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GSA

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Small business is critical economic driver education about card benefits and ... an e-mail whenever one of his/her employees transacts business on a card... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GSA


1
U.S. General Services Administration
GSA SmartPay Program Update
David J. SheaDirector, GSA SmartPay Visa
Government ForumWashington, DC April 25, 2006
2
Together, Weve Come a Long Way
FY05 - 17 billion in spend 26 million
transactions 300 thousand cardholders
3
Together, Weve Come a Long Way
FY05 - 7 billion in spend 43 million
transactions 1.9 million cardholders
4
Together, Weve Come a Long Way
FY05 - 1 billion in spend 24 million
transactions
5
Agencies, Industry and GSA Working Together A
Success Story
  • GSA SmartPay provides service to over 350
    federal agencies, organizations, and Native
    American tribal governments
  • Over 92 million purchase, travel, and fleet
    transactions processed in FY05 through 2.6
    million cards
  • Total program spend of nearly 25 billion in FY05
  • Earnings of over 118 million in agency refunds
    in FY05
  • Give yourselves a hand!
  • Total spend across all business lines from FY99
    to FY05 147 billion

5
6
What this means... Is Mission Support
6
7
Continuous Management Improvement Process
  • Delinquency Management
  • February 2006 Government-wide IBA delinquency
    rate was 3.26
  • 8.2 decrease from one year ago and an 82
    decrease since 2000
  • Reduction in number of cards deployed
  • 738,621 fewer cards in FY05 than FY00
  • 22 fewer cards in FY05 than FY00
  • OMB Circular A-123 Appendix B, Improving the
    Management of Government Charge Card Programs,
    was issued 10/1/2005
  • Requires agencies to submit charge card
    management plans
  • Requires training for all participants and
    refresher training every 3 years
  • Requires agencies to implement risk management
    policies and controls
  • Requires agencies to maintain and report data and
    performance metrics

7
8
Examples of Oversight Challenges
  • Could the following transactions be proper?
  • A purchase made at a bar...
  • A purchase made at a liquor store...

8
9
Oversight Challenges
  • A purchase at a bar...
  • This was a legitimate purchase (though made
    through unconventional means) made by an
    individual who needed to rent a horse for a
    funeral. The bar owners brother owned the
    horse.
  • A purchase made at a liquor store...
  • This was a legitimate purchase made by an Army
    chaplain for sacramental wine.
  • Better methods for more readily identifying and
    preventing improper purchases need to be found
    and implemented. This is key to future program
    growth, although the actual rate of card
    fraud/misuse/abuse is very low.

9
10
Future Program Opportunities
  • Strategic sourcing
  • Similar to what is obtainable with individual
    consumer cards, Government should receive spend
    reports from Industry as a common practice can
    play a role in agency strategic sourcing efforts
  • Larger Dollar Value Transactions
  • Cardless systems with lower interchange rates
  • Micropurchase level may increase
  • Need to be sensitive to interchange payment issue
  • Data challenges
  • Access to Level 3 transaction data is still a
    major challenge for Government. GSA SmartPay
    contractors are required to pass all the data
    they receive from merchants however, the program
    has no privity of contract with merchants.
  • Approach towards incentivizing merchants to pass
    Level 3 data while progress has been made --
    needs to be revisited/reinvigorated. May be
    innovative ways to obtain this data.
  • Government should have consistent access to
    data-driven business intelligence, meaningfully
    presented

10
11
Future Program Opportunities
  • Small business transactions
  • Getting industry to provide data/reports on small
    business transactions is still an issue
    (SF-294/295/e-SRS, etc.)
  • Industry needs to be more aggressive/innovative
    in driving increased small business merchant
    acceptance
  • Small business is critical economic driver
    education about card benefits and costs needs to
    be improved and simplified
  • New card products need to challenge the status
    quo
  • Debit cards offer lower fraud protection coverage
    and lower or no rebates compared to charge cards.
    Must this be true?
  • Prepaid cards may provide a greater degree of
    control over program spending. Do we have a
    training/education issue here?
  • Card member benefits that are provided to
    commercial clients should also be available to
    the Government
  • We cant we have cards that can turned on/off as
    needed?
  • Cant we come up with better alternatives to
    convenience check use?

11
12
Future Program Opportunities
  • Security
  • In cards offered to individuals, industry offers
    features such as virtual account numbers and
    system-generated e-mails for defined events, such
    as receipt of a payment, spending reaching a
    certain pre-defined level, etc. Why dont we
    have these features? Imagine a world where, for
    example, a supervisor receives an e-mail whenever
    one of his/her employees transacts business on a
    card.
  • Similar to consumer cards, industry should be
    able to provide Government cardholders with
    timely warnings of potentially high risk
    transactions
  • Sensitive government data (including employee
    data) must be protected from improper disclosure
    at all levels prime and subcontractor
  • Card information shall not be shared by open
    e-mail
  • Misuse/abuse/fraud
  • While there is a some commonality to industry and
    governments definition/ understanding of fraud,
    a common definition of it, as well as of misuse
    and abuse, needs to be implemented
  • Government is getting better at detecting fraud
    but greater collaboration with industry to
    understand purchasing policies and provide
    innovative tools and approaches is key to
    sustaining gains

12
13
Future Program Opportunities
  • Tax recovery
  • Federal Government transactions made on centrally
    billed accounts (CBAs) should not be taxed
  • Taxes assessed on CBA transactions should be 100
    recoverable
  • Tax levy issue remains a concern
  • A/OPC staffing challenges
  • Need to reduce time necessary to effectively
    manage the program
  • Many A/OPCs perform this work as a collateral
    duty
  • Need to develop better, more innovative practices
    and tools
  • Can automation/better policies/better training
    help?
  • International challenges
  • Industry needs to assist the government in better
    aligning with chip card technology that is
    required to support transactions in some
    countries
  • Industry should provide better customer service
    support for foreign transactions government
    mission is increasingly global
  • Need to get a better handle on costs of
    international transactions

13
14
Future Program Opportunities
  • Program Concerns Commercial world in tension
    with Government needs
  • Transparent rebate calculations
  • The formula that banks use to calculate rebates
    on charge card transactions is not transparent
  • Rebate calculations depend on several factors
    which are not clearly defined and vary from bank
    to bank
  • Cancelled cards
  • Transactions can still be passed through
    cancelled charge cards for months after the card
    has been cancelled
  • When do we put the fork in a dead card?
  • Dispute process
  • Government is required to dispute a transaction
    within a relatively short window (60 days from
    transaction date)
  • The dispute process is currently structured with
    a relative bias to the merchant

14
15
Transition
FY05
FY07
FY08
FY06
FY09
Fall 2004
Spring 2005
Fall 2005
Fall 2006
Fall 2007
Fall 2008
Spring 2006
Spring 2007
Spring 2008
Acquisition Planning Phase
  • Future program requirements
  • Request for Information
  • Press release
  • Acquisition strategy
  • Source Selection Plan

Acquisition Management Phase
  • Draft Request for Proposals
  • Request for Proposals
  • Contract award/s

Transition Planning Phase
Transition Management Phase
15
16
Transition
FY06
FY08
FY09
FY07
Spring 2006
Fall 2006
Fall 2007
Fall 2008
Spring 2007
Spring 2008
Spring 2009
Fall 2005
  • We simply cannot have what happened during the
    first transition happen again
  • Financial interface challenges
  • Card distribution issues
  • Later, crispy cards from mail irradiation
  • The GSA SmartPay program office will
  • Work closely with agencies and banks to
    facilitate a smooth transition
  • Develop transition planning tools for agency use
  • Plan and prepare for the transition to minimize
    impact on cardholders
  • Large amount of agency and bank involvement
    required

Now
AwardContracts
16
17
Transition
FY06
FY08
FY09
FY07
Fall 2005
Spring 2006
Fall 2006
Fall 2007
Fall 2008
Spring 2007
Spring 2008
Spring 2009
Now
AwardContracts
  • A/OPCs need to make sure their cardholders
  • Ensure that all transactions with their current
    bank are reconciled subscriptions are stopped
    under prior accounts
  • Fill out a new card application
  • Activate a new card
  • Destroy their old card and ensure no new
    transactions continue to be made on it Complete
    any new training
  • Contact the A/OPC if they have any issues or
    questions

17
18
Questions?
18
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