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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
Architect of the Capitol
Suspected Violations of the Architect of the Capitol (AOC) “Government Ethics,” “Standards for Conduct,” “Authority and Responsibilities of the Office of Inspector General and Cooperation of AOC Employees” Policies and “Title 18, United States Code §1001
Transmittal of the Final Report Assessing the Federal Trade Commission’s Compliance with the Federal Information Security Management Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Redacted for public release)
Financial Audit of USAID Resources Managed by Expanded Church Response in Zambia Under Cooperative Agreement AID-611-A-15-00002, January 1 to December 31, 2019
During the course of the audit, we determined that FEMA provided hotel rooms to about 90,000 households (nearly 227,000 survivors) after the 2017 California wildfires and Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria. However, FEMA did not oversee and manage the Transitional Sheltering Assistance (TSA) program to ensure it operated efficiently and effectively to meet all disaster survivors’ needs. Specifically, FEMA officials did not accurately validate taxes charged for hotel rooms and did not ensure that CLC maintained accurate records to ensure taxes charged were reasonable and allocable; paid for unoccupied rooms; and did not transition survivors from TSA hotels to interim or permanent housing timely. This occurred because FEMA officials did not establish a dedicated program office with staff and standard operating procedures for the TSA program. These deficiencies hindered FEMA from conducting appropriate reviews of the hotel costs and payments, and from adequately coordinating with the states to prepare pre-disaster housing strategies. As a result, FEMA paid more than $55.8 million in unverified taxes, disbursed indeterminate amounts for unoccupied rooms, and left over 146,000 disaster survivors in hotels for more than the recommended 30 days. We made two recommendations that when implemented, will improve FEMA’s oversight and pre-disaster planning of transitional sheltering. FEMA concurred with both recommendations and the recommendations are resolved and open.