Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Internal Revenue
Service's (IRS) Integrated Case Processing (ICP) systems development
effort, focusing on: (1) IRS' assessment of ICP costs and benefits and
users' perceptions on the system's benefits; (2) IRS' testing of ICP;
(3) IRS' ongoing efforts to redesign its customer service work processes
to fully use ICP capabilities; and (4) the software development
processes being used for ICP.
GAO found that: (1) improving service to taxpayers is an important goal
that IRS' Customer Service Vision shows promise in addressing, but the
promise anticipated by the vision is unlikely to be fulfilled unless
changes are made in the development and deployment of ICP; (2) IRS
estimated that about $150 million was spent on ICP from 1993 to 1995 and
that an additional $77 million will be spent through 1996; (3) overall,
IRS plans to spend about $641 million on ICP through fiscal year 2000;
(4) despite this sizable investment, costs and benefits remain uncertain
because: (a) the scheduled rollout of ICP workstations continues to
change; (b) the ICP capabilities have not been finalized; (c) certain
benefits are still to be determined; and (d) the software is still being
developed; (5) IRS planned that certain ICP capabilities being developed
would be pilot tested beginning on September 30, 1996, but in a
memorandum dated July 31, 1996, the Associate Commissioner for
Modernization postponed the pilot test indefinitely; (6) IRS developed
and initiated a limited deployment of the initial ICP version; (7) the
test results provided little insight on the potential benefits of the
system, because IRS did not adequately measure ICP's impact on business
operations; (8) IRS officials recognized the limitations of the testing
and told GAO that testing of the next software release would be more
comprehensive; (9) it is unclear how this and future versions will
support new work processes that are being designed; (10) according to
IRS' Customer Service Vision, ICP was expected to be the vehicle to
provide customer service representatives with access to information that
would enable IRS to combine a phase of the tax collection process with
customer service; (11) IRS is now reconsidering the extent to which the
collection process can be combined with customer service and is
reconsidering the range of tasks a customer service representative can
be expected to perform; and (12) the software development processes in
place at IRS organizations responsible for developing ICP software are
extremely weak, making the likelihood of their producing quality ICP
software on time and within budget very low.
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