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Agenda. Pre Site Visit Information Request OFCO Monitoring EDGAR Requirements Contract Administration Regulatory vs. Non-regulatory Guidance. Richard Rasa (OIG) May 2, 2007 . OIG FY 2008 Workplan will include Audits of the Perkins Program at Federal, State, and Local levels.
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Agenda • Pre Site Visit Information Request • OFCO Monitoring • EDGAR Requirements • Contract Administration • Regulatory vs. Non-regulatory Guidance
Richard Rasa (OIG)May 2, 2007 OIG FY 2008 Workplan will include Audits of the Perkins Program at Federal, State, and Local levels
James Evans (OFCO)May 1, 2007 • Districts have inadequate internal controls • Single audit process has weaknesses
Troy Justesen: “Align OVAE Monitoring with the rest of the Department”
OCFO Monitoring Objectives • Conduct a Risk Analysis of Erroneous Payments in Education Programs • Review the Adequacy of Internal Controls
What is the definition of Internal Controls? • US Government Accountability Office (GAO) definition… An integral component of an organization’s management that provides reasonable assurance that the following objectives are being achieved: - effectiveness and efficiency of operations, - reliability of reporting, and - compliance with applicable laws and regulations
Summary of Last Year’s OCFO Findings • Procurement and Disbursement Controls (120 Findings, 48%) • Controls over Equipment (95 Findings, 38%) • Audits (22 Findings, 9%) • Drawdown and Disbursement of Title I Funds (12 Findings, 5%)
Procurement and Disbursement Controls • Inadequate controls over purchase orders • Inadequate controls over processing and payment of vendor invoices • Inadequate controls over contracts with vendor and service providers
Controls Over Equipment • Accurate equipment records not maintained on a current basis • Lack of adequate controls to account for location and custody of equipment • Inadequate process for conducting regular physical inventory of equipment
Audits • Corrective action plans to address audit findings in the A-133 single audit reports were either unavailable for review, inadequately prepared, or not timely • Management and internal control letters addressing A-133 and financial statement audit reports were unavailable for review • Inadequate guidance provided to LEAs on form and content of corrective action plans
Drawdown and Disbursement of Funds • SEA did not ensure timely drawdown and application of Federal funds to the grant year that resources were intended to support • Inadequate monitoring of LEAs application
OCFO FY-2007 Review Process • Criteria for review -Recent audit findings -Findings from recent monitoring reports -Program Office review schedule -Consideration of other risk factors • OCFO review may be scheduled -Concurrent with Program Office site visit -Independently
SEA / LEA Responsibilities Under EDGAR State-administered programs
State-administered programs • Part 76 applies • Applicant applies to SEA • Can be formula or discretionary, or combination, but typically formula • SEA approves application
State-administered programsSubpart B and Subpart C • Subpart B – “How a State Applies for a Grant” • General state application • State plan definition • Multi-year state plans • Required certifications • Plans (including subgrant applications) as public documents • Amendments to state plans • Subpart C – “How a Grant Is Made to a State” • an must meet statutory and regulatory requirements • Opportunity for hearing before plan disapproved • Notification of grant award
State-administered programsSubpart D • “How to apply to the State for a Subgrant” – highlights: • Application procedures • General application requirements (GEPA) • Notice requirement • Joint application and projects • Public availability
State-administered programsSubpart E • “How a Subgrant is Made to an Applicant” – highlights: • State procedures for reviewing applications • Disapproval (opportunity for hearing) • SEA hearing procedures
State-administered programsSubpart F • “What Conditions Must Be Met by the State and Its Subgrantees” –highlights: • Allowable costs • Indirect cost rates • Evaluation • Construction • Participation of Students Enrolled in Private Schools • Other requirements
State-administered programsSubpart G—IMPORTANT– ED FOCUS!! • “What Are the Administrative Responsibilities of the State and Its Subgrantees” –highlights: • Compliance with statutes, regulations, state plan, and applications • State or subgrantee directly administers or supervises the admin of each project • Fiscal control and fund accounting procedures required
State-administered programsSubpart G— (cont’d) • When a state may begin to obligate funds • “Substantially approvable” • Good examples of timing in EDGAR (76.703) • When obligations are made • When certain subgrantees may begin to obligate funds • “Substantially approvable” • Carryover • Reports • Records • Privacy
State-administered programsSubpart G— (cont’d) • Use of funds – more than one program may assist a single activity (with sufficient accounting system) • State must have procedures to ensure compliance**** • Reviewing and approving apps, technical assistance, evaluating projects, “other administrative responsibilities” to ensure compliance • Subgrantee hearing opportunities (when required)
State-administered programsSubpart I • “What Procedures Does the Secretary Use to Get Compliance?” • Cross reference to GEPA, including: • Recovery of funds • Withholding • Cease and desist • Other proceedings • Judicial review • Cooperation with audits
How to Carry Out Requirements? • Programmatic requirements • Fiscal/administrative requirements: rule for state-administered programs: • State and local agencies must use fiscal control and fund accounting procedures that will ensure the proper disbursement of, and accounting for, federal funds • HOW?? • Threshold systems
Threshold System Requirements for Recipients of Federal Grants • Financial Management Systems (internal controls, cash management and payment) • Procurement Systems • Inventory Management Systems • Overarching concept: Internal Controls • Requirements for systems: • Primarily EDGAR and A-87 • ED may issue guidance or regulations on internal controls – clarity needed! • ED monitoring threshold systems – check EDGAR and monitoring documents
Important Concept: Distinction between Subgrantee and Contractor • Subgrantees mandated by statute (typically direct grantees are prohibited from making subgrants – 75.708) • Can have an entity that is both in different contexts • A-133 outlines basic rules
Difference between Subgrantee (subrecipient) and Contractor (vendor) • Subgrantee (A-133): • Determines who is eligible to participate in a federal program; • Has its performance measured against whether the objectives of the federal program are met; • Is responsible for programmatic decision making; • Is responsible for complying with federal program requirements; and • Uses the federal funds to carry out a program as compared to providing goods or services for a program.
Difference between Subgrantee (subrecipient) and Contractor (vendor) • Vendor (A-133): • Provides the goods and services within normal business operations; • Provides similar goods or services to many different purchasers; • Operates in a competitive environment; • Provides goods or services that are ancillary to the operation of the federal program; and • Is not subject to compliance requirements of the federal program.
Difference between Subgrantee (subrecipient) and Contractor (vendor) • Why does this matter? • Clean audit trail (make it easy for auditors!) • VERY different responsibilities depending on classification of entity • Likely an increased focus as result of increased contracting by SEAs and LEAs
Typically July 1st Pre-award Grant Start Post-award Close-out Planning Typically September 30th for State as a Whole Typically December 30th for State as a Whole Period of Availability Begins IF Application Approved or Substantially Approvable Liquidate Funds & File FSRs Time to Obligate Funds (Period of Availability)
Obligations Definition Period of Availability Linking Obligations to FundsCost Allocation
Obligations: Definition • Obligation = Transaction that requires payment
Obligations: Period of Availability • Every grant has a “period of availability” = period in which grantee can obligate funds • Therefore, must be able to relate all costs to a specific transaction that occurred during the period of availability • Substantial difference between discretionary and formula funds
Obligations: Period of Availability • Grantees and subgrantees may begin to obligate funds when: • Statutory start date (typically July 1st) AND • Awarding agency approves application; or • Awarding agency determines application is “substantially approvable” • Reimbursement subject to final approval
Obligations: Period of Availability • Tydings Amendment • Allows extra year to obligate funds • Does not apply to all grants • Under Tydings, funds are available for 24-27 months: • 12-15 months under the grant award (July 1, 2006 – September 30, 2007) • Plus 12 months (October 1, 2007 – September 30, 2008)
Obligations: Carryover • Under Tydings, unobligated funds can usually be “carried over” from first year • Statute may impose limitations on carryover
Obligations: Linking • In order to have a valid “obligation” there must be: • A transaction giving rise to an obligation within the period of availability; and • A “linking” of the transaction with funds that were available during the period of availability • “Linking” a transaction to particular grant funds can occur after the period of availability ends • Method of linking varies from state-to-state • SEA may link transactions for LEA
Obligations: Linking • “Linking” example from Tydings grant: • Transaction occurs on August 1, 2005 • Available funds include: • 2003-2004 Funds (became available 7/1/03) • 2004-2005 Funds (became available 7/1/04) • 2005-2006 Funds (became available 7/1/05)
Obligations: Linking vs. Allocation • Linking • Accounting flexibility that applies to programs with multiple open grant years (e.g., Tydings) • Allocation • Legal requirement that applies to all grants • Basic Rule: can only charge in proportion to the value received by the program
Linking vs. Allocation (cont.) • Obligation = professional development conference on August 1, 2005 • Available grants: • Title I, Part A (FY 03-04, 04-05, 05-06) • Title II, Part A (FY 03-04, 04-05, 05-06) • Title V, Part A (FY 03-04, 04-05, 05-06)
Bottom Line: Why is This Important? • Must be able to document that all transactions relate to timely obligation • Date of transaction • Payee • Invoice number • Purchase order number • Amount of transaction • Accounts debited and credited
Liquidations Drawdown Payment Cash Management
Liquidation: Definition • Liquidation = Settle an obligation by paying funds
Liquidations: Timeline • Must liquidate all obligations within 90 days after the end of the period of availability • Example: • Period of availability: July 1 – September 30 • Liquidation period ends: December 30 • State may impose shorter deadline on LEAs • ED may extend this deadline • But only to liquidate valid & timely obligations
Payments: Drawdown by State • Drawdowns by states are governed by the Cash Management Improvement Act (CMIA) • Applies to all federal funds transferred to states • Goal of CMIA is to improve the transfer of federal funds between the federal government and the states
Payments: Drawdown by State • If advance payment authorized, must minimize payout time • Subpart A • 3-day rule • Subpart B • “As close as administratively feasible”
Payments: Drawdown by State • State Liability for Interest • Incurred if funds are not spent within 24 hours of drawdown • Accrues from the day funds are credited to state account until the day funds are paid out • Federal Liability for Interest • Incurred if state must use own funds to pay valid, authorized obligation • Accrues from day state pays its own funds until the day federal funds are credited to state account
Payments: Drawdown by Non-State Grantee & Subgrantee • EDGAR authorizes 3 methods for transferring funds from ED to a non-state grantee: • Advance • Reimbursement • Working Capital Advance
Payments: Drawdown by Non-State Grantee & Subgrantee • Advance payment • Must be willing and able to maintain procedures to minimize the time elapsing between transfer and disbursement in accordance with CMIA guidelines • Must return interest earned on advances • May keep up to $100/year for administrative expenses