Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 124.djvu/3899

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124 STAT. 3873 PUBLIC LAW 111–352—JAN. 4, 2011 ‘‘(B) describe any additional funding the agency will obli- gate to achieve the goal, if such an action is determined appro- priate in consultation with the Director of the Office of Manage- ment and Budget, for an amount determined appropriate by the Director. ‘‘(2) In providing additional funding described under paragraph (1)(B), the head of the agency shall use any reprogramming or transfer authority available to the agency. If after exercising such authority additional funding is necessary to achieve the level deter- mined appropriate by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, the head of the agency shall submit a request to Congress for additional reprogramming or transfer authority. ‘‘(i) If an agency’s programs or activities have not met perform- ance goals as determined by the Office of Management and Budget for 3 consecutive fiscal years, the Director of the Office of Manage- ment and Budget shall submit recommendations to Congress on actions to improve performance not later than 60 days after that determination, including— ‘‘(1) reauthorization proposals for each program or activity that has not met performance goals; ‘‘(2) proposed statutory changes necessary for the program activities to achieve the proposed level of performance on each performance goal; and ‘‘(3) planned executive actions or identification of the pro- gram for termination or reduction in the President’s budget.’’. SEC. 5. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY PRIORITY GOALS. Chapter 11 of title 31, United States Code, is amended by adding after section 1119 the following: ‘‘§ 1120. Federal Government and agency priority goals ‘‘(a) FEDERAL GOVERNMENT PRIORITY GOALS.— ‘‘(1) The Director of the Office of Management and Budget shall coordinate with agencies to develop priority goals to improve the performance and management of the Federal Government. Such Federal Government priority goals shall include— ‘‘(A) outcome-oriented goals covering a limited number of crosscutting policy areas; and ‘‘(B) goals for management improvements needed across the Federal Government, including— ‘‘(i) financial management; ‘‘(ii) human capital management; ‘‘(iii) information technology management; ‘‘(iv) procurement and acquisition management; and ‘‘(v) real property management; ‘‘(2) The Federal Government priority goals shall be long- term in nature. At a minimum, the Federal Government priority goals shall be updated or revised every 4 years and made publicly available concurrently with the submission of the budget of the United States Government made in the first full fiscal year following any year in which the term of the President commences under section 101 of title 3. As needed, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget may make adjustments to the Federal Government priority goals to reflect significant changes in the environment in which the Deadline. Public information. Recommenda- tions. Deadline. Request.