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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
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Department of Justice
Investigative Summary: Findings of Misconduct by an AUSA for Failing to Declare Items and Pay Customs Duties Upon Reentry Into the U.S. From International Travel
Along with steam, the coal combustion process produces hot gases (called flue gases), including sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and ash particles. Flue gas moves through ductwork to various air pollution control devices prior to being emitted through the stack. The objective of our evaluation was to determine if TVA is taking actions to address environmental and safety risks related to flue gas ductwork at coal plants. Since scrubbers increase the risk of corrosion within flue gas ductwork, our evaluation included plants with operational scrubbers. We found TVA has completed repairs to address environmental risks associated with flue gas ductwork at coal plants. However, TVA's framework for repairing and reporting ductwork leaks could be improved by (1) clarifying thresholds to repair and report cumulative leaks, (2) establishing realistic repair timelines, and (3) prioritizing the most environmentally damaging leaks for repair. We also found TVA has completed some repairs designed to address safety risks associated with ductwork, but TVA site management indicated long-term capital projects are needed and planned for remediation at Bull Run Fossil Plant and Cumberland where the worst material conditions were present. In addition, we found weakness in the identification of safety concerns related to ductwork at the sites. Additionally, we determined TVA is incurring risk by adopting a strategy to apply internal thermal coatings to ductwork at Cumberland to resist corrosion. Thermal coatings have not previously been used for this application nor have they been through a technical review involving Generation Engineering. This could result in TVA spending several million dollars on a solution that may not work.
The Housing Authority of the City of Anderson, Anderson, IN, Did Not Always Comply With HUD’s and Its Own Requirements Regarding the Administration of Its Housing Choice Voucher Program
From July 2011 through June 2014, the New York Department of Health (State agency) improperly claimed approximately $300,000 in incorrect Federal Medicaid reimbursement for the drug Herceptin.
The OIG audited TVA's fraud risk management activities to determine if it had incorporated the practices in its organizational culture and structure conducive to fraud risk management as identified by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) framework for managing fraud risk. In summary, we found while TVA has attempted to demonstrate a senior-level management commitment to integrity through various ethics and code of conduct policies, improvements are needed in TVA's practices to combat fraud and involve all levels of the agency in setting an antifraud tone. In addition, TVA management has not formally designated an entity to design and oversee fraud risk management activities. We recommended TVA management consider (1) developing policies and practices that directly communicate the senior-level commitment to combating fraud; (2) implementing practices, such as training and other fraud-awareness activities, that involve all levels of TVA in setting an antifraud tone that permeates the organizational culture; and (3) designating an entity within TVA to lead fraud risk management activities in accordance with the guidelines provided by the GAO framework. TVA management agreed with our recommendations, stating they were consistent with Public Law 114-186 signed by President Obama on June 30, 2016.