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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
Federal Election Commission
OIG Report IE-23-01: Evaluation of Staffing, Hiring, and Retention at the FEC
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) has experienced a significant decline in staffing levels over the last 20 years, losing 20% of its full-time workforce from 2002 to 2022. Based on this observed decline, the Office of Inspector General (OIG) initiated this evaluation to identify root and proximate causes of this decline and to evaluate related issues.
We audited the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Office of Community Planning and Development’s (CPD) process for collecting financial information from grantees participating in the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Entitlement program. Prior year HUD financial statement audits found weaknesses in CPD’s processes to estimate accrued grant liabilities and instances where it appeared CDBG grantees were holding advanced funds. Our audit objectives were to determine whether (1) the financial information collected from grantees was sufficient to monitor grantee financial reporting and performance as required by federal regulations; (2) HUD’s monitoring of grantees’ cash on hand was sufficient to ensure compliance with cash management requirements and that the monitoring was adequate to safeguard funds against the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse; and (3) HUD was properly reporting the financial information collected from its grantees in accordance with the Statements of Federal Financial Accounting Standards.We found that the financial information collected from CDBG Entitlement grantees was not sufficient to monitor grantee compliance with cash management requirements contained in federal regulations. Our review of CPD Cash on Hand Quarterly Reports (PR 29 reports) found that grantees consistently made errors in preparing the report or did not have adequate documentation to support the amounts reported. We also found PR 29 reports that were not submitted or were submitted after the required deadline for certain quarters and resubmissions that were not tracked by HUD. Without reliable and timely financial data, CPD cannot adequately monitor grantees’ excess cash or properly assess their compliance with cash management requirements, thereby increasing the funds’ susceptibility to the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse. Further, since the reports were not submitted in a timely manner and were not reliable, the information collected could not be leveraged by the Office of the Chief Financial Officer (OCFO) to properly report grantee financial information in compliance with the Statements of Federal Financial Accounting Standards. Additionally, we found opportunities for CPD to improve (1) the timing of grantee drawdowns to better align with when the actual expense was incurred and (2) its financial data collection efforts from its CDBG grantees to estimate HUD’s accrued grant liability as required by the Statements of Federal Financial Accounting Standards. CPD’s accrued grant liability estimation methodology relies on grantee drawdown data and produces an unreliable estimate due to the significant delays in grantee disbursements from when an expense is incurred. Further, CPD does not collect expense data elements from the OMB Federal Financial Report (Standard Form-425), which could potentially be used to assist HUD in producing a more precise accrual estimate, resulting in improved financial reporting. Lastly, we identified that CPD is collecting information on the PR 29 report that was not approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA). Consequently, CPD did not receive public input as required nor did they assess the reporting burden imposed on the grantee as required by the PRA.We recommend that CPD improve its guidance, training, and monitoring of the PR 29 report to ensure that the information collected is reliable, accurate, and timely. In addition, we recommended that CPD work with OCFO to ensure that it collects all of the information needed to properly account for all CPD activities in HUD’s financial statements in accordance with Federal financial reporting requirements and accounting standards. Lastly, we made a recommendation that CPD obtain the required approvals under the PRA for the PR 29 report.
Financial Audit of Enhanced MDR-TB Services Through Network of Private Hospital Managed by Majelis Pembinaan Kesehatan Umum Pimpinan Pusat Muhammadiyah in Indonesia, Cooperative Agreement 72049720CA00001, January 1 to December 31, 2022
If the EPA does not adequately plan to increase the PSB’s capacity to respond to a 20-fold increase in employees receiving continuous vetting services, delays in processing and managing full TW 2.0 implementation may increase the risk to national security from insider threats.