Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Circular A-131: Value Engineering, issued 26 January 1988, revised 21 May 1993 [2] and 26 December 2013. Contains guidance to support the sustained use of value engineering by federal departments and agencies; Circular A-133: Audits of states, local government and non-profit organizations: see OMB A-133 Compliance Supplement
OMB Circular A-130, a circular produced by the United States Federal Government to establish policy for executive branch departments and agencies OMB Circular A-16 , a circular created by the United States Office of Management and Budget to provide guidance for federal agencies that create, maintain or use spatial data directly or indirectly ...
The OMB A-133 Compliance Supplement is divided into 7 divisions: Part I: Background, Purpose, and Applicability – Presents a brief description of the history of the Single Audit, defines the purpose of the OMB Circular A-133, and establishes where and why the Single Audit applies.
OMB Circular A 87, "Cost Principles for State, Local, and Indian Tribal Governments" (2 CFR part 225) – This circular includes the 50 States of the United States and the District of Columbia (Washington, D.C.), any agency or instrumentality of these governments—and any county, parish, municipality, city, town, State-designated Indian tribal ...
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is the largest office [a] within the Executive Office of the President of the United States (EOP). OMB's most prominent function is to produce the president's budget, [2] but it also examines agency programs, policies, and procedures to see whether they comply with the president's policies and coordinates inter-agency policy initiatives.
Executive Order 12866 in the United States, issued by President Clinton in 1993, requires a cost–benefit analysis for any new regulation that is "economically significant", which is defined as having "an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or adversely affect[ing] in a material way the economy, a sector of the economy, productivity, competition, [or] jobs," or creating an ...
Congress passed the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96–511) and its successor, the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–13 (text)), that established OIRA in the OMB. The OMB review process became more formalized in 1981 with President Ronald Reagan's Executive Order 12291.
On January 14, 2019, President Trump signed into law H.R. 4174, [11] the OPEN Government Data Act (OGDA), which codifies in law the requirement for agencies to make their public data assets available in machine-readable format. On June 28, 2019, in Circular A-11, [12] OMB expressed intent to begin complying with section 10 of GPRAMA. [13]