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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
Department of Defense
Air Force’s F-15 Eagle Passive/Active Warning and Survivability System
Closeout Audit of the Familias Unidas por su Salud Project Managed by Federacion Red NicaSalud, Cooperative Agreement 524-A-00-06-00005-00, July 01, 2012, to September 30, 2013
Title 2 CFR Part 200 Audit of Catholic Relief Services - United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, and Affiliates for the Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2017
The OIG investigated an allegation that a senior official with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) was involved in a conflict of interest when she directed her staff to hire a private consultant who was her friend. We found that the official violated Federal ethics regulations when she directed her staff to pay $2,400 to a private consultant with whom she had both a professional and personal relationship. In return for the payment, the consultant provided three written work products to BLM.
This is a publication by GAO's Office of Inspector General (OIG) that concerns internal GAO operations. This report addresses the extent to which GAO has established controls for ensuring uniform standards are applied in debt and interest waiver decisions consistent with federal requirements.What OIG Found: GAO has not established actionable procedures to help ensure that federal requirements for deciding when and how to waive debt or interest are met. Specifically, GAO has not developed effective procedures needed to ensure that debt and interest waiver decisions made by the Chief Human Capital Officer are consistent with the principles of equity, fairness, and the interests of the United States, as required by federal law. In addition, the Human Capital Office was unable to provide documentation for many of the debt waiver decisions reviewed or the documentation provided did not support the debt waiver decisions that were made, which limits management’s assurance that GAO’s use of waivers meets federal requirements.What OIG Recommends: OIG made three recommendations intended to help ensure that GAO debt and interest waiver decisions are consistent with federal requirements. First, develop and implement procedures to consider equity in debt waiver decisions and to waive interest on debts consistent with federal standards and applicable laws. Second, develop and implement procedures to help ensure that Human Capital Office staff properly identify and maintain waiver information made or received as evidence of GAO’s waiver activities, consistent with GAO’s debt collection policy and Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government. Third, enforce compliance with the requirements of GAO’s official electronic records management system for debt and interest waiver records. GAO agreed with our recommendations and stated that it has taken or initiation actions to address them. We will assess whether actions taken address the intent of our recommendations once documentation supporting the actions described by GAO is provided to us.
The U.S. Postal Service uses the Customer Service Adjusted Workload (CSAW) and Customer Service Variance (CSV) models to optimize retail and customer service operations. The CSAW model is used daily to record the actual workload in customer service units. Supervisors input actual workload for manual distribution of letters and flats volume in this system. Our objective was to assess the accuracy of earned workhours in customer service operations in the Tennessee District.
The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 established the Competitive Bidding Program for durable medical equipment (DME). The program replaces a fee schedule with a competitive bidding process to set Medicare reimbursement amounts in certain areas. In a letter to OIG, Members of Congress expressed concerns about the program's effect on access to DME and requested that OIG study this issue.
The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 established the Competitive Bidding Program for durable medical equipment (DME). The program replaces a fee schedule with a competitive bidding process to set Medicare reimbursement amounts in certain areas. In a letter to OIG, Members of Congress expressed concerns about the program's effect on access to DME and requested that OIG study this issue.