Agencies have tons of data but don\'t always use it wisely. A new report examines how a few agencies are analyzing statistics to reach their goals. The Partners...
wfedstaff | June 4, 2015 2:35 pm
A new report suggests “Moneyball” could do for federal programs what it did for the 2002 Oakland Athletics.
A’s General Manager Billy Beane built a winning baseball team on a shoestring budget by breaking with conventional wisdom. He recruited an Ivy Leaguer to find statistics that really mattered to winning games. Then he used them to build a roster of players on a shoestring budget.
“The thing that you think will help you win isn’t necessarily the thing that will help you win,” said Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Deputy Chief Operating Officer Michelle Snyder at the release of the new report “From Data to Decisions: The Power of Analytics.”
Collecting and analyzing the right data is a key theme of the report by the nonprofit Partnership for Public Service and IBM’s Public Sector Business Analytics and Optimization. They found a few common keys to success:
“The government has long excelled at gathering large quantities of data, but it hasn’t always built that analytic capacity or that analytic culture and you can see how valuable that analytic culture is in this study,” said Shelley Metzenbaum, associate director of performance and personnel management at the Office of Management and Budget at a presentation Wednesday. She said she hoped this report and a similar one by the Association of Government Accountants would “be the beginning of a movement” that would help the government “deliver more with less.”
In preparing the report, researchers examined data analytics at eight agencies. They drew on programs at CMS, the departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, the Federal Aviation Administration, the Social Security Administration, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Coast Guard and the Navy.
At the VA-HUD program to end veterans’ homelessness, the goal was clearly articulated, but the path forward was not.
“There was a lifecycle that we needed to capture,” said VA’s Performance Improvement Officer David Zlowe.
HUD stopped counting how many housing vouchers they issued to vets, and started counting how many vets were using them. The VA compared that information to vets’ medical records.
They found that veterans with substance abuse problems were more likely to drop out of the program than those with mental illnesses.
“Now we can start to manage our interventions and programs even more effectively,” Zlowe said.
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