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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 the Interior
Investigation of Alleged Fraudulent Receipt of Overtime Pay
At the request of the Tennessee Valley Authority's (TVA) Supply Chain, we examined the cost proposal submitted by a contractor for nuclear modifications, outage and supplemental maintenance, and technical support services at TVA's three operating nuclear plants. Our examination objective was to determine if the company's cost proposal was fairly stated for a planned $950 million contract. In our opinion, the company's cost proposal was fairly stated. Specifically, the labor markup rates proposed were supported by the company's actual historical costs.(Summary Only)
We determined that FSA had adopted and implemented new tools and processes in this area in response to the April 2015 closure of one of the largest for-profit education companies in the United States, but further improvements were needed. We reported that FSA needed to improve its processes for reviewing a school’s composite score calculation and any related composite score appeal made by a school. We further noted that FSA needed to implement controls to prevent schools from manipulating composite scores to avoid sanctions or increased oversight by FSA. We concluded that improvements in these areas could better protect students and taxpayers. Specifically, unexpected or abrupt school closures can have significant adverse effects on large numbers of students, including potentially being displaced from their educational program before completion, having credits that cannot transfer to another school, incurring significant student loan debt without obtaining a degree or certificate, and significantly diminished job prospects. Taxpayers are also adversely affected when those types of school closures result in significant volume of loan discharges. We pointed to the financial responsibility provisions that were to have gone into effect in July 2017 as part of the borrower defense regulation changes as including tools to improve the Department’s oversight of schools.