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Brought to you by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Federal Reports
Report Date
Agency Reviewed / Investigated
Report Title
Type
Location
Office of the Director of National Intelligence, Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security
Review of Domestic Sharing of Counterterrorism Information
This report is the result of a joint review conducted by the Inspectors General for the Intelligence Community, Department of Homeland Security, and Department of Justice.
The EEOC is heavily dependent on its FSSP, IBC, for its Data Act implementation and reporting. EEOC has performed some of the recommended steps from the DATA Act Playbook and has collaborated with IBC to ensure the accuracy and completeness of data to be reported on behalf of EEOC. The four steps that EEOC performed were:Organize team, Review Elements, Inventory Data, and Design and Strategize. The EEOC needs to specifically document roles and responsibilities between the EEOC and IBC. Additionally, EEOC should develop a comprehensive implementation plan at the agency level even if it is relying on its FSSP to report DATA Act information on its behalf. Though it appears that IBC is on track in meeting DATA Act reporting requirements by May 2017, according to a report issued by the DOI’s OIG in December 2016, EEOC has the ultimate responsibility of ensuring the accuracy, quality, completeness, and timeliness of the data reported on its behalf.
Our review determined that EEOC is on track to meet the reporting requirements of theDigital Accountability and Transparency Act. We did include three suggestions formanagement’s consideration. Also we have included management’s comments in ourreport.
Over half of the Medicaid payments that Ohio's Department of Medicaid made to providers for full vials of Herceptin were incorrect. Of the 248 line items reviewed, 135 (54 percent) were incorrect and resulted in overpayments of about $142,000 ($91,000 Federal share). The 113 remaining line items were correct.