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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
Department of Agriculture
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service’s Horse Protection Act Inspection and Disqualification Processes at Horse Show Events
This Office of Inspector General (OIG) Healthcare Facility Inspection program report describes the results of a focused evaluation of the care provided at the Hershel “Woody” Williams VA Medical Center in Huntington, West Virginia.
This evaluation focused on five key content domains: • Culture • Environment of care • Patient safety • Primary care • Veteran-centered safety net
The OIG issued one recommendation for improvement in one domain: 1. Environment of care • Safe and clean environment
The Office of Inspector General is issuing this inspection report to assess the U.S. Small Business Administration’s (SBA) initial response to Hurricane Helene, including staffing, loan application volume, and timeliness of disaster loan approvals.
We found that in SBA’s initial disaster assistance response to Hurricane Helene, the agency promptly established a field presence, adequately staffed recovery centers, responded timely to applicant queries, and processed loans in a timely manner.
We found that SBA processed loan applications in 20 days on average but was unable to disburse many of those loans due to a 68-day funding lapse. As a result, the overall processing time was 69 days on average with the funding lapse and 64 days on average without it. In addition, we identified opportunities for SBA to optimize its outreach efforts so disaster survivors are aware of the assistance available to them.
We recommended SBA review current outreach strategies; immediately conduct outreach efforts in North Carolina and South Carolina and perform a root cause analysis to determine the basis of insufficient outreach efforts in these two states; and implement appropriate changes to ensure maximum awareness of available assistance to disaster survivors that account for rural areas.
Management’s planned actions to review staffing assignments to ensure adequate coverage for future disasters and immediately conduct outreach efforts in North Carolina and South Carolina resolved Recommendations 1 and 2. Management’s response did not resolve Recommendation 3; therefore, we will seek resolution in accordance with our audit follow-up policy.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA’s) Office of Marine and Aviation Operations (OMAO) operates NOAA’s fleet of specialized environmental data-collecting aircraft, including three “hurricane hunter” aircraft: one Gulfstream-IV-SP (G-IV) that is 29 years old and flies high-altitude storm surveillance missions and two Lockheed WP-3D aircraft that are 48 and 49 years old and fly directly into tropical cyclones (low-altitude storm reconnaissance). The G-IV has exceeded its original estimated service life, and the WP-3Ds will reach the end of their estimated service lives in 2030.
NOAA has initiated replacement efforts for its aging hurricane hunter aircraft and Congress has appropriated funds for replacement aircraft. NOAA will replace the G-IV with two modified Gulfstream 550s and will replace the WP-3Ds with Lockheed C-130Js. The objective of our audit was to assess NOAA’s progress replacing its hurricane hunter aircraft.
We found that (1) hurricane hunter replacement programs started late, delayed definition of requirements, and did not identify and manage key risks; (2) hurricane hunter replacement programs need more effective management and executive oversight; and (3) technically complex acquisition and development programs require mature systems engineering practices.
We made seven recommendations to help NOAA apply effective program management and oversight to these major acquisitions.
Financial Audit of USAID Resources Managed by Joint Clinical Research Center in Uganda Under Cooperative Agreement 72061720CA00013, October 1, 2023, to September 30, 2024