Alameda County Grand Jury
• 2019-2020
Alameda County’s General Services Agency Too Often Fails at Capital Project Management Executive Summary Alameda
⚠️ Translation Notice: This content has been automatically translated. The original English text is the official version. Translation may contain errors.
⚠️ Este contenido ha sido traducido automáticamente. El texto original en inglés es la versión oficial. La traducción puede contener errores.
Findings and Recommendations 10 findings
20-25
Page 1
GSA has a culture of poor communication with its client departments which contributes to unnecessary delays and increased project costs.
No recommendations for this finding
F20-25
GSA has a culture of poor communication with its client departments which contributes to unnecessary delays and increased project costs.
No recommendations for this finding
20-26
Page 1
Poorly developed and disseminated Capital Program and procurement procedures result in inconsistent project management within GSA. 96 2019―2020 Alameda County Grand Jury Final Report
No recommendations for this finding
F20-26
Poorly developed and disseminated Capital Program and procurement procedures result in inconsistent project management within GSA. 96
No recommendations for this finding
20-27
Page 1
GSA’s redefinition of professional requirements for project managers and its inability to sufficiently staff project manager positions contribute to poor control over the delivery of capital projects.
No recommendations for this finding
F20-27
GSA’s redefinition of professional requirements for project managers and its inability to sufficiently staff project manager positions contribute to poor control over the delivery of capital projects.
No recommendations for this finding
20-28
Page 1
GSA’s failure to update as-needed professional contracts results in unnecessary bidding which contributes to unwarranted delays in project delivery.
No recommendations for this finding
F20-28
GSA’s failure to update as-needed professional contracts results in unnecessary bidding which contributes to unwarranted delays in project delivery.
No recommendations for this finding
20-29
Page 1
Alameda County’s failure to prioritize long-range planning and site safety assessments has set county government capital construction on a rudderless course oftentimes guided by litigation and emergency needs.
No recommendations for this finding
F20-29
Alameda County’s failure to prioritize long-range planning and site safety assessments has set county government capital construction on a rudderless course oftentimes guided by litigation and emergency needs.
No recommendations for this finding
Conclusions 1
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CL1 Page 11Our investigation found that high priority capital projects often moved slowly when GSA held the lead role. The grand jury identified staff retention and training, improved project planning, communication and coordination, and management’s attention to clients’ needs as the most important steps GSA must take to improve its capital project management and delivery. The grand jury heard from witnesses that GSA’s upper management must be more engaged; they should be front and center when explaining important delays or significant cost overruns to client departments or when key project manager turnover occurs. Such developments can be huge setbacks for capital projects, and clients need the assurance that GSA cares, understands, and possesses the capability to fix them. When staff turnover or increased workload threatens GSA's ability to deliver quality services, management needs to acknowledge those complications, inform client departments, and work creatively to find alternatives solutions, such as contracting with outside project management firms. GSA must also be more disciplined and transparent in communicating the status of its capital projects. One technique is to share with clients a weekly GSA report card on all active capital projects listing next steps, key milestones, responsible parties, and deadlines. Sometimes the reason for a client’s dissatisfaction is a lack of understanding of the planning, design, bidding, or award policies and procedures. Finally, GSA must lead with more robust planning for the county’s infrastructure with the guidance of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors. This would help the General Services Agency better manage current projects and anticipate future workloads and secure the necessary resources.
No Responses Found 1
Government entities assigned to respond to this report. No response documents have been linked in our database.
Alameda County Board of Supervisors
Elected County Office