GAO Reports That Although SEVIS is Improving, Issues Remain
The
General Accounting Office (GAO) issued a report last week that evaluated the
Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS), an effort by DHS to
collect and record key data on foreign students, exchange visitors and their
dependents prior to their entering the Untied States, upon their entry and
during their stay. The GAO reviewed
system performance, actions to improve performance and plans for collecting the
fee to be paid by foreign students and exchange visitors to cover SEVIS costs.
According
to the GAO’s report, SEVIS performance is improving.
Program office reports for some key system performance requirements show
that these requirements are being met, although it was found that not all key
performance requirements are being monitored or reported.
Without formally monitoring all key performance requirements, DHS cannot
adequately assure itself that potential problems will be identified and
addressed early. It was also found
that other, less formal indicators of performance, such as daily system use by
program officials and unsolicited user feedback, indicate that the system is
meeting requirements. The GAO’s
analysis of new requests for system changes, including changes to address
reported performance problems, shows these requests are declining.
Additionally, officials representing educational organizations generally
see performance as having improved.
The
DHS has taken specific actions to improve SEVIS performance, according to the
GAO’s report. In particular, it
has installed a series of new software releases and increased Help Desk staffing
and training. In addition, program
officials are holding regularly scheduled meetings and are asking user groups to
test new releases. Despite DHS’s
efforts, educational organizations continue to report problems.
The GAO outlined SEVIS’s most common complaints and methods in which
DHS attempted to accommodate.
When
educational organizations complained about the inability of users to download
data to create custom reports, DHS evaluated the software options to provide
custom report capabilities. In
response to reports of slow Help Desk responses in the form of inconsistent
answers to technical questions and incorrect answers to policy questions, SEVIS
increased Help Desk staffing as of March 2003 and training is given to Help Desk
on a continuing basis. DHS changed
the SEVIS software in January 2004 after complaints of incomplete transmission
of data to the State Department database.
In
order to strengthen SEVIS, the GAO in its report made recommendations designed
to improve DHS’s monitoring of key system performance requirements, address
educational association performance concerns and expedite collection of the fee.
While DHS agreed with most findings, conclusions and recommendations of
the GAO, it did not fully agree with two findings and their associated
recommendations.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.