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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
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Performance Audit of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s Compliance with the Payment Integrity Information Act of 2019 for Fiscal Year 2025
An Amtrak lead operational specialist based in Washington, D.C., was terminated from employment on May 27, 2026, following the issuance of our investigative report. Our investigation found that the former employee violated company policy by allowing a non-employee to accompany him in restricted areas without proper authorization and for knowingly submitting expenses and receiving reimbursements for meals for non-company employees. The former employee is not eligible for rehire.
Audit of the Schedule of Expenditures for Sajdi-Consulting Engineering Center Under the Water Engineering Services Project, Contract 72027821C00003, in Jordan from January 1, 2024, to December 31, 2024
Under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, or IIJA, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was provided with over $60 billion in appropriations for Agency programs, including the Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Fund Programs, the Superfund Program, geographic programs, and more. Since the IIJA’s enactment, the EPA Office of Inspector General has been conducting timely and relevant oversight to ensure that IIJA funds—taxpayer dollars—are used effectively. Our fourth annual IIJA progress report covers February 1, 2025, through January 31, 2026, and provides an update on our oversight of the EPA’s use of IIJA funds.
Summary of Findings
During the period covered in this report, the OIG issued seven audit reports, six evaluation reports, and two audit follow-up reports related to the Agency’s IIJA activities. In addition to examining initial implementation, we have increasingly focused on how the Agency is managing and overseeing IIJA funds that have already been awarded. In this report, we highlighted Agency accomplishments and identified key challenges, including gaps in the EPA’s guidance, oversight, timely fund utilization, recipient capacity, and data quality that risk slowing and undermining IIJA outcomes.
This memorandum provides the final results of the Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) risk assessment of the U.S. AbilityOne Commission’s (Commission) Government Purchase Card (purchase card) program for fiscal year (FY) 2025. The OIG concluded that the risk of illegal, improper, or erroneous use in the Commission’s purchase card program is low. As a result, an audit of the Commission’s purchase card program is not warranted.
The objective of the risk assessment was to analyze and identify the risks of illegal, improper, or erroneous purchases and payments within the Commission’s purchase card program, to determine whether an audit is warranted or make recommendations and identify areas of risk that the Commission could improve to strengthen its purchase card program.
The VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) sought to assess whether Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) claims processors were appropriately overriding warnings and calculator results within the Veterans Benefits Management System for Rating (VBMS R). The review focused on overrides processed between April 1 and September 30, 2024, and evaluated compliance with applicable laws, policies, and procedures.
The OIG found that while many overrides were properly executed, an estimated 9,900 were not warranted or lacked valid justification. These unwarranted override decisions occurred (1) because VBA did not conduct regular quality reviews that would provide feedback to processors, (2) because of the absence of clear guidance on what constitutes a valid override justification, and (3) because of limited functionality in two VBMS R oversight tools. These deficiencies hindered VBA’s ability to perform efficient oversight and could lead to quality reviewers examining cases that did not actually involve an override.
Actions by VBA claims processors caused about $67,200 in improper disability benefits payments and unnecessary exam costs, with the potential to affect future disability benefits payments or result in unnecessary exam costs. The OIG briefed VBA on the review’s progress in March 2025, and VBA agreed with the sample review results. In December 2025, the OIG officially briefed VBA on the findings. Although VBA has since taken steps to enhance aspects of its override process by releasing a new reporting dashboard in February 2026, the OIG has not reviewed or tested it.
To address the issues the OIG identified and strengthen the VBMS-R override process, the OIG made five recommendations focused on improving guidance, oversight, and system functionality. VBA agreed to implement all five recommendations.