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Architect of the Capitol Fiscal Year 2005 Budget Call & Fiscal Guidance. Preparation of the Multi-Year Budget
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Architect of the CapitolFiscal Year 2005 Budget Call & Fiscal Guidance Preparation of the Multi-Year Budget • The FY05 Multi-Year Budget submission will consist of all non-recurring projects for which funds are being requested in FY05 and those future projects that are projected to require funding during FY06 through FY09. • The Multi-Year Budget consists of 4 sections: • Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) Development Projects • Non-CIP Projects • Minor Construction • Study, Design, and Condition Assessment
Multi-Year Budget Type Definitions: • Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) Development Projects: CIP projects are defined as, “A capital project [that] is a non-recurring construction project or system replacement thatexceeds $250,000 in cost and requires design documents and specifications for its execution.” • Capital Improvement Projects must be at 100% design, with construction documentation, before being considered for construction funding in FY05. • Non-Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) Development Projects: This incorporates planned non-recurring construction projects not meeting the $250,000 threshold. For these projects a compelling justification providing the description and need/benefit of the project will be required, including a statement addressing the risk and impact if funding for the project is not provided. • Minor Construction: Minor Construction provides flexibility for unforeseen construction-related needs as required by Members, Officers, Committees and various Congressional support organizations. Construction-related needs incorporate minor construction, repair, and major alteration projects, and related activities in connection with jurisdictional construction and maintenance activities. • Study, Design, and Condition Assessment: The Study, Design, and Condition Assessment line provides flexibility to perform studies, designs and condition assessments. Under this Multi-Year budget item, specific known studies, designs, and condition assessments should be itemized with an associated estimated cost.
Architect of the CapitolFiscal Year 2005 Budget Call & Fiscal Guidance Timeline JULY 31ST 2003 The budget consists of the following three sections: • The Operating Budget (Annual Recurring Program Groups and Non-Recurring Budget Items - One-Year Annual Funds) • The Multi-Year Budget (Non-recurring Multi-Year Capital Improvement Projects) which also incorporates a Five-Year Capital Budget Plan. • Full-Time Equivalent (FTE)/Positions (Personnel Compensation & Benefits and FTE/Position Requests) August – September 2003 • Jurisdiction Account Holders will present and justify their budget submissions in a joint session with the Budget Office, Architecture, Engineering, Construction Management, and Procurement. Mid-October 2003 • Decisions on final budget levels due. Early November 2003 • FY05 Budget is prepared for submission to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Mid December 2003 • Detailed justifications for the FY05 Budget due to the Senate and House Committees on Appropriations.
Answering the call… • Use of PIC • 1391 data • Project Evaluation information • Generation of 1391’s – One location for all information! • Lockout of data after July 31st • A strawman FY05-FY09 list has been developed to estimate workload and get a jump start on input. • Available information is being input by Planning and Jurisdictions • Project managers will be responsible to input 1391 and Project Evaluation information into PIC w/Jurisdiction and Planning assistance. • Program Directors shall identify projects which cross Jurisdictions.
Preparing Effective Documentation General Tips “More” is better than “less” Justification data means more opportunities to get “scoring points” Use ‘plain english” – No Tech Talk… Meet with customers Walk the site, then tell the story Provide photographs Provide usable site plan if applicable to project
Preparing Effective 1391’s • Title: Use a concise, but descriptive title • Block 9: Provide a FY for each project • Property Acquisition • Professional Services • Construction Costs • Include Escalation / Contingency • Miscellaneous Expenditures • Block 10: Description of Proposed Construction • More is better • Describe special or high cost items
Preparing Effective 1391’s • Block 11a: Project • Hard hitting opening statement, a concise summary of the project. • Block 11b: Scope • How was the scope of this project determined? • A Study? A Regulatory inspection or requirement? • Block 11c: Requirement • First sentence should state the real requirements! • Why does the AOC need this project? • Provide short summary of missions and functions performed or supported by this jurisdiction.
Preparing Effective 1391’s • Requirement – cont’d • How will this project support the AOC mission? • BE SPECIFIC !!! • Provide relevant data to support the requirement. • How did we get into the position to need this project? • New programs, new missions, more people, regulatory or security requirements? • What is the basis for you needing this project in a given FY?
Preparing Effective 1391’s • Block 11d: Current Situation • Current Problems? • Condition of existing facilities or equipment (if any) ? • History of problems? Dates, frequency, costs, impacts? • Citations? Who issued them and when? • Forced to do work arounds? Costs? • Impacts on readiness or operations? • Is the situation reaching the breaking point? • Provide info on hazardous conditions, environmental problems, utility outages, internal or external complaints.
Preparing Effective 1391’s • Block 11e: Impact if not provided • Hard hitting and concise! • Why can’t this project wait another year? • Don’t recycle statements already used. • Avoid cliches • Impact of not fixing (if applicable)?
Preparing Effective 1391’s • Block 11f-j: Alternatives Considered • Status Quo • Renovation/Modernization • Lease • New Construction • Analysis Results • Supplemental Data • Issues • Planning • Environmental Issues
References needing ‘Evidence’ • Safety Hazards • Environmental Problems • Economic Savings • Improved efficiency, productivity • Mission degradation • Impacts on morale and retention • “This is the only viable alternative” – Prove it! • Adverse Health impacts • Security problems • Did you describe work arounds? Show Cost impact?
Typical weaknesses in 1391’s • Lack of backup data, dates, citations, costs, or stats. • Requirement is vague or unclear • Write-up did not address previously approved projects • Use of unsubstantiated words such as: • “Productive” • “Effective” • “Efficient” • “Can’t perform the mission” • Did not tell a compelling story • Did not discuss options considered and rejected • No discussion of what is wrong with the current situation • No strong justification of why the project can’t be deferred