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Administration and Management

The FY 2003 Budget Request of $268.14 million for Administration and Management (A&M) - five percent of the agency's total budget request - represents an increase of $41.46 million, or 18.3 percent, over the FY 2002 Current Plan. A&M supports the agency's high-performing workforce and its state-of-the-art physical and IT-enabled business infrastructure.

(Millions of Dollars)

     
FY 2001 Actual
FY 2002
Current
Plan
FY 2003 Request
    Change

Amount

Percent

Salaries and Expenses 1

$166.33
$176.40
$210.16
$33.76
19.1%

Program Accounts (R&RA & EHR)

40.26 42.69 49.22 6.53 15.3%

Financial Statement Audit

0.55 0.55 0.70 0.15 27.3%

Travel

[13.00]
[15.00]
[16.00]
[1.00]
[6.7%]

 

Subtotal
207.14
219.64
260.08
40.44
18.4%

Office of Inspector General 1

6.58
7.04
8.06
1.02
14.5%

Total, A&M

$213.72
$226.68
$268.14
$41.46
18.3%

Retirement Accruals1  

 

Salaries and Expenses
-5.80
-6.36
-7.21
-0.85
13.4%

 

Office of Inspector General
-0.26
-0.28
-0.36
-0.08
28.6%

Adjusted Total, A&M

$207.66
$220.04
$260.57
$40.53
18.4%

Totals may not add due to rounding.
1Includes Pension and Health Costs as proposed by the Administration's Costs Integration Legislation requiring agencies to pay their full share of the accrued cost of retirement beginning in FY 2003.

This request reflects findings from the first stages of a comprehensive, strategic assessment of NSF's A&M responsibilities. Over its 50-plus year history, NSF's commitment to excellence in supporting research and education has consistently been matched by its high standards and commitment to innovation in administration and management. Continuing this tradition of excellent stewardship requires a level of investment that reflects NSF's increasing responsibilities, the growing complexity of its workload, and new requirements for both IT and physical security.

  • In FY 2001, the number of proposals received by NSF rose to nearly 32,000 from 29,500 the previous fiscal year. Yet, the same staffing level managed this 8 percent increase in workload. Furthermore, while NSF's budget has more than doubled since 1990, staffing has remained constant.


  • The scope and complexity of NSF's programs also continue to expand. Leading-edge activities require partnership approaches in project development, review, execution, and oversight. NSF therefore recognizes the need to explore new approaches to its working environment and IT infrastructure that encourage collaboration and promote more effective knowledge management.


  • This request also includes key initiatives that will improve the security of NSF's IT systems and its physical infrastructure. For example, one of NSF's GPRA performance goals for successful management is to implement an agency-wide security program in response to the Government Information Security Reform Act.

NSF's focus on demonstrating management excellence is sharpened through attention to specific issues. For example, the President's Management Agenda mandates that NSF, like other agencies, demonstrates consistent results through proven management practices in: Human Capital Management; Achieving e-Government; Competitive Sourcing; Financial Management; and Integrated Budget and Performance Management. In addition, the agency also proactively addresses management challenges identified through internal review and oversight as well as those identified by the agency's Inspector General and the General Accounting Office.

  • In financial management, NSF was the only government agency to receive the highest possible rating on the recently-issued President's Management Scorecard.


  • NSF has also shown administrative leadership by establishing a chartered, external advisory group to provide guidance to the agency's CIO and CFO.

Recently, the NSF Inspector General concluded that NSF needs increased staffing to ensure that it continues to achieve high standards of pre- and post-award management excellence while its portfolio grows in size and complexity. The FY 2003 Budget addresses these concerns by increasing full-time equivalent (FTE) positions in mission-focused areas - the first increase in more than a decade.

In addition, funding is provided for the full range of general operating expenses needed to support the workforce and its program management responsibilities. These include increases to maintain and develop NSF's existing portfolio of IT systems as well as initiating the development for our next generation corporate system, the Proposal, Review, and Awards Management Integration System (PRAMIS).

The Administrative and Management Portfolio

The Foundation's A&M activities are funded through four appropriations accounts: Research and Related Activities, Education and Human Resources, Salaries and Expenses, and the Office of Inspector General.

FY 2003 Administration and Management: Funding Sources by Appropriation

Salaries and Expenses

The FY 2003 Budget Request for Salaries and Expenses (S&E) is $210.16 million, an increase of $33.76 million, or 19.1 percent, over the FY 2002 Current Plan of $176.40 million. This includes funding for Personnel Compensation and Benefits ($139.64 million in FY 2003) and General Operating Expenses ($70.52 million in FY 2003).

  • Within the proposed increase, the FY 2003 Request Level is sufficient to fully fund 1,217 FTEs, an increase of 67 FTEs. It also covers higher benefit costs and anticipated statutory pay and locality increases.
  • The agency contribution to employee benefits is increasing because a higher percentage of the workforce is covered by the Federal Employee Retirement System (FERS), which requires higher agency contributions than the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) plan. Additionally, S&E includesis requested Pension and Health Costs as proposed by the Administration's Cost Integration Legislation requiring agencies to pay their full share of accrued cost of retirement beginning in FY 2003.

The FY 2003 request for General Operating Expenses (GOE) is $70.52 million, an increase of $20.33 million over the FY 2002 Current Plan. GOE includes NSF's entire range of program and administrative support functions.

  • The GOE level for FY 2003 provides for advances in the agency's information technology systems - to enhance the information infrastructure and security, to promote e-business, and to provide for increasing IT contractor costs.


  • It provides for rental payments to the General Services Administration.


  • Additionally, an increase in travel funds in FY 2003 will foster a more comprehensive approach to program oversight, monitoring, and outreach - especially for large facility projects and other large NSF awards.

Program Accounts

A&M-related expenses supporting the R&RA and EHR appropriations increase by approximately $7 million to a total of $49.92 million, a 15.5 percent increase, as shown in the following table.

(Millions of Dollars)

           

FY 2001 Actual

FY 2002 Current
Plan

FY 2003 Request

Change

Amount
Percent

Program Accounts:        

 

R&RA Appropriation1
25.66
28.97
35.35
6.38
22.0%
  EHR Appropriation1,2
15.15
14.27
14.57
0.30
2.1%

Total, Program Accounts

$40.81
$43.24
$49.92
$6.68
15.4%

Totals may not add due to rounding.
1Financial statement audit costs are included in the above program accounts.
2 Excludes A&M expenses for H-1B Nonimmigrant Petitioner Receipts.

  • These costs include funding for personnel appointments under the Intergovernmental Personnel Act (IPAs) and their associated travel and operating costs as well as administrative contracts and requisitions that directly support programs.


  • A&M also includes funding for Foundation-wide evaluation contracts, as well as development costs associated with NSF customer-focused information technology projects, such as FastLane.

Office of Inspector General

The FY 2003 request for the OIG is $8.06 million, an increase of $1.02 million over the FY 2002 Current Plan. The proposed increase includes the addition of 3 FTE to the OIG staff following recommendations by the National Science Board and the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs calling for measured growth in the number of audits conducted at organizations that receive NSF funding. The balance of the increase will permit modest growth in the areas of contract support for audits, technological capability, staff training, and outreach activities. Funding for the financial statement audit contract is charged to the appropriations being audited. OIG support costs - such as rent and communications - are provided in the Salaries and Expenses appropriation.

Additionally, OIG includes Pension and Health Costs as proposed by the Administration's Cost Integration Legislation requiring agencies to pay their full share of accrued cost of retirement beginning in FY 2003 is requested.

Highlights FY 2003 A&M

Highlights of the FY 2003 A&M request include the major initiatives in Electronic Government and Human Capital Management, consistent with the President's Management Agenda.

Electronic Government

NSF is a leader in the use of information technology to advance its mission to promote the progress of science, education, and engineering. The Foundation continues to advance discovery and to exercise leadership in science and engineering research and education while taking steps to promote the dissemination, integration and application of new knowledge.

In October 2000, NSF became the first government agency to conduct all essential business interactions and transactions with its customers electronically. This allowed NSF to continue receiving and processing proposals without interruption during the recent mail emergencies following the anthrax attacks.

The award-winning FastLane system exemplifies a high level of excellence and achievement in information systems design and implementation. For example:

  • Over 200,000 scientists and engineers, including the country's top researchers and educators, use FastLane's web-based systems to submit proposals for funding, for proposal peer-review, and to report on the progress of their government-funded research and education projects.


  • Universities and other organizations request funding increments, cash payments, and reports on billions of dollars in expenditures through FastLane.

The results of NSF's e-Government initiatives are significant. In FY 2001, NSF processed more than:

Electronic Proposal Percent by Fiscal Year (FY 97-01)
  • 32,000 Electronic Proposals (over 99% of all proposals)
  • 130,000 Electronic Reviews
  • 6,000 Electronic Graduate Research Fellowships
  • 21,000 Electronic Grantee Progress Reports
  • 7,000 Electronic Post-Award Actions
  • 13,000 Electronic Requests
  • $4.0 Billion Distribution of Funds

In addition, NSF has been and continues to be an active leader in interagency electronic grant initiatives through the new government-wide e-Grants initiative, the Federal Demonstration Partnership, and other activities. In particular, the common interagency grant portal, known as the Federal Commons, directly benefits from NSF's trail- blazing efforts and the strong foundation provided by NSF's information systems and electronic grants processing.

FastLane positions NSF to fulfill the vision of a fully integrated electronic proposal and award system to provide quick, secure and paperless processing. In FY 2001, NSF successfully completed a GPRA initiative to conduct 10 paperless process proof-of-concept pilots using FastLane systems. In addition to FastLane, there are a number of internal legacy systems that process more than 10,000 new grants awarded each year from the roughly 32,000 competitive proposals submitted by the science and engineering research and education communities.

  • Recently, NSF implemented a new Awards System, a prototype for high-functionality in automating electronic grants processing, and, based on a successful pilot, has implemented a web-based interactive system for panelist peer-review of proposals.


  • In addition, for related IT systems, NSF completed in a multi-year effort to convert central applications from a mainframe environment to a client-server environment and to implement a state-of-the-art corporate telecommunication system that integrates telephones and computers.

In the future, NSF will follow a disciplined approach for ensuring that new investments needed to optimize business value and mission performance are planned and evaluated within the context of an overall Enterprise Architecture framework. The NSF Integrated Enterprise Architecture will (1) provide a blueprint for defining current business processes, applications, information resources, and technical infrastructure; (2) support definition of the knowledge bases, applications, and supporting technology that are needed to support evolving NSF mission needs; and (3) define a crisp transition strategy and plan for achieving an integrated Enterprise Architecture that is consistent with NSF business goals and operational priorities.

Highlights of new information technology investments are:

PRAMIS: NSF's first phase of implementing next-generation e-government capabilities will focus on NSF's two principal business processes: (1) Merit Review and (2) Award Management and Oversight.

The centerpiece of this will be the design, development, and implementation of the Proposal, Review, and Awards Management Integration System (PRAMIS). NSF's phased approach for implementing next-generation e-government capabilities will result in delivery of high-priority technologies and capabilities to uphold the Foundation's management excellence.

PRAMIS will improve internal NSF processing as a complement and extension to the common processes and products planned for the government-wide e-Grants initiative and Federal Commons, focusing on integration and improvement of internal functions. As with FastLane, NSF will ensure that internal business process improvements and IT capabilities are integrated with the government-wide e-Grants initiative to streamline and simplify electronic grants management across the government.

PIMS: The Program Information Management System (PIMS) is a web application that will provide a robust data architecture for the front-end of the NSF program information life cycle. Program officers will use the system to manage information about their programs, including detailed business rules that can be leveraged by other NSF data systems at later stages in the life cycle. The system will support a completely electronic review and approval process for information development and publishing, and the resulting database will enable dynamic web publishing of accurate, consistent information on all NSF web sites.

Knowledge Management: As part of NSF's phased approach for implementing next-generation e-government capabilities, opportunities for improving productivity for common functions will be addressed. In the knowledge management area, key projects to promote the dissemination, integration, and application of new knowledge are planned. These include human capital knowledge bases, a final projects report knowledge base, and a Committee of Visitors repository.

Customer Service: To enhance customer service, NSF will continue implementation of a new "Customer Care" initiative and commercial call tracking software to improve support for the over 200,000 external customers from research and education institutions.

Infrastructure: In FY 2003, NSF will also support evolving legacy administrative systems into more robust and consistent government-wide and commercial enterprise solutions.

Remote Access: NSF will continue to advance the application of current and emerging technologies such as wireless and videoconferencing to support evolving telecommuting and remote access needs.

Information and Physical Security: The Foundation is focused on assuring that NSF infrastructure and critical assets are appropriately protected while maintaining an open and collaborative environment for scientific research and discovery. NSF has established a strong and comprehensive Information Technology Security program that is consistent with government-wide guidance and patterned after industry best practices. This program encompasses all aspects of information security, including policy and procedures, risk assessments and security plans, managed intrusion detection services, vulnerability assessments, and technical and management security controls.

The NSF approach is based on a fundamental philosophy of risk management where information technology security risks are assessed, understood, and mitigated appropriately. This approach allows NSF to implement appropriate layers of protective measures and controls to ensure the privacy, integrity, and security of information and information technology resources needed by NSF and the broad research community - while allowing appropriate access and availability to users. In FY 2003, NSF will focus increased resources on improving physical and information technology security. Specifically, in FY 2003, NSF will initiate a major project to implement the use of "smart" technology to restrict and monitor employee and visitor access and entry into NSF facilities, and to improve access controls to e-business applications and capabilities. Other planned improvements include enhancements to network, telephone, and corporate infrastructure, and additional investments in risk assessments, security plans and controls, and penetration testing. These investments will ensure that the risk of unauthorized access to facilities, systems and information using various manual and automated checkpoints and controls is appropriately mitigated.

NSF Academy

The NSF Academy is being developed in support of the agency's vision of growing as a learning organization, with learning opportunities woven into the fabric of the organization's business processes and practices. It will provide the agency's workforce with a comprehensive suite of organization and career-enhancing programs. The Academy will also provide innovative training modules for the NSF community to familiarize them with NSF's electronic business systems.

A range of new learning activities is being developed and/or piloted at this time:

Developing IT competency for NSF's e-business environment: This year, 24-hour on-line access tutorials for NSF's e-business processes will be launched. One tutorial explains the Electronic Proposal Processing System, with information on the role of all participants involved in proposal review including the details of managing and executing the Integrated Panel System. We are planning to have information available to those serving on NSF panels so that panelists, who are dispersed around the country can become familiar with the electronic business systems and the role of the panelist prior to arrival at NSF.

The Academy's goals are to have an on-line tutorial for all new major business systems at the time they are introduced. The PIMS (described above) will be the first project for which a web-based tutorial will accompany its release.

Distance Learning: The Academy is piloting distance learning. We are subscribing to off-the-shelf courses to offer a greater number of classes that NSF staff can use at any time. The first pilot with supervisory staff was very successful. It included topics such as coaching and project management. There will be pilots for the major occupations at NSF to ensure that our investment in Distance Learning is well-managed. Courses available through distance learning will be embedded in the curricula for each job category.

Leadership: The Academy has begun a three-pronged approach to leadership - based upon conducting needs assessments for program officers, administrative staff, and executives. We are supporting the leadership initiative with an orientation that addresses leadership competencies, beginning with a special orientation for Division Directors. Part of the curriculum for Division Directors will be an annual seminar that will be offered this fiscal year.

Curricula development, succession planning, career development, certification programs, and support for Academic learning: NSF plans a robust learning program to ensure that all staff members have the required competencies for their current job, for jobs as they move through the rapidly changing e-business environment, and for professional development in general. With input from NSF staff, we will be developing plans to help support an array of learning activities.

Human Capital Management

For more than 50 years, NSF has enabled discovery, learning and innovation by drawing upon its talented, diverse workforce. The agency's flexible, agile workforce of high-end knowledge workers includes approximately 600 permanent and visiting scientists and engineers (approximately 65% of the agency's scientists and engineers are permanent government employees), 450 business and operations personnel, 350 program support personnel, and approximately 210 on-site contractors, including IT contractors, mail room personnel, proposal processing personnel, Help Desk and Information Center personnel.

Workforce categories are shown in the following tables.

Detail of NSF Workforce by FTE
     
FY 2001 Actual
FY 2002 Current Plan
FY 2003 Request
Change Amount
Federal Employees:      

 

Salaries and Expenses 1,170 1,150 1,217 67

 

Inspector General 46 50 53 3

 

Arctic Research Commission 4 4 4 0

Subtotal, Federal FTE

1,220 1,204 1,274 70
Non-Federal Employees:  

 

IPAs 106 140 140 0

 

Detailees to NSF 4 5 5 0

 

Contractors Performing        

 

Administrative Functions 210 210 210 0
  Subtotal, Non-Federal FTE 320 355 355 0
  Total, Workforce FTE 1,540 1,559 1,629 70

DISTRIBUTION OF FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT (FTE) FOR FY 2001

 

Federal Employees

Intergovernmental Personnel Act Appointments

Biological Sciences

101

14

Budget, Finance, Award Management

120

0

Computer & Information Science & Engineering

53

18

Cooperative Education Program (Student Aides)

33

0

Education & Human Resources

110

24

Engineering

127

13

Geosciences

90

11

Mathematical & Physical Sciences

115

14

Office of Information & Resource Management

162

0

Office of the Director

83

3

Office of Polar Programs

43

1

Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences

133

8

 

Subtotal, Actual FTE Usage

1,170

106

Office of Inspector General

46

0

 

Total, Actual FTE Usage

1,216

106

The FY 2003 Request includes 67 additional (FTE) - 50 FTE to support existing NSF programs and 17 FTE to support additional programs proposed to be transferred to NSF from other agencies. The additional positions will be allocated based on an agency-wide review of critical human capital needs that is part of the comprehensive Strategic Business Analysis scheduled to begin in FY 2002. An example of a possible allocation of these positions follows:

NSF will recruit approximately 35 FTEs to strategically enhance program/business management expertise within the agency. Individuals recruited will:

  • Complement existing workforce expertise in critical science and engineering fields in research and education, thus positioning the agency to respond to increasingly complex, interdisciplinary science and engineering opportunities and challenges; and


  • Strengthen the agency's project and business-related acumen.

In addition to strengthening workforce core competencies, individuals hired will relieve growing workload pressures on current NSF project/program managers, thereby allowing increased attention to critical areas such as award management and oversight, performance assessment and accountability. To ensure the continued effective planning, management and oversight of facility projects, the agency will dedicate at least 7 of the approximately 35 positions to these activities. New Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction (MREFC) projects such as NEON and Earthscope will be allocated a dedicated FTE. As part of the agency-wide review, ongoing MREFC projects will be reviewed to ensure that the appropriate level of project management exists and additional FTE will be provided if warranted.

NSF will also recruit approximately 15 FTEs as science/engineering assistants. Based on several internal pilots to-date, NSF has found that many of the recurring tasks performed by Ph.D.-level scientists and engineers can, in fact, be effectively carried out by individuals with bachelors or masters degrees in science or engineering. Science/engineering assistants perform duties such as developing program announcements, researching and recommending reviewers, writing panel reports, responding to questions from principal investigators, and synthesizing information from project reports. The recruitment of science/engineering assistants will allow Ph.D. level scientists and engineers to focus on more of the substantive science and engineering issues associated with program and proposal/award management and oversight. This strategic recruitment promises both efficiency and effectiveness improvements in NSF business processes.

An additional 17 FTE will support the establishment and management of three programs transferred from other agencies: Sea Grants, Environmental Education, and Toxic Hydrology Research.

Recent A&M Accomplishments

Electronic Recruitment: e-Recruit is a web-based system that automates the government hiring process and allows NSF's Division of Human Resources Management (HRM) to develop and post vacancies electronically. E-Recruit will allow HRM to reengineer its business processes so that staff spend less time on paper-intensive work such as rating and ranking applications, corresponding with candidates, and setting up panels.

The e-Recruit system will manage the bulk of the rating and ranking. HR staff will then provide a quality review of the top candidates, only spending time on those who certify their expertise high enough to warrant referral, instead of spending countless hours reviewing applications from individuals who would not even make a first cut. Applicants fill out an on-line resume and answer a series of job-specific questions. e-Recruit screens out ineligible and unqualified applicants, applies federal rules such as Veterans' preference and CTAP/ICTAP, notifies applicants of their eligibility, rates and ranks applicants based on their answers to the questions and generates a web-based certificate of rated and ranked applicants for the manager to view.

  • e-Recruit allows HRM to realize cost savings with the phase out of printing and mailing hard copy vacancy announcements.


  • e-Recruit will enable NSF to reach a more diverse audience through direct links to web-based recruitment mechanisms and organizations that lead efforts to broaden participation in science and engineering. For example, it will link to one system that via email, instantly notifies hundreds of HBCUs, Hispanic-serving institutions, plus the leading professional organizations that focus on underrepresented groups.


  • And, most significantly, the typical time from posting a vacancy announcement to having a new employee on board is expected to shrink from several months (currently) to approximately six weeks with e-Recruit.

Empowering Front-Line Employees: NSF's Division of Grants and Agreements (DGA) has recently revised its Delegation levels of authority to allow grants specialists to approve actions at the lowest possible levels while still maintaining appropriate accountability and internal controls. DGA has a streamlining committee that is working with the Foundation-wide e-grants initiative to streamline the processing of routine, low-risk grants as much as possible.

  • These changes will position DGA staff for the future by requiring less time to be spent on low-risk, routine activities and providing more time to address high-risk actions, on-site monitoring and project oversight.


  • In addition, these changes provide DGA staff with greater decision-making responsibility, development of higher competencies, and increased job growth potential.

Budget Internet Information System (BIIS) and Enterprise Information System (EIS): The Budget Internet Information System (http://dellweb.bfa.nsf.gov/) contains information on GPRA issues such as processing time and award size. It is easily accessible to the public via the Web and is used extensively by the academic community and research and development press. Information currently available includes:

  • Funding Rate by State and Organization: Contains information on number of competitive proposals and awards, funding rate, NSF processing time, award duration, and award size. The information can be obtained by discipline and includes ten years of trend data.


  • Award Listings by Organization, State, and Institution: Includes information on funding by state and institution, broken out by academic and industrial performers with detail by discipline and award.


  • Award Summary by Top Institutions: Shows information on funding by the top institutions, broken out by academic and industrial performers with detail by discipline and award for the past five years.

The Enterprise Information System (EIS) is an internal NSF, user-friendly system that informs and empowers NSF program and financial managers as they make budget and planning decisions. The EIS includes financial and personnel information. For example, a summary of grant budgets for all NSF awards is available. This includes budgets for investigator salaries, funding for undergraduates and graduates, indirect costs, and equipment costs. Trends and current status of projects also are available.

FY 2003 GPRA Performance Goals (Management)

Performance Area

No.

Annual Performance Goals for Management

Proposal and Award Processes7   

Use of Merit Review

IV-1

At least 85 percent of basic and applied research funds will be allocated to projects that undergo merit review.

Implementation of Merit Review
Criteria - Reviewers8

IV-2

At least 70 percent of reviews will address aspects of both generic review criteria.

Implementation of Merit Review
Criteria - Program Officers8

 

IV-3

For at least 80 percent of decisions to fund or decline proposals, program officers will comment on aspects of both generic review criteria.

Customer Service -
Time to Prepare Proposals

IV-4

Ninety-five percent of program announcements will be publicly available at least three months prior to the proposal deadline or target date.

Customer Service -
Time to Decision

IV-5

For 70 percent of proposals, be able to inform applicants whether their proposals have been declined or recommended for funding within six months of receipt.

Award Portfolio   

Award Size

IV-6

NSF will increase the average annualized award size for research grants to a level of $125,000, compared to a goal of $113,000 in FY 2002.

Award Duration

IV-7

NSF will maintain the FY 2002 goal of 3.0 years for the average duration of awards for research grants.

Award Oversight and Facilities Management

Construction and Upgrade of Facilities

IV-8

For 90 percent of projects, keep construction and upgrades within annual expenditure plan, not to exceed 110 percent of estimates.

 

IV-9

Ninety percent of construction / upgrade projects will meet all major annual schedule milestones.

 

IV-10

For all construction and upgrade projects initiated after 1996, when current planning processes were put in place, keep total cost within 110 percent of estimates made at the initiation of construction.

Operations and Management of Facilities

IV-11

For 90 percent of facilities, keep operating time lost due to unscheduled downtime to less than 10 percent of the total scheduled operating time.
Business Practice
Electronic Business IV-12 NSF will continue to advance "e-business" by
  IV-13 NSF will continue to advance "e-business" by creating a functional web-based Electronic Jacket available for use by NSF staff by the end of FY 2003.
Information Technology Security IV-14

NSF will maintain and enhance the agency-wide security program to ensure adequate protection of NSF's IT infrastructure and critical assets.
Performance Indicators:
-100 percent of mission-critical systems will have documented risk assessments.
-100 percent of mission-critical systems will have approved security plans on file.

Human Resources and Workplace
NSF Staff - Diversity IV-15

NSF will ensure that diversity considerations are embedded in activities related to agency staffing of scientists and engineers (S&E).
Performance indicator: Initiate development of a NSF S&E diversity plan.

  IV-16 NSF will show an increase over FY 2000 in the total number of appointments to NSF science and engineering positions from underrepresented groups.
Workforce IV-17

NSF will align or develop competency-based curricula, through the NSF Academy, that provide cross-functional, work-based team learning opportunities.
Performance Indicator: Initiation of curriculum development activities that address program management, leadership development, and technology and business process training.

  IV-18

NSF will develop competency-based, occupation classification alternatives that support the agency's strategic business processes and capitalize on its technology enabled business systems.
Performance Indicators:
-Identification of workforce competencies for two or more of NSF's strategic business processes.
-Initiate identification of competency-based, classification alternatives.

5Development of an additional performance goal in FY 2003 for reviewer pool diversity will be assessed once the FY 2002 goal of establishing a baseline for participation of members of underrepresented groups in the NSF reviewer pool is completed.
6These performance goal will undergo both quantitative and qualitative assessment.

 
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