the operational mission, the business
strategy, and the information to be used to accomplish them.
DHS did not follow this approach in developing Version 1.0 of its
architecture, primarily because the department did not issue a
strategic plan until February 2004. Specifically, the department
released its initial architecture in September 2003, approximately 5
months before it issued its strategic plan. Without an explicit
strategic direction to inform the architecture, the architecture's
business representation was derived from the existing architectures and
the ongoing and planned IT investments of some of its component
agencies (i.e., Immigration and Naturalization Service, Customs and
Border Protection, Coast Guard, and the Federal Emergency Management
Agency). As a result, Version 1.0 did not contain a departmentwide and
national corporate business strategy that described such things as
(1) the desired future state of its mission operations and business
activities, (2) the specific goals and objectives to be strategically
achieved, and (3) the strategic direction to be followed by the
department to realize the desired future state. Rather, the
architecture's strategic operational and business content is basically
the sum of its component agencies' business strategy parts. Moreover,
although the department is using generally accepted architecture
development techniques, the architecture artifacts that have been
derived using these techniques (i.e., the value chain
analysis,[Footnote 30] CURE matrix,[Footnote 31] conceptual data model,
and sequencing diagram) do not provide a consistent view of the scope
of the department's mission. In some instances, the vision focuses
internally on departmental activities only, while in other instances,
it focuses on homeland security at a national level (i.e., addresses
other homeland security stakeholders, such as other federal agencies
and state and local government). The architecture's business strategy
also does not identify corporate priorities and constraints to be
considered when making departmentwide and national decisions about
future homeland security activities. The DHS contractor responsible for
evaluating the quality of Version 1.0 made similar comments concerning
the architecture's business strategy. Specifically, the contractor
reported that the scope of the architecture was unclear, at times being
internally focused on only the department, while at other times being
more broadly focused on national homeland security. Further, the
contractor reported that the business strategy did not include all DHS
mission activities.
According to the chief architect, the fiscal year 2004 IT budget
submission deadline did not allow the department to delay development
of the architecture until the strategic plan had been completed. A
senior architecture official also stated that this time constraint
(i.e., 4-month development period) did not allow subject matter experts
(i.e., both internal and external DHS stakeholders) to be consulted and
to participate in developing Version 1.0. According to the CIO, subject
matter experts are now participating in the department's architecture
development activities.
As stated above, having a mission-and business-driven enterprise
architecture is a fundamental principle. Until the department uses an
enterprisewide understanding of its mission operations and business as
the basis for developing its architecture, its architecture's utility
will be greatly diminished, and it is unlikely that changes to existing
operations and systems that are based on this architecture will provide
for optimization of mission performance and satisfaction of stakeholder
needs. Moreover, because DHS did not base Version 1.0 on such an
understanding, the content of this version may prove to be invalid if
future work shows that the strategic business assumptions used to
develop it were inaccurate. This in turn would limit the value of
Version 1.0 as a basis for building the next version.
Initial Architecture Can Be Partially Traced to the Federal Enterprise
Architecture, but the Extent of Alignment Is Unclear:
OMB guidance does not explicitly require agency enterprise
architectures to align with the FEA. However, a requirement for
alignment is implicit in the OMB guidance. For example, this guidance
states that agencies' major IT investments must align with each of the
FEA's published reference models (business, performance, services, and
technical), and that agencies' nonmajor IT investments must align with
the business reference model.[Footnote 32] Since an agency's enterprise
architecture is to include a transition plan that strategically
sequences its planned IT investments in a way that moves the agency
from its current architectural environment to its target environment,
this means that the agency's investments would need to align with both
the FEA and the agency enterprise architecture, which in turn would
necessitate alignment between the FEA and the agency architecture.
Aligning agencies' architectures with the FEA is also an implied
requirement in recently released OMB guidance for its enterprise
architecture assessment tool.[Footnote 33] According to this guidance,
agency enterprise architectures are "a basic building block to support
the population of the FEA." Further, OMB states that one of the
purposes of the FEA is to inform agency efforts to develop their
agency-specific enterprise architectures.
We have previously reported that OMB's expected relationship between
the FEA and agency enterprise architectures has not been clearly
articulated, in part because OMB has not defined key terms, such as
architectural alignment.[Footnote 34] In the absence of clear
definitions, we also reported that assumptions must be made about what
alignment means, and that the greater the use of assumptions, the
greater the chances of expectations about these relationships not being
met and intended outcomes not being realized. For the purposes of this
report, we have assumed that alignment can be examined from three
perspectives: functional, structural, and semantic. Functional
alignment means that the architecture and the reference models have
been decomposed to the same level of detail to determine if the
business operations, services, and technology components are similar in
nature and purpose. Structural alignment means that the architecture
and the reference models are both constructed similarly, for example,
they may share the same hierarchical construct whereby information is
grouped by common levels of detail. Semantic alignment means that the
department's architecture and the FEA reference models use similar
terms and/or definitions that can be mapped to one another.
The FEA and Version 1.0 of DHS's enterprise architecture are not
aligned functionally or structurally. Specifically, we could not map
Version 1.0 to the FEA from either of these perspectives because the
DHS architecture is not decomposed to the same level of detail as the
reference models and thus does not permit association of the respective
functional components and because the DHS architecture is not
structured in a hierarchical fashion as the reference models are.
However, the terms or definitions used in the business, services, and
technical components of Version 1.0 could be mapped to similar terms in
the FEA business, services, and technical reference models. The results
of this mapping are discussed below.
* We mapped all 79 of the high-level activities that we found in the
business view of the DHS architecture to similar terms in the FEA
business reference model. To achieve this degree of mapping, however,
we needed to trace the 79 high-level activities to multiple levels of
the reference models, including business areas, lines of business, and
subfunctions. For example, for the DHS high-level business activity
"stockpile and deploy supplies" (defined as including managing
immunizations, as well as identification, acquisition, development,
maintenance, and distribution of other pharmaceutical and medical
supplies) we needed to go to the reference model's subfunction level to
find "immunization management." In addition, we were not able to map
any terms in the DHS architecture to several areas in the business
reference model that would appear relevant to DHS, such as the business
area "mode of delivery" or the line of business "defense and national
security."
* We also mapped Version 1.0's applications/services view to the FEA
services reference model. In this case, the initial architecture
contained terms that could be associated with all of the FEA reference
model's 7 service domains, 29 service types, and 168 service
components.
* We also mapped terms used for technical services in the Version 1.0
technical view to the FEA technical reference model. However, this
mapping was again based on associating high-level descriptions in
Version 1.0 with lower-level descriptions in the FEA. Moreover, some
terms for technology elements in Version 1.0 could not be mapped to the
FEA technical reference model, such as "narrowband wireless and
broadband wireless." Conversely, some technical services and standards
in the reference model that should be applicable to DHS were not
evident in Version 1.0, such as software engineering (including test
management services) and database middleware standards, respectively.
In those instances where we could not semantically associate
Version 1.0 to the FEA reference models, we found no associated
explanations. As a result, we could not determine whether future
alignment is envisioned or not.
According to the CIO and the chief architect, the steps that DHS took
to align the initial architecture with the FEA reference models
represent the most that could be done in the time available. The
architect also stated that changes would be made to the technical views
of the architecture to more closely reflect the content within the
FEA's technical reference model. However, given that what is meant by
agency architectural alignment to the FEA is not well defined, the
degree to which DHS and other agencies can establish the intended
relationship between the two is both challenging and uncertain. This in
turn will constrain OMB's ability to meet the goals it has set for the
FEA.
Conclusions:
Having and using an enterprise architecture that reflects the
department's strategic operational and business needs and enables it to
make informed decisions about competing investment options is critical
to DHS's business transformation and supporting system modernization
efforts. DHS recognizes this and has produced an initial architecture
in a short time with limited resources and is working on its next
version. Nevertheless, the department is in the midst of transforming
itself and investing hundreds of millions of dollars in supporting
systems without a well-defined architecture to effectively guide and
constrain these activities. Following this approach is a risky
proposition, and the longer DHS goes without a well-defined and
enforced architecture the greater the risk. Therefore, it is important
that DHS ensure that the next version is based on a top-down, strategic
business-based approach that involves key stakeholders, as advocated by
best practices. It is also important for DHS to ensure that its
architecture includes the necessary content. Until this is done, it
will be prudent for the department to limit new system investments to
those meeting certain criteria, as we have previously recommended. To
do less puts the department at risk of investing hundreds of millions
of dollars in efforts that will not promote integration and
interoperability and will not optimize mission performance.
Further, the relationships that OMB expects between the FEA and agency
architectures, including DHS's are not clear. Until OMB clarifies what
it means by architectural alignment, it is unlikely that the outcomes
it envisions and desires through architectural alignment will result.
Recommendations for Executive Action:
To ensure that DHS has a well-defined architecture to guide and
constrain pressing transformation and modernization decisions, we
recommend that the Secretary of Homeland Security direct the
department's architecture executive steering committee, in
collaboration with the CIO, to (1) ensure that the development of DHS's
enterprise architecture is based on an approach and methodology that
provides for identifying the range of mission operations and the focus
of the business strategy and involving relevant stakeholders (external
and internal) in driving the architecture's scope and content; and
(2) develop, approve, and fund a plan for incorporating into the
architecture the content that is missing.
In addition, we are recommending 39 actions to ensure that future
versions of the architecture include (1) the six key elements governing
the business view of the "To Be" architectural content that our report
identified as not being fully satisfied, (2) the three key elements
governing the performance view of the "To Be" architectural content
that our report identified as not being fully satisfied, (3) the seven
key elements governing the information view of the "To Be"
architectural content that our report identified as not being fully
satisfied, (4) the five key elements governing the services/
applications view of the "To Be" architectural content that our report
identified as not being fully satisfied, (5) the six key elements
governing the technical view of the "To Be" architectural content that
our report identified as not being fully satisfied, (6) the seven key
elements governing the security view of the "To Be" architectural
content that our report identified as not being fully satisfied, and
(7) the five key elements governing the transition plan content that
our report identified as not being fully satisfied.
In addition, to assist DHS and other agencies in developing and
evolving their respective architectures, we recommend that the Director
of OMB direct the FEA Program Management Office to clarify the expected
relationship between the FEA and federal agencies' architectures. At a
minimum, this clarification should define key terms, such as
architectural alignment.
Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:
In DHS's written comments on a draft of this report, signed by the
Director, Bankcard Programs and GAO/OIG Liaison within the Office of
the Chief Financial Officer (reprinted in app. IV), the department
agreed that much work remains to develop both a target enterprise
architecture and a transition plan to support business and IT
transformation, and it stated that it would ensure that the
architecture criteria that we cite in our report, which our
recommendations reference, are addressed to the extent possible in
Version 2.0 of its architecture. Notwithstanding these statements, the
department also stated that it took exception to several aspects of our
report, including our criteria and recommendations. In particular, it
stated that (1) the criteria were not realistic and assumed the
existence of a comprehensive enterprise architecture, the development
of which was inconceivable in the time available, (2) the criteria had
not been provided to the federal community and were not available when
Version 1.0 of DHS's architecture was being developed, and (3) the
recommendations did not take into consideration the department's
limited resources. DHS stated that it had accomplished one of the most
important goals of Version 1.0, which was "positioning the department
to more actively engage with our business representatives, with a
strategic plan in hand and a greater awareness of the need for and
value of an enterprise architecture generally on the part of our senior
and executive management." DHS also provided specific comments on our
findings relative to each criterion that we assessed Version 1.0
against. These comments fell into two general categories: agree that
content is missing but content was not intended to be part of
Version 1.0, and do not agree that content is missing (i.e., factually
incorrect).
We do not agree with the department's comments concerning the criteria
and our recommendations. In particular, our report does not state that
DHS should have ensured that Version 1.0 of its enterprise architecture
satisfied all of the criteria that we cite. We have long held and
reported the position that enterprise architecture development should
be done incrementally,[Footnote 35] with each version of an
architecture providing greater depth and detail to an enterprisewide,
business-driven foundational layer. We provide in the report an
analytical assessment of where Version 1.0 stands against a benchmark
of where it will need to be in order to be an effective blueprint to
guide and constrain major investment decisions for organizational
transformation. In doing so, we have provided the department with a
road map, grounded in explicit criteria, for incrementally developing a
mission-derived blueprint.
In addition, the criteria that we used in our review and cite in our
report came from published literature on the content of enterprise
architectures, which we structured into categories consistent with
federal enterprise architecture guidance and have used in prior
evaluations of other agencies' enterprise architectures, the results of
the first of which we issued in September 2003.[Footnote 36] We shared
these criteria and categories with DHS at the time that we began our
review, and we shared the results of our review relative to each
criterion with DHS enterprise architecture program and contractor
officials over a 2-day period after we completed our review. At that
time, both the DHS and the contractor officials agreed with our
results. While we acknowledge that we had yet to publish our
categorization of the criteria at the time that Version 1.0 of DHS's
architecture was being developed, the criteria that we drew from and
used were both well established and publicly available.
In addition, we recognize in both the report and its recommendations
the point made in DHS's comments about the initial architecture
development effort being constrained by resources. It is because of
this that our recommendations call for DHS's architecture executive
steering committee, which is composed of those department business and
technology executives who collectively control billions of dollars in
resources, to develop, approve, and fund a plan for completing the
architecture. In our view, the resource point cited in DHS's comments
is a departmental funding allocation and prioritization decision,
rather than a resource shortage issue.
Also, we do not question the department's comment concerning the intent
and goal of Version 1.0, or whether its goal has been accomplished.
Rather, the purpose and scope of our work was to determine the extent
to which the initial architecture version contained the building blocks
of a well-defined blueprint and to thereby identify what, if anything,
remained to be accomplished. If more needed to be done, our objective
was to determine whether the initial version provided a foundation upon
which to build any missing content. As we previously stated,
development of a well-defined enterprise architecture is by necessity
incremental, and our report is intended to provide DHS with a criteria-
based road map for incrementally accomplishing this. To avoid any
misunderstanding about the need to develop the architecture
incrementally, we have added further detail on this topic to this
report.
With respect to DHS's specific comments on each of the findings and
recommendations that acknowledged missing content, we support the
department's statements indicating that it will address this missing
content in the next or subsequent versions of the architecture.
However, we do not agree with DHS's comments when it stated that our
findings were factually incorrect or when it disagreed with the
criteria. Our responses to DHS's comments for each of these areas of
disagreement are provided in appendix IV.
In their oral comments on a draft of this report, OMB's Office of
E-Government and Information Technology and the Office of General
Counsel officials stated that OMB's Administrator for Electronic
Government, Information and Technology had recently testified that
additional work was needed to mature the FEA. In addition, the
officials stated that OMB is committed to working to evolve the FEA and
agency enterprise architectures, and that this work will clarify many
of the issues raised in our report.
As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report
to the Secretary of Homeland Security and to the Director of OMB. We
will also make copies available to others upon request. In addition,
the report will be:
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [Hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov]. If you have any questions on matters discussed in
this report, please contact me at (202) 512-3439 or
[Hyperlink, hiter@gao.gov]. Key contributors to this report are
acknowledged in appendix V.
Sincerely yours,
Signed by:
Randolph C. Hite:
Director, Information Technology Architecture and Systems Issues:
[End of section]
Appendixes:
Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:
Our objectives were to determine whether the initial version of the
Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) enterprise architecture
(1) provides a foundation upon which to build and (2) is aligned with
the Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA).
To address the first objective, we followed the approach that we have
previously used to evaluate the content of an agency's enterprise
architecture.[Footnote 37] Specifically, we first segmented
Version 1.0 of the architecture into the three primary component parts
of any architecture: the "As Is," the "To Be," and the transition plan.
We then further divided the "As Is" and "To Be" architectures into five
architectural components similar to the Office of Management and
Budget's (OMB) architecture reference models and defined in our
enterprise architecture maturity framework: business, information/
data, services/applications, technical, and performance; we added
security as a sixth component because of its recognized importance in
the various architecture frameworks and its relevance to the other five
architectural components.[Footnote 38] Because the department is
currently investing about $4.1 billion in fiscal year 2004 for IT
systems and supporting infrastructure, we focused our evaluation on the
"To Be" architecture and the transition plan and did not analyze
whether DHS's "As Is" architecture satisfied relevant "As Is" guidance.
For each of these six architectural components, we used the key
architectural requirements that we previously reported as necessary for
a well-defined "To Be" architecture.[Footnote 39] We also used the key
architectural requirements that we previously reported as necessary for
a well-defined transition plan.[Footnote 40] We then compared the
"To Be" architecture and transition plan (Version 1.0) against the key
elements. In doing so, we used the following criteria to determine
whether the key element was fully,[Footnote 41] partially,[Footnote 42]
or not satisfied.[Footnote 43]
To assess the extent to which the architecture was aligned with the
FEA, we compared the "To Be" architecture with the FEA business,
services-and technical reference models, Versions 2.0, 1.0, and 1.1,
respectively. We did not select the performance, information/
data,[Footnote 44] and security models[Footnote 45] because department
officials told us that these models were not part of the scope of their
effort in developing Version 1.0. We, therefore, focused on the
business, services, and technical models and attempted to map the
architecture and FEA reference models at three levels: semantic,
functional, and structural.[Footnote 46] However, we were unable to do
so from a functional or structural standpoint because the DHS
architecture was neither decomposed to the same level of detail, nor
constructed in a hierarchical fashion like the reference models. We
therefore mapped key elements of the DHS architecture (e.g., business
activities, target applications, and services) to the reference models
by identifying similar terms and/or definitions. To augment our
documentation reviews and analyses of the architecture, we also
interviewed various officials, including the chief information officer
and chief architect to determine, among other things, these officials'
comments on our detailed analysis.
We also met with OMB officials to discuss its process for reviewing
agencies' enterprise architectures and the results of its review of
DHS's architecture. According to OMB officials, its review of DHS's
architecture is still ongoing and thus we were not provided a copy of
the review results.
We conducted our work at DHS headquarters in Washington, D.C. We
performed our work from November 2003 to May 2004 in accordance with
generally accepted government auditing standards.
[End of section]
Appendix II: Detailed Results of GAO's Analyses of Version 1.0 of DHS's
"To Be" Architecture:
Business: Key architectural element: A business assessment[A] that
includes the enterprise's purpose, scope (e.g., organizations, business
areas, and internal and external stakeholders' concerns), limitations
or assumptions, and methods;
A gap analysis[B] that describes the target outcomes and shortfalls,
including strategic business issues, conclusions reached as a result of
the analysis (e.g., missing capabilities), causal information, and
rationales;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain a
business assessment or gap analysis results;
However, the architecture recognizes the need to perform a business
assessment and project-specific gap analyses. It also identifies
possible concerns (e.g., inefficiencies in business function and
technology) that may be addressed by the department.
Business: Key architectural element: A business strategy that describes
the desired future state of the business, the specific objectives to be
achieved, and the strategic direction that will be followed by the
enterprise to realize the desired future state;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not have a
business strategy that adequately describes the desired future state of
the business, the objectives to be achieved, and the strategic
direction to be followed.
Business: Key architectural element: The business strategy should
include:
Element satisfied? Explanation of partially satisfied: However, the
architecture does address to a limited degree the characteristics of a
business strategy, as discussed below.
Business: Key architectural element: * A vision statement that
describes the business areas requiring strategic attention based on the
gap analysis;
Element satisfied? Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture
does contain a vision statement; however, this statement does not
highlight opportunities for strategic change to business processes, nor
does it present a consistent view of the national responsibilities for
homeland security at the various levels (i.e., federal, state, local,
and international).
Business: Key architectural element: * A description of the business
priorities and constraints, including their relationships to, at a
minimum, applicable laws and regulations, executive orders,
departmental policy, procedures, guidance, and audit reports;
Element satisfied? Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture
recognizes that homeland security processes, procedures, and decisions
about IT management should comply with applicable laws, regulations,
and guidance, particularly those associated with privacy requirements.
The architecture also specifically mentions the National Strategy for
Homeland Security. However, the architecture does not explicitly
identify, reconcile, prioritize, or align the applicable laws,
regulations, and guidance. As a result, business priorities and
constraints are not identified.
Business: Key architectural element: * A description of the scope of
business change that is to occur to address identified gaps and realize
the future desired business state. The scope of change, at a minimum,
should identify expected changes to strategic goals, customers,
suppliers, services, locations, and capabilities;
Element satisfied? Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture
does not explicitly identify what will be changed in the "As Is"
environment. It also does not explicitly identify key customers,
suppliers, products, services, locations, and capabilities for homeland
security at the national level.
Business: Key architectural element: * A description of the measurable
strategic business objectives to be met to achieve the desired change;
Element satisfied? Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture
does not describe measurable strategic business objectives; however, it
does contain objectives in the transition strategy that may be used to
develop strategic business objectives.
Business: Key architectural element: * A description of the measurable
tactical business goals to be met to achieve the strategic objectives;
Element satisfied? Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture
does not describe measurable tactical business goals; however, it does
describe some high-level performance measures for several of its
business areas.
Business: Key architectural element: * A listing of opportunities to
unify and simplify systems or processes across the department,
including their relationships to solutions that align with the
strategic initiatives to be implemented to achieve strategic objectives
and tactical goals;
Element satisfied? Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture
does not align all opportunities for change with strategic initiatives
and potential investments. However, the architecture does identify
conceptual[C] projects and opportunities to address inefficiencies in
systems and processes.
Business: Key architectural element: Common (standard and
departmentwide) policies, procedures, and business and operational
rules for consistent implementation of the architecture;
Element satisfied? No.
Business: Key architectural element: A description of key business
processes and how they support the department's mission, including the
organizational units responsible for performing the business processes
and the locations where the business processes will be performed. This
description should provide for the consistent alignment of (1)
applicable federal laws, regulations, and guidance; (2) department
policies, procedures, and guidance; (3) operational activities; (4)
organizational roles; and (5) operational events and information;
Element satisfied? No.
Business: Key architectural element: A description of the operational
management processes to ensure that the department's business
transformation effort remains compliant with the business rules for
fault, performance, security, configuration, and account management;
Element satisfied? No.
Business: Key architectural element: A description of the
organizational approach (processes and organizational structure) for
communications and interactions among business lines and program areas
for (1) management reporting, (2) operational functions, and (3)
architecture development and use (i.e., how to develop the architecture
description, implement the architecture, and govern/manage the
development and implementation of the architecture);
Element satisfied? No.
Performance: Key architectural element: A description of the processes
for establishing, measuring, tracking, evaluating, and predicting
business performance regarding business functions, baseline data, and
service levels;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not describe
these processes;
However, the architecture recognizes the need for such processes and
identifies a conceptual project and a business activity that will be
used to establish these processes.
Performance: Key architectural element: A description of measurable
business goals and outcomes for business products and services,
including strategic and tactical objectives;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not describe
explicit measurable business goals and outcomes for any of the
department's primary and secondary business areas (e.g., identify
threats and vulnerabilities; and prevent, prepare and recover from
incidents);
However, the architecture does provide a description of customer-
focused, measurable business goals and outcomes (e.g., the average time
taken to resolve customer inquiries) for all of the department's
primary and secondary business areas (e.g., human resources and budget
and finance), with one exception (i.e., the architecture does not
contain customer-focused, measurable goals and outcomes for the primary
line of business entitled "facilitate the flow of people and goods").
Performance: Key architectural element: A description of measurable
technical goals and outcomes for managing technology products and
services for the "To Be" architecture that enables the achievement of
business goals and outcomes;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain
measurable technical goals and outcomes for managing technology
products and services that enables the achievement of business goals
and outcomes (e.g., identifying threats and preventing terrorist
attacks);
However, the architecture does contain performance measures for
managing technology (e.g., percentage of data or information shared
across organizational units and time to produce, create, and deliver
products or services). The architecture also lists conceptual projects
focused on improving technology management performance with respect to
information sharing (e.g., infrastructure consolidation).
Information/data: Key architectural element: A description of data
management policies, procedures, processes, and tools (e.g., CURE
matrix[D] ) for analyzing, designing, building, and maintaining
databases in an enterprise architected environment;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not describe
or reference enterprise data management policies, procedures, or
processes;
However, the architecture does contain a CURE matrix. The utility of
this CURE matrix for planning purposes is questionable because the
relationships among business functions and applications are ambiguous-
-not uniquely identified or defined.
Information/data: Key architectural element: A description of the
business and operational rules[E] for data standardization to ensure
data consistency, integrity, and accuracy, such as business and
security rules that govern access to, maintenance of, and use of data;
Element satisfied? No.
Information/data: Key architectural element: A data dictionary, which
is a repository of standard data definitions for applications;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain a
data dictionary;
However, the architecture does contain an information dictionary that,
while incomplete, does identify some data objects (e.g., cargo,
incident, and weapon). As a result, this information glossary could be
used to facilitate the creation of a data dictionary.
Information/data: Key architectural element: A conceptual data model
that describes the fundamental things/objects (e.g., business or
tourist visas, shipping manifests) that make up the business, without
regard for how they will be physically stored. A conceptual data model
contains the content needed to derive facts about the business and to
facilitate the creation of business rules. It represents the
consolidated structure of business objects to be used by business
applications;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not provide a
conceptual data model that contains the content needed to derive facts
about the business and to facilitate the creation of business rules to
build databases. The content is at such a high level (e.g., labels and
terms) that it can be interpreted in numerous ways;
However, the architecture does provide a high-level conceptual data
model that identifies "super-classes" or groupings of objects without
the required business context, such as (1) the complete definitions for
information categories or classes and (2) concrete business objects.
This information can be used to build the conceptual data model.
Information/data: Key architectural element: A logical database model
that provides (1) a normalized (i.e., nonredundant) data structure that
supports information flows and (2) the basis for developing the schemas
for designing, building, and maintaining physical databases;
Element satisfied? No.
Information/data: Key architectural element: A metadata[F] model that
specifies the rules and standards for representing data (e.g., data
formats) and accessing information (e.g., data protocols) according to
a documented business context that is complete, consistent, and
practical;
Element satisfied? No.
Information/data: Key architectural element: A description of the
information flows and relationships among organizational units,
business operations, and system elements;
Element satisfied? No.
Services/applications: Key architectural element: A description of the
services and their relationships to key end-user services to be
provided by the application systems;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not specify
all the end-user services to be provided by application systems (e.g.,
the use of e-mail as an end-user service for various applications), nor
does it provide a rationale for this exclusion. It also does not
specify the various relationships between the end-user services and the
entities that will provide these services;
The architecture also contains inconsistencies in the descriptions of
the relationships between user services and application systems, which
affect its utility. For example, in one instance, the architecture
notes that correspondence management may involve "maintaining logs and
references to pieces of correspondence that are of interest to the
enterprise for tracking purposes and that these pieces of
correspondence may be e-mails, paper letters, phone conversations,
etc." In another instance, the architecture does not recognize the use
of this e-mail service for managing correspondence;
However, the architecture does contain high-level descriptions of the
types of application systems that will be needed (e.g., a financial
management application that can manage all financial aspects of general
accounting, budgeting, capital assets, and investment control). It also
notes that "To Be" applications will be derived and created based on
how each user class uses data while performing business activities.
Services/applications: Key architectural element: A list of application
systems (acquisition/ development and production portfolio) and their
relative importance to achieving the department's vision, based on
business value and technical performance;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not identify
the applications' relative importance to the overall vision. For
example, it does not explicitly identify and describe application
systems that support functionality across organizational boundaries
(e.g., local, state, and federal agencies). In addition, priorities are
not explicitly defined for the target applications;
However, the architecture provides a list of the types of candidate
applications (e.g., financial, grant, and property management) and
links these application types to business functions by providing an
application-to-function cross-reference matrix;
In addition, it identifies conceptual projects that may provide target
capabilities or applications and it prioritizes these projects
according to scheduled completion times. For example, some conceptual
projects are placed within a category labeled "Rationalize," which
means they are scheduled for completion within 6 months.
Services/applications: Key architectural element: A description of the
policies, procedures, processes, and tools for selecting, controlling,
and evaluating application systems to enable effective IT investment
management;
Element satisfied? No.
Services/applications: Key architectural element: A description of the
enterprise application systems and system components and their
interfaces;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not describe
applications in terms of the business process flows that each
application will support (e.g., how to identify and report threats and
vulnerabilities), nor does the architecture describe the business
process flows. The architecture also does not reflect how application
selection decisions can or will be made without this information.
Further, it does not identify human/ machine boundaries, inputs,
outputs, controls, and standard application programming interfaces;
However, the architecture contains a list and graphic depictions of the
types of application systems that would satisfy the department's
business needs, including a brief description of the functionality to
be provided by these systems. For example, it describes a generic
"financial management" application that could be satisfied by many
application packages or development components.
Services/applications: Key architectural element: A description of the
system development life cycle process for application development or
acquisition and the integration of the process with the architecture,
including policies, procedures, and architectural techniques and
methods for acquiring systems throughout their life cycles. The common
technical approach should also describe the process for integrating
legacy systems with the systems to be developed/acquired;
Element satisfied? No.
Technical: Key architectural element: A list of infrastructure systems
and a description of the systems' hardware and software infrastructure
components. The description should also reflect the system's relative
importance to achieving the department's vision based on constraints,
business value, and technical performance;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not provide a
complete list of the "To Be" infrastructure systems, nor does it
describe the functional characteristics, capabilities, and
interconnections for the infrastructure projects listed. It also does
not reflect the systems' relative importance to achieving DHS's vision.
For example, the relationship between the department's vision for
infrastructure projects and their value in preventing terrorist attacks
has not been defined; However, it does identify a conceptual project
(i.e., OneDHS) that may be used to consolidate the infrastructure. It
also identifies a list of conceptual applications (e.g., a
communications management application to manage connectivity between
networks) that may provide certain infrastructure capabilities and
functions for OneDHS. Further, it identifies associated subprojects,
such as a secure network, server and storage consolidation, and a
standard desktop environment, and it associates them with the business
areas;
The architecture also lists several existing infrastructure systems,
such as the Department of Defense's (DOD) Secure Internet Protocol
Routing Network, which may be used by the department and its homeland
security partners;
The architecture outlines an approach for establishing a framework to
enable DHS to sequence the delivery of capabilities over time based on
homeland security priorities.
Technical: Key architectural element: A description of the policies,
procedures, processes, and tools for selecting, controlling, and
evaluating infrastructure systems to enable effective IT investment
management;
Element satisfied? No.
Technical: Key architectural element: A description of the technical
reference model (TRM[G] ) that describes the enterprise infrastructure
services,h including specific details regarding the functionality and
capabilities that these services will provide to enable the development
of application systems;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain a
TRM that describes all enterprise infrastructure services. The list of
technical services is likely incomplete because the architecture does
not identify all DHS organizations and its homeland security partners
that supply and consume technical services. For example, the
architecture indicates the use of DOD's Secure Internet Protocol
Routing Network, which is a Global Information Grid (GIG)[I] enterprise
service, to exchange information among homeland security organizations.
However, it does not list the technical services that are provided by
this network. The architecture also does not show whether these TRM
services are common or reusable;
In addition, the architecture does not describe the functionality and
capabilities that will be provided by the services that are identified;
However, it does contain a high-level TRM that provides a structure and
vocabulary that can be used to describe DHS's enterprise infrastructure
services. It also contains application principles (e.g., there will be
only one enterprise application for each function area, to be used by
all departmental organizations) and technology patterns (e.g., use of
commercial-off-the-shelf software for implementing relational
databases) that can be used to guide technology development and
acquisition decisions.
Technical: Key architectural element: A description in the TRM that
identifies and describes (1) the technical standards[J] to be
implemented for each enterprise service and (2) the anticipated life
cycle of each standard;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain a
complete standards profile (i.e., it excludes technical standards that
support a number of the services reflected in the TRM). For example,
the profile does not identify standards that support "narrowband
wireless access," even though there are applicable homeland security
applications that require this service (e.g., Land Mobile Radio, Air to
Ground Communications, Mobile Operations IT). It also does not list the
actual life cycles (e.g., "sunset" dates for current products and
standards, and dates for when new developments will use target
technologies) of many of the standards and products identified in the
architecture;
However, it does contain a list of technical standards that the
department and/or its partners may implement.
Technical: Key architectural element: A description of the physical IT
infrastructure needed to design and acquire systems, including the
relationships among hardware, software, and communications devices;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not provide a
description of the physical IT infrastructure that will be needed to
support future operations. Specifically, it does not fully describe
networks and their topologies and configurations for the department's
internal and/or shared spaces. For example, the architecture does not
identify the component parts of the DHS consolidated network. It also
does not relate the technology platforms to applications and business
functions;
However, the architecture does provide a vision for the technology
environment, such as a high-level diagram that depicts information
sharing among user groups. It also identifies telecommunications
backbone options for exchanging data, such as use of the Internet for
sensitive but unclassified data. The architecture also identifies types
of technology platforms, including computing, storage, and
communication devices and software.
Technical: Key architectural element: Common policies and procedures
for developing infrastructure systems throughout their life cycles,
including requirements management, design, implementation, testing,
deployment, operations, and maintenance. These policies and procedures
should also address how the applications will be integrated, including
legacy systems;
Element satisfied? No.
Security: Key architectural element: A description of the policies,
procedures, goals, strategies, principles, and requirements relevant to
information assurance and security and how they (the policies,
procedures, goals, strategies, and requirements) align and integrate
with other elements of the architecture (e.g., security services);
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not describe
the policies, procedures, goals, strategies, principles, and
requirements that are relevant to information assurance and security,
nor their alignment and integration with other architecture elements;
However, it does contain (1) a high-level diagram that depicts a data
classification schema to facilitate information sharing (e.g.,
sensitive but unclassified or top secret); (2) a security pattern that
can be used to provide capabilities to secure and protect IT resources
(e.g., confidentiality via encryption, authorization and access control
via single sign-on, and intrusion detection and prevention using
firewalls); and (3) a security principle that reflects the requirement
for sharing information contained within nonclassified systems. This
information could be used to develop a strategy.
Security: Key architectural element: Definitions of terms related to
security and information assurance;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not define
all key terms that are listed (e.g., "information assurance" and
"security services"). In addition, there are discrepancies between
DHS's security terms and others involved in homeland security, such as
DOD. For example, DOD's definitions for authentication, availability,
confidentiality, and integrity differ from DHS's definitions for the
same terms;
However, the architecture does contain definitions for some security-
related terms (e.g., "identification and authorization" and "audit
trail").
Security: Key architectural element: A listing of accountable
organizations and their respective responsibilities for implementing
enterprise security services. It is important to show organizational
relationships in an operational view because they illustrate
fundamental roles (e.g., who conducts operational activities) and
management relationships (e.g., what is the command structure or
relationship to other key players) and how these influence the
operational nodes;
Element satisfied? No.
Security: Key architectural element: A description of operational
security rules that are derived from security policies;
Element satisfied? No.
Security: Key architectural element: A description of enterprise
security infrastructure services (e.g., identification and
authentication) that will be needed to protect the department's assets
and the relationship of these services to protective mechanisms;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture's TRM does not
explicitly identify the security services, making it difficult to
ensure that there are no redundant services, nor does it clearly define
what constitutes a technical security service. In addition, the
architecture identifies DOD's Secure Internet Protocol Routing Network,
thereby implying the use of a GIG enterprise service, but it does not
reconcile how or whether these services will be used by DHS and other
homeland security entities;
However, the architecture does provide some guidance on security
services, and it lists several services to be used to secure and
protect resources, such as confidentiality, data integrity,
authentication, and policy enforcement.
Security: Key architectural element: A description of the security
standards to be implemented for each enterprise service. These
standards should be derived from security requirements. This
description should also address how these services will align and
integrate with other elements of the architecture (e.g., security
policies and requirements);
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain a
complete list of standards. For example, it does not include standards
for several security services (e.g., network security/intrusion
detection systems and single sign-on) nor does it provide a rationale
for excluding them;
Further, the architecture does not explain how DHS will communicate
with other extended architecture systems (e.g., DOD and Department of
State) if those systems require certain standards to support DHS
systems;
However, the architecture does contain a list of several security
standards that may be associated with security services.
Security: Key architectural element: A description of the protection
mechanisms (e.g., firewalls and intrusion detection software) that will
be implemented to secure the department's assets, including a
description of the interrelationships among these protection
mechanisms;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain a
complete list of the protection mechanisms needed, nor does it describe
all these mechanisms and the interrelationships among them. For
example, protection mechanisms have not been identified for monitoring
and auditing activities, biometrics, control and protection, computer
forensics tools, and computer intrusion and alarm. Moreover, the
architecture indicates that security requirements have not been
analyzed, thereby bringing into question the validity of the protection
mechanisms identified;
However, the architecture does contain a list of protection mechanisms,
such as firewalls.
Source: GAO analysis of DHS data.
[A] A business assessment is a comprehensive analysis of the business,
from both an internal and an external perspective, to reach conclusions
on what requires strategic management focus and action.
[B] A gap analysis is the process of comparing an existing state with a
desired state and determining what changes must be made to achieve the
desired state.
[C] DHS defines a conceptual project as a project that is "derived from
business activities and their associated applications and components.
Conceptual projects are the highest level of categorization for a set
of capabilities that can be combined and developed to satisfy a set of
business requirements.":
[D] A CURE (create, update, reference, and eliminate) matrix shows the
business functions and applications that create, update, reference,
and/or eliminate specific data elements, enabling the organization to
develop applications.
[E] Business and operational rules define specific constraints for the
data, such as security needs (e.g., confidentiality and accessibility
of data) and actions that should or should not occur, such as updating
or deleting data.
[F] Metadata are "data about data" that enable automation and
consistent management and use of information, such as rules and
standards.
[G] The technical reference model (TRM) describes (1) how technology is
supporting the delivery of service components and (2) the relevant
standards for implementing the technology. The TRM is a generally
accepted representation of the generic components of an information
system. It allows designers, developers, and users to agree on
definitions, have a common understanding of the services to be
provided, and identify and resolve issues affecting such requirements
as interoperability, portability, reliability, scalability, and
serviceability.
[H] Examples of enterprise services include application services, such
as Web services, and collaboration services, such as instant messaging
and video conferencing.
[I] DOD defines the Global Information Grid as the globally
interconnected, end-to-end set of information, capabilities,
associated processes, and personnel for collecting, processing,
storing, disseminating, and managing information on demand to
warfighters, policy makers, and support personnel.
[J] Technical standards are strict rules and protocols governing how a
given enterprise service is to be implemented.
[End of table]
[End of section]
Appendix III: Detailed Results of GAO's Analyses of Version 1.0 of
DHS's Transition Plan:
Key architectural element: Analysis of the gaps between the baseline
and the target architecture for business processes, information/data,
and services/application systems to define missing and needed
capabilities;
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: A high-level strategy[A] for implementing
the enterprise architecture;
This strategy should include:
Key architectural element: * Specific time-phased milestones for
acquiring and deploying systems;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not have
specific milestones for any actual projects that will deploy systems;
However, the architecture does identify specific time-phased milestones
for conceptual projects. For example, it notes that projects
categorized as "Quick Hits" will be completed within 6 months, projects
to consolidate duplicate systems within less than 2 years, and projects
that optimize systems after 2 years.
Key architectural element: * Performance metrics for determining
whether business value is being achieved;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain
explicit metrics that can be implemented or assessed, but it recognizes
the need for such metrics;
However, the architecture does contain high-level metrics, such as "the
percent of data/information shared across organizational units" that
may be used to establish detailed metrics.
Key architectural element: * Financial and nonfinancial resources
needed to achieve the business transformation;
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: * A listing of the legacy systems that will
not be part of the "To Be" environment and the schedule for terminating
these systems;
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: * A description of the training strategy/
approach that will be implemented to address the changes made to the
business operations (processes and systems) to promote operational
efficiency and effectiveness. This plan should also address any changes
to existing policies and procedures that affect day-to-day operations,
as well as resource needs (staffing and funding);
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: * A list of the systems to be developed,
acquired, or modified to achieve business needs and a description of
the relationship between the system and the business need(s);
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: A strategy for employing enterprise
application integration (EAI) plans, methods, and tools to, for
example, provide for efficiently reusing applications that already
exist, concurrent with adding new applications and databases;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not contain a
strategy for employing EAI plans, methods, and tools, nor does it
describe how EAI will be used to integrate legacy and future systems;
However, it does list technologies, products, and standards for EAI. It
also contains a vision for a service-oriented architecture[ B] that may
be developed into an EAI strategy.
Key architectural element: A technical (systems, infrastructure, and
data) migration plan that shows:
Key architectural element: * the transition from legacy to replacement
systems, including explicit sunset dates and intermediate systems that
may be temporarily needed to sustain existing functionality during the
transition period;
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: * an analysis of system interdependencies,
including the level of effort required to implement related systems in
a sequenced portfolio of projects that includes milestones, time lines,
costs, and capabilities;
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: * a cost estimate for the initial phase(s)
of the transition and a high-level cost projection for the transition
to the target architecture;
Element satisfied? No.
Key architectural element: * A strategy that describes the
architecture's governance and control structure and the integrated
procedures, processes, and criteria (e.g., investment management and
security) to be followed to ensure that the department's business
transformation effort remains compliant with the architecture;
Element satisfied? Partially;
Explanation of partially satisfied: The architecture does not include
an architecture governance and control structure and the integrated
procedures, processes, and criteria to be followed;
However, the architecture recognizes the need for a governance
structure and contains a high-level discussion of governance that
focuses on identifying the most critical governance issues and
challenges, making general recommendations for dealing with these, and
establishing the context in which appropriate managers, process owners,
and subject matter experts will develop process details.
Source: GAO analysis of DHS data.
[A] Acquisition/business strategy is a plan or action for achieving a
specific goal or result through contracting for software products and
services.
[B] A service-oriented architecture is a collection of services that
must communicate with each other. The communication might involve only
simple data passing, or it could involve two or more services
coordinating some activity. It requires a means for connecting the
services to each other.
[End of table]
[End of section]
Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:
U.S. Department of Homeland Security:
Washington, DC 20528:
Mr. Randolph Hite:
Director, Architecture and Systems Issues:
Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548:
JUL 23 2004:
Re: GAO-04-777; Homeland Security: Efforts Underway to Develop
Enterprise Architecture, But Much Work Remains, GAO Engagement Number
310272:
Dear Mr. Hite:
Thank you for the opportunity to review the findings referenced in the
draft report, GAO 04-777. Homeland Security: Efforts Underway to
Develop Enterprise Architecture But Much Work Remains.
GAO Recommendations:
To assist DHS in developing a well defined architecture, GAO is making
recommendations to the Secretary of Homeland Security that are aimed at
improving the department's architecture development approach and the
content of its architecture. GAO is also making a recommendation to the
Director of OMB to clarify the expected relationship between agencies'
enterprise architectures and the Federal Enterprise Architecture.
Response:
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) acknowledges that much work
does remain to create a target enterprise architecture (EA) and
transition plan to support business and information technology
transformation; however, we take exception to several aspects of the
report and its recommendations.
The DHS EA was evaluated against an unrealistic expectation that the
first version would comprehensively address the full national scope of
the homeland security enterprise. While this full scope is one of the
highest priorities of the EA effort, the scope is long term and
collaborative in nature. The report does not fully recognize the "blank
sheet of paper" DHS had on March 2003 d the need with limited resources
to guide DHS transformation and to engage our business community in
this transformation.
It is important to recognize that the DHS EA was evaluated against
criteria that has not yet been provided to the federal community, and
was not available when Version 1.0 was being developed.,
One of the most significant outcomes of Version 1.0 was the positioning
of the Department to more actively engage with our business
representatives from a strategic perspective; and thereby gain a
greater appreciation of the need for and value of EA generally on the
part of our senior and executive management. We accomplished this goal
with Version 1.0, and intend to continuously improve the content and
processes of our EA program over time.
The recommendations do not take into consideration limited resources.
The report explicitly expects that DHS would have fully decomposed all
aspects of all elements of an EA when in fact (given time, resources
and the maturity of the department), we selectively focused on those
areas of the EA that were most transformational in nature. It would
also have been helpful to have received the recommendations in a
prioritized framework so that the most cost-effective impact on
transforming DHS as mandated by the establishment of the Department can
be realized. Notwithstanding the absence of prioritization, the DHS EA
program will ensure that the criteria are addressed to the extent
possible (given resources and time) in Version 2. Aspects of the
criteria that are not incorporated into Version 2 will be integrated
into subsequent versions in the most cost effective and technically
disciplined manner possible. Our response to each key architectural
element under Appendix II, Detailed Results of GAO's Analyses of DHS's
"To Be" Architecture and Appendix III, Detailed Results of GAO's
Analyses of Version 1.0 of DHS's Transition Plan are enclosed.
We again thank you for the opportunity to provide comments on this
report.
Signed by:
Anna Dixon:
Director, Bankcard Programs and GAO/OIG Liaison:
Office of the Chief Financial Officer:
U.S. Department of Homeland Security:
Enclosure:
APPNDX II: 1;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A business assessment that includes the
enterprise's purpose, scope (e.g., organizations, business areas, and
internal and external stakeholders' concerns), limitations or
assumptions, and methods;
ISSUE: Business Assessment;
COMMENT: A high-level business assessment was included as the Business
Model Overview document which describes and characterizes of the
business model in terms of scope and methods.
APPNDX II: 2;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A gap analysis that describes the target
outcomes and shortfalls including strategic business issues,
conclusions reached as a result of the analysis (e.g., missing
capabilities), causal information, and rationales;
ISSUE: Gap Analysis;
COMMENT: Concur. as additional information is collected for version 2.0
a more detailed gap analysis can be conducted. The primary intent of
the EA version 1 was to describe the target business environment in
terms of functions and data. A high-level assessment was conducted in
order to develop the sequence diagram for the transition strategy which
draws relationships between current investments and target functions/
activities. If anything, rather than gaps there are/is a lot of
redundancy in terms of investments.
APPNDX II: 3;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A business strategy that describes the
desired future state of the business, the specific objectives to be
achieved, and the strategic direction that will be followed by the
enterprise to realize the desired future state;
ISSUE: Business Strategy:
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top to rows of the Zachman framework. The EA Business
strategy that describes the EA Program scope, objectives and strategic
directions was not within the scope of the initial architecture
description.
In regards to the business strategy (mission, goals and objectives) for
the Department that is defined in the DHS strategic plan. EA planning
and implementation does not dictate the DHS strategic direction,
mission and goals but rather is complementary to the strategic plan and
brings that plan into life.
APPNDX II: 3a:
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A vision statement that describes the
business areas required strategic attention based on the gap analysis;
ISSUE: Vision Statement;
COMMENT: See response to 3.
APPNDX II: 3b:
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the business priorities and
constraints, including their relationships to, at a minimum, applicable
laws and regulations, executive orders, departmental policy,
procedures, guidance, and audit reports;
ISSUE: Business Priorities & Constraints;
COMMENT: Concur with comment. Version 2.0 will better define the
business priorities and constraints, however mapping to applicable laws
and regulations, executive orders, departmental policy, procedures,
guidance, and audit reports will be a huge resource intensive exercise
and will not be completed until a later date.
APPNDX II: 3c;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the scope of business change
that is to occur to address identified gaps and realize the future
desired business state. The scope of change, at a minimum, should
identify expected changes to strategic goals, customers, suppliers,
services, locations, and capabilities;
ISSUE: Scope of Business Change;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top two rows of the Zachman framework. Once information
is collected and vetted then the true analysis can begin. This is a
critical step in understanding the long term changes that will need to
be managed across the Department. Preliminary analysis will begin in
the Summer of 2004.
APPNDX II: 3d;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the measurable strategic
business objectives to be met to achieve the desired change;
ISSUE: Measurable Strategic Business Objectives;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
terms in of the top two rows of the Zachman framework. The measurable
business objectives are defined in the DHS strategic plan. The
relationship between the EA business view and the strategic objectives
is described in terms of related business activities to strategic
objectives.
In terms of the business objectives of the EA program, those are
described in the Governance strategy and DHS EA Governance Plan, which
is being implemented incrementally.
APPNDX II: 3e;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the measurable tactical
business goals to be met to achieve the strategic objectives;
ISSUE: Measurable Tactical Business Goals;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
terms in of the top two rows of the Zachman framework. The measurable
business goals are defined in the DHS strategic plan. The relationship
between the EA business view and the strategic goals is described in
terms of related business activities to strategic objectives
(associated with the strategic goal).
In terms of the business qoals of the EA program, those are described
in the Governance strategy and DHS EA Governance Plan, which is being
implemented incrementally.
APPNDX II: 3f;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A listing of opportunities to unify and
simplify systems or processes across the department, including their
relationships to solutions that align with the strategic initiatives to
be implemented to achieve strategic objectives and tactical goals;
ISSUE: Listing - Unify / Simplify Systems or Processes;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top two rows of the Zachman framework. Once information
is collected and vetted then the true analysis can begin. This is a
critical step in understanding the long term changes that will need to
be managed across the Department. More detailed analysis will be part
of the transition plan analysis to be conducted during the Summer of
2004 and be delivered along with the EA V2 materials:
APPNDX II: 4;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: Common (standard and department wide)
policies, procedures, and business and operational rules for consistent
implementation of the architecture;
ISSUE: Standard Business Policies, Procedures, Rules;
COMMENT: In terms of the business goals of the EA program, those are
described in the Governance strategy and DHS EA Governance Plan, which
is being implemented incrementally - to include EA policy, procedures
and rules.
APPNDX II: 5;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of key business processes and
how they support the department's mission, including the organizational
units responsible for performing the business processes and the
locations where the business processes will be performed;
ISSUE: Key Business Processes;
COMMENT: This statement is false. Key business processes are described
in terms of the business function/activity descriptions contained in
the business model. These functions/activities were derived from the
Homeland Security Act of 2002 and the National Strategy for Homeland
Security.
APPNDX II: 5a;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: this description should provide for the
consistent alignment of: a) applicable federal laws, regulations, and
guidance;
ISSUE: Applicable Federal Laws, Regulations & Guidance;
COMMENT: The functions/activities were derived from the National
Strategy for Homeland Security and the Homeland Security Act of 2002.
While these are not a specific mapping of the activities to each
requirement additional resources are required to conduct more detailed
analysis. See response to 3b.
APPNDX II: 5b;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: this description should provide for the
consistent alignment of: b) departmental policies, procedures, and
guidance;
ISSUE: Department Policies, Procedures & Guidance;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top two rows of the Zachman framework. Alignment to
department policy, procedures and guidance is described in the
governance strategy and DHS EA Governance Plan, which is being
implemented incrementally.
APPNDX II: 5c;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: this description should provide for the
consistent alignment of: c) operational activities;
ISSUE: Operational Activities;
COMMENT: This statement is false. Operational activities are described
in terms of the business function/ activity descriptions contained in
the business model These functions/activities were derived from the
Homeland Security Act of 2002 and the National Strategy for Homeland
Security.
APPNDX II: 5d;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: this description should provide for the
consistent alignment of: d) organizational roles;
ISSUE: Organizational Roles;
COMMENT: DHS organizations are attributed to each of the business
activities as appropriate. While the specific roles are not defined,
the information collected provides a starting point to understanding
the relationship between the organizational elements and the functions
they perform. This will be further analyzed to better define the
organizational roles within the Department. Version 2.0 provides an
organizational description in terms of mission and function. This
information will be used in that analysis.
APPNDX II: 5e;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: this description should provide for the
consistent alignment of: e) operational events and information;
ISSUE: Operational Events;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top two rows of the Zachman framework. Part of that
information is indeed key business events. Future work is planned
involving key DHS internal stakeholders in defining and describing key
events and the relationship of those events to the business:
functions/activities.
APPNDX II: 6;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the operational management
processes to ensure that the department's business transformation
effort remains compliant with the business rules for fault,
performance, security, configuration, and account management;
ISSUE: Operational Management Processes;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top to rows of the Zachman framework. Alignment to
organizational management processes is described in the governance
strategy and DHS EA Governance Plan, which is being implemented
incrementally.
APPNDX II: 7;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the organizational approach
(processes and organizational structure) for communications and
interactions among business lines and program areas for:
ISSUE: Organizational Communications Processes and Structure;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top to rows of the Zachman framework. The
organizational approach to the EA processes and organizational
structure for communications and interactions among business lines and
program areas is described in the governance strategy, DHS EA
Governance Plan, and DHS EA Communications Plan - which is being
implemented incrementally.
APPNDX II: 7a;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the organizational approach
(processes and organizational structure) for communications and
interactions among business lines and program areas for: a) management
reporting;
ISSUE: Management Reporting;
COMMENT: See response to 7. If the proper information is collected
during the EA Planning phase analysis can be conducted inform
management of the most effective methods of management reporting. The
EA Planning team has only considered management reporting in terms of
the EA program.
APPNDX II: 7b;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the organizational approach
(processes and organizational structure) for communications and
interactions among business lines and program areas for: b) operational
functions;
ISSUE: Operational Functions;
COMMENT: The intent of the EA version 1.0 was to describe the business
in terms of the top to rows of the Zachman framework. In terms of the
management structure of the Department, that information was provided
and used from the DHS organizational chart provided to the EA team.
Business functions/activities were attributed by organizations that
perform those functions. This information (once more detailed
information can be collected) can be used to allow management to make
informed decisions and understand the impact to the organization of
those decisions.
APPNDX II: 7c;
RECOMMENDATION: BUSINESS: A description of the organizational approach
(processes and organizational structure) for communications and
interactions among business lines and program areas for: c)
architectural development and use (i.e., how to develop the
architecture description, implement the architecture, and govern/
manage the development and implementation of the architecture;
ISSUE: Architectural Development & Use;
COMMENT: Architecture development and use is described in the
Governance strategy and DHS EA Governance Plan, which is being
implemented incrementally.
APPNDX II: 8;
RECOMMENDATION: PERFORMANCE: A description of the processes for
establishing, measuring, tracking, evaluating, and predicting business
performance regarding business functions, baseline data, and service
levels.
ISSUE: Process - Business Performance Metrics;
COMMENT: Version 2.0 of the EA will provide an enhanced business model
that will be a solid foundation for establishing performance measures.
The individual business activities identified in Version 2.0 should
each have performance measures and metrics, baseline data, and service
levels associated with them. The overall process for developing this
performance information needs to be defined by the business area and
performance measurement staff of DHS. This is a substantial process
that must involve a wide range of DHS components working together. To
the extent these processes are developed, they will be referenced and/
or included in Version 2.0. The conceptual project and business
activity related to this area in Version 1.0 will be expanded upon in
Version 2.0 by the DHS EA Project team.
APPNDX II: 9;
RECOMMENDATION: PERFORMANCE: A description of measurable business goals
and outcomes for business products and services, including strategic
and tactical objectives;
ISSUE: Goals & Outcomes - Business Products & Services;
COMMENT: Version 2 of the EA will provide an enhanced business model
that will be a solid foundation for establishing business goals and
outcomes. The individual business activities or value chain areas
identified in Version 2 can each have measurable goals and outcomes
associated with them. The development of the specific quantitative
goals and outcomes needs to be done by each business area and
performance measurement staff of DHS. To the extent these goals and
outcomes are developed, they will be referenced or included in Version
2. The description of customer focused, measurable business goals
included in Version 1 will be expanded upon in Version 2.
APPNDX II: 10;
RECOMMENDATION: PERFORMANCE: A description of measurable technical
goals and outcomes for managing technology products and services for
the "To Be" architecture that enable the achievement of business goals
and outcomes.
ISSUE: Goals & Outcomes - Technology Products;
COMMENT: Version 2.0 of the EA will provide an improved foundation for
describing technical goals and outcomes. The technology-related
quantitative goals and outcomes need to be defined by the CIO and
performance measurement staff of DHS. To the extent these goals and
outcomes are developed, they will be referenced and/or included in
Version 2.0. The performance measures for measuring technology and the
technology management conceptual projects included in Version 1.0 will
be expanded upon in Version 2.0.
APPNDX II: 11;
RECOMMENDATION: INFORMATION / DATA: A description of data management
policies, procedures, processes, and tools (e.g., CURE matrix) for
analyzing, designing, building, and maintaining databases in an
enterprise architected environment;
ISSUE: Data Management Policies, Procedures, Processes & Tools;
COMMENT: The intent and scope of the version 1.0 effort was to collect
the terms and facts that represent the common nouns (data objects) of
the business. The data management policy, practices, processes and
tools will be defined in the data management governance documents at a
later date:
The CURE matrix is a data usage planning tool, in that is provides
high-level relationships between the business functions/activities and
how those functions/activities may act on a particular data object.
This tool is instrumental in the application/component architecture
definition phase.
This version of DHS EA data architecture represents conceptual data
model and it was not intended to define data mgmt policies, procedures,
processes and tools at this level. Acceptance criteria did not identify
this as a requirement.
APPNDX II: 12;
RECOMMENDATION: INFORMATION / DATA: A description of the business and
operational rules for data standardization to ensure data consistency,
integrity, and accuracy, such as business and security rules that
govern address to, maintenance of, and use of data;
ISSUE: Data Standardization - Business &Operational Rules;
COMMENT: The intent and scope of the version 1.0 effort was to collect
the terms and facts that represent the common nouns (data objects) of
the business. The data management policy, practices (including business
and security rules), processes and tools will be defined at a later
date as the EA plan is refined and the architecture matures.
APPNDX II: 13;
RECOMMENDATION: INFORMATION / DATA: A data dictionary, which is a
repository of standard data definitions for applications;
ISSUE: Data Dictionary.
APPNDX II: 14;
RECOMMENDATION: INFORMATION / DATA: A conceptual data model that
describes the fundamental things/objects (e.g., business or tourist
visas, shipping manifests) that make up the business, without regard
for how they will be physically stored. A conceptual data model
contains the content needed to derive facts about the business and to
facilitate the creation of business rules. It represents the
consolidated structure of business objects to be used by business
applications;
ISSUE: Conceptual Data Model;
COMMENT: This is not accurate. A conceptual data model was delivered
consisting of a list of primary data object definitions and
characteristics, associated business subject areas and even some high-
level subject area diagrams. Conceptual data models are usually
abstract, however necessary to begin to form the underlying structure
of the business needs. The intent and scope of the version 1 effort was
to collect the terms and facts that represent the common nouns (data
objects) of the business to understand the types of information of
which the department has a need to collect and store. The purpose of
conceptual data model is to provide common vocabulary for the
enterprise and to depict fundamental structure of the enterprise in
terms of data. It was not intended to provide rules for building
databases.
APPNDX II: 15;
RECOMMENDATION: INFORMATION / DATA: A logical database model that
provides (1) a normalized (I/e/, non-redundant) data structure that
supports information flows and (2) the basis for developing the schemes
for designing, building, and maintaining physical databases;
ISSUE: Logical Database Model;
COMMENT: The main focus of the EA version 1.0 effort was to describe
the DHS enterprise in terms of the top two rows of the Zachman
framework. Clearly, a logical data model does not fall within that
scope, but rather a logical data model would be defined by a "solution"
architecture using the structure provided and defined by the conceptual
data model. That is ensuring that information and data used by a
solution is reflective within the enterprise conceptual data model.
There was not our objective to develop logical data model at this
point:
APPNDX II: 16;
RECOMMENDATION: INFORMATION / DATA: A metadata model that specifies the
rules and standards for representing data (e.g., data formats) and
accessing information (e.g., data protocols) according to a documented
business context that is complete, consistent, and practical;
ISSUE: Metadata Model;
COMMENT: The intent and scope of the version 1 effort was to collect
the terms and facts that represent the common nouns (data objects) of
the business. The data management policy, practices, processes
(including rules and standards for representing data) and tools will be
defined in the data management governance documents at a later date.
APPNDX II: 17;
RECOMMENDATION: INFORMATION / DATA: A description of the information
flows and relationships among organizational units, business
operations, and system elements;
ISSUE: Information Flows & Relationships;
COMMENT: The main focus of the EA version 1.0 effort was to describe
the DHS enterprise in terms of the top two rows of the Zachman
framework. As the EA Plan continues to evolve information flows will
created to describe the information flow among organizational entities
as well as with external entities;
APPNDX II: 18;
RECOMMENDATION: SERVICES / APPLICATIONS: A description of the services
and their relationships to key end-user services to be provided by the
application systems;
ISSUE: Services - Key End Users;
COMMENT: The description of the Notional Application Architecture
describes applications in terms of the user workflows they enable;
APPNDX II: 18a;
ISSUE: Specify End-User Services by Application Systems;
COMMENT: While it is not specifically mentioned, these applications
were derived from the usage of business functions by user classes, as
mapped in the business model. This relationship of user to business
function to application will be much more apparent in version 2.
APPNDX II: 18b;
ISSUE: Inconsistency User Services / Application;
COMMENT: The consumption diagram for the Communication Systems
Management Application specifically calls out the consumption of Email
services for managing some of the correspondence.
APPNDX II: 19;
RECOMMENDATION: SERVICES / APPLICATIONS: A list of application systems
(acquisition/development and production portfolio) and their relative
importance to achieving the department's vision, based on business
value and technical performance;
ISSUE: Application Systems - Relevance to DHS Vision;
COMMENT: The Application and Component Architectures indirectly link to
the Value Chain, via the business functions. Relative importance should
be noted via this linkage. However, Applications will cross both value
chain and organizational boundaries. This is the basis of reuse that
has been built into the architecture. Version 2.0 of the Application
and Component Architecture should have more detail available to specify
which organizations will be able to use each component. This will be
based on the mapping of Components to the Business Functions they
enable. Business Functions are then mapped to the organizations (both
internal and external) that perform them.
APPNDX II: 20;
RECOMMENDATION: SERVICES / APPLICATIONS: A description of the policies,
procedures, processes, and tools for selecting, controlling, and
evaluating application systems to enable effective IT investment
management;
ISSUE: Application Systems - IT Investment Management;
COMMENT: The notional application and component architecture describes
the categories of information systems required to execute the
enterprise mission. The GAO report is correct in that it does not
describe the governance for selecting, controlling, and evaluating
systems to enable investment management. This is an issue that should
be addressed with governance;
APPNDX II: 21;
RECOMMENDATION: SERVICES / APPLICATIONS: A description of the
enterprise application systems and system components and their
interfaces;
ISSUE: Application Systems, System Components and Interfaces.
APPNDX II: 22;
RECOMMENDATION: SERVICES / APPLICATIONS: A description of the system
development lifecycle process for application development or
acquisition and the integration of the process with the architecture,
including policies, procedures, and architectural techniques for
acquiring systems throughout their lifecycles. The common technical
approach should also describe the process for integrating legacy
systems with the systems to be developed/acquired;
ISSUE: System Development Life Cycle Process - App. Dev;
COMMENT: The business functions and their interaction with data and
user roles requires much further decomposition before we can begin to
describe all of the system development life cycle processes, policies,
procedures, and architectural techniques. At this stage of the
architecture, we have defined the need for types of software to be
required by the enterprise. Once the models are decomposed into
specifications, then it would be more appropriate to define how the
software will be provisioned.
APPNDX II: 23;
RECOMMENDATION: TECHNICAL: A list of infrastructure systems and a
description of the systems' hardware and software infrastructure
components. The description should also reflect the system's relative
importance to achieving the department's vision based on constraints,
business value, and technical performance:
ISSUE: Infrastructure Systems, Hardware & Software Components;
COMMENT: "One DHS" has become a real initiative sponsored by the
Infrastructure Services section of the Office of the CIO. "One DHS" is
creating the Roadmap to One DHS Infrastructure which will detail out
the list of infrastructure systems (including descriptions, hardware
and software components, and value characteristics) which will support
DHS moving forward. The DHS EA effort is coordinating with "One DHS" in
order to incorporate this information into the architecture. We require
timely response from the Infrastructure Services unit for this
information as it is surfaced through the "One DHS" activities.
Resource constraints within Infrastructure Services has negatively
affected this timely response.
APPNDX II: 24;
RECOMMENDATION: TECHNICAL: A description of the policies, procedures,
processes, and tools for selecting, controlling, and evaluating
infrastructure systems to enable effective IT investment management;
ISSUE: Policies, Procedures, Processes, Tools - Infrastructure Systems
Evaluation;
COMMENT: Governance processes, procedures and policies have been
adopted to guide decision making as to architectural alignment of
proposed technology investments. These are being described within V2.0
of the DHS EA.
APPNDX II: 25;
RECOMMENDATION: TECHNICAL: A description of the technical reference
model (TRM) that describes the enterprise infrastructure services,
including specific details regarding the functionality and capabilities
that these services will provide to enable the development of
application systems;
ISSUE: TRM - Description Infrastructure Services;
COMMENT: Governance processes, procedures and policies have been
adopted to guide the evolution and maturation of the DHS EA TRM. Focus
is rapidly moving from as-is descriptions to to-be targets. These are
being described within V2.0 of the DHS EA.
APPNDX II: 26;
RECOMMENDATION: TECHNICAL: A description in the TRM that identifies and
describes (a) the technical standards to be implemented for each
enterprise service and:
ISSUE: TRM - Technical Standards for Enterprise Service;
COMMENT: The V2.0 DHS EA TRM contains both structure and content which
support the to-be target infrastructure services. These items are under
governance processes, procedures and policies at a DHS enterprise
level. These are being described within V2.0 of the DHS EA.
APPNDX II: 26a;
RECOMMENDATION: TECHNICAL: A description in the TRM that identifies and
describes (b) the anticipated life cycle of each standard;
ISSUE: TRM - Life Cycle of each Standard;
COMMENT: The anticipated lifecycle of the above referenced technical
standards is incorporated into v2.0 of the DHS EA TRM. The content of
the lifecycle information is under governance and will be described
within the V2.0 DHS EA;
APPNDX II: 27;
RECOMMENDATION: TECHNICAL: A description of the physical IT
infrastructure needed to design and acquire systems, including the
relationships among hardware, software, and communications devices;
ISSUE: Physical IT Infrastructure Description;
COMMENT: The "One DHS" initiative is defining the physical
infrastructure components required to support a DHS to-be target. DHS
EA is coordinating with "One DHS" in order to incorporate these
definitions, descriptions and requirements into the DHS EA. DHS
Infrastructure Services resource constraints limit the effectiveness of
our coordination. Information Sharing requirements and solution
concepts are included within V2.0 of the DHS EA.
APPNDX II: 28;
RECOMMENDATION: TECHNICAL: Common policies and procedures for
developing infrastructure systems throughout their life cycles,
including requirements management, design, implementation, testing,
deployment, operations, and maintenance. These policies and procedures
should also address how the applications will be integrated, including
legacy systems;
ISSUE: Policies & Procedures - Developing Infrastructure Systems;
COMMENT: Common policies and procedures for life cycle development of
infrastructure capabilities are being developed through "One DHS". DHS
EA is coordinating with "One DHS" in order to incorporate these items
within the DHS EA. Applications integration (including legacy) is
addressed in the DHS EA through a combination of Services/
Applications, Technical and the DHS EA Transition Plan. These
perspectives come to bear on every investment quided by the DHS EA.
Concepts of how this would work are described within V2.0 of the DHS
EA.
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY:
COMMENT: Currently developing a draft security document that addresses
these issues.
APPNDX II: 29;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A description or the policies, procedures,
goals, strategies, principals, and requirements relevant to information
assurance and security and how they (the policies, procedures, goals,
strategies, and requirements) align and integrate with other elements
of the architecture (e.g., security services);
ISSUE: Policies & Procedures - Information Assurance;
COMMENT: Concur. Policies and procedures for information assurance and
security are not contained in the EA. The Department (CISO) is
developing policies and procedures for information assurance and
security. Currently developing security goals, underlying principles,
strategies, implementation approaches, and standards. Policies and
procedures will be referenced as part of the requirements:
APPNDX II: 30;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: Definitions of terms related to security and
information assurance;
ISSUE: Definitions of Terms - Information Assurance;
COMMENT: Concur. The conceptual EA (V1.0) presented the outline of a
security architecture approach and indicated some of the components
from which it will be constructed. The Security Architecture under
development will define all terms included. The Definitions of Terms
for Information Assurance will be developed and will align with
commonly accepted terminology.
APPNDX II: 31;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A listing of accountable organizations and
their respective responsibilities for implementing enterprise security
services. It is important to show organizational relationships in an
operational view because they illustrate fundamental roles (e.g., who
conducts operational activities) and management relationships (e.g.,
what is the command structure or relationship to other key players) and
how these influence the operational nodes;
ISSUE: List Organizations - Enterprise Security Services;
COMMENT: Concur. A listing of organizations and roles and
responsibilities will be provided in the Security Architecture under
development Currently developing the security organization and a high
level diagram will be completed for V2.0.
APPNDX II: 32;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A description of operational security rules
that are derived from security policies;
ISSUE: Operational Security Rules;
COMMENT: Concur. A listing of operational security rules derived from
security policies will be provided in the Security Architecture
underdevelopment. There is a need for clarification on requirements and
specific details from the Department in order to complete this effort.
APPNDX II: 33;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A description of enterprise security
infrastructure services (e.g., identification and authentication) that
will be needed to protect the department's assets, and the relationship
of these services to protective mechanisms;
ISSUE: Enterprise Security Infrastructure Services;
COMMENT: The purpose of the conceptual EA (V1.0) is to provide an
outline of the elements of the EA that require further detail to be
provided in subsequent versions. The EA V1.0 does indicate the security
infrastructure services required, but does not indicate the mechanisms
by which they will be implemented. These have been identified and will
be incorporated in V2.0;
APPNDX II: 34;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A description of the security standards to be
implemented for each enterprise service. These standards should be
derived from security requirements. This description should also
address how these services will align and integrate with other elements
of the architecture (e.g., security policies and requirements);
ISSUE: Security Standards for Each Service;
COMMENT: Concur. The EA (V1.0) does not contain a complete list of
standards (security and other) Development of standards is underway and
will be reflected in subsequent versions. Will identify and incorporate
general requirements (such as FIPS) there is a need to address the
organization specific requirements (such as DoD etc) that will require
cooperative work and input from the organizations.
APPNDX II: 35;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A description of the protection mechanisms
(e.g., firewalls and intrusion detection software) that will be
implemented to secure the department's assets, including a description
of the interrelationships among these protection mechanisms;
ISSUE: Protection Mechanisms to Secure Assets;
COMMENT: Concur. The EA (V1.0) does not contain a list and descriptions
of protective mechanisms to be employed. The EA V1.0 is intended as an
outline EA to indicate the areas where further detail is required and
is under development. A high level analysis for assessment of
Protection Mechanisms to Secure Assets is underway;
APPNDX III: 36;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: Analysis of the gaps between the baseline and
the target architecture for business processes, information/data and
services/application systems to define missing and needed capabilities;
ISSUE: Gap Analysis - Baseline and Target Architecture;
COMMENT: Partial analysis provided. Version 1.0 provided legacy systems
by mission area and provided a sequencing plan that could be correlated
to those same mission areas. Problems identified with the legacy
systems are addressed by the target. Further Gap analysis was planned
for during the Rationalize phase (first 6 months) of the Transition
Plan. Each conceptual project contains a sub-project called As-Is/
Target Gap analysis. This sub-project identifies target requirements
and determines the gap between current capabilities and target
requirements. Results from the Gap analysis plan indicate:
-Existing applications or 300s that can be used to satisfy target
requirements:
-Portions of an existing applications or 300 can be used to satisfy
target requirements:
-No existing application or 300 can be used to satisfy a target
requirement:
-A portion of an existing application or 300 can be used during an
interim time period to satisfy a target requirement.
APPNDX III: 37;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A high-level strategy for implementing the
enterprise architecture;
ISSUE: High Level Strategy - Implementing EA.
APPNDX III: 37a;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: Specific time-phased milestones for
acquiring and deploying systems;
ISSUE: Time-phased Milestones;
COMMENT: Concur.
APPNDX III: 37b;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: Performance metrics for determining whether
business value is being achieved;
ISSUE: Performance Metrics;
COMMENT: Concur.
APPNDX III: 37c;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: Financial and non-financial resources needed
to achieve the business transformations;
ISSUE: Financial & Non-financial Resources;
COMMENT: Partial analysis provided. Version 1.0 provided a correlation
between conceptual projects and the associated already approved 300s.
The Gap Analysis Projects (Within Each Conceptual Project) Will
Determine The Extent To Which Current 300s Can Be Used.
APPNDX III: 37d;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A listing of the legacy systems that will not
be part of the "To Be" environment and the schedule for terminating
these systems;
ISSUE: Listing - legacy systems to be terminated;
COMMENT: Partial analysis provided. The existing and planned systems
can be correlated to a swim lane in version 1.0. All existing systems
will be phased out eventually or built upon as part of the target
architecture. The Gap analysis project in each swim lane will focus on
reviewing 300s that might meet specific target requirements and
determine a specific action plan.
APPNDX III: 37e;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A description of the training strategy/
approach that will be implemented to address the changes made to the
business operations (processes and systems) to promote operational
efficiency and effectiveness. This plan should also address any changes
to existing policies and procedures that affect day-to-day operations,
as well as resource needs (staffing and funding);
ISSUE: Training Strategy for changes - business operations and
processes;
COMMENT: Partial Analysis provided. Changed management and training was
planned for as a part of each conceptual project. Change Management
(People) Activities: These Sub-projects Seek To Improve Organizational
Collaboration And Cooperation. Some Of These Projects May Result In
Organizational Changes, Some In New Training Programs, And Some In
Improved Procedures.
APPNDX III: 37f;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A list of the systems to be developed,
acquired, or modified to achieve business needs and a description of
the relationship between the system and the business need(s);
ISSUE: List of Systems to be developed, acquired, modified;
COMMENT: Partial Analysis Provided. A list of Target applications was
provided and the concept.
APPNDX III: 38;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A strategy for employing enterprise
application integrations (EAI) plans, methods, and tools to, for
example, provide for efficiently reusing applications that already
exist, concurrent with adding new applications and databases;
ISSUE: Strategy - Enterprise Architecture Integration Plans;
COMMENT: Concur with Partially Satisfied. There is a Enterprise
Application Integration (EAI) component development that is planned as
part of the Governance conceptual project.
APPNDX III: 39;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A technical (systems, infrastructure, and
data migration plan that shows:
ISSUE: A Technical Migration Plan:
APPNDX III: 39a:
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A technical (systems, infrastructure, and
data migration plan that shows: a) the transition from legacy to
replacement systems, including explicit sunset dates and intermediate
systems that may be temporarily needed to sustain existing
functionality during the transition period;
ISSUE: Transition from legacy to replacement systems;
COMMENT: Version 2.0 will show the transition from legacy to
replacement systems.
APPNDX III: 39b;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A technical (systems, infrastructure, and
data migration plan that shows: b) an analysis of system
interdependencies, including the level of effort required to implement
related systems in a sequenced portfolio of projects that includes
milestones, timelines costs and capabilities;
ISSUE: Analysis - system Interdependencies;
COMMENT: Partial Analysis provided - dependencies between components
and conceptual projects are shown on the sequencing diagram.
APPNDX III: 39c;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A technical (systems, infrastructure, and
data migration plan that shows: c) a cost estimate for the initial
phase(s) of the transition and high-level cost projection for the
transition to the target architecture;
ISSUE: Cost Estimate Initial Phase;
COMMENT: Version 2.0 will show the cost and schedule of projects.
APPNDX III: 40;
RECOMMENDATION: SECURITY: A strategy that describes the architecture's
governance and control structure and the integrated procedures
processes and criteria (e.g., investment management and security) to be
followed to ensure that the department's business transformation effort
remains compliant with the architecture.
ISSUE: Strategy - architecture's governance and control structure;
COMMENT: Concur with the Partially Satisfied assessment.
[End of table]
The following are GAO's comments on the Department of Homeland
Security's (DHS) letter dated July 23, 2004.
GAO Comments:
1. See the "Agency Comments and Our Evaluation" section of this report.
2. We agree that Version 1. 0 included a high-level (or overview)
business model that offered some descriptive information on weaknesses,
such as potential areas of inefficiencies or overlaps in current
departmental business functions and technology. However, the underlying
business assessment that would form the basis for a clear statement of
the enterprise's purpose, scope, limitations, assumptions, and methods
for successful business transformation was not present, and DHS
provided no evidence that such an assessment had been performed. For
example, for the areas that the business model overview identified as
potential areas of inefficiency or overlap, the architecture did not
provide the supporting analysis. The architecture also did not provide
a time frame for completing such an assessment or state that one would
be performed. Further, when we concluded our analysis and shared our
findings with senior DHS architecture officials and supporting
contractor personnel, they agreed with our finding.
3. We acknowledge the department's comment that the business strategy
and vision statement were not within the scope of the initial
architecture description. However, we note that this comment is
inconsistent with DHS's intent to describe the top two rows of the
Zachman framework, because these rows include this information.
Moreover, as stated in our report, best practices require that the
architecture be based on the business strategy and states that to do
otherwise negatively affects the architecture's utility and makes it
unlikely that changes to existing operations and systems will provide
for optimum mission performance and satisfaction of stakeholders'
needs. In addition, while we do not question that the business strategy
and vision statement are included in DHS's strategic plan, we did not
evaluate this plan because it was issued 5 months after the approval of
Version 1. 0. Further, when we concluded our analysis and shared our
findings with senior DHS architecture officials and supporting
contractor personnel, they agreed with our findings.
4. As stated in the report, we do not question the department's intent
for Version 1. 0 of the architecture or whether these goals have been
achieved. However, our analysis shows that important architecture
artifacts that would be expected to be included in this version and
that are associated with the top two rows of the Zachman framework were
not included in the architecture description.
5. We acknowledge the department's comment that Version 1. 0 of the
architecture did not contain measurable strategic business objectives
or tactical business goals, as evidenced by our finding that this
information was missing. In addition, while we do not question that
this information is included in DHS's strategic plan, we would note
that we did not evaluate this plan because it was issued 5 months after
the approval of Version 1. 0. With respect to the governance strategy
and plan, the former outlined the steps to be taken to develop such a
strategy, and the latter was not contained within Version 1. 0, nor was
it provided separately. Further, as previously noted, we do not
question the intent of Version 1. 0. Further, when we concluded our
analysis and shared our findings with senior DHS architecture officials
and supporting contractor personnel, they agreed with our findings.
6. We disagree. While we acknowledge that there are high-level business
functions and activities in the business model, the model did not
define business processes. Business process descriptions have a
definitive beginning and end and reflect the interrelationships among
business functions and activities. The functions and activities
described in Version 1. 0 had not been decomposed to a sufficient level
of operational detail to describe routine tasks (e. g. , develop
mitigation strategies to minimize the impact of the threat). Further,
when we concluded our analysis and shared our findings with
architecture officials and supporting contractor personnel, they agreed
with the criteria and with our findings.
7. Version 1. 0 of the architecture did not include a communications
plan, nor was such a plan provided separately. However, we do agree
that effective management reporting will depend on DHS's ability to
collect the right information for the architecture program.
8. The organizational chart referred to in this comment was not
provided to GAO.
9. We disagree. While we acknowledge that the architecture contains a
high-level or abstract conceptual data model, we found that the model
lacked the information for the business owner's view of data and for
the creation of a conceptual data model that can be used to develop the
logical database model as required by the Zachman framework, which DHS
has acknowledged that it is following to develop its architecture.
Specifically, this would require that the conceptual data model
(1) include concrete business objects, (2) enable facts about the
business to be derived, and (3) facilitate the development and
validation of business rules. Further, when we concluded our analysis
and shared our findings with senior DHS architecture officials and
supporting contractor personnel, they agreed with the criteria and our
findings.
10. The focus of our review was the content of Version 1. 0 of the
architecture. We did not evaluate the "OneDHS" initiative as part of
this effort because it was identified in the architecture as a
conceptual project.
11. We disagree. While we acknowledge that the architecture indicated
the need to perform project-specific gap analyses, these analyses were
not included in Version 1. 0, and DHS did not provide any evidence that
such analyses had been performed. In addition, the department did not
provide a time frame for completing them. Further, when we concluded
our analysis and shared our findings with senior DHS architecture
officials and supporting contractor personnel, they agreed with our
findings.
12. We disagree. While we acknowledge that conceptual projects were
linked with proposed IT investments (i. e. , exhibit 300s), the
architecture did not show the correlation among the projects and the
potential investments. To show this correlation, DHS would have needed
to reflect the extent to which the identified business need--which
should be based on a gap analysis--would be addressed by the proposed
investment, and this explanation would be documented within the
architecture. However, the architecture did not contain this
information or a time frame for when it would be provided. The
architecture also did not include information on the approval status of
these proposed investments. Further, when we concluded our analysis and
shared our findings with senior DHS architecture officials and
supporting contractor personnel, they agreed with our findings.
13. We disagree. Version 1. 0 of the DHS architecture does not provide
sufficient information to differentiate between existing and new
systems. In addition, the architecture did not include an analysis that
identified existing systems that would be terminated. Further, when we
concluded our analysis and shared our findings with senior DHS
architecture officials and supporting contractor personnel, they agreed
with our findings.
14. We disagree. The architecture does not contain detailed training
approaches, strategies, or plans. Instead, the architecture contains
high-level briefings that refer to planned activities to determine the
needs for training based on anticipated changes. These needs, once
identified, may be used to develop a business-specific plan for change
management and training. Further, when we concluded our analysis and
shared our findings with senior DHS architecture officials and
supporting contractor personnel, they agreed with our findings.
15. We disagree. While we acknowledge that the architecture listed the
names of both existing systems and several systems under development,
it did not identify which of these systems would be developed,
modified, acquired, and/or used as intermediate systems until the
target system has been deployed to meet specific future business needs.
Further, when we concluded our analysis and shared our findings with
senior DHS architecture officials and supporting contractor personnel,
they agreed with our findings.
16. We disagree. We acknowledge that the architecture included a
sequencing diagram that graphically associated the components and the
conceptual projects. However, the architecture did not provide either
an explanation of the graphically depicted relationships or an analysis
of the interdependencies. DHS also did not provide evidence that such
an analysis had been performed. Further, when we concluded our analysis
and shared our findings with senior DHS architecture officials and
supporting contractor personnel, they agreed with our findings.
[End of section]
Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:
GAO Contact:
Cynthia Jackson, (202) 512-5086:
Staff Acknowledgments:
Staff who made key contributions to this report were Joseph Cruz,
Joanne Fiorino, Anh Le, Randolph Tekeley, and William Wadsworth.
(310272):
FOOTNOTES
[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, High-Risk Series: An Update,
GAO-03-119 (Washington, D.C.: January 2003) and Major Management
Challenges and Program Risks: Department of Homeland Security,
GAO-03-102 (Washington, D.C.: January 2003).
[2] An enterprise architecture is a blueprint that defines, both in
logical terms (including interrelated business processes and business
rules, integrated functions, applications, systems, users, work
locations, and information needs and flows) and in technical terms
(including hardware, software, data, communications, and security), how
an organization's information technology systems operate today, how
they are to operate in the future, and a road map for the transition.
[3] See, for example, U.S. General Accounting Office, Information
Technology: Architecture Needed to Guide NASA's Financial Management
Modernization, GAO-04-43 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 21, 2003); DOD
Business Systems Modernization: Important Progress Made to Develop
Business Enterprise Architecture, but Much Work Remains, GAO-03-1018
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 19, 2003); Information Technology: DLA Should
Strengthen Business Systems Modernization Architecture and Investment
Activities, GAO-01-631 (Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2001) and
Information Technology: INS Needs to Better Manage the Development of
Its Enterprise Architecture, AIMD-00-212 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 1,
2000).
[4] The Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) is a collection of five
"reference models" developed by the Office of Management and Budget,
which are intended to provide a governmentwide framework to guide and
constrain federal agencies' enterprise architectures and information
technology investments.
[5] For purposes of this review, we mapped the department's
architecture to the FEA's business, services, and technical reference
models.
[6] Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Public Law 107-296, Nov. 25, 2002).
[7] GAO-03-119.
[8] See, for example, U.S. General Accounting Office, Information
Technology: Architecture Needed to Guide NASA's Financial Management
Modernization, GAO-04-43 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 21, 2003); DOD
Business Systems Modernization: Important Progress Made to Develop
Business Enterprise Architecture, but Much Work Remains, GAO-03-1018
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 19, 2003); Information Technology: DLA Should
Strengthen Business Systems Modernization Architecture and Investment
Activities, GAO-01-631 (Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2001); and
Information Technology: INS Needs to Better Manage the Development of
Its Enterprise Architecture, AIMD-00-212 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 1,
2000).
[9] E-Government Act of 2002, Public Law 107-347 (Dec. 17, 2002).
[10] J. A. Zachman, "A Framework for Information Systems Architecture,"
IBM Systems Journal 26, no. 3 (1987).
[11] See, for example, U.S. General Accounting Office, DOD Business
Systems Modernization: Improvements to Enterprise Architecture
Development and Implementation Efforts Needed, GAO-03-458 (Washington,
D.C.: Feb. 28, 2003); Information Technology: DLA Should Strengthen
Business Systems Modernization Architecture and Investment Activities,
GAO-01-631 (Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2001); and Information
Technology: INS Needs to Better Manage the Development of Its
Enterprise Architecture, AIMD-00-212 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 1, 2000).
[12] U.S. General Accounting Office, National Preparedness: Integrating
New and Existing Technology and Information Sharing into an Effective
Homeland Security Strategy, GAO-02-811T (Washington, D.C.: June 7,
2002).
[13] U.S. General Accounting Office, Homeland Security: Information
Sharing Responsibilities, Challenges, and Key Management Issues,
GAO-03-715T (Washington, D.C.: May 8, 2003).
[14] U.S. General Accounting Office, Homeland Security: Efforts to
Improve Information Sharing Need to Be Strengthened, GAO-03-760
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 27, 2003).
[15] U.S. General Accounting Office, Information Technology: Leadership
Remains Key to Agencies Making Progress on Enterprise Architecture
Efforts, GAO-04-40 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 17, 2003).
[16] U.S. General Accounting Office, Information Technology: A
Framework for Assessing and Improving Enterprise Architecture
Management (Version 1.1), GAO-03-584G (Washington, D.C.: April 2003).
[17] U. S. General Accounting Office, Information Technology: Homeland
Security Should Better Balance Need for System Integration Strategy
with Spending for New and Enhanced Systems, GAO-04-509 (Washington,
D.C.: May 21, 2004).
[18] Statement of Steven I. Cooper, Chief Information Officer,
Department of Homeland Security, before the Committee on Government
Reform, House of Representatives, May 8, 2003.
[19] Statement of Steven I. Cooper, Chief Information Officer,
Department of Homeland Security, before the Subcommittee on Technology,
Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and the Census,
Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives, October 8,
2003.
[20] Budget function codes are used to describe the budget of the
United States in terms of the major purpose served, such as national
defense and international affairs. By grouping together functionally
related items, regardless of the responsible agency, this
classification enables Congress and the public to see what the
government is doing or expects to do and, in general, focuses upon the
ultimate purpose that the government programs are designed to solve.
[21] This initiative is intended to support budget decision making by
providing more useful performance information (i.e., better information
on how inputs are used to produce outputs, which affect outcomes).
[22] U.S. General Accounting Office, Information Technology: The
Federal Enterprise Architecture and Agencies' Enterprise Architectures
Are Still Maturing, GAO-04-798T (Washington, D.C.: May 19, 2004).
[23] U.S. General Accounting Office, DOD Business Systems
Modernization: Important Progress Made to Develop Business Enterprise
Architecture, but Much Work Remains, GAO-03-1018 (Washington, D.C.:
Sept. 19, 2003).
[24] U.S. General Accounting Office, Executive Guide: Information
Security Management--Learning From Leading Organizations, GAO/
AIMD-98-68 (Washington, D.C.: May 1998).
[25] These key elements are described in detail later in the report.
[26] OMB's E-Government Task Force identified 23 initiatives (two
additional initiatives were subsequently added) aimed at improving
service to individuals, service to businesses, intergovernmental
affairs, and federal agency-to-agency efficiency and effectiveness.
[27] See, for example, Office of Management and Budget, Federal
Enterprise Architecture Business Reference Model, Version 2.0 (June
2003); Chief Information Officer Council, A Practical Guide to Federal
Enterprise Architecture, Version 1.0 (February 2001); Office of
Management and Budget, Management of Federal Information Resources,
Circular No. A-130 (Nov. 28, 2000); M.A. Cook, Building Enterprise
Information Architectures: Reengineering Information Systems (Prentice
Hall Inc.: 1996); and National Institute of Standards and Technology,
Information Management Directions: The Integration Challenge, Special
Publication 500-167 (September 1989).
[28] See, for example, Office of Management and Budget, Federal
Enterprise Architecture Business Reference Model, Version 2.0 (June
2003); Chief Information Officer Council, A Practical Guide to Federal
Enterprise Architecture, Version 1.0 (February 2001); and Office of
Management and Budget, Management of Federal Information Resources,
Circular No. A-130 (Nov. 28, 2000).
[29] Steven H. Spewak with Steven C. Hill, Enterprise Architecture
Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Data, Applications, and Technology
(Princeton, N.J.: John Wiley and Sons, Incorporated, 1992).
[30] The value chain provides a holistic view of business activities
across the enterprise, showing high-level business functions that are
central to mission fulfillment and add value to the services provided
by the enterprise. The value chain cuts across organizational
boundaries.
[31] A CURE (create, update, reference, and eliminate) matrix shows the
business functions and applications that create, update, reference,
and/or eliminate specific data elements, enabling the organization to
develop applications.
[32] Office of Management and Budget, Preparation, Submission, and
Execution of the Budget, Circular No. A-11 (July 25, 2003; revised Nov.
14, 2003).
[33] Office of Management and Budget, Enterprise Architecture
Assessment Framework, Version 1.0, April 2004.
[34] GAO-04-798T.
[35] See, for example, DOD Business Systems Modernization: Important
Progress Made to Develop Business Enterprise Architecture, but Much
Work Remains, GAO-03-1018 (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 19, 2003).
[36] GAO-03-1018.
[37] See, for example, U.S. General Accounting Office, Information
Technology: Architecture Needed to Guide NASA's Financial Management
Modernization, GAO-04-43 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 21, 2003); and DOD
Business Systems Modernization: Important Progress Made to Develop
Business Enterprise Architecture, but Much Work Remains, GAO-03-1018
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 19, 2003).
[38] See, for example, Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Federal
Enterprise Architecture Business Reference Model, Version 2.0 (June
2003); Chief Information Officers Council, A Practical Guide to Federal
Enterprise Architecture, Version 1.0 (February 2001); OMB, Management
of Federal Information Resources, Circular No. A-130 (Nov. 28, 2000);
M.A. Cook, Building Enterprise Information Architectures:
Reengineering Information Systems (Prentice Hall Inc.: 1996); and
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Information Management
Directions: The Integration Challenge, Special Publication 500-167
(September 1989).
[39] GAO-04-43.
[40] GAO-04-43.
[41] The architecture satisfies all aspects of this key architectural
element.
[42] The architecture partially satisfies some aspects of this key
architectural element but does not satisfy at least one significant
aspect.
[43] The architecture does not satisfy any aspects of this key
architectural element.
[44] OMB has not officially released the data reference model.
[45] OMB has not yet developed a "security profile" for the FEA.
[46] For purposes of this report, we defined semantic alignment to mean
that the department's architecture and the FEA reference models use
similar terms and/or definitions that can be mapped to one another. We
defined functional alignment to mean that the architecture and the
reference models have been decomposed to the same level of detail to
determine if the business operations, services, and technology
components are similar in nature and purpose. We defined structural
alignment to mean that the architecture and the reference models are
both constructed similarly, for example, they may share the same
hierarchical construct whereby information is grouped by common levels
of detail.
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