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Brought to you by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Objective: To determine whether the Social Security Administration decreased the number of auxiliary beneficiaries with missing or incorrect Social Security numbers on the Master Beneficiary Record.
The objectives of the audit were to determine whether the Kentucky Department of Education (Kentucky) had an adequate oversight process in place to ensure that (1) local educational agencies’ (LEA) American Rescue Plan (ARP) Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) plans met applicable requirements and (2) LEAs use ARP ESSER funds in accordance with applicable requirements and their approved LEA ARP ESSER plans. Overall, we found that Kentucky had adequate processes to ensure that LEA ARP ESSER plans met applicable requirements. We also determined that the ARP ESSER plans for Warren County and Jefferson County met applicable requirements and that Kentucky was consistent in how it reviewed and approved the two plans. We did, however, find that Kentucky’s process for reviewing LEA ARP ESSER reimbursement requests should be documented and could be strengthened to provide additional assurance that LEAs use ARP ESSER funds for allowable purposes. Although Kentucky had been consistent in how it oversees LEAs’ use of ARP ESSER funds, it did not request a listing of expenditures or review any supporting documentation from LEAs as part of its review of LEA reimbursement requests. Without supporting documentation to verify that the expenditures are allowable and properly accounted for, there is an increased risk that Kentucky will not identify or become aware of significant compliance issues involving the ARP ESSER program. Additionally, Kentucky did not have written policies and procedures to guide personnel through the reimbursement process. Without documented processes for reviewing LEA reimbursement requests, Kentucky officials might not fully understand what is expected of them or what they should be reviewing. This could result in inconsistencies in how Kentucky personnel perform these reviews and missed opportunities to identify unallowable or questionable expenditures that should be analyzed more closely. Also, at the end of our fieldwork, Kentucky had designed but not yet started additional monitoring of selected LEAs based on their overall risk. After the exit conference, Kentucky provided us with written policies and procedures for its ARP ESSER monitoring process. We reviewed those policies and procedures and concluded that they were designed in a way that should enable Kentucky to identify and select high-risk LEAs for review and detect instances of noncompliance during monitoring reviews.